John Brown Jun

John BROWN Jun (1637 – 1683) was Alex’s 9th Great Grandfather; one of 1,024 in this generation of the Shaw line.

We have five separate Brown lines and seven different Brown immigrant ancestors, by far the most of any surname.  When the surname is of English origin it is derived from a nickname concerning the complexion of an individual, or the colour of their hair. Brown is derived from the Old English brunbrūn; Middle English brunbroun; or Old French brun.

1. John BROWNE Sr. (Swansea). (1583 Hawkedon, Suffolk  – 1662 Swansea, Mass)
John BROWN Jr.  (1620 -1662 Rehoboth, Mass)

2. John BROWN (Hampton) (1589 London – 1677 Salem, Mass)

3.  Nicholas BROWN (1601 Inkberrow, Worcester – 1694 Reading, Mass)

4. James BROWNE (1605 Southhampton, Hampshire  -1676 Salem, Mass.)

5. Thomas BROWNE (1607 Christian Malford, Wiltshire – 1687 Newbury, Mass.)
Francis BROWN I (1633  Christian Malford, Wiltshire – 1691  Newbury, Mass.)

John Brown Jun was born 4 Jan 1637 in Newbury Mass.  His parents were James BROWN and Judith CUTTING.  He married Mary WOODMAN on 20 Feb 1659 in Newbury, Mass.  John died 29 Aug 1683 in Newbury, Mass

John Brown and his father were glaziers.  Work consisted of glass-blowers, boiler men, glaziers and glass carriers.

Mary Woodman was born about 1638 in Newbury, Mass.  Her parents were Edward WOODMAN and Joan SALWAY.    Mary died 30 Mar 1703 in Newbury, Mass

John’s second wife Hannah Hobart was born 15 May 1638 in Hingham, Plymouth, Mass. Her parents were Peter Hobart and Elizabeth Ibrook.  Her grandparents were Edmund HOBART and Margaret DEWEY. Hannah died 11 Sep 1691 in Bristol, Bristol, Mass.

Children of John and Mary:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Judith BROWN 3 Dec 1660
Newbury, Mass
Zachary Davis
4 Feb 1680/81
Newbury
.
Henry BRADLEY
7 Jan 1695/96
Newbury, Mass
14 Nov 1728 in Newbury, Mass.
2. Mary Brown 8 Mar 1661/62
Newbury
William Partridge
Dec 1680
Newbury, Mass
3. Elizabeth Brown 15 May 1664
Ipswich, Mass
2 Dec 1706
4. Jomr Brown 29 Sep 1666
Ipswich
5. Jonathan Brown 4 Nov 1688
Ipswich
Lydia Kindrick
6 Apr 1694
Ipswich
6. Sarah Brown 2 Dec 1670
Ipswich
7. Hannah Brown 13 Nov 1676
Ipswich
8. William Brown 1 Dec 1677
Salem, Mass
2 Apr 1753
Salem

John Brown, glazier, lived in Newbury 1659-1662 in Ipswich 1663 – 1686. He bought house barn and land on High street in Ipswich Jan 15 1663

The Ancient Records of the Town of Ipswich:

The names of such as are Commoners in Ipswich, viz: that have right to Commonage there: The last day of the last month 1641 – John Browne. /P/ Month the first day 26th 1640. Agreed with James Pitney and John Browne the day and yeare above said that they shall keepe a herd of Swyne soe many as shall be put before them at Castle neck and Hogg Island from the 10th of Aprill untlll harvest be fully ended and they are to carry them and bring them back to the severall owners yvided that the owners send each of them a man to drive them and bring them back and that they shall stand to all damage done in Corne and that they chall put them up in the pen every night In consideration wereof they shall have 401b and if any hoggs shall be lost by their negligence they shall pay for them and they are to be there every night except upon extraordinary occasions and then but one of them to be absent and they are to have Is in hand for every Hogg put before them 2s 6 d for every Hogg at midsummer and the remaynder to make up 40lb at the time when they deliver them up either in mony or merchantable Corne within 14 days after the tyme or else they are to pay half soe much more as the agreement and in case any Hogs be put bf fore them they shall pay for them the whole pay except they fetch them away upon the Hogkeepers information of being soe poor that they are not like to live. The mark P of James Pitney John Browne

Oulde Newbury: 2 21 Oct 26 1659 Nicholas Wallington of Newbury conveyed to John Browne of Newbury house and four acres of land lately purchased of the executrix of Henry Travers described as above Ipswich Deeds book 2 leaf 13 24. Nov 7 1660 John Browne of Newbury glazier sold to Henry Sewall of Newbury gentleman house and four acres of land in Newbury formerly owned by Henry Travers bounded with the streets on the south and east the land of Richard Browne on the west and Tristram Coffin’s land on y north also shop and new shop lately built and floored etc Ipswich Deeds book 2 page 16 28

2 John Browne James of Newbury and Ipswich glazier born 1638 married Feb 20 1659 60 MARY WOODMAN (Edward) He removed from Newbury to Ipswich about 1663. By his father’s will he seems to have received something from the estate of Henry Bright of Watertown In 1678 he sold house and land in Ipswich and we have found no further trace of him.

Children

1. Judith BROWN (See Henry BRADLEY‘s page)

2. Mary Brown

Mary’s husband William Partridge was born about 1652 in Salisbury, Essex, Mass. His parents were William Partridge and Ann Gerrish. William died 3 JAN 1728 in Newbury, Mass.

5. Jonathan Brown

Jonathan’s wife Lydia Kindrick was born 01 Dec 1669 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass. Lydia died in Ipswich, Essex, Mass.

Sources:

New England marriages prior to 1700 By Clarence Almon Torrey, Elizabeth Petty Bentley

http://www.bradleyfoundation.org/genealogies/Bingley/tobg04.htm#37323

The old families of Salisbury and Amesbury, Massachusetts: with some related

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=pjmpjm&id=I20777

Posted in 11th Generation, Line - Shaw | Tagged , | 5 Comments

Thomas West 3rd Baron de la Warr

Thomas WEST 3rd Baron de la Warr (1577 – 1618)  (Wikipedia)  was the Englishman after whom the bay, the river, and, consequently, an American Indian people and U.S. state, all later called “Delaware“, were named. He was Alex’s 11th Great Grandfather; one of 4,096 in this generation of the Miller line.

Baron de la Warr Coat of Arms

Thomas West was born 9 Jul 1577 in Wherwell Hampshire, England.  His parents were Thomas WEST , 2nd Baron De La Warr, of Wherwell Abbey in Hampshire, and, Anne KNOLLYS. daughter of Sir Francis Knollys and Catherine Carey. He married Cicely SHIRLEY 25 Nov 1602 in St. Dunstan’s.  Thomas died 7 Jun 1618 enroute to Virginia on the Neptune offshore Nova Scotia.  In 2006, research had concluded that his body was brought to Jamestown for burial. A grave site thought by researchers to contain the remains of Captain Bartholomew Gosnold may instead contain those of Baron De La Warr.

Thomas West Lord De La Warr

Cicely Shirely was born about 1580 in Wiston, Sussex, England.  Her parents were  Sir Thomas SHIRLEY and Anne KEMPE. Cicely died 31 Jul 1662

Only four Children of Thomas and Cicely are confirmed by Peerage.com:

Children of Thomas and Cicely:
Name Born Married Departed
1. Hon. Robert West Elizabeth Coch
2. Sir Henry West (4th Baron of De la Warr) 3 Oct 1603
Burgh Wallis, Yorkshire, England
Isabella Edwards
Mar 1625 in Brussels, Belgium
1 Jun 1628
Southampton, Hampshire, England
3. Anne West ? c. 1605
Southampton, Hampshire, England
Christopher Swale
1629 in Southampton, England
c. 1660
Southampton, England
4. Elizabeth West ? 1606
Southampton, England
Herbert Pelham
1627 in Southampton, England
c. 1660
Southampton, England
5. Hon. Cecily West c. 1609
Southampton, England
Sir Francis Bindloss
1629
Borwick Hall, Lancashire, England
.
Sir John Byron
1626 in Southampton, England
Feb 1638
Southampton, England
6. Hon Lucy West c. 1611
Newstead, Nottinghamshire, England
Col. Robert Byron
1634 Nottinghamshire, England
c. 1660
Southampton, England
7. John West ? 1615
Sussex, England
Mary Taft
Before 1641
Ipswich, Mass
6 Oct 1683
Ipswich, Mass
8. Twyford WEST ? 22 Dec 1616 in Brinkhill, Lincolnshire, England. Mary CROSS
1651 in Rowley, Mass.
Jan 1684 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass.
9. Catherine West ? c. 1618
Southampton, England
c. 1660
Southampton, England

Thomas West Baron De la Warr

Thomas West received his education at Queen’s College, Oxford where he did not complete his course, but subsequently (1605) received the degree of M.A.   In 1597 he was elected member of parliament for Lymington, and subsequently fought in Holland and in Ireland under the Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex, being knighted for bravery in battle in 1599. He was imprisoned for complicity in Essex’s revolt (1600-1601), but was soon released and exonerated. In 1602 he succeeded to his father’s title and estates and became a privy councillor. Becoming interested in schemes for the colonization of America, he was chosen a member of the council of the Virginia Company in 1609, and in the same year was appointed governor and captain-general of Virginia for life.

Arrival of Thomas West, Lord de la Warr in Jamestown

After the Powhatans murdered the colony’s governor, Lord Ratcliffe, and attacked the colony in the first First Anglo-Powhatan War, Lord De La Warr led the reinforcement of Virginia.  Sailing in March 161o with three ships, 150 settlers and supplies, he himself bearing the greater part of the expense of the expedition,

Even with the arrival of the two small ships from Bermuda under Captain Christopher Newport, the colonists were faced with abandoning Jamestown and returning to England. On June 7, 1610, both groups of survivors (from Jamestown and Bermuda) boarded ships, and they all set sail down the James River toward the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean.  On June 9, 1610, Lord De La Warr and his party arrived on the James River shortly after the Deliverance and Patience had abandoned Jamestown. Intercepting them about 10 miles  downstream from Jamestown near Mulberry Island, the new governor forced the remaining 90 settlers to return, thwarting their plans to abandon the colony. Deliverance and Patience turned back, and all the settlers were landed again at Jamestown.

As a veteran of English campaigns against the Irish, De La Warr employed “Irish tactics” against the Indians: troops raided villages, burned houses, torched cornfields, and stole provisions; these tactics, identical to those practiced by the Powhatan themselves, proved effective. He had been given instructions by The London Virginia Company to kidnap Native American children. These instructions also sanctioned attacking Iniocasoockes, the cultural leaders of the local Powhatans. The campaign ended the Powhatan siege and resulted in the marriage of Pocahontas and John Rolfe which introduced a short period of truce between the English and the Powhatan Confederacy. Although the truce was a short one, it allowed the English to fully secure the colony’s fortifications and housing, expand its farming, develop a network of alliances with other Indian nations, and establish a series of outlying smaller settlements.

Lord De La Warr’s rule was strict but just; he constructed two forts near the mouth of the James river, rebuilt Jamestown, and in general brought order out of chaos.  West became so ill that in March 1611 he sailed home to England.  He  published a book  at the request of the company’s council ,  about the conditions of affairs in Virgina:  The Relation of the Right Honourable the Lord De-La-Warre, of the Colonie, Planted in Virginia (reprinted 1859 and 1868). He remained in England, though still the nominal governor, until 1618, when the news of the tyrannical rule of the deputy, Samuel Argall, led him to start again for Virginia.  Our ancestor, Twyford West was born in 1616.  He embarked in April, but died en route on the 7th of June 1618,  and it was thought for many years that he had been buried in the Azores or at sea. In 2006, research concluded that his body was brought to Jamestown for burial. A grave site thought by researchers to contain the remains of Captain Bartholomew Gosnold may instead contain those of Baron De La Warr.

Because of his health, West did not spend much time in Virginia, but he was the single largest investor and his extended family was quite prominent in the colonization of North America. His uncles were the privateers who had sailed in the Roanoke voyages, Captain Francis and Henry Knollys. His Aunt Leticce Knollys was the mother of the Earl of Essex, and wife of the Earl of Leicester.

His brothers John West and Francis West both became Virginia Governors. Francis West settled Westover, which was on the upper James River in Virginia. Berkeley Plantation was sandwiched between Westover and Shirley’s plantation, all established between 1613 and 1619. His sister was married to the Pelhams whose children were instrumental in the colonization of New England.

Children

1. Hon. Robert West

Robert’s wife Elizabeth Coch was born

2. Sir Henry West (4th Baron of De la Warr)

Henry’s wife Isabella Edmunds was born Nov 1607 in Brussels, Belgium. Her parents were Sir. Thomas Edmunds and [__?__]. Isabella died 24 Dec 1677 in Southampton, England.

Sir Henry  died on 1 June 1628 at age 24.  He succeeded to the title of 4th Baron Delaware [E., 1570] on 7 June 1618.2 He gained the rank of Captain in 1624 in the service of the Earl of Oxford’s Regiment of Foot.

3. Anne West

Anne’s husband Christopher Swale was born 1605 in Swineshead, Lincolnshire, England. Christopher died 5 Sep 1645 in Southampton, England.

4. Elizabeth West

Elizabeth’s husband Herbert Pelham was born 1602 in Swineshead, Lincolnshire, England. Herbert died 1660 in Southampton, England

5. Hon. Cecily West

Cecily’s first husband Sir Francis Bindloss (Bindlose) was born 9 Apr 1603 in Borwick, Lancashire, England.  His parents were  Sir Robert Bindlosse. and [__?__].   Sir Francis died 26 Jul 1629 in Borwick, Lancashire, England.

Cecily’s second husband Sir John Byron was born 1600 in Dutton, Cheshire, England. His parents were  Sir John Byron and Anne Molyneux.  After Cecily died, he married 1644 in Dutton, Cheshire, England to Hon. Eleanor Needham, daughter of Robert Needham, 2nd Viscount Kilmorey and Eleanor Dutton. (b. 1629 in Dutton, Cheshire, England – d. 26 Jan 1664 in Chester, Cheshire, England). Sir John died 23 Aug 1652 in Paris, France without issue.

John Byronwas created 1st Baron Byron of Rochdale, co. Lancaster [England] on 24 October 1643, with a special remainder to each of his brothers .

He matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge University, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, in 1615 and graduated in 1618 with a Master of Arts (M.A.).   He was Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Nottingham from 1624 to 1625.   He was Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Nottingham in 1626.  He was invested as a Knight, Order of the Bath (K.B.) in February 1625/26.  He was Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Nottinghamshire from 1628 to 1629.  He held the office of High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire from 1634 to 1635. He held the office of Gentleman of the Bedchamber.  He held the office of Lieutenant of the Tower of London in 1641.   He fought in the Battle of Edgehill in 1642, where he commanded the Royalist reserve.  He was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Civil Laws (D.C.L.) by Oxford Terrace, Paddington, London, England, on 1 Nov 1642.   He gained the rank of Field Marshal in the service of the Royalist forces of Cheshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire and North Wales.   He was Governor to James, Duke of York between 1646 and 1652, later King James II.   He held the office of Governor of Chester before February 1645/46, until its capture by Parliamentarian forces.   In June 1646 he capitulated to the Parliamentarians as the Royalist commander of Carnarvon Castle..

