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WhippleGenWeb |
Whipple Researchers | Special
Topics | Censuses, Lists & Vital Records | Other Whipple Websites
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Norma A. Combs
Joanne
Lahr-Kreischer
Blaine Whipple
Charles M. Whipple, Jr.
- Charles' most recent Whipple publication: A
History of Captain John and Sarah Whipple of Dorchester, Massachusetts and
Providence, Rhode Island : A Multigenerational Study of the First Whipple Family in America
. -- Victoria, B.C. :
Trafford, 2007.
- His next most recent Whipple publication: A
History of William Whipple of Dorchester, Massachusetts and
Smithfield, Rhode Island : His Antecedents and
Descendants, 1652-1712. -- Victoria, B.C. :
Trafford, 2006.
- Captain
John Whipple's Two Grandsons Named William: A Reply
- Captain John Whipple and His Descendants (by Charles M. Whipple, Jr., and Barbara R.
Carroll):
- Photo Album of Charles M. Whipple's Providence Trip 2004
- History of Whipple Hall
George Carroll
Whipple III
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Censuses
Lists
Vital Records
- Whipple Family Genealogy Forum.
A place to ask and answer questions about Whipples.
- Quakertown Online. Although
not exclusively a Whipple website, the descendants of Samuel Whipple (including
great grandson Samuel
and great great grandson Noah)
are a significant part of Quakertown,
in Ledyard, Connecticut. Among the site's many useful
resources are the full text of The Battle-Axe by Timothy Watrous, Sr., and sons (ca.
1810), as well as Anna Williams's chapter on the history of Quakertown from
The Rogerenes (1904).
- Whipple's World. The
web site for N.Y. television personality George Carroll Whipple III.
- The Political Graveyard.
Besides including a page entitled Index to Politicians: Whipple,
the site lists "occupants"
of numerous graveyards throughout the U.S.
- The Gaspee Virtual Archives
and Gaspee Days web sites
have information about Commodore Abraham Whipple's role in the burning
of H.M.S. Gaspee--before the official outbreak of America's
Revolutionary War with Great Britain.
- Wippell's (www.wippell.com),
founded in 1789 in Exeter, England, is one of the oldest and largest
clerical outfitters and church furnishings companies.
- The Whimple History Society (www.whimple.org)
from Whimple, Old England, presents a compelling argument that the name Whipple means other than
"white stream". Under archives-Placenames Background, it asserts that Whipple probably should have been interpreted as "fair" or "fine"
stream. See also the website www.whimple.net.
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