Children of Joshua and Marjory (Knowlton) Bigelow were all born Westminster, Worcester county, MA:
16C41.+ Joshua , b 06 Apr 1766; d 24 May 1835 Worcester, Otsego, NY; m 12 May 1792 Rhoda Bowman; res Worcester, NY. 4 children.
16C42. Mary, b 16 Mar 1768; allegedly the same who married 28 Sept 1791 in Newbury, VT, Jeremiah INGALLS. [Re Mary Bigelow's alleged marriage: her cousin Jabez BIGELOW jr was living in Newbury, VT late 1780's, early 1790's, hence the assumption that she was the Mary Bigelow who m Jeremiah INGALLS.]
16C43.+ Eleizer , b 26 Dec 1769; d ca 1838 (mon = 07Jun1848 78 y) Springfield twp, Oakland Co, MI; m circa 1796 Lydia SPENCER; moved MI 1837. 10? children.
16C44. Rebecca, b 03 May 1772; d _____ ; m ______ Edmond SHIPMAN. (see below)
16C45. Lydia, b 21 Oct 1775.
16C46.+ Gideon Smith, b 25 Dec 1777; as "Smith G. Bigelow" was living 1810 Onondaga co, NY, had wife and 2 children--never again appears on census.
16C47. Margery, b 21 June 1781. (see below); m Ebenezer Houghton;
16C48. Susanna, b 25 Aug 1786; d __ Jun 1832 (where?); m 24 Mar 1806 Phineas POWERS.
Sources: 
      Bigelow Family Genealogy Volume. I page.80-81; 
      Howe, Bigelow Family of America; page 85-86;
      NY censuses 1790-1850; 
      cemetery inscriptions, Oakland co, MI; 
      History Oakland Co MI; 
      VT vital records; 
      obituaries from Albany papers, as in NY State Library; 
      NSDAR applications descendants Joshua Bigelow.
      More from Find a Grave
      Joshua Bigelow, son of Eleazer and Mary Fiske Bigelow, was born
      April 12, 1733 in Watertown, Middlesex county, Mass. He was only 9
      when he moved with his parents to Westminster, Mass. There he
      married on April 11, 1764, Marjory Knowlton of Shrewsbury, Mass.
      She was born January 1, 1747, the daughter of Ezekiel and Susanna
      Morgan Knowlton. They lived in Westminster for many years. Joshua
      served in the Revolutionary War, and about 1790 removed to
      Worcester, Otsego county, New York where he appears on the 1800
      census.
      
      From Massachusetts Soldiers & Sailors of Revolutionary War,
      Vol II: Bigelow, Joshua, Westminster. Private, Capt. Elisha
      Jackson's co., Col. Asa Whitcomb's regt.; which marched on the
      alarm of April 19, 1775, to Cambridge; service, 5 l/2 days; also,
      Capt. Jackson's co.; marched to East Hoosuck August 22, 1777,
      under command of Maj. Bridge on the alarm of the battle of
      Bennington and there dismissed; service, 10 days; also, pay roll
      for 27 days service; marched under command of Maj. Bridge to
      reinforce Northern army, agreeable to resolve of September 22,
      1777.
    
New Note 02Nov08:
      Subject: Margery Knowlton Bigelow (Mrs. Joshua)
      Date: Sun, 2 Nov 2008 20:57:15 -0500
      From: "Elizabeth Knowlton" < knowltonew@earthlink.net >
      Hi, Rod,
      Thanks for your great web site and bulletin board.
       I am working on a line that includes Margery Knowlton (b
      1747 in Shrewsbury, MA).  She marries Joshua Bigelow
      (1733-aft 1800) and raises a family with him in Westminster,
      MA.  After 1790 they move to Otsego Co, NY.  I am trying
      to find a death date for her (and for Joshua), but of course the
      state lacks vital records.  Has anyone found a cemetery or
      newspaper that would give death dates for them?
       Elizabeth W. Knowlton
      
      New Note:
      Subject: The Ingalls 
      Date: 19 Sept 2004
      From:  "George Ingalls" < gingalls@gvtel.com > 
      Hi Rod, 
          I am looking for information on Jeremiah
      Ingalls jr. His father was Jeremiah Ingalls sr., and his mother
      was Mary Bigelow. 
      