6. Hon Lucy West

Lucy’s husband Col. Robert Byron was born 1611 in Newstead, England. His parents were  Sir John Byron and Anne Molyneux.  Robert died 1664 in Southhampton, England

He held the office of Governor of Liverpool.   He gained the rank of Colonel in the service of the Royalist infantry forces.  He fought in the English Civil War.

7. John West

John’s wife Mary Taft was born in 1615 in England.  Mary died 2 Apr 1675 in Beverly, Essex, Mass.

8. Twyford WEST  (See his page)

Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_West,_3rd_Baron_De_La_Warr

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&db=bruesch639&id=I25952

http://www.thepeerage.com/p14230.htm#i142296

http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/Bios/ThomasWest(3BDeLaWarr).htm

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=23241110

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bruesch639&id=I56647

Posted in 13th Generation, Artistic Representation, College Graduate, Immigrant - England, Immigrant Coat of Arms, Line - Miller, Place Names, Public Office, Storied, Veteran, Wikipedia Famous | Tagged , , , , , | 30 Comments

Twyford West

Twyford WEST (1616 – 1684) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Miller line through his daughter Elizabeth.  He was also Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather of the Shaw line through his daughter Hannah

Twyford West – Coat of Arms

Twyford West was baptized 22 Dec 1616 in Brinkhill, Lincolnshire, England.   Many genealogies state that his parents were Thomas WEST 3rd Baron De La Warr (Wikipedia) and Cicely SHIRLEY. However, it is unlikely that the son of a Baron would indenture himself as a servant for seven years.  He arrived in Boston in 1635 aboard the “Hopewell” at the age of 19 with an agreed indenture of seven years to Edwad Winslow, who paid for his passage.   Twyford married Mary CROSS on 1651 in Rowley, Mass. Twyford died 11 Jan 1684 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass.

Mary Cross was born 1630 in England. She died 25 Jun 1697 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass.

Children of Twyford and Mary:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Elizabeth WEST c. 1652 in Ipswich, Mass. Joseph CHAPLIN
22 Feb 1670/71 in Rowley, Mass.
12 Oct 1702 in Rowley, Mass.
2. Mary West 1654
Rowley, Mass
28 Dec 1659 Ipswich, Mass
3. Hannah WEST 1659 Ipswich, Mass Samuel PERKINS
1 Jan 1675/76 Ipswich, Mass
21 Aug 1732 Ipswich, Mass
4. John West 20 Oct 1661 Apr 1733
5. Nathaniel West 1 Jan 1666 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass .

Thomas West was Governor of Virginia. Leaving his deputy Sir Samuel Argall in charge, his dad returned to England and published a book about Virginia in 1611.  Thomas West remained the nominal governor, and received complaints from the Virginia settlers about Argall’s tyranny, so he set sail for Virginia again in 1618, to investigate. He died en route. Since Twyford was born in 1616, he really didn’t know his father.  In fact, since Twyford arrived in America as an indentured servant, it is less than likely that his father was a Baron.

Twyford was indentured to Edward Winslow (1595 – 655) an English Pilgrim leader on the Mayflower.   Winslow served as the governor of Plymouth Colony in 1633, 1636, and finally in 1644. His testimony in Mourt’s Relation is one of only two primary sources of the “first thanksgiving” in existence.

Twyford was an indentured servant for Edward Winslow 3rd, 6th and 10th Governor of Plymouth Colony

Jan 1634/35 – The Plymouth court noted that “The servant of Nicolas Snow was willing to serve out his time with John COOPER, according to the tenor of his indenture”. This servant was not the same as Twiford West who, after brief service with Nicholas Snow, agreed on 12 Feb 1635/36 to return to Edward Winslow, with whom he had originally made his indenture.

22 Feb 1635 : Records of Plymouth Colony, Vol. 1, p. 37.

“Twiford West, hauing bound him selfe by an indenture to serue Mr Edward Winslow, of New Plimoth, or his assignes, for the terme of sixe years, vpon shuch conditions as apears more at large in ye said indenture, the said Ed: Winslow haueing assigned him to serue Nicolass Snow [our ancestor Nicholas SNOW], of ye same towne of Plimoth, the said Twiford West (after some triall) disliking to be with ye said Nicolas Snow, came to ye afforesaid Ed: Winslow, & desird he might dwell with him selfe, and he would serue him one year more then is expresed in ye said indenture; vpon which his request, ye said Ed: Winslow compounded with ye said Nicolass Snow for ye said Twiford West, so as the said Twiford West is now (by his own free desire) bound to serue ye said Ed: Winslow seauen years, his time beginning from ye date mentioned in ye afforesaid indenture. This agreemente was acknowledged by all ye parties before ye Gouer, Feb: 12, 1635, and was desired to be recorded.”
Records of Plymouth Colony, Vol. 1, p. 37.

31 Jan 1545/55 – Twyford purchased fifty acres in Ipswich from the estate of [our ancestor] Thomas SCOTT (1595 – 1654) another of our ancestors Richard KIMBALL was an executor of the estate.

16 Sep 1658 – (Ipswich Deed IV : 340) . . . Marke SYMONDS of Ipswich . . . for . . . fifty pounds . . . Have Granted . . . unto John PICKARD of Rowley … his pcell of ground . . . lyeing on the North Syd of the North River … at the end of his farme formarly sold to John Crose containeing seaven acres . . . with about halfe an acre bought of Robert Lord . . . having the land of Twyford WEST toward the Southwest …  . . . Rec. June 9, 1680.

List of Men With Commonage Rights, 1678 – Materials for the History of Ipswich New England Historical & Genealogical Register Vol 7, January 1853, pg 77

18 Feb 1678 – a List of ye Names of those psons yt have right of Comonage according to Law and order of this Town.

Twiford WEST

Twyford may have had a brother, John West , who also emigrated. John West was born 1616 in Sussex, England; died 1648. He may have been the son of Thomas West and Cicely Shirley. He married Mary Taft  Bef. 1640 in Ipswich, Essex Co., MA.

Mary Taft born 1615; died April 02, 1675 in Beverly, Essex, MA.

Children of John West and Mary are:

i. Capt. Thomas West, b. 1640 in Duxbury, Plymouth Co., MA; died 6 Sep1706 in Homes Hole, Dukes, MA; m. Elizabeth Jackson 12 Dec 1661 in Beverly, Essex, MA.

ii.Joseph West, b. 1644 in Ipswich, Essex Co., MA; died 1 Jan  1659/60.

iii. John West, b. 1647 in Ipswich, Essex Co., MA; died 26 Jul 1668.


Sources:

http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/f_5c4.htm#18

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/k/y/k/Granvil-C-Kyker/GENE1-0026.html

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hwbradley/aqwg3299.htm

http://www.pilgrimhall.org/hopkinssnowrecords.htm

Posted in 12th Generation, Double Ancestors, Immigrant - England, Line - Miller, Line - Shaw | Tagged , | 8 Comments

Leonard Harriman

Leonard HARRIMAN (1622 – 1691) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Miller line.

Leonard Harriman – Coat of Arms

Leonard Harriman was born in 1622 in Rowley, York, England.   He married Margaret PALMER about 1649 in Rowley, Mass.  Leonard died on 6 May 1691 in Rowley, Mass.

Leonard Harriman Memorial  – Rowley burial ground – IN MEMORY OF LEONARD HARRIMAN A MEMBER OF EZEKIEL ROGERS ORIGINAL SETTLEMENT BORN ROWLEY, YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND 1622 DIED ROWLEY, MASSACHUSETTS MAY 1691 AND HIS WIFE MARGARET DIED ROWLEY, MASSACHUSETTS OCT. 1676 DEDICATED A.D. 1991 THE HARRIMAN FAMILY ASSOCIATION Burial: Rowley Burial Ground Rowley Essex County Massachusetts, USA Plot: 6 Row, East 5


Margaret Palmer was born in 1626 , 1628 or 1632 in Rowley, East Riding Yorkshire, England.    Margaret died 22 Oct 1676 in Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts.

Margaret’s  father is unknown.  The Thomas Palmer who died in Rowley 2 Aug 1669 is not her father because he was born about 1623 and did not marry Ann Bailey/Wheeler until Jun 1643.  However, some reports say he was born before 1600. Perhaps he married Ann in middle age or perhaps he is related as he also comes from Yorkshire.

Another Palmer came to Rowley in the early days.  John Palmer was in Rowley by 1643 when he was said to be a carpenter by trade and became a proprietor in Rowley by that year.  His origins are not known, but he was made freeman in Boston 2 Apr 1640.  John married Ruth Ayce  17 Sep 1645 in Rowley.  After Ruth died giving birth to their second child, he married 14 May 1650 in Rowley to Margaret Northend (1624 – 1704), daughter of our ancestor JOHN NORTHEND.  Sgt. John Palmer died in Rowley on 17 Jun 1695 Age: 72

Children of Leonard and Margaret:

Name Born Married Departed
1. John Harriman 16 May 1650 Rowley, Mass Unmarried 18 Sep 1675
Killed at Bloody Brook
2. Matthew Harriman 16 Aug 1652 Rowley Elizabeth Swan
22 Dec 1673 Haverhill, Mass
.
Mary Cadle, c. 1716
Aft. 1722
Haverhill, Mass
3. Hannah HARRIMAN 22 May 1655 in Rowley, Mass. Caleb BOYNTON
26 May 1674
19 Feb 1726 in Rowley
4. Jonathan Harriman 5 Dec 1657 Rowley Sarah Palmer
c. 1685
.
Margaret Elithorpe
19 Aug 1691 Rowley
15 Feb 1742 in Rowley
5. Mary Harriman c. 1659 Rowley Samuel Cooper
25 JUN 1691 Rowley
7 Oct 1732 Rowley

Perhaps this Thomas Palmer is Margaret’s brother.
Thomas Palmer, born 1620 in (York) England; died 02 Aug 1669 in Rowley (Essex) MA. He married Ann [__?__]  Jun 1643 in Rowley (Essex) MA.
Children of Thomas and Ann Palmer:

i. Samuel Palmer
ii. Margaret Palmer
iii. Timothy Palmer
iv. Thomas Palmer

Some say  brothers, Leonard and John Harriman, were the pioneer immigrants of that surname in New England. Leonard is the ancestor of most of the Harrimans of Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine, and John of those of Connecticut, New York and New Jersey.  I’m not so sure they were brothers as Leonard was part of the Rowley, Yorkshire group that immigrated under the guidance of Rev. Ezekiel ROGERS. while John’s origins are recorded to be Uldale, Cumberland, England, 160 miles away.

John Harriman settled in what is now New Haven, CT and died in 1681. He took the “oath of fidelity,” July 1644, and received the “charge of freeman,” April. In his will he calls himself “stricken in years.” and only one son.  “His son’s name was John, born 1647, graduated Harvard College, 1667. He was a minister, and preached twenty years in New Haven and vicinity. He removed to Elizabethtown, N. J., and was settled over the
church there, until his death in 1704.

Leonard being sixteen years of age and his brother John came to America in 1640 with twenty or thirty families under the guidance of Rev. Ezekiel ROGERS. These colonists were a Godly people and shared their property in common for about five years. Leonard was admitted freeman of Rowley in 1647. In the same year he bought of John Todd the house lot laid out to John Spofford on Bradford street, now corner of Bradford and Common streets. He was a farmer and mechanic, being a maker of looms. His shop is supposed to have been on the nearby brook and to have been operated by water power. On an ancient tax list of a date before 1664, he is recorded as taxed eight shillings nine pence. His will, dated May 12, 1691, was proved Sept. 24, 1691.

His name appears of record in Rowley before 1649. He bought, in 1667, of John Todd the house lot laid out to John Spofford on Bradford Street. His wife was Margaret who was buried 22 Oct 1676. He died 6 May 1691. His will dated 12 May 1691, mentions himself as being infirm. His son Matthew to have land in in Haverhill. Also mentioned in the will is son Jonathan, daughters Hannah Boynton, and Mary Harriman, grandson Matthew, son of Matthew (Essex Probate, 304: 385)

In a Rowley survey,  made before 1647,

Certaine Divisions of Meadow laid out in the Meadow Called Crane Meadow:
To Edward HASSEN three Acres of meadow lying on the South east side of John Smithes meadow the northeast end abutting upon a pond the south west end upon the upland.
To Leonard HARRIMAN seaven Acres of meadow lying on the Southeast side of Edward Hassens meadow pt of it bought of William Hobson and pt of John Harris the east end abutting upon a brooke the west end upon the upland —
Uplands laid out at the plaine Called the Great plaine Imp
To Edward Hassen foure Acres & an halfe of upland at the plaine Called the great plaine lying next the south ffence by the Country way the east end abutting toward the fence the west end towards other.

Essex Probate Docket # 12451

In the name of God, Amen, I, Leonard Harriman of Rowley, in ye county of Essex, in New England, being infirme in body but of competent understanding as formerly doe make this my last will and testament as followeth:

Imprm, I committ my soule into ye hands of God who gave it to me and my body to decent buriall in hopes of a happy resurection through the power and strength and merits of my dear Redeemer, the Lord Jesus Christ.

As to my outward estate I dispose of it as followeth: To my eldest son, Matthew Harriman I give and bequeath all my lands and meadows in ye bounds of Haverhill provided he pay eight pounds which I am engaged to pay for him to Mr. Wainwright, and forty shillings in money to his sister, Mary, which if he doe not I reserve the parcell of meadow I bought of Abraham Whittichar, called spike’s meadow guieing it to my Executor hereafter named to enable him to pay the sd sum or sums, and to his son Matthew my grand child, I give my armes and amunition: to my son Jonathan Harriman I hereby confirme that which I have guien him by deed of gift upon marriage, and the new Leanto built agst his Roome and my shop and loomes and all the working geers belonging to them and all my utensills of husbandry and half my part of the hay boat. Also, I give him the other half of my lands in Rowley provided he pay to his sister Hannah Boynton within six years after my decease in corne or cattle or both the sum of thirty pounds; and to his sister, Mary Harriman the sum of thirty pounds within three yeares after my decease; and suffer sd Mary to enjoy peaceably during her liuing unmarried the end of the house next the street and two apple trees by sd end, and two more appletrees in other part of ye orchard and the garden spot before that end of ye house which if he sd Jonathan by himself or heires cause it not to be payed then my overseers here after named upon the desire of my daughters shall haue liberty to apprise so much land now giuen by will not giuen absolutely upon marriage as shall pay my sd daughters what I should have payed.

To my daughter, Hannah Boynton, I giue the sum of thirty poundes to be paid by Jonathan, her brother or lands upon non-payment as expressed.

To my daughter, mary Harriman, I give ye vse of the end of the house next the street so long as shee remaine unmarried and ye use of four appletrees as before exprest as my overseers shall set out for her use also I giue to be at her dispose emediately upon my decease two cows and such household stuff as I shall leaue and thirty pounds which Jonathan is to pay her as exprestor upon her decease before the time prefixt as shee may giue it when payable by will or deed of gift.

