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  1. The Mordecai Lincoln House is a historic house in Exeter Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania built c. 1733 by Mordecai Lincoln, the great-great-grandfather of President Abraham Lincoln. The house stands in the narrow valley of Hiester Creek on a 9-acre plot near the village of Lorane on Lincoln Road.

  2. When Mordecai Lincoln was born in 1771, in Linville Creek, Rockingham, Virginia, United States, his father, Captain Abraham Lincoln, was 27 and his mother, Bathsheba Herring, was 29. He married Mary Mudd in August 1791, in Nelson, Kentucky, United States. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 4 daughters.

  3. Compare DNA and explore genealogy for Mordecai Lincoln born 1657 Hingham, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony died 1727 Scituate, Plymouth, Province of Massachusetts Bay including ancestors + descendants + 3 photos + 4 genealogist comments + DNA connections + more in the free family tree community.

  4. 23 de feb. de 2013 · The house below was built by Mordecai Lincoln, believed to be the great-great-great grandfather of Abraham Lincoln. President Lincoln had other ancestors by the name Mordecai, so the individual who built this homestead should not be confused with the president’s uncle. Located on the Boundary Brook, which was the initial boundary between ...

  5. When Mordecai Lincoln Jr was born on 24 April 1686, in Hingham, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America, his father, Mordecai Lincoln, was 28 and his mother, Sarah Jones, was 25. He married Hannah Salter on 14 September 1714, in Freehold Township, Monmouth, New Jersey, United States.

  6. The story of the Pennsylvania Lincolns originates with two brothers, Mordecai and Abraham, who came into the state from New Jersey in the year 1720. Mordecai eventually settled in what is now Berks County and was the great-great-grandfather of President Lincoln. Abraham’s descendants took up their abode in Philadelphia, and some of them still reside

  7. Mordecai and Hannah's son, John Lincoln (1716–1788) settled in Rockingham County, Virginia and built a large, prosperous farm nestled in the Shenandoah Valley. [6] Abraham Lincoln, instead of being the unique blossom on an otherwise barren family tree, belonged to the seventh American generation of a family with competent means, a reputation for integrity, and a modest record of public service.