The Ancestors of Thomas Winter Ames & Eileen Mary Hopkins

The Ancestors of Thomas Winter Ames & Eileen Mary Hopkins Jewett/Jowet Booth Freeman Hopkins Baker Putnam Burnham Dawes Ames Knowlton Sherm...
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The Ancestors of Thomas Winter Ames & Eileen Mary Hopkins

Jewett/Jowet

Booth

Freeman

Hopkins

Baker

Putnam

Burnham

Dawes

Ames

Knowlton

Sherman

Holyoke

Hutchinson

Wolcott / Walcot

Morse

Mansfield

Tripp

Canfield

Updated: 5 September 2015

Index of Names Abel.............................................43 Ackrendon..................................23 Ackworth......................................5 Allen............................................17 Alsworth.....................................18 Ames...........................................46 Ames/Eames.................................3 Andrews........................................4 Andrews......................................40 Annable.........................................5 Anthony......................................54 Antrobus.....................................41 Arnold.........................................15 Arnold.........................................41 Austin/Awstin............................77 Ayers............................................58 Backus.........................................58 Baker...........................................50 Baldwin.......................................12 Baldwin.......................................59 Baldwin.......................................60 Ball...............................................43 Balls.............................................11 Barker............................................5 Barker..........................................76 Barlow.........................................21 Bayes............................................76 Beaumont...................................41 Belding/Beldon/Baildon...........23 Bellingham.................................12 Bennet.........................................81 Bennett........................................16 Bennett........................................18 Bent.............................................33 Bills..............................................77 Bishop.........................................63 Bishop.........................................71 Bissell..........................................79 Bliss.............................................15 Blodgett/Blowatt........................37 Blott.............................................60 Blythe..........................................12 Bond..............................................9 Boone..........................................25 Booth...........................................78 Bosworth....................................11 Bosworth....................................23 Bowers.........................................73 Bowers.........................................73 Boys.............................................19 Boyvill.........................................81 Brayne.........................................35 Brewer.........................................26 Brewster......................................68 Brewster......................................72 Brewster......................................73 Bridge/Bridges...........................27 Briggs..........................................71 Brooks.........................................20 Brown..........................................58 Bruce...........................................21 Bull..............................................41 Bumstead....................................25

How to Read This Chart Burnell.........................................12 Burnham.....................................40 Burr.............................................18 Butler...........................................22 Calverly.......................................80 Campbell.....................................47 Canfield/Camfield.....................60 Cantize........................................16 Carpenter....................................15 Carter..........................................39 Caswell........................................15 Chaffee/Chaffe...........................15 Chambers...................................25 Champman.................................15 Claflin..........................................15 Clark............................................59 Clark............................................70 Clark/Alcock................................5 Cobb............................................15 Cogswell......................................49 Coles............................................65 Coles............................................69 Cooke..........................................52 Cooke..........................................71 Copley.........................................59 Cranfield.....................................10 Crosse..........................................22 Crow............................................11 Curtis...........................................22 Davenport...................................31 Dawes/Dors/Dor.......................24 Deacon........................................15 Denison.......................................58 Dickenson...................................59 Doty.............................................70 Douglass.....................................45 Dowsett.......................................10 Drax/Drake................................81 Dunkhorn...................................11 Dunlop........................................45 Duxford.......................................12 Eastfield......................................12 Edwards......................................60 Eggleton......................................38 Eliot.............................................11 Erdley..........................................63 Erdley..........................................69 Erdley..........................................71 Farnsworth...................................6 Ferch/Verch Ienen.....................63 Fisher...........................................71 Flood...........................................25 Flucker........................................47 Folkingham................................23 Francis.........................................23 Freeman......................................65 Freeman......................................69 French.........................................57 Frye..............................................15 Fuller...........................................11 Gage.............................................69 Gale.............................................32 Gardner.......................................29

Gardner.......................................58 Gargrave.....................................80 Gator...........................................18 Gladyn.........................................10 Gleason.......................................14 Godfrey.......................................73 Goodrick.....................................23 Gore.............................................28 Gorham.......................................74 Gould............................................7 Gould..........................................13 Gould..........................................80 Grant...........................................16 Grant...........................................20 Grant...........................................56 Gregory.......................................81 Griswold.....................................59 Haburne/Haborne.....................56 Hale...............................................9 Hale.............................................21 Hall..............................................50 Hall..............................................73 Harding.......................................60 Harmon.......................................15 Harris..........................................10 Harvie..........................................81 Hawes..........................................74 Hazard.........................................53 Hazen/Hassand..........................56 Hedge..........................................76 Hinckley......................................77 Hodsoll........................................66 Holden........................................32 Holyoke.........................................8 Holyoke.......................................14 Hope............................................11 Hopkins......................................61 Hopkins......................................69 Hopkins......................................71 Hopkins......................................72 Howe...........................................54 Howland.....................................75 Howlett.......................................57 Hull..............................................76 Huntington.................................11 Hurst...........................................76 Hutchinson.................................10 Hyde............................................58 Jackson........................................52 Jennison......................................34 Jewett...........................................17 Johnson.......................................29 Kaye.............................................41 Kebble/Kibble.............................18 Kendall........................................35 Kenworthy..................................77 Keyes...........................................20 Kingsbury...................................58 Kinnly.........................................10 Kirby............................................10 Knowles......................................72 Knowles......................................73 Knowlton....................................16

Knowlton....................................19 Knox............................................47 Lathrop/Lothrop........................76 Lawrence.....................................41 Lawrence.....................................51 Lawrence.....................................55 Lawton .....................................51 Lee...............................................58 Lee...............................................63 Lee...............................................69 Lee...............................................71 Leigh..............................................9 Linsford.......................................25 Little..............................................4 Luist.............................................47 Lumpkin.....................................64 Lyon.............................................15 Mahieu........................................52 Mahieu........................................71 Mandeville....................................7 Mandeville..................................13 Mansfield......................................6 Marsh..........................................59 Marshall......................................53 Marshall......................................59 Martin.........................................59 Mason..........................................49 Maundy.......................................66 Mayo............................................64 Mayo............................................72 Mayo............................................73 May..............................................26 McCane.......................................42 Mears/Mere/Meere....................29 Merrick.......................................63 Merrick.......................................69 Merrick.......................................71 Miles............................................35 Mills.............................................25 Moore..........................................42 Moore..........................................44 Morse..........................................70 Moseley/Maudesley...................55 Moyses........................................54 Neal...............................................6 Newcomb....................................34 Norton.........................................76 Nowell.........................................45 Odding........................................51 Ower............................................19 Paine............................................50 Paine............................................54 Palmer.........................................42 Peabody/Paybody......................57 Perkins........................................18 Perrin..........................................21 Phelps..........................................59 Pierce/Prisse.................................3 Pinder..........................................18 Plympton....................................33 Potter...........................................53 Potter...........................................53 Potter...........................................54

Potter...........................................54 Pratt.............................................14 Pray................................................6 Prence..........................................67 Prence..........................................72 Prence..........................................73 Putnam..........................................7 Putnam........................................13 Reed.............................................15 Richardson.................................12 Richardson.................................21 Riddlesdale.................................57 Robbins.......................................20 Robinson.....................................27 Roby............................................54 Rogers.........................................18 Rogerson.....................................11 Roland.........................................63 Rose.............................................21 Rusher.........................................43 Russel..........................................11 Rutter/Ritter...............................33 Ryan.............................................78 Sackerell......................................35 Saunders.....................................22 Sawbridge...................................18 Sawyer...........................................4 Schroeder....................................43 Searles.........................................15 Selbee..........................................60 Sheldon.......................................60 Shelley.........................................12 Sherman......................................51 Silverside.....................................12 Smalbroke.....................................8 Smalbroke...................................14 Smith...........................................16 Smith...........................................18 Smith...........................................23 Smith...........................................30 Smith...........................................69 Smyth..........................................73 Smyth..........................................73 Smythe/Simkinson....................68 Smythe/Simkinson....................72 Smythe/Simkinson....................73 Snow............................................69 Southwick...................................12 Stacey/Stace................................30 Standish......................................23 Stetson.........................................71 Stockton........................................8 Stockton......................................14 Stokes............................................8 Stokes..........................................14 Stone............................................60 Storey...........................................25 Sturgis.........................................76 Sturgis.........................................77 Taylor..........................................74 Taylor..........................................77 Taylor..........................................77 Temple?.......................................66

Thatcher......................................46 Thomas........................................10 Thomas........................................79 Thompson...................................41 Thompson...................................49 Thompson...................................52 Tidd.............................................11 Tidd.............................................36 Tilly.............................................75 Todlerby......................................67 Todlerby......................................72 Todlerby......................................73 Tracy............................................63 Tracy............................................69 Tracy............................................71 Trask............................................12 Treat.............................................22 Trescott.......................................55 Tripp............................................50 Tripp............................................54 Tupper.........................................69 Turner.........................................79 Unger...........................................11 Vorce/Force................................42 Wainwright.................................49 Waldo..........................................48 Walker...........................................4 Walker.........................................52 Ward..............................................6 Ward............................................51 Ward............................................76 Warren..........................................4 Warren........................................37 Warren........................................52 Warren........................................57 Weden...........................................7 Weden.........................................13 Weldon........................................62 Whelden.....................................72 Whipple......................................49 White...........................................49 Whitlock.....................................37 Wilbore.......................................53 Wilcox.........................................52 Willard........................................23 Williams........................................5 Willis...........................................72 Willis...........................................73 Wilson.........................................16 Wilson.........................................19 Winter.........................................44 Wolcott........................................22 Woodford...................................60 Wouldbie.....................................81 Young............................................7 Young..........................................13 Young..........................................63

©2015 Edith Mary Ames Mitchell. All rights reserved.

Each horizontal line represents a male lineage. The male of each generation is above the line and his wife is listed below the line. A descending line next to the wife’s name connects to a vertical line lower in the document indicating her male line. Sometimes you will need to scroll down many pages to reach the wife’s paternal line. Information written in black type has been verified from reliable sources & vital records. Names written in red type are ancestors that have been reasonably verified. Information written in orange type has been obtained from various family history books. The reliability is unknown. However, it is more reliable than information written in green. Information written in green type has been obtained through ancestry.com or a similar source. It has not been verified through genealogical books, libraries or societies. In most cases I have found this information to be correct, but not always. Pink type indicates notes of interest, or notes I have written to myself about pursuing more information. A little brown ship next to a name indicates the person was the immigrant to the United States. Little pink ships mean the ancestor arrived to America on the Mayflower in 1620. Little blue ships indicate ancestors who arrived on the Fortune, Anne or the James to Plymouth Colony. The Fortune arrived in 1621. The Anne & James arrived in 1623. “Along with the Mayflower passengers, they were known as the “Olde Comers”

Mary & John 1630

Mayflower 1620

Anne 1623

Significant ancestors: Prince Hopkins had at least eight ancestors who sailed on the Mayflower and qualify his descendants to membership in the Mayflower Society. Since his ancestor Stephen Hopkins also lived for a while in Jamestowne, Prince Hopkins’ descendants qualify for membership in the Jamestowne Society. My father, Thomas Ames, had two Mayflower ancestors on his mother’s side and one on his father’s side. The one on his father’s side was the same as one of the two on his mother’s side, Richard Warren – i.e. his parents were cousins. My father also had many ancestors who helped the Patriot cause during the Revolutionary war, qualifying his descendants to memberships in the DAR/ SAR. A Gold Star indicates the ancestor fought for the Patriots during the American Revolution. A Pink Star indicates the ancestor fought in the King Phillips War.

1400s

1500s Minor T. Ames cont. 1866, sales 1st yr $150,000, added chain supply depots in Il & other states, w/in 10 yrs sales $1 mil annually, had mines in OH, PA & IL.; liv. Chicago & Minonk. IL; bought Minonk coal mine 1864; united w/ Presbyterian Chur at age 21; Democrat, tho not political (no sides in Civil War?). Poss. named after uncle, Miner Chaffee or Capt. Miner Knowlton of U.S. Army. At death one of Chicago’s directors of B.&.O RR. Attended 8th Presby. Ch in West Division, Chicago, IL.xli m. w#2 13 Feb 1883 prob Columbus, OH, Irene Cowen (dau of Washington Cowen of Columbus O. & sister to his brother Franklin Ames’ wife Emma). She took over fam. bus at Miner’s death. Children w/ Irene: Emily Faithful b. 10 Nov 1885, Miner Thos Jr., b. 8 Jul 1887 & twin Thos Miner b. 8 Jul 1887-d.18 May 1889. See Minor’s bios.

Monument for Minor Thomas Ames in Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois EMA©2005

Ames/Eames

Info from internet. Prob not verified. THOMAS EAMES JOAN

MILLICENT pos BREWSTER c1552-1614 b.1552 St. George’s Parish, Fordington, Dorset, Eng. (Some on web think last name Brewster but no signficant source & all from same original claim) m. bet 1547 & 1595 Fordington. d. 23 May 1614 Fordington.

According to the Mayflower society, the Pierce/Prisse genealogy is unknown at present.

Voluntown, CT Birthplace of Rachel Mansfield

MARGERY PIERCE/ PRISSE c.1599-c.1662 b.c.1599 Eng m.1614 prob. Dorset Eng. d.pos 31 Dec 1662 Marshfield Children b. Eng: Hannah 1614 Millicent 17 Swanton John b.1619 Swanton, Morley MARK b. May 1620 Persis b.28 Oct 1621 Anna b.1622 poss. Charlestown, MA Elizabeth b. May or 13 Jun 1624 Justus b. 29 Ap 1627 Margery b.5 Dec 1630 in Fordingham, Dorset, Eng. Abigail bet.1634-38 (Some on web say born in Swanton Morley Norfolk, Eng & that first children born there, too. No sig. source.)

Becket, Berkshire County, Massachusetts

Abner buried in the graveyard behind the Congregational Church in Becket Center.

Recovery1633

Lt. MARK EAMES 1620 - 1693 (age 73) b. May 1620, either Swanton Morley Norfolk or St. George, Fordington, Dorset, Eng., [Probably Dorset if Eames went with Endicott.] d. Jul 1693, Marshfield, Plymouth Co, MBC. Emig. to Amer. w/ father when c15 yrs. old to Charleston. Remov. w/ family to Hingham, had grant of land in Hingham in 1645, Purchased house & land in Marshfield w/ father 10 Dec 1651 in Marshfield, Referred to as Lieut. in militia for Marshfield, MBC, Repres. in General Court 1662 & for 14 out of next 20 yrs. Sold land to son, Anthony witness by Demaris, Mary & Mary Eames, provided for estate for five daughters to share. d. 1693 Marshfield. Note: Mark & wife Eliz. died a few days apart. ELIZABETH ANDREWS b. 1627/8, bp1638 -1693 b. 1627/8, bp. Mar 1637/8 Hingham by Rev. Peter Hobart, m. Tues 26 May 1648 Hingham, Plymouth Co, MBC. d. 1693 Marshfield Children b. Hingham: Eliza 16 Aug 1644 John b. 6 Jun, or Sept 1649 in Hingham, killed age 27 in “Rehoboth” fight. Ruth bet. 1652-69 Jonathan b.31 May 1656 Children b. Marshfield: ANTHONY bet1644-58 Demaris bet1650-61 David bet1658-59 Sarah c.1663 (NOTE: Date conflicts of marriage after birth child? Also she seems to have been only 10 when she was married if she was born near her bp.) (NOTE: Curious if this Andrews is related to the Andrews family in Ipswich, uncle of the Burnham brothers.

ANTHONY N. EAMES c1657-1729 (age 73) b. c1657 Marshfield, PC, d. 17 Sep 1729 Marshfield, Plymouth Co, MBC MERCY SAWYER 1668-aft.1729 b.1 Feb 1668 Marshfield living 1729 m. Mon 2 Dec 1686 (MS#99, vol18/1,pg84) Children b. Marshfield: Mercy b. 1687 Jerusha b.1688 Elizabeth b.1691 Ichabod b.1693 Marke b.1698 Mary b. 1698 ANTHONY b. c.1703

Recovery1633

ANTHONY SAWYER EAMES, JR. 1703-1793 (89/90) b.1703 Marshfield, Plymouth Colony, Remov to Lebanon, CT 14 Jan 1738,d. Voluntown CT (now called Sterling) 26 Apr 1793, bur. family lot in Sterling (part of Lebanon). (MS#471vol18/1,pg143) Records are verified in Becket, Berkshire Co. Mass records. ANNA BARKER 1709-bef 1790“ of Marshfield” b.19 Oct 1709 Marshfield, Plymouth Colony. m. Sunday 25 Mar 1725 Marshfield, d.Sterling, CT bef. 1 Aug 1790 14 children all married except Jerusha Children b Marshfield: Mark 17Aug/May1726 David 11Jan1728/29, bp 28 Jan 1734 (moved to Becket with Abner) John Nov 1730 ABNER 26 Jan 1732 Lydia Mar 1734 Anna 3 Apr 1736 Hannah 14 Jan 1738 Children b. Lebanon unless otherwise noted (maybe Hannah was too.) Marcy 5 Jan 1739/40 m. John Mansfield bros. of Rachel Mary 23 Sep 1741 Jerusha 18 Dec 1742 In Voluntown Desire 15 Oct 1745 in Voluntown Priscilla 9 Aug 1747 Zephaniah 17 Nov 1749 Naomi 17 Sep 1751

MINER THOMAS AMES 1839-1890 b. 20 Jul 1839 Becket, Berkshire Co., MA, bp “Thomas Miner Ames” Becket MA Cong. Ch 1 Apr 1841 w/ bro. & sis. by Camp Greylock in Becket is Rev. Lavius Hyde, “Genial, on the site of the home of J. affectionate, provident Ames & W. F. Taylor on the husband & father. Dark 1876 map, just east of Center complex, brown eyes, 5’10 Pond. This probably refers 1/2”xl d. 13 Jan 1890 @ home to Joel Ames, Jr., Justin’s JUSTIN MARTIN AMES 1811 Prairie Ave, Chicago brother, who married a 1799-1882 (age 83) Taylor. But maybe it was had b. 7 May 1799 Becket, MA, of Bright’s disease (liver disease), bur. Graceland been the home of the Ames bp 16 Jun 1809 Becket Cemetery, Chicago, IL. Edu. family before that. I have Congregational Ch. by ABNER EAMES district school, 1855 census: yet to research real estate Joseph L. Mills d. 14 Nov 1732-1812 (80) listed w/ fam, age 16, records..—EMA 1882 Thompsonville, CT, b. 30 April 1732 (other “Pedlar”, left Becket 1855xl Bur. North Cemetery, account b. 26 Jan 1731/2), at age 17, moved 1000 miles Becket MA. Was “well to Marshfield, PC. bp.28 to OH: “Traveling salesman, do” “farmer, mechanic & Jul 1734, mentioned in went West”xl, selling small in lumber” (RA), 1855 father’s will. lived awhile in stock of jewelryxli liv. 2 Census listed as “Farmer”, Voluntown CT, lived awhile yrs. NY State, attended Adm. Beckett Cong Ch 1 Jul in Ashford, settled with academy in Schuylerville, 1827 at same time as wife his brother David Eames NY for one winter, returned & Irene & Putnam children to being salesman, sold in Becket MA c.1777. DR. JOEL AMES & Pliny & Lucy Ames. 1798 signed Charter with book subscriptions, 1857 EMA, RA “Fair complexion, brakeman, later baggage Thomas Chaffee & Thomas 1769-1852 (age83) blue eyes, five feet eleven Chaffee Jr. (see his grandson b. 1769 Ashford, CT, d.23 master on RR 5 yrs in OHxl, inches in height.” Both he & got job from Mr. E. Mize, Justin’s in-laws) to establish Jan 1852 Becket MA. Doctor. Didn’t enjoy Anna members of Congreg acting Supt. Cleveland, the First Congregational practice medicine, preferred Church, Justin married Society in the Town of Zanesville & Cincinnati books & reading, “very three times. Becket, d. & bur. Becket, RR, arr. Chicago IL 8 Sept All children by #1. w#2 Berkshire Co., MA 15 Mar intelligent man”, Changed 1862 age 23, est. coal yrd name from Eames to Calista H. Brackett of 1812. Gravemarker says: & office corner Kinzie & Ames,“left off E because Millbury CT m. Apr 1861 “Ecl XII:12 Then shall the Green Streets spring of thought superfluous” Becket (she was 54), w#3 dust return to the Earth as it was; & the Spirit shall 1812=the year of his father’s Mrs. Harriet Watkin(s) m. Continued to left return unto God who gave death—(RA). Mentioned in May/Jun 1875 History of Becket but not as See History of Becket book it.” (Mayflower Society Silverbook Vol18,pt2p143) a doctor. See grave rubbings & bio. in EMA records.

RACHEL MANSFIELD 1734-1825 b.30 Nov 1734 Voluntown, CT, m. 14 Oct 1755 Voluntown Presb. Church Voluntown, New London, CTvii, d. 10 Jun/Mar 1825, Plattsburg, NY, Children: Abner c30 Apr 1764/1758 Mercy c1760 (m. Wm. Hunter -see note below about him.) Polly bet 1753-82 Ruth 13 Apr 1764 Naomi Apr 1765 JOEL 1769, Ashford, CT Zephaiah 15 Mar 1774

Grave marker for both Justin & Anna in North Becket Cemetery. It’s the second largest monument in the cemetery. Carved from Becket granite. ANNA HARRIET CHAFFEE/CHAFFE “Annie” also “HARRIET A. CHAFFEE” 1803-1859 (age 56) b.4 Feb 1803 Becket, MA m.20 Jan 1824 Becket, MA, d.17 Aug 1859 Becket, MA “of dysentery”, Dark complexion & black eyes.8th gen. Chaffee in Amer. 10 children, 5 daughters & 5 sons, seventh was MINOR T., all born Becket: Samantha Minerva 24 Dec 1826 Zeruiah 26 Oct 1828 Samson Chaffee 28 Jul 1830 George Luther 16 Jun 1832 Lucy Ann 6 Oct 1835 Note: EMA visit to Becket— Lucinda 6 Mar 1837 info from Snow Genealogy THOMAS MINER/ MINER THOMAS book in Town Hall: 20 Jul 1839 Wilson 16 Apr 1841 Julia 24 Mar 1843 Franklin 7 Jul 1845

Grave marker for both Joel & Azuba.A few rows in front of Justin’s in North Becket Cemetery. AZUBA/AZUBAH PUTNAM 1774-1856 (age 82) b. 1774, m.14 Dec 1795 Becket, MA, d.30 Jun 1856 Becket, bur. North Becket Cemetery w/ husband. Adm 13 Nov 1808 Becket Cong Church. Ten children,“JUSTIN was (Note: Marriage certif. third”(RA). from Voluntown in my Joel Jr.11 Nov 1796-1886 possession.) (Note of interest: Their son, Pliny 3 Apr 1798-1860 JUSTIN M. 17 May 1799 Abner Jr. enlisted at the Putnam 15 Feb 1801-188? age of 80 during the War Sally 19 Apr 1809 of 1812 as a substitute for Jonathan 24 May 1805 his bros-in-law, William Hunter & died as a prisoner Zephaniah 18 Oct 1810 of war on a British Warship Irene 6 Sep 1813-1848 Iowa with his cousin Isaac.) Abner Ignatius 12 June 1815-1864

(Note: RA wrote in her references to Voluntown, “It is now called Sterling CT.” However, I was able to obtain records from Voluntown CT in 2005.)

?

1800s

1700s

Location of cemetery where Joel & Justin are buried. Just south of North Becket

Recovery1633

Capt. ANTHONY EAMES* c.1595-prob 1686 (age 91) b. c1595 St.George’s Parish, Fordington, Dorset, Eng. d. prob. Jun 1686 Marshfield. Church warden in St. George, signed Bishop Transcripts in 1623 & 1627v., Arr. Charlestown, MA, c.1629 prob.as part of advance party preparing for Massacusetts Bay Colony. Ret. to sail again on Recovery of London, Gabriel Cornish, Master, from Weymouth on 16 Mar 1633. “of record” in Charlestown in 1634/35. No.22 on list of 33 governing selectmen for Charlestown, MA in 1634xxvii. Joined church in Charlestown w/wife 13 Sept 1634, Removed to Hingham MA, c.1636, “house in lower plain”vi, asst in laying out boundary between Plymouth Colony & Mass. Bay Col., “frequently town officer”, Built & ran corn mill, made freeman in 1637, Rep. to Mass. Bay Col. Gen. Court ‘37 & ‘38, Info from internet. &’43. Controversy over Prob not verified. Capt. appt. 1644-45. Remov to Marshfield, MA bet. THOMAS EAMES 1645-50, Rep. of Plymouth 1548-1618 Colony General Court 1653, b.1548 England, d. 25 Jun 1618 Fordington, St. George, 58, 61., Mem of Council of War, 1657. Dorset, Eng.

Pierce/Prisse Lebanon, CT Later home of Anthony Sawyer Eames Becket, MA Ashford, CT Birthplace of Justin and Birthplace of Joel Minor Ames Eames/Ames

1600s

Info on early Eames family from Mayflower Society Family books & all fully verified.

KNOWLTON LYMAN AMES “Snake” 1868-1931 b. 27 Nov 1868 in Minonk, IL, Edu.Princeton Univ., Inherit. Minonk Coal & Tile, Foreclosed 1902,Remov. Evanston (1460 Ashbury Avenue @ time of birth of son John), Remov. to Chicago 1915/16, Pres. Booth Fisheries, CEO & Owner Chicago Journal of Commerce, l. 936 Lakeshore Drive, 1st floor apt, Chicago, IL 1916-22, div. Adelaide 1920, m.#2 Ada Howell. Child w/ Ada: Emily Ann b. 2 May 1926; Inducted into College Football Hall of Fame, See extensive bio. There’s also a book called The Ames Tragedy K684.462 in Newbury Library with transcripts of death at mines in Minonk. d.31 Dec 1931 Chicago, IL by shooting himself in the head with a revolver after Depression ruined him financially. Bur in Riverside Cemetery, Chicago (not with his father in Graceland)

KNOWLTON LYMAN AMES, Jr. 1893-1965 b.19 Nov 1893,Minock, IL, Edu:1917 Princeton Univ AB, m#1 Edith Ames Winter, m#2 Olivia, m#3 Francis, m#4 Dorothy. Occ: newspaper owner, finance, businessman, Pres. Yellow Cab Co., owner Chicago Evening Post, President Chicago Journal of Commerce, Dir. of Finance for State of Illinois 1936, owned chicken ranch w/ w#4 in Bahamas end of life, author of Berlin After the Armistice dedicated to his cousin, Brig General Charles Dawes (F4774.03 Newbury Library, Chicago); d.13 Oct 1965 Harbour Isl, Bahamas—drove off end of pier in his pick-up truck & drowned. Grave on Bahamas, prob Harbour Island.

Adelaide w/ her children: Rosemary, John & Knowlton Lyman Ames Jr, “Juny”. It would have been taken after Alys died, who died before Rosemary was born.

THOMAS WINTER AMES 1922-1992 b.16 Jun 1922 Minneapolis MN,BS Univ. Calif.Berkeley, l. Chicago until 1936, Remov. to Pasadena, CA 1936-1966, l. Santa Monica 1966-1992, Service: U.S. Army during WWII, stateside; occ: nurseryman, owned & built T.W.Ames Nursery on Foothill Blvd, Pasadena, sold indoor plants. Remov. to Santa Monica, CA, c1967 where bought apartment house northeast corner Chautauqua Blvd & Pacific Coast Highway. Was forclosed upon c1988 & had to move to shed near a warehouse. That warehouse burned down. He rented a garage to store his possessions, where he apparently lived for a while. It is thought he spent the last year or more living on the street because he hadn’t visited the garage during that time. Had been walking to Norm’s Coffee Shop every morning at about 5:00 to 6:00 am for last 18 years of his life, but stopped going six months before death because unable to get there; d.29 Dec 1992 Santa Monica, CA, of pneumonia. Died on the sidewalk of Euclid Street in Santa Monica next to the shopping cart which he’d been pushing. Turned in by police as a John Doe. Fingerprints identified him; bur. National Cemetery in Riverside, CA. He hadn’t communicated with his family for the last 13 years of his life, so no one was aware of his death until I went in search of him six months after his death. See the book I wrote about the search, about him & about our Ames family history titled The Man in the Purple Cow House, & other Tales of Eccentricity, by Mary Ames Mitchell.

EILEEN MARY HOPKINS 1925-2010 b.London, England 10 Nov 1925, lived in England until 1939, visited America in 1938 w/ Britannic 1939 adopted brother Peter; left from Southampton, (Final immigration) Eng on Manhattan; arr. 4 Aug 1938, emig. to America on Britannic from Liverpool, arr. New York 29 Jul 1940 (w/ half-sister Jennifer, stepmother Florence “Fay” Cartledge Hopkins, & Fay’s mother listed as “Mary D. M. Cartledge”; bp. San Rafael, CA c1942, visited Eng. in 1948; returned through New York on Queen Elizabeth from Southhampton, obtrained BA in Art from Scripts College 1947; obtained JD from Glendale College of Law 1972; took CA bar exam one time, didn’t pass, never tried again; worked for Legal Aid for several years; volunteered as Publicity Chair for Los Angeles Arboreteum; serious amateur photographer; m.#1 Thomas Ames 11 Jul 1950, div1965, m.#2 Jerry Mlynko Aug 1983; he d. c1995; l. Pasadena, Los Angeles Co, CA 1947-2003; remov. to San Rafael, Marin Co., CA in summer 2003. d. 9 Nov 2012 San Rafael, natural causes. bur Santa Barbara Cemetery, Santa Barbara, CA. Children(Ames): all b. Pasadena, CA EDITH MARY THOMAS WINTER, Jr. CHARLES HOPKINS

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EDITH AMES WINTER 1895-1965 (age 70) b.7 Dec 1895 Minneapolis, MN, BA Wellsley 1917 m.#1 Knowlton Lyman Ames, Jr. “Juny” Minneapolis, 27 Jun 1919, res. Chicago frm marriage to bef 1936 when ADELAIDE/ADELHEID mov. to Pasadena, CA where SCHROEDER “Nanna” her parents had retired, 1870-1948 (age 78) m.#2 Pasadena 23 Sep b.19 Aug 1870 Clinton Ave, 1936 Paul McGuinnis, d.30 Brooklyn NY, m.18 Jan 1893 Aug 1965, Carmel Valley, Brooklyn NY, Grew up in CA, OF “Self administered Brooklyn; edu. Adelphi barbituate intoxication,” Academy in Brooklyn until ashes bur. Lakewood Cem, 18 yrs; d. Chicago 1 Sep Minneapolis (Paul d.11 Apr 1948; bur. Shelter Island 4 1965 age 68) Sep 1948 Children b. Minneapolis: 4 Children: Knowlton Lyman III KNOWLTON LYMAN JR “Bud” 10 Jun 1920, m. “Juny” 19 Nov 1893 b. Jane Rubicam Skirm, Minonk 21 June 1947 in either Alys 5 Jun 1897-1902 b. CT/NY, d.Chicago, IL Evanston, Il 2002; Children: Jeffrey John Dawes 27 May 1903Knowlton, Katherine 1987 prob. b. Evanston Skirm, Elizabeth Winter Rosemary 11 Dec 1906THOMAS WINTER, 16 1989 prob b. Evanston Jun 1922, m. Eileen Hopkins, 11 Jul 1950 Santa Barbara, CA, d. Santa Monica CA 1992. Children: Edith Mary, Thomas Winter, Charles Hopkins, Robert Dawes “Bob” 15 Nov 1925, m. Kathryn Ann Wallace 23 Nov 1945, Pasadena, CA, d. 2010; Children: Robin Louise, Marta Lesley, Haven Winter

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EMILY ROSE (FRENCH) 1841-1877 b. 20 Feb 1841 prob Columbus OH, m.#1 Mr. ? French. a friend of her brother, Henry. Mr. French & Henry “instantly killed by lightening Feb 15, 1862 Vicksburg, Louisanna during civil war when soldiers, Henry bur. Alexandria, OH. (Alexandria suburb of Granville OH, outside Columbus).Listed 30 Oct 1853 choir of East Granville Church, OH. Emily m.#2 Minor 18 Apr 1866/62 in Colombus after Emily’s father moved there. Family kept ties w/ rest of family in Alexandria, where Emily’s father buried. Emily d.4 May 1877 at home at 839 West Washington,“12th ward” Chicago. bur. Graceland Cemetery in site where her husband eventually was buried. 5 Children (two died): KNOWLTON LYMAN 1868 Harriett 1872-1912 (m.McCormick) Jane Rose 1870-1938 (m. Walter W. Ross 1939 who is largely responsible for the Ames/Rose geneology here. He bur. w/ Emily in Minor’s plot as are other Ross descendents.)

1900s

3 RA = Records of Rosemary Ames.

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?

THOMAS ANDREWS ?-? From Hingham, Eng. “Aged when he arrived in Hingam. Rev. Peter Hobard wrote in his diary on 21 Aug 1643 “Old Thomas Andrews dyed.” Came w/ son Joseph to Hingham, MBC prior to arrival of Rev. Hobart & company on 8 Jun 1635. 18 Sep 1635 drawing of house lots drew five acres including back land on Town Streen now North Street. His lot one upon which stood, in 1899 dwelling owned by heirs of late Perez Lincoln. Hobart had arrived first Charlestown, then remov to Hingham where was pastorate for 44 yrs.

Andrews

UNKNOWN Children: JOSEPH Thomas m. Ann? (Ref. Edward Small, p.689)

1600s

ELIZABETH ? bet 1595-1615 Children: ? Thomas Nov 1632 prob Eng. Joseph c1634/5 ELIZABETH bp Mar 1637/8 Hingham by Rev. Peter Hobart. m. Emes (How her father spells it in will.)She must have been born earlier to be old enough to marry Mark. Ephriam pb Aug 1639 Hingham by Hobart. Remov to New Hersey bef 1679 Hannah prob m. Matthew Gannett Sr of Scituate Mary m ? Beard (prob Thos. Beard) Hepzibah m. Jefffrey Manning Abigail b1647, m 25 Jul 1667 John Wadsworth

?

THOMAS LITTLE bef 1613-1671 Emig. to Plymouth bef.m. in 1633, bur. Marshfield 12 Mar 1671,tax list. (MSVol18/1,pg4)

Little

Hingham, Massachusetts Bay Colony Marshfield, Plymouth Colony

Location of where Anthony & his family first lived (Hingham), then where they moved (Marshfield) & where Anthony N. & Anthony Jr. were born (Marshfield). Minonk

JOHN SAWYER c1640s-1704 m. Mercy 1666 m. Rebecca (Barker) Snow (see Hopkins line), Marshfield 1694 & had 10 more children: Abigail, Lydia, Mercy (a second Mercy Sawyer b.aft 1694), Deborah, son, Sarah, Bethiah, Luseanna, Rebecka & Abiah.) Appointed constable of Marshfield 1672 d. aft.1704/5(deed) prob. Plymouth MERCY LITTLE 1645-1693 b. Plymouth c.1645, bur. Marshfield 1693. m. Marshfield 1666 Children: ___ke b. 1667 MERCY b. 1668/9 Susanna b. 1671 n.f.r. Thomas b. 1672 Josias b.1675 Mary b. 1677 n.f.r. Anne bur 1682

ANNA WARREN 1612-1675 b. prob London, England c1612, m. Anne 1623 Plymouth 1633 d. Marshfield after 1675/76 (son’s will) Emig. on Anne with mother & sisters 1623. Children: Abigail b. c.1635 Ruth d. aft 1675/76 Hannah b. c.1637 Mayflower 1620 Patience b.c.1639 MERCY b. c.1645 RICHARD WARREN Isaac b. c.1646 c1580-1628 Ephraim b. 1650 b. prob.Hertford, England bef. 1600, “of London”,d.1628 Thomas b. bef. 1654/5 killed by Indians 1676 in King Plymouth, Emig. Mayflower Phillip’s War. 1620.listed in 1623 Div. of Samuel b. c.1656 Land, 1627 Div. of Cattle. Died following year.(See MS Vol18/1,pg1 & bio.)

Warren

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UNKNOWN

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AUGUSTINE WALKER bef 1565-soon aft.1613 d. England. Will was found recently, identifying Elizabeth’s last name, dated April 1613

ELIZABETH WALKER c1580-1673, above 90 b. c1580 England, m. 14 Apr 1610 Great Anne 1623 Amwell, Hertford, d.Plymouth 1673,Emig. Anne 1623 with five daughters. Children: Mary b.1610 ANNA b.1612 SARAH b.1614 Elizabeth b.c.1616 Abigail b.1618 Nathaniel b.1624 Joseph b.1626

Evanston

Birthplaces of Knowlton Lyman Ames Sr. (Evanstown) & Knowlton Lyman Ames Jr. (Minonk)

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Walker

1900s

JOSEPH ANDREWS c1597-1680 age 83 b. c1597 in Devon, England. Went w/ father to Hingham, MBC before 1634. House lot granted by town 18 Sep 1635 “next west of that of his father & contained five acres, including back land. First Town Constable of Hingham (then called Bare Cove) 8 Jul 1635. Deputy of Hingham to MBC General Court six sessions. Later remov to Duxbury in Plymouth County. d. Hingham 1 Jan 1679/80 at age 83. Will proved same month. (See Edward Small Desdendants book pdf p690 for many town offices, will & inventory of possessions.)

Sawyer Note: The Little Family is prominent in Newbury, MA. Might find connection to him there. Seems to be no more info regarding Plymouth.

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?

Locations of Marshfield & Plymouth

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?

“Direct descendents of Randulph de Calverhall of England, 1200” said Barker Genealogy. No more specifics.

Barker

ROBERT BARKER (Sir?) bet1580-1593 b. c1580/93 Kent, England CATHERINE ACKWORTH 1584-? b. c1584 Kent, Eng, m. St. Andrews, Devon, Plymouth, Eng. Children: John c1610 Robert c1616

Ackworth ?

Williams

JOHN WILLIAMS of Scituate, c1600-1694 b. Eng c.1600, propounded for freeman of Plymouth Colony 5 Mar 1638/9, d. 22 Jun 1694 Scituate, Plymouth, PC ANNE ? 1603b. Eng. m. bef 1618 Eng, d. Scituate, PC Children: Lucy c1620 John 1624 Scituate(who left property to “Williams Barker, son of my nephew John Barker of Marshfield” & his brother Samuel?) ANN(A) 1625 Edward c1626 Mary 1626

?

Annable

ANN(A)/HANNAH WILLIAMS 1625-1658 b.1625 Eng, m.1632 Mass or Eng, d.16 Feb 1658 Scituate, bur. Barnstable, MBC Children Marshfield & Duxbury except where noted: Deborah 1639 Anna 1643 m.Pratt Mary 1647 JOHN 1650 Williams 1651 m#2 Abraham Bliss 1654 (Note: prob related to Experience Bliss. See Chaffee line.)

JOHN BARKER, Jr. bet 1649/52-1729,age79 b. bet 1650/51 Marshfield, PC, d.1 Dec 1729 Barnstable, MA, Occ. Husbandman 1670 (farmer), youngest of 5 child, m#2 Hannah Loring 22 Jan 1706/1707xiii m#3 Sarah aft.1706, res. Barnstable on Cape Cod early manhood, remov. to Marshfield then Scituate. Rep. Barnstable & Scituate in Gen. Court. Severely wounded King Phillip’s War, 1680 freed from bearing arms on that account. Always interested legal matters, some years Justice of Peace. m. #2 Sarah?, m. #3 Hannah Loring Cushing 22Jan1707 (see below) widow of Cushing & daughter of Loring. DESIRE ANNABLExxxi 1653-1706 “age 53” b. Oct 1653 Barnstablexi, Plymouth Colony, bp. 16 Oct 1653 Barnstable [NEHGR 9:28],m.18 Jan 1676/7xii, d.24 Jul 1706 Barnstablexiv Children in Barnstable: Barnabus c1677/88 JOHN 4 May 1678 Desire 22 Sep 1680 Anne 26 Aug 1682 Anna 1 Nov 1683 b. in Scituate, PC Samuel Williams 23 Apr 1686 Barnabus Mary 1690/88

1900s

JOHN BARKER III* 1678-1744/45 b. 4 May 1678 Barnstable, MBC, d 1 Feb 1744/45 Barnstable, res. in Sterling, CT, 3rd in line in America, time of relative peace, no military records, husbandman, recorded as purchasing land in Lebanon, CT in 1726, 1729, 1735, no record of living there, however because son Nehemiah grad Yale 172?, poss. residence in CT (matching RA’s records), m#2 Bethiah Ford 5 Jan 1715ix Barnstable (Note: the year after Hannah’s death.) xxxi

Location of Marshfield & Duxbury (Plymouth Colony).

HANNAH ? xxxi ?-1714 m. 1702 d.1714 Children: Abner 24 Jun 1703 John IV “Wensday” 3 Jan 1704/5 Jonathan 14 Jun 1706 Desire 19 Feb 1707/8 ANNA 19 Oct 1709 Hannah 10 Mar 1712

The Jones River is between Duxbury & present Kingston, MA. This is the current view of the bridge, the site of John Barker’s death, as seen from the William Bradford house in Kingston. Photo ©2005

?

Anne 1623

ANTHONY ANNABLE 1595-1674 b.1595 All Saints Parish, Cambridge, Eng, m. #1 Jane Moumford 26 Apr 1619 All Saints, 4 children: Sarah c1620, Hannah 1623 Plymouth (m. Thos Burman), Susannah c1630 (m. Wm Hatch), Child bur 8 Apr 1635, Deborah bp 7 May 1637, Scituate. Emig w/Jane, Sarah & Hannah on Anne 1623, (Hannah on ship list, but Great Migration records says b. America); on 1643 Pierce’s Colonial List; Occ: farmer, 1st res. Plymouth. Remov to Scituate 1633; of 1st settlers; remov to Barnstable 1639; extensive service. See bio & sep. account of how he started Scituate, MA. (Jane d. 1643; bur 13 Dec 1643 Barnstable.) m.#2 Ann Clark; d. bet 23 Apr & 4 Jun 1674 Barnstable, Plymouth Colony.

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ANN CLARK/ALCOCK bef 1630-aft 1678 m.1/3 Mar 1644/5 Barnstablexv,xiv, Anthony’s w#2, on 30 Oct 1677 fined 20s “for selling of beer to English & Indians without license”xvi Children: Samuel bp 8 Feb 1645 Barnstable, m. Mehitable Allyn Ezekiel 19 Apr 1649 DESIRE bp 16 Oct 1653 Barnstable

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Clark/Alcock

JOHN BARKER Sr. bet 1610&17-1652 b.Kent, Eng, Emig. bef. 1632 to Plymouth, PC c1628 w/ bros. Robert, Remov to Duxbury 1637. Brick mason until 1638 when in 1641 w/ others purchased ferry from Jonathan Brewster which crossed Jones River/ North River to adjoining town of Marshfield, for transporting cattle & men, carried passengers for 2 pence per person.Remov. then to Marshfield where res. until accidental drowning at Jones River ferry 14 Dec 1652 Marshfield, PC, leaving an estate of 131£, Served Marshfield militia, freeman there a year & a half before death.

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Mansfield

Farnsworth

Neal Pray

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JOHN MANSFIELD ?-1689xlvxii p.157 d. 1689, Hingham left fair amount of land to widow, one son & one dau. ELIZABETH FARNSWORTH ?-1706xlvxii p.157 Sold some of land inherited from husband before death. Gave some to dau. Mary, who was unmarried an sold her land before she died. Balance went to son John, & at his death it went to his children undivided. In 1718 there were 8 children living. In 1741, only 7 living. d. 1706 Hingham. Children: JOHN 15 Nov 1656 Mary

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JOHN MANSFIELD 1656-1717 age 61 xlvxii b. Hingham 15 Nov 1656, d. Hingham 1 Nov 1717 “of Hingham”, cooper. There was some land in Hingham near his daughter Hannah, near Mill Neck, about 30 acres, bounded west by salt water, N. & S. by land of Peter Barnes, & E. by Highway. 2/8ths of land inherited by sons Thomas & Stephen by 1620, when suit about land in courts. SARAH NEAL 1661-1736 age 75 xlvxii b. Braintree, MBC 10 Dec 1661, d. Hingham 4 Jun 1736 Children: John 25 Apr 1684, prob. d. bef 1717 Sarah 8 Oct 1685 m. Thos. Harvey of Norton, move to Salisbury CT Elizabeth 25 Nov 1687 m. Jeremiah Stodder, d. Dec 1775 age 88 Hannah 28 Apr 1689, m. Elnathan Bartlett of Plymouth Jeremiah bp 22 May 1692 Joseph 12 Aug 1693 laborer Benjamin 1 May 1695 wheelwright Rachel 4 Apr 1699d. 18 Sep 1716 THOMAS 1702 Stephen 1795

1900s

THOMAS MANSFIELD c1702 b. c1702 based on date of marriage, & date of Thomas, son of John. Married in Boston. I’m guessing this is the Thomas referred to in Rachel’s birth. We know Rachel’s birth. Rest based on that. This Thomas had a sister Rachell. MARY/MAREY WARD c1705 b. c1705 based on date of marriage, m. 1 Dec 1725 Boston by Samuel Sewell, Esq. Boston VR (Found this Thomas & Mary Mansfield by process of elimination, not direct link. This was the only Thomas & Mary Mansfield I could find who would be about the right age to be Rachel’s parents. & the other children were listed under Abington births. The listed children could be from another Thomas & Marey Mansfield. Children b. Abington, MBC: Boston VR

Hannah 3 Oct 1730 Thomas 10 Sep 1732 RACHELL bp 30 Nov 1734 John bp 15 May 1737 Calvin bp 7 Oct 1739

HENRY NEAL xlvxii p.157

HANNAH PRAY xlvxii p.157

Ward

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“Belonged to the ancient family of Puttenham, of which George Puttenham, author of the Arte of English Poesie was a distinguished member. There are several versions of the Family Tree back in England. See article on Putnam/Puttenham.

NICHOLAS PUTNAMi -1598 d. 1598 Eng. Owned estate prob. Stewkley, or Wingrave. Only Stewkley mentioned in will.

Putnam

Gould RICHARD GOULD 1479-1531 b. 1479 Bovington, Buckingham/Hertfordshire, Eng- THOMAS GOULD 1500-1546/7 land; d.11 Oct 1531 Eng. ALICE AXTEL/ JOAN ? MANDEVILLE 1480-1536 1490/9-1546

RICHARD GOULD 1530-1558 age 28 b. 1530 Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, Eng. d.1558 Bovingdon. JANE WEDEN 1532/8-1558/60

RICHARD GOULD 1553–1597/1604 of Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, Eng. ELIZABETH YOUNG 1555/63-1589 Children: Jeremy Zaccheus Sarah Priscilla c1585

Deac. JOHN PUTNAMi 1579/80-1662 b/bp. 17 Jan 1579/80 Ashton Abbots, Buckingham, Eng Signed his mother’s marriage bond to William Huxley 1614 in Aston Abbots. Involved in deposition in Aston Abbots at age 57 in 1637. Sometime acquired property, maybe from father, in Aston Abbots where resided 3 decades before America,Immig bet 1637-1638 with wife, Thomas, Nathaniel, John & at least one dau. Eliz. to Salem Village, Essex, MBC. Farmer “husbandman” & “yeoman”. Deeded land 1638 Salem, Pur 100 acres 20 Jan 1640/1 Salem Village. Adm church & freeman 4 Apr 1647 Salem Vil, (see records for more land dealings). Split his land & homestead among his three sons in 1653 which together w/ the property acquired by themselves, made them the largest taxpayers in community. Sons Thomas, Nathaniel & John men of energy, thrift & uprightness & held important offices in town, military & parish affairs. d. 30 Dec 1662, Salem Village, Essex, MBC, bur. Salem Village. Re: his death, “He ate his supper, went to prayer with his family & died before he went to sleep.” Edward Putnam, his grandson. PRISCILLA GOULD ? c1585-1668 1636/7 b.3 JUN 1582 Bovingdon, Herts, Eng. m.1613 Eng, no official record of date, c1611, adm. Salem chr 21 mar 1641, d.1668 Salem Village, Essex Co., MBC, bur. Salem or pos Wadsworth, Norfolk Co, MBC. Children: Elizabeth/Eliza pb 20 Dec 1612 Aston Abbots, Bucks, Eng. Adm ch. Salem 1643, d. aft 1648 Lt. THOMAS pb 7 Mar 1614/5 John bp 24 Jul 1617 Aston Abbots Nathaniel bp 11 Oct 1619 Sara bp 7 Mar 1622/3 Aston Abbots Phoebe bp 28 Jul 1624 Aston Abbots, bur. 30 Apr 1630 Aston Abbots age 6 Capt John bp 27 May 1627

? 1636/7

Lt. THOMAS PUTNAMi bp1614/5-1686 bp 7 Mar 1614/5 Aston Abbots Buckingham, Eng, pos b. 1610 or 1615, Emig to America w/parents pro 1636/7 to Salem age 21 or 26, granted 50 acrs upland & 5 acres meadow 20 Jan 1640/1 Salem, Essex Co. MBC, res. Lynn, Esses, Co in 1640, adm Salem chr 3 Apr 1643, apt General Crt as judge 18 Jun 1645 1 yr in Lynn, (see records for other accomplishments), rec 250 acres land frm father 20 Dec 166 9 Salem, will dated 8 Feb 1682/3, #2 Mary Veren 14 Nov 1666. Came into property in Jamaica & Barbadoes when married. He & Mary had one child, Joseph, who is the father of General Israel Putnam. See book, Salem Possessed, to see all the fuss about Thos & his inheritance.Was wealthiest man in Salem Village, twice what anyone else had. Left most of it to his second wife & Joseph.d. 10 May 1686 Salem Village, Essex MBC (now Danvers) ANN HOLYOKE 1620/1-1665 (age ? 45) 1636/7 b. Tanworth-inArden, Warwick, Eng 16 Jan 1620/1, m. Salem, d. 1 Sep 1665 Salem Village, Essex Co., MBC Children b. Salem Village: Ann 25 Aug 1645-14 Sep 1676 Salem age 31-m. Wm. Trask Sarah bp 23 Jul 1648-c1686 Mary 17 Oct 1649-bef1686 Sergt Thomas 12 Mar 1651This fellow, his daughter Ann & his wife Ann were among the key figures in the witch hysteria of 1692. DEAC EDWARD 4 Jul 1654 Deliverance 5 Sep 1656, m. Jonathan Walcott son of William Walcott & Alice Ingersoll of Devon Eng. Elizabeth 30 Aug 1659-1705 m. Joshua Bailey Prudence 28 Bef 1661/2aft1745 age 84, m. William Wyman Joseph 1 Sep 1665-1 Oct 1665 age 2 mo.

Mandeville

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1700s ISAAC PUTNAM 1734-1809 (age 75) b.4 Nov 1734 Sutton, Worcester, MBC, d. 24 Mar 1809 Becket, Berkshire Co, MA Served Fr. & In. War in Crown Pt exped. under Capt John Learned 1756. Promoted to Corp. Oct of same yr. Serv as Private under Capt John Sibley in alarm for relief of Ft William Henry 1758. Ensign in Capt Joseph ISAAC PUTNAM Phillip’s 2nd Oxford 1698/9-1751 age 53 Company 1771=John b. 14 Mar 1698/9 Salem Chandler’s 1st Worcester Deac. EDWARD PUTNAM Village, Essex, MBC, Regiment. 1790 census 1654-1748 age 94 deeded land from father Becket, Berkshire, MA, b. 4 Jul 1654 Salem Village, w/ house, orchard, swamp Census info is 3-1-4. 1800 Essec, MBC, bp 9 Jul 1654 & meadow 16 Jan 1718/9 census Becket info 00001Salem, rec. land , house & in Topsfield, Essex, MBC. 01001. History of Becket barn from father on 2 Jan Deeded land to brother states, “In town minutes, 1685, adm freeman 1690, Ezra 12 Feb 1721 Topsfield without explanation, these chosen deacon of First chr (prob same he inher from persons were listed. They of Danvers (Salem Village?) father), pur 125 acrs from had ‘come into the town 3 Dec 1690 & kept position John Hutchinson in Sutton, for the Purpose of aiding until his death. Worked Worcester Co., MBC 23 therein not having obtained father’s farm early part of May 1726, Adm Sutton Chr the Town’s Consent therefor, life. His father set aside an 1 Bef 1730, deeded more & the town constable was estate for him which later land from father 11 Jun directed to post a ‘warning became town of Middleton. 1734 Middleton. Deeded at the Dwelling House’ “yeoman”, seemed well smae land to Ezra for £600 of each & every one of educated, wrote ornate syle 18 Jun 1734. d. 1751 Sutton. them, informing them of language for time, during Will proved 5 Oct 1751. that they must ‘Depart 1682 Salem trials, supported Son Phineas executor. Was the Limits thereof with Rev. Samuel Paris. Accused one of earliest Putnams all their children within Martha Cory of afflicting to leave Salem Village. fifteen days.” On June Thos. wife & dau which led Name first mentioned 21, 1791,Timothy Snow, to her arrest. Wrote early in Sutton when pur land Constable, certified that he Putnam genealogy compiled there 1726. Pur 33 more had issued ‘Warrants’ to the in 1733, will signed 11 mar acrers of Davenport farm following persons: Nathan 1731/2 Salem, d. 10 Mar which bordered his lands. Putnam, his wife & children 1747/8 Middleton, Essex, Name does not appear in ... Isaac Putnam, his wife & MBC. will proved 11 Apr Sutton records after 1740, children..”If same, he must 1748 Salem. Inventory of tho died 11 yrs. later. His have come back for he is estate 25 Jul 1748. (See son Phineas inherited listed in the death records records of life.) homestead. for the Cong. Church. MARY HALE 1660-1718 (age 58) b. 15 Jul 1660 Newbury, Essex, MBC, m#2 Edward Jun 1681 Salem Village, Essex Co, MBC. She was widow of Aquila Jewett whom she’d married c1680. d. 31 Jul 1718 Salem Village. Children b. Salem Village: Deac. Edward 29 Apr 1682 Holyoke 28 Sep 1683-he was killed by an indian raiding party 3 Jul 1706 age 23 Deac. Elisha 3 Nov 1685 Joseph 1 Nov 1687 Mary 14 Aug 1689-bef1726, m. Thos. Flint Prudence 25 Jan 1692/31745, m. William Wyman her cousin, son of Wm. Wyman an Prudence Putnam Nehemiah/Jeremiah 20/21 Dec 1693 Ensign Ezra 28 Feb 1695/61747, m. Elizabeth Fuller,dau. of Thos Fuller & Eliz. Andrewssister of Joseph Fuller below. ISAAC 14 Mar 1698/9-1751 m. Anna Fuller, but not sister of Eliz. or Jos. dau. Jonathan Fuller & Susanna Trask. Abigail bp 26 May 17001764, m. Joseph Fuller s. of Thos Fuller & Eliz. Andrews (There is a Joseph Fuller listed as a carpenter in the History of Ipswich.)

ANNA FULLER 1699-1804 (age 105) b. 6 Nov 1699 Salem Village, Essex, MBC. bp 6 Jul 1701 Salem Village. d. 1804 Sutton, Worcester Co., MBC. Children: Phineas 1 Oct 1722 Asaph 11 Sep 1724 Anna 27 Jul 1726 Salem Village-aft1797 Sutton, m. Josiah Trask s. Josiah Trask & Mary Woodbury Susanna 20 Aug 1728 Sutton, m. Thomas Gleason Nathan 24 Oct 1730 Edward 5 Feb 1733/4 Sutton-c1735, died young ISAAC 4 Nov 1734 Lydia 20 Oct 1736 Sutton Capt. Daniel 28 Mar 1739/40

The Putnams & the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 Our Edward Putnam was one of the accusing party which caused the Witch Hysteria. The book Salem Possessed details the story as researched by Harvard scholars. In the 1690s, the merchant sea port Salem Towne had a “suburb” called Salem Village, which consisted mostly of farms. The residents of Salem Village wanted to break off from Salem Towne & create a church of their own, since without a church, they could not self-govern. But the residents of Salem Towne wouldn’t release them. There were two rival families—the Porters & the Putnams. The Porters were wealthy merchants & large land owners with a great deal of influence in Salem Towne. The Putnams were the highest tax payers in Salem Village, but they were a lot less wealthy than the Porters. One point of grievance was that Porter land blocked access from Putnam Land to Salem Village, making it harder for the Putnams to do business. This rivalry had been going on for several decades, evidenced by many court claimes by the Putnams against the Porters. Thomas Putnam Sr. was the eldest son & heir apparent of the original emigrant to Salem, John Putnam. Thomas Sr. married Ann Holyoke & they had at least eight children, including two sons, Thomas Jr. & our Edward. But when Ann Holyoke died, Thomas Sr. married another woman who happened to be allied with the Porter clan, Mary Ingersol Veren. She was the widow of wealthy merchant Nathaniel Veren of Salem Towne. Thomas & Mary had one son Joseph, born 14 September 1669 in Salem Village. He is the father of General Israel Putnam, commander of our ancestor Lt. Colonel Thomas Knowlton. (And, today, the Ingersols, Mary’s family, own the land where Knowlton was born.)

RACHEL PRATT Other account of Rachel 1739-1833 (age 80) says b. Oxford MBC 29 b. 6 Sep 1739 Framingham, Apr 1753, Middlesex, MBC, filed m. intention 28 May 1760 in Oxford Worcester, MBC, m.28 May 1760 Oxford, d. 26 Nov 1833 Becket, MA Con. Church records.(Eben Putnam suggests she died at the home of her son at the age of 104, but math is 10 yrs off-Matt. Putnam records) Children b. Oxford Jonathan bet1761-1774, liv @ Mile Stone Hill, Pomfret, CT Isaac 15 Jun 1763 Rachel 13 jan 1765-24 Mar 1791, m. Joshua Carter Nathan 14 Feb 1755-aft 1820 census in Becket, also res Greece, Monroe Co, NY, m. Loadecia Walker Lucy 21 Apr 1767-24 Jun 1804, m. John Messenger 1803 in Becket Sarah 1769-1844, m. Joshua Carter 1793 (same as above-she died 1791) David 1771 AZUBAH 1774xxviii (don’t know if she was born in Oxford like older siblings) Joel bet 1776 & 1780

Thomas Sr. had given a great deal of land to his two sons during his lifetime (usually at their marriage), but when he died, he left the balance of his remaining inheritance to Joseph, including the house he had built in 1648 at the foot of Hawthorne Hill. Similar to the story in the Bible about Joseph & his older brothers, this story of a favored youngest son caused a great deal of bitterness between Joseph & his older half brothers, Thomas & Edward. It didn’t help matters when Joseph Putnam married Elizabeth Porter of the Porter clan. The Putnams were not part of the initial three cases of witchcraft, however, a month later, when that issue had begun to calm down, Thomas Jr.’s daughter Anne began showing signs of possession by witchcraft. She & her group of mostly young women friends accused many family & friends of the Porter clan of being witches. This was the beginning of the hysteria. Her mother Anne & her uncle Edward also made accusations. Some Harvard scholars discovered an extremely high correlation—most of the accusers were somehow related to or associated with the Putnams & most of the accused were related to or associated with the Porters. This may not explain how the original three women showed signs of illness or being possessed, but the scholars theorized that the resulting hysteria which caused the execution of 19, the imprisonment of some 200 & the accusation of some 300, was the revenge of Thomas Jr. on his youngest brother Joseph, agrivated by the actions of the “wicked” stepmother Mary Veren Putnam, who had withdrawn his inheritance. Note: The Israel Putnam Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution marked Hawthorne Hill as a landmark with a bronze plaque.

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Weden Young

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JOHN HOLYOKE 1543-? b.1543 Eng

Holyoke

UNKNOWN 1545-1565 England

Stokes

HUMPHREY STOKES 1500-1551 age 51 b. 1500 Yardley, Worcester, Eng, d. 7 Jan 1551 Yardley.

1600s

EDWARD HOLYOKE Sr. 1566-1631 b. Tanworth, Warwickshire, Eng, d. 31 Dec 1631 Tanworth ELIZABETH STOKES 1562-1615 b.28 Aug 1582 Tanworth, Warwickshire, Eng, d. 22 Aug 1615 Tanworth Children: EDWARD 1585

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EDWARD HOLYOKE Jr. 1585-1660 age 75 b. 15 Feb 1585 Tanworth Warwick,Eng; d. 4/5 May 1660 Lynn, Essex, MBC VR PRUDENCE STOCKTON 1584-1665 age 80 b. 20 Dec 1684 Kinbalt, Staffordshire, England; m.18 Jun 1612 Kimcote,Walton,Leice stershire,Eng. d.1 Sep 1665 Lynn, Essex, MBC Children b.1626 Tanworth, Warwickshire, England: ANN 1626

RICHARD STOKES 1544-1590

ANNE ? -1559 m.1525, d. 4 May 1559 Yardley Children: RICHARD 1544

MARY SMALBROKE 1546-1591

THOMAS STOCKTON 1505-1558 age 53 b. 1505 Edsley, Whitchurch, Shroupshire, Eng, d. 1558 Edsley

THOMAS STOCKTON 1530-1591 b. 1530 Edsley, Whitchurch, Shroupshire, Eng, d. 1591 Whitchurch

JOHN STOCKTON 1565-1630 age 65 b.1565 Kinbalt, Staffordshire, Eng, m. 17 Aug 1578 Kiinbalt, d. 13 Nov 1630 Kinbalt

JOYCE ? 1510-1579 age 69 b. 1510 Whitchurch, Shroupshire, Eng, d. Whitchurch

JOAN ? 1532b.1532 Eng, m. 1553 Whitchurch, Shropshire, Eng, d. Whitchurch Children: JOHN 1565

SUSANNA ? 1564-1627 age 63 b. 1564 Kinbalt, Staffordshire, Eng, m. 17 Aug 1578 Kiinbalt, d. 19 Feb 1627 Kinbalt Children: PRUDENCE 1564

Smalbroke

Stockton

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1700s

1900s The Hales were among the first settlers of Newbury, MBC.

THOMAS HALE Sr. 1604-1682 age 78 b.c1604 (subtracted from death date), came to Newbury w/ wife in 1635; occ. glover; accepted freeman same day as Wm. Hawthorne Boston General Court 14 May 1634; 7 Dec 1642 among 91 acknowledged as freeholders by town with rights [see Hale, History of Newbury] which heirs inherited & could sell, resided south side of River Parker in Newbury. Hale name considerable antiquity & high respectability in Eng. of Codicote, in Herts, Eng. Listed in “Mr. Parker’s party of 41 on 29 May 1671. [see Thomas Hale Jr. 1721 entry in judge Sewall’s diary, “Thomas Hale [was] made a justice. I opposed it, because there are five in Newbury already & he had lately kept an ordinary & sold rum. I was answered he had laid it down. I fear it will not be for the honour of the persons, nor of the governor & council, nor for the welfare [of the town] unless perhaps dwelling on the neck he may give check to traveling on the Lord’s day’ Within the imits of ‘ould [old] Newberry,’ there are now forty-four justices.” d. Newbury 21 Dec 1682

Hale

Bond

Leigh

GEORGE BOND 1534-1592 age 58 b. 1534 Buckland, Somerset, Eng, d. Mercer Chapel, Middlesex, Eng WINNIFRED LEIGH 1538-1592 b. 1538 Stoneleigh, Warwickshire, Eng, m. 1589 Walton, Stone, Herts, d. 1592 Kings Walden, Herts

WILLIAM HALE 1551-1634 age 66 b. 1551 Kings Walden, Herts, Eng, d. 27 Aug 1634 Kings Walden

THOMAS HALE Sr. 1575-1630 b. Watton-at-Stone, Herts, Eng, d. 19 Oct 1630 WattonAt-Stone

ROSE BOND 1555-1648 age 93 b. 1555 Walton Sto, Herts, Eng, m. 1575 (age 20) Herts, Eng, d. 31 Jul 1648 Kings Walden Children: THOMAS 1575

JOAN KIRBY 1580-1640 b.1580 Little Munden, Herts, Eng, m. 19 Oct 1601, d. 29 Oct 1640 Little Munden Children: THOMAS 1606 Somebody had 9 children. I thought it was William, but this Thomas was b. 1606, not jiving w/ web sources. 9 Children: Richard 1596 William 1597 Rowland, his heir George 30 Jul 1600 Alicia 1603 Winifred 1604 THOMAS 1606 who came to Newbury Anne 1609 Dionisia 17 May 1611

THOMAS HALE Jr. 1633-1688 54 b. 18 Nov 1633 Watton Stone, Hertfordshire, Eng, on 29 May 1671 Newbury he was one of 41 in “Mr. Woodman’s party” ordered to pay a fine (“one noble” for him). His father was part of Mr. Parker’s party, also 41 members. The dispute was apparently (don’t have all the pages) over majority rule vs church members. “agitated the church for more than a quarter of a century” “vital question of church & state” Similar to what happened in Salem d. 22 Oct 1688 Newbury, Essex, MBC

Old Burying Ground where Thomas & Thomasine Hale are buried.

MARY HUTCHINSON 1630-1688 age 57 b. 26 Dec 1630 North Muskham, Nottinghamshire, Eng, “of Danvers”; m. 26 May 1657 In memory of Newbury, Essex, MBC, d. Thomas hale 22 Oct 1688 Boxford, Essex, Chr. June 15, 1606 MBC Died Dec. 21, 1682 Children: and his wife Capt Thomas 11 Feb 1658 Thomasine Dowsett MARY 15 Jul 1660 Born abt. 1609 Abigail 8 Apr 1662 Died Jan. 3, 1683 Hannah 29 Nov 1663 English immigrants Lydia 17 Apr 1666 of 1637 Elizabeth 16 Oct 1668 THOMASINE DOWSETT Joseph 20 Feb 1671 -1683 Samuel 6 Jun 1674 d. 30 Jan 1683 Children: m#2 William Watson THOMAS 18 Nov 1633 John 19 Apr 1635-2 Jan 1707, carpenter; m. #1 Rebecca Lowell 5 Dec 166?; she d. 1 Jun 1662; m#2 Sarah Somerby 8 Dec 1663; she d.19 Jan 1672, m#3 Sarah Symonds Ipswich; she d.19 Jan 1698/9 Samuel b.Newbury 2 Feb 1639/40-5 Nov 1709, remov Woodbury NJ m.#1 Lydia Musgrove 19 Mar 1669, m#2 Sarah Ilsly of Newbury 21 Jul 1673; she d. Woodbridge 19 Jan 1680/1 Apphia 1642; m.Benjamin Rolfe 3 Nov 1659

Plaque at the First Burying Ground. “This burying ground was laid out in 1635 by the first town selectmen & restored in 1929 by William L. & Jane Dole Moore in memory of Richard Dole & the First Settlers.

Site of the settlers’ first landing.

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9

1400s There’s more

Kirby

Cranfield There’s more

Dowsett

There’s more

Gladyn

1500s

THOMAS KIRBY 1521-1573 age 52 b. 1521 Standon, Herts, Eng, d 14 Nov 1573 Standon, Herts

JOHN KIRBY 1558-1628 b. 18 Oct 1558 Herts, Eng, d. 1628 Watton-at-Stone, Herts, Eng

JOAN SMYTHE 1525-1573 age 48 b. 1525 Therfield, Herts, Eng, m. 22 Jul 1548 Therfield, d. 1573 Herts

JOAN CRANFIELD 1550-1640 b. 1550 Little Munden, Herts, Eng, m. 23 Dec 1576 Watton at Stone, Herts, Eng, d. 29 Oct 1640, Wattonat-Stone Children: JOAN 1580

WILLIAM CRANFIELD 1530-1614 b. 1530 Watton-at-Stone, Herts, Eng, d. 5 Nov 1614Watton-at-Stone

JOHN DOWSETT 1480-1530 age 50 b. 1480 Kelvedon Hatch, Essex, Eng; d. 1539 Stanford Rivers, Essex,Eng.

GEORGE DOWSETT 1527-1594 AGE 67 b. 1527 Stanford Rivers, Essex, Eng, d. 1594 Harlow, Essex, Eng

ALICE ? 1480-1530 age 50 b. 1480 Stanford River, Essex, Eng; m. 1517 age 37 Stanford Rivers, d. 15 Mar 1530 Stanford Rivers.

