Saturday, July 27, 2019

 

Palestine? Who Lived There? Edward Robinson Can Tell You Who


Friday, October 31, 2014


Nadene Goldfoot                                                                     

Edward Robinson (b: April 10, 1794 in Southington, Connecticut d: January 27, 1863 in New York City)  was an American biblical scholar. He studied in the United States and Germany, a center of biblical scholarship and exploration of the Bible as history..


Descendants of father of EDWARD ROBINSON, Reverend, Archaeologist
[1] William Robinson, Reverend b: August 15, 1754 in Lebanon, New London, Conncticut d: August 15, 1825 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
.. +Naomi Wolcott b: February 08, 1780 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
*2nd Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:
.. +Sophia Mosely b: September 16, 1783 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
*3rd Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:
.. +Anna Mills b: August 13, 1787 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
*4th Wife of [1] William Robinson, Reverend:
.. +Elizabeth Norton b: 1761 d: 1824 in prob. Southington, Hartford, Connecticut
. EDWARD ROBINSON, Reverend, Archaeologist b: April 10, 1794 in Southington, Hartford, Connecticut d: January 27, 1863 in Manhattan, New York
..... +Therese Albertine Adolfus Luise Von Jacob b: January 26, 1797 in Halle (Saale) , Germany d: April 13, 1869 in Hamburg, Mitte, Germany
..... Edward Robinson, Jr. b: 1836 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts d: February 14, 1894 in 367 W. 56th St, Manhattan, New York
......... +Emma M. Unknown b: Abt. 1836 d: November 08, 1885
......... Therrese Marie Robinson b: 1879 d: July 01, 1879


"The son of a Congregational minister, Robinson was born in Connecticut. (A Congregational church "are Protestant churches in the Reformed tradition practicing congregationalist church governance, in which each congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs." ) After graduating from Hamilton College in 1816, he became a professor of biblical literature at Andover Theological Seminary in Massachusetts and later, Union Theological Seminary. He studied abroad in Germany and Palestine, was an expert in classical Greek, and eventually mastered Hebrew.

 One of the great biblical scholars of his era, Robinson published several volumes that were based on careful personal exploration of ancient biblical sites. Armed with a compass, a telescope, and a Bible, he made several important identifications of landmarks, and his writings had a significant impact on modern archeology.

Probably his two most important finds were Hezekiah’s Tunnel, and the Arch at the southwestern wall in Jerusalem that is named after him today. Robinson's Arch is a masonry stub about 50 feet long that projects out of the face of the Western Wall, just south of the Wailing Wall, in a semi-enclosed area filled with rubble from the Roman destruction in 70 A.D. It was the support for a massive staircase that led up from shops and markets on the street level to a gate at the Temple Mount." 

It was this American biblical scholar and archaeologist,  Edward Robinson in 1838, who announced that hundreds of place names of villages and sites in Palestine, who they thought were Arab names, were found to be Arabic renderings of translations of ancient Hebrew names, biblical  or Talmudic. Edward, born in Connecticut, though he was raised on a farm, attended Hamilton college in Clinton, NY and graduated.  He not only studied Hebrew but aided Moses Stuart in preparing his 2nd edition in 1823 of his Hebrew Grammar and translated it into English in 1825.  He became Professor Extraordinary of sacred literature at Andover Theological Seminary in 1830-33.    He was born on April 10, 1794 and died on January 27, 1863 in Brooklyn, New York, and was not from the Jewish Robinsons.  He's called Father of Biblical Geography and the Founder of Modern Paleontology due to the work he achieved.

Robinson had traveled to Palestine in 1838 with Reverend Eli Smith which led to the publication of biblical Researches in Palestine in 1841.  Imagine what it must have been like.  This was 29 years before Mark Twain's famous visit found in his book, " The Innocents Abroad."He was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Geographical Society in 1842.  Robinson, together with Smith, made scores of identifications of ancient places and the work created his enduring reputation as a Founder by setting the compass of future archaeological field work.  Examples from Jerusalem include the Hezekiah tunnel, and Robinson's Arch in the Old city, named for him.
                                  

In Jerusalem, one can find Robinson's arch on the south-western flank of the Temple Mount,which  once supported a staircase which led to the Temple.

The Arabs have never even had a name of their own for this country which they claim.  Filastin is the Arab transliteration of Palestine, the name Romans gave the country after 135 CE and their fight with General Bar Kokhba of the Jews who kept them on the offense for 3 years in trying to retake Jerusalem.  Romans had used this name thinking to obliterate the presence of the Jewish people with it, the name of their biggest adversary.

