Jimson, Patrick

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published: 04 Mar 2020
Researcher: Teresa Rust
Editor: Teresa Rust and Ray Dusek


Jimson, Patrick. NEHGR, SD

Name Variations: Jimson, Timson, Jemeson


First Generation in the New World

1. A, PATRICK¹ JIMSON, 1 was born presumably in Scotland and died possibly in New Hampshire?

Biographical Notes:
On the Suffolk Deeds list his name is spelled, Patricke Timson.2
“Patriarch Jemeson” was received into the Oyster River, New Hampshire community on 15 Feb 1658, along with at least seven other SPOW.3

  1. /battle-of-worcester-documents/ []
  2. https://archive.org/stream/suffolkdeedslib07hassgoog#page/n60/mode/1up []
  3. Vital Records from The NEHGS Register. Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014. (Compiled from articles originally published in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.) https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/21068/248/45649272 []

Dulen, Edward

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published: 03 Oct 2018
Updated: 04 Mar 2020
Researchers: Ray Dusek, Andrew Millard, Teresa Rust, B. Craig Stinson
Editors: Teresa Rust


Edward Dulen is probably the same man listed as:
Edward Irwin, #41. on George S. Stewart’s Captured at Dunbar list

Name Variations: Irwin, Erwin, Urin, Dulen, Duren, During, Dowreing , Eurin, Errin, Evrin, Arrin, Dowereing


IMPORTANT UPDATE! (July 2018)
According to, Christopher Gerrard, Pam Graves, Andrew Millard, Richard Annis, and Anwen Caffell, in, Lost Lives, New Voices: Unlocking the Stories of the Scottish Soldiers at the Battle of Dunbar 1650, (England: Oxbow Books, 2018), on page 255, Edward is categorized as:

Doubtful [that he is a Dunbar prisoner transported on the Unity]

Irwin/Erwin/Urin/Dulen/Duren/During/Dowreing/Eurin/Errin/Evrin, Edward. Residences: Oyster River, Dover NH. Appears: 1658. D.1666. Probably the Edward Dulen of the John & Sara list. One of Valentine Hill’s Seven Scots. [Exiles; DR; BCS; SPOWS; Ch.7 & 8]

For explanations of the category, abbreviations and references see List of Dunbar prisoners from Lost Lives, New Voices.


First Generation in the New World

1. EDWARD DULEN, was born, presumably, in Scotland, and died at Exeter, New Hampshire on 09 Nov 1667. He never married.

Biographical Notes:
1. A “Edward Erwin” was received into the Oyster River community on 15 Feb 1658 along with at least seven other Scots.1

2. “I set out to prove whether or not William Furbish was one of Valentine Hill’s original “Seven Scots.” I can’t prove that fact either way. However, I have traced 18 Scots who were first taxed at Oyster River (Dover, N.H.) between 1657-1659. Most of these are either on “The Dunbar Prisoners” list or on the John & Sara list. A good bit of this information will be new, I believe. And I can correct (and in some cases corroborate) some of the speculations that have been made about these 18. I have tried to be careful to document, in hope these will be of use to you and to other researchers.” ~ B. Craig Stinson


History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire. Contributed by Ray Dusek.
History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire. Contributed by Ray Dusek.

NOTES:

From Ray Dusek:
John Roy
1630–1710
Birth 1630 • ,,,Scotland
Death 24 JUN 1710 • Charlestown, Suffolk, Massachusetts
Spouse: Elizabeth Phipps 1643
Children
Mary Roy 1662
Elizabeth Roy 1664-1669
John Roy 1666-1669
Samuel Roy 11668-1669
Elizabeth Roy 1670-1671
Solomon Ray 1672
Marcie “Mercy” Roy 1675-1716
Daniel Roy 1678-1679
Mary Roy 1680
Please note that John Roy was the Heir to to the estate of Edward Dulen (see the attachment on Edward Dulen)
  1. Vital Records from The NEHGS Register. Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014. (Compiled from articles originally published in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.) https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/21068/248/45649272 []

Hudson, John

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

John Hudson. “Scotch Prisoners Sent to Massachusetts in 1652, By Order of the English Government”1


First Generation in the New World

1. JOHN¹ HUDSON, was born, presumably in Scotland about 1634 and died in Newington, Rockingham, New Hampshire about 1717. He married first before 1677, (_____), she died in 1689. He married, second, at Dover, New Hampshire on 25 Jul 1689, MARY BEARD.2 John Hudsen married to Mary Beard, July 25, 1689.

Biographical Notes:

Children of John and (_____) Hudson:
2. i. SARAH² HUDSON, (John¹), was born in probably Portsmouth, Rockingham, New Hampshire in 1677. She married, JOHN SHACKFORD, 1677-1738.

2. ii. MARY² HUDSON, (John¹), was born in Newington, Rockingham Co., New Hampshire on 13 JANUARY 1689; died in 1716.

Second Generation

2. i. SARAH² HUDSON, (John¹), was born at Portsmouth, Rockingham, New Hampshire in 1677. She married, JOHN SHACKFORD, 1677-1738.

Children of John and Sarah (Hudson) Shackford:
3. i. PAUL³ SHACKFORD, (Sarah², John¹), was born in 1702; d. in 1786.
3. ii. JOHN³ SHACKFORD, (Sarah², John¹), was born in 1707; d. in 1766.
3. iii. MARY³ SHACKFORD, (Sarah², John¹), was born in
3. iv. DEBORAH³ SHACKFORD, (Sarah², John¹), was born in
3. v. SARAH³ SHACKFORD, (Sarah², John¹), was born in
3. vi. ELIZABETH³ SHACKFORD, (Sarah², John¹), was born in

2. ii. MARY² HUDSON, (John¹), was born in Newington, Rockingham Co., New Hampshire on 13 Jan 1689 and died at Newington in 1716. She married, ABEL PEAVEY, 1688-1736.

Children of Abel and Mary (Hudson) Peavey:
3. i. SALLY PEAVEY, 1709
3. ii. HUDSON PEAVEY, 1711-1785
3. iii. THOMAS PEAVEY, 1714-1803
3. iv. ABEL PEAVEY, 1716-1790


Published: 30 Nov 2018
Page contributors: Ray Dusek, Teresa Rust, B. Craig Stinson


Scots at Oyster River
John Hudson (d. 1717)
B. Craig Stinson
15 Aug 2016

John Hudson seems to have been a prisoner from the Battle of Worcester, yet is one of
the very earliest Scots to be listed in Oyster River documents. He seems already to have had a lot there before October 5, 1652, for on that date Valentine Hill was granted “foure acres of land adjoining to Goodman Hudsons Lott for his Scots.” A Peavey and Hudson family history says that John Hudson originally belonged to Valentine Hill.

John Hudson
John & Sara #77

A Peavey and Hudson family history says that he belonged to Valentine Hill.
5 Oct 1652 – at Oyster River [HTDNH 80]
called “Goodman Hudson” [HTDNH 76]
5 Oct 1652 – It looks as if he already had his lot when Valentine Hill was granted the four
acres [HTDNH 80]
settled at Bloody Point, Newington [HTDNH 80]
25 July 1689 – married Mary Beard (probably second marriage) [HTDNH 80]
19 Mar 1693/4 – granted 10 acres adjoining the land he bought from William Furber
[HTDNH 80]
1717 – died, leaving most of estate to grandson Hudson Peavey [HTDNH 80]

A small amount of information can be found in GDMNH 355, although it claims he was about 48 years old in 1701, making his date of birth 1653. He could possibly have had a son of the same name born by 1653, but not likely.
September 1697 – Dover constable

Sources:
HTDNH History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire, vol. 1, Everett S. Stackpole
and Lucien Thompson, 1913, pp. 60, 76, 80.
GDMNH Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Noyes, Libby, and
Davis, Portland, Maine: The Southworth-Anthoensen Press, 1928-1939, p. 355.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~peaveysusa/PVNE/records/
biographies/pv_hudson_lineage.html
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jalanne/Familylines/Leroy/
Leroy8.html
~B. Craig Stinson
August 15, 2016


Miscellaneous Sources and Notes:

Contributed by Ray Dusek.
Contributed by Ray Dusek.

 

  1. Vital Records from The NEHGS Register. Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014. https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/21065/378/1425475473 []
  2. New England Marriages to 1700. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2008.) Originally published as: New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2015. https://www.americanancestors.org/DB1568/i/21175/812/426891506 []

Mackey, John

Battle:03 Sep 1651, Battle of Worcester, in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara; May 1652
Prisoner and List:John Mackey; John & Sara list
Name Variations:Key, Kye, Mackey, Kye, Keiay, Keays
Residences:Dover, New Hampshire and Berwick, Maine
Other SPOW Associations:Peter Grant
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published on: 02 Sep 2016, Updated: 19 Mar 2019
Page Contributors: Ellen Brown Pfeifer, Teresa Rust, B. Craig Stinson
Editor: Teresa Rust


John Key, #44 on George S. Stewart’s Captured at Dunbar list, most likely the:
Mackey, John.* NEHGR, (GSCD), Dover, NH; Berwick, ME.

