Old Dead Relatives

The genealogy of my extended family

Who's Your Daddy?
First Name

Last Name

Notes


Matches 3,851 to 3,950 of 6,350

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3851 m1 Miriam HOWLETT
m2 Elizabeth GUILD 
STANLEY, Jacob (I8876)
 
3852 m1 Nathan EATON, s/o Benjamin EATON & Maria WEED, by whom she had 7 children EATON, Martha Ann (I44595)
 
3853 m1 Nathan LORD
m2 Abraham CONLEY 
MNU, Anne (I4126)
 
3854 m1 Nathaniel VEREN a rich merchant formerly of Salem.
In 1684, Mrs. Putnam in the apportionment of seats in the meeting house at the Village was seated in the first, or principal pew reserved for women. 
INGERSOLL, Mary (I6376)
 
3855 m1 Owen HUGHES 1765
m2 Joseph MILLARD 1778 
WYNN, Hannah (I3589)
 
3856 m1 Patty _____ (d 28 Nov 1792)
Had children:
Samuel (Mar 1789—?)
John (Apr 1792—?)
——
Military service 10 Apr 1818 
COUSINS, Samuel (I4874)
 
3857 m1 Phoebe GROUT
m2 1743 Sarah BUCK 
WINN, Jacob (I34613)
 
3858 m1 Ralph Greystoke 25 Nov 1317 DE AUDLEY, Alice (I9778)
 
3859 m1 Rhoda CHANDLER, on 17 Nov 1803
They had 7 children, surname STANDISH:
Morgan Lewis, Louisa M, Jane Juliet, Samuel Perry, Lucille Elvira, Rhoda Amelia, and John Dana
m2 Elvira ALLEN, on July 29, 1835 
STANDISH, Samuel (I45891)
 
3860 m1 Richard FOSTER (?—1658, Plymouth MA) on 10 Sep 1651 Plymouth MA
Children, born in Plymouth:
1 Mary (8 Mar 1652–?)
2 Benjamin (abt 1655—?)

m2 Jonathan MOREY on 8 Jul 1659 Plymouth MA
Children:
1 Jonathan (abt 1661—bef 26 Apr 1733), m. Hannah BOURNE.
2 John (abt 1666—?)
3 Hannah (abt 1673—aft 12 May 1720), m. John BUMPUS 
BARTLETT, Mary (I43502)
 
3861 m1 Robert Soper CARLISLE, Ida Grace (I2460)
 
3862 m1 Ruth HOOPER 1682 Salem Village
m2 Abigail BRIGGS 1689 Salem MA.
It’s possible he had an unknown first wife who was the mother of a Mary Walcott who was born c.1678 and married David HARWOOD 1701 Salem MA.
——
Abraham Walcott witnessed a deed by Jane and Thomas Parker at Boston 1658, but another account says he was age 37 when he married in 1682 making him b. 1645, probably too young to have been a witness in 1658.
Abraham Walcott was witness to a deed of land in Maine granted to Walter Phillips by Indians, recorded at Sheepscott ME 1663.
In 1670 Abraham Walcott, husbandman, purchased from Joseph Foster of Salem for 25L 8 acres of land with an incomplete frame house, and is recorded at Salem Village 1678.
In 1681 Abraham Walcott was taxed at Salem for the church rate, and enrolled as a freeman of Salem Village 1690.
In 1696 Abraham Walcott, yeoman, and wife signed a mortgage on a house and 32 acres next to John Wolcott, with John Wolcott as a witness; Abrahan was living at Salem Village during the 1692-3 witchcraft trials but did not participate in them; 
WALCOTT, Abraham (I31711)
 
3863 m1 Ruth RUDDOCK
m2 1778 Mehitable Stacey PEDRICK
——
Dr. Elisha Story was supportive of the Patriot cause and joined in throwing tea into the harbor on December 6, 1773. He became the company surgeon with Colonel Little's regiment and march with them to Lexington on April 10, 1775. He fought beside his friend, Joseph Warren (who was also a physician) at the Battle of Bunker Hill. He assisted in removing a wounded friend to a place close by called "Winter Hill" during the fighting, where he remained for the night to take care of the wounded and dying. It is said that late in the year of 1777, he served in the New Jersey campaign with General George Washington. He resigned from the army that year because of the mismanagement of the medical division. 
STORY, Dr Elisha (I47495)
 
3864 m1 Ruth SWAN
m2 Joanna THORN STEVENS
m3 Mary LEIGHTON

He Served in King Phillip's War; Capt Sills company, 1675 AND 1676. He was one of the last surviving veterans of King Phillips War. He also survived a French and Indian raid on Haverhill, Massachusetts, in 1708, in which his third wife, his son, and three grandsons were killed. He became a lieutenant in the militia and was active in the Indian Wars, serving under Capt. Sill, from 1675-76. He served in Queen Anne's War in the Massachusetts Militia.

