USA > Massachusetts > Plymouth County > Plymouth > Families of the Pilgrims > Part 9
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8. Maryª b. 9 Mar. 1660 ; d. bef. 9 Jan. 1689/90.
*9. Nathaniel3 b. 10 Mar. 1661, at Plymouth; d. 29 Oct. 1707, at Plymouth ; m. - , Phebe -, b. -; d. -. She m. (2) Thomas Gray.
10. John3 b. 23 Oct. 1663; d. bef. 9 Jan. 1689/90.
#11. James3 b. 7 Nov. 1665, at Plymouth ; d. 30 May 1715, at Plymouth ; m. 21 June 1687, at Plymouth, Sarah3 Doty (Edward2-1), b. 9 June 1666, at Plymouth; d. bef. 16 Aug. 1749. She m. (2) 28 Sep. 1726, at Plymouth, John Bacon.
12. Jabez3 b. -; drowned 19 Apr. 1701.
* * * *
Children of Joseph2 WARREN and Priscilla Faunce:
*1. Mercy3 b. 23 Sep. 1653, at Plymouth ; d. Mar. 1747, at Kingston; m. 6 Jan. 1674, at Plymouth, John3
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BRADFORD (William2-1), b. 20 Feb. 1652, at Ply- mouth ; d. 8 Dec. 1736, at Kingston.
2. Abigail3 b. 15 Mar. 1655, at Plymouth ; d. bef. 4 May 1689.
*3. Joseph3 b. 8 Jan. 1657, at Plymouth; d. 28 Dec. 1696, at Plymouth ; m. 20 Dec. 1692, at Plymouth, Mehitable Wilder, b. -; d. -.
*4. Patience3 b. 15 Mar. 1660, at Plymouth ; d. aft. 9 Mar. 1719 ; m. 16 Dec. 1686, at Plymouth, Samuel LUCAS, b. 15 Sep. 1661, at Plymouth ; d. 17 Jan. 1715/6, at Plymouth.
*5. Elizabeth3 b. 15 Aug. 1662, at Plymouth ; d. -; m. 19 Jan. 1687, at Plymouth, Josiah FINNEY, b. 11 Jan. 1660 at Barnstable ; d. -.
*6. Benjamin3 b. 8 Jan. 1670, at Plymouth; d. 30 May 1746, at Plymouth ; m. (1) 22 Apr. 1697, at Plymouth, Hannah Morton, b. 7 Nov. 1677, at Plymouth ; d. 3 Nov. 1715, at Plymouth ; m. (2) 25 Oct. 1716, at Plymouth, Esther (Barnes) Cushman, b. -; d. 1 Nov. 1770.
157 %
WILLIAM WHITE Eleventh Signer of the Mayflower Compact
WHITE FAMILY SURNAMES THREE GENERATIONS
HAYWARD (HEAWARD, HOWARD) SHERMAN WHEELER WHITE YOUNG
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WILLIAM WHITE
In the genealogy published by The Republican Press Association, 1895, William White Family, we find this reminder :
"It should be the pleasant duty of every descendant of that earnest band of men and women who took so much fortune and life in their hands, daring so much to secure a free home for us, to turn to that Past, and let our honored ancestors be an inspiration and benediction to our lives.
"Sacred writing records the close connection between posterity and ancestry when it says, 'Children's children are the crown of old men, and the glory of children are their fathers.' . We are a derivation from the past and ought to be considered and weighed in connection with it . . and as the ancient Romans, when emigrating to foreign climes, took with them the carved images of their fathers, setting them in the place of honor in their new homes, so it sets the lives of our fathers before us to be an inspiration to our lives which we can transmit to our chil- dren, bidding them to hold the sacred trust entire, and so teach their children.
"Before they had found a place to land and settle, those men of justice and sense, Carver, Bradford, White, Brew- ster, and Winslow . . drew up, on the lid of Elder Brewster's chest in the cabin of the Mayflower, an instru- ment which established the principle of individual liberty as a right which has influenced the destiny of man through all succeeding history. 'This was the birth of constitutional liberty ; thus was organized the Rights of Man.'
"We do not claim for them (our ancestors) perfection ; yet the superstructure was so full of the life of Jesus Christ that it has illumined our whole country, and we hope it will never be extinguished."
William White from London, and Robert Cushman (who came to America later) from Canterbury were wool carders.
William1 White married Susanna Fuller in Leyden on 11 Feb. 1612. She was a sister of Samuel and Edward
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Fuller, of the Mayflower. They were married by the Rev- erend John Robinson.
Their children were:
1. -2 b. -; buried 28 June, 1615, at Leyden.
2. 2 b. -; buried 21 Dec. 1616, at Leyden.
*3. Resolved2 b. c. 1615 or 1616 at Leyden, d. bet. 1690 & 1694 ; m. 5 Nov. 1640, Judith Vassall, d. of William Vassall, b. -; buried 3 Apr. 1670 ; m. (2) Abigail ( -___ ) Lord on 5 Oct. 1674, at Salem, she b. 1606, d. bet. 15 and 27 June, 1682, at Salem.
