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Descendants of Clement Messervy


Generation No. 2


2. AARON8 MESSERVY (CLEMENT7, JEAN (JOHN)6, CLEMENT5, THOMAS4, THOMAS3, RICHARD2, GREGOIRE1) was born 1676 in Portsmouth, Rockingham, NH, and died Jan 1704/05. He married SUSANNAH SAWYER 20 Nov 1695.

Notes
He and his decendents lived in Salem, MA. This family retained the MESSERVY name spelling. The history of Gorman added this son of Salem, Massachusetts.


       Children of Aaron Messervy and Susannah Sawyer are:

  i.   MARY9 MESSERVY.
  ii.   MARY MESSERVY.
  iii.   ABIEL MESSERVY.
7. iv.   WILLIAM MESSERVY, b. Aft 26 Feb 1694/95, Salem, MA.
  v.   SUSANNA MESSERVY, b. Aft 28 Apr 1695, Salem, MA.
8. vi.   AARON MESSERVY, b. Aft 29 Apr 1695, Salem, MA.
3. CLEMENT8 MESERVE (CLEMENT7 MESSERVY, JEAN (JOHN)6, CLEMENT5, THOMAS4, THOMAS3, RICHARD2, GREGOIRE1) was born 1678 in Portsmouth, Rockingham, NH, and died Oct 1746. He married (1) ELIZABETH JONES 24 Sep 1702 in Portsmouth NH by Rev John Pike, daughter of Jenkin Jones and Abigail Heard. He married (2) SARAH STONE 14 Aug 1738.

Notes
Clement Meserve, son of the emigrant, was born in Portsmouth, about 1678. He was in William Redford's Co. Militia in 1696, and on Sept. 24, 1702, he was married to Elizabeth Jones. He lived in Newington, N. H. on his father's
homestaed, where he had gone from Portsmouth, Until 1726, when he and Daniel Moody bought 100 acres of land in Scarborough, Maine and , in 1729, 150 acres more. This land was held by his heirs who sold it to William Vaughan. His Will was probated Nov 5, 1746.


       Children of Clement Meserve and Elizabeth Jones are:

  i.   JOSEPH9 MESERVE.
9. ii.   ABIGAIL MESERVE, d. 10 Nov 1734.
10. iii.   CLEMENT MESERVE, b. 1703, Newington, Rockingham, NH; d. 1746, Standish, Cumberland, ME.
11. iv.   NATHANIAL MESERVE, b. Abt 1704, Portsmouth, Rockingham, NH; d. 28 Jun 1758, Louisburg, Nova Scotia, Canada.
  v.   GEORGE MESERVE, b. 1706, Scarborough or Newington; m. ELIZABETH HAM, 17 Feb 1736/37.
12. vi.   JOHN MESERVE, b. 21 Mar 1707/08, Newington, Rockingham, NH; d. 09 Mar 1762, Scarborough, Cumberland, ME.
  vii.   PETER MESERVE, b. Aft 1709, Newington, Rockingham, NH; m. SARAH LOND, 31 Mar 1737.
  viii.   ELIZABETH MESERVE, b. Aft 1711; d. 1790; m. JAMES LIBBY, 23 Dec 1725, Newington, NH by Rev. Joseph Adams.
13. ix.   DANIEL MESERVE, b. 24 Jan 1714/15, Newington, Rockingham, NH; d. 13 May 1803, Scarborough, Cumberland, ME.
4. DANIEL8 MESSERVY (CLEMENT7, JEAN (JOHN)6, CLEMENT5, THOMAS4, THOMAS3, RICHARD2, GREGOIRE1) was born Abt 1679, and died Aft 30 Jun 1756. He married DEBORAH (MERROW) OTIS 01 Dec 1701.

       Children of Daniel Messervy and Deborah Otis are:

14. i.   JOHN9 MESERVE.
  ii.   ELIZABETH MESERVE, m. JOSEPH LIBBY, 29 Dec 1726.
  iii.   ANNE MESERVE, m. JAMES NUTE.
  iv.   MARY MESERVE, m. DANIEL MEADER, 1743.
15. v.   DANIEL MESERVE, b. 15 Mar 1709/10.
16. vi.   CLEMENT MESERVE, b. 1716; d. 08 Jul 1800, Madbury, NH.
  vii.   TAMSON MESERVE, b. 1720; m. STEPHEN PINKHAM.
5. MARY8 MESSERVY (CLEMENT7, JEAN (JOHN)6, CLEMENT5, THOMAS4, THOMAS3, RICHARD2, GREGOIRE1) was born 1679 in Portsmouth, Rockingham, NH. She married (1) MARK HUNKING 27 Jun 1697. She married (2) JOHN NEWMARCH 05 Dec 1699.

       Children of Mary Messervy and John Newmarch are:

  i.   JOHN9 NEWMARCH, b. 03 Oct 1700.
  ii.   MARK NEWMARCH, b. 20 Mar 1701/02.
  iii.   THOMAS NEWMARCH, b. 15 Sep 1703.
  iv.   MARY NEWMARCH, b. 18 Nov 1705; m. CALEB CUSHING, 12 Mar 1729/30.
  v.   JOSEPH NEWMARSH, b. 29 Oct 1707.
  vi.   SAMUEL NEWMARCH, b. 03 Sep 1709.
  vii.   NATHANIEL NEWMARCH, b. 07 Jul 1710.
  viii.   BENJAMIN NEWMARCH, b. 18 Jul 1713.
  ix.   JOANNA NEWMARCH, b. 12 Jul 1715.
6. TAMSON8 MESSERVY (CLEMENT7, JEAN (JOHN)6, CLEMENT5, THOMAS4, THOMAS3, RICHARD2, GREGOIRE1) was born 1680 in Portsmouth, NH, and died 1704. She married (1) JOHN TIBBETTS. She married (2) JOSEPH HAM Aug 1704 in Dover, Strafford, NH.