Also my will is and I hereby constitute my sd son Jonathan my sole executor impowering him to pay my debts and funeral charges out of the moveable estate not before bequeathed and to pay himself such necessary charge as he may be at about my will and the remainder I giue to be equally divided by my overseers betwixt my sd daughters, Hannah and Mary, within half a yeare after my decease.

Further my will is and I hereby desire my beloved friends Newhemiah Jewett and Joseph Jewett, senior, to be my overseers tosee to the fulfilling of my sd will allowing for any time about sd betrustment they expend out of my estate not withstanding whatI haue ordered Matthew to pay; upon his paying ten shillings of silver money to my executors and two thousand pine bords I acquitof the rest above mentioned: to Jonathan I giue my division in the comons near Caleb Jacksons about eleven acres in the roome ofthat I sold to Samuel Pearley that he had a share in. In witness that this is my last will and testament and that I revoke all former and other wills I have hereunto set my hand and seale this twelfth day of May Anno Dom, 1691.

Leonard Harriman [Sealed]

Signed sealed and declared to be his last will and testa-ment in presence of us

Witnesses,
James Dickinson
John Hopkinson

THE INVENTORY OF YE ESTATE OF LEONARD HARRIMAN, DECEASED, TAKEN BY YE SUBSCRIBERS YE FIFTH OF JUNE, 1691

Imprims, half ye house & half ye homestead & barne and shopp – 30 00 00 (pounds, shillings, pence)
It. 1/2 Hunsley hill lott and 1/2 ye acres nere it 6 acres 1/2 – 12 00 00
It. 1/2 ye 1 acre 1/2 at newplaine – 1 10 00
It. 1/2 ye oxpasture marsh, ye whole 3 acres – 7 10 00
It. 1/2 ye plowing land and ruff land at ye farme 14 acres ye whole – 14 00 00
It. 1/2 ye two acres of marsh at Oyster poynt – 05 00 00
It. 1/2 ye acre at Wicom’s spring – 03 00 00
It. 1/2 y. 2 acres at Sandy bridge – 05 00 00
It. 1/2 y. acre at stackyard – 03 00 00
It. 1/2 ye acre below Jackson’s ile – 01 00 00
It. 1/2 ye highway marsh whole about 1 acre – 02 00 00
It. 1/2 ye acre of gate marsh – 02 00 00
It. 1/2 ye marsh in partnership with Todd all about 1 acre – 02 00 00
It. 1/2 ye acre and 1/2 bought of Thomas Nelson – 03 00 00
It. 1/2 ye planting lott and pasture in Bradford street Lotts – 20 00 00
It. quick or liueing stock – 17 00 00
It. 2 feather beds & bedding furniture, linen wearing clothes chest and pewter – 22 17 00
It. armes books brass iron wooden earthern and glass vessels and household vtensills and cloth – 07 05 00
It. Loomes and tackling and implements of husbandry – 05 08 00
It. debts due ye estate – 02 04 02
Total – 172 04 02
It. debts oweing to be paid out of ye estate and funeral charges – 10 14 08 (pounds, shillings, pence)

And to prizing proving ye wil & recording – 01 00 00

The above sd apprizement made by us ye day and yeare above written as witnesses our hands.

Nathaniel Jewett
Newhemiah Jewett

Children

1. John Harriman

John’ did NOT marry Hannah Bryan 20 NOV 1672 in Rowley.   She married another John Harriman in Connecticut on the date.  The other John Harriman was baptized 24 Jan 1647 in New Haven, CT.  His parents were John Harriman, a well-to-do inn keeper and Elizabeth [__?__].  The other John Harriman attended Harvard College, married Hannah Bryan, a daughter of Richard, of Milford, Ct., Nov. 20, 1672. She was born 1654. He was a settled pastor of the first Presbyterian church at Elizabethtown, N.J., Oct. 1, 1687. He was given a land grant of one hundred acres by the Proprietors Feb 20, 1693.

Our John was killed at the Battle of Bloody Brook with Captain Lathrop on 18 Sep 1675. At a given signal, hundreds of warriors, who were lying concealed all around the spot, opened fire on the convoy. Chaos followed, bullets and arrows flew from every direction. Captain Lathrop immediately fell. Of the 80 soldiers, only 7 or 8 escaped.

2. Matthew Harriman

Matthew’s wife Elizabeth Swan was born 30 Sep  1653 in Haverhill,  Mass.  Her parents were  Robert Swan, a soldier of King Philip’s war, and Elizabeth Acie , of Haverhill. Her grandfather was Richard Shaw, of Rowley, a soldier of King Philip’s war.

Matthew’s second wife Mary Cadle was born Jan 1678.

Matthew  is mentioned as building a house previous to 1675 on land the ownership of which did not entitle its owner to the rights of common. He voted on the placing of a new meeting house June, 1683, and on the moving to a new meeting house in the winter of 1698. He is mentioned as living at Fishing river in a house next that of Thomas and Hannah Dustin, which is on the east side of Little river, near Primrose street.

Children of Matthew and Elizabeth:
Matthew, Elizabeth, Mary, Margaret, Abigail, Mehitable, John, Leonard, Nathaniel, Richard and Abner

3. Hannah HARRIMAN (See Caleb BOYNTON‘s page)

4. Jonathan Harriman

Jonathan’s first wife Sarah Palmer was born 13 Nov 1661 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. Her parents were John Palmer and Margaret Northend. Her grandparents were John NORTHEND and Elizabeth COLE. Sarah died 30 Jun 1688 in Rowley, Essex, Mass

Jonathan’s second wife Margaret Elithorpe was born 24 Jul 1672 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Nathaniel Elithorpe and Mary Batt. She first married 21 Jan 1689 in Rowley, Essex, Mass to Samuel Wood (b. 26 Dec 1666 in Rowley – d. 25 Nov 1690 in Port Royal, Nova Scotia) Margaret died 25 Jan 1754 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

The Battle of Port Royal (19 May 1690) occurred at Port Royal, the capital of French Acadia, during King William’s War (1689–1697), the first of the four French and Indian Wars. A large force of New England provincial militia arrived before Port Royal, which was surrendered without resistance not long after. The New Englanders, led by Sir William Phips, after alleging Acadian violations of the terms of surrender, plundered the town and the fort. The aftermath of the surrender was unlike any of the previous military campaigns against Acadia. The violence of the plunder alienated many of the Acadians from the New Englanders, broke their trust, and made future relations with their English-speaking neighbors more difficult.

Jonathan Harriman 1 — Source: Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938)

Jonathan Harriman 2

Jonathan Harriman 3

Jonathan Harriman 4

Jonathan’s son Samuel Harriman was born 12 Nov 1705 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. He married 16 Oct 1729 in Newbury, Essex, Mas to Jane Coleman, daughter of Thomas COLEMAN II and Pheobe PEARSON

5. Mary Harriman

Mary’s husband Samuel Cooper was born in 1660 in Mass.

Sources:

http://www.harriman-family.org/archive/will.html

http://www.harriman-family.org/index.shtml

http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/b_h.htm

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~corey/harriman/d2.htm#g2

http://genforum.genealogy.com/harriman/messages/365.html

http://fam.eastmill.com/Names38.htm#HARRIMAN

Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938) By Holman, Mary Lovering, 1868-1947; Pillsbury, Helen Pendleton Winston, 1878-1957

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=6973582&st=1

Posted in 12th Generation, Immigrant - England, Line - Miller, Pioneer, Violent Death | Tagged , , | 20 Comments

John Boynton

John BOYNTON (1614 – 1670) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Miller line.

John Boynton – Coat of Arms

John Boynton was born in 1614 in Knapton, Wintringham, North Riding Yorkshire, England. His parents were William BOYNTON and Elizabeth Janet CHAMBERS.  He emigrated with his brother William in the summer of 1638, towards the end of the Great Migration with Rev. Ezekiel ROGERS and his followers on the ship “John of London” from Hull England.  He married Elinor PELL on 21 Feb 1643 in Boston, Mass. John died 18 Feb 1669/70 in Rowley, Mass.

John Boynton may have been baptized in St Peter’s Church, Wintringham, North Yorkshire

Elinor Pell was born about 1616 in England. Her parents were Joseph PELL and Elizabeth JAMES.  According to Blodgett and Jewett, Ellen Pell was a maid-servant of Atherton Haulgh (Hough), who was admitted to the Boston church, April 5, 1641, and “dismissed 1:8: 1643 to Rowley; letter granted 21: 2: 1644, when she was wife to John Boynton, member of Rowley Ch.” After John died, she married Maximilian JEWETT on 30 Aug 1671,  Finally, she married Daniel WARNER on 1 Jun 1686 in Ipswich, Mass.  Elinor died 5 Aug 1689 in Rowley, Mass.

Maximillian Jewett was born 4 Oct 1607 in Bradford, West Riding Yorkshire, England. His parents were Edward JOWETT and Mary TAYLOR.  He immigrated on the John, departing from England, arriving 1638 in Massachusetts Bay Colony.1 He became a freeman on 13 May 1640 in Rowley.  He married Ann FIELD 13 May 1653 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. After Ann died, he married 30 Aug 1671 in Rowley, Essex, Mass to Eleanor Pell. Maximillian died 19 Oct 1684 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

Daniel Warner was born in Boxted, Essex, England about 1618.  His parents were William WARNER and Abigail BAKER.  Daniel sailed with his parents from London to America in 1635.  It is said by some Warner genealogists that they sailed on the ship,”Increase“ He came to Ipswich with his family in 1637 and became a freeman there in 1641. He married Elizabeth DENNY on 2 Jun 1641 in Ipswich Mass.  He married his second wife Faith Lord, the widow of Edward Browne on 1 Jul 1660. He married his third wife, the widow Eleanor Pell Boynton Jewett of Rowley on 1 Jun 1686. Daniel died on  9 Sep 1688 in Ipswich, Mass.

Eleanor’s daughter, Hannah Boynton married Daniel’s son, Nathaniel Warner.

Children of John and Elinor:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Capt. Joseph Boynton 1644 Rowley, Mass Sarah Swan
13 MAY 1669
.
Elizabeth Wood
16 DEC 1730 Rowley
2. John Boynton 17 SEP 1647 Rowley Hannah Keyes
8 MAR 1674/75
.
Mary widow of Simon Wainwright
22 DEC 1719 Rowley
3. Caleb BOYNTON c. 1649 Rowley Hannah HARRIMAN
26 May 1674
16 Dec 1730
4. Mercy Boynton 5 Dec 1651 Rowley Josiah Clark
14 Dec 1670 Ipswich, Mass.
.
Joseph Goodhue
4 Jul 1692 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass
.
John Hovey
30 Nov 1712 in Ipswich, Essex, Mas
22 Dec 1730 Rowley
5. Hannah Boynton 26 Mar 1654 Rowley Nathaniel Warner
(son of Daniel WARNER)
29 NOV 1673
Feb 1693/94
6. Sarah Boynton 19 Apr 1658 Rowley Hopewell Davis
16 Sep 1682 Charlestown,  Mass.
14 Dec 1704
7. Samuel Boynton c. 1660 Rowley Hannah Switser
17 Feb 1685/86 Rowley, Essex, Mass

John and his brother William immigrated  to Massachusetts  in 1638 on the ship John of London with the Rev. Ezekiel Rogers of Rowley, England, near Hull. and his followers, about 20 families from Yorkshire.   John and William’s cousin Sir Matthew Boynton (26 Jan 1591 – 12 Mar 1647), (Wikipedia)  helped finance the Rowley expedition. John and Sir Mathew were cousins, but not close ones. Their common ancestor was John’s 6th Great Grandfather – Sir Thomas Boynton whose will was proved at York on Sept 6 1408. He had two sons, Henry (eldest and heir from whom descends present Baronet) and our ancestor Sir Christopher.

Sir Mathew Boynton’s Ancestry

Parents – Sir Francis Boynton, High Sheriff of Yorkshire 1596, m. Dorothy, dau and co-heir of Sir Christopher Place, of Halnaby. He d. 9 April 1617, was s. by his only surviving son. He was High Sheriff of Yorkshire, 38 Eliz. (1596), and mentioned the following year as leasing the “twenty-foot bank” at Barmston, where in 1598 he built the middle part of the late mansion, in the hall of which were his arms impaling those of Place, and another shield supported by two goats. He was one of the King’s Council in the North in 1602, and was knighted at York 17th April, 1603, when King James passed through that city on his way from Scotland to the throne. There is a tradition that King James spent a night at Burton Agnes, and that the arms on the gateway commemorate this event. In 1591 Francis Boynton became possessed of the “Rectory and Church of Byrlington” with all its rights, etc.

Grandparents – Sir Thomas Boynton (1544 – 1587) of Acklam, was a minor at his father’s (Matthew Boynton, Esq., XVI) death, and was ward to the King (35 Hy. VIII) 1543-4. who ordered the yearly payment of £20 out of the manor of Barmston to Sir Ralph Eure during the minority of this Thomas, with wardship and marriage of the said Thomas who suffered a recovery of the manor of Barmston and advowson of the rectory in 1567. Thomas Boynton was High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1576. Member of Parliament for Boroughbridge in 1571, and received the honour of Knighthood at Hampton Court in January, 1577, and was mentioned as a suitable person to fill a vacancy on the Council of the North.

He married three times:
(1) Jane, daughter of Sir Nicholas Fairfax, of Gilling, who brought him no issue.
(2) Frances, daughter of Francis Frobisher of Doncaster, by whom he had Francis (XVIII).
(3) Alice,7 daughter of Nicholas Tempest, of Holmside, in the bishopric of Durham, Esq. (who bore him no issue), and widow of Christopher Place, of Halnaby, who had by her among other children, Dorothy, at length sole heir of that family

Great Grandparents – Matthew Boynton, Esq (1523-1540) son and heir of Thomas Boynton of Roxby, was aged 19 when his father’s Inquisition was taken. He was appointed to be chief steward of the possessions in the Counties of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire in the King’s hands, by the attainder of William Woode, late Prior of Bridlington, with £6 a year out of the issues and the appointment of an under steward. This grant is dated 5th May, 1539. Though Matthew Boynton seems to have been intimately connected with some of the leading spirits of Bigod’s Rebellion, he seems at the same time to have remained loyal to his sovereign. He married Anne, daughter of Sir John Bulmer, of Wilton.

2nd Great Grandparents – Thomas Boynton (1501-1523) of Roxby, brother of Sir Henry Boynton, Kt. (XIV), and second son of Henry Boynton (XIII), was in 1514 party to a dispute with Ralph Claxton over a rent of ten shillings from a house in Marton-in-Cleveland.3 In 1519 he petitioned the Cardinal of York, Legate to Pope Leo X, to have the Chapel and Chapelyard of Roxby consecrated de novo and sacraments administered there ; Roxby paying all dues to the Church of Hinderwell. He married Cecily, daughter of Sir James Strangeways of Sneaton. Thomas Boynton was buried at Roxby, and on a slab to his memory are a brass effigy, an inscription plate and four shields bearing the arms of Boynton.