Suffolk Deeds: Liber -I-II [1629-56]

IMPORTANT UPDATE! (July 2018)
According to, Christopher Gerrard, Pam Graves, Andrew Millard, Richard Annis, and Anwen Caffell, in, Lost Lives, New Voices: Unlocking the Stories of the Scottish Soldiers at the Battle of Dunbar 1650, (England: Oxbow Books, 2018), on page 255, John is categorized as:

Doubtful [that he is a Dunbar prisoner transported on the Unity]

Key/Kye/Mackey/Kye/Keiay/Keays, John. Residences: Dover NH, Berwick ME. Appears: 1657. B.c.1633. D.1718. Probably to be identified with the John MacKey on the John & Sara list. [Exiles; Banks; DR; BCS; SPOWS; Ch.7 & 8]

For explanations of the category, abbreviations and references see List of Dunbar prisoners from Lost Lives, New Voices.


John and Sara Passenger List:
Macketh, Neile.
Mackey, Hugh.
Mackey, John. (GSCD), Dover, NH; Berwick, ME.

First Generation in the New World

1. JOHN¹ KEY/MACKEY, was born, presumably in Scotland about 1633 and died in Maine in 1718. He married, first, in Maine about 1672, UNKNOWN (_____). He married, second, in Maine about 1679?, Widow SARAH (JENKINS) NASON, daughter of REYNOLD JENKINS and widow of JONATHAN NASON.

Biographical Notes:
Both Torrey’s Marriages before 1700 and the Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire by Noyes, Libby and Davis give the name of Jonathan Nason’s wife as “Sarah” Jenkins. Torrey’s Marriages also lists the 2nd wife of John Key as “Sarah (Jenkins) {Mason} w. Jonathan”.” ~ Ellen Brown Pfeifer

Children of John Key [not in proper order of birth]:
2. JOHN KEY, JR., born at Kittery, Maine about 1672-76; captive in Quebec with his father 1689-1695; married about 1697, GRIZZEL GRANT, daughter of Peter Grant, a SPOW.
2. ELIZABETH KEY, born at Kittery in 1673; m. on 03 Jan 1694, WALTER ABBOTT.
2. ABIGAIL KEY, born at Kittery (on the Roll of English Prisoners in the Hands of the French and Indians at Canada – 1710)
2. JAMES KEY, born at Kittery in 1685; died 1690, killed by Indians at age 5
2. SARAH KEY, born at Kittery.
2. MARY KEY, born at Kittery; married SYLVANUS WENTWORTH.
2. HANNAH KEY, born at Kittery; married JOHN HAINES.

________________________________________________________
Scots at Oyster River
John Key

(about 1633-1718)
by B. Craig Stinson
12 August 2016

John Kye Senior, his mark, 1710

After being released from his indenture, John Key relocated to the far north end of the homesteads along the Newichawannock River on the Maine side, above Salmon Falls. He and his first and second wives raised seven children. Being on the edge of the frontier, they were especially vulnerable to the surprise Indian attack that took place on March 17, 1689/90. John’s five-year-old son James was killed. John and two of his other children, John and Abigail, were taken prisoner and sold in Canada. Prisoners in or around Quebec for six years, John and John Jr. were ransomed in 1695 and returned home to Maine. Daughter Abigail was still on the captive roll in 1710, so she may never have returned. John Jr. grew up to marry Grizzel Grant, a daughter of Scot Peter Grant.

John Key, aka Kye, Keiay, Keays, Mackey TIMELINE:
1633 – Approximate date of birth. (about 70 in 1703 deposition) [GDMNH 398]1650 or 1651 – HTDNH 81 thinks it very likely that he came on the John & Sara.
[Stinson note: There is a “John Mackey” who is #128 on the John & Sara list, but I suspect he is instead the “John Key” who is #44 on “The Dunbar Prisoners” list.]1657 – taxed at Dover as “John Key” [OKAHF 568]11 Dec 1662 – grant of land in Kittery [NEHGR 176]; 30 rods on the river, extending 267 rods into the woods [OKAHF 135][Note: James Grant [#34 DPL], James Barry, and Micum McIntire [#61 DPL] received similar grants that same day.] [OKAHF 135]1667 – at Berwick (aka Salmon Falls) [OKAHF 133 map shows shows John Key’s land near the far north end of the Old Berwick settlers.]1669 – oath of fidelity [OKAHF 568]1671 – grant of land from Kittery [NEHGR 176]Name of first wife is unknown.
12 Nov 1679 – “Goodman Keys Land” abuts James Grant [MW 78]2nd wife is daughter of Reynold Jenkins and widow of Jonathan Nason.
17 March 1689-90 – he and his son John and daughter Abigail captured by Indians and taken to Canada. His son James was killed. [detailed real-time account OKAHF 162-165]1695 – John Key and John Key Jr. were ransomed [NEHGR 176]1711 – his house was a garrison sheltering 25 people in six families [OKAHF 177]13 Apr 1710 – will made as “John Kye” [MW 210-212][Note: his mark on the will is very cool!]30 Oct 1718 – will probated [MW 212]Inventory £202:3:0 [MW 212]

Seven Children [Not in Birth Order]:
JAMES, (killed by Indians 1690, age 5) [GDMNH 398]JOHN, JR., captive in Quebec with his father 1689-1695; married Grizzel Grant, daughter of Peter Grant, about 1697
ABIGAIL, (on the Roll of English Prisoners in the Hands of the French and Indians at Canada – 1710)
SARAH
MARY, married Sylvanus Wentworth
HANNAH, married John Haines
ELIZABETH, born in 1673 and married Walter Abbott, January 3, 1694

In a 1701 deposition, John Key stated that James Barry, Niven Agnew, and John Taylor owned in succession a farm in upper Kittery (south Berwick).

[Stinson note: this is Barry’s grant from Kittery. Upon Barry’s death in 1675 Agnew inherited it; when Agnew died in 1687 he willed it to John Taylor.]

SOURCES:
HTDNH History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire, vol. 1, Everett S. Stackpole and Lucien Thompson, 1913, p. 81.
GDMNH Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Noyes, Libby, and Davis, Portland, Maine: The Southworth-Anthoensen Press, 1928-1939, p. 398.
OKAHF Old Kittery and Her Families, Everett S. Stackpole, Lewiston, Maine, Press of the Lewiston Journal Company, 1903, pp. 133, 135, 177, 568.
http://junkinsfamilyassociation.wikidot.com/robert-junkins-story
MW Maine Wills 1640-1760, William M. Sargent, Portland: Brown Thurston and Co., 1887, pp. 210-212.
NEHGR The New England Historical and Genealogical Register for the Year 1861, Volume XV, Samuel G. Drake, Boston: Dutton and Son, 1861, p. 176.
Yearbook of the Society of Colonial Wars of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Boston, 1897, p. 125.

Homestead of John Key, 1662

Homestead of John Key, 1662
______________________________________________________________On February 02, 2017, Sandra A. Andrews shared:
Just to show how the John Key’s family, was connected with my family.
“First Generation in the New World
1. JOHN KEY, was born in Scotland about 1633 and died in Maine in 1718. He married, first, in Maine before about 1672, UNKNOWN (_____). He married, second, in Maine about 1679?, Widow UNKNOWN (JENKINS) NASON.”

1. Reynold Jenkins b Abt. 1608 England, d Bet. 1661 – 10 Feb 1678, m England Anne Gale, b England. Their children are SARAH, Mary, Joseph, Philadelphia, Stephen & Jabez.
2. SARAH JENKINS m (1) Jonathan Nason, d 1691 [Constable in 1682. Served on Grand Jury, 1674, 1688. Killed by accident in 1691. His brother, Baker accidently hit him in the head with an oar while in a canoe.]Their children are Alice, Charity, Mary, Sarah, Jonathan, Abigail, Richard. I am 10th generation to Sarah Jenkins.
**SARAH (JENKINS) NASON m (2) Aft. 28 Jun 1703, JOHN KEY, (SPOW).
John Key was my Alice Nasons’ step-father. She married Joseph Abbott, the brother of Walter Abbott, who married Elizabeth Key (John’s daughter). Elizabeth’s sister, Mary, married Sylvanus Wentworth, brother of my Ezekiel Wentworth married to Elizabeth (UNLN).
I find it interesting to look at my Mother’s line….she has 4 SPOW ancestors…..Robert Dunbar, John Munroe, Alexander Gordon, & John Taylor….and then to see how close we are to another SPOW.

Jimson, Patrick

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published on: 24 August 2016
Updated: 24 May 2018

No known descendants.