Today they've even found that some Arabs who are living with such names over their doorposts are long lost Jews who had been forcefully converted to Islam. 

                                                                    
                                         Jerusalem, City of David

The truth of the matter is that there was never a Palestinian Arab nation.  Those who had lived in Palestine within the Ottoman Empire found it a good place to plunder and destroy.  There were only a few who lived within its boundaries and may have had a liking for their village while they made war on the next one.  They lived in clans which fought for the right of local tax-gathering, or even for their town.  They were not conscious of any relationship to the land of Palestine.  If they knew of it as a land, they learned this from the Jews and their stories of living here for so many long years.

Palestine is mentioned only once in the Koran as the "Holy Land"--holy, that is to Jews and Christians; not to the Muslims.  This is why Jews and Christians were referred to as "people of the book."

People visiting the Holy Land in the 19th century felt that the country had been waiting for the return of its lawful inhabitants as it was in dire condition, mostly of weeds, swamps and desert inhabited by mosquitoes.  This attitude was significant compared to the Arabs living in the land.  In 1200 years they had lived here of which 400 were under the Ottomans, they had built only a single town, Ramleh, built as the local subprovincial capital in the 8th century.

In the 10th century, Arab writer Ibn Hukal wrote: "Nobody cares about building the country, or concerns himself for its needs."  This was showing the ruination of a country treated like this for hundreds of years.  The handful of Arabs who lived there were downtrodden subjects of a disinterested ruler.  The remote authority in Constantinople took their sons for soldiers and the local tax farmer sucked them dry.  The village over the hill and the rival tribe had to be guarded against or fought in a cycle of mutually destructive getting even for a past strike.  The Bedouin nomads tore up their olive trees, destroyed their crops, filled their wells with stones, broke down their cisterns, took away their livestock, but were sometimes useful as allies to help fight the next village.

Such was Palestine welcoming in tourists to see a treeless waste with a sprinkling of emaciated towns, malaria-ridden swamps in its once-fertile northern valleys, and the once thriving South Negev  that had turned into a desert, with a population in Palestine that had dwindled to almost nothing.  Neither Arab nor Jew were in enough numbers to turn all this around and fight the carousing marauders on their camels. 

                                                                  
And then came in the reinforcements--for the Jews--the First Aliyah in 1881.  .
                                                                                
Edward Robinson, (William, Ichabod, John, Samuel, William, John Robinson, whose line I've traced back to  John Robinson b: 1588 in Barton St. David, Somerset, England and who died in 1693, is my half 4th cousin 6 times removed from my mother's side of the family, the Robinsons.  That is, if I didn't get too mixed up in all the Robinsons of New England, he's on my tree.  You see, my mother converted to Judaism when she married my Jewish father. Her maiden name was Robinson.   Coincidentally, my mother's brother was Kenneth Edward Robinson, and their grandfather was Abiathar Smith Robinson.  There's a Robinson-Smith connection if I ever saw one!   Here I am, Jewish and holder of dual citizenship with Israel and the USA. 

Resource: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Aliyah
https://wwwrobinsongenealogy.blogspot.com/2022/08/going-back-to-william-robinson-and.html
Battleground, fact and fantasy in Palestine by Samuel Katz, p. 114
Update: http://jewishfactsfromportland.blogspot.com/2012/07/palestine-that-unwanted-backwater-that.html
  mentioning Robinson and Smith in Palestine and their findings. 

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Tuesday, July 09, 2019

 

Our New RobinsonTree coming from Weathersfield, Windsor, Vermont--Same County As Royalton

Nadene Goldfoot                               


The town of Weathersfield was named for Wethersfield, Connecticut, the home of some of its earliest settlers. The Connecticut town had taken its name, in turn, from Wethersfield, a village in the English county of Essex, the name of which derived from "wether", or in Old English wither, meaning castrated lamb. In England, wethers were trained to lead flocks of ewes to pasture. It was a supreme irony that the name of the Vermont town (with an 'a' inserted) would derive from a connection to sheep, the animal that would come to define Weathersfield's earliest antecedents and first put it on the map.
                                                 
Weathersfield, Windsor, Vermont 
 
         A Possible Tree For Our Robinson Line 
               (Y haplogroup of R-L21) 

There are no papers showing a connection to John Milton Robinson, but he sure seems to be the John living with the Tullers.  If he was Abiathar's father and Abiathar had to live elsewhere being 21 now, he may have accompanied his father and found lodging in Tunbridge.  