*4. Peregrine2 b. 7-10 Dec. 1620, n. s., at Cape Cod Har- bor ; d. 20 July, 1704 ; m. bef. 16 Mar. 1648/9, Sarah Bassett, b. -; d. 22 Jan. 1711, at Marshfield.
William White died 21 Feb. 1621. His widow, Susanna, m. (2) 12 May 1621, at Plymouth, Edward1 Winslow.
Resolved2 White came to Plymouth with his Pilgrim parents. He was born in Leyden, Holland, about the time they resolved to seek a new home in the western world and received his name from that circumstance. He was sup- posed to have been about six years of age at the time of the Mayflower's arrival.
Resolved2 White m. Judith Vassall, d. of William Vas- sall, of Scituate, on 5 Nov. 1640. She d. 1670.
"Mrs. Judith White . .. was a mother worthy of her times ; like Wickliffe she could see, hear and act. When the Quakers were persecuted in court she could not sit still and hear them denounced with threatened persecutions and death, but (woman as she was, who had been told to sit in silence in the church) arose and sternly rebuked the complainer for his unchristianlike talk and behavior; and to her bravery, and influence over her husband's half- brother, Gov. Josiah Winslow, he refused his signature to the letter sent by Massachusetts Bay Colony ; and that no worse persecutions are found on the Old Colony Records,
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she is entitled to the grateful remembrance of the Pilgrim daughters."
Resolved2 m. (2) 5 Oct. 1674, at Salem, Abigail ( -___ ) Lord, widow of William, of Salem, b. 1606; d. bet. 15 and 27 June, 1682, at Salem. He owned lands in Scituate in 1638 at the place afterwards sold to Lt. Isaac Buck, a half mile south of the Harbor. In 1662 he moved to Marshfield. He seems to have had two houses, the one near Bucks Cor- ner and the other at Belle House Neck. In Marshfield, he settled near his brother, Peregrine, on the South River. Their posterity is found in Bristol County as well as Plymouth. Some of them may have moved to Barbadoes.
Resolved2 was one of the original twenty-six purchasers of Middleboro, March 1662, from the Indian Chief, Wampa- tuck. They returned to Plymouth during Philip's war. Resolved died between 1690 and 1694.
Children of Resolved2 WHITE and Judith Vassall :
1. William3 b. 10 Apr. 1642, at Scituate ; d. 24 Jan. 1695, at Marshfield.
2. John3 b. 11 Mar. 1644, at Scituate; d. -.
*3. Samuel3 b. 13 Mar. 1646, at Scituate; d. aft. 20 Sep. 1720, and bef. Apr. 1731 ; m. - Rebecca -; b. abt. 13 Mar. 1646; d. 25 June 1711 at Rochester.
4. Resolved3 b. 12 Nov. 1647, at Scituate ; buried 27 Mar. 1670 ; unmarried.
*5. Anna3 b. 4 June 1649 at Scituate; d. 25 May 1714, at Concord; m. 2 June 1671, at Concord, John HAYWARD (Heaward, Howard) ; b. 20 Dec. 1640, at Concord ; d. 22 Nov. 1718, at Concord.
*6. Elizabeth3 b. 4 June, 1652, at Scituate ; d. -; m. 17 July, 1672, at Concord, Obadiah WHEELER; b. c. 1650, prob. at Concord ; d. -.
(Note: Approved by General Society of Mayflower Descend- ants after 1941.)
*7. Josiah3 b. 29 Sep. 1654, at Scituate; d. bef. 5 June, 1710; m. bef. 30 Dec. 1680, Remember Read, bap. 26 Apr. 1657, at Salem ; d. -.
8. Susanna8 b. Aug. 1656, at Scituate.
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Peregrine® White was born in the cabin of the May- flower, as she lay in Cape Cod Harbor, 7/10 Dec. 1620, N.S., and derived his name from their peregrinations-the name, "Peregrine" signifying a pilgrimage in a strange land. He was the first native-born New Englander. He went to Green Harbor with the family of his step-father, Governor Edward Winslow, after 1632.
Peregrine2 White m. bef. 16 Mar. 1648/9, Sarah, d. of William and Elizabeth Bassett (passengers on the For- tune, 10 Nov. 1621).
"He settled on an estate given him by his father-in-law, lying between North and South Rivers, not far from their united outlet to the ocean. . ,Mr. Bassett died in Bridgewater, in 1667, and left a large and valuable li- brary, for that period, to his son-in-law, Peregrine White."
Captain Peregrine White died 20 July, 1704, at Marsh- field. His wife, Sarah, died 22 Jan. 1711, at Marshfield. "He was one of thirty volunteers to assist them of Massa- chusetts Bay and Connecticut in their wars against the Pequin Indians." (i.e., Pequod) .
On the Marshfield church records appears the following in Rev. Edward Thompson's handwriting: "Captain Pere- grine White, the first born child of New England, was admitted into the church in the 78th year of his age." On this occasion, Rev. Thompson preached from Matthew 20:6-7. 'And about the eleventh hour he went out and found others standing idle, and saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle? They say unto him, Because no man hath hired us. He saith unto them, Go ye also into the vineyard; and whatever is right, that shall ye receive.'
