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Ancestors of David Alexander Neibaur


Generation No. 13


      4610. James Beer , Jr.. He was the son of 9220. James Beer , Sr. and 9221. Anne Perrott. He married 4611. Elinor.

      4611. Elinor, born Abt. 1626.
     
Child of James Beer and Elinor is:
  2305 i.   Anne Beer, married William Manning February 07, 1674/75.


      4612. Edward Penny III. He was the son of 9224. Edward Penny , Jr. and 9225. Thomasin. He married 4613. <Unnamed>.

      4613. <Unnamed>.
     
Child of Edward Penny and is:
  2306 i.   William Penny, married Mary Waymouth January 29, 1673/74.


      4614. Essau Esaiahor Husse Waymouth. He was the son of 9228. William Waymouth and 9229. Elizabeth Parrot. He married 4615. Bridget Coake.

      4615. Bridget Coake. She was the daughter of 9230. Edward Cloake and 9231. Julia.
     
Child of Essau Waymouth and Bridget Coake is:
  2307 i.   Mary Waymouth, married William Penny January 29, 1673/74.


      7696. John Sayles , Sr.184,185, born 1633; died 1681 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND. He was the son of 15392. John Sayles and 15393. Mrs. Soales. He married 7697. Mary Williams Abt. 1656.

      7697. Mary Williams186,187, born August 1633; died 1681 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, USA. She was the daughter of 15394. Roger Williams and 15395. Mary Barnard.
     
Child of John Sayles and Mary Williams is:
  3848 i.   John Sayles , Jr., born August 17, 1654 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, USA; died August 02, 1727; married Elizabeth Olney WFT Est. 1694-1698 in Providence, RI.


      7698. Thomas Olney188,189, born June 06, 1632 in Herfordshire, England190,191; died June 11, 1722 in Rhode Island192,193. He was the son of 15396. Thomas Olney and 15397. Marie Ashton. He married 7699. Elizabeth March July 03, 1660 in Providence, RI194,195.

      7699. Elizabeth March196,197, born Abt. 1632198,199; died WFT Est. 1669-1727200,201.
     
Child of Thomas Olney and Elizabeth March is:
  3849 i.   Elizabeth Olney, born January 31, 1665/66; died November 02, 1699 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, USA; married John Sayles , Jr. WFT Est. 1694-1698 in Providence, RI.


      7700. Michael Phillips202,203, born Abt. 1630 in England204,205; died Abt. 1684 in Newport, RI206,207. He married 7701. Barbara Phillips 1659208,209.

      7701. Barbara Phillips210,211, born WFT Est. 1623-1646212,213; died Aft. 1706214,215.
     
Child of Michael Phillips and Barbara Phillips is:
  3850 i.   Richard Phillips, born 1667; died December 13, 1747 in Smithfield, RI; married Sarah Mowry WFT Est. 1698-1730.


      7702. Nathaniel Mowry216,217, born January 10, 1643/44 in Providence, RI218,219; died March 24, 1717/18 in Providence, RI220,221. He was the son of 15404. Roger Mowry and 15405. Mary Johnson. He married 7703. Joanna Inman 1666222,223.

      7703. Joanna Inman224,225, born Abt. 1644226,227; died 1718228,229. She was the daughter of 15406. Edward Inman.
     
Children of Nathaniel Mowry and Joanna Inman are:
  3851 i.   Sarah Mowry, born WFT Est. 1663-1689 in Providence, RI; died WFT Est. 1698-1772; married Richard Phillips WFT Est. 1698-1730.
  ii.   Patience Mowry, died 1734; married Joseph Smith.


      7712. Christopher Smith, born in England; died June 1676 in NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND, USA. He married 7713. Alice in England.

      7713. Alice, died Abt. 1681.
     
Child of Christopher Smith and Alice is:
  3856 i.   Edward Smith, born in England; died November 08, 1693 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, USA; married Amphillis Angell May 09, 1663 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, USA.


      7714. Thomas Angell. He married 7715. Alice Ashton.

      7715. Alice Ashton.
     
Child of Thomas Angell and Alice Ashton is:
  3857 i.   Amphillis Angell, died 1694; married Edward Smith May 09, 1663 in PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, USA.


      7716. Roger Mowry230,231, born Abt. 1612 in England232,233; died January 05, 1665/66 in Salem, MA234,235. He was the son of 15432. Thomas Mowry and 15433. Elizabeth Mowry. He married 7717. Mary Johnson 1639 in Roxbury, Suffolk, MA236,237.

      7717. Mary Johnson238,239, born 1618 in Roxbury, Suffolk, MA240,241; died January 05, 1677/78 in Providence, RI242,243. She was the daughter of 15434. John Johnson and 15435. Margary M. Scudder.
     
Child of Roger Mowry and Mary Johnson is:
  3858 i.   Nathaniel Mowry, born January 10, 1643/44 in Providence, RI; died March 24, 1717/18 in Providence, RI; married Joanna Inman 1666.


      7718. Edward Inman244,245, born Abt. 1620246,247; died WFT Est. 1648-1711248,249.
     
Child of Edward Inman is:
  3859 i.   Joanna Inman, born Abt. 1644; died 1718; married Nathaniel Mowry 1666.


