Elisha Hedge

Elisha HEDGE (1640 – 1732) was Alex’s 9th Great Grandfather; one of 1,024 in this generation of the Shaw line.

Elisha Hedge was born ca. 1640 in Barnstable, Mass. His parents were Captain William HEDGE and [__?__].  He married Mary STURGIS in 1660 in Yarmouth Mass.  Elisha died 17 May 1712/13 in Yarmouth or 17 May 1732 Yarmouth, Burial: Cove Burying Ground, Eastham, Barnstable, Mass.

Mary Sturges was born 20 Apr 1648 in Sandwich, Mass.  Her parents were Edward STURGIS and Elizabeth HINCKLEY.  Mary died 5 Mar 1712/13 in Yarmouth. Children of Elisha and Mary

Name Born Married Departed
1. Elizabeth Hedge 1663
Yarmouth
Barnabas Lothrop (Thankful’s brother and son of Barnabas LOTHROP)
14 Nov 1687
18 Sep 1747
2. William Hedge 31 Jan 1668/69 Yarmouth Elizabeth Ingoldsby
1681 in Boston
15 Sep 1734 Yarmouth
3. Mary Hedge Mar 1670/71 Yarmouth Josiah Thatcher
25 Feb 1690/91 Yarmouth, Mass
.
Zachariah Paddock
29 Jul 1708 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass
6 Aug 1727 Yarmouth
4. Elisha Hedge Mar 1670/71 Yarmouth Sarah Lothrop (Thankful’s sister and son of Barnabas LOTHROP)
1 Sep 1702 Barnstable, Mass
27 Jun 1709
5. John HEDGE 15 Apr 1673 Yarmouth Thankful LOTHROP
25 Jan 1699/1700
2 Jun 1752 Yarmouth
6. Samuel HEDGE 18 Jun 1675 Yarmouth Grace SNOW
8 Dec 1698 Eastham, Mass.
19 May 1714 Eastham, Mass
7. Sarah Hedge 3 Mar 1677/78 Yarmouth Thomas Howes (Son of our ancestor Jeremiah HOWES)
23 Jun 1698 Yarmouth
24 Mar 1776
8. Mercy Hedge SEP 1680 Yarmouth Edward Denison
ca. 1699 Yarmouth
Rhode Island
9. Susanna Hedge 16 Dec 1682 Yarmouth Amos Howes
22 May 1701 Yarmouth
24 Jan 1755 Yarmouth
10. Thomas Hedge Apr 1684 Yarmouth Hannah Taylor
12 Dec 1717

Mr. Elisha Hedge is one of those who was supposed to assist the widow Mary Sturgis in settling the estate of Samuel Sturgis [PCR 5:160]. Most sources claim that Elisha and William Hedges married Mary and Elizabeth Sturgis, but there is no direct evidence for this, and the known marriage of Mary Sturgis to one of the sons of Edward Sturgis is sufficient to explain other associations between the two families [Roger Faxton Sturgis, Edward Sturgis of Yarmouth, Massachusetts, 1613-1695 and His Descendants (Boston 1914), pp. 10-18].

An invoice of liquors brought into town during the year 1663, will give some idea of the extent of the drinking habits of the times :

” A Note of the particulars of the Liquors that have been brought into the town of Yarmouth, since May 1663, and envoiced.
Item, Mr. HEDGE a quarter cask of liquors.
Item, Samuel Sturgis 10 gallons.
Item, Edward STURGIS, Sr. 10 gallons.
Item, Edward Sturgis, Jr. 10 gallons.
Item, Elisha HEDGE, 10 gallons.
Item, Mr. Hedge, 10 gallons and 5 cases.
Item, Mr. Thacher, 3 cases.
Mr. Hedge, Edw. Sturgis, Sr. and Sam’l Sturgis, 17 gallons. Nathaniel Covell, 10 gallons.
Teague Jones, 10 gallons envoiced, and one case forfeit to the country.
Richard Michell, 10 gallons.
By Anthony Thacher, Robert Dennis.”

Early in the 1663 a party of residents of Yarmouth n indulged in an escapade quite in conflict with the customs of the times, and their names subsequently appeared in the court records, which inform posterity that “Josias Hallet and Thomas Starr of Yarmouth went to the house of John Doane, Jr., at Eastham, and finding no one at home, behaved themselves uncivilly therein, ransacking the house for liquors, and drinking thereof, and writing and setting up in the house a libellous and scandalous paper of verses and leaving them there. Elisha HEDGE and Samuel Sturgis were also deemed guilty, in some degree, though not so deeply as the former.” The two first were ordered to find sureties, for their good behavior until the next court and pay each a fine of fifty shillings ; the two latter to find sureties and pav each a fine of thirty shillings.

Liquor legislation was a disturbing element in Yarmouth. The court in 1663 fined Edward STURGIS for bringing liquor into town without giving seasonable notice to those appointed to invoice it, and in the 1664 Elisha HEDGE, for breaking bulk before giving notice what liquors he had brought into town, was adjudged to have forfeited 16 gallons thereof

Google books:  Title The Williamson and Cobb families in the lines of Caleb and Mary (Cobb) Williamson of Barnstable, Mass., and Hartford, Conn. 1896, Author, Frank Farnsworth Starr Publisher J. Wilson & son, 1896 Original from the University of Wisconsin – Madison, Digitized Mar 18, 2008

On page 116, of Vol. 114, of the Archives of the State of Massachusetts, we find the following :

— Province of the Massachusetts Bay> To His Excellency the Govern’ the Honorble Council & House of Representatives in General Court Assembled June 12th 1735

[Col. Shubal Gorham was the son of Lt. Col John Gorham described below and grandson of our ancestor  Capt. John GORHAM]  He was successful in his petition, but spent a large sum of money in promoting Gorhamtown, Maine, but his speculation in wild land proved unfortunate.

The Petition of Shubal Goreham Representative of the Town of Barnstable for himself and the Persons Whose Names are hereto Under Written being in the Expedition to Canada Anno 1690 or the Descendants of those who are dec* under the Command of Capt. Jn° Goreham Sheweth That the said Capt Goreham with a Company under his Command was actually in the Service of the Crown at the Time when Sir William Phipps went to Cannada in the Year 1690 in Order to Reduce that Country to the Obedience of the Crown of Great Britain and altho” he failed Yet those who went on said Expedition Suffered great hardships and Your Excellency and Honre haveing heretofore Rewarded those who have Served their Country He therefore most humbly Prays that the Heirs of the said Cap’ Goreham & such others as were in said Expedition under his Command that are now living & the Heirs of such as are since dec* May Obtain a Grant of a Tract of Land of Six Mile square for a Township to be settled in such Way and Manner as may be Consistent with Your Excellency & HonTM Pleasure & in Duty Bound shall Pray &c

Capt Jn° Goreham, (Ca Lieut Jabez Snow, Ensne James Claghorn, Sergt Constant Freeman alive, Sergt James Lewis alive, Drumr John Holbrook, Corp Caleb Williamson alive, Corp0 Barnabas Wixum alive, James Maker, Jn° Andrus alive, Abraham Remick alive, Tho” Snow alive, Jos: Higgins, Joshua Higgins alive, Nathu Atkins, Cornelius Jones, Daniel Cole alive, Elisha Tupper, Edmond Freeman alive, George Field, Nath” Lothrop, Clerk James Pain, Jn° Lewis alive, Sam Allen, Shubal Goreham, James Hamblin alive, Thos Parker, Jon Linnet, James Cookoone alive, Stephen Presberry alive, Tho” Hambleton, Batcheldor Wing alive, Samuel Larrance, Jn° Robinson, Jn° Rowly alive, Samn Godfrey alive, Benj’ Wood, Rob’ Phinney, James Stewart , Joseph Burg , Joseph Cane, Robt Claghorn, Tim” Fuller alive, Jn° Grey, Elisha Hedge, Samuel Rider, Jos: Sturgis alive, Dan Hambleton alive, Michael Phillips , Jabez Elamus, James Robius, Jos: Daniel Jer: Samson, Benjamin Bates, Tim Toby, Wm Bootson, Jn° James, Elimas Shantam, Edward Phiuney, Zimro Robins, James Mark

The Batteries of Quebec bombard the New England fleet.

Children

1. Elizabeth Hedge

Elizabeth’s husband Barnabas Lothrop was born 22 MAR 1662/63 Barnstable, Mass.  He Thankful’s brother and son of Barnabas LOTHROP and Susanna CLARK.  After Elizabeth died, he married  20 Feb 1706 Barnstable to Bethiah Fuller and 25 Dec 1718 Barnstable to Hannah Chipman.  However, these second and third marriages are incompatable with Elizabeth’s 18 SEP 1747 date of death.   Barnabas died 11 OCT 1732.

2. William Hedge

William’s wife Elizabeth Ingoldsby was born 1681 in Boston, Suffolk, Mass. Her parents were Ebenezer Ingoldsby and [__?__]. Two other marriages are recorded for Elizabeth which are incompatible with William Hedge’s 15 SEP 1734 Yarmouth date of death, 23 Feb 1701 – Boston, Mass to Stephen Norwood and 14 May 1698 – Boston, Mass to Windsor Goulding. Maybe Elizabeth had a cousin of the same name.

3. Mary Hedge

Mary’s first husband Josiah Thacher was born 26 Apr 1667 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. Josiah died 12 May 1702 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

Josiah Thacher Headstone

Mary’s second husband Zachariah Paddock was born 14 Apr 1664 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were Zachariah Paddock and Deborah Sears. He first married1686 – Yarmouth, Plymouth colony to Bethiah Hall (15 Nov 1668 – 8 Mar 1708) He married 29 Jul 1708 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass to Mary Hedge. Zachariah died 8 Apr 1718 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

4. Elisha Hedge

Elisha’s wife Sarah Lothrop was born between 1677 and 1681 in Barnstable, Mass.  Her parents were Barnabas LOTHROP and Susanna CLARK.  Many sources say Sarah married 15 May 1698 Barnstable to Stephen Skiffe.  Sarah died 14 May 1749 in Sandwich, Mass.

Sarah’s husband Stephen Skiffe  was born 4 Feb 1684/85 in Sandwich, Barnstable, Mass.  His parents were Capt. Steven Skiffee and Lydia Snow.   He first married 15 May 1698 in Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass to Sarah Lothrop (b. 1678 in Barnstable, Mass – d. 14 May 1749 in Sandwich, Mass)  After Sarah died in 14 May 1749 in Sandwich, Mass., he married Thankful GORHAM 27 Jul 1749 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.  Thankful was our ancestor through her first marriage to Thomas HAWES (1701 –  1747).  Steven died 4 Oct 1758 in Sandwich, Mass.

Many sources show Sarah, daughter of Barnabas Lathrop marrying either Elisha or Stephen, but these two sets of marriage facts are incompatible. Sarah couldn’t have been married to Stephen and Elisha at the same time.  Sarah’s death and Stephen’s remarriage in 1749 fits.   The 1702 marriage of Elisha Hedge and Mary Sturgis was recorded in Barnstable records and their siblings Thankful LOTHROP and John HEDGE married in 25 Jan 1699/1700.  I haven’t found children from either of these two marriages.

ONE guess is Sarah married Stephen after 1709 when Elisha died, not 1698 as is usually reported.  ANOTHER guess is Stephen married a first cousin also named Sarah Lathrop.  Stephen’s Sarah was born in 1681, not 1678 as is most usually ascribed to Barnabas’ Sarah.  Sarah’s gravestone reads: Buried in Old Burying Ground, Sandwich, Barnstable, MA. Her gravestone reads: “Here lies the body of Mrs. SARAH SKEFF wife to Stephen Skeff, Esq. who departed this life May ye 14th 1749 in the 69th year of her age.”.

Sarah Skeff Headstone –Wife to Stephen Skeff Esq In the 69th year of her age — Old Town Cemetery Sandwich, Barnstable County Mass

5. John HEDGE (See his page)

6. Samuel HEDGE (See his page)

Two first cousins named Thankful Hedge were born a couple years apart on Cape Cod.  Either one may have married our ancestor Edward STURGIS IV. Both show a death of 17 Apr 1762 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

Thankful Hedge was born 17 Apr 1714 in Eastham, Barnstable, Mass. Her parents were Samuel HEDGE and Grace SNOW.

Another Thankful Hedge was born 23 Oct 1712 in Yarmouth, Mass. Her parents were John HEDGE and Thankful LOTHROP.

7. Sarah Hedge

Sarah’s husband Thomas Howes was born 1677 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were [our ancestors] Jeremiah HOWES) and Sarah PRENCE. Thomas died 8 Aug 1700 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

8. Mercy Hedge

Mercy’s husband Edward Denison was born 1678 in Stonington, New London, CT. Her parents were George Dennison and Mercy Gorham. Her maternal grandparents were our ancestors Capt. John GORHAM and Desire HOWLAND. Edward died 9 Dec 1726 in Westerly, Washington, Rhode Island

9. Susanna Hedge

Susanna’s husband Amos Howes was born 1672 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were Joseph Howes and Elizabeth Mayo. His grandparents were our ancestors Thomas HOWES and Mary BURR.  Amos died 16 Feb 1718 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass

10. Thomas Hedge

Thomas’ wife Hannah Taylor was born 1688 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. Hannah died 16 May 1719 in Yarmouth, Mass.

Sources:

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=23629018

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

http://capecodhistory.us/genealogy/wellfleet/Names179.htm#HEDGE

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/k/a/h/John-B-Kaherl/BOOK-0001/0004-0169.html

History of old Yarmouth. Comprising the present towns of Yarmouth and Dennis. From the settlement to the division in 1794 with the history of both towns to these times (1884) Author: Swift, Charles Francis

Posted in 11th Generation, Double Ancestors, Line - Shaw, Veteran | Tagged | 13 Comments

John Hedge

John HEDGE (1673 -1752) was Alex’s 8th Great Grandfather; one of 512 in this generation in the Shaw line.

John Hedge was born 15 Apr 1673 in Yarmouth, Mass. His parents were Elisha HEDGE and Mary STURGES.  He married Thankful LOTHROP on 25 Jan 1699/1700.  John died 2 Jun 1752 in Yarmouth Mass.

Thankful Lothrop was born in Sep 1683 in Barnstable, Mass.  Her parents were Barnabas LOTHROP and Susanna CLARK.  Thankful died 2 Jun 1752 in Barnstable.

Two first cousins named Thankful Hedge were born a couple years apart on Cape Cod.  Either one may have married our ancestor Edward STURGIS IV.  Both show a death of 17 Apr 1762 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.  I have traced the ancestries of both.

Thankful Hedge was born 23 Oct 1712 in Yarmouth, Mass. Her parents were  John HEDGE and Thankful LOTHROP.

Another Thankful Hedge was born 17 Apr 1714 in Eastham, Barnstable, Mass. Her parents were John’s brother  Samuel HEDGE and Grace SNOW.

