Old Dead Relatives

The genealogy of my extended family

Who's Your Daddy?
First Name

Last Name
Capt Thomas FOLSOM

Capt Thomas FOLSOM

Male 1737 - 1794  (57 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Capt Thomas FOLSOM was born on 2 Dec 1737 (son of Benjamin FOLSOM and Rachel GILMAN); died on 9 Dec 1794.

    Family/Spouse: Elizabeth GILMAN. Elizabeth was born on 13 Sep 1739; died on 5 Aug 1819. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Benjamin FOLSOM was born in 1696 (son of Lt Peter FOLSOM and Susanna MILLS); died in 1752.

    Benjamin married Rachel GILMAN. Rachel (daughter of James GILMAN and Hannah VEREY) died about 1750. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Rachel GILMAN (daughter of James GILMAN and Hannah VEREY); died about 1750.

    Notes:

    Husband and wife are 2nd cousins.

    Children:
    1. 1. Capt Thomas FOLSOM was born on 2 Dec 1737; died on 9 Dec 1794.
    2. Rachel FOLSOM was born on 5 Jun 1741; died on 20 May 1764.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Lt Peter FOLSOM was born on 3 Apr 1649 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts (son of John FOLSOM and Mary GILMAN); died on 5 Mar 1718 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Other Events:

    • Military Event: Militia
    • Military Flag: Y
    • Baptism: 8 Apr 1649, Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts

    Notes:

    He lived on the Hampton Road east of the village of Exeter on the southwest corner where the road leaves the Hampton Road and goes to Kensington. It has generally been in the possession of the Folsom family. He was a shrewd and active businessman of affairs and acquired much property. He was known as Lieutenant Peter in the records of the town church.
    ——
    Lt Peter Folsom was given “Credit for Military Service” Oct 24, 1676, in John Hull’s ledger. (Bodge’s “Soldiers in King Phillip’s War,” p 449) He was “Ensign” in 1692, and was also Lieutenant. From Mar 5 to April 2, 1696, he was in Captain Kinsley Hall’s “first company of militia in Exeter.” (History of Exeter, p 218).
    ——
    The home of Peter Folsom was at the corner of Hampton and Kensington roads (now High Street), on the site of the present house of Charles W. Barker. It was through Lt. Peter Folsom’s field that this road to Kensington was laid out in 1704.
    The memorial to John Folsom and his wife Mary Gilman was erected on a triangular plot of land at the juncture of these roads, the land originally a part of the homestead of Lt Peter Folsom.
    http://interactive..com/10263/dvm_GenMono000085-00041-0/63?backurl=http://person..com/tree/1122756/person/-1992500777/facts/citation/5427909523/edit/record

    Peter married Susanna MILLS on 6 May 1678 in Maine. Susanna (daughter of Thomas MILLS and Mary WADLEIGH) was born in 1651 in Wells, York, Maine; died in 1717 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Susanna MILLS was born in 1651 in Wells, York, Maine (daughter of Thomas MILLS and Mary WADLEIGH); died in 1717 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    Children:
    1. Mary FOLSOM was born about 1690 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    2. Peter FOLSOM died in ?.
    3. John FOLSOM was born about 1685 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in 1757 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    4. Elizabeth FOLSOM died on 8 Apr 1756.
    5. Susanna FOLSOM was born on 27 Sep 1682 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in May 1746 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    6. 2. Benjamin FOLSOM was born in 1696; died in 1752.

  3. 6.  James GILMAN was born on 31 May 1665 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire (son of Moses GILMAN and Elizabeth HERSHEY); died about 1738 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    James married Hannah VEREY. Hannah (daughter of Thomas VEREY and Hannah GYLES) was born on 31 Mar 1652 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; died in ? in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Hannah VEREY was born on 31 Mar 1652 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts (daughter of Thomas VEREY and Hannah GYLES); died in ? in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in unknown.

