108 HISTORY OP 



the present instance, it is a fine commentary on such 

 honest proceedings to find the land thus obtained to be 

 still in the hands of the lineal descendants of such 

 •woTthy ancestors. Henry A. Carpenter, from whom 

 we have obtained the foregoing documents, is now the 

 owner of the old Ferree Homestead* containing two 

 hundred and forty acres, and nearly all the owners of 

 tlie other farms makingup the tract of two thousand acres, 

 first purchased by Daniel Ferree and Isaac Le Fevre, 

 are either relatives, or closely connected with the Ferrees. 

 H. A. Carpenter is the -fifth in descent from Daniel Feriee. 

 His father was Abraham Carpenter. 



Before closing this chapter, we shall introduce a tra- 

 ditionary account of the Ferree family, furnished us by 

 Joel Lightner, Esq., of Leacock township. It was written, 

 in answer to several inquiries put to Mr. Lightner, in 

 1 822, by the Hoii. Abraham Shreiver, Esq., of Frederick 

 county, Maryland. We have added a few notes. — 

 Shreiver's mother was a Ferree. 



"An account of the ancestors of the Ferric family, as 

 given by John Ferrie, aged 84 years, (in 1822) Joseph 

 Le Fevert and Leah Lightner,J aged about 63, (in 1822), 

 and from some of the original title papers to the lands 

 purchased from the Hon. William Penn, proprietor of 

 the province of Pennsylvania. 



*Mary Ferree, whose maiden name was Warenbuer, died at 

 an advanced age, in Conestoga township, 1716. On her death, 

 P^ter Evans, Register General for the probate of Wills, and 

 granting Letters of Administration, in and for the province of 

 Pennsylvania, &c. granted Letters of Administration to Mary's 

 sons, Daniel, Philip and John, the 20th of September, 1716. 



t Joel LightheT's wife 's father. 

 |Tbe mother of Joel Lightner. 