Children of John and Thankful:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Abigail Hedge ca. 1701
Yarmouth Mass
Nathaniel Clark
26 Apr 1720
Harwick, Mass.
27 Oct 1732
Harwich, Mass
2. John Hedge 4 Oct 1702
Yarmouth
Desire Hawes (sister of Ebenezer) and daughter of Capt. Ebenezer HAWES Sr.
26 Nov 1724 Yarmouth
6 Feb 1761 Yarmouth
3. Barnabas Hedge 27 Dec 1704
Yarmouth
Mercy Barnes
(Widow of Samuel Cole)
21 Dec 1733 Plymouth, Mass
18 Jan 1762
Plymouth, Mass
4. Susannah Hedge 11 Nov 1706
Barnstable, Mass
4 Dec 1706
Yarmouth
5. Elisha Hedge 8 Nov 1707
Barnstable
16 Jun 1723
Yarmouth
6. Sarah HEDGE 30 Nov 1709
Barnstable Mass
Ebenezer HAWES
At sea,
16 Jan 1729
.
Isaac Mathews
31 Aug 1743
1761
Yarmouth, Mass
7. Thankful HEDGE 23 Oct 1712
Yarmouth
Edward STURGIS IV
4 Mar 1730/31
Yarmouth, Mass.
After 17 Apr 1762 Yarmouth
8. Mercy Hedge 9 Aug 1714
Barnstable
Thomas Howes
20 Oct 1737
9. Ann Hedge 9 Dec 1716
Yarmouth
Prince Hawes (son of our ancestor Joseph HAWES)
17 Jul 1735
Yarmouth
4 Mar 1782
Yarmouth

x

Children

1. Abigail Hedge

Abigail’s husband Nathaniel Clark was born 1682 in Harwich, Barnstable, Mass. He was Abigail’s first cousin.  His parents were Andrew Clark and Mehitable Scotto. His grandparents were Thomas CLARK and Susannah RING. Nathaniel died 1740 in Harwich, Barnstable, Mass.

In a deed of gift, dated 18 June 1673, Thomas Clark gave to his son Andrew a house and ground in Boston “that I received from the estate of John Nichols by virtue of a Judgement granted me March 5th 1672…”

Andrew lived in Scotto’s Lane where his father bought him a house, and he carried on the shoe business. He was an assistant counsellor, and several times representative to the General Court. Finally he removed to Harwich, of which town he and his father were among the original proprietors in 1694. He died there in 1706.

Abigail Hedge Clarke Gravestone - Old Burying Ground  Brewster  Source: Find A Grave Memorial# 45657063

Abigail Hedge Clarke Gravestone – Old Burying Ground
Brewster Source: Find A Grave Memorial# 45657063

Here lyes Buried ye
Body of Mrs Abigail
Clarke Wife to Mr Nathaniel
Clarke Who Died
October 27th 1732 in ye
32d Year of Her Age

Children of Abigail and Nathaniel:

i. Barnabas Clarke b. 10 Feb 1723 Harwich, Barnstable, Mass; d. 4 Nov 1772 Dedham, Mass; m. Hephzibah “Hepsy” Barrett (b. 12 Sep 1731 in Boston, Mass – d. 10 Jul 1776 in Dedham, Ma after a long illness) Her parents were Thornton Barrett and Hepizbah [__?__]. Barnabas and Hepsy had four children born between 1749 and 1757.

From Samuel Clarke’s “Some of the Records of the Descendants…” p. 19:

“After some years Captain clarke quitted the sea, and became a merchant in Boston.

The Boston Gazette of May 15, 1768, has the following: Imported in the London Packet, Capt. Calef, from London, and to be sold by Barnabas Clarke at his store on Treats Wharf, Boston, near the market at the lowest rates: –Bohen Tea by the chest or less quantity; Pepper by the bag or ditto; Spices of all kinds; Best Durham Mustard by the box; Russia, English and Ravens Duck; Gun powder by the cask. Also Kippen’s Snuff by the cask; best French Indigo; Pimento; Ground and Race Ginger; Muscovado Sugar; Philadelphia Flour; Bar Iron;Iron Hoops; Anchors.”

1740 – Shipmaster; sailing from Boston to London and the Provinces

1749 – Member of the New North Church, one of those, who, as the church records tell us, ‘labored under such doubts and fears with respect to ye Lord’s Supper, that they were afraid immediately to approach unto it’.”

ii. Elisha Clark b. 22 May 1725 Harwich, Barnstable, Mass

iii. Abigail Clark b. 18 Oct 1726 Harwich, Barnstable, Mass;; d. Ashfield, Mass.; m. 28 Jan 1746 in Dennis, Barnstable, Mass to Joseph Hall (b. 6 Aug 1723 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. – d: 5 Feb 1787 in Dennis) Joseph’s parents were Joseph Hall and Rebecca Sears. Abigail and Joseph had five children born between 1746 and 1757.

iv. John Clark b. 29 Jun 1729 Harwich, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 1729

v. Isaac Clark b. 15 May 1731 Harwich, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 1731

2. John Hedge

John’s wife Desire Hawes was born 22 Mar 1704 in Yarmouth, Mass. Her parents were Capt. Ebenezer HAWES and Sarah NORTON.  Desire died 5 Mar 1764 in Yarmouth.

Children of John and Desire:

i. Sarah Hedge b. 20 Aug 1729 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; s. 1784; m. 11 Mar 1749 in Yarmouth to David Matthews (b. 14 May 1727 in Yarmouth = d.10 Jul 1819 in Yarmouth) David’s parents were John Matthews ( – 1776) and Sarah and David had nine children born between 1748 and 1770. After Sarah died, David married 26 Jun 1785 in Yarmouth to Anna Crowell (b. 15 Dec 1756 in Yarmouth – d. 3 Mar 1821)

ii. John Hedge  b. 10 Jul 1734 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 1 Jun 1782 New York, New York; m. 8 May 1762 in Yarmouth to Temperance Thacher. John and Temperance had five children born between 1767 and 1777.

iii. Capt. Elisha Hedge b. 9 Jan 1736 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 4 Sep 1807 Yarmouth; m. 8 Feb 1759 Yarmouth to Mary Gorham (b. 16 Jun 1735 in Barnstable – d. 11 Oct 1828 in Yarmouth) Mary’s parents were Isaac Gorham (1715 – 1753) and Mary Hallett (1717 – 1741). Elisha and Mary had eight children

In 1778, Elisha was a Captain in Col Nathaniel Freeman (wiki)‘s first Barnstable Regiment of Militia. Freeman commanded a militia regiment in the Rhode Island expedition (1778).

Nathaniel Freeman (1741-1827) was an American physician and jurist. He was a Brigadier General during the American Revolutionary War and a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1775.

Nathaniel Freeman (1741-1827) was an American physician and jurist. He was a Brigadier General during the American Revolutionary War and a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1775.

iv. Thankful Hedge b. 30 Sep 1738 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 30 Sep 1738

3. Barnabas Hedge

Barnabas’ wife Mercy Barnes was born 19 Dec 1708 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass.  Her parents were William Barnes and Alice Bradford.  She first married 14 Nov 1728 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass to Samuel Cole (b. 2 Apr 1709 in Plymouth Mass – bef 1734).  Mercy died 25 Dec 1791 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass.

Children of Barnabas and Mercy:

i. John Hedge b. 1733

ii. William Hedge b. 1733 Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass;

iii. Mercy Hedge b. 27 Nov 1734; d. 20 Sep 1779 Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass; m. 24 May 1753 in Plymouth, Mass. to Thomas Davis (b. ~1722 – Plymouth – d. 7 Mar 1785 – Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass) Thomas’ parents were Thomas Davis born as early as 1685 of Albany and later North Carolina perhaps earlier married as early as 1708 to Catherine Wendell or Mary Millington or one could have been a second wife. He died about 1764.

Thomas Davis and his brother David Davis went to Plymouth MA about 1742. Mercy and Thomas had seven children born between 1757 and 1776.

iv. Abigail Hedge b. 2 Dec 1737 Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass; d. 9 Dec 1763 – Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass

v. Barnabas Hedge b. 3 May 1740 in Plymouth, Mass.’ d. 17 Nov 1778 Plymouth, Mass; m. 30 May 1761 in Plymouth to Hannah Hedge (b. 20 Jul 1743 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.) Hannah’s parents were Thomas Hedge (1719 – ) and Mary Gorham.  Hannah’s grandparents were our ancestors James GORHAM Jr. and Mary JOYCE.  Barnabas and Hannah had one son  Barnabas, born in 1764.  Barnabas Jr went on to have fifteen children of his own.

vi. Lemuel Hedge b. 25 Jun 1742 Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass; d. 7 Jul 1742 – Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass

vii. Lothrop Hedge b. 5 Nov 1744 Plymouth County; d. 20 Jan 1745 – Plymouth, Plymouth Mass.

viii. Sarah Hedge b. 5 Jun 1746 Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass;

6. Sarah HEDGE (See Ebenezer HAWES ‘s page)

7. Thankful HEDGE(See Edward Sturgis IV’s page)

Two first cousins named Thankful Hedge were born a couple years apart on Cape Cod.  Either one may have married Edward Sturgis. Both show a death of 17 Apr 1762 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

This Thankful Hedge was born 23 Oct 1712 in Yarmouth, Mass.

Her cousin Thankful Hedge was born 17 Apr 1714 in Eastham, Barnstable, Mass. Her parents were Samuel HEDGE and Grace SNOW.

I have traced the genealogies for both.

8. Mercy Hedge

Mercy’s husband Thomas Howes was born 17 May 1711. His parents were Jonathan Howes and Sarah Vincent.   His grandparents were Thomas Howes and Sarah Bangs (daughter of Edward BANGS). His great grandparents were our ancestors Thomas HOWES and Mary BURR.  Thomas died 24 Sep 1793 – Dennis, Barnstable, Mass.

Children of Thomas and Mercy:

i. Joshua Howes 12 Jul 1738 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 5 Jun 1765; m. 2 Dec 1763 to Mercy Howes (b. 28 Dec 1740) Her parents were Philip Howes and Mercy Sears.

ii. Thankful Howes b. 7 Jul 1740 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 30 Mar 1741 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass

iii. Thankful Howes b. 1 Nov 1743 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. Aft 1810 ; m. 12 Jan 1769 in Yarmouth to Capt. Peter Sears (b. 29 Jul 1743 Yarmouth – d. 22 Jul 1802 Ashfield, Franklin, Mass) Peter’s parents were Lt. Zachariah Sears (1706 – 1796) and Methitable Crowell (1721 – 1760)

Childless, they adopted a nephew, Peter Sears (1787-1867), son of Rowland Sears of Ashfield, Massachusetts. The elder Sears worked in the whaling industry before retiring from the sea and running a general store dealing in rum, salt, and other items.

In 1789, he served as selectman for Yarmouth. Around 1800, the Sears family moved to Ashfield, Massachusetts, and the elder Peter Sears died there two years later, on July 22, 1802. Young Peter Sears held the rank of lieutenant in the Massachusetts militia for several decades. He married Lucy Fuller in 1808 and left Ashfield in the early 1820s, moving first to Boston and, by 1826, to Dexter, Michigan, where he ran a large and successful farm. The couple had eight sons and two daughters.

The Sears Family papers contain 31 letters, 21 account books, 20 legal documents, 9 school writings, and 360 receipts, spanning 1767-1848 and are stored at William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan.

The Correspondence series primarily covers two periods of time: 1771-1806 (21 letters) and 1832-1842 (10 letters). Relatives of the elder Peter Sears and his wife Thankful wrote many of the letters dating to the earlier period, concerning family news and health. An early undated letter, written by Salley Sears during the Revolutionary War, conveys the news that one of Peter Sears’ brothers had been captured and transported to Charleston, South Carolina. On September 12, 1802, Joseph Sears wrote a letter to Thankful, acknowledging Peter Sears’ death and expressing sympathy. Several other letters of this period contain orders for salt from Peter Sears’ store. The younger Peter Sears is the recipient of all of the later correspondence; relatives who had settled across the Midwest, in towns such as Kalamazoo, Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Perrysburg, Ohio, wrote to him with updates on their new lives. A common theme in the letters is the hardships they faced as early settlers.

The Documents series contains 20 items ranging in date from 1770-1853, including three wills, several legal documents relating to land in Washtenaw County, and two items relating to the younger Sears’ service in the Massachusetts Militia. The Account Books series encompasses records for Peter Sears’ store in Yarmouth from 1768-1794, which list items that he bought for himself, as well as orders that he placed for others.

The Receipts and Financial Records series is by far the largest, and spans 1770-1849. Records from 1770 to 1802 show the types of items that Peter Sears stocked in his store, as well as well as his network of suppliers. After 1802, the financial materials relate to the younger Peter Sears; they document his purchases, payment of taxes, sale of land prior to leaving for Michigan, and debts.

iv. Thomas Howes b. 27 Feb 1745 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; m. 17 Jan 1773 Yarmouth to Jerusha Howes (b. 16 Mar 1753 in Yarmouth) Jerusha’s parents were Samuel Howes (1707 – 1772) and Jerusha Sturgis (1710 – )

v. Mercy Howes b. 27 May 1750 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; m. 7 Jul 1771 Yarmouth to John Hall of Hebron, CT

9. Ann Hedge

Ann’s husband Prince Hawes was born 29 Dec 1709 in Yarmouth.  His parents were Joseph HAWES and Mary HOWES.  Prince died 8 Dec 1771 in Yarmouth.

INSCRIPTION: “Here lies Buried Mr. Prince Hawes Who decd Decm Ye 8th 1771 Aged___”

Children of Ann and Prince:

i. Prince Hawes b. 15 Apr 1736 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 14 Dec 1767 Lost; m1. 2 Apr 1757 in Yarmouth to Elizabeth Hallett (b. 25 Apr 1734 in Yarmouth – d. 19 Mar 1764 in Yarmouth) Her parents were Joseph Hallett and Abigail Thacher. Prince and Elizabeth had three children born between 1758 and 1763.

m2. 17 Oct 1765 in Yarmouth to Sarah Thacher (b. 17 Aug 1737 in Yarmouth – d. 7 Aug 1773 in Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass) Her parents were Judah Thacher (1693 – 1775) and Sarah Crosby (1702 – 1771) Prince and Sarah had one child, Anna, born in 1766. After Prince died, Sarah married 27 Nov 1771 in Yarmouth to Thomas Palmer (b. 12 Feb 1738 in Falmouth – d. 25 Apr 1775 in Falmouth)

ii. Anna Hawes b. 29 Jun 1739 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 28 Apr 1765 Yarmouth

iii. Simeon Hawes b. 22 Mar 1745 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 4 May 1791; m. 1768 to Bethiah Matthews (b. 22 Mar 1749 in Yarmouth – d. Jul 1796 in Yarmouth) Her parents were William Matthews (1721 – 1789) and Abigail Atkins (1725 – )Simeon and Bethiah had nine children born between 1769 and 1789.

Hawes, Simeon. Capt. Lot Crowell’s co., Col. Nathaniel Freeman’s regt.; service, 3 days, on an alarm at Dartmouth and Falmouth in Sept., 1778; also, Corporal, same co. and regt.; service, 2 days, guarding prisoners belonging to the [British] ship “Somerset,” lost on Cape Cod in Nov., 1778.

iv. Baby Hawes b. 18 Jul 1746 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 31 Aug 1746 Yarmouth

Sources:

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

Representative Men and Old Families of Southeastern Massachusetts – 1911 Google Books

http://www.capecodhistory.us/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I35334&tree=Nauset

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=23688606

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/b/a/i/Susan-C-Bailey/GENE1-0011.html

Posted in 10th Generation, Double Ancestors, Line - Shaw | Tagged | 12 Comments

Capt. Ebenezer Hawes Sr.

Capt. Ebenezer HAWES Sr. (1679 – 1727) was Alex’s 8th Great Grandfather; one of 512 in this generation of the Shaw line.