    Other Events:

    • Married Name: SAWYER

    Notes:

    d/o Thomas VERY & Hannah GYLES
    m1 1664 Bartholomew FOSTER
    m2 1691 Thomas SAWYER

    Children:
    1. 3. Rachel GILMAN died about 1750.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John FOLSOM was born on 2 Dec 1613 in Hingham, Norfolk, England (son of Adam FOULSHAM and Agnes SMITH); died on 27 Dec 1681 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Other Events:

    • Also Known As: FOULSHAM, SMYTH
    • Occupation: Selectman, farmer, surveyor, sawmill owner
    • Immigrant?: Y
    • Baptism: 1615, Hingham, Norfolk, England
    • Migration: 26 Apr 1638, “Diligent”
    • Residence: 1645, Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts

    Notes:

    John and Mary are the ancestors of all the Folsoms in America, with the exception of one family, as related by Mr Abraham Folsom of Boston:
    His younger brother, James Madison Folsom, went to Savannah, GA, 1829, and died before the rebellion, had two sons, Dr. Robert W., who fell in the battle of the Wilderness, the colonel of his regiment, and James M., a young lawyer and colonel on the staff of Gov. Brown. As Col. James was passing with a Georgia regiment through Sumter, SC, a crowd of gentlemen and ladies had gathered at the depot to greet them - the ladies throwing bouquets to the officers and soldiers. Col. James caught one, and on his depature found in it a slip of paper, on which was wirtten the name “Rosa Folsom.” His curiosity being greatly excited, he wrote to know about the family, and received the following reply from the young lady’s father: “We are descended from one who espoused the cause of liberty under Cromwell, but who died during the Protectorate. At the Resotration his estates were confiscated; and soon afterwards the sons embarked for America, and landed at Albermarle Sound [this must have been, if at all, at the settlement of the second colony at that place, 1667]. Two of the brothers married in America. Shortly after they simplified their name by spelling it “Folsom”. Col. James M. is the author of the “Heroes of Georgia” and is now clerk of the court of the county of Straffod, NH.
    ——
    A Genealogy of the Folsom Family, by Jacob Chapman, Introduction by Rev. N. S. Folsom, D.D., Lawrence, Mass

    On the 26th of April, 1638, the ship "Diligent of Ipswich," England, of 350 tons burden, John Martin, master set sail from the mouth of the Thames for Massachusetts bay, having on board nineteen families and six or eight single persons, - in all, one hundred and thirty-three. Twelve of these families, numbering eighty-four souls, were from old Hingham, - the rest from the immediate vicinity; and they had all embarked for the purpose of joining a colony settled in Hingham, Mass, (1633-1637),consisting of ten families and five single person (in all, forty-nine), who had been their friends and neighbors in old Hingham. Among those now emigrating were John Foulsham of Hingham then twenty-three or twenty-four years of age, and his young wife, to whom he had been married about a year and a half. They were attended by two servants. His wife's father and mother (Edward and Mary Clark Gilman, of Hingham), three younger brothers (Edward, not quite twenty-one years old, John and Moses) two younger sisters (Sarah and Lydia who married Daniel Cushing, - 1645), and three servants of the family, were fellow-passengers. The rector of the parish, Rev. Robert peck, with his family, consisting of his wife, two children, and servants, also formed part of the company. The immediate occasion of their departure seems to have been trouble in ecclesiastical matters. Their rector, doubtless with the sympathy and aid of most of those constituting the emigrating party, had pulled down the rails of the chancel and alter, and leveled the latter a foot below the church, as it remains to this day. Being prosecuted by Bishop Wren, he left the kingdom, together with his friends, who sold their estates at half their real value, promising to remain with them always.