“Patrick Jimson” is a name found on, A list of the passengers aboard the John and Sarah of London John Greene Mr. bound for New England, dated 11 Nov 1651. ~ Suffolk Deeds, LIBER I., Massachusetts, 1880. Google Books Online

Name Variations:
Patrick Jameson, aka Gimison, Jemison, Jennison, Gynnison, “Patrick the Scott”

________________________________________________________
Scots at Oyster River

Patrick Jameson (d. 1678)
by B. Craig Stinson
17 August 2016

Patrick Jameson, was a Scottish prisoner of war whose darker story is mostly untold in the history books of the last century. Perhaps he is harder to track because his name is rendered so many different ways: Gimison, Jennison, Gynnison, or simply “Patrick the Scott”. He was probably the “Patrick Jimson” who was prisoner #91 on the John & Sara. He originally belonged to Valentine Hill and was one of the first Scots at Oyster River to earn his freedom. Mr. Hill trusted him enough that he wanted Jameson to live on his land (1659); the town of Oyster River valued his work and judgment such that they essentially offered Jameson and Philip Chesley a blank check to lay out a highway from Oyster River to Cochecho that was “fitt for horse and foot” (1664).

But in 1669 he perpetrated an ugly crime. Abetted by her older brother, “a simple-minded youth”, Patrick “Jenyson” raped a seven-year-old girl named Grace Roberts. Jameson was at least in his late 30’s and unmarried. The assailants were jailed and bound over for trial in Boston. The crime exposed a loophole in the law; rape of a child over the age of ten was punishable by death, but no one had thought to include younger children in the prohibition. It took only a month for the courts to close this loophole, and prosecutors argued for the death of Jameson in spite of the technicality.

Very little about the verdict can be found so far; a year after the crime was first brought to court Grace’s older brother William was publicly whipped. Jameson was to have received “some grievous punishment”; one source claims he was executed. But most histories seem to think Jameson may have escaped punishment. To be sure, we find him quite alive in Saco, Maine, and in trouble for being drunk on July 5, 1670; Major Pendleton even paid part of his fine. In 1674 he was at Yarmouth Falls with sawmill owner Henry Sayward; in 1675 he was in court at Wells for being absent from meeting. It appears that he died childless in 1678. But the legacy of pain he brought to Grace Roberts continued to echo through several more generations.

Patrick Jameson, aka Gimison, Jemison, Jennison, Gynnison, “Patrick the Scott”

John & Sara #91

1657 – taxed Oyster River as “Patrick the Scott”
11 May 1659 – Mr. Valentine Hill sold land on the north side of Oyster River to him [as Patrick “Gimison”] and told that he had been a useful servant about his mill.
John Meador testified in 1710: “the westerly bounds of that land Mr. Valentine Hill sold to Patrick Jemison begins at the salt river between a fence and a Littell Hill wher plume trees grow and soe running upon a straight Line to Stony Brook to an elm standing near Capt. Woodman Decesd orchard… I asked Mr. Valentine Hill why hee would sell that land to Patrick Jemison, Hee answered mee because hee was A usefull man to mee aboutte my mills hee was my Servt and I would have him settled by mee and further saith not.” [HTDNH 69]
1663 – town grant
1664 – he and Philip Chesley were chosen “to lay out the heigways from Oyster River to Cochechae and make the heigways fitt for horse and foot and bring thear a Compt of thear charges to the Townsmen.” [HTDNH 219]
HTDNH 80 is discreet or uninformed about the nature of his 1669 crime.
29 June 1669 – William Randle, Patrick Jenyson and William Roberts Jr. were bound over upon suspicion of raping seven-year-old Grace Roberts [NHCR 246-248]
07 Sept 1669 – under indictment in Boston for “mistreatment” of Grace Roberts, under age 8, of Oyster River [GDMNH 374]
New Hampshire Court Records 1640-1692, vol. 40, pp. 247-248:
Wm Randle Junr Patrick Jenyson & Wm Roberts Junr
being bound over to this Court by Capt Waldren upon suspition of a Rape done to ye body of Grace Roberts a Girle of aboute seaven yeares old,
This Court having Examyned all Parties that they Could receive Light from, ffind ye Case soe as that they order that they be at present secured in ye prison at Dover, and be transmitted to ye prison at Boston there to be Kept to yr further triall & that the witnesses be som’oned to reappear then & ye evedences Concerning the case sent in season.

Screen Shot 2016-08-23 at 5.36.29 PM 2
New Hampshire Court Records 1640-1692, pages 246-247.

New Hampshire Court Records 1640-1692, pp 246-247
13 Oct 1669 – enactment of death penalty for rape of child under age of ten
28 June 1670 – court determines a punishment for William Roberts Jr. of being “whipt forthwith to ye number of 10 Stripes upon ye bare back & ffees”. [NHCR 261]
Brother “a simple-minded youth” [HTDNH 85] was ruled complicit and was whipped
5 July 1670 – Jameson in court for being drunk in Saco, Maine; Major Pendleton paid part of his fine.
1674 – at Yarmouth Falls with Henry Sayward
1675 – at Wells absent from meeting
1677 – estate of Patrick Gynnison, deceased, granted to Samuel Austin of York, according to Alfred, Maine, court records. [HTDNH 80]
2 Oct 1678 – estate administered to Samuel Austin [of Wells]
No children.

What became of Grace?
Grace Roberts was born about 1662, the youngest child of William and Dorothy Roberts. Her father William had come to Oyster River by 1643; he rented a home on the north bank of Oyster River from William Follett. William Roberts became a strong Quaker and was in constant trouble with the authorities.

Screen Shot 2016-08-23 at 5.47.36 PM 2
Grace Roberts’ childhood home, Oyster River, New Hampshire

Grace was only about seven years old when she was raped by Patrick Jameson. Her older brother William Jr. was also indicted, alongside William Randle Jr. The courts eventually ruled that her brother was to be publicly whipped with 10 stripes. The actual perpetrator may have escaped serious punishment.

When Grace was nine, her father purchased the home he had been renting. Two years later, William Roberts and William Jr. were killed in an Indian attack. Grace was 13. Added to the horror of all the violence they had been subjected to, the family now faced a financial crisis as well. Grace went to work for Mrs. Follett; it appears that Grace was now a servant in the very house in which she had grown up.

Two years later, in 1677, fifteen-year-old Grace gave birth to a baby. The father was another of the Follett household servants, John Muchemore (Michelmore). Since birthing a bastard child was not only socially unacceptable but also illegal, a warrant was issued for her arrest. It was Grace that bore the brunt of the law. History does not seem to show what became of this child.

Five years later, February 13, 1682, twenty-year-old Grace Roberts was summoned before the grand jury in Portsmouth for committing the crime of “ffornication”. The evidence? Another illegitimate child. Grace claimed that a childless married man named Ezekiel Pitman was the father; he denied the charge and apparently was exonerated. This child, too, seems to be lost to history so far.

Screen Shot 2016-08-23 at 5.55.07 PM 2
New Hampshire Court Records, February 13, 1682.

New Hampshire Court Records, February 13, 1682

About this time Grace’s life finally took a less turbulent turn. Grace married Philip Duley, a sailor in the service of Captain John Cutts. They were married for 35 years. There is not much documentation about them during these years, except for the five Duley children that Grace bore: Philip Jr., William, Hannah, Sarah, and Mary. Grace’s two older children are, so far, lost to the record. Grace’s husband Philip died in 1717, and two years later she was baptized, “an ancient widow”. She was 57 years old. Some time after that she married Timothy Moses and lived another two decades or so. But the drama in her life was not at an end.

Her children and her children’s children
Grace Roberts Duley’s three daughters all provided fodder for the gossipers of the day. Middle daughter Sarah died shortly after marrying Thomas Harris. Harris took up with Sarah’s younger sister Mary. By law they could not marry, so when they had a child together in 1721 in Maine, Mary was indicted for the crime of bastardy. The couple were undeterred; they relocated back across the river to New Hampshire and had a second child. But neither did the relocation deter the law; Mary was brought up on charges in that state as well. And while both partners were guilty under the law, the woman who gave birth was always easier to indict than the man who fathered the child. Undaunted, the couple continued to live as husband and wife, contrary to the law prohibiting in-laws from marrying. Over the years Thomas Harris and Mary Roberts had several more children together.

Grace’s older daughter Hannah may have lived unmarried. Hannah built a house for herself at Portsmouth in 1728. In 1736 she too was in court for bastardy, apparently bearing a child out of wedlock.

Grace lived to see all this, and probably also lived to witness the terrible tragedy that befell her oldest granddaughter. Sarah Duley was born in 1713, the oldest child of Grace’s son Philip Duley Jr. Sarah likely was named for her aunt, Sarah Duley Harris. Sarah Duley’s mother Elizabeth died when she was 8; she was probably not yet a teenager when her father Philip died. So it seems likely that went to live with her grandmother Grace, although she might instead have gone to live with her aunt Mary or possibly with her aunt Hannah. In 1733 Sarah married Peter Simpson; within the year they had a baby boy named Nicholas. Young Peter Simpson apparently died in 1739, leaving a young widow and probably a young son.