Ebenezer Hawes was born on 28 Mar 1679 at Yarmouth, Plymouth Colony.  He was the son of Capt John HAWES and Desire GORHAM. He married Sarah NORTON at Edgartown, Dukes, MA, on 23 Feb 1700. Ebenezer died 7 Oct 1727 at Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

Sarah Norton was born at Edgartown, Martha’s Vineyard, Mass.  in 1676.   Her parents were Isaac NORTON and Ruth BAYES.  Sarah died 9 Jan 1742 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

Sarah Norton Hawes – Headstone – Ancient Cemetery Yarmouth PortBarnstable CountyMassachusetts

Children of Ebenezer and Sarah:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Jabez Hawes 13 Sep 1700
Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass
1728
Yarmouth, Mass
2. John Hawes 3 May 1702
Yarmouth
Susannah Bassett (Daughter of Joseph BASSETT Sr.)
10 Feb 1732 Yarmouth
1746
3. Desire Hawes 22 Mar 1704
Yarmouth
John Hedge (Sarah’s brother)
26 Nov 1724 Yarmouth
5 Mar 1764
Yarmouth
4. Ebenezer HAWES Jr. ca. 1705
Yarmouth, Mass
Sarah HEDGE
16 January 1729
At Sea
28 Jan 1741/42
Administration of his estate was given to his widow Sarah
5. Isaac Hawes 10 Aug 1707
Monomoy, Barnstable, MA
Mary Sargent
14 Nov 1734 in Gloucester, Mass
4 Aug 1751
Yarmouth
6. Ruth Hawes 13 Fwb 1708/09
Monomoy
Joseph Thacher
24 Feb 1728 Yarmouth
3 May 1772
Yarmouth
7. Benjamin Hawes 13 Oct 1710
Chatham, Barnstable, Mass
Anna Paddock
25 Aug 1736 Boston
29 Dec 1741
8. Solomon Hawes 6 Jul 1712
Chatham
9. Bayes Hawes (Son) 1714
Chatham
Jean Lewis
1 Jul 1744
Barnstable
10 Jul 1785
9. Jacob Hawes 1716
Chatham
 29 Dec 1741

Ebenezer was a man of prominence in Yarmouth and Chatham and was a Captain in the militia.

Chatham, Barnstable, Mass.

Chatham, Barnstable, Mass.

~1706 – Removed to Monomoy, afterwards Chatham.  Native American tribes who lived in the area before European colonization include the Nauset, specifically the Manomoy or Monomoy people. “Manamoyik” was a Nauset village located near present-day Chatham. Explorer Samuel de Champlain landed here in 1606, contacting (and skirmishing with) the Nauset. English settlers first settled in Chatham in 1665, and the town was incorporated in 1712, naming it after Chatham, Kent, England. Located at the “elbow” of Cape Cod, the community became a shipping, fishing, and whaling center. Chatham’s early prosperity would leave it with a considerable number of 18th century buildings, whose charm helped it develop into a popular summer resort.

1707 thru 1719 – Selectman in  Chatham ten times

1709 -” One of two appointed to make preparations for a minister”

1710 and 1715 – Coroner for Barnstable County

13 Mar 1716 – Styled “Captain” in the records when he was chosen moderator

1716 – Appointed town agent to demand, sue for and recover from Rev. Mr. Hugh Adams “what the said Adams oweth to the town of Chatam” with the power to retain attorneys.

1728 – Returned to Yarmouth and died early that year.  His widow adminstered his estate 4 Mar 1727/28.

Edmund Hawes

Ebenezer Hawes Bio – Source: Edmund Hawes 0f Yarmouth Massachusetts 1914

Ebenezer Hawes Bio 2
Ebenezer Hawes Bio 3
Ebenezer Hawes Bio 4

Children

2. John Hawes

John’s wife Susannah Bassett was born 22 Jan 1715, Yarmouth, Mass.  Her parents were Joseph BASSETT Sr. and Susannah HOWES.  Susannah died in 1746.

Children of John and Susannah:

i. Sarah Hawes b. 17 Oct 1732 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; m. 17 Oct 1771 in Yarmouth to Thomas Palmer (b. Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass)

ii. Samuel Hawes b. 17 Oct 1734 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

iii. John Hawes b 19 Apr 1736 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 2 Aug 1737 Yarmouth

iv. Ruth Hawes b. 21 May 1742 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

v. Susannah Hawes b. 28 Apr 1744 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

vi Mercy Hawes b 31 Jan 1746 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

3. Desire Hawes

Desire’s husband John Hedge was born 4 Oct 1702, Yarmouth  His parents were  John HEDGE and Thankful LOTHROP.  John died 6 Feb 1761 Yarmouth, Mass.

Children of Desire and John:

i. Sarah Hedge b. 20 Aug 1729 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 1784; m. 11 Mar 1749 in Yarmouth to David Matthews (b 14 May 1727 in Yarmouth – d. 10 Jul 1819 in Yarmouth) David’s parents were John Matthews ( – 1776) and Hannah Sturgis (1693 – 1754). Sarah and David had nine children born between 1748 and 1770. After Sarah died, David married 16 Jun 1785 in Yarmouth to Anne Crowell (1740 – 1821)

ii. John Hedge b. 10 Jul 1734 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; d 1 Jun 1782 New York, New York; m. 8 May 1762 in Yarmouth to Temperance Thacher John and Temperance had five children born between 1767 and 1777.

iii. Elisha Hedge b. 9 Jan 1736 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 4 Sep 1807 Yarmouth Elisha had five children born between 1760 and 1782.

iv Thankful Hedge b. 30 Sep 1738 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.;

4. Ebenezer HAWES Jr. (See his page)

5. Isaac Hawes

Isaac’s wife Mary Sargent was born 15 Feb 1716 in Gloucester, Essex, Mass. Her parents were Samuel Sargent and Mary Norwood.

Children of Isaac and Mary

i. Isaac Hawes b 21 Sep 1735; m. 14 Jul 1757 in Boston to Sarah Bouve Isaac and Sarah had three children born between 1758 and 1761.

ii. William Sargent Hawes b 1738; m. 30 Jan 1766 in Boston to Sarah Hunstable (b. 27 Nov 1741 in Boston)

6. Ruth Hawes

Ruth’s husband Joseph Thacher was born 11 Jul 1699 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were John Thacher and Lydia Gorham. His maternal grandparents were John GORHAM  and Desire HOWLAND. Joseph died 17 Jun 1763 in Yarmouth, Mass.

Children of Ruth and Joseph

i. Desire Thacher b: 1729 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 1729 in Yarmouth

ii. Desire Thacher b: 1730 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 1816; m. 1756 in Yarmouth to Grindal Rawson (b: 1721 in Yarmouth Desire and Grindal had three children born between 1757 and 1761. Divorced: 1773 in Spousal Abuse

Grindal graduated from Harvard College in 1741 and received his M.A from Yale in 1753.

1751 – He was installed as the Congregational minister in Ware, Massachusetts., but resigned January 30, 1754

1755 – He became the minister of the West Yarmouth Church a month before his marriage to Desire Thacher. He was dismissed in 1760.

Rev. Mr. Rawson was living with his son, Jonathan Rawson, in Dover, New Hampshire, when he died in Sutton, Massachusetts., while on a to Sutton, Mass to visit his son Ebenezer.

iii. Ruth Thacher b: 1732 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass;

iv. Ebenezer Thacher b: 1734 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass;

v. Ruth Thacher b: 1736 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 19 Oct 1810
Yarmouth; m1. 16 Nov 1755 in Yarmouth to Ezekiel Webb (b. 4 Mar 1733 in Freetown, Bristol, Mass. – d 16 Nov 1764) Ruth and Ezekiel had one child Sarah (b. 1756)

m2. 17 Dec 1768 in Yarmouth to Seth Whelden (b. 26 May 1738 in Yarmouth – d. 8 Oct 1820 in Dartmouth, Mass.) Seth’s parents were Seth Whelden (1700 – 1773) and Mary Mayo (1700 – ) Ruth and Seth had four children born between 1771 and 1776.

vi. Joseph Thacher b: 1741 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass;

vii. Joseph Thacher b: 1744 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; m. 1765 in Yarmouth to Susannah Whelden (b. 1 May 1742 in Yarmouth – d. 8 Jun 1783) Susannah’s parents were John Whelden (1711 – 1797) and Susanna Hallett (1722 – 1751) Joseph and Susannah had five children born between 1766 and 1766.

7. Benjamin Hawes

Benjamin’s wife Anna Paddock was born 23 Sep 1717 in Yarmouth, Dennis, Mass. Her parents were John Paddock (1695 – 1732) and Rebecca Thacher (1696 – 1736).

Children of Benjamin and Anna:

i. Benjamin Hawes b. 18 Mar 1739 in Boston, Mass; d. 5 Apr 1788 Charleston, South Carolina; m. Ann [__?__] (b. – d. 4 Aug 1790 in Charleston, South Carolina) Benjamin and Ann had five children born between 1763 and 1788.

9. Bayes Hawes

Bayes’ wife Jean Lewis was born 28 Apr 1713 in Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass. Her parents were Jonathan Lewis (1674 – 1743) and Patience Look (1681 – 1767). Jean died 10 Jul 1785.

Children of Bayes and Jean:

i.Jacob Hawes b. 21 Apr 1745 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 1790

ii. Deborah Hawes b. 27 Jan 1747 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 1793

iii. Jane Hawes b. 17 Jul 1749 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 9 Aug 1749 Yarmouth

iv Bays Hawes b. 21 Jul 1750 Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass; d. 1795

v, Jabez Hawes b. 1754

vi Joshua Hawes b 1756

Sources:

Wing Family of America – Capt. Ebenezer Hawes

Representative Men and Old Families of Southeastern Massachusetts – Google Books

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=12668448&st=1

Edmond Hawes of Yarmouth, Massachusetts: an emigrant to America in 1635, his ancestors, including the allied families of Brome, Colles, Greswold, Porter, Rody, Shirley and Whitfield; and some of his descendants  1914

Posted in 10th Generation, Historical Monument, Line - Shaw | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Ebenezer Hawes Jr.

Ebenezer HAWES (1705 – 1741) was Alex’s 7th Great Grandfather; one of 256 in this generation of the Shaw line.

Ebenezer Hawes was born about 1705 in Yarmouth, Mass.   He was the son of Capt. Ebenezer HAWES and Sarah NORTON. He married Sarah HEDGE [at sea?,] on 16 Jan 1729. In the will of his mother dated 20 Dec 1741, Ebenezer is spoken of as lately deceased.  Administration of his estate was given to his widow Sarah on 28 Jan 1741/42.

Sarah Hedge  was born 30 Nov 1709 in Barnstable Co., MA.  Her parents were  John HEDGE and Thankful LOTHROP.  After Ebenezer died, Sara married Isaac Mathews on 31 Aug 1743. Sarah died in 1761 in Yarmouth, Mass.

Isaac Matthews was born 4 Sep 1712 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were John Matthews and Hannah Sturgis. Isaac died 7 Feb 1790 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

Children of Ebenezer and Sarah:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Abigail Hawes 16 Sep 1730 Yarmouth, Mass. Joseph Thatcher
27 Jul 1749 Yarmouth,
21 Jun 1789 Yarmouth
2. Solomon Hawes 22 Jul 1733 Yarmouth
3. Ebenezer Hawes III 16 Aug 1735 Yarmouth Hannah Hawes (Thomas II’s sister & Daughter of Thomas HAWES I)
15 Jun 1760 in Yarmouth
.
Temperance Taylor
29 Jan 1770
26 Jul 1808 Yarmouth
4. Thankful Hawes 13 Jun 1738 Yarmouth Enoch Hallett
15 Aug 1754 Yarmouth
8 Mar 1788 Yarmouth
5. Desire HAWES 12 Apr 1740 At sea Thomas HAWES II
25 Jan 1759 Yarmouth

In the will of his mother (Sarah Norton Hawes died 9 Jan 1742 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.), Ebenezer is spoken of as “lately deceased.”   Administration of his estate was given to his widow Sarah.

Children

1. Abigail Hawes

Abigail’s husband Joseph Thatcher was born 10 Sep 1726 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were Judah Thacher and Sarah Crosby. Joseph died 24 Dec 1771 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.

Joseph resided in Yarmouth and was a blacksmith.

Children of Abigail and Joseph:

i. Solomon Thacher b. 3 Apr 1750 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 25 Oct 1798

Yarmouth; m. 5 Dec 1774 in Yarmouth to Susannah Crosby (b. 26 Nov 1754 in Yarmouth – d. Sep 1808) Susannah’s parents were Barnabas Crosby and Mehitable Taylor.

ii. Capt. Peleg Thacher b. 22 Nov 1751 in Yarmouth, Mass; d. 12 Aug 1817 Barnstable, Barnstable, Massa; burial Cobb’s Hill Cemetery (East and West); m. 21 Aug 1780 in Yarmouth to Marcy Matthews (b. 1760 – d. 24 Feb 1853 Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass.) Mercy’s parents were Elisha Matthews (1730 -1825) and Elizabeth Sturgis (1734 – ).  His maternal grandparents were our ancestors Edward STURGIS IV and Thankful HEDGE.

Alternatively, Mercy’s parents were Isaac Matthews (1712 – 1790) and Sarah Hawes (1709 – 1761).

Peleg lived at East Barnstable, on S. W. corner, opposite Ezekiel Thacher’s house; he was a  mariner.

Inscriptions:
“In memory of Capt. Peleg Thacher he died August 12th 1817 in the 66th year of his age. They die in Jesus and are blest, How kind their slumbers are, From sufferings and from pain released And freed from every snare.”

“In memory of Mrs. Mercy widow of Capt. Peleg Thacher, died Feb. 24, 1853 aged 93 years.”

iii. Ebenezer Thacher b. 2 Jun 1754 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 1 Apr 1831 Yarmouth; buried buried there in Old Burying-ground; m. 30 Jun 1785 in Yarmouth to Tamsen Taylor (b. 1 Jun 1763 in Yarmouth – d. 20 Mar 1828 in Yarmouth) Tamsen’s parents were cousins Lothrop Taylor (1722 – 1764) and Thankful Taylor (1732 – 1778) Ebenezer and Tamsen had eight children born between 1787 and 1807.