John Hartshorn was a weaver from Haverhill, MA, a town about ten miles up on the Merrimack River. Boston's slate gravestones did not make it in to Haverhill. This left the town and its neighbor, the town of Bradford across the river without gravestones. Circa 1700 Mr. Hartshorn, at age fifty, decided to take on a second career. He started carving gravestones. He developed his own image, a mask-like face. Emanating out from the face were lines of many configurations. Later on he added large circles with geometric designs inside. What he created is called the Merrimac Valley Style. Hartshorn borrowed ideas from designs he found on Boston's gravestones. Those ideas he reworked into his own creations. He obviously had the ability to carve skull and wing designs but did not. Through various circumstances he moved a couple of times and ended up living in Connecticut where he continued to carve gravestones into his eighties. Many of his garvestones can be seen in MA. & CT. to this day. 
HARTSHORN, John (I35049)
 
3865 m1 Ruth WATERS
m2 1848 Sophia MAJORS 
CARLTON, Moses (I37564)
 
3866 m1 same day as sister Sarah
m2 William BASSETT 
TILDEN, Mary (I5217)
 
3867 m1 Samuel SMEDLEY
m2 1676 Samuel PERRY 
WHEELER, Hannah (I47459)
 
3868 m1 Samuel WRIGHT Jr, on Nov 24,1653 at Springfield,MA. (Samuel also fathered a natural child by Elizabeth's sister Mary.)

m2 Nathaniel Dickinson Jr. on Sep 26,1684 at Northampton,MA. She was his third wife.

Children (by first marriage):
Samuel Wright III,
Joseph Wright, 
Benjamin Wright,
Ebenezer Wright,
Elizabeth Wright Stebbins Hannum,
Eleazer Wright,
Hannah Wright Billings,
Benoni Wright.
——-
Last name is uncertain. 
BURT, Elizabeth (I42553)
 
3869 m1 Sarah
m2 Abigail wd/o Nicholas FOLLETT.
All children were by first wife. 
NASON, Richard (I4842)
 
3870 m1 Sarah Ann AVERY (1832—?1851) CARTER, Lewis (I24119)
 
3871 m1 Sarah DECKER (1674-?), d/o John DECKER & Sarah BENNETT
Children: Havevil, Anthony, Eleanore, Sarah.
m2 Leah NUTE FURBER (widow) (1680-1748)
Children: Abigail, Elizabeth (died young), Olive, John, Elizabeth, Joshua 
NUTTER, Hatevil (I4881)
 
3872 m1 Sarah _____ by 1643
m2 Elizabeth STREAM by 1645
m3 Mary (Jacob) OTIS, did of John OTIS 
HOLBROOK, Capt John (I5416)
 
3873 m1 Shuah HEARD (15 Jan 1694), d/o Capt. John HEARD and Phebe LITTLEFIELD
Phebe (LITTLEFIELD) HEARD, Maj. Charles FROST and Dennis DOWNING were killed by Indians at Ambush Rock, in that part of Kittery, now Eliot, on Sunday, 4th July, 1697, while returning on horseback from the meeting house in the Parish of Unity, in the Precinct of Berwick, where they had attended divine service. A bronze tablet marks this spot. The body of Phebe LITTLEFIELD HEARD was buried in the old burying ground upon the farm in Eliot, belonging to the heirs of Sylvester BARTLETT. A bronze tablet also marks this spot.
——
CAPT. NATHAN BARTLET, b. in Newbury, 23d December, 1691; d. 1775; moved to that part of Kittery, now Eliot, in 1713. Captain Bartlet was a ganner and did a prosperous business.
He purchased in 1725 60 acres of land at Sturgeon Creek of John WITTUM for £250. The following year he bought 20 acres of land of Peter WITTUM, paying therefor £100.
An old deed from John HEARD to his son-in-law, Capt. Nathan BARTLET, in 1725, gives him a tract of land at Third Hill with one- half part of Stoney Brook and one-third part of a saw-mill built by James EMERY and Maj. Charles FROST adding this note "that it is to be understood that the above given and granted premises are not to be reckoned as any part of my daughter, Shuah's, portion." This land and other land which he purchased became the homestead place of his descendants.
Captain BARTLET built (about 1718) a brick house near John HEARD'S home, the present site of the Bartlett homestead, making the bricks on his land bordering on Sturgeon Creek. This brick house was partially destroyed by an earthquake about 1737, and Captain BARTLET built about 1740 the oak timbered two and a half story Colonial house, now standing, in which five generations of the Bartlett family have been born and reared. 
BARTLET, Capt Nathan (I47231)
 
