Thank you for visiting my blog!

Thank you for visiting my blog!

This blog is used to share information I find about the families I am researching. To see these family names click on the "My Families" tab. Please feel free to make comments, corrections, and ask questions here or on my Facebook page or go to the "About Me" tab to send an e-mail.

Reading this Blog

My posts can be accessed by the date posted from the column on the right. Blog posts containing specific surnames can be found by clicking on the names in the left column.

Line

Thursday, July 2, 2026

52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks: #20 — Nancy Reed Glynn of Putney, Vermont


Nancy Reed, my third great-grandmother, was one of the children of Benjamin Reed and Huldah Pratt. According to The Reed Genealogy, she was born on 2 August 1798. Her birthplace is not stated in that account, but if she was born at her parents' home, she may have been born in Woodford, Bennington County, Vermont, where Benjamin and Huldah resided from about 1788 until at least 1803.

Nancy’s parents, Benjamin and Huldah, had deep New England roots. Benjamin Reed had served in the Revolutionary War and later moved his family from Massachusetts into Vermont. Benjamin wrote in his pension record that, while in Vermont, he lived in Woodford, Wardsboro, and Putney. By 1812, Benjamin, Huldah, and several of their children were living in Putney, Windham County, Vermont.

Nancy grew up in a large family. Some of her siblings lived long enough to leave records in Vermont and beyond, while others appear only briefly in the records. The Reed Genealogy names her siblings as Benjamin Jr., John, Cyrus, David, Calvin, Huldah, Betsey, Luther, and Almira. Combined information from the U.S. census and The Reed Genealogy suggests the probable Reed household in 1820, shown below.


Before Nancy’s marriage, I found her name in Putney records twice, both on the same day, 2 January 1821, in land transactions involving her parents and her brother Luther. Benjamin and Huldah sold land to Luther Read, and Luther then leased the farm back to Benjamin and Huldah for their natural lives. The rent was symbolic: one ear of corn each January 2nd, if demanded.

“To Have and to hold the said Land and buildings unto the said Benjamin Read and Huldah his wife, for and during their natural lives, and whichsoever of them shall continue the longest, they or either of them yealding and paying therefor, on the second day of January each and every year, one ear of corn if demanded on the premises.”

On 19 January 1829, Nancy Reed married Joseph T. Glynn* in Putney, Vermont. She was about thirty years old. Joseph was from nearby Dummerston and was often referred to as Truman.

Nancy and Joseph made their home in Putney and had at least three children:
• Caroline Almira Glynn, born 22 July 1829 in Putney
• Henry Reed Glynn, born 2 June 1833 in Putney
• Joseph Albert Glynn, born 13 February 1835 in Putney, my second great-grandfather

Only a few weeks before Joseph Albert’s birth, Nancy’s father, Benjamin Reed, died in Putney on 10 January 1835. Nancy’s mother, Huldah Pratt Reed, lived several more years and died in Putney on 17 May 1842. Huldah lived long enough to know all three of Nancy and Joseph’s known children. In the 1840 census of pensioners, Huldah was identified as living in Joseph T. Glynn’s household.

On 11 April 1842, shortly before Huldah’s death, Luther Read conveyed land in Putney to Nancy Glynn, wife of Joseph T. Glynn, for $10. The parcel began on the River Road near a little brook north of Elisha Wilber’s property and included the privilege of taking water from a spring about sixteen rods north of the land, by logs. The land was part of a lot Luther had bought from James Lowell.

The next year, on 10 May 1843, Luther Read sold a 60-acre Putney parcel to Lydia A. Campbell and Sophronia Sabin for $1,150. That deed reserved Nancy Glynn’s earlier right to take water from the spring under Luther’s deed to her dated 11 April 1842. Nancy and her heirs had to keep the logs or lead pipe covered, avoid unnecessary injury to the soil, and maintain a fence around her land at no expense to the new owners.

The 1850 census places Nancy in Putney, where she was living with her husband Joseph, a laborer, and their three children. Seventeen-year-old Henry and fifteen-year-old Albert attended school during the year and were also identified as laborers. Their daughter Caroline was twenty-one years old. Nancy’s brother Luther, a widower, was enumerated just above the Glynn family with three of his minor children. Luther’s wife, Jerusha, had died on 24 May 1850 at only thirty-eight years old.

That same year, Joseph and Nancy were also involved in a land transaction with the Vermont Valley Railroad Company. On 13 May 1850, they conveyed land to the railroad. The deed referred to “our land,” and Nancy was examined separately from her husband before acknowledging that she signed freely and without fear or compulsion. That detail is a reminder that Nancy’s legal interest in the land had to be formally recognized.

On 26 July 1850, Nancy’s brother Calvin died by accidental drowning at Mandarin, Duval County, Florida. He had been living in Florida for about twenty-five years.

The next year, Nancy’s youngest brother, Luther Read, died on 27 November 1851. A probate-related paper states that Luther Reed died leaving five minor children, one son and four daughters, and also one sister, the wife of Joseph T. Glynn, all then living in Putney. This record is especially important because it identifies Nancy, wife of Joseph T. Glynn, as Luther’s sister.