Ebenezer was a soldier in the Revolutionary War and lived in Yarmouth, at N. W. corner of the westerly lane leading to the old burying-ground, in the house that was afterwards altered and occupied by his daughter Ruth” Thacher. Hedied April ist, 1831, at Yarmouth, and was He married June 30th,1785, at Yarmouth, to Tamsen Taylor, born , 1764 (seeage at and date of death), at Yarmouth; died March 20th,1828, at Yarmouth, in her 65th year, and was buried therein Old Burying-ground ; gravestone. She was a daughterof Ebenezer Taylor of Yarmouth.

iv. Lydia Thacher b. 22 Jan 1756 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 9 Mar 1838; m. 5 Jun 1777 in Yarmouth to Charles Hallett (b. 4 Apr 1751 in Yarmouth – d. 15 Nov 1821 in Yarmouth) His parents were cousins John Hallett (1719 – 1760) and Rebecca Hallett (1723 – )

v. Isaac Thacher b. 6 Sep 1757 in Yarmouth, Mass.

vi. Joseph Thacher b. 16 Apr 1759 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; m. 1782 in Yarmouth, Mass to Abigail Gorham (b.: 4 Mar 1760 in Yarmouth – d. 22 Sep 1821) Abigail’s parents were Samuel Gorham (1722 – 1789) and Abigail Hallett (1727 – 1790).

vii. Sarah Thacher b. 10 May 1761 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 20 Jul 1847 Ashfield, Mass.; m. 10 Dec 1789 in Yarmouth to Joseph Vincent (b. 16 Jun 1756 in Yarmouth, Mass. – d.8 Jan 1844 in Ashfield, Mass) Joseph’s parents were David Vincent and Abigail Hawes.

viii. Temperance Thacher b. 22 Dec 1762 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 14 Jun 1791

ix. Daniel Thacher b. 29 Apr 1765 Yarmouth, Mass

x. Barnabas Thacher b. 26 Aug 1768 Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 26 Sep 1836; m. 18 Apr 1793 in Yarmouth to Molly Howes (b. 28 Aug 1769 Yarmouth – d, 11 Aug 1838) Molly’s parents were Edward Howes and Sarah Green. Barabas and Molly had nine children born between 1794 and 1810.

xi. Ezekiel Thacher b. 26 Jan 1772 Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 1785

3. Ebenezer Hawes III

Ebenezer’s first wife Hannah Hawes was born 25 Mar 1738 Yarmouth, Mass.  She was Thomas II’s sister.  Her parents were Thomas HAWES I and Thankful  GORHAM.  Hannah died 19 Aug 1764 in Yarmouth, Mass. after just four years of marriage.

Ebenezer’s second wife Temperance Taylor was born 28 Jul 1744 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. Her parents were William Taylor and Anne Gorham. Temperance died Sep 1810.

Ebenezer Hawes III’s son Isaiah Hawes (b. 2 Feb 1777 – d. 31 May 1852 in Vassalboro, Kennebec, Maine) also moved from Yarmouth,  Barnstable Mass to  Vassalboro, Maine along with his cousin Isaac Hawes.   Isaiah came to Vassalboro in 1809.  Isaiah married Desire Collins and had a family of twelve children, but only one boy Isaiah Hawes, born in 1827.  His brother, Prince Hawes,(b. 20 Sep 1772) father of Rev. Josiah T. Hawes, of Litchfield, came from Yarmouth, Cape Cod, in 1802.

 Isaiah was a private in the War of 1812 along with several other Hawes and Seth RICHARDSON Sr and Jr.    Capt. J. Wellington’s Company, Lieut. Col. E. Sherwin’s Regiment.  From Sept. 24 to Nov. 10, 1814. Raised at Albion, Kennebec Maine and vicinity. Service at Wiscasset.

Rank and Name.
Joel Wellington, Captain
Washington Heald, Lieutenant
Israel Richardson, Ensign
Robert Richardson, Sergeant
Charles Stratton, Sergeant
William Eames, Sergeant
Samuel Ward, Sergeant
Richard V. Hayden, Corporal
Nathaniel Merchant, Corporal
Andrew S. Perkins, Corporal
Benjamin Reed, Jr., Corporal
Odiorne Heals, Musician
John Kidder, Jr., Musician
Samuel Gibson, Musician

Privates include:
David Hawes
Ebenezer Hawes
Isaiah Hawes (son of Ebenezer III above)
James Hawes
Seth Hawes
Andrew Richardson
Ebenezer Richardson
Seth RICHARDSON I (our ancestor)
Seth RICHARDSON II, (our ancestor)

Children of Ebenezer and Temperance:

i. Capt. Ebenezer Hawes b. 24 Jan 1771 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; m.29 Sep 1799 to Thankful Thacher (28 Feb 1751 – d. 7 Apr 1823) Thankful’s parents were William Thacher and Thankful Hedge.

ii. Prince Hawes b. 20 Sep 1772 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. m.15 Oct 1797 in Yarmouth to Betsy Taylor (b. 29 Dec 1778 in Yarmouth – d. 26 Jan 1827 in Vassalboro, Kennebec, Maine) Betsey’s parents were Ansel Taylor and Azuba Hallett.

iii. Josiah Hawes b. 22 Nov 1774 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 1798

iv. Isaiah Hawes b. 2 Feb 1777 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; d. 31 May 1852 in Vassalboro, Kennebec, Maine; m. 7 Feb 1808 Yarmouth to Desire Collins (b. 9 Jan 1780 Liverpool, Queens, Nova Scotia – d. 4 Sep 1866 – Vassalboro, Kennebec, Maine) Desire’s parents were Stephen Collins (1746 – 1793) and Ruth Cheever (1750 – ) On the other hand, Desire might have been the daughter of David Collins, Jr. and Deborah Sears of Dennis, MA. The 1850 census shows her using the nickname, Desiah. Desiah is also the name given to her in “History of Brighton,” volume two, J. P. C. Winship, 1902.

Isaiah and Desire had twelve children between 1808 and 1830.

Isaiah and Desire moved to Maine between 1808 when their daughter Temperance was born in Yarmouth and 1810 when Sarah was born in Vassalboro.

In the 1850 census, Isiah and Desiah were farming in Vassalboro, Maine.

v. Temperance Hawes b. 21 Jul 1779 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. m. 7 May 1805 in Yarmouth to Thomas Woodbridge

vi. Hannah Hawes b. 12 Jan 1782 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.; m. 19 Sep 1805 in Yarmouth to Thomas Custis (b. 25 Dec 1779 in Virginia) Thomas’ father was Joseph Custis.

Hannah’s cousin Hannah Hawes (daughter of James Hawes and Rebecca Russell, granddaughter of Thomas HAWES I and Thankful GORHAM ) married  3 May 1792  in Yarmouth to Thomas’ brother John Custis  (b. 1 Jan 1768 Accomack, Virginia – d. 9 Nov 1810 (Age 42) Yarmouth ).

vii. Sarah Hawes b. 9 Jun 1784 in Yarmouth, Mass; d. 6 Oct 1800 Yarmouth

4. Thankful Hawes

Thankful’s first husband Enoch Hallett was born 1737 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. His parents were Samuel Hallet and Susannah Clark. Enoch died 8 Mar 1788 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass. After Thankful died in 1778, he married 25 May 1780 to Abigail Rider (b. 1740)

Children of Thankful and Enoch:

i. Samuel Hallet b. 8 Apr 1756 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 29 Jan 1778 Lancaster, Virginia

ii. Barnabas Hallett b. 27 Dec 1757 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 20 Sep 1795 Yarmouth; m1. 28 Dec 1786 in Yarmouth to Desire Hallett (b. 15 Apr 1759 in Yarmouth – d. 19 Feb 1790 in Yarmouth)  Desire’s parents were Thomas Hallet and Sarah Hamblin.  Barnabas and Desire had one daughter Desire born in 1788.

m2. 27 Oct 1791 in Yarmouth to Desire’s sister Sarah Hallett (b. 14 Jul 1763 in Yarmouth – d. 11 Feb 1793)  Sarah’s parents were also Thomas Hallet (1729 – ) and Sarah Hamblin (1733 – 1800)

Barnabas and Sarah had one son Ezekiel born in 1792.

m3. 17 Oct 1793 to Bethiah Hall (b. 7 Nov 1766 in Yarmouth) After Barnabas died, Berthiah married 17 Jul 1800 in Yarmouth  to Stephen Hallett (b. 16 Aug 1754 in Yarmouth – d. 1835 in Yarmouth) and had two more children in 1802 and 1803 . Stephen’s parents were Stephen Hallett and Mercy Joyce. Lots of Hallet cousins running in this family!

iii. Enoch Hallet b. 19 Feb 1760 in Yarmouth, Mass.; m. Mary “Molly” Sears (b. 1760 in Yarmouth – d. 11 Apr 1838)  Mary’s parents were Moody Sears (1734 – 1795) and Elizabeth Lewis (1739 – 1803).  Enoch and Mary had nine children born between 1785 and 1805.

iv. Heman Hallet b. 27 Jan 1762 in Yarmouth, Mass.

v. Abner Hallet b. 27 Mar 1764 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 7 Jan 1797 Yarmouth; Burial: Woodside Cemetery
Yarmouth Port; m. 25 Dec 1794 in Yarmouth to Mary Hallet (b. 1 Sep 1762 in Yarmouth – d. 4 May 1845 in Yarmouth) Her parents were Jeremiah Hallett and Hannah Griffith.

vi. David Hallet b. 21 Mar 1766 Yarmouth, Mass.; d. at sea Sulawesi Tengah, Indonesia; m. 7 Nov 1813 in Yarmouth, Mass. to Mercy Loring

vii. Susanna Hallet b. 7 Mar 1769 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 13 Feb 1768 Yarmouth

viii. Achsa Hallet b. 31 Aug 1772 in Yarmouth, Mass.

ix. Thankful Hallet b. 3 Sep 1774 in Yarmouth, Mass.; Cambridge, Middlesex, Mass; m. 1795 to John Miller

x. Rhoda Hallett b. 29 Aug 1776 in Yarmouth, Mass.; d. 05 Aug 1837 Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass; m. 2 Nov 1800 Yarmouth to Edward Marston (b. 22 Mar 1773 in Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass. – d. 12 Nov 1839 in Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass. Edward’s parents were John Marston (1738 – 1817) and Mary Crocker (1744 – 1816). Rhoda and Edward had seven children born between 1802 and 1818.

5. Desire HAWES (See Thomas HAWES II‘s page)

Sources:

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

Wing Family of America – Ebenezer Hawes

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=dowfam3&id=I131652

Representative Men and Old Families of Southeastern Massachusetts – Google Books

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=12668447&st=1

Posted in -9th Generation, Line - Shaw | Tagged | 9 Comments

Henry Howland

Henry HOWLAND (1564 – 1670 ) was Alex’s 12th Great Grandfather; one of 8,192  in this generation of the Shaw line.

Henry Howland - Coat of Arms Granted in 1584 by Queen Elizabeth, beginning with Bishop Howland.

Henry Howland was born about 1564 in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, England  His parents were John HOWLAND and Emma REVELL.   He married Margaret AIRES 26 Apr 1600 in St. Mary’s, Ely, Cambridgeshire.   Henry died on 17 May 1635 in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire.  Henry is buried on 19 May 1635 in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire. Occupation: Yeoman.

Fenstanton_High_Street

Margaret Aires was born in 1567 in England.  Margaret died on 30 Jul 1629 in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire.   Margaret is buried on 31 Jul 1629 in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire.

Children of Henry and Margaret:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Humphrey Howland 1596 in Essex, Essex, England Margaret Calvert
21 Nov 1622
St. Mary’s, Middlesex, England – divorced in White Chapel
.
Ann (or Mary) in Oct 1636 in Barking, Essex, England
10 Jul 1646
St. Swithin Parish, London
2. John HOWLAND ca.1598
Fenstanton, Hunts., England
Elizabeth TILLEY
1623/24
Plymouth
23 Feb 1672
Plymouth, Mass
3. Arthur HOWLAND ca 1600
Fenstanton, Hunts., England
>Margaret WALKER Reed
1626
England
30 Oct 1675
Marshfield, Mass
4. Margaret Howland 1602
Fenstanton, Hunts., England.
Richard Philips
26 Apr 1623
Fenstanton, Hunts.
1646
England
5. Simon Howland baptized 19 Aug 1604 Ann Ulster
1632 in Huntingdonshire, England
1634
London, Middlesex, England
6. Henry Howland c. 1605
prob Fenstanton, Hunts., England
Mary Newland
England
11 Jan 1670/71
Duxbury, MA.
7. George Howland 1608
Fenstanton, Hunts., England
10 Feb 1642/43
St Dunstans East London, London, England

x

Children

1. Humphrey Howland

Humphrey’s first wife Margaret Calvert was born 1600 in Fen Stanton, Hunts., England. Anne died Oct 1636 in England. divorced in White Chapel

Humphrey’s second wife Ann (or Mary) [__?__] was born in Barking, Essex, England. Ann died in 1646.

Humphrey was apprenticed on Nov 12, 1612 to James Smith of the Drapers Company, London and was granted his freedom on Dec 1, 1620.  In a poll of the city companies in 1641, Humphrey Howland is listed as a clothworker in Bush lane.

2. John HOWLAND (See his page)

3. Arthur HOWLAND (See his page)

4. Margaret Howland

Margaret’s husband Richard Phillips was born 1593 in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, England. His parents were George Phillips and Anne [__?__]. Richard died 1646 in England

5. Simon Howland 

Simon’s wife Ann Ulster was born in 1604 in England

Simon was apprenticed to his brother Humphrey, his father’s name and parish being recorded in the books in 1622 and made free March 24, 1629. He was living in 1634.

6. Henry Howland

Henry’s wife Mary Newland was born 1609 in Fen Stanton, Huntingdonshire, England. Her parents were William Newland and Agnes Greenway. Her brother William married our ancestor Rose ALLEN in a second marriage for each.  Rose’s father was George ALLEN the Elder  and her first husband was Joseph HOLLOWAY.  Mary died 17 Jun 1674.

Rose Allen and her second husband, William Newland her also Quakers.  They+ were fined 10 shillings for being at a Quaker meeting on October 2, 1661, and that same year, William Newland was complained of for having entertained a Quaker in his home..

Henry was apprenticed to his brother Humphrey in 1628, but as there is no record of him being granted his freedom, he probably did not finish the apprenticeship. He came to Plymouth Colony and settled in Duxbury where he died in 1674. His will dated Nov 22, 1670 names eight children. Like his brother Arthur, he was a Quaker and many of his descendants adhered to that faith.

Henry resided for a while in Plymouth, but by 1633 became an early settler in Duxbury “by the bayside, near Love Brewster.” He was a surveyor of highways, and was able to bear arms in 1643. He was a grantee of Bridgewater in 1645, but did not remove there.

25 Mar 1633 – Henry’s name appears on the Plymouth tax list, and he was also on the original freeman list.

8 Apr 1633 – Walter Harris had his indenture transferred to Henry Howland.

5 Jan 1635/36 Henry became the constable of Duxbury. He was frequently a member of trial and grand juries.

3 June 1657 – Henry, John Tompson, Morris Truant, Ralph Allen, and Thomas Greenfield refused to serve on the grand jury.

2 Mar 1657/58 – The same day his brother Arthur was fined for permitting a Quaker meeting in his house and for resisting the constable of Marshfield in the execution of his office, Henry Howland was fined ten shillings for entertaining a meeting in his house contrary to court orders.

22 Dec 1657 – Henry, his son Zoeth and brother Arthur were called before the Plymouth court to answer for entertaining a Quaker, and suffering and inviting sundry to hear said Quaker. They were fined for using thier homes for Quaker meetings. The families of Henry Howland and his brother Arthur, were two Plymouth families most identified as practicing Quakers. The families ceased attending Plymouth religious services and allowed their homes for the conduct of Quaker meetings. Throughout his life, Henry’s brother John HOWLAND (also our ancestor) remained faithful to Separatist belief and practice, but his compassion for Quakers is not known.

2 Apr 1659 – Henry with 26 others bought of the Indians what is now Freetown, for a few old coats, rugs, iron pots, etc. including “one little kittle”. In 1664 he purchased a large portion of land in Mattapoisett (Swansea). Henry was owner of the sixth lot in Freetown. However, his sons, John and Samuel, really became the actual settlers.

7 June 1659 – The court, referring to an order disenfranching Quakers and other offenders, gave notice to four men to appear in court the following August,

6 Oct 1659 – Henry and his brother-in-law, William Newland, were were sentenced “to bee defranchised of their freedom of this corpation”.

