User Home Page Genealogy Report: Ancestors of Carolyn Thelma Earnshaw
Ancestors of Carolyn Thelma Earnshaw
948.Jacob Davis (1), born Abt. 1640 in Gloucester, MA; died September 02, 1685 in Gloucester, MA.He was the son of 1896. John Davis (1) and 1897. Alice Newman.He married 949. Elizabeth Bennett January 20, 1660/61 in Gloucester, MA.
949.Elizabeth Bennett, born 1641; died Aft. 1685.She was the daughter of 1899. Elinor.
Child of Jacob Davis and Elizabeth Bennett is:
474 | i. | Jacob Davis, born February 26, 1661/62 in Gloucester, MA; died February 01, 1717/18 in Gloucester, MA; married Mary Haskell September 14, 1687 in Gloucester, MA. |
950.William Haskell, born August 26, 1644 in Gloucester, MA; died June 05, 1708 in Gloucester, MA.He was the son of 1900. William Haskell (1) and 1901. Mary Tybbots.He married 951. Mary Browne July 03, 1667 in Gloucester, MA.
951.Mary Browne, born July 28, 1649 in Gloucester, MA; died November 12, 1715 in Gloucester, MA.She was the daughter of 1902. William Brown and 1903. Mary Robertson.
Notes for William Haskell:
Owned and operated a grist mill & sawmill in Rockport, MA
Freeman 31 October 1684
Child of William Haskell and Mary Browne is:
475 | i. | Mary Haskell, born April 29, 1668 in Gloucester, MA; died November 21, 1721; married Jacob Davis September 14, 1687 in Gloucester, MA. |
952.Thomas Riggs I (Source: Became the Town Clerk of Gloucester, MA for fifty years), born 1632 in England; died February 26, 1721/22 in Gloucester, MA.He was the son of 1904. Edward Riggs.He married 953. Mary Millet.
953.Mary Millet, born August 29, 1639 in Dorchester, MA; died January 23, 1694/95 in Gloucester, MA.She was the daughter of 1906. Thomas Millet and 1907. Mary Greenway.
Notes for Thomas Riggs I:
Of Roweley, Co. Yorkshire, England.Became the Town Clerk of
Gloucester, MA for fifty years
Children of Thomas Riggs and Mary Millet are:
i. | Thomas Riggs II, married Ann Wheeler | |||
476 | ii. | John Riggs, born February 25, 1669/70 in Gloucester, MA; died January 12, 1747/48 in Gloucester, MA; married Ruth Wheeler January 11, 1747/48 in Gloucester, MA. |
954.Henry Wheeler, born 1635 in Salisbury, Co. Wiltshire, England; died Bef. 1696.He was the son of 1908. John Wheeler and 1909. Ann Godfrey or Youman.He married 955. Abigail Allen Abt. 1659 in Salisbury, MA.
955.Abigail Allen, born January 04, 1639/40 in Salisbury, MA.She was the daughter of 1910. William Allen and 1911. Ann Goodale.
Notes for Henry Wheeler:
He was a planter
More About Henry Wheeler:
Baptism (LDS): February 03, 1634/35, Salisbury, Co. Wiltshire, England
Children of Henry Wheeler and Abigail Allen are:
i. | Ann Wheeler, married Thomas Riggs II | |||
477 | ii. | Ruth Wheeler, born 1671 in Salisbury, MA; died 1732 in Gloucester, MA; married John Riggs January 11, 1747/48 in Gloucester, MA. |
956.Abraham Tilton I, born Bet. 1638 - 1639 in Lynn, MA or England; died March 28, 1728 in Ipswich, MA.He was the son of 1912. William Tilton and 1913. Susannah Stoddard Hays.He married 957. Mary Crams January 25, 1665/66 in Hampton, NH.
957.Mary Crams, born 1646 in Hampton, NH; died 1678 in Ipswich, MA.She was the daughter of 1914. John Crams and 1915. Hester White.