3rd Great Grandparents – Henry Boynton (1460 – 1495) of Acklam, son of Sir Thomas Boynton, Kt. , married Margaret, daughter and co-heir of Martin de la See of Barmston,

4th Great Grandparents – Sir Thomas Boynton, Kt (c. 1440 -1460) son of William Boynton, Esq. (XI), of Acklam, married Isabel daughter of Sir William Normanville, of Kildwick

5th Great Grandparents – William Boynton (c. 1400 – ) was heir to his brother Thomas. He presented a petition to the King that two messuages, three cottages and sixteen bovates of land in Boynton which his father Henry had assigned to his brother’s wife, Margaret, in dower, might be restored to him. This property had been forfeited through Henry Boynton’s revolt against King Henry IV, and was still in the King’s hands. William petitions for the restoration of the manor of Roxby and the moiety of the manor of Newton-under-Osenburgh, and of a messuage, a cottage, five bovates and forty acres of land in Snainton, Co. York. All this property had been forfeited by reason of his father’s revolt. William Boynton married Jane, daughter of Simon Harding.

6th Great Grandparents – Sir Henry Boynton (? – 2 Jul 1405 in Sadbury, England) son of Sir Thomas Boynton, Kt., succeeded his grandfather Sir Thomas, and was suspected to be in the interest of Henry (Percy) Earl of Northumberland and his son, who had taken arms against the King, Henry IV, for in the fourth year of his reign, when the battle of Shrewsbury (21st July, 1403) was fought, John Wockerington, Gerald Heron and John Mitford were commissioned to tender an oath to this Henry de Boynton and others, to be true to the King and renounce Henry, Earl of Northumberland and his adherents; yet three years after he was concerned with the said Earl, Thomas Mowbray, E. M., Richard Scrope, Archbishop of York, etc., who had taken arms against Henry IV. Sir Henry fled to Berwick, was apprehended on the surrender thereof to the King, and with several others executed.

A mandate was issued to the Mayor of Newcastle-on-Tyne to receive the head of Henry Boynton, “chivaler,” and to place it on the bridge of the town to stay there as long as it would last, but within a month another mandate as issued to the Mayor to take down the head, where it was lately placed by the King’s command, and to deliver it to Sir Henry’s wife for burial. Sir Henry’s property, the manor of Acklam in Cleveland, with all members being forfeited and in the King’s hands, was granted to Roger de Thornton, Mayor of Newcastle-on-Tyne, but in the following August a grant was made for life to Elizabeth, late the wife of Henry Boynton, who had not wherewithal to maintain herself and six children or to pay her late husband’s debts, of the towns of Roxby and Newton, late the said Henry’s and forfeited to the King, on account of his rebellion, to hold to the value of £20 yearly, and there was granted to her also all his goods, likewise forfeited, to the value of £20, and she must answer for any surplus. Sir Henry married Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Conyers, of Sockburne, in the Bishopric of Durham ; she afterwards became the wife of John Felton.

“A Topographical Dictionary of Yorkshire, For the year 1822″ by Thomas Langdale

“The family of the Boyntons is of very great antiquity; Bartholomew de Boynton, the first mentioned in the pedigree, died seized of the manor of Boynton, from whence the family were denominated; He lived in 1067. They appear to have come into possession of the manor of Barmston, their ancient seat in this Riding, by the marriage of Henry Boynton, Esq. temp. Henry VII.

Barmston [is] a parish-town… 6.5 miles from Bridlington.  Pop, 205. The Church is a rectory, dedicated to All-Saints, in the deanry of Holderness, value, £13. 11s. 10.5d. Patron, Sir Francis Boynton, Bart [8th Baronet]. In 1726, Sir Griffith Boynton [3rd Baronet] founded an Alms-house here, for four old men, and endowed it with a small annual stipend for each. — The repairs and stipend were charged by Sir Griffith upon the manor of Haisthorpe. The old Hall, anciently the residence of the Boynton family, is now occupied as a Farm-house. It is moated round.

Boynton is a village and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is situated approximately 3 miles  west of the town of Bridlington.

Barmston is a village in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is situated on the Holderness coast, overlooking the North Sea . The Boyntons came to Barmston following the marriage of heiress Margaret de la See to Sir Henry Barmston in the 15th century.

Matthew Boynton married Francis Griffith, heiress of an estate at Burton Agnes including Burton Agnes Hall and Burton Agnes Manor House (a surviving example of a Norman manor house, although encased in 18th century brickwork) which the second Baronet inherited in 1647.  . Matthew was  1st Baronet of Barmston and Bainton in the East Riding of Yorkshire and an English Member of Parliament.   He was the eldest son of Sir Francis Boynton, who was High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1596. He was educated at St John’s College, Cambridge before being admitted at Lincoln’s Inn. He was created a baronet on 15 May 1618, and was himself twice High Sheriff, in 1628 and 1643–1644.

Burton Agnes Hall is an Elizabethan manor house in the village of Burton Agnes, near Driffield in Yorkshire. It was built by Sir Henry Griffith in 1601–10 to designs attributed to Robert Smythson

A baronetcy is the only hereditary honour which is not a peerage; baronets are commoners.  “The present hereditary Order of Baronets in England dates from 22 May 1611 when it was erected by James I who granted the first Letters Patent to 200 gentlemen of good birth with an income of at least £1000 a year. His intention was two fold. Firstly he wanted to fill the gap between peers of the realm and knights so he decided that the baronets were to form the sixth division of the aristocracy following the five degrees of the peerage. Secondly, and probably more importantly, he needed money to pay for soldiers to carry out the pacification of Ireland. Therefore those of the first creation, in return for the honour, were each required to pay for the upkeep of thirty soldiers for three years amounting to £1095, in those days a very large sum.  Originally baronets also had  the right to have the eldest son knighted on his 21st birthday. However, beginning in the reign of George IV, these rights have been gradually revoked. The Baronetcy of Boynton of Barmston lasted until 1966 when it became extinct upon the death of Sir Griffith Wilfrid Boynton, 13th Baronet (1889–1966)

Matthew entered Parliament in 1620 as member for Hedon, and subsequently also represented Scarborough in the Long Parliament from 1645 until his death.

SIR MATTHEW BOYNTON, KT. AND BART., second son of Sir Francis Boynton (XVIII), was christened at Barmston, 26th January, 1591, knighted at Whitehall, 9th May, 1618, and in 1619 was enrolled a Baronet. He was High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1628, and received a deputation dated at Westminster that year for preserving the game in the North and East Ridings. He was M.P. for Scarborough 5 in 1640, and was again High Sheriff in 1643, which office he continued to hold the following year, was M.P. for Hedon in the reign of Charles I (1620-3), and was a Commissioner of Sewers in 1645. Sir Matthew resided much at Roxby and sometimes at Highgate. He was one of the Parliament chiefly entrusted, and who in 1637 on the dissatisfaction with the proceedings of Laud [William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1633 to 1645, opposed Puritanism. This, and his support for King Charles I, resulted in his beheading in the midst of the English Civil War.] embarked with Cromwell for New England, but an order in Council prevented their voyage. [In 1637, Oliver Cromwell had a design to remove to New England. Sir Mathew Boynton, Sir William Constable, Sir Arthur Haslerigg, Mr. John Hampden, and several other gentlemen were preparing to remove themselves with him, and were actually embarked for that purpose; but were prevented by a proclamation, and order of council, and thus Mr. Cromwell’s voyage to New England was prevented].  The next year, though we find him abroad, the same authority implies a reason.

In January, 1642, Sir Matthew routed a royalist party of 600 men at Guisbrough, killed many and took a considerable number prisoners, whereof their commander Slingsby was one, and 200 arms. He contrived the seizure of Sir John Hotham, who was taken.

The Great Hall at Burton Agnes Hall

Matthew built his home at Burton Agnes, near the ancient village of Boynton west of Bridlington after he decided to stay in England instead of emigrating. The assumption that he financed at least his cousins’ emigration is based on a transcribed letter from Sir Matthew to the son of Gov. Endicott found in the Boynton genealogy, stating his decision not to come to New England after all, and releasing his “servants” from any further obligation to him, and making a gift of his goods and livestock that were transported in preparation for his now-abandoned emigration plans.

Back to John Boynton the Immigrant

In the summer of 1638, towards the end of this great migration from the England of Charles I, Rev. Ezekiel Rogers and his followers set sail on the ship “John of London” from Hull England. On board were about twenty families, nearly all from Yorkshire, under the leadership of Rev. Rogers of Rowley, England, near Hull. Among the families were Frances Lambert, from Holme-on-Spaulding-Moor; Edward Carleton, from Barnston; Hugh CHAPLIN, Joseph and Maximilian JEWETT, from Bradford; Robert and John Hazeltine, from Biddeford in Devon; William Jackson, from Rowley, and William and John Boynton, Thomas Nelson, John Spofford and Thomas Tenney.

The ship landed in Salem Harbor where they stayed the winter and spent the time looking for a more permanent location to settle. Rev. Rogers appeared before Mr. Wilson’s church of Boston in the year 1638 and requested for himself, and his people, to join with Mr. Wilson’s church. His request was granted. Rev. Rogers was urged to join a company, being formed to colonize Quinnipiack, now New Haven, Conn., but chose not to go. Before the winter was over Ezekiel Rogers request of the General Court, a tract of land between Ipswich and Newbury. His request was granted and the settlement began in the spring of 1639.

By 1645, sixteen additional families had arrived in Rowley, including James Bailey, Nicholas JACKSONJane GRANT,  Francis PARROTRichard THURLOW and John PEARSON.

The Rowley Company purchased additional land at the expense of about £ 800. Those who were able contributed the purchase money, and in the layout of the house lots, the amount given determined the size of the lot granted.

Although the first mention of the new plantation was in March of 1638, it was not incorporated until September of 1639.

On the “tenth of the eleventh Anno Dni 1643, Thomas Nelson, Edward Carlton, Humphrey Reynon & Francis PARROT made a survey of the town and a register of the several house lots of from 1 1/2 to 6 acres then laid out to the settlers.

10 of our ancestor families (underlined in red) had plots in Rowley in this 1642 map.  John and William Boynton’s plots were in the southwest part of town between Bradford Hill and the Rye Field.

Here is today’s approximate location of John’s lot on Google Maps.

In accordance with an order made in the year 1650, the fences of the common fields of the town of Rowley were divided according to the proportion of land held by individual proprietors, and a number was assigned to each man’s portion; the comparative length of the fence to be maintained by each immigrant of interest as indicating their relative holdings at this time: “the hundred and fort Rod of the feild fence which they who have gats in the ox pastur are to make and mainetaine its thus numbered as followeth

VI frances PARRAT six rale Length
VII Mr Shewell Twelue rale Length
VIII William Asee six rale Lengths
VIII Mr Carlton six Rale Lengths
X Thomas Teney six rale Length
XI Thomas CROSBEE six rale Length
XII Richard Swane nine rale Length
XIIII Edward HASEN three Rale Length
XV Mr Ezekiell Rogers nineteene rale Lengths
XVIII Mr Thomas Nellson Thirty one rale Lengths

The fence between the ox pasture and the medow which is a two Rale fence at further sid of the ox pasture to ye mill ward thos are the severall proportions as folleth every ox gate Two rale lengths and euer aker of medow foure and a half–
II frances Parrat foure rale Lengths
XVI Mr Ezekiell Rogers twelue rail Length
XVII Edward HASEN Twol rale Lengths
XVIII John Smith foure rale Lengths
XVIIII John PEARSON [also our ancestor] eighteen rale Lengths
XX Mr Edward Carlton Thirty rale Lengths
XXI Robert Swane foure rale Length & halfe and Richard Swane suenteene and half of length
XXII William BOYNTON  nine rale Lengths
XXIII Will Teny and Thomas Teny nine Lengths

John Boynton – Will 1

John Boynton – Will 2

John Boynton – Will 3

Children
1. Joseph Boynton

Joseph’s first wife Sarah Swan was born 30 Mar 1644 in Rowley, Essex Mass. Her parents were Richard Swan and Ann [__?__]. Sarah died 27 Feb 1718 in Rowley, Essex Mass.

Joseph’s second wife Elizabeth Wood’s origins are not known.

Joseph Boynton was a captain in Col. Francis Wainwright’s First Regiment – Red – serving from 1706-1707, on the Port Royal Expedition. In addition, he served as town clerk and as a town representative for many years. He and his family moved to Groton, Mass., in 1715, several years before the death of his wife, Sarah, Feb. 27, 1718/19. After Sarah’s death he returned to Rowley sometime before 1719/20, according to church records, and married Elizabeth Wood. Joseph Boynton died 16 Dec 1730 in Rowley.

Joseph Boynton 1 — Source: Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938)

Joseph Boynton 2

Joseph Boynton 3

2. John Boynton Jr.

John’s first wife Hannah Keyes was born 12 Sep 1654 in Newbury, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Solomon Keys and Frances Grant. Her grandparents were Thomas GRANT and Jane HABURNE. Hannah died 11 Apr 1717 in Bradford, Essex, Mass

John’s second wife Mary [__?__] was born 647 in Mass. widow of Simon Wainwright

John served in the Great Swamp Fight.  In May, 1676, the Court voted to repay the losses of divers persons who were “damnified” by the burning of Major Appleton’s tent at Narraganset.  John received 4 pounds, 16 schillings, 10 pence.

3. Caleb BOYNTON(See his page)

4. Mercy Boynton

Mercy’s first husband Josiah Clark was born 1647 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass. His parents were Thomas Clark and Grace [__?__]. Josiah died 27 Sep 1691 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

Mercy’s second husband Joseph Goodhue was born 13 May 1662 in Bocking, Essex, Mass. His parents were Joseph Goodhue and Sarah Whipple. Joseph died 2 Sep 1697 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass.

Mercy’s third husband John Hovey was born 1644 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass. His parents were Daniel Hovey and Abigail Andrews. John died 29 Mar 1718 in Topsfield, Essex, Mass.

5. Hannah Boynton

Hannah’s husband Nathaniel Warner was born in 1646. His parents were Daniel WARNER and Elizabeth DENNY. Nathaniel died  29 Apr 1684.

6. Sarah Boynton

Sarah’s husband Hopewell Davis was born 1644 in Charlestown, Suffolk, Mass. His parents were Barnabas Davis and Patience James. Hopewell died 17 Aug 1712 in Charlestown, Suffolk, Mass

7. Samuel Boynton

Samuel’s wife Hannah Switser was born 1660 in England. Her parents were Christofer Switcher and [__?__]. Hannah died 13 Mar 1718 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

Sources:

Boynton ancestry before 1614

John Boynton 1 — Source: Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938)

John Boynton 2

http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/b_b.htm

http://www.ourfamilyancestry.info/famhist/pafg32.htm#1022

http://berks.pa-roots.com/familyfolder/Boynton.html (36 generations of Boyntons)

http://members.tripod.com/~Scott_Michaud/Boynton-history.html

http://home.myfairpoint.net/ddillaby/boynton1.html

http://www.quine.org/boynton.html

http://www.boyntons.us/yorkshire/people/lineage/collier/02barmston.html

Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938) By Holman, Mary Lovering, 1868-1947; Pillsbury, Helen Pendleton Winston, 1878-1957

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=1621219

Posted in 12th Generation, Historical Site, Immigrant - England, Immigrant Coat of Arms, Line - Miller, Pioneer, Storied | Tagged , , , , | 20 Comments

Sgt. Caleb Boynton

Sgt. Caleb BOYNTON (1649 – 1730) was Alex’s 9th Great Grandfather; one of 1,024 in this generation of the Miller line.