The story is that the 1850 census in Royalton, Windsor, Vermont, had my ggrandfather, Abiathar's future wife, Julia Ann Tuller on the census at age 15 and living in the house was a worker, John Robinson, age 51, born in Vermont.  It could easily be John Milton Robinson, a man I had thought about before but now, after working on a previous article of Robinsons throughout the censuses in Windsor, it suddenly made sense that this one and only John of Wethersfield was Abiathar's father.  Abiathar was in Tunbridge in 1850 where he married Julia Ann in 1852.  She was still in Royalton.  They had a lot of relatives living in Tunbridge; the Tullers, Durkees, etc.  
                                                        
                    Too bad it didn't say the Robinson's House

Abiathar Smith Robinson b: December 1829 in Weathersfield, Windsor, Vermont
father: John Milton Robinson b: Feb 15, 1800 in Weathersfield
 grandfather: Jasper Robinson b: 1772 Stafford Springs, Tolland, CT
  ggrandfather: Elijah Robinson b: 1735  Windham, CT
   gggrandfather: Benjamin Robinson b: 1702/3 Tisbury, Dukes, Mass.
    ggggrandfather: Peter Robinson, Sr. 1655  Barnstable, Mass
      gggggrandfather:  Isaac Robinson b: 1610-1620 Reusel-de Mierden, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands, Leiden, Holland
       ggggggrandfather: JOHN ROBINSON, REVEREND and wife BRIDGET WHITE
 b: Sturton Nottinghamshire, or Lincolnshire, England, d:Leyden, Holland
                                                  

Sheep came to Wethersfield.  "The man responsible for that feat was a native of Boston who had become a European trader. William Jarvis was appointed by President Thomas Jefferson as U.S. Consul General to Portugal, after founding a trading house in Lisbon. In 1811 Jarvis imported from Spain to his farm at Weathersfield Bow the first Merino sheep brought to America. Jarvis set aside eight of the 4,000 Merino sheep he imported as gifts to former President Jefferson and to President James Madison.
                                                       
Weathersfield farm for sale today
Rev. John Dudley, a sometime missionary to the Choctaw Indians, a graduate of Yale Seminary, the descendant of one of the earliest families of Connecticut, His ancestor, William Dudley, settled in Guilford in the early 17th centuryGuilford is a coastal town in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States, that borders Madison, Branford, North Branford and Durham, and is situated on I-95 and the Connecticut seacoast.) and a widely reprinted Congregational preacher, made his home in Weathersfield, where his son William Wade Dudley was born.

I found a Dudley gal married to a John Robinson on the line that leads to Meppershall, England.  Descendants of John Robinson

John Robinson b: November 18, 1770 d: April 29, 1846 in Sanbornton, Belknap, New Hampshire
.. +Anna Dudley b: Abt. August 22, 1770 in Candia, Rockingham, New Hampshire

 And another Dudley married to a Jonathan Robinson: :
Descendants of Deborah Gilman Dudley
Deborah Gilman Dudley b: March 23, 1777 in Kingston, Rockingham, New Hampshire d: January 30, 1819 in Brentwood, Rockingham, New Hampshire
.. +Jonathan Robinson b: July 14, 1776 in Brentwood, Rockingham, New Hampshire d: September 20, 1828 in Brentwood, Rockingham, New Hampshire

Descendants of Katherine Stevens Dudley
Katherine Stevens Dudley b: 1840 d: 1926
.. +Horace James Robinson b: 1827 in Brentwood, Rockingham, New Hampshire d: March 20, 1912

Descendants of Oliver Hunt Dudley
Oliver Hunt Dudley b: February 22, 1809 in Colton, Belknap, New Hampshire d: May 27, 1891 in Willard,  Box Elder, Utah
.. +Mary Ann Robinson b: March 19, 1811 in Epping, Rockingham, New Hampshire d: February 04, 1884 in Willard,  Box Elder, Utah

Descendants of Sarah Dudley
Sarah Dudley b: January 12, 1720/21 in Brentwood, Rockingham, New Hampshire d: May 05, 1808 in Exeter, Rockingham, NH
.. +Josiah Robinson, Captain b: December 10, 1718 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire d: October 06, 1802 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire

All these Dudleys and Robinsons are in Rockingham, New Hampshire; with the Robinson's being on a tree that are a DNA match to our Robinson line.  They are not R-L21 but about 5 steps from it, our closest match that had gone to Maine.  Could it be that Dudleys followed along with Robinsons in New Hampshire?  I think part of my tree is correct in that we start from Weathersfield and wind up in Rockingham with one of those Robinsons married to a Dudley in order to incorporate our Y haplogroup line.  How about that?  What can I figure with my other DNA matches?  Hmmm.  Chances are that this line is just a coincidence with a John Robinson staying with the Tullers and wasn't Abiathar's father at all.    Do you think?  