The mystery
On Tuesday, August 11, 1739, the body of a female newborn was found floating in a well in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Suspicion was cast upon every woman who was known or suspected to have been pregnant in recent weeks, especially those who were unmarried. The young widow Sarah Simpson was accused and a warrant was issued for her arrest. Sarah admitted having recently given birth but claimed that the child was stillborn. She led authorities to a very shallow grave by the river. But this was not the child in the well.

The investigation widened. Soon another young woman was accused, a 20-year-old Irish servant named Penelope Kenny. Penelope lied at first, but then confessed that she had given birth to a boy on a Wednesday morning and had put him alive into a tub in her master’s cellar, and on the following Friday night, threw the body into the river.

This sensational revelation apparently shifted the focus from the mother of the child in the well, whose identity was still unrevealed. But the incensed community apparently had enough of what they sought. Both Sarah Simpson and Penelope Kenny were jailed. On August 31, 1739, after a long and difficult trial, a jury of “twelve good and lawful men” found both women guilty of “feloniously concealing the death of a… infant bastard child.” The penalty was for both to be “hanged up by the Neck until her body be dead”. This sentence was appealed to Governor Belcher, who granted a postponement for about six weeks.

A pastor was assigned to each imprisoned woman. Sarah Simpson repented of her lack of church attendance during her marriage, which the pastor noted, very often leads to the committing of capital crimes. On December 27, 1739, the delay of execution ran out. Rev. William Shurtleff preached what appears to be almost an hour-long sermon on the mile-long walk from the prison to the gallows. His sermon, “The Faith and Prayer of a Dying Malefactor”, can be found here: http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/evans/N03751.0001.001?view=toc

Sarah Simpson and Penelope Kenny were hanged in the public square at Portsmouth in front of a large crowd, the first executions in New Hampshire. Apparently neither Sarah nor Penelope ever named the man who fathered her child.

Christopher Benedetto’s carefully researched and wonderfully told account of this sad affair can be found in his 2006 monograph, “A Warning to All Others,” which was published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society. Here is a link to his piece:

http://www.seacoastnh.com/Places-and-Events/NH-History/first-women-executed-in-nh/?showall=1

An echo across generations
Whether Patrick Jameson’s heinous act in 1669 in some way played a part in the tragedy that unfolded seventy years later we cannot know. But Grace Roberts’ daughters and granddaughter most likely knew of their loved one’s rape as a little girl and of the two children she bore outside of wedlock while she was yet in her teens. Two of her daughters and one of her granddaughters also gave birth to children out of wedlock. For Grace’s daughters Hannah and Mary, this probably caused trouble for them and their children at the hands of moral society. For Grace’s granddaughter Sarah Simpson, it cost her life.

Sources:
GDMNH Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Noyes, Libby, and Davis, Portland, Maine: The Southworth-Anthoensen Press, 1928-1939, pp. 210, 274, 313, 374, 501, 557, 589.
HTDNH History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire, vol. 1, Everett S. Stackpole and Lucien Thompson, 1913, pp. 48, 68-69, 80, 85-86, 171, 219.
NHCR New Hampshire Court Records 1640-1692, vol. 40, Ed. Otis G. Hammond, The State of New Hampshire, 1943, pp. 246-248, 261, 390-391.
“The Faith and Prayer of a Dying Malefactor”, William Shurtleff, December 27, 1739. http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/evans/N03751.0001.001?view=toc
“A Warning to All Others”, Christopher Benedetto. http://www.seacoastnh.com/Places-and-Events/NH-History/first-women-executed-in-nh/?showall=1

B. Craig Stinson
August 17, 2016
______________________________________________________________

Curmuckhell, John

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:Carmicle, Cernicle, Carnicle, Chirmihill, Cyrmihill
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published on: 23 August 2016
Updated: 24 May 2018
Researchers: B. Craig Stinson
Editors: Teresa Rust


John Curmuckhell had no known children. [GDMNH 129]

John Curmuckhell is a name found on, A list of the passengers aboard the John and Sarah of London John Greene Mr. bound for New England, dated 11 Nov 1651. ~ Suffolk Deeds, LIBER I., Massachusetts, 1880. Google Books Online


________________________________________________________
Scots at Oyster River

John Curmuckhell (d. 1677) and Alexander Mackaneer (d. abt. 1670)
by B. Craig Stinson
23 July 2016

John Curmuckhell married the daughter of a fisherman from York County, John Pearce. He was killed by Indians on April 7, 1677. Fellow Scot Andrew Rankin and five other residents of the Brixham section of York County were also slain that day as they were clearing land for the spring planting. Curmuckhell’s small estate was administered by his brother-in-law, fellow Scot Micum McIntire. Some histories claim in error that McIntire then married Curmuckhell’s widow; McIntire was actually married to Dorothy, a sister of Curmuckhell’s widow Anne.

Alexander Mackaneer was probably not one of Valentine Hill’s Scots, but he was one of the Dunbar prisoners. He married Dorothy, the younger daughter of fisherman John Pearce of York. When we see him as a free man, probably in his mid-30’s, he is suffering from lameness and weakness; he died about 1670, leaving no children. His widow Dorothy married fellow Scot Micum McIntire.

John Curmuckhell, aka Carmicle, Cernicle, Carnicle, Chirmihill, Cyrmihill

1657 – taxed at Oyster River [HTDNH 77]
26 Dec 1660 – purchased land from John Pearce (aka Pierce), a fisherman from York County
married Pearce’s older daughter Anne [HTDNH p77]
6 July 1675 – Anne Pearce Curmuckhell was taken to court for not frequenting the public worship of God on the Lord’s Day [HTDNH 77]
7 April 1677 – John Curmuckhell was killed by Indians [GDMNH 129]. The victims included Andrew Rankin, Lewis Bean, John Frost, John Palmer, William Roans, and Isaac Smith, who was visiting from Chelsea, in addition to Curmuckhell.
11 Sep 1677 – Curmuckhell’s brother-in-law Micum McIntire administered his small estate. [GDMNH 129]
Ann Pearce Curmuckhell remarried later that year. Her second husband was John Bracy. [GDMNH 129, 553] He was an interesting character whose story is worth following. [HYM 267-270]
[Note: HTDNH p77 is the source that claims erroneously that his widow married Micuim McIntyre of York]
John Curmuckhell had no known children. [GDMNH 129]

Alexander Mackaneer
John Pearce’s younger daughter Dorothy Pearce first married Scot Alexander Mackaneer (unknown date).
[Note: Stinson suspects he is the “Alexander M’Nair” who is #77 on “The Dunbar Prisoners” list.] [see also GDMNH 451]
In 1666 he and his wife were excused for their 5-week absence from church due to his lameness and weakness.
Mackaneer died about 1670; he had no children [GDMNH 451]

Before 4 Sep 1671 Dorothy Pearce Mackaneer married Micum McIntire (#61 on the Dunbar Prisoners list) [GDMNH 451, 553, 472]

*More on Micum McIntire in his section

Sources:
GDMNH Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Noyes, Libby, and Davis, Portland, Maine: The Southworth-Anthoensen Press, 1928-1939, pp. 129, 451, 472, 553.
HTDNH History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire, vol. 1, Everett S. Stackpole and Lucien Thompson, 1913, p. 77.
History of York, Maine, vol. 1, Charles Edward Banks, Boston: Society for the Preservation of Historical Landmarks in York County, 1931-1935, pp. 267-270, 282
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=thurtle-walker&id=I317

B. Craig Stinson
July 23, 2016
______________________________________________________________

Hamilton, David

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published on: 09 Dec 2014
Updated: 24 May 2018
Researchers: Teresa Rust
Editors: Teresa Rust


“David Hamilton” is a name found on, A list of the passengers aboard the John and Sarah of London John Greene Mr. bound for New England, dated 11 Nov 1651. ~ Suffolk Deeds, LIBER I., Massachusetts, 1880. Google Books Online

Name Variations: Hambleton

Photo contributed by Jon Grant.
Contributed by Jon Grant: “A few weeks ago, I returned from my one and only trip to New England. During my visit to the Durham Historic Association in Durham, New Hampshire, I was searching for additional references to my Peter Grant in Oyster River (present day Dover, New Hampshire). Instead, I found James Grant on a map in an area called Salmon Falls. That area is now called Rollinsford, New Hampshire. I was told to visit that area by the locals because of its beauty. I was not disappointed. Interestingly enough, James’ land wasn’t too far away (as the crow flies across the Salmon River) from where Peter was eventually buried in South Berwick, Maine. In my drive through the area, I came across a marker for David Hamilton, SPOW. I took a picture and the following is the text, as laid out on the marker which I found on Sligo Road in Rollinsford, New Hampshire.”