Caleb Boynton was born about 1649 in Rowley, Mass.  His parents were John BOYNTON and Eleanor (Ellen) PELL.  He married Hannah HARRIMAN on 26 May 1674. Caleb died 16 Dec 1730.

Hannah Harriman was born on 22 May 1655 in Rowley, Mass.  Her parents were Leonard HARRIMAN and Margaret PALMER. Hannah died 19 Feb 1726 in Rowley.

Children of Caleb and Hannah:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Hannah Boynton 5 Sep 1675 Rowley, Mass. 17 May 1706
Rowley
2. Margaret BOYNTON 23 Sep 1677 in Rowley, John CHAPLIN
9 Apr 1701
22 Apr 1735 Rowley
3. Ruth Boynton 14 Jan 1681/82 Rowley Judah Clark
14 Feb 1714/15
2 Feb 1752
Lincoln, Mass
4. Jeremiah Boynton 8 Jan 1685/86 Rowley 1 Jun 1709
Rowley
5. Ebenezer Boynton 17 May 1688 Rowley Sarah Wheeler
25 May 1711
Newbury, Essex, Mass
.
Abigail Chadwick
7 Jun 1728 Weston, Middlesex, Mass
16 Sep 1761
Milford, Mass

General Notes: Serg. Caleb Boynton, “Blacksmith” married 26 May 1674, Hannah, daughter of Leonard Harriman. His will, dated 17 May 1706, mentions wife (unnamed), sons Jeremiah and Ebenezer. Daughters Margaret Chaplin and Ruth Boynton Essex Probate, 310: 47. His widow Hannah died 19 Feb 1725/26. Church records referred to Caleb saying “He was a worthy man.”

>Children

2. Margaret BOYNTON (See John CHAPLIN‘s  page)

3. Ruth Boynton

Ruth’s husband Judah Clark was born 07 FEB 1681 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. His parents were John Clarke (1650 – 1736) and Mary Poore (1654 – 1726). He first married 5 Apr 1704 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. to Hannah Kilborne. Judah died about 1717 in Rowley, Essex, Mass

5. Ebenezer Boynton

Ebenezer’s wife Sarah Wheeler was born 4 Jul 1692 in Newbury, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Nathan Wheeler and Elizabeth/Rebecca Safford. Sarah died Feb 1728 in Weston, Middlesex, Mass.

Ebenezer’s wife Abigail Chadwick was born 1684. Abigail died in 1733.

Boynton House purchased by Ebenezer and Sarah in the Georgetown district of Weston in 1726 as it appeared in 1933.

Sarah Wheeler was named as “Sarah Boynton” in her father’s will proved 26 July 1741. Ebenezer was a blacksmith and he and Sarah moved to Weston, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, before 1726.

Ebenezer Boynton Headstone

The name at the top of this stone is that of Ebenezer Boynton (1688-1761)  The stone marks the grave of several people from the same family and is very difficult to read due to weathering of the inscription..

Sources:

http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/b_b.htm

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~corey/harriman/d2.htm#i10410

http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~legends/boynton.html#ebenezer

Posted in 11th Generation, Line - Miller, Veteran | Tagged | 3 Comments

Hugh Chaplin

Hugh CHAPLIN (1603 – 1653) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Miller line

Immigrant Ancestor

Hugh Chaplin was born 22 May 1603 in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England.  His parents were Ebenezer CHAPLIN and [__?__].      He emigrated  with his wife Elizabeth. in the summer of 1638, towards the end of the Great Migration with  Rev. Ezekiel ROGERS and his followers on the ship “John of London” from Hull England.  He married Elizabeth SCOTT. about 1642 in Ipwich, Mass.  He was almost forty years old when he married and his bride was twenty years younger.  Hugh died on 22 Mar 1653 in Rowley, Mass.

Hugh Chaplin was born in Bradford, West Yorkshire, England

Elizabeth Scott was born in 18 Nov 1623 Rattlesden, Suffolk, England.  Her parents may have been Thomas SCOTT and Elizabeth STRUTT. After Hugh died, she married our ancestor Nickolas JACKSON in 1656. Elizabeth died on 12 Jun 1694 in Rowley, Mass at the age of 89.

Some sources say Elizabeth Scott married in Rowley, MA in 1647, John Spofford, from an ancient Yorkshire family (pre-dating 106, according to the records). John Spofford was the son of another John Spofford, who, in 1662, lost his ministery in Silkston, Yorkshire for “non-conformity.” He was, of course, a Puritan. A daughter of John and Elizabeth (Scott) Spofford, Sarah Spofford, born 22 Mar 1661-2, married Richard Kimball(3). The passengers on the Elizabeth were very much an inter-related group; it also included Munnings, undoubtedly related to Richard Kimball.

Children of Hugh and Elizabeth:

Name Born Married Departed
1. John Chaplin 26 Aug 1643 in Rowley 5 Sep 1660 in Rowley
2. Joseph CHAPLIN 11 Dec 1646 in Rowley, Mass Elizabeth WEST
22 Feb 1670/71 in Rowley, Mass
17 Apr 1705 in Rowley, Mass
3. Thomas Chaplin 2 Sep 1648 in Rowley 21  Jun 1660
4. Jonathan Chaplin 10 Dec 1651 in Rowley 24 Nov 1659 in Rowley

Three of Hugh’s sons died within ten months of each other in 1659 and 1660, doubtless of some prevalent children’s disease, for the Vital Statistics of Rowley show that thirty children died there in that period.  Wife Elizabeth and second son Joseph thus became the residual heirs.

In the summer of 1638, towards the end of this great migration from the England of Charles I, Rev. Ezekiel Rogers and his followers set sail on the ship “John” from Hull England. On board were about twenty families, nearly all from Yorkshire, under the leadership of Rev. Rogers of Rowley, England, near Hull. Among the families were Frances Lambert, from Holme-on-Spaulding-Moor; Edward Carleton, from Barnston; Hugh Chaplin, Maximillian and Joseph Jewett, from Bradford; Robert and John Hazeltine, from Biddeford in Devon; William Jackson, from Rowley, and William and John BOYNTON, Thomas Nelson, John Spofford and Thomas Tenney.

The ship landed in Salem Harbor where they stayed the winter and spent the time looking for a more permanent location to settle. Rev. Rogers appeared before Mr. Wilson’s church of Boston in the year 1638 and requested for himself, and his people, to join with Mr. Wilson’s church. His request was granted. Rev. Rogers was urged to join a company, being formed to colonize Quinnipiack, now New Haven, Conn., but chose not to go. Before the winter was over Ezekiel Rogers request of the General Court, a tract of land between Ipswich and Newbury. His request was granted and the settlement began in the spring of 1639.

By 1645, sixteen additional families had arrived in Rowley, including James Bailey, Nicholas JACKSON, and John PEARSON. Hugh Chaplin became a Freeman in 1642, and most of the others soon followed. Previous to 1664 a Freeman meant that they were members of some Congregational Church and had taken the Freeman’s oath, and were entitled to vote.

On the “tenth of the eleventh Anno Dni 1643, Thomas Nelson, Edward Carlton, Humphrey Reynon & Francis Parrot made a survey of the town and a register of the several house lots of from 1 1/2 to 6 acres then laid out to the settlers.

10 of our ancestor families (underlined in red) had plots in Rowley in this 1643 map.  Hugh Chaplin had the third most southwest lot on Bradford Street

Here is today’s approximate location of Hugh’s lot on Google Maps.

The Rowley Company purchased additional land at the expense of about £800. Those who were able contributed the purchase money, and in the layout of the house lots, the amount given determined the size of the lot granted. Hugh Chaplin received the following, “To Hugh Chaplin, one lotte containginge an acre, and halfe, bounded on the south side by John Dresser’s house lott, part of it lyinge on the west side, and part of it on the ease side of the street.”

Although the first mention of the new plantation was in March of 1638, it was not incorporated until September of 1639.

Hugh Chaplin was a respected citizen of Rowley, served the term of 1648 as juror in Rowley; served on the trial jury and was Overseer, 3, January 1650 and again 19, December 1641. Hugh had four boys, all born in Rowley. Three of his sons were minors at the time of his death. The lots that were Hugh’s in later divisions, were given to his heir and only living son Joseph, in his father’s right. Hugh Chaplin only lived fifteen years after settling in Rowley, he died testate, making his will a week before his death.

Hugh did not sign his will, but it was witnessed by Joseph Jewett and John PICKARD, who proved the will in Ipswich Court, 31, Mar 1657. The will had not been proven by the widow within the twenty month allowed for the action, so she was sentenced to forfeit one hundred pounds to the court. On 6 Apr 1657, Elizabeth Jackson petitioned the court for an abatement of the fine of £100 for neglecting to present her former husband Hugh Chaplin’s will to be probated and on 29 Sep 1657, the count moderated the fine of Nicholas JACKSON for not proving the will of his wife’s former husband.

Will of Hugh Chaplin

This 15 day of the firste month 1654. The laste will and Testemente of Hew Chaplin of Rowlay in the Countie of Esexs being sick in bodie yet perfite in memorie I commite my soule to God thorowgh Jesus Christe. And for my outword estaite as followeth. Imprimis for my whole estate is at the dessposeng of my beloyed wife Elesabeth Chaplin Duringe the time she dus contenew a widow provided she dowe nothing in dessposing of my estaite without the consente of Thomas Maghell Maxiemillian Jewite Thomas Doconson Hew Smith John Pickard. But if my wife marrie then my estaite to be dessposed of by thes fine men afore mensoned as after followeth if my estaite be fourscore pounds they my wife shall haue Thirtie pounds And the riste of my estaite to be devided equalie amongst all my Children Onely my Elldeste sonne John Chaplin shall have thre pound more than anie one of my children. And my will is that my wife haue thirtie poundes oute of fourscore poundes and this preposion to be cepte whether my estaite be more of lesse.

Hugh had a grant of an acre and a half of land for a house lot in Rowley, Massachusetts, on what is now Bradford street, and there he built his house, which [as of 1922] it stood and was in good  good repair. He was made freeman in 1642, and according to the history of Rowley he was a surveyor of land, and was included in the list of men of that ancient plantation of whom it is written that they all were “godly men of good estate.” Hugh Chaplin died in Rowky, and was buried there 22 1 mo. 1653. His will, written with his own hand, is on file in the Court of Probate in Salem, and gives evidence that he was a man of educational attainments. Hugh and Elizabeth Chaplin had four children, all born in Rowley: 1. John, born August 25, 1643, buried September 5, 1660. 2. Joseph, of whom further. 3. Thomas, born September 2, 1648, buried June 21, 1660. 4. Jonathan, born December 10, 1651, buried November 24, 1659.

Sources:

Hugh Chaplin – Certificate

Hugh Chaplin 1 — Source: Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938)

Hugh Chaplin 2

2http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~corey/smpoor1822/a8.htm#i4296

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/t/r/o/Dana-R-Trodella/GENE7-0027.html

History of Passaic and its environs …: historical-biographical, Volume 2

http://www.jcsisle.com/wills.html

Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938) By Holman, Mary Lovering, 1868-1947; Pillsbury, Helen Pendleton Winston, 1878-1957

Posted in 12th Generation, Historical Site, Immigrant - England, Line - Miller, Pioneer, Public Office | Tagged , | 12 Comments

Joseph Chaplin

Joseph CHAPLIN (1646 – 1705) was Alex’s 9th Great Grandfather; one of 1,024 in this generation of the Miller line.

Joseph Chaplin was born on 11 Dec 1646 in Rowley, Mass.  His parents were Hugh CHAPLIN and Elizabeth SCOTT.  He married Elizabeth WEST on 22 Feb 1670/71 in Rowley, Mass.  Joseph died 17 Apr 1705 in Rowley, Mass.

Elizabeth West was born about 1652 in Ipswich, Mass.  Her parents were Twyford WEST and Mary CROSS.  Elizabeth died on 12 Oct 1702 in Rowley, Mass.

Children of Joseph and Elizabeth:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Joseph Chaplin 4 APR 1673 Rowley, Mass. Mehitable [__?__] Buried
10 Jun 1754 in Attleboro, Mass
2. John CHAPLIN 26 Oct 1674 Rowley Margaret BOYNTON
9 Apr 1701
24 Jan 1767
Rowley
3. Jonathan Chaplin 4 APR 1677 Rowley Before 1705
Rowley
4. Jeremiah Chaplin 27 JUL 1680 Rowley Ann Kilbourne
28 FEB 1702/03 Rowley
17 DEC 1764
Rowley
5. Elizabeth Chaplin 20 SEP 1682 Rowley John Searle
23 NOV 1708 Rowley
1 MAR 1756 Ipswich, Mass.

Joseph and Elizabeth lived in the house built on the 1 1/2 acres granted originally to his father, Hugh Chaplin. This house is still in existence on State road (95). The house was in the possession of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities.

Chaplin-Clarke House is a historic house at 109 Haverhill Street in Rowley, Massachusetts. The house was built in 1670 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Private residence. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Built in 1671, is Rowley’s oldest dwelling. This building has a central chimney built on a stone foundation. There is a slight overhang on both the first and second stories on the east end, but none in front. The building also has a lean-to, a very early addition, and the house is the only one in Rowley that has both an overhang and a lean-to. Richard Clarke and one of his children died of smallpox in 1730, and their unmarked graves lie west of the house by the stonewall.

You can see by comparing the original Rowley settler map with this view of 109 Haverhill Street from Google Maps that the house is in the same place as the original grant.

NR. LHD. PR. 2 burial lots of smallpox victims on property of First Period house which was preserved by Mrs. Pauline Fenno who lived on estate at old Ox Pasture Hill Farm. Gave house to  Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, which sold into private ownership with PR.   The Chaplin-Clarke House is protected by a preservation restriction, drawn up in accordance with MGL Chapter 183, Sections 31-33. A preservation restriction runs with the deed and is one of the strongest preservation strategies available.