Less than a year after Luther’s death, Nancy and Joseph lost their only daughter. Caroline Almira Glynn died on 6 August 1852 at the age of twenty-three from what was then called consumption, now known as tuberculosis. Her obituary follows:

“In Putney, Aug. 6, of consumption, Miss CAROLINE ALMINA, daughter of Joseph F. and Nancy Glynn, aged 23. Being an only daughter, she naturally won an unusual share of parental and fraternal affection, which was the more deserved on account of her excellent moral qualities. She bore a lingering sickness with christian fortitude and resignation. Trusting in the mercy of God through the merits of a crucified Saviour, she met the closing scene with calmness, leaving evidence that hers was the death of the righteous. Printers in Mass. and N. H. please copy.”

Nancy’s name appears in 1853 on a paper regarding one of Luther’s minor daughters, Hellen [Helen] Read. On 26 August 1853, Nancy Glynn signed a request asking the Probate Court for the District of Westminster to appoint a guardian for Hellen, who was under the age of fourteen. This places Nancy in Putney and still involved in Reed family matters less than a year before her own death.


Nancy Reed Glynn died in Putney on 2 April 1854, at about age fifty-five. She is buried in Maple Grove Cemetery in Putney, along with her daughter Caroline and her son Joseph Albert.

Nancy did not leave many records that tell her story directly, but the records that do name her are meaningful. They place her in the Reed household before marriage, on Reed family land after marriage, and in Putney’s legal records as a wife, mother, sister, and landholder.

*Nancy Reed Glynn should not be confused with Nancy Lockwood, who married a different Joseph Glynn and lived in Windsor County, Vermont. The two couples are sometimes combined or confused in online family trees and other web-based sources.



If you would like to learn more about the families I research, follow my Facebook page, where I share each post and other genealogical finds.

Diana
© 2026

“Calvin Read obituary,” Florida Republican (Jacksonville, Florida), 8 August 1850, digital image, OldNews (https://www.oldnews.com/en/record?record_id=record-11024-225493483&page_id=3 : accessed 13 June 2026). OldNews incorrectly indexed this issue as The Florida Republican, Jacksonville, Duval, Florida, 1 January 1848; the masthead identifies the paper as Florida Republican and gives the date as Thursday, 8 August 1850.

Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/190058477/nancy-glynn: accessed July 2, 2026), memorial page for Nancy Reed Glynn (2 Aug 1798–2 Apr 1854), Find a Grave Memorial ID 190058477, citing Maple Grove Cemetery, Putney, Windham County, Vermont, USA; Maintained by dbquinn (contributor 47552132).

John Ludovicus Reed, The Reed Genealogy: Descendants of William Reade of Weymouth, Massachusetts, from 1635–1902, vol. 1 (1901); digital image, Internet Archive (https://archive.org/details/reedgenealogydes01reed/page/n11/mode/2up : accessed 18 April 2026).

“Mortuary Notice,” The Semi-Weekly Eagle (Brattleboro, Vermont), 27 September 1852, p. 3, for Caroline Almira Glynn; digital image, GenealogyBank  (https://www.genealogybank.com : accessed 2 July 2026).

The Vermont Gazette, February 4, 1876, Page  2. via Newspapers.com (https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-vermont-gazette-benjamin-reed-town/155440991/: accessed July 2, 2026), clip page for Benjamin Reed - Town Clerk from 1792 - 1803 by user dewquinn.

"United States, Census, 1820", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHLP-7XZ : accessed18 April 2026), Entry for Benjamin Read, 1820.

"United States, Census, 1850", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MC2N-4L1 : accessed 18 April 2026), Entry for Joseph Glynn and Nancy Glynn, 1850.

"Vermont, Vital Records, 1760-1954", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFVW-SZY : accessed 18 April 2026), Entry for Nancy Glynn, 02 Apr 1854.

“U.S., Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, 1800-1900,” database and images, Ancestry.com (https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/49769:1995 : accessed 25 June 2022), for Benjamin Reed, images 266 to 320; citing "Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files" (NARA microfilm publication M804, 2,670 rolls). Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

"Vermont, Vital Records, 1760-1954", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XFVW-S4G : accessed 18 April 2026), Entry for Joseph F Glynn and Nancy Read, 19 Jan 1829.

"Vermont, Births and Christenings, 1765-1908", FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F825-54H : accessed 18 April 2026), Nancy in entry for Caroline Almira Glynn, 1829.

"Vermont, Births and Christenings, 1765-1908", FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F8L6-CJS : accessed 18 April 2026), Nancy in entry for Henry Reed Glynn, 1833.

"Vermont, Births and Christenings, 1765-1908", FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F8L6-CJH : accessed 18 April 2026), Nancy in entry for Joseph Albert Glynn, 1835.

"Windham, Vermont, United States records," images, FamilySearch (https://
www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-89S9-F9FC-7?view=fullText : 18 Apri, 2026), image 80 of 198; Vermont. Supreme Court, probate mentioning minor children, and sister of Luther Read. 

"Windham, Vermont, United States records," images, FamilySearch (https:// www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9S9-FTN5?view=fullText : accessed 2 July 2026), image 270 of 301; Vermont, Supreme Court, guardianship, Hellen Read. 




No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for reading my blog. Your comments are appreciated.