A House Divided: Collver Family History Titelbild

A House Divided: Collver Family History

A House Divided: Collver Family History

Von: Rev. Dr. Albert B. Collver III
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A House Divided: Collver Family History is a limited-run narrative history podcast tracing the Collver/Culver family through the American Revolution, Loyalist exile, Upper Canada, and the generations that followed. Told by Rev. Dr. Albert B. Collver III, each episode combines genealogy, original records, family memory, and historical storytelling to recover the lives of Jabez Collver, his descendants, and the divided world they inhabited.

© 2026 Albert B. Collver III
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  • Pull Down All Other Persuasions
    Jul 17 2026

    For words spoken to a neighbor in 1777, the Rev. Jabez Colver of Wantage was convicted of sedition — for warning that if America won the Revolution, “the Presbyterians will pull down all other Persuasions.”

    This episode reconstructs the courtroom where he said it: who the judges, the prosecutor, and the grand-jury foreman actually were, and why a Congregationalist feared the Presbyterians in particular. The trail runs from the English Civil War and the ghost of Oliver Cromwell to the very structure of church government — and to a fear with a surprisingly long reach.

    Some of it is proven, some of it is a good guess, and the essay tells you which is which.

    Read the illustrated version, with the original 1777 indictment and every source: https://history.collver.biz/pull-down-all-other-persuasions/

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    35 Min.
  • The Captain of the Dove
    Jul 13 2026

    A dove-named man, a ship called Dove, and the historian who caught them both before the tide went out.

    On the third of August, 1811, the brig Dove came up the Thames to New London under Captain Christopher Colver — sixty-three days out of Liverpool — and Frances Manwaring Caulkins caught the whole story half a century later from the ninety-year-old captain’s own lips, on the wharf, before the tide took it out for good. Plus the strangest Culver of all: Stephen, who built a dredging machine he had forgotten he’d already seen as a prisoner-boy in the harbor of L’Orient.

    Read the essay: https://history.collver.biz/the-captain-of-the-dove/

    More at The Collver Family History Project — https://history.collver.biz

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    20 Min.
  • The Ship That Never Was
    Jul 10 2026

    The sentence the family kept for three centuries was that Edward Colver sailed from London in 1635 aboard John Winthrop the Younger’s ship. The ship is the one thing the record cannot give us — no name, no master, no port, no year. This episode walks the vessel plank by plank anyway: the standardized English merchant ship of the Great Migration, the ‘tween-deck world where families lived stooped for ten weeks, the biscuit and the beer, and the wheelwright who was worth his passage. Along the way a name pulls taut — a Reverend Edward Culver, vicar of Harmondsworth on the ground where Heathrow now stands, whom the family’s Maryland branch has long claimed as the immigrant’s grandfather: possible, not provable, and the parish that would settle it lies under the runways.

    Music: an original theme in the manner of the 18th-century singing-school tunes the Collver family sang.

    Full text, images, and sources: https://history.collver.biz/the-ship-that-never-was/

    From The Collver Family History Project — https://history.collver.biz

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    25 Min.
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