JOAN GLADYN 1527-1578 age 51 b. 1527 Harlow, Essex, Eng, m. 23 June 1570 (age 33) Stanford Rivers, Essex, Eng, d. 1578 Harlow Children: GABRIEL 1577

1600s

Continues on Page 81

Harris Thomas

MERCY 1581-1653 age 72 b. 1581 Harlow, Essex, Eng, m. 1614 (age 33) Harlow, d. Watton-on-Stone, Herts, Eng Children: THOMASINE 15 May 1606

ROBERT GLADYN 1494-1567 age 73 b. 1594 Harlow Market, Essex, Eng, m. Harlow Market; d. 5 Sep 1567 Harlow

THOMAS HUTCHINSON 1570-1618 xlvxiv THOMAS HUTCHINSON b. 5 nov 1570 Newark, Nottingham, Eng, m.@ 1540-1598 age 58 xlvxiv age 18, Occ: landowner. b. 6 May 1540 Newark, Only surviving son & heir. LAWRENCE Nottingham, Eng, m.@ age Inherited father’s property HUTCHINSON xlvxiv 29; will dated 1 Mar 1598, 1509/10-1577 age 68 proved 11 May 1598, prob. at Newark, Nottingham, Remov. to Arnold near b. 4 Feb 1509/10 Newark. He appointed as Nottingham, Eng; will dated supervisors of will “cousin” city of Nottingham bet 1601 & 1605; will dated 11 21 Jul 1577, d. c 9 Oct 1577 Mr. Thos Hutchinson of when will proved, Tollerton, Owthorpe & Mr. Thos Ellis Mar 1618; bur. at Arnold, Nottingham 17 Aug 1618. Nottingham of Gray’s Inn, London. ALICE KINNLY ISABEL HARRIS MARY THOMAS 1570/1-1618 1515-1580 age 64 1552-1604/5 age 46 b.21 May 1570 Newark,, b. 1 Oct 1515 Nottingham; b. 9 Aug 1552 Newark, Nottingham, Eng; m. m. 25 Jun 1535 Nottingham; Nottingham, Eng, m. 20 d. 7 Jun 1580 Nottingham Apr 1570 @age 17 Newark; 30 Apr 1589 Arnold Nottingham, Eng @age 18; Children: d. 1598 Eng d. 17 Aug 1618 Arnold, Robert 1536–1559 Children: Nottingham She survived THOMAS 1540–1598 THOMAS 1570–1618 her husband. Agnes 1542–1572 Joan 1572–1648 Children b. Newark: Richard 1544–1609 William 1573–1597-d. William 1590–1688 William 1546–1612 during father’s lifetime. John 1592–1690 m.#1 Ann, m#2 Jane Melford Isabel 1595–1675 m. Adam Barker Humphry 1597–1597 Elizabeth 1599–1599 Robert bp 6 Sep 1601 Newark–1628 m. Margaret RICHARD 1602/3–1682 Thomas bp 16 June 1605–1627

RICHARD HUTCHINSON 1602-1682 age 80 xlvxiv b. 1602 Nottingham (no pb records at family homes of Newark or Arnold); 4th son & 6th child, m. #1 Alice Bosworth 7 Dec 1627 age 25 in Cotgrave, Nottingham; Emig to Salem c1635 from last residence of N. Muskhan, Nottingham; birth obtained from deposition in 1660 granted land which became Hawthorne Hill (which was ultimately inherited by Joseph Putnam) all 7 children from w#1, First 4 b. England. Granted land + 20 extra acres Salem 1637 if he would set up a plough (and that there would be 37 ploughs in the colony), near Beaver Dam Brook (now BeaverBrook-runs thru Middleton into Ipswich River), joined 1st Chur Danvers 1647, Rev. Francis Higginson, m. #2 Mrs. Susannah (?) Archer Oct 1668 Salem, MBC, she was widow of Samuel Archer who d. 26 Nov 1674, m. #3 Mrs. Sarah Standish 1 Apr 1679 Salem-she was widow James Standish. Richard had been admin. of his estate. Will 19 Jan 1679, prov. 26 Sep 1682, d. age 80, Salem

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ALICE BOSWORTH ?? prob of Southwell, Nottingham, Eng, m.7 Dec 1627 Cotgrave, Nottingham, Eng, member First Church Danvers 1636, d. 26 Nov 1624 Children 1st 4 born Eng: Alice 27 Sep 1628 N. Muskham–bur. 1628 Elizabeth bp. 30 Aug 1629 Arnold, Eng (her grandfather’s residence), m. Deac. Nathaniel Putnam, d. Danvers 24 Jun 1688/9 MARY bp. N. Muskham 28 Dec 1630 Rebecca c1632 Eng,m. James Hadlock Joseph 1633–1716 Abigail bp. 25 Dec 1636 Salem, m. Anthony Ashby. Hannah bp 20 Jun 1639 Salem, m. Daniel Boardman of Ipswich John b. May 1643, m. #1 Sarah Putnam (of John & Rebecca Putnam) d. bef.1676 (invent of estate)

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Kinnly

1900s

GABRIEL DOWSETT 1577-1627 age 50 b. 1577 Harlow, Essex, Eng, d. 14 Dec 1627 Harlow

UNKNOWN 1498-? b. 1498 Harlow Market, m. Harlow Market

Hutchinson

1800s

1700s

10

1400s

Bosworth

Russel Hope

Huntington There are more Huntingtons. See Family Master 2

Unger

Fuller

There are more Fullers & Dunkhorns See Estey/ Putnam Family Tree

Dunkhorn

Balls Crow Eliot

1600s

1800s

1700s

1900s

prob Mr. JOSEPH BOSWORTH 1575-1641 age 66 b. 30 Sep 1575 Southwell, Nottingham, Eng; m.age 28, some way connected w/ celebrated collegiate church of Southwell, otherwise known as Cathedral Church of Nottinghamshire, d. 1 Dec 1641 Southwell. CATHERINE RUSSELL 1580-1644 b. 14 Apr 1580 Southwell, Nottingham, Eng; m. 13 Jun 1604 @age 24 EDGAR DAVID RUSSELL WILLIAM RUSSELL Southwell, d. 10 Jun 1644 1510-1553/4 1550-1608 b. 6 Sep 1510 Oxfordshire, b. 20 May 1550 Oxfordshire, Southwell Children: Eng; m. @age 36; d. 19 Feb Eng; m. @ age 25, d. 26 ALICE 1605–1668 1553/54 Oxfordshire, Eng; Jan 1608/9 Southwell, Thomas 1607–1658 occ: merchant Nottingham, Eng Enoch 1609–1662 Lydia 1612–1612 SAMANTHA HOPE CATHERINE 1515-1559 age 44 HUNTINGTON b. 10 Jun 1515 Oxfordshire, 1554-1608 Eng; m. 18 Jun 1547 b. 1 Jul 1554 Oxfordshire, Oxfordshire; d. 30 Aug 1559 Eng, m. 10 May 1576 Oxfordshire; Oxfordshire @age 21, d. Children: 27 Jul 1608 Southwell, WILLIAM 20 May 1550 Nottingham, Eng. Children: Charles 1577–1645 CATHERINE 1580–1644

JAMES HUNTINGTON 1519/20-1572 age 53 b. 7 Mar 1519/20 Oxfordshire, Eng; d. 5 Oct 1572 Oxfordshire; occ: farmer MARY UNGER 1526-1578 age 52 b. 12 Jul 1526 Oxfordshire, Eng; m. 9 Mar prob. bef 1554 Oxfordshire; d. 6 Oct 1578 Oxfordshire Children: CATHERINE 1 Jul 1554

Note: A Joseph Fuller is listed in History of Ipswich as a carpenter.

ROBERT FULLER 1548-1614 age 66 b.1548 Redenhall, Norfolk, Eng; m.@24yrs; d. 23 May 1614 Redenhall

JOHN FULLER 1578-1608 age 30 b.15 Mar 1578 Redenhall, Norfolk, Eng; m.@21; d. 22 Dec 1608 Redenhall

THOMAS FULLER 1606-1659 b.1 Mar 1606 Redenhill, Harleston, Norfolk, Eng; d. 30 May 1659 Redenhill

SARAH DUNKHORN 1552-1584 age 32 b.1552 Starston, Norfolk, Eng; m.29 Jan 1572 @20yrs Starston; d.1 Jul 1584 Redenhall

MARGARET BALLS 1582-1628 age 46 b.1582 Redenhall, Norfolk, Eng; m. 19 Dec 1599 @17yrs Starston, Norfolk, Eng; d.27 Mar 1628 Redenhall Children: THOMAS 1 mar 1606

ELIZABETH ELIOT 1588-1645 age 57 b.1588 Redenhall, Wortwell, Norfolk, Eng; d. 23 Oct 1645 Wortwell Children: THOMAS Apr 1618

JOHN BALLS 1535-1582 age 47 b.1535 Eng; m.@24yrs; d. 1582 Norfolk, Eng. MARGARET CROW 1540-1582 age 42 b.1540 Eng; m. 28 Jan 1559 @19yrs Norwich, Norfolk, Eng; d. 1582 Norfolk Children: MARGARET 1582

THOMAS FULLER 1618-1698 b.Apr 1618 Wortwell, Norfolk, Eng, m.@25yrs; d. Jun 1698 Salem, Essex, MBC

THOMAS FULLER 1644-1719 b. 30 Apr 1644 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC, d. 18 Apr 1719 Hamton, Windham, CT

ELIZABETH TIDD 1626-1650 age 23 b.19 Sep 1626 Ipswich, Suffolk, Eng; m. 13 Jun 1643 @16yrs Woburn, Middlesex, MBC; d.Jun 1650 Woburn Children: THOMAS 30 Apr 1644

RUTH RICHARDSON 1647-1699 age 52 b.14 Apr 1647 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC, m. 1668 age 21 Woburn; d. 19 Jul 1699 Windham, CT Children: JONATHAN 19 Sep 1673

JONATHAN FULLER 1673-1751 age 78 b. 19 Sep 1673 Salem, Essex, MBC, m. @age 20, d. 1751 Sutton, MBC SUSANNA TRASK 1676-1759 age 83 b. 3 Nov 1676 Salem, Essex, MBC, m. 3 Jan 1694 Salem, d. 1759 Salem Children: ANNA 6 Nov 1699

ROBERT ELIOT 1550-? b. 1550 Redenhall, Wortwell, Norfolk, Eng. UNKNOWN Children: ELIZABETH 1588

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[I believe John & Margaret adopted at least one child. Should verify if Elizabeth was or was not.]

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MARGARET GREENLEAF 1600-1651 age 51 b.Jan 1600 Ipwich, Suffolk, Eng; m.? d.1651 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC Children: ELIZABETH 19 Sep 1626

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ISABEL ROGERSON 1571-1614 age 43 b.1571 Pontefact, West Riding, Yorkshire, Eng; d. 22 May 1614 Pontefract Children: JOHN 1589

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JOHN TIDD 1589-1656 age 67 b.1589 Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, Hampshire, Eng; m.@32; d.24 Apr 1656 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC

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JOHN TIDD 1563-1657 age 94 b.1563 Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, Eng; d. 24 Apr 1657 Yarmouth. Outlived his son one year.

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Tidd Rogerson

1500s

11

1400s Richardson

1500s THOMAS RICHARDSON THOMAS RICHARDSON 1590-1633 age 42 1523-1630 age 107 b. 24 Aug 1590 Westmill, b.1523 Westmill, Herts, Herts, Eng; d. 8 Jan 1633 Eng; d. 4 Mar 1630 Westmill Westmill MARY ? 1503-? b.1503 Westmill, Herts, Eng; d. Eng Children: THOMAS 1523

MARGARET SILVERSIDE 1541-1615 age 74 b.1541 Westmill, Herts, Eng; d. 1615 Westmill Children: THOMAS 24 Aug 1590

Silverside

Baldwin Eastfield

JAMES BALDWIN 1522-? b.1522 St. Mary’s Watford, Herts,Eng; m. 23 Nov 1541 @19 yrs St. Mary’s DOROTHY EASTFIELD 1522-? b.1522 St. Mary’s Watford, Herts,Eng; m. 23 Nov 1541 @19 yrs St. Mary’s Children: GEORGE 1561

Shelley Bellingham

THOMAS RICHARDSON 1608-1651 age 43 b. 3 Jul 1608xlvii Westhill, Herts, Eng; m. @26 yrs; d. 28 Aug 1651 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC MARY BALDWIN 1608-1670 age 62 b.1608 Eng; m.xlvii4 Mar 1635 Charlestown, MBC @27yrs; d. 19 May 1670 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC Children: RUTH 1647

UNKNOWN

RICHARD BALDWIN 1584-? b.20 Sep 1584 St. Marys Hitchin, Herts, Eng; m. Feb 1611 St. Mary’s @26yrs; d.? JOHANE BLYTHE 1579-? b.15 Oct 1579 St. Marys, Hitchin, Herts, Eng; m. Feb 1611 St. Mary’s @31yrs Children: MARY 1608

NICHOLAS TRASK 1561-1589 b. 1561 Somerset, Eng; d. 29 Apr 1589 Somerset

MARY SARAH xlviii SOUTHWICK 1605-1696 age 91 b. 1605 Lancashire, Eng; m. 1628 Salem Village, Essex, MBC @23 yrs; d. 1696 Salem Village Children: WILLIAM bp 19 Sep 1640 (Note: Question of marriage LAWRENCE date, as don’t believe there SOUTHWICK were any marriages in EDWARD SOUTHWICK 1594-1660 age 66 1568-1605 age 37 b.1594 Tetnal, Staffordshire, Salem until Winthop’s b.1568 Staffordshire, Eng; Eng; d. 1660 Shelter Island, group came in 1630.) m.@age 36; d. 1605 NY CASSANDRA BURNELL ANNE SHELLEY 1598-1660 age 62 1572-1605 age 33 b.1598 Lancashire, Eng; m. b.1572 Tettenhall, 25 Jan 1623 Kingswinford, Staffordshire, Eng; m. 10 Dec 1604 Tettenhall; d. 1605 Staffordshire, Eng @25 yrs; d. 1660 Shelter Island, NY St. Michaels, Tettenhall Children: LAWRENCE 1594 UNKNOWN 1561-? m. 1587 @26 yrs Somerset Children: WILLIAM 14 Dec 1585

JOHN SOUTHWICK 1550 b.1550 UNKNOWN 1545 b.1545 JOHN SHELLEY 1555 b.1555 Patcham, Sussex, Eng

WILLIAM TRASK xlviii 1585-1666 b. 14 Dec 1585 East Coker, Somerset, Eng; d. 15 May 1666 Salem, Essex, MBC

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MARGARET 1570-1609 age 39 b.1570 Eng; m. 18 Aug 1590 Wootten Wawen, Warwickshire, Eng; d. 1609 Children: CASSANDRA 1598

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JOAN ? 1530-1579 age 49 b.1530 Eng; m. 1557 Bearly, Warwickshire, Eng @age 27; d. 30 Sep 1579 Bearley Children: HUMPHREY 30 Dec 1564

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HUMPHREY BURNELL 1564-1609 age 44 b.30 Dec 1564 Bearley, Warwickshire, Eng; d. 5 oct 1609 Oldwinford, Worcester, Eng

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JOHN BURNELL 1530-1572 age 42 b.1530 Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland; d. 28 Sep 1572 Wooton, Wawen, Warwickshire, Eng.

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Tettenhall is right up the road from where the Thomas’ lived in Wolverhampton. They lived on Tettenhall Road.

ANN PUTNAM 1645-1676 age 31xlviii b. 25 Aug 1645 Salem Village, Essex, MBC; m. 18 Jan 1665/66 Salem; d. 14 Sep 1676 Salem Children: Hannah/Ann 7 Jun 1668 Elizabeth 16 Mar 1669/70 Salem - bef 1685 Dover, Rockingham, NH Sarah 14 Jun 1672 Salem William 7 Sep 1674 Susanna 3 Sep 1676

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ANN BELLINGHAM 1559 b.1559 Errington, Northumberland, Eng;

WILLIAM TRASK 1640-1691 age 51xlviii bp 19 Sep 1640 Salem / 19 Jul 1640; m.@ 27yrs; d. bef. 26 Mar 1691 Salem

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Burnell

GEORGE BALDWIN 1561-? b.22 Sep 1561 East Grinstead, Sussex, Eng

WILLIAM BLYTHE 1545 b.1545 St. Marys, Hitchin, Herts, Eng; m.22 Nov 1570 St. Mary’s @25yrs ABBOT-? 1550-? b.1550 St. Marys, Hitchin, Herts, Eng; m.22 Nov 1570 St. Mary’s @20yrs Children: JOHANE 1579

Trask

There are more Shelleys. See Estey/Putnam Family Tree.

1900s

KATHERINE ? 1543-1631 age 88 b.1543 Westmill, Herts, Eng; m. 1565 Westmill @22yrs; d. Mar 1631 Westmill Children: KATHERINE 1569

Blythe

Southwick

KATHERINE DUXFORD 1569-1631 age 62 b.1569 Westmill, Herts, Eng; m. Westmill; d.10 Mar 1631 Westmill Children: THOMAS 3 Jul 1608

1800s

1700s

RICHARD DUXFORD 1539-1622 age 83 b.1539 Ashwell, Herts, Eng; m. Westmill; d.23 Apr 1622 Westmill

Duxford

There are more Baldwins. See Estey/Putnam Family Tree

1600s

12

1400s

1500s

1600s

1800s

1700s

1900s

The Putnams & the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 Our Edward Putnam was one of the accusing party which caused the Witch Hysteria. The book Salem Possessed details the story as researched by Harvard scholars. In the 1690s, the merchant sea port Salem Towne had a “suburb” called Salem Village, which consisted mostly of farms. The residents of Salem Village wanted to break off from Salem Towne & create a church of their own, since without a church, they could not self-govern. But the residents of Salem Towne wouldn’t release them. There were two rival families—the Porters & the Putnams. The Porters were wealthy merchants & large land owners with a great deal of influence in Salem Towne. The Putnams were the highest tax payers in Salem Village, but they were a lot less wealthy than the Porters. One point of grievance was that Porter land blocked access from Putnam Land to Salem Village, making it harder for the Putnams to do business. This rivalry had been going on for several decades, evidenced by many court claimes by the Putnams against the Porters.

? 1636/7

There are several versions of the Family Tree back in England. See article on Putnam/Puttenham.

NICHOLAS PUTNAMi -1598 d. 1598 Eng. Owned estate prob. Stewkley, or Wingrave. Only Stewkley mentioned in will.

Putnam “Belonged to the ancient family of Puttenham, of which George Puttenham, author of the Arte of English Poesie was a distinguished member.

Gould Continued on page 80 THOMAS GOULD 1500-1546/7 ALICE AXTEL/ MANDEVILLE 1490/9-1546

Mandeville

Thomas Putnam Sr. was the eldest son & heir apparent of the original emigrant to Salem, John Putnam. Thomas Sr. married Ann Holyoke & they had at least eight children, including two sons, Thomas Jr. & our Edward. But when Ann Holyoke died, Thomas Sr. married another woman who happened to be allied with the Porter clan, Mary Ingersol Veren. She was the widow of wealthy merchant Nathaniel Veren of Salem Towne. Thomas & Mary had one son Joseph, born 14 September 1669 in Salem Village. He is the father of General Israel Putnam, commander of our ancestor Lt. Colonel Thomas Knowlton. (And, today, the Ingersols, Mary’s family, own the land where Knowlton was born.) Thomas Sr. had given a great deal of land to his two sons during his lifetime (usually at their marriage), but when he died, he left the balance of his remaining inheritance to Joseph, including the house he had built in 1648 at the foot of Hawthorne Hill. Similar to the story in the Bible about Joseph & his older brothers, this story of a favored youngest son caused a great deal of bitterness between Joseph & his older half brothers, Thomas & Edward. It didn’t help matters when Joseph Putnam married Elizabeth Porter of the Porter clan. The Putnams were not part of the initial three cases of witchcraft, however, a month later, when that issue had begun to calm down, Thomas Jr.’s daughter Anne began showing signs of possession by witchcraft. She & her group of mostly young women friends accused many family & friends of the Porter clan of being witches. This was the beginning of the hysteria. Her mother Anne & her uncle Edward also made accusations. Some Harvard scholars discovered an extremely high correlation—most of the accusers were somehow related to or associated with the Putnams & most of the accused were related to or associated with the Porters. This may not explain how the original three women showed signs of illness or being possessed, but the scholars theorized that the resulting hysteria which caused the execution of 19, the imprisonment of some 200 & the accusation of some 300, was the revenge of Thomas Jr. on his youngest brother Joseph, agrivated by the actions of the “wicked” stepmother Mary Veren Putnam, who had withdrawn his inheritance. Note: The Israel Putnam Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution marked Hawthorne Hill as a landmark with a bronze plaque.

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ANN HOLYOKE 1620/1-1665 age 45 b. Tanworth-inArden, Warwickshire or Tamworth Staffordshire, Eng 16 Jan 1620/1. Emig. bet 1630 & 1635, d. 1 Sep 1665 Salem Village, Essex Co., MBC Children b. Salem Village: Ann 25 Aug 1645-14 Sep 1676 Salem age 31-m. Wm. Trask Sarah bp 23 Jul 1648-c1686 Mary 17 Oct 1649-bef1686 Sergt Thomas 12 Mar 1651This fellow, his daughter Ann & his wife Ann were among the key figures in the witch hysteria of 1692. DEAC EDWARD 4 Jul 1654 Deliverance 5 Sep 1656, m. Jonathan Walcott son of William Walcott & Alice Ingersoll of Devon Eng. Elizabeth 30 Aug 1659-1705 m. Joshua Bailey Prudence 28 Bef 1661/2aft1745 age 84, m. William Wyman Joseph 1 Sep 1665-1 Oct 1665 age 2 mo. Scroll down to HOLYOKE

Young

JANE WEDEN 1532/8-1558/60

RICHARD GOULD 1553–1597/1604 of Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, Eng. ELIZABETH YOUNG 1555/63-1589 Children: Jeremy Zaccheus Sarah Priscilla c1585

PRISCILLA GOULD c1585-1668 ? b.3 JUN 1582 1636/7 Bovingdon, Herts, Eng. m.1613 Eng, no official record of date, c1611, adm. Salem chr 21 mar 1641, d.1668 Salem Village, Essex Co., MBC, bur. Salem or pos Wadsworth, Norfolk Co, MBC. Children: Elizabeth/Eliza pb 20 Dec 1612 Aston Abbots, Bucks, Eng. Adm ch. Salem 1643, d. aft 1648 Lt. THOMAS pb 7 Mar 1614/5 John bp 24 Jul 1617 Aston Abbots Nathaniel bp 11 Oct 1619 Sara bp 7 Mar 1622/3 Aston Abbots Phoebe bp 28 Jul 1624 Aston Abbots, bur. 30 Apr 1630 Aston Abbots age 6 Capt John bp 27 May 1627

? 1636/7

Lt. THOMAS PUTNAMi bp1614/5-1686 bp 7 Mar 1614/5 Ashton Abbots Buckingham, Eng, pos b. 1610 or 1615, Emig to America w/parents betw 1636 & 1638 to Salem age 21 or 26, granted 50 acrs upland & 5 acres meadow 20 Jan 1640/1 Salem, Essex Co. MBC, res. Lynn, Esses, Co in 1640, adm Salem chr 3 Apr 1643, apt General Crt as judge 18 Jun 1645 1 yr in Lynn, (see records for other accomplishments), rec 250 acres land frm father 20 Dec 166 9 Salem, will dated 8 Feb 1682/3, #2 Mary Veren 14 Nov 1666. Came into property in Jamaica & Barbadoes when married. He & Mary had one child, Joseph, who is the father of General Israel Putnam. See book, Salem Possessed, to see all the fuss about Thos & his inheritance.Was wealthiest man in Salem Village, twice what anyone else had. Left most of it to his second wife & Joseph.d. 10 May 1686 Salem Village, Essex MBC (now Danvers)

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Weden

RICHARD GOULD 1530-1558 age 28 b. 1530 Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, Eng. d.1558 Bovingdon.

Deac. JOHN PUTNAMi 1579/80-1662 b/bp. 17 Jan 1579/80 Ashton Abbots, Buckingham (or Wingrave), Eng Signed his mother’s marriage bond to William Huxley 1614 in Aston Abbots. Involved in deposition in Aston Abbots at age 57 in 1637. Sometime acquired property, maybe from father, in Aston Abbots where resided 3 decates before America,Immig bet 1636-1638 with wife, Thomas, Nathaniel, John & at least one dau. Eliz. to Salem Village, Essex, MBC. Farmer “husbandman” & “yeoman”. Deeded land 1638 Salem, Pur 100 acres 20 Jan 1640/1 Salem Village. Adm church & freeman 4 Apr 1647 Salem Vil, (see records for more land dealings). Split his land & homestead among his three sons in 1653 which together w/ the property acquired by themselves, made them the largest taxpayers in community. Sons Thomas, Nathaniel & John men of energy, thrift & uprightness & held important offices in town, military & parish affairs. d. 30 Dec 1662, Salem Village, Essex, MBC, bur. Salem Village. Re: his death, “He ate his supper, went to prayer with his family & died before he went to sleep.” Edward Putnam, his grandson.

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Same family as above

Holyoke “Holyoke family was one of the most prominent & aristocratic families in the colony.” —Matthew Putnam, author of Putnam Genealogy.

JOHN HOLYOKE 1543-? b.1543 Eng UNKNOWN 1545-1565 England

Stokes HUMPHREY STOKES 1500-1551 age 51 b. 1500 Yardley, Worcester, Eng, d. 7 Jan 1551 Yardley. ANNE ? -1559 m.1525, d. 4 May 1559 Yardley Children: RICHARD 1544

EDWARD HOLYOKE Sr. 1566-1631 b. Tanworth, Warwickshire, Eng, d. 31 Dec 1631 Tanworth ELIZABETH STOKES 1562-1615 b.28 Aug 1582 Tanworth, Warwickshire, Eng, d. 22 Aug 1615 Tanworth Children: EDWARD 1585

EDWARD HOLYOKE Jr. 1585-1660 age 75 b. 15 Feb 1585 Tamworth Staffordshire,Eng; d. 4/5 May 1660 Lynn, Essex, MBC PRUDENCE STOCKTON 1584-1665 age 80 b. 20 Dec 1684 Kinbalt, Staffordshire, Eng.; m.18 Jun 1612 Kimcote, Walton, Leicestershire, Eng. d.1 Sep 1665 Lynn, Essex, MBC Children b.1626 Tanworth, Warwickshire, England: ANN 1626 Note: They probably immigrated between 1630 & 1635.

RICHARD STOKES 1544-1590 MARY SMALBROKE 1546-1591

DAVID PRATT xlvxiii c1675-? b. c1675, prob Framingham. m#2 SARAH BANCROFT of Reading 14 Dec 1704 in Middlesex Co. “Prob. Index: guard. pet. #17856 dated 1733 for five youngest children.” (I don’t know THOMAS PRATT xlvxiii what that code means.That’s c1636-1692 “of Sudbury & Framingham, what it said in the recordsEMA) “The Framingham MBC” VR erroneously named b. c1636 Eng. Emig to parents of daughter Watertown, MBC in midMehitable as Daniel & 1600s. Took Oath of Alleg Sarah, however she & her 1652 at least age 16. d. 26 Sep 1692 Sherbourne, M’sex husband were guardians of her brothers Jonathan & Co. when wife Susannah was granted adm. of estate. Elisha. [VR; B#51]” David’s children w/ Sarah: Rachel C#107 [that must be a 18 Oct 1706; Mehitable 4 source code in the book Jul 1708; Timothy 4 Jun I’m quoting, but I don’t have the book] is excellent 1710; Hepzibah 11 Oct 1712; Elisha 1715/6-1734; source of land records Jonathan 25 Jun 1718; Sarah etc. Im 1678, he bought 29 Feb 1719/20; Abigail 26 land in Framingham next Sep 1722; Prudence 17 Feb to Thomas Gleason (his 1724/5 probable father-in-law).

Smalbroke Stockton

THOMAS STOCKTON 1505-1558 (age 53) b. 1505 Edsley, Whitchurch, Shroupshire, Eng, d. 1558 Edsley

THOMAS STOCKTON 1530-1591 b. 1530 Edsley, Whitchurch, Shroupshire, Eng, d. 1591 Whitchurch

JOHN STOCKTON 1565-1630 (age 65) b.1565 Kinbalt, Staffordshire, Eng, m. 17 Aug 1578 Kiinbalt, d. 13 Nov 1630 Kinbalt

JOYCE ? 1510-1579 age 69 b. 1510 Whitchurch, Shroupshire, Eng, d. Whitchurch

JOAN ? 1532b.1532 Eng, m. 1553 Whitchurch, Shropshire, Eng, d. Whitchurch Children: JOHN 1565

SUSANNA ? 1564-1627 age 63 b. 1564 Kinbalt, Staffordshire, Eng, m. 17 Aug 1578 Kiinbalt, d. 19 Feb 1627 Kinbalt Children: PRUDENCE 1564

Pratt There seems to be no connection to Phineas Pratt of Wessegusset & Plymouth.

Gleason

SUSANNAH GLEASON? ?-? xlvxiii m. by 1655. That she is Thomas’ wife is still unproven. We do know THOMAS GLEASON xlvxiii that her first name was ?? Susannah. Liv. Charlestown, then Children: Framingham. Lost all Thomas 1656 property in a suit by the Abigail/Abiel c1658 inhabitants of Charlestown. Ebenezer c1660 Therefore, no complete list Joseph c1662 of his heirs exists. There John 1665 is a Gleason Genealogy in Philip c1667 the NEHGS library, which Ephraim c1669 names his children by Nathaniel c1671 circumspect. Possible he Jonathan c1673 & his wife Susannah had DAVID c1675 a daugher Susannah old Jabez c1677 enough to marry neighbor Thomas Pratt by 1655. See other connections.

Note:Jesse & Nathan served in the Rev. War. Nathan id’d as “bro of Jesse” in B#788 [don’t know what this reference is-EMA] Note: There was a Claffin house in Becket. But couldn’t find any genealgical records about it.

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(Note: Susannah & her husband Thomas named their sons the same names as Susannah’s brothers in the same order w/ other names in between which were possible the names of Thomas’ brothers.)

SARAH CLAFLIN xlvxiii c1763?-1783, 80th yr m. 10 Mar 1723/4 Framingham. d. 12 May 1783 in 80th year in Framingham Children: David Jr. 30 Jan 1724/5 m. Elizabeth Brewer poss. Abigail c1728? m. Peter Brewer Jesse 1730 Jonathan 23 Sep 1739 RACHEL 6 Sep 1739 Nathan 5 Nov 1743

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SUSANNAH ? xlvxiii c1639 Children: Susannah Thomas Jr.-owned land in Sudbury adjacent to land bought by Thomas Pratt (his brother-in-law) in 1678. Thos. Pratt (his nephew) was one of those who took inventory of his estate in 1705. Joseph John Philip Nathaniel

RACHEL ? xlvxiii c1684-bef 1704 b. c1684 based on birth of child. d. bef 1704 based on date of David’s marriage to w#2 Sarah. She & her husband were named in the birth record of one child in Framingham. It’s likely she died in childbirth since David Jr. was born only two years before his father remarried. Child: David Jr. 28 Jan 1702

DAVID PRATT Jr. xlvxiii 1702-1777 (age76) of Framingham, Middlesex, MBC. b. 28 Jan 1702 Framingham, MBC. d. 27 Nov 1777 Oxford in 76th year.

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THOMAS CHAFFEE,JR 1768-1853 b. 15 Mar 1768 in THOMAS CHAFFEE Willington, CT, d.2 Sep 1731-1810 1853 Becket, MA. bur. b. 8 Apr 1731 Ashford Becket Cemetery behind CT, 5th gen. Chaffees First Cong. Church. Amer.—Ra, farmer, bought Chaffee family was in farm near Becket, MA for charcoal business, for 100 pounds, he & wife bel. which Becket was famous Congreg. Chrch, rode to at time. The clean charcoal church on horseback. He & was exported to as far as wife adm 3 Apr 1784 Becket India during industrial Cong. Church. d. 5 Dec revolution.—EMA 1810 Becket.EMA

Claflin

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?

THOMAS CHAFFE ?-1863 1st gen. U.S.(RA) d. 6 Mar 1683 On list of orig. settlers to Hingham, MBC, came 1638, prob from Hingham, Norfolk, Eng., Hingham records “The several paracells of land & meadow legally given unto Thomas Chaffe by the town of Hingham” 17 Jul 1637

Chaffee/Chaffe

prob. DOROTHY ? Children: NATHANIEL c1638 Joseph 1639 Nantasket, MBC (RI) m. Annis Martin

Bliss

Harmon Carpenter Searles

prob.THOMAS BLISS c150/60-c1635 According to Cutter, most of the Blisses are descended from two of his sons (Thomas & George) & their newphew Thomas, who was the eldest son of his eldest son, Jonathan. Thos. Sr. was a puritan, yeoman, wealthy landowner, who lived near Okehampton, in the Belstone parish, Devonsire, Eng. Family was highly educated, gentlemanly & refined in their manners. Name originally to have been Blois, the name of a division of prob JONATHAN BLISS France. He was persecuted Imprisioned for for his faith & impoverished nonconformity & heavily & ruined in health. Prob. fined, ill-treated & in long died about 1635 when his confinement, contracted a sons & grandson went to fever from which he never America. recovered. UNKNOWN Children: JONATHAN Thomas, Elizabeth George Mary Elizabeth m. Sir John Calcliffe.

NOTE: They must have moved from Hingham to Nastasket in RI, then to Rehoboth?

Facts are verified from Jonathan & Mariam to later. I am only deducing his father was Thomas, whose father was Jonathan, since most Blisses are to have descended from this line.

prob THOMAS BLISS

UNKNOWN Children: THOMAS

JONATHAN BLISS MARIAM HARMON WILLIAM CARPENTER ?? of Amesbury, Eng. Emig on James, arrived 24 Jun 1635; settled 1st Salem, then Providence. (Many early settlers of Providence came as a group to Salem on James.) Listed as “Thomas” on ship mainifest. Came as a single man.

NEHGS Vol164:36-40 & Correction 164:296 (Note: Searles is a name from the early Plymouth days settling the cape. Carpenter is also an early name which is found frequently again in Becket, MA cemetaries alongside Chaffee & Brewster)

ELIZABETH ARNOLD ?? Arr c1637 Providence

NATHANIEL CHAFFE 1638-1721 b.1638 Rehoboth, d.1721 Rehoboth, Bristol, MBC

JONATHAN CHAFFE 1678-1766 b.7 Apr 1678 Rehoboth, Bristol, RI, d. 31 Dec 1766 MBC, Bur Rumford, E. Providence, RI

EXPERIENCE BLISS 1649-1721 b.5 Feb 1649 Rehoboth, Bristol, MBC, m. 19 Aug 1669 Swansea MBC d. 1721 Rehoboth 11 Children-1st two b. Swansea, MA, rest b. Rehoboth, Bristol, MA Dorothy b.1670 Sw.m. Nathanil Paine Thomas 19 Oct 1672 Sw., m. Margaret Carpenter Rachel 7 Sep 1773 Re. Nathaniel 4 Jan 1676/7 m. Mercy __ JONATHAN 7 Apr 1678 David 22 Aug 1680 m.#1 patience Atherton, m#2 Mrs. Hannah (__) Pidge Experience 24 Mar 1682 m. Timothy Carpenter Mehitable 10 Jun 1685-1699 Daniel 30 Oct 1687 m. Alice/Alse Millerd, m.#2 Ms. Perses (__) Ormsby Noah 19 Jan 1690/1-1691 Noah 17 Dec 1692 m.#1 Sarah Carpenter, m#2 Hepsibah Dagget

HANNAH CARPENTER 1684/5-aft 1767 b. 10 Apr 1684/5 m.23 Nov 1703 Rehoboth MBC, d. after 1767 prob Rehoboth 9(RA) children all b. Rehoboth JONATHAN 25 Jun 1704 m. Abigail Lyon Nathaniel 20 Oct 1705 m. #1 Rebecca Mason, m.#2 Lydia Peck Hannah 3 Oct 1707 m. Joseph Armington Daniel 6 Feb 1710/11 m. Mary Robinson Miriam 22 Aug 1712-1773 unm. Susanna 22 Sep 1714-1715 Ephriam 25 Jan 1715 m.#1 Patience Butterworth, m#2 Hannah Butterworth William ca1717-1730 Susanna 10 Jun 1720-d. young Twins: Deliverance 2 May 1723 Josiah 2 May 1723-1725 Susanna 28 Aug 1728-1736

JONATHAN CHAFFEE 1704-1785 b.25 Jun 1704 Rehoboth, MBC (Rehoboth is now MA, Bristol is RI) Remov to Ashford bef. 1748. d. 9 Feb 1785 Ashford, CT ABIGAIL LYON ?-aft.1748 m.1 Jun 1727 10 Children all b. Ashford, CT Jonathan 21 Apr1728 Josiah 10 Feb 1728 THOMAS 8 Apr 1721 Hannah 28 Nov 1733 William 30 Jul 1736 Susannah 10 Sep 1738 Abigail 17 Dec 1740 Deliverence 7 Feb 1742 Johnathan 11 May 1746 Carpenter 25 Jan 1748

ABIGAIL KNOWLTON 1768-1843 (age 75) b. 19 Jun 1768 Ashford, CT; m.21 Nov 1791 Ashford, adm. 6 Sep 1807 to Congreg. Church of Becket ministry of Joseph L. Mills. Husband also member. d. Becket 18 Sep Note: Still looking for 1843, bur. Becket Cemetery connection from Hannah in graveyard of First to Col. Reed who fought Congregational Church with her daughter-in-law’s next to her husband. father, Knowlton, at Harlem 12 children: Heights. Samson 4 Aug 17921813 Frederick 25 Nov 1793 Wolcott 3 May 1795 Newman Keyes 15 Dec 1796 Miner Chaffee 6 Feb 1799 Alma 1801 ANNA HARRIET 4 Feb 1803, d. Becket Thomas Sherman 24 May 1805 Lucinda 12 Jan 1807 Prentice 1 Jan 1809 Abigail Honora 12 Apr 1811 Samson Knowlton 11 Jul 1814 (after same name died see above.)

Three children married three Carpenter children (See above, Anna Barker marries Abraham Bliss 1654 after John Barker dies.)

WILLIAM CARPENTER MIRIAM SEARLES

Arnold Lyon

JOHN LYON poss. of Windsor

Note: Anna’s brother Wolcott married a Kingsley 22 Apr 1818. Kingsley big name in Beckett.

ELIZABETH

Reed

Web source very confusing. Two accounts. One of a William who came in 1605 on the Assurance de Lo from Gravesend, Kent in 1635 & another of a Samuel who came with the Great Fleet in 1630 [Winthrop’s] who was the son of William Read & Lucy Henage. Settled in Rehoboth (Attleboro)

BETHIA FRYE

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LYDIA ELIZABETH CASWELL 1697-aft 1744 b. 6 Jun 1697 Redding, Fairfield Co, CT, m.7 Oct 1733 Children: HANNAH 31 Ot 1741 Becket, MA Mathew 16 May 1735 Abigail 18 Jul 1737 Shubael 27 Sep 1738 Willington Mary 31 Aug 1740 Anna 17 Jul 1744 Huldah 11 Apr 1747

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BETHIA COBB 1678b. 5 Apr 1678 Taunton, Bristol Co., MBC, m.15 Jun 1797 Children: Mary JOHN Aug 1701 Taunton George May 1704 William 28 Feb 1712/13 Swansea Bristol, MBC Bethia 28 Feb 1712/3 Swansea

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JOHN REED c1701-aft 1756 b.Aug 1701 Taunton, PC d. 1756 Willington, Tolland Co., CT. Note: not listed in the History of Becket

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There was a reference to a Talcott Genealogy for these web sources. Might try that & see if there is any information on this family.

JOHN REED 1674-aft1739 b. 5 Jun 1674 Weymouth, Norfolk, MBC, aft 6 Jun 1739 Great Barrington, Berkshier, MBC

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Champman Deacon Frye Cobb Caswell

WILLIAM/SAMUEL REEDE AVIS CHAMPMAN/ DEACON

JOHN REEDE 1649b. 1649 Weymouth, Norfolk, MBC

HANNA REED 1741-1836 b.31 Oct 1741, Becket, Berkshire Co,MA (This doesn’t seem right. If she got married in Willington which is right by Ashford, she probably was born in Ashford & moved to Becket after her marriageEMA),Web source said b. 1742 Willington, m. 26 Mar 1761 Willington, Tolland, CT, d. 5 May 1836 Becket, Berkshire, MA Children: Benjamin 16 Nov 1762 Deliverence 26 Oct 1764 Joshua 5 May 1766 THOMAS 15 Mar 1768 Johnathan 4 Mar 1768 Lois 12 Mar 1773 Nathan 24 Feb 1775 Hannah 22 May 1777 Zephaniah 11 Ock 1779 Caleb 1 Jul 1781 Calvin 9 Jun 1783 Abigail 23 Apr 1785 (44!)

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In Wm. Conqueror’s Domesday Book AD 1085 the name was spelled “Chenoltone” of Canterbury & York, Kent Co. Other spellings: Nolton, Knollton

RICHARD KNOWLTON Crest: A Demi-Lion Rampant prob1553-? b. c1553 prob Canterbury, Motto: Vi et Virtute Eng. The manor was originally in Canterbury Parish but the area was redistricted to Sandwich, Kent, Eng.

Knowlton

Cantize ? SMITH Note: the Smiths who came to Hingham where Ann died were Ralph & Francis. See History of Hingham by Long.

Smith

ELIZABETH CANTIZE c1556-aft1584 b. c1556, m. 17 Jul 1577 Canterbury, Kent, Eng. Children: George 6 May 1578 Stephen 1 May 1580 d. Young Thomas 1582 Stayed in England WILLIAM 1584

Deac.NATHANIEL KNOWLTON 1658-1726 “69th yr” b. 29 June 1658 Ipswich, MA,d.24 Sept 1726 Ipswich, bur. Old Cemetery Ipswich, Long time town Treasurer, 9 times Rep in Legislature ? Account from Knowlton ? Genealogy: Shoemaker, JOHN KNOWLTON Capt. WILLIAM b. 24 Jul 1658/9, d. 24 Sep 1610-1654/5 KNOWLTON 1726 “man of consequence” b. Kent, England, 1610, c1584-1632 in Ipswich. Commoner 18 (RA)/Canterbury (now b.c1584 prob. Canterbury Feb 1678, Deac. of First Sandwich), Kent, Eng. d. (now area is Sandwich), Cong Church 1697, many 8 Oct 1654/5. Eldest of 3 Kent, Eng. d.prob1632 yrs. treasurer, Dep. to Gen bros, (2 younger=William Novia Scotia where Crt 1700, ’02, ’03, ’05, ’09, JOHN KNOWLTON Jr. & Deacon Thos.) gravestone found by land ’14, ’20. Historian said of 1633-1684 Shoemaker in Ipswich. surveyor Alphonso Wells b.1633 d. 8 Oct 1684 Ipswich, him, “Though honored by in 1839. Believed to be part Became citizen 1639, men he did not forget to Fought King Phillips War Freeman 9 Jun 1641, On owner of vessel in which 1675, Appletown Company honor his God.” 19 Dec 1648 in record in sailed for America & d. Narragansett Campaign Ipswich for subscibing to on voyage, not far from HERE LIES YE BODY OF fund to pay Maj. Denison, Nov. 30, Occ:Shoemaker. Nova Scotia. Dur. that Freeman’s Oath 16 Oct 1680, DEACON NATHANIEL the man entrusted to short time, Nova Scotia KNOWLTON WHO DIED Drafted for Narragansett defense of townships under Engl. control & few SETEMBER YE 24 1726 IN THE Expedit. 30 Nov 1670. against Indian assaults & families of MBC liv. there. 69 YEAR OF HIS AGE Eyesight failing at age 42 other enemies. Appears Trad. holds his ship sold indicated from letter of John accumulated consid. there & widow & children record* Died intestate & property by death from proceeded to MBC, prob records of sales & transfers prob. insolvent. Note: born Hingham, fol. yr, where of prop. in Ipswichxxv. Will the same year his parents widow said to remarry. On were arriving in America. 29 Nov 1653, liv. Ipswich, 9 Jun 1668, “Anne, widow m.#2 Sarah (poss. YoungRA MAi of William Knollton” or Whipplexxi) Deborah & petitioned for appraisal of John moved to Wenham land in Hingham. Their son, c1666, next door to Ipswich, Deac. Thomas left “rest of but then Sarah & John must for my mother’s use during xxiv have returned to Ipswich her life.” on 14 Dec 1653 where both died. 1635 grant for house & land in Hingham, wife administrator. Both born in Kent. ANN ELIZABETH SMITH c1588-1675 b.c1588 Ipswich, Essex/ Kent, Eng. Imig. to Hingham sometime between 1632 & 1634. She remarried in Hingham. Came to America with her sons, d. 8 Nov 1675 Hingham, MBC. 6 Children b.Chiswich, Eng: JOHN 1610 Robert c1613 stayed in Eng. William 1615 Mary 1617 d. young in Eng. Deac.Thomas 1622, m#2 Mary Kimball Samuel 1611 m.#2 John Tucker in Hingham. At least one child.

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Wilson

1600s

MARGERY WILSON c1614-1654/5 b.c1614 Eng.,surv. husband but a few monthsxxv Children: JOHN 1633 Abraham 1635, d. unm. Elizabeth 1639

DEBORAH GRANT ChildrenXXI: Joseph 1651 (m. MaryWilson) Samuel 1653 Daniel 1655 John 1656 NATHANIEL 29 Jun 1658 Elizabeth 1 Mar 1659/60 (She is somehow connected (m. Timothy Dorman of to Theophilus Wilson Topsfield 15 Nov 1688 below under Pinder, but EMA-resided Boxford) not clear. Deac.Thomas 19 May 1662 William 1664 John’s brother William Johnathan 1665 is listed in the History Susanna 15 Aug 1673 of Ipswich as having a Abraham - enlisted 19 service that made bricks. Dec 1675 Maj. Samuel (p82) Their brother Dea. Appleton’s Campaign Thomas Knowlton & Naragansett Exped Nathaniel Knowlton were Robert cordwainers - men of the Catherine awl & lapstone, as was a Ezekiel John Wilson. Could that Deborah be Margery’s father or Ephraim brother?(p83) There is no listing of a John Wilson among Rev. Thos. Wilson’s Cross outs-I think I’m descendents.) supposed to eliminate these people but not completely sure. My notes from Knowlton Genealogy were too sketchy. Someone died in Ipswich 3 Feb 1678. Maybe that was Sarah whose grave would ? be marked Mrs. Sarah Knowlton.

DEBORAH JEWETT 1664-1743(age 79) b.3 Dec 1664 Ipswich or Rowley(next door), Essex, MBC, bp 9 Aug 1668. m.3 May 1682, Ipswich, MBC, d. 25 Apr 1743 Ipswich, MBC Children: Samuel 1682 NATHANIEL 3 May 1683 John 7 Dec 1685 Thomas 8 Nov 1692 Abraham 27 Feb 1698 Elizabeth 15 Sep 1792 liv. Boxford David 15 May 1707

WILLIAM KNOWLTON 1708-1753 age 45 b.30 Jan 1708 Ipswich, m. in Boxford, built house on the land deeded to them by his father-in-law. —d. 13 Mar 1753 Ashford. Remov. to Ashord with family May 1748, “Housewright”, purch. 400 acre farm & div. among his sons.West Parrish of Boxford. (Note. The jouse existed in Boxford until recently— burned down in 2005 with the tenent sleeping in it-an old man of 80-something. The land currently owned by the Ingersol family, old family of Ipswich.)

Col. THOMAS KNOWLTON 1740-1776 b.22 Nov.1740 West Boxford MA, bp 30 Nov 1740 Boxford, Essex, MA,l. Ashford (house burned down 20 Oct 2005-#238 Boxford Historic Houses). CT Enlist.as Private Fr.IndianWar @ 15/16 yrs old., 1762 settled on 400acre farm Ashford., Selectman @ 33yrs, Capt. of CT troops in Battle Bunker Hill. Led Knowlton’s Rangers Harlem Heights,Killed 17 Sep 1776 Commended by Gen. Washington. Statue=Hartford CT. erected 1895(See ext.bio) Believed buried with Major Leitch at the corder of 143rd &

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Thomas Knowlton cont. 7th streets in NYC near where they were slain., Tho another account says he was taken back to Morris mansion & died there.

NATHANIEL KNOWLTON, Jr. 1683-aft Feb 1760 b. 3 May 1683 Ipswich, MBC, res. Ipswich. m. #2 Mrs. Reform (Trescott) Jewett (b.c.1690 Milton, MBC), widow of Benjamin Jewett 15 Jan 1717 (Not so sure about this. My notes are vague—Mary She would be his aunt. Or his cousin by a different Abraham!) MARY BENNETT 1685-c1716 age c32 b.3 Mar 1685 Ipswich m.29 Apr 1703, death determined by birth of her last child & the remarriage of her husband. 5 children b. Ipswich: Mary 3 Jun 1704 WILLIAM was second, 8 Feb 1705/6 Nathaniel 30 Jun 1708 (m. Mary Fuller) Jeremiah 2 Aug 1713 (m. Sarah Allen) Martha c1715 (m. Dr. Flint)

Grant

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ANNA KEYES c1742-1808 c68 b.20 Dec 1742 Ashford, CT m. 5 Apr 1759 d.22 May 1808, Buried Old Ashford Burying Ground at Warrenville, CT, Modest tombstone reads, “This monument is erected in memory of Colonel Thomas Knowlton & his wife.” Ana is buried beneath monument. “Remember God did us part; Accept it M#2 Col. EPHRIAM DEAN with a willing heart.” Baptism usually 8 days of Taunton & remov. there. 9 children, 2 died in infancy: after birth) Frederick 4 Dec 1760-9 Oct 1841 NOTE: Book The Dwellings Sally 23 Nov 1763-6 Mar of Boxford notes that 1852 William & Martha Pinder Thomas 13 Jul 1765-2 May Knowlton settled on the 1858, lived in Wellington land her father, Theophilus Polly 11 Jan 1767-1885 Pinder owned. It later ABIGAIL 20 Jun 1768 became the residence of Michael Murphy & is listed Samson 8 Feb 1770, d.10 Sep 1777 as #238 in the book. It Anna 8 Jun 1771 d. 4 June was built exactly like the 1772 building now housing the Boxford Historical Society. Anna(2)19 Mar 1773-19 Jun 1817 Ashford NEW NOTE: The house burned down 20 Oct 2005, Lucinda 10 Nov 1776,d.10 Mar 1805 with the old renter in Frederick Knowlton, Thos & it!—EMA Anna’s son who fought with Knowlton at Harlem Heights Notes: Lucinda’s father & left the records. Never never saw her, born married. three months after he was killed at Battle of Harlem Heights (RA said ABIGAIL was youngest daughter, but doesn’t agree with dates below confirmed by trip to Ashford & Becket Town Halls.—EMA Scroll down to KEYES

West Boxford Church “Second Congregational Church built in 1736.

MARTHA PINDER c1706-aft.1753 b. prob Boxford c1706, marriage bans published 13 Feb 1728 West Boxford, Essex, Admitted to church in Ashford, CT from Bradford (near Boxford) MBC 27 Jul 1749. Children:(one set twins) Mary 9 May 1729 m. Ezekiel Tiffany of Ashford, CT 9 Mar 1748/9 Lucy d.young Sarah 1733 m. Joshua Kendall of Ashford Lucy 20 Feb 1736/7 m. Dea. AbijahBrooks William 9 Aug 1733 m.Mehitable Eaton of Ashford 18 Dec 1757 Daniel b. 23 Dec 1738, bp.31 Dec 1738, m#1 Eliz. Farnham 3 Dec 1763, m#2 Rebecca Fenton 24 Apr 1788 of Willington THOMAS 30 Nov 1740 Priscilla 20 May 1744 unm. Nathaniel bp.9 May 1745/6 d.young 19 Jul 1749

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Bennett

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John 1638

Jewett

Allen

ABRAHAM JEWETT c1634-c1694 Occ: Tannerxxxii, Was c54 yrs old on 2 Jul 1691 Essex Need to look this up and see Deeds 9:21, also 5I’swich87. what it was supposed to say. His home in Rowley was “parcell of ground” of three & one-hald acres, bounded east on a highway leading to Ipswich, south on land of John Dresser, west on land of John Mighill, north on common land of the town of Rowley, purch for 17 pounds, of Mr. Joseph Jewett (see below) who “departinge this life, not havinge given the saide Abraham Jewett any legall assurance there of, we Philip Nellson & Jeremiah Jewett Exequitors unto the aforesaide Mr. Joseph Jewett” confirm said sale; unrecorded deed web info on ABRAHAM in possession of Amos E. JEWETT 1634-c1694 Jewett, dated 3:1;1661-2. bp. 14 Sep 1634 Bradford, This land, then having West Riding, Yorkshire, buildings thereon, was Eng. probate 29 Sep 1694, sold, 8 Apr 1737, by his d.30 Apr 1694 Rowley, grandchild, Anne Swett, Essex MBC prob emig w/ uncles Maximilian & Joseph to David Dresser, & the larger part of it is now Jewett & bro. John. He & (1932) owned & occupied bro got married same day. by Albert A. Hicken. The First mention of them. inventory of his estate He was a tanner, came to was taken 30 Apr 1694 America on the John, arr. by Ezekiel Jewett, Joseph 1638 Dorchester, settled Jewett, & Nehemiah Jewett. Rowley, Essex Co., MBC. His widow, Ann, was See bio. administratrix.(xxxvii) Abraham & his brother John’s relationship to Abraham’s wife’s step-father, prob WILLIAM JEWETT Joseph Jewett is a mystery. It 1605-? is thought they are probably b. 1605 Eng. His brothers nephews of Maximillian & Maximillian & Joseph Joseph & sons of William, emmigrated to America. b. 1605.

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m#2 Joseph Jewett, one of orig. founders of Rowley, 3 more children.

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ANN ALLEN/ALIN 1643-1721/22 b. 8 Oct 1643 Boston, Suffolk, MA or 1639 Hingham, PC, m. 2:2 mo. 1661xxxvii or 1664(RA) Rowley, At time of her marriage, she BOZOAN ALLEN, Capt. was living with her mother c1617-1652 who had married Joseph from Lynn,Norfolk Eng, Jewett. d. 9 Feb 1721-2 Emig.to Hingham, MBC Rowley 1638. Part of “Hobart Children Rowley: cluster of families,” earliest DEBORAH 3 Dec 1664 settlers of Hingham who Ann 20 Jun 1667, m. Francis opposed chosing Anthony Palmer Eames as Captain. Bozoan William bp 30 May 1669, in placed in his place. Eames’ Canada Expedition 1690, Conflict with our prob d. in service other ancestor supporters objected & Boston magistrates refused Mary 11 Jun 1671, m. Anthony Eames to sanction Allen’s election. Ebenezer Brown Episode called the “Military Besoume 30 Aug 1673, bur Problems of 1644/45”. 13 Sep same yr. “Bozoan Allen prominent Abraham 22 Nov 1674, m. resident of Higham. Set up Sarah Dorman a mill in 1643 w/ Anthony Priscilla 27 Aug 1679 Eames & Wamual Ward. Elizabeth pb 7 Oct 1683, m From Lincoln, History Thos. Perrin of Ipswich of the town of Hingham. (NEHGS Register Vol 162, Jul 2008, No. 647, p175.) At his death Bozoan Allen owed many debts, including one to Franc[is] Robinson at Boston; the inventory recording this debt was dated 22 September 1652. GreatMig See write-up in Puritan Experiment.d. 14 Sep 1652 Boston, Suffolk, MBC, will 9 Sep 1652 MBC d. 14 Sep 1652, ANN c1618-1660 Emig from Lynn, Norfolk, Eng, bur. 8 Feb 1660/61 Rowley, Essex, MBC. Will 5 Feb 1660 Essex Co, MBC See will Children b. prob. Hingham MBC: ANN 8 Oct 1643 Bossom 13 Feb 1652 John 13 Oct 1641

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Bennett Perkins

THOMAS PERKINS 1484-1547age63 b.1458 Hillmorton, Warwicks, Eng, d. 1547 Hillmorton

HENRY PERKINS 1510-1592 b. 1510 Hillmorton, Warwicks, Eng, d.11 May 1592 Hillmorton

ALICE c.1589-? b. c1589 Hillmorton, m. c1529 Hillmorton Children Hillmorton: Luke William 1508 HENRY 1510 Thomas 1510 Edward c1542 Isach c1548 (Willing to bet the last two were from a different wife.)

ALICE pos.KEBBLE/ KIBBLE ?-1608 b. of Hillmorton, Warwicks, Eng, d. 5 Apr 1608 Hillmorton, bur 11 Mar 1608 Hillmorton Children: HENRY

Kebble/Kibble Sawbridge

HENRY PERKINS ?-1608 b. Hillmorton, Warwicks, Eng, d. 5 Apr 1608 Hillmorton, bur 11 Mar 1608 Hillmorton ELIZABETH SAWBRIDGE c1565-aft1609 b. Hillmorton, Warwicks, Eng, m. 29 Nov 1579 Children Hillmorton unless otherwise: Alice 1580 James c1581 Thomas 24 Jul 1582 JOHN 23 Dec 1583 Francis 1 May/Nov 1585 Frances 1586 Edward 12 Dec 1588 Agnes/Anne 16Oct1592 Richard cMar1593 Sarah 25 Aug 1594 Francis 1596 William 13 Jan 1597/8 Luke 27 nov 1600 Elizabeth 28 Nov 1602 Elizabeth 22 Jul 1606 John 1609 (Note: I cut off the fist six names because they were before date of marriage. I think he must have been married to someone else first.)

JOHN PERKINS 1583-1654 (age 71) b.23Dec 1583 Newent, Gloucester, Eng,bp. 23 Dec 1583 Hillmorton, Warwick, Eng. d. 23 Sep 1654, It appears from places children born that came to America between 1626 & 1632. JUDITH GATER c1595-aft1632 b.in Hillmorton, Warwicks, Eng, m.9 Oct 1608 Hillmorton, Children Hillmorton unless otherwise: Abraham 28 Jan 1607 Judith1608 Bath,Somerset John 14 Sep 1609 Isaac 26 jan 1610/11 Elizabeth 31 Mar 1611 Bath Ann 5 Sep 1617 Thomas Apr 1619 Thomas 28 Apr 1622 Jacob 12 Sep 1624 Reddington 1626 LYDIA 3 Jun 1632

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HENRY BENNETT 1629-aft 1664 b. 1629 Eng.

HENRY BENNETT 1664-aft 1683 b. Ipswich, Essex, MA

LYDIA PERKINS 1632-1706/7 age 75 bp.3 Jun 1632, m.1651 Ipswich, MBC, d.12 jan 1706/7 Ipswich

FRANCES BURR 1669-aft 1683 b. b.c1669 Ipswich, m.20 May 1685xlv Children: MARY 3 Mar 1685 Ipswichxlv

Abraham Perkins, Lydia’s broher, listed in History of Ipswich as an innkeeper.

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A Dr. John Perkins, either her brother or fathre, was ised as “minisered as well t fleshly ills” p83

Gator JOHN BURR c1644-1673 age 29 b.c1644 Ipswich MBC, d. 22 Apr 1673 Ipswich

Burr Smith

MARY SMITH c.1647-1707 b.ca1647, d.12Jun1707 Ipswich, Essex, MBC, Children b. Ipswich: Frances c1664/69 Jonathan 28 Jun 1665 Elizabeth 29 Dec 1667 Jeremiah 10 Jul 1670 Abyell 11 Dec 1672

Susan & Ellen 1635

Pinder

MICHAEL PINDER 1552-?

The English Home of Henry Pinder of Ipswich, by John B. Threlfall. References: Ancestry of Charles Stanton Pillsbury (1938); Essex County Quarterly Court Files: Essex County Deeds 1:211.

MARY ALSWORTH 1556-?

Alsworth

JOHN PINDER/PYNDER 1627-c1701 b.1627 Cambridge, Eng. d.14 Apr ? Ipswich, Essex, MBC,“of Pynder, Eng, ‘“a Soldier in ye Countrie’s Service & subscriber to fund for services of Maj. Dennison in King Philip’s War.xxv Probate filed 29 Jan 1701, Intestate, Ipswich

UNKNOWN possibly Martha b. c.1662 Children: MARTHA b. Boxford, Essex, MA

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ELIZABETH WILSON c1639-1671 b.c1639 Ipswich, Essex, MBC, m. by 16 Aug 1658 Ipswich, d. 20 May 1671 Ipswich NEHGS Children: THEOPHILUS 28 Jun 1678 Note: wonder if related to Elizabeth Wilson b.Ipswich above in 1639? under Knowlton

THEOPHILUS PINDER 1678-1785 b.28 Jun 1678 Ipswich “of Ipswich” Remov. to Boxford where he purchased land, later built on by his daghter Martha & her husband William Knowlton.EMA Deeded the land to William Knowlton 22 mar 1735, bur Ashford near grave of William Knowlton; d. 10 Jan 1765 prob Ashford.

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Question: Any relation to the Rogers family that marries Frederic Schroeder below?

MARY ROGERS c1582-aft1628 m. 22 May 1614 St. Mary the Great, Cambridge, Eng. Sailed to Amer from London on Susan & Ellen (Edward Payne, Master) May 1635. Henry not on manifest w/ wife & children. Ages determined from ship manifest. 6 Children: Frances bp 6 Aug 1615 St. Mary Mary bp 14 Sep 1617 St. Mary Joanna 1621/22 Anna 1623/24 Katharine 1625/26 JOHN 1628

Susan & Ellen 1635

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Rogers

HENRY PYNDER/ PINDER 1578/89-1661 b.1578/89 Lincolnshire, Eng bp. 21 Bef Coleby, Kesteven, Linconshire or b. Salisbury, Essex, Eng. ; “lineal descendant of Pynders of Lincoln County, Eng. to whom following arms granted 1538, registered in Herald’s College, London, Azure, a chevron between three lion’s heads, erased argent, guttae de poix, ducallly crowned or. Crest, a lion’s head erased or, ducally crowned azure.”xxv m#2 Elizabeth d. 6 Feb 1661 Ipswich, Essex, MA,

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Engraving of Rev. Thomas Wilson from the 1678 edition of his “Christian Dictionaire.” Courtesy of Houghton Library, Harvard College Library. Bi 596.12.15F.NEHGS Vol163 Note: This is one of only two images I have of ancestors who lived in the 1600s, 1500s or earlier. He’s sort of scary looking!

Wilson

Ower

ELIZABETH poss. KNOWLTON c1604-? b.c1604 Eng?, m. by c1634 birth of first child Children: Thomas b Eng c1634, d.c1703, m. by 27 Dec 1657 Jane Swan Seaborn (girl) (on boat) prob 1636, m. 6 Sep 1655 Cambridge as #2 w David Fiske ELIZABETH c1639 Ipswich, MA Note: The link to the Knowlton family is unclear, but probable. Eliz. might be dau. of John Knowlton.

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CHRISTIAN OWER ?-aft 1627 m. as #2 wife 29 Jun 1592 Canterbury. d. aft 1627. Received from her mother’s will: wedding ring, one silver soone, one cypres chest, one paiire of byne shets, one paire of fine pillow beeres, one paire of tongs, three poringers, my best hatt, my beste peticote, one little box with a new cover to it, with half a dozen of new napkins, one new towell, one chaffing dish, & one new fine table cloath.” Children: Elizabeth bp 21 Apr 15 94, bur 28 Aug 1594 Jane bp 15 Feb 1595/6 Samuel bp18 Nov 15991624/5 THEOPHILUS pb 20 Dec 1601 Martha bp 15 Jan 1603/4, m. Henry Bachelor of St. George’s, Canterbury RICHARD OWER & sailed to Amerca on ELIZABETH BOYS Hercules 1637. d.4 Apr prob of Canterbury. Her 1686 Ipswich no issue. brother was Sir John Boys, Mary bp 16 Jan 1603/4 who founded Jesus Hospital twin of Martha, m. St. in Canterbury. (See copy of Martins-in-the-Fields, Geoff Swinfield’s research London Thomas on Boys ancestryin R. Treadwell. Immigrated Stanton Avery Special to America on Hopewell Collections, NEHGS) 1635, settled Ipswich

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THEOPHILUS WILSON aft1600-c1690/1 age 88 bp 20 Dec 1601, d. 10 Jan 1690/1 Ipswich. Immigrated by 1636, settling at Ipswich. Freeman of MBC 13 Mar 1691. Will dated 3 Oct 1690, proved 31 Mar 1691 naming son Thomas, sons in law John Pindar & David Fiske, 3 grandchildren including Eliz. Russell. Cousin Nathaniel Tredwell overseer.

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Knowlton

Rev. THOMAS WILSON 1562/63-1621/2 b. Durham Co. Eng 1562/63, bur St. George the Martyr, Canterbury, Kent “in his own church=yard, outside the chancel” on 25 Jan 1621/2. m#1 Rebecca ? w/whom had Samuel, Paul & Nathaniel. m.#2 Christian Ower. Matriculated Queen’s College, Oxford 17 Nov 1581 at age 18. Grad. w/ B.A. 7 Feb 1583/4 & received M.A. 7 Jul 1586. In Jul 1586 appointed rector of St. George the Martyr at Canterbury thru influence of Henry Robinson (1553?-1616) provost of Queen’s College. Remained Canterbury rest of life, preaching 3 to 4 sermons per week. Wpon affections of puritan section of his people, tho more than once complained of by others to Archbishop Abbott for nonconformity. Acting chaplain of Thomas, second lord Wotton in 1611. Wrote “Christian Dictionaire” copies of which were in estates of Wm. Brewster, Sam. Fuller, & Myles Standish. Robt. Cushman, John Keble & Thos Shingleton were members of his parish, later becoming members of Leyden parish. Historian Peter Clark wrote that he was “probably the most distinguished preacher in early Jacobean Kent who preached themes from middle-of-the-road Calvinism.” Thus his Christian Dictionaire went to New Eng. w/ Pilgrims & later his children arrived.

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Boys

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by 1633

by 1633

ROBERT KEYES c1606xlviv-1647 (age 41) b. c1606 Eng; Origin unknown; Emig to America by 1633 when shows up in Watertown (the birth of Sarah); Remov. Newbury 1644; Edu: owned a Bible; Estate: 3 acre homestall Watertown 1644, acquired from Wm. Woolcocks; Family farm: 2 acres of “Remote Meadows,” sold to Nicholas guy. 23 Nov 1647 Wm. Aspinwal testified re: bill of exchange for £10 “Rich: Denny upon “Mr. Robert Keyes of Newbery 7 May 1647 = 2 mo. before Richard’s death; d. 16 Jul 1647 in his home in Newbury, age 41. See Migration entry re: his estate.

Keyes

Sources The Coming Together of the Keyes & Gage Families” William Gage. Gateway Press, Baltimore MD 1986 For more information: The Keyes Newsletter PO Box 372205 Satellite Beach FL 32937-0205 or c/o Maurice Keyes Kurtz Jr. (Editor) 285 Temple Street Satellite Beach FL 32937-3106

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Grant

SARAH ? c1605-1680 b. c1605 Eng; m. prob 1631, def by 1633 prob Eng; Emig w/ husband in 1633 prob with one son, Solomon; m#2 7 Nov 1658 Ipswich John Gage who had arrived w/ Winthrop & among signers of Covenant of First Church Boston. d. 7 July 1680 Newbury: Children: SOLOMON c1631 Eng Sarah 26 May 1633 Watertown; m. 8 Jul 1656 Samuel Buswell Salisbury prob Peter c1635, m. Eliz. Rebecca 17 Mar 1637/8 Watertown, m. Wm Smith 6 Jul 1657 Topsfield Mary/Phebe 17 Jun 1639; m. John French of Topsfield Elias 20 May 1643.1644 Watertown/Newbury, m. Sarah Blanford 11 Sep 1665 Sudbury Mary 16 Jun 1645 Newbury, m. #1 16 Feb 1663 Benjamin Gage (her stepbrother) in Andover; They had a son John 21 Sep 1666 d. 11 Oct 1671

Sgt. SOLOMON KEYES c1631/2xlviv-1702 (age 71) b. c1631/2 Eng; Emig. w/ his parents by 1633 first to Watertown, then Newbury c1644. Was only 15 when father died. Took place as head of household. By 1663, “Year of Earthquakes & naked women in church” Solomon left Newbury - possibly because of bitter factions in church & more opportunities westward. Also same time as brother Elizas - moved to Sudbury, west of Watertown, his old home. Deposition 10 Dec 1692 Solomon “above 60 years of age. Moved to Chelmsford, granted land on a hill 1644 named Francis Hill after his wife. Solomon built house. “old Keyes homestead par excellence, a roomy two story white house” when Asa Keyes lived there 200 years later. Solomon active community member. Assessed 30 May 1671. A doctor Reid cured Hannah in 1674 for 4s 6d. Reported £31 17s 6d damage after King Philips war. Selectman 1683, 1684, 1690. Town Clerk 1698 & poss 1690 (maybe his son). 1686 listed as proprietor of land at junction Concord & Merrimac River which formerly belonged to Waymeset Indians. 16 Mar SOLOMON KEYES 1665-1755 (age 90) 1691 Garrison included Solomon Keyes & Solomon b. 24 Jun 1665 Chelmsford MBC, bp by Rev. Rev John Keyes Jr. Old Chelmsford Fiske; took up land in the Town Book stated “Sargnt “neck” where the Concord Solomon Keyes dyed Mch River enters the Merrimac 28 1702 age 70. There m.#2 bef 1710 Priscilla/ is a photo of his will in Persila; child: Zebediah reference. d. 28 Mar 1702 1710-1758. d. 1755 Chelmsfield, MBC Chelmsford. FRANCES GRANT MARY ROBBINS 1634-1708 1671-1707/9 (age 36) b. 12 Jun 1634; m. 2 Oct b.11 May 1671 Chelmsford, 1653 Newburyxlvi; d. 1708 MBC; m. 30 Mar 1688/91 Chelsfield Chelmsford. Either 11 Children b. Chelmsford: Selectman or Clerk 1690. 6 Hannah 1654-1717 children. 3 dau & 3 sons. d. Sarah 1656-1738 29 Feb 1755 Chelmsford. Mary 1658-1715 Children: Jane 1660-1681 m. Samuel Mercy/Mary 1688-1715 Cleveland 17 May 1680 ELIAS 17 Nov 1692 Judith 1662-1718 Hannah 1690/8-1756 SOLOMON (1st son after 5 Henry 1699 sisters) 24 Jun 1665 Solomon 1701-1755 Joseph 24 May 1667-1757 Eunice 1704Ruth Apr 1669-1671 (age 2) Ruth 1707-1752 Moses 21 Mar 1671-1747 John 14 Aug 1674-1768 Elias 1680/1-1706m. Anne Robbins (sister of Mary who m. Solomon.) Steven 1681

ELIAS KEYES 1692-1767 (age 74) b. 17 Nov 1692 Chelmsford, MA; Remov. to Ashford c. 1719; d. 22 Feb 1767 Ashford, Windham, CT. MARY ? 1695-1753 (age 58) b.1695; m. 1714 Chelmsford (she 19); d. 27 Nov 1753 Ashford. Children: Ephraim 1715-1802 - looks like he was in the same regiment as Thos & Daniel Knowlton - Majr. John Slapp’s company in Ticonderoga 13 Oct 1759 Stephen 1717-1788 SAMSON 21 Nov 1719 Mary 1722-1802 Zachariah 1724-1753 Solomon 1728-? - who had a son listed w/ Rev. War soldiers named Edward b. 4 Jun 1759.