First Generation in the New World

1. DAVID¹ HAMILTON, was born in Scotland between 1620-1630 and was killed at Newichwannock, near Dover, Maine on 28 Sep 1691/2, by Native Americans. 1 He married at Dover, New Hampshire on 14 Jul 1662, ANNA JACKSON/JAXSON, 2 a daughter of RICHARD JACKSON, a Scottish prisoner of war (SPOW).

Biographical Notes:
1. David HAMMILTO, HAMMILTON signed a petition of New Hampshire Settlers on 20 Feb 1689. 32. Supposedly, Anna was the daughter of Richard Jackson (also a Scottish POW from the John & Sarah). She was born in Lanark, Scotland.~ Not confirmed
3. “David Hambleton maryed to Annah Jaxson July 14 16[torn]”4

Children of David and Anna (Jackson) Hamilton:
2. i. DAVID² HAMILTON, b. about 1664
2. ii. SOLOMON² HAMILTON, b. 10 Aug 1666
2. iii. GABRIEL² HAMILTON, b. about 1668
2. iv. ABIAL or BIAL HAMILTON, b. about 1670
2. v. JONATHAN² HAMILTON, b. 20 Dec 1672
2. vi. ABEL² or ABELL HAMILTON b. about 1676
2. vii. JONAS² HAMILTON, b. about 1679

Second Generation

2. i. DAVID² HAMILTON, (David¹), b. about 1664

2. ii. SOLOMON² HAMILTON, (David¹), b. 10 Aug 1666

2. iii. GABRIEL² HAMILTON, (David¹), was born 1668 and died after 22 Sep 1729 (will date). He married MARY HEARL.

Children of Gabriel and Mary (Hearl) Hamilton:
3. i. GABRIEL³ HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹)
3. ii. MARY HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹), (died young)
3. iii. HANNAH³ HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹),
3. iv. JOHN³ HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹),
3. v. PATIENCE³ HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹),
3. vi. JONATHAN³ HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹), bap. 4 Aug 1715
3. vii. KATHERINE³ HAMILTON, (Gabriel², David¹), bap. 29 May 1718

2. iv. ABIAL or BIAL HAMILTON, (David¹), b. about 1670

2. v. JONATHAN² HAMILTON, (David¹), b. 20 Dec 1672

2. vi. ABEL² HAMILTON, (David¹) was born in Newichawannock, about 1676. He married, DEBORAH (_____).

Children of Abel and Deborah (_____) Hamilton:
3. i. BENJAMIN³ HAMILTON, (Abel², David¹),
3. ii. JOSEPH³ HAMILTON, (Abel², David¹),
3. iii. MARY³ HAMILTON, (Abel², David¹),

2. vii. JONAS² HAMILTON,(David¹), b. about 1679

Third Generation

3. BENJAMIN³ HAMILTON, (Abel², David¹) was born in Berwick, Maine prior to 1719. He married in Berwick on 27 Oct 1747, EXPERIENCE WALKER.

Children of Benjamin and Experience (Walker) Hamilton:
4. i. BENJAMIN HAMILTON, (Benjamin³, Abel², David¹), bap. 13 Feb 1750
4. ii. ABIGAIL HAMILTON, (Benjamin³, Abel², David¹), bap. 4 May 1755
4. iii. JAMES HAMILTON, (Benjamin³, Abel², David¹), bap. 19 Aug 1756
4. iv. ABEL HAMILTON, (Benjamin³, Abel², David¹), bap. 29 Mar 1759
4. v. RICHARD HAMILTON, (Benjamin³, Abel², David¹), bap 1 Nov 1761
4. vi. JOHN HAMILTON, (Benjamin³, Abel², David¹), born 20 Jan 1766; bap. 23 Feb 1767


For additional help, please go to the:
Descendants and Researchers List and the Facebook Group.


SOURCES and NOTES:
On 3 Jan 2017, Jack Hamilton wrote: “David Hamilton was my 8th Great Grandfather. According to our family history he was indeed on the John and Sara and sold into indentured servitude to a sawmill in Southern New Hampshire. He eventually settled in Rollingsford, New Hampshire and started our branch of the Hamiltons in America.”

Hamilton, Samuel King. The Hamiltons of Waterborough (York County, Maine) Their Ancestors and Descendants (Boston: Murray and Emery Company, 1912) (At openlibrary.org)

Cutter, William Richard. Genealogical and Family History of the State of Connecticut: A Record of the Achievements of Her People in the Making of a Commonwealth and the Founding of a Nation, Volume 2, Part 1 (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1911), 683-685. (A FREE Google eBook)

Contributed by: Jon Grant –
Coat of Arms
Et arma et virtus
Near this place lived
DAVID HAMILTON OF WESTBURN:
Born in the parish of Cambuslang,
Scotland, in October, 1620; captured
By Oliver Cromwell at the Battle of
Worcester, England, September 3, 1651;
Brought to America as a prisoner
In chains on the “John and Sarah”
In the same year; settled near here
And married ANNAH JAXSON
Of Lanark, Scotland; killed by
Indians on September 28, 1691.
ERECTED JUNE 1963

The following was submitted by Shawnlee von Lunen:
“Under David since the other researcher has some we don’t need to repeat:
The History of The Town of Durham New Hampshire
Source Historical and genealogical Reg, N.E.H.G. Gen. Soc of Boston. Samuel Drake Publisher 1847 Vol 1 – 50 ( Oct 1847 pages 378- 379)
“London This 11th of November , 1651; Captain Jojn Greene; “Wee whose names are under written frighters of your shipe the Joh and Sara doe order yow forthwith as winde & weather shall permitt to sett sajle for Boston in New England $ there deliver our Orders and Servants to Tho kemble of charles Towne to be disposed of by him according to orders wee have sent him in the behalfe & wee desire yow to Advise with the said Kemble about all that may be concerne that whole Intended bojage using you Jndeavo’s with the said Kemble for the speediest lading your shipp from New Eng, to the barbadoes with porvisions $ such other things as are in N.E. fot fo the West Indies where yow are to deliver them to Mr. Charles Rich to be disposed of by him for the Joinet accont of the frightr’s & so to be Retou’ned home in stocke vndevided thus desiring wee remajme your loving friends Sinatum et Recognitum John Beex Rob’t Rich Will Greene in pneia Jo Nottock: notar Publ; 13 May 1652 Entred & Recorded Edward Rawson Recorder

After the Battle of Worcester, the prisoners were marched to London and confined there for a few months on the artillery grounds at Tuthill fields, which were about a half mile from Westminster Palace. Here they were allowed daily rations of a pound of bread and a half a pound of cheese. Shelter is thought to be provided only for the sick.

Susan Grady added this After the ship landed, a person bought the prisoners and paid the ship’s captain twenty pounds British sterling for each prisoner. This was the cost of the ship’s passage for one prisoner. The prisoner then had to work for this man from six to eight years as an indentured servant.

(actually cost for passage was about 2 pounds the rest was profit)

The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 44, By Rev Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton, of New York City

David Hamilton was the immediate ancestor of the Hamilton family of Dover, and Somersworth, New Hampshire and Berwick, Maine

He was of Dover, New Hampshire and married at Saco, Maine in 1662, Anna Jackson, probably closely related to Eleanor Jackson and her son John, planters to whom Henry Joycelyn deeded land in York Co., Maine, 20 May 1663.

The other researcher covered marriage of Gabriel and Mary Hearl daughter of William and Elizabeth Hearl

couldn’t remember if he added this:

The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 44

Maine and Nova Scotia Hamiltons

Page 362-363

Gabriel Hamilton of David married 1st ca 1705, Mary a daughter of William Hearl Sr and his wife Elizabeth. He father made his will 9 Aug 1718 (probated 16 June1730 in which he leaves property to the children of his daughter, Mary Hamilton , deceased, To his granddaughter Patience Hamilton he leaves a feather bed and bolster.

Gabriel married 2nd 24 May 1721, Judith (Lord) Meeds, daughter of Nathan and Martha (Tozer) Lord of Berwick, widow of Benjamin Meeds. She was born 29 Mar 1687, and is mentioned in her fathers will made 6 July 1733 (probated 24 Sept 1733). Her uncle Richard Tozer, Jr born 1660 married Elizabeth daughter of William Wentworth, the founder of the Wentworth family in America. He was her second husband. Judith’s brother Capt Samuel Lord married Martha Wentworth (Paul2, William1). Judith was one of 11 children.

By his first married Gabriel had Gabriel, Mary, Hannah, John, Patience, Jonathan, Katherine

By his second marriage he had

Mary, Martha, Margaret and Olive baptised 6 May 1731. All in the First Parish

Extract of the Will of Gabriel Hamilton I also give to my said wife (Judith) all the income of the stock of cattle and other creatures that I shall have at my decease during the aforesaid term of 10 years, and at the end of said term the one half of the prinicpal stock and the other half to be my son Jonathan’s and all other personal estate of mine and my said wife shall have during the ten years, and at the end of the said term divided equally between my wife and my said son Jonathan.

