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Notes |
Linked to |
| 10651 |
This may be her burial record. | Dole, Alice (I44144)
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| 10652 |
This may be the Edward who came to Woburn. | Convers, Edward (I40086)
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| 10653 |
This may not be a record for this Benjamin. | Marshall, Pvt. Benjamin Jr. (I9408)
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| 10654 |
This militia killed between 100 and 200 people. | Turner's Falls, the Battle of (I45351)
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| 10655 |
This name originated either as an Anglo - Saxon nickname or as the personal name, "Abbud". | Abbot, George Sr. (I9494)
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| 10656 |
This parcel of land was Beaverbrook Plowlands lot granted to Richard, with Henry acting as an agent. | Kimball, Richard Sr. (I12644)
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| 10657 |
This parcel of land was Beaverbrook Plowlands lot granted to Richard, with Henry acting as an agent. | Kemball, Henry (I12728)
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| 10658 |
This property consisted of "my now dwelling house scituate & being in the aforesaid town of Billerica with all the land broke up & unbroke up to the same belonging, which house & lands were late in the hands of Edmund Chamberlene, and is part of the tract of land purchased of Mr. Dudley deceased and is by estimation in all to the number of one hundred and twenty and five acres more or less". | Baker, William (I11124)
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| 10659 |
This property joined his original patented land, located on 'Indian Creek a branch of the Western branch of the Nansemond River.' Indian Creek is now a part of Lake Prince, near Suffolk, Virginia. | Garrett, John (I23745)
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| 10660 |
This property was adjoining John Garrett's. | Bryan, John (I23754)
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| 10661 |
This Providence Island is located off the Mosquito Coast, currently Nicaragua, in the Caribbean. | Neale, Henry (I11954)
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| 10662 |
This real estate consisted of 35 acres of land valued at £275; salt marsh £20; buildings £25. | Chase, Ens. Moses (I2509)
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| 10663 |
This record may be a conflation... | Abbot, George (I9581)
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| 10664 |
This role was repeated several more times. | Hopkins, Stephen (I9355)
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| 10665 |
This sale apparently fell through. | Barnes, John (I45002)
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| 10666 |
This ship was famous in the history of the early emigration to Massachusetts, and her Master was equally noted for his skillful seamanship and his sympathy with the policy of the Puritan leaders. In 1630, 1631, and 1632 she made four voyages hither in quick succession under his command with the regularity and safety of a ferry, and on one of them saved the new settlement from starvation and death by her timely arrival with provisions and anti-scorbutics. The official connection of the Lyon with the Winthrop Fleet is of the same character as related of the Mary and John, as both were doubtless approved by the Governor and Assistants. In his letter of March 28, 1630, to his wife, written from the Arbella, off the Isle of Wight, after noting the sailing of the Mary and John, Winthrop wrote: 'and the ship which goes from Bristowe (Bristol) carrieth about eighty persons', This was the Lyon and she probably sailed from that port to accommodate passengers living In the West Counties -- Lancashire, Cheshire, Warwick, Gloucestershire, and Somerset. That they were authorized to settle in the limits of the Bay Patent seems assured as there is no evidence to the contrary following their arrival. The date of her departure is not known (probably in March) but her arrival at Salem is reported 'in the latter part of May' some time before the Arbella reached that port. The identity of this ship is not established as there were several of her name in existence at that period. In view of her valuable services to the Colony it is to be hoped that the necessary search may be made to fix her home port, previous history, tonnage, and ownership. Of Captain William Peirce, her Master, more particulars are known. He had sailed to Plymouth in 1623 as Master of the Anne of London, bringing the last lot of passengers to the Pilgrim settlement. He was then a resident of Ratcliffe, parish of Stepney, London, and at that date was about thirty-one years old. He made a voyage to Salem in 1629 as Master of the Mayflower (not the Pilgrim ship) and thereafter he was in constant traffic in passengers and merchandise across the Atlantic. He took up his residence in Boston in 1632 and was admitted freeman May I4, 1634. His wife, Bridget, joined the church February 2, 1632/3; perhaps a second wife, as a William Peirce, mariner of Whitechapel, was licensed in 1615 to marry Margaret Gibbs. Whitechapel and Stepney are adjoining parishes. He became a Town and Colony official and was engaged In coastwise shipping thereafter. He compiled an Almanac for New England which was the second issue in 1639 from the Daye press at Cambridge. In 1641 he was killed by the Spaniards while on a voyage to the island of New Providence, Bahamas Group, whither he was taking passengers for settlement. In view of her valuable services to the Colony it is to be hoped that the necessary search may be made to fix her home port, previous history, tonnage, and ownership. | Lyon (I35284)
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| 10667 |
This story is contained in a Word document that was downloaded from the internet site, www.isn.net/~dhunter/rcoffin.html | Source (S166)
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| 10668 |
This tract of land descended from Thomas Kemble, a merchant of Boston, to his daughter, Sarah Knight. | Barton, William (I10213)
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| 10669 |
This tract of land descended from Thomas Kemble, a merchant of Boston, to his daughter, Sarah Knight. | Barton, Elisha (I10231)
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| 10670 |
This was "for Steephen Deane's children (in consideration of a lot they had on Duxburrow side)." | Cook, Josias (I9334)
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| 10671 |
This was "so as to be near the meeting-house". | Hale, Capt. Thomas Jr. (I9644)
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| 10672 |
This was described as "all the purchase lands that belonged unto and were the lands of Edward Banges and Daniell Cole ... between the two brooks commonly called Bound Brook and Stony Brook ... in Yarmouth". | Bangs, Edward (I14230)