Map of Rowley Ancestor Plots Click to View Seven of our ancestor families helped found Rowley including Hugh Chaplin whose lot was located in the lower left hand corner

Will of Joseph Chaplin Proved 7 May 1705 (Essex Co. Probate Files):

“In the Name of God Amen: I Joseph Chaplin of the towne of Rowley in the province of the massachusettes bay in New England being weake of body but of sound understanding do make this my last will and testament; as foloweth. To my eldest son Joseph Chaplin I do order nine pounds to be paid in mony by them that I shall appoint my executors provided that he do aquit all claime to his uncle Nathaniell West estate that I am obliged by bond that he shall do and my will is Also that my two youngest sons John and Jeremiah Chaplin shall have all my housing and lands and meadows and my will is that my son Joseph shall  have an equal share with the rest of my children to be paid to him as money if he com for it; and give aquittance according to my Ingagement for him a to the nine pounds above expressed els his part in my estate to stand obliged for it and my will is that my Daughter Elizabeth Chaplin shall have an equall share in my estate payd to her as mony out of my estate according to aprisement: my will is also that my son John shall have the sum of ten pounds accounted for his trade that was learnt in my time: And I do appoint my two sons John Chaplin and Jeremiah Chaplin to be my whole and sole executors of this my will and Testament; and as for the nine pounds above expressed enterlined before asignement and in testimonie of the truth of the about said I Joseph Chaplin have set to my hand and seal this thirteenth Day of April in the year seaventeen hundred and five

Witness:                                                                                                     Joseph (his X mark) Chaplin
Samuel Platts
Caleb Boynton
Joseph Kilborn

Children

1. Joseph Chaplin

Joseph’s wife Mehitable [__?__] was born about 1677 in Newbury, Essex, Mass. Mehitable died 12 Oct 1702 in Newbury, Essex, Mass.

Joseph died without leaving living children and so his relatives inherited his estate.

2. John CHAPLIN (See his page)

4. Jeremiah Chaplin

Jeremiah’s wife Ann Kilbourne was born 28 Nov 1680 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Joseph Kilbourne and Mary Trumble. Ann died 24 Aug 1751 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

He was the great grandfather  of the Rev. Jeremiah Chaplin, founder and first president of Colby College

On February 27, 1813, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts adopted a petition to establish the Maine Literary and Theological Institution, the 33rd chartered college in the United States. The petition was led by Baptists who had come to the region for missionary work, and who wanted to train their own ministers, to end the reliance on England for providing men of learning. From 1816-1818, the new institution found a home in Waterville on 179 acres of land donated by citizens. In 1818, trustees assigned the institution to Rev. Jeremiah Chaplin, a Baptist theologian. Chaplin arrived in Waterville in the summer of 1818 with his family and seven students, including George Dana Boardman, the institution’s first graduate. They were put up in a vacant Waterville home, and in that home the first classes were held.

After Maine separated from Massachusetts in 1820, the first Maine legislature affirmed the Massachusetts charter for the institution, but made significant changes. Students could no longer be denied admission based on religion, the institution was prohibited from applying a religious test when selecting board members, and the trustees now had the authority to grant degrees. A turning point, the Maine Literary and Theological Institution was renamed Waterville College on February 5, 1821.

 

Jeremiah Chaplin (1776-1841)

Jeremiah Chaplin (wiki) (1776 – 1841) was a Reformed Baptist theologian who served as the first president of Colby College (then called the Waterville College) in Maine.

He worked on the family farm and graduated fromBrown University in 1799. Chaplin spent a year at Brown as a tutor and then studied theology eventually becoming pastor of a Baptist church in Danvers, Massachusetts. He left this pastorate in 1817 to become president of the new Waterville College (later Colby College) at which he served until 1833. Chaplin first met Gardner Colby during this period while Colby was still a child, and Chaplin assisted Colby’s family after Colby’s father died.

During the remainder of his life, Chaplin preached in Rowley, Massachusetts and Wilmington, Connecticut, and then moved to Hamilton, New York where he died in 1841. Chaplin held to a Calvinist Baptisttheology throughout his life/

Parents Asa Chaplin (1739 – 1807 and Mary Bailey (1744 – 1820)

Grandparents Jonathan Chaplin (1706 – 1784) and Sarah Boynton (1708 – 1784)

Great Grandparents Jeremiah Chaplin (1680 – 1765) and Ann Kilbourne (1680 – 1751)

5. Elizabeth Chaplin

Elizabeth’s husband John Searle was born 2 Nov 1686 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass. His parents were Samuel Searle and Deborah Bragg. After Elizabeth died, he maried 1 Jun 1756 in Bradford to Bethia Danforth (d. 16 Jul 1768 Byfield).  John died 20 Jun 1771 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

John Searle Bio – Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury



Sources:

Joseph Chaplin 1 — Source: Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938)

Joseph Chaplin 2

Joseph Chaplin 3

http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/b-_c.htm

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~corey/smpoor1822/a7.htm

http://www.jcsisle.com/wills.html

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=38041243&st=1

Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury (1938) By Holman, Mary Lovering, 1868-1947; Pillsbury, Helen Pendleton Winston, 1878-1957

Posted in 11th Generation, Historical Site, Line - Miller | Tagged | 6 Comments

John Chaplin

John CHAPLIN (1674 – 1767) was Alex’s 8th Great Grandfather; one of 512 in this generation of the Miller line.

John Chaplin was born 26 Oct 1674 in Rowley, Mass. His parents were Joseph CHAPLIN and Elizabeth WEST.  He married Margaret BOYNTON on 9 Apr 1701 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.  John died 24 Jan 1767 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

Margaret Boynton was born 23 Sep 1677 in Rowley, Mass.  Her parents were Caleb BOYNTON and Hannah HARRIMAN.  Margaret died 22 Apr 1735 in Rowley.

Children of John and Margaret:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Hannah CHAPLIN 20 Feb 1701/02 Rowley, Essex, Mass Israel HAZEN
27 May 1724 Rowley
10 Jun 1760
Rowley
2. Elizabeth Chaplin 9 Apr 1705 Rowley 26 Mar 1759
Linebrook Parish, Ipwich, Mass
or
Oswego, New York,
3. John Chaplin Jun 1709 Rowley 31 Dec 1712 Rowley
4. Mehitable Chaplin Dec 1709 Rowley 17 Nov 1767
Rowley
5. Lieut. John Chaplin 12 May 1717 Rowley Hepzibah Jewett
27 Jan 1746
Boxford, Essex, Mass.
.
Sarah Stickney
16 Jun 1772 Newbury, Mass
21 Jan 1774 Rowley
6. Margaret Chaplin 1719 Rowley Thomas Wood
2 Jun 1736
Rowley
31 Mar 1770
Rowley
7. Moses Chaplin 21 Jun 1721 Rowley Hannah Stringer
9 Jun 1747 Rowley
18 Oct 1811
Rowley

x

Children

1. Hannah CHAPLIN (See Israel HAZEN‘s page)

5. Lieut. John Chaplin

John’s first wife Hepzibah Jewett was born 6 Oct 1724 in Boxford, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Ezekiel Jewett (1693 – 1775) and Martha Thurston (1699 -1780). Her grand parents were Thomas Jewett and Hannah Story and his great grandparents were Ezekiel JEWETT and Faith PARRATT,  as well as William STORY and Sarah FOSTER.  Hepzibah died 1 Aug 1771 in Rowley, Essex, Mass

John’s second wife Sarah Stickney was born 25 Jan 1713 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Benjamin Stickney (1673 -1756) and Mary Palmer (1674 -1747). Sarah died 7 Feb 1798 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

In some of the records John’s son John Jr.  is called lieutenant, from which it may be inferred that he gave some service during the the French and Indian Wars, although no actual records of his service is found. The sword of Lieutenant John Chaplin was handed down and kept in the family until recently [1908], when it was destroyed by fire.

Children all of 1st wife, b. in Rowley:

Sons, Joseph, David, , John , and  Daniel, , all served in the Revolutionary War.

i. Hepzibah Chaplin, b. 26 Sep 1750 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. 6 Oct 1750  Rowley

ii. Deacon Joseph Chaplin, b. 22 Feb 1752 Rowley, Essex. Mass; d. 12 Dec 1813 Rowley; m. 24 Sep 1778 in Rowley to his first cousin `7 Ruth Wood (b. 22 Jan 1753 in Rowley – d. 28 Jan 1843 in Rowley)  Her parents were Thomas Wood (1713 – 1779) and Margaret Chaplin (1715 – 1770), (see below).   Joseph and Ruth had at least two children: Joseph and Hepzibah.

Map made for Joseph Chaplin 1795 , Rowley, Massachusetts

Map made for Joseph Chaplin 1795 , Rowley, Massachusetts

Joseph served in the revolution.

Inscription:
Here lies the body of
Deac. JOSEPH CHAPLIN,
food for worms till the glorious
resurrection morning. He was born Feb. 22
1752 & died Dec. 12, 1813.Deceitful world farewell to you,
In heaven may I appear,
I bid you friends a short adieu
And will you meet me there;
And join the saints with angels bright
To praise the sacred Three,
And dwell with him in realms of light
Who dy’d to make us free.
Then while the grave’s before your eyes
Pray give this truth its weight
That on a moment as it flies
Hangs your eternal state.
Haste thou my soul arise and fly
Thro’ realms of lasting day
And say there’s nought below the sky
To tempt thee there to stay
Here my redeemer reigns with praise
And always from his throne,
He watches all my dust to raise
A body like his own.
Rowley Burial Ground 
Find A Grave Memorial# 8424646

iii. David Chaplin, b. 26 Jan 1754 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. Waterford, Oxford, Maine; m. Jane Saunders (b. 1760 in Mass. – d. Waterford, Oxford, Maine)  Her parents were Edward Saunders (b. 1725) and [__?__].

David served in the revolution.

Chaplin, David, Ipswich. Private, Capt. Abraham How’s co. of Minute-men, which marched from Ipswich (West Parish) on the alarm of April 19, 1775; service, 2 days;

Also, Capt. John Baker’s co., Col. Moses Little’s (17th) regt.; muster roll dated Aug. 1, 1775; enlisted May 11 (also given May 2), 1775; service, 2 mos. 26 days; also, company return [probably Oct., 1775]; age, 17 yrs.; also, order for bounty coat or its equivalent in money dated in camp Dec. 11, 1775;

Also, Capt. Thomas Mighill’s co., Col. Loammi Baldwin’s (26th) regt.; pay abstracts for Jan.-May, 1776;also, pay abstract for June, 1776, dated New York;

Also, account of guns returned by persons in the 26th regt. while at Trenton Dec. 31, 1776, and Jan. 1, 1777;

Also, Capt. Benjamin Adams’s co., Col. Johnson’s regt.; enlisted Aug. 15, 1777; discharged Nov. 30, 1777; service, 4 mos., with Northern army

David was placed on the pension roll: 7 Jun 1819 for his service in the Massachusetts Continental Army. His pension of $96.00 annually commenced 13 May 1818. He was dropped from the roll under act May 1, 1820 after having received $173.60.

Pensioned again under act June 7, 1832. Annual Allowance: $80.00; Sums received: $240 00. Placed on the pension roll: 2 Aug 1833 Commencement of pension: 4 Mar 1831.

iv. Lydia Chaplin, b. 2 Dec 1755 Rowley, Essex, Mass.; d. 13 Dec 1851 Greenville, Kennebec, Maine; m. 13 May 1781 in Chester, Rockingham, New Hampshire to John Knowles (b. 25 Apr 1759 in Rye, Rockingham, New Hampshire – d. 26 May 1832 in Fayette, Kennebec, Maine) His parents were Amos Knowles (1722 – 1809) and Elizabeth Libby (1725 – 1804)Lydia and John had ten children born between 1770 and 1802.

John’s SAR record is 88839.  He was a private and a sergeant in the New Hampshire troops.

v. John Chaplin, b. 22  Jan 1758 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. 3 Aug 1837 Bridgton, Cumberland, Maine; m. 2 Jun 1778 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass to his first cousin Margaret Chaplin (b. 7 Sep 1757 in Ipswich, Essex, Mass. – d.: 1840 in Bridgton, Maine)  Her parents were Moses Chaplin and Hannah Stringer (See below).  John and Margaret had ten children born between 1782 and 1805.

With three of his brothers served with credit during the war of the revolution.

Chaplin,John, Rowley. Private, Capt. Richard Peabody’s co., Col. Edward Wigglesworth’s regt.; pay abstract for travel allowance from Ticonderoga home in 1776.

Not sure if this is our John — Chaplin, John, Hartwood. Private, Capt. Peter Porter’s co. of Minute-men, Col. Paterson’s regt., which marched April 23, 1775, in response to the alarm of April 19, 1775, to Cambridge; service, 13 days; also, Capt. Thomas Williams’s co., Col. John Paterson’s regt.; muster roll dated Aug. 1, 1775; enlisted May 5, 1775; service, 3 mos. 5 days; also, company return [probably Oct., 1775]; also, order for bounty coat or its equivalent in money dated Camp No. 3, Charlestown, Dec. 23, 1775.

About 1790 he went to Maine and was one of the first settlers in the town of Bridgton.

vi.  Daniel Chaplin, b. 8 Mar 1760 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. 24 Aug 1823 Waterford, Oxford, Maine; Burial: Woodlawn Cemetery , North Waterford; m. 5 May 1792 in Rowley to Mary Saunders (b. 17 Oct 1768 in Rowley – d. 9 Oct 1846 in Waterford, Maine) Her parents were Edward Saunders (b. 1725) and [__?__].  Daniel and Mary had eight children born between 1792 and 1810.

Daniel served in the revolution, and afterward settled at Waterford, Maine.

Chaplin, Daniel, Rowley (also given Ipswich). Private, Capt. John Baker’s co., Col. Moses Little’s (17th) regt.; muster roll dated Aug. 1, 1775; enlisted May 11 (also given May 2), 1775; service, 2 mos. 26 days;

Also, company return [probably Oct., 1775]; age, 22 yrs.;

Also, order for bounty coat or its equivalent in money dated in camp Dec. 11, 1775; also, Capt. Thomas Mighill’s co., Col. Loammi Baldwin’s (26th) regt.; pay abstracts for Jan., March and May, 1776;

Also, pay abstract for June, 1776, dated New York;

Also, Capt. Benjamin Adams’s co., Col. Johnson’s regt.; enlisted Aug. 15, 1777; discharged Nov. 30, 1777; service, 4 mos., with Northern army.

vii. Martha Chaplin, b. 4 Aug 1762 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. 13 Jan 1763 Rowley

viii. Caleb Chaplin, b, twin with Lois, b. 20 Mar 1764 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. Aug 1795 Saratoga, Rev War, New York

ix. Lois Chaplin, b twin with Caleb, born March 20, 1764.

x. Eunice Chaplin b. 1 Aug  1766; d. Starling Fayette, Maine; m1. 12 Oct 1789  Winthrop, Kennebec,  Maine and 16 Oct 1790 – Sterling, Worcester, Mass. to Brown Emerson (b. 1765 in Mass); m2. James Pool. (b. 1765 Mass.)

6. Margaret Chaplin

Margaret’s husband Thomas Wood was born 11 Jan 1713 in Rowley, Mass. His parents were Thomas Wood (1689 -1765) and Sarah Howe.  After Margaret died, he married 1771 to Eliz Dickinson Burpee.  Thomas died 20 May 1779 in Rowley, Mass.

Children of Margaret and Thomas:

i. Rev. Amos Wood bapt 29 May 1758 in Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. 3 Feb 1798 Rowley; m. Susannah Bailey (b. 15 Oct 1774 Weare, Hillsborough, New Hampshire – d. 4 Oct 1824 in New Hampshire)  Her parents were Samuel Bailey (1745 – 1821) and Hannah Clark (1748 – 1827).  Amos and Susannah had three children born between 1793 and 1798.

