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One Branch of the Newlin Family Tree

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For further information on other branches of the Newlin Family Tree please visit the following websites:
http://www.southeasternnewlinassociation.com/

If you have a link to another Newlin Family Website, please email it to us at info@newlingristmill.org.

For more information on Algie I. Newlin's book The Newlin Family: Ancestors and Descendants of John and Mary Pyle Newlin. (Mount Vernon, IN: Windmill Publications) 1965, please click here.

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Nicholas Newlin
(1630 - 1699)
(Elizabeth Paggott)
_(-1717)

Nathaniel*
(1663-1729)
( Mary Mendenhall)
(-1729)
John
Elizabeth
Rachel

Jemima
Elizabeth
Nicholas**
(1689-1768)
Nathaniel
(1690-1732)
(Jane Woodward)
(-1737)
John***
(1691- 1753)
Keziah
Mary

Rachel
Elizabeth
Nathaniel III****
(1717-1766)
(Esther Midkiff)
Joseph
Jane
Mary
Martha
Nicholas
Nathan

Edith
Jane
Mary
Esther
Nathaniel IV
Cyrus*****
(1750-1824)
(Abigail Pennell)
(-1787)
Thomas
Tabitha
Abigail

Robert
(-1840)
( Mary Brown)
(-1847)
Samuel
Jane
Isaac
Abigail

Samuel
Abby
Cyrus
Robert
(Ann Penrose Scull)
Mary
Anna
Brown
Jeanette
Margaret

Cyrus
Robert
Charles
Alfred
Walter
Ann
William Ver Planck
(Mary Helen Bennett)

Lilian
Washburn
Anne
Helen
Walter
Bennett
Earl
Mortimer******
(Elizabeth Bell
Battles)
Edith
William
Ver Planck Jr.

   
   

*
Built Grist Mill in 1704 on land deeded to his father by William Penn.
**
Continued milling operations; heirs eventually sold mill to Trimble family in 1817.
***
Moved out of Concord to Newlin Township; heirs moved to North Carolina.
****
Built Nine Ton Tavern in 1747 on road from Wilmington to Reading. The building has recently been restored and is being used by a visitors bureau.
*****
Moved to Wilmington. Second marriage produced several children including Thomas Shipley Newlin, a blacksmith, who married Sarah Grubb in 1782 at Concord Meeting. Descendants of John H., the last of their seven children, remained in Concord Township through present day.
******
In 1958, purchased "Concord Flour Mill," first built in 1704 by ancestor Nathaniel Newlin. Restoration of the mill began.