SAMPSON KEYES 1720-1805 (age 85) “of Ashford, CT”(RA) b. 21 Nov 1719 Ashford, Windham, CT; d. 14 Mar 1805 age 85, (obtained birthdate by subtraction) ABIGAIL BROOKS 1721-1801 (age 80) m. 22 Sep 1742 by Rev. Mr. Hale, d. 21 Aug 1801 (obtained birthdate by subtraction), bur. Snow Cemetery, Ashford, CT. Children: Sampson Jr. 30 Oct 1761 Abigail 20 Dec 1758 ANNA 1 Sep 1743 James 29 May 1752 John 24 Oct 1745 Mary 30 Dec 1756 Olive 13 Sep 1747, d. 27 Oct 1748 Olive(2) 18 Sep 1749 Zechariah 2 Oct 1754

Note: The Rev. James Hale, who married them, was Ashford’s first minister & Nathan Hale’s great uncle.

Location of Chelmsford, birth & marriage of Mary Robbins.

Newbury was founded in 1635, 2 years after John Winthrop Jr founded Ipswich. Newbury named after hom town in England of Rev Thos Parker. Chelmsford Plantation for Chelmsford granted 1655) bend on Merrimack, 25 miles from Newbury, on western frontier outpost town. Nothing between them & settlement along Connecticut River. w/ 39 petitioners Rev John Fiskey from Welham. King Philips war killed 300 settlers, destroyed 600 homes, raided 50 towns. Took 20 years to recover. Chelmsford built a garrison house (guard houses along the edge of the frontier) after war to scout for future raids.

THOMAS GRANT c1600-bef1653 b. c1600 Eng; d. bef 1653 Rowley, Essex, MBC

There was an earthquake in 1663. “Again Feb 3, shocks cont until July.

JANE ? ?

Robbins Brooks

JOHN BROOKS 1664-1733 age 69 b.1 Mar 1664 Woburn, MBC; d. 7 Aug 1733 Concord,, Middlesex, MBC

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PHOEBE RICHARDSON 1700-1752 age 52 b.21 Feb 1700 Woodstock, Windham, CT; m. 2 Jun 1719 Pomfret, Windha, CT; (she 19, he 24) d. 1752 Ashford Children: ABIGAIL 16 May 1721 Scroll down to RICHARDSON

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MARY BRUCE 1665-1742 age 52 b.15 Jun Woburn, Middlesex, MBC; m. 30 Dec 1684 Concord, Middlesex, MBC; d. 1742 Stoneham, MBC Children: JOHN 28 Nov 1694

JOHN BROOKS 1694-1743 age 48 b.28 Nov 1694 Woburn, MBC; d. 29 Mar 1743 Ashford, Windham

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Bruce Lyman’s grave in Alexandria.

ZACHARIAH RICHARDSON 1677-1748 age 71 b.b. 21 Nov 1677 Woburn, MBC; d. 23 Nov Woburn (2 days after his birthday)

Richardson See other Richardsons who are also from Woburn. Prob same family.

“Erected to the memory of Dea. Lemuel Rose who died Sept 13th 1835 aged 71 years & 4 months. Born in granvill Ms. A revolutionary soldier Emigrated with the first company of settlers. Drove the first team on the town plat. Led the devotions of the first Sabbath assembly. Was 22 years Deacon of the Granvill Cong. Chh. Was faithful consistent & generous His graces shone with a brighter & brighter lustre till death.”

MEHITABLE PERRIN 1677-1699 age 22 b.19 Apr 1677 Rehoboth, Briston, MBC; m. ?; d 4 Jul 1699 Rehoboth Children: PHEBE 21 Feb 1700

Perrin

JONATHAN ROSE c1690-1767 b. prob.c1690 Scotland, Settled w/family in E. Granville, MA in1741, Deacon in Congr. Chch, d. Burned to death when house destroyed by fire Oct. 1767

Francis

Rose The Roses were part of a group which moved from Grenville, MA, to settle the town of Grenville, OH. When the Roses first came to Granville, which had already been surveyed & laid out, Timothy Rose (later Deacon) got caught in a bramble, so Lemeul (his brother) dashed around him & became the first to enter the Town Commons. Timothy wrote: “Mrs. Axcy Rose, wife of Deac. Lemeul Rose, who was a hysterical despondent woman, became very much enraged at Hon. Timothy Rose; who had acted as agent of the Land Co; accusing him of being the author of all their misery. Her trouble reached such a pitch that on one occasion she asked her husband, calling him ‘Daddy’, ‘to give her the butcher knife to cut her throat.’ Her eldest son Helon said in a dry quite way, ‘Oh don’t Mother you will bloody your gold beads.’ She was dissuaded from the act & when spring came & everything looked prosperous she was the happiest woman in the settlement.” (See book on Granville in EMA’s possession.) The originally Congregational church became Presbyterian. The original building is gone. It was where the new Presbyterian Church is now. NOTE: Someone I know who had relatives in Granville, OH told me there were many Knowltons there, which leads me to believe Minor T. Ames probably knew of the Rose Family through his mother before he went to Ohio & met Emily. The historian in Granville said it was common for the Ohio settlers to frequently travel back & forth between their old homes in Massachusetts & their new in Ohio. She had many letters people who’d written from Granville, MA to OH. Granville right next door to Becket, MA. both at the western end of Mass.

*Source: Rose, Christine. Descendants of Robert Rose of Wethersfield & Bradford Connecticut, San Jose, 1983 (However, the information about Lemuel, Helon & Lyman was not correct. So doubt reliability, hence green)

MARGERY ?* c. 1595-? Came on the Francis, with her husband in 1635 at age 40.

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“Asher, Widow of Dea Lemeul Rose, Died Jun 15 1850 in her 87 year” ACHSAH HALE 1763-1850 age 87xlii, m. 1784 Suffield, CT 7 children, 3 sons,4 da. Mariam 22 Feb 1785 m. Elhannah Linnell HELON 5 Nov 1788 Susannah 18 Jun 1791 m. Amos Carpenter Lemeul Jr. 28 Jul 1793 Mother Deborah m#2 Silence 4 Sep 1795 m. Aaron Spelman, widower of Joshua Stark Betsy Rose, Justus’ sister Matilda 12 May 1798 m. Giles Hickox Christopher Columbus 20 Oct 1803

Mary “Jane” Dawes Rose

Abigail Kendall Holden Rose

Cemetery in Alexandria, Ohio.

Close up of the 1899 Columbus Property Atlas found in the Columbus Public Library. Shows corner of Rose & Maine where Lyman Rose lived. There is a marking for a Rope walk. This part of town was considered too unsafe (by the librarians) for me to visit when I was there alone March 2007. Rose Avenue is now called Kelton (an extenuation of the road to the south). Jane’s grave inscribed: “Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord.”

Rope walk.

EMILY WOLCOTT 1783/8-1865 b. 22 Mar 1783/8 Sandersfield, MA, m. 4 Apr 1816 (Thurs), d. 28 Feb 1865 Alexandria, Ohio. 3 children, one died young: LYMAN 2 Jan 1817 Note: Sandersfield is only a few miles away from Granville, MA

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MARY JANE DAWES 1813/4 -1852 (age 38) b. 20 Nov 1813 in Thomaston, ME, Remov. to OH @ 4 yrs. old, childhood sweetheart of Lyman, family lived on farm 1 mile from Rose farm in Alexandria, Story of courtship in Alexandria in Dawes Story. m. 20 May 1840 at Great Farm house in Alexandria of her parents. Her only son Henry was “instantly killed by lightning Feb 15 1862 in Louisiana while in camp opposite Vicksburg” [civil war]. He was with Emily’s first husband, Mr. French, who also died. Jane d. 15 Aug 1852 Columbus, bur. Alexandria, OH, Licking Co. (Granville 6 mi. from Alexandria) 3 Children b. St. Albans, Licking Co, OH: EMILY 20 Feb 1841 Henry D. c1842-15 Feb 1862 Mary 1845-1846 Mary (adopted)

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JAMES BARLOW prob of E. Granville, MA

DEBORAH BARLOW ?? m.1744 12 Children: 7 sons, 4 daughters LEMEUL was 6th son & 8th child: Elihu 30 Mar 1749-9 Jun 1949 (3 mo) Levi 5 May 1750 m.Mary Deming Deborah 25 May 1752 m. Stephen Spelman Tryphena 27 Apr 1754 m. Jesse Miller Gad 24 Aug 1756 m. Caroline Hale Reuben 15 Jul 1758 unm. Justus Jr. 13 Jul 1760-4 Jun 1859 Timothy 1 Jun 1762 LEMEUL 23 May 1764xliii Hiram 11 Nov 1766 m. Sabra Cooley Mehitable/Mabel 22 Oct 1768 m. Jesse Thrall Rhoda 24 Aug 1770 m. Enoch Graves

Lyman Wolcott Rose (His wife No.2 is on the right, Charlotte Tyler)

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ABIGAIL HALE 1690-1793 age 103 14 children, 7 lived to old age & had families, JUSTIN was 5th son. She was blind for about the last 15 yrs.. Her memory remarkably good til death. After the fire which burned her house & killed husband, she rebuilt her house in the same place in Granville.On her 100th birthday, Church Mtg./ Sermon of descendents attended: 110 grnd chld, 300+ great grdchld, 40+ great great. i.e. 450+lving descendents while she was yet living.d.1793, age 103. Two of her grandchildren living in her house, very old in 1859. Children b. East Granville MBC: Jonathan Jr. David Daniel John Justus Mar 1724-1781 Elisha Sharon Abigail m. Sharon Peas Dorothy m. Seward Dama m. Oliver Treat Betsey m. Aaron Spelman Caroline . John Seward

JUSTUS ROSE 1724-1781 age 58 b. Mar 1724 l. East Granville, MA d. 25 Sept 1781. Deacon in Cong. Church. Res. East Granville.

HELON ROSE 1788-1874 b. 5 Nov 1788 Granville, MA, remov to Granville, OH, w/ in 1805 age 17, d. Columbus OH 27 Dec 1874, bur Alexandria. In War of 1812 owned first distillery in Granville in 1818, sold soon after, liv. “fine farm near Granville, Licking Co., OH, [prob in Alexandria], in an “old red brick farm house” in Alexandria, “there is an old mill that belonged to Rose family in Alexandria.” [Alexandria still consists of an intersection of two streets. The Dawes store & probably the mill were on that corner.]

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Barlow I found no connection between Ascher & Nathan Hale. But I’m not sure if I’ve looked to see if she Hale Note: is descended from Thomas Hale above.

ROBERT ROSE* Came on the Francis, which left England bound for New England Apr 1635 under DANIEL ROSE* Master John Cutting.

Deac. LEMEUL ROSE the elder*xlii 1764-1835 b. 23 May 1764, the 6th son & 8th child. joined Rev. War @16yrs. “complex. light,hair light, occup. farmeriii l. Granville, MA, 1 of 25 (many of them Roses) who formed Cong. Chrch in Granville, MA then emigrated as a church, the Licking Land Company, to Granville, OH in 1805. Deacon in Congreg. Chch, Justice of Peace & good neighbor, upright citizen & possessed a good property”.“his gravity, inflexible integrity & promptness,enabled him to honor his office & his kindness & generosity was a blessing to his church & to his friends” d.Sunday, 13 Sep1835. Note: See story about Sabbath. Description of Rev. War service page 3 of Walter Thrall Genealogy, also pension recordxlii.

Engraving of Lyman in the Columbus OH newspaper obituary. LYMAN WOLCOTT ROSE 1817-1901 (age 85) b. 2 Jan 1817, St. Albans Tp./Alexandria, Licking Co, OH. Grew up Alexandria. Remov to Columbus 1865 at end of war, Got into hemp rope biz. during Civ. War, Had a rope walk (long building where they braid rope) next to his house in Columbus on the corner of East Main St. & Rose Ave. “A man of very fine character, respect & loved by friends.”“Grand old guy”, “highly esteemed,”“one of the oldest & best known residents of Columbus,” traveled extensively for biz, “He was familiar w/ underground railway & was not averse to assisting in its methods of procedure. d. 29 May 1901 at his late home, corner East main Street & Rose Avenue [now Kelton], Columbus, bur. in Alexandria. m. #2 Charlotte “Sally” E. Tyler, who d. 27 Mar 1890, aged 73 y 11 m 12 d, & is bur next to Lyman also in Alexandria. There is an old mill in Alexandria that used to belong to the Rose family.

This map shows the relationship of Granville (where Lemeul Rose moved in 1805 as part of first settlers) to Alexandria, where Lyman & Helon are buried & where Lyman met Jane Dawes. Lyman had moved to Columbus during civil war where he had a rope making factory. The long building where the rope is braided is called a Rope Walk. The Rose & the Dawes families lived in Alexandria when Lyman & Jane met. Minor T. Ames met Emily Rose in Columbus. See Dawes family below.

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Cont. on Page 80 Source: Genealogies of Connecticut Families, Vol III, p568, Gary Boyd Roberts, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co, Inc. 1983.

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JOHN WOLCOTT, Sr. 1516-? b. 10 Sep 1516, Tolland Somerset, Eng., d.7 Dec 1571, Tolland AGNES BUTTLER 1523 b. 1523 Tolland, Somerset, Eng. Children: Mary 1553 JOHN 17 Apr 1545 Alice 1551

JOHN WOLCOTT, JR 1545-1618 b.17 Apr 1545 Tolland, Somerset, Eng, Golden Manor House. d. 21 Mar 1618,Tolland, Somersetshire, England whose ancestry traced back 15 gen to 11th cent. in Wales, to Sir John Wolcott, Knight, in Shropshire. William Wolcott of Wolcott (10th gen) settled in Tolland prior to 1500. See Hollister’s Histo. of Con. Vol. 1, pg189) of “Golden Manor”, which still stands, (see bio) Motto inscribed, “Inclined to swear in the words of no master.” AGNES CROSSEa 1551/2-? b. 3 Jan 1551/2 Tolland, Somerset, Eng. m.9 Feb 1577/78 Children: John c.1594 Henry 6 Dec 1578 Christopher 1583

Butler Crosse Source: NEHGS:652 p282, See “Myrtle Stevens Hyde “A Wolcott Corrrection” Register 157 (2003):256

Saunders

THOMAS SAUNDERS of Lydiard St. Lawrence, Somerset, Eng. ANN ?

1600s

Mary & John 1630

HENRY WOLCOTT* 1578-1655 (age 77) bp 6 Dec 1579 Lydiard St. Lawrence/ liv in Tolland Somersetshire, Eng, until 1630 NEHGS:652, d. 30 May 1655 Windsor, Hartford, CT. Came 1st time to Amer. in 1626, returning to fetch wife & 3 of their children, Henry Jr., Christopher & George in 1630. (3 other children, incl Simon were to follow later. Simon is progenitor of Roger Wolcott, Gov. of Conn 1750-54, & Oliver Wolcott, Gov. Conn. 1796-97 & one of signers of Dec. of Indep. These are cousins only.) “Henry & wife Elizabeth: This happie pair were married about ye year 1606. He came to new England about the year 1626 & in the year 1630 brought over his family to avoid the persecution of those time against dissenters.”ii Henry was 52 & Eliz. 46. Sailed from Plymouth, Eng. on 20 Mar 1630 on the Mary & John, Captain Squeb, who landed Nantastet & “dropped them on wilderness shore” Made way to Watertown, (& poss a while in Dorchester) then Windsor CT. Particip. all legislative proceedings in Windsor CT, anually re-elected to house of Magistrates as the upper House.l. Windsor south of Farmington River on road to Hartford. ELIZABETH SAUNDERS 1589-1655 (66) Mary & John bp. 20 Dec 1630 1589 Lydiard, St. Lawrence, Somerset, Eng. m. 19 Jan 1605/6/7 at Lydiard d. 7 Jul 1655, five weeks after husband died.Both buried under a brownstone arch in the cemetery of the First Congregational Church at Windsor, CT on the north bank of the Farmington River. Many of their descendents are buried in same cemetry GEORGE was 4th son Children (nio) b. Lydiard, St. Lawrence, Somerset, Eng: John 1 Oct 1607, liv in Eng 1631; d. bef 1655 Henry 21 Nov 1610. d.1680/Esq d. Windsor 1662 Children (nio)b. Tolland, Somerset, Eng GEORGE c1612/22 Anne/Anna 1620/c1624; m. Matthew Griswold Christopher c1615, d. unm 1662 Mary 1622/1626 m. Job Drake Simon 11 Sep 1624/25; m. Joanna Cooke; d. 11 Sep 1687 Windsor

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Mary & John 1630

GEORGE WOLCOTT Betw 1612&1619-1662 b. bet.1610/23 & 1619 in Tolland, Somersetshire, Eng., emig w/ parents & two bros. in 1630, left Eng. 20 Mar 1630, arr. Amer 30 May, 1630. Made Freeman by Gen. Court of Conn. in 1657, much later than his bros. he was almost 34 to 46 yrs. old. Rest of sons inherited a lot from parents, but for George, only “Also, I give to George, my third son, the five pound he owes me & five pounds more”, d. in his home Wethersfield, CT 12 Feb 1662 betw. 43 & 51 yrs of age. ELIZABETH TREAT 1627-? b. 25 Jul 1627, Eng. m. c.1649 Children: George Jr. John Mercy Elizabeth

GEORGE WOLCOTT 1652-1726 b.20 Sep 1652 prob Wethersfield, Hartford Co, CT, d. 7 Jul 1726 Wethersfield, ELIZABETH CURTIS 1653-aft1716 b. 17 Apr 1673, m.30 Aug 1691 Wetherfield 10 Children: Elizabeth 22 May 1693 Deborah 3 Jan 1694/95 Ann 11 Aug 1698 George 15 Jan 1700/1 Caleb 15 Aug 1703 Eunice 28 Nov 1705 JOSHUA 15 Jun 1708 David 3 Mar 1710/1 Josiah 29 Aug 1713 Sarah 3 Nov 1716

JOSHUA WOLCOTT 1708-aft.1752 b. 15 Jun 1708, d. aft 11 Nov 1752 ESTHER BELDING 1710-aft 1749 b. 27 Jun 1710 Wethersfield, CT 8 children,Joseph=5th Esther Honor bet 1725-44 Joshua bet 1725-1745 Solomon 1 Sep 1735 JOSEPH 1740 Caleb ca1743 Josiah aft 7 Sep 1746 Thomas aft 1749

JOSEPH WOLCOTT 1740-1808 b. 1740, d.21 May 1808 Children born in Sandisfield, Berkshire Co, MA

HORACE WOLCOTT 1759-? b.9 May 1769, prob. during or after Rev. War remov. to Sandisfield, Berkshire, MA (which is very close to Granville, MA). Prob remov. to Granville, Licking Co., OH in 1805 with above.

ELIZABETH BOSWORTH LUCY SMITH 1746-1812 c1770-aft1665 b.Middleton, CT, m.1766 m. 22 Mar 1788 d.Sandersfield, MA 13 children(1 died) Sandisfield: Lucy 9 Mar 1767 HORACE 9 May 1769 Joseph 5 May 1771 Honor 17 Nov 1772 Joseph 9 Feb 1775 Elias 16 Jun 1777 Eliza 17 May 1779 Edward 23 May 1781 Esther 22 Nov 1783 Josiah 11 Mar 1785 Esther 19 Jul 1787 Joshua 4 Feb 1791 Sarah 4 Apr 1793 Note: Most of these children would have born during the Revoutionary War.

Treat

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Curtis

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Belding/ Beldon/ Baildon Page 80

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GEORGE BAILDON 1521-1588 b. 1521 Methley, Eng, d. May, bur 31 May, 1588 Kippax, Eng

Sir FRANCIS BAILDON/ BAYLDON 1560-1622 b. b.1660 Kippax, Eng, d 20 Jun 1622 Monk, Eng

ANNE FOLKINGHAM 1520 b. 1520, m. c1540, Children: Hilary Richard Hilary Richard William Anne Ann FRANCIS

MARGARET GOODRICK 1564-aft1598 b.1564 Ribston Manor, Eng, m. 1588 Ribston Manor Children: Margaret c.1587 Kippax William 4 Jan 1589 RICHARD 26 May 1692 Cuthbert c1592 Martin c1593 Henry c1594 Thomas c1595 Clare c1596 Muriell 30 Sep 1598 m.#2 Francis Johnson

1600s RICHARD BAILDON/ BELDEN 1591/94-1666 b. 26 May 1591 Kippax, West Riding, York, Eng, d. 22 Aug 1655, Weathersfield, Hartford, CT, Occ 1646 town “cow-keeper” will 22 Aug 1655, emig bet 1631 & 1640 to Wethersfield, believed his wife died before he emig w/ sons. See complete bio. MARGARET ACKRENDON bet 1591-1602 b. c1591 Kippax, m. 9 Dec 1622 Kippax d. bef emig bet 1631-1640 Children: Eng William 1622 Norwalk, Samuel 16 Sep 1632 (killed by indians Sep 1677) Norwalk JOHN c1631 Kippax Susan ca1623 Langfield Mary 1625 Grace 1627 Wadsworth Sara 1630

JOHN BELDEN/BELDING 1631-1677 b. 4 Feb 1631 Kippax, West Riding, York, Eng, d. 27 Jun 1677 Wethersfield, CT, 1657 to 58 was trooper under Maj John Mason., poss baptised 1657 “made free”. Merchant, tavern keeper, left estate of 911£ LYDIA STANDISH 1638 b. 1635/38/46 Wethersfield, Hartford, CT, m. 24 Apr 1657, d.& bur. in Wethersfield Children Wethersfield: John 12 Jun 1658 Lt/Dea Jonathan 21Jun1610 JOSEPH 23 Apr 1663 Samuel 3 Jan 1664/65 Sarah 31Mar1668 Daniel 12Oct 1670 Ebenezer 8 Jan 1671-72 Lydia Mar 1674/5 Margaret 19Mar1677

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JOSEPH BELDING of Wethersfield, CT 1663-1724 b. 23 Apr 1663 Wethersfield, CT, d. 7 Dec 1724 Wethersfield MARY/MERCY WILLARD c1675-1739/40 m. 27 Oct 1693 Children b. Wethesfield: Sarah 1 Jun 1695 Capt.Joseph 28 Dec 1697 Capt.Thomas 9 Sep 1700 Mary 23 Apr 1704 Amos 15 Aug 1707 ESTHER 26 Jun 1710 Eunice 16 Jun 1714

Goodrick Ackrendon ?

Standish

Francis

Note: It is not known how or if Thomas Standish is related to MYLES STANDISH. Either he is his younger brother, a son that was left in England, or a nephew. Family tradition says he is from the same family. Myles was born 1586 Ellanbane, Isle of Man, Lancashire, Eng. There was also a JAMES STANDISH from Ruskington, Lincoln, Eng. who had a son Thos bp 25 June 16 Note: There was a Thomas Standish of Duxbury, Eng. who paid the lay subsidy tax of 26s 4p in 1581 & 1587, 32s in 1598 & 1600. xlvxvii

ROBERT FRANCIS

THOMAS STANDISH c1610-1693 age 80 b. Eng,bp.25 Jun 1615 Ruskington, Lincoln, Eng, Emig bef. 1636 as one of orig settlers to Wethersfield, CT, d.5 Dec 1693 Wethersfield, CT. Soldier in Pequot War 1637 which resulted in grant of land, Keeper of Fort Stiles at Wethersfield. Authentic trad. says of family of Myles Standish, either son, bros or nephew. Same characteristics & physically same. See bio. w#2? Susanna Smith, w#3? Mary Church SUSAN FRANCIS 1624-1692 age 68 m.c1644 Wethersfield d.30 Nov 1692 Children: Thomas c1656 Sarah c1660 Eunice c1663 LYDIA c1648

JOAN

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Dawes/Dors/ Dor

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DAR Patriot #A030777

Lt. WILLIAM AMBROSE DAWES 1642-1705 (63) b. 24 July 1642 in Braintree, MBC, Planter of London,1635 “bricklayer” Mason & WILLIAM DAWES II builder in Boston. Listed 1620-1703 (83) in many places w/ father b. 1620 prob Sudbury, for brickwork & chimney Suffolk County, Eng. d. survey. Home next father 24 Mar 1702/3, Embark east side Sudbury St. for Amer 10 Apr 1635 Member AHAC 1674. & arr Boston 7 Jun 1635 Freeman 31 May 1671, on Planter of London, 1681 w/ father & cousin “Nicholas Trerice, Master” James Hawkins contract in 1635 age 15, listed on build house Dep Gov Thos English Customs House Danforth,1669 occ const REgister w/ a Francis foundation Third Chr Dexter age 13—both under (Old S. Chr),1683 tithing a Daniel Hanbury age 29. man, 1697 Constable. Copiest deduced Wm & Lt.in War vs Indians – in Francis poss in Hanbury’s 1692 served “his Majesty’s care though no further army at Pemaquid,” NE’s connection bet them found. northernmost fort, as a Also on Planter = Bushnell soldier & as a workman. In family would merge w/ service was wounded, losing Dawes fam later. Settled an eye at Fort Pomaquid, 1st Boston & worked into ME 1692 “whereupon, bricklaying trade, then Mt. on his petition, June 19, Walloston when became 1695, provincial Legislature Braintree May 1640 (along allowed him ten pounds with Mills & Newcomb out of the public treasury. families), Became Mason. Ancestor of three patriots, Age 21 in 1641 when m. Col. Thomas Dawes, Jr. Susannah. Jun 1650 referred (1754 A&HAC), William to as “Dawes of Braintree.” Dawes Sr. (A&HAC1760) Remov. permanently Boston & William Dawes, Jr. 1650/51. Deposition stated (A&HAC1768)” (Records of resided Boston “from 1652 A&HAC) d. Boston 9 Nov & before.” Mem. 1st Chur 1705, bur Boston 10 Nov Boston (had to be to be 1705 age 63. freeman). Took Freeman’s Oath 6 May 1646.Became HERE LAYS ENTOMBED substantial property THE BELOVED PARENTS OF holder—east side near THOMAS DAWES pond of Sudbury St, then VIZT AMBROSE DAWES known as “the lane from DECR Ye 9th 1705 IN Ye 63D Prison Land to the Mill YEAR OF HIS AGE Pond” Built home referred MARY DAWES WIFE TO to “mansion house” lasted 5 AMBROSE DAWES DECD gen (Ambrose, Thos) until MAY Ye 22D 1706 IN Ye Brits tore down during 64TH YEAR OF HER AGE occup 1775 (mason could There is a Patterdale in JONATHAN DAWES DECD build big house). 1656 pd Cumbria/N. York county. OCT Ye5th 1690 IN Ye 29th £3 for wrk on Fort Hill. Wit Deepdale is in N. York. YEAR OF HIS AGE ALSO 7 many docs. 1674/5 sworn Doesn’t seem that near CHILDREN OF THOMAS & Juryman. 22 Apr 1675 pd Roman Road. SARAH DAWES £200 “lawful money of New AMBROSE DAWES England” to John Nichols of Abigail b. Northern England, Boston, joyner, & Susannah 1628 Deepdale, Pattersdale, his wife, for their messuage Westmoreland County, not WILLIAM DAWES & land bounded westerly far from Old Roman Road Tradition states that he & by the st that leads to 2nd from London to Edinburgh, his wife came to America Meeting House (More Scotland (same road which with the 50 or so people property see Dawes-Gates), JOHN DAWES William Brewster below help fnd Old South Chur led by Endicott to Salem b. Northern England, grew up near.) One theory in 1628 on Abigail. (Along 12/16 May 1669 (aka Third Deepdale, Pattersdale, Chur). Judge Sam. Sewell states Ambrose was born with Anthony Eames Westmoreland County, not above.) “but soon returned recorded 24 Mar 1703/4 far from Old Roman Road aboard the Ambrose that “Wm Daws, Mason, dyes to England”. His son would from London to Edinburgh, sailed with Winthrop’s fleet, return in 1635.His brother about 2 p.m. A good old Scotland (same road which bringing his parents to NE inherited estate of wife now man, full of days, is got William Brewster below in 1630.But that conflicts well to the end of his weary called Mt. Ephriarn near grew up near.) with other data. Race.” Faversham, Kent. UNKNOWN Children: John, Jr. William (died sans progene) AMBROSE

UNKNOWN Children: Ambrose Dawes WILLIAM

UNKNOWN Children: Ambrose Dawes WILLIAM

Source: For more detailed information on Dawes & all preceeding related families, refer to Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines, compiled by Mary Walton Ferris, Privately Printed, 1943. Two volumes. Most of our families are in Volume I. You will find it in the Mayflower Library, Sutro, DAR & NEHGS. I have copied most pages, but not all.

William Mears Dawes (father of Jane Dawes who m. Layman Rose) settled in Alexandria, Ohio, in 1834 & stayed there for the rest of life except the last few months, which he spent in Wisconsin to be near his son, where he died. The Rose family had moved to Granville. Helon Rose probably moved up the road to Alexandria, where his son Lyman met Jane Dawes. See Lyman Rose above.

This is our Revolutionary War hero. There are tons of books about him. I will only highlight important dates.

WILLIAM DAWES, Jr. 1745-1799 (age 53) b. 6 Apr 1745 Boston, Suffolk Co, MA,liv. early years parent’s house on Ann Street(now Front). Home religiously strict of times. Occ: Tanner, tanyard @ Sudbury & Friend Sts/ Mill Run, Dawes wharf on Distillhouse Square, Boston, Joined A&HAC 8 Apr 1768. Second serg.1770. He & wife joined Old South Church 8 Apr 1768. liv. w/ wife at No. 64 Ann nearly opposite his father. Mem. Sons of Liberty w/ Revere, 1st of Express Riders sent by J. Warren to sound alarm British on way to Lexington & Concord via land route. Ambushed by Brits in Lexington, escaped, not clear where went. Joined Contin. Troops fighting @ Bunker Hil. Remov family to Worcester when Boston unsafe. Partner w/ bro-inlaw Coolidge as grocer. At close war returned Boston, liv. Distill House square, continued as grocer in Dock Square. A&HAC revived after Rev. 1786 & he held position of clerk.Worked for early Mass. govt, his signature on early colonial bills. 1796 remov to Marlboro failing health, farm presumably once occupied by his father. Died there & remains brought to Boston. Memorial in Cambridge Commons-27 horseshoes marking his route.w#2 Lydia Gendall 28 Nov 1795 survived him near 10 yrs.1 child: Hannah, Consid. property w/ w#2. d. Marlborough 25 Feb 1799 intestate. Division of estate ran from 1799-1805, bur. King’s Chapel in Boston (grave shown above.)

WILLIAM MEARS DAWES 1771-1885 (age 84) b. 26 Dec 1771, 64 Anne St (now Front St, plaque marks location between a McDonalds & a Dunkin’ Donuts across street from Funeuil Hall) Boston, Suffolk Co, MA. d. 21 Sep 1855. After Rev. War moved to Sudbury with his wife’s family, Holdens, because Boston devasted by war. Bought land for factory & store w/ John Warren in Sudbury 3 July 1795. liv. short time in Marlborough, remov. to Thomaston, ME (then MBC) in 1800 (where his grandfather had been given land, possibly for service in early Indian war) certainly, land in New Hampshire had come into Dawes’ hands from service of Ambrose in King Phillips’ war), appoint. surveyor & Inspector of Port by Pres. Jefferson 1809, Repres. town in 1st Constit. Conv. In 1816. Coldest winter ever in New England when thousands moved to Ohio, remov. to Marietta, Morgan Co., OH (western frontier on Ohio River, founded 1787 Ohio Company of Associates in Boston), then purchased land in Malta, near McConnellsville,1817 then Alexandria, Licking Co, OH 1834., 1st Postmaster, set up 1st carding machine, Mem of Gen. Assembly, Assoc. Judge of Morgan County 7 yrs, spent rest of life. d. Wisconsin, prob Ripon home of his son George, 21 Sep 1855. His grave is not to be found in Alexandria or nearby Granville. (Extensive files in EMA records.)

Plaque marking birthplace of William Dawes Jr on Front Street (formerly Ann Street) across street from Feneuil Hall.

Grave of William Dawes, Jr. in Cemetery of Kings Chapel, Boston.

Jane Dawes Rose

“Nabby” Abigail Kendall Holden Dawes

Gravestone on left is Nabby’s daughter, Jane Dawes Rose & the unmarked grave to the right is presumed to be Nabby. There is a letter stating that Nabby wanted to be buried next to her daughter Jane.

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(Henry was the grandfather of Vice President of U.S. Charles G Dawes, Snake’s cousin. They were good friends in Chicago & he also helped my grandfather, KLA Jr.. Henry married Sarah Cutler, whose father signed the Constitution of Ohio. Their son Rufus Dawes married Mary Berman Gates 18 Jan 1864 (which is where the Dawes- Gates ancestry books come from). Their children founded the Arboreteum in Granville, OH.

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ABIGAIL KENDALL HOLDEN “Nabby” 1780-1856 b. 1 Mar 1780 Sudbury, Middlesex Co, MA, m. 26 Sept 1795/6 Sudbury; d. in Hudson, OHDG, bef 21 Sept 1856 when records show her son Henry paid bill for transporting her remains to Alexandria. 9 children: Charles 15 Aug 1797 MEHITABLE MAY Sudbury- aft 1855 unm. 1750/1-1793 William 2 Aug 1799 b.19 Jan 1750 Boston, m. Fitzwilliam NY- aft 1880 3 May 1768 Boston at age m. Sally Rice, m#2 Luch 17, d. 28 Oct 1793 “age 42 Ann Birchard yrs, 2 mo, 22 days”(birth Rest b. Thomaston, ME subtracted from death George 25 Oct 1801-1869,d records A&HAC) Children: 10 Oct 1869 Wis, m. Eliz Hannah 12 Feb, bp17 1769Ames (See DG) 2 Sep 1851, m#1 Benj Henry 4 May 1804-1867 Goldthwiait. m#2 Judge Edward 16 Jun 1807-1865 Dan. Newcomb m. Caroline Dana WILLIAM MEARS 26 Dec James Thompson 11/13 1771 - see following Jun 1809-21 Sep 1840 m. Samuel May 26 Feb, bp Nancy Fitch 28 1773–12 May 1776 Mary Holden 18 Oct 1811(age 3) 7 May 1894 m. Edgar Mehetable 4 Nov 1774-20 Birge Ellsworth Apr 1776 age 2 JANE 20 Nov 1813 see Charles May 22/23 Feb following 1776 Worcester-d/ 18 John 7 Dec 1815-19 Jun/ Kim 1853 Jul 1876, bur pioneer Lucretia 23 May 1788 burying gd Alexandria, Boston, d. unm. 20 OH. m. mMary M. Van Oct 1855 Dorn.

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LYDIA BOONE 1718-1760 (age 42) b.27 Mar 1718 Boston, bp 30 Mar 1718 Old South Church. m. 2 Oct 1742 New South Church, Boston d.1760 Boston 12 Children (3 d. infancy) b Boston: Hannah 18/19 Sep 1743, bp 25 Jan 1944, m. John Lucas, d 11 Ap 1803 WILLIAM Jr. 1745 see following Lydia 7/10 Feb, bp 15 1746/7/8/9-22 Jul 1815 m. John Coolidge who had grocery w/ Wm Jr in Worcester Mary 7 Feb, bp 12 Feb 1749, prob d. young. Elizabeth 17 Nov, bp 18 Nov 1750- prob d. young Abigail 27 Dec, bp 31 Dec 1752-19/20 Nov 1833 m. Wm. Cogswell (Francis4, Jonathan3, Wm2, John1) Elisha 15 Aug, bp 17 Aug 1755 - “Tory” written against his name in Old South Church reg bap. Rebeckah b&bp 26 Sep 1756-24 Oct 1836 m. Moses Ring Ruth 1 Mar, bp 4 Mar 1760, prob d. young

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SARAH STOREY“of Eng” 1679-1758/9 b. 1679 Eng, m. 20 Aug 1702 Boston by Rev Mr. Samuel Willard of Old So. Church, join O.S Chu 31 Oct 1703, d. 1758/9 “surviv husb 9 yrs” 15 Children (6 d. yng): William 4/bp 5 Dec 1703, d.yg. Thomas b.19/bp 22 Jul 1705, d.yg Thomas 25 Jan 1706; d c174750; m. Eliz Underwood Ambrose 30 Sep 1708, d.yg Mary 10 Dec 1709; d. bef fthr, m. Wm Moor(e) Sarah 24 Jul 1711; m#1 Sam’l Hasham; m#2 Andrew Brugher Story 9 Oct 1712; d.1769; m. Sarah Paine Wm II 15 Jan 1713; d.yg Susannah 14 Aug 1715; d.yg Hannah 19 Dec 1716; d.yg Rebecca 9/bp 23 Mar 1717/8; d. 1788; m. Wm Homes (nephew of Ben Franklin) WILLIAM III 2 Oct 1719 Abigail 14/bp15 Jan 1720/1; d.1816@96; m. Josiah Waters artist Elizabeth 28 Feb 1722/3; d. Marlborough 18 Jan 1776; m. Joshua Loring Hannah II 7/bp12 Jul 1724; d. bef fthr; m. Jacob Thayer

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Note: The Thos. born here, William Jr.’s great uncle, was the father of Col. Thos. Dawes Jr. who was a big mucky muck in the provincial govt, good friend of John Hancock & held all sorts of offices. That makes him William Jr.’s second cousin once removed. This was probably Thomas Dawes, Jr, a commander for the A&HAC. Maybe it was he who took over the family business when William Sr. became a goldsmith.

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NOTE: The Dawes family was considered a “...craft dynasty” in Boston – “...families that in the course of several generations produced, through ties of blood & marriage, a prodigious number of builders, men who accumulated, moreover, both means & position... raising a prouder estate of second stratum of American society, than the English official classes who were pushed out after the revolution. Thomas Dawes is the best example.” — Abbott Sewell Cummins A Maine branch of the Dawes family spelled it Dors & Dor in the 5th & subsequent generations. Interesting since the genealogist/friend of Charles Gordon Ames, who helped him seek birth mother & father from Maine, Lucy Thatcher, was named Dor.

MARY SUZANNAH BUMSTEAD* 1642-1706 b. 2 Apr 1642 Roxbury, MBC, m. Boston not later than Dec 1662, d.22 May 1706 Boston 10+ child all b. Boston, only 4 survived Ambrose. Mary 24 Sep 1664 pb 1st ch 23 Dec 1666,-aft 17 Oct 1705 m. prob James Webster Rebecca 25 Feb 1665-aft 17 Oct 1705, m. Benj. Marshall Susan, bp 1st Ch 23/30 Dec 1666, d. prob young. Anna, bp 30 Dec 1666, d. prob young Susanna 19 Mar 1668, d. prob bef 1673 William - 19 Dec 1671 -d. mariner at London 1699 Susannah II b. & bp.11 Jan 1673-d. bef father Ambrose Jr. bp 5 Mar 1675. m#1 Mehitable Gardner (John2, Thos1 of Cape Anne & Salem), m#2 Mary Chandler Joseph 21 Oct 1677-bef father THOMAS 1 Nov 1680 (see following)

THOMAS DAWES* 1680-1760 (age 80) b. 1 Nov 1680 (VS), Boston, bp 7 Nov 1680, Mason & builder in Boston, “mason, grandson & nephew of masons” After mother’s death 1706, rec 1/4 of small movable estate left by father & home on Sudbury St appraised at £60. Assumed legacies total £30, 18 Apr 1705 join Old S. Chr. Appt. 1715-6 militia, 1718 constable, memb. militia but apparently not a member of the A&HAC, 1719-20, 15 yrs after death of parents, liberty granted to him “to erect a Toomb in the Spot of ground where his Relations wr buryed in ye Old burying place.” Owned several houses, considerable property, 2 Negro slaves. Granted land NH result of father’s service King Phil War., d.“of apoplexy” 17/18 Mar 1749/50DG/60AHAC

Lt. WILLIAM DAWES 1719-1802 (age 83) b. 2 Oct 1719, Boston, Suffolk Co, MA. d.14 Nov 1802 Boston 3 yrs. after death of son, William Jr, liv. on Ann Street (now Front Street) corner of Scottow’s Alley, plaque showing residence on wall across street from Fenuiel Hall between a McDonalds & a Dunkin’ Donuts where William Jr. was born. Orig. a tailor— tailor’s shop on Salt Ln, ran “from Bowes’ corner, in Union Street, east to Mill Creek.” Petit. town for liberty to build shop on town’s land at head of dock on 16 Mar 1747, committee denyed request Mar 28, “persons in general that live thereabout objection to the same.” Remov.Marlboro, purch & settled on farm. After few years returned Boston, kept grocer’s store, then partnered w/ nephew Wm Holmes, Jr. (also A&HAC member), engaged as gold/silversmith (in will called self “trader”). Business on Ann (now North) Street, where Oak Hall stands. Family lived in rooms over shop. “We are told that his apprentices were among party who threw tea overboard in Boston Harbor. The daughters of the family sat up for them; & when they came in, the rims of their hats, which were turned up a little, were loaded with tea, which the young women vigorously shook into the fires.” Prob in same guild with Paul Revere. Remained in Boston during siege, concealing silver & valuables in cellar. Blind during last two years of his life. Adm. Old South Church 8 Feb 1735, juryman Inferior Court 29 Sep 1770, firs serg. of A&HAC 1766. Considerable property. Sold one house to relative John Coolidge for £1200; very religious. House left to wife on Ann St, £6000, one of half doz. leading patriot families of Boston dur. Rev war. Bur. “Chapel Ground” Apparently a twin but unknown if twin survived. m. w#2 wife Hannah Gair a widow, 27 Aug 1764. daus Ruth (m. Jacob Tidd) & Sarah. d. 14 Nov 1802 Boston. (VR) Will 1 Dec 1800, prov 29 Nov 1802

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SUSANNA MILLS c1625-aft1687 b.c1625 Suffolk, Eng. ? m. Braintree,24 Jul 1641, d. Boston aft1687 when mentioned in husband’s will. Children b. Braintree: AMBROSE 24 Jul 1642 Joanna, bp 2 Jun 165 as dau of “__ Dawes of Braintree”, d. bef 1657 Children b. Boston: Susan bp 17 Oct 1652-aft 1695 m. John Nichols, called “brother” in Ambrose’s will William II b. 8 Mar 1654/5pos aft 1681 Joanna II bp 2 Aug 1657 poss Hannah (error of John & Susannah) 7 Jan 165914 Jan 1659 Jonathan 3 Nov, pb 10 Nov 1661-5 Oct 1690 m. Hannah Morse (John3, John2, Samuel1)

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JOHN MILLS c1585-1678 b. c1595 Lavenham, Suffolk, Eng, d. 3 Jul 1678 Braintree, MBC.

Mills ?

SUSANNA ? c1585-1675 b. c1595, Eng, m. bef 1620?, d.10 Dec 1675 Braintree, MBC ?

THOMAS BUMSTEAD c1600-1677 b.c1600 Chelmsford, Essex, Eng, Emig.from Eng.c1640 Roxbury then Boston, Member of Ancient & Honorable Artillery Co. 1647.d.22 Jun 1677 Boston

Bumstead ?

SUSANNA CHAMBERS c1615-bef1677 b.c1615 Suffolk, Eng, d. bef 1677 Boston, Essex Co, MBC

Chambers Storey

?

NICHOLAS BOON 1st gen(RA) 1610-bet 1679 & 1697 Emig.to Boston. First shows up Boston Oct 1674 when taxed (2s for town & 2s for country). 31 Jan 1676 delivered to Robert Orchard a barrel, a bundle & a box on which Orchard failed to pay Customs duty. Died bet when son & namesake born in 1679 & Elizabeth listed as widow in 1697.

Boone Included in Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines.

Linsford

THOMAS LINSFORD* c1620-aft1652 “of Boston”, The immigrant. On 5 Oct 1697 “widow Elizabeth Boon” testified about a house that her father helped to build w/ his own hand before Oct 1652,& in which he died & she lived when she was little, & his wife Elizabeth inherited upon his death, on Fishers (now Hanover) & Back (now Salem) streets.d. bef 1663 when house was conveyed to a Johnson who used it for the first printing office in Boston. ELIZABETH ? c1635-c1663 m. 1640 Boston,lived in her husband’s house after he died then returned to Old England. Children: ELIZABETH John Mar 1650/51

ELIZABETH LINSFORD c1640s-aft1697 m. 1660 Boston On 5 Oct 1697 “widow Elizabeth Boon” testified in the Inferior Court of Common Pleas in Boston to establish claim to small piece of ground in Boston on which her father helped build house in 1652, 40+ years earlier. She was only child living at time of testimony. Must have been raised in that house. Children b. Boston: perhaps Elizabeth c1665, d. 13 Oct 1667 age 2, bur Copp’s Hill Burial Grd, Mary 19 Jun 1678, no more record NICHOLAS 10 Aug 1679, see following

NICHOLAS BOONE* DG 1679-1738 b. 10 Aug 1679 Boston, m#1 Boston by Rev Ebenezer Pemberton of 3rd/Old South Church Mary Barns 26 Aug 1703. She is possibly the Mrs. Boon who Samuel Sewell wrote about d. Nov 1713 after only 2 to 3 hrs of sickness. Occ:“Noted Bookseller of Boston”dabbled in printing, over 60 publications identified published/”Printed for Nicholas Boone” mostly religious. Sermons, an Old Testament, Almanacs, medical matters such as inoculation for smallpox, London Pharmacopoeia, essays, military matters, calamities, sad end to which pirates came, “Navigation Spiritualized,” government & legal matters, history of “Boston News-Letter.” Wrote, published & sold first book by American author on Military Science. Will dated 20 May 1730, proved 4 Dec 1738 (8 yrs later) . Left house & land in Cornhill. [more details in D-G], l. Boston (RA) d. Boston Nov 1738. HANNAH FLOOD bef1683-1742 b. bef 15 Jul 1683 (Sun) prob. Boston. Prob the Hannah Flood bp 15 Jul 1683 she was w#2, prob widow of John Wing, a mariner. They were m. 2 Oct 1703. She m. Nicholas 15 Apr 1714 by Rev Ebenezer Pemberton of 3rd/ Old South Church. (same as #1 above), d. prob Cornhill 1642 bef 30 Mar. Children b.Boston: Hannah 10 Feb 1714/15 m. Paul Farmer, a perriwiggmaker Elizabeth “Betty” 11 Sep 1716 kept house for brother in law Wm. Dawes during seige of Boston LYDIA 27 Mar 1718 Mary “Molly” 7 Jul 1719 also, w/ Betty, kept house for Wm Dawes during seige. John 24 Jun 1721 d. young Abigail 18 Mar 1721/22 d. 1 yr 50 mo. bur Kings Chapel bur ground. James 21 Jun 1725 Note: RA recorded that Hannah’s mother was named Hannah also. Scroll way down to HOPKINS

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Note on connection to other historical Mays Dorothy May The book about the Mays mentions the fact that Governor William Bradford’s first wife (the one who died) was Dorothy May, but didn’t know the connection—only that she was also from Sussex. Her marriage records have her from Wilzbuts/Wisbeach/Wisbech burough, a port & market town in the Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire o the River Nene. Louise May Alcott Our Samuel May (1723-1794) married w#2 Abigail Williams & together they had 13 children. Their son Joseph May (1760-1841) m. Dorothy Sewell (1758-1825). Their daughter Abigail May (1800-1877) married Amos Bronson Alcott (1799-1888). They are the parents of Louise May Alcott (1835-1888), the author. I noticed that she died two days after her father. She on March 6, he on March 4.

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James 1623

*Note: John Eliot was often called “the Apostle to the Indians. B. England 1603, was minister of Roxbury church 1632-death in 1690. Christianized Indians of 20 tribes within the limits of the English plantations. Translated entire Bible into Indian language. First Protestant minister to preach the gospel to the North American savages.

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Lyon 1632

Brewer Lyon 1632

JOHN MAY I Also Mayes/Maies 1590-1670 (age 80) b. 1590 Eng. According to tradition of Mayfield, Sussex, Eng (some 40 miles s. of London). Master of the James, which sailed w/ Anne in 1623. Came to settle for good in 1640 with wife & two sons Samuel & John. Settled in Roxbury in part thereafter called Jamaica Plain. 1641 Mem of Church under Pastor John Eliot*. 1641 Freeman “entitled to vote & eligible to office” Under ministry of Rev. Sam Danforth from 1650 to 1670. M#2 Sarah ? who d. 4 May 1670. Will dated Sabbath morning 24 Apr 1670 witnessed by William Park & Edward Morris. Still extant in Suffold Registry of Probate (see The May Family Bok p.1) d. four days after will 28 Apr 1670. Described his lands, “lot of land” owned by him “o the east side of Stony River, near the house of John Weld” & of “the rest of his lands & meadows. Also spoke of carpenter’s tools. ?? b. 1552, m. 1630 d. 18 Jun 1651 prob Roxbury. “This day died sister Mayes, a very gracious & savoury Christian,” Children: JOHN 1631 Samuel b. Eng-d. 17 Jul 1697 w#1 Abigail Stansfall. W32 Mary Duncan

DANIEL BREWER c.1596-1646 b.c1596, d. 28 Mar 1646 Roxbury, Emig w/ wife & 3 older child, on 1632 voyage of Lyon (the 4th trip during yrs 1630, William Peirce Master, 123 passengers incl 50 children, arriv. Boston 16 Sep 1632, settled Roxbury named after being a rocky place, freeman by 14 May 1634, owned several prop, total c95 acres, some by Stony River, signed by his initials, prob. resided at Jamaica Plain where May’s also resided. 1640 Jury member, 1 Aug 1645 one of subscribers of “Free Schoole in Roxbury”, called himself “husbandman”, signed will 12 Jan 1756/6, doc. proved 20 May 1646 named 5 living chidren, left bed, kettle & pweter dish to Sarah, died of an ulcer in his lungs...” See Dawes-Gates, Olney description of Lyon 1632

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JOHN MAY/MAYS II 1628/31-1671 (age 39) b 1628/1631 England. Came to America with his father. Admitted freeman 1660. Was blind some months before he died. d.11 Sep 1671 Roxbury, MA. Will is in Suffolk Registry of Probate (Mass.). He occupied same land of fther, though probably added to it considerabley. Had land at Norays & Wolomonopog, a saltmarsh, at Gravel Point (slight promotory between Roxbury & Boston near where Mass. Ave. crossed the Boston & Providence RR. Bought land from Robert Williams & woodland from Goodman Howe. Also mentions carpenter’s tools in his will like his father did. Was one of 50 covenantees employing John Prudden as teacher, now favous grammar school? “to instruct in all scholastical, moral, & theological discipline, the children of those persons whose names are hereinunderwritten. SARAH BREWER* 1638-1707/8 b.8 Mar 1638 Roxbury, m.19 Nov 1656 (Sun) Roxbury. She’d been married before but name of former husband not ascertained. d.8 Jan 1707/8 A widow at 33 yrs w/ 7 children: Mary 7 Nov 1657 m. J. Riggles Sarah 8 Sep 1659 Eleazer 12 Feb 1662 JOHN 19 May 1663 Mehetabel 6 May 1665 Elisha 20 Mar 1668 Ephraim 23 Dec 1670

Deac.JOHN MAY III 1663-1729/30 b. 19 May 1663, d. 24 Feb 1729/30 PRUDENCE BRIDGE 1664-1723 b. 11 Jan 1664, m.2 Jun 1684 Roxbury, MBC, d. 26 Sep 1723 11 Children: John 23 Nov 1686-1 Mar 1770 m. Eliz. Child Samuel 8 Jan 1689 Prudence 29 Dec 1690 -d. young EBENEZER 19 Oct 1692 Prudence 29 Nov 1694-1729 Hezekiah 14 Dec 1696-5 Sep 1783 m. Anna Stillman Sarah 29 Oct 1698 Nehemiah 28 Jun 1701 Mehetable 27 Feb 1703 m. John Peake, Jr. Eleazer 9 Jul 1705-19 Feb 1783 w#1 Dorothy Davis, w#2 Abigail Sumner Benjamin 1 Mar 1708-8 Dec 1774 m. #1 Mary Williams m#2 Abigail Gore (His brother’s wife?)

Ensign EBENEZER MAY 1692-1752 (age89) b. 19 Oct 1692 Roxbury, Suffolk Co, MBC. Was executor of his father’s will along with his brother Eleazer. Inherited the most of his real estate at Jamaica Plain, MBC. Admitted to church membership 5 Apr 1715. Gravestone still standing as of 1876 in the old graveyard, corner of Washington & Eustice Streets. d. 2 May 1752 Roxbury. ABIGAIL GORE 1693-1763 (70th yr) b.26 Oct 1693 Roxbury, m. 3 Apr 1718 prob Roxbury, d.26 Jan 1763 in her 70th year, Roxbury. She & Ebenezer bur in the Eustic Street Cemetery (map DG p 275) & the inscriptions on their tomb stones were entirely legible in 1939 No 189 & No. 190 W.P.A. Project, just behind the front fence to the left of the entrance. There is probably a connection to presidental candidate Al Gore here as it is fact he descended from the Puritans.

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SAMUEL MAY 1722/3-1794 b.17 Feb 1723 Boston, Suffolk Co, MBC, m#2 Abigail Williams-they had 13 children & were the great-grandparents of Louse May Alcott (see note to left) Occ: builder & dealer in lumber; member of Rev. Dr. Byle’s church on Hollis Street. During Rev. War he was member of Old South Church, Boston. Considerable skill as architect: built Episcopal Church, Old Cambridge which is still standing— symetrical & in good taste. A man of great energy. Many records exist of his kindness & generosity. His mansion on Orange, now Washing Street, Boston, was still standing in 1854. A photographic picture of it preserved & Davis St. covers in part the area of his lumber wharf. As of 1854 there was a portrait of Samuel w/w#2 Abigail in Maine Historical Society, & on display in Tate House, Portland, ME. d. 9 Aug 1794 Boston CATHERINE/ CATHARINE/ KATHERINE MEARS 1730-1752 b. 14 Oct 1730 Roxbury, MA, m. as his w#1 Boston 3 Nov 1748*, d. 20 Mar 1752 Children: Mary 1 Dec 1749- d. a month & a half later on 15 Jan 1750 MEHIBABLE 6 Aug 1751

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JOANNA ? 1601/2-1668/9 (age 87) b. 1601/2 prob Eng, m. prob Eng. d. 7 Feb 1688/9, Emig on Lyon, Sept 1632 Boston. res. Roxbury, MBC Children 1st 3 b. Eng, rest b. Roxbury: Daniel c1624 m. Hannah Morril) mem. A&HAC, m. Hannah Morrill Anne bef 1632 Joanna bef 1632 Nathaniel 1 May 1635, m. Eliz. Kingsbury, #2 Eliz Rand SARAH b, 8/10 Mar 1638, bp 8 Nov 1638 Roxbury George

DAR Patriot #A076086

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Note: Extensive details of the Free Schoole in D-G p114. Signers of school agreement: Edward Bridge, John Gore, Daniel Brewer, John May & Peter Gardner.

Bridge/Bridges Ref: D-G

Robinson Ref: D-G

JOHN BRIDGE 1576 Note: There was a John Bridges, Master of the James, Part of Winthrop’s colony. UNKNOWN b. c1580

EDWARD BRIDGE c1601-1683 b. c1601 Eng; emig by or bef 1637. Either brought wife Mary w/ or married her soon after arriv. Had child soon after. W/wife joined Roxbury Chur bef 22 May 1639 when became Freeman. Home on Dorchester Road eight acre tract north of Thomas Bell’s & west of George Holmes. 7 acre tracts recorded to him, one adjoined land of Daniel Brewer. No record public service. Signed petition from Roxbury to English monarch protesting loss of MBC charter. Freq. a witness for wills, to take inventories & appriase estates. Grand jury of Boston. Support Roxbury “Free Schoole” Will 5 Dec 1677. Dan Brewer & John Gore overseers & executors. d. Roxbury 20/23 Dec 1683 “aged about 82 years” “an aged brother.” Left estate of £320 probated 27 Dec 1683. MARY c1613-after 1677 m. bef 1637. d. after husband. Children: Mary 18 Nov 1637 rec Roxbury; d. 13 Apr 1718 m. Samuel Gay Thomas 31 May/Mar 1638/9; not named in father’s will, no further record. JOHN 15 Dec 1641/c1640 see following Hannah c1643 (not in D-G) Elizabeth c1645 (not in D-G)

WILLIAM ROBINSON ?-1668 (4 pgs detail in D-G) Emig NE c1636. Mem Dorchester Chr, which org 23 Aug 1636. Refer to as “husbandman” 30 Sep 1639 when signed lease to use c100 acres in Dorchester. Freeman 18 May 1642 in company w/ other Dorchester men; 1643 joined A&HAC; 1644 made trip to Olde Eng & ret same year; 1651 pd for dwelling “neere unto Naponsett River” (detail D-G). Signed petition to protect colony charter 1664; same yr. Wm pur 1/2 interest in mill by tide Mill Creeke East. m#2 Ursula (Adams Streeter Hosier. c1666. d. terrible mill accident 6 Jul 1668. Ministers of Roxbury recorded it, “William Robinson, a brother of the Church of Dorchester, was drawn through by ye cog-wheel of his Mill & was torn in pieces & slain.” Wrote lenghty will “with his owne hand” before death but left uncompleted & unsigned. 31 Jul widow, 2 sons & 2 sons-in-law (incl the above John Bridge) endorsed it & agreed it should be recorded.

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JOHN BRIDGE* 1640-1674 (See D-G lenghty bio) b. 15 Dec 1641/c1640DG, Roxbury; land transaction w/ John Ruggles bef Sep 1658, settled Apr 1660. Jun 1661 w/ John May, John Watson, Wm Lyon & Wm Gary purch prop left by Philip Eliot(bro Rev Eliot). Chr mem 22 Mar 1662/3. 1664 joined father, John May, Ptr Gardner & 36 other Roxbury men petition pleading Gen Crt safeguard colony’s charter. Witn registration of father-inlaw’s incomplete will 31 Jul 1668. Witn & overseer for Edward Bugby of Roxbury Nov 1668. 1669 bot dwelling house southeast by hwy of Dedham for £75. d. Roxbury, 20 Aug 1674 in his early 30s & 9 yrs before death father. Body famous as subject of prob 3rd autopsie performed in NE. PRUDENCE ROBINSON 1643-aft 1677 or later bp.17 Dec 1643; m. c1660/1. Chu mem 5 Apr 1663. Receiv £20 from death father & each of her children (his grandchildren) receiv 10s. She survived her husband & received a fair inheritance. 1 or 2 of her children died young. 4 children married. Last record of her July 1677d. No record 6 Children: PRUDENCE 11 Jan, bp 12 Jun 1664; d. Roxbury 26 Sep 1723; m John May III Roxbury 2 Jun 1684 Margaret 18 Jul, bp 22 Jul 1666. d. 19 Mar, bur 22 Mar 1670/1 Edward 9 Sep, bp 13 Sep 1668; d. named in will of grdfather, d. prob aft Jul 1724. prob m. Mary Brooks. Margaret 11 Mar 1673 Mary c1669 [not listed in D-G] John b. 11 Jan, bp 15 Jan 1670/1(D-G) d.1659 Roxbury (NEHGS) Rhoda Rose (NEHGS, not D-G)

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MARGARET ? ?-bet 1640 & 1666 Likely m. in Amer bef 1st child Jun 1640. d. after 7 Oct 1664 when placed mark on deed for mill & bef Wm. m. w#2 c1666. Children bp Dorchester & prob b. there: Samuel “eldest son”, prob 14 Jun 1640; m. Mary Baker; d 16 Sep 1718. Increase bp 6/13/14 Mar 1642, m. Sarah Penniman; d. aft 1668. PRUDENCE bp 17 Dec 1643; m. c1660/1 John Bridge; d. aft death of husband 20 Aug 1674; See following Waiting (girl) bp 26 Apr 1646; m. Joseph Penniman, brother of Sarah above; d. 21 Aug 1690

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JOHN GORE (?-1657) b. Eng, eldest son. Emig w/wife & son John by 1635 when became resident of Roxbury, MBC. Both joined Roxbury Chr; oath of freeman 18 Apr 1637. 1638 member Ancient & Hon. Artillery Co. & was its clerk 1655*.[As written in D-G] “Home lot of about 4 acres lay “west of Stony River on the way leading to the Landing-place & Tide-Mill ... on the south west side of Tremont St, just beyond the railroad crossing, & it extended to Parker St. A brick block now covers site of the Gore house, which is said to have been taken down in 1876. The name is perpetuated by Gore Ave which traverses part of orig estate.” Fire in Roxbury 1645 obscured much of story. 1638-40 Exerpt from Richard John one of larger land Gorre’s will in DG “... This owners of town. More than document written on sheet 12 other Roxbury tracts 12” x 15” after a religious ranging from few acres to preable called the testator ‘of 108 acres, totaling over the towne of Sothampton;’ 400 acres. Had several mentioned first, son household servants Hanah Thomas Gorre living Roe & Thomas Reeves; at Baddisley (Badsley?) sometimes called a farmer; ‘where I lately lived,’ whose sometimes called merchant. legacy was £200; gave to (See four pages on John wife Elizabeth one half of Gore in D-G papers.) the household goods & Frequent gifts to Harvard implements, together with College. Roxbury Clerk/ all my wool & yarne & Notary 1639. Constable £200; it made bequests to 1641; Referred to as Mr. Did four servants, to the three deal w/ John Tuttle. Signed ministers of the town of will 22 May 1657, was Southampton & to one sick, d.town records) 4 Jun minister of Baddisley; made 1657 Roxbury or (church small bequests to the poor records) 2 June & bur 3 of these two towns & gave June. Very long inventory the residue to his eldest 22 Jun 1657, estate valuation son John Goore whom over £812, proved 30 Jul he named sole executor, 1657. House=parlor, hall, but named two others as kitchen, shop, w/ chamber “executors in trust.” over each of these rooms. RICHARD GORRE of Southampton, gentleman, d. Southampton, Hants bet 6 Jan 1643/4 (date of will) & 3 Jan 1644/5 (date will proved in Prerogative Court of Canterbury.) (see D-G for more details). Since John, as eldest son, would automatically have inherited a double share, it shows that the estate of Richard must have considerable exceeded £800, & the context suggests that his occupation concerned weaving. On 23 Dec 1644 appeared before Notary Public in Boston & signed a power of attorney authorizing one Joseph Browne of Southampton, Eng, to prove & execute his father’s will, but that service really was performed by one of the “executors in trust,”

Gore Ref: D-G pp 319-329

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A&HAC’s flag in Feneuil Hall, Boston, Mass.

Meeting Room in Feneuil Hall for the Ancient & Honorable Artillery Co. America’s oldest regiment. Founded 1636, Boston.

Ancient & Honorable Artillary Company (From Dawes Gates book) The name & fame of the Honourable Artillery Company of London was transplanted to Massachusetts soon after it colonization, by some of its members, & a junior company was established at Boston, which is the oldet military organization on the American continent. It is recruited, to a great extent, from those who have been active membes of the volunteer militia It elects its officers annually; has its stated spring & fall parades; listens once a year to a sermon preached in a church, which is followed by a “feast” in Faneuil hall, with distinguised invited guests, & is jealous of irs prerogatives & its traditions. The New England organization is also a living link between generations, past & present, & has outlived every institution, except the Christian Church & the Public School, that was in existence on the American continent when it was chartered. “The colonists lost no time in organizing train-bands, which were supplied with the weapons & equipments sent out from England & were drilled by veterans= officers, who were paid for their services. At a Court of Assistants, held at Boston 26 July 1631, it was ‘ordered, that evy first Thursday in evy mont there shal be a genall traineing of Capt. Vndrhill’s company att Boston & Rocksbury, & evy fiest Friday in evy month there shal be a genall traineing of the remaindr of the mwho inhabitt att Charlton, Misticke & the New Towne, att a convenient place aboute the Indian wigwams, the traineing to begin at one of the clocke in the afternoon.’” By Oct 1636, there were ten train bands in existence in Massachusetts & their officers conceived the plan of organizing in the colony a subsidiary of the honored London organization to which some of them had belonged before emigration. As a result a charter was granted to 24 of them in March 1638/9, under the name of the “military Company of Massachusetts” which title later became the “Ancient & Honorable Artillery Company.” Among the charter members were Wm elder brother of our Robert Jennison, Thomas Cakebread & Wm Spencer elder brother of our Gerrard Spencer (DGII, 769 [the other half of the tree, not part of Ames Hopkins tree]. This organization served as a military school in which officers of the scattered train bands could acquire uniformity of tactics & drill. It also furnished the only social distinction in the infant colony & furnished the only titles used, other than those of the military. “Each musketeer was to be provided with a musket, priming wire,worj, scourer, & bullet-mounl, a rest, bandoleers, a sword, one pound of powder, twenty bullets, & two fathoms of match rope. The musket was a matchlock, the cock holding by a screw, & the burning match rope was applied to the powder in the pan. Muskets were generally large & heavy, & a forked staff, or rest, was required to support them when presented to fire. The staff, or rest, had a crotch or crescent at the top, & sharp iron at the bottom to fasten it in the ground. Musketeers carried their powder in little wooden, tin, or copper cylindrical boxes, each containing one charge; twelve of tese boxes were fixed to a belt two inches wide, worn over the left shoulder, & the boxes & belts were called bandoleers. Usually the primer containing the priming powder, the bulletdog, & priming-wire were fastened to the leather belt. These & the little long boxes hung upon the belt, made much rattling. This belt, with its dangling appendages, had some resemblance to a string of sleigh-bells. The Artillery Company took an active & influential interest in the formation of the “United Colonies of New England” consummatd 19 May 1643, for mutual military defense versus Indian & French, which finally resulted in our fight for independence. John Gore was the earliest of our ancestral members to join the A&HAC, followed by Wm Robinson 1643, John Tuttle 1644, Roger Clapp 1646, Thos Bumstead 1647, Simon Tuttle Wm Beamsley 1656, John Mills 1665, Ambrose Dawes 1674, Wm Dawes 1760 & Wm Dawes Jr. 1768.