3874 m1 Sir William HATTON
m2 Sir Edward COKE
was wooed by Sir Francis Bacon
——
Elizabeth was 26 years younger than her second husband and had a disposition that was hot-tempered and articulate. They were said to be not compatible but at least well-matched. By 1604, Elizabeth's marriage to Sir Edward Coke deteriorated and she was said to have become a formidable character and thorn at her husband's side. They quarreled over their respective rights to the Hatton estate which Elizabeth had inherited from her first husband: the dispute became so bitter that the King intervened personally to mediate. 
Elizabeth and her husband were never reconciled: at his funeral she remarked "We shall never see his like again, thanks be to God".
——
Elizabeth was left a wealthy widow, her property including the Isle of Purceck (with Corfe Castle) and Hatton House, Holborn… She was courted by Francis Bason and Edward Coke. The Cecil family preferred Coke, the Attorney-General, and Elizabeth married him in November 1598. She refused, however, to use his name or to live with him after the birth of their daughters, Elizabeth and Frances…. She continued to quarrel with Coke over his misappropriations of her property and his refusal to maintain her until 1616 when he fell into disgrace and was dismissed from his post as Chief Justice. Elizabeth then stood by her husband, even going to live with him at Stoke Poges, but in the following year a dispute over their daughter Frances’s marriage led to their las and bitterest quarrel. Coke wish her to marry Buckingham’s elder brother; Elizabeth went to great lengths to prevent this, stealing Frances away and forging a proposal to her from the Earl of Oxford. Frances was kidnapped back by her father. At first Elizabeth received help from Bacon, but he changed sides on hearing that James I favored the marriage; Elizabeth was placed under house arrest, and Frances whipped into submission. After the marriage (November 1617), Elizabeth submitted to the King and was released, but she was never reconciled to her husband. She continued to live at Hatton House until Coke’s death, giving parties to which Coke was not admitted. When in 1623 Frances left her (now insane) husband for a lover, Elizabeth was involved in her daughter’s disgrace. She supported the Parliamentarian cause in the Civl War, and survived her daughter Frances by some six months.
Who's Who in Shakespeare's England: Over 700 Concise Biographies of Shakespeare's Contemporaries, Alan Palmer, Veronica Palmer, Palgrave Macmillan, 1999; p110 
CECIL, Elizabeth (I10102)
 
3875 m1 Stephen SAFFORD b: 18 Feb 1738 in Newbury, MA on 30 Aug 1762 in Biddeford, York, ME CLAY, Sarah (I4403)
 
3876 m1 Susanna HAVEN on 12 Jan 1715 GLEASON, Thomas (I40813)
 
3877 m1 Sybilla Anna Sheerman on 19 Sep 1715.
Known children: Elizabeth (19 Sep 1715 —?), Johann Heinrich (8 Sep 1719—?), and Anna Barbara (Mar 1722—?)
m2 Cornelia Keyser on 6 Sep 1728 in Kingston, NY.
Known children: Zamuel (5 Oct 1729—?), Andries (30 Apr 1732—?), Frederick (25 Mar 1733—?) 
GUNTERMAN, Andreas Frantz “Andrew” (I31378)
 
3878 m1 TAYLOR POTTLE, Emma Elizabeth (I45419)
 
3879 m1 Thomas DUSTIN of Dover and Kittery
m2 Matthias BUTTON 
WHEELER, Elizabeth (I34486)
 
3880 m1 Thomas WEST
m2 William RANDOLPH 
LANE, Dorothy (I31637)
 
3881 m1 Tristram HULL
children:
1 Mary Hull (b 1645)
2 Sarah Hull (1647—1647)
3 Sarah Hull (b 1650)
4 Joseph Hull (b 1652), m Experience Harper, lived Kingston, Rhode Island
5 John Hull (1654—1733), Sea captain, m Alice Teddeman 1684
6 Hannah Hull (1656—1732), m Joseph Bliss 1674
m2 William HEDGE
——
Blanche was still alive when Hedge died between June 30 1670 (date of will) and July 5, 1670 (ordered by court to bring will and inventory.) The following was recorded in his will, "...whereas Blanch, my wife, hath dealt falsely with me in the covenant of marriage in departing from me, therefore I do in this my last will ... give her 12d. and also what I have received of hers my will is shall be returned to her again."
——
The law put the onus on a woman to cry out for help if she was being propositioned against her will. In March 1656 John Gorum was fined forty shillings "for unseemly carriage toward Blanche Hull at an unseasonable time, being in the night." Blanche was fined fifty shillings "for not crying out when she was assaulted by John Gorum in unseemly carriage towards her." Both Gorum and Blanche were married at this time, Gorum to Desire Howland, eldest daughter of John Howland and his wife, Elizabeth Tilley Howland, and Blanche to Tristram Hull. The court evidently considered Blanche to have been a willing participant rather than a victim. 
MNU, Blanche (I47515)
 
3882 m1 William ABDY
m2 Charles Augustus CAVENISH-BENTINCK

On 3 July 1806 she married Sir William Abdy of Felix Hall, Essex [3] at Camelford House in the Parish of St George, Hanover Square. [4] William and Anne had no children and on 4 September 1815 Anne created more scandal, eloping with her lover, William's friend, Lord Charles Bentinck. Regretting it next day she sought to return to her husband. A great deal of vacillating followed until Anne's exasperated father washed his hands of all three of them. William took the matter to the courts and was awarded £7000 damages plus costs against Lord Charles. A bill for divorce was entered into the House of Lords on 3 May 1816 and received the Royal assent on 25 June. [5] The customary provision that the guilty parties should not be allowed to marry having been struck out, Anne and Lord Charles were married on 23 July at St Martin in the Fields. [6] 
WELLESLEY, Anne (I46947)
 