1 May 1660 – Henry Howland was charged with entertaining another man’s wife in his house after her husband had complained to him, and for permitting a Quaker meeting in his house and entertaining a foreign Quaker. He stiffly denied the first charge, and the court noted that the evidence ‘did not appeer to make it out,’ but he was convicted on the Quaker charges.

7. George Howland

George was a merchant in London.

Sources:

From Annis Spear, 1945 by Walter Goodwin Davis

x

http://www.renderplus.com/hartgen/htm/howland.htm

http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/report/rr_idx/idx109.html#HOWLAND

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=598149&st=1

Posted in 14th Generation, Double Ancestors, Line - Shaw | 6 Comments

Arthur Howland

Arthur HOWLAND (1607 – 1675) was Alex’s 11th Great Grandfather; one of 4,096  in this generation of the Shaw line.

Henry Howland - Coat of Arms Granted in 1584 by Queen Elizabeth, beginning with Bishop Howland

Arthur Howland was born about 1607 in in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, England. His parents were Henry HOWLAND and Margaret AIRES.    The name of his first wife is not known.

Fenstanton High Street

He possibly came to New England with his brother Henry nearly twenty years after their brother John arrived in Plymouth on the Mayflower.  He soon moved to Marshfield where he became a major landholder.  He married the widow Margaret Walker  before 6 Jun 1648 when John Walker was called his son-in-law. Arthur died 30 Oct 1675 in Marshfield, Mass.  Arthur’s brother John HOWLAND is also our ancestor.

Marshfield Founder's Monument - Arthur Howland

Margaret Walker was born in 1605 in Mancester, Lancashire, England.  Her parents were Thomas Walker and Margaret Bardsley.   When she married Arthur, Margaret was the widow of [__?__] Reed, though the marriage must have been very short.  Margaret died 22 Jan 1682/83 in Marshfield, Mass.

Children of Arthur and Margaret:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Deborah Howland ca. 1627
England
John Smith
4 JAN 1648/49
Plymouth, Mass.
16 OCT 1665
Dartmouth, Mass.
2. Mary Howland 1629
Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, England
Timothy Williamson
6 JUN 1653
Plymouth
26 AUG 1690
Marshfield, Mass
3. Martha Howland 19 DEC 1632 John Damon
1659
.
Peter Bacon
9 Feb 1671 in Hingham, Plymouth, Mass
4. Arthur Howland ca. 1633 England Elizabeth Prence (Daughter of Gov. Thomas PRENCE)
12 SEP 1667
2 APR 1697
Marshfield
5. Elizabeth HOWLAND ca. 1634 in England John LOW
ca. 1660
Marshfield
12 Oct 1683

Arthur was living in Marshfield, Mass. by 1643. He was granted 50 acres of land and some meadow at North River in 1640. He bought an additional three hundred acres of land for 21 pounds sterling, 13 pounds in money and the balance in corn and cattle.

22 Dec 1657 – Arthur, his brother Henry and Henry’s son Zoeth were called before the Plymouth court to answer for entertaining a Quaker, and suffering and inviting sundry to hear said Quaker.  They were fined for using thier homes for Quaker meetings.’   The families of Arthur Howland and his brother  Henry, were two Plymouth families most identified as practicing Quakers. The families ceased attending Plymouth religious services and allowed their homes for the conduct of Quaker meetings.  Throughout his life, Arthur’s brother John HOWLAND (also our ancestor)  remained faithful to Separatist belief and practice, but his compassion for Quakers is not known.

1659 –  Arthur Jr.’s freeman status was revoked and in 1684 he was imprisoned in Plymouth.

1669 – Arthur was arrested for neglecting to pay his minister-tax; due to his advanced age and low estate he was excused from paying.

Will: Last Will and Testament of Arthur Howland deceased exhibited to the Court holden att Plymouth the seaventh of March Ann Dom. 1675 and ordered by the said Court here to be Recorded:

In the name of God amen: I Arthur Howland, of marshfield in the collonie of new Plymouth in New England, yeoman, being weake of body but of sound and perfet memory, praised be Almighty God for the same, Knowing the uncertainty of [man’s life] this short life and being desirous to settle that outward estate that the Lord hath lent mee, I doe make this my last will and testament in maner and form following: That is to say, first and principally, I Comend my soule to Almighty God my Creator, expecting to receive full pardon of all my sinnes, and salvation by Jesus Christ my Redeemer, and my body to the earth To be buried in decent maner as to my executrix, hereafter named, shalbe thought meet and Convenient, and as concerning such worldly estate which the Lord hath lent mee, my will and meaning is the same shalbe Imployed and bestowed as hereafter in and by this my will is expressed.

Imprimus: I doe revoak, Renounce all and make void all [former] wills by mee formerly made and declare and appoint this to be my last Will and Testament.

Item: I will that all the debts that I justly owe any maner of person or persons whatsoever, shalbe well and truely payed or ordained to be payed in Convenient time after my decease by my executrix hereafter named, except only the debt, thirty shillings, which I owe to Edward Wanton, which said debt I will that the same be payed by Timothy Williamson in maner [and time] hereafter expressed.

Item: I give and bequeath unto my son Arthur Howland, his heires and assignes for ever, fifty acres of upland and alsoe meddow sufficient to keep six head of Cattle which said Land is now in the tenure and occupation of my said son Arthur, and lyeth next unto John Moshers land, and Runneth fron the boundary marke that the Jury made, which the land of the mee the said Arthur Howland and the said John Mosher To the Ridge Northeast and southwest.

Item: I give and bequeath unto my grandchild Assadiah Smith the full sume of five pounds to be payed to her by the heires, executors, and administrators or assigns of my deare wife margarett Howland Imediately after her decease.

Item: I Givc and bequeath unto the three brothers of the said Assadiah the sume of five pounds to be equally divided betwixt them and to be payed unto them by the heires, executors, Administrators and assignes of my said wife Imediately after her decease and incase any of the said Children die before by said Wiffe, my will is that the said sume shalbe equally devided betwixt the survivers of thern.

Item: I give and bequeath unto my daughter Mary Williamson the sume of ten pounds To be payed to her by the heires, executors, Administrators or assignes of my said wife imediately after her decease.

Item: I Give and bequeath unto my daughter Martha, Damon the sume of ten pounds To be payed unto her by the heires, executors, administrators or assignes of my said wife Imediately after her decease.

Item: I give and bequeath unto my daughter Elizabeth LOW the sume of ten Pounds to be payed To her by the heires, executors, administrators or assignes of my said wile Irnediately after her decease.

Item: I Give and bequeath unto my wifes Grandchild Mary Walker the full sume of ten poonds to be payed unto her by the heires, executors, Administrators or assignes of my said wife Imediately after her decease.

Item. I Give and bequeath unto my Grandchild Timothy Williamson, his heires and assignes for ever, after my said wifes decease a Piece of meddow in the Township of Marshfeild aforesaid Containing f[ive?] acres be the Same more or lesse that lyetb between a Certaine Creek that comes out of the River there and a Great Rocke that stands in the Marrsh, hee paying unto Edward Wanton, his executors or assignes, for the term of three years next after hee comes to enjoy the said meddow the sume of ten shillings per annum.

Item: I Give and bequeath the full Remainder of Reall and personall estate whatsoever it is or whatsoever it may he found unto my deare and welbeloved wife Margarett Howland and to her heires, Executors, Administrators and assignes for ever, And doe hereby Nominate, Constitute and appoint my said wife the sole executrix of this my last will and testament, In Witnes whereof whereof I, the said Arthur Howland, have hereunto sett my hand and seale the third day of July in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred seventy and foure, Ann. Regni Regis, Caroli Secundi nunc Anglia.

Arthur Howland senior
Signed, sealed and published by Arthur Howland
And a seale as his last will and Testament in the presence of us
And was att the time of the ensealing
Edward Pelhams acknowledged before
Resolved White* Josiah Winslow Govnor.

“Certain Comeoverers”  Crapo, Henry Howland  New Bedford, Mass.: E. Anthony & Sons, 1912; p152

“Arthur Howland, who came over with his brother Henry, settled in Marshfield. Three hundred  acres of upland in Marshfield were granted July 2, 1638, to Capt. Myles Standish and Mr. John  Alden, “lying on the north side of South River, bounded on the east by Beaver Pond, and on  the west by a brook,” which later for a conUsideration of £21 sterling was conveyed to Arthur Howland.

In 1640, fifty acres additional was granted to him. On this farm he lived and died, as did five generations  of his descendants. Arthur Howland had married the “widow Margaret Reed,” who outlived him. Arthur  died and was buried on his farm at Marshfield, October 30, 1675. His second child was Deborah, who  married John Smith, Jr., of Plymouth, and from whom Phebe Howland, through the Russells, descended

Children

1. Deborah Howland

Deborah’s husband John Smith was born 1618. John died 15 Mar 1692 in So Dartmouth, Bristol, Mass.

After Deboraah died, he married by mid-1666 to Ruhamah Kirby, dau. of Richard Kirby and his wife Jane, of Sandwich, Mass. Richard Kirby first appears in the New England records in 1636 as an inhabitant of Lynn, Mass. In 1637, together with others he removed to Cape Cod, and began the settlement of the Town of Sandwich. When the Society of Friends, or Quakers, first appeared in New England, Richard was “sympathetic” to them although there is no record of his becoming an actual member of that Society…

The primary background regarding John Smith of the Town of Plymouth and later Dartmouth, Mass. was first published in 1898 by Melatiah Everett Dwight in “An Account of Some of the Descendants of Richard Kirby of Sandwich Massachusetts,” with reference to John O. Austin’s “One Hundred and Sixty Allied Families.” Included in Dwight’s book is a genealogy of “Lieut. John Smith, Jr.”, based on a manuscript by H.H.H. (Humphrey Henry Howland) Crapo Smith, a son-in-law of one of John Smith’s descendants. Unfortunately, the portion concerning John Smith contains more errors of substance and corrections to dates than this memorial can encompass.

The principle errors regarding “Lieut. John Smith, Jr.” are that as a Quaker he never was a Lieut., and he was not knowingly the son of a John Smith. He was called John Smith, Jr. at Plymouth only because he was the younger of two John Smiths that resided at Plymouth for many years, and both Mr. Crapo Smith and Melatiah Dwight badly confused them. He was called John junior only in the records of the Town of Plymouth, Mass., but when he resettled at Dartmouth, Mass. he was known simply as John Smith.

Who John Smith’s parents were is unknown. He died testate at Dartmouth, Mass. on the “15th, 1st month (March), 1692, in (his) 74th y.”, latter shorthand for “in the 74th y. of his age” (DVRs). This record indicates he died Aetatis 74, and 73 years old, b. on or after Mar. 15, 1618/19. He is purportedly interred at what is now known as the private Smith Family Burying Ground located behind a private residence in South Dartmouth, Mass. But, in the 1600s as Quakers frowned on erecting gravestones as symbols of personal vanity, no actual gravestone marks his internment. There are gravestones of Smith descendant family at this burial ground, but they are 5 generations later when Quakers were permitted to erect small plain gravestones with minimal personal detail.

Peter Rounds’ brief summary of John’s will, dated June 8, 1691, proved Nov. 12, 1692, contains a material error. The subsequent estate record follows:

• Wife Ruhamah. Six sons: Judah, Gershom, Eliazer, Hezekiah, Deliverance Smith & one son not named [i.e., youngest son Eliashib]. Daus. Hassadiah wife of Jonathan Russell, Mehitabel wife of John Russell, Hannah Smith, Sarah Smith & Deborah Smith. Grand children: James son of my son Eliazer Smith, James Russell son of Jonathan Russell & Mic[hael] son of my son Hezekiah Smith. Seth Pope & my brother-in-law Recompense Carby [Kirby], Execs. (sic) Witns.: Benjamin Howland & Vallentine Hudelston. [Bristol County PR 1:55].

NOTE: the actual will names son Deliverance and wife Ruhamah as co-executors; Pope and Kirby as overseers, who both later refused to serve. Pope was a prominent Congregationalist. By the time John Smith’s will was probated, brother-in-law Recompense Kirby, a Quaker, had already or soon moved to Quaker dominated Burlington County in the then Province of West Jersey.

• Receipts for legacies from the Estate of John Smith, dated Jan. 10, 1693/4, by daughter Hassadiah Russell & husb. Jonathan Russell, by dau. Mehittabell & husb. John Russell and by daus. Hannah Smith & Sarah Smith. [Ibid, 1:161/2].
• An acct. [final] of Deliverance Smith, Exec. of the Estate of John Smith of Dartmouth, dated Dec. 1, 1696, was filed of record [based on the estate inventory filed in 1693]. Mentions wife Ruhamah, son Deliverance Smith, daus. Hassadiah wife of Jonathan Russell, Mehitabel wife of John Russell, Hannah Smith, Sarah Smith & Deborah Smith (latter under age). [Ibid, 1:161/2].

John Smith was twice married. He m. 1) on Jan. 4, 1648/9 at Plymouth, Mass., Deborah Howland, dau. of Arthur Howland and his wife Margaret, the former widow Reed. The date of Deborah’s birth is unknown, but she is presumed to have been b. either at Plymouth or Marshfield, Mass. and was at least 18 years of age when she married. She. d. at Dartmouth, Mass. by 1666. Deborah’s paternal uncle was John Howland, the 1620 Mayflower passenger, but her parents did not arrive at Plymouth until the late 1620s.

2. Mary Howland

Mary’s husband Timothy Williamson was born 1621 in England. His parents were George Williamson and [__?__]. Timothy was killed during King Philip’s War and buried  6 Aug 1676 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass.

It is not known on what day he was killed, but presumably, he fell on the last day of July or on one of the first days of August, perhaps in one of the skirmishes at Bridgewater. He was buried 6 August 1676, in what is called the Ceder Grove Cemetery, at Marshfield.

In a deposition dated 1668 Timothy Williamson, aged 47 or thereabouts, stated that he came to Marshfield about 26 years earlier with the Rev. Edward Bulkeley. In 1657 he was made a freeman of Marshfield, where he had already been a surveyor of highways and a constable. He was licensed to keep an ordinary in Marshfield in 1674, which his widow continued in 1678.

The will of Timothy Williamson Sr. “being called to serve in the warr against the enimie,” dated 20 June 1676, exhibited 2 November 1676, left all his property at his wife’s disposal “while she lives and that it be by her equally divided amongst them children att her decease,” except 40 acres to son Timothy. The inventory was exhibited 4 November 1676 by Mary Williamson, widow. In March 1680, the will was declared invalid, but in the face of pleas made in July 1681 by Robert Stanford and his wife on the one part, and Samuel Sprague in behalf of the children on the other, its conditions were recognized. On 17 September 1690 Timothy’s land was given in equal partnership to the now surviving sons, they to pay equally their seven [sic] sisters, daughters of Timothy.

An inventory of the estate of Timothy Williamson Deceased taken the 20th of October 1676.