        Note: 
      Subject: Bigelow web site 
      Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2002 21:15:49 -0800 
      From: "David Holcomb" <david@holcombs.net> 
Hi, First I would like to say that I have enjoyed your web site
      on the 
      Bigelow Family.  I was wondering if you had any info on Margery
        Bigelow 
      16C47 the daughter of Joshua Bigelow.  She would be the 5th
      generation from 
      John Biglo.   I think that I am a descendant of hers but
      I am trying to 
      prove it.  Is there a wedding record for her?  Thanks
      for your time, Dave Holcomb 
      Note2: 
      Subject: The Bigelows 
      Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2002 15:23:59 -0800 
      From:  "David Holcomb" <david@holcombs.net> 
      Dear Mr. Bigelow, 
          I was hoping you could steer me in the right
      direction.  I have been 
      trying to research my 4th great-grandmother and her father in
      hopes of 
      finding out who they were.   Her name was Margery
      (Bigelow) Houghton and her 
      father was named Joshua Bigelow.  I was intrigued by your web
      site and 
      especially entries for 16C4     Joshua 4
      BIGELOW and  16C47.       
      Margery, 
      b 21 Jun 1781.   Do you have any ideas as to how I could
      find out if this 
      Margery married a Ebenezer Houghton born in 1779. What I have been
      able to 
      find out so far is as follows: 
 
Biography in "History of Medina County and Ohio" Published by Baskin & Battey, Historical Publishers, 1881
L. D. PHINNEY, retired farmer; P. O. Whittlesey; is a native of Connecticut, born September 7, 1807, the youngest child of his parents, who were Benjamin and Hannah (Yeoman) Phinney; he was born about the year 1776, his wife one year later. To them were born nine children, eight of the number attained to man's estate. The family were all born in Connecticut, but removed to Oneida Co., N. Y., when L. D. was a lad of tender age. . Oct. 20, 1831, he was married to his present companion, whose place of nativity was Maryland Township, Otsego Co., N.Y., time of birth April 15, 1809; her parents were Ebenezer and Margery (Bigelow) Houghton; to them were born eleven children, but five lived to be grown. After the marriage of Mr. And Mrs. Phinney, they remained on the farm of his father until 1856, when he emigrated to this State, settling at La Fayette Center, where he has since been a constant resident. . Mrs. Phinney has two sisters, Emily, Mrs. Seth P. Duncan, in Oswego, N.Y., and Rebecca, Mrs. Isaac Blair, of this township; her parents died in this township, her father in 1857, mother in 1860.
From "The History of Medina Co. and Ohio" 1881- 
      ISAAC BLAIR, retired farmer; P.O. Chatham; is one of the early
      settlers of this township and was born Feb. 4, 1805, in Madison
      Township, Madison Co., N.Y.  His parents, David and Eunice
      Blair, were natives of Massachusetts, 
 
. ..  Jan. 1, 1829,
      he was united in marriage to Louisa Phinney, who was born in
      Oneida Co., N.Y.; daughter of Benjamin Phinney, whose wife was a
      Yeoman.  
..  In 1834, Mr. Blair came West to this
      county, and purchased 70 acres of unimproved land, at $4 per
      acre.  He erected a log cabin on the same, and returned to
      New York to bring his family out, but, in consequence of death of
      his wife, his plans were entirely changed.  He sent his
      brother out, who occupied the premises until 1837, when he moved
      out, bringing with him his present wife, who is Rebecca Houghton,
      a native of Worcester, N.Y. , and was born Jan. 11, 1804; a daughter
        of Ebenezer and Margery (Bigelow) Houghton.  Ebenezer
      was a son of Ebenezer. The father of Margery was named Joshua.
    