JOHN GORE (1634-1705) b. 23 May 1634 Eng. m. at age 49 1651-1654 student Harvard,from age 17 but didn’t grad. His cousin John famous student there. Possibly went to sea on a Mayflower, Tuition paid largely in provisions, as was habit then. “quarter of bef, Indian corn, barley, malt, rye, “a chest of glasse” for president & sums of money. Schoolmaster, surveyer in Conn & Maine, [see D-G for details] Clerk of Roxbury. Roxbury records in Boston City Hall in his & his father’s handwriting for 50 to 60 years! 26 Nov 1686 “Mr. John Gore confessed Christ & was receiv. to full Comunion.”Lived in area of Roxbury called Jamaica or Pond Plain. d. intestate 26 Jun 1705 Roxbury. Inventory £392, w/ land £611. SARAH GARDNER (1662-aft 1699) m. 31 May 1683 Roxbury. She 26 yrs, he 49 yrs. (28 yrs diff) 30 May 1686 received “full Comunion” in Roxbury Chr by Rev John Eliot. Children: Hannah 14 Feb 1678/9 m. Samuel Curtis; d 1775 age 87/88 John 27 Feb bp 2 Mar 1683/4; m. Mary Stedman d. 1756 age 72 Sarah 24 Aug, bp 30 Aug 1685; m. James Pierpont; d 1776 age 90 Ebenezer 7 Nov 1689; m. Susanna Paul; d. 13 Nov 1763 age 74 In 1789 he signed a petition to keep negro serants off the streets at night. Abigail 15 Feb 1691-2; d. 12 Aug 1691-2/1693 toddler ABIGAIL 26 Oct 1693; m. Ebenezer May; d. 26 Ja 1763 79th yr Samuel 11 Sep 1695; d. 15 Feb 1695/6 (infant) Samuel 15 May 1697; d. 9 Jun 1697 one month Samuel 1 Sept 1699; m. Mary Williams; d. 29 Nov 1757 age 58-2-17

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RHODA _?_ (c1607 to 10-1693) 83+ m. by or bef 1633 Eng. Emig w/ husband & son John by 1635 when became resident of Roxbury, MBC. Both joined Roxbury Chr. Tradition says after debarkation of family at Boston, as they made way to Roxbury where planned to reside, 2 men carried her over Boston Neck because the ground wet & swampy. When reached a small hill in Roxbury on land of John Remington, Rhoda so delightd w/ view from rise that exclaimed, “This is Paradise!” place ever after called Paradise Hill. After John’s death, Rhoda became Remington’s w#2. 11 child; 6 d. infancy. 5 surviv John. Only John & maybe Mary surviv Rhoda. Mary perhaps Eng, m. ? Milam, d. af 1666 John (see following) Obadiah 27 Jun 1636, d. consumption 7/12 May 1646 age 10 Samuel prob 1638; m. Eliz Weld; d. 4 Jul 1692 age 54 Abigail 5 Aug 1641; d 13/30 Apr 1642 Abigail pb 5/7 May 1643; d unm 21 Oct 21/23 1671 Hannah 15 ay 1645; m. Ralph Bradhurst, d. 10 Jul 1686 Obadiah pb 25 Mar 1648/49; bur 3 Sep 1653 Twins bur unbap 11 Jan/ Jun 1651 Benjamin bp 31 De 1654; “dyed within a short space after”

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Gardner Ref: D-G

Mears/Mere/Meere Ref: D-G p 425-439

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THOMAS GARDNER JAMES MEARS 1702/3/4-1771 b. 11 Feb 1702/3 on old Rob’t Mears homestead, SAMUEL MEARS, Jr. Boston. Lost mother in 1671-1727, age 56 Recorded b. 22 May 1671, infancy. Tanner, referred but upon death, Rev. Sam’l to as Currier. Father remarried when he was Dexter specifically stated 2/3. He & Mehitable he d. on his birthday of res. in Roxbury, where 10 May. m.#2 Boston 23 James spent life. Rec’d 1/2 Sep 1706 by Rev. Benj. Wadsworth of 1st Church, residual estate from father. 1690-1739 expedition to to Hannah Whale who Canada, & grant of land at surv him. Liv. through succession of Boston fires. Huntstown (Ashfield) in 1739, where appointed to Age 5 at Great Fire of 1676, yr his father died to survey lots. Purfch house 1690/1. 1679 fire destroyed east side Washington St 150 bldgs. 2 Oct 1711, res slightly S of Eustis blt 1701 [see DG for history Roxbury Gate, George of house.] Built tannery Tavern, another fire consumed Old Mtg House where Webster Hall later stood. Estab. tanning biz & 1st Town House but carried on by 3 generations not his tavern [see DG & of descendants after, than also Nicholas Boone]Got money when Uncle Simon by a man who married into Stacy’s widow d. 1711. Res family. Admit Roxbury Chur 7 Jan 1728 (few mo home of his grandfather Robt & inher prop to south after wife), when chur in Abigail of London w/one-time home of Gov. second meeting house. 1635 When 3rd Mtg Hse blt, Endicott. 1708/9 mov to Roxbury Gate. Got license James purch pew No. 39 next to gallery stairs for ROBERT MEARS/MERE, to sell drink.[details DG] £19.13.4, near Ebenezer MEERE, MEERES “George Tavern” still May. Rev Nehemiah 1592-1666/7 about 75 standing 1939 west side Walter minister. But bldg (RA)1st gen. Amer. Washington, midway bet burned to grnd on “Lord’s b. 1590 Eng; Emig on present Arnold & Ball SAMUEL MEARS Abigail of London, Richard 1641-1676, age 35 Streets, orig 20 acres land. Day, 26 Feb 1743/4 soon after Devine service in Hackwell, Master in July Many records in history b.7 Jun 1641; bp 13 Jun the Afternoon due to 1635 at age 43 w/ wife about meetings there. 1641 Boston. Carpenter. footstove. m.#2 Hannah Elizabeth(30), Samuel (6) [see DG very interesting Received his father’s house (Pope) Wardell 1 Aug & John (3mo). Dearted details] 19 Jul 1726 as & various tracts of land 1754 Roxbury. Among Plymouth as last port c. 1 “innholder” petitioned when father died; land 20 men (inclu our Eben. Aug 1635 w/ 220 passengers deals (see D-G) 1672, 1674, for renewal of license & May) wrote ltr to min in & many cattle. Robert privilege to remove to witnessed document Jul 1757 re: singing in chur. listed as Husbandman. Arr 1672. Served as Sergeant Dock Square in bus dist Were wearied of use of Boston c. 8 Oct-passengers under Capt James Oliver’s of Boston. New location metrical version of Psalms infected w smallpox. where uncle James Mears company formed Nov-Dec in Bay Psalm Book & slow Settled Boston. Dec 1625 had been innkeeper in 1675 for Narragansett tedious rendition of songs. received allotment of land Campaign during King 1699-1700 “Sun Tavern,” [details DG] Will 1 Jun as “now inhabitant”. Jan but Sam’l died less than Philip’s War among other 1769, prov 19 Jul 1771. 1635/6 listed proprietor. year later. Will 9 Mar Boston men joining “army No evidence he joined 1726. [D-G 1/2 page about Beneficiaries: w#2 Hannah, of one thousand men who her 3 Wardell children,son church or became freeman. went out to save the white his death written by Rev James, widow of dec son Much property [see Dawes race in the new land” [see Sam’l Dexter, son-in-law] Our ancestors Edmund Gates account], Home John, granddau Mehitable details D-G]. After his death “Sam’l a just honest man Freeman & William Potter west side Court (now Dawes £80. Estate £2,253 & very Charitable for 4 mo later, money due him were fellow passenters on Tremont) Street, opposite incl negro man Plato one of his capacity; had a the Abigail. end of Hanover Street. - 85 for service in company of who was to be free, silver very hard death & I hope Maj Savage. Seems to have tankard, much land. d.bef ft on Tremont & 284 feet come out of wars uninjured, has exchanged earth for One Boston Great fire on Hanover St; deposed 19 Jul 1771 Roxbury, MB. heaven. My wife has lost however d. in Boston 4 mo started 14 January 1652/3 28 Apr 1662 age 70; left Bur in Mears tomb in old later w/ no will in Apr 1676. a tender loving father & burying ground at corner estate of £349. Will 20 Feb [D-G “may have resulted I have lost a very kind Interesting will of his son 1666, probated 10 Sep 1667 of Washington & Eustis bountiful friend.” d. 10 from hardships of military John who d. age 28. “aged”. [see will in D-G]. Streets. May 1727, aged 56 service”] ELIZABETH pos JOHNSON 1605/aft 1672 Abigail of b. c 1605 Little London Brighton, Eng; m. 1635 by 1628 Eng; emig at age 30 w/ husband & 2 children on Abigail; Joined 1st Boston Chr 24 Jul 1636; aparently capable person; Aug 1641 she & John Oliver witnessed a deed. Was left sole executrix of husband’s estate. 24 Jul 1672 again sold land. No record of her after that. Children all boys: Samuel c.1630 Eng, d. bef 1641 John 1635 Eng; m. Mercy Sandys, d.12 Nov 1663 Stephen 10 Dec 1637; bp 25 Dec 1638, d. 10 Dec 1661 SAMUEL 7 Jun 1641 see following James 9 Mar 1643/4; bp 31 Mar 1644; m. Eliz Mellows; d. 8 Oct 1712 age 69.

MARY STACY ?-aft 1681/2 m. c.1663/4; survived her husband. On 19 Jul 1676 appt administratrix for his estate; left w/6 children after husband died. Awarded “whole moveable estate of £160.” Would have experienced the Boston Fire of 1676.[details DG] m#2 bef 13 Feb 1681/2 Fitch; brought dower to new home, inherited more when her mother died. Last record of Mary is her sister Ann Stacy leaving her a bed in her will dated Feb 1861/2. Children all b. Boston: Stephen 21 Nov 1665, d. after his father Elizabeth 9 Apr 1668, aft her aunt Ann’s death 13 Feb 1681/2 SAMUEL 22 May 1671, see following Mary 26 Nov 1673, no further record v. & vi: two other children living in Jul 1676 but no more record

Sun Tavern, built 1/2 century before Peter Faneuil’s Hall, stood on Corn Court, Dock Square on one of busiest corners in early town, orig only 30 ft from the dock. Used as a residence, a tavern, a grocery & a market. View over water & shipping activities must have been one of the main attractions of the place. Bldg stood w/ historical plaque for 220 yrs before being demolished in Jul 1912 for modern bldg. As it was being wrecked, it’s structure revealed “its great beams & girders were large & numerous enough to hold up a modern sky-scraper, instead of a two-story bldg. The walls were not only lathed but lined w/ brick as well. The men engaged in tearing the bldg down came across an old mirror, stuck between the plaster & the clapboards of the outer wall ...” The house to left (west) bore address 26-8 Dock Square.

If I ever visit Roxbury, I should look up this tomb!

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From the website where I found this painting of Maria MEHITABLE Catharain: DAVENPORT 1705-c1750-3 b. Dorchester, MBC. Date “Because there were many Thomas Smiths in Boston at this time, it has been difficult to identify this painter, who left of b. recorded as 30 Aug 1705, however conflicts w/ a fine self-portrait. Recently information on the Portrait of Thomas Smith has been discovered by Harvard PhD date of bp 26 Aug 1705; m. candidate Jason LaFountain. The following quote is from as w#1 in Milton by Rev. the diary of Thomas Smith’s great-grandson, Samuel Peter Thacher of that place 15 Dec 1726.(Milton is right Dexter, whose mother, Catherina Mears Dexter, was known to have owned the painting. “My mother has the by Braintree). Admit full arms of an ancestor of hers, of the name of Smith. She fellowship Roxbury Chur MARIA/MARIAH/MARY 10 Sep 1727. d. in Roxbury, has his portrait too, daubed by himself, with some lines CATHARINA SMITH in verse at the bottom, of his own composing, in the style MBC, sometime before (widow of Gross) of the day. He was an officer in Cromwell’s army, & had 1754 when James m#2. c1670-3 to 1703-4 also the command of a fort, or garrison. From her family Children: b.1670-3 prob Boston, m#1 Mehitable 25 Oct 1727, d. arms the field of mine was taken. The crest & the motto Wm Gross 1692/3. m#2, as were as Mr. Artist pleased, & the Vellum was, in other bef 1769 his w#1 7 Dec 1697 Boston Mary 31 Mar 1729, d. 18 respects, bedecked & bedizened according to his fancy.” by Rev. Cotton Mather of from Samuel Dexter, “Samuel Dexter CommonplaceSep 1729 Old North Church, d. 17 Book,” 1763-1809, Massachusetts Historical Society, Ms. CATHARINE/ Feb 1703/4/5 (bef Sep 1706) SBd-219/Microfilm P-201, 276-277.” KATHERINE 14 Oct Boston when her youngest 1730, d. 20 Mar 1752 child, James, was an infant. Supported by information in DG, “ See following See info of her father about James 22 Oct 1731, m. Anna painting. Greaton; d. 6 Jun 1804 4 Children: age 73 Mary 12 Sep, bp 18 Sep John c1732; m. Abigail 1698; not named father’s Minot; d. 17 May 1769, will age 37 Samuel 10 Apr bp 14 Apr 1700, liv at father’s will Catherine 25 Sep, bp 28 Sep 1701, m#1 Rev Sam’l Dexter; m#2 Sam’l Barnard. d. 10 Jun 1979. Her father’s will called her his “only daughter” JAMES see following

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Johnson

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Stacey/Stace Ref: D-G - p. 558+

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SIMON STACEY ?-bef1644 Resident Ipswich by 2 March 1637/8. Assigned use of house lot adjoining Wm Warner. d. c1644 before his wife married William Adams Sr. whose son Wm Adams Jr. married Elizabeth Stacy.

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ELIZABETH CLERKE? ?-bef1644 Children: Thomas d. 23 Jul 1690 m. Susannah Worcester Sarah c1627- 5 March 1708/9, m. ?Bushwell (prob capt Wm Buswell). Susanna d. 12 Feb 1687 m. Joseph French Elizabeth d c1655/6 m. Wm Adams Jr Ens, Lieut & Capt.Simon c1636/7-27 Oct 1699 w/ issue m. Sarah Wallis MARY d. aft 13 Feb 1681/2 Ann d. 21 Feb 1681/2 unm.

Portrait found on Wikipedia 18 May 2013: “Captain Thomas Smith was an American artist & mariner who lived somewhere between 1600 & 1700 & completed a self-portrait circa 1680, which is the earliest known self-portrait from America. He lived in Boston & was a Puritan as evidenced by his dress & symbolism in the portrait. Smith is believed to have been influenced by Dutch Golden Age painting, based on his use of light & shadow which was manipulated to show emotion & expression in his portrait. The distant sea battle is a Baroque touch, representing the painter’s earthly victories, whereas the skull represents memento mori. Smith wears Puritancal “sadd” clothing, which may represent Smith’s own self-questioning & negativity. The painting also includes the following poem, signed T.S. (Hughes, 35), & represents vanity: Why Why should I the World be minding therein a World of Evils Finding Then Farewell World: Farewell thy Jarres thy Joies thy Toies thy Wiles thy Warrs Truth Sounds Retreat: I am not sorye. The Eternal Drawes to him my heart By Faith (which can thy Force Subvert) To Crowne me (after Grace) with Glory.” Because there were many Thomas Smiths in Boston at this time, it has been difficult to identify this painter, who left a fine self-portrait. Recently information on the Portrait of Thomas Smith has been discovered by Harvard PhD candidate Jason LaFountain. The following quote is from the diary of Thomas Smith’s great-grandson, Samuel Dexter, whose mother, Catherina Mears Dexter, was known to have owned the painting. “My mother has the arms of an ancestor of hers, of the name of Smith. She has his portrait too, daubed by himself, with some lines in verse at the bottom, of his own composing, in the style of the day. He was an officer in Cromwell’s army, & had also the command of a fort, or garrison. From her family arms the field of mine was taken. The crest & the motto were as Mr. Artist pleased, & the Vellum was, in other respects, bedecked & bedizened according to his fancy.” from Samuel Dexter, “Samuel Dexter Commonplace-Book,” 1763-1809, Massachusetts Historical Society, Ms. SBd-219/Microfilm P-201, 276-277.

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UNKNOWN

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Ref: D-G - p. 547-551

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Smith

Capt THOMAS SMITH ?-? (From DG) Smith is a “man of mystery. Nothing is known of his birth, death or marriage.His great-great-great grandson, John Haven Dexter, quoted family knowledge when he wrote in his family history c.1850 of his grandmother Catherine (Mears) Dexter, “Her maternal grandfather was Captain Thomas Smith, a mariner—a portrait of whom by himself, may be seen in the hall of the American Antiquarian Society in Worcester;—the portrait of his wife being also there,and that of his daughter Maria Catharina, mother of Mrs. Dexter is in possession of Misses Catharine & Rebecca Clapp, Dorchester.” Dexter calls Smith “a great navigator.” As of 1940 (publication of DG) the self portrait was owned by Edmund B. Hilliard, grand nephew of the librarian S.F.Haven mentioned above& was loaned by him to American Antiquarian Society from whom a reporduction was purchased for DG). Portrait was loaned in 1939 during NY World’s Fair to Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC. Assumed Smith liv. Boston, where dau. married, lived & d. No evidence of ownership of land, taxes, or any record of him found. Naval battle in portrait believed an action in which he took part. Detailed history of the painting in DG, pp549-550.

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Davenport Included in Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines. Occasionally name spelled Danforth.

King Philips War: Thomas Davenport Jr. made his will before joining Capt Isaac Johnson at the Swamp Fight who lead his forces across the fallen tree trunks at the back of the fort, being succeeded. Both Capt Johnson & Thomas were killed in the fight. Johnson was succeeded in command by Lt. Phineas Upham who received his mortal wound there. The inventory of Thomas’ estate was taken 4 Jan & his will proved 28 Jan 1676 by his brother Charles.

THOMAS DAVENPORT ?-1685 (Extensive bio in D-G) b. prob England. Prob came to Mass during “second migration” 1635. Settled Dorchester. Many who settled Dorchester were from western England. 1639/40 admonished for “huiring John Parish to cast baules of paste, with copperas in them & cast it into a mans yard.” Chur mem 20 Nov 1640. Freeman 18 May 1642. Home in Dorchester on northeastern/eastern slope Mt Bowdoin (today near junt Olney St & Geneva Ave) 1653 purch holdings from Wm Pigrom £16; 1659 purch land from Widow Glover; 1665 pur dwelling etc from Wm Blake, old Wm Sumner land. Issue over land laid out by Master John Gore. 1669/70 Constable. Had tenant Daniel Holbrook of Melton, Eng. Jan 1675/6 petitioned Gen Crt poor blind Indian brought 2 children “and did bestow them” upon Thos & son Thos, asking permission to accept children. Jan 1675/6 served on jury. 16778 Grand Jury w/ George Sumner. 1678 relieved of army duty. Same year one of Dorchester men signed req oat of allegiance to king. Will 24 Jul 1683, “being aged” “yeoman”. Mary & son Charles executors. Samuel Clapp overser. Wife had whole estate as long as remained widow, which she did. Charles was to keep her with him. Proved 4 Feb 1685/6. Estate not closed for 35 years until death of Charles. d. 1685/6 Dorchester MARY ? c1620b. prob England. m. prob in NE, bef 1643. Joined Dorchester Chr 8 Mar 1644 Children b. Dorchester: Sarah 28 Dec 1643, d. poss 10 May 1679; m. Sam’l Jones Thomas bp 2 Mar 1675; killed in King Philip’s War 19 Dec 1675 (often mis-named Danforth, son of Thos Danforth) Mary bp 21 Jan 1648/9; d.1707; m. Sam’l Maxfield Anna bp 29 Dec 1650; not named in father’s will Charles bp 7 Nov 1652; d. 1 Feb 1719/20 age 68; m. Waitstill Smith Abigail bp 15 Jul 1655; not named in father’s will Mehitable 14 Feb 1656/7; d. 18 Oct 1663 age 7 Jonathan 6 Mar, bp 13 Mar 1658/9; d. 11 Jan 1729; m. Hannah Maynard. Ebenezer 26 Apr, bp 28 Apr 1661; d. 19 Jul 1738; m#1 Dorcas Andrews; m#2 Sarah Bartlett m#3 Patience _?_ JOHN 2 Oct 1664

JOHN DAVENPORT 1664-1725 (Extensive bio D-G) b.2/20 Oct 1664, bp 20 Nov 1664; Dorchester, MBC. Obligated by father’s will to live w/ mother then inherit house, barn & orchard (value £53) + proportionate share of parental estate. May have followed older brother Ebenezer to Maine for short time c1684. Business affair w/ Peter Lyon 6,000 acre reservation which Roger Clapp helped lay out in 1657. 30 May 1705 listed as lessee of Indian land w/ Peter Lyon ordered to appear before Cont. Court in Boston 18 Aug 1706. Purch land western part Milton 1706 south side of Canton Ave “at the foot of Blue Hills.”, northest side of the Blue Hill range. The house he built still standing in 1941. He d. there & son Sam’l & grandson Sam’l & great-grandson Isaaac b. there. Remov to Milton about time b. of 7th child in 1707. 5 children moved w/ him. Will 19 Feb 1722/3; Proved 5 Apr 1725. He d. two weeks earlier end of Feb 1725. No inventory but estate must have been quite large. d. in his house 21 Mar 1725 Milton.

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1700, such leases form Indians were made illegal. The Great Blue Hills, which rise to 635 feet above sea level are the tall mountains seen from the sea which gave the Massachusetts Indians their name. It means “near the great hill or mountain. Early “Massadchuseück/ Masathulets/ Messeytusick.

From Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines, Vol I, p275

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NAOMI (poss MAY) -1739 Some evidence but no proof she is dau of our John May. Naomi May, b. 1667, was still single in Jul 1690 & living in Dorchester. m. c1694. Survived husband by 14 years. Received 1/3 of real estate & personal during life time. d. “widow” 7 Jan 1739 Children all except last one b. Dorchester: John 10 Jun, bp 16 Jun 1695; d. 20 Jul 1778; m. Mary Bent. Called “John of Ponkipog” Samuel 20 Oct, bp 24 Oct 1697; d. 29 Jun 1773 in 75th yr; m. Rebecca Holbrook, dau of the Daniel Holbrook tenant in grandfather’s house. Ephraim bp 6 Aug 1699; unm; bur 25 Feb 1774 Joseph 30 Aug, bp 7 Sep 1701; d. 12 Mar 1752; m. Sara Ware Stephen 8 Oct, bp 12 Oct 1703; d. 2 Mar 1784 age 80; m. Thankful Bent “Meatable”/MEHITABLE rec birth 30 Aug, bp Aug 26 (date conflict) 1705; d. c1750-3; m. James Mears Benjamin b. Milton 12 Aug 1707 [conflicts w/ date of bp] bp 10 Aug 1707; named in father’s will, however man of same name died one mo before father. Maybe died after will written.

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Note: There was a Mrs. Rachel Davenport, who had a controversy with our relative Thomas Little in 1666, prob. Plymouth

Holden

THOMAS HOLDEN Ref: D-G pp 359-357

Gale

JOHN HOLDEN

WILLIAM HOLDEN b. 1523 Hoghton Lancshire, Eng. ISABELLA? of HOGHTON

WILLIAM HOLDEN II b. 1553 Lindsey, Suffolk co, Eng.

WILLIAM HOLDEN III b. Lindsey, Suffolk co, Eng. MARGARET GALE Children: Adam Richard 1609 JUSTINIAN bp 6 Oct 1611 Joseph John

JUSTINIAN HOLDEN (1611-1691) age 80 [2 pgs in DG on him] bp 6 Oct 1611 Lindsey, Suffolk, Eng. Calling self 23 & brother 25, embarked 10 Apr 1634 from Ipswich, Suffolk, Eng on Francis of Ipswich, John Cutting master, which sailed w/ Elizabeth bound for Port of Boston. “Richard came from Eng. for the cause of religion, he was a dissenter to the extablished Church of England.” They orig. settled in Watertown, MBC. Worked as carpenter & owned land. 10 May 1642 received 40 acres. Home on what is now Grove Street in Belmont - north of Fresh Pond & west of Alewife River.1652-3 Constable. 1653-4 Tax collector.1654 Watertown paid him for killing a wolf & a fox. 6 May 1657 Freeman. m.#1 Elizabeth? who was 10yrs older, d. 18 Mar 1672/3 Cambridge. 1660 moved to Sparhawk property, Cambridge-property he bought 7 yrs earlier. 1662 he was “to sitt in ye foremost seats” in the meeting house, Richard’s descendants moved to Vermont. m#1 Elizabeth Jennison [NFR](RA)“1st gen Amer, or maybe Elizabeth Onge whose parents (maybe she also) came to America with him on Francis. Made will 12 Aug 1691, personal estate £80, total estate £1,153 w/ 2 dwelling houses, two orchards, meadow land, etc. d. 1691 Cambridge, MBC.

ABIGAIL KENDALL (1728-1802) age 75 m. 28 Jan 1752 Sudbury even though her family had moved to Lancaster by then. But her sister was married & living in Sudbury. Her sister Eunice might have lived w/ them. 2 Dec 1752 she & Jonas bapt & owned the covenant at West Side Chur, later called First Parish Chur of Sudbury. Not admitted full communion until 10 Jun 1792. d. Sudbury as “Old Mrs. Holden, wife of Jonas,” bur 1 Feb 1802 aged 75. Children all b. Sudbury Abel 2 Oct 1752; captain in Revolution; m#1 Lois Cutler; m#2 Thankful Cutting; d.3 Aug 1818 in NY Cy Levi 12 Jan 1754; became captain in Revolution; m 15 Jan 1778 1st cous once remov Hannah Plympton; d. 9 Apr 1823 in Newark, NJ JONAS 31 Aug 1756 - see following Asa 10 May 1762; served in Revolution at age 14; m. Mary ?; d. 3 Aug 1854 Joel 5 Dec 1768: m. Betsey David; d. aft 1792

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DAR Patriot #A0568986 Capt JONAS HOLDEN, JR. 1756-c1847 b.31 Aug 1756 Sudbury, Middlesex Co, MA. Grew up during discontent before Revolution. 1770 Sudbury residents refrained from importing English goods on which offensive tax laid. 1773-4-Sudbury stood against import of taxed tea. 1774-Sudbury formed militia & minutemen to hold themselves in readinesss to march at moment’s notice. [read great detail of Rev. War experience in Dawes Gates account] 13 Mar to 15 Apr, 1775 Jonas “Jr” & Abel Holden attended drill practice, later participated in Concord attack & harrasing British retreat. [Sudbury is about 8 mi. SW of Concord.] Marched w/ Molly’s brother. Probably in attendance when “shot heard around the world”. Was Ensign under Capt Rice during war. Capt. of Militia 1787-1795, 1798 became Major; 1790 head of a family of 11, but 2 prob servant relatives. 1792 Inn Holder. Mar 1803 exec of father’s estate. 1805 purch land Waitsfield, Washington County, VT, moved in time for poll tax. 1806 purch nursery on east side Mad River, 1807 w/ others signed religious ageement-VT law, creating “Congregational Society in Waitsfield, served as one of 3 on “Prudential Committee:”, dealt heavily in real estate in Waitsfield & adjoining Fayston. Resident for time c1820 in Winchester, Cheshire Co, NH, but returned to Waitsfield where d.c1847. MOLLY THOMPSON (1757-aft 1798) b. 17 | bp 23 Jan 1757 Sudbury, MBC, m. 10 Dec 1776 (Revolution!) SudburyVR, w/ husband became members of Rev. Mr. Cook’s Church, Sudbury [as had parents of both of them & grandparents of Molly]; d. aft Jul 1798. 12 Children all Sudbury Lewis 21 Feb 1777-1870; m#1 Phebe Sawin; m#2 Nancy (Kidder) Johnson. Infant dau 27 Oct 1778 d. 20 Nov 1778 Abigail “Nabby” Kendall 1 Mar 1780, Ruel 29 Aug 1781 John 12 Jun 1783 Polly 18 Mar 1785; m. Dr. Charles Ulmer Betsy 28 Jan 1787; m. Thos Ruggles Plympton William 17 Mar 1789 Sally 21 Apr 1791 Nancy (I) 8 Feb 1793; d. 15 Apr 1794 Nancy (II) 19 Apr 1795 Fanny 2 Jul 1798

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GRACE JENNISON (1678/9-1757) m. 7 Nov 1699 Watertown, MBC by The Rev. Henry Gibbs, & at that gentleman’s home. 11 Children: b.Watertown John 5 Jun 1700; m. Mary Wheeer; d. prob1757 Daniel 3 Apr 1702; m. Anne Jones; d. 7 Nov 1782 Peter 1 Feb 1704/5; m#1 Beulah Dakin; m#2 Abigail Jones; d. aft 1790 Grace 3 Jul 1707; d. 8 Mar 1724/5 Elizabeth 29 Jul 1709; prob m. Henry Goddin (some say it was her aunt w/ same name) Josiah b.29 Jan at Watertown & bp at Weston 16 Feb 1711/12; m. Hannah Parker; d. 2 Jan 1800 Child b. Sudbury: Judah/Judith 5 May 1715; bp Weston 30 Jul 1715; said to have been b. Colchester, CT Children b. Concord: Eunice 5 Sep 1717 Mary 20 Mar 1718/9; m. John Howe; d. 15 Aug 1801 JONAS 8 Jul 1721 See following Abigail 7 Nov 1723; d. 27 Feb 1723/4 at 3 mo.

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Note: The three Shattuck girls were sisters.

Ens JONAS HOLDEN 1721-1802/3 age 81 b. 8 Jul 1721 Concord MBC; 10 Dec 1752 Abigail was bp & Jonas “owned the covenant” - this was the Half-Way covenant that permitted baptism of children. In military service dur colonial period, enlisted 10 Mary 1748.; served 1st as sentinel under Capt Phineas Stevens, then sergeant under Capt Eleazer Melven-a member of the 2nd Foot Company under Capt Richardson in April 1757. recorded as “ensign” 1768. 4 of 5 sons served in Revolution. Youngest enlisted at age 14. Grantee of land on Mill Brook in Sudbury 3 Apr JOHN HOLDEN 1753; “cordwainer’ leather 1675-c1767 worker or shoemaker as b.18 Jul 1675 Cambridge, were also 4 older brothers. MBC; in land transfers of Until 1773, listed on deeds 1707 & 1709 referred to as cordwainer, but in 1773 as “of Watertown”. Had listed as “gentleman”. May children there from 1700 have retired from active life. to 1711/2, though family 10 Jul 1783 transfered to son moved west to Watertown Jonas £200 (considerable Farms (later Weston) prob sum), 3 tract land in Jan 1709/10 when Grace Sudbury w/ buildings dismissed from the church thereon + 1/2 interes in at East End Watertown to own dwelling. 1790 he that at Weston. Also must & Abigail lived alone in have lived Sudbury where Sudbury though sons Levi 7th child born in 1715, & Jonas jr w/ families also tho pb in Weston. Perhaps in town. Financial problems temporary. 1717, family Jan 1794, mortgaged whole settled in Concord where estate in Sudbury & debt not by 1733 he deeded half discharged during life time. interest to the ordinary Will proved 9 Mar 1803 to son John, & later other by son Jonas in Middlesex half to son Daniel. 1735 County Probate Court; still called “innholder” but mortgage discharged by 1736 called “yeoman. Little his heirs or executor 5 Apr known after that. Appears to 1805. Children scattered live in Concord when Grace widely, Abel & Asa to d. there as “wife to John Hanover, NH & later to NY Holden.” d. c1677, likely City, Levi to NJ & Jonas at Concord where he had to VT. bur 17 Jul 1802/3 lived from c1716 until at Sudbury, MA; bur 5 months least 1757. after his wife.

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MARY RUTTER (c1647-aft 1716) b. by/before 1647, testified on 11 Apr 1692 she was 45;date not recorded but named first in her father’s will. m. as his w#2 1673 Cambridge. She was 35yrs old & 35 yrs younger than Justinian.9 May 1694 Widow Howldin one of many to sign petition regarding the placing of new meeting house. She was still living 12 Nov 1716, age 69 Children b. Cambridge, MBC 4 sons, 3 dau: Samuel 28 Apr 1674, m. Susanna Shattuck, d 1726 Cambridge JOHN 18 Jul 1675 Isaac 26 May 1677, m. Joanna Shattuck; d. 8 Mar 1772 Cambridge Mary 21 Mar 1678/9; m. Sam’l Ward; d. 17 Jan 1758 Grace 13 Aug 1681; m. as w#2 Benjamin Eddy; d. 9 Nov 1714 Watertown Joseph 6 Sep 1683; m#1 Abigail Shattuck; m#2 Eliz. Dickson Russel; d. 30 Nov 1768 ae 84 Elizabeth 6 May 1686; pb 24 Oct 1686; d. 1767 “in her eightieth year” Watertown.

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See DG: 3 pages of details about formation of Sudbury & goings on during period.

See complete description of mtg house & other work & land deals in DG.

Rutter/Ritter

Ref: D-G pp 533-539

? 1639

Plympton Bent

? BENT

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ELIZABETH PLYMPTON c1622-1689 b. c1622 Eng based on date of marriage; was neighbor & poss. lover of John in Olde Eng & followed him across ocean 1639 w/ aged grandmother. Prob liv first in home of her uncle, John Bent. m. 1 Nov 1642 Sudbury. Marriage lasted 48 yrs. d. Sudbury 15 May 1689 Children: Elizabeth 6 Oct 1642, not in father’s will John 7/9 Feb 1645; m. Hannah (prob Pendleton) Bush; d 3 Jun 1692 Rebecca 28 Feb 1647; m. Jonathan Lawrence; d.16 Feb 1724 age 74 Thomas 5 Apr 1650; m. Jemima Stanhope; d. aft 1703 MARY by or bef 1647; named first among dau in father’s will; d. aft 12 Nov 1716 Joseph 1 May 1656; d.s.p. by 1703 Jane m. Isaac Amsden; d. 22 Nov 1739 Hannah m. [Nathaniel?] Lawrence; d. bef Jun 1694

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Both ref: D-G p 497 (I don’t have these pages yet.—MAM)

? PLYMPTON

JOHN RUTTER/RITTER c1615/6 -1694/5, age 79 b. c.1615/6 prob Eng based on deposition in 1652 stated “about 37 yrs old”; emig 1638 age 22 on Confidence. Sailed from London & last from Southampton. Listed as “servant” of Peter Noyes of Penton, Grafton, Hampshire, Eng, & of Sudbury in NE. Same vessel carried uncle John Bent of his future wife. Must have had short servant commitment since free to marry 3 yrs after arrival. Carpenter. Among earliest who settled Sudbury. (Neighbors incl others who came on Confidence) West side Sudbury Riv., now Wayland, then lands south & west purch from Indian named Cato/Goodman, who had his home on “Wigwam Hill,” still called “Goodman’s Hill.” His house “on north street” (later East St) little westerly from Clay-pit Hill. 3 acres given by “gratulation of services.” 17 Feb 1642 hired to build Sudbury Mtg Hse 30’ x 20’. Good standing in community. “Sergent” in 1667. Surveyor in 1672; Selectman 1675; Sudbury suffered much attack in King Philip’s War, “Sudbury Fight”=4-hr battle on Green Hill (see DG) John signed petition to Gen. Crt for damages. 1688 among recipients of ammunition to guard town. Last record = 10 Jan 1693/4 when referred to as Serj. Thought of by town chroniclers in 1889 as “a type of the historic Puritan.” Will 6 Jun 1694, proved 1695. Included £4 for dau Mary Holden, widow of Justinian Holden of Cambridge, to be pd w/ in year of his death.

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1500s *Capt Wm Jennison was one of 24 charter members of the A&HAC. Prominent, welathy & most patriotic man, one of first settlers of Watertown.

Rev John Hale mentions in his “Modest Inquiry” that a Watertown Nurse testified that a [Mrs.] Kendal bewitched to Death a Child of Goodman Genings [Jennison] of Watertown” this prob being a child of Robt & Grace—D-G

Jennison Ref: D-G pp 368-373

ROBERT JENNISON / GEMSON/JINNINGS/ GENERSON bef1600-1690 Followed younger bro Capt Wm Jennison* to NE. Appears Watertown bef Apr 1637 when 1st child b. w#1 Elizabeth _?_. They had Eliz (12 Apr 1637-26 Feb 1664, m. Geroge Reed) Eliz d. 10 Oct 1638 age 30. Freeman May 1645 Watertown, implies chur mem. 6 acre home lot in angle where Cambridge Rd (to Harvard, now Mt Auburn St) & Bank Lane met. East of Mill Bridge, east of lowest falls on Charles, at head of tidewater. Bro Capt Wm (of Colchester, Old Eng) returned perm to Eng c1651 leaving consid real estate to Robt incl 200 acres Framingham which Robt sold.Considerable land owner himself. (See D-G), Aug 1672 called “yeoman” Will dated 15 Sept 1683, codicil dated 2 Apr 1687 after Grace d. in 1686; Robt d. Watertown 4 Jul 1690; will proved 7 Oct 1690, inventory 24 Jul 1690 @£101. GRACE ? ?-1686 m. as his w#2 1639/early 40; d. 26 Nov 1686. Children b. Watertown. Michal/Mihelle/Michell 17 Dec 1640; d. 4 Jul 1713; m#1 Richard Bloise; m#2 Capt John Warren SAMUEL 15 Dec 1642 See following

Planter 1635

Sailed to America on the Planter with William Dawes & the Tuttles/ Antrobus Clan.

Newcomb

Ref: D-G pp 458-462 Planter 1635

FRANCIS NEWCOMB 1605-1692 age 87/100 b. prob Eng. Age 35, sail to Amer on Planter, Nicholas Trarice, Master. w/ wife & 2 child. Left London Apr 1635. Settled in Boston 3-4 yrs. Bef 1640, remov. to outlying tract to S. called Mr. Wollaston (became Braintree 13 May 1640, now Quincy.) 16 Feb 1639/40 Boston Chur sent committee to inquire after spiritual state of 11 persons at Mt. Wollaston of whom Rachel ye wife of Francis Newcome was one. Francis acquired tracts of land Braintree, one near Iron Works, other south side Monaticut River, prob lived at or on “Neck” [see DG re: history of iron works]. 1645, 1670, 1672-3 & 1682 recorded as “abuttor”. Trial jury 1678.No evid. public life. d. Braintree 27 May 1692. Age discrep=town records & gravestone Hancock Cemetery say “aged 100 yrs” but claimed age at emigration = 87 yrs.

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Sergnt, later Ens SAMUEL JENNISON 1642-1701 (Extensive bio D-G) b. 15 Dec 1642 Watertown, MA; spent entire life Watertown; 1672 appt The information in D-G one of 2 hog reeves; In about what a Town Clerk deeds listed as “Yeoman” does is interesting. & “gentleman;” Varied & extensive service to town (See D-G) incl Town Clerk Nov 1691; Constable 1693-5; Commissioner; Selectmen 1691; Will 13 Nov 1700; d. 15 Oct 1701 Watertown; inv of estate £383 taken 31 Oct 1701; will probated 3 Nov 1701. JUDITH NEWCOMB 1645/6-1723 b. 16 Jan 1645. m. Watertown 30 Oct 1666, outlived Sam 21 yrs; Inher homestead & £60; d. 1 Mar 1722/3 Watertown after sick 8-9 wks “an Aged Widow Woman.” Children b. Watertown Judith 13 Aug 1667; m#1 James Barnard; m#2 John Bemis Mercy 23 Jan 1669/70; d. 28 Feb 1671/2 (age 1) Rachel 8 Oct 1671; m#1 Timothy Barron m#2 John King Samuel 12 Oct 1673; m. Mary Stearns; d. 2 Dec 1730 William (twin) 17 Oct 1676; m. Eliz Golding; d. 19 Sep 1744 Elizabeth (twin) 17 Oct 1676; d. bef father GRACE 11 Feb 1678/9 See following Peter 1 Oct 1681; m. Jane ?; d.17 Jan 1722-3 Robert 21 Jul 1684; m. Dorothy (Thomas) Whittemore; d.1799 Lydia 18 May 1688; m. John Traine

“1666 Samuel Jenyson & Judith Newcomb joyned in maryage [the] 30 of October” [from Dawes Gates book]

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RACHEL ? 1615-aft 1685 b. prob Eng. Emig to Amer age 20 w/ husb & 2 child on Planter. Mem Boston 1st Chur 28 Feb 1635/6, 7/8 mo. after arriv Boston, transf to Braintree Mar 1684/5. No death record. Children. 1st 2 b. Eng, 3rd b. Boston, rest Braintree: Rachel 1632-3, no rec after emig John c1634; m#1 Ruth? m#2 Eliz.?; d. 21 Mr 1722 Hannah bp 1st Chur 15 Oct 1637; m. James Thorp Mary 1 Apr 1640; m. Sam’l Deering Sarah 30 Jun 1643 JUDITH 16 Jan 1645/6 see following Peter 16 May 1648; m#1 Susannah Cutting; m#2 Mary (Phillips) Humphrey; d. 20 May 1725 Abigail 16 Jul 1652; liv 1702, prob unm Leah 30 Jul 1651; m. Wm. Price Elizabeth 26 Aug 1658 m#1 John Pidge/ Pigge; m#2 James Emery

Watertown Town Record:

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Included in Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines.

Kendall

Brayne Miles Sackerell

JOHN KENDALL 1548-1627/8 1548 Norfolk, Norfolk, Eng.d.1627/8 Norfolk, bur. 1628 SARAH BRAYNE MARY MILES 152815531528 Norfolk, Norfolk, Eng. b.1553 Norfolk, Norfolk, Nov?, Norfolk, d. Norfolk Eng. Children b.Norfolk: m. 1574 Norfolk, d. Norfolk JOHN 1548 Children b.Norfolk: William 1550 William 1575 James 1554 Thomas 1577 Samuel 1556 JOHN 1580 Henry 1557 Samuel 1582 Henry 1558 Edward 1583 John c1587 Miles 1578/88 Frances Miles Kendall 1588 WILLIAM KENDALL 1527-1600/1 1527 Norfolk, Norfolk, Eng., D. 1600/1 Norfolk

FRANCIS KENDALL (aka MILES) 1615 to 20-1708 age 88 b. 1615 to 1620 Eng (date from deposition Dec (Prob. the same group 1658). Prob emig w/bro Thos Kendall. Arr of “33 Selectmen” that Amer. in/bef 18 Dec 1640 when he & 31 men of Capt. Anthony Eames Charlestown signed town orders for Woburn=tract above was a part of.) of land granted May that year to Charlestown. 1642 officially Woburn w/ Rev. Thos Carter. Prob l. 1st temp housing w/ married sister in Charlestown. [See details D-G p375] “A miller.” Remov. to Woburn, of first & most prominent inhabitants, 18 yrs. Board of Selectmen, Woburn tax list 1645. Freeman 26 May 1647. Name recorded on marriage 24/26 Dec 1644/7 as “Frances Kendall, alias Miles.” Family trad. explains he was said to have left England w/o consent of parents/government. Brother Thos seems never to have used any other name. 26 May 1647 Freeman. Thos. followed THOMAS KENDALL next year. Held numerous 1648/9-1730 age 81 other offices. Looked b. 10 Jan 1648/9, Woburn upon as “a gentleman MA. Had a farm in Woburn of great respectability & said to adjoin his father’s. influence in the place of his “Husbandman.” Bought residence.” 1678 Tythman, & sold land. Some was by but later differed w/ church Sam Blodgett’s land. 1 Feb as to infant baptism, fined 1691/2 chosen by selectmen for neglecting to attend, tithing man for ensuing attending Anabaptist year “for ye West End of sd meetings. Built & operated Towne” implying his home first Kendall mill at was there. Appointed to Woburn junct present look over 9 other families Willow & Lexington to determine pauperism/ Sts “where a part of the confirmed depravity, like dam & mill race are still moral overseer.Received prob JOHN KENDALL [1872] to be seen. Left 1/4 interest in 1st Kendall 1580-1660 corn mill to sons John, Mill from father including b. 1580 Norfolk, Norfolk, Thomas & Samuel.xxiv It land. [document in D-G Eng; res Cambridge in stayed in family for 6 gen. record] m#2 Woburn, Mary 1646/d/bur. 21 Mar 1660 [See bio. D-G & others] Abigail (Raynor) Broughton Cambridge, Eng. Two of Will 9 May 1706. d. 1708 who d. 31 Dec 1716 no his sons went to America, prob Woburn, MA. Will children recorded. Thos. d. Francis & Deacon Thomas. probated 1708. Curious 25 May 1730 Woburn. Left Thomas had 10 daughters & physical characteristics 60 recorded grandchildren. 1 son - left no descendents recurred occasionally by Seems to have died to carry on his family name. birth of children w/ extra suddenly. Left no will. (Cutter) So all from Francis. finger or toe! ELIZABETH SACKERELL 1584 b. 1584 Cambrige, Cambridgeshire, Eng, m. 25 Nov 1605 Norfolk, Norfolk, Eng Children b. England: FRANCIS c1620 see following Deac. Thomas (also went to America.) Mabel c1605; m.in Eng c1628 William Reade. They emig to America on Defence, arr Boston Jul 1635 w/ 3 eldest children. Res Boston & later Woburn. Their son, Israel Reade m. his 1st cousin Mary Kendall; her son Geroge Reade m. Elizabeth Jennison, & their son Wm Reade m. his father’s first cousin Abigail Kendall. She m#2 21 Nov 1660 as his w#2 Henry Somers. He left substantial legacies to his step-children. Eliz John (see bio date)

MARY TIDD bef 1626-1705 b.prob Eng. Emig w/ her parents. m. 24 Dec 1644 Woburn, MBC. d. 1705 Woburn after a painful illness which she had before Francis died. He left provisions for her care in his will. 84+ recorded grdchild, all but 6 b. before Francis’ death, most b. before Mary’s death. Children: John 2 May/Jul 1646; d. cApr 1732; m#1 unkn; m#1 Eliz. Comey; m#3 Eunice (Brooks) Carter THOMAS 10 Jan 1648/9 see following Mary 20 Jan 1650/1; d. 17 Jan 1721/2; m. 1st cuz Israel Reed Elizabeth 15 Jan 1652/3; d. aft father; m#1 Ephraim Winship; m#2 Joseph Pierce (Anthony2, John1) Hannah 26 Jan 1654/5; d. aft 1699; m. Wm Greene Rebecca 2 Mar 1657/8; d. 16 Apr 1690; m. Joshua Eaton Samuel 8 Mar 1659/60; dc1749; m. Mary Locke Jacob 25 Jan 1660/1; d. aft 1717; m#1 Persis Hayward/Haywood, m#2 Alise (Hassell) Temple Abigail 6 Apr 1666; d 12 Oct 1734; m. 1st Cuz once removed Wm Reed.

RUTH BLODGETT* 1656-1695 Woburn,MA b. 28 Dec 1656 Woburn, m. 1673/4 Woburn, d. 18 Dec 1695 2 days after b. of 10th child Woburn. Ruth was mentioned as a witness in the witch trials by Cotton Mather. She testified about the birth of a freak baby with Lydia Kendal, one of her husband’s kin. Children b. Woburn Ruth 17 Feb 1674/5; m#1 John Walkr; m#2 Josiah Wood Thomas 19 May 1677 “first of the name at Lexington”; d. 1761; m. Sarah Cheever Mary 21 Feb 1680/1; d.19 Nov 1760; m. Joseph Whitmore Lt. Samuel 29 Oct 1682; d. 13 Dec 1746; m#1 Eliz Pierce; m#2 Mehitable (Parker) Hosmer, widow of John Hosmer RALPH 4 May/24 Aug 1685 see following Eleazer 16 Nov 1687; d. aft 1767; m#1 Hannah rowe; m#2 Sarah (_?_) Angier widow of Benj. prob Ephraim Oct 1689/ c1690; d. 15 May 1728; m. Judit Walker Jabez (twin) 10 Sep 1692; d. 14 Aug 1725; m. Rebecca _?_ Jane (twin) 10 Sep 1692; d. aft Jun 1722; m. Joseph Russell Son d.@birth 16 Dec1695 & Ruth died 2 days later.

RALPH KENDALL 1685-1753 b. 4 May 1685 Woburn. Among 5 of Francis’ grandchildren to receive a bequest of land. “To my grandson Ralph Kendall, the son of my son Thomas Kendall I give my plow lott, in Hodges Hole & also half the plow lott which formerly belonged to Michaele Lippingwell in that place ...”. Dealt extensively w/ land. 1714 bought fam farm 120 acres from father, paid £60 down, arranged a mortgate. housed 8 children b. Woburn. Remov to Lancaster 1719/20. 225 acre tract. Sometimes called “tailor” & sometimes “Yeoman”. No record of public service, church mem or freeman. 1727 Earthquake. 1751 moved eastward back to Charlestown but was “warned out”. Remov to Maine. c 1751 settled on Kennebec with son-in-law John Cheney, son Benj Kendall & Elizas Cheney, son of John, grants were being sold for the old Plymouth Colony lands. But he & John Cheney died bef their petition for land reached the General Court. d. Maine, prob on Arrowsic Island [area where Popham Colony was], but death recorded as of Georgetown, ME, on 11 Sep 1753. Possibly buried in Old Burial Ground a little more than a mile below the Watts Garrison.

Newton’s Comet winter of 1680/1. First appeared 10 Dec. Remained visible until mid-February. Considered most brilliant of any of which there is an accurate account. People of the day believed comets were tokens of displeasure of Heaven & that there would be a calamity for every comet, & a comet for every calamity.

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ABIGAIL CARTER 1689- aft 1754 b. 30 Mar 1689 Woburn, m. May 1707xxxiii; named in father’s will; d. aft last day of record 11 Jul 1754 when as a widow she sold land in Lancaster. Children b. Woburn Ruth 6 Jan 1706/7/8; prob bef 1725 Ralph 15 Dec 1708; d. 19 Dec 1708 aged 4 days Peter 14 Oct 1710; d. in military serv bef 6 Sep 1741 when widow admitted to Lancaster chr. m. Hepzibah Ruck. Abigail (I) 14 Aug 1712; prob d. bef 1728 see following Esther [poss twin] 14 Feb 1714; no further record Jonathan 14 Feb 1714/7; poss twin. d. North Yarmouth, ME where ch membership terminated at death, but no date, no further record; m. Rebecca _?_ Bezell/Bezeleel 7 Apr 1717 poss twin if Jonathan 1717 & error in date. Keziah 23 Jan 1718/9; d. aft Jul 1771. m. John Cheney Children b. Lancaster: Uzziah (boy) 11 Apr 1721; d. 16 Aug 1785; m. Eliz Parce/Pearce Abiathar (a boy) 22 Feb 1723; d. aft 1790. m. Thankful Butler m#2 Sybil (Marson) Cheney, widow Elias Cheney stepson of Keziah. Ruth 9 Feb 1725; d. prob 10 Nov 1757 ABIGAIL (II) 20 Jul 1728; bur 1 Feb 1802. See following Benjamin 12 Sep perhaps 1731, more likely 1732; d. 28 Feb 1805. m. Jenny Rogers Eunice recorded b. 14 May 1732, but more likely (DG) 1734; d. 13 Apr 1770 35 yrs 10 mo; m. Jonathan Carter

Note: Aug 1644 Charlestown (mother town of Woburn) voted that every family should give one peck of wheat or 12p in month “toward the maintenance of the college at Cambridge” aka Harvard.

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JOHN TIDD, Sgt. bef 1600-1656 b. c1589 Yarmouth, Isle of ? Wight, Eng, tailor. Res of Charlestown MBC by 1637. 23 Apr 1638 land laid out to them “on Mystic side” toward what later became Malden, lot No. 86 (based on taxable estate of #10. 30s. 0p. His presumed bro Joshua Tidd had lot No. 74. Neither lived there. John acq at least 7 pieces Charlestown land, prob 8 + 1 3/4 cow commons incl plot in the Rockfield at edge of Waterfield now Winchester & 6 acre lot in “ancient line field” along Mystic R. Fairly prosperous. Joined Charlestown Ch 10 Mar 1639, same day as Joshua. Also affiliated w/ Woburn chr bef 10 May 1643 when applied for Freemanship. 1640 task to ring bell for chur. & town mtgs - pd £1 10s. 18 Dec 1640, 32 men incl Kendall, Carter & Wm Greene signed petit for new land that became Woburn which they then cleared, built houses etc. & spent remainder of lives. 1643 “the 1st citizen of Woburn, named by military title in the records” = Sgt of train band. Taxed 8 Sep 1645; surveyor of fences 1646; selectman 1647; committee to collect Country rate 8 Sep 1645 = 1655; commissioner. Was earliest extant supposed to get 100 ac land tax list acquired by a Richrd Yonge [Young] in c1628. One of “Bold Petitioners” who signed “Woburn Memorial for Christian Liberty” Inventory estate at Woburn £163. m#2 Alice ? aft 1651 who survived him & remarried Wm. Mann. Will 9 Apr 1656 Gave Alice house for “next marriage”d.24 Apr 1656 Woburn MBC; will proved 10 Nov 1656

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Tear drop marks location of Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, England, home of the Tidd Family

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MARGARET ? ?-1651 b. c1595 Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, Eng; m.1621; prob came to Amer w/ husband as did most of their children, who were nearly adult. d.1651 Woburn, MBC Children prob b. England: Samuel d. by 1642 when wife=“widow”; m. by 1641 Sarah ? Hannah d. 14 Jun/14 Aug 1650. m. Wm Savell. MARY d. Woburn 1705; m. Francis Kendall - See following Elizabeth d. bef Aug 1684; m. Thomas Fuller John - b. c1618/9, prob the John Tidd who emigrated at age 19 on the Mary Anne of Yarmouth as servant under Saml Mary Ann Greenfield. 1637 Passengers were examined in Eng 12 May 1637, said to arr Boston 20 Jun (if true, very quick voyage) Greenfield settled Salem as did John’s brother Samuel. John d. 13 Apr 1703; m. Rebecca woWood.

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Thomas & Samuel Blodgett included in Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines. Some conflicts with NEHGS.

Encrease 1635

Blodgett/Blowatt

American Blodgetts are not entitled to a coat of arms because of their Blodgett ancestry. Their last four generations of English ancestors are known to have been glove makers, inn keepers & farmers.

ROBERT BLOGGETT Jr. bet1570-9-1625 b.1578 Stowmarket/ Haughley, Suffolk, Eng. d.1625 Stowmark Note: Stowmarket and Haugley are villages 2 miles apart, 11 miles THOMAS BLOWGATT/ ROBERT BLOGGATT Sr. NW of Ipswich, west BLOWGATE coast of Eng. ca1520-1602 c1490-1560 m.#1 Sarah Stepper 17 May or b. ca1520 Haughley, b.ca1490 Haughley, Suffolk, Suffolk, Eng. d. 2 Aug 1602 1597 (must have died in Eng, d. Jun 1560 Haughley, Haughleym “Yeoman of childbirth, because M.#2 bur. 1560 St. Mary’s Church, Haughley”, will 5 Jun 1602, Mary Witlock next year. Haughley, Suffolk, Eng. proved 3 Aug 1602. All land Removed to Stowmarket Will 1 Nov 1558, proved 5 andbecame an Innkeeper & tenement of Haughley Jun 1660 (Ipswich Probate left to son Thomas. (Ipswich w/ bros John. Died w/ no Office. See bio.) known will. Probate Office. See bio.) UNKNOWN c1509-1573 b.c1509 Haughley Children b. Haughley Thomas c.1531 Joan/Johan ca1533 Margaret ca1535 Andrew ca1537 John ca1539 Rose ca1541 ROBERT Sr. 1543/20

Warren

Note: Wonder if any relation to Richard Warren of Mayflower.

Whitlock

MARGARET/MARIA/ MARIE WARREN ca1544 b.ca1544 Stowmarket, Suffolk, Eng,m. ca1560 Stowmarket Children - Stowmarket/ Haughley Thomas 1560-1595 John c.1560/6-1595 Elizabeth c.1568-1595 Ann ca1570-1595 Francis ca1572-1595 Margaret 1574 Ellen 1576-1578 ROBERT c.bet 1574-99 Joan 1580

MARY WITLOCK 1587 b.1587, m. 1598 Stowmarket Children b. Stowmarket except Thomas, Haughley Sarah c.1600 Robert 1602 THOMAS 18 Nov1604 Phebe 1607 John 1610

THOMAS BLODGETT 1604/5-1641/2 age c36 (died young) b.18 Nov 1604 Haughley, Suffolk,bp. 18 Nov 1607 Stowmarket, Suffolk, Eng, Immigrant to Boston 18 April 1635 on Increase/ Encrease of London (Robert lea, Master) arriv Boston “at the end of July,” (3 mo) w/ wife & 2 small sons. Two older children had died of plague before he left c1631 as well as his uncle. Listed as “Glover” He age 30, wife age 27, Daniell age 4, Samuel age 1 1/2. (DG said she was 37) Settled Cambridge. Freeman Mar 1635/6 (which means earlier joined church). Granted 2 acres 6 Feb 1636/7, & other tracts. No public activity (maybe since died young). Only in America 6 yrs. Will dated 10 Aug 1641, proven 8 Jul 1642, Cambridge Middlesex, MBC [NEHGR 7/185] (See will in DG) d. 7 Aug 1642 Cambridge, MBC. After death Susan retained home adjacent to common as well as west field. (See DG for extensive bio.) SUSAN/SUSANNAH ? 1606-1660 b.Jul 1606 London,Eng. Encrease 1635 m. c1628 Stowmarket, Emig. w/ husband & children on Encrease 1635. When husband died 3 children were ages 5 to 11. Inherited whole estate “as well within doors as without” #2 his 2nd wife James Thompson m. 14 Feb 1643/44 WoburnGM - Thompson Her dau (Susanna Blodgett, m. his son by w#1. In 1640 he signed w/our John Carter, Francis Kendall, John Tidd & Wm Greene the Woburn “Town Orders”.Note: Thompson family below. d.10 Feb 1660/1 Woburn, Middlesex, MBC Children b. England Daniel 14 May 1631 d. 28 Jan 1671/2, m. Mary Butterfield Ensign SAMUEL 12 Jul c1633 see following Children b. Cambridge: Susanna Jun 1637 m.in Woburn her stepbrother Jonathan Thompson, d. Woburn 6 Feb 1697/8 Thomas b.?, d. Cambridge 7 Aug 1639

Encrease 1635

Ensign SAMUEL BLODGETT 1633-1720 nearly 87 b/bp. 12 Jun 1632/33 Stowmarket, Suffolk, Eng. (RA) Parents emig. to New England in 1635 when he age 1 1/2. Family lived in Cambridge (formerly Newtowne). After father died in 1642, when he was 9, his mother remarried & the family moved to Woburn home of James Thompson in Woburn. Became a landowner after reaching adulthood. Deputy to the General Court of Mass. Colony 1691 (implies that sometime became mem of ch & freeman). Served as selectman, commissioner of rates & other offices at various times (See ext. bio.) Ruth’s sister Sarah Nutting came to live w/ them after Indians killed her husband John. d. 21 May 1720 Woburn. Tear drop marks location of Stowmarket, Haughley, Suffolk, England, homeland of the Blodgett Family.

RUTH EGGLETON 1631/2-1703 b. 8 Nov 1631 Woburn/ Boston, Middlesex, MBC/ Biddenden Kent, Eng. m. 13 Dec 1655 Woburn, d. 14 Oct 1703 Woburn. Increase Mather refers to her in his “Brief History”, 24 Jun 1675Aug 12 1676. He spells it Bloghead. [DWK, DAWG] Children b. Woburn: RUTH 28 Dec 1656 see following Samuel 10 Dec 1658 d. 5 Nov 1743 m. Hulda Simonds Thomas 26 Feb 1661, d.Lexington 29 Sep 1740, m. Rebecca Tidd (John1) Susanna 17 Feb 1664/5, d. 9 Feb 1715, m. James Simonds (bro of Hulda above) Sarah 17 Feb 1667/8, d 19 Sep 1692, m. John Hayward Martha (twin) 15 Sep 1673, d. aft Feb 1710, m. Joseph Winn Mary (twin) 15 Sep 1673, d. 11 Mar 1752 m. Joseph Richardson (Joseph2, Samuel1)

Tear drop marks location of Woburn, Massachusetts where they all ended up.

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Castle 1638

Ref: p284-286 D-G Castle 1638

STEPHEN IGGLEDEN/ EGGLETON ?-1638 Died during passage on ship Castle in 1638(Savage)

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JON__?__EGGLETON (bef 1626-bef1650) b. Eng. prob d. England. His wife alone when appears in Woburn in 1650. Not clear if Ruth was born in England or in Amer. so don’t know if he ever got to Amer like his wife did.

ELIZABETH ? ?-? Prob proprietor in Roxbury 1639 Children: JON

JANE ? DG c1600-1686/7 From Kent, EngSavage. b. c1600 Eng, m. c1630-32 Eng. arrived w/ two dau Woburn c1650. m#2 James Britton about that time; m#3 1 Feb Elizabeth & Jane seem to be 1658/9 Isaac Cole as his mixed up in some records. w#2 in Woburn. He d. Maybe children listed under 10 June 1674 & she prob moved. 6 Oct 1674 this Jane are Elizabeth’s. document presented to court, proving Jane mother of Ruth: “The Humble request of Jane Cole ye relict of Isac Cole deceased & of Sam’l Bloghead & John Nutton, yt whereas Isack Cole of Wooburn died intestate & left a one hundred twenty pounts Estate; viz fforty pounds in moveables & ye rest in house & Lands. Its their request yt their Mother in law Jane Cole may have a competency to maintain her in her old age she being about 74 years old. If the court See fit to order ye one half of the sd Estate ye aboue mentioned parties are willing to Entertain her & ffree ye town from charges & ye Selectmen doe concur herein.” 6, 8[Oct] [16]74 “The court having heard wt all Ptyes concerned can say in this case, do order to ye widow [Jane} forty pounds to be payed out of ye moveables as prised in the Inventory, or money, & ye widow to make choyc of her bed & furtniture in pt.” d. 10 Mar 1686/7 Woburn. Pos. sailed on Hercules. Known Children: Sarah m. John Nutting of Woburn who was killed by Indians dur King Phil War. Sarah went to live w/ Ruth. d. aft 1676 RUTH 8 Nov 1631, m. Sam’l Blodgett; d. 14 Oct 1703 Woburn (see next gen.)

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JOHN CARTER c1616-1692 (See DG) b. c1616-1620 England. Conflicting dates = deposed 4 Apr 1660 he was about 40, but called 66 when d. at Woburn. 2 wives. Freeman 29 May 1644. Liv c1636-1640 Headstone in Woburn Charlestown, prob w/ Cemetery to Capt. John father. 1640 granted land Carter, aged 66 d. 14 Sep across Mystic River to north 1692. Image from D-G. estab “Charlestown Village.” One of 32 Charlestown men who become proprietors & settlers there along w/ Francis Kendall, John Tidd & Wm Greene. 18 Dec 1640 met & signed series of Town Orders. Contemporary described them as “a very industrious, as well as a hardy, courageous race of men...frugal of their time, diligent in their work, & gave no countenance to idlenes or dissipation..” 1653 judgement on one of his servants for “stubbornes & rebellion agst his master, shalbe openly & severly whipped at Woborne, not exceeding ten stripes.” Court case 1659 (See DG) found guilty & had to publicly state “I John Carter do acknowledge that I have wronged, slandered & defamed Capt. Edw. Johnson [Town Clerk] in saying that he ... did falsify the Town Records, for which I am sorrowful.” DG THOMAS CARTER Fined £5 & court expenses ?-1692 of £2-18-9. w/ Mary Blacksmith. Emig to Kendall & Ruth Blodgett, Charlestown w/ wife Mary witnessed an anabaptist case & 6 children not later than in 1670. Nov 1670 chaired summer/fall 1636. Town committee to build new only admitted inhabitants mtg house. 1672 promoted by favorable vote. Joined from Lieut. to Captain of chur 2 Sep 1639. Not to be militia. Served as selectman confused w/ minister Thos w/ Francis Kendall. 1687 & Mary Carter in Woburn report of his negro servant next door. Freeman 9 “Bess” giving birth to a dau. Mar 1636/7. Procedure Collected taxes 1653, 1658 for town each male given & 1688. Served militia as 2-acre house lot & 2-acre ensign 1651 to at least 1661, land “to plant.” Petitioned lieut 1664-1672 & captain Gen Court in 1639 about of Woburn company 1672 an injustice. Constable 2 - 1690 (age 70+) when Mar 1640/1 & took oath members petitioned he of office. 7 Sep 1641 fined was too old & deaf. Kept for not doing his job well title until death. 1675 enough.Acquried a lot of served under Capt Nathl land (See DG) 1649/50 Davenport in Narragansett gave 1/2 to son John & 1/2 Expedition. m.#2 Elizabeth to son-in-law Wm Greene. Grose late May 1691(same Prob he who donated £1yr w#1 died). Will signed 2-0 to Harvard. Will 5 May 15 Jun 1691 (5 wks after 1652. Inventory 25 Jun 1652 w#1 died).Estate valued incl tools, iron & servant over £1,020. Had married “Matthew the Scotchman”. w#2 before will. d. 14 Sep d. betw 5 May & 25 Jun 1692 Woburn. bur Woburn 1652. Cemetery. MARY ? ?-1664/5 b. England. Emig to Charlestown w husband & 6 childen. Joined chur 1645. Inherited from husband right to pasture on town commons for “4 & 1/4 cows” = 4 cows & a sheep or calf. d. 6 Mar 1664/5 Charlestown, listed as “Mother of the Carters in town.” Children all b. England (order undertain): Thomas c1606-8; called oldest son; d. 30 Dec 1694 Charlestown Samuel shoemaker c1616 - 29 Aug 1681; m. winifred Harrod/ Harwood JOHN betw 1616-1620 Mary b.?, d. c1673. m John Brinsmeade Hannah b.? d. 1658. m#1 Wm Greene. m.#2 Thos Brown of Charlestown

ELIZABETH ? c1613-1691 (age 78) b. c1613 (date determined by age at death). m. as John’s w#1 c1642. d. 6/7 May 1691 Woburn “aged 78.” Children all b. Woburn: Elizabeth 8 Aug 1643 - 20 Dec 1653. Mary 8 Mar 1646 - 2 Jul 1714, m. Peter Fowle Abaigail 21 Apr 1648, m#1 James Fowle, m.#2 Sam’l Walker Hannah 19 Jan 1650/1 - aft 26 Sep 1706, m. James Converse JOHN 6 Feb 1652/3

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10 Jul 1677 vessel landed at Nantasket w/ passengers infected w/ small pox, 800 in colony died of it w/in next 2 yrs.

JOHN CARTER 1652/3-1727 (age 75) b. 6 Feb 1652/3 Woburn, MBC where spent whole life. Received 1/5 of 500 acre tract in Quinebaug from father & 2/5 of rest of father’s estate including house & 30 acres; 4 acres Pine Meadow, acreage at Bull Meadow, 2 acres at Great Meadow & 3 acres at marsh at Charlestown. Church mem by 1676. Freeman 23 May 1677. Sergeant in 1682. Lieut from 1700 to death. Selectman at least 1700 & 1710. 13 Jan 1698/9 called before selectmen “and animadverted upon for mispending his time, & admonished to improve it better for the futer, or else he might expect some other course would be taken.” Will 5 Feb 1723/4 presented for probate 16 May, proved 19 May 1727. d. 8 Apr 1727 Woburn age 75.

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RUTH BURNHAM 1658-1723/4 age 65 b. 22 Aug 1658, m. 30 Jun 1678, d. 11 Jan 1723/4 Woburn, Middlesex, MA 14 Child, 12 surviv parents: Elizabeth 18 Sep 1680 m. Ebenezer Flagg; named father’s will Ruth 18 Oct 1681 m. Josiah Wright d. Woburn ae 92+ Mary 17 Jul 1683 m. Joshua Sawyer; d. 23 Oct 1751 ae 69 John 8 Aug 1685 d. 21 May 1705 Woburn ae.20 Thomas 3 Jul 1687 m. Susanna Winship; d. 17 Mar 1753 ae 66 Woburn ABIGAIL 30 Mar 1689 m. Ralph Kendall d. aft 1754 Phebe 11 Jun 1691 m. Jonathan Thompson; d. bef father’s will Joseph 16 Feb 1692/3 m#1 Anna Cooper; m#2 Ruth Dodge; d. aft father’s will 1729 Samuel 31 Oct 1694 m. Margery Dickson; d. 21 Jan 1787 Woburn Esther 21 Aug 1696 m. Sam’l Greene, d. aft father’s will Josiah 3 Aug 1698; d. aft father’s will Jabez 17 Sep 1700 m. Abigail Manning; d. 10 Jul 1771 ae 71 Woburn Nathaniel, twin 4 Mar 1702; named in father’s will Benjamin, twin 4 Mar 1702; slain by Indians 5 Sep 1724

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Burnham

THOMAS BURNHAM c1558b.c1558 Norwick, Norfolk, England

Lt.THOMAS BURNHAM 1623-1694, age 71 b.1623 Norwich, Norfolk, Eng, d.19 May 1694 Ipswich, MBC. Came to Amer 1635 on Angel Gabriel which wrecked at Sacerdehock in the harbor of Pemaquid, ME during record hurricane off coast of New England day after ship landed at Pemaquid. (Read, The Angel Gabriel, the Illusive Galleon.) Deep-sea divers are still looking for ship in Pemaquid Harbor. Sailed w/ brothers John & Robt when he was 13 yrs old. His uncle Robert Andrews was skipper of the Angel Gabriel & on records of 1635 Chebacco (now Essex Village) 3 Sep 1635 owning land, so prop. already settled in America. Appears to have gone to Eng. to fetch boys right after their father died. Mother also died in 1635. Thos.’ oldest brother Benjamin had inherited estate & stayed in England. Next brother had gone off to India & would make his own fortune. Thos, brothers & uncle took another ship & settled in Chebacco (near Ipswich) MBC near Thos. Firman, John Perkins, John Cross, Richard Hoffield & Thomas Hardy. Fought Pequot war & other Indian skirmishes even as boy. Occ. carpenter. Freeman Chebacco; Selectman 1647; Sergeant Ipswich Company 1644;, Ensign 1665; commissioned Lt. in 1683; ROBERT BURNHAM Deputy Gen. Crt 1683-1685; 1581-1634 on town committees. Granted b.1581 Norwick, Norfolk, privilege of erecting saw mill Eng. d. Norwick, Norfolk, on Chebacco River 1667. Eng.From family of Walter Owned much land in CheLe Veutre who came to bacco & in Ipswich which was Eng in 1066 w/ Conquest divided between sons Thomas of William of Normandy & James upon death. Not to in the train of his German confuse w/ Thomas Burnham Cousin Earl Warren. Made of Hartford who landed Lord 1080 & received Saxon safely. “Our Thomas Burhvillage of Burnham, Co of nam crashed into America, Norfolk becoming Lord the other one landed safely in Walter Burnham.Burnham one place.” means town by a stream. poss. m#1 Anna Wright (See long bio about family 1639 CT history) MARY ANDREWS 1585-1635 b.1585 Norwich, Norfolk, Eng, m.1607/8 Norwich d. 1635 Norwich. Children b. Norwich, Norfolk Co, Eng except Mary b. St. Albans, Herts, Eng: Edward 1609 Amelia 1615 Lt.THOMAS 1623-1694 Deac.John 1618 Benjamin 1621, d. 1691 Eng. (made fortune in India, but didn’t want eldest bro. Edward to get it. After years of fighting, went to court & none of Burnhams got it. Robert 2 Oct 1624-1691 Mary 10 Apr 1625 John 1618-1694

Andrews

Her brother Robert Andrews, who had taken her sons to America, was on Chebacco land records of 1635. 3 Sep 1635 he had first public house of Ipswich.

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There was no grave listed in the cemetery list for Ipswich for Thomas. Possibly there is a Chebacco Parrish graveyard which would be south of the town of Ipswich. There is a Burnham library there. p. 82 History of Ipswich: Thomas & his brother John listed as carpenters. p.79 Daniel Burnham’s mansion mentioned p78 Thomas Burnam mentioned re: grant for the saw-mill in 1667

Tear drop marks location Norwich, Norfolk, England, the ancestral home of the Burnham & Andrews families.

NOTE: Sailing with Thos. on the Angel Gabriel was a John Tuttle, probably related to Mary’s stepfather. He was a teenager. If related, then it’s even more likely that Thos & Marie’s families knew of each other before coming to America. NOTE: Would be of interest to see if Daniel Burnham, the architect in charge of Chicago’s Columbian Exposition in 1893 with our ancestor Minor T., was a descendant. Tear drop marks location of Pemaquid Point. The Angel Gabriel was harbored at Pemaquid, to the right of that tear drop, when a hurricane hit in July 1635 & smashed it. Fortunately, Thomas Burnham, his brothers & his uncle, the captain, were already on shore. Grave of Mary Lawrence Tuttle Burnham, “Mrs. Mary Burnham, wife of Liuet. Thomas Burnham, died March the 27, 1715, Aged 92 years. Mother of 15 children & grandmother of 70”

Tear drop marks location of Ipswich, Massachusetts, where the Burnhams & the Andrews settled.

Planter 1635 Note: Mary is possibly a descendent from the Plantagenets. Sources disagree. Am to refer to 600 Royal Descendants in America. (or something like that.)

