The Benjamin Robbins
Family Story
by Lanny A. Robbins
(Great Grandson of Benjamin Jackson Robbins)
October 5, 2004
Benjamin Robbins (born 1786) and his
first wife Sarah Bailey were natives of Vermont as described in the obituary of
their first son, Archibald. They lived in Ovid (now Lodi), Seneca Co. NY in 1812
when their son Archibald Robbins was born and also in 1815 when their daughter
Elizabeth (Betsy) Robbins was born. Benjamin and Sarah Robbins lived in Jersey
Township in the vicinity of Lake Lamoka, Steuben County (now Tyrone Twp.
Schuyler County) NY in 1820 when their second son Caleb Robbins was born and
when the New York census was recorded in 1820 and 1825. In 1825 they lived on 14
acres of improved land with 2 cattle, 5 hogs and produced 24 yards of linen,
cotton, clothes, etc.
Then I think Benjamin's first wife
Sarah died about 1826 and Benjamin married his second wife Mary (Maria) about
1828. Benjamin Robbins and family were on the 1830 census record for
Jersey in Steuben County NY and lived there when Nancy Robbins was born in 1833
and again when the 1835 New York state census was recorded. In 1835 they lived
on 30 acres of improved land and owned 1 horse, 5 cattle, 9 sheep and 5
hogs. I think that Benjamin and Mary Robbins took Benjamin's teenage son, Caleb,
plus their little toddler, Nancy, along with their belongings in a wagon and
went over to Olean NY and got on a flatboat with several other families and
rafted down the Allegheny River through Pittsburgh PA and on down the Ohio River
through Cincinnati, Ohio, to Madison, Indiana, during the spring flood of 1836.
They settled in Jennings County, Indiana where Charles Robbins was born October
25, 1836. Benjamin Robbins bought land on June 27, 1837, just south and east of
the Cana cemetery in Marion Township. Benjamin and Mary Robbins joined the
Coffee Creek Baptist Church at Paris Crossing, Indiana, in July of 1837. Their
son Aaron Robbins was born July 8, 1837. But, then Benjamin’s second wife, Mary,
died in November of 1838.
On June 16, 1839, Benjamin Robbins
married a third time to a 32 year old widow lady, Susannah Chaney/Burton, who
had been a member of the Coffee Creek Baptist Church in Paris Crossing since May
of 1835. She had five children from her first husband, William T. Burton, before
he died in Bartholomew County, Indiana in 1834 when Susannah was 27 years old.
Benjamin and Susannah Robbins bought two adjacent 40 acre parcels by Paris
Crossing about one half mile south of the old Coffee Creek cemetery on January
26, 1844, and probably lived there when their daughter, Emily Robbins, was born
as well as when their son, Benjamin Jackson Robbins, was born on May 30, 1845.
The combined families of Benjamin and Susannah Robbins appeared on the September
11, 1850, census for Montgomery Township, Jennings County, Indiana.
September 11, 1850, census for Montgomery Twp, Jennings County Indiana
Name |
Age |
Occupation |
Birthplace |
Benj Rob[b]ins |
64 |
farmer |
b. NY |
Susanna [Chaney/Burton/Robbins] |
43 |
|
b. KY |
Susanna [Burton] |
22 |
|
b. KY |
Amos [Burton] |
21 |
farmer |
b. KY |
Sally A. [Burton] |
15 |
|
b. IN [Bartholomew Co.IN] |
Nancy [Robbins] |
17 |
|
b. IN [Steuben Co. NY] |
Charles [Robbins] |
14 |
|
b. IN [Cana IN] |
Aaron [Robbins] |
13 |
|
b. IN [Cana IN] |
Emily [Robbins] |
6 |
|
b. IN [Paris Crossing IN] |
Jackson [Robbins] |
4 |
|
b. IN [Paris Crossing IN] |
Sally, Charles and Aaron
attended school in 1850.
Allen Hill |
19 |
farmer |
b. IN |
Salena Hill |
21 |
|
b. IN |
Amos Burton |
20 |
|
b. KY |
[Comments in brackets added by Lanny A. Robbins, actual abbreviation for Indiana was Ia in the census record]
Susannah Chaney Burton/Robbins died
in September of 1852 when she was 45 years old. Two of the Burton children, John
and Rebecca, and their spouses sold Susannah’s 40 acres on May 3, 1854. In June
of 1854 Benjamin Robbins was excluded from the membership roll of the Coffee
Creek Baptist Church in Paris Crossing, Indiana. Benjamin was 68 years old and
may have moved into the home of his son Caleb and attended another church. Caleb
was a member of the First Marion Baptist Church about 2 miles north of Cana and
5 miles west of Commiskey.
In 1855 the Burton and Robbins
children decided to move out west to Kansas. The oldest girl, Susannah Burton,
was dismissed by letter of transfer from the membership roll of the Coffee Creek
Baptist Church in Paris Crossing, Indiana, in August of 1855. Shortly after
leaving Indiana they were advised not to go to Kansas because it was a border
state between the North and the South. So, they would have gone to Nebraska then
but the youngest Burton girl, Sally, was very frail and became quite ill so they
stopped in Bloomfield, Iowa, to take care of her. Sally died in Iowa. On
August 11, 1856, Benjamin Robbins sold his 40 acres at Paris Crossing, Indiana.
At a Coffee Creek Baptist Church business meeting on the 3rd Saturday in June of
1857 Benjamin Robbins was restored to the church membership roll and then
dismissed by letter of transfer at the same meeting. Benjamin may have died at
that time and wished to be buried by Susannah at the Coffee Creek Baptist Church
cemetery. A short biography of Aaron Robbins reported that his father died in
Indiana at the age of 70.
The older boys in the Burton-Robbins
family worked at a brick factory in Bloomfield, Iowa, where they knew the
Headrick family. Charles Robbins married Nancy A. Pollard in 1856, Amos Chaney
Burton married Lavina Headrick in 1858, Aaron Robbins married Frances Welch in
1861 and Emily Robbins married Mortan C. Floyd in 1864 while they all lived in
Davis County Iowa. Benjamin Jackson Robbins lived in the home of Amos and Lavina
Burton. During 1863 to 1865 all of the families, except Emily’s moved out near
Ashland (now Saunders County) in the Nebraska Territory. Nebraska became a state
in 1867. Amos Burton and his family built a sod house at Waverly, Nebraska (now
Lancaster County). Emily may have died in Davis County Iowa about 1868. In 1874
Benjamin Jackson Robbins married Amelia Beyer and this marriage was the first
one recorded after the Saunders County courthouse location was moved from
Ashland to Wahoo, Nebraska.