The History of Medina County and Ohio states that he died in
      Medina in 1857. 
      Tombstone Inscriptions From the Cemeteries in Medina Co., Ohio -
      1983, 
      compiled by The Medina Co. Genealogical Society 
      Pg 225    Shaw Cmty - Lafayette Twp 
                 
      HOUGHTON, Ebenezer, Feb. 14, 1857 - 77y5m8d 
      His date of birth is derived by taking his date of death and
      subtracting 77y5m8d. 
I have attached a word doc. that has a family tree chart and
      other research. 
      Dates fit, Places fit, and names seem to fit, but how do I prove
      that they 
      are the ones that I am looking for?  Any help would be
      appreciated and 
      thanks for the time to look this over.  Dave Holcomb
 Clark Bigelow Shipman was born on June 1, 1831, in
        Rochester, Vermont, to Harvey and Betsey Eaton Shipman, who were
        teachers and farmers. Fanny Augusta "Gusta" Perham was born May
        3, 1831, to John and Sarah Whitney, on the family farm--Perham
        Hill--near Bethel, Vermont. The Shipman family moved to Bethel
        in 1838 where Clark and Augusta became childhood friends.
        Following in her parents footsteps, Augusta became a teacher.
        Clark left home in 1850 to take a teaching position in a nearby
        village and later moved to a socialist colony near Red Bank, New
        Jersey. Augusta followed him to New Jersey in 1854 and the
        couple was married on November 6, 1855. The newlyweds settled on
        Shipman family land and began raising their own family. Between
        1856 and 1875 the Shipmans had five children, Winifred,
        Gertrude, Rebecca, Henry, and Margaret. The couple purchased the
        Shipman land in Vermont and a farm in New Jersey, moving between
        the two properties for the better part of the 1860s. In 1868
        Augusta purchased her childhood home from her mother and the
        family settled on Perham Hill. Clark Shipman, not content to
        stay in Vermont, heard of the riches to be had in the West and
        began planning a move. Augusta did not share his enthusiasm, so
        in 1881 the Shipmans sold their New Jersey farm and Clark and
        his son Henry left to find homesteading land in the West.
        Augusta and her daughters rented a small flat in Atlantic City
        where they remained until 1882 when Augusta and Maggie, her
        youngest daughter, returned to Perham Hill. Clark and Henry
        settled near the Judith River in Montana. Winifred and Gertrude,
        the two oldest daughters moved to Montana in 1883 and filed on
        their own homesteads. Augusta remained in Vermont, adamant she
        would never go west. Clark returned east for a visit, after
        being separated from his wife for almost eight years. He
        convinced Augusta to sell Perham Hill and, in 1890, Clark and
        Augusta, Rebecca, and Maggie arrived in Montana. Once there,
        Augusta prodded Clark to buy more and more land until they had
        amassed some 7,000 acres, which they sold to the Great Northern
        Railroad in 1906. After the sale the Shipmans moved to
        Lewistown, but Augusta's love of her childhood home finally
        prevailed and in 1911 the Shipmans returned east. Winifred
        Shipman opened the first school in Philbrook, Montana, and later
        taught in Lewistown and then Chestnut. She ended her Montana
        teaching career in 1886 when she married Lewistown merchant
        Nicholas Erickson. She was forced to leave Montana in the 1890s
        as a result her husband's sudden death from pneumonia. Winifred
        moved her children to Evanston, Illinois, where she bought a
        home and worked as a teacher. Gertrude Shipman taught in
        Martinsdale, Stanford, and Ubet. She remained in Montana until
        1911 when she returned east with her mother to live in Lee,
        Massachusettes. Ultimately, mental illness took its toll on
        Gertie, and in 1916 she was institutionalized. Henry Shipman
        left Montana in 1884 to attend Tuffs College. He obtained a
        degree in 1888 and returned to Montana to work his own ranch,
        located near his parents. He married in 1904, sold his ranch,
        and returned east in 1906 to raise his family in Vermont.
        Rebecca Shipman studied and lived in New York as an
        artist--working especially in engraving--until she moved to
        Montana in the early 1890s. In Montana she lived with her
        parents and continued her art work on commission. She returned
        to the East to live with her parents in 1911. Upon their return
        to the East, Clark and Augusta Shipman settled in Lee,
        Massachussetts. Clark Shipman died February 5, 1913, and Augusta
        died July 7, 1917.
        
        Shipman Family Papers.
        "Guide to the Shipman Family Papers." 
        Manuscript Collection 274.  Montana Historical Society
        Research Center, Helena, Mont.
        The link for the guide is http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/documents/retrieve.asp?docname=mthimc274.xml
        Thanks to:
        Molly Kruckenberg