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MARY LAWRENCE 1623-1715 (age 92) b.1623 Albans, Herts, Eng. bp.27 Mar 1625 St. Albans Abbey, St. Albans, Herts, m. 1640-45 Ipswich, Essex Co, MBC Emig Boston on Planter (w/ Wm. Dawes, age 15) 7 Jun 1635, when she was c10 yrs. old, w/mother & stepfather, John Tuttle (ver.m.1645) Sources giving surname as Tuttle referring to her stepfather. d.27 Mar 1715 Ipswich, MBC. 5 children b.Ipswich, Chebacco Parish, MBC: THOMAS 19 Jan 1645/6 John 1648 Mary 1650 James 1651 Johanah 1654 Abigail 2 Jun 1656 m.Warren Ruth 1 Jul 1657 RUTH 23 Aug 1658 Joseph 26 Sep 1660 Nathaniel 4 Sep 1662 Sarah 28 Jun 1664 Esther 19 Mar 1664/5 Phoebe 6 Mar 1666/7

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Lawrence

WILLIAM LAWRENCE ?-1572 d. 1572 Huntingshire, Eng MARGARET KAYE 1510-? Children: WILLIAM 1532

Kaye

Beaumont

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WILLIAM LAWRENCE c1532-1572/80 (age 40/48) b.ca1532 St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Eng.d.20 Dec 1572/80 St. Albans KATHERINE BEAUMONT c1544-? c1544 prob.Hunsdon, Herefordshire, Eng. Children: JOHN Elizabeth Thomas Agnes Alice Stephen Joan Margaret Note: There is a Beaumont in the Belding Line above, back a few generations.

Bull

RAFE ANTROBUS 1506-? b. 1506 Pever, Cheshire, Eng.

WILLIAM ANTROBUS (One account of Antrobus skips William & goes straight to Rafe, however, note that his second eldest grandson is named William)

UNKNOWN

UNKNOWN

Antrobus

Arnold

Thompson

JOHN ARNOLD 1535-1583 b. 1535 St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Eng, bur 10 Nov 1583 St. Albans also. MARIE 1538-

JOHN LAWRENCE 1562-ca1609 b/bp.12 Jan 1562 St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Eng, d. c.1609, bur 24 Jun 1609 St. Albans Abbey, St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Eng. Chandler occupation bef 1609. Estate Inventory 10 Aug 1609 Hertfordshire. David L. Greene transcribed from Archdeaconry of St. Albans Probate & Administration Act Book 2:56 see printed bio. Ment. Thomas & Edward John in will. Died the yr. his son Thomas married Mary Andrews.

William THOMAS LAWRENCE ca1588-1624/5 l. England (RA) (S.R.Durand) bp 2 Feb 1589 St. Albans, Chief Burger of St. Albans in 1623. d. 20 Mar 1625 St. Albans. JOANE/JOAN ELIZABETH BULL ANTROBUS ca1563 1592-1659/60/61 Children b. St. Albans bp. 1592 St. Albans, William c1580 Hartfordshire, Eng, m#1 Edward c1582 Thos.Lawrence 23 Oct John c1583 1609 St. Albans Abbey, Elizabeth c1585 St. Albans. They had 7 Francis c1586 children, of whom two Richard c1587 daughters died w/in a THOMAS c1588 few days of birth. Greene: Anne c1592 Thomas died intestate. Joan c1595 On 21 Mar 1624/5 Joan Mary c1601 Lawrence, relict granted Mary c1603 admin of his goods. Her acct, filed 1627 lists their children as John, Thomas, Note: There is prob. William, Jane & Marye. She another John Lawrence married Tutthill the same who was married to year. At age 42, she brought MARGARET ROBERTS her Lawrence children over which some accounts with her Tutthill/Tuttle show. children on the Planter, Nicholas Trerice,Master, depart Eng early April 1635, arr Boston on 7 Jun 1635. Settled Ipswich. c1650/1 John Tuttle went to Carrickfergus, Ireland. 1654 Joan followed him. He d. there 30 Dec 1656 & she d. there aft 1659. bur. 29 Jan 1660/61 Carrickfergus Co, Antrim, Ireland? Children w/ Lawrence all bp WALTER ANTROBUSDG in St. Albans, Eng: 1555-1614 Joan c1610 b.1555 St.Albans, Hertfordshire, Eng, d. 5 Apr Jane c1614/5, m. Geo Giddings 1614/16- St. Albans also, bur 5 Apr 1616 (? exactly 2 Marie bp 7 Nov(d28)1616 John bp 22 Jul 1618 yrs later?) Thomas c.1619 JOANE ARNOLD William bp 28 Jul 1622 c1571-aft 1635 MARIE bp 10 Apr 1625 See b.c1570/7. Lived St. Alban, following Herefordshire, Eng where her dau was born; m.1586. m#2 c1626-8 in St. Albans, She was a widow when she Eng, John Tutthill/Tuttle & emig at age 65 w/dau & had 7 more children 1628 daughter’s husband (John thru 1637 in St. Albans. At Tuttle) 7 Jun 1635 to Boston least 4 came to America w/ on Planter, Nicholas Trerice, parents. Master. No record of her Children with Tuttle: after. d. prob. New England Abigail Children: Simon Walter Sarah William John Robert JOANE Elizabeth Henrie

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NOTE: According to Chris Child, an historian at the NEHGS, there is a legitimate line to the Plantagenets through the Lawrence family. See Gary Robert’s Royal Descendants of 600 Immigrants. I had heard of a line, but my first attempt failed. Haven’t followed this lead yet.

Planter 1635

The party that sailed on the Planter in 1635 consisted of: Joan Arnold Antrobus, age 64 Joan Antrobus Lawrence Tuttle, age 42 Jane Lawrence m. George Gidding John Lawrence age 17 Wm Lawrence age 12 Marie Lawrence age 9 John Tuttle, mercer, age 39 Abigail Tuttle, age 6 Simon Tuttle, age 4 Sarah Tuttle, age 2 John Tuttle, age 1 Some servants Also on ship were our ancestors: William Dawes Francis Newcomb w/wife Rachel

Note: a young Tuttle male also listed among passengers of Angel Gabriel. Maybe one of the older of the 7 children since only 4 seem to have come on Planter. Connection with Marie’s husband who came on Angel Gabriel?

prob WILLIAM THOMPSON c1685-? Earliest claimed head of family of this name. Tradition claimes born c1685 on passage over from Eng. No record of parents. As adult, settled Sudbury. While “absent from home, his house was attacked by Indians. His wife & her infant child escaped to woods, but in her flight she was wounded in the leg by a musket ball, & suffered greatly during the night which she spent hidden in the forest.” Listed muster rolls of Capt Sam’l Wright 17 Jun 1724 (several months service) & second roll 1724. Old Thompson house, where descendents & poss Wm liv, stood just west of track of Mass Central RR at junction w/ county hwy. ?? Known children: John perhaps c1713; m. Abigail Farnsworth; d. aft Aug 1748 & bef 3 Jul 1758. James c. 1726 See following

JAMES THOMPSON c1726/7-1812 age 85 b. 1726/7 prob Sudbury; l. Sudbury in 1757 when daughter born & in 1776 when marriage of daughter. Admit First Parish Chur by Rev Mr. Cooke. Occupation wheelwright. Apr 1757 member of the active militia force of Sudbury in the Second Foot Company under Capt Josiah Richardson & took part in phases of Old French War. On Revolutionary musterool 26 Oct 1778 under Capt Rice w/ his son Abel, Ens Jonas Holden, Abel HOlden & bro-in-law Reuben Vorce. Sep 1757 signed as witness guardina papers. 11 Apr 1760 witnessed will of stepfather Danile Woodward. Nov 1760 court doc w/ Mother-in-law. Prudence. Many land transactions. Aug 1767; 1776; 1772; 1774; 1777. 1778-9 member of committee discussing division of Sudbury. 1780 chosen Town Clerk & Treasurer of Sudbury; (East side eventually became Wayland) 1784-1785 mortgage deal; 3 Jun 1788 referred to as “wheelright” deeded bldg to Thos Plympton Esq & nathan Loring known as “Malt House” (Document written by Levi & Jonas Holden). He lived for 35 years as a widower after Mary died, prob w/ some of children, until 18 Mar 1812. 14 Apr 1812 Jedidiah Thompson of Sudbury petitioned to be appointed administrator of the estate of his father James Thompson “who had died within 30 days past leaving no will & no other son than the petitioner.” d. SudburyVR c18 Mar 1812.

Tear drop marks location St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England, the ancestral home of the Lawrence family.

Part of DG quote about Malt House on land owned by James “also a malt house standing near the aforesaid premises ... reserving the privilege of living in the aforesaid dwelling house & enjoying necessary conveniences therein & privilege of putting hay for one cow in the barn & housing said cow during my natural life. Also reserving privilege of the malt house for purpose of making malt so long as I shall be able to work at the business.”

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MARY VORCE 1735-1775 27 Dec 1735; bp 4 Jan 1736; m. Sudbury 14 Nov 1754; d. Sudbury 3 Feb 1775. Children b. SudburyVR: Abel 26 May|bp 27 Jul 1755; m. prob Sarah Martin, poss Sarah Brown; d. 19 Jun 1811 ae 56; served Rev. MOLLEY 17 Jan 1757, see following Ann 3 |bp 10 Dec 1758, no more record Lucy 6 Jun 1760; m.Jotham Brigham; d. 20 Dec 1831 Prudence 28 Apr|bp 20 May 1762; m.Joseph Cutter; d.poss 6 Jan 1813 Sarah 23|bp 27 May 1764; no more record Jedidiah bp 9 Nov 1766; m. Mary Goodenow; d. c1814 Naham 4|bp 11 Sep 1768; d. 11 Jun 1769 Elizabeth bp 17 Sep 1771; no more record

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ELIZABETH PALMER ?? m. April 1667 Children: Benjamin prob c 1668; m. Elizabeth c1688/9 who bore him 7 children in Wrentham MA from 1690 to 1708, will proved Nov 1734. [More info D-G] Thomas c1670; m. c1693 Hannah _?_. l. Westchester Co NY in 1698; remov c1713 to Woodbridge NJ. Had 2 dau & 4 sons. pro d. Jun 1736. Matthew prob c1672; m. Woodbridge 7 Jan 1696 Sarah Morris, 1 son & 2 dau—one died young. MARK prob c1674; see following.

Source: Dawes-Gates

Col. JOHN PALMER ?

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DEBORAH MACCANE 1674-aft Oct 1707 b. 1674. m as his #1 wife in Wrentham 13 Oct 1698. d. around 33 yrs old bet Oct 1707 & 29 Mar 1709 when Mark m. #2.

Some Sudbury records confuse Vorce with Morse & record children under wrong name. (D-G) Reuben I was listed as Reuben Morse in Sudbury VR.

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PRUDENCE MOORE 1704-aft 1760 b. 1704, m. 18 Dec 1732 by Rev. Israel Loring in Sudbury. Had 3 younger children left in home when husband died. (Our Mary already married.) 21 Sep 1757 son Reuben, age 18, chose Deac. Josiah Haynes as guardian. £500 bond paid. James Thompson (Prudence’s son-inlaw) signed as witness/ bondsman. 18 Oct 1759 she m. #2 Daniel Woodward of Sudbury. His will dated 11 Apr 1760 of next year. He d. before June 28 but he didn’t leave her much. Prudence heavily burdened. 1759 son Peter “of Rutland” enlisted in Provincial service age 17, returned 1760 & died bef 30 Jun of that year. She asked probate court for his wages & suggested her James Thompson appointed administrator w/ Wm Rice & Nathan Loring sureties of the £500 bond. Prudence disappears from records after June 1760. Children b. Sudbury: Rueben 9 Aug, bp 11 Nov 1733; d. 19 Dec 1736 age 3 MARY 27 Dec 1735; bp 4 Jan 1736; d. Sudbury 3 Feb 1755; m. Sudbury 14 Nov 1754 James Thompson. See following Ann “Voree” 12 Dec 1737; bp 22 Jan 1738; d. Stow 29 Jan 1824 age 86y 1m 17d. m. by Rev Israel Loring 7 Jan 1761 to Benj. Tower. Ruben II 12 Jan bp 14 Jan 1739/40; d. aft Oct 1778 when he ent service; m. Sudbury Mary Rice Peter 26 Jul, bp 1 Aug 1742; d. unm bef 30 Jun 1760

Location of Sudbury & Framingham, residence of the Vorce & Thompson families.

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Moore

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MARK VORCE 1700/3-1755 b. c1700/3, bp First Parish of Sudbury 22 Aug 1714, servant of Benjamin Wight of Sudbury. Wight was son of Henry & Jane (Goodenow) Wight of Dedham & grandson of Thomas Wight of that place. Benj Wight came to Sudbury in early life to be near mother’s relatives, m. there & stayed til death 1739. Had only daughters of whom Experience Wight became wife of Capt Josiah Richardson under whom our James Thompson fought in 1757. Jonathan Wight, Bro of Benj, removed from Dedham to Wrentham & l. near family called Force, whose descendants freq changed spelling to Vorce. In that fam were a Mak Sr b. c1670/4 & Mark Jr b 1703. Theory that Benj Wight visited his bro Jonathan in Wrentham and, lacking son, induced Mark Force to go to Sudbury in his employ. He served military as Mark Vorce in 1725 under Capt Samuel Wright. 25 Sep 1730 “cordwainer of Framingham” pd £15 to John Eveleth & wife Hannah for 1 1/2 acres land in Sudbury on westerly side of Sudbury River near Timber Swamp & on n. side of Lancaster Rd. Early days Framingham called Sudbury Farms & settlers considered “out dwellers” of Sudbury. 13 oct 1730 bought 5 more acres adjacent land. 11 Nov 1733, he & Prudence “owned the covenant in the First Parish Church & eldest child baptized. 1734 taxed for his property in Framingham. Nov 1739 sold 10 acres land in Sudbury to Wm Rice. 1741 “cordwainer of Sudbury, sold 5 more acres land Sudbury for £30 to Daniel Putnam. Served as pall bearer for daughter of Rv. Loring 29 Jul 1754 along with Mr. Eames. 9 Mar 1755 a contribution of £25 lacking one shilling taken up for Vorce Family. 24 Mar 1755 Rev Loring wrote,“This day visited Mr. V. Found him in great distress of Mind as well as body. Told me that in his younger years he used to pray in secret but thro’ vain company-keeping, left it. Now shockt with the thoughts of Eternity, had sent for me to direct him in the great matter of his Eternal Salvation. 17 May 1755 Rev Loring diary closes w/ “Saturday The Last night about the middle of it Dyed Mark Vorce who has MARK FORCE been Labouring under MATTHEW FORCE prob c1674 a lingering consuming ?? b. prob c1674 in NY City. Sickness & of the Long Theoretially of French m. #2 29 Mar 1709 Sarah Continuance. Man dieth descent, l. Gravesend, Long Hills. Either he or his son & giveth up the Ghost & Island in 1669 to 1671, Mark m. Wrentham 19 Apr where is he?” Thus d. 17 & in New York City “on 1736 Mary Connwall who May 1755. No evidence Broadway below Rector d. Wrentham 30 Jan 1740/1 of will so prob left little Street 1675-8” as the “wife of Mark”. beyond home.

Vorce/Force

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1900s House on left is 123 Clermont Street in Brooklyn where Frederick Schroeder resided at the time of his death. The building on the right is part of St. Joseph’s College, on the site of Frederick’s former home while he was Mayor of Brooklyn, 249 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, which Rosemary Ames (his granddaughter) said occupied the entire block.

MICHAEL SCHROEDER 1793-1872 age 79 b. 1793/94 in capital city of Treves, (then the “Frederick A. Schroeder, Born capital of a department of Sarre & under French Mar 10, 1833, Died Dec 1, 1899. Mary Jane Rusher, Wife rule,secularized in 1801, became part of Kingdom of Frederick A. Schroeder, Born Nov. 7, 1829, Died Jul of Purssia in 1815) Univ. Tear drop marks location Trier (Treves) Germany (formerly 21, 1913. Schoeder” degree as Civil Engineer, Prussia), home of the Schroeder family. Official of Electorate of Treves - drew maps & registered titles, Openly proclaimed sympathy to democratic rule. Revolut of 1848 gave him opportunity to leave his job, fled fatherland. 60 days cross Atlantic w/Frederick, Sophie & Josephine, Arr. Castle Garden 10 May 1848. Settl New York. Remov. Williamsburg, Remov. to live w/ Frederick, d. 14 Aug 1872 “aged 79 yrs). Listed on burial monument Schroeder plot Green Wood Cemetry, Brooklyn, NY.

Schroeder

Abel

JOHN RUSHER ?? b. England, well established family there. (RA)

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ELIZABETH BALL ?? l. near Birmingham “Houndel” England d. Amer. Note: Her father “dressed in knee britches wearing white stockings with silver buckles on his shoes & raised sheep in the north of England.”(RA)

MARY JANE RUSHER 1866-1913, age 83 b. 9 Nov 1830, prob Eng, as she was known as an “English woman”; m. Williamsburg, Eastern Dist. of Brooklyn, 26 Nov 1854, l.Brooklyn, NY d. 21 Jul 1913 at Shelter Island family home, age 83, bur. w/husb. in GreenWood Cem, Brooklyn, NY. 11 children, only 6 surviv. infancy Francis Frederick 1855 Lenore Mary 1857 Edwin A. 30 May 1859-14 Oct 1902 Harriet Louise 1861 Clara Fanny 1864-1868 Mary Jane 16 May 1866-9 Nov 1899; m. Wm. T. Andersen (a stained glass window in Union Chapel, Shelter Island Heights, NY has the inscription “In Memory of Mary Jane Schroeder Anderson.) Clara 1869-1869 Fanny 1869-1869 ADELHEID 1870 Alice 1872 Frances “Frankie” 21 Aug 1874 m. Alfred John Boulton (1857-1944) d.27 Jan 1954

Amy Claire McCormick with Annie Mitchell in front of the plaque at the entrance the Brooklyn Bridge on which Frederick A. Schroeder is listed among the people who organized the bridge’s construction. His name is dead center. Frederick is Amy’s Great3 Grandfather—(Photo: April 2007)

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Rusher Ball

? ABEL “He was prominently identified w/ the civil & social affairs of Treves when it was capital of the department of Sarre.”(RA)

SOPHIE ABEL ?? m. 1813 Treves when city under French rule. l. Prussia, died after husband & son moved to US. She stayed with firstborn, Edward. Since Michael was govt. official, their home was “one of comfort & culture, & their children had unusual educational advantages” RA. Children (n.i.o.): Edward needed to stay in Treves to finish his educ. in medicine. Came later Amer. FREDERICK 10 Mar 1833 Sophia m Mr. Joost, their only child m. George Broughton of NY, well known illustrator Josephine

FREDERICK ANTONY SCHROEDER 1833-1899 b.10 Mar 1833, Trier Germany, Prussia, Emig. w/father age 15,1948, began as cigar maker, had factory of 12 workers by 21, Founder, Pres.& partn. Germania Savings Bank 1870s, Comptroller of NY Rep. 1870, Mayor Brooklyn, N.Y 1875 oversaw erec. of Municipal Dept Bldg, opening Ocean Parkway from Prospect Park to Coney Isl, foundation of first elevated railroad, stringing of first wire of Brooklyn Bridge, & estab. of City Charter. 1878 State Senator Third District, restructured relationship Mayor of NY to Governor, d.1 Dec.1899 at No.93 (changed to 123) Clermont Ave.,Brooklyn NY or d. Hotel Margaret, Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, listed in 1888-90 Brooklyn, New York Directories l. on 249 Clinton Ave, Occup “President; tobacco”. See ext. bio & original newspaper article.

Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York Schroeder Memorial, burial ground for: Frederick Schroeder Mary Jane Rusher Michael Schroeder Several of Frederick’s & Mary Jane’s children & some of their spouses. —Photo ©2007 Mary Mitchell

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The Bible page showing the birth of the children of Peggy Anne Moore & Richard Winter including Thomas Winter, 7 Oct 1801 at 1/2 past 12 o’clock in the morning. You can see the shadow from the printing from the next page on the back of the paper below, which reveals that it is the original torn out Bible page. The tear drop indicates the location of Grantham, England, birthplace of Thomas Gerald Winter, where his father was the mayor.

RICHARD WINTER ?-? l. England

Winter

THOMAS GERALD WINTER 1863-1934 b.15 Mar 1863 Finkin St., Grantham, Lincolnshire, Eng,18th child, 5’10 1/2”tall, light hair, blue eyes, light complexion (Naturalization Papers) Edu. Coll of San Malo, France, Emig c1879 to Canada. Member of mounted police; scout for last Indian uprising in British Columbia, Remov. to Minneapolis 1891; owned several grain elevators; listed trade: “grain merchant”; WWI-Capt.125th Regim. Red Cross International Corp.& drove ambulance in France; mem. of Minneapolis Park Board & largely respon. for beautification & improvement of parks there; retired 1926; THOMAS WINTER remov to 1230 N. Arroyo OF GRANTHAM Blvd. Pasadena, CA, where 1801-1866 died. d. 22 Jun 1934 Pasadena, m. w#1 Miss Mander of London 1829. She d.1849. CA; Bur. Lakewood Cemetery, m. Mary Rogers 1851. Mayor Minneapolis, MN with wife & family. Grantham, England, occ. listed on Thomas’ birthcertif “Solicitor”, address at time “Finkin Street, Grantham. d.1866 Grantham, Eng. He was 60 yrs. old when his son, Thomas was born. NOTE: see original news article brought from England by his son Thomas Gerald. Children w/ w#1: Riland, Margaret, Eliza, Noel, Edmond, Henry, Coners Dunlop, Caroline, Albert Wade, Fany Maria, Annie, Marion

PEGGY ANNE MOORE MARY JANE ROGERS 17721821-1902 b. Jan 13, 1772 #2 Wife, l. England l. England Children: Children: Gilbert Douglas 1852-1909 Letitia 15 Mar 1796 Edith Marion 1856-1891 Richard 1797 Kate 1858-1919 WILLIAM MOORE THOMAS 7 Oct 1801 at Mary Emily b.1859 ? -1797 1/2 past 12 o’clock in the Amy Guendolen b.1861 l.England morning THOMAS GERALD b.1863 d.1797 Boston? (prob Mary Anne (Twin) 4 Jun Boston, Lincolnshire, 1803 at 1/2 past 7 morning which isn’t that far from William (Twin) 4 Jun 1803 at Nunnington. This guy made 8 morning a copy of the vital statistics Margaret 1 Jan 1805 page from the Bible of his wife’s ancestor, Wm. Douglas & his dau Eliz. Douglas. That manuscript is among the records brought to the US with Thomas Winter. Title of ms: “Copied from a Bible in the possession of Mr. Moore. Wetheringhouse”, in EMA’s possessions. Notes in margin prob by Thos. Winter.

Paper scrap in Thomas Winter’s envelope of family records showing the births of the Moore children.

Moore

SARAH NOWELL 1737-1797 age 60 d.1 March 1797 Children: Wm. 29 Aug 1755 Molly 20 Feby 1760 Susanna Dunlop 9 Mar 1768 PEGGY ANN 3 Jan 1772 Ann 31 Jul 1773 Alexander 10 Feb 1776

Alice (Ames) & Thomas Winter lived in Minneapolis, Minnisota, until they retired in Pasadena in 1926. They used these two addresses. As of 1912, lived at 418 Groveland Place (yellow house)which Thos. also used on his bookplate. My guess is they lived first on Groveland near the center of town (now surrounded by highrises; b.t.w.-the asking price in Apr 2005 is $765,000) & then moved to 2833 Lake of the Isles Parkway (brick house) a little further from the center of town still residential. The view of the lake was taken from the front door porch. Though a beautiful home, it was the most modest on the Parkway, in some cases by a lot. —EMA

The resting place for the whole family is here at Lakewood Cemetery in the center of Minneapolis, at the end of Herrepin Blvd. The large cross marks the plot with their names carved on both sides. Individually engraved stones mark each grave. They were all cremated.

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ALICE VIVIAN AMES 1865-1944 b.Albany NY 28 Nov 1865; A.B. from Wellesley Col., 1886, MA from Wellesley Col. 1889; m. (same date her parents married) 25 Jun 1890 Boston; Pres. Federation of Women’s Clubs 1920-24, Chair. of Minn. Women’s Council of Defense & Minneapolis Chapter, Red Cross during WWI. Remov w/ husband when his health bad to Pasadena, CA 1926; Dir. of Public & Studio Service Dept. of Motion Picture Producers & Distributors of America, Inc. (“Will Hayes Org”); d. 5 Apr 1944, Cremated Mt. View Crematory, ashes bur w/ husb & family Lakewood Cemetery, Minneapolis, MN, Children: Charles Gilbert Ames 1893Note - Their son was 29 May 1907 (age 14) known as Gibert, not EDITH AMES b.7 Dec Charles, same name as 1895 Thomas’ brother Gilbert Douglas‚see above. Edith (my grandmother) was named after Alice’s sister Edith, & I (Edith Mary Ames Mitchell) was named after her. )

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Paper scrap in Thomas Winter’s envelope of family records showing Sarah’s Death

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Nowell Walking west from Westhill - approaching Skene. Arrow points to the church. Graveyard is to the left of arrow, not visible in photo.

Arrow points to where the records state Lewis was buried. The same record said another rector was buried on top of him.

? NOWELL Church of Skene. The original building where Lewis worked Skene Village. This is it! The mini-mart supposidly stood just to the left of this 19th Cent.building. was just to the right (out of sight). The But since that is where the graves are, it must have been church is at the very end to the left. somewhere else.

This stone slab bears the inscription of a later rector who was buried over Lewis. I borrowed a trowel from my B&B & did some digging. I couldn’t find another horizontal slab, however, I did find the stone seen here, which was probably the support slab for Lewis’ grave. Jim Finnes, the historian, said all graves were horizontal slabs, so it probably wasn’t a headstone.

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The Kirkyard (churchyard) next to the Cathedral Kirk (Church) of St. Machar, Old Aberdeen, Scotland. Church established 1165.

Mary behind the grave marker for William Douglas “Gulielmo Duglassio V.D.M.”, “M. Jo. Dunlop” & “Magister Ludovicus Dunlop V.D.M.”

Douglass Close up of grave plaque. A little water splashed on the stone made it much easier to read.

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JOHN DOUGLAS Position of plaque in the kirkyard.

This link not clear. We know we are descended from Lewis Dunlop through one of his sons. John had no children. Since the Epthalamium was included in the records, I am assuming Alexander is the link.

Close-up of my excavation. LODOVICO “LEWIS” DUNLOP* b. c.1625Minister at Tarland then Rector of the Church of Skene, Scotland; orig. copy of Bible records in EMA’s possessions. ELIZABETH DOUGLAS 1630-1704 b. c1630, m.1 May 1655, Tarland. d.30 Aug 1704, bur. w/ Lewis at Church of Skeine. Children b. at Tarland: William 5 Sept 1656, d.1675 (age 19, bur. next to Grandfather in Aberdeen. ALEXANDER 31 Jul 1658 John 10 Dec 1659, m. Catherine ?, d. 25/27 April 1714, bur. w/ Grandfather in Church WILLIAM DOUGLAS of Aberdeen. Rector of aka GULIELMO the Church of Skene, DUGLASSIO on grave. Scotland. Copy of c1600-1666 inscription from grave b. c.1600 stone in possessions of Professor of Divinity at EMA as of this writing Kings College/Marischal explaining how he College, Old Aberdeen. stepped down as Rector Library bequeathed to because religious changes Marishall College of were against his beliefs. Aberdeen, Scotland, by his Lodovick 4 May 1662 grandson, John Dunlop. Elizabeth 9 Nov 1663, (Photo copy of original list Lodovick & Elizabeth of books in possession of died the same day in 1665 MAM.) Large oil portraits of small pox, Lodovick at of William Douglas, Lewis 11am & Eliz. at 7pm. Dunlop & John Dunlop were in possession of James George 28 Dec 1665 Katherine 20 Jan 20 1668 Douglas Winter of Wayzata, Children b. Skene MN as of 1919 d. 30 Jan James 30 Dec 1669, d.Feb. 1666, Aberdeen, (see tomb 13, 1690 (age 21) bur. marker to inscription.) Aberdeen by Grandfather. Andrew 9 Dec 1671 UNKNOWN Children: ELIZABETH b. ca1630 James (became a minister, student Marischall College)

ANN DUNLOP c1714-1762 (age 48) Apparently died same day as her mother, 15 Jun 1762, prob. Yorkshire.

Something is not right. Ann Dunlop & her father, Alexander have the same birthday. Maybe they are brother & sister? & almost 60 years between birth of two Alexanders? Father & son?

ALEXANDER DUNLOP 1658-c1722/1734 b. 31 Jul 1658 Tarland (it’s about 20 minutes west of Skene). He was a minister, went to Marischal College with his brother John where his grandfather had been Professor of Divinity. On the internet I found from him, “Testament Dative & Inventory” dated 23 June 1734, Alexander Dunlop, Rector of Nunnington in Yorkshire” It refers to Lewis Dunlop (his son) & Aberdeen, hard to read. d. prob. Nunnington, York, Eng.

ALEXANDER DUNLOP* 17??-1762 Rector of Nunnington, York, Eng.

“M:C.” ?-poss 1746 (if this is Conyer’s mother) Possibly, Possibly her last name is Conyers, “Miss Catherine”

MARGARET ? ?-1762 d.in Yorkshire, 15 Jun 1762 same day as her daughter. Children: ALEXANDER 1714

m. Epthalamium states “on his marriage with M:C. Feb 13th—1689.” Children mentioned in will: ALEXANDER 1714 Lewis NOTE: See letter from Conyers Dunlop. If this is Conyer’s mother: he had 2 younger brothers & 2 younger sisters, one older brother & 2 older sisters. Eldest brother Vicar of Bardney in Lincoln. d. 1743. Youngest brother was surgeon in Navy. M:C had two sisters alive at letter: Mrs. Harrison widow near York, Mrs. Metcalf near Ripow[?} w/ a son named Conyers Metcalf in York. Conyers b. 1711. Found a famous clock maker in London about that age. If this is Conyer’s mother, then her father was Rev. Leonard Conyers of Kirby overs’ Carr”, & his wife was a daughter of Revd. ___ Taylor, & granddaughter of Sir Roger Jaques.

This Epithalamium (an ode to a bride & groom) was written by Alexander Dunlop in 1689. This ancient piece of paper was carried to America by Thomas G. Winter, via Canada. It was among the Winter family papers that my dad, Thomas Winter Ames, left behind.—EMAM

Douglas/Dunlop Story Prof. William Douglas (all students & teachers were listed by their Latin names at Marischal College) was a very important figure in mid 1600s in Aberdeen. He is listed as a participant in many meetings. There was also a Sir William Douglas—not to be confused with our ancestor since his ancestry didn’t match. My great grandfather Thomas Gerald Winter brought to America with him an envelope containing documents that show his ancestry from William, from a copy of the pages in William Douglas’ Bible listing marriages & deaths, to mere scraps of paper listing other births or deaths. William’s daughter married Lewis Dunlop. (From a newspaper article in the papers, it appears the Dunlops were from Glasgow.) Lewis was an important Rector in Skene, a parish just west of Aberdeen—a 20 minute car ride today. Oftentimes, I found both Lewis & his father-in-law at the same meeting in Aberdeen discussing church policy. If you take a close look at the people who attended Lewis & Elizabeth’s wedding, you will see many of William’s associates from the college, including the presiding head. The Church of Skene (Kirkton) is still surrounded by farmlands, with a small village with a mini-market & pub, but no post office. For a long time I thought we were related through Lewis & Elizabeth’s son John, who became the Rector of the Church of Skene, then left the church for political reasons. This was the tumultous times of the Bishop Wars in Scotland. William was listed as a Coventer, i.e. he was opposed to the church having Bishops, where King James & his son King Charles wanted to reinstate the bishops. John was apparently part of the old “episcopal” school, those who wanted Bishops. Marischal College would have been the center of things in Aberdeen during the Bishop Wars. Kings College was created to accomodate the other “episcopal” team. Now the two are combined as the University of Aberdeen in Old Aberdeen. William is buried under a huge horizontal brass grave marker in the kirkyard of St. Machar, part of Old Aberdeen & the University of Aberdeen. Though I can’t make the direct link, I think we are related through Lewis & Elizabeth’s son Alexander, who became the Rector of Nunnington in Yorkshire England. Thomas Winter had incorrectly written that Nunnington was in Scotland on his version of the family tree. From the research I have done so far, Nunnington vital records must be obtained directly from Nunnington, not the British Archives. I have an address but haven’t pursued it yet. Alexander did some preaching at the church of Skene, as did his brother John while their father was the Rector. Alexander is often listed as a student with his brother John in the Marischal records. From what I’ve read, people like Alexander left Scotland because of the Bishops Wars. Nunnington isn’t that far over the border. It’s probable he was also on the episcopal team. Latin Inscription on the Douglas Plaque at St. Machar M. Gulielmo Duglassio V.D.M. qui postquam curam pastoralem Ecclesiae de Forgue magna cum pietate per annos 16 tenuisset & postea S.S. Theogogiae Professoris munos in Academia Regia Abredonensi per 22 annos recondita cum eruditione ^ summa laude sustinuisset atque voce vita scriptis deo & ecclesiae militasset vivis excessit 30 die Januarii anno dom 1666. Victurumque in secula nomen extendet hoc exuviarum conditorium quod Magister Ludovicus Dunlop V.D.M. gener posuit M. Jo. Dunlop V.D.M. Rector Ecclesiae de Skene, Vir sanctus coelebs doctus pacificus veritatis primaevae vincex Bibliothecam suam Academiae Marischall et Reifamiliaris relquum amicis et egin legavit. Cum lv aetatis annum summa cum laude attigisset, animam Deo reddidit, Aprilis die xxvii A.D. Mdccxiv. Cincresque sub beatae resurectionis spe cum avo hic condi jussit.

Paper from Thomas Winter records re: Margaret & Ann’s death. Transcription: Vigitate[?] & orate Ternfrus[?] Lugit[?] In memory of Mrs. Margaret, Relict of Mr. Alexander Dunlop Rector of Nunington in Yorkshier [in pencil = “also Ann Nowell her”] daughter died June 15th, 1762 aged 48 years With deepest thoughts, Spectator vew(?) thy fate / Thus Mortals pass to an unmortal State at distance one shied of left, with uncraving[?] sight / Streams the great sorrow from her melting eyes at the Tribunal day I hope to see; / all friends in glory Eternity.

The tear drop marks Nunnington, Yorkshire, England, where Alexander Dunlop moved & became the rector of the parish church. Apparently his son Alexander lived there, too. The tear drop with the “A” marks the Kirkton of Skene. Since there is no post office, Skene doesn’t appear in Google as a village.

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Last page of the had written copy of William Douglas’ Bible written by William Moore (see him on previous page).

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Illustration of the old Marishall College, probably as it was in William Douglas’ day.

The tear drop indicates the location of Skene near Westhill, Aber​deen​ shire,Scotland, the home of the Douglas & Dunlop families, & where at least Lewis is buried. William is buried in Old Aberdeen with his granddaughter Elizabeth & some other grandchildren. His plaque lists Lewis (Lodovico) & John. John may be buried there, too. Skene used to be a large parish. It was divided up & Westhill is the thriving town. Skene, found on Old Skene Road, is just a tiny row of old gray buildings with the church at one end.

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Note: Historians at the NEHGS suggested I research Caroline Dall further in the Dictionary of American Biographies & under American Women.

Ames This is not an ancestral line. Charles Gordon Ames was adopted. It is believed his father’s last name was Moore, but no one is certain. Charles’ mother gave birth to him out of wedlock.

UNKNOWN Poss CHARLES MOORE. Charles Gordon Ames was born out of wedlock & never able to firmly establish the identity of his birth father, even after extensive investigation. One of Charles’ associates in the Unitaraian church, Mrs. Caroline Wells Healey Dall (a famous author at the time, & leader of the women’s rights movement) tried to help. She suspected a sailor who had died at sea, Charles Moore, but was unable to prove it. We don’t know where she got this information. The curator at the Knox Museum stated that Charles’ father was rumored to have been from Warren, ME, the town next door to Thomaston where Lucy lived. Charles met his mother Lucy twice without revealing to her husband who he was. Lucy ackowledged him, & asked him to keep the secret. But even after Lucy’s death, the Thatcher family would not reveal to Charles the identify his father—afraid to tarnish Lucy’s name.

“On mightier wings my soul does spring, to unseen worlds away.”—Charles Gordon Ames

Rev. CHARLES GORDON AMES 1828-1912 b.3 Oct 1828 out of wedlock to Lucy Anna Thatcher in Dorchester MA, adopted about age 3 by THOMAS & LUCY (FOSTER) AMES. (They were paid $300 to take him.) Brought up on Ames farm at Canterbury, NH hearing often he had been born out of sin. Parents Calvinists. Oct 1842 bp Free Will Baptist Church & left farm to work in Baptist printing establishment. Licensed Baptist ministry age 18, 1847-1849 studied Geauga Seminary near Cleveland & in Nov of 1849 ordained @ age 21. m. w#1 Sarah Jane Daniels 28 Mar 1850 Dover, NY, They had child: Charles Wilburforce Ames b.1855. CGA’s first parish=Tamworth Iron Works, NH (now Chocorua?) Sent to St. Anthonys, MN, (now Minneapolis) 1851, 2nd parish St. Anthony Falls, Continued at right.

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Charles Gordon Ames, cont. MN; 4 Jul 1854 Secretary of first mtg of MN Republican Party; first Register of Deeds for Min., Clerk of Court & Editor of Minn. Republican (first Republican newspaper in West, would endorse Lincoln).1859 had religious conversion [believing “man” GOOD not BAD], returned to Boston & joined Unitarian Church, mem of Church of Disciples Boston. Sent to Bloomington, IL for 3 yrs, where got to know Lincoln. Sarah died 1861 of diseased pancreas. Rejected from service Civil War for weak constitution; paid for replacement; sermons to rally troops, ardent support of North; served parishes in Cincinnati, Albany; m. w#2 Julia Frances “Fanny” Baker 1863 Cincinnati. 1865-1872 sent to California by Unit. Ch to survey religious conditions; founded churches in Santa Cruz & San Jose.(No longer exist) 1872 called from CA to Germantown, PA, succeeded Minister Longfellow (bro of poet).1877-80 Editor Christian Register.1880 1st Minister of Spring Garden Unitarian Chu. in Phila. ’89 Minis. Ch of Discip. where he’d begun in Boston but would commmute to Germantown by train. Officiated the wedding of Grace Williamson in Kings Chapel Boston 2 Dec 1896. Still preaching in Philadelphia & Boston at age 82. d.15 April 1912 Boston, MA. Ashes bur Lakewood Cemetery, Minn w/ wife. (See extensive bios, letters & his book “Spiritual Biography” in EMA’s possession. Charles Wilberforce Ames (Alice’s half brother) m. Mary Lesley & had six children: Charles, Margaret, Catharine, Alice, Elizabeth, Theodore. Information for this tree is from Catharine Ames Jackson Wise, Charles’ granddaughter through Elizabeth. Charles & Sara also adopted Serena Marie Huntley, who had been living with them since 1854 & she took the name Ames

This Daguerreotype of Lucy Anna Thatcher Knox is in the Massachusetts Historical Society’s collection, under Ames Collection

Individual plaques. All Winter/Ames/McGinnis relatives buried here were cremated.

Thatcher Oil painting of Lucy in the bedroom of the Knox Museum, Montpelier, Thomaston, ME.

Note re: Fanny - She lived in Barnstable the last 14 yrs. of her life. She probably went into the Boston & stayed at the City Club, which is the letterhead she often uses in the letters I have from her.

Note: I visited “Great Great Aunt Edith” in Sante Fe in 1964 on a trip there with my family. She must have died right after I met her. She was 90 years old & lived in a dark house (Inside was dark. Old furniture everywhere. She made me copy our Mayflower Line from an old family Bible. I finally had that Mayflower line to John Cooke & Sarah Warren proved in 2009. We inherited her old footpeddle Singer sewing machine which Paula Ames now has.—EMA

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JULIA FRANCES BAKER aka “Fanny” 1840-1931 age 91 b.14 Jun 1840 Canandaigua, NY, m. 25 Jun 1863 Hon. EBENEZER Cincinnati, OH. (Silver THATCHER tray from 25th anniversary 1778-1841 age 63 w/ Bob Ames as of 2004 b. 9 Nov 1778 Cambridge, inscribed 1863-1888), MA, d. 1841 Bingham, l.Albany NY, l. near or in MA, “Thatchers were of Boston, MA, belonged Mercer, ME”. Found one to Women’s City Club of Ebenezer Thatcher on Boston, 40 Beacon Street. LUCY ANNA 1840 Census, his age was Listed in The Book of THATCHER either 50 or 59.—EMA Women’s Firsts by Phyllis 1807-1863 b. 29 Sep 1807 Thomaston, Reed for founding Relief Society of Germantown, ME, m. 3 Jun 1845 (after PA, first volunteer org her son Charles was born for woman to visit urban ) ___ Leeson (b. 8 Aug poor & report needy cases. Castleton/Geneva, NY, (Social Workers) Attended d. Mar 25 1863 Reading, Antioch College, Yellow MI). Lucy d. 14 April (11 May—DAR) 1863 Reading, Springs, OH for 1 year. Taught in Cincinnati Ohio Michigan. public schools.1890 first Children: CHARLES out of wedlock. female factory inspector We don’t know what she in MA; d. 21 Aug 1931 Barnstable, MA., ashes named him, or if she named him. No record of bur. Lakewood Cemetery, birth in Dorchester, Ma. Minneapolis LUCY FLUCKER KNOX Children: Harriet Anna Leeson (b. 1776-1851/4 Lillian d. at 6 mo. 19 Oct 1847 Reading, b. 1776 Boston, MBC (DAR ALICE VIVIAN 28 Nov MI), who would have record said Philadelphia, 1865 been Charles’ half sister. but seems historically Theodore b.22 Mar 1870 (3 Harriet m. 11 Nov 1868 impossible, unless her mo. on 1900 census), d. 4 Fletcher C. Rice (b.10 mother went there for Jun 1871 Jan 1844 Marion, NY) & birth), m. c1800, d. 12 Edith Theodora 21 Oct had at least two children. Oct 1854 Montpelier, 1874 still single at 1900 Caroline b 30 Oct 1869 Thomaston, ME. Moved census, m. Raymond & Robert 13 Oct 1874 in to Montepelier after her Crosby; retired 812 Galesburg, IL sister Caroline d.17 Oct Calle Abeyta & 650 1851. (Caroline, m. #1James DAR records of Harriet A. Alameda, Santa Fe, NM Swan & #2 John Holmes, for husband’s health. She Rice. National No. 4100. inherited estate but had no Also records of C. Fowler d. 21 Jun 1964, ashes children.) Children: bur. Lakewood Cem. w/ #4629 & D. Hayes #333616 Hon. Henry Knox mother. [Maybe the C. Fowler is Caroline Flucker m. Caroline?—EMA] Benjamin Smith of Newberg NY Lucy Anna

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Painting of Henry Knox hanging in Montpelier, The General Henry Knox Museum. Image provided & © by the Museum.

WILLIAM KNOX 1712-1762 Family was from the area of Belfast Ireland, Scottish/Irish descent. Wm. was born in St. Eustatia, one of the West Indian Island. Landed Boston 1729; Shipmaster & owner of a wharf & small estate on Sea Street near Summer, which in 1756 he was compelled to relinquish due to misfortune,.1759 returned to St. Eustatia where he died 25 Mar 1762, at age 50, when Henry was 12; leaving Henry as sole support of his mother & younger brother.

Knox

Campbell ROBERT CAMPBELL

Flucker Luist

JAMES FLUCKER West Indian sea captain ELIZABETH LUIST “Large family”

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HENRY KNOX 1750-1806 b. 25 July 1750 Boston, MBC, Scottish-Irish descent. 7th child of 10 sons; @ age 12 his father died, leaving him sole support of his mother; robust & enterprising youth, left grammar school; found work bookstore of Wharton & Bowes, in Cornhill, Boston. Enlist. local militia comp. age 18; 5 Mar 1770 @ Boston massacre, endeavored to restrain Cpt Preston from firing into mob-losing 3rd & 4th fingers of left hand when fouling piece burst; on 21st birthday (1771) opened for himself The London Book-Store=resort of British officers, fair income; mother died few months later; self edu, loved books on military, esp. artillery, slow reader; friends of the Sons of Liberty; became chief artillery officer of the Continental Army & later nation’s 1st US Secretary of War. Later life settled in estate called Montpellier near Thomaston, Knox Co, ME, which was still part of Massachusetts, cattle farming, ship building & brick making. Rep. for Mass. Gen. Assembly. While visiting friend in Union, ME, swallowed chicken bone pierced his intestine, Continued at right.

Henry Knox painting hanging in the Washington Administration, by James Harvy Young, 1873. From the earlier Gilbert Stuart painting considered the best, showing him in uniform, w/ crippled left hand resting upon cannon in Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. At this time he weighed nearly 300 lbs. He had a “pompous, self-complacent walk”, was forceful, often profane, in his language, expressed himself freely on most subjects; leading to hazardous business ventures, though helpful on battlefield. Both generous & hospitable, endearing himself to Greene, Lafayette & Washington.

Birthplace of Henry Knox opposite head of Drake’s wharf on Sea Street, Boston.xlvx

Wadsworth July 1791-17 Oct 1851 (age 60) m#1 James Swan of Dorchester #2 Hon. John Holmes of ME, no issue Augusta Henrietta 16 Sep 1792-23 Apr 1796 (age 4) Marcus Bingham 24 Sep 1794-23 Apr 1796 (age 2) Infant Sep 1797 (stillborn) From American Biographies: Known as “Madam Knox”, almost as corpulent as her husb, known in NY as “the largest couple in city,” a lively & meddlesome, but amiable woman, she had domineering ways, to which Knox obliged to yield; her lofty manners led him occasionally to reprove her. Her tactless remarks & social blunders caused amusement, but her position as hostess & influence w/ Mrs. Washington, were undeniable. Of her 13 children, ten died young— two on same day in 1796. Only 3 survived parents. [And I believe only one has any heirs today.—EMA]

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MARY CAMPBELL LUCY FLUCKER c1718-1771 age 53 1756-1824 (age 68) m. 11 Feb 1735 Boston by b.2 Aug 1756 Boston, Rev. Mr. Morehead, d. 14 Suffock, MBC, m. 16 June Dec 1771 Boston 1774 Boston, Suffolk, MBC, Ten Children, all sons, Henry Her parents were loyalists. was the seventh, only four In spite of separations due reached manhood. Two to his military service, they older brothers went to sea remained a devoted couple & never returned. Were for the rest of his life, & supposidly alive in 1769. carried on an extensive John correspondence. Since the Benjamin couple fled Boston in 1775, HENRY 25 Jul 1750 she remained essentially Ebenezer homeless throughout William 1756: sometime the Revolutionary War. counsel in Dublin, clerk Her parents left with for his bro when Henry the British during their Sec. of War, died insane withdrawal from Boston in 1797 after the success of George Washington’s army on Dorchester Heights, which ironically hinged upon Knox’s cannons. She would never see them again. Liked to gamble. Her husand THOMAS FLUCKER Esq. would warn her not to be too hard on the neighbors 1719-? b. Charlestown, MBC 9 Oct who weren’t as wealthy. 1719, eldest son. Last British Henry left big debt. d. 20 Jun Colonial Secretary of MBC 1824 Thomaston, ME. 13 Children, 10 died in when his dau. married Henry Knox. Flucker was a childhood or infancy, only Tory & of large family. He & three survived their father, his wife fled to Nova Scotia only Lucy left heirs: with Howe on Dorchester LUCY FLUCKER 26 Feb 1776 Boston-12 Oct 1854 Heights & never saw their (age 78) daughter again. Julia 2 July 1779-died infant Henry Jackson 24 May 1780 HANNAH WALDO Boston/Montpelier-9 Oct Children: 1832 Thomaston (age 52) Thomas b.?, grad Harvard Marcus Camillus 10 Dec 1773, Lt. British Army, 1781-autumn 1782 (age 1) prob. never mar. Marcus Camillus 6 Jul 1783Hannah bp 1 Dec 1751 Sep 1791 (age 9) in PA of West Church, Boston, m. sunstroke / died accident & div. James Urquhart, an officer in the British at Boarding School army. m#2 Mr. Horwood. Julia Wadsworth Nov 1784 21 Jan 1798 (age 14) LUCY 2 Aug 1756 she was Caroline 1786-1787 (infant) his second daughter. George Washington 27 Nov 1787-23 Aug 1789 (age 2) George Washington 7 Feb 1790-Dec 1796 (age 6) Caroline Continued at right.

died @ home of infection 3 days later, 25 Oct 1806 Montpelier Estate, near Thomaston, ME, Eulogy pronounced by Hon. Samuel Thatcher. (In many history books, his papers were at NEHGS, but one of their historians said that now the Knox Papers are in the possession of the New York Historical Society.

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Portrait of Brig. Gen. Samuel Waldo by an unknown artist, some thought to be Smibert. Adorns the walls of the Walker Art Gallery in Bowdoin College. “A man of Deac. CORNELIUS commanding presence, tall, WALDOxlvxi stout, & of dark complexion.” c1624 - 1700/1 (age 76) He was a man of excellent b. c1624 England. Came to understanding & great America bef. 1647 Earliest activity. His knowledge of known records of him men & books was much found in Essex County improved by travelling; & Court Records, vol. ii., p. his undeviating integrity, 213:-“At a Court held in his military turn of mind Salem ye 6th of 5th mo. & independent manners, 1647 by adjournment rendered him a highly Cornelius Waldohath left respected commander.” was a fowling peice for further an accomplished gentleman, security of ye 40sh for active & enterprising; had which he stands ingaged enjoyed the advantage of for his brother Thomas foreign travel, having crossed for a fine unto ye contree Brig. Gen. SAMUEL the ocean fifteen times, & & thereupon The Court is WALDO was an elegant military pleased to forbear Leviing ?-23 May 1759 officer, tall & portly., ye sd fine from him before d. 23 May 1759 near “a man who left his Ipswich Court next.” Bangor, ME. “A man of mark wherever he went & Settled in Ipswich. 1660 commanding presence, tall, accomplished more than any had a quarrel with Francis stout & of dark complexion” individual projector of his Issleton. In 1661 owned His “talents, great & times, who relied solely on shares in Plum Island. brilliant..., were marred by private resources & personal Remov. to Chelmsford MBC an overpowering ambition influences & exertion. 1665, listed as a merchant. & avarice which, at times, Licensed by Middlesex made him unscrupulous Court as “an inkeeper 9 in the means he employed May 1690, in consideration JONATHAN WALDO to gain his ends”Acquired ? - c1731 of his not allowing ‘cards, major share in the dice, table, bowles, inepins, Notice of death appeard Muscongus Patent. See left. Boston Gazeteer 31 May billards, or other unlawful Sudden death of apoplexy. 1731. “established himself as Estate divided by children. game’, “esteemed for his piety & remembered by his merchant in Boston where Lucy inherited 1/5th & Gen. he acquired considerable friends as Deacon Waldo. Knox acquired more of it. wealth & reputation for d. 3 Jan 1700/1, at Bur. King’s Chapel benevolence. Adm. to First Burial Ground, Boston. Chelmsford, bur. old Church, Boston, 15 Dec burying-ground there, (Same place as our ancestor, 1695. gravestone still stands. William Dawes.)

Waldo HERE LYES Ye BODY OF Deacon CORNELIUS WALDO AGED 75 YEARS DIED JANR Ye 3d 1700 The Memory of the Just is blessed “Of Cornelius” parentage nothing has been learned, & the only clue we have to it is contained in a letter from his brother-in-law, John Cogswell, written from London to his parents in 1653, which contains the following important sentences:-” I have been with my brother Waldo’s friends; his mother lives in Berwick; his Uncle John is dead; his brother Thomas is in Ireland, & his Uncle Barrow is dead; the rest are in health. I pray be earnest with my sister Waldo to be loving & tender to my three babes, for she knows not how soon hers may be left to the wide world.” From this it is probable that Waldo’s family were living in or near London. It has generally been supposed that the Berwick, where Mrs. Waldo was then living, was Berwick-on-Tweed; but as there are two or three parishes called Berwick within twenty-five miles of Westbury Leigh, co. Wilts, from which place the Cogswells came & which were probably known to them, it is not at all unlikely that one of these parishes is meant, & that the family of Cornelius Waldo lived near the Cogswells in England, & were old acquaintances & friends. The famliarity with which John Cogswell mentions the relatives of Cornelius, & the fact that the first appearance of the latter in America is at Ipswich, where he became the “farmer” of John Cogswell, Sr., whose daughter he afterwards married, is circumstantial evidence of an earlier acquaintance. xlvxi

Angel Gabriel 1635

Note: Chebacco Falls is also where the Burnhams settled. Thos. Burnham also came on the Angel Gabriel.

The “brother Thomas” mentioned in Cornelius’ bio must have returned to England, since he was in Ireland in 1653 when John Cogswell was in London, & there is no evidence that he ever revisited America. He perhaps lived at Strawberry Bank, now Portsmouth, N. H, or at Hampton, while here, since a deed given by “Stephen Bachilor, formerly of Hampton, Norfolk County & now of Strawberry Bank,” to his grandson, John Sambourn of Hampton, dated “ 20th of 2d 1647,” was witnessed by “ Tho Waldo”; & a deed of same date from John Sambourn of Hampton to William Sambourn of Hampton, was witnessed by “ Thomas Waldo.”

HANNAH MASON c.1668-1726 (age 58) b. c1668, m. 28 Nov 1692 by Samuel Sewell, Esq at Boston. Adm. First Church of Boston 29 Feb 1711. Birth & parentage not been learned. d. either 16 May or 3 June 1726. Two conflcting records. Children b. & bp.Boston Jonathan b,?-d, 18 Aug 1694. SAMUEL, bp. 22 Dec 1695. Abigail bp. 16 Aug 1696; d. young. Jonathan 4 June 1697, bp. 6 Jun 1697 Mary bp. 6 Aug 1699, d. young. Cornelius 13 Feb 1700, bp. 16 Feb 1700; d. 4 Nov, bur 6 Nov 1714 Boston. Hannah 23 Jan 1702, bp. 24 Jan 1702. Edward 23 Aug 1704, bp. 26 Aug 1704; d. 4 Sep 1705. Mary 25 Feb 1705, bp. 3 Mar 1705/6; d. 27 Mar 27 1709 Anne 13 Apr 1708, bp. 18 Apr 1708 Josiah 13 Aug 1709, bp. 21 Aug 1709; d. 24 Apr 1710. Abigail 28 Sep (sic) 1711, bp. 23 Sep 1711

LUCY WAINWRIGHT 1704-1741 “of Ipswich” b. 30 Apr 1704 Ipswich, m. intentions pub. 20 Jun 1722 Boston. Record of m. not found; d. 7 Aug 1741 Boston of breast cancer. See her obituary at the end of the article to the right on her husband. Children b. Boston, bp First Church Boston. Samuel 7 May 1723, bp. 12 May LUCY born 23 Jan 1724, bp. 24 Jan Hannah 21 Nov 1726, bp. 4 Dec Francis 13 June 1728, bp. 19 May Sarah bp. 24 Sept. 1732, b. not recorded; prob. d. young. Ralph-Gulston 25 Aug 1735; bp. 31 Aug.

MEMENTO MORI FUGIT HORAH HERE LYES Ye BODY OF MRS HANNAH WALDO WIFE TO MR CORNELIUS WALDO AGED 80 YEARS DIED Ye 25 OF DECEMBER 1704 Ye MEMORY OF Ye JUST IS BLESSED

Jonathan Waldo was the second generation of our Waldo Family in America. He & his brother Cornelius Waldo “of Boston” were among the twenty other partners who joined “Ten Proprietors” who received the ten parceled shares of the Musgongus patent in Maine. The original patent was granted to John Beauchamp of London & Thomas Leverett of Boston, England, in 1630, granted by the Council for New England. Edward Ashley & Captain William Pierce took possession of the patent as their agents in 1630, sailing there on the Lyon, which was owned by Beauchamp’s partner Mr. James Sherley & others [including Beauchamp & Pierce]. They brought laborers & mechanics & established a trading-house on the George’s River, in what is now Thomaston, ME. The original Muscongus grant [Muscongus River is on the east side of Pemaquid Point] was comprised of 1,000 square miles [650,000 acres], taking in the whole of the present county of Knox except the Fox Island, & of Waldo County with the exception of territory now covered by five towns. No price was paid for this tract; it was thought that the settlement of this section would enhance the value of others. Success in the fisheries at Monhegan & in other localities along the coast of Maine, hastened an occupation of the Muscongus grant. This settlement was broken up by King Philip’s war, which terminated in 1678. For forty years the territory lay desolate. On the death of Beauchamp, Leverett became by law possessed of the whole grant, & for several years he assumed its management. Through him the patent descended to his son, Governor John Leverett of Massachusetts, & in 1714 to Gov. Leverett’s grandson, John Leverett, President of Harvard College (the great-grandson of the original patentee). In 1719, John Leverett “entered upon measures for resettling & reorganizing the patent.” He parceled the land into ten shares in common & conveyed them to certain persons thenceforth called the “Ten Proprietors.” These owners admitted twenty other partners, termed the “Twenty Associates” among whom were Cornelius & Jonathan Waldo of Boston. The Twenty Associates afterwards transferred to the Waldos, 100,000 acres. Under their auspices, in 1719-1720, two plantations, which subsequently became the thriving towns of Thomaston & Warren, were commenced. This may be regarded as the first permanent settlement of the patent. In 1726, one David Dunbar, who had obtained an appointment styling him “Surveyor-General of the King’s Woods” became very aggressive. He claimed a reservation of all pine-trees in Maine in diameter over two feet as masts for the British Navy. He drove the lumberers, by force, from their homes, seized their timber & burned their sawmills. Samuel Waldo [Jonathan’s son] was sent to England to procure a revocation of Dunbar’s authority & in the end succeeded. For this, & other valuable services the thirty partners conveyed to Samuel Waldo one-half of the whole patent. In 1744 he distinguished himself at the capture of Louisburg & gained the title of General Brigadier Waldo. After the accession of General Waldo to so large an interest in the patent, added to what he had inherited of his father’s share, about 200,000 acres still belonged to the old proprietors. By 1678 he had obtained all but 100,000 shares. General Waldo offered favorable inducements for European immigration & in 1749 German colonists established the town of Waldoborough. Owing to his influence Fort Powhall, Stockton, was built at a time when no white inhabitant retained a dwelling-place upon the shores of Penobscot River or Belfast Bay. While upon a tour of observation to his portion of his estate, he died suddenly near Bangor, May 23, 1759, at the age of 63 years old. Waldo County, two towns including the name Waldo & Mount Waldo perpetuate his name. The land descended to the general’s four children, Samuel, Francis, Lucy & Hannah. Hannah became the wife of Thomas Flucker, who was the secretary of the Province of Maine. Flucker bought Samuel’s shares. When Lucy died without children, her interest fell to her brothers & sisters. Flucker & Francis Waldo, his wife’s brother, were Tories. During the Revolutionary War they removed to England & their property became forfeited to the State. In 1774, Henry Knox married Thomas Flucker’s daughter Lucy [named after her aunt Lucy Waldo]. Lucy was Thomas & Hannah’s second daughter. When the Revolution ended, General Knox purchased four-fifths of the whole patent; the remainder was the property of his wife. The territory was surveyed, the lines adjusted & in 1792, General Knox took formal possession of his estate, which then contained only nine incorporated towns. He did much to induce immigration. But sometime before his death in 1806, he became involved in pecuniary embarrassments. In 1798 he mortgaged that part of his domain now comprised in Waldo County to General Lincoln & Col. Jackson, who had been his sureties. This mortgage was in 1802 assigned to Messrs. Israel Thorndike, David Sears & William Prescott of Boston & they foreclosed it. They established a land agency in Belfast in 1809. Many of the land titles in Waldo County are derived through these proprietors. General Samuel Waldo From Genealogy of the Waldo Family: A Record of Descendants of Cornelius Waldo of Ipswich, Mass. from 1647 to 1900 Compiled by Waldo Lincoln in 1902

Real Estate in Boston do in Massachusetts outside of Boston do In Connecticut do in Maine Total real estate Personal Estate Grand total Debts due from the estate Total net estate

£4709:17:4 7114:18:4 2672:13:4 41387:10: £55884:19:0 15135:16:6 £71020:14:6 11871:16:0 £59148:18:61

His lands in Massachusetts, outside of Boston, were mostly in Worcester County, his deeds of purchase there dating from 1731 to 1742, but mostly in the years 1733, ’34, & ’35. His heirs sold, between 1760 & 1773, 735 acres in Worcester, 2535 acres in Rutland, 1442 acres in Princeton, 647 acres in Holden, 568 acres in Oakham, & 1203 acres in Hubbardston; a total of 7130 acres in Worcester County. Previous to his death he had, himself, sold much other land in the towns of Worcester, Lancaster & Rutland. His lands in Connecticnt were in the towns of Woodstock, Mansfield & Canterbury. Through his wife, he had inherited a large estate in Ipswich & other towns in Essex County; but these lands were mostly sold before his death. His lands included in the Muscungus Patent were valued in the inventory at one shilling per acre. During the Revolution, all his unsold estate, which included nearly the whole of the Muscungus Patent, was confiscated, owing to the fact that all of the heirs, save his granddaughter, Mrs. Lucy (Flucker) Knox, were royalists & absentees. Gen. Knox afterwards succeeded in recovering a part of the estate for his wife. Mr. Waldo lived in both Boston & Falmouth, now Portland, having a residence in both of those towns. His house in Boston, which he inherited from his father, was situated in Cornhill Street. In person, Gen. Waldo was, says Mr. Williamson, “a man of commanding presence, tall, stout, & of dark complexion.” Through the courtesy of the authorities of Bowdoin College we are able to publish a copy of his portrait, by an unknown artist-by some thought to be Smibert-which adorns the walls of the Walker Art Gallery. By it one can obtain an excellent idea of the personal appearance of the man, but of his character it is more difficult to form an opinion. Williamson says, “He was a man of excellent understanding & great activity. His knowledge of men & books was much improved by travelling; & his undeviating integrity, his military turn of mind & independent manners, rendered him a highly respected commander.” And, again, in speaking of the choice of Pepperell & Waldo for the command at Louisbourg, he says:-“They were chosen for their popular manners, energetic character & great moral worth, rather than any skill in military affairs.” Gov. Fownall says he “was an accomplished gentleman, active & enterprising; had enjoyed the advantage of foreign travel, having crossed the ocean fifteen times, & was an elegant military officer, tall & portly.” In the Jennison Papers, in possession of the American Antiquarian Society, he is said to have been “a man who left his mark wherever he went & accomplished more than any individual projector of his times, who relied solely on private resources & personal influences & exertion. Waldo may be designated a Colonial Nobleman.” His intimacy with Sir William Pepperell, the high social position to which he attained, & his influence with the government both at home & abroad, all indicate a high character. Yet he quarrelled bitterly with his family over the division of his father’s estate, & conducted himself in so unseemly a manner that his brothers-in-law & co-executors, Edward Tyng & Thomas Fayerweather, men of the highest character, in a letter still in existence in the collection of Charles P. Greenough, Esq., of Boston, characterized him in scathing terms as base, untruthful & blasphemous, & as especially unmanly & unkind to his only brother, closing with these words, “but what shall we say when a man is so infatuated to the World that all Natural Affection is laid aside & his whole bent & study is how to gain the World tho on the most dishonourable Terms.” His treatment of Col. Thomas Westbrook, with whom he was associated in some of his enterprises in Maine, was, if Rev. Thomas Smith & others are correct, far from creditable. “Mr. Waldo came to town,” says Smith, in his diary, under date of June, 1743, “with an execution against Col. Westbrook for ten thousand five hundred pounds & charges.” To this Judge Freeman, the compiler of “Smith’s Journal,” whose father administered on Westbrook’s estate, says, in a footnote, “He (Westbrook) died of a broken heart caused by Waldo’s acts who led him into large land speculations & then struck upon him in an unfortunate time; “and Hon. William Goold adds, “Waldo’s execution swept off all Col. Westbrook’s large property, including his splendid seat, which, with all his other lands, were set off to Waldo, & were held by his sons for many years after.”

It would perhaps be unjust to accept Governor Belcher’s accusations too seriously, as they were made during the heat of a violent political quarrel; but, in connection with other testimony, they must have a certain weight, & we are inclined to the belief that Gen. Waldo’s talents, great & brilliant as they undoubtedly were, were marred by an overpowering ambition & avarice which, at times, made him unscrupulous in the means he employed to gain his ends. The intentions of marriage of “Mr. Sam’l Waldo of Boston & Mrs. Lucy Wainwright of Ipswich’ were published at Boston, June 20, 1722.2 No record of their marriage, which probably occurred at Ipswich, has been found. She was daughter of Major Francis & Sarah (Whipple) Wainwright of Ipswich; born Apr. 30, 1704, at Ipswich;3 died Aug. 7, 1741, at Boston.4 The following obituary appeared in the Boston Evening Gazette for Aug. 10, 1741: “On Friday Died of a Cancer in her Breast Mrs. Lucy Waldo late Wife of Mr. Samuel Waldo of this Place, Merchant, now in Europe: the beauties of whose Person when in her Prime of Life, tho’ such as were surpassed by none of her sex were excell’d by those of her Mind: where Religion & Vertue were most happily tempered by the uncommon Sweetness of her natural Disposition for the Exercise of all the Duties of humane Life. The Accomplishments render’d her, in her Maiden State, the Delight of young & old of both Sexes, & in her marriage State, a most Annable Wife, a discreet & affectionate Mother, a good Mistress, an agreeable Companion & a valuable friend. She had during several of her Last Weeks, an hard Conflict with her Distemper, Anndst the Pains of which she possessed herself with an unwearied Patience & Christian Resignation & preserved all the sweetness of Temper & Manners, which was peculiar to her in the full Enjoyment of her Health; nor could her Sickness efface the agreeableness of her Person, till death drew the Yail over it, before which all Beanty must fade, that is not immortal, & set her Spirit free from her perishing earthy Tabernacle, to enjoy that unbodied State of Being, where we are assured, the Righteous rest from their Labors till its frail Partner shall at length put on incorruptible Beauty, & be inseparably reunited to it in Life eternal. Her Funeral will be attended this afternoon.” A funeral sermon, on the occasion of her death, preached by Rev. Charles Chauncy, at the First Church in Boston, was afterwards printed, under the title, “Joy, the duty of Survivors, on the Death of Pious Friends & Relatives.”

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Notwithstanding Mr. Waldo’s activity in connection with his Maine affairs he did not neglect other matters which might serve to advance his interests, for that he was a selfish & ambitious man there can be no doubt. He was an active & influential politician, & perhaps not over particular in the means he took to attain his ends. He was an intimate friend of Sir William Pepperell & of William Shirley, afterwards Governor, apparently a bitter enemy of Governor Jonathan Belcher, & took advantage of his frequent visits to London to undermine the influence of Belcher & to further the appointment of Shirley as his successor, in which he was finally successful. Belcher found no epithets too strong to be applied to Waldo: called him “ wretch,” “disconcerted fool,” “dog,” “violent, malicious fellow,” “haughty blockhead,” etc.; asserted that he was seeking the governorship for himself, & finally accused him of the forgery of a letter which he used against the Governor. His favorite nickname for Waldo was “ Duke Trinkalo,” by which name he referred to him in most of his letters of the period.1 There is no evidence, other than Belcher’s assertion, that Waldo was seeking the governorship for himself; but it is by no means unlikely that he was desirous to be knighted & thus be of equal rank with his friend Pepperell, & was working to that end. Besides being a landed proprietor & politician, Waldo was also a soldier; and, in 1739, when the regiment under Col. William Pepperell was divided, he was put in command of the new or eastern regiment, which position he was holding when the expedition against Louisbourg was undertaken in 1745.2 Of this expedition Sir William Pepperell was made commander-in-chief; & Waldo, retaining his colonelcy of the second Massachusetts regiment, was commissioned brigadier-general, Feb. 7, 1745, & made second in command of the Massachusetts forces, but subordinate to MajorGeneral Roger Wolcott of Connecticut as to the whole expedition.3 Pepperell, in his official report to Gov. Shirley of the capture of Louisbourg, says that “Brigadier Waldo & Dwight4 has behaved themselves worthy of their posts.”5 Waldo was thenceforth known as “ Brigadier Waldo.” In the winter of 1746-7, when Massachusetts raised 1500 men for an expedition against Crown Point, the command was given to Waldo, but an epidemic of small-pox caused the attempt to be abandoned & there is no record of further military service by him. Soon after, in 1749, he made a final trip to England, accompanied by his sons, Francis & Ralph. On this visit he was, with Sir William Pepperell, presented at Court & received from King George II. praise for his military services.”