3883 m1 William FARROW
Child: Patience Farrow Bates.
m2 Thomas JAMES
Children: Thomas James Jr, Elizabeth James Stetson, Philip James, Jane James Lane, John James, Sarah James, Margaret James Drew, and Content James Harden. 
TOWER, Patience (I12334)
 
3884 m1 William HILLS
m2 Maurice BAKER 
MNU, Elizabeth (I42850)
 
3885 m1 William LUDDINGTON of Gunby, Lincolnshire, England UMFRAVILLE, Margaret (I15490)
 
3886 m1 William PARTRIDGE
m2 1655 Anthony STANYAN 
SPICER, Ann (I33847)
 
3887 m1 William Rodick
m2 David Wheeler 
STOVER, Mary Ann (I44859)
 
3888 m1 WOODBURY KOXE, Elizabeth (I45372)
 
3889 m1 ___ADAMS

The “Anne” and the “Little James” left England together, and arrived a week or so apart in Plymouth. Most of the passengers were probably on the “Anne”, as the “Little James” was smaller and carried mostly cargo.
http://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Ellen_Newton_%283%29 
NEWTON, Elinor “Ellen” (I13000)
 
3890 m1 ____ BISHOP HUMPHREY, Joane (I38827)
 
3891 m1 ____ BLOTT, d/o Robert BLOTT, died soon after
m2 Judith SMITH, at Boston 3 Jul 1656
——
Richard Tozier of Dover, NH lived, first at Boston.
He was mortally wounded, 16 Oct. 1675 at the Indian assalt at Salmon Falls and died soon at Kittery.
——
Coleman. "N. E. Captives Carried to Canada" In 1675, Richard Tozier's house was attacked by the Indians for the second time and he was murdered. Lieutenant Plaisted with twenty soldiers went out to bring in the body of his friend and the ambushed Indians waiting for that "last office of love" fired on them, killing the lieutenant and one son and mortally wounding another.
——
David B. Tozier "Some Records of the Tozier Family in New England". The first attack on Richard Tozier's house was made 25 Sept. 1675 when he was absent in the command of Capt. Wincoll. Two Indians attacked the house that was occupied by fifteen women and children. A girl of eighteen years, perhaps a daughter of Richard, closed and held the door while the others escaped through a rear door. The Indians chopped through the door, struck the girl on her head and body with their hatchets and, leaving her for dead, they pursued the others who escaped to the next house except for a three year old girl whom they murdered and a seven year old who was carried off to captivity. That girl was returned safe after several months and the one who was wounded made a complete recovery.
——
Richard was taxed at Cocheco, Dover in 1659 and the same year received a grant at Newechewannick, now Berwick, ME, then a part of Kittery. 
TOZIER, Richard (I4137)
 
3892 m1 ____ BROWN
m2 ____ CLIFFORD
m3 Joseph ISACKE 
MNU, Margaret (I46255)
 
3893 m1 ____ KRUSLOCK BLANTON, Shirley Frances (I33974)
 
3894 m1 _____ SMITH
m2 Mary GAINES 
CATLETT, Col John (I16006)
 
3895 m1 —?—
m2 by 1635 Agnes ____
——
On 17 February 1635, Rev. Hull was expelled from the Church of England. 
Rev. Joseph Hull, who settled first in Weymouth in 1635, but having run up again the antagonism of the Boston Puritanical Party, removed with his followers in 1639 first to Plymouth Colony (Barnstable), then to Maine (York).
——
REF GDMNH. He arrived at Boston Massachusetts 5 May 1635 with his wife and 7 children, and 3 servants. His wife Agnes was 25 when they arrived, so at least some of the children were by a previous marriage. The first child which is certainly a child of Agnes is Hopewell.
b. 25 Apr 1596, Crewkerne, Somersetshire, Eng.
r. 1635, Wessaguscus, Massachusetts
r. 1636, Hingham, Massachusetts
r. 1639, Barnstable, Massachusetts
r. 1641, Yarmouth, Massachusetts
r. 1643, York, Maine
r. 1652, Launceston, Cornwall, Eng.
r. 1662, Oyster River, New Hampshire
d. 19 Nov 1665
——
He is the well documented 1614 graduate of St Mary's Hall, Oxford. Following graduation he was ordained a clergyman in Northleigh, Exeter, England. He soon fell out with the authority and he resigned. In 1635, he along with 105 others sailed for New England and formed what is known as Hull's colony.
The Hull Colony consisting of Rev. Hull and 21 families settled at Wessaguscus, Massachussets Bay Colony which was later rechristened Waymouth, a full-fledged town. Rev. Hull was a magistrate and member of the General Court of Massachussets Bay Colony. He was, however, at odds with the Puritans and found he had to move. He moved to the old colony of Plymouth and established the town of Barnstable. The rock still stands in the middle of the highway from which he preached. He soon found he was again at odds with the local Puritans and moved back to England where he was Rector at St. Burien in Cornwall near Land's End. His children had remained in the colonies and married. He later returned to his old parish in York, Maine where he died. 
HULL, Rev Joseph (I3897)
 