 I see a Bartlett connection between the two groups.  I'll have to check on that next.  They connect quickly in New Hampshire.  They both have Dudley L. Bartlett on them from New Hampshire and son George Bartlett with Martha Robinson, wife.  That Martha is the Robinson connection of Bartlett.  
Descendants of Bartlett

Bartlett b: Abt. 1798
. [1] Dudley L. Bartlett b: 1818 in Meredith, New Hampshire
..... +Hannah P. Wilson b: 1818 in Meredith, New Hampshire
..... [2] George D. Bartlett, Captain b: February 1847 in Ossipee, Strafford, New Hampshire d: May 18, 1918 in prob. Aberdeen, Grays Harbor, Washington
......... +[3] Martha Ellen "Wright" Robinson b: June 1846 in New York d: October 06, 1924 in Aberdeen, Grays Harbor, Washington
......... [4] Freeman Bartlett b: 1870 in prob. Milford, Otsego, New York
......... [5] Linn Lynn W. Bartlett b: 1871 in prob. Milford, Otsego, New York
......... [6] MAUD OBERA Bartlett b: June 06, 1881 in Brainard, Crow Wing, Minnesota d: May 30, 1980 in Woodburn, Oregon
............. +[7] George Owen Watson b: September 26, 1880 in Beloit, Mitchell, Kansas d: December 25, 1959 in Aberdeen, Grays Harbor, Washinton
......... [8] Hallie G. Bartlett b: 1884 in New York
......... [9] Aline Lena M. Bartlett b: May 20, 1889 in Portlandville, New York
............. +[10] George W. Parsons b: Abt. 1890 in New York
. *2nd Wife of [1] Dudley L. Bartlett:
..... +Elizabeth b: 1820
..... [2] George D. Bartlett, Captain b: February 1847 in Ossipee, Strafford, New Hampshire d: May 18, 1918 in prob. Aberdeen, Grays Harbor, Washington
......... +[3] Martha Ellen "Wright" Robinson b: June 1846 in New York d: October 06, 1924 in Aberdeen, Grays Harbor, Washington
......... [4] Freeman Bartlett b: 1870 in prob. Milford, Otsego, New York
......... [5] Linn Lynn W. Bartlett b: 1871 in prob. Milford, Otsego, New York
......... [6] MAUD OBERA Bartlett b: June 06, 1881 in Brainard, Crow Wing, Minnesota d: May 30, 1980 in Woodburn, Oregon
............. +[7] George Owen Watson b: September 26, 1880 in Beloit, Mitchell, Kansas d: December 25, 1959 in Aberdeen, Grays Harbor, Washinton
......... [8] Hallie G. Bartlett b: 1884 in New York
......... [9] Aline Lena M. Bartlett b: May 20, 1889 in Portlandville, New York
............. +[10] George W. Parsons b: Abt. 1890 in New York

..... George W. Bartlett b: 1847

Update: I have found a Leroy Bartlett in Fairfax, Franklin, Vermont at age 29 on
the 1850 census along with wife Corinda, age 22 and son Wharton B Bartlett
age 1. None are on my tree. I'll keep looking. There are many.



 

Tunbridge and Royalton, Vermont Beginnings:

Nadene Goldfoot                                         
                                                                 
Royalton, Orange, Vermont is the site on the 1850 census showing that my ggrandmother, Julia Ann Tuller, lived here at the age of 15.  She married Abiathar Smith Robinson next door in Tunbridge, Vermont in 1852 in February, a leap year. 

When did these towns start and how long had Abiathar's family been in Vermont?

A bit of interesting history:  Royalton was originally chartered (also known as patented) on November 23, 1769, by King George III through the Royal Lieutenant Governor of New York. This Royal New York Charter granted 30,000 acres of unclaimed land to 30 Partitioners who had the land surveyed three years prior to the charter. The New York Charter included restrictions: all mines of silver and gold were to remain the property of the King and all large pine trees fit for ship masts were reserved for the Royal Navy.   They suffered from a large Indian attack in 1780.  
                                                                     
South Royalton, Windsor, Vermont
The town was re-chartered by the Independent Republic of Vermont on December 20, 1781. Vermont did not become a part of the United States until March 4, 1791. This Vermont Charter had more restrictions on the land than the original New York Charter and was granted to some 58 people known as Proprietors.. This happened after the USA's first census of 1790.  