"It is stated that he was always filial and loving, visiting his mother every day, riding on a large black horse, his coat buttoned with buttons the size of a silver dollar.
"In the Boston Weekly News Letter of July 31, 1704, the fifteenth number of the first newspaper printed in New England, appeared the notice of his death. 'Marshfield,
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July 20; Captain Peregrine White, of this town, died here the 20th inst., aged 83 years and 8 months. He was vigorous and of a comely aspect to the last.' "
The exact spot of his interment is unknown, but probably in the Winslow burying-ground where his mother was buried.
"An old book, The Life of John Eliot, written by Cotton Mather about 1695, once owned by Peregrine, is now (1895) in the possession of E. L. B. Howard, Cambridge, Mass. It bears the autograph of Peregrine White, 1702, two years previous to his death."
Children of Peregrine WHITE and Sarah Bassett:
*1. Daniel3 b. c. 1649; d. 6 May, 1724, at Marshfield ; m. 19 Aug., 1674, at Marshfield, Hannah Hunt, b. -; d. aft. 25 May, 1721.
2. - -3 b. 1650 or 1651; d. y.
*3. Jonathan3 b. 4 June, 1658, at Marshfield; d. bef. 22 Feb. 1737 ; m. (1) 2 Feb. 1682, at Yarmouth, Hester Nickerson, b. -; d. 8 Feb. 1702/3, at Yarmouth ; m. (2) -, Elizabeth -; b. -; d. 12 Apr. 1718, at Yarmouth.
*4. Peregrine3 b. c. 1660; d. 20 Nov. 1727, at Boston ; m. (1) Susanna -, of Weymouth ; b. -; d. -; m. (2) -; Mary -; b. -; d. aft. 13 Mar. 1755. She m. (2) Cornelius Judevine.
*5. Sarah8 b. Oct. 1663, at Marshfield ; d. 9 Aug. 1755, at Scituate; m. in Jan. 1688/9, at Scituate, Thomas YOUNG, b. Nov. 1663 ; d. 25 Dec. 1732, at Scituate.
*6. Sylvanus® b. bef. 1667, at Marshfield ; d. bef. 29 June, 1688; m. - Deborah -; b. -; d. aft. 30 June 1688.
*7. Mercy8 b. c. 1670; d. 12 June, 1739, at Marshfield ; m. 3 Feb. 1697, at Marshfield, William SHERMAN3 (Desire? Doty, Edward1) ; b. 19 Apr. 1672, at Marshfield ; d. 26 Feb. 1739, at Marshfield.
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EDWARD WINSLOW (1595 - 1655)
Third Signer of the Mayflower Compact July, 1621 :
" ... it was thought meete to send some abroad to see their new freind Massasoyet, and to bestow upon him some gratuitie to bind him the faster unto them; as also that hearby they might veiw the countrie, and see in what maner he lived, what strength he had aboute him . . . So the .2. of July they sente Mr. Edward Winslow and Mr. Hopkins, with the fore said Squanto for ther guid . . . "
Bradford : Of Plimoth Plantation (Commonwealth of Mass. ed., p. 219)
WINSLOW FAMILY SURNAMES THREE GENERATIONS
BROOKS (BROOK) BURTON CORWIN WALCOT (WALCOTT, WOLCOTT) WINSLOW
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EDWARD WINSLOW
Edward Winslow, born at Droitwich, Worcestershire, England, 18 Oct. 1595. Died at sea, 8 May 1655. He was Governor of the Plymouth Colony in 1633, 1636 and 1644. He was the son of Edward and Magdalene (Ollyver or Oliver) Winslow. In 1617 he joined John Robinson's con- gregation at Leyden.
On 16 May 1618, he married Elizabeth Barker at Leyden. His vocation was printing, and he may have been employed by William Brewster.
He sailed on the Speedwell, transferring to the May- flower. He took with him two servants, George Soule and Elias Story, and purchased £60 stock in the venture.
He was one of the party who, in the frail shallop, made the adventurous exploration of the coastline in the winter of 1620. He was chosen envoy to meet Massasoit in 1621 and made the Colonists' first treaty with the Indians. In a visit to Massasoit's home he is believed to have saved Massasoit's life. He was second only to Capt. Myles Standish in his importance in dealing with the Indians.
His first wife died early in 1621 and on 12 May 1621, he married Susanna (Fuller) White, sister of Edward and Samuel Fuller and widow of William White. This was the first marriage at Plymouth.
In 1622 Edward Winslow sent back to England via the Fortune four narratives of explorations and negotiations with the Indians. Bradford also sent a narrative of the voyage and the first year of the Colony. Bradford's report was kept by the captain of a French privateer which cap- tured the Fortune, but Winslow's narratives arrived safely in London and were published by George Morton in 1622.
In the latter part of 1623 he went back to England, re- turning to Plymouth in March 1624, bringing with him "three heifers and a bull, the first of any catle of that kind in the land." In 1624 he became one of the five Assistants and returned again to England to negotiate with the
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Merchants. That same year he published a report of the years 1621-3, Good News from New England, or a True Relation of Things Very Remarkable at the Plantation of Plymouth in New England.