3896 m1 —?— abt 1626
m2 Elizabeth abt 1638
——
All 13 children of William Ward are recorded in the Vital Records of Newton, Massachusetts. This includes children who were clearly born in England and recorded after the fact. All of these entries are marked as coming from the ‘Town copy with additions;’ however, exactly when they were recorded and by whom is not clear and the dates are not matched to any known English records. The Vital Records of Newton state that his first six children were all born in England, though if the dates are correct it seems more likely the last, Hannah, was born in Massachusetts. His will, by referring "daughters by his first wife, implies that at least the first 5 children were by his unknown first wife. There is no way to know the correct mother for the sixth child, Hannah. The children of William Ward and his second wife Elizabeth were actually born in Sudbury, Massachusetts and are also recorded there. A couple of errors brings some doubt as to the accuracy of the dates of the children born to William Ward by his first wife. Hannah is listed born in England in 1639, at a time when William Ward was already in New England. William Ward, son of William Ward is recorded in Sudbury records as born on 22 January 1640, but the Newbury records give his birthdate as 22 February 1648. 
WARD, William (I46382)
 
3897 m1 —?—, England

From: Maine Pioneers, 1623-60
"Captain Richard Walderne; Waldron Dover, signed the Combination in 1640;had lawsuit in 1641; recorded proprietor in 1642; selectman. 1647 and1665. Joined with William Waldron in a bond June 12, 1645. Removed to Boston; his servant Elizabeth Tilston d. Sept. 2, 1658. With wife Ann he sold land at Dover April 13, 1660. Was appointed to join persons in marriage in 1662. Returned to Dover. He deposed in June, 1664, ae. about 48 years. Signed petition to Gen. Court Oct. 10, 1665.
Ch.: Elnathan, b. in Boston 6 July, d. 10 Dec. 1659; Esther, b. Dec. 1, 1660; Mary, b. Sept. 14, 1663; Eliazer, b. at Dover 1 May, 1665; Elizabeth, b. 18 Oct. 1666; Marah, b. 17 July, 1668. [Dov. Hist. Col.] His wife Anne d. 7 Feb.1684-5. He was killed by the Indians 28 June, 1689. "

"On 21 Feb 1676 Maj Richard Waldrene and Nicholas Shapleigh, were appointed a committee to "treat with the Eastern Indians for Peace."
——
Maj Waldron’s death
The Indians rushed into Major Walderne's garrison. He attempted to defend himself with a sword but was quickly overpowered and tied to a chair. The furious Penacooks each slashed the 74 year old man across the chest with his own sword, crying out " I cross out my account!" They hacked off his nose and ears then thrust them into his mouth. Finally, they forced him to fall upon his sword. Even in death, the Indians were not done with vengeance: they cut off the hand that had cheated them by holding down down the scales during trading. The final act of revenge was to burn the house to the ground, and murder or take captive the rest of Walderne's family. 
WALDRON, Maj Richard (I33280)
 
3898 m1 —?—; came to NE with husband and child. Their house was burnt.
m2 1656 Elizabeth COOLIDGE 
CRACKBONE, Gilbert (I15899)
 
3899 m1 —?—; mother of his children
m2 Martha BOURNE, w/o John BRADFORD
m3 Mary FOOTE, w/o John STODDARD & John GOODRICH, d/o Nathaniel FOOTE & Elizabeth DEMING
——
In 1645, he and Thom. Leffingwell, released Uncas, the sachem of the Mohegans when he was besieged. Uncas afterwards gave 400 acres of land to both. Thomas Tracy was lieutenant of the New London County Dragoons, enlisted to fight the Dutch and the Indians.
In King Philip's war in 1675, he and John Bradford were appointed Commissary and Quartermaster. He owned much real estate, more than 5000 acres. 
TRACY, Lt Thomas (I20162)
 
3900 m1. 1 May 1816 Samuel Cousins
d/o Samuel Gray (1750-1843) & Mercy Watson (1752-1828) 
GRAY, Susanna E. (I34968)
 
3901 m1. Henry Elkins
m2. Abraham Lee, June 21, 1686
m3. Richard Jose
m4. ___ ____ 
WALDRON, Esther (I33711)
 
3902 m1. John Gull (?— abt 1629) on 10 May 1620
Children from m2 born in England:
John
Nathaniel
Joseph
Thomas
Anna/Hannah
——
After the death of her father and stepmother in 1616, she went to live with her uncle and aunt William and Philip (Banks) Morris in Billingborough, Lincs. She was mentioned as living with William Morris in the will of her cousin Edmund Harrison of Billingborough in 1617.
They emigrated to New England about 1637 and settled in Wethersfield, Conn. and Hadley, Mass. 
BINCKS, Anne (I36185)
 
3903 m1. John Trundy
m2. Alexander Alley  
CARTER, Judith (I6608)
 
3904 m1 Alianor CAMOYS — m bef 1426 in England
m2 Mary WEST — m bef 1468 in England
m3 Catherine CHIDLOCKE — m May 1477 in England