Item I give and bequeath to my said son Jonathan my house, barn and lands at the home place where I now live, excepting what I shall give to my daughters Hannah and Mary out of the same, he my said son Jonathan to possest, when the forementioned term of 10 years has expired, of one half there of, and half the stock of creatures and moveable goods, being the personal estate afore said, and the other half thereof at the end of my wifes widowhood, and life, as is before expressed, and he m soad son Jonathan shall pay to my 5 daughters viz.: Patience, Katherine, Martha, Margaret and Olive, each of them 10 pounds in money or cattle at a just value, within 12 months of the decease of my wife and the time of his having the whole of the estate herein given him.

The above author states: In my manuscript notes in the Library of New England Historical Society, will be found many notes of deeds of land of these sons of David Hamilton or deeds given by them.

In these Abels name appears in 1699, Gabriels in 1701, Jonas in 1702, Abeils in 1703, Gabriels in 1703, Abiels in 1703, James in 1705 and 1707, Abiels in 1708, Abels in 1709, Abiels in 1710 and 1712, Abels in 1712, Abiels in 1713. These notices I obtained through Rev. Dr Quint of Allston, Mass.

In the N H State Papers were various notices of the family of more or less importance-see volumes 2, 3, 9, 14, 15.

From 1642 to 1699 there was not a Hamilton mentioned in the York Deeds

Of the family of Gabriel alone have I been able to collect complete records. His will is printed in the Maine Wills, and the records of his family and descendants have been kept more connectedly than those of the other branches of the family. (he goes on to talk of the other branches records)

He also used these records for David and Gabriel:

Folsom’s Hisotry of Saco and Biddeford, page 187

York Deeds, Part I, Folio 136, 142

Maine Wills page 16

Suffolk Deeds, Lib. I, Folio 5, 6

Anderson’s Memorials of the House of Hamilton, pp 392, 3

New Hampshire State Papers

In 1913 New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial: A Record of the …, Volume 4, page 1684

This additional information was published:

2. Gabriel, a son of David Hamilton was born in 1679 and lived in Berwick, Maine. He owned much property in Berwick and some in New London, Connecticut.

He and his wife Mary joined the church at Berwick Sept 6, 1713.

His will was dated Sept 22, 1729 and proved Apr 30, 1730.

He married first about 1705, Mary Hearl who died before Aug 9, 1718, daughter of William Sr and Elizabeth Hearl.

He married 2nd May 24, 1721, Judith (Lord) Meeds born Mar 29, 1689, daughter of Nathan and Martha (Toxer) Lord of Berwick and the widow of Benjamin Meeds.

Children of his first wife the first 5 were baptised Sept 6, 1713

Gabriel, Mary died young, Hannah, John , Patience, Jonathan bapt Aug 4, 1715 Katherine baptised May 29, 1718

Children of the second marriage: Mary Baptised Aug 27, 1724; Martha baptised the same day, Margaret baptised the same day, and Olive baptised May 6, 1731

Maine Genealogists: (A snippet) from in addition to signalling births, the fornication charges allow us to narrow down the date of marriage. Gabirel Hamilton suspension occurred only 5 months after his marriage to Judith Meeds, and undoubtedly Judith had given birth in the interim. Judith was not charged by the church becuase she was not a member.

More about Anna JACKSON:

Born: abt. 1641, Hamilton Townshp, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Death: Aft 1669, Dover, New Hampshire

iv. Gabriel Hamilton

Born: 10 Aug 1668, Rollinsford, Dover, New Hampshire

Christened:

Marriage: Mar 1702/03 to Mary Hearl

2nd: 24 May 1721, Berwick, , York, Maine to Judith Lord

Died: 1730, York, , Maine

More about Judith Lord:

Born: 29 MAR 1687/abt. 1700, Berwick, York, Maine

Christening:

Died: 1775, Bernick, , York, Maine

Children of Gabriel Hamilton and Judith Lord:

i. Mary Hamilton

ii. Martha Hamilton

iii. Olive Hamilton

Olive above born between Dec 1730-1731 married John Knight born ca 1721 the son of Grindall and possibly Mary Harris

They were married June 2, 1748

The Baxter Manuscripts, volume 9-24, the Lefavor Tower Publishing Company, Portland, Maine Collections of the Maine Historical Society, Alderman Libra

After this my line goes from Olive and John Knight

through daughter Judith Knight born 11 Dec 1763 in Berwick, York, Maine died 3 May 1838 in Limington, York, Maine. She married William Wentworth born 7 Apr 1762 in Limington, York, Maine and died 6 Apr 1862, Limington, York, Maine a son of Joseph Wentworth and Eunice Shorey

Judith Knight and William Wentworth had:

Benjamin Wentworth born 2 Jan 1793 in Limington, York, Maine who married Sally Bryant born 23 Apr 1793 in Saco, York, Maine died 21 Aug 1821 Limington, York, Maine. Sally was a daughter of Ephraim Bryant Jr and Martha Kimball

Benjamin Wentworth and Sally Bryant had:

Ephraim Wentworth born 21 Sept 1819 Limington, York, Maine and died bet 1880-1884 Paint, Somerset, Pennsylvania he married Mary Jane Sawyer 1836 Limington, York Maine and died bet 1884-1900 Paint, Somerset, Pennsylvania

Ephraim Wentworth and Mary Jane Sawyer had:

Augusta Nancy Wentworth born 1861 Maine died 2 Oct 1887 Scalp Level, Cambria, Pennsylvania. who married Joseph W Seese 23 Dec 1852 Paint, Somerset, Pennsylvania died 2 Sept 1923 Ogle, Somerset, Pennsylvania

Augusta Nancy Wentworth and Joseph W Seese had:

Mary Lizabeth Seese born 25 Jan 1885 Paint, Somerset, Pennsylvania died 12 Mar 1979 Cambria, Pennsylvania she married Henry Calvin Custer born 1 Mar 1885 Somerset, Pennsylvania and died 10 June 1956 Paint, Somerset, Pennsylvania

Mary L Seese and Harry C Custer had:

Patricia Lou Custer (living) married George Von Lunen III born 13 July 1930 died 7 Mar 2004 Salix, Pennsylvania

The next 4 generations living

I included a few sources for the first few generations but of course I have sources for the other generations if someone needs them.

MARCH 2018:
Shared by Robert Doughty () in March 2018:
“I’m not sure this is the same family, but the Province and Court Records of Maine, Volume 1, Page 272 show Thomas Doughty (my ancestor) was a grand jury member, September 18, 1666 in court at Cascoe and Kittery, Maine. At this court session, Thomas Chick was indicted for misbehavior. Thomas Chick and Thomas Doughty engaged themselves in a bond of 10 pounds that Chick “shall be of good behavior towards all persons, especially toward the wife of Davie Hamilton.”

  1. Vital Records from The NEHGS Register. https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/21073/366/1427090392 []
  2. “HAMILTON, David (-1692) & Anna JACKSON; 14 Jul 1662, 166-?; Dover, NH {Dover NH Mar. 87; Hodson 45; Reg. 44:361, 71:126; Hamilton (1933) 7; GDMNH 303, 370}” New England Marriages to 1700. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2008.) Originally published as: New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2015. https://www.americanancestors.org/DB1568/rd/21175/689/426888819 []
  3. Vital Records from The NEHGS Register. Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014. (Compiled from articles originally published in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.) https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/rd/21072/234/1427112786 []
  4. Saco, Maine, Vital Records from The NEHGS Register. Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2014. (Compiled from articles originally published in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.) https://www.americanancestors.org/DB522/i/21135/126/426743779 []

Jackson, Walter

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published on: 04 Dec 2014 Updated: 24 May 2018
Page contributors: Wayne Mitchell, Teresa Rust, B. Craig Stinson

List of his Descendants and Researchers

“Walter Jackson” is a name found on, A list of the passengers aboard the John and Sarah of London John Greene Mr. bound for New England, dated 11 Nov 1651. ~ Suffolk Deeds, LIBER I., Massachusetts, 1880. Google Books Online

First Generation in the New World

1. WALTER JACKSON, was born presumably in Scotland and died at Durham, New Hampshire in 1683. He married before 1663, JANE (_____). Jane married, second, Henry Rice.