In London he defended the Pilgrims from the conten- tions of John Oldham and John Lyford ; as a result he was able to borrow money and purchase supplies.
In 1627 Winslow was one of those who assumed the Colony's debt in return for trading concessions granted in Maine, at Cape Ann, Buzzards Bay and subsequently on the Connecticut River. In 1629 he superseded Isaac Allerton as the Colony's agent and made several more trips to England. He was Assistant nearly every year from 1624 to 1646. He aided in organizing the New England Con- federation and was representative from Plymouth.
In 1646 Winthrop induced him to return to England to defend the Massachusetts Bay Colony against charges of Samuel Gorton. Winslow's report, Hypocrisie Unmasked was in reply to Gorton's Simplicities Defense Against Seven-Headed Policy. In 1649 he published The Glorious Progress of the Gospel Among the Indians of New Eng- land which resulted in the founding of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, in New England.
In 1636/7 he moved to Green Harbor and built a hand- some residence there. In all the initial labors for es- tablishing the Colony, the nucleus of a great nation, he was very active and influential. Possessing a sound and well-disciplined mind, pious heart and happy address, he was eminently useful in mitigating the sufferings and promoting the welfare of the Pilgrims.
Edward Winslow's portrait in the gallery of Pilgrim Hall, in Plymouth, is the only authentic portrait of any of the Mayflower passengers.
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Edward1 Winslow, b. 19 Oct. 1595, at Droitwich, Eng .; d. 8 May 1655, at sea, in the West Indies; m. (1) 1618, at Leyden, Elizabeth Barker, b. -; d. 24 Mar. 1621, at Plymouth ; m. (2) 12 May 1621, at Plymouth, Susanna (Fuller) White, b. -; d. bef. 1675.
Children of Edward1 WINSLOW and Susanna (Fuller) White :
1. Edward2 b. bef. 22 May 1627; d. y.
2. John2 b. bef. 22 May 1627; d. y.
*3. Josiah2 b. c. 1628; d. 18 Dec. 1680, at Marshfield; m. - , Penelope Pelham, b. c. 1630 ; d. 7 Dec. 1703, at Marshfield.
*4. Elizabeth2 b. -; d. -; m. (1) bef. 1656, Robert BROOKS, b. -; d. -; m. (2) 22 Sep. 1669, George CORWIN, b. -; d. 3 Jan. 1684/5, at Salem.
Children of Josiah2 WINSLOW and Penelope Pelham :
1. - 8 (dau.) b. 13 Mar. 1658, at Marshfield ; d. 15 Mar .. 1658, at Marshfield.
*2. Elizabeth8 b. 8 Apr. 1664, at Marshfield; d. 11 July 1735, at Pembroke; m. 4 Sep. 1684, at Marshfield,. Stephen BURTON, b. -; d. 22 July 1693, at Bristol, R. I.
3. Edward8 b. 14 May 1667, at Marshfield ; d. y.
*4. Isaacª b. c. 1671 ; d. 14 Dec. 1738, at Marshfield ; m. 11 July 1700, at Boston, Sarah Wensley, b. 11 Aug. 1673, at Boston; d. 16 Dec. 1753, at Marshfield.
Child of Elizabeth2 Winslow and Robert BROOKS:
1. John8 b. c. 1656 ; d. 25 Dec. 1687, at Charlestown.
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Children of Elizabethª Winslow and George CORWIN :
*2. Penelope® b. 7 Aug. 1670, at Salem ; d. 28 Dec. 1690, at Salem ; m. 19 Feb. 1686, at Salem, Josiah WALCOT, b. -; d. -. He m. (2) 6 May 1694, Mary Freake, b. -; d. -.
3. Susanna® b. 10 Dec. 1672, at Salem ; d. -; m. (1) 29 Nov. 1694, at Salem, Edward Lyde, b. -; d. -; m. (2) -, Benjamin Wadsworth, b. -; d. -.
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EPILOGUE
There were one hundred and two passengers aboard the Mayflower when she sailed from England in the late summer of 1620. Before she reached her anchorage at Plymouth, two babies were born, Oceanus Hopkins and Peregrine White, making a total of one hundred and four passengers. William Butten died during the voyage ; Mrs. William Bradford, Edward Thomson and James Chilton died at Cape Cod. During the winter and spring months that followed, at least forty-six others died, leaving only one-half the original number.
Of the eighteen married couples who embarked on the other side of the Atlantic, only four couples survived to see their first summer (1621) in New England. As the result of illness, malnutrition (especially scurvy), and exposure to cold and dampness, fourteen of the wives and nine of the husbands died during those first challenging months in the New World wilderness.