Annals of the Baptist Churches in New Hampshire: A Sermon, Preached Before the New Hampshire Baptist Convention Oct 20, 1835 By Ebenezer Edson Cummings

ii. Lucy Wood b. Rowley, Essex. Mass.; d. 19 Dec 1796; m. Reuben Howe

iii. Moses Wood b. Rowley, Essex. Mass.; d. 15 Apr 1742 Rowley

iv. Sarah Wood b. Rowley, Essex. Mass.

v. Hannah Wood b. 1 Apr 1744 Rowley, Essex. Mass.; m. 6 Nov 1763 to Edmund Tenney (b. 6 Sep 1741 in Byfield, Essex, Mass – d. 10 Oct 1831 Gilmanton, Belknap, New Hampshire) His parents were Ebenezer Tenney (1703 – 1795) and Ann Woodbury (1703 – 1753).  Hannah and Edmund had at least four children born between 1769 and 1776

vi. Eunice Wood b. 1746 Rowley, Essex. Mass.; d. 18 Aug 1746
Rowley

vii. Ruth Wood b. 22 Jan 1753 Rowley, Essex. Mass.; d. 28 Jan 1843 Rowley; m. 24 Sep 1778 in Rowley to her first cousin Joseph Chaplin (b. 22 Feb 1752 in Rowley – d. 12 Dec 1813 in Rowley) His parents were John Chaplin and Hepsibah Jewett.  (See above)    Ruth and Joseph had at least two children: Joseph and Hepzibah.

7. Moses Chaplin

Moses’ wife Hannah Stringer was born 1723 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. Hannah died 4 Apr 1809 in Rowley, Mass.

Children of Moses and Hannah:

i. Mary Chaplin b. 4 Jul 1749 Rowley, Essex, Mass.; d. Waterford, Oxford, Maine;  m. Joseph Nelson (b. 6 Jan 1745 in Rowley, Essex, Mass – d. Waterford, Oxford, Maine) His parents were Joseph Nelson (1682 – 1743) and Lydia Pengrye (1709 – 1780).  Mary and Joseph had four children born between 1777 and 1790.

Nelson, Joseph, Ipswich.Private, Capt. Abraham How’s co., which marched on the alarm of April 19, 1775, from West Parish in Ipswich; service, 2 days.

Nelson, Joseph, Rowley.Private, Capt. John Baker’s co., Col. Moses Little’s (17th) regt.; muster roll dated Aug. 1, 1775; enlisted May 5, 1775; service, 3 mos. 4 days; also, company return [probably Oct., 1775]; age, 30 yrs.; enlisted May 2, 1775; also, order for bounty coat or its equivalent in money dated Dec. 11, 1775.

ii. Hannah Chaplin b. 31 Aug 1751 Ipswich, Essex, Mass.; d. 19 Nov 1830 Ipswich; m. 1 Apr 1784 in Ipswich to Nehemiah Jewett (b. 25 Dec 1737 Ipswich – d. 8 Nov 1815  Ipswich)  His parents were Purchase Jewett (1710 – 1786) and Ruth Todd (1720 – 1799).  Nehemiah  first married 8 Jan 1767 in Rowley to Margaret Hazen (1742 – 1776) and had five children born between 1768 and 1776.

Jewett,Nehemiah, Ipswich.Private, Capt. Moses Jewett’s troop of horse, Col. John Baker’s (3d Essex Co.) regt., which marched on the alarm of April 19, 1775, to Medford; service, 3 days.

iii. Moses Chaplin b. 4 Jan 1755 Rowley, Essex, Mass; d. 6 Nov 1807; m. 12 Dec 1776 in Rowley to Elizabeth Hopkinson. Moses and Elizabeth had seven children born between 1777 and 1804.

iv. Margaret Chaplin b. 7 Sep 1757 Ipswich, Essex, Mass; d. 1840 Bridgton, Maine; m. 2 Jun 1778 in Ipswich to her first cousin John Chaplin (b. 22 Jan 1758 in Rowley – d. 3 Aug 1837 in Bridgton, Cumberland, Maine)  His parents were John Chaplin and Hepsibah Jewett (See above). Margaret and John had ten children born between 1782 and 1805.

Sources:

http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/b_c.htm

http://home.earthlink.net/~djaness/d47.htm#P4339

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=38043802

http://dunhamwilcox.net/me/me_bio_chaplin.htm


Posted in 10th Generation, 90+, Line - Miller, Veteran | Tagged | 5 Comments

Robert Crosby

Robert CROSBY (1596 – 1640) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Miller line.

Robert Crosby was born 30 Oct 1596 in Holme-on-Spaulding-Moor, East Riding Yorkshire, England.  His parents were John CROSBY and Jane WEBSTER. He married Constance BRIGHAM on 22 Jul 1622 in Holme-on-Spaulding-Moor.  Robert may have died in 1640 at sea on his way to America.   Alternatively, Robert died in He died between 1634 and August 1638 in England and Constance, a widow with three daughters emigrated with her children before 1643.

Robert Crosby may be buried at the Church on Spaulding Moor

Constance Brigham was born in 1602 in Holme-on-Spalding, Yorkshire, England. Her parents were Thomas BRIGHAM and Isabelle WATSON. Constance died on 25 Jan 1683/84 in Rowley Mass.

Children of Robert and Constance:

Name Born Married Departed
1. John Crosby 25 Jan 1624
Holme-On-Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, England
1625
Holme-On-Spaulding Moor
2. Jane CROSBY 22 Apr 1627 in Holme-on-Spaulding–Moor, England John PICKARD Jr.
29 Oct 1644
Rowley
20 Feb 1715/16 in Rowley, Mass
3. Mary Crosby 4 Dec 1629
Holme-on-Spaulding-Moor, England
Robert Longhorne
16 Jan 1647 Rowley
29 Nov 1667 Rowley, Mass.
4. Robert Crosby 4 Dec 1629
Holme-on-Spaulding-Moor, England
c. 1631
5. Robert Crosby 22 Jul 1631
Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, England
1632
6. Hannah Crosby 31 Oct 1634
Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, England
John Johnson
6 Dec 1655
Rowley, Mass
13 Dec 1717
Rowley, Mass

JOHN CROSBY, b. abt. 1556 in Holme-upon-Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, Eng. and d. in Holme between 29 Oct. 1604 (Will) and 11 Jan. 1604/05 (Probate). John married (1) a woman whose name is not known, who d. by Aug. 1594. They had four children. John married (2) JANE WEBSTER on 31 Aug 1594 prob. in Yorkshire, Eng.they had one child.

The administration of John Crosby’s Will was assigned by him to Margaret Crosby, his eldest surviving child. She proved his will on 11 Jan 1605/05 but was herself deceased by 2 Aug. 1605 when her stepmother Jane Webster Crosby was given administration of her estate.

John Crosby’s Will as shown in Prindle’s article:

   “To wife Jane for life the house I live in, she paying a rent of 26s. 8d. yearly to my son Robert Crosby, beginning when he is 21; and he is to have said estate at her death. If wife remarry, she to give security to Robert Millington, to keep estate in repair. If all my children die s.p., then said estate to the children of Henry Patchett and Rowland Smith. To daughter Margaret, two cows, etc. If wife be with child, it to have two cows. All residue to daughter Margaret, she to be executrix. Witnesses: John Millington, Robert Millington.”

John’s wish to leave his estate to the children of Hanry Patchett and Rowland Smith if his own children died without issue leads me to wonder exactly what relationship John had with those children. His only known sister died without issue, so unless he had another sister or two whose names have not been discovered he could not have been blood uncle to them.

A complication arose in the administration of the estates of John Crosby and his daughter Margaret. A man named Richard Yeoman of Holme-on-Spaulding Moor with a real or percieved claim upon the estate of John Crosby because through his attorney, a “Mr. Fothergill” he filed against the estate, and  on –

“16 Jan. 1606/7 warning was made not to give administration on the estate of John Crosbie, late of Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, nor on the portion of Margarete Crosbie, late of Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, not yet administered, without first “notefying” Yeoman or his attorney.”York Wills”

This claim was settled by 13 Feb 1606/07 for on that date John Webster, perhaps a brother of Jane, was given guardianship of nine year old Robert Crosby and administration of John Crosby’s estate was given to the same John Webster and his ward, John Crosby’s only surviving child, Robert Crosby. The estate inventory was less than forty pounds. “York Wills”

 Now, what of Jane Webster Crosby?  Her stepdaughter Margaret had previously designated Jane as the executrix of her estate in Aug 1605,  yet 17 months later in Feb. 1606/07, when her son was being assigned as a ward and co-executor of her late husband’s estate, there is no mention of her. Less than a month earlier she was conspicuous by her absence of mention in the suit filed Richard Yeoman against her late husband’s estate Had Jane died during that 17 months? Robert was her only child by John Crosby and it would seem improbable that there would be no mention of her in some fashion during these proceedings unless she was dead.

Children of John Crosby and his (1) wife:

  • 1. Richard Crosby, bapt. 16 May 1580 prob. Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, Eng., d. y.

  • 2. Ellen Crosby, bapt. 10 Nov. 1582 prob. Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, Eng., d. y.

  • 3. Margaret Crosby, b. abt. 1584 prob. Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, Eng., d. bet. Jan. & Aug. 1605, aged abt. 21 years. No marriage, no issue

  • 4. Peter Crosby, b. abt. 1586 prob. Holme-on-Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, Eng., d. y.

Child  of John Crosby and (2) Jane WEBSTER:

  • 5. ROBERT CROSBY.

On 13 Feb 1606/07, at the age of 9, after the deaths of his father and older sister, Robert  Crosby was assigned into the guardianship of John Webster, possibly of Holme and possibly his uncle. He was also named as co-administrator of his father’s estate.  Robert’s mother Jane was probably still alive at this time but nothing in Prindle’s article indicates when or where she died.

Perhaps Constance followed her sister and cousin to America after her husband died. John was certainly dead by 1643 when Constance recieved a grant of an acre and a half house lot.

On the “tenth of the eleventh Anno Dni 1643, Thomas Nelson, Edward Carlton, Humphrey Reynon & Francis Parrot made a survey of the town and a register of the several house lots of from 1 1/2 to 6 acres then laid out to the settlers.

10 of our ancestor families (underlined in red) had plots in Rowley in this 1642 map.  Constance Crosby’s plot was on High way across from the Rye field near the training ground.

Here is today’s approximate location of Constance’s lot on Google Maps.

In 1674 Constance consented to the choice of Daniel Wickham as the guardian for her orphaned grand daughter Sarah Longhorne.

28 Jan 1677 – Constance was listed as a Freeholder in Rowley.

Siblings

Constance’s sister, Anne Brigham married Simon Crosby on 21 Apr 1634 at Holme England.  They emigrated to New England on the Susan and Ellyn in the spring of 1635 to Cambridge Mass.

Constance Brigham Crosby and Sebastian Crosby were first cousins.Sebastian Brigham was born in 1609 in Holme-on- Spalding-Moor, Yorkshire, England. His parents were John Brigham and Constance Watson.  He was married to Mary [__?__] in 1634 in England.  He emigrated to New England in the autumn of 1638 in the company led by Rev. Ezekiel ROGERS of Rowley in Yorkshire, a parish about a dozen miles southeast of Holme-on-Spalding-Moor. The next spring they founded the town of Rowey Massachusetts.    Captain Sebastian Brigham commanded the Rowley company and was deputy to the Massachusetts General Court in 1650.  He probably returned to England about 1656.Sebastian’s father John Brigham was born in 1574 in Holme On Spaulding Moor, Yorkshire, England.  He was christened on 10 Oct 1574 in York, St Martin Coney, Yorkshire, England.   John died in 1621 in Hotham, Yorkshire, England.  He married Constance Watson 30 Sep 1599 in Holme On Spalding Moor, Yorkshire.John’s (eldest) son Henry and three other children (unnamed) were given legacies in the will of his great-uncle Henry3 Brigham of Seaton, dated 30 June, 1606, previously given. (P. and E. York Wills, vol. 30, fol. 165.) On 11 May, 1621, administration on the estate of John Brigham of Hotham, deceased, was granted to his widow Custance Brigham. (Adm. Act Books, P. and E. Court of York, Harthull Deanery.)

He married 30 Sep 1599, Constance Watson, baptized 17 Aug 1578, daughter of James Watson, and sister of Isabel Watson the wife of his brother [and Constance Brigham Crosby’s father] Thomas Brigham; she is mentioned in the wills of her father, James Watson, dated 10 Jul 1615, her sister Isabel Brigham dated 8 Jun 1634, and her brother-in-law Robert5 Brigham, dated 5 Sep 1640. (P. and E. York Wills, vol. 34, fol. 95, vol. 42, fol. 281, and original will for 1640.)

On account of the loss of the registers of Holme on Spalding Moor between 1601 and 1628, the baptismal record of only Henry, the eldest child of John and Constance (Watson) Brigham, is now preserved; but the will of Robert5 Brigham (brother of John5), in 1640, previously given, names six others, William, John, Robert, Gillian, Margaret, and Phillippa, all “now in this land,” thus clearly indicating there were others then out of England, evidently referring to Thomas6 Brigham who accompanied his own-cousin Anne6 (Brigham) Crosby, wife of Simon Crosby, to New England in the ship Susan and Ellen in April 1635, and Sebastian Brigham who emigrated to New England in the autumn of 1638 in the company led by Rev. Ezekiel Rogers of Rowley in Yorkshire, a parish about a dozen miles southeast of Holme on Spalding Moor. The order of births of these ten children is uncertain. Parents: Thomas BRIGHAM and Gillian [__?__].

Sebastian’s mother Constance Watson was born in 15 Aug 1578 in Holme On Spalding Moor, Yorkshire, England.  Constance died 10 Jul 1615 in Holme On Spalding Moor, Yorkshire, England.

Sebastian’s grandfather  Thomas Brigham was born 05 Mar 1550 in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor, Yorkshire, England. Thomas died 08 Nov 1586 in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor, Yorkshire, England.  He married Gillian Twelison.  Thomas was also Constance’s grandfather.  He is mentioned in the will of his father dated 25 Oct., 1558, ; also was given a bequest in the will of his cousin Peter Tomlinson alias Millington, dated 21 Dec. 1584, as mentioned above. (P. and E. York Wills, vol. 15, part 3, fol. 347, and vol. 22, fol. 677.) He was a cloth-worker as in his burial record of 8 Nov., 1586, he is called a “webster.” On 3 May, 1587, administration on his estate was given to his widow Gillan. (Adm. Act Books, P. and E. Court of York, Harthill Deanery.) Parents: Thomas BRIGHAM and Jennet MILLINGTON.

Spouse: Gillian. Thomas BRIGHAM and Gillian were married in 1571. Children were:

i. Elizabeth Brigham,
ii. John Brigham, (Sebastian’s father)
iii. Thomas BRIGHAM, (Constance’s father)
iv. William Brigham,
v. Richard Brigham,
vi. Robert Brigham.