• Knight of the Shire for Sussex
• Sheriff of Surrey and Sussex, 1439-40, 1467-8
• Keeper of the temporalities of the Archbishopric of Canterbury 
LEWKNOR, Sir Roger (I15746)
 
3905 m1 Elizabeth LYON 18 May 1575. She divorced him for adultery on 21 May 1585. GRAY, Patrick (I47003)
 
3906 m1 John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk, son of William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk and Alice Chaucer, between 28 Jan 1450 - 7 Feb 1450. Annulled before 24 March 1453
m2 Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond, son of Sir Owen Tudor and Catherine de France, 1 Nov 1455 Bletsoe Castle, Bedfordshire.
m3 Henry Stafford, son of Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham and Lady Anne Neville, circa 1462.
m4 Thomas Stanley, 1st Earl of Derby, son of Thomas Stanley, 1st Baron Stanley, and Jean Goushill, before Oct 1473 as his second wife. 
BEAUFORT, Countess Margaret (I10655)
 
3907 m1 Philippe DALLINGRIDGE — m 24 Oct 1417 in England
m2 Elizabeth ECHINGHAM — m aft 1421 in England 
LEWKNOR, Sir Thomas (I15748)
 
3908 m2 24 Apr 1779 Samuel DALAND

Children b Salem:
1 John Symonds,
2 Samuel Symonds,
3 William Symonds,
4 Joseph Symonds,
5 Jonathon Symonds,
6 Benjamin Symonds,
7 James Symonds,
8 Ebenezer Symonds. 
HERBERT, Susannah “Anna” (I4589)
 
3909 m2 1 jan 1702 Mary BONFIELD, wd/o Peter FICKETT (Figgett)
Children bp Marblehead:
Elizabeth bp 15 Dec 1689
Benjamin bp 24 Apr 1692, m Dorcas
Pentecost bp 26 Jan 1694, m Rebecca, had son George bp 27 Sep 1719
Miriam bp 22 Mar 1696
John bp 28 Nov 1697
Mary bp 25 Dec 1698
Sarah bp 31 Mar 1700
Children bp Wrentham:
Hepsibah bp 10 Jan 1703
John bp 29 April 1705 
BLACKINTON, Pentecost (I5215)
 
3910 m2 13 Sep 1715 Elizabeth FELT PLUMMER, Benjamin (I39033)
 
3911 m2 14 Nov 1709 Duxbury, Plymouth MA DESIRE ARNOLD, died before 11 Dec 1715, daughter of SETH ARNOLD and ELIZABETH GRAY. BARTLETT, Ichabod (I43511)
 
3912 m2 14 Nov 1716 Thomas AYERS of Haverhill HARTSHORN, Ruth (I35044)
 
3913 m2 15 Jul 1658 Plymouth MA Mary FAUNCE
m3 25 Jan 1665 Plymouth MA Mary SHELLY 
HARLOW, William (I43666)
 
3914 m2 1648 Richard BOWEN KEY, Elizabeth (I15636)
 
3915 m2 1655 Bridget LOKER, wd/o Robert DAVIS, d/o Henry LOKER & Elizabeth ____

Thomas King emigrated to the United States in either 1638 or 1639. He settled in Sudbury, MA. In 1642 the town ordered that Thomas King would have the power to view the river and agreed with the workmen to build a cart bridge over it.

In 1650 Thomas owned Lot 50 in the southwest quadrant of a two mile grant. In 1656 he petitioned the court for an 8 square mile tract of land, 8 miles from Sudbury. This became the town of Marlborough.

Thomas King was very active in civic affairs. He was elected one of the first selectman on 25 February 1656. He held that office until 1665. He was elected town constable in 1661 and 1662. Along with four other officers, he was responsible for laying out the highways in town.

Thomas received a 39.5 acre lot in town on 26 November 1660. In an inventory dated 6 April 1665, he also held 19.75 acres in the second division of upland 16 acres and 2 rods of second division meadows and 19.75 rods of first division cedar swamp. He received a further 5.25 acres on 27 July 1665. 
KING, Thomas (I7557)
 
3916 m2 1669 Elizabeth RUGGLES
——
Great Migration Directory: Rogers, John: Chelmsford, Essex; 1636; Watertown, Dedham, Chelmsford [MBCR 1:373; WaBOP 29, 120; DeTR 1:20, 58; BChR 33; Lechford 186; Aspinwall 14; Fiske Notebook 95, 99-101, 120; Waters 216-17; SPR Case #1568; Rodgers 3:40-43; NEHGR 33:443, 56:379; TEG 21:169-70]. 
ROGERS, John (I43972)
 
3917 m2 17 Oct 1714, Thomas MILES of Prince George’s County GRIFFITH, Elizabeth (I45588)
 
3918 m2 1713 Mary BROOKS NORCROSS STEARNS, John (I6619)
 