Notes for Abraham Tilton I:
He was a Carpenter, a millwright and a farmer.he was admitted a
freeman 11 May 1681.He is buried at Ipswich hamlet (now Hamilton),
MA
Child of Abraham Tilton and Mary Crams is:
478 | i. | Abraham Tilton, born Bet. 1666 - 1667 in Hampton, NH; died January 07, 1756 in Ipswich, MA; married Mary Jacobs December 11, 1693 in Chebacco, Ipswich, MA. |
958.Thomas Jacobs, born 1641 in Ipswich, MA.He was the son of 1916. Richard Jacobs and 1917. Martha Appleton.He married 959. Sarah Browne December 21, 1671 in Ipswich, MA.
959.Sarah Browne, born 1650 in Ipswich, MA; died January 29, 1678/79 in Ipswich, MA.She was the daughter of 1918. John Brown and 1919. Mary Holmes.
Notes for Thomas Jacobs:
Admitted freeman 27 May 1674
More About Thomas Jacobs:
Will /proved/: December 03, 1706, Ipswich, MA
Child of Thomas Jacobs and Sarah Browne is:
479 | i. | Mary Jacobs, born November 07, 1672 in Ipswich, MA; died January 23, 1744/45 in Ipswich, MA; married Abraham Tilton December 11, 1693 in Chebacco, Ipswich, MA. |
960.Edward Jordan, born 1585.He was the son of 1920. Robert Jordaine.He married 961. Elizabeth Broughton.
961.Elizabeth Broughton, born 1637 in Worcester, England.She was the daughter of 1922. Foulkes Broughton.
Notes for Edward Jordan:
Of Co. Worcester, England
Child of Edward Jordan and Elizabeth Broughton is:
480 | i. | Reverend Robert Jordan, born 1612 in St. Swithin's, Co. Devon, England; died 1679 in Portsmouth, NH; married Sarah Winter |
962.John Winter (Source: George Cleeve, the patentee and founder of the seventeenth century settlement, which after several changes of name, is now the city of Portland, is a well known and controversial character in Maine's Colonial History.His life after his migration in 1630 is heavily documented in records of the Provincial Courts and in contemporary correspondence, and may be followed in detail in the late James Phinney Baxter's biography titled "George Cleeve of Casco Bay," published by the Gorges Society in 1885.Mr. Baxter is definitely an apologist for Cleeve and was perhaps influenced in his judgement by his pride and affection for the city of which he was mayor and a leading citizen for many years.And indeed, it is not difficult to feel some sympathy for Cleeve. Ejected from his first Maine home at the mouth of the Spurwink River by JOHN WINTER, the agent of Robert Trelawny, a Plymouth merchant, who had an unassailable title, Cleeve was followed for the next three decades by what seems the cold and calculated hatred of Winter and Winter's son-in-law, REVEREND ROBERT JORDAN, whose aggressiveness equalled that of Cleeve and whose greed may be measured by Cleeves ambitions, although those qualities were coupled with those wholly admirable.Returning from England in 1637 with a patent of his own for the site of Portland, which was forever to be called Stogumber and never was, Cleeve had to meet WINTER'S dubious claim that this land too fell under Trelawny's title, a claim in which JORDAN persisted after WINTER'S death.Attempting to tie himself to the fortunes of John Winthrop, to whose good character he testified before the King in London in 1636, Cleeve was treated with great caution by the Puritan Governor on his return.Winthrop who was doubtless fully informed of events and characters in the royalists and conformist province to the eastward, presumably suspected Cleeve's motives and was chary to his friendship.Nor could it have been pleasant for Cleeve to appear constantly - and it was a constant position - as plaintiff or defendant before a court of the judges of which were personally hostile to his plans and weary of his personality, however unbiased their judgement.One need not approve of Cleeve to sympathize with him.), born 1575 in Stogumber, England.He married 963. Joane Bowdon.