Biographical Notes:
1. From Wayne Mitchell at on 19 Oct 2016:
“The dates-of-birth and birth order of Walter’s children are uncertain.
It is possible that either William or Elizabeth is the child conceived
by Jane before she married Walter, for which she accused Andrew Wiggin
in 1667.” ~ Wayne, Susan, and Craig
2. Submitted by B. Craig Stinson, “Walter Jackson, a prisoner from the Battle of Worcester, was probably purchased originally by Valentine Hill. Unlike most of his peers Jackson may have remained at Oyster River after his indenture was complete. He married a woman named Jane who was a live-in “servant maid” of our ancestor in-law Andrew Wiggin. In 1667 Jane bore a child that she claimed was fathered by her master Andrew Wiggin. The baby was evidence of the indiscretion; Jane Jackson was found guilty and offered ten “stripes” or a fine of £4 plus court costs, which fine Walter Jackson paid. Andrew Wiggin was acquitted. They had five children together. Walter died in 1683. His widow remarried.” SEE: Sources and Notes below.
3. “Assuming we are right about there only being one wife, then yes, it has
to be Jane who was killed in the Indian raid in 1694. In the report,
she is styled “Mrs. Jackson,” although she had married a second time and
was by then the widow of Henry Rice (whose daughter from a previous
marriage later married her son James).” ~ Wayne

Children of Walter and Jane (_____) Jackson:
2. i. WILLIAM JACKSON, b. about 1669.
2. ii. ELIZABETH JACKSON,
2. iii. MARY JACKSON,
2. iv. JANE JACKSON,
2. v. JAMES JACKSON, born about 1681.

________________________________________________________
Scots at Oyster River
Walter Jackson (d. 1683)

Walter Jackson, a prisoner from the Battle of Worcester, was probably purchased originally by Valentine Hill. Unlike most of his peers Jackson may have remained at Oyster River after his indenture was complete. He married a woman named Jane who was a live-in “servant maid” of our ancestor in-law Andrew Wiggin. In 1667 Jane bore a child that she claimed was fathered by her master Andrew Wiggin. The baby was evidence of the indiscretion; Jane Jackson was found guilty and offered ten “stripes” or a fine of £4 plus court costs, which fine Walter Jackson paid. Andrew Wiggin was acquitted. They had five children together. Walter died in 1683. His widow remarried. Walter Jackson

John & Sara #82
A Scotch prisoner and probably first there in service at the mills [GDMNH 373]
Homestead on north side of Oyster River between William Beard and Philip Chesley [GDMNH 373]
10 January 1658-9 – received as an inhabitant of Oyster River [GDMNH 373]
early 1663 – was an appraiser of Alexander Mackdouel’s estate in ???
[Stinson note: along with William Furbish]
1663 – had a wife Jane in 1663 [HTDNH 80]
1666 – was granted 20 acres “at the head of his one [own] lot betwixt the Cow path and the swamp.” [HTDNH 66]
[Stinson note: this land was on Beard’s Creek on the north side of the Oyster River; see map p48 HTDNH]
25 June 1667 – “Sd Wiggin then to answer ye charge Lade to him in begetting Walter Jacksons wife with child while she Lived with him” [NHCR 225] [Jane was Andrew Wiggin’s indentured maid.]
WJ 1st Para 2 25 June 1667 – Jane Jackson found guilty of fornication and fined 10 stripes or £4 plus court costs, which Walter Jackson paid.

Screen Shot 2016-08-22 at 3.34.35 PM 2

17 September 1667 – Walter Jackson in court “concerning ye wrong Mr. Andrew Wiggins had done to his wife in begetting her with child while she Lived with said Wiggin as his servant made”. Wiggin was acquitted. [NHCR 227-228]
1683 – Walter Jackson died
18 March 1697-8 – his will administered to son William [GDMNH 373]
Five children listed [GDMNH 373]

W. J. Map 2

Sources:
HTDNH History of the Town of Durham, New Hampshire, vol. 1, Everett S. Stackpole and Lucien Thompson, 1913, pp. 48, 66, 80.
GDMNH Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Noyes, Libby, and Davis, Portland, Maine: The Southworth-Anthoensen Press, 1928-1939, p373.
NHCR New Hampshire Court Records 1640-1692, vol. 40, Ed. Otis G. Hammond, The State of New Hampshire, 1943, pp. 224, 225, 227-228.

B.Craig Stinson
August 16, 2016

SOURCES AND NOTES:
Written and submitted by Susan Grady:
Descendant and Researcher: Ms. Susan Marjorie Jackson Sinclair Green Grady Bowen, Falls Church, Virginia
“Walter Jackson was born in Scotland, possibly in Lanarkshire, in the village of Westburn, a region of Scotland southeast of Glasgow. He could read and write. For someone to have been able to read and write during the period was an indication that he came from a wealthy family. He had a brother James. His mother may have been named Elizabeth. Walter Jackson defied Oliver Cromwell (born 1599, died 1658, Lord Protector of Great Britain (1653-1658) and a Protestant Puritan.). Walter Jackson wanted to help Charles II (a Catholic and the son of King Charles I of Great Britain, who was beheaded by his English subjects in 1649) to become king of Great Britain. Charles II gathered an army and Walter Jackson joined his army. Walter Jackson was in the unit commanded by the Duke of Hamilton. The army and Charles II fought against Oliver Cromwell and Cromwell’s army at the Battle of Worcester on September 3, 1651 in Worcester, England. Cromwell defeated Charles II, who fled back to France, where he had been living. Three thousand Scots were taken prisoner by the soldiers of Oliver Cromwell at the battle of Worcester. Oliver Cromwell punished Walter Jackson. Cromwell sent Walter Jackson to Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colony on the ship John and Sara. It left England on November 8 or 11, 1651 and arrived in Boston on February 24, 1652. After the ship landed, a person bought the prisoners and paid the ship’s captain twenty pounds British sterling for each prisoner. This was the cost of the ship’s passage for one prisoner. The prisoner then had to work for this man from six to eight years as an indentured servant. After this time, the indentured servant was given his freedom and a grant of land. Walter Jackson and the other prisoners from the John and Sara were marched from Boston to Lynn, Massachusetts, a two-day trip, and kept in the Saugus House. Walter Jackson went to work for a Scots Presbyterian lowlander, who first went to Ireland and then to New Hampshire, who was named Mr. Nicholas Lissen. He worked in one of two of Mr. Lissen’s lumber mills in Exeter, New Hampshire. Walter Jackson then went to work for Mr. Valentine Hill. Born about 1603, in London, Mr. Hill was living in Boston in 1635. In 1649 he moved to Oyster River (now Durham), New Hampshire. At the end of his term of indenture Walter Jackson probably worked in Mr. Valentine Hill’s sawmill at the Falls on the Oyster River and married Jane (maiden name?) in 1663. Walter Jackson lived on the north side of the Oyster River in Durham. In 1683, Walter Jackson died in Durham. Walter Jackson had two sons by his first wife: William Jackson, who was captured by the Indians in the above-mentioned raid and managed to escape, and James Jackson. Ms. Susan M. Jackson Sinclair Green Grady of Falls Church, Virginia is descended from William Jackson. Mr. Thomas A. McKay of Arlington, Virginia is descended from James Jackson. In 1998 he self-published a book, Jacksons Descent from Walter Jackson of Oyster River (Durham), New Hampshire in the 1650’s. It is in the Library of Congress in Washington, DC. I own a copy of Mr. Thomas Mckay’s book about Walter Jackson. My 91-year-old mother, lives with me in Falls Church, Virginia. While doing research, we discovered that Walter Jackson was a very good friend of the prisoner Salamon Sinclare (Solomon Sinclair), who went to New Hampshire. In the 1980’s we met one of his descendants, Mr. Pete Sinclair Cummings, who lived in Worcester, Massachusetts.
– Submitted by Ms. Susan Marjorie Jackson Sinclair Green Grady Bowen, Falls Church, Virginia

Gordon, Alexander

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:
Prisoner and List:
Name Variations:
Residences:
Other SPOW Associations:
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published: 04 Dec 2014
Updated: 09 Jan 2019
Page contributors: Mary Gordon, Andrew Millard, Teresa Rust


Individual Contract with Master John Cloise

“Gordon had been captured during the Battle of Worcester in 1652 [1651] and sent to Tothill Field, near London, to await deportation. While there, he agreed to go to Massachusetts with Cloise…”


Facebook: House of Gordon DNA
Website: Gordons of Maine Owned by John Wesley Gordon
Gordon Surname DNA Project: House of Gordon DNA Project
Alexander Gordon at Ancestry.com family tree


First Generation in the New World

1. ALEXANDER¹ GORDON was born at Aberdeen (St Nicholas Parish), Aberdeenshire, Scotland on 04 Aug 1635 . He died at Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire in Aug 1697. He married at Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, in 1663, MARY LISSEN, the daughter of NICHOLAS LISSEN and ALICE JANE. She was born about 1639 at Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died at Exeter.