3919 m2 1716 Stephen DOW
Children:
John Hutchins b: 5 MAY 1671 in Haverhill, Essex, MA
Johannah Hutchins b: 27 SEP 1673 in Haverhill, Essex, MA
Frances Hutchins b: 7 JUN 1676 in Haverhill, Essex, MA
Mary Hutchins b: 9 MAR 1678/79 in Haverhill, Essex, MA
Andrew Hutchins b: 22 MAY 1681 in Haverhill, Essex, MA
Samuel Hutchins b: 20 AUG 1682 in Haverhill, Essex, MA
Joseph Hutchins b: 29 MAY 1689 in Haverhill, Essex, MA 
CORLISS, Johana (I4858)
 
3920 m2 1717 Mary CLOUGH ALLEN, Dorothy (I46763)
 
3921 m2 1726 Hannah ROSS (1679—1754)

General information from https://archive.org/details/haverhillemerson01pope/page/22/mode/2up 
EMERSON, Robert (I47108)
 
3922 m2 1733 Abigail GILES TRASK, Josiah (I6254)
 
3923 m2 1739 Dorcas Priscilla BARTLETT BATCHELLER, Mark (I47061)
 
3924 m2 1751 Ann BRYAN, w/o John SHARP NICHOLS, John (I43691)
 
3925 m2 1810 Rebecca BURTON (1784—1874) HOPKINSON, Stephen (I4400)
 
3926 m2 1813 Weare DRAKE
m3 30 Jun 1821 Carr LEAVITT 
NELSON, Anna (I42)
 
3927 m2 1871 Albert COOPER (1832—1887)
Children:
Lizzie (1860—1886)
Carrie B HERSHEY (1864—1911) 
LUTZ, Mary Adella (I15825)
 
3928 m2 1893 George W. PUTNAM BREWER, Sarah Almeda (I15923)
 
3929 m2 1895 John HODGE (1829—1903) BURROUGHS, Nellie R. (I35316)
 
3930 m2 1907 Carrie H. RICHARDS, w/d of ____ JONES, d/o John M. RICHARDS & Katherine M. RICE HUNTLEY, Leroy Sunderland (I4394)
 
3931 m2 1949 Herbert Francis BACON (1900—1963) ANDERSEN, Marie Christine (I44343)
 
3932 m2 2 Jun 1666 Ann EWER WING, Daniel (I39286)
 
3933 m2 23 Nov 1663 Sarah Averill -  Sarah Averill Wildes was condemned for witchcraft and was executed by hanging in Salem, Massachusetts, on July 19, 1692.
m3 26 Jun 1693 Mary, w/o George JACOBS who was hanged as a with at Salem on 19 August 1692.
——
John and his brother William emigrated from England on the Elizabeth and settled in Rowley, MA before moving to Ipswich. John gave his age as seventeen when he registered with the authorities of the port of London for the voyage to New England on 11 Apr. 1635. Also on the Elizabeth was William Whitredd, his wife, son, and three other young men. Whitredd was a carpenter as were the Wildes brothers. Perhaps John was Whitredd's apprentice. Also on board the Elizabeth was Alice Wild, age 40, whose relationship to John and William is not known. Perhaps John’s mother and William’s step-mother? In 1646 William Whitred sued Michael Cartrick and the verdict was that the plaintiff should pay John Wild 30/, the defendant 30/, and that John Wild was to pay the other 20/ to himself.
—— 
WILDES, John (I35013)
 
3934 m2 26 Aug 1776 Hannah PEMBER (16 Mar 1750—?), d/o John PEMBER & Irene WOOD HYDE, Capt Matthew (I45746)
 
3935 m2 Abigail Garfiled (b 1646), Dec 22 1686 in Sudbury, MA GLEASON, Joseph (I36529)
 
3936 m2 Abigail Winn of Portsmouth, NE, 20 Aug 1741.
——
Capt Peter STAPLE of Artillery commanded the 1st company, First Massachusetts Regiment under Lt. General and Commander in Chief  William PEPPERRELL during the French-Indian Wars and the surrender of Louisburg, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia in 1745, after this victory Lt General William Pepperrell was knighted. Capt Peter’s surname was STAPLE, however military records refer to him as STAPLES, PCC Administration refers to him as Lieutenant. Sir William’s niece Sarah was the mother of Margery FROST.
——
Louisburg, a French fortress and naval station on Cape Breton Island, threatened British dominance in the North Atlantic. New Englanders especially resented attacks by pirates and privateers on their commerce and fishing. Knowing that France had neglected the settlement, Massachusetts governor William Shirley organized regional support for an attack on the fortress in the spring of 1745. Colonists, joined by British naval ships, captured the settlement on 15 June 1745. The colonists held Louisburg despite ill-fated attempts at recapture and were embittered when, by the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle of 1748, England sacrificed Louisburg for Madras, although England's financial reimbursement to Massachusetts energized its flagging economy.
Peter Staples, Capt Lt of the 1st Artillery Co, 1st MA Regt, 5 Feb 1744. This company was subsequently commanded by Richard Mumford, commissioned 3 Jun 1745.
List of men in Capt Peter Staple’s Company: Thomas Hardy (1st Lt), John Burbank (2nd Lt), George Knight, Parker Gowel, Hugh McLellan, John Furbish, Josiah Clark, John Lydstone, Edward Hammond, Peter Withum, Daniel Lydstone, Benjamin Leach, Andrew Green, Daniel Wilson, Joshua Brooks, James Abbot, Ichabod Corsen, Uriah Hanscom, Zimri Hanscom, Simeon Dam, George Marriner, Thomas Allen, Bartholomew Withum, John Thompson, John Ayers, Jonathan Thompson. 
STAPLES, Capt Peter (I3031)
 