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| 10673 |
This was described as "all the purchase lands that belonged unto and were the lands of Edward Banges and Daniell Cole ... between the two brooks commonly called Bound Brook and Stony Brook ... in Yarmouth". | Cole, Daniel (I12162)
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| 10674 |
This was discovered in a book of abatements for Hampton that was brought to court in November 1679. | Hussey, Capt. Christopher (I13089)
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| 10675 |
This was Henry's 2nd marriage and Abbie's first. | Family: Pvt. Henry Dearborn Whitcher Noyes / Abbie B. Hutchings (F2763)
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| 10676 |
This was her second marriage. | Family: Charles Henry Young / Ella M. Rock (F12987)
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| 10677 |
This was his occupation at the time of Rosie's birth. | Coy, Pvt. Silas Edee (I13046)
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| 10678 |
This was located "on the northern side of the freshet that runneth into Greene's Harbour where the way to Sittuate crosseth the same being on the upper side the said path". | Chandler, Roger (I906)
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| 10679 |
This was on the Piscataqua River. | Small, Edward (I10225)
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| 10680 |
This was outlined in a letter to John Endicott dated 28 May 1629. | Ingersoll, Richard (I7155)
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| 10681 |
This was shared with Obadiah Homes. | Gardner, Thomas Jr. (I21314)
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| 10682 |
This was the record of a transaction that occurred about a decade earlier. | Estow, William (I13165)
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| 10683 |
This was the second marriage for both. | Family: Reuben Maydeck / Dora Zakim (F11794)
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| 10684 |
This was to be equally divided between them, provided "Goite" did "come not over to possess it the next summer" [ DTR 11]. If there were enough, John "Grenway" was to have one acre more in the marsh, 27 June 1636. | Grenaway, John (I5724)
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| 10685 |
This would become the town of Kingston 30 years later. | Drake, Abraham Sr. (I6767)
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| 10686 |
Thomas and Sarah took on the responsibility of raising two of his grandchildren after their parents died young. | Family: Thomas Rawlings / Sarah ________ (F4052)
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| 10687 |
Thomas Gross drowned in Provincetown Harbor Nov 14, 1828, aged 50 yrs. 8 mos. | Gross, Thomas (I17321)
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| 10688 |
Thomas Lumbert Sr. of Barnstable complained to the court that "Jedediah, his son, hath carried stubbornly against his said father, and that he is by him freed, provided he do dispose himself in some honest family with his father's consent, which if he shall neglect to do, the Court have deputed Mr. Hinckley to dispose of him to some honest, godly family, with his and his father's consent". | Lombard, Jedediah (I21296)
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| 10689 |
Thomas Moulton of Hampton, New Hampshire, brought with him to York in 1655 his wife and at least four of his children: Abigail (1645-1692) who married Henry Simpson and was killed with him in the Massacre; Joseph (1648-1692), who with his wife Hannah
(Littlefield) was also killed in the Massacre; Jeremiah (1650-1731), whose first wife was a daughter of Roland Young; Mary (1652-1725), whose second husband was Samuel Bragdon.In later generations there are families of Emersons, Freemans, Bowdens,
Talpeys, Putnams, Bragdons, and others.
Mary and Thomas were twins. | Moulton, Thomas (I5939)
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| 10690 |
Thomas took on the responsibility of raising his niece and nephew after his father died. | Family: Thomas Rawlins, Jr. / (F17519)
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| 10691 |
Thomas was made a freeman of the Colony in 1666. His homestead descended to his son Thomas, by whom it was conveyed in the latter years of his life, to his nephew, William Holt.
In the spring and July of 1651 he was granted land in New London, Conn. In 1662 Jun 28 a warrant was issued for his appearance in court on the first Thursday in July to answer the complaint of John Lewis regarding a debt of ten shillings. A bark of twelve to twenty tons, named the "Speedwell" was built for him by Mouls and Coit circa 1662. In 1669 he was made a freeman, and in 1673 was appointed a jury-man for the year, and again in 1677. In 1675 Jun 4 he was confirmed as Sergeant of the Trainband at New London with his brother Samuel Beebe, and again in 1678. In 1675 when the Indians were attacking and burning several villages in and around New London, he was one of seven men appointed to set up fortifications against them. He also served in the King Phillips War with the rank of Sergeant. In February of 1677/8 he was a part of a building committee set up to build a new meeting house at the site of the old one. In 1683 Nov 19 he was part of a committee to seek a replacement minister who had passed away. In 1690 he was assigned the job of finishing the interior of the new meeting house. The same year he succeeded his brother John Beebe as Sergeant of the Trainband. He was prominent in church affairs. | Beebe, Thomas (I8992)
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| 10692 |
Threfall and his inventory have 3 Dec 1707. | Adams, James (I34424)
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| 10693 |
Threfall has 1 Mar 1654/5. | Family: Deacon Edmund Rice / Mercy Hurd (F12490)
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| 10694 |
Threfall say 25 Jan 1643/4. | Barnes, Hannah (I12633)
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| 10695 |
Threlfall has 10 Aug 1600. | Frost, Thomasine (I18324)
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| 10696 |
Threlfall has 17 Mar 1610/11. | ________, Joan (I29901)
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| 10697 |
Threlfall has 19 Sep 1682. | Family: Capt. Richard Kimball / Sarah Spofford (F13517)
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| 10698 |
Threlfall has 22 Dec 1604. | Richardson, Samuel (I11378)
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| 10699 |
Threlfall has 22 Mar 1623/4. | Blower, Joshua (I33729)
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| 10700 |
Threlfall has 23 Mar 1627/8. | Blower, John (I33732)
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