- Birth: 22 MAR 1733, Preston,Windham,CT
- Christening: 13 MAY 1733, Preston,Windham,CT
- Death: 23 FEB 1813
- Burial: St Tammany Cem
Father: Joseph SKINNER
Mother: Martha KINNE
Family 1:
Lille HEALY
- Marriage: 11 MAR 1761, Pomfret,Windham,CT
- Reuben SKINNER
- Daniel SKINNER
- Lille SKINNER
- Mercy\Mary SKINNER
- Joseph SKINNER
- William H SKINNER
- Sarah SKINNER
- Nathan SKINNER
- Cortlandt SKINNER
Family 2:
Rosabelle KINNE
_Thomas SKINNER _
_Ebenezer SKINNER _____|
| |_Mary PRATT _____
_Joseph SKINNER _|
| | _________________
| |_Sarah \ Abigail LORD _|
| |_________________
|
|--Daniel SKINNER
|
| _________________
| _______________________|
| | |_________________
|_Martha KINNE ___|
| _________________
|_______________________|
|_________________
INDEX
Notes
!.....Wahl, Doris Seymour. The Skinner Kinsmen, The Descendants of
Joseph and Martha (Kinne) Skinner. Niagra Falls, NY. n.d. page 48:
b. Preston, Windham County, Colony of Connecticut, March 22, 1733;
baptised there, May 13, 1733.
Daniel Skinner's will was dated February 22, 1813. He died Feb. 23,
1813 and is buried at St. Tammany Cemetery, but his tombstone is no
longer there. (Mrs. Wahl visited the location of St. Tammany Cemetery in
June, 1951. There she saw two stones whose inscriptions were as
follows: "In memory of Cortlandt, son of Daniel and Lille Skinner, who
departed this life, June 22, 1796, aged 16 years, 10 months and 4 days."
"In memory of Lille, wife of Daniel Skinner, who departed this life June
7, 1807, aged 69 years, 6 months and 27 days.")
He m. (1) Pomfret, Conn, by Jeremiah Hinna, March 11, 1761 Mrs. Lillie
Richardson, a widow with a daughter, Phoebe, who was then about seven
years old. Lillie was b. Nov. 11, 1737 in Preston, Conn., the daughter of
----- Heli (or Healy). She was the mother of all of Daniel's children.
She d. June 7, 1807 and was buried at St. Tammany Cemetery which was
directly across the Delaware River from Calicoon, New York.
Daniel m. (2) May 4, 1808, Rosabelle Kinne, daughter of Henry and
Martha Kinne, great granddaughter of Thomas Kinne.
In correspondence with one of the descendants of Daniel Skinner, after
visiting the above site, I was told that there had once been over one
hundred tombstones at St. Tammany's Cemetery, but that the ice and
flooding river had washed most of them away. There is no cemetery
there now, and the land has reverted to private farm land. The two
headstones inscribed as above were found close to the house, one in the
garage and one under the porch! We searched the property for quite some
time, in a heavy rain, but failed to find Daniel's stone anywhere about.
The son of the owner of the property (in 1951) was most kind and
helpful, but knew nothing of the old cemetery as his parents had just
recently purchased the farm. - Doris Seymour Wahl
Contemporary Records:
1790 - Census - "Cosikton District, Northampton Co. Pennsylvania
Daniel Skinner:
3 males over 16 yrs, 2 male under 16 yrs, 4 females
Daniel Skinner named his land "St. Tammany Flats" after the
celebrated Indian Chief, St. Tammany. (From Quinlan's History of Sullivan
Co., NY)
The third permanent lodgement made within the limits of Sullivan
(County) by white men was at Cochecton, as the valley of the Delaware
from Callicoon to Turkey Creek to the mouth of the Ten Mile River was
designated a century ago.