Again, I wish to quote from Dr. Samuel Eliot Morison's statements; this time from The Pilgrim Fathers: Their Significance in History, published by the Colonial Society of Massachusetts and Plimoth Plantation, (1951) :
(p. 12) "It was pointed out fifty years ago that only thirty-seven of the hundred or so passengers on the May- flower belonged to the Pilgrim congregation at Leyden. Hence many have concluded that the Pilgrim Fathers were but a minority in the Plymouth Colony ; . . . but if you group them by families*, the figures tell a very different story. And I submit that the only sensible way to analyze the Mayflower passengers is by families, for some of the Leyden people picked up relatives or servants in England, and in those days it was unheard-of for a dependent kinsman or servant to differ in religious or political views from his master. On board the Mayflower there were
* Italics mine.
169 *
twenty-six heads of families, of whom exactly half came from Leyden ; and twelve boys or men without families, of whom five came from Leyden. The great sickness of the first winter at Plymouth so thinned the ranks that in the spring there were left twelve heads of families, again split fifty-fifty between Leyden and non-Leyden, and four single men, none of whom had belonged to the Leyden congrega- tion. But three of the six surviving non-Leyden heads of families were Hopkins, Standish, and Warren, who became pillars of the Pilgrim state; and the four surviving bach- elors were the famous John Alden, Gilbert Winslow the brother of Edward Winslow, Gardiner who soon returned to England, and a six-year-old boy.
"Governor Bradford's annals, as retold by count- less historians and teachers, and by poets like Longfellow, have secured for this brave little band a permanent place in American history and American folklore. The story of their patience and fortitude, and the workings of that un- seen force which bears up heroic souls in the doing of mighty errands, as often as it is read or told, quickens the spiritual forces in American life, strengthens faith in God and confidence in human nature. Thus the Pilgrims in a sense have become the spiritual ancestors of all Americans, whatever their stock, race or creed .* Bradford foretold it himself in these words :
'Thus out of small beginnings greater things have been produced by His hand that made all things of nothing, and gives being to all things that are ; and as one small candle may light a thousand, so the light here kindled hath shone unto many, yea in some sort to our whole Nation ,
. "The Pilgrims knew nothing of the coast they had reached, except what John Smith had written in his Description of New England. No group of Englishmen, Frenchmen, or Dutchmen arrived on our
* Italics mine.
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shores in the colonial era at so unfavorable a season or so ill equipped; few were so isolated from possible succor. Yet none came through so well.
"What other cause can we assign for this, than the Pilgrims' profound faith in God, and God's response to their prayers? . . . "*
As Dr. Edward Cushing Mitchell, then President of Leland University, New Orleans, observed in his History of Bridgewater (1897), " . Our fathers have rightly taught us to estimate a man by what he is and not by what his grandfather was, but, after all, there are lessons to be learned from the lives of men who have preceded us, [lessons] which convey wisdom as well as inspiration. "
History reveals to us the fact that the Plymouth Colo- nists had little in the way of material possessions during the early years of their settlement, but they had immeas- urable riches in spiritual values. Much can be learned from their indomitable courage, resourcefulness, diligence, and faith in Almighty God.
* Italics mine.
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REFERENCES
The genealogical data in Families of the Pilgrims were copied verbatim from the records of George Ernest Bowman, founder and first Secretary of the Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants.
Additional sources of biographical data were the following:
Alden, Ebenezer, M.D., Memorial of the Descendants of the Hon. John Alden, 1867.
Alden, Rev. John, Story of a Pilgrim Family, 1890.
Allerton, Walter Scott, History of the Allerton Family, 1900.
Banks, Charles E., The Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers, 1929.
Bowman, George Ernest, The Mayflower Descendant, 1899-1937.
Bradford, William, Of Plimoth Plantation (several editions).
Cook, Henry, A Memorial of Francis Cook, 1870.
Dexter, Henry Martyn, D.D., LL.D., and Dexter, Morton, The England and Holland of the Pilgrims, 1905.
Drummond, Josiah H., The John Rogers Families in Plymouth and Vicinity, 1896.
Fuller, F. A., The Mayflower Fuller Genealogy, 1897.
Fuller, William H., Genealogy of Some Descendants of Edward Fuller, 1908.
Fuller, William H., Genealogy of Some Descendants of Samuel Fuller, 1910.
Goodwin, John A., The Pilgrim Republic, 1888.
Hopkins, Timothy, "Stephen Hopkins of the Mayflower and Some of His Descendants,“ N. E. Historical and Genealogical Register, 1948-1951.
Joy, Jane Taylor, History of the Taylor Family, (Billington data).
Libby, Charles Thornton, Mary Chilton's Title to Celebrity, 1926.
Parkhurst, Minnie Latham, Chilton-Latham Genealogy of the Descend- ants of James Chilton, 1919.
Porteus, Rev. Thomas C., Captain Myles Standish, 1920.
Ridlon, Rev. G. T., A Contribution to the History, Biography and Gene- alogy of the Families of Soule, 1926.
Savage, James, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, 1860.
White, Emma S., Genesis of the White Family, 1920.
White, Thomas, Ancestral Chronological Record of the William White Family, 1895.
