Submit Field

Brief Life History of Submit

When Submit Field was born on 17 June 1774, in Sunderland, Franklin, Massachusetts, United States, her father, Joseph Field III, was 50 and her mother, Ruth Parker, was 40. She married Gaius E. Lyman on 20 December 1796, in Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 5 daughters. She died on 27 April 1846, in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States, at the age of 71, and was buried in Old North Cemetery, Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States.

Photos and Memories (1)

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Family Time Line

Gaius E. Lyman
1769–1846
Submit Field
1774–1846
Marriage: 20 December 1796
Elhanan Winchester Lyman
1798–1827
Christopher Columbus Lyman
1800–1883
Orra Almira Lyman
1803–1880
Julia Etta Lyman
1805–1871
Emma Submit Lyman
1807–1807
Jane B Lyman
1808–1842
Hannah Submit Lyman
1812–1835
Theodore Lyman
1814–1836

Sources (16)

  • Submit Field, "Massachusetts Births and Christenings, 1639-1915"
  • Submit Field, "Massachusetts Marriages, 1695-1910"
  • Submit Field, "Connecticut Deaths and Burials, 1772-1934"

World Events (8)

1776

Thomas Jefferson's American Declaration of Independence endorsed by Congress. Colonies declare independence.

1781 · British Forces Capture Fort Griswold

The capture of Fort Griswold was the final act of treason that Benedict Arnold committed. This would be a British victory. On the American side 85 were killed, 35 wounded and paroled, 28 taken prisoner, 13 escaped, and 1 twelve year old was captured and released.

1794 · Creating the Eleventh Amendment

The Eleventh Amendment restricts the ability of any people to start a lawsuit against the states in federal court.

Name Meaning

English and Irish: habitational name, probably from Field, in Leigh, Staffordshire. The placename derives from Old English feld ‘flat open country’. In the late 12th century one of Henry II's warrior knights took the surname to Ireland, where it often took the semi-Norman French form de la Feld. From the 15th century onward it was increasingly reduced to Field and gave its name to Fieldstown, the family's chief seat near Dublin. A branch of the Anglo-Irish family that migrated back to England in the 14th century retained the Normanized form as Delafield .

English: topographic name for someone who lived by an arable field or an area of open country (Middle English feld).

Irish: Anglicized form of Feeley , through similarity of sound, and of Maghery by translation (chiefly in Armagh), from Gaelic An Mhachaire ‘of the field’.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

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