1900s

In 1759 Governor Pownall made an expedition to Maine for the purpose of establishing a fort on the Penobscot. Waldo, although 63 years old, accompanied him, though not apparently in an official capacity. On May 22, Pownall, with a detachment of his forces, ascended the river, & on the following day landed on the eastern bank, not far above the present site of Bangor, & there, while engaged in determining on a site for the fort, Waldo fell dead of apoplexy. “There is a tradition that his death occurred in this wise: After he had landed with GOT. Fownall, he withdrew himself a few paces from the company and, looking round, exclaimed,’ Here is my bound,’-meaning the limit of the Waldo Patent-and instantly fell dead. . . . This, however, is supposed to be fabulous, since GOT. Fownall makes no mention of it in his journal, & since, also, the Waldo Patent had the Penobscot for its eastern boundary.” The expedition returned to Wassaumkeag Point, at the head of the first falls, on the next day, taking Waldo’s remains with it, & there they were buried, on May 25, with military honors. The Boston Evening Post for June 4, 1759, has the following account of the ceremonies: “His Excellency had the Corps brought down with him to the Fort Point, where it was interred in a Vault built for the Purpose, on Friday, with all the Honours due to so faithful a Servant of the Public, & so good a Common-Wealth’s man as the Brigadier had ever shown himself to be. Upon landing the Corps, it was received by a Guard, & when the Procession began, the Ship King George, fired Half Minute Guns till it arrived at the Place of Interment. “The Procession was led by an officers Guard, next to which the Minister, then the Corps carried by the Bargemen of the King George, & the Pall was supported by the principal Officers; The Governor followed as Chief Mourner, then the Officers of the Troops, & the Master Artificers, employed in building the Fort, two & two: & the whole closed with a Captain’s Guard: before coming to the Ground, the Troops under Arms form’d a Circle. Divine Service was performed, & a Sermon suitable to the Occasion preached by the Rev. Mr. Phillips:2 & upon the Interment of the Corps, the Guards fired three Vollies over the Grave. It is generally supposed that the remains of Gen. Waldo continue to repose in their original burial-place. No itemized funeral charges appear in the settlement of Gen. Waldo’s estate, in the Suffolk Registry of Probate. But among the invaluable Knox manuscripts, is the account of Thomas Fluker, one of the administrators, which contains the following charges: Aug. 3. William Fairfleld, repairing the tomb near Kings Chapel £6. July 9. To Capt. Sander’s people the care in removing the remains of the Brigr from Penobscot: £1. 4 “From this it is evident that Gen. Waldo is buried in King’s Chapel Burial Ground, in Boston. Gen. Waldo died intestate and, July 11, 1759, his sons, Samuel & Francis Waldo of Falmouth, & his sons-in-law, Isaac Winslow of Roxbury & Thomas Flucker of Boston, were appointed administrators on his estate, which was very large. The inventory shows that it consisted of:

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HANNAH COGSWELL “of Ipswich”NEHGS 1624-1704 (age 80) b. 1624 Westbury Leigh Co. Wilts, Eng., Emig. to Amer w/ parents on the Angel Gabriel, sailed from Bristol 23 May 1635 when she was 11 yrs. Angel Gabriel exploded in the hurricane of 15 August. [See Burnham Family who came on same ship.] Date of m. unknown but bef 2 Jan 1651 (“2d day, 11th mo.”) when “John Coggeswell Sr” conveyed to “my sonne in law Cornelius Waldoe all that my dwelling house scituate & being at Chebacco Falls with the appurtenances together w/ all ye land meadow & pasture thereunto belonging contayning by estimation forty & nine acres be it more or less scituate lying & being on ye southeast syde of Chebacco river & bounded upon said river & alsoe upon certaine land of William Story toward the southeast, & upon certaine land of Samuel Younglove toward the southwest with all & singular the appurtenances, in bounds of the town of Ipswich in the shire of Essex, in New England___& unto this grant doth Elizabeth my wife consent.” d. 25 Dec 1704 Charlestown, MBC. where poss. staying with dau. Rebecca after death of husb. Bur. in Phipps street burying ground, where gravestone still standing 12/13 Children: Elizabeth Samuel Francis Lucy Winslow Hannah John Daniel 19 Aug 1657 Cornelius Martha 27 Feb 1658. 2 sons buried Deborah 14 Jan 1661. Rebecca 28 Jan 1662. Judith 12 July 1664. Mary 9 Sep 1665; d. 29 Nov 1665 Chelmsford.

Waldo Family From A History of New England Edited by R. H. Howard & Henry E. Crocker

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Angel Gabriel 1635

JOHN COGSWELL, Sr. 1592-1669 NEHGS bp Westbury Leigh, Wiltshire 2 Apr 1592. “Native of Westbury Leigh, was a well-to-do woolen manufacturer in England, removed to New England w/ wife & 8 children, leaving one, a daughter, in England. Sailed on the Angel Gabriel which was “burst to pieces & cast away off Pemaquid Harbor, 15 Aug 1635. Became the 3rd original settler in that part of Ipswich which is now Essex, Mass.,& prominent in town & church. d. 29 Nov EDWARD COGSWELL, Sr. 1669 Ipswich, MBC.

Cogswell

Thompson

Curious if related to David Thompson of Pisquataqua because of her brotherin-law’s association with the Hamptons & because she came to America via Pemaquid on the Angel Gabriel

White

Dr. SAMUEL THOMPSON Vicar of Westbury Parish

ELIZABETH THOMSON m. 10 Sep 1615 All Saints Chur, Angel Gabriel 1635 Westbury Leigh, Wiltshire. Emig on Angel Rev. WILLIAM Gabriel 1635 voyage, with 3 THOMPSON sons & 4 dau. ?-? Children: 10 b. 1616 & 1633, Vicar of Westbury Parish. all bp Westbury Leigh: He officiated his daughter Elizabeth* bp 15 Sep 1616, Elizabeth’s wedding. Will m. Richard Masterson dated on or about 10 Jul Mary* bp 24 Jul 1618; m. 1623, mentioned w(#2?) Godfrey Armitage Elizabeth. John Cogswell, William* bp Mar 1619/20 m. John White, Clerk; Nichols Susanna Hawkes Phippe executor. Prof. John* bp 25 Jul 1622, London Prerogative Court Returned to Eng Dec 1652 of Canterbury 5 Mar after his wife had died, 1623/4. xlvxvi leaving 3 young children behind in Ipswich to be PHILLIS poss WHITE cared for by his sister, ?-1608 xlvxvi Hannah Cogswell Waldo. His first wife & mother Phillis bp 2 Jul 1624 m. of oldest children, bur 23 Jan 1643/4 John Westbury, Wiltshire 19 Broadhurst. She stayed in Jul 1608. She was sister England. or half-sister of Rev. John HANNAH* bp 6 Apr 1626 White who officiated her granddaughter’s marriage & Esther* bp 2 May 1628 Edward* bp 16 Apr 1630 who pos. married her dau. Alice bp 24 Sep 1631 Children of Wm. Thompson Ruth bp 28 Nov 1633 Abigail c1641, m. Thos. mentioned in his will, not Clark necessarily from Phillis: f five daughers, one married Sarah c1645 m. Simon Tuttle, son of John Tuttle to a Mr. Hounsell, & (see Lawrence & Angel another married to a Mr. Gabriel conneciton) White. William *emig w/ parents on Angel Samuel Gabriel.

Partial manifest of Angel Gabriel constructed from church & court recort records of Boston & Essex County, MBC

Mason Wainwright Whipple

FRANCIS WAINWRIGHT SARAH WHIPPLE

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Baker Note: Baker & Mosely records were researched by Alice Vivian Ames Winter back in the early part of the 20th century for her application to the Daughters of the American Revolution. Notes from the archivist included: “No thorough search made for English Ancestry of Maudesly (Mosely) family, but two theories regarding it. One of which is that its descent is from the Maudesley’s of Maudesley Lancashire County. A modest & useful family of being one of the three of “gentle blood” which were residents of this little town & appear to have held the demesques of Maudesley in the time of Henry I (1100 to 1135) & parted with the ownership in 1744. the other theory is that the descent is from Sir Nicholas Moseley who was of a Laueasluse (sp?) family & was Lord Mayor of London in 1599”

1600s

Rev. THOMAS BAKER* 1638-1710 age 72 b. 1638 prob Norfolk Eng. [If his parents were here in 1638, he must have been born just before they left?] Birth date from tombstone. He lists occ: tailor, 1653 His land is mentioned as adjoining George Kinrick of Newport in deed of latter to Wm.Field of Providence WILLIAM BAKER 1655. 1655 - Ordained c1613-? minister Baptist Ch (age b. cEngland c1613, based 17/18),1656 w/ William on date of 1638, when he Vaughn & others, left First & others were admitted Baptist Church to form to be inhabitants of “Second Baptist Church” Aquidneck Island having of which he was paster for submitted themselves to time. The reason being, the government “that is, “Said persons conceived a or shall be established.” 23 prejudice against psalmody Aug 1638 - He had a lot & against the restraints that granted him, on which he the liberty of prophesying was to build the following was laid under; also against spring at farthest, or else the doctrine of particular his allotment was to be redemption; & against the otherwise disposed of. 13 rite of laying on of hands Jul 1654 (date of the return as a matter of indifferof Roger Williams to Rhode ence.” Wife #1 pos. Sarah, Island from Eng.) Was one Child:Thomas Jr. who is of the witnesses to the deed the ancestor of Mary Baker given by Chief Taccomanan Eddy, who d.1743, 1685 to the Warwick purchasers bought 25 acres in Newport of a tract called RI for £1 which they sold to Pottawomut. 1 Apr 1669 - Smith in 1689. 1666 remov Receipt recorded from said thence to Kings Town & Wm. Baker & Mary his wife, gathered another church to one Abiah Carpenter for -pastor for many years.1710 a yearling heifer. - succeeded by Rich.Sweet. MARY ? ?? Children: THOMAS Mary m. Mark Roberts Jan 1683 Sarah m. P. Robertson Apr 1685

Sources: Jones Hill, Dorchester by David Clapp p.59 Moseley Memorials by E.S. Mosely p. 21 (Thomas), p. 22 Increase. Cutter’s Connecticut Geneologies Vol IV pp. 1086 & 7 1st 3 generations.

MARY/SARAH CARR 1641Wife #2 Children in Newport: Thomas N. Kingston 7 Jan 169?- Had 13 children He pos child of first wife Sarah? BENJAMIN b.1679/6 James 1682 m. Penelope Westcott dau of Amos & Deborah (Stafford) Westcott

For further research, see “Great Migration Begins” for Edmund, John 1630, Charles & William 1633.

BENJAMIN HALL 1648-1698 b. 1648, d. 1698 Portsmouth, RI

Hall

ALICE TRIPP

1800s

1700s

BENJAMIN BAKER, SR. 1679/6-1726 b. 1676 Newport, RI, d. 1726 Kingston, RI 1709 He & others bought 1824 acres land in Narragansett near “Devil’s Hoof ” Died intestate leaving two infant children. Admins of estate guardianship by appointment to brother Thomas. Note: Marriage records burned in fire & name appears Mary Ha. Baker property flanked by both Havens & Hall families & both had Mary or Mercy, Town records list wife as Mercy. (It’s possible that Benjamin was from Thos.’ first wife Sarah, because records of Thomas Jr. b. in N. Kingston list mother as Mary?) MARY HALL/HAVENS (HA __ on marriage records of North Kingston) 1678b. 3 Apr 1678, m. 18 ? 1704/5 in North Kingston, RI by William Hall, Justice. Children: Mary 1706 BENJAMIN b.1724/19 Mercy b.1712 Dinah 1708-1772 John 25 Jan 1716/7

Deac. BENJAMIN BAKER, JR.* 1724-1778 b.1724 or 1719 South Kingston, RI d.1778 Continental Army Rev. War. Remov. family to Hoosick Patent which became District of Hoosic then Hoosick, Rensselaer County NY 1773. Enlisted in Army of the Revolution at 52/54 yrs & died in 1778 from sickness contracted in the same. Two sons, Josiah & Elijah also served. Our records show regiments. MARY SHERMAN 1727-1821 age 94 b.1 Sept 1727 South Kingston RIxliv, m. 16 Sept 1742 by Isaac Shelon, Justice in South Kingston, RI, d. 20 Dec 1821 West Hoosick, NY, Thomas Potter refers to her as his grandaughter in will, confirming step parent connection of her parents. Land transaction in Western NY for a Benjamin Baker 16 Apr 1803 No. 0009024940018 Children prob. all b. Kingston, RI: Mercy 1744 Josiah d.1778 Benjamin 1750-1778 Elijah (Rev) 1754-1778 Thomas Potter 1774-1778 John 1762-1846 Sherman 1763-1849, or 1768 S. Kingston JIRAH 1764-1846 Noah 1771 or1767-1846 Sarah m. Harrington 1752 Mary m. Babcock 1766Lydia m. Scribner 1756 ? m. Hawlry Norman 1759

JIRAH CLARKE BAKER 1764-1846 b. 28 Jan 1764 Richmond, RI.“Jirah was a farmer, removed to Rensselaer Co. NY, Hoosick Township in 1773 “where was justice of the peace for many years [and prob. performed marriages] & filled many of the principal town offices, & was a most estimagle & worthy citizen.”Hyde Gen. Was member of New York Constitutional convention of 1801 of which Daniel D. Thomkins was President & Martin Van Buren was member.” d. 4 Jun 1846 West Hoosick, NY, Bur West Hoosick Cemetery, NY, “Cemetery is on Rt.103 West Hoosick, NY. Stone reads Jirah Baker died 4 June 1846 82y 4m 7d.”xvii m#2 Susan Crandallxlvix MARY MOSELY 1777-1827 (50) b.6 Apr 1777 Belchertown, MA, m.1792 Hoosick, d.3 Nov 1827 Hoosick, Renseallor Co, NY, bur. West Hoosick Cemetery, NY, cemetery on Rt103 in West Hoosick, NYxiii 9 Children b. Hoosick: Lucina 19 Apr 1774-1796 Clark 3 Mar 1796 m. Lucina Welsh Jonathan 6 Nov 1797 m. Sarah Chapman Norman 27 Oct 1799 m. Waity Gibbs Esther 20 Oct 1801 m. John Brown Sidney 14 Sep 1803-1804 Mary 17 May 1805 m. her mother’s first cousin Arunah Moseley, 2nd son of Aurnah Moseley of Lebanon NY INCREASE b.1811/21 Jul 1807Hyde Gen. Hoosick m. Julia Ann Canfield Jirah Eaton 17 Jun 1810 m. Elmira Gifford

Note: some of these are dates of deaths, not births as elsewhere.EMA

JOHN TRIPP MARY PAINE

Manchester, NY b.& m. Julia Ann Canfield Hopewell Center l. Julia Ann Canfield & Canandaigua b. Fanny Baker

A t l an ti c Ocean

New Lebanon, NY d. Mary Hyde Moseley

JULIA ANN CANFIELD 1817/18-1904 age 87 m. 21 Apr 1835 Manchester, Lakewood Cemetery in Minneapolis, Minnisota, where Julia is buried with her daughter Fanny & Fanny’s family. Ontario Co, NY. aged 17, by Rev. Noah Barrell in presence of Almon Melvin & Lydia H. Reed xlvviii She was “of Manchester,”, so likely b. there, housekeeper. 28 Apr 1836 Indenture made between Increase Baker & Julia Ann his wife of Hopewell in county Photo of Julia taken in Philadelphia. of Ontario for land near “Benjamin Hill” They were paid $1220 by Jareb Culver of Victor for the property. 12 Feb 1838. They sold 1152 acres in Hopewell to Mr. James Kimbal, conveyed to Andrew Alexander. 15 Jul 1843 they sold property in Canandaigua for $2800 to Elijah Kerrington of Canandaigua from the William & Mary Bacon subdivision on way to East Bloomfield. d. 11 Jul 1904; ashes bur Lakewood Cemetery, Minneapolis, MN with her daughter, granddaughter & great granddaughter. Children: Clark b.1836,d.1865 William Eugene 15 Sep 1838* FRANCES Albert John

Hoosick, NY d. Mary Sherman Baker bur. Mary Moseley b.& d.Jirah Baker

e Lak ario t n O

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Tripp Paine

INCREASE BAKER 1808-1875/6 Eighth child, b. 21 July 1807 Hoosick, NY, at wedding was listed as “of Penfield” xlvviii :, Monro Co., NY, a farmer, aged 27.d. 10 June 1876 Canadaigua, NY, Account from Baker Family History, Ontario Historical Society says b. 1811, went to Canandaigua, Ontario Co., NY, engaged in milling, d. 1875. I think first account more accurate. There is a listing for an Increase Baker in the 1862 Cincinnati, OH Directory the year before his daughter Fanny married Charles Ames there. “Baker Increase coal measurer, s.e.c. Front & Butler, h. s.e.c. Baum & Observatory Road”—EMA

1900s

Belchertown, MA b. Mary Moseley

Kingston, RI b.& m. Mary Sherman l. William Baker d. Ben Baker Sr. b. Ben Baker Jr.

50

1400s

Sherman Sherman family of German origin. Sherman, Schurman, Schearmaun, Scherman. Part of AngloSaxon emigration, first to Dedham, Essex, Eng, cloth dressers or shearers of cloth, 2 distinct families in New England, One from Wm Sherman who came w/ Pilgrims to Plymouth c 1630 settled Marshfield—of whom know nothing before he came. Other of Dedham settled vicinity of Boston of Henry Sherman. Early records scanty.

Lawrence Info from 1st few gen from NEHGS vol167/Jan2013. Sort of confusing, esp the first bit. __?__ LAWRENCE of Suffolk, Eng. ?? Children: JOHN c1500 (see next) James c1505 of Dedham yeoman, m#1 Joan (?) Thorpe, widow of Wm Thorpe of Dedham, m#2 Barbara?

SUSAN LAWRENCE (one source HILLS since “brother-in-law Gilbert Hills mentioned in both her & her husband’s wills.) (?-1610) m. 14 Jun 1568 in Moze, parish in northeast Essex overlooking he Walton Backwaters (NEHGS Register 1913). Moze parish registers begin 1548, include her father John; her will dated 31 Aug 1610, proved 12 Sep 1610. Children? Phebe bp 1 May 1570, m. Simon Fenn, d.31 Aug 1610 Henry bp 26 Aug 1571, m. Mary ?, bur 7 Feb 1642/3 JOHN LAWRENCE Dedham (c1500-?) SAMUEL bp 11 Jan 1572/3, of Suffolk, Eng. m. Phillip Ward “a famous preacher, a Anne bp 7 Aug 1575, m. #1 reverend grave minister Anthony Whiting m#1 who hd been a preacher Thomas Wilson to those who fleeing from Daniel m#1 Christian religion in Q. Marie’s day Chapman m#2 Sarah [1553-1558] met together Mitchell in woods & secret places, Nathaniel bp 19 Jun 1580, as they could. He was a bur 21 Jun 1580 Dedham gentleman of a great estate Nathaniel bp 11 Jul 1582, & exceeding liberality to m#1 Phebe Anger/ the poor. In thetime of Q. Angier, m#2 Priscilla?, Elizabeth he preached at will 13 Jan 1615/6 Fressingfield. He owned St James Park in South Elham.” John bp 17 Aug 1585, m. Grace Ravens Unclear from records if he had one or two wives. Prob Ezekiel bp 25 Jul 1587; m#1 Rachel Alefounder; m.#2 2 since span bet births of Anne Stephens?, bur 21 children, unless some died. 1653/4 Dedham Edmund m. Judith Anger/ ?? Angier (sister of Phebe Children, prob w#1, order above) unclear: John c1525 of Fressingfield, Mary bp 25/27 Jun 1592, d bef parents wills m#1 Anne Sammes m#2 Alice (Vesey) Gunville m#3 Mary (Coker) (Garrington)(Turner) Pellett Alice c1538 m. Wm Garrard James c1540 in Syleham, Fuffolk 1593 Margaret c1543 m. Ricard Elmye Thomas c1545 m#1 Priscilla Alabaster m#2 Mirable ? Children prob w#2 SUSAN c1548 m. Henry Sherman - see next daughter? c1552 m. Gilbert Hills

SARAH ODDING m. 25 Jul 1633 Roxbury? daughter of Mrs. John Porter (previously Mrs. Odding?) Children: Eber 1634 Roxbury, PC-1706 Sarah 1636 Roxbury, m. Thos Mumford of S. Kingston RI PELEG 5 Feb 1638 Portsmouth RI Mary 1639-d.young Edmond 1641 Samson 1642-1720 William 1643-d.young John 1644-1734 Mary 1645 m. Samuel Wilbor of Swanzey Hannah 1647 m. Wm. Chase of Swanzey Samuel 1648-1717 Benjamin 1650 m. Hannah Mowry Philip 1 Oct 1652 m. Hathaway Philip & Sarah sided w/ Anne Hutchinson during troubles. Went w/ Anne to RI. Met Roger Williams in Providence who advised them to purchase Aquetnet Island from Indians (now Rhode Island). Est. a regular government on 1 Jul 1639, of which Coddington chosen Governor & Philip Sherman Secretary. Then held office in colony & in critical periods, as a man of intelligence, wealth & influence, was frequently consulted by those in authority. The early work still remains in Portsmouth. When left RI, he left Congregation Church & joined Society of Friends (Quakers). Devout but determined man. NEHGs, only assuming wife immigrated w/ Phillip— EMA His brother John was also amazing man.

PELEG SHERMAN 1638-1719 b. 5 Feb 1638 Portsmouth, RI, d. 1719 Portsmouth, RI, Occ: farmer, resided upon the homestead of his native town. (NEHGS 24:67)

THOMAS SHERMAN 1658-1719 b. 8 Aug 1658 Portsmouth, RI, d.bef18 Feb 1719 South Kingstown RI, Occ: farmer in S. Kingstown (NEHGS ?:p271)

ELIZABETH LAWTON 1637-aft1658 b. 10 Sep 1637 Cranfield, Bedford, Eng., m. 25 Jul 1657 Children: THOMAS 8 Aug 1658 William 3 Oct 1659 settled Dartmouth RI Daniel 15 Jun 1662 Mary 11 Dec 1664 Peleg 8 Oct 1666 Elizabeth 25 Nov 1670 Samuel 15 Jul 1672 Eber 20 Oct 1674 John 28 Oct 1676 Benjamin 15 Jul 1677 George 18 Dec 1687

LYDIA WILCOX (MS#44) c1675/80-1756 b. c1680 Tiverton, RI, m. #1 Thomas Sherman 26 Jun 1702 prob Portsmouth, Had illegitimate child with Henry Howland in 1698. d. 1750 Portsmouth, RI Children (1st 2 Portsmouth RI, rest S. Kingstown, Washington Co, RI: JOSIAH 2 Mar 1702/3(MS# 221, NEHGS) Daniel 26 Nov 1706 m. Susannah Earle Ruth c1708 ,m. 1 Feb 1726 Benjamin Potter (her step brother) George 1710 - a minor in 1728 Benjamin 1712 a minor in 1730, m. #2 Mary Sherman, m. #3 Sarah Elizabeth Cook Susannah 1715 a minor in 1735, prob m. Samuel Sheldon

1900s

JOSIAH SHERMAN (MS#221) 1702-1739 b.2 Mar 1702 S.Kingstown, RI, d.1739 Note: Stepbrother of his wife. See below. (MSVolCookepg43) MARY POTTER (poss Martha) 1708-1727/41 b.16 Aug 1708 South Kingston, Washington Co.RI, m.4 Jun 1727 by Rouse Helme in South Kingston, RI, Was step-sister of her husband, Josiah.d.1727 Note: apparently died in chidlbirth or poss d. 1741 Kingstown, RI Child: MARY b.1727 S. Kingston, RI

m. #2 North Kingston THOMAS POTTER 8 Dec 1720 (see him below, 2 of his children by previous marriage married two of Lydia’s children by previous marriage) He d. 1728 (NEHGS 61:271) Child: Martha 1727/21 (MSVol.Cooke,p42)

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LANCELOT WARD “of Wethersfield, Essex, Eng” NEHGS v16,Jan2013 JOAN ?? NEHGS v16,Jan2013 Known Children: Philipp Robert - will 8 Jan 1616/7

1634

Hon. PHILIP SHERMAN 1610-1687 bp.5 Feb 1610/1 Dedham, Eng., d. Mar 1687 Portsmouth, RI, Emigrated to Roxbury, MA in 1634. first Secretary of RI (NEHGS 24:71)

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Lawton

AGNES ? NEHGS 24:63 (?-1580) NEHGS 167:Jan states Henry the younger “son “of the first wife,” no name. Children? HENRY m. Susan Hills, d.1610 Edmond m. #1 Anna Pellett, #2 Anna Clarke Judith John Robert, Dr. bp 6 Feb 1560, m. Anna

SAMUEL SHERMAN (1573-1615) age 42 bp.11 Jan 1572/3 Dedham, Essex, Eng, d. bet 20 Jan 1615/6 & 2 Mar 1615/6 Dedham, Eng 1615. “John Ward of Ipswich, MA, a great-nephew of Phillipp Ward Sherman, left will dated 26 Dec 1652, proved 25 Mar 1656, mentioned 2 yungest sons of cousin Sam’l Sherman of Boston, deceased & cousin Philip Sherman of Rhode island. Sam’l Sherman’s will mentions w. Phlip; sons Henry, Phillipp & Sam’l; dau Mary & Martha. Executors were wife & Mr. John ‘Upcheire’ of Dedham, ‘my brother in law’”(NEHGS Register V167,Jan2013 ) PHILLIPP WARD (c1575-aft1616/7) m. c1598 prob Essex, Eng. d. aft 8 Jan 1616/7 when witnessed will of her brother, Robert Ward. Children Mary bp 2 Oct 1599, d. aft 20 Jan 1615/6, date father’s will Samuel 20 Oct 1601 d. Boston MA. m. Grace ? Henry d. young Henry bp. 20 Oct 1601/25 Jun 1603. m. Mary Fisher Martha bp. 24 Jan 1603/4; d. aft 20 Jan 1615/6, date of father’s will. Sarah bp. 11 Feb 1605/bur 5/6/12 Dec 1612 PHILIP bp. 5 Feb 1610/11687. m. Sarah Odding Susan

1800s

1700s

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Odding

HENRY SHERMAN the younger (c1545-1610) Clothier in Dedham, HENRY SHERMAN Eng. (NEHGS 24:63). (?-1589) (NEHGS167:Jan2013p43) b. of Dedham, Esses, Eng, since bore Suffolk Sherman prob Dedham, Eng, d. bet coat of arms, prob remov. to 21 Aug & 31 Aug 1610(dates of will & widow’s will). Suffolk (NEHGS 24:63)

1600s

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Ward

1500s

51

1400s

Wilcox

1500s

DANIEL WILCOX 1565-1605 age 41 b.1565 So. Elkington, Lincolnshire, Eng., d. 25 Nov 1605 So. Elkington, bur.same. ESABELL “WILCOCK” c1567-aft1606 b.c1567, m. c1585 North Elkington, Lincolnshire, Eng. Children (Thos born No. Elkington, rest except Edward b. So. Elkington): JOHN 8 Aug 1586 Thomas 30 Nov 1589 Anne 1 Mar 1591 Ellen 1 Sep 1594 Alis c1595 Margret 4 Nov 1587 Francis 10 Dec 1`598 Edward bef Feb 1602

Note: Bartholomew and Mary (Golding) Gosnold lived in Bury, St. Edmunds, Suffolk from 1595 to 1606. Gosnold built the first habitation in New England in 1602 and was the founder of Jamestowne in 1607. There must have been discussion of colonizing America in the local pub. EDWARD WILCOXxviii 1603-1638 age 35 b. 26 Oct 1603 & chr Mar 2 1604? Bury, St. Edmunds, Suffolk, Eng, Emig. before1660 d. 13 JOHN WILCOX May 1638 Portsmouth, 1586-1607 age 21? (Kingston) RI, m#1 Mary? b.8 Aug 1586 Bury, St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England, c1628 +1 child:Daniel bef d. Nov 1607, m. c1603 Bury, 1630 in England. m#2 Susannah 1631. St. Edmunds. UNKNOWN

SUSANNAH THOMPSON 1607-aft1632 b.26 Oct 1603 Orby, Lincolnshire, Eng., m.12 May 1631 Orby. Note: No record of death so don’t know if she emigrated. Children: Stephen 26 Sep 1607 Orby DANIEL 4 Mar 1632 John 1637 Mary 1639 Westerly RI

m#2 ROBERT PASTORN c1606

Thompson Jackson

CARYNTHAPHUCH JACKSON b. Orby, m.10 Nov 1606 (the year before Susannah was born.)

Cooke Anne 1623

? le MAHIEU JENNIE ? Canterbury, Eng.

Mayflower 1620

Warren

1900s

DANIEL WILCOX 1632/33-1702 bp.Croft, Lincolnshire, Eng, 4 Mar1632/33, d. Tiverton [now RI] 2 Jul 1702 [NEHGRV.147,P188-91] m#1 Hannah Cooke 1654 maybe Jacob’s daughter +1Child, Sarah Wilcox OR m#1 Elizabeth Cooke ELIZABETH COOKE bef1644-1715 b. Plymouth bef.1644 m. Plymouth 1661 d. Tiverton 6 Dec 1715 (MS#8 VolCooke p.9) Children: Daniel c.1662 Samual c.1664 Stephen ca1665 Mary 1674 Plymouth John ca1670 RI Thomas 1671 Edward 1675 LYDIA b.1675/9 Tiverton, RI (#44 Vol Cooke) Sarah ca1676 Plymouth Susanna1680

HESTER MAHIEU c1581- aft1663 b. prob. France or Eng. m.Leyden, Holland 4 Jul 1603, Emig. on Anne 1623 w/ son Jacob & some or all of daughters. Outlived Francis. Signed only with a mark, a Walloon (Belgian/ French) Protestant Children: JOHN 1607 (MS#2) Child bur 20 May 1608 Elizabeth pb 26 Dec 1611 n.f.v. Jane bef 1613 Jacob c1618 m.Damaris II Hopkins Plym 1646 Hester c1620 Mary bet may 1624 & 22 May 1627

Tear drop indicates Croft, Lincolnshire, England, the possible origin of Daniel Wilcox. He was definitely from Lincoln, just not sure he was from Croft.

SARAH WARREN 1614-1696 b. 1612 prob Eng, d.aft Jul 1696, Emig. Anne 1623 on Anne w/ her mother & four sisters in 1623 when age 9, m. 28 Mar 1634 Plymouth. (MS#4 VolWarren pg5) Children b. prob Plymouth or Dartmouth RI: Sarah b.1639 ELIZABETH bef.1644 #8 Hester 1650 Mary 1651 Mercy 1656

Tear drop indicates Great Amwell, Ware, Hertfordshire, England, the home of Elizabeth Walker.

RICHARD WARREN c1580-1628 b. prob.Hertford, England bef. 1600, “of London”,d.1628 Plymouth. Emig alone on Mayflower 1620.On 1623 list for Div. of Land, & 1627 Div. of Cattle. Died following year. See bio. ((MS#1 Vol18/1,p.1)

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ELIZABETH WALKER c1580-1673 “above 90 yrs” b. c.1580, m. 14 Apr 1610 Great Anne 1623 Amwell, Hertford, d. Plymouth 1673, Emig. Anne 1623 with 5 daughters. Two sons b. immed. after. Children: Mary b.1610 ANNA b.1612 MS#4 SARAH b.1614 (see below) Elizabeth b.c.1616 Abigail b.1618 Nathaniel b.1624 Joseph b.1626

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AUGUSTINE WALKER d. soon after 1613 date of Will: Apr 1613. Will recently found confirming Elizabeth’s sir name.

Mayflower 1620

JOHN COOKE 1607-1695 b.Leyden, Holland, bp Jan/Mar 1607, emig. Mayflower 1620 around age 13, Freeman 1633 List, Many offices held in Plymouth. Ordained 1st FRANCIS COOK(E) Congregational Deacon in c1583-1663, America.Became Baptist “above 80” 1657, expelled from b. aft.1583, England, Plymouth, removed to Member w/ wife of Walloon Dartmouth, RI with Sarah Church 1606/7, Emig. where Yeoman. Last living Mayflower 1620 with his Mayflower Passenger. See son John (age13) extensive details in books Freeman list of 1633, on Plymouth.d.Dartmouth d. Plymouth 7 Jul 1663, MA 1695, (MS#2 VolCooke (MS#1 VolCooke,p.1) p.3)

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Walker

1800s

1700s

AMOS THOMPSON b.Orby, Lincolnshire, Eng

Mayflower 1620

Mahieu

1600s

52

1400s

1500s

1600s

1800s

1700s

1900s

Reference Note: Look up “Descendants of Ichabod Potter” in Rhode Island Genealogical Register. 3 (1981-82): 208.

Note: these people are from Newport, Eng. & named their new home, Newport RI.

ROBERT POTTER Question: What is the link 1577-? to Alice Potter below also b. b. 1577 Pangnell, Newport, Buckinghamshire, Eng. England?

Potter

ELIZABETH MARSHALL bef1588-aft1644 b. Pangnell, Newport, Buckinghamshire, Eng. Children: MARTHA c1600 London, Eng.(see below under T. Hazard) NATHANIEL c1614 Eng. Susannah 1618 George c1619 Robert Elizabeth Marye John Rebeckah William

Marshall

Wilbore THOMAS WILBORE c1482-1564 “of Colchester” Essex, Eng. b. Royston in West Riding, orkshire. d. bet 20 Jan & 22 Jun 1564. Occ: Taylor. Justice of the Peace 1549 Colchester, 1655 one of Head Ward of bailiffs elected for common council. Other details of property in bio. ALICE ? Children b. prob Colhester: John NICHOAS Joan

Or: could be JOHN & MARTHA POTTER, John’s father being Robert b.1554 Manchester, m. to Isobel b.c1556 Manchester, Lanceshire, Eng.? Their son Nathaniel b. 1616 See bio for all their children.

NICHOLAS WILBORE 1504-1583 b. c1505 prob Colchester, d. c1583, will made 27 Nov 1582, proved Braintree, Essex, Eng 16 Sep 1583, in Braintree as of 1548, very well to do, much real estate & property in Braintree, Stisted & Bocking. Wollen draper, owned large hill in Braintree called Skitts Hill used to pasturage of his sheep. He is the great grandfather of Dorothy Wilbore either through Robert or Nicholas who was father of Samuel who was definitely in Portsmouth. See bio. ANN ? ?? Children b. prob Braintree: Thomas Joseph William ROBERT or NICHOLAS Susan Mary Ann (note Ann married __ Baker. One of children is Richard. Portsmouth connection?)

DOROTHY WILBORE/ ANDREWS c1616/17-1696 b.c1617, m.#1 1635/6 Portsmouth Children b.Portsmouth: Nathaniel Sep1637 Abel 1638 ICHABOD 1639 Robert ca1641 m#2 John Albro 1647 5 Children

prob. ROBERT WILBORE b. bef1591 (based on him selling his half of a tenement called Wolnes to his brother William who owned the other half in 1611) of Braintree, Essex, Eng. Mentioned in wills of his father & Uncle William. No list of his children.

MARTHA HAZARD/ HAZZARD 1649/1-aft 1684 b.1 Apr 1649 Portsmouth, m. #1 Ichabod Potter c1663 Portsmouth. d. Kingston, Washington Co, RI sometime after last child was born in 1864. Children w/ Potter b. Portsmouth: THOMAS 1663 Portsmouth John c1665 Robert c1667 Ichabod c1669; m. Margaret Helme Susanah c1671 Sarah c1673 m.#2 Benjamin Mowry c.1676 Roxbury, Suffolk Co, MA. Children w/ Mowry: Benjamin c.1677 Roger c.1679 John c.1681 Joseph c.1684

Link is vague

some say SAMUEL WILBORE, but she’s not mentioned in list of his children in book on Wilbores. Poss. related to his uncle, Robert Wilbore whose wife was Dorothy Wilbore or poss. she missed out in the will because she was a girl.

THOMAS POTTER 1663-poss1728 b. 1663 Portsmouth, RI, m#1. Susannah Tripp 1688, m#2. Lydia Wilcox Sherman 1720, will 23 Jun 1728 prob S.Kingston, RI or d. N. Kingston, RI

Look up: Descedants of Ichabod Potter in Rhode Island; Genealogical Register 3 (1981-82): 208

SUSANNAH TRIPP 1667-c1720 b. 31 Oct 1667 Portsmouth, RI m.20 Jan 1687. Her grandmother was by George Lawton, Asst. also a Potter so these two are probably cousins. She was Thos. w#1 & Lydia, above, was w#2 d.c1720 Children: Susannah 1688 Sarah 1690 Ichabod 1692 John 2 Oct 1697 Nathaniel 15 Apr 1700 Benjamin 19 Jan 1703 (m. his stepsister Ruth Sherman above) Joseph 30 Jan 1706 MARY 16 Aug 1708 m. her stepbrother, Josiah Sherman Thomas 8 Feb 1695/96

Teardrop indicates location of Pagnell Newport, Buckinghamshire, England, from where the Potters supposedly emigrated.

DOROTHY

THOMAS HAZARD/ HAZZARD 1617-1680 b.c1610/17 Lyme Regis, Dorsetshire/Wales, / Nottingham, Eng, d. 1680 So. Kingston, RI, settled Portsmouth, RI

Hazard

Potter

ICHABOD POTTER 1639/40-1676 (age 37) b.Portsmouth, RI 1639 Martha & Ichabod are 1st cousins. Nathaniel & NATHANIEL POTTER Martha Potter below are 1614/16-1644 b. c1614 London, Middlesex sister & bro.They probably traveled from Eng. together., or b. 1616 Pagnell, Newport, Buckinghamshire, b.1639 Portsmouth, Newport Co, RI, d. 1676 Eng.d. 1644 Kingston, RI or Portsmouth, Emig. prob Portsmouth (Note: during King Phillip’s War) 1638/9 Portsmouth

GEORGE POTTER c1584b.c1584 London

MARTHA POTTER 1610/11-1669 b.16 Oct 1611, London Middlesex, Eng. m.c1628 Eng, d.1669 Portsmouth, RI. Children: Elizabeth c1626/1635/6 Hannah 10 Jul 1637 Boston d.1710 Robert c1635-1710 Nathaniel 1640 MARTHA 1641,Portsmth Thomas 1642 Jonathan c1645 George c1646 Nathaniel c1647

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Note: Hannah b. Boston indicates prob. emigrated through Boston. Note: frequency of death 1710 - what happened then?

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MARTHA ? c1585 prob London

Teardrop indicates location of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, where the Potter, Hazard & Tripp families settled.

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1500s

Sources: Tripp Genealogy Descendants James (not ours, we go through son John) son of John Tripp. Compiled by George L. Randall, Vining Press, New Bedford, MA, 1924. Genealogy of the Tripp Family Decended from Isaac Tripp of Warnia RI. Arther D. Dean. F. H. Gerlock & Co, Scranto, PA, 1903.

Tripp

NICHOLAS MOYSES ?-1609 bur 11 Jun 1609, Horkstow

Moyses

RALPH PAINE 1555-1649 b.1555 Eng.

Paine

Anthony Roby

MARY PAINE 1615-1686/7 b. 1615, chr.1611 Eng, m#1 John Tripp ? 1638 Portsmouth, Newport, RI, m#2 Benjamin Engel-Portsmouth 1682, d.&bur.12 Feb 1686/7 Portsmouth Children all Portsmouth: JOHN 20 Nov 1640 Peleg 1642 Joseph 1644 Mary Nov 1646-1716 m. Gershom Wordell Elizabeth 1648 Alice 1650 Isabell 1651 m. Samson Sherman Portsmouth 4 Mar 1674/5 Abiel 1653 James 1656 Sylyanus 1660 Martha 31 Aug 1663

JOHN TRIPP 1640-1719 b.1640 Portsmouth, Newport, RI, bur 20 Nov 1719 Portsmouth SUSANNAH ANTHONY 1644-ca1716 b.1644 Portsmouth, Newport, RI,m. 7 Sep 1665RI VR Portsmouth by William Baulston, Asst., Children all Portsmouth: SUSANNAH 31 Oct 1667 Mary 9 Dec 1670 John 19Jul 1673 m. Mary Hart of Richard Hart 6 Sep 1683 Othniel 5 Jun 1676 Benjamin 21 Feb 1677/78 m. Elizabeth Potter of Nathaniel Potter of Dartmouth 31 Jul 1797 Lot 26 Dec 1684

Location of Horkstow, Burton-Upon-Humber, Lincolnshire, England, the home of John Tripp & Isabel Mosyes

ANTHONY PAINE 1585-1649 b.1585 Norton, Lincolnshire (now Doncaster), Eng. d/bur 6 May 1649 Portsmouth, RI, m#1 Rose Grinnell c1609 (must have died in childbirth because m. Alice next year. m#3 Rose Potter 10 Nov 1643 Portsmouth (Alice’s sister?) same yr as Alice’s death. ALICE POTTER c1587-1643 b.c1587, m.1610, d.1643 Portsmouth (w#2) Children: Mary Infant b.c1613 Prtsmth Alice(Alys) 1622 RI Unknown 1624 Anthony c1625 RI Rebecca 17 Jul 1618 in Reading, Middlesex, MA

FRANCIS ANTHONY 1550-1623 b.16 Apr 1550 London, Middlesex, Eng, d. 26 May 1623 London

JOHN ANTHONY 1585-1655 b.1585 London, Middlesex, Eng, d. 21 Apr 1655, London.

JANE HOWE 1584-1623 b.1554 London, Middlesex, Eng, m. 1584 London d. 1623 London Children: JOHN

MARY ? 1589-1655 b.1589 London, Middlesex, Eng, d.1655, London. Children: JOHN

Wonder if any relation to Lords Howe from Revolution.—EMA

MARTHA b.1584, Eng Children: SUSANNAH

Location of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, where the Potter, Tripp & Anthony families settled. These families were probably Baptists.

JOHN ANTHONY 1607-1675 b.c1607 Hempstead, Middlesex, Eng. d. 28 Jul 1675 Don’t know if emigrated —EMA SUSANNAH POTTER 1620-1675 b.1620, m. 1641 Kingston, RI, d. 1675 Warwickshire, Kent, RI. Children: SUSANNAH

Location of Norton, Doncaster (near Lincolnshire), England, the home of Anthony Paine.

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GEORGE POTTER c1593-ca1606 b.c1593 London, Middlesex, Eng, d.c1644 prob London.

1900s

NEHGS - for further information on John Tripp, Portsmouth: Newport Historical Magazine 4(1883):50-57, Arthur D. Dean; Genealogy of the Tripp Family Descended from Isaac Tripp of Warwick, R.I. & Wilkes Barre,Pa. Scranton, PA, 1903; George L. Randall, Tripp Genealogy: Descendants of James son of John Tripp, New Bedford, 1924; Valentine Research Studio, Tripp Wills, Deeds, & Ways. Washington D. C. 1932.

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Potter

THOMAS HOWE 1522-? b.1522 London, Middlesex, Eng.

ISABEL MOYSES c1598-1654 m. 30 Jul 1609 Horkstow, chr 20 Mar 1584 Horkstow, bur 4 Nov 1654 Horkstow or Whiltshire? Children all b. & bur. Horkstow: JOHN chr 8 Sep 1611 Grace Jan1613-Feb1613 Robert (twin of Grace, same death) Francis 1614 (note m.#3 William Cooke) Elizabeth 1616-1648 Dorothie 1618-1624 Ann 1621-1626 Robert 1625-1652 Bridgett 1629-1629/30

JOHN TRIPP “The Founder” 1610-1677/8 b.6 Feb 1610 Covington, Lincolnshire / Northumberland Co, Eng. Apprentice to Master Randall Holden house carpenter trade, After completed his time he m. Mary. Landed 1630 Newport. One of signers of Compact Portsmouth 30 Apr 1699 & remov. Portsmouth. Sheriff c1635 Portsmouth. Deputy many yrs from 16481672. In will, left land in Dartmouth, Portsmouth, Narraganset & Westerly to each of 11 children & 79 grandchildren.Stated he was a Quaker. d. 12 Feb 1677/8 Portsmouth RI, will proved 28 Dec 1678. See bio.

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1700s

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Howe

JUDITH ROBY c1529-? b.ca1529 London, Middlesex, Eng. Children: FRANCIS

JOHN TRIPP ?-bet1629/48 b. Horkstow, Lincolnshire, Eng, d.bet1629-1648, or b.26 Nov 1581 Broad Chalk, Wiltshire, Eng, m. c1586. See bio.

UNKNOWN 1562-aft 1649 b. 1562 Eng., m. c.1584 Lincolnshire Eng. Children: ANTHONY 1585

Potter FRANCIS ANTHONY 1525-? b.c1525 London, Misslesex, Eng.

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1600s James 1635

Moseley/Modesly/Maudesley Note: If John & Sisily Maudesley came on the James, then he sailed alongside the Angel Gabriel, which held Thos. Burhnam above. See history of Angel Gabriel! Richard Mather was also on the James.

or

1900s

Mary & John 1630

JOHN MODESLY/ MAUDESLEY/MOSELEY bet1615/16-1661 Later name adopted by family about 200 ys ago, Emig. w/ wife Sisily (Cicily) from Ormskirk, Lancashire County England to Mattafran near Dorchester, MA. (4 mi. from Boston) with the first settlers. One account says on Mary & John, w/ Capt. Squebb in 1630. Other acct. says emig. on James w/ Rev. Richard Cotton Mathers Company from Bristol, Eng. in 1635. Support for both theories in The History of Dorchester pub. 1859 by Dorchester Antiquarian & Historical Society. Pref. latter theory. Freeman, 14 Mar 1638/9, Grantee of land in 1656. Will dated –29:8 mo 1661 (see files) “of Dorchester”, “graunted to Cicily, his Relict, in behalfe of her selfe & children.” £240.3s.8d. d.29 Aug 1661 Norwich, New London, CT. m.#2 Elizabeth bef.1638, son Joseph SISILY (CICILY, CECELIA) c1609/18-1661 b.Lancashire Co, Eng,xxiii Will dated 29 Nov 1661 “Sisilly Modsly” “my thirds which fols to mee out of my husbands estate”See rest of will in file. d.Dorchester 3 Dec 1661 Children b. Dorchester: THOMAS 1638 John (Lt. King Phil War) Elizabeth aft1639

James 1635

Lawrence

or

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1700s

Mary & John 1630

THOMAS LAWRENCE c1615-? Hingham-1637 landholder & admit freeman 1638/9, ‘lawful owner of four hundred acred of land.” ELIZABETH BATES 1609/10-1655 b.10 Mar 1609/10 or 1616 or later. d. 5 Nov 1655 Hingham (hard to tell if Elizabeth or Thos. died?) Children: Nicholas b.Hingham Mary Elizabeth

Note: This is the fellow that my great grandmother Alice Vivian Ames Winter used to apply to the DAR. See her application for further details.

THOMAS MAUDESLEY 1638-1706 b. 1638 Dorchester, MAiv Eldest son, will 1 Oct 1706, d. 22 Oct 28/22 1706, bur. Dorchester Cem, MA, MARY COOPER LAWRENCE 1633-1723 b. 8 Apr 1633 Hingham,Plymouth Co/ Dorchester, Suffolk MA, m.28 Oct 1658 Dorchester, MA d.2 April 1723 10 Children b. mostly Dorchester, MBC: John 1659 Mary 31 Dec 1660 INCREASE Apr 1663/23 Mar 1661/2 (born Maudesley, changed to Moseley) Mary c7 Mar 1665 Thomas 12 Mar1667 m. Susan Rigbie Elizabeth 19 Feb 1668/9 Unite 5May1671 soldier 1690 Quebc Ebenezer 4 Sep 1673 John 9 Apr 1676 Nathaniel 28 Oct 1678 Joseph 17 Apr 1682 At least last 9 children b.Dorchester, MA, maybe Mary, too. Spelling of surname appears to change after Increase, rest b. Norwich, New London, CT.—RA

INCREASE MAUDESLEY/ MOSELEY bef1663-1690 Eldest son. b. 23 Mar 1661/62 Dorchester (or Norwich CT), bp April 26,1663. Sergent in Dorchester military Company of 76 under command of Capt John Withington, joined disasterous expedition commanded by Sir William Phippa against Quebeck in 1690. Only 30 returned, he being missing. d. 30 Oct at sinking of ship in St. Lawrence River, Quebec, King Williams War.Ntl. Geo2000Exped. turned up ship. SARAH TRESCOTT of Dorchester b.aft1668, m. 1688/89, bur. Old Indian Cem, Franklin, CT Only son was INCREASE m. John Pabody (Peabody) of Roxford, MA, removed there wi/ Increase (@12 yrs) Children: INCREASE Jr. Jan 1691 m#2 JOHN PEABODY Sarah 1689

(Note from old: Boxford 1701.) INCREASE MOSELEY Jr. 1691-1731 b. Dorchester, bp23/9 Mar 1691 posthumous his father who died in attack on Quebeck in 1690. m. Boxford, MA 4 Sep 1711 (or 4 Jul 1711)CT. Removed w/wife 1711 to Norwich, West Farms (now Franklin), CT. d. 21 Feb 1731 Norwich, MARY HAZEN 1694-aft1731 b.1 Sep 1694, m. 4 Jul 1711 in Boxfordxxvi, Moved along with her parents to Norwich, CT, where mainly resided. Childrenii all of record in Norwich, CT: Increase May 1712 (Chief Justice) Sarah 18 May 1715 Edna 18 Oct 1718 John 7 Apr 1720 Thomas 1 Aug 1722 PEABODY 19 Aug 1724 Mary 15 Feb 1726VR Norwich CT Abisha 5 Aug 1731

JONATHAN MOSELEY 1749-1829 b. 10 Jun 1749 Norwich, New London Co, CT. Occ.Farmer. Served in 14th Regiment of Albany County Militia during Rev. War under Captain Oliver Lyman in 1776, rank of Rev. PEABODY MOSELEY Private. “New York in the Revolution as Colony & 1724-1791 State, pub.1898, pg.235, m. b.19 Aug 1724 Norwich, 17 Jul 1775 Granby, CT. New London Co, CT. Settled at Belchertown, MA Baptist clergyman, res. c1777 (when Mary was Norwich, Mansfield & born), remov. to Hoosick, Granby CT. 1779 he, his NY. Lived in NY three yrs wife & some of children joined Society of Shakers at before peace declared. d. Aug 1829 West Hoosick, New Lebanon, NY, d. Sep Rensselear Co, NY 1791 New Lebanon NY. MARY HYDE ESTHER CLARKE 1732-1816 of Granby b.24 Mar 1732 Norwich, 1757-1820 West Farms (now Franklin), b. 28 Aug 1757 Norwich, CT. Eldest daughter, m. 2 New London, CT m.10 Aug 1748 prob Norwich. Jun 1775/17 Jul 1775Hyde Gen. Survived her husband by Norwich, CT. d. 3 Aug 1820 c25 years, d.1816 New Hoosick, NY Lebanon, NY w/ Shakers. 10 Children: 9 Children: Mary 6 Apr 1777, Eldest JONATHAN 10 Jun 1749 child Norwich, CT Increase 28 Feb 1779 Zerviah “Zinah” 14 Jun Belchertown, m. Rachel 1755 - joined Shakers in Wright New Lebanon, was their ? physician & botanist & died there, d. unm. Jacob 22 Jan 1759 Norwich, m. Keziah Clark Daniel 27 Feb 1761 Norwich, joined Shakers at New Lebanon, d. there unm. Constantine 1763 Mansfield, CT. Joined Shakers & d. unm. Phebe c1765 Granby. Joined Shakers. d. New Lebanon unm. Rebecca 29 Jul 1766 Mansfield, CT. Joined Shakers at New Lebanon, d. there unm. Ebenezer 20 Feb 1769 Mansfield, m. Sarah Wright Arunah 29 Jan 1772 Mansfield, m. #1 Sarah Shapley, #2 widow Deborah Gillespie

Note: Records of Mosely/ Hazen family are in Historical Society of Boxford, MA, but ran out of time to pursue them fully —EMA Location of Orskirk, Lancashire, England, the home of John & Sisily Maudesley.

Location of Dorchester, Massachusetts, where the Moseley family settled & lived until around 1691.

Trescott Location of Norwich, Connecticut, where the Moseley family settled after 1691. Peabody Moseley was born here in 1724. Ester Clark & Mary Hyde were born here also.

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Hazen/ Hassand

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RICHARD HASSAND 1500/10-1544 b. 1500/10 Thorgenbye, Lincolnshire, Eng, d. 1544 Eng. AGNES 1515b. 1515 Eng, m. c.1536 Cadney

EDWARD HAZEN “The Immigrant” 1614-1683 b.14 Dec 1614 Cadney, Lincolnshire, Eng.,In Rowley by 1649 with w#1 Elizabeth who was bur. THOMAS HASSEN 18 Sep 1649 Rowley. m. 1581-1628 age 47 JOHN HASSAND #2 Hannah. Home was on b. 11 Mar 1581 Cadney, 1545-1591 age 46 west side of Central Street, Lincolnshire, Eng., d. c.May owned in 1932 by heirs of b. 1545 Cadney, Lincolnshire, Eng. d/bur 14 1628 Cadney, bur 21 May Calvin R. Titcomb. bur. 22 1628 Cadney Apr 1591 Cadney Jul 1683 Rowley. xxvi ELIZABETH ?

ELIZABETH ?

THOMAS GRANTxxxvii 1601-1643 b/bp 12 Feb 1601 Hessle, Yorkshire, Eng d. 1643 Rowley, Essex, MA To verify, need listing number 71 for Thos & Jane Grant from Early Settlers of Rowleyxxxvii

Grant

Haburne/ Haborne

1600s

HANNAH GRANT 1631-1716 age 85 b.16 Oct 1631 prob. Cottingham, Berkshire, Yorkshire, Eng. chr. same,w#2 of Edward. m. 2 Mar 1650 Rowley, d/bur Feb 1715/6 Haverhill, Middlesex, MA Children Rowley: Hannah 7 mo. 1653; m. Wm. Gibson 1657 John 22 7mo 1655 THOMAS 29 Nov (11 mo.) 1657 Edward 10 Sep 1660 m. Jane Pickard Isabel 21 Jul 1662; m. John Wood Priscilla 25 Nov 1664; m. J. Pearson Ednah 20 Jun 1667 m. Timothy Perkins of Topsfield Richard 6 Aug 1669 Hepsibah 22 Dec 1671 Sarah 22 Aug 1673 m. Wicom Sarah 22 Aug 1673

m#2 Lieut. George Browne of Haverhill 17 JANE HABURNE/ Mar 1683/4 in Haverhill. HABORNE) He adopted her youngest 1602-1695 age 94 son Richard. b/bp 10 Oct 1602 Cottingham, Berkshire, Eng m.21 Sep 1624 Cottingham, d. 16 Feb 1696 Rowley, Essex, MA, bur. same. Must have emigrated with daughter Hannah. Children: HANNAH 16 Oct 1631

Lt THOMAS HAZEN 1657-1735 age 77 xxvi b.29 Jan/Nov 1657 Rowley, Essex, MA . Moved first to Boxford, then Norwich, CT w/ most of family in 1712. d.12 Apr 1735 Norwich. Res. near the “great meadows,” in pasture where an ancient cellar is still visable”, Reyner Pond. Emig to Boxford immed. after marriage, Frman 22 Mar 1689/90, Selectman several times. On committee to bld mtg. house 1698-99,1711 mov. w/ fam to Norwich, CTxxvi, or Rowley, buried in the Rowley cemetery.

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NOTE: Boxford is right next to Rowley, which is an older town. & Topsfield is right next to both of them.

MARY HOWLET 1662/64-1727 age 65 xxvi b.1662 Rowley Essex Co, MA (other acct 1 Sep 1664, Topsfield, Essex Co, MA), m. 1 Jan 1683/4 Rowley, d. 24 Oct 1724/7 xxvi Norwich, New London, CT *Vital records of all obtained. Children b. Rowley: Hannah 10 Oct 1684/5, m. Simonds of Boxford in Boxford Children b. Boxford: Alice 10 Jun 1686 m. Jeremiah Perley of Boxford John 23 Mar 1687/88; m. Mercy Bradstreet Thomas 7 Feb 1688/9 Jacob 5 Dec 1691 MARY 1 Sep 1694 (twin to Lydia below) Lydia 1 Sep 1694 (m. Benjamin Abell of Norwich Hapzibah 22 Mar 1696/7 Ruth 3 Oct 1699 Jeremiah 4 Jul 1701/2 Ednah 25 Dec 1704; m. Joshua Smith of Norwich son 4 Jan 1701/2

Location of Cadney, Lancashire, England, the home of Edward & Hanna Hazen

Location of Rowley, Massachusetts, where the Hazen family settled. Topsfield & Boxford are right next door.

RALPH HABURNE 1569-1630 age 61 b/bp 1 Jan 1569 Cottingham, Yorkshire, Eng, d/bur 17 Apr 1630 Cottingham ANA MAUDE JECKLES/ 1542-1622 JEKYLL b.1542 Cottingham, m. 1571/73-1623 Cottingham, d. 17 Feb 1622 b. 1571/73 Cottingham, m. Cottingham 2 Dec 1593 Cottingham, d/bur 5 May 1623 Cottingham JOHN HABURNE 1538-1597 b 1538 Cottingham, Yorkshire, Eng., d. 16 Oct 1597

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THOMAS HOWLETT c1606-1677 b.ca1606, d.1677 Ipswich, MA

Howlett

French Warren

Riddlesdale

1600s

JACOB FRENCH ?-1615 d.11 Nov 1615 Assington, Suffolk, Engxx SUSAN WARREN c1500-? m. 27 Sep 1578 Bures Saint Mary, Suffolk, Eng. [nehgr 14]

ALICE FRENCH 1610-1666 b.9 Apr 1610 Assington, Suffolk, Eng. d.26 Jun 1666 Topsfield, MBC Children: THOMAS c1637Ipswich Sarah c1639 Ipswich THOMAS FRENCH John c1643 Ipswich 1584-c1639 Mary c1645 b.11 Oct 1584 Bures Saint Samuel c1646 Mary, Suffolk, Eng, d. c1639 William c1650 Ipswich, MA Nathaniel SUSAH RIDDLESDALE 1584-1658 b.20 Apr 1584 Boxford, Eng.m.5 Sep 1608 Assington, Suffolk, d.Aug 1658 Ipswich, MA Children: Thomas 27 Nov 1608 ALICE 9 Apr 1610 Assington Dorcas 31 Jul 1614 Susan 25 Apr 1616 Anne 15 Mar 1617/8 Margaret 12 Mar 1619/20 John 26 May 1622 Mary 6 Jan 1624/25

John French, poss Alice’s brother, listed in History of Ipswich as felt maker & hatter.

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THOMAS HOWLETT, Jr.xix 1637/8-1667 b.1638 Ipswich, Essex Co, MA, 23 Dec 1667 Ipswich, MA, “of Topsfield” as of daughter’s wedding. LYDIA PEABODY c1640-1715 b.30 Aug 1640 Rowley, Essex, MA m. bef 1662, d.30 Apr 1715 Children: MARY Alice m.#2 8 Jul 1667 Thomas Perley (Note: something not right. This is 5 mo before Thomas Howlett’s death.) He was b.1641, son of Allan & Susanna Bokeson Pearly emig. of England. He owned most of the land in vicinity, portion still owned by lineal descent. Influential man, filling most town offices, early rep. to General Court. Freeman 23 May 1677. d. 24 Sep 1709 Boxford village. Children w/ Perley: Thos 1668 m. #1 Sarah Osgood, m.#2 Mrs. Elizabeth Putnam, widow of Joseph Putnam & mother of Gen. Israel Putnam, bringing them to Boxford when Israel was about 8 yrs old) Jacob 1670 Lydia 1672 Mary Hepzibah

Location of Leichester, England, from where the Peabody family emigrated.

Planter 1635

Peabody/ Paybody

Lt. FRANCIS PEBODYE c1612/4-1697/8 b.c1612/4 Eng.Emig to Amer dep. Eng bef. 11 Apr 1635 on the Planter, Nicholas Trarice, Master, (sp. Peboddy), age 21, listed as JOHN PABODY “husbandman”,, arr. Boston ?-c1649 7 Jun 1635, 2 Depositions b.Eng, emig from Leichester in Essex Co. court 24 County to Plymouth bef.7 Jun 1662 & 19 Nov 1690. Mar 1636-7 when listed as Had “planting ground” in Freeman, admitted & sworn Ipswich 1636, , in 1640 res w/ others on list 2 Jan 1637-8 Hampton[see more info Received grant 10 acres 1 in Bio records of EMA] & Jan 1637/8 “on Duxborrow granted Freeman there 18 side, lying betwixt the lands May 1642 in company with of William Tubs on the Hampton men. 1645 shared the north side & those of common lands of Hamptn, Experience Mitchell on the on committee for finishing south side, & from the sea in mtg. house, m#1 Lydia, the west, & from Blew Fish m#2 Mary prob Foster River in the easte.” Another (widow of Daniel Wood) tract granted 2 Nov 1640 of aft 1649+9 more children. 30 acres “with meadow to Frances had at least 14 it” at North River. mem jury children total. Move to which convicted 3 young newly estab. “Toppesfield” Englishment of murder of aft1648; Lt of militia an Indian 4 Sep 1638, & of company, selectman, etc. “the Grand Inquest” at the Note: Topsfield is right by court of 4 Jun 1639. One of Rowley & Boxford, MA. sureties on neighbors bond Children prob by Mary: 4 June 1639. Left will dated Sarah, Hepsibah, Mary, 16 Jul 1649. But no records Ruth, Damaris, Samuel, of his death.(See will in Jacob, Hannah, Nathaniel. records.) Will proven 27 Will dated 7 Aug 1698, d.19 Apr 1667 Feb 1697/8 Topsfield, MBC

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LIDIA ? bef 1625-aft1649 4 Nov 1645 “lidia pebodye” slandered by Eunice Cole-latter ordered to sit in stocks at Hampton & acknowledge her guilt. Children Hampton, MBC LYDIA bp Hampton 30 Aug 1640 Capt. John c1642 Joseph c1644 William c1646 Isaac c1648

Topsfield was named a town 18 Oct 1650

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ISABELL ? ?-? Children: Thomas FRANCES ca1613 William c1619 has a son named John Annis m. c1639 John Rouse (Rowe) of Marshfield who d. 16 Dec 1684; she d. c1688, each left will.

Location of Topsfield, Rowley & Boxford, Massachusetts, where the Howlett & Peabody families settled. Note the proximity to Danvers, which was formerly Salem Village, location of the Witch Hysteria of 1692. Also note proximity to Peabody, Massachusetts, where other members of the family of that name settled.

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1600s WILLIAM HYDE b. Eng c 1636 (determined by age of 1st son), prob came c 1633 w/ Rev. Hooker, first minister of Hartford, sojourned for a while in Newton, MBC, with Hooker then on to Hartford. First appears Hartford CT 1636. Name on monument sign in old cemetery as one of orig. settlers, had lands assigned to him there. Owned lands Hartford as late as 1639. Remov. to Saybrook bef. 1652 when dau. married there., Norwich was settled in 1660. 35 Orig. proprietors of town. See records from Hyde Genealogy for list. Wm. was of considerable importance among settlers, frequently elected one of townsmen/ selectmen. d. 6 Jan 1681. His home lot was devised to his grandson, William Hyde 2nd. Part of it owned by William Mansfield, descendant of latter, & was occupied by him as the site of his dwelling-house in 1859.

Hyde

SAMUEL HYDE c1637-1677 age 40 b. c1637 Hartford, CT, only son, came to Norwich in 1660. Eldest dau. Eliz. born that year was first white child born in Norwich. He was farmer, had lands assigned to him at Norwich West Farms. d. there 1677 at age 40, when children all still minors. John Birchard became guardian.

UNKNOWN Prob came to Amer. w/ husb. Son b. Hartford. No account of her death on Norwich records. Handwritten note in book “See the Bradbury Memorial English records.”

JANE LEE of East Saybrook (now Lyme, m. Jun 1659, date of death not ascertained. Children: Samuel May 1665 Norwich m. Elizabeth Calkins John Dec 1667 Norwich m. Experience Abel William Jan 1670 Norwich m. Anne Bushnell THOMAS July 1672 Norwich m. Mary Backus Jabez May 1677 Norwich m. Elizabeth Bushnell (sister of Wm.’s wife?) THOMAS LEE Elizabeth Aug 1660 Came from Eng 1641 w/ wife Norwich m. Lieut & 3 children to Saybrook. Richard Lord Phebe Jan 1663 Norwich, PHEBE BROWN m. Matthew Griswold Known children Sarah Feb 1675, d. same yr. Thomas Sarah m. John Large of Lyme, settled on Long Island Jane

Lee Brown

Denison

MARY BACKUS b. Nov 1672 Norwich, 2nd daughter, m. Dec 1687, d. 27 Mar 1752 Children: Thomas 29 Jul 1699 Norwich m. Eliz. Huntington JACOB 20 Jan 1703 m. Hannah Kingsbury Abner 12 Sep 1706 Norwich, m#1 Jerusha Huntington m#2 Mehitable Smith Mary 21 Feb 1698 Norwich, m. John Pember Phebe 16 Mar 1702 Norwich m. John French Jane 4 Dec 1704 Norwich, m. John Birchard

1900s

Capt. JACOB HYDE 1703-1782 b.20 Jan 1703 Norwich West Farms (now Franklin) CT, second son, occ: farmer, settled Norwich West Farms. Survived his wife by 2 yrs, d. 22 Jan 1782 Norwich HANNAH KINSBURY 1708/09-1770 b. 13 Mar 1708/09 Haverhill, MBC, eldest daughter m. 11 Oct 1727 Haverhill, d. 16 Mar 1770 Bennington VT while visiting some of her children residing there. See page 39 of Hyde Genealogy for list of her children. There is a copy of it in the California Mayflower Library

Location of Norwich, Connecticut, where Hyde family resided by 1672 when Thomas was born. William originally helped settled Newton, MA, then Hartford with Rev. Thomas Hooker. William was in Harford in 1636.

(Hyde Genealogy p.8)

STEPHEN BACKUS of Norwich, among list of 35 oring proprietors

Backus Gardner Kingsbury Ayers

THOMAS HYDE 1672-1755 b.Jul 1672 Norwich, CT, 4th son, settled at Norwich West Farms (now Franklin) CT, was a farmer, survived his wife, d. 9 April 1755 prob Norwich.

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SARAH GARDNER of Norwich

prob HENRY KINGSBURY c1615-1687 of Rowley, MBC; b. c1615 Eng, remov. Haverill, d. 1 Oct 1687 Haverill

Missing link See Hyde Gen.One generation missing

JOSEPH KINGSBURY of Haverill, MBC 1656LOVE AYERS of Haverhill, MBC

JOHN DENISON of Ipswich

Deac.JOSEPH KINGSBURY 1682-1757 of Norwich b. 22 Jun 1682 Haverill, MBC, remov. to Norwich c 1709, d. 1 Dec 1757 Norwich

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RUTH DENISON c1685 - 1779 age 93 of Norwich b. c1685 Ipswich, m. 5 Feb 1706 at Haverill, remov to Norwich c 1709, d. 6 May 1779 13 children all on Norwich records, though first 2 prob b. Haverill: Ephraim 4 Jan 1707, m. Marth Smith, d 1772 Hannah 13 Mar 1709 m. Jacob Hyde Love 23 Feb 1711 m. Josiah ackus, d.1778 Ruth 24 Feb 1713 m. Joshua Edgerton Joseph 27 Feb 1715 Ebenezer 111 Feb 1717 m. Priscilla Kingsbury Eleazer 7 Feb 1718 Eunice 14 Oct 1722 m. Jabez Backus Daniel 14 Dec 1724 m. Abigail Barlow, c. 1760 Tatistha 7 Oct 1726 Irene & Grace, twins, 6 Mar 1729, both d. young Nathaniel 7 Feb 1731, m. Sarah Hill

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NOAH CLARK 1694-? b.28 Mar 1694, Northhampton, MA

Clark Dickenson

EUNICE DICKINSON 1697-? b.10 Feb 1697 Hatfield, MBC (Hatfield is right next to Northampton , where her husband was born.)

Mary & John 1630

Phelps One source says Tewkesbury Abbey was Catholic, not Anglican.

WILLIAM PHELPS (I) 1560-prob 1611 b. Tewkesbury, bp 4 Aug RICHARD PHELPS 1560.Bailiff (Mayor) of Tewkesbury, Glouchester, Tewkesbury in 1607. d. Eng. prob 1611. JOAN DOROTHY Prerogative Court of ?-1613 Sources: 1) NEHGS Reg Vol 163, 650 Canterbury, administrations Children bp Tewkesbury 1587-1591, p60 “May 10, Abbey Church: Apr 2008. 1588, commission issued to Mary bp 4 Sep 1587 “The Phelps Familu of Joan Phelps, relict of James Mary bp 23 Apr 1588 America & their English phelps, late of Twekesbury, Thomas bp 24 Jun 1590 Ancestors. 2 Vol 1899. deceased, to administer Dorothy bp 29 Feb 1595 2 Phelps immigrants to the good & chattels of said WILLIAM 28 Feb 1599, bp windsor: George and deceased.” 19 Aug 1599 William; apparently not Children bp Tewkesbury James bp 14 Jul 1601 related. Abbey Church: Elizabeth bp 9 May 1603 2) “Phelps, Brockett WILLIAM, bp 4 Aug 1560 George b. c1606 & Perkins & Allied Thomas bp 10 Aug 1563 Families,” manuscript, George bp 5 Sep 1566 Vol 1, Compiled by Lorna Alice bp 14 Dec 1572; m. Phelps Oberly, 1948 John Hope 21 Jun 1595 (found in DAR Library. Edward bp 10 May 1578 Scans of pages in digital Keneline bp 16 Oct 1580 records of MAM under Richard bp 16 Oct 1583 Phelps.) Well sourced. Oberly obtained records of Robert bp 18 Jul 1584 Tewksbury Abbey Church, A Nicholas, brother of Wm, Gloucestershire, Eng. also mentioned 31 May 1613 in commission reports, tho not listed in baptisms. JAMES PHELPS c1520 Supposed to be bro of Francis Phylyppe of Nether Tyne, Staffordshire, Eng.

WILLIAM PHELPS (II) / FELPS 1599-1672 b. 28 Feb 1599 Tewkesbury; bp.19 Aug 1599 Tewkebury Abbey, Eng, Res w/ wife & 1st child Richard for while Tewkesbury. Remov south, poss Somerset or Dorset. Emig on Mary & John from Plymouth to Nantasket, MBC 1630 w/ wife, 6 children & bro George (then unm). Settled Dorchester. Active. Made Freeman w/ in 1st 6 mo. Mass. Colonial Cont to right... ELIZABETH MARSHALL c1601-1635, Mary & John age 34 1630 b.1601 Eng. d. Dorchester 1635, 5 yrs after arrival. Children b. Eng, mostly Tewkesbury: Richard bp 26 Dec 1619 William c1620; w#1 Isabel Wilson; w#2 Sarah Pinney Sarah c1623; m. Wm Wade Samuel c1625; m. Sarah Griswold NATHANIEL c1627 Joseph c1629 on Mary & John List, age 1 - See following Joseph c 1629; w#1 Hannah Newton, w#2 Mary Salmon; d. 1684 ae 55 [The Oberly ms follows this line.]