Notes
Tamson was scalped by Indians Apr. 28, 1703. She recovered and lived to a
ripe old age.

According to a story published by the Arlington Coin Journal
Vol. II - No. 7, dated Sept.- Oct. 1973, As copied from this article.

OUR EARLY FEMALE COUNTERFEITOR'S

This month we want to tell you about Tamsen Meserve. She had the dubious
distinction of being the only woman counterfeiter to ever darken New
to ever darken Hampshire's shores.

Tamsen was an outgoing woman, with no little amout of ambition, curtailed,
perhaps, only by the times and the premise that woman in those early days were meant to be seen rather than heard.

In 1704 Tamsen married Joseph Ham of Dover with whom she lived a typical
and somewhat conformist life for 19 years, until her husband's death in 1723.

Two years later, scarcely out of the mourning period dicated by the times, she remarried - this time a widower named John Tibbitts. This marriage followed much the same pattern as her first one. That is, until 1731 when things began to look up for Tamsen. It so happened that a William Byrn, a painter (and perhaps a laborer, too) came to Dover from Rochester, New
Hampshire. Now after a short while, the folks in Dover began to think pretty
highly of Mr. Byrn and so implored him to "keep School." As he put it, "learn
their children to write."

William cottoned to this idea, accepted their offer, and was at once boarded at the home of John and Tamsen Tibbitts. Now, Tamsen, being a bright young woman, soon discovered that the new boarder had latent talents; that is, he could do a mighty nice flower drawing, and had the ability to pen beautiful script.

Believing that such talent shouldn't go to waste, Tamsen brought a 20
Shilling Mass. bill and a few other notes to Bryn, and with a bit of friendly
persuasion, prevailed upon him to copy them.

News of Byrn's skill somehow reached the ears of John McVicker and Samuel Styles, and soon a partnershipwas formed with the gifted penman. McVicker and Byrne, never ones to use their heads, made a foolhardy mostake of delivering to Styles two documents bearing their signatures. In one they promised to give Styles one-fifth of all the money he could pass, and also pay his expenses, while the other one they swore "by the living God" to betray him neither by signs or word of mouth.

Meantime, Tamsen was busy in her own way, having passed off a 30 shilling New Hampshire bill to Sarah Pitney, while Styles passed a 3-Pound 10 Shilling note to Hannah Bradford of Portsmouth and another to Sarah Croftswait.

This threw Styles under suspicion and he was promptly arrested and he was promptly arrested and searched. His pockets produced nine counterfiet
3 pound 10 shilling bills, along with much more incriminating evidence-the two documents given him by McVicker and Bryn.

At this point things began to happen pretty fast; warrants were speedily issued and both of Style's accomplices were tossed into jail. They were soon joined by the Tibbets, and it didn't take long to discover that the gang had a plate and that the only give-away on the nicely stuck bills were the
signings.

At the court hearing, both Styles and Byrn wre given the same sentence-pay
a fine of 14 pounds, stand one hour in the pillory at Exter, each to have one
ear lopped off, and each to be jailed for one yaer without bail.

The Court, backlogged with work, didn't have time for the other prisoners,
so McVickers was returned to jail and the Tibbitts were relaesed on recognizance of 500 pounds.

Byrn, who began to feel sorry for what he had done, began to repent, though more than likely spurred by the thought of perhaps drawing a lighter sentence, decided to blow the whistle on his friends and made a full confession of the whole ugly mess. He claimed the bills were not made by a plate but his own hand and pen at the instigation of Tamsen; and bitter at Styles for his carelessness which brought on Byrn's arrest, he let loose with everything he knew about him, too.

The outcome was that Tamsen and her husband were charged with counterfeiting and passing, but at a Court of General Sessions, the king's attorney couldn't get a grand jury to indict them, so they were dismissed after paying court costs. McVickers, on th other hand, was convicted, fined 7 pounds, pilloried for one hour, had one ear cropped, and spent a year in prison.

Thus New Hampshire's only woman counterfeiter, Tamsen Meserve Ham
Tibbitts, bless her heart, came out of that nasty counterfeiting business
smelling like a rose!


       Children of Tamson Messervy and Joseph Ham are:

  i.   ELIZABETH9 HAM, b. 22 Feb 1704/05; m. BENJAMIN LIBBY.
  ii.   MARY HAM, b. 28 Dec 1706; m. SHADRACK HODGDON.
  iii.   TAMSON HAM, b. 09 Jul 1708; m. UNKNOWN SPINNEY.
  iv.   ABIGAIL HAM, b. 05 Nov 1710.
  v.   ANN HAM, b. 02 Dec 1712.
  vi.   DANIEL HAM, b. 25 Apr 1716.
  vii.   CLEMENT HAM, b. 16 Dec 1718.
  viii.   JONATHON HAM, b. 08 Jan 1719/20.
  ix.   JONUS HAM, b. 26 Jun 1722.


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