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INDEX
- A -
Adams, 18, 26, 41, 45, 148 Albertson, 81
ALDEN, 18-29, 58, 82, 127, 133, 140, 146, 147 Allen (Allyn), 24, 25, 56, 58, 73, 76, 105, 109, 112, 147, 148 ALLERTON, 30-37, 47, 52, 54, 70, 104, 109, 123
Armstrong, 39 Arnold, 27 Atkins, 102
- B-
Bacon, 76, 156
Badgley, 83
Baker, 41, 45, 73, 81
Bangs, 54
Barber, 137, 144
Barker, 124, 153, 155, 165, 167
Barlow, 124
Barnaby, 149, 152
Barnes, 157
Barrow (Barrows), 70, 73, 81, 140
Barstow, 154
Bartlett, 18, 22, 23, 25, 37, 44, 46, 47, 53, 64, 70, 82, 132, 149, 151, 152
Bass, 18, 21, 26 Bassett, 160, 162, 163 Baxter, 105, 110 Beal, 87
Belcher, 26
Canaday, 143 Cannon, 112
Bemen, 77
Bennet, 105, 113
Bigford, 101
Carpenter, 43, 44, 94, 105, 115, 116
BILLINGTON, 38-40, 85, 86, 112
Blackwell, 149, 155 Blossom, 110 Bonham, 88, 91
Bonney, 69, 73, 78, 130, 132, 135, 136
Bosworth, 105, 109, 116, 117 Bourne, 44, 105, 108, 115 Bowen, 96 BRADFORD, 41-46, 68, 81, 127, 149, 157
Bradley, 47, 52
Bradstreet, 36 Brayley, 143 Brett, 69
BREWSTER, 29, 31, 35, 46, 47-54, 151
Briggs, 27, 63 Brock, 46
Brooks (Brook), 164, 167
BROWN, 24, 25, 55-58, 70, 71, 77, 81, 104, 105, 109, 114, 116, 140 Browne, 22, 128
Brownell, 141
Browning, 22, 128
Bruce, 130, 133
Buck, 75, 134
Buckingham, 76
Bullock, 38, 40
Bumpus, 84, 86
Burrill, 18, 25, 26
Burroughs (Burrowes), 57, 149, 154
Bursley, 105, 109 Burton, 164, 167 Bushrod, 37
-C-
Card, 137, 143
Carver, 79, 148 Cary (Carey), 25, 58, 111, 112,
145, 148
Case, 115 Caswell, 87 Chaffin, 113
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Chandler, 18, 28, 46, 59, 61, 62, 140 Chapin, 26 Cheseborough, 18, 28 CHILTON, 23, 27, 59-63, 70, 104, 113, 134, 147, 153 Chipman, 105, 108, 114, 115 Christophers, 47, 52
Church, 78, 149, 151, 154, 155
Churchill, 23, 75, 76, 82, 112
Churchman, 127
Clark, 74, 75, 137, 143 Clift, 78 Cob (Cobb), 54, 80, 105, 114, 137, 140
Cobham, 22, 128 Codman, 115 Coe, 18, 22
Colclough, 35, 37, 54
Cole, 36, 46, 67, 70, 97, 98, 100, 101, 103, 104, 112, 129
Collier, 51, 52, 53 Combes (Coombes), 37, 87, 113, 122, 123, 124, 135
Conant, 118, 119, 120, 121
COOKE (Cook), 36, 57, 64-72, 75, 80, 98, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 132, 140, 149, 151, 153, 154 Copeland, 18, 26 Corwin, 164, 167, 168
Cowing, 77 Crocker, 105, 109, 110, 114
Crossman, 40, 86
Crow, 88, 92
Cummings, 124
Curtis, 73, 80, 136
Cushman, 30, 35, 36, 37, 64, 70, 98, 104, 105, 109, 117, 157
-D -
Darte, 52 Davis, 68, 153 Deane, 101, 128 Decro, 79
Delano, 18, 21, 25, 27, 73, 82, 113, 130, 136, 140, 145, 148, 149, 156 Dennison, 105, 111, 116
Devol, 137, 141
Dickenson (Dickinson), 105, 108, 115, 116
Dimmock, 105, 115 Dingley, 147, 152 Doane, 101 DOTY (DOTEN), 25, 27, 64, 69, 73-83, 98, 103, 104, 142, 146, 147, 148, 156, 163
Drew, 18, 25
Drinkwater, 137, 142 Drury, 24 Dunham, 24
Durfe, 109 Dutch, 118, 119, 120, 121 Dwelly, 134
-E-
EATON, 38, 39, 40, 84-87, 93, 96, 97
Eddy, 25
Edwards, 75, 82
Ellis, 83
England, 75, 81
Everill, 21, 23
Ewell, 78
Ewer, 155
Eyres, 30, 37
-F-
Faunce, 75, 76, 80, 151, 156
Finney, 46, 149, 157
Fitch, 41, 45
Fobes, 18, 22
Folger, 124 Fones, 137, 144