    The party having landed at Boston, Massachusetts, August 10, 1638, immediately proceeded to their place of destination, about fourteen miles south-east from Boston. An Adam Foulsham, probably a s/o the Adam who died in 1627, and a cousin, if not brother of John Foulsham, came from Hingham, Eng. To Hingham, Mass., in about 1639, but returned and died - 1670. Their rector remained about three years, when, hearing that the bishops were deposed, he returned to England in 1641 (the date given by Daniel Cushing), resumed his rectory, and died in 1656. Edward Gilman had with others obtained a grant of land eight miles square in a place now called Rehoboth, near the Rhode Island line, in 1641. In 1647 his name is recorded in Ipswich. Soon afterward, he went to Exeter, N.H., where his sons were already established in business. John Folsom and wife, with their children, followed her father and mother to Exeter, probably no earlier than 1650, the first authentic record of their residence in that town being in the year 1655.
    ——
    The orthography and pronunciation of the name have varied in the family itself, as well as among others writing and pronouncing it. The first Anglo-American bearing the name spelt it "Foulsham." His son, Dea. John, wrote it " Fullsom " in 1709 ; and it is signed " Foullsam " in his last will — 1715. In one instance, in the Hingham town records, it is spelt "Fulsham," but always afterward "Foulsham." In the Exeter records it is uniformly written "Folsom" from the year 1659, with one exception in 1681, when the town clerk wrote "Foulshame." In the records of the first parish, Haverhill, Mass., — 1749-64, —it is spelt "Foulsham," "Foulsam," "Folsham,” and "Fulsom." on occasion of the baptism of children of “Josiah Foulsham." Originally it was doubtless spelt "Foulshame," its etymological significance being the fowls home, or breeding-place or mart. The old syllabic division must have been Fouls-hame, the final syllable becoming shortened into "ham," with the first letter silent, pronounced like urn, as may now often be noticed in words ofthat termination. A further shortening appears in 1504, — how extensively practised is uncertain, — in a Latin inscription on a monumental stone in the floor of the church of Repps, Norfolk county, which, translated, is, "Pray for the soul of Mr. Thomas Folsham, Baccalaureate of the Chapel." (Hist, of Norfolk Co., vol. xi, p. 182.) This last mode of spelling appears on modern maps of England, designating the town ; but everywhere it is now written Folsom by those bearing the name.
    ?In regard to the pronunciation of this word, it is now generally pronounced by the family quite like wholesome. The writer has never known but one exception. And we suggest that this is a preservation of the old way of pronouncing the name : that in the first syllable, "Fouls," the diphthong "ou" was sounded as in "souls," "poultry," &c. Certain it is that this old spelling — fouls (or foules) — of our modern word "fowls" occurs in Chaucer, as in his "House of Fame," and in his "Legend of Nine Good Women," --
    ”As this foule, when hit, beheld.”
    ”I hear the foules sing.”

    Our suggestion is, moreover, fully borne out by similar phenomena of pronunciation in modern times. We hear " bowling-alley" (once written ’bouling-alley’ , and the sphere or ball, boule) pronounced in two ways, with the first syllable like "ow" in howl and in the drinking-vessel bowl. "Johnson, Elphinstone, and Perry declare for the former, — i. e., as in howl; Sheridan, Scott, Rennell, and Smith pronounce it like hole. Garrick corrected Walker for pronouncing it like 'howl.’” (Early English Pronun., vol. I. p. 152.) Even the pronunciation of the word, when written as Dea. John Folsom wrote it, "Fullsom," has authority in the old pronunciation of the word "Cowper" like that of wound, a hurt, as now heard, with the ‘ou’ as in "group," or, possibly, nearer the sound of o-oo, the sound of the ‘ow’ in "Cowper," as in howl, being "given it only by those who do not know the family.",,

    John married Mary GILMAN on 4 Oct 1636 in Hingham, Norfolk, England. Mary (daughter of Edward GILMAN and Mary CLARK) was born about 1615 in Hingham, Norfolk, England; died about 1692 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary GILMAN was born about 1615 in Hingham, Norfolk, England (daughter of Edward GILMAN and Mary CLARK); died about 1692 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Other Events:

    • Immigrant?: Y
    • Baptism: 6 Aug 1615, Hingham, Norfolk, England
    • Migration: 26 Apr 1638, “Diligent”

    Notes:

    Mary Gilman, bpt 1615 in Hingham, Norfolk, England, daughter of Edward Gilman, the immigrant. She married in Hingham in 1636 John Folsom, emigrated with him and her parents in 1638, settled initially in Hingham, then they all went to Exeter, NH; she died in 1691.

