Individual Details
John NEWLIN
(1 Sep 1783 - 28 May 1832)
Events
Families
| Spouse | Esther STUBBS (1786 - 1873) |
| Child | Eli NEWLIN (1808 - 1874) |
| Child | William NEWLIN (1810 - 1850) |
| Child | Jane Lydia NEWLIN (1811 - 1856) |
| Child | Sarah NEWLIN (1813 - 1900) |
| Child | Ruth NEWLIN (1817 - 1841) |
| Child | John NEWLIN (1818 - 1821) |
| Child | David NEWLIN (1820 - 1884) |
| Child | Phineas NEWLIN (1822 - 1851) |
| Child | Elias NEWLIN (1822 - 1906) |
| Child | Joel NEWLIN (1824 - 1913) |
| Child | Esther NEWLIN (1826 - 1849) |
| Father | Eli NEWLIN (1755 - 1790) |
| Mother | Sarah HADLEY (1762 - 1827) |
| Sibling | Ruth NEWLIN (1780 - ) |
| Sibling | Joshua NEWLIN (1781 - ) |
| Sibling | Edith NEWLIN (1785 - ) |
| Sibling | Mary NEWLIN (1786 - ) |
Notes
Census
Name: John Newlin Home in 1830 (City, County, State): Chester, Clinton, Ohio Free White Persons - Males - 5 thru 9: 4 Free White Persons - Males - 15 thru 19: 1 Free White Persons - Males - 20 thru 29: 1 Free White Persons - Males - 40 thru 49: 1 Free White Persons - Females - Under 5: 1 Free White Persons - Females - 10 thru 14: 1 Free White Persons - Females - 15 thru 19: 2 Free White Persons - Females - 40 thru 49: 1 Free White Persons - Under 20: 9 Free White Persons - 20 thru 49: 3 Total Free White Persons: 12 Total - All Persons (Free White, Slaves, Free Colored): 12Biography
John, the third child of Eli and Sarah Hadley Newlin, spearheaded the Newlin migration from North Carolina to the Middle West. When barely past his twenty-third birthday, Spring Meeting of Friends set its stamp of approval on his youthful ambition to get on the rising tide to the West. During the first decade of the nineteenth century, Ohio was filling with settlers from the South as well as from the Northeast. Quaker settlements in South Carolina and Georgia were melting away, and restless Friends in North Carolina and Virginia were beginning to join the growing stream to the West. Quakers from the South made the Miami valley, in the southwestern part of Ohio, their rendezvous. Near the present town of Wayndesville, the Miami Friends Meeting was set up in 1803. During the four years from 1803 to 1807 eighteen hundred removal certificates of Friends were received by Miami Monthly Meeting. More than 800 of these were from Cane Creek and Bush River Meetings in South Carolina, and from Georgia.The exact date of arrival of John Newlin in the new settlement along the Miami is not known. Thirteen months elapsed between the granting of the certificate by Spring Meeting, October 10, 1806, and its presentation to the Miami Meeting, November 12, 1807. It was only two months later that John Newlin and Esther Stubbs repeated their wedding vows with the approbation of the Miami Friends. It is quite possible that the desire to get married prompted John to present his neglected certificate.
They moved their membership to Center Meeting a year later, to Springfield Meeting nine years later, Their twelfth child was born eighteen and one half years after their marriage. John died in 1832,
Endnotes
1. Cemetery Photos and Data: , by williamknight57; ; findagrave.com, . Online www.findagrave.com; John Alden Headstone; Printout dated 29 May 2017, Findagrave.com, Virtual Cemetery, database (www.findagrave.com :accessed 10 Apr 2013) entry for John Newlin. Springfield Friends Cemetery, Wilmington, Clinton, OH. Compiled by Dorothy Gaston, 2010, #58494866..
2. Cemetery Photos and Data: , by williamknight57; ; findagrave.com, . Online www.findagrave.com; John Alden Headstone; Printout dated 29 May 2017, Findagrave.com, Virtual Cemetery, database (www.findagrave.com :accessed 10 Apr 2013) entry for Esther Stubbs Newlin. Sugar Grove Cemetery, Plainfield, Hendricks, IN. Compiled by Dorothy Gaston, 2010, #58494789..
3. Ancestry.com, online www.Ancestry.com, This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie (), downloaded 2004, U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900, database, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 24 Apr 2013), entry for Esther Stubbs, 2004..
4. Ancestry.com, online \<[Url]\\><, [Cd]><. Hereinafter cited as [ShortTitle]>.
5. , 1 Jun 1830 Census, , , 1830 United States Federal Census [database on-line], Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 26 Apr 2013), Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Entry for John Newlin, Place: Chester, Clinton, Ohio; Page: 237; NARA.
6. Cemetery Photos and Data: , by williamknight57; ; findagrave.com, . Online www.findagrave.com; John Alden Headstone; Printout dated 29 May 2017, Findagrave.com, Virtual Cemetery, database (www.findagrave.com :accessed 10 Apr 2013) entry for John Newlin. Springfield Friends Cemetery, Wilmington, Clinton, OH. Compiled by Dorothy Gaston, 2010, #58494866..
7. Cemetery Photos and Data: , by williamknight57; ; findagrave.com, . Online www.findagrave.com; John Alden Headstone; Printout dated 29 May 2017, Findagrave.com, Virtual Cemetery, database (www.findagrave.com :accessed 10 Apr 2013) entry for John Newlin. Springfield Friends Cemetery, Wilmington, Clinton, OH. Compiled by Dorothy Gaston, 2010, #58494866..
8. Ancestry.com, online \<[Url]\\><, [Cd]><. Hereinafter cited as [ShortTitle]>.
9. Ancestry.com, online \<[Url]\\><, [Cd]><. Hereinafter cited as [ShortTitle]>.
10. Ancestry.com, online \<[Url]\\><, [Cd]><. Hereinafter cited as [ShortTitle]>.