Mary & John 1630

NATHANIEL PHELPS c1627-1702 b.1625 Eng., Emig to America on Mary & John when age 5, d.27 May 1702 Northampton, MBC ELIZABETH COPLEY bef1635-1712 (over 77) “widow” b. Eng. m.17 Sep 1650 Windsor, CT, d. 6 Dec 1712 Northampton, MA Children Windsor: Mary 21 Jun 1651 NATHANIEL 2 Jun 1653 Abigail 5 Apr 1655 Children Northampton: William 22Jun 1657 Thomas 20 May 1661 Mercy 16 May 1662

NATHANIEL PHELPS 1653-1719 age 66 b.2 Jun 1653 Windsor, CT, d.19 Jun 1719 Windsor, CT GRACE MARTIN 1656-1727 b.1656 England, m.11 Aug 1676, d. 2 Aug 1727 Northampton Note: Family lore that Grace was left by a lover in England who married another. She then came alone to America to join relatives at Hadley. Arriving in Boston without funds, she was nearly sold for her passage money until friends helped her. Children: Grace 11 Nov 1676 Northampton Nathaniel 1 Nov 1678 SAMUEL 18 Dec 1680 Northampton Lydia 17 Jan 1683 Grace 10 Nov 1685 Elizabeth 19 Feb 1688 Abigail 3 Nov 1690 Nathaniel 13 Feb 1692 Sarah 8 May 1695 Northampton Timothy 1697

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1700s

SAMUEL PHELPS 1680-1745 age 65 b. Dec 1689 Northampton, MA, d. 9 Dec 1745 Northampton MARY EDWARDS 1685-aft1724 b.1685 Northampton, MBC, m. 12 Dec 1706 Northampton, MBC, Children: Samuel 22 Sep 1707 Nrth Benjamin 13 Jul 1709 Mary 17 Dec 1711 Jonathan 20 Feb 1714 Martha 9 Sep 1717 RACHEL 21 Aug 1724 Northampton

1900s

NOAH CLARK c1725-1812/16 b.c1725, or 26 Feb 1718 Northhampton, MA d. 1816, or 20 Dec 1789 Granby, MA Note: Grandy is right by Beckett where Eames/Ames family lived for a hundred years. RACHEL PHELPS of Granby, Mass. 1724- b. 21 Aug 1724, in Granby Children b. Hadley, MA: Rachel 14 Dec 1745 Gad 27 Feb 1747 Amaziah 26 Mar 1749 Rufus 22 Feb 1751 Eunice 27 Apr 1753 Rhoda 20 Aug 1755 ESTHER 28 Aug 1757 Kezia 11 May 1759 Noah 27 Apr 1762

William Phelps (II) cont. Records: 19 Oct 1630 applied & made Freeman. 9 Nov 1630 jury of 12 to try Walter Palmer (1st jury trial in NE colony); 27 Sep 1631 Constable; 9 May 1632 Committee for raising of public stock; 4 Mar 1634 committee to lay bounds betw Boston & Roxbury; 1634 General Court. 14 May 1634 committee of 4 to view ground at Mt Wollaston Mary & John, 400 tons for enlargement of Boston. 4 Mar 1634 appt by Gen Crt to help arrange bounds with burden, commanded Dorchester & Boston. 5 May 1635 mem Gen Crt from Dorchester held in Newton, now by Captain Squeb, 140 Charleston. 8 Jul 1635 committee to set bounds between Wessaguscus & Barecove. passengers. company Dorchester records include: 23 Apr 1633 property definition. 1634-lost wife. Same year organized into a church & selected minister day before w/ Rev Mr. Warham, planned moved to settle Windsor, CT. Family & brother George, too. Prob Wm didn’t go until 1635. Wm part of governing commission for 1st year. First sailing. Sailed from Old Plymouth 20 Mar 1630, arr court 26 Apr 1636, Mr. Roger Ludlow presided. Six commissioners. 21 Feb 1637, the Nantasket, now Hull, MBC name of the plantation changed from Dorchester to Windsor. Wm presided 1 May 1637 when “It is ordered that there shall be an offensive war against the Pequots.” By 1638, 30 May 1630. Company determined Windsor was a Connecticut Colony & out of jurisdiction of MBC. People of settled Dorchester, first Windsor, Wethersfield & Hartford met 2 Jan 1639 Hartford & adopted constitution for town in MBC to organize Connecticut Colony. Recog no authority save God superior to that delegated by people. town government, then Drawn up by Mr. Roger Ludlow, presiding magistrate, w/ assistance from 5 magistrates many moved to Windsor, of whom Mr. Wm Phelps was one. Magistrate: 1639-1643, 1645-1649 & 1656-1662. CT. Was Deputy 1651. Participated in 9 Sep 1642 mtg re “make sale of Rhode Island, & to take first act.” 4 Jan 1638 w/ Messrs Haynes, Ludlow & Hopkins - committee to settle Plymouth Colony’s claimes claim to lands on Conn River. [much more service in Oberly MS]. According to Trumbull’s Church had been organized in Plymouth, Eng in 1630. First pastors Rev Warham & Rev History of Connecticut, “In Mr. Maverick called, accepted & installed by Rev John White in the New Hospital, Old these early days the title Plymouth, Eng. Remained as organization thru settlement of Dorchester then Windsor. of Mister or Mr. was only Mr. Wm Phelp’s residence in Windsor, 1636, on road running northerly & later cont to given to elderly persons Poquonoc & a short distance north of mill in Mill-river Valley, & in line, first w/ Rev of distinction, while all Mr. Warham, Joseph Newbury, John Dorchester, then Mr. Wm Phelps. He w/ many military titles were always neighbors drowned out in flood of 1639. Soon Phelps moved farther north, settled south used.” of Highlands now known on map as Phelps Meadows, road running e & w, on e side of road to Poquonock. Many records of purchases & sales of property. Dr. Stiles, “He was one of the most prominent & highly respected men in the colony, An excellent, pios & upright man in his public & private life, & was truly a pillar in Church & State.” Married w#2 Mary Dover 1638, an English lady, also passengers on Mary & John & member of Dorchester & Windsor chur. They had 2 children. (Timothy b. Windsor 1 Sep 1639 m. Mary Griswold [note his half brother m. Sarah Griswold]; & Mary b. Windsor 2 Mar 1644; m. Thos Barber.W#2 Mary d. 27 Nov 1675.) Wm. liv NE 42 yrs, 36 in Windsor. d. 14 July 1672, bur 15 Jul 1672 in his 73rd year, honored & respected by all.

Location of Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, England, from where the Phelps family emigrated.

Location of Braintree, England, from where the Martin, Marsh & Baldwin families emigrated. Many Braintree people came to England on the Lyon in 1632 with Rev. Thomas Hooker’s party that eventually went to Hartford, Ct. Hooker had joined them in 1633 on the Griffin.

Marshall Copley

JOHN COPLEY JANE

Griswold

THOMAS COPLEY 1597-1634 ELIZABETH GRISWOLD 1597-

EDWARD GRISWOLD

Location of Northampton, Massachusetts, where the Phelps family had settled by time of Nathaniel’s death in 1702. Originally William settled his family in Dorchester with the other passengers of the Mary & John after their arrival in 1630.

UNKNOWN WILLIAM MARTIN 1624-1672 b. 1624 Braintree, Essex, Eng.

Martin

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GRACE BALDWIN c1592-? c1592 Braintree, Eng

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JOHN MARSH c1586-? c1586 Braintree, Essex Eng.

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Marsh Baldwin

LYDIA MARSH c1626b.c1626 Braintree, Essex, Eng.

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1500s

Edwards

1600s

WILLIAM BALDWIN SARAH ?

Baldwin Harding

RALPH SHELDON 1605-1651 b.1605 Ashford,Bakewell Parish, Derby, Eng., d.1651 prob. at sea BARBARA STONE 1607b.1607/9 Ashwell, Bakewell, Derby, Eng.m. 27 Apr 1629 Ashford Children b. Ashford, Eng: ISAAC 1627/30 John 8May1628 Samuel c1632 Solomon c1634

JOSEPH WOODFORD Eng.

Blott Selbee

ROBERT BLOTT 1587(Eng) 1665

SARAH BALDWIN 1621-? b. 1621 Bucks, Eng. prob. descendenat of William Baldwin above & thus cousin to Grace Martin. Note: Maybe she was the one who helped Grace out?

THANKFUL SHELDON 1663-1741 One of twins. Her sister was Ruth Sheldon. Children: MARY 1685 Northampton, MBC

SUSAN SELBEE 1591(Eng)-1660

THOMAS WOODFORD 1610-1667 Eng. MARY BLOTT 1613-1656 Eng.

ISAAC SHELDON 1627/29/30-1708 1st. gen.“of Ashford, Bakewell, Derby, Eng.d.27Jul1708, bur.Bridge St.Cem, Northampton, MBC m#2 Mehitabel Gunn 1686 Northhampton, child Capt.Jonathan 29 May 1687,Northhampton MARY WOODFORD 1635-1684 b.24 Jan 1635/6 prob. Roxbury, Norfolk, MBC, m. 17 Apr 1652/3 Windsor, Hartfold Co, CT 13 Children b. Windsor, South Kingston, Wash, RI, &Northhampton Hamps,MBC: Mary 4 Sep 1654-W Isaac 4 Sep 1656-W John 8 Dec 1658-SK Thos 6 agu 1661-W Ruth 27 Aug 1663-probW THANKFUL 27 Aug1663-W Mindwell 24 Feb1664/5-W Joseph 1 Feb 1667/8-W Hannah 21 Jun 1670-W Ebenezer 4 Aug 1672-W Samuel 9 Nov 1675-W Ebenezer 1 Mar 1676/7-W Mercy 4 Feb 1683/4-NH

*MATTHEW CANFIELD/CAMFIELD/ CAMPFIELD bef. 1627 - c1673 Res. New Haven Connecticut c1639 if not before. Emig.from England. Latter part of life remov. w/ family to Norwalk, CT, then to Newardk N.J. where d. c1673 *SARAH TREAT Emig. from England. m. prob. before 1643. Children: Samuel: m. Elizabeth Willoughby bef 1670 & had: Ebenezer, Abigail, Matthew, Samuel & Jedediah. Records of rest of generations not in evidence Ebenezer m. Bethia ? of Joseph & Rachel ?, had children: Joseph who res. Newark NJ, m. Rachel Daglish, child: Benjamin, Abiel, Ebenezer, Bethya/ Bethia & Rachel Mary Matthew m. Deborah ?, child: John & others. John m. Deborah, child: John, Elizabeth, Matthew, Ruth & Hannah Hannah Rachel Jonathan(d. prob. w/o issue)

Tear drop indicates Ashford, Bakewell Parish, Derbyshire, England, from where the Woodford & Sheldon families emigrated

Missing Link

WILLIAM CANFIELD (Name obtained from Baker Family History, by Seaver) of Belchertown, MA.

Tear drop indicates Belchertown, in the middle of Massachusetts, where the Canfield’s lived.

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*Ref: The Name & Family of Canfield compiled by the Media Research Bureau, Washington DC in Baker files. Other Canfield immigrants include: Thos. Canfield, prob. brother of Matthew res. Milford CT bef. 1646. m. Phebe Crane children listed. John Canfield/Cam(p)field res. Portsmouth RI bef 1655. One son John. No more known Nathaniel Canfield res. Norwalk CT bef 1670, prob bro of Matthew & Thos.

ALEXANDER EDWARDS 1626-1690 b. 1626 poss.Wales, d.1690 BENJAMIN EDWARDS 1652-1690 Northampton, MBC

ISABELLE HARDING

Woodford

*Coat of Arms described by Burke, Encyclopaedia of Heraldry 1844: Arms “Argent, fretty sable” or “Argent, a fret engrailed sable.”

1900s

RICHARD BALDWIN b. Bucks, Eng.

Sheldon Stone

Canfield/Camfield

1800s

1700s

60

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1600s

and Sea Venture 1609

Hopkins

Mayflower 1620

Master STEPHEN HOPKINS 1582-1644 age 62 MS#1 b.c1582, prob. Hursley, Hampshire, Eng. Sailed on Sea Venture to Jamestown, Virginia 1609 as a minister’s clerk, ship wrecked in “Isle of Devils” w/ new governor Thos. Gates in Bermudas. 150 survivors stranded for 9 months (see Mayflower Quarterly), nearly executed for mutiny. Pardoned, then helped build 2 boats, Deliverance & Patience, arr. Jamestown 24 May 1610, prob heard that his wife had died, leaving his children alone, returned England c1611. m.#2 Elizabeth Fisher 19 Feb 1618, St. Mary mallon, Whitechapel, London,res. just outside London Wall on High Road entring city at Aldgate, vicinity Heneage House near Carver, Badford, Cushman, & Southworth of Mayflower,,Emig Plymouth w/ Eliz & children on Mayflower 1620 Children w/ Elizabeth: Damaris 1618-1627 Oceanus (b.1620 aboard Mayflower) d. bef 22 May 1627 rest b. Plymouth: Caleb-1623-bef1651 =seaman, d. off Barbedos Deborah c1626 Damaris 1628 m. Jacob Cooke Ruth c1644- 30 Nov 1644 unm. Elizabeth c1632 Asst to Gov. 1636, late 1630s opened Ordinary, fight w/ Tisdale 1636, fined for allow drinking & shuffleboard play on Sabbath 1637, 1638 twice fined for markups on looking glasses, 1638 issue w/ maidservant. Granted 7 Aug 1638 first grant to settle Yarmouth on Cape. He & Giles had first house there. Giles father-in-law Gabriel Whelden obtained second grant. see below.Will among JOHN HOPKINS papers. d. bet 6 June & 17 Jul ?-bef 1600 1644 Plymouth. of St. Thomas Parish, (MS Vol.6, pg5) Winchester, England ELIZABETH ? ?-? lived in St. Thomas Parish, Winchester, Eng. at time of lay subsidy tax (E19/1374/415a), paid 4s on lands valued at 20s. Her husband had died a few months before taxed.

MARY ? bef.1695-1610/3 m. bef May 1604, onwed shop & counter, so prob shop keeper, died while her husband was away in America. bur. 9 May 1613 Hursley, Hampshire, Eng, records indicated she was “widow” since Stephen disappeared. 3 children bp Hursley: Elizabeth 1604-aft1613 & bef.1620 (prob. died before Mayflower) CONSTANCE bp.1606 (see below) GILES bp.30 Jan 1607/8 (MS #3)

Orig. gravestone in Cove Buriel Ground in Eastham MA would have been of wood & discintegrated. This one was replaced by ancestors.

Mayflower 1620

GILES/GYLES HOPKINS c1607-1688, age 81 bp. 30 Jan 1607/8 Hursley, Hampshire, Eng, emig 1620 w/ father, stepmother & siblings on Mayflower. 1637 volunteered w/Caleb & father to go against Pequot Indians.1638/9 remov. to Yarmouth where prob. met wife. Occupied 1st house trad. built by English on Cape Code below Sandwich.1642/3 took Oath Fidelity, Yarmouth surveyor of highways, bef.1660 moved to Eastham where surveyor, guardian of bro. William, d.1688/89 Eastham, bur. Cove Burial Grd, Eastham, wil 19 Jan 1682, codicil 5 Mar 1688/9, son Stephen executor, (MS#3 Vol.6pg.8) CATHERINE/KATHERN/CATORNE WHELDEN/WHILDEN c1616/7-aft 1688 bp Bashford, Nottinghamshire 6 Mar 1617/17; m. 6/9 Oct 1639 Plymouth, d. aft. Mar 1688 Eastham 10 Children: Mary b.Nov 1640 #16 STEPHEN Sep 1642 John 1643-d.@ 3mo. Abigail Oct 1644 m. Wm.Merrick Deborah June 1648 Caleb Jan 1650/1 Ruth June 1653 poss m.Samuel Mayo? Joshua June 1657 William 9 Jan 1660 Elizabeth Nov 1664 -d. @ 1 mo.

MR. STEPHEN HOPKINS 1642-1718 age 76 #16 MS b.Sep 1642 Yarmouth d.10 Oct 1718 Harwich (Note: 3 of his sons married 3 daus. of John & Hannah Mayo below— Judah, Nathaniel, & Joseph) m. #2 Bethia Linnell Atkins 1701 Eastham Children to Bethia: Benjamin b. 1690 Mary 1692 (MS Vol.6 Pg.22) MARY MERRICK 1650-1694/1701 age 44 or 51 b.4 Nov 1650 Eastham m. 23 May1667 Eastham, d.bet1694-1701 Eastham Children: Elizabeth Jun 1668 Stephen 15 Jul 1670 Ruth Nov 1674 Judah 16 Jan 1677/78 Samuel Mar 1682 Nathaniel Mar 1684 #79 JOSEPH 1688

1800s

1700s PRINCE HOPKINS III 1810-1882 age 72 b. 2 Sept 1810 New Sharon, ME or poss. N. Vassalboro, ME , 1860 census ME “Inn Holder”; 1864 map shows P. Hopkins Hotel, d. 25 Apr 1882 N.Vassalboro,ME. North Vassalboro was one of six “post hamlets” to Vassalboro. Prince Hopkins was part owner of hardware store & a tannery there from at least 1850 to 1856. The hardware store was on a corner called Getchell’s Corner, because originally, a John Gretchell, Sr. from Cape Cod kept the 1st store in Vassalboro there. It was on roads east of the Yates Mansion, present corner store [1892]; It was built by Joseph R. Abbott, who sold goods in half of the store while Daniel Marshall ran a store in the other half. Then a Samuel Foster took over Abbott’s half, & Prince Hopkins & Jacob Southwick took over Marshall’s half, calling their company, “Southwick & Hopkins”. Southwick also owned property with paint factory, ashery? & plaster mill lower downstream east PRINCE HOPKINS, Jr. side of river. Large tannery 1768-1854 age 86 @ mouth built 1816. Prince b.23 Sep 1768 Harwich Hopkins became partner bp.4 Dec 1768, d.4 Jul 1854 with Southwick for tannery, New Sharon, ME, as well as store which was JOSEPH HOPKINS 1771 Executor for one store before 1850. #79 MS Joseph Hopkins, Occ: Business was successful 1688-1771 84yrs whaler (prob when in until Southwick’s death in b.1688 Eastham Harwich) then became 1855. It was a business for d.24 Apr 1771 Harwich PRENCE (PRINCE) farmer (prob when moved the whole state. [the largest bur. Old. Cem. Brewster. aft. HOPKINS I #389 MS to ME), Remov. to Maine business in the whole state?] 1723 was passed choice of 1731-1800 age 69 in 1804; left Harwich after the tannery was the “life pew in Brewster Church by b. 7 Jul 1731 Harwich both parents were dead of N. Vassalboro”. One father-in-law, John Mayo. m. 1753 Harwich after Revolutionary war. The acre covered with shed for Adm. to ch. 1724, serv. on d. betw. 24 Apr & 22 Oct cape was probably pilphered his tanning bark brought committees in 1763, 1765, 1800 Harwich badly during the war & not from the surrounding. resident of “Third Remove” Pub.conf. & receiv. & school dist. of Harwich owned covenant of Brewster much left there. Son Joshua Prince Hopins erected a was 7, son Myrick was 4, 1726. Church 1754 Phebe was 1 when moved. Continued at left. (MS vol.6 pg.87) (MS Vol.6 pg.365) MARY MAYO 1694-1771 age 77 b.26 Oct 1694 Hingham, m. 17 Apr 1712 Harwich, d. 15 Jan 1771 Harwich 3 mo. after husband, bur. w/ husband. 10 children: Isaac 10 Mar 1712/13 Joseph 10 May 1715 Mary 15 Dec 1716 Jonathan 12 Feb1719/20 Hannah 22 Oct 1722 (m.cousin) Nathan 22 Aug 1726d.@11mo Prence (Prince in church rec) 8 Jul 1729-d.shortly after #389 PRENCE 7Jul 1731 Nathan 6 Oct 1733 Elizabeth 6 Jun 1738 Solomon 31 May 1739

PATIENCE SNOW 1732-1823 age 91 b. 12 Apr 1732 Harwich m. 15 Feb 1753 Harwich d. 1 Nov 1823 Brewster (Northern part of Harwich became Brewster in 1800) Children: Seth 6 Jul 1753 Thomas 10 Jun 1755 Sarah 27 Mar 1759 Joseph (twin)27Jan1760 Nathaniel (twin)27Jan 1760 Thankful bef 23 Feb1766 PRINCE bp.23 Sep 1768 Nathaniel 25 Dec1770 Elizabeth

Red tear drop indicates location of Hursley, Hampshire, England where Stephen Hopkins baptized his children, including Giles.

PHOEBE MORSE 1773-1856 **b.10 Sep 1773, “of Chatham”/more prob. b. 10 Sep 1819 Chatham. 2 entries for m. banns (1) 25 Oct 1792 Chatham per V.R. of Chatham MA & (2) 30 Oct 1793 Harwich pre V.R. Harwich, MA, m. 28 Nov 1792 according to Mayflower Families, Edward Doty, Vol11, part 1, pg 164 (prob not New Sharon, ME as orig, thought since; Sally b. Brewster/Harwich 1794. d. 2 May 1856 New Sharon, Franklin Co, ME. Children b.Brewsterxxxiv: Sally 23 Nov 1794-1869 Joshua 28 Jan1797-1879 Myrick 24 Jan 1979-1891 Phebe 27 Jun 1803-1878 Eliza 5 Apr 1806 Tombstone in North Lewis 7 May 1808 in Albion Vassalboro, ME, for Prince & PRINCE 2 Sep 1810 N. Olive Hopkins Vassalboro OLIVE HAWES **Info from Fay Enke, 1809-1896 age 87/90 w#2 of Prynce Hopkins; b. 22 Nov 1808, Vassalboro, confirmed by NEHGR, ME, m. 13, Feb 1834 N. other date from Mayflower Vassalboro, ME, d. 17 Oct Society, Hopkins books) 1896 N. Vassalboro, ME Note: The northern part Children: of Harwich, MA, became CHARLES HARRIS 14 Apr Brewster, MA, in 1800. 1836/7 Clara Azuba 1839-1840 The name Morse is an old Orrick Hawes 1842-1863 name in Sandwich, MA, (There was an Orrick possibly family was from Hawes who was the Town there. Sandwich is two Clerk of Vassalboro in towns west of Brewster on 1883. But if this guy the Cape. One of the rooms didn’t reach adulthood, it at the Inn at Sandwich must have been his uncle, Center is named the Rev. cousin or nephew.) Morse Room. The name Prince Leroy 1845-1849 of the road, Tupper, is George Prince 1853-1924 same as name of her her (Note: Only Charles & great-grandmother, Tupper, George lived to adulthood. Chatham is at elbow Cape George apparently didn’t Cod. get married. Records state no issue.)

1900s

CHARLES HARRIS HOPKINS 1837-1913 age 77 b.14 April 1837 N. Vassel-boro, ME; mov San Fran 1861 “by sea”xlvv;worked at mint where met Sam Booth, future father-in-law; returned ME to m. childhood sweethrt w#1 Sep 1865 Lizzie A. Cullis; she d. childbirth 1867; m. 30 Feb 1868 w#2 Ruth Merritt Mathews Singer prob. SF, dau of Isaac Merritt Singer & his mistress Mary McGonigal from Ireland. Ruth 1 of her 5 children w/ him. 1870 census=Ruth age 16 & siblings liv San Francisco; C.H purch’ed seat on S.F. Stock & Bond Exchange 1874; Isaac Singer d.1875; left Ruth $21,975. C.H. sold seat on Exchange 1876. Ruth d. giving birth to son1878. Son alsodied.One record indicates C.H. became “major stock holder of Singer Manufacturing Company”; m.#3 Mary Booth 27 Aug 1883 SF; built “El Nido” at 1900 Garden Street, Santa Barbara, CA c1900; res there (missed 1906 SF quake) until 2 mo. bef. death, when went to SF for cure & d. in Fairmont Hotel 11 Nov 1913. Estate paid “record” inheritance tax for the State of Calif. bur. Santa Barbara Cemetery.Tombstone reads: “Peacefully he rests at last.”

Prince Hopkins of 1810 cont. building for built a house of entertainment when “influx PRINCE/PRYNS/PRYNCE of strangers was so great”. Mr. Wilson first kept an inn CHARLES HOPKINS IV there, succeeded by Prince 1885-1970 age 85 b.Oakland, CA, 5 Mar 1885, Hopkins who kept it an BS Yale ’04/5, MA London inn until Nov 1880. George Hawes (Charles Hopkins’ School of Economics, uncle) ran the hardware 1911 Patent for Flying store. Machine, Ph.D. Univ. of London in Psychology, 1920 [Confusing sequence.] The hardware store passed to remov. to Eng, introduced the wollen mills people to Eileen thru her bro. sometime after Southwick’s Harold, m.#1 Eileen. div death. They organized a 5 yrs later. m.#2 Fay Enke company in 1856, which Dec 1933, 1939 Remov. to was an important industry USA. Res:1375 Oak Knoll of North Vassalboro, but Ave (Hungtington Hotel “cottage”) in Pasadena, CA, [if I understood correctly] wasn’t as important as the with Fay, taught classes at L Pomona college, d. 15 Aug tannery. 1970 Santa Barbara massive heart attack, bur Santa Barbara Cemetery next to parents.Gravemarker states: Prince C. Hopkins, March 5, 1885 - August 16, 1970. Children w/ #2 Fay: Jennifer Fay 1938 David Stephen Prince 15 Sep 1943

Prince Charles Hopkins

See his autobiography Both Hands Before the Fire, & my biography The Search for My Abandoned Grandmother, & the Journal for Santa Barbara Historical Society Novicas.

Isabel Mary Booth Hopkins

Note:The name “Prince” came from our ancestor Thomas Prence, one of the six governors of Plymouth Colony’s during the colony’s existence from 1620-1690. He was a very important man during his time. Both of Prince’s grandfathers were named Prince. See bio of Thos Prence below.

Charles Harris Hopkins (With my book in front of his gravestone!)

MARY ISABEL BOOTH “May” “Queen May” 1861-1955 age 93 b.7 Aug 1861, Maynard/ Boston, MA. #3 wife of Charles Hopkins, m. 27 Aug 1883 San Francisco, CA, at age 22, She was 52 when Chas. died & never remarried. d. 12 Feb 1955 Santa Barbara, CA, bur. Santa Barbara Cemetery, CA, with husband & son. Built 2151 Laguna St. in San Fran. with her family 1926 aft. death of husb. Sometime after 1945 moved permanently to El Nido in Santa Barbara where died. Then son, Prynce divided lot of El Nido into three lots, sold El Nido & built house for himself at 1920 Garden, the middle of the three lots. “Staunch Catholic, belonged to St. Mary’s, but not sure old or new.” —granddaughter Eileen. Her mother had been Irish, hence Catholicism. Charles probably raised Calvanist or Quaker in Maine. Child: PRINCE CHARLES 5 Mar 1885

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Scroll down to MERRICK

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EILEEN MAUDE THOMAS 1892-1933 age 41 or 42 b. 9 Feb 1892 17, 17 Merridale Lane, Wolverhampton, Staffs, Engl; grew up @ 17 Tettenhall Ln (prob same str., name changed) Wolverhamton; 2nd eldest of 8; m.#1 Prince Hopkins 12 Jan 1921 St. Peter’s Church parish, St. Peter’s Cranley Gardens, London Eng; res. 11 Park Lane, London, then Earl’s Court Rd when dau.Eileen born. Prince ran Chateau de Burres outside Paris, France at time, a school for boys; remov to St. Anges Court, London 1930, div. Prynce 1930, m.#2 Vernon Armitage 1931 res. 62 Ellsworthy Road until time of death; d. 18 Nov 1933 @ Seafield Hospital, 29 Racecourse Rd., Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland of long condition of heart disease, while on vacation w/ sister Peggy Thomas Abbott. Occ: Poet & mother. Children: Peter b.8 Apr 1923, Broarstairs, Kent, Eng; foster child. Adopted by Prince & w#2 Fay Hopkins 1934 in Amer, then taken back to Eng EILEEN MARY 10 Nov 1925

Santa Barbara Cemetery, looking west. Stone in front is tombstone for Charles Harris Hopkins. Two plaques beyond are for Prince & his mother Mary. Now Eileen Mary Hopkins Ames is buried with her father and grandparents.

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Weldon

Sources: 1) NEHGS Vol 1:164, Oct 2011, p295 2) Letter from Tracy Dodds of Nottinghamshire Family History 3) University of Nottingham manuscript

1500s

? WHELDEN

Pos. HENRY WHELDEN

UNKNOWN Children b. poss Basford, Notts: Thomas d.1610; church warden 1596 Helen d 1616 Jane d. 1627 HENRY

UNKNOWN Children b. poss Basford, Notts: GABRIEL

GABRIEL WHELDEN/ WHILDEN ?-1653/4 xlvxv “blacksmith” of Basford, Nottingham, Eng; all children bp at St. Leodegarius Ch in Basford, Nottingham1, 3 mi. from Arnold, also in Sherwood Forest; church warden Basford 1628. His uncle, Thomas, a blacksmith, held post before. When Thos. died, he bequeathed a lot to Gabriel. G. left Eng. some time after Oct 1637, date deed from John Hutchinson. Prob emig to Amer 1638 aft 20 Apr when lease from Earl of Clare to Robert Wright of property in Basford, Eng, who was “currently in the occupation of Gabriell Wheld[en].” Apparently went to Amer because of religious persecution. Liv early in Dedham. Dau Katherine wrote letter to Mr. John Shanva/Sharat/ Sharratt2 of Nottingham, 29 Jun 1639 to report death of her sister, Martha of Dedham, who had drowned 12 days bef. Thus Gabriel liv. in Dedham before Yarmouth. Given the second grant after Stephen Hopkins to settle Yarmouth 3 Sep 1638; 6 Oct 1639 was “lycensed to dwell at Mattacheese (Massachusetts) w/ the consent of the committees of the place & have land there;” Many references to him in history of Yarmouth, but no wife named; after 1639 m. #2 Margaret?, prob MBC; 17 Jun 1641 sold his third of a skiff to 2 men for 15 shillings; 1642 & 1647 Surveyer of Highways for Yarmouth; bef. 14 May 1648 sold property in Yarmouth to Edward Sturgis; prob then moved to Malden, MBC; 21 Oct 1653 he & youngest son John sold to Wm Crofts of Lynn, property in Arnold, Nottingham, Eng. Referred to “of Yarmouth and Malden.” Died in Malden bet 11 Bef 1653 (date of will) & 4 Apr 1654 (date of probate).

1600s

1800s

1700s

Prob Jane ? (No proof she was mother of children.) Children: Thomas bp 1 Feb 1611/2, bur 15 Apr 1614 Kathren [stet] bp 6 Mar 1616/7 Henry bp 21 Feb 1618/9 Mary bp 23 De 1621 Martha bp 23 Dec 1621, same day as her sister. Maybe twins (Mary & Martha!) John bp 5 Nov 1623 Ruth bp 5 Jul 1621 John 4 Oct 1630

1900s

Red tear drop indicates location of Bashford/Basford, Nottingham, England from where Gabriel Wheldon emigrated.

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Scroll down to MERRICK

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1600s prob. James 1636

Rev. JOHN MERRICK (MYRICK) Rev. WILLIAM MERRICK 1579c1546 St. David, Pembroke, b.1579 St. David’s, Pembrokeshire, Wales Wales

Merrick Roland

Historians not sure whether Wm. Merrick was m. to Margaret Roand or Janet Ferch Ienen.

Ferch/ Verch Ienen Bishop Young

JOHN AP IENEN ca1520 b.c1520 Anglsy, Wales

MARGARET ROLAND Children: JOHN Edmund Renault Alice Sionedd Owain William Richard Agnes Roland

DOROTHY BISHOP Children: WILLIAM Thomas James John III

or JANET FERCH/VERCH IENEN b. c.1510/50, Anglsy, Wales, m. c.1570 Wales, d. St. David, Pembrokeshire, Wales Children: JOHN 1579

1800s

1700s

The Freeman, Hopkins, Merrick, Snow, Brewster, Tracy, Lee & Mayo Family Connections

Ensign WILLIAM MERRICK, Sr.* bet1600&03-c1686 b/ betw 1600-3, perhaps Wales, prob. oldest of four brothers to reach Charlestown in the return of James in spring of 1636 prob as a servant, “called himself old servant.” Certain was here before Oct 1636; Bradford’s Plymouth records 1636 accused of trespassing, served 6 yrs in Colonial Militia under Capt. Standish as lieutenant & ensign. Granted 5 acres “next to the glade on Powder Point 6 Oct 1636, which became Duxbury;, granted another 20 acres on “Greenes harbor Payth” Oct 1637, married late (1642) prob because had to fulfill duties of servant, “working out his freedom” Other dates on juries, etc. for Duxbury1645 became proprietor of extended grant given to all residents of Duxbury, which later became Bridgewater, but he didn’t move there, poss. 1647 remov to Eastham, proposed for freeman on 5 Jun 1651 & 4 May 1652, took oath of fidelity 1657, but not granted until 1 Jun 1658; 1662 among 21 man granted 50 “acrees apeece” in Saconnet Necke when purchased from Indians (now Little Compton RI) tho most owners, like Wm’s didn’t live there but remained in Duxbury where proprietor’s mtgs held. Owned lot #12; will dated 3 Dec 1688 but changed to 1686, inventory 17 Feb 1688/9, oath 6 Mar 1688/9

Until right after the Revolutionary War, when Prince & Phoebe (Morse) Hopkins moved to Maine, everyone on the Hopkins family tree lived on Cape Cod in the towns which are now Sandwich, Yarmouth, Eastham, Brewster, Orleans & Harwich. Stephen & Giles Hopkins were the first to obtain a grant to settle Yarmouth. Gabriel Wheldon was the second. Edmund Freeman was the leader of the first group of nine which settled Sandwich. Thomas Prence led the first group of settlers in Eastham. In 1653 Nathanial Snow, William Merrick & John Mayo were on the jury to lay out the main road. (now 6A). On 16 Oct 1700, the Harwich/Brewster Church was established in the town of Harwich, Plymouth Colony, right after it & the Bay Colony were required by Parliament to become one colony under the Bay’s Charter (1690). Many people in Plymouth were not happy about this merge since the religious beliefs of the Pilgrim Separatists & Puritans were different. Thomas Freeman (brother of our ancestor John, Jr.) was chosen Deacon of the church & became active in public life. John Jr. continued to be inactive publicly. John’s second wife (not our ancestor) was admitted to this church 14 Sep 1701.

REBECCA TRACY c1622-1688 b.c1625 prob Plymouth, m.1642/45 Barnstable, PBC 10 Children 1st 3rd or 4th b. Duxbury but all recorded in Eastham: WILLIAM 15 Sep 1643 eldest (m#1 Abigail Hopkins d/o Giles & m#2 Elizabeth, widow of Jabez Snow) See below page 46 Stephen 12 May 1646, m.#1 Mery Bangs, #2 Anna Wilbore Rebecca 28 Jul 1648 MARY 4 Nov. 1650 Ruth 15 May 1652 m. Edmund Freeman SARAH 1 Aug 1654 m. John Freeman John 16 Jan 1657 Isaac 6 Jan 1660/61 Joseph 1 Jun 1662 m. #1 Eliz.Hawes m#2 Elizabeth (Freeman) Remick d/o Samuel Freeman Benjamin 1 Feb 1664 m.#1 Rebecca Doane, #2 Rachel (?) Lincoln.

Harwich was under the jurisdiction of Eastham until its incorporation on 14 Sep 1694, so births in Harwich were recorded in Eastham. On 18 May 1711, Harwich land was purchased from the Indians by a group including one of the Snows. In 1722, the church had to be rebuilt. In 1725 Brewster Church boys were prohibited from “playing & profaning the Sabbath.” The north portion of Harwich, at the elbow of the Cape, became Brewster, Mass. in 1803. At that time Brewster became the North Parish of First Church. John Freeman, Jr., & William Merrick, Jr. were two of the eight who established this church. John Mayo, another.

Notes: She was born the year her father came to America on the Anne. Maybe she came with her mother later? Data obtained from Mayflower Society & Dawes Gates book.

MATTHEW BISHOP ELIZABETH YOUNG

When I was visiting Becket, MA, where the Ames family lived from 1777 to 1850, I found many gravestones with the names Brewster, Snow, Merrick & Freeman. The first doctor in Becket was Dr. Oliver Brewster, who was a direct descendent from William Brewster. I saw no Hopkin gravestones in Becket. -EMA

Anne 1623

Note:Norfolk is the same county where Norwich is & where John Robinson is from. Maybe that’s the connection to Leiden?

Tracy Erdley

Lee

Note: William Bradford’s w#2’s maiden name was Lee, also from Leiden.

STEPHEN TRACY Jr. 1559-? b.1559 Norwich, Norfolk, Eng. AGNES/ANNE ERDLEY. c.1565 b.c1565 Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, Eng

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STEPHEN TRACY Jr. 1596-aft1656 b.28 Dec 1596 Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England. d. Great Yarmouth after 1656. Emig.from Leiden, Holland on Anne 1623, Returned to Eng. permanently c1642/3/4. Occup in Leiden Sayworker(serge weaver) Plymouth 1633 Freeman, Remov to Duxbury 1639 (See bio for offices & court appearances. Listed in Great Migration series.)

Prence Freeman Hopkins

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TRYPHOSA LEE 1596-1655 m. 2 Jan 1620/21 Jacob Leyden, Zuin, 1625 Holland, seems to have been pregnant w/ Sarah when Stephen left for America on Anne, so waited & came on Jacob in 1625. Rebecca must have been conceived right away. Children: b. Leyden: Sarah 1623-sailed on Jacob w/mother Children b. Plymouth: REBECCA 1625 Jane Jan 1622/3 Ruth 1628-aft 1655 unm. Mary 1630-afat 1655 unm. John c1632, m. Mary Prence, dau Thos. Prence

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Note: wonder if related to Hester Mahiew married to Francis Cooke.

See Thankful Lathrop; wonder if she is descendant of Rev. Lathrop.

Mayo

Rev. JOHN MAYO xlvxviii Mayoh/Maio/Mao/Meo/ Mayow/Mayhow/Mayhue/ Mayhue/Mayhew b. England during reign of Q.E. Grew up during reign of James I. Was a man by time of Charles I. Prob among 504 who went up to Oxford 1615, he matric. Magdalen Hal (hotbed of nonconformity) 28 Apr 1615, age 17, of Northamptonshire, a commoner’s son. Like Richard Mather, left w/o a degree. Still seems to have been in exercise of ministry previous to emig. Came to America 1638 w/ wife & 5 children. Prob cost £30. (Same yr, 20 ships arrived bringing 3,000 passengers.) 1st minister of Second Church Boston (North Church of Paul Revere Fame, I believe.) Overseerer of Harvard College. Associates were John Wilson, John Cotton & John Norton. Ministers said to, “have at all times been men whose disposition was to pass their life in industriuous peaceful & useful occupations—with little taste for parade, with little ambition to chronicle their own doings.” He avoided limelight, published no sermons, left no diary & was too busy to keep extensive church records. Remov to Mattakeese bet 1 Mar & 14 June 1639 w/20 families, temp. church under Rev. Joseph Hull. Mattakeese renamed Barnstable. He was named “teaching elder”.Some congregation were Indians. Had 12 acres of upland w/ meadow adjoining; n. of highway. Joined by Rev. John Lathrop & 41 families 11/21 Oct 1639. Lathrop took over from Hull. Freeman 3 Mar 1639/40. Remov to Eastham (orig. called Nauset) as minister 1646 w/7 families incl. our Thos.Prence. Prob. the same John Mayo who left in will dated 18 Jan & proved 20 Mar 1629/30 “To my sonne Mr. John Mayo I bequeath a coffer of ash standing over my kitchin”

Note: Plymouth Census in 1643 Stated 3135 inhabitants. 230 = Freeman The Barnstable population comprised about 300 English & 500 Indians

TAMSEN ? ?-? Known Children, order written by Savage. Hannah m. Nathaniel Bacon 1642 SAMUEL Nathaniel (definitely the second son) m. Hannah Prence John Jr. Elizabeth m. Joseph Howes of Yarmouth

Lumpkin

WILLIAM LUMPKIN xlvxviii of Yarmouth

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The Desire

Capt SAMUEL MAYO Stayed in Barnstable when his father went to Eastham. Other account “Was one of the 90 who owned Eastham. Sold to his son, Samuel.” OCC: mariner. Barnstable deeded him land for fish-house in 1647 on Cromwell’s point below dwelling. Became master of the bark Desire in 1650. THOMASINE LUMPKIN

First important ship to hail from Barnstable. Swift craft. 3rd vessel laid down in Mass. Built Marblehead summer 1636, 120 tons. 3 falcons & a falconet w/ other equipment came from the bark Warwick. [Earl of Warwick. She wrecked off of Cape Allerton, I think.] Capt. Wm. Peirce was her first master. “a skillful navigator & a Christian gentleman.” She first took Endecott’s soldiers to Block Island for the Pequot War, & the next year carried them supplies. Then she sailed to the West Indies with prisoners, rum & salt fish; to return in seven months laden with cotton salt & the first negroes to be enslaved in New England. In 1639 she made from Boston to Gravesend in the Thames in 23 days. Captain Pierce made his last voyage in the Desire. He sailed to New Providence Island, a Puritan settlent sponsored by the Earl of Warwick off the coast of Nicaragua. Not knowing the Spanish had recently captured the island, he the port on 13 July 1641 and was killed by the Spanish. The good ship headed for home; her dead were buried at sea. The original owners of the Desire were in debt to the John Harvard estate, according to accounts made up by Captain Pierce, Master, & the agent of Mr. Craddocke, one of them, & passed by Mr. Peters, another owner. When the president of Harvard College brought suit against William Pierce, Jr. & Richard Web in the Middlesex Court, the debt was long overdue & in excess of £80. There is record of a hearing on 1 Oct 1650. Eventually the Desire came to be controlled by Capt. Samuel Mayo & partners.

Rev. JOHN MAYO 1655-1725, age 70 b. prob 1655/56 Oyster Bay, Long Island, NY, since married in Hingham & Mary b. in Hingham, prob. l. there c1682, Remov to Harwich bef. 1713 when chosen to superintend building of meetinghouse. d. 1 Feb 1725/26 Harwich HANNAH FREEMAN 1663-1743, 80th yr b.prob Eastham, PC bet 15 Feb 1663/63 & 15 Feb ‘65/66, m.14 Apr 1681 Hingham, MBC d.15 Feb 1743/44 Harwich (now Brewster, MA ) Children prob b. Hingham: Hannah 1681 m.Hopk. Samuel 1684 (helped with purchase of land for Harwich. Of the 90 plots, he pur. 1 from father, 1 from Stephen Hopkins, 1 from Thos. Cosby. Mercy 1688 m.Hopk. John 1691 m.Hopkins Rebecca 1692 #321 MARY 26 Oct 1694 Joseph 1696 Elizabeth (#63 MS VolBrewster pg91)

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Known Children, random order: Mary c1645 m. Capt. Jonathan Bangs Rev. John c1655 THOMASINE

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THOMASINE ?xlvxviii There was a note in the NEHGS article that William’s mother-in-law was also named Thomasine.

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Abigail 1635

Freeman Coat of Arms: Three blue losenges on a gold shield. Crest: a demi-lion rampant gules holding between his paws a like losenge. Motto: Liber et audax “Education & Audacity” literally meaning “Book & Bold”.xxxvi

Freeman Coles See NEHGS Register, Volume 164, Aril 2010, p. 104 for article on Bennett Hodsell Freeman. Write-up in Dawes Gates books, p349-683

Mister EDMUND FREEMAN III 1595-1682, age 92 bp St. Mary’s Chur, Pulborough, Sussex, Eng. (south of London) (tho poss b. Essex earlier). Inherited property in Pulborough & Billinghurst from father. Brother of Wm Freeman who married his wife Bennet’s sister, Christian Hodsoll. Emig. on Abigail, master Capt. Richard Hackwell; left Eng July 1635 & arriv. Boston 8 Oct 1625. Settled Saugus MBC (later Lynn). Presented to colony “20 corselets or pieces of plate armor.” Adm. freeman 2 Jan 1637; liv short time Duxbury; 3 Apr 1637 received charter from Gov. Bradford on behalf of self & 8 other cohorts of Saugus to establish Sandwich, consisting of 60 lots; received largest grant as leader. Sandwich incorp. 1639; app. Asst. Gov 1650-1647. 17 Jun 1641 one of Board of Assist. w/ Edward Winslow & Miles Standish, which met to set boundaries of Yarmouth & Barnstable & to hear all causes & controversies. Wanted to respect rights of Wampanoag Indians. He had to inflict punishment on Mrs. Crowe’s maid who pilfered goods from Crowe—“needed to be just & equal.” 1641 helped Thos. Prence & other Undertakers to settle acount; 1643 on list in Sandwich of those between 16 & 60 “who were liable to bear arms” at age 53; m. w#2 10 Aug 1632 Shipley Parish, Sussex ELIZABETH RAYMENT

EDMUND FREEMAN c1560-c1623, age 63 b. c1560 England, apparently gentleman of considerable wealth. Referred to as “senior” & Continued at right “yeoman.” When he died, left a £800 besides various lands & tenements to son Edmund, & £20 to each child. Died 12 yrs before his son & grandchildren went to America, but three years after the Mayflower left, financed partially by his son-in-law, John Beauchamp (see below.) See bio.Will dated 30 May 1623; bur, 6 Jun 1623 Pulborough Church, Pulborough, Essex, Eng.xxxvi His sons edmund & Wm = executors.

BENNET HODSOLL c1596 -1630 bp 23 Aug 1596, m. as w#1 16 June 1617 in Cowfold, Sussex, Eng. bur. 12/13 Apr 1630 in Pulborough, Sussex, Eng (neighboring town to Cowfold) Children b. Eng: Alice 1618/9 bp Pulborough m. Paddy Edmund 1629 (m. Mercy Prence’s sister, Rebecca) Bennet Elizabeth 1625 JOHN c1622, bp 1626/7 Billinghurst Nathaniel bp 2 Sep 1629, bur 10 days later Mary m. Edward Perry [NEHGS article does not include Mary]

Major JOHN FREEMAN 1627 -1719 AGE 98 b. Eng. c1622, pb Billinghurst, Sussex, Eng. 28 Jan 1626/7, emig. w/ parents on Abigail in 1635, Lived for a while in Saugus (which became Lynn, MA). Remov short time Duxbury, then Sandwich when his father founded it in 1637. By 1651 liv. Eastham (in the area which is now called Orleans just sout of Eastham proper.) when second son John was born.(First son John died as infant.) 5 Jun 1651 made freeman of PC. 1653 Deuty to Old Colony Court, & again in 1656, 1662, 1663, 1664, 1665, 1666. 1667 Ass.t Governor, reelected successively until 1692. One of first selectmen of Eastham,. Many yrs. deacon of First Church.10 Jan 1673 purchased one share of land of Thomas Podner esq land for three pounds. d.Eastham 28 Oct 1719. Large landholder, military rank major from service of Indian Wars, Dep. to Gen Court, Asst in govern, Selectman, Deacon of Eastham Church, app to Bench of Crt of Common Pleas. Sisterin-law to Hannah Mayo. Will porbated 4 Nov 1719. named John as executor. See copy of will in records of EMA. (MS Vol Bewst p.28)

Location of Pulborough, Sussex, England, home of Mister Edmund Freeman III

Amy McCormick & Mary Mitchell visiting Edmund Freeman III’s grave in Sandwich, Massachusetts, April, 2009.

Mister Edmund Freeman III continued. (1600-1675/6, age 75, b. Eng 1600 at age 35 came on Abigail w/husband. d. 1675/6 Sandwich, MBC. Bur w/ husband on plot of land 1.5 miles northwest of the Sandwich Town Hall on Tupper Rd.) Edmund d. bet 21 Jun & 2 Nov 1682 at Sandwich, PC. To get to the gravestones: Take path from south side of road up through woods about 200 ft to opening on flat area where, if you turn left through opening in stone wall, you will see a square fenced area. Both graves lay over area where their house once stood. See photo at left. Note: Others on list who established Sandwich MBC with Mister Edmund Freeman: Richard Chadwell, George Knott, Edward Dillingham, Thomas Tupper, Henry Feake, Thomas Dexter, William Wood, John Carman & William Almy. Last five moved away, rest stayed for rest of lives. Sandwich was part of Barnstable County, oldest town on Cape Cod. Families from Duxbury, Plymouth & Lynn helped settle it. Edmund went on business trip to England to meet with son-in-law John Beauchamp in 1639 & created a partnership for the beaver trade. In this partnership were: William Bradford, Edward Winslow, Thomas Prence, Myles Standish, John Alden, John Howland, Isaac Alerton & William Brewster. Edmund returned to New England on the Champion. Also had industry in whaling (oil). In Eastham they made tar (John Freeman) Note: There is a Samuel Freeman on Winthrop’s Boats list. Also, a Mr. Edmund Freeman is mentioned in will of Richard Hutchinson, Salem, c1636/7. See records of “Salem” Also, an Edmund Freeman owned land in Salem by our ancestor Richard Hutchinson sometime between 1636/7 ad 1648.

Marcy’s gravestone is supposidly oldest tombstone in this country w/ a figure of angel instead of skull carved at the top as seen here. MERCY/MARCYE PRENCE 1631-1719* (80) bur. Eastham Cove Cemetery 11 Children: JOHN HANNAH *D-G stated Mercy d. 1711.

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ALICE COLES bef 1580 - 1651 b. Eng. Sister of George Coles of Amberley, Essex. She outlived husband 28 yrs. When Edmund died, she went to live w/ sonin-low, John Beauchamp in Reigate, Surrey (just north of Pulborough & just south of London.) Beauchamp was one of London Merchants who provided financial assist. to Plymouth Colony until at least 1641, mentioned frequently in Bradford’s Of Plimouth Plantation. Will dated 13 Nov 1650; proved 5 Mar 1651/2 d. Mar 1651 in Reigate, Surrey, Eng. 6 children (3 sons & 3 dau) bp St. Mary’s Church, Pulborough, Sussex, Eng: EDMUND 1594 Alice bp 15 Apr 1601 m. John Beauchamp of London William m#1 Christian Hodsoll, sister of Edmund Jr.’s wife, Bennet; m#2 Jane Gratwick; d. 15 Sep 1666 Eleanor bp 25 Aug 1603; bur 7 Apr 1618 age 15 John bp 29 Jan 1605/6/7; liv 1623 Wonder if he is related to Elizabeth bp 27 Aug 1609; m. John Coddington. William Coddington who was religious leader with Ann Hutchinson.

Abigail 1635

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JOHN HODSOLL of Stansted, Kent ANNE ? It’s not certain if this wife was John’s mother.

JOHN MAUNDY ALICE TEMPLE?

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JOHN HODSOLL c1555-c1617 b.c1555 (taken from age statement he made 10 May 1608) of Cowfold, Sussex, Occ: mariner & major supplier of planking & other wood products to the Royal Navy. Given the use of the Navy’s utility vessel George, a large barge, for carrying such products to the naval shipyards at Dartmouth. Had his own wharf downstream & on the opposide side of the Thames [from the shipwyard]. Prob. the John Hodsoll listed as an investor in the Virginia Company (3rd Charter of 1612). m.#1 Anne Maundy c1579. m.#2 c1614 Faith (Moorer) (Bacon) Bareham, who was bp St. Mary Colechurch, London 28 Sep 1576, dau of Robert & Eliz (Barto) Moorer, & widow of Wm. Bacon & Thos. Bareham. John & Faith had one child: William bp Cowfold 12 Sep 1615, d. as infant by 1617 (date of father’s will), Faith d. in Surrey. John bur. Cowfold, Sussex, 20 Nov 1617, left will dated 1 Aug 1617, proved 26 Nov 1617. (See NEHGS Register Vol164 Apr 2010 for details.) ANNE MAUNDYNEHGS c.1559-1613 m. c 1579. bur All Saints Barking, London 15 Sep 1613. Children: Anne bp 27 Mar 1580 All Saint Barking, bur St. Dustan’s 24 Dec 1581 Thomas bp 10 Dec 1584 St. Dunstan’s, Stepney, d. bet 1607&1617 Clement bp 10 Dec 1585 St. Dunstan’s, d. bet 1607 & 1617 Anne bp 27 Jan 1586/7 St. Dunstan’s, m. Thos. Sheffield, bur. St. Michael Cornhill, London 1625 Elizabeth bp 24 Jan 1587/8 St. Dunstan’s, m. William Scates, St. Margaret’s, Barking, Essex, bur. St. Margaret’s m.#2 Andrew Printup John Jr. bp 24 Nov 1589 All Saints Barking, m. Elizabeth Gratwick 27 Sep 1617, d 12 Nov 1628 in Shermanbury, Sussex, bur Cowfold, Sussex, left lenghty will which proves much of this info Katherine bp 28 Jan 1591/2 All Saints Barking, m. Warner Norwood 24 Oct 1617 in St. Michael Cornhill, bur w/ husband at St. Olave Hart Street, London 25 Feb 1636/7 William bp 1 Apr 1593 All Saints Barking, d. bef 12 Sep 1615 Jane bp 10 May 1595 All Saints Barking, d. bef. 1617 (Father’s will) BENNETT bp 23 Aug 1596 All Saints Barking (see her above) Margaret bp 31 Oct 1597 All Saints Barking, bur All Saints Barking 10 Nov 1597. (lived 1 month) Christian bp 23 Apr 1602 All Saints Barking, m. William Freeman bef. 20 Jul 1620, bur 24 Jul 1635 Cowfold Scroll down to THOMAS

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? PRENCE of Leichlade, Gloucester Co., Eng.

Gov. THOMAS PRENCE c1600-1673, age 73y b. prob.near Leichlade, Gloucestershire, Eng (west of London) c1600 l.“of All Saints, Barking, London”, Emig on Fortune in company w/ Jonathan Brewster. Arr. Plymouth 9 Nov 1621, One of only 6 governors of Plymouth during its colonial days. One of 11 Undertakers to guarantee purchase of Plymouth from Adventurers. Gov. Assist, Treas. & Commis of Colonies. 4th Gov. of Plymouth in 1633/4 age 34, two terms. Remov. Duxbury, then Nausett 1644 after his father-in-law Wm. Brewster died, which they named Eastham 1651 where formed 4th church of Plymouth, he was one of 7 original proprietorsxxxv along with Nicholas Snow. That part now Orleans. 1661 established a grist mill that aided in development of town. Helped Indians who gave him land as gift in return. Gov. of New Plymouth again 1657 til death in 1673. Will 13 Mar 1672/3, added codicil 28 Mar 1673. Probated 5 Jun 1673. Covered large estate. Willed to his son John Freeman “should receive “Speeds [John Speed was cartographer & mariTHOMAS PRENCE ner] Cronicle & Wilsons ?-1630 Dictionary & the abridgOrig.of Leichlade, ment; & Simpsons history Gloucester Co., Eng. Remov. of the Church & Newmans from Leichlade at an Concordance.” d. Plymouth unkown date to All Saints, 29 Mar 1673 bur. 8 Apr Barking, London, where 1673, called “Esquire.” he carried on the trade of carriage-maker, & where m.#2 Mary Collier 1635, on 31 Jul 1630 made will, m.#3 Apphia (Quick) which was probated on 14 Freeman, widow of Samuel Aug 1630. It made bequests Freeman bef. 1662, m.#4 to daughter Katherine aft. 1655/6, bef. 1668 Mary Crayford, dau Rebecca (?Burr) Howes, 1627. Diple & ‘to son Thomas Children by Mary Collier: Prence now remayninge Jane b. 1637, Mary, Sarah in New England in the b.c1643-6, Eliz m. Arthur pts beyond the seas one Howland, Judity m#1 Isaac beere bole of silver & alsoe Barker; m#2 Wm Tubbs. my scale Ringe of gold to See History of Harwich & be del to him at his next Eastham, D-G books & MS return..’.xxxviii Vol Brewster, p.9. ELIZABETH TODLERBY

PATIENCE BREWSTER 1600-1634 #3 MS b. Scrooby, Nottinghamshire c.1600, Emig. Anne 10 Jul 1623, w/ sister Fear, m. Plymouth 5 Aug 1624 #1 w of T. Prence’s #1, the 9th marriage recorded in Plymouth. d. Plymouth, MA bef 12 Dec 1634 of “pestilent feaver” Children b. Plymouth: Rebecca bef. 1627 subdivision of cattle. d. bef 18 Jul 1651 when husband m. again. Thomas bef 1627; d in Eng bef 13 Mar 1672 #15 MERCY bef.28 Sep 1631 See following Hannah bef. 23 Nov 1634 when husband m. again. m.#1 Nath’l May; m#2 as w#2 Jonathan Sparrow (MS Vol.Brewster p.8)

Notes on Prence from D-G The Fortune: sailed from London in early part July, 1621. Unable to clear channel until end of Aug & didn’t arrive New Plymouth ’til 9 Nov. Failed to bring store of supplies for use of its passengers. Colonists already short. Became necessary to put enire colony on half rations at once. Thos welcome addition to colony. Highly moral, educated, dignified & well-to-do. He was non-Pilgirm, pro-Puritan & stricter in religious matters than the leaders themselves. Fearless in making stern decisions, tho prone to show mercy, intolerant in matters of religion. Anti-Quaker. By spring of 1632 he followed father-in-law Wm Brewster to Duxbury, where Patience died 1634. Elected Governor 1634 for term of 1 yr. Both families resided Duxbury until 1644 when Wm died. Thos removed family to Nauset on Cape w/ 6 other families/ total 49 souls. Helped form 4th church. Named Gov again 1638. Was among Assistants, magistrate or Gov until death. Settlement renamed Eastham in 1651. Prence had farm of at least 200 acres richest land in vicinity. When Bradford died, Thos named Gov & continued 16 consecutive yrs until own death.

Location of Lechlade, Gloucestershire, England, birthplace of Thomas Prence

Difficulty w/distance bet Plymouth & Eastham, he remov to Plymouth c1 Jun 1663 when court ordered “convenient, hansome rome bee aded to the Gounors house & that the charge of the building thereof bee defrayed out of the pay for Kinebecke...[the beaver business, trading station]” Annual salary of £50. The home furnished by colony also office. His family could stay there at least a year if he died before end of term. It overlooked the sea at what was then called “Plain Dealing” but is now known as Seaside. [Apparently in the middle of the current town. Map included in D-G.] He bought it June 1668 for £150, paid in instalments. Reverted to colony upon his death after paying family £50. About 1658, Indian named Repent admitted his intent to shoot Prence as he returned to his home. The culprit was whipped. Summary of service: held overnor 1634, 1638, 1657-73.; assistant or magistrate at least 22 yrs; treasurer 1636-07; commissioner for Plymouth for the United Colonies for 13 yrs, member of council for war in 1637 against Pequotes; also held various special civil & military trusts. 1737 sole member of council for war when Plymouth voted to assist Conn. Colony against Pequots. For 20 yrs carried financial burden in behalf of colony when took over the debt from the three English associatses. Only trait against this “fine record” was “intolerance” (see 6 more detailed pages about his services & merits in DG)

Anne 1623

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Elder WILLIAM BREWSTER c1566-1644 b. prob Doncaster, Yorkshire, Eng. c.1566/67, m. Eng.bef.1593, “of St. Mayflower Ursualsteeg, Eng., Some 1620 time @ Cambridge, read some Latin & Greek, serv. in Eng. court; on 20 Oct 1585 xlvxvii he paid “lay subsidy” which was Q. Eliz. tax on all indiv w/ moveable goods worth £3 or more at 20p/£1 of goods - he pd 120 shillings (=120p) on £6 of goods. Sent to prison for relig. belief; started Pilgrim separatist church from his manor, Scrooby Manor, in Nottinghamshire c1605?, fled to Amsterday, Holland 1608, Remov to Leyden with Rev. John Robinson’s group 1609; tutored aristoc. in Leyden, printer. Joined church in Leyden, Holland 25 Jun 1609, Emig to Plymouth on Mayflower 1620, acting Elder in Plymouth but had left Cambridge before becoming ordained.d. Plymouth, MA 10 Apr 1644 c.9 or 10:00 eve., bur. unknown.(There is a whole book on Wm. Brewster as well as info in MS Vol. Brewster p.1) Scrooby Manor has been refurbished w/ guest house. See www scroobymanor.com. Hidden w/in 12 acres meadowland. Can still see moat boundaries & fish pond.

Brewster Smythe/ Simkinson

WILLIAM BREWSTER Postmaster of Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, England. Lived in the Manor house owned by the Archbishop of Centerbury. MARY SMYTHE or SIMKINSON

This stone was created by Brewster descendents for both Mary & William & is at base of old Plymouth cemetery just north of the church at street level.

Location of Scrooby, Nottingham, England, the home of William & Mary Brewster & the birthplace of the Pilgrim Church which founded Plymouth Colony.

MARY ? c1568-1627 b. prob. Eng. c1568/9, d. Mayflower Plymouth 17, Historians 1620 can’t find which of two Marys living in Scrooby was William’s wife. Both Mary’s were cousins & descendents of Plantaget family & thus William the Conquerer & Charlemagne. Apr 1627 Children: Jonathan 12 Aug 1593 PATIENCE c1600 [of age to sign as a marriage witness in 1618] Fear c1606 (she & sister Patience died of pestilent (fever=typhoid) no long before 12 Dec 1634 Child bur. Leyden 1609 Love 1611(boy, came on Mayflower) Wrestling 1614, d. bef 1644 settlement of father’s estate.

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poss. NICHOLAS SNOW of Hoxton, Co. Middlesex, Eng.

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Mayflower 1620

Hopkins

See above.

pos.JOHN HOPKINS See above.

MARY ? See above.

Smith

Freeman Coles See above. See above.

Merrick

See above.

Tracy Erdley

See above. See above.

Lee

Master STEPHEN HOPKINS See above.

NICHOLAS SNOW c1599-1676 age 77 b. pos.1599/1600 St. Leonard’s Shore-ditch, London, Eng. next door to St. Mary’s where Stephen Hopkins married w#2. Emig. on Ann 1623, Freeman Plymouth 1633, Served as arbitrator, surveyor & on juries. By 1645 settled Eastham [town started by Thomas Prence et.al], served as clerk, selectman, deputy, constable, highway surveyor, excise collector. Involvement in Church of Eastham. Deac. Samuel Freeman & John Mayo exec. of will; d. prob Eastam 15 Nov 1676. (MS Vol.6,p.7)

CONSTANCE HOPKINS “Constanta” c1606-1677 age 71 bp.11 May 1606 Hursley, Hampshire, England d. Eastham, mid Oct 1677, bur. Cove Burial Ground Eastham, m. Nicholas Snow prob Plymouth, May 1627, Emig. Mayflower w/ family. 12 Children b.prob. Plymouth or Eastham: Mark 1628 Mary c1630 Sarah c1632 Joseph c1634 Stephen c1636 John c1638 Elizabeth c1640 # 13 JABEZ c1642 Ruth c1644 Constance Child Child (#2 MS0 Vol. Hopkins p.7)

EDMUND FREEMAN See above

EDMUND FREEMAN See above

Major JOHN FREEMAN See above

ALICE COLES See above

BENNET HODSOLL See above

MERCY PRENCE See above

Rev. JOHN MERRICK/ MYRICK See above DOROTHY BISHOP See above

Ensig. WILLIAM MERRICK Sr. See above

Rev. WILLIAM MYRICK See above MARGARET ROLAND or JANET FERCH/VERCH IENEN See above STEPHEN TRACY See above

STEPHEN TRACY Jr. See above

AGNES/ANNE ERDLEY See above

TRYPHOSA LEE See above

REBECCA TRACY See above

1600s

Lt. JABEZ SNOW 1642-1690 b. prob. Eastham c1642, d. Eastham 27 Dec 1690, m. Eastham Elizabetha(?) Eastham 1681; surveyor, selectman, engaged in expedition to Canada 1690 (MS #13 Vol.6, p.19) ELIZABETH ? (poss. SMITH) pos.1648-1732 b. pos.1648, d. 1732, m.#1 Jabez Snow Eastham 6 Sep 1670, m. #2 William Merrick of Eastham aft.1691 after Jabez died [widower of Abigail Hopkins Merrick] 9 Children (Snow) First four recorded Eastham: Jabez 1670 #64 EDWARD 26 Mar 1672 Sarah 1674 Grace 1674/5 Thomas pos.1677 Elizabeth prob. Easthan bef.1690 Deborah prob. Eastham bet 1678-90 Rachel prob. Eastham 1685 Mercy

1800s

1700s

EDWARD SNOW 1672-1754/58 #64 MS b. Eastham, 26 Mar 1672, d. prob. Harwich bet 1754-58, adm. Brewster Church, Nov 1707, Selectman & poundkeeper at Harwich [later Brewster], Occup: Yeoman. (MS Vol.6,pg72)

NATHANIEL SNOW c1709-1749 #321 MS bp.8Jan1709/10 Brewster Church, Harwich, d. Mar 1749 Harwich, Owned covenant at Brewster Church 23 Apr 1732, Adm full com 13 Sept 1741. ( MS Vol.6, p.301)

SARAH FREEMAN 1676-1739 b. Eastham, Sep 1676, d. Harwich 23 Aug 1739, adm. Brewster Church Oct 1707 7 Children all bp.Harwich: Thomas c1701 Jabez c1703 Rebecca c1705 Martha bp.1707 #321 NATHANIEL bp.8 Jan 1709/10 Nathan bp.1716 Joseph bp.1718 (#275 MS Brewster p.84)

THANKFUL GAGE 1711-1776 b.Yarmouth, Plymouth Colony 27 May 1711,m.#1 Nahaniel Harwich 20 Aug 1730, Adm. Brewster Ch. 19 May 1734, m.#2 Harwich 28 Oct 1761 Joseph Sears, Jr. [widower of Ruth Sears, dau of Samuel & Ruth Merrick Sears, also desc of Hopkins). d. prob bet Jul & Dec 1776 Harwich. 8 Children(Snow)all bap Brewster Ch: PATIENCE 12 Apr 1732 Edward 1733 Thomas 1735 Seth 1737 Nathaniel 1739 Sarah bp&d.1741 Bette, “Elizabeth” 1746 Ruben 1748

1900s

The Snows came from St. Leonard’s Shoreditch, London, England.

JOHN FREEMAN Jr. 1651-1721, 70th yr #58 MS b. Eastham, Plymouth Colony Dec 1651, Remov to Harwich (now Brewster) c1675. Children births recorded in Eastham because under jurisdiction until Harwich incorporated in 1694. d. Harwich PC [now Brewster] 27 Jul 1721 in 70th yr, bur. Old Burial Grd, Brewster, PC, one of orig. eight people construc. orig. church in Harwich 17 Oct 1700. Deacon. Admit. member 14 Sept 1701. Wife #2 Mercy (?Hedge) Watson (MS Vol Bewster p.83) SARAH MERRICK 1645/54-1696 b. Eastham, PC 1 Aug 1645/54, m. Eastham 18 Dec 1672, d. Eastham 21 Apr 1696, “long Sick of a consumtion” Children: John 1674, d.bef 1678 SARAH Sep 1676 John Jul 1678 Rebecca Jan 1680 Nathaniel 1682/3 Benjamin 1685 Mercy 1687 Patience Susannah m. John Mayo Jr. Mary bef 1696 Elizabeth (MS Vol Bewster p.83)

(1645 or 1654 doubt is due to my typing error. Need check in Silver Books to see which is correct.)

See above.

JOHN GAGE Scroll down to THOMAS

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JANE TUPPER Note: The main road on which the Inn at Sandwich Center, Town Hall & the graves of the Freemans in Sandwich is Tupper Road.

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Gage Tupper

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Double check these birth dates etc. in the Doty books. They were all messed up.

JOSEPH MORSE (1647-?) b. prob Beverly 1647 MARY ?

Morse

Mayflower 1620

ELIZABETH DOTY (1675/6-1772) b. Plymouth 12 Dec 1698, d. 1772 Children b. Plymouth except Gershom: Joshua 12 Sep 1699 ELIZABETH 8 Oct 1701 Edward 25 Jul 1704 Joseph 29 Dec 1706; no further record NewberryNewbury 28 Jul 1709 Abigail 22 Sep 1711 Theodorus 20 Aug 1714 Gershom 1716

NEWBURY MORSE (1709-1784) b Plymouth 28 July 1709 [MD 2:163], d. Wareham 25 Apr 1784 [Wareham Chrch Rec. p53] No Plymouth County probate record for Newbury Morse has been found. (MS #117 Doty) LYDIA BRIGGS (1719-?) b. Rochester 9 Dec 1719, m. Rochester 3 Jan 1741 Children: Zebulon 28 Apr 1741 Eunice 12 Mar 1742 Mary 21 Sep 1745 SETH 14 Jan 1747 Samuel 5 Mar 1749 Simeon 21 Jan 1751 Joseph 26 Jul 1756

JOHN DOTY (1640-1701 age 61) b. 1640 Plymouth. Apr EDWARD DOTY 1661 received a musket in (?-1655) a distribution of guns & b. Eng. Emig to America swords belonging to town of on Mayflower as servant of Plymouth; 2 Jul 1667 liberty Master Stephen Hopkins. granted to Edward Dotey His parents have not been & his brothr John Dotey to found. Prob at least 21 at look out for some supplies time of signing Mayflower of land. 17 Jan 1667/8 John Compact 11 Nov 1620. & Thos Dotey sold to John Referred to as “of London” Smith their seventh parts as was Stephen. Noted for of share of Dartmouth his belligerence. Fought land from estate of father. only duel in Plymoutn Appointed guardian of his Colony vs fellow servant brother Edward’s children Edward Leister with swords when he drowned: Samuel, & daggers. Wounded each Mercy & Benjamin; will 15 other before were separated. Apr 1701, prov 3 Jun 1701 Punishment to have heads m#2 SARAH JONES & feet tied together 24 22 Nov 1694 Plymouth, hrs. After 1 hr humble Children w/Sarah: appeals let off. Frequent Sarah 19 Feb 1695/6 appearances in Court Patience 3 Jul 1697 as plaintff or defendant, Desire 19 Apr 1699 usually trespassing, assault Sarah m.#2 Joseph Peterson & battery & breaking the 23 Aug 1704 peace (lost most suits) m. #1 John d. 8 May 1701 unknown; d. 23 Aug 1655 Plymouth, Plymouth (More MS Doty) (More in MS #3 Doty, p6.)