£ Sh. Pe.
Item his mony and apparell at 07 04 06
Item his Neate Cattle 30 00 00
Item 1 mare 01 10 00
Item his swine att 04 00 00
Item 2 beds in the westerly chamber and furniture 09 10 00
Item 1 spinning wheele with other Lumber 00 10 00
Item in the Parlour 1 trundle bed and beding 01 10 00
Item Table linnine and other linnine 02 15 00
Item 1 New Table and forme att 01 06 00
Item 1 Chest and 5 chaires with some other things 00 15 00
Item 1 bed in the other Chamber 03 00 00
Item his bookes att 00 15 00
Item his Armes and Ammunition 01 10 00
Item 4 yardes of New Cloth and other smale things 01 00 00
Item his pewter att 03 00 00
Item veselles of brasse 01 15 00
Item Iron potts and other vessells 01 10 00
Item severall thinges in the Kitchen 01 14 00
Item in the Leanto 1 bed and other thinges 04 00 00
Item beer vessells & other things in the cellar 00 12 00
Item 20 pounds of sheeps woole 00 15 00
Item his tooles att 03 05 00
Item his Cart and Plow and tackling 02 08 00
Item in the Mault house his haire cloth 02 00 00
Item other lumber in the Mault house 01 00 00
Item bagges and course tecking att 01 00 00
Item his English and Indian Corne 12 00 00
Item Debts due to the estate 02 10 00
Item his housing and land 100 00 00

This inventory was exhibited to the Court held att Plymouth the 4th of Novenber 1676 on the oath of Mary Williamson, widdow; Anthony Snow John Carver Josiah Snow.

3. Martha Howland

Martha’s first husband John Damon was born 11 Nov 1621 in Kent, England. His parents were John Damon and [__?__] Gilson. He first married 16 Jun 1644 in Scituate, Plymouth Colony  to Katherine Merritt.  Katherine was the daughter of Henry Merritt and Deborah Buck, daughter of Lt. Isaac Buck, also from Kent.  John died 3 Oct 1676 in Scituate, Plymouth, Mass.

John Damon came over to Plymouth Colony at about the age of seven sometime before 1628 with his sister, Hannah, who was about five, and his mother’s brother William Gilson, and his wife, Frances. Gilson was also John and Hannah’s guardian. Gilson was from Feering, Essex in England. He and his wife Frances were childless. We don’t know the circumstances of why he took on his sister Hannah’s children and went to Plymouth.

In 1630, John, his sister Hannah, his Uncle William and Aunt Frances settled in Scituate with other “Men of Kent” who laid out the village with “great regularity” for “mutual defense” (4 acres per lot). Old records record Gilson as a “man of education and talents.” He was, as an “assistant to the government,” a member of the Governor’s Council in 1633, 1634, and 1636-1638. With the help of his nephew John, built and erected the first windmill (for grinding corn) in the New World, suggesting that he could have been a miller by trade. According to colony records of 1633, Gilson was a contractor, with others, at a very early date to “improve the navigable passage at Green’s Harbor, near Governor Winslow’s, in Marshfield (then called Rexham). We can only imagine that John, as a young man, was helping and learning from his uncle as he would have from his father.

Gilson and his wife Frances, in addition to taking care of John and Hannah, were also looking after Priscilla Brown, daughter of Peter Brown of Plymouth, who had died and left his widow with a large family of children. By all accounts, they were “devoted to their young kinspeople.”

After Gilson died, a fairly young man, in 1639, his will provided well for both John and Hannah, and dictated that “his nephew John Damon should receive my lot on the third cliff, after the next crop is taken off.” John “succeeded to his uncle’s residence, on Kent Street.” When Frances died ten years later, in 1649, Hannah and John were made sole heirs. All evidence suggests that, as the Plymouth Colony Records state, “although he had no children of his owne, yet that he had two of his sister’s children, which he looked upon as his own.” Susan Collamore Damon, Davis’ sister, in a journal entry on October 1897, quotes Colony Records of 1649: “John and Hannah Damon are allowed by the Court to be lawful heirs of William Gilson, it being proved by divers (diverse) persons that Mr. Gilson had often said that he intended to make these (his sister’s children) his heirs.”

In 1666, John Damon was appointed to command the Scituate Company of “Colonial Soldiery under Captain Miles Standish, commander of all of Plymouth Colony’s Militia, and served there until 1669.

There are many stories illustrating John Damon’s unselfishness and genuine interest in the welfare of others. As well, his service to the settlement, as demonstrated by his selection as Deputy to the Colony Court, Council of War, and Selectman, further showed his devotion, integrity, and willingness to take risks in order to ensure fairness and stand up for things he believed in. Another story as recorded by Early Planters of Scituate by Harvey Hunter Pratt, brings together many of our emigrant ancestors: John Damon, John Bryant, John Turner, and Lt. Isaac Buck. Suffice it to say that there was a disagreement about whether Elder William Hatch could claim a share in the town’s common land. “It has been told elsewhere in these pages that the Colony Court had permitted the freemen of Scituate to make division of these lands among the freeholders. In doing this, there had been trouble. Two factions had sprung up, and the town had delegated the privilege to a committee. While the magistrates did not approve of this, they sanctioned it for a time, and then re-established the bench in the performance of the duty by appointing a committee of its own choice from the townsmen made up however of the leaders of each faction.” You see the trouble a-brewing, when the committee assigned the task of resolving the issue is made up the very men on opposite sides of the issue. One one side of the issue–Capt. James Cudworth, Cornet Stetson, Isaac Chittenden, and Lt. Buck–who did not want Elder Hatch to be able to receive a plot of land. Lt. Buck was John Damon’s first wife’s grandfather. On the other side, advocating for Hatch, were John Damon, John Turner, Sr., John Turner, Jr., and John Bryant, Sr. We are descended from ALL of these men–John Damon, John Turner, and John Bryant. How funny they were on the same side. Except for Buck, who, incidentally, Damon was able to sway over to his side, thereby securing the majority (although he lost Bryant, he gained Chittenden and Buck) for Hatch to receive his “layout,” and swapping out one of our ancestors (Bryant) for another (Buck).

Strong circumstantial evidence indicates that John of Scituate and Deacon John of Reading were probably more or less distantly related in England, as it seems that both came from County Kent.

John Damon served in the local militia according to Deane’s History of Scituate. On page 118, “We observe in 1665 Cornet Robert Stetson, Serj. John Damon, etc.,” and on page 119, “Serj. John Damon is commanded to take comand until further notice.”

In an inventory taken on October 23, 1676, John Damon had few debts, many animals, and much prized food. The big value items included 7 oxen, 10 cattle, 6 score and 12 bushels of Indian corn, and 25 sheep tied with 20 loads of hay.

On 3 Oct 1676, Martha Damon petitioned the court to take inventory of the estate of Serg. John Damon. (Note: On the same date Daniel Damon, aged about 23 years, requested the court to take inventory of the estate of John Damon Jr.) The inventory of the goods and chattels, and that of the land (including improvements) of Serg. John was recorded by the court 23 Oct 1676. (The inventory of the goods and chattels of John Jr was recorded on the same day.)

The goods and chattels of Serg. John totaled 202 pounds 7 shillings and 11 pence; the land totaled 170 pounds 10 shillings. Letters of administration were granted to Martha 3 Jul 1677. The disposition of the estate was recorded 18 Oct 1677. The widow received her third-67 pounds 9 shillings and 4 pence from the goods and chattels; and 56 pounds 16 shillings and 8 pence of the real estate.

The childrens’ share of the goods and chattels was 134 pounds 18 shillings and 7 pence. Out of this was allowed 9 pounds for bringing up the weak one (Ebenezer) and 3 pounds 11 shillings 8 pence for bringing up the youngest (Martha). These sums were over and above the normal portion which they should receive.

Each of the ten youngest children received 20 pounds, and Daniel, the oldest son, received 40 pounds. 2 Mar 1679-80, the court was satisfied that Martha had paid to Daniel, and to the three other children which he had by his first wife, the sums which were due to them.

Also on 2 Mar 1679-80, the court ordered that the four daughters, Silence,\ Margaret, Hannah, and Martha, the daughters of the said John Damon, shall have each of them, 10 pounds in current country pay, payed to them and to every each of them when they come of age or be married. (The record does not state whether this was in addition to the 20 pounds previously ordered or instead of it.)

The third of the real estate which Martha received was hers as long as she remained a widow. The court, on 1 Jun 1680, noting that Martha had remarried, ordered her to vacate the premises, but she was still to have one third of the profits thereof.

Zachary received the lot of the land on the cliff as his 20 pound portion-he paid Martha 3 pounds as she had made some improvements on it, and received the whole lot. Ebenezer’s share in Conihasset was to go to Peter Bacon and Martha his wife, also 3 pounds 10 shillings out of John’s land on the cliff, if they bring Ebenezer up to be 21.

Martha’s second husband Peter Bacon 30 Mar 1642 in Hingham, Suffolk, Mass. Peter died 9 Aug 1694 in Hingham, Plymouth, Mass.

4. Arthur Howland

Arthur’s wife Elizabeth Prence was born about 1645 in Duxbury, Mass. Her parents were Gov. Thomas PRENCE and Mary COLLIER. Elizabeth died xx.

1657 –  Arthur Howland Jr., an ardent Quaker, was brought before the court.  Elizabeth Prence, daughter of Gov. Thomas PRENCE (also our ancestor)  and Arthur Howland Jr., fell in love. The relationship blossomed and matrimony seemed inevitable. However, it was illegal and punishable by court sanction for couples to marry without parental consent. Thomas Prence urged Elizabeth to break off the relationship, but to no avail. He then used powers available to him as Governor. Arthur Howland, Jr., was brought before the General Court and fined five pounds for

inveigling of Mistris Elizabeth Prence and making motion of marriage to her, and prosecuting the same contrary to her parents likeing, and without theire mind and will…[and] in speciall that hee desist from the use of any meanes to obtaine or retaine her affections as aforesaid.”

2 Jul 1667 – Arthur Howland, Jr., was brought before the General Court again where he “did sollemly and seriously engage before the Court, that he will wholly desist and never apply himself for the future as formerly he hath done, to Mistris Elizabeth Prence in reference unto marriage.” Guess what happened! They were married on December 9, 1667 and in time had a daughter and four sons. Thus a reluctant Thomas Prence acquired a Quaker son-in-law, Quaker grandchildren and innumerable Quaker in-laws of Henry Howland.

In 1666 this provision concerning courtship was the law of the colony:

“Whereas divers persons unfitt for marriage both in regard to their yeoung years as also in regard of their weake estate, some practiseing the enveigleing of men’s daughters and maids under guardians (contrary to their parents and guardians liking), and of mayde servants without leave and liking of their masters. It is therefore enacted by the Court that if any shall make any motion of marriage to any man’s daughter or maydbe servant not having first obtained leave and consent of the parents or master so to doe, shalbe punished either by fine or corporall punishment or both, at the discretion of the bench and according to the nature of the offense.”

Young Howland and Mistress Prence were enamored of each other. They were not “unfitt for marriage” within the meaning of this statute, both being of age and the former possessed of fifty acres of land in Duxbury which had been granted him by the colony court.

“There was however one grave and insuperable objection. Howland was a Quaker. His father, at first a sympathizer, had been frequently prosecuted before Prence, who was then Governor, for the entertainment of Quakers and assisting in the promulgation of their faith, and had finally embraced it. The Governor was rabid in his opposition to the sect and the marriage of his daughter to one of them was intolerable. The young woman was the third child of his second marriage. Her mother was a sister of William Collier, as prominent and persistent in his persecution of the Quakers as was the Governor himself. Both parents forbade the courtship which in spite of their joint efforts continued. No other means availing, recourse was finally had to a criminal prosecution against Howland under the law which has been above quoted.

On March 5, 1666-7 Howland was brought before the Bench on which his accuser sat as the presiding magistrate and charged with: “inveigling Mistris Elizabeth Prence and makeing motion of marriage to her, and prosecuting the same contrary to her parents liking, and without theire consent, and directly contrary to their mind and will.” He was sentenced to pay a fine of five pounds, to find sureties for his good behavior: “and in special that he desist from the use of any meanes to obtaine or retaine her affections as aforesaid.” (Plymouth Colony Records Vol. III Page 140, 141).

“Here Arthur’s brother-in-law, John Damon came to the assistance of his friend. He became surety for that good behavior which the Court required. He also apparently counseled the action which was taken four months later when Howland “did solemnly and seriously engage before this Court, (Governor Prence still presiding) that hee will wholly desist and never apply himself for the future, as formerly hee hath done, to Mistris Elizabeth Prence, in reference unto marriage.”

However solemn this agreement may have been, it was not serious on the part of young Howland; nor did Mistress Prence agree that the action either of the Court or her lover was final. The courtship continued and was consummated in a marriage later. The daughter was never forgiven. The bitterness which Prence showed toward General Cudworth for the latter’s leniency toward the Quakers was greatly increased in the case of his daughter because of her successful rebellion to his stubborn will. Although he disinherited her, he lived to see her surrounded by a contented brood and the Scituate planter who had become the surety for the good behavior of the parent the Godfather of his children.”.

5. Elizabeth HOWLAND (See John LOW‘s page)

Sources:

From Annis Spear, 1945 by Walter Goodwin Davis

x

http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/report/rr_idx/idx109.html#HOWLAND

http://www.pilgrimjohnhowlandsociety.org/john_howland_john_elizabeth_howland.shtml

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=128226741

Posted in 13th Generation, Dissenter, Immigrant - England, Line - Shaw, Storied, Violent Death | Tagged , | 11 Comments

John Low

John LOW (1629 – 1676) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Shaw line.

John Low - Coat of Arms

John Low was born about 1629 in England.  He married Elizabeth HOWLAND about 1660 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass.  John was killed 26 Mar 1676  at Nine Men’s Misery  a site in current day Cumberland, Rhode Island where nine colonists were tortured by the Narragansett Indian tribe during King Philip’s War. A stone memorial was constructed in 1676 which is believed to be the oldest veterans memorial in the United States.  Cumberland was originally settled as part of Rehoboth, Mass  which is listed as the location of John’s death.

9 Jun 1664  – A John Low witnessed a  deed from Chicatabutt to Pompanohoo and other Indians living on the Catuhtkut river. Thus Indians were both the grantor and grantees. Richard Bourne, the first witness, was ‘teacher of the Indians at Sandwich.’ If the John Low of the deed was actually John Low of Marshfield, it is possible that he may have been an Indian pupil of Bourne’s who adopted an English name. He may have been the John Low who, with Richard Bourne, witnessed an Indian deed.

Nine Men's Misery Memorial, Cumberland, Rhode Island

Elizabeth Howland was born ca. 1634 in England. Her parents were Arthur HOWLAND and Margaret WALKER Reed. Elizabeth died 22 Mar 1725 in Shrewsbury, Monmouth, New Jersey.

Children of John and Elizabeth:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Elizabeth LOW ca. 1660
Marshfield, Mass
Walter JOYCE
1676 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass
12 OCT 1683
Marshfield, Mass
2. Arthur Low 1665
Marshfield, Mass
[__?__]  bef. 18 Mar 1690/91
3. Hannah Low 15 JUL 1670
Marshfield
4. Margaret Low ca.  1672
Marshfield
Jonathan Pratt
8 JAN 1691/92
Scituate, Mass.
5. Job Low ca.  SEP 1677
Marshfield
Mary Wormwood
17 APR 1701
Wells, Maine
After  1759
Wells, York, ME
vi.  Daniel Low (Illegitimate)  before 5 Jun 1678
Marshfield
 Mary Ingersoll
1 Oct 1707
Wells, Maine
11 May 1723
Marymount, Wells, Maine
Killed by Indians

John and Elizabeth (Howland) Low are listed on the Marshfield founder's monument.

John and Elizabeth’s life does not seem marked by order and respectability.  John Loe of Marshfield was fined 5s. for drunkenness on 2 Mar 1668/69 and upon his second offense 1 Mar 1669/70 the fine was doubled. On 5 Mar 1670/71 he was fined 40s. for “profaning the Sabbath by servile labor and contemptable words.”