3937 m2 Abigail WRIGHT, w. of Robert SHARPE & Thomas CLAPP
——
He resided in Weymouth till about 1663, when he removed to Mendon. The Indians drove him back in 1676 and thereafter he settled in Scituate by 1676. Freeman 1647. Selectman, Deacon, and Captain in militia at Mendon.
——
WILLIAM HOLBROOK, bp. St Johns, Glastonbury, Somersetshire, 12 June 1 620 [Joseph Neal Anc 131]; m. (1) by 1655 Elizabeth Pitts (on 1 August 165 5, "administration to the estate of Mrs. Elizabeth Pitts deceased is granted to W[illia]m Holbrooke & Elizabeth his wife," who presented an account of what "my mother Mrs. Pitts oweth to me & to others in her sickness & health" [SPR 3:26]); m. (2) about 1696 Abigail (Wright) (Sharp) Clapp, daughter of RICHARD WRIGHT and widow of ROBERT SHARPE and THOMAS CLAPP [TAG 67:38; GMB 3:2072-74] . 
HOLBROOK, Capt William (I6163)
 
3938 m2 abt 1793 Susannah KNIGHT (1770—1858) NOYES, Josiah (I24578)
 
3939 m2 Allen BROWN

After the death of Jonathan, she was granted administration of his estate, and the children were sent to live with guardians. Ruth died before the estate was finally settled on 2 Jan 1743. The settlement gave everything to Jemima, wife of John White, under the condition she give annuities to her brother Jonathan (if living) and her sisters Mary and Ruth. It referred to Jemima as the eldest daughter, which was actually Kezia, who had married Jethro Wood on 28 Jun 1738 in Stoughton, and not mentioned in the settlement. Shortly after the January settlement, John White (called of Concord) and Jemima sold the Watertown property of her late father to Oliver Livermore.
John HASTINGS was guardian to Keziah, Jemima, & Jonathan.
Oliver LIVERMORE was guardian of Mary, Ruth, & Rebecca. 
HOLLAND, Ruth (I30747)
 
3940 m2 Also (alice) on 2 Dec 1666
s/o George Cowdrey of England.

William Cowdrey is listed among the earliest settlers in the town of Lynn, later Reading, Massachusetts, in Lilley Eaton's history of Reading: "[T]he following persons, with their families, were inhabitants at or about the year of incorporation [1644] ... William Cowdrey, who settled on Cowdrey's hill."

William and his wife Joanna appear on a list of names of the brethren and sisters of the church at Reading 1648-1650. In 1649, William was chosen as "clerk of the writs," an office which "included among its duties the recording of the action of the town as well as the record of writs, issued for trial of small causes."

He lived on the site of the late Quannapowett House on the Common. 
COWDREY, Deacon William (I42570)
 
3941 m2 Anna HASKOLL (~1730-?) at Beverly, MA on 27 Nov 1769 COOK, Elias (I43652)
 
3942 m2 Anna LOVETT, d/o Thomas LOVETT or ASTWELL LEESON, Robert (I46040)
 
3943 m2 Archibald DOUGLAS, 6th Earl of Angus; divorced on 11 March 1528
m3 Henry STEWART, 1st Lord Methven 
TUDOR, Margaret (I7321)
 
3944 m2 at Newington 19 Dec 1720, Salathiel DENBO, s/o Salathiel DENBO and _______ ROBERTS ADAMS, Rachel (I35081)
 
3945 m2 bef 1 Feb 1731, Edward RUMRY (?—bef 5 Apr 1762) DURIN, Sarah (I47033)
 
3946 m2 bef 25 Oct 1574 Richard BRISSENDEN
Other children:
Katharine (abt 1557—bef 1628/9)
Eleanor (abt 1559—aft 1628/9)
Elizabeth (abt 1561—aft 1574) 
STEWART, Sir Robert (I43944)
 
3947 m2 by 1674 Capt Richard HUNNEWELL (?—6 Oct 1703 - killed by Indians), s/o of Roger HUNNEWELL, his 2nd wife
m3 Joshua DOWNING 
BEARDSLEY, Ruth (I42586)
 
3948 m2 by 1674 Capt Richard HUNNEWELL (?—6 Oct 1703 - killed by Indians), s/o of Roger HUNNEWELL, his 2nd wife
m3 Joshua DOWNING 
STOVER, Elizabeth (I44719)
 
3949 m2 Carl Frey ADAIR, Bertha Hargraves (I422)
 
3950 m2 Celia M. PHIPPS 28 Nov 1940 CONARY, Edmund White (I38449)
 

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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