Doty

Clark

JOSHUA MORSE (1675-1754) b. prob Beverly c1675, d. 1754 [MD 13:207], Joshua sold a house in Middleboro in 1717, & land in Rochester in 1719. W/ wife Eliz. sold land in Plymouth in 1725. Occ: saddler & innkeeper. On 18 Dec 1728 Joshua & wife of Middleboro sold one acre & his dwelling house in Middleboro to Samuel Warren [Pymouth C. LR 23:191] Jan 1737/8 Jushua & wife sold 3 acres in Rochester to David Nye [ibid], No Plymouth or Barnstable County probate recored for Joshua Morse has been found.

FAITH CLARK c1619-1675 age 56 b. prob Eng c1619, arriv last Francis of Apr 1634 on Francis w/ 1634 father, d. & bur. Marshfield Tuesday 21 Dec 1675 9 Children b. Plymouth: Edward prob 1637 or earlier JOHN by 1640 Thomas prob 1641-2 Samuel prob 1643-4 Desire c1645/6 Francis Elizabeth c1647 1634 Isaac 8 Feb 1648/9 Joseph 30 Apr 1651 THURSTON CLARK/ Mary c1653 CLEARKE FAITH ?

m#2 John Phillips 14 Mar 1666/7 Plymouth, his w#3, signed pre-nuptial agreement preserved her rights to oversee her children & dispose of her property.

SETH MORSE (1747-?) b 14 Jan 1747 [Chatham VR], prob. of Wareham-see siblings, MA (#491 MS, Doty) HANNAH MYRICK (?) m. Chatham 1 Feb 1772[2] Children b. Chatham Lydia 20 Feb 1773 [2]; m. Barnard Siery [3] Hannah 10 Dec 1774 [2]; m. (int.) 29 Nov 1794 Prince Harding [4] Phoebe 10 Sep 1776 [2]; m.28 Nov 1792 Prince Hopkins [4] Marana 1778; d.y. Joshua 25 Mar 1781 [2]; m. 4 Mar 1804 Sally Morse [5] Mariana 15 May 1783 [2]; d.y. [2]Chatham VR 1:69 [3] Morse Gen. pp 182-183 [4] Chatham VR 1:162-163 [5] Chatham VR 1:195 All in MFS Edward Doty Family Generation V, p. 164

ELIZABETH COOKE 1648/9-1692 44th yr b. 18 Jan 1648/9 Plymouth; m. bef 1668 Plymouth, d. 21 Nov 1692 Plymouth Children b. Plymouth: John 24 Aug 1668 Edward 28 Jun 1671; prob d bef 15 Apr 1701 Jacob 27 May 1673; prob d. bef 15 Apr 1701 ELIZABETH 10 Feb 1675/6 Isaac 25 Oct 1678 Samuell “last of Januawary” 1682/3 Elisha 13 Jul 1686 Josiah Oct 1689 Martha Oct 1692

Edward Doty was known as “of London”

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Cooke See above.

FRANCIS COOK(E) See above. HESTER MAHIEU See above.

Mahieu See above. Hopkins See above.

Fisher

? le MAHIEU See above. JENNIE ? See above.

poss. JOHN HOPKINS See above.

Master STEPHEN HOPKINS See above. ELIZABETH FISHER ?-1644 b. Eng, m.Stephen’s #2 wife St. Mayflower Mary Mallon, 1620 Whitechapel, London, Eng 19 Feb 1617/8, d. 6 Jun 1644 Plymouth Children: Damaris c1618 Eng, emig on Mayflower, d. soon aft 1627 Oceanus bet 16 Sep & 11 Nov 1620 aboard Mayflower, d. soon aft 1627 Caleb c1623, “heir apparent” seaman, “dyed” Barbadoes bef 1651 Deborah c1626 Damaris c1628 Ruth c1630 Plymouth, d. unm aft 30 Nov 1644 (dist father’s estate) bef 3 Apr 1651 Elizabeth 1632 Plymouth, custody to Richard Sparrow, d. unm aft Oct 1657

Briggs Stetson

Merrick See above. Bishop See above. Tracy See above. Erdley See above. Lee See above.

1600s

Anne

1623 JACOB COOKE 1640-1701 age 61 b. c1618 Holland, emig on Anne with mother & sisters, Red. 100 acres from father upon marriage, occ: husbandman, will 11 Dec 1675 Plymouth, his land divided between sons, Inventory dated 18 Dec 1675d bet 11 & 18 Dec 1675 (inv) m#2 Elizabeth Lettice Shurtleff. DAMARIS HOPKINS 1627-bef 1669 b.bef 22 May 1627 Plymouth, m. prob Plymouth shortly aft 10 Jun 1646, d. bef. Nov 1669 Children b. Plymouth ELIZABETH 18 Jan 1648/9 Caleb 29 Mar 1651 Jacob 26 Mar 1653 Mary 12 Jan 1657/8 Martha 16 Mar 1659 Francis 5 Jan 1662/3 Ruth 17 Jan 1665 Sarah c1671 [Rebec]kah bef 1675 father’s will

1800s

1700s

1900s

SAMUEL BRIGGS LYDIA STETSON

Rev. JOHN MERRICK Rev. WILLIAM MERRICK (MYRICK) See above See above DOROTHY BISHOP See above

STEPHEN TRACY See above AGNES /ANNE ERDLEY See above

STEPHEN TRACY See above TRYPHOSA LEE See above

Ensign WILLIAM MERRICK, Sr.* See above REBECCA TRACY See above

WILLIAM MERRICK 1643-1732 90th yr b. prob Duxbury 15 Sep 1643, d Harwich 30 Oct 1732, bur Brewster Cem, m#2 Elizabeth (?) Snow, widow of Jazez Snow, 1670 Eastham freeman, surveyor highways 1678-9, grand juror 1684, moved to n. Harwich (later Brewster) bef 1694, yr which petitioned it for town, one of 7 who established church at Harwich 1700, rep Harwich Gen Assemb 1719, Occ. Yeoman, will 5 May 1723, codicil 29 Aug 1729, prov 29 Nov 1732 (p23 MS Hop) ABIGAIL HOPKINS 1644-1691 b. Yarmouth Oct 1644, m. Eastham 23 May 1667, d. prob Eastham Children, first two b. Eastham, all from probate records: Rebecca 28 Nov 1668 William 26 Mar 1673 m. Deborah Snow Benjamin 1674 Nathaniel 1675 John c1680 JOSHUA c1680 Ruth 1684 Samuel ?

JOSHUA MERRICK/ MYRICK 1680-bet1738&40 b.Eastham c1680, d. Harwich bet 14 Nov 1736 & 30 Apr 1740. Adm Brewster Chr 24 Apr 1733, “Joshua Merrick res. in “Second Remove [school disrict] of Harwich 1726, wife Lydia administratirix of estate 30 Apr 1740, settlement occured 18 Mar 1745, John Sow of Harwich guardian to minor children. LYDIA MAYO 1694-1745 b Eastham 12 June 1694, m. Eastham 4 June 1714, bp & admit Brewster Church 25 May 1735, 7 oldest children bp there, 13 May 1733. d. aft 18 Mar 1745. Children rec. Harwich: THOMAS 10 Feb 1717/8 Seth 13 May 1720 Joseph 6 Jun 1722 Abigail 10 Jul 1724, m. Nathaniel Hopkins Lydia 20 Sep 1726 Barnabas prob 1728 Hannah 9 Oct 1731 Mary 17 May 1734 Bezaleel 12 Nov 1736

THOMAS MERRICK 1717/8-1796 b. Harwich 10 Bef 1717/8, d. prob Harwich aft 1796 No probate recs. for Thomas or Ruth Myrick have been found in Barnstable Co. RUTH GODFREY [GOULD] c1716-1796 (77th yr) b.c1716 prob Chatham, MBC, m. int. Harwich 2 Aug 1750, m#1 int. 18 Aug 1739 John Gould Eastham who d. Chatham prob 1750 & had 4 child. Harwich: John, Thomas, Richard & Abigail, d. Harwich/Chatham 22 Jul 1796 in 77th year, called “wife of Thomas Mirick of Harwich” Children bp Brewster Church Harwich: HANNAH bp 8 Dec 1751 Elizabeth bp 3 Jun 1753 Ziporah pb 27 Oct 1754 Ruth pb Jan 1757; perh m. Thomas Bangs Lydia bp 7 Jan 1759, prob m. Seth Lincoln Joshua bp 18 May 1760 (See MS #413 Hopkins p. 388) Scroll down to THOMAS

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Hopkins

Possibly JOHN HOPKINS See above

See above.

Whelden See above.

1600s Master STEPHEN HOPKINS See above MARY ? See above

? WHELDEN See above

Possibly HENRY WHELDEN See above

UNKNOWN See above

UNKNOWN See above

Mayo

GABRIEL WHELDEN See above Probably JANE ? See above

Rev. JOHN MAYO See above

See above.

TAMSEN ? See above

Prence See above. Todlerby See above. Brewster See above. Smythe/ Simkinson See above.

Knowles Willis

WILLIAM BREWSTER See above MARY SMYTHE SIMKINSON

THOMAS PRENCE See above

Gov. THOMAS PRENCE See above

ELIZABETH TODLERBY See above

PATIENCE BREWSTER See above

Elder WILLIAM BREWSTER See above

1800s

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1900s

GILES/GYLES HOPKINS See above CATHERINE WHELDEN /WHILDEN (KATHERNE, CATORNE) See above THOMAS MAYO 1650-1729 ye 79th yr b Eastham 7 December 1650, d Eastham 33/3 Apr 1729, called “Sr”, gravestone in Old Cemetery Orleans, MA, prom citizen, selectman 12 yrs, (See land dealings in Eastham & Chatham p. 96 MS Brewster) Occ: Yeoman, died “Testate”-order to appraise estate Barnstable NATHANIEL MAYO 29 Apr 1729, among c.1627-1661 b. Eng c1627, 1643 elected relatives, all of Eastham, for second time able to bear Grand & Great Grand children of Thomas Prence, arms. d. Eastham bet 19 Esquire, formeer Governor Dec 1661 & 26 Feb 1661, of New Plymouth, now will 19 Dec 1661, prov Plymouth 4 Mar 1661, (see deceased—selling all rights p 29 BMS Brewster for land to lands in Middleboro an Bridgewater, Mass. dealings) HANNAH PRENCE bef 1634-bef 23 Nov 1698 b. Plymouth bef 12 Dec 1634 (date mother’s death) & prob brf 1633 (if she was 16 yrs of age when married), m. #1 Eastham 13 Feb 1649 Nathaniel Children w/ Mayo b. Eastham: THOMAS 7 Dec 1650 Nathaniel 16 Nov 1652 Samuel 12 Oct 1655 Hannah 17 Oct 1657 Theophilus 17 Dec 1659 m.#2 Jonathan Sparrow of Eng,(widower of Rebecca Bangs) Children w/ Sparrow: Patience 25 Oct 1675 Richard c1675

BARBARA KNOWLES 1656-1714/5 b Eastham 28 Sep 1656, m. Eastham 13 Jun 1677, d. Eastham 23 Feb 1714/5 Children b. Eastham Thomas 3 Apr 1678 Theophilus “last day” Oct 1680 Mary 6 Aug 1683 Mercy 19 Jan 1685 Ruth 20 Jan 1688 Judah 25 Sep 1691 LYDIA 12 Jun 1694 Richard 13 Jan 1696/7 Son b 1 Aug 1699, d. 18 Aug 1699 Israel 12 Aug 1700

MARY ? See above JOHN KNOWLES 1596-1685 age 89 b. 1 Nov 1596 Waltham, Lincolnshire, Eng, d. 1685 prob MBC. His parents poss William Knowles (1566-1598) & Grace Clavell (1570-?) Prob the one in Great Migration: On 25 October 1651 Mr. John Knowles of Watertown sold to Mr. John Bex & company (of the Saugus ironworks) twenty acres in Lynn “formerly bought of Mr. Tomlins of Lin” [ ELR 3:141. (This record may pertain to TIMOTHY TOMLINS) In September 1642 a letter was sent from several persons in Virginia to the authorities in Boston, requesting that “a supply of faithful ministers” be sent to them. On 7 October 1642 William Thompson of Braintree, John Knowles of Watertown & Thomas James of New Haven were sent on the mission, from which Knowles & James returned the following year [ WJ 2:93-94, 115-16]. (Hubbard also described this mission, relying largely on Winthrop [Hubbard 190-91, 410-11]) x APPHIA BANGS (twin), b. Eastham 15 October 1651 [ PCR 8:15]; m. (1) Eastham 28 December 1670 John Knowles [ PCR 8:57; NEHGR 79:293-95]; m. (2) by 6 March 1677 Stephen Wood Jr.[ PCR 5:220].

Need to check Mayflower Books to see how Knowles connected.

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ELIZABETH WILLIS 1621-? b. 1621 Isleworth, London, Eng, m. 1613 Children: Richard 1614

RICHARD KNOWLES 1614-1682 b.17 Sep 1614 Lancashire, Eng, d. 1 Feb 1682 Plymouth, MBC RUTH BOWER 1616-1687 AGE 71 b1616 prob Eng, m. 15 Aug 1639 Plymouth, d. 1687 Eastham, Barnstable Co, MBC Children BARBARA Samuel m. Mercy Prence

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Bowers Smyth

Mayo See above.

Prence See above. Todlerby See above.

Knowles See above. Willis See above.

1900s

WILLIAM BREWSTER See above MARY SMYTHE SIMKINSON

FRANCIS GODFREY There is a Francis Godfrey in the Great Migration, but don’t have his link verified to Jonathan. See Migration bio.

GEORGE GODFREY 1636-1688 of Eastham

ELIZABETH HALL Children: GEORGE Richard m. Lydia Freeman (2nd cousin to Mercy Mayo)

UNKNOWN Children DG: Richard 1677; m. Lydia Freeman 1702; d. prob aft 1742. Jonathan b. 1682; d. 1765

Rev. JOHN MAYO See above

NATHANIEL MAYO c.1627-1661 See above

TAMSEN ? See above

HANNAH PRENCE bef 1634-bef 23 Nov 1698 See above

THOMAS PRENCE See above

Gov. THOMAS PRENCE See above

ELIZABETH TODLERBY See above

PATIENCE BREWSTER See above

THOMAS MAYO See above BARBARA KNOWLES 1656-1714/5 See above

JONATHAN GODFREY/ GODFREE 1682-1765 b. Eastham 24 Jun 1682, d prob Chatham bet 7 Mar 1765 (will) & 23 Apr 1765 (will proved Barnstable. They lived in Monomuit (now Chatham) & settled at Ragged Neck. See p. 140 Brewster MS Book. MERCY MAY0 1685-aft 1765 b. Eastham, PC 19 Jan 1685, m. Eastham 30 Oct 1707 by Jonathan Doane Esquire, d. after 7 Mar 1765 when named in will of husband. Children in order of her will: Thomas c1708 Jeptha c1710 Hannah c1712 Mercy c1714 RUTH c1716 Lydia 1718 Mehitable c1720 Anna c1722 Barbara c1724

Elder WILLIAM BREWSTER See above MARY ? See above

JOHN KNOWLES See above

RICHARD KNOWLES See above

ELIZABETH WILLIS See above

RUTH BOWER See above Scroll down to THOMAS

BARBARA SMYTH See above

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GEORGE BOWERS See above

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Bowers See above. Smyth See above.

1800s

1700s

BARBARA SMYTH 1596-1644 b. 1596 Braithwell, Yorkshire, Eng, m. 9 Feb 1614 Braithwell, d. 25 Mar 1644 Cambridge, Middlesex, MBC Children: RUTH 1616

Godfrey Hall

Brewster See above. Smythe/ Simkinson See above.

1600s

GEORGE BOWERS 1590-1656 age 66 b. 1590 Manby, Lincolnshire, Eng, d. 30 Dec 1656 Cambridge, Middlesex, MBC

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In Burke’s The Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, there is a John Hawes “of an ancient Bedfordshire family” who married Margaret Orlebar of Hinwick House in 1676.

Hawes Taylor

Gorham

1500s

1600s

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1900s

Capt. EBENEZER3 HAWES 1678/9-1727 age 50 xlvvi b. 24 Mar 1678 Edgartown. m#1 Sarah Norton, capt. of militia. Remov to Monomoy (afterward Chatham) c1706. Chosen selectmen Chatham 1707 & 10x thereafter, last time 1719. Styled captain in EDMUND HAWES / records of 13 Mar 1715/16, EDMOND when chosen moderator. 1608-1693 1709 one of two appointed “Of Plymouth, Duxbury “to make preparation for & Yarmouth”; b.c1608, “of a minister,” 1710 & 1715 London”, will 25 Sep 1693, coroner for Barnstable. 1716 Emig. to America 1635, appointed town agent to d. 9th day of J(torn) & demand, sue for & recover bur 10th day of June 1693 from Rev. Mr. Hugh Adams Yarmouth. One of original “what the said Adams oweth settlers of Sandwich on to town of Chatham” w/ cape in MBC with Giles & power to employ attorneys. Stephen Hopkins. A man Capt. JOHN HAWES Chosen to procure suitable “of education & social bet 1635&40-1701 mininster for town. 31 standing”xxxvii Helped to Jul 1717 purch half brick execute conveyances, wills b. bet 1635 & 1640 prob Duxbury. Cutler. Rep. to dwelling Boston-sold same & other legal writings General Court PC 2 yrs, 24 Aug 1722 for £160. Kept since lawyers were not starting 1696. “Capt. John inn/tavern in Catham. tolerated in the colony. (xxxvii p.86) Hawes of Yarmouth, having see Smith’s History of Records indicate his Leg Cut of Dyed with Chatham,ret. Yarmouth he is of Carolingian it.” Will 15 Oct 1701, prob. c1720, Moved Chatham descent; will 5 May 1692 c1706, then Edgartown, Yarmouth, prob 20 Jul 1693 19 Nov 1701. Mentioned his son Ebenezer. Thachers then ret. Yarmouth c1720. mentioned son John & d. 7 Oct 1727 Yarmouth “dau. Desire, wife of my sd were witnesses. Inventory 25 Nov 1701, amounted intestate (See bio.) Bur. son John” & remembered Ancient Cemetery his son Ebenezer. John was to £629-8-4.d. Nov 1701 Yarmouth, MBC. Yarmouth. executor.

Dea./Capt. PRINCE HAWES 1772b.30 Sep 1772, Yarmouth, Barnstable, MBC. He emig to Vassalboro from Yarmouth in 1802 with his brother Ebenezer Hawes. EBENEZER HAWES In 1819, a Prince Hawes 1705-bef.1741 less than 35 was voted Selectman of b. 15 Jul 1705 Yarmouth Vassalboro, ME w/ 3 yrs. Cordwainer, received the service. Prince Hawes easternmost of his father’s was a deacon of the land in Chatham when Congretaional Church of latter died. Appointed Vassalboro, organized 1820, guardian of his minor which stood on the site of brothers Benjamin & the Riverside Cemetery [as Solomon, of 1895 book, where I got EBENEZER HAWES m.#2 Thankful Thacher this info]. It later became 1735-1809 (dau of Justice of Peace?) b. “Middle of Aug” [16MFS] the Unitarian Church [prob Child: Sarah 18 Jun 1801, d. 1735, Yarmouth, Barnstable, during upheaval of 1850s] Yarmouth bef. 29 Dec 1741, MBC, d. 26 Jul 1809 in 1851. By 1895, the date of his mother’s will. building was gone. Yarmouth SARAH HEDGE DESIRE GORHAM TEMPERANCE TAYLOR (poss Mrs.) BETSEY SARAH NORTON 1709-1761 1644-1700 age 56 m. inten. 8 Dec 1769, m. TAYLOR 1676/7-1741/2 age 65 b. 30 Nov 1709 Yarmouth, b. 2 Apr 1644 Plymouth, 29 Jan 1770, Yarmouth, 1772-aft 1855 b. Edgartown, MA 1676, m. 16 Jan 1728/9 by Peter m. 7 Oct 1661 Barnstable. Barnstable, MBC, “both of bp. 17 Oct 1772, Danvers, m. 23 Feb 1699/1700 Received £40 from her Essex, MBC, intentions 4 Edgartown, MA,Receiv. her Thacher JP, 14 Nov 1744 she Yarmouth” & husb. #2 filed account of Children YarmouthVR: father before his death, d. Feb 1797 Yarmouth VR, m. dower of one third when intestate estate of Ebenezer Ebenezer 25 Jan 1771 Yarmouth, MBC, 30 Jun 15 Oct 1797, Yarmouth, husband died, will 20 Dec 1700 aged 56 yrs. PRINCE 30 Sep 1772 Barnstable, MBC, poss. 1741 d. 9 Jan 1741/2 in her for a debt to be taken our of her dower third, d. 12 Children: Josiah 22 Nov 1774 lived Chatham in 1855 65th year Edgartown. will Capt. JOHN GORHAM/ May 1761 in her 52d yr, Elizabeth 5 Oct 1662-1732 Isiah 2 Feb 1777 census, LDS records film # 29 Dec 1741, prob 11 Feb GORUM bur. Ancient Cemetery, m. Thos. Daggett Temperance 31 Jul 1779 0945512 1741/2, (see MFS records c1620/1-1676 Yarmouth. Mary 10 Jun 1664-1725 m. Hannah 12 Jan 1782 Children: about her will, signed bp. 28 Jan 1620/1 Benefield, Children Yarmouth VR John Bacon Sarah 9 Jun 1784 Emily? (Prince Hopkins IV with her mark), She gave Northamptonshire, Eng Abigail 16 Sep 1730 Edmund 2 May 1669, not said in his autobio. there much to her son Ebenezer’s A John Gorham, pos same, mentioned in father’s A Temperance Taylor was was an Aunt Em who was children. She died after her Solomon 22 Jul 1733 passenger on Philip bound EBENEZER “middle of ” will 1701 born in Massachusetts in either Emily Hawes by sons Benjamin & Ebenezer for N. America 20 Jan 16 Aug 1735 John 14 May 1671-1723 m. “lately deceased” at her will, 1750? birth or marriage.) 1635, Richard Morgan, Thankful 13 Jun 1738 (pos Mary Edmond? Betsy? bur w/ husband in Ancient master. 8 Mar 1648 purch. she m. Thacher above) Joseph 16 Jul 1673-1752 m. Cemetery of Yarmouth w/ Her father is possibly OLIVE b. 22 Nov 1808, 1/2 John Howland’s lands Desire 12 Apr 1740 #1 Bethia Hall, #2 Sarah husband. William Taylor, whose Vassalboro, ME in Marshfield which had Howes will=25 Aug 1795 Rev. Josiah T. “of Litchfield” Children: been bought from Gov. m#2 31 Aug 1743 Isaac Jabez 20 May 1675-bet 1693 Jabez 13 Sep 1700 Bradford. (see extensive Matthews & had 5 more & 1701 Yarmouth, d. young records land purchas, John 3 May 1702 Yarmouth children: Isaac, Hannah, The Northamptonshire Freeman etc.) Returned to EBENEZER 24 Mar ROBERT GORHAM Barnabas, Susannah & 1678/9-1727 Desire 22 Mr 1703/4 Gorham supposed to Eng. for short period. 1652 A Ralph Gorham, pos. Mary. Yarmouth, m. John have descended from family moved to Yarmouth Isaac 9 Mar 1679/80-1730 same, granted land in (married granddaughter Hedge, Sarah’s brother Sir Hugh de Gorham & then Barnstable, built Plymouth 2 Oct 1637 for of Thomas Prence & #2 EBENEZER 15 Jul 1705 wife Margaret, daug of grist mills in Barnstable, house & garden. 5 Mar Sarah Collier) Yarmouth Sir William l/Angevin. In 1637 Ralph complained vs “tan fatts [tannery], Desire last of Feb 1680-1723 Isaac 10 Aug 1707 1281 Sir Hugh de Gorham Frances Sprague. 1638/9 etc.” Cpt King Philip’s Benjamin 20 Mar 1682/3Manamoit/Monomoy possessed manor of War, Narraganset fight Ralph presented for 1722 (Indian name for churchfield in parish of breaking peace. 1 Sep 1640 “wounded by having his Experience 24 Sep 1686Chatham) Oundle, & land in Benefield he complained vs Ralph powderhorn shot & split 1758 Ruth 3 Feb 1708/9 which had belonged to his Smith, 2 Mar 1640/1 Smith against his side, died from Monomoy, m. Joseph wife’s father. More than resulting fever intestate complained vs Ralph. 5 Apr Thacher 200 yrs later, baptism of c1675/6. Desire & 2 sons 1640 Ralph sued Tristram Bejamin 13 Oct 1710 “John Gorram, son Ralph named adminstrators; Clark (Clark’s island?) & Chatham Gorram” was entered in Desire received her dower John Crab for debt. Ralph Solomon 6 Jul 1712 Benefield register. thirds; bur. 5 Feb 1675/6 then disappeared from Chatham Swansea, MBC Plymouth records. Bays/Bayes c. 1716 prob Chatham DESIRE HOWLAND Jacob b. prob Chatham, d. 1625/6-1683 bef 20 Dec 1741 = date b.c1625/6 Plymouth, of mother’s will which PC,(deducted from birth doesn’t mention him records of her brother John), m. c1643 Plymouth (no records. she was Mrs. Gorham in father’s will 1672) Liv. Plymouth until birth of Desire then moved to Marshfield. Later to Barnstable when brand new town, d. 13 Oct 1683 Barnstable before her mother. Children: b.Barnstable-Jabez, Mercy, Lydia, Hannah & Shubael DESIRE 2 Apr 1644 Ply. Temperance 5 May 1646 Marshfield Elizabeth 2 Apr 1648 Mfld James 28 Apr 1650 Mfld John 20 Feb 1651/2 Mfld Joseph 16 Feb 1653/4 Yarmouth Jabez 3 Aug 1656 Barnstable Lydia 11 Nov 1661 Bst Hannah 28 Nov 1663 Bst Shubael 21 Cot 1667 Bs.

Location of Benefield, Northampton, England, from where Captain John Gorham emigrated.

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HENRY HOWLAND ?-1635 Yeoman. d. 17 May 1635 Fenstanton. Huntingdonshire, Eng

Howland

Tilly WILLIAM TILLEY c1515-1578/9 b.c1515, 1st appearance in Manorial Records of Henlow Grey on 24 Apr 1543, “having two closes, 50 acres of land, one acre & a half ofmead” to which was to pay 14s per year in rent to the lord & 5s as work-silver, & 4d as a bedrip. First frankpledge session 4 Oct 1547-homage juror w/ Michael Cooper & Henry Hurst regarding widow Eliz. Bath surrendering properties to William & Agnes Tilly. See Mayflower Quarterly for more details. Regularly listed as homage juror, usually w/ Cooper & Hurst. from 1549 to 1558. Reference to Walter Cooper, son of Michael Cooper. After he d. in 1578, his wife Agnes Tilley is listed as a “suitor of the court” in Oct 1580. bur 21 Jan 1578/9 Henlow, AGNES ?-1582 bur. 7 Jun 1582 Henlow

ROBERT TILLEY c1540-? “Husbandman”, of Henlow Parish, Bedfordshire, Eng (also home to Samson & Cooper families of Mayflower) Manorial Records of Henlow xlvxx: First listed as one of homage jurors 15 Apr 1585. Often affiliated w/ Edward Cooper (father of his daughter-in-law Agnes Cooper who married Edward, & grandfather of Mayflower passengers Humility Cooper & Henry Samson) & John Rush (step-father of Joan Hurst, his daughter-in-law m. to John). Homage juror at view of frankpledge (group of 20 familes pledged together) in 1587 & 1588, particularly regarding lands of Henry Hurst, prob grandfather of Joan Hurst. Homage juror 1596, last appearance is rental role of 1598. Taxed quite a few times for Q. Eliz. Lay subsidy tax: Taxed xlvxvii 3s in 1594, 1598 & 1600. Will dated 31 Dec 1612, proved 6 Apr 1612 [sic 1613], mentions “free house wherein I dwell, w/ the back side, orchards & garden, w/ the appurtenances thereunto belonging w/ a little stripe or plat of ground, whereon sometimes did stand a barn. Land bequethed to son John, upon death of “my now wife Elizabeth” (indicates she is not mother of children), on condition John paid his brother Edward “the sum of 30 lbs lawful Eng. money.” If he did not, Edward was to receive the house & property.

JOHN HOWLAND 1592-1672 above 80 b.c1592 Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, Eng (9 m. NW of Cambridge on Olde Roman Road), d. 23 Feb 1672/3 “above 80 yrs” in Rocky Nook, Kingston. Passenger Mayflower, 1620 to Plymouth. See written accounts of him falling overboard during voyage & being rescued with boat hook.Sailed to America from Holland, servant of John Carver who was 1st Gov. As a hired hand, like Standish, he was neither Saint nor Stranger, 13th man to sign Mayflower Compact. Bradford called him “lusty young man”, Bought freedom at death of Carver, whose estate he prob. inherited & became head of household which included Desire Minter, Elizabeth, & “lad” William Lathrop. Elect PC Assistant 1 Jan 1631/2, 1733/4 & 1634/5, In charge Kennebec Trading Post 1634 at time of Hocking incident, will 29 May 1672, prov 6 Mar 1672/3

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ELIZABETH TILLY 1607-1687 (age 80)xlvvii bp 30 Aug 1607 Henlow, Mayflower 1620 Huntingdonshire, Eng, m. c Mar 1623 not quite age 16 (In those days it was considered New Year’s Day), widow for 15 yrs. never remarried, d. 22 Dec 1687 in Swansea where she was living with daughter Lydia & her husband. Ten children all b. Plymouth PC or Kennebec: Desire 1624/5 John 24 Apr 1627 m. Mary Lee Hope 30 Aug 1629 m. John Chipman Elizabeth m. E#1 Ephraim Hicks, m#2 John Dickenson Lydia m. Brown Hannah m. Bosworth Joseph c1640 Jabez c1644 Ruth c1646 m. Cushman Isaac c1649

Location of Henlow, Bedfordshire, England, which is apparently very near Huntingdonshire. Elizabeth Tilly was baptized in Henlow, Huntingdonshire. So maybe the boundaries of the county changed.

Mayflower JOHN TILLEY 1620 ?-1620/1 Silkweaver. Came to America on Mayflower with his wife, dau. Elizabeth & a brother named Edward Tilley. Apparently she was only child with them. He, wife & bro. Edward died first winter.

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JOAN HURST 1567/8-1620/1 bp 13 Mar 1567/8 Henlow. m. #1 Rogers. m. #1 Tilly Mayflower 1620 Eng., Came to America on Mayflower with her husband & dau. Died first winter leaving Elizabeth an orphan. She was apparently only child.

1900s

Location of Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, England, the home of the Howland Family,

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?? ?-? m. c1570 Children: Edward m. Agnes Cooper JOHN

MARGARET ? ?-c.1629 Bur. Fenstanton 31 Jul 1629 John Howland had at least five siblings: Humphrey, draper, settled St. Swithin’s Parish, London, probate records prove identity of John Howland’s parents. Children: Arthur (d. 1675)-his older brother, arrived in Plymouth after 1627, soon moved to Marshfield where he became a major landholder, listed “of Duxbury inNE, Planter 28 Aug 1640 Henry (d. 1671)-his younger brother, arrived as early as 1633.One of the original settlers of Duxbury & was chosen constable in 1635. Margaret m. Richard Phillips of Fenstaton, shoemaker George merchant of St. Dunstan’s East London, d. 10 Feb 1643/4

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1400s prob HENRY HURST b. prob 1505. 1st appears Manorial Records 4 Oct 1535 as homage juror. Same yr. on manor rental rolls owing rent of 20d p.y. Again 1538/9 Homage juror 1540. Same time, Michael Cooper, father of Edmund Cooper, obtained 30 acres land in Henlow. Henry listed as having one “close, containing one acre, & two acres of land w/ rental of 2s. 1543 two acres of land in the croftes between the land of the Prior of Lanthonye on both sides, paying 2s a year to the Lord therefore.” Homage juror sessons involving William & Agnes Hurst & Michael Cooper. 1549 essoined Wm. Tilly. (See Mayflower Qt. article.) ?? ?-? Children: Henry d. “an ancient bachelor” WILLIAM

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WILLIAM HURST c1530-bet 1567 & 1571/2 b. c 1530 & d. between 1567 when fathered last child & 1571/2 when his widow Rose remarried John Rush ROSE ?-? m. Children: JOAN Henry bp 10 June 1561

prob. THOMAS BAYES c1615-1679/80 (age 64) of Edgartown, Martha’s Vineyard, MA, Remov to Vineyard before 1653. will dated 14 Feb 1679/80. Executers were his wife & Thomas Mayhew, Jr. Inventory rendered 31 May 1680. Exact date of death between then not known. xlvxxx prob. ANNA BAKER ?-bet 1681&1697 xlvxxx m. 26 Oct 1639 Dedham. d. bet Aug 1681 & March 1696/7. Children mentioned in husband’s will: Hannah m. Bridges Mary m. Joseph Norton Anna m. Andrew Newcomb Abigail m. Timothy Batt RUTH 2 (5) 1643 Dedham Thomas Jr. 1 (1) 1645 Boston. d. 17 Nov 1669 unm.

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THOMAS HEDGE 1565-1621 age 49 b. Adston, Northamptonshire, Eng, d. Adston

ELISHA HEDGE 1585-1634 age 49 b. Adston, Northamptonshire, Eng, d. 1634 MBC

WILLIAM HEDGE 1602-1670 age 68 b. 27 Jan 1602 Northamptonshire, Eng, d. 11 Aug 1670 Yarmouth

ALICE ?

ANN WARD 1590-1633 age 42 b. 1590 Middleton Cheney, Northampton, Eng, m. 12 Jul 1610 age 20 Middleton Cheney, d. 1633, Middleton Cheney Children: William 27 Jan 1602

BLANCHE HULL 1605-1650 age 45 b. 1605 Northleigh, Devon, Eng. m. 1555 Yarmouth, Barnstable, MBC, d. 1650 Yarmouth Children: Elisha 1640

RICHARD WARD 1541-1585 age 44 b.1541 Middleton Cheney, Northampton, Eng, d. 185 Middleton Cheney

THOMAS WARD 1561-1613 age 52 b. 1561 Middleton Cheney, Northampton, Eng, d. 1613 Middleton Cheney

AGNES ? 1568-1633 Children: THOMAS 1561

FRANCIS ? 1568-1633 Children: ANN 1590

ISAAC NORTON, JR. RUTH BAYES 1643-? xlvxxx b. 2 (5) 1643 Dedham Children: SARAH Mercy m. James Claghorn bur. 1762 age 75

ELISHA HEDGE 1640-1732 b. 1640 Barnstable, MBC, d. 17 May 1732 Yarmouth

JOHN HEDGE 15 Apr 1673, Yarmouth, Barnstable, MBC, d. 2 Jun 1752 Yarmouth

MARY STURGIS 1648-1713 b. 20 Apr 1648 Sandwich, Barnstable, MBC, m.1665 Yarmouth, Barnstable, MBC @ age 17, d. 5 Mar 1713 Yarmouth Children: JOHN 15 Apr 1673

THANKFUL LATHROP/ LOTHROP 1679-1752 Children: SARAH 1709 John Barnabas 27 Dec 1704 Yarmouth, m. Mercy Bangs (a Bradford descendant #172) as her second husband.

Research Note: This woman is possibly a descendant of the Rev. John Lathrop mentioned above.

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Hull Sturgis Lothrop/Lathrop

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Research Note: There is an Isaac Norton b. 1641 to Nicholas Norton in the Waymouth/Boston Early Records p. 171 NEHGS Register pub 1855.

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PETER STURGIS

EDWARD STURGIS 1552-1625 age 73 b. 1552 Kent, Eng, m. @ age 24 Kent, d. 23 Jun 1625 Sturry, Kent, Eng.

JOHN STURGIS 1578-1625 age 46 b. 27 Apr 1578 Worth, Kent, Eng, m. @ age 30, d. 1625 Sturry, Kent, Eng

EDWARD STURGIS 1613-1695/10 age 82 b. 1613 hannington, Northampton, Eng, d. Oct 1695 Sandwich, Barnstable, MBC

UNKNOWN

UNKNOWN

MARGARET AUSTIN 1576-1622 age 46 b.1576 Woodnesborough, Kent, Eng. m. 28 Nov 1608 Tilmanstone, Kent, Eng @age 32, d. 1622 Eastry, Kent, Eng. Children: EDWARD 1613

ELIZABETH HINCKLEY 1648-1713 age 73 b. 20 Sep 1617 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, m.1637 Faxton, Northampton, Eng @age 20, d. 14 Feb 1691 Sandwich, Barnstable, MBC, Children: MARY 20 Apr 1648

ANTHONY AUSTIN/ AWSTIN 1550b. Kent, Eng

Austin/Awstin Kenworthy

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ELIZABETH KENWORTHY 1568-1620 b. 10 Oct 1568 Goudhurst, Kent, Eng, d. 9 Feb 1620 Goudhurst, Kent, Eng Children: MARGARET 1576

JOHN HINCKLEY/ HYNCKLEYE age 65 1512-1577 b. 1512 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, d. 25 Jun 1577 Harrietsham

ROBERT HINCKLEY 1537-1606 age 69 b. 1537 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, d. 27 Mar 1606 Harrietsham

THOMAS HINCKLEY 1562-1635 age 73 b.20 Dec 1562 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, m. @age 46, d. 1635 Ulcombe, Kent, Eng

JOHANE BILLS 1515-1564 age 49 b. 1515 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, m. @age 19 1534 Harrietsham, d. 23 Jan 1564 Harrietsham Children: ROBERT

ELIZABETH ? 1541-1574 age 33 b. 1541 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, m. age 12?? 1553 Harrietsham, d. 2 Nov 1574 Harrietsham Children: THOMAS

ANN KATHERINE ? 1584-1635 age 51 b. 1584 Harrietsham, Kent, Eng, m. @age 24 1608 Harrietsham, Hawkhurst, Kent, Eng, d. 1635 harrietsham Children: ELIZABETH

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1700s SAMUEL BOOTH 1832/3-1909 b. Eng. Imig to Mass, prob. Boston, remov to Mission Dist. of San Francisco in 1860s, one of first residents there, 1863-64 SF Directory listed him, “Mission Wollen Mills dw1 w s Shotwell nr Sixteenth” 1890 censusxxxvix liv. at 512 Shotwell SF “age 58” (ie b.1832), SF Call article on 50th anniv. in 1907 stated “age 77” (ie b.1890), 1905 Directory “r. 512 Shotwell” 1908 Directory, p307 “r.825 Fell St.[pos lost home on Shotwell in 1906 earthquake?] treas AOUW (Ancient Order of United Workmen)”, in 1903 was Grand Receiver of AOUW Callagan Bldg; worked at “the mint” in San Francisco with Charles Hopkins, who married his dau. Mary. Their only son, Prince Hopkins wrote in his autobio, Both Hands Before the Fire, “My dearly loved grandfather was a graybeard of tall & rather leonine appearance, one of most all-round men I have ever known. He was the adequate breadwinner & effectively functioning father of 7 children who lived to adulthood & good citizenship. For 40 yrs was writer of campaign songs for his policital party, & of some very sweet poems. He was held in esteem & affection by all who knew him, was non-smoker & Continued next column.

Booth The Booth Family Plot is underneath a big tree in Holy Cross Cemetery, Colma, California, just south of San Francisco. (Cemeteries not allowed in San Francisco.)

Ryan

Sam Booth continued. almost a non-drinker. He was so devoted a husband, that when, two yrs after they had celebrated their golden wedding anniversary, Grandma went down w/ what was clearly to be her last illness, he, unable to endure the thought of life w/out her, took to his bed & in 3 days was dead before her.”; d. “recently before Aug 23, 1909 San Francisco The Ancient Order of United Workmen was the first fraternal order to offer death benefits & life insurance to its members. The group dwindled in the early 20th century & doesn’t exist today, though there is a group here in San Rafael, CA, which claims to have descended from it. It began in Meadeville, PA on 27 Oct 1868, bounded by Mason John Jordon Upchurch. Each member paid $1 & his family would receive not less than $500 when he died. Each time a member died, eery member put in another $1 in the fund to refill it.

JONATHAN BOOTH bef 1850-? b. England, poss. Cheadle. Emig. to Calif in 1867. As of 2004, his family Bible, starting 1749 (orig. of distant relatives, Clayton & Goodwin families), was in the possession of Kimberly Breeze, widow of Peter Breeze, in Mill Valley, CA, great grandson.

?

UNKNOWN Children (n.i.o.): SAMUEL Franklin (Eileen Hopkins said he moved to Southern California & married into Otis Chandler family of Los Angeles Times. EMA thinks Otis Booth “Spike”, of Pasadena, is his descendent.

JOHANNA RYAN 1836/7-c1909 b. Ireland. m. 28 Apr 1857 in Massachusetts. d. c1909 San Francisco. Celebrat. 50th wed anniv. 1907 Invitation says “‘At Home’ 825 Fell St, San Francisco, California”. Prince Hopkins, in autobio. said he visited them weekends as child at 512 Shotwell Street in Mission District of San Francisco. “My ‘Big Grandma’, as I called her by way of distinction from my father’s mother, was a tall, gaunt Irishwoman of strong character, stern w/ her own numberous progeny, but like her rival, my ‘Little Grandma’ in Maine, a push-over for a grand-child. I used to wait in the kitchen for her fragrant loaves to be hauled out of the oven in order that I might claw out w/ greedy fingers, & devour while hot, the delicious interiors. Grandma had a deaf ear for the protests of my aunts that I should at least be required to wash my hands” Children: (Dated derived from census records) Ella? (Mrs. Charles Iredale) c1858 MARY ISABELLE 1861 Samuel F. c1863 Amy 1868 Madelain “Lena” 1865 (listed as teacher in 1903 SF directory, living at Shotwell address w/ parents Frank Edith Scroll down to THOMAS

The Ryans are often from the southern coastal counties of Tipperary, Waterford, Wesford & Kilkeny.

Suggestions for further research: 1. Death records (go through California. Not found in Salt Lake City. Try vital records at California Genealogical Society. 2. Census records (I have already found some.) 1860, 1865 State census. 3. City Directory 4. Church Records. Archdiocese 5. Baptisms (Again, catholic) 6. Try to find Samuel Jr. 7. I couldn’t find any of the children in the Massachusetts Vital Records. Search Ella b 1858. 8. Naturalization & Citizenship Index 1405752 (LDS research number) 9. Real Estate Records 10. Records from the AOUW.

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GEORGE THOMAS c1812-aft 1861 b. 1812 Bristol (based on 1861 census when 49 yrs. old) Occ: in 1861=Optician. in 1882=Master of Eagley School, Turton, res. in 1861 at 66 Temple Street, St. John Parrish, Wolverhampton, Staffordshire. Res in 1882 (at time of George Need to look up his death & Victoria’s wedding) record in Wolverhampton. prob. Clark Street, Wolverhampton =Victoria’s residence on wedding certificate.

Location of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, where the Thomas Family lived.

Thomas Turner

HANNAH TURNER c.1820-aft 1861 b.c1820 Preston, Lancashire based on 1861 census when 41 yrs old. 6 kids listed on census. George youngest, at 9. First 2 b. Clitheroe, Lanc. Rest b. Ealeybridge, Lanc. William T. (probably for Turner) c1842 Occ: “Printers Compositor” Sarah Jane c1844 Clitheroe Eleanor Ann c1845prob the “Nellie” who witnessed Geo & Vic’s wed Emma c1846 Hannah E. 1851 GEORGE JAMES 1851

Location of discovery of gold Location of Victoria Annie Bissell’s birthplace

Possible location of Tasinania Bissell’s birthplace

Note: Emma Hinks was of Wassel, Staff. When I researched Bissell, I found many of them in Wassel. Maybe cousins?

Bissell

poss RICHARD BISSELL poss. St. Lawrence Parish, Ludlow Shropshire, England poss. MARY Note: The Samuel Bissell I found listed b. Tettenhall in 1819 had parents Richard (b. bef 1799) & Mary. I have yet to confirm this connection. I found only one Richard & Mary Bissell. They were on the 1841 census. He was 45 & she 50. His occupation “ Nailer.” That would make him b. c1796 & she b. c1791. They were living in St. Lawrence Parish, Ludlow Shropshire, England

GEORGE JAMES THOMAS 1851-1943 (age 92) b.18 Dec 1851, Bolton, Lancashire. Appears as son on 1861 census, age9. 1891 census=age34. res@ 17 Merridale Lane, Wolverhampton, which must have changed to 17 Tettenhall Rd by 1901 census. Lists Amelia J. Head=Domestic Servant & Annie E. Turner, who might be cousin=Domestic Nurse. 1901 census res@ 17 Tettenhall Rd, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, Staffordshire. 2 servants: Sarah Rogers“Nurse Domestic” & Hettie Clark“General Domestic”, Occ. in 1891=Insurance Agent”, in 1901=”Superintend”, On marriage certif= “worker, clerk”, on Eileen’s bir certif(1892) = “Water Rate Collector.” On Eileen’s marriage certificate (1921) =“Insurance Broker”. Family lore: “All the children wrote their names on the ceiling in the basement of Tettenhall Road w/ soot from a candle.” I went there w/ cousin Candida Aug 2006. It is now a multi-resident bldg. No one answered door. My mother, Eileen Hopkins Ames, had no memory of him, nor did her cousin Camilla Bissell Thomas. d.Wolverhampton betw JanMar 1943.

VICTORIA ANNIE BISSELL c1861/1863-1940 (age 77/79) b. c1861 Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (age 10 on 1871 census, but listed as 77 at death in 1940) m. 1 Jul 1882 at age 21 (10 yrs younger than Geo) in The Parish Church, Parish SAMUEL BISSELL of St. Jude, Wolverhampton, c1818-1909 (age 90) Staffordshire, Eng. d. 17 b.poss c1818 Tettenhall, Tettenhall Rd, 18 Jun 1940 Staff (right down road with Harold in attendance from Wolverhampton). of Myocardial degeration & Occ: Eileen’s mar certif Chronic Bronchitis. = “Merchant”, 1871 Children: b. Wolverhampton, census=“Commercial Staffordshire, England: Traveler” ie salesman, res@ Harold “Webster” George 14 95 Clark St, Athal Terrace, Jun 1886, m#2 Joyce Alice St.Jude Parrish, St. Marks Steuart Ward, Wolverhampton. EILEEN MAUDE 9 Feb He & Emily lived Australia 1892, m.#1 Prince Charles betw 1859 (b. of Tasizaina) Hopkins, M#2 Vernon & 1866 (b. of Ada). 4 Armitage children born Australia. Winnifred May “Peggy” bet Res prob. Compton Road, Oct-Dec 1893, m. #1 Mr. Wolverhampton 1882 when Pope, #2 Jack S. Abbott Vic married. 1871 had 2 Eric S. c1895, m. Kathleen ? servants: Eliza Richards Liala Victoria c.1898 d. 9 “domestic servant” & Aug 1983 w/o children. Emma Hinks “nurse” d. (Listed as Victoria Liala in Wolverhampton, Staff 29 Jul-Sept 1898 registry, Vol Apr 1909. 6b. p589, m. Dick Wilson (“Mr. T.H.Wilson” in Eileen Maude’s will.) William “Billie” George EMILY E. c.1898, m. Florence ? c1836-aft 1871 Daisy Nora bet Oct-Dec 1899, b. c1836 Ireland (35 yrs old Vol 6b p575, m. Lionel John on 1871) Turner (Note: A Joseph Glover Bissell Marie Louise b.1901 (Julywitnessed George & Vic’s Sept 1901 book, vol 6b. wedding. That must have p575) been Josephine.) (3 others died according 6 dau. listed on census:1st to Eileen Mary Hopkins four b. Australia, “scholars”, Ames) the 1891 census lists last two b. Wolverhampton: a “Loslie J Thomas, age Tasizaina c1859 11/12”) VICTORIA ANNIE c1861 Josephine c1865 Ada M. c1866 Mary L. c1869 Emily M. c1870

1900s

17 Tettenhall Road, Wolverhampton, Staff. England, home of Victoria & George Thomas, Aug. 2006 (Photo: Mary Ames Mitchell) Their grandson, Lionnel Turner, son of Daisy, remembers staying at 17 Tettenhall Road when his family visited from their home in Argentina. He remembers the names written on the ceiling of the basement. When Lionnel was older, George took him to the nearby pub to drink & Lionel had to keep up with him. “The house was always lit with candles,” said Lionel. Both Lionel & my mother Eileen Hopkins Ames, (Lionel’s first cousin)couldn’t recall their grandmother cooking. So assume there was at least one servant. “Which every one did in those days if they could afford it,” said my mother. Eileen also remembered, “My grandmother came to visit my mother (Eileen Maude) when I was little & stayed with us in London. I remember her as warm & fuzzy. I don’t remember my grandfather staying with us.”

1 Jul 1932—50th Wedding Anniversary of Victoria Annie & George William Thomas in Wolverhampton, Staff. Eng. One year before death of my grandmother, Eileen Maude Thomas Hopkins Armitage seated lower right. From left top row: “Peggy”, Eric, Joyce (Harold’s wife), “Billie”, “Webster”, Florence (Billie’s wife), Kathleen (Eric’s wife) Vernon Armitage (Eileen’s second husband), Marie Louise. From left bottom row: Liala, George, Victoria, Eileen.

REFERENCES: 1940 d/c for Victoria Annie Thomas. b/c George James Thomas. d/c Samuel Bissell, 1861 Census George & Hannah Thomas Family, 1891 Census George James & Victoria A. Thomas Family, 1901 Census George James & Victoria Annie Thomas Family, 1911 Census George James & Victoria Annie Thomas Family, 1871 Census Samuel & Emily E. Bissell Family, 1841 Richard & Mary Bissell Family, 1921 m/c Eileen M. Thomas & Prince C. Hopkins, b/c Eileen Maude Thomas, 1932 m/c Eileen Maude Thomas Hopkins to Vernon Armitage, 1925 b/c Eileen Mary Hopkins, 1933 d/c Eileen Maude Thomas Hopkins Armitage, 1882 m/c George James Thomas to Victoria Annie Bissell.

79

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Extensions

WILLIAM WOLCOTT Sr. 1439-1504 (age 55) b. 1439 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng. d. 1504 Tolland, Somerset, Eng. NOTE: Named after the city of Walcot where family originated.

JERAN/JEVAN/IEVAN WALCOT 1176-? b. 1176 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng.

ROGER WALCOT 1211-? b. 1211 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng.

Sir PHILIP WALCOT c1230-1327 b. c1230 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng.

JOHN WALCOT 1281-? b. 1281Walcot, Shropshire, Eng.

JOHN WALCOT 1316-1383 b. 1316 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng., d. 1383 prob Walcot.

THOMAS WALCOT 1342-1406 b.1342 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng., d. 1406 prob Walcot.

JOHN WALCOT 1368-1396 Sir JOHN WALCOT b. 1368 Walcot, 1388-? Shropshire, Eng. d. 3 b. 1388 Walcot, Aug 1396 Shropshire, Eng.

ROGER WOLCOTT 1416? b. 1416 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng.

ANN MYNDE 1180-? b. 1180 Shropshire Children: ROGER 1211

EDITH DOWNES 1215-? b. 1215 Walcot Children b. Walcot: PHILIP c1230

JULIAN HARLEY/HERLE 1250-? b. 1250 Walcot Children b. Walcot: JOHN 1381

ALICE LLOYD 1285-? b. 1285 Walcot Children b. Walcot: JOHN 1316

UNKNOWN 1320 b. 1320 Walcot Children b. Walcot: THOMAS 1342

UNKNOWN 1346 b. 1346 Children: JOHN 1368

UNKNOWN 1372-? b. 1372 Walcot Children b. Walcot: JOHN 1388

MARGARET LLOYD C1427-? b. Mathavarn, Merioneth, Wales. Children, the first two al least b. Walcot: WILLIAM 1439 Edward c1447 John c1449

JOAN SPERRY 1442-? b. 1442 Children: WILLIAM 1463

Baildon

ROBERT BAILDON 1427-1472/3 b. 1427 Eng., d. bet 1472 & 1473

WALTER BAILDON 1448-1500 b. 1448 Baildon Hall, Eng. d.1500

Calverly

AMICE/ALICE CALVERLEY 1427-? b. c1427, m. c1448 Children: Robert Thomas Alice Elizabeth Margaret WALTER

? GARGRAVE c1448-? b c.1448. m. c1468. Children: William Anne Richard Leonard JOHN

Wolcott

DAVID of GARTHAMEL 1144-? b. 1144 Walcot, Shropshire, Eng. JANE WALCOT 1148-? b. 1148 Shropshire Children: JERAN?JEVAN/IEVAN 1211

MATILDA de CORNWALL c1388-? b. c1388 Burford, Shropshire, Eng. m. 1416 Walcot Children b. Walcot: ROGER 1416 Jane 1427

WALTER CALVERLY c1400-? b.c1400 Eng. ELIZABETH MARKINFIELD Children: AMILCE/ALICE

Gargrave

Gould

ROBERT GARGRAVE ALICE BEAUMONT

WILLIAM WOLCOTT 1463-1502 (age 39) THOMAS WOLCOTT b. 1463 Tolland, 1487-1554 d. 1502 Tolland, bur. churchyard of b. 1487 Tolland, d. Dulverton, Tolland, 5 Jun 1554 Tolland. Eng. d. 2 yrs. before Was living in Golden Manor in 1525 his father. ELIZABETH WHETCHILL c1478-? b. c1478 Tolland Children: THOMAS 1487

JOHN BAILDON bet 1468&14691526 b. bet 1468 & 1469 Doncaster, Eng. d. 22 Dec 1526. m#2 Mary Mauleverer ? HALDENBY c1470-? b. c1470, m. c1495 Children: John Thomas Richard Edith Jennet Edward Richard William ROBERT

MARGARET WELLING 1503-? b. 1503 Tollland, m. 1552 Children: Thomas Jr. c1543 JOHN 10 Sep 1516 Henry 1523 Robert 1525

ROBERT BAILDON 1499-1558 b. 1499 Doncaster, Eng. d. 1558 MARGARET MIRFIELD 1498-? b. 1498 Kippax, Eng. m. c1518. Children: Nicholas Edward William GEORGE

THOMAS GARGRAVE c1425-? b. c1425 Eng MARGARET LEIGH c1425-? b. c1425 Eng. m. 1446 Children: Thomas Robert Alice CHILD ? c1448

RICHARD GOULD 1479-1531 b. 1479 Bovington, Buckingham/ Hertfordshire, England d.11 OCT 1531 England JOAN ? 1480-1536

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BERNARD HUTCHINSON of Cowlam, in the County of York, Esq. ?-aft 1282 xlvxiv Liv in Cowlam (a very small parish in th eEast Riding of Yorkshire w/ only 17 souls in 1809, w/ 2,036 acres) JOHN HUTCHINSON in 1282. of Cowlam xlvxiv

Hutchinson

? BOYVILLE Children: JOHN Robert, m. Miss Newcomen of Saltfleetby, Lincoln, also ancient & respectable family Mary m. Wm Sutton of Wassenbroughe/ Washingborough, Lincoln

Boyvill Wouldbie Gregory Bennet Harvie Drax/Drake

EDITH WOULDBIE Children: JAMES Barbara m. Lewis Ashton of Spalding, Esq., prob of Lincoln Julia m. Alyne Bruxbie of Shobie, Exq Margaret m. Wm. Champernoune, Esq. Devonshire

JAMES HUTCHINSON of Cowlam xlvxiv Only son & heir to John. URSULA GREGORY Children: WILLIAM John m. dau of John Conyers, Esq. Barbara m. John Hathorne of Cransweke, Esq (Cranswick, which is few miles from Cowlam) Dau. m. John Ocam, Esq. Eleanor m. Thomas Brown Esq.

1400s

ANTHONY HUTCHINSON of Cowlam, Esq. xlvxiv Eldest son & heir; w#1 WILLIAM HUTCHINSON Judity Crosland, dau. of Thos. Crosland, Esq. No of Cowlam, Esq. xlvxiv Issue. Eldest son & heir. ANNE BENNET Children: ANTHONY Oliver m. dau of John Tindall, Esq. Mary m. Jervas Abtoste (prob Abtofte) Alice m. Wm. English

ISABEL HARVIE She was w#2. Children: William (heir to Cowlam) m. Bridget dau of William of West Harlton, Esq; had 3 children THOMAS John Richard (who supposidly went to Ireland) Leonards Edmond Francis Andrew

JOHN BOYVILL, Esq. “This family was one of the best & oldest families in Yorkshire.” WILLIAM WOULDBIE of Wouldbie [no one seems to be able to find out where this was. Prob York or Lincoln.]

THOMAS HUTCHINSON Esq. ? - aft 1550 xlvxiv Second son by second wife of Anthony. Prob. born late 1400s. During early 1500s (“time of Henry VIII), he purchased the principal portion of the township of Owthorpe, Nottingham. This lordship contained 1600 ares of land. Later, the remaining portion of the township came into the possession of his descendants. He also owned considerable estate at Cropwell Butler (few miles northward); Colston Basset (few miles eastward of Owthorpe); Tollerton (west of Owthorpe); & Ruddington (west of Owthorpe). His residence was at Cropwell Butler, as would be three succeeding generations. Mansion at Owthrope wouldn’t be built until Sir Thomas Hutchinson - 4th in direct descent, who built & occupied the mansion. There is no trace of the mansion at Cropwell Butler or of Owthorpe today. Parish registers of Cropwell Butler prior to 1684 long destroyed, & those of Owthorpe prior to 1731 are missing. He was living 9th Oct 1550 when he proved the will of his son William. ? DRAKE/DRAX ?- prob bef. 1550 She wasn’t mentioned in the will of her son William on 11 June 1550, whereas her husband was, therefore she was probably deceased by then. Children: William m. dau of Mr. Watson. They had 1 son & 3 dau. His grandson, Thomas, would built manor at Owthorpe, be knighted by Charles I [while the rest of the Hutchinsons were fleeing!] & m#1 Margaret, dau of Sir Wm. Fitzwilliams, knight to Elizabeth, & m.#2 Catherine, dau of Sir John Stanhope, from Derby. He was royalist & MP in 1643. But his sons didn’t follow his persuasions, so he disinherited them. Catherine lived life of splendor in Notthingham to age of 102. Other son = famous Col. John Hutchinson. John LAWRENCE poss. Robert

Mr. ? GREGORY of Nafferton, Yorkshire (very near Cowlam) WILLIAM BENNET of Theckley, Esq. Prob Thackley in the West Riding of Yorkshire. ROBERT HARVIE, Esq. Mr. ? DRAX/DRAKE of Kinoulton, Nottingham

81

Ames Family Tree Source Notes NOTE: I’ve skipped some numbers & repeated others. I was in too much of a hurry & got careless. A missing number doesn’t mean there is a mistake or that something is missing. Sources from research by Rosemary Ames: Mormon Chart filled out by Rosemary Ames, Great Aunt to EMA, who researched church & city hall records in New England. Her sources also include: “Family Document & Letters, Dawes & Allied Families, compiled by Mary Walton Ferris, privately printed 1943. Wm. Dawes & His Ride with Paul Revere, by Henry Holland, compiled, edited by A. Böhmer Rudd, Washington D.C. 1950 British & American Wolcotts, by Jos. C. Jackson, privately printed N.Y. 1912 61 pps. typed mss. compiled by Milo E. Ames, Albany, N.Y. 1911 53 pps. booklet printed 1895 for ceremonies in Hartford, Conn. at unveiling of Statue of Colonel Thomas Knowlton. i Ipswich in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Thos. Franklin Waters, Pres. of Ipswich Historical Society, Pub. Ipswich 1905. ii Ye Famely Chronologie, 1691 iii “Massachusetts Soldiers & Sailors of the Revolutionary War”, Vol. XIII, pg 572 Mary’s additional sources: Mayflower Families, Through Five Generations: Richard Warren Family, Volume 18 Part 1 & 2, 1999; Stephen Hopkins Family, Volume 6, 2001; Francis Cooke Family, Paperback, 5th Ed.2000; William Brewster Family, Paperback, 3rd Ed.2000, General Society of Mayflower Descendents Original documents, manuscripts & miscellaneous family records inherited from Thomas Winter Ames, Sr., some dated back to the 1600s. Information from Ancestry.Com is printed in green i “The First Settlers of New England”, John Savage, 1862, Electronic Version ©Robert Kraft, July 1994. ii Franklin Mousley research 1950s LDS microfilms #0001042, 0001043 iii The American Geneologist, Vol. 52, No. 3, pg175 iv.1900 NEHGS REGISTER vol 54: 377-383.LDS microfilms #0001042 & 0001043 by Franklin Mousley in 1950’s. v. Directory of the Ancient heads of New Entland Families, compiled by Frank R. Holmes, New York, 1923, (274p), p. 73, Godfrey Memorial Library, AGBI, Middletown, CT, 1952 vi. History of Hingham, MA (Lincoln?) vii. Early Connecticut Marriages, as found in ancient church records prior to 1800, by Frederick W. Baily, 1896-1906. Voluntown Presbyterian Church, organized Oct. 15 1723. Records of Rev. Samuel Dorrance. viii. Lewis & Newhall, p. 187 ix. Nathan Barker Descendancy, compiled by William G. Lord, 1931 x. Proof Danie’s firs wife Hanah was a Johnson, daughter of Samuel Johnson, is found in a deed dated 10 Jan 1710/11 recorded 29 April 1724 from Samuel to son David Johnson (Warner) xi. The Geneology of the cushing Family, Cushing, James S. Montreal, 1905; 1st ed 1887, carries some lines to 10th generation, No sources with entries. Prefact to 1905 says extensive use of NEHGS library, History of Hingham, Buckingham Genealogy 1892, town & church records of Hingham, Scituate, Rehoboth, Pembroke, Hull. xii. Geneologial Notes of Barnstable Families, Otis, Amos; 2 vols in one; 1888/90; reprinted eneo Publ Co 1979. (re Carroll library) xiii. Geneological Dict. of First Settlers of New England, James Savage, Geneo Publ 1977, also onlin http://genweb. net/~books/savage/electronic version 4/2000, http://www. usgennet.org/usa/vt/state/savage/10/2002, http://www. usgennet.org/usa/topic/newengland/savage/ xiv. Barnstable County (Cape Cod) Mass Early Vital Records CD ROM; S&R Test; VR 1:391 dau of Anthony born about beginning of Oct 1653. xv. Plymouth County, Mass, Early Vital REcords, CD Search & Research Publ Co. p110 in MD13:86 xvi. Plymouth County Records 5:246 xvii. Baker Geneology, John Komar at Warren Co Ny GenWeb Site Grave Stone xviii. Web info on Wilcox from NEHGR vol127, pgs 188-191, Savage vol IV S-Z, p546, Forming the Civil Comb? 5 20 2638 compact of Government 5 28 1638, Colony Office served as a representative – R1670 Rhode Island page, Colony Office 1672 Westerly, RI., Christening info 2-3-1604 (copied source from William James Family from Newport RI tree, ancestry. com.

Miscellaneous Facts xix.The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, Anderson, Rober Charles, Boston, New Engalnd Historic Geneological Society, 1995. 3 volumes A-F, G-O, P-W., Ohio State Library Call Number F3.A53 1995, pg. 1026 xx. Fifty Great Migration Colonists to New England & Their Origins, Threlfall, John Brtooks, Madison Wi:Published byt he Author, 1990, NEHGS F/3/T58/1990 p. 161 xxi. Bates, Bigge, Hyland, & Stedman, article in NEHGS Register, reprinted by Geneology.com on CD#181. xxii. “Town Life in the Fifteenth Century” by Green (Source of Steve Fry, [email protected]) xxiii. Records of John Graham Moseley (www) xxiv. Extracted from Historic Homes & Institutions & Personal Memoirs o Worcester County, Massachusetts. Prepared under the Editorial Supervision of Ellery Bicknell Crane, & Published by Lewis Publishing Company 1907. Vol #1, pages 541-542 EMA - Edith Mary Ames Mitchell visited town or grave to obtain information. xxv. “The Knowltons Genealogy”, bound two-volume ms. in Ashford Town Library, EMA forgot to write down author. xxvi. The History of Boxford, & Early Settlers of Rowle, Massachusetts xxvii. “A facsimile - an engraved copy of the document with signatures, is a feature, page 51, in the History of charlestown, Mass. by Richard Frothingham, Boston, 1835.” -RA xxviii. History of Hingham xxviii. Azubah’s information is from the grave marker in Becket. Lucy, her mother & Father are from the death records in Becket. The rest of the family’s records are from Ancestry.com records, & since it’s doubtful there would be two couples with the same name & with dates that fit, I am assuming they are the same.(EMA) xxx Web source: Genealogical & Family History of Western New York, compiled by William R. Cutter, New York, Lewis Historical Pub. Co., 1912, p.126) xxxi Barker Genealogy 1927, by Elizabeth Frye Barker, Pub. Co/. 15 West. 107th St. NY 1927 in the Mayflower Society Library. xxxii Early Settlers of Rowley MA, p. 203 xxxiii KFA,DAWG (I’m not sure what this means. It was the reference on the web information. EMA) xxxiv NEHGS xxxv History of Harwich pg. 52 xxxvi. Research of Ray M. Freeman, 18 February 1989, source: Cape Cod Series Vol II: History & Genealogy of the Mayflower Planters by Hills G974.48 H557ha (1936) xxxvii. - History of Old Yarmouth, by Charles F. Swift, pub The Historical Society of Old Yarmough, 1975 p.85 xxxvii Early Settlers of Rowley, Massachusetts, by George Brainard Blodgette, revis. by Amos Everett Jewett, Rowley, Massachusetts, 1933 xxxviii Dawes-Gates ref. Pop’s Pioneers, pp IX, 372; Gleanings of English records, J.A. Emmerton & H.F. Waters in Essex Institute Historical Colletions, XVII, 103-4 xxxvix 1890 US Census, California Room, San Rafael Public Library, California xl The Chaffee Genealogy 1635-1609 by William H. Chaffee of New York City, N.E. Historic Genealogical Society, The Grafton Press xli Leadig Men of Chicago, 18__, “Miner T. Ames” (fE 48962.096 Newberry Library, Chicago) xlii Pension Record for Rose, Lemuel, W. File No. 5715, Cer. No. 13483 xliii Granville Times May 10 1934 xliv Rhode Island Vital Records xlv Ipswich Vital Records xlvi American Biographies (book in the Pittsfield Library, Massachusetts, Genealogy Dept. “Knox, Henry” xlvii U.S. & International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 xlviii The Referenced History of the Putnam Family in England & America Volume 1 by Matthew H. Putnam & Rand M. Putnam. see individuals for exact references to Vital Records & Church Records. xlviv The Great Migration Begins, records in the NEHGS; “Robert Keyes” xlvv: California Society of Mayflower Descendants, First 100 Members, page 46 xlvvi: Ancestors & Descendants of Edmond Hawes, Library in New York pp 166 on. xlvvii: Mayflower Five Generation Books John Howland of the Mayflower xlvviii: NEHGS 76:267 xlvix: NY GenWeb, Rachel Baker Cottrell records xlvx: Life & Correspondence of Henry Knox by Francis Samuel Drake (pdf version on file) xlvxi: Genealogy of the Waldo Family : A Record of

Descendants of Cornelius Waldo of Ipswich, Mass. from 1647 to 1900. This genealogy was compiled by Waldo Lincoln in 1902. It traces the descendants of the founder of the American branch of the Waldo family, Cornelius Waldo. xlvxii: American Genealogist (found through NEHGS web site) xlvxiii: The Pratt Directoryu - 1995 Edition by Jayne Pratt Lovelace. It’s in the LDS Library in Salt Lake City. Xeroxed pages in my records. xlvxiv: NEHGS Register Vol 22, “Genealogy of the Hutchings of Salem, p.236-254. xlvxv: NEHGS Register Vol 163, October 2009 p. 253 xlvxvi: NEHGS Register, Vol162, Jan 2008, pp5-7 xlvxvii: Mayflower Quarterly, Vol 75, No. 2, p140. “Lay Subsidy Taxes. under document series E179 in Great Britain’s Public Records Office. xlvxviii: NEHGS Register, Vol 95, p39-49 “The Rev. John Mayo, 1941 xlvxix: Descendants of John May of Roxbury, Mass 1640, Second Edition, Originall Compiled by Samuel May, John Joseph May, Richard S. Edes, John Wilder May 1878. Revised by John Franklin May 1978. Gateway Press, Inc. Baltimore 1978 xlvxx: The Mayflower Quarterly, Vol.76. No.2, June 2010, Article: “The Manorial Records of Henlow Grey: New Information on the Tillys, Coopers & Hursts”, by Caleb H. Johnson. xlvxxx: NEHGS Register Jan 1899, p130 under Replies Batt & Bayes. (roman numerals above are screwed up. I’m starting again with “L” for 50. l: Illustrated History of Kennebec County, Maine. ed. Henry D. Kingsbury, Simeon L. Deyo. New York: H.W. Blake & Company, 1892

Dates towns were established: Menden 1667 Oxford 1692 next to Sutton. Sutton 1714 Old Norfolk Co. MBC established 10 May 1643 = area No. of Merrimack - Northeastern corner of present state of Mass & southeastern part of what is now New Yampshire: Concheco (Dover) Strawberry Bank (Portsmouth) Salisbury Exeter Hampton No longer a county after 22 Jan 1679/59 when New Hampshire became a separate royal province. Eastham = one of the 4 original towns on Cape Cod. Settled 1644 Harwick 1694 (Eastham = parent town of Harwich)

The Ancestors of Thomas Winter Ames & Eileen Mary Hopkins

Jewett/Jowet

Booth

Freeman

Hopkins

Baker

Putnam

Burnham

Dawes

Ames

Knowlton

Sherman

Holyoke

Hutchinson

Wolcott / Walcot

Morse

Mansfield

Tripp

Canfield