Elizabeth must have sought affection elsewhere for on 3 Jun 1673, Joseph Rose of Marshfield “being groundly suspected for having to much familiarity with the wife of John Loe in a dishonest way.” was put to a bond of £20 to refrain from her company.

After John was killed in King Philip’s War, “Elizabeth being a single woman” had an illegitimate child before 5 Jun 1678 when she was sentenced by the court to be whipped.  The child was in all probability Daniel Low.  While Daniel’s paternity is unrecorded, Joseph Rose sentenced above to stay away from Elizabeth is a good bet.

Nine Men’s Misery

On 26 Mar 1676 during King Philip’s War, Captain Michael Pierce led approximately 60 Plymouth Colony colonial troops and 20 Wampanoag Christian Indians in pursuit of Narragansett Indians who had burned several Rhode Island towns and attacked Plymouth, Mass. as part of King Philip’s War. Pierce’s troops caught up with the Narragansett Indians but were ambushed in what is now Central Falls, Rhode Island. Pierce’s troops fought the Narragansetts for several hours, but were surrounded by a larger force of Narragansetts. The battle was one of the biggest defeats of colonial troops during King Philip’s War with nearly all killed in the battle, including Captain Pierce and the Christian Indians (“Praying Indians”) (exact numbers vary by account somewhat). The Narragansetts lost only a handful of warriors.

Nine of the colonists who were among the dead were first taken prisoner (along with a tenth man who survived). These men were purportedly tortured to death by the Narragansetts at a site in Cumberland, Rhode Island, currently on the Cumberland Monastery and Library property. The nine dead colonists were buried by English soldiers who found the corpses and buried them in 1676. The soldiers created a pile of stones to memorialize the colonists. This pile is believed to be the oldest veterans’ memorial in the United States, and a cairn of stones has continuously marked the site since 1676.

A more personal and detailed account of the massacre of Pierce’s party by the Indians gives us a flavor of the emotion felt by the English:

“Sunday the 26th of March was sadly remarkable to us for the Tidings of a very deplorable Disaster brought unto Boston about 5 a Cloak that Afternoon, by a Post from Dedham, viz., that Captain Pierce (of) Scituate, in Plimmouth Colony, having Intelligence in his Garrison at Seaconicke, that a Party of the Enemy lay near Mr. Blackstones, went forth with 63 English and twenty of the Cape Indians, (who had all along continued faithful, and joyned with them;) and upon their March, discovered rambling in an obscure woody Place, four or five Indians, who, in getting away from us, halted, as if they had been lame or wounded.

But our Men had pursued them but a little Way into the Woods, before they found them to be only Decoys to draw them into their Ambuscade: for on a Sudden, they discovered about 500 Indians, who in very good order, furiously attacqued them, being as readily received by ours.

So that the Fight began to be very fierce and dubious, and our Men had made the Enemy begin to retreat but so slowly that it scarce deserved that Name, when a fresh Company of about 400 Indians came in; so that the English and their few Indian Friends were quite surrounded, and beset on every Side.

Yet they made a brave Resistance, for about two Hours: during all that Time they did great Execution upon the Enemy, whom they kept at a Distance, and themselves in Order. For Captain Pierce cast his 63 English and 20 Indians into a Ring, and fought Back to Back, and were double-double Distance, all in a Ring, whilst the Indians were as thick as they could stand, thirty deep.

Overpowered with those numbers, the said Captain, and 55 of his English and ten of their Indian Friends were slain upon the Place; which, in such a Cause, and upon such Disadvantages, may certainly be stiled ‘The Bed of Honour.’ However, they sold their worthy Lives at a gallant Rate; it being affirmed by those few that (not without wonderful Difficulty, and many Wounds) made their Escape, that the Indians lost as many Fighting Men, (not counting Women and Children,) in this Engagement, as were killed at the Battle in the Swamp, near Narraganset, mentioned in our last Letter, which were generally computed to be above three Hundred

The “Nine Men’s Misery” site was disturbed in 1790 by medical students led by one Dr. Bowen looking for the body of one of the dead colonists, Benjamin Bucklin, who was said to be unusually large with a double row of teeth. They were stopped by outraged locals. The site was desecrated several more times until 1928 when the monks who then owned the cemetery built a cemented stone cairn above the site. The cairn and site can still be visited on the Monastery grounds.

This picture shows the Nine Men’s Misery Original Carin better

Pierce’s Fight was followed by the burning of Providence three days later, and then the capture and execution of Canonchet, the chief sachem of the Narragansetts. The war was winding down even at the time that Pierce’s party was destroyed, and in August, King Philip himself was killed.  Two of our ancestors children, John Millard, son of John MILLARD  and Benjamin Buckland, son of William BUCKLAND also died in the battle.

The site is located on the grounds of the former Trappist monastery of Our Lady of the Valley, now the Cumberland public library, and is an approximately 15 minute walk behind the main building on a rise in the woods.

Directions:  Follow the road to the right past the main building, you will come to a low white building on your left and at that point should see a break in the chain link fence that is on your right. There is a low metal guardrail in the break, step over and you should be on a walking path. Turn right and not far up the path will divid, take the left path, it will bring you through a field. In the field, it again branches out – take the left again and keep walking out of the field through the trees. From leaving the field to reaching the monument is about the same distance that you walked to get out of the field from the start. Coming down over a small rise, there is a path to the right that brings you to the elevated area that the monument occupies – you can see the monument from the rise when on the path.

Children

1. Elizabeth LOW (See Walter JOYCE‘s page)

2. Arthur Low

1 Nov 1679 – Arthur Loe was apprenticed to John Dingley at the age of fourteen to serve until he reached 21.  Arthur was to faithfully serve his master and dame and not to absent himself from their service by day or night without their consent.  They were to provide him with meat, drink, apparell, washing and lodging fit for one of his degree and on the expiration of his term as their servant to pay him £3, ‘and incase he carry himself’ well £4.

The inventory of the estate of Arthur Low was submitted 13 Mar 1690/91 and it includes £5:2:4 for wages as a soldier to Canada.  He had a son, Arthur, but no wife indicating she may have died during child birth.

Arthur’s son is sometimes mixed up with the father.  He married 24 JAN 1716/17 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass. to Elizabeth Crocker (b. 5 JAN 1694/95 Marshfield)   Her parents were Jonathan Crocker and Mary Burroughs.

4. Margaret Low

Margaret’s husband Jonathan Pratt was born 20 MAR 1667/68 Plymouth, Mass. His parents were Jonathan Pratt and Abigail Atwood. Jonathan died 28 JUN 1728 Hanover, Plymouth, Mass.

5. Job Low

Job’s wife Mary Wormwood was born in 1681 York, Maine. Her parents were William Wormwood and Mary Young.

Job choose guardian Sept 1691 so he would be at least 14 at that time. He chose Benjamin Philips of Marshfield which throws his own birth back to at least September 1677.

When they moved to Maine in 1699, the brothers Job and Daniel Low were several times mentioned in that order with the inference that Job was the elder.   As there is no record of Elizabeth having a child in 1677, it is probably that Job, whatever his actual paternity, was either born before John Low’s death or posthumously and he must therefore be considered legitimate.

vi. Daniel Low (Illegitimate)

Daniel’s wife Mary Ingersoll was born about 1678 in Kittery, Maine.  Her parents were John Ingersoll and Deborah Gunnison..  After Daniel died, Mary Ingersoll and Andrew Lewis filed marriage intentions on 25 Apr 1724.

While Daniel’s paternity is unknown,  Walter Goodwin Davis says Joseph Rose is the most likely person.

On June 3, 1673, Joseph Rose of Marshfield, “being groundedly suspected to have much familiarity with the wife of John Low in a dishonest way”  He was put to a bond of £20 to refain from her company.

Elizabeth Low “singlewoman” was convicted of whoredom on 5 June 1678, on which date Elizabeth Low, widow, accused Philip Leonard of Marshfield of getting her with child. She was sentenced by the court to be whipped.

Note: assuming Elizabeth’s 1634 birth is correct, she would have been 44 years old when she became pregnant with an illegitimate child.  Quite a shock I’m sure!

Job & Daniel Low left Marshfield along with several Roses before 1699 and purchased land in York, Maine.

Daniel Low was granted land on 22 Nov 1699 in Wells, York County, Maine, but as it was not improved as to the usual conditions, it was re-granted to his brother Job Low on Mar 14, 1714.

He and his wife were in court on 1 Oct 1707 for the “usual cause.” He died on Tuesday, 11 May 1723 in Merryland, Wells, York County, Maine, at age 45 years by Indians.

Sources:

From Annis Spear, 1945 by Walter Goodwin Davis


http://www.genealogyofnewengland.com/b_l.htm
According to  “Ancestry of Annis SPEAR” by Walter Goodwin DAVIS, pp. 95-100, John died in battle.

Posted in 12th Generation, Historical Monument, Immigrant - England, Line - Shaw, Pioneer, Storied, Veteran, Violent Death | Tagged , , , | 10 Comments

Walter Joyce

Walter JOYCE (1650 – 1713) was Alex’s 9th Great Grandfather; one of 1,024 in this generation of the Shaw line.

Immigrant Ancestor

Walter Joyce was born about 1650 in England.  Many geneologies say he was born in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass, but he could have been born in Gloucestershire, England.  Walter was in Marshfield by 1668.   He married Elizabeth LOW in 1676 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass.. Although records of his origin, birth, siblings, marriage, and death have not yet been located, the births of seven children are registered at Marshfield, Massachusetts, between 1676 and 1693.  Walter died in 1713

Location of Marshfield in Plymouth County

Elizabeth Low was born about 1660. Her parents were John LOW and Elizabeth HOWLAND.  Elizabeth died 21 Aug 1698 in Marshfield, Mass.

Children of Walter and Elizabeth:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Lucretia Joyce 3 OCT 1676
Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass
Samuel Sylvester
9 OCT 1700
Marshfield
1 JAN 1717/18
Marshfield
2. Thomas Joyce 19 APR 1679
Marshfield
Elizabeth Bent
31 OCT 1701
Marshfield
Apr 1732 or
Jan 1755
Marshfield
3. Mary JOYCE 12 Nov 1682
Marshfield
James GORHAM
29 Sep 1709
28 Jun 1778
4. Elizabeth Joyce 24 MAR 1683/84
Marshfield
David Hershey
12 MAY 1721
Hingham, Mass
1733
5. Abigail Joyce 26 OCT 1687
Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass
ca. 1700
Marshfield
6. Seth Joyce 26 JUL 1691
Marshfield
Rachel Sherman
9 NOV 1726
Marshfield
18 SEP 1750
Marshfield
7. Bathsheba Joyce 17 JAN 1692/93
Marshfield
Ebenezer Mahurin
12 DEC 1718
Marshfield
1755
Morris, New Jersey

John Joyce removed 1637 to Sandwich, thence to Yarmouth in 1643 being in list of those able to bear arms that year in both towns.  Had Abigail in 1646 in Yarmouth where he died 1666.   His widow Dorothy(Dority)  died 1680. In his will names only Hosea,  Mary, and Dorcas.  He was married to Dority COCHET before 1646 in England. Children were: Hosea JOYCE , Abigail JOYCE, Dorothy JOYCE, Mary JOYCE. Walter was born just after, could he be another son?

Children

1. Lucretia Joyce

Lucretia’s husband Samuel Sylvester was born 1676 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass. His parents were John Silvester and Sarah [__?__]. Samuel died 6 Jan 1735 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass

2. Thomas Joyce

Thomas’ wife Elizabeth Bent was born 1673 in Sudbury, Middlesex, Mass. His parents were Joseph Bent and Elizabeth Bourne. Thomas died in 1719 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass.

Will: Will written 26 Sep 1744, gives equal cash and movable estate to “my three dau. Abigail Lapham, Lydia Joyce & Naomy Joyce”; while Lydia and Naomy unmarried, to have use of westerly end of dwelling house, use of “sellar”, apples from trees, a cow and a swine; with that reservation, all housing and lands in Marshfield to sole excr, son John. Wit. James, Hannah, James Jr. Sprague. Probated Jan.25, 1755. Settlement to Joseph Lapham Jr. and Abigail, Timothy and Lydia Silvester, Naomi Joyce from excr. John Joyce on Mar. 24, 1755; estate 130 pds.

3. Mary JOYCE (See James GORHAM‘s page)

4. Elizabeth Joyce

Elizabeth’s husband David Hershey was born 28 Jan 1686 in Abington, Plymouth, Mass. He first married 6 Aug 1707 in Bridgewater, Mass to Esther Reed (b. 1686 in East Bridgewater, Plymouth, Mass. – d. 1721). His parents were William Hersey and Sarah Langlee.

6. Seth Joyce

Seth’s wife Rachel Sherman was born 29 Apr 1702 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mass. Her parents were Ebenezer Sherman and Margaret Decrow. Rachel died 5 Dec 1754 in Marshfield, Plymouth, Mas

7. Bathsheba Joyce

Bathsheba’s husband Ebenezer Mahurin was born 1691 in Taunton, Bristol, Mass. His parents were Hugh Mahurin and Mary Campbell. Ebenezer died in Nov 1755 in Pequannock, Morris, New Jersey,

Sources:

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

http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/report/rr_idx/idx120.html#JOYCE

http://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=11211790

Posted in 11th Generation, Immigrant - England, Line - Shaw | Tagged | 7 Comments

Thomas Huckins

Thomas  HUCKINS (1618 – 1679) was Alex’s 10th Great Grandfather; one of 2,048 in this generation of the Shaw line.

Immigrant Ancestor

Thomas Huckins was born about 1618 in  England.  He came before he was 21 years of age and resided in the vicinity of Boston.  He was one of the twenty-three original members of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, charted in 1638. Arthur Perry, son of Edmund PERRY was their drummer.  Thomas bore its standard in 1639.  He first married Mary Wells in 1642 in Barnstable, Plymouth Colony.  After Mary died,  he married Rose TILLEY (Hyllier) on 3 Nov 1648 in Barnstable, Plymouth Colony.  Thomas and his son Joseph were cast away in his vessel and perished in a gale 9 Nov 1679 .

Rose [__?__] was born in 1616  in England. She first married Hugh Tillie (later known as Hillier in 1640 in Yarmouth, Barnstable, Mass.  Hugh died in 1648 and Rose married Thomas.   Rose died in 1687 in Barnstable, Mass..

Hugh Hillier, Rose’s first husband, came to Salem from Dorchester, England in 1629, in the Lyon’s Whelp, the same ship that carried Thomas MINER.  Hugh was under the auspices of the Rev. John White of Dorchester, to serve Sir Richard Saltonstall.

3 Mar 1638/39 –  Mr. Nicholas Sympkins, Heugh Tilley and Giles Hopkins were deposed to the last will and testament of Peter Weden, the elder of Yarmouth, deceased.

1 Mar 1641/42: Heugh Tilley, of Yarmouth (and 3 others) are complained of to the scoffers and jeerers at religion, etc. and making disorders in their town meetings, etc.; are to be sent for to answer the next court, their town meetings, etc.; are to be sent for to answer the next court.

7 Jun 1642 – Before the Grand Enquest: Heugh Tilley, released. Josias Winslow complaints against William Hiller [Hillard], an action of a debt, that he pay forthwith, pay him xiijli [13£?]xvs  upon a bill which he undertake to pay one Boswell. The debt of xiiijli [9£?] was confessed, and judgement granted; 14 days respit for execucon.