Ford, 56, 79, 134, 149, 155
Foster, 149, 152
Freake, 168
Freeman, 47, 53
FULLER, 36, 84, 86, 87, 88-97, 109, 159, 165, 167
- G- Gale, 105, 115 Gates, 148
[ 174 }
Gibbs, 105, 116, 149, 156 Gifford, 141 Glascock, 94 ·Glass, 40 Godbertson, 123 Gorham, 77, 105, 108, 110, 111, 134 Grafton, 30, 36 Gray, 27, 59, 61, 62, 111, 113, 134,
153, 156
Green, 149, 156 Griffin, 115 Grinnell, 18, 23 Griswold, 124
-H-
Hallett, 21, 27, 105, 110 Hamlin, 105, 112 Hammond, 133 Handley, 115 Hanmer, 130, 132, 135 Hanson, 43 Harlow, 30, 37, 82, 149, 152 Harmon, 76, 83
Haskell, 137, 139, 142, 143
Hatch, 73, 75, 77, 78, 155
Hathaway, 64, 68, 149, 153
Hawes, 77, 105, 110, 134 Hawks, 30, 35, 36
Hayden, 26
Hayward (Heaward) (Howard), 64, 68, 69, 158, 161 Heirs (Hyres) (Hires),
(See Eyres)
Hersey, 69 Hicks, 108, 115 Higgins, 125, 126, 128, 129
Hill, 47, 52
Hillman (Hilmon), 130, 133 Hinckley, 114
Hobart, 22, 44, 46, 128, 142, 154
Hollingsworth, 119, 120
Holman, 122, 124 Holmes, 44, 46, 73, 75, 79, 113, 130, 132, 135, 146, 147, 148 HOPKINS, 67, 69, 72, 78, 80, 98-104, 128, 129, 148 "Horton, 80
Hoskins, 86, 87 Howes, 58 HOWLAND, 36, 77, 105-117, 134 Hoxie, 115 Hubbard, 36 Huckens (Huckins), 105, 110, 114 Hull, 83
Hunt, 41, 45, 119, 120, 163 Hussey, 111 Hutchinson, 30, 37, 62 Hutton, 120
-I-
Ivey, 149, 152
- J-
Jackson, 81 Jenkins, 105, 112 Jencks (Jenks), 105, 116
Jenney, 151
Jolls, 63 Jones, 69, 75, 77, 81, 88, 91, 104,
142, 149, 153
Joyce, 105, 114 Judevine, 163
-K-
Kanady, 142 Keen (Keene), 37, 78, 130, 135,
149, 152
Kent, 105, 116, 117 King, 57 Kingman, 26 Knowlton, 118, 120, 121
-L-
Landers, 73, 82 Latham, 59, 61, 62, 70, 104 Lathrop (Lathrup) (Lothrop),
69, 89, 91, 112
Latting, 81 Lawrence, 62
Lee, 30, 37, 94, 96, 108, 109 Lettice, 67, 70, 100 Lewis, 54, 73, 82, 87, 93, 97
{ 175 }
Lincoln, 155
Little, 69, 75, 77, 104, 142, 149, 151, 152, 153
Lombard, 149, 156 Long, 62 Lord, 160, 161 Lovell, 73, 78 Lucas, 149, 157 Ludden, 46 Lyde, 168
- M-
Macomber, 141 Mahieu, 65, 67 Man, 119 Martin, 38, 40 Maverick, 30, 32, 34, 35, 36
May, 38, 40, 43, 44 Mayo, 47, 54, 98, 103
Mendall, 57, 81
Merrick, 98, 101, 102 Middlecott, 59, 61, 62, 147
Miller, 70, 104, 135
Mitchell, 64, 67, 68, 69
MORE (MOORE), 118-121
Morey, 149, 152 Morgan, 23 Mors (Morse), 73, 80 Mortemore, 24 Morton, 72, 73, 76, 91, 98, 100, 103, 124, 157
Mountjoy, 24 Mudge, 81 Mullins (Molines), 19, 21
- N-
Nash, 139, 140 Nelson, 80, 96, 132, 149, 152 Newton, 30, 37 Nichols, 113
Nickerson, 163 Norcut, 130, 135 Norris, 31, 34 Nowell, 62
-0-
Oakman, 73, 76, 134 Oldham, 46, 51, 52, 77, 130, 134 Oliver, 165 Otis, 110 Overzee, 35, 37, 54
-P-
Pabodie (Peabody), 18, 21, 22, 23, 28, 126, 127, 133, 140
Packard, 69 Paddock, 18, 28 Pain (Paine), 98, 101, 129, 137,
143
Parke, 51
Partridge, 53
Patte, 40
Payne, 59, 62, 147
Peame, 52
Pelham, 167
Penn, 39, 40, 85, 86
Perry, 53 Peterson, 75, 137, 139, 140, 142
Phillips, 21, 23, 74
Phinney, 114, 125, 129
Pickett, 47, 52
Plumly, 130, 132
Plummer, 131
Pope, 69, 114, 115, 152
Pratt, 73, 77, 97, 122, 123, 124
Prence (Prince), 47, 51, 53, 54, 101
Price, 64, 71 PRIEST, 113,. 122-124, 135 Prior, 69
-R-
Ramsden (Ramsdell), 84, 86, 87 Raymond, 45 Read (Reed), 64, 71, 161