How were Robert and Simon Crosby Related?   The Brigham sisters both married Crosbys from Holme-on-Spaulding, Yorkshire, which would make you guess they were close relatives.  It turns out Robert and Simon were 4th cousins, sharing a common 3rd Great Grandfather in John Crosby (1440 – 1502)

SIMON Crosby was born about 1608, His parents were Thomas Crosby and Jane Sotheron.  I don’t know how many Crosbys lived in Holme-on-Spaulding during those days, but he must have been Robert’s relative.  Simon died Sep 1639 Cambridge Mass.

Simon’s Parents – Thomas Crosby was born about 1575 in County York, England in either Holme-on-Spalding-Moor or Bubwith. He was the second child and only son of Anthony Crosby and Alison Blanchard.   Thomas’ father Anthony died in 1599 and Thomas inherited a hundred-acre farm in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor.  Thomas and Jane were married in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor on October 19, 1600. The couple had four sons:

i. Anthony Crosby, born about 1602 (The History of the Town of Cantebury, NH that list Anthony Crosby, not Robert  as the husband of Constance)
ii. Thomas Crosby, born about 1604
iii. William Crosby, born about 1606
iv. Simon Crosby, born about 1608

Tax records and other documents suggest that the family led a fairly well-to-do life.

Relatively late in life, Thomas and Jane emigrated to New England, possibly in the autumn of 1638 with a group of Reverend Ezekiel Rogers’ followers, but in any event prior to 1640. They may have lived with the widow of their son Simon in Cambridge, Massachusetts until she remarried in 1645 — at about that time, Thomas purchased a house in Cambridge. After a few years, he sold his holdings in Cambridge and the couple relocated, for the last time, to Rowley, Massachusetts. Thomas lived to over 85 years of age and died in Rowley in 1661, buried on May 6. Jane died the following year and was buried in Rowley on May 2, 1662.

Jane Sotheron, baptized in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor on March 4, 1581/82, was the daughter of William and Constance (Lambert) Sotheron. 1609 tax records indicate that William Sotheron was the wealthiest resident of the parish.

Simon’s Grandparents – Anthony Crosby was born about 1545 in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor, County York, England. He married, about 1570 a woman named Alison, whose maiden name is believed to Blanchard. They had two children: Thomas and Ellen. Anthony died in 1599.

Simon’s Great Grandparents – were Thomas CROSBY and Jannetta [__?__] Thomas was born about 1501/1510. He married Janeeta in 1542 at Holme On,Spaulding, Thomas died  16 MAR 1558 at: Holm Holling,Spaulding,York,Eng.

Jannetta [__?__] was born about 1512 at Moore, York, Eng. and died 9 MAY 1569 at Gripthorpe, York, England

Simon’s 2nd Great Grandfather Miles Crosby was born about 1483 at Holme On,Spaulding Moor,York,England.

Simon’s 3rd Great Grandfather John Crosby was born about  1440 in Yorkshire, England and died about 1502 in Yorkshire.  Immigrants Robert and Simon Crosby were 4th cousins, sharing a common 3rd Great Grandfather in John Crosby.

Robert CROSBY’s parents were John CROSBY and Jane WEBSTER. 

John Crosby was born 1556 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died Jan 1605 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. John married Jane Webster on 31 Aug 1594 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.

Jane Webster was born 1562 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. She  was buried 1 Dec 1630 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.

Robert CROSBY’s grandparents were Richard CROSBY and Margaret [__?__]

Richard Crosby was born 1532 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died Jul 1586 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. Richard married Margaret on 1555 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.

Margaret [__?__] was born 1535 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. She died Oct 1591 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England  Prindle notes that Margaret’s maiden name was perhaps Stennson, as she bequeathed clothes to “Sis (Cecelia?) Stennson, my sister.”, but considering Margaret’s age and the probable age of a sister of hers, I think it is much more likely – excluding the possibility “Sis” never married – that Stennson was her married name rather than her maiden name.

  Richard Crosby’s Will, dated 10 April 1586 and proved on 6 Jul. 1586, obtained by Prindle from the Bartlett Collection and by Dr. Bartlett from “York Wills”, is as follows in Prindle’s article:

“To be buried in church yard. To son Thomas Crosby, a yoke of drawne stotts. To son Robert Crosby, a yoke of Stotts undrawn. To wife Margaret Crosbye, two old oxen. To daughter Elizabeth Crosbie, two drawne Stotts, and a brown mare I bought of John Wetherall, etc. To said daughter Elizabeth 2 acres of land in more ridge and in the east yng of Holme (and other lands). To son Robert Crosbie, land in Holme called Rowlay, and to his heirs, and if none, to Thomas Crosbie and John Crosbye my sons (other land to them). To Peter and Margaret Crosbie, children of my son John Crosbie, lanbs, etc. To the children of Henry Smith of Brighton and the first child of Katheren Granger, lambs, etc. to wife margaret Crosby and sons Thomas and Robert Crosbie, the lease of the farm where I dwell, and residue of goods, they to be executors. Witnesses: Willm Lambart, Henry Haton, Miles Wright, Peter Granger, Willm Howlaye.”

The Will of Margaret Crosby, widow of Richard, is dated 12 Oct. 1591 and proved 15 Jan. 1591/92, obtained by Prindle from the Bartlett Collection and by Dr. Bartlett from “York Wills”, is as follows in Prindle’s article:

   “To the two children of John Crosbie, brass, etc. To John Crosbie’s daughter, a coffer. To John Crosbie’s two children, 10s each when of age.  To George Clarke, 8s. To Sis Stennson, my sister, clothes. To Willm Beadle’s wife, a kerchief. To Willm Mease, a mett of rye. All residue of goods to my son Thomas Crosbie, he to be sole executor. Witnesses:  Willm Begdall and John Wetherell. Also to son Thomas Crossebie my part of the lease in the moor end for 8 years.”

They had the following children:

i. John CROSBY was born 1556 and died Jan 1605.
ii Elizabeth Crosby was born 1558 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. She was buried 1 Feb 1587 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.
iii Thomas Crosby was born 1560 and died 1597.
iv Robert Crosby was christened 19 Jul 1562 and died May 1597.

Robert’s Great Grandparents were Thomas CROSBY and Jennet [__?__]. Thomas was born 1505 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died Oct 1555 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. Thomas married Jennet on 1530 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.

Jennet was born 1510 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England. She died after 10 Oct 1555 in Holme upon Spalding Moor.

Thomas and Jennett had the following children:

i. Agnes Crosby was born 1531 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire.
ii. Richard CROSBY was born 1532 and died Jul 1586.
iii. Michael Crosby was born 1534 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire.
iv. James Crosby was born 1536 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire.
v. Alice Crosby was born 1538 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire.
vi. Robert Crosby was born 1540 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire.

Robert’s 2nd Great Grandfather was John CROSBY. John was born 1470 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He married [__?__] on 1494 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.

John had the following children:

i. Robert Crosby  was born 1495 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.
ii. Alan Crosby  was born 1498 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died after 1528 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.
iii. James Crosby was born 1502 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died after 1528 in Holme upon Spalding Moor, East Riding, Yorkshire, England.
iv. Thomas CROSBY was born 1505 and died Oct 1555.
v. Richard Crosby  was born 1508 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died 1545 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.

Robert’s 3rd Great Grandfather John CROSBY was born 1440 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died . between 20 Apr. 1502, the time his will was dated, and 8 Jun. 1502, date of probate.  in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. He was about 62 years old.  John married [__?__] on 1469 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.  Immigrants Robert and Simon Crosby were 4th cousins, sharing a common 3rd Great Grandfather in John Crosby.

He was buried in the Choir of Parish Church, Styllingfleet, Yorks. Bartlett’s research had him of Alne and Stillingfleet, Yorkshire. Willed two houses in Flaworth, Yorkshire, a village in the Parish of Alne. The name of his wife or wives is unknown, and a wife isn’t mentioned in his will so she probably predeceased him.

Prindle states of him, “members of the yeomandry were almost always buried in the churchyard. The fact that John was to be buried in the choir of the church indicated his high standing in the community.”.

John Crosbie’s will is translated from the orig. Latin. Obtained by Dr. Bartlett and part of the Bartlett Collection at the NEHGS. Here as it was presented in Prindle’s article in the Register.

“To be buried in the choir of the parish church of Stillyngfleyte. To the church of Stilyngfleyte £4. To the four orders of the bretherene of York, 2s. To my son John, 6s 8d. to my son Richard, 10 sheep, 2 calves and 20s. To my daughter Emme, 6s 8d. To my daughter Agnes, 6s 8d. To my son Robert, 20s. To my son Miles, the remainder of all the years which I have in a house called Gyhouse, lying in Flaworth, with the appurtenances. To John Crosby, son of Robert Crosby, a house called Boyhowse, lying in Flaworth, with appurtenances. All the residue of my goods to my son William and my son Miles, they to be executors. Witness: John Mylin, Chaplain.”

John had the following children:

i. John CROSBY was born 1470.
ii. Emme Crosby was born 1472 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.
iii. Agnes Crosby was born 1474 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.
iv. Robert Crosby was born 1476 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.
v. Richard Crosby was born 1478 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.
vi. William Crosby was born 1480 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England.
vii. Miles Crosby was born 1483 in Alne, North Riding, Yorkshire, England. Miles was the immigrant Simon Crosby’s 2nd Great Grandfather.

Cousins

Constance’s first cousin Thomas Brigham  also emigrated to Massachusetts on the Susan and Ellyn, leaving London in April 1635. Thomas was born in 1603. His parents were John Brigham (b. about 1574) and Constance Watson (chr. 17 Aug 1578). His grandparents that he shares with Constance were Thomas Brigham (b. abt 1550/51) and Gillian [__?__].  He married Mercy Hurd about 1637. He may have settled first in Watertown MA; by 1639 he was a resident of Cambridge MA. He left a will dated 7 Dec 1653; proved 1684. Thomas died 17 Dec 1653 Cambridge MA

Mercy Hurd was born about 1613 England; died 23 Dec 1693 Marlboro MA; Mercy married (2) 1 Mar 1655 to Edmund Rice; married (3) 1664 William Hunt.

In conclusion there should be noted the close relationship between Thomas and Ann Crosby. Their fathers were brothers, their mothers were sisters — an unusual type of double cousin-ship. Thomas Brigham, Simon Crosby, his wife Ann Brigham, Constance Brigham CROSBY (Robert’s widow), and Sebastian Brigham, were all young people together in the same place in England. Thomas, Simon and Ann settled in Cambridge; Sebastian and Constance with her three daughters in Rowley. Later Simon’s children removed to Barnstable County, Thomas’ children removed to Marlboro with their mother upon her second marriage, and Constance’s children, all girls, married.

Children

2. Jane CROSBY (See John PICKARD Jr. ‘s page)

3. Mary Crosby

Mary’s husband Robert Longhorne was born 1622 in Holme On Spalding Moor, Yorkshire, England. His parents were John Langhorne and Jane Clemett Robert died 12 Feb 1668 in Haverhill, Essex, Mass.

Robert’s brother Thomas Longhorne, b. 1617, in England, and died 6 May 1685 was a butcher and resided in Cambridge, Mass. He was the town drummer. In 1652 Thomas purchased the homestead of Simon Crosby who was the uncle by marriage of his sister-in-law Mary Crosby. This homestead was on the south corner of Brattle Street and Brattle Square in Cambridge. It is probably that he resided there for the rest of his life. Brattle Street’s “Tory Row,” called the area “not only one of the most beautiful but also one of the most historic streets in America.” “As a fashionable address it is doubtful if any other residential street in this country has enjoyed such long and uninterrupted prestige.”

Thomas was co-executor of his brother Richard’s Will along with his niece, Elizabeth Longhorne. Thomas was mentioned by the Widow Constance Crosby in a petition to the Ipswich Court 4:3:1674 concerning the guardianship of his niece Sarah Longhorne.

In Rowley in 1666 Richard was granted 100 acres of land, “It lyeth on the Highway that goeth from Ipswich to Andover.”, and in 1667 he recieved part of the Hog Island Marshes during a division. In late December of 1667 a series of deaths in the family, beginning with Richard’s wife Mary, left only three, perhaps four, survivors a little over six months later. Richard’s death and burial followed in less than a month and a half after that of his wife Mary. This left their six children orphans. However their two youngest children, and only remaining sons, Richard and Thomas were both dead within five months.

The eldest surviving daughter at the time of Richard’s death was Elizabeth Langhorne, to whom he assigned a double portion in his Will of 10 Feb 1668, and whom he appointed as co-executor of his Will along with his brother Thomas Langhorne of Cambridge.

After the death of her parents their youngest child Sarah (b. 1660) made several appearances in the court records of Essex Co. On “5 May 1674; Sarah Longhorne chose Daniel Wicom as her Guardian.” On another occassion, Sarah Longhorne, “who was left young and of tender agge”, having been under the charge of an executor, petitioned the court for a guardian. Petition to the court, dated Ipswich, 4:3:1674:

“Constance Crosbie Grandmother to this orphan Sarah Longhorne under-standing that Daniel Wickham is like to be perswaded to accept of Guardianship for her: I thinking that she had need of one that hath more experience to oversee her and for other reasons I am very unwilling & doe desire that such a thing may not be proceeded in or granted till Thomas Longhorne of Cambridge, her uncle, knowes and gives his consent for he takes more care of the children than I expected he would have done; not more at present, your poor & humble servant & handmaide.”

6. Hannah Crosby

Hannah’s husband  Capt. John Johnson was born 1630 in Rowley, Essex, Mass. His parents were John Johnson and Susan [__?__]. John died 29 Jan 1686 in Rowley, Essex, Mass.

Hannah Crobie Johnson Gravestone – Rowley Burial Ground, Rowley, Essex County, Massachusetts, Plot: 11 Row, West 1

Inscription:

HERE LYES Ye BODY OF
Mrs HANNAH JOHNSON
WIDDOW OF CAPt JOHN
JOHNSON WHO DIED
DECEMBER Ye 25 1717
AGED 83 YEARS

Sources:

http://familytrees.genopro.com/454373/Roelofs/default.htm?page=CROSBY-Robert-I19883.htm

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=necko&id=I4821

http://theharmons.us/harmon_t/b426.htm#P60047

http://www.angelfire.com/ny/chickened/brighamfamily.html

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=11516978

http://troutwind.tripod.com/crosby.html

http://dustyhills.net/b8.htm#P2293

Most American works in the 20th century concerning the Crosby/Brigham and allied families of Holme-upon-Spaulding-Moor, Yorkshire are founded upon the work of Dr. Joseph Gardner Bartlett, and his wife Elizabeth French Bartlett, both professional genealogists, and both productive members of the NEHGS. Dr. died in 1927 and his widow combined his mss. collection with her own. After her death in 1961, their combined collections were acquired by the NEHGS as the “Bartlett Collection, SG/BAR/86. Dr. Bartlett did the English research for Eleanor Davis Crosby’s “SIMON CROSBY THE EMIGRANT”, submitting to Mrs. Crosby a 237 page typewritten report. Both NEHGR articles quoted here made extensive use of the Bartlett Collection as their source. Carton 3 of the Bartlett collection contains carbons of the report by Dr. Bartlett to Mrs. Crosby along with many charts outling the collateral families associated with this Crosby line in Yorkshire

http://troutwind.tripod.com/crosby.html

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