Seventh Generation


1493. Thomas Skillman Everitt was born on 20 October 1803 in New Jersey. He was born in 1810 in Pennsylvania. He lived at Baltimore Ward 20 in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD in 1850. Thomas lived at Baltimore Ward 16 in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD in 1870. He lived in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD in 1880. He died Old Age on 21 April 1886 at the age of 82 in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD. Thomas was buried on 23 April 1886 at Loudon Park Cemetery in Catonsville, Baltimore, MD. Last known address in Baltimore is 440 W. Fulton Avenue. Came to Baltimore in 1844-45

Address listed in the 1864 Baltimore City Directory as 39 Garden. At that time was located somewhere between Eutaw Place and Lanvale Street. This street no longer exists. City Directory is located at the Enoch Pratt Free Library, Central Location on Cathedral Street in Baltimore. Directory is on Microfilm.

Could not find Thomas Everitt in the 1850 City Directory.


The following information might be about this Thomas Everitt, who was born in NJ and was a harness maker in Baltimore, from www.newtonnj.net/Pages/lowermainst.htm

Brick Corner, No. 1 Main Street, 1871

This pair of cartes-de-visite record changes at the old Brick Corner. The earlier photograph was taken in February 1871 as Samuel Johnson prepared to rebuild his store at 1 Main Street. The old Brick Corner, demolished in March, had been built by Anson Potwine & Co. in 1822 and successively occupied by John Potwine, Vanderen & Longstreet, Backster & Bell, and by William Beach (who called it "Beach’s Bazaar"). It was refitted in 1855 by William H. Johnson & Son. The low frame building to the rear on Spring Street had been used by Grant Fitch as the office of the New Jersey Herald in 1838, by Harmony Lodge and by Thomas Everitt as a harness shop.

This following is information I have posted about TSE on the following website: http://www.migrations.org/individual.php3?record=24540

Found on 1850 Census of Baltimore City - says age is 45 and occupation is a "saddler". See Thomas Everitt - 1850 Census.jpeg on personal computer.

Found on 1970 Cenus of Baltimore City - says age is 60 (inaccuracy? or misreading of written file?) and occupation is a "harness maker". See Thomas S. Everitt - 1870 Census.jpeg on personal computer.

1880 Baltimore City Census of his son - Robert B. Everitt - has Thomas's birthplace as Pennsylvania - not New Jersey!

Mary Anna Reese, daughter of Unknown Reese and Unknown Unknown, was born on 16 July 1795 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA. She was born in 1820 in Pennsylvania. She lived in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD in 1880. Mary died on 2 May 1887 at the age of 91 in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD. She died on 3 May 1887 at the age of 91 in Baltimore (Independent City), Baltimore, MD. She was buried on 7 May 1887 at Loudon Park Cemetery in Catonsville, Baltimore, MD. Found her listed with Thomas S. Everitt in the 1864 Baltimore City Directory as living on 39 Garden Street. This street no longer exists. Baltimore City Directories are located at the Enoch Pratt Free Library, Central Branch on Cathedral Street, Baltimore.

Her Death Certificate has been copied by Daniel A. Everitt and is with him. It is ceritificate number 99582, Ward 19, dated May 11, 1887. Her death certificate lists her place of birth as Philadelphia, PA and that she had been in Baltimore, 44 years.

Possible Reference to Mary Reese found on http://www.angelfire.com/al2/McCalebs/Brooks_Hollingsworth.htm

" Ibid., p. 962, 14 March 1789: GR to Henry Crum both Frederick Co. 161 3/4 acres on lines of
Henry Crum, George Rice, Anthony Crum. Wit. Robert Hollingsworth, Thomas Hale, Micajah
Rock, Barth. Smith; rec. 8 apr. 1789 (ibid., p. 136). Note: were George and Elizabeth Rice
selling their landholdings in Frederick Co. in preparation to move elsewhere? EB's mother would
have died two years before, and her estate would have been settled, so the family ties in
Frederick Co. may have been more tenuous now. Note that the Brooks lines begin to move to
Wythe Co. in early 1790s. Could George and Elizabeth have gone there? Could they have
been in KY by 1797? See below.
A GR left a will 2 Oct. 1792, pr. 9 July 1795, Frederick Co., VA. The will stipulates that his father
is to continue to live with the family for life. Could this be John Donaldson, whom Hannah Rice
married after the death of John Rice? The will names brother John and his four sons, the 6
unnamed children of GR and wife Elizabeth, nieces Mary Reese, Sarah Rice, Elizabeth Boyd,
and Jean Sullivan (wife of William), and a brother Edmond Rice. The exrs. are wife Elizabeth,
Andrew Waggoner, James McDonald. A codicil mentions son-in-law Micajah Roach. Pr. at
Woodford Co., KY, co. court, 9 July 1795. Note: if the father of the will is not a step-father, this
disproves that GR is son of John and Hannah. "

Not sure if this works - but may have a connection with Robert Lunz, 524 Seminary AVenue, Lutherville, MD 21093, who has a Reese Family Connection in Philadelphia.

Thomas Skillman Everitt-55602 and Mary Anna Reese-55603 had the following children:

+3461

i.

Francis Arnett Everitt-55595.

+3462

ii.

Mary Anna Everitt-55604.

+3463

iii.

Robert Burns Everitt-55614.