      7728. Joseph Jenckes , Sr.250, born August 26, 1599 in Hammersmith, London, England251; died March 16, 1682/83 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts251. He was the son of 15456. John Jenckes and 15457. Sarah Fulwater. He married 7729. Joan Hearne September 30, 1630 in All Hallows By The Wall, London, Middlesex, England252.

      7729. Joan Hearne252, born 1607 in Colnbrook, England253; died February 28, 1634/35 in London, England253. She was the daughter of 15458. George Hearne and 15459. Catharine.

Notes for Joseph Jenckes , Sr.:
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #4052, Date of Import: Jan 20, 1997]

Part 1, Chapter 1
Ancestors of One Line Only

JOSEPH JENCKES I
(1602-1683)
(Lynn, Massachusetts Bay Colony)

The first of the Jenckes clan to come to America was Joseph Jenckes, who was born in Hammersmith, England, near London, in 1602. He was a master mechanic, an operator of an extensive foundry and metal works, and an expert blacksmith. One of the cousins facetiously refers to him as "Our worthy progenitor, Joseph Jenckes, the honest blacksmith." He was presumably a descendant of the Welsh or ancient Britons, and of the Jenckes of Wolverton, Staffordshire county, England, That they were all of a mechanical turn of mind is evidenced by the following, which was clipped from an old newspaper:
"Steel is aptly named, The first man who made a piece of iron that would stand a high test in carbon and fiber was a Mr. Jenckes of Wolverton, Staffordshire, England. He was an iron-master by trade and a skillful mechanic. He allowed no one to inspect his furnaces except those whom he could trust, and even his men knew nothing about the inner workings of his business.
"He had a small shop in the rear of his foundry, and here behind locked doors, he arranged the chemicals for every bit of metal turned out. Finally two men, Henry Bessemer and William Cook, after planning for some time, succeeded in getting the watchman drunk after the foundry was closed for the night and climbed into Jenckes' laboratory, where they obtained a bottle of chemicals which they took to New York for analysis. A short time later a new firm was started, which succeeded in driving the real inventor to the wall and which received most o the credit for originating the tempered steel. These facts were well known to many steel workers of that day."
Returning to Joseph Jenckes, we are told that he was a widower with two sons, Joseph, Jr., and George, and that he was a very "ingenious man." Governor Winthrop of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, realizing that the colonies needed such men, earnestly entreated Mr. Jenckes to come to America and cast his lot with the colonists in the new world, In 1642 Mr. Jenckes arrived in Lynn, Massachusetts. In 1645 he was found at the Saugus Iron Works.
He married again in Lynn and raised a second family of three sons and two daughters: Sara, b. 1650, Samuel, b. 1654, John, b. 1660, Deborah, b. 1658, Daniel, b. 1663. He was the acknowledged head of the iron-smelting and foundry business, and first builder of machinery in this country, He was also the first patentee of inventions in America, having introduced the idea (first granted in England by act of Parliament in1625) of protection for the manufacturer of improvements by petition to the government of Massachusetts Bay. Almost all the Jenckes (or Jenks) in America today trace their descent to this first Joseph.
There is no record of the other son, George, ever having come to America. Perhaps he was the ancestor of the Jenckses (or Jenks) who have come here of late years, including Carmen Jenks, my daughter's little maid, in Riverside, Illinois, or of Sir Maurice Jenks, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1930. The surname was spelled Jenckes, Jencks, Jenkes, and Jenks (the present spelling), but never "Jinx." Joseph H. Jenckes, the present mayor of Phoenix, Arizona, is undoubtedly a descendant of our Joseph, but not in our direct line.
Captain John Jenckes, grandson of Joseph, Sr., was trumpeter of a "Company of Horse" in Lynn, Massachusetts. This company was styled "Horse Marines" and it may be the foundation for the old song entitled: "I'm Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines; I feed my horse on corn and beans; of course, it's quite beyond the means of a captain in the army."
It appears that the first patent granted in America was to Joseph Jenckes in 1646, which reads as follows:


More About Joseph Jenckes , Sr.:
Burial: Ilseworth, Middlesex, England
Christening: August 26, 1599, St Anne Blackfra, London, Middlesex, England

More About Joan Hearne:
Burial: Hounslow, Middlessex, MA
     
Children of Joseph Jenckes and Elizabeth Darling are:
  i.   Sarah Jenckes254, born 1652254; died WFT Est. 1653-1746254.
  ii.   Samuel Jenckes254, born 1654254; died WFT Est. 1655-1744254.
  iii.   Deborah Jenckes254, born June 11, 1658254; died WFT Est. 1659-1752254.
  iv.   John Jenckes, born 1660.
  v.   Daniel Jenckes, born 1663.
     
Children of Joseph Jenckes and Joan Hearne are:
  3864 i.   Joseph Jenckes , Jr., born October 12, 1628 in Hammersmith, England; died January 08, 1716/17 in Providence, Providence, Rhode Island; married Esther Ballard 1655 in Lynn, Essex, Massassachusetts.
  ii.   George Jenks, born 1634 in Colebrook, Bucks, England255; died WFT Est. 1635-1724255.


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