1790 census: Charles Robinson was listed in Weathersfield, Windsor, Vermont. Many Robinsons would be here throughout 1840s census.

1800: census:  Amos Robinson was listed in Royalton, Windsor, Vermont.

Other Robinsons are living in other towns in Windsor.

Elijah Robinson Jr.  Wethersfield, Windsor, Vermont
Benjamin  Wethersfield
Charles       "
Peter          "
Jasper        "
Elijah         "
Stephen   Baltimore
James      Reading
Ebenn      Reading
Isaiah      Springfield
Daniel     Springfield
William     Hartford
Amos       Hartford
Eham       Bethel
Gelotes     Plymouth
Silas         Windsor
Peter        Chester

1810:  Amos Robinson  Royalton 
Charles    Wethersfield
Peter       Wethersfield
John        Wethersfield
Benjamin  Wethersfield
Stephen   Baltimore
Ebans (Ebenezer)b: 1765  Reading in 1840 military at age 75????wow! 
James     Reading
Daniel     Springfield
Daniel     Hartford
Elizer      Bethel
Lelotus    Plymouth 
Silas        Windsor
Peter       Chester 
James     Chester
Deborah  Pomfret
Ebenezer    Bridgewater

1820: Amos Robinson  Royalton
         Timothy Robinson  Royalton 
Charles  Wethersfield
Benjamin  Weathersfield


Stephen   Baltimore
James      Reading
James      Reading
Ebenezer  Reading
Ebenezer 2nd  Reading
Augustus  Springfield
John        Springfield
Daniel     Springfield
Lydia       Springfield
Isaiah      Springfield
Rosanah  Plymouth
John D.     Windsor
Elijah        Windsor
Moses       Windsor
James       Chester
Peter        Chester
Luther      Bridgewater
Eli            Bridgewater
Eliazer      Bridgewater
Henry       Sharon
Joel          Norwich

              1830 Census in Royalton, Windsor, Vermont

Chloe       Wethersfield
Stephen   Baltimore
Phineas C. Baltimore
Loke         Baltimore
James       Reading
Lewis        Reading
James       Reading
Marvin      Reading
Eben         Reading
Eben         Reading
William     Reading
Daniel       Springfield 

George      Hartford
Daniel       Hartford
Moses       Windsor
Elisha       Windsor
Mary        Windsor
Thomas    Chester
John H.    Chester
Horatio     Bridgewater
Nathaniel L.  Bridgewater
Jfe           Bridgewater
Luther      Bridgewater
Joel          Sharon

1830 had no Robinsons in Royalton.  They had all moved out into other towns of Windsor County.  The family of Timothy Durkee suffered through the burning of Royalton on October 16, 1780, 50 years ago.  It was when Royalton was surprised by an attack of 300 Indians of many tribes.  The leaders were from the Caghnewaga tribe from Canada with intentions of destroying the town of Newbury in eastern Vermont on the Connecticut River.  

Only Timothy's oldest son, Heman,  remained in Royalton.  Harvey remained in Vermont.  Several moved to New York.  Timothy's grandchildren spread out far and wide to Pennsylvania, New York, Winsconsin, Texas, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Iowa, and Odelltown, Canada.  Some even stayed in Vermont.  

1840 in Royalton, Windsor, Vermont 
Timothy Robinson in Royalton
Joseph Robinson in Royalton 

John     Wethersfield
Moody W. Robinson in Reading
Ebenezer Robinson  in  Reading
Mary Robinson    Reading
Ezra                   Reading
Ebenezer            Reading
Marvin                Reading
Ebenezer            Reading
William               Reading
James                 Reading
Ebenezer             Reading
Lucius                 Reading
Mary                  Bridgewater
Ebenezer            Bridgewater
Jesse                  Bridgewater
Nathaniel            Bridgewater
Leonard              Bridgewater
Cyrus                 Sharon
Roswell               Sharon
Samuel              Norwich
Nelson               Norwich
Horatio              Pomfret 
Amos                Pomfret
Joseph              Hartford
Augustus           Windsor
Moses                Windsor 
Thomas             Chester
John H.              Cavendish
Stephen             Baltimore