On the banks of the river, near the present village of Cochecton, was an
Indian village of some note, where the savages of the surrounding
country met to observe their ancient customs. Here they had their
green-corn dances, their dog festivals, their games of ball, etc. and here
according to ancient tradition, which has been nearly lost amid the din
and whirl of modern days, lived the celebrated Lenape sage and Yankee
Saint - Tammanend, Tammaning or Tammany. William L. Stone says that
he lived in the middle of the 17th century: That he was a sagacious and
virtuous sachem; that in his youth he resided in the country which is now
called Delaware; and that he afterwards settled on the banks of the Ohio.
In truth, little or nothing reliable is known concerning this heathen
saint. The first settlers claimed that his lodge was on the Skinner farm,
and the "Admiral" loved to designate his valley-land as St. Tammany
Flats.
The State of Pennsylvania has erected a State Marker at Milanville,
Pennsylvania, which reads as follows: "Cushetunk - The first
Connecticut settlement of the upper Delaware was made here in 1755,
under the lead of Moses Thomas and Daniel Skinner, on lands called
Cushetunk by the Indians. Settlement seized by the Indians and Tories,
1778."
From - Volume 53 p 84 - New Jersey Historical Society:
Water Transportation in Colonial New Jersey
The first type of boat was, of course, the Indian Canoe. In it the fur
trader sought the beaver which were becoming more and more scarce.
The raft was an obvious means of floating timber to market. In 1764 one
was brought down to Philadelphia from Chochecton Falls, NY by Daniel
Skinner and his assistant. This feat of navigating the river for nearly
two hundred miles was widely praised. Both men were given the
"freedom of the city" and Skinner was awarded the title of "Lord High
Admiral of the Delaware" which he bore until his death. The raft
consisted of six pine logs, seventy feet long, to be used as masts for
ships, then building at Philadelphia.
Excerpt from letter of Edna Skinner Beegle: "It seems to be the trend of
the authors of today to belittle the leading men of early days and some
of them speak of Daniel as a "rough old rascal" but he was religious, kind
and refined because my Grandfather Calvin remembered him and his
father Nathan was very mild of dispositon. He often was called to take
the position of minister if minister was absent and would read the
Scriptures, whole chapters, without a Bible.
Daniel Skinner is listed in Mrs. Fernald's "Skinner Kinsmen" as #170
descendant of Thomas Skinner of Malden, MA.
!.....E93.1126.69-79 SKU 11(1)18 Neal
!.....E93.1221.09 Todd, Sheryl SKU11(1):7: Donovan, F. 1966. River Boats
of America. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co. P 17-18.
One of the giants of colonial rafting days was Admiral Dan Skinner -
ŗadmiral˛ only of a fleet of log rafts. Skinner had been a sailor. He left
the sea and trekked from Connecticut across New York to the head
waters of the Delaware. He realized that the tall pines on the foothills
of the Catskill Mountains would make fine masts for the ships of the
Royal Navy. The kingšs agents had never reached these remote forests to
put their broad arrow marks on mast trees, so Dan gathered a group of
brawny men and started an industry.
Skinner pioneered in welfare benefits for employees. The members of
his picked crews of adventurous roughnecks had to pay an initiation fee
to secure their jobs - two large bottles of whiskey for an experienced
steersman and one for a deck hand. But the fringe benefits soon returned
their initial dues many times over. Danšs method of managing the hairpin
turns in the upper river was to stop the rafts above the bend and get the
men pleasantly potted on New England rum so that they happily took icy
dunkings while manhandling the craft around the turn. Below, they
finished the rum to take the chill off. The difficult stretch of the
Delaware ended at Easton. Here the rafts paused overnight while the
crew had a thorough carouse for which Dan provided lodging, food, liquor,
and women. Then the hung-over crews floated calmly down to the
shipyards at Camden and Philadelphia. From here the men, pockets heavy
with their pay, started their walk back to the head waters of the river,
dribbling their earnings at taverns on the way. Most arrived tired and
broke - and ready for another voyage.
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Mon Sep 3 16:59:24 2001