William Hiller [Hillard] was born in 1614.  He came to this country in the spring of 1635 on the ship “Elizabeth and Ann”, out of London. He was a carpenter, 21 years of age.  He was involved in lots of Plymouth court cases, see here.  I wonder if he is the reason Hugh changed his name to Hillier?

August, 1643 – the Names of all the Males that are able to beare Armes from xvj [16] Years old to 60 years: Duxborrow–William Hillier [Hillard], 49 Barnstable–Will Tilly, Yarmouth – Heugh Tilly allias Hillier, 49. (this should indicate that Hugh changed his name from Tilley to Hiller).

1644: Names “Surveyors of the Heigh ways in each towne–Yarmouth: Huegh Hillier, Anthony Thather.

1657 – List of names that have taken the Oath of Fidellytye–Hugh Tillie allias Hillier.

Children of Rose [__?__] and Hugh Hillier

Name Born Married Departed
i. Deborah Hillier 30 Oct 1643 John Sargent
19 Mar 1661
20 Apr 1669
Barnstable, Mass.
ii. Samuel Hillier 30 Jul 1646

Children of Thomas and Mary Wells

Name Born Married Departed
1. Lydia Huckins 1644 1644
2. Mary Huckins 1646
3. Elizabeth Huckins 1647 1648

Children of Thomas and Rose

Name Born Married Departed
4. John Huckins 2 Aug 1649
Barnstable, Plymouth Colony
Hope Chipman (Daughter of John CHIPMAN)
10 AUG 1670
Barnstable, Mass.
10 Nov 1678
Barnstable
5. Thomas Huckins 25 Apr 1651
Barnstable
Hannah Chipman (Daughter of John CHIPMAN)
1 MAY 1680
Barnstable, Mass
.
Sarah Pope
17 AUG 1698
Barnstable, Mass.
1714
Lost at sea
6. Hannah HUCKINS 14 Oct 1653
Barnstable
James GORHAM Sr.
Barnstable
24 Feb 1672/73
13 Feb 1728
Barnstable
7. Joseph Huckins 21 Feb 1655
Barnstable
9 Nov 1679
Lost At Sea with his father

The name was written Huckins, Hutckins, Huckens and Huggins, the latter being the early pronunciation

Salem Company marching“In 1637, a military company was formed, and Thomas was the 6th signer of the roll.  It was incorporated as The Military Company of Massachusetts on 13 Mar 1639.   In 1639-40, Thomas was chosen ensign.  The Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts is the oldest chartered military organization in North America and the third oldest chartered military organization in the world.   While it was originally constituted as a citizen militia serving on active duty in defense of the northern British colonies, it has become, over the centuries primarily an honor guard and a social and ceremonial group in Massachusetts. Today the Company serves as Honor Guard to the Governor of Massachusetts who is also its Commander in Chief.

Governor Winthrop granted a charter in March 1638, and on the first Monday in June following, an election of officers was held on Boston Common. Among the charter members was Nicholas Upsall, who later forsook his membership to join the Quakers. Since that time, the company has continued to hold their annual elections on the Boston Common on the first Monday in June by casting their votes on a drum head. Company membership has long been considered a distinction among the New England gentry in a similar manner to which regimental membership conferred distinction on the sons of the English gentry.   Since 1746, the headquarters of the Company has been located in Faneuil Hall. In this armory, the company maintains a military museum and library containing relics from every war in which the United States has been engaged since its settlement

Thomas was a member of our ancestor, Rev John LOTHROP’s church [See his page for details] and he was one of the tolerant element of that church.  “The criminal calendar records only one charge affecting his moral character. He is charged with having abused a poor servant. No details are given, and no opinion can be formed of the heinousness of the offence. Mr. Huckins was only required to pay the expenses, as he was obliged to do as the boy’s master; no fine nor punishment being imposed on him.” He was a large landowner; and captain of the packet.

Thomas had a landing place or wharf near his house, where he discharged and received freights. He was one of the ‘farmers’ or partners that hired the Cape Cod fisheries. In 1670 considerable quantities of tar were manufactured in the colony, and he was appointed one of the purchasers.  Oct 4, 1675

1646 – Elected Constable; selectman many years;

1 Mar 1653 – Thomas was licensed to sell wines and strong waters until the next June court. He had probably been authorized to keep an ordinary, or public house, during the previous ten years. He was for several years receiver of the excise imposed on the importation of wines and liquors and powder and shot. In the last mentioned year, he was captain of the packet, and he brought into the town for himself 35 gallons of wine and 9 of brandy, besides liquors and powder and shot for other persons. Mr. Otis says:

After the death of Mr. Lothrop the Barnstable church ceased to act in harmony. Mr. Huckins adhered to the party that invited Mr. William sergeant to become the pastor. This faction belonged to the political party that in 1656 had become dominant in the colony, and had adopted the narrow sectarian policy that had always ruled in Massachusetts. That Mr. Huckins adopted the intolerant policy of the party to which he belonged does not appear. Though constable in 1657, he lived on friendly terms with his neighbor Nicholas Davis (of Quaker sympathies), and as the notorious Barlow of Sandwich was employed to search the house of Davis, it may be inferred that Huckins declined to act officially in the case. In 1662, Mr. Huckins cordially united with the other factions of the church in the settlement of Mr. Walley, a man of peace and an able advocate of the ‘tolerant principles of the Rev. Mr. Lothrop.’ He was a large land owner.

“When Mr. Huckins settled there, a stream of fresh water run all the year on the south of his house, through a morass impassable by teams. In this isolated spot he kept an ordinary, as taverns were then called, for the accommodation of travellers. It is however to be presumed that the lovers of ‘strongwater’ knew the paths that lead to his house.”

1669-78 – Elected Deputy

1670 – William Clarke and Edward Gray of Plymouth; Richard Bourne and William Swift of Sandwich; Thomas Hinkley and Thomas HUCKINS of Barnstable; Samuel Sturgis, of Yarmouth and John FREEMAN of Eastham, formed a company to engage and regulate the making and disposing of all the tar made in the colony, at the price of 8 shillings for every small barrel, and 12 shillings for every great barrel, during the full term of 2 years.”**.

1671 – Member of Council of War

1675 – Commisary General  Thomas was on the Regimental Staff of the Plymouth Regiment during the Great Swamp Fight.

The following is taken from Hamlin Family Genealogy, pg. 87.

“Mr. THOMAS HUCKINS,1 b. 1617; m. 1st, 1642, Mary, dau. of Isaac Wells, of Barnstable; who was buried July 28, 1648; m. 2d, Nov. 3, 1648, Rose, widow of Hugh Hyllier of Yarmouth. Mass. Little is known of his early history; he came over before 21 years of age and resided in the vicinity of Boston; member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company and bore its standard, 1639. The name was written Huckins, Hutckins, Huckens and Huggins, the latter being the early pronunciation. Several of the name came early to Mass. A Mr. Thomas Hutchins was assistant to the Governor of the Mass. Bay Company, in England, and promoter of the company; which may account for the early settlement of those of this name in Mass.; and for the prominence of the subject of this sketch. He removed to Barnstable, and was presumably one of Mr. Collicut’s Company; a superior business man, wealthy, and was one of the partners who hired the Cape Cod fisheries; constable, 1646; selectman many years; deputy, 1669-78; member of council of war, 1671; Commissary General, 1675; and held other offices of trust and honor; licensed to keep the ordinary and sell wine, 1652-3. He was a member of Mr. Lothrop’s church; of which Otis remarks: “No patent of nobility granted to an ancestor, can confer so much honor on a man as to be able to trace his descent from a member of Mr. Robinson or Mr. Lothrop’s church.” To his everlasting credit be it said, that he was of the tolerant element of that church. He was a large land owner; and captain of the packet. He and his son Joseph were cast away in his vessel and perished in a gale. Nov. 9, 1679. His widow d. 1687, aged about 71 years. “

Children

i. Deborah Hillier

Deborah’s husband John Sargent was born 8 Dec 1639 in Charlestown, Middlesex, Mass. His parents were William Sargent and Sarah Minshall.  After Deborah died, he married 3 Sep 1669 to Mary Bense who died  without issue and finally Lydia Chipman, daughter of John CHIPMAN  about 1674. John died 9 Sep 1716 in Malden, Middlesex, Mass.

“John Sargent (born in Charlestown) went to Barnstable with his father, and was admitted to inhabit there between 1662 and 1666.  He returned to Malden about 1669, where he was a selectman six years. His military service was in 1676 as a soldier in Major Gilliam’s Company, in garrison at Brookfield, Mass.

In May, 1695, the town of Malden made a division of 2,300 acres of common lands.  The distribution was by lot to all freeholders in the town, in proportion to their ratable estates, – an average of about thirty acres to each man.  Among the names are John Sargent, Sr., and John Sargent, Jr.  It was votes by the town – showing confidence in his integrity and fairness – “that John Sargent, sen’r, is the man to draw the lots.”
All his fifteen children are named in his will of May 20, 1708.

John Sargent Headstone — Bell Rock Cemetery Malden Middlesex County Mass

5. Thomas Huckins

Thomas first wife Hannah Chipman was born 14 Jan 1658, Her parents were John CHIPMAN and Hope HOWLAND. Hannah died 4 Nov 1696, Barnstable, Barnstable, Mass.

Hannah Huckins Headstone — Lothrop Hill Cemetery ,Barnstable, Barnstable County, Mass.

HERE LYETH INTERRED
Ye BODY OF
HANNAH HUCKINS
WIFE OF
THOMAS HUCKINS
DEC’D NOVEMBER Ye 4th
IN Ye 37 YEAR OF HER
AGE 1696
 This very old gravestone displays a small winged skull in a small tympanum. It is carved in the style of William Mumford of Boston.

Hannah Huckins Headstone Details

Thomas’ second wife Sarah Pope was born 14 FEB 1657/58 Plymouth, Mass. Her parents were Thomas Pope and Sarah Jenney. After Thomas died, Sarah married 13 Nov 1676 Barnstable, Mass to Samuel Hinckley (1653-1698). Sarah died before 5 Jul 1727.

Sources:

Amos Otis, “Genealogical notes of Barnstable families,” 1888,
Roberts’s History of The Ancient and Honorable Artillery Co

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John Tilley

John TILLEY (1571 – 1620 or 1621) was one of the settlers who traveled from England to North America on the Mayflower and signed the Mayflower Compact. Tilley died shortly after arrival in New England.  John was Alex’s 12th Great Grandfather; one of 8,192 in this generation of the Shaw line.

St. Mary the Virgin Church, Henlow, Bedfordshire, England

John was christened 19 Dec 1571 in Henlow, Bedfordshire, England . He was the eldest child of Robert TILLEY and Elizabeth [__?__]. He had four sisters (Rose, Agnes, Elizabeth, and Alice) and three brothers (George, William, and Edward or Edmund).   Tilley’s paternal grandparents were William and Agnes Tylle, his great-grandparents were Thomas and Margaret Tylle, and great-great-grandparents were Henry and Johann[a]? Tilly, all of Henlow. John died 10 Apr 1621 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Mass

Church Record Book at St. Mary Church, Henlow, showing the Tilley entries

John married Joan HURST Rogers on 20 Sep 1596 in Henlow, Bedfordshire, England.  John and Joan had five children between 1597 and 1607. At least one child died young.

John Tillie was one of the signers of the Mayflower Compact, though he didnt live through the first winter in Plymouth

Joan Hurst Rogers was baptized 13 March 1568 in Henlow, Bedfordshire, England.   Her parents were William HURST and Rose MARSHE.   Joan had married first Thomas Rogers, [unrelated to the Thomas Rogers on the Mayflower] 18 June 1593 in Henlow, Bedfordshire, England.  Joan had had one daughter from her previous marriage.

Thomas and Joan’s child is:

1. Joan Rogers, baptized 26 May 1594 in Henlow, Bedfordshire, England, married Edward Hawkins 27 Jun 1620 at St. Paul’s Church, Bedford, Bedfordshire, England..

Children of John and Joan:

Name Born Married Departed
1. Rose Tilley 23 Oct 1597
Henlow, Bedfordshire, England

1602
Henlow, Bedfordshire, England
2. John Tilley 26 Aug 1599
Henlow, England
Edith [__?__]
1634 Dorchester, Mass
Oct 1636
Saybrook, CT
3. Robert Tilley 25 Nov 1604
Henlow, England
Mary Hawkins
1632
St Pauls,  Bedfordshire, England
1639
Swansea, Bristol, Mass.
4. Elizabeth TILLEY 30 Aug 1607
Henlow, England
John HOWLAND
1623, Plymouth, Plymouth Colony
21 Dec 1687
Swansea, Bristol, Mass.

In September 1620, John and Joan embarked on the Mayflower along with their teenage daughter Elizabeth and John’s brother Edward Tilley and his wife Ann or Agnes (Cooper) Tilley. Edward and Ann brought along Ann’s relatives Henry Sampson and Humility Cooper. They left behind their older children, who were married by this time. They arrived at what would become Plymouth in November. John and brother Edward were amongst the men who signed the Mayflower Compact.

Caleb Johnson found that unlike most Mayflower families, the Tilleys and Hursts had significant land, social status and inheritances. See his article in The Mayflower Quarterly, Vol 76, No. 2, June 2010.

Unfortunately, the first winter after their arrival was extremely difficult and a number of the settlers died. Amongst these were John, wife Joan, brother Edward, and sister-in-law Ann. William Bradford reported,

“…Edward Tillie, and his wife both dyed soon after their arrivall; and the girle Humility their cousen, was sent for unto Ento England, and dyed ther But the youth Henery Sampson, is still liveing, and is married, & hath .7. children. John Tilley and his wife both dyed, a litle after they came ashore…”

This left daughter Elizabeth the only surviving member of the Tilley family in America. The orphan was taken in by John Carver but he and his wife both died that spring. Elizabeth married John Howland, Carver’s former servant, in 1623/24 and left many descendants including us!

The only known contemporary references to the parentage of Elizabeth (Tilley) Howland are found in Bradford’s History. In the list of the Mayflower Passengers he mentions her three times, as follows:

“John Tillie, and his wife; and Eelizabeth their doughter…”
“John Howland maried the doughter of John Tillie, Elizabeth, and they are both now living;…”
“John Tillie, and his wife both dyed, a little after they came ashore; and their daughter Elizabeth maried with John Howland… “

Children

2. John Tilley

John’s wife Edith [__?__] was born 1603 in England. Edith died in 1647

3. Robert Tilley

Robert’s wife Mary Hawkin was born 1610 in Bedfordshire, England. Mary died in England.

Robert served as an apprentice to a tailor.

4. Elizabeth TILLEY (See John HOWLAND ‘s page)

Shallop Elizabeth Tilley

Shallop Elizabeth Tilley

The Pilgrim John Howland Society has constructed a Shallop Elizabeth Tilley named after John and Joan’s daughter .

Sources:

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mosmd/englandphotos.htm

Wikipedia – John Tilley (Pilgrim)

http://www.lynngallup.org/genfam/pafn113.htm#1876

http://www.boydhouse.com/michelle/gorham/johntilley.html

http://massandmoregenealogy.blogspot.com/2011/07/mayflower-ancestors-pt-6-john-tilley.html

 

Posted in 14th Generation, First Comer, Historical Church, Immigrant - England, Line - Shaw, Pioneer, Storied, Wikipedia Famous | Tagged , , | 9 Comments