Looking at John in the 1840 Wethersfield census, he was from age 30-40, so in 1850 he would have been from 40-50.  A John Robinson was 51 in Royalton on the 1850 census in the Tuller household.  In 1840 the Wetherfield John had a son under 5, one from 5-10 and one from 10-15.  By the 1850 census he would have been from 20-30.  This fits Abiathar who was 21. Hmmm!   John had a lot of females in his home in 1840; a daughter under 5, one fro 15-20, 30-40, 40-50, and 70-80.  He or his wife may have had female siblings living with them and of course the grandmother.  Information has been found.  This must be his father.  His mother is Elizabeth Haskell.   This line takes me directly to Reverend John Robinson who went the Pilgrims over on the Mayflower to America.  It's can't be!  Our Y haplogroup is R-L21.  Anyone else in this group have this?  I went by a finished tree already on FamilySearch.  

The population of Wethersfield:

Historical population
CensusPop.
17901,146
18001,94469.6%
18102,1158.8%
18202,3018.8%
18302,213−3.8%
18402,002−9.5%

Tunbridge, Orange, Vermont   This is where Abiathar Smith Robinson seemed to be living in when he married in February 1852. It's a town next door to Royalton.  
                                               

 Tunbridge is a town in Orange CountyVermontUnited StatesEstablished in 1761, Tunbridge has three villages and five covered bridges that follow the First Branch of the White River and Vermont Route 110.  

"Tunbridge was granted by Benning Wentworth of New Hampshire in 1761. The town was named fNaor the Viscount of Tunbridge who lived back in England. The first settlers in town were Moses and Susannah Ordway. They were the parents of 22 children, eighteen of whom lived to adulthood. In October of 1780, during the Revolution, a British led military force of some three hundred Mohawks from Canada, attacked Tunbridge. Four men were killed and some thirty males were taken prisoner. It was not until the end of the Revolution that the town was safe enough for settlement.  This must be the same attack as Royalton experienced.             


         Orange, Vermont 1790 Census: No Robinsons in Tunbridge;

1. Jonathan Robinson 1790 census in Ryegate, Orange, Vermont-died in Indiana in 1850.
2. Amos Robinson, Northfield, Orange, Vermont
3. Nathaniel Robinson, Northfield  "        "
4. Daniel Robinson, Strafford
5. Abraham Robinson, Strafford
6. John Robinson, Topsham
7. Samuel Robinson; Fairley

The census of 1791 found nine hundred people living in Tunbridge." 

       Orange, Vermont 1800 Census:  No Robinsons in Tunbridge

1. Amos Robinson, Northfield
2. Nathaniel Robinson  Northfield
3. Ezekiel Robinson Northfield
4. Daniel Robinson  Strafford
5. Daniel W. Robinson  Strafford
6. Zadock Robinson  Strafford
7. Abraham Robinson  Strafford
8. William Robinson  Barre
9. William B. Robinson  Barre
10. Ashur Robinson, Brookfield
11. Jona Robinson, Cornith and Washington
12. Samuel Robinson  West Fairlee
 13.David Robinson  West Fairlee
 14. Jesse Robinson  West Fairlee
 15. Isaac Robinson  Williamstown
 16. James Robinson  Thetford
 17. Samuel Robinson  Thetford

     Orange, Vermont 1810 Census: No Robinsons in Tunbridge

Simeon Robinson  North Hero
Jond (Jonathan) Robinson  Cornith
Samuel Robinson, Thetford
William Robinson  Williamstown
Solomon "                    "
N  (Nathaniel ?)    Northfield
Amos    "                   "
Ezekiel   "                  "
David     "           Vershire
Josiah   "           Strafford
Abram   "                 "
James   "                 "
Daniel   "                 "
Zadock  "                 "
Daniel   "                 " 
Ashur   "            Brookfield
Andrew              Berlin
James                Randolph

As of the 2017 Census the town population was 1,171 . The town consists of three village centers, all situated on Vermont Route 110 in the valley of the first branch of the White River. The three settlements are named North Tunbridge (also known locally as "Blood Village"), Tunbridge Village ("Market") and South Tunbridge ("Jigger").  

Because Vermont abounded with Robinsons, Abiathar could have been a son of anyone of them.  It's like trying to find a needle in a haystack in finding his father who has not been on any census with him.  A John Robinson was living with his wife's Tuller family in Royalton in 1850, the 1st census with women's names as well.  He was said to be born in 1799.  


Resource:  http://royaltonvt.com/about-royalton/town-history/
https://ldsgenealogy.com/VT/Royalton.htm
http://tunbridgevt.org/our-history/

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