· Richards, 44, 148 Richmond, 125, 128, 130, 134 Rickard, 55, 58, 64, 70, 84, 87, 98, 104
Rider (Ryder), 149, 152, 155
176 %+
Ring, 72, 73, 78, 80, 98, 100, 103, 148
Ripley, 41, 45 Roberts, 34 Rochester, 135 ROGERS, 18, 22, 26, 45, 98, 101, 115, 124, 125-129, 134
Rounds, 117 Rouse, 73, 75, 78, 133 Rowley, 88, 91, 92 Russell, 115
-S- Sabin, 38, 40 SAMSON, 18, 27, 130-136, 139, 145, 147
Sargent, 105, 108, 114 Savery, 86
Savil, 26
Sawyer, 133, 149, 153, 155
Scotto, 154 Seabury, 18, 22, 28
Seaman, 81
Shaw, 64, 69, 73, 82, 103
Sherman, 27, 73, 75, 78, 79, 80, 103, 117, 146, 147, 148, 158, 163 Shove, 111 Shurtleff, 67, 70, 100
Simmons, 18, 21, 22, 24, 130, 133, 139, 140
Sirkman, 93, 96
Skeffe (Skiff), 105, 115, 149, 155
Skinner, 30, 36
Slade, 141
Slater, 83 Smalley, 1,01
Smith, 98, 102, 115, 133
Snell, 18, 28
Snow, 18, 24, 25, 28, 55, 57, 58, 98, 100, 101, 102, 128, 129, 149, 151, 153, 155 SOULE, 18, 27, 64, 70, 71, 75, 79, 137-144, 145, 147, 148 Southworth, 18, 21, 22, 23, 28, 43, 44, 105, 108, 112, 113, 134, 140, 154
Sparrow, 47, 54
Sprague, 18, 28, 29, 79, 149, 152,. 154.
Sprout, 130, 131, 134, 135 Squire, 142 Stafford, 111 STANDISH, 18, 21, 27, 62, 73, 75, 79, 80, 131, 133, 140, 145-148
Stanford, 28, 45, 131
Starr, 23, 30, 37, 47, 53
Steele, 41, 45
Stetson, 77, 135
Stevens, 41, 45
Strong, 117 Studley, 132, 141
Sturgis, 105, 110, 111
Sturtevant, 27, 117, 147, 153 Summers, 132
Swan, 122, 124
Swift, 64, 71 Sylvester, 77
- T- Taber, 64, 68, 71, 149, 153 Tanner, 143
Taylor, 88, 92, 109
Terry, 125, 128 Thacher, 105, 108, 111
Thaxter, 149, 155
Thayer, 18, 26, 130, 132
Thomas, 79, 105, 109, 113, 153
Thurber, 117
Tilden, 149, 152
Tilley, 107, 108 Tinkham, 55, 56, 57, 64, 70, 71, 77, 81, 98, 104, 105, 114, 140
Tisdale, 125, 128 Tomson, 55, 57, 64, 68, 71, 72, 140, 154
Toogood, 117 Townsend, 105, 112, 115
Tracy, 44 Travers, 30, 37
Tucker, 154
Tupper, 77
Turner, 47, 52, 73, 77, 79
Twining, 129 Tyler, 130, 132
[ 177 }
-V- Vassall, 160, 161 Vaughn, 108, 113 Vermayes, 44 Vial, 24 Vincent, 123
- W -
Wadsworth, 72, 140, 142, 168 Wait, 131, 133
Walcot (Walcott) (Wolcott),
164, 168 Walker, 98, 101, 137, 139, 144, 151, 155, 156
Walley, 18, 24 Ward, 30, 35
WARREN, 22, 23, 28, 37, 44, 46, 53, 67, 68, 69, 70, 73, 75, 76, 77, 78, 82, 104, 124, 132, 142, 149-157
Washburn, 64, 69, 70 Waterman, 27, 73, 82, 149, 155 Webb, 18, 26
West, 28, 64, 68, 137, 139, 143, 144, 149, 154
Wensley, 167
Weston, 73, 79, 137, 139, 142, 145, 148
Wetherell, 47, 53
Wheelding, 105, 111
Wheeler, 158, 161
Wheelock, 145, 148
Wheldon, 100, 102
Whetstone, 156 WHITE, 24, 73, 78, 82, 94, 158-163, 165,167
Whitman, 58 Wilcox, 64, 68, 149, 153
Wilder, 157
Willard, 18, 24
Williams, 88, 92, 102, 125, 128
Willoughby, 35, 37, 54
WINSLOW, 23, 27, 59, 61, 62, 63, 70, 104, 108, 111, 113, 134, 147, 153, 160, 164-168 Wiswall, 18, 22, 44, 45
Wood, 44, 46, 93, 97, 105, 113, 124 Woodman, 30, 36
Wormall, 73, 79
Wright, 57, 64, 68, 70, 71, 105, 115, 124, 137, 140
- Y-
Young, 158, 163
{ 178 }
1
Somerville Printing Co., Somerville, Mass.
1956
HECKMAN BINDERY INC.
FEB 93
N. MANCHESTER, INDIANA 46962
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