    Children:
    1. Deacon John FOLSOM was born about 1638 in prob at sea; died on 6 Dec 1715 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire; was buried in Congregational Church, Exeter, New Hampshire.
    2. Samuel FOLSOM was born about 1641 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died on 27 Feb 1701 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    3. Nathaniel FOLSOM was born about 1644 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died in 1720 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    4. Israel FOULSHAM was born in Sep 1644 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died in Sep 1644 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts.
    5. Israel FOLSOM was born about 1646 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died on 6 Apr 1677 in New Piscataway, Middlesex, New Jersey.
    6. 4. Lt Peter FOLSOM was born on 3 Apr 1649 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died on 5 Mar 1718 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    7. Mary FOLSOM was born in Apr 1651 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died about 1717 in Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts.
    8. Ephraim FOLSOM was born on 23 Feb 1654 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died on 11 Jun 1709 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

  3. 10.  Thomas MILLS was born in 1615 in Exeter, Devonshire, England; died after 17 Dec 1681 in Wells, York, Maine.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: Fisherman
    • Immigrant?: Y

    Notes:

    Thomas was a fisherman and lived in Saco and Wells. 

    Thomas married Mary WADLEIGH. Mary was born about 1630 in Bristol, Bristol, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Mary WADLEIGH was born about 1630 in Bristol, Bristol, England.

    Other Events:

    • Immigrant?: Y

    Notes:

    d/o John WADLEIGH aka WADLEY, WADLOWE (1607—bef 1672) & Mary

    Children:
    1. Sarah MILLS was born about 1642; died about 1700; was buried in unknown.
    2. 5. Susanna MILLS was born in 1651 in Wells, York, Maine; died in 1717 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

  5. 12.  Moses GILMAN was born about 1630 in Hingham, Norfolk, England (son of Edward GILMAN and Mary CLARK); died on 6 Aug 1702 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

    Other Events:

    • Immigrant?: Y
    • Baptism: 11 Mar 1630, Hingham, Norfolk, England
    • Migration: 26 Apr 1638, “Diligent”

    Moses married Elizabeth HERSHEY about 1658 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts. Elizabeth was born on 19 Apr 1636 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died on 8 Sep 1719 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 13.  Elizabeth HERSHEY was born on 19 Apr 1636 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died on 8 Sep 1719 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    Children:
    1. Deacon Thomas SKINNER was born on 25 Jul 1645 in Chichester, W Sussex, England; died on 28 Dec 1690 in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was buried in Kings Chapel Burial Ground, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts.
    2. Capt Jeremiah GILMAN was born on 31 Aug 1660 in Newmarket, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died in 1745 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    3. Caleb GILMAN was born in 1678 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died on 22 Mar 1766 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.
    4. 6. James GILMAN was born on 31 May 1665 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire; died about 1738 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

  7. 14.  Thomas VEREY was born about 1626 in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England; died on 28 Mar 1694 in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in unknown.

    Other Events:

    • Also Known As: VERY
    • Immigrant?: Y

    Notes:

    s/o Samuel VERY & Bridget

    Thomas married Hannah GYLES on 6 Jul 1650 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts. Hannah was born about 1626 in England; died on 25 Aug 1683 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 15.  Hannah GYLES was born about 1626 in England; died on 25 Aug 1683 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in unknown.

    Other Events:

    • Immigrant?: Y

    Notes:

    d/o Thomas GYLES

    Children:
    1. 7. Hannah VEREY was born on 31 Mar 1652 in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; died in ? in Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts; was buried in unknown.
    2. Sarah CARLTON was born on 29 Jul 1774 in Andover, Essex County, Massachusetts; died on 26 Nov 1843 in Andover, Essex County, Massachusetts.
    3. John CARLTON was born on 30 Mar 1778 in Andover, Essex County, Massachusetts; died on 21 Jul 1845 in Andover, Essex County, Massachusetts; was buried in 1845 in North Parish Cemetery, N Andover, Massachusetts.


Notes

This website uses dates from the Gregorian calendar (New Style), unless otherwise noted.

For more information on dates, see Wikipedia: Old Style and New Style dates.

I strive to document my sources. However, some people and dates are best guesses and will be updated as new information is revealed. If you have something to add, please let me know.

Updated 23 Dec 2023