Children of Alexander and Mary (Lissen) Gordon:
2. i. ELIZABETH² GORDON b. at Exeter on 23 Feb 1664
2. ii. NICHOLAS² GORDON b. on 22 Mar 16661, d. at Exeter in 1748, m. SARAH HALE SEWALL.
2. iii. MARY² GORDON was born on 22 May 1668. She died in 1737. She married in 1695, NICHOLAS SMITH.
2. iv. JOHN GORDON, was born at Exeter on 26 Oct 1670 and died at Exeter in Apr 1746. He married on 23 Dec 1697, SARAH ALLEN, daughter of Capt. JOHN ALLEN and MARY PIKE. She was born at Salisbury, Massachussetts on 09 Feb 1676/77. She died in 1770 at Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire, USA.
2. v. JAMES GORDON, was born at Exeter on 23 Jul 1673. He died in 1717. He married, ABEIL REDMAN.
2. vi. ALEXANDER GORDON, was born at Exeter on 01 Dec 1675. He died at Exeter in 1730. He married, SARAH SEWALL.
2. vii. THOMAS GORDON, was born at Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, in 16782. He died in 1762. He married (1) ELIZABETH HARRIMAN. He married (2) REBECCA HEARD.
2. viii. DANIEL GORDON, was born at Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, in 16823. He died at York, Maine, before Apr 1743. He married, MARGARET HARRIMAN.

Second Generation

2. i. ELIZABETH² GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born at Exeter on 23 Feb 1664.

2. ii. NICHOLAS GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born on 22 Mar 1666 and died at Exeter in 1748. He married, SARAH HALE SEWALL.

Children of Nicholas and Sarah Hale (Sewall) Gordon:
3. i. PATIENCE GORDON, was born in 1690. She married, SAMUEL STEVENS.
3. ii. LYDIA GORDON, was born in 1692. She married, THOMAS DOLHOFF.
3. iii. ELIZABETH GORDON, was born in 1694. She married, NICHOLAS DUDLEY.
3. iv. MARY GORDON, She married, SAMUEL COLCORD.
3. v. “FEMALE” GORDON, She married, UNKNOWN ROBINSON.

2. iii. MARY² GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born on 22 May 1668. She died in 1737. She married in 1695, NICHOLAS SMITH.
Children of Nicholas and Mary (Gordon) Smith:
3. i. RICHARD SMITH,
3. ii. NATHANIEL SMITH,
3. iii. DANIEL (CAPT) SMITH,
3. iv. NICHOLAS SMITH,
3. v. BENJAMIN SMITH,
3. vi. EDWARD SMITH,
3. vii. JOHN (CAPT) SMITH,
3. viii. ANN SMITH,
3. ix. MARY SMITH,
3. x. ELIZABETH SMITH,
3. xi. PATIENCE SMITH,
3. xii. COMFORT SMITH,
3. xiii. ABIGAIL SMITH,

2. iv. JOHN GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born at Exeter on 26 Oct 1670 and died at Exeter in Apr 1746. He married on 23 Dec 1697, SARAH ALLEN, daughter of Capt. JOHN ALLEN and MARY PIKE. She was born at Salisbury, Massachussetts on 09 Feb 1676/77. She died at Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire.

Children of John and Sarah (Allen) Gordon:
3. i. JOHN³ GORDON, (John², Alexander¹), was born at Exeter in 1697. He married at Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts on 16 Jan 1697, HANNAH WILLET.
3. ii. ALLEN³ GORDON, (John², Alexander¹), was born at Exeter in 1701.
3. iii. JOSEPH GORDON, was born at Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts, in 1705 (9). He died at Biddeford, York, Maine, in 1784. He married, MERCY (_____). She was born in Maine, in 1705.

2. v. JAMES² GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born at Exeter on 23 Jul 1673. He died in 1717. He married, ABEIL REDMAN.

Children of James and Abeil (Redman) Gordon:
3. i. JONATHAN³ GORDON, (James², Alexander¹), was born in 1701. He married LYDIA DOLLOFF.
3. ii. JAMES³ GORDON, (James², Alexander¹), was born in 1704.
3. iii. NICHOLAS³ GORDON, (James², Alexander¹), was born in 1706.
3. iv. JOHN³ GORDON, (James², Alexander¹), was born in 1708. He married, REBECCA (_____).
3. v. JOSEPH³ GORDON, (James², Alexander¹), was born in 1711.

2. vi. ALEXANDER GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born at Exeter on 01 Dec 1675. He died at Exeter in 1730. He married, SARAH SEWALL.

Children of Alexander and Sarah (Sewall) Gordon
3. i. ANNA³ GORDON
, (Alexander², Alexander¹), was born at Exeter on 13 Jul 1715. She married, DAVID LAWRENCE.
3. ii. SUSANNA GORDON, (Alexander², Alexander¹),
3. iii. SARAH GORDON, (Alexander², Alexander¹),
3. iv. MARY GORDON, (Alexander², Alexander¹),
3. v. LYDIA GORDON, (Alexander², Alexander¹),
3. vi. ELIZABETH GORDON, (Alexander², Alexander¹),
3. vii. DEBORAH GORDON, (Alexander², Alexander¹),

2. vii. THOMAS GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born at Exeter in 1678 and died in 1762. He married, first, ELIZABETH HARRIMAN. He married, second, REBECCA HEARD.

Children of Thomas and Elizabeth (Harriman) Gordon:
3. i. TIMOTHY³ GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹),was born in 1700. He died in 1700.
3. ii. THOMAS³ GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born at Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts on 24 Aug 1701 and died at Brentwood, Hew Hampshire on 27 Aug 1772. He married, MARY SCRIBNER.
3. iii. DIANA³ GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born in 1703. She married, BENJAMIN MAGOON (probable SPOW desc.). He was born at Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts.
3. iv. DANIEL GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born on 01 Dec 1704.
3. v. ABIGAIL GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born on 28 May 1707. She married, JOHN ROBERTS.
3. vi. BENONI GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born in 1709.
3. vii. TIMOTHY GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born on 22 Mar 1716.
3. viii. JAMES GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), .
3. ix. HANNAH GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), She married, ITHIEL SMITH.

Children of Thomas and Rebecca (Heard) Gordon:
3. x. NATHANIEL GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹), was born on 25 Mar 1728.
3. xi. BENJAMIN GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹),

2. viii. DANIEL² GORDON, (Alexander¹), was born at Exeter in 1682 and died in York County, Maine before Apr 1743. He married, MARGARET HARRIMAN.

Children of Daniel and Margaret (Harriman) Gordon:
3. i. ELIZABETH³ GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹), was born on 28 Jan 1709.
3. ii. MARY GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹), was born on 20 Feb 1711. She married, NATHANIEL MERRILL.
3. iii. ABNER K GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹), was born on 24 Nov 1712 and died at New Hampton, New Hampshire. He married, ELIZABETH STRAW. She was born at Amesbury, Essex County, Massachusetts on 19 Apr 1719. She died at Henniker, Hillsborough, New Hampshire in 1790.
3. iv. MARGARET GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹), was born in 1714.
3. v. ALEXANDER GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹), was born on 29 Jan 17164.
3. vi. MARGARET GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹), She married, SAMUEL BRADSTREET. He was born in Suncook, New Hampshire.


Sources:
CHA88

FamilySearch Colonial county court papers, 1648-1798 Court papers – Folios 1-26 1648-1661 Image 114 https://www.familysearch.org/…/3:1:3Q9M-CS3Q-C417-D…

HISTORY OF EXETER: PART II FAMILY REGISTER, FROM THE EXETER RECORDS, Pg 21-22

History of Exeter: Bell History of Exeter (Pg 58, 59)

Hol79

Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986,” images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9Z7-GC21?cc=2106411&wc=MC1M-ZMS%3A361613501%2C364517501: 22 May 2014), Middlesex > Deeds 1649-1670 vol 1-3 > image 104 of 645; county courthouses and offices, Massachusetts.

New England Marriages Prior to 1700

Page 57 of Social and Economic Networks in Early Massachusetts: Atlantic Connections by Marsha L. Hamilton:

TAG14


Miscellaneous Notes: (Everyone must verify the information on this page themselves.)
Andrew Millard wrote, on 09 Jan 2019:
Andrew Millard I found the court case, which was in January 1653/54 (11 month 1653). Here is Alexander’s testimony. FamilySearch Colonial county court papers, 1648-1798 Court papers – Folios 1-26 1648-1661 Image 114 https://www.familysearch.org/…/3:1:3Q9M-CS3Q-C417-D…

Cloyse’s response and the outcome of the case are not recorded in those files. Alexander Gordon explicitly says he was at Tothill Fields, which would imply capture at Worcester. The ship is not named.

Banks in his 1926 account of the Scots (https://www.jstor.org/stable/25080212) on p.26 dates this to 1663 which is clearly an error but has led to others making interpretations based on over 10 years’ servitude. Apart from the date, Banks’ transcript appears to be accurate, though I haven’t checked every word. He also cites Alexander Gordon’s indenture, but I haven’t checked that yet.”

Contributed by Andrew Millard. FamilySearch Colonial county court papers, 1648-1798 Court papers – Folios 1-26 1648-1661 Image 114 https://www.familysearch.org/…/3:1:3Q9M-CS3Q-C417-D…

and here is his indenture to Samuel Stratton, enrolled in the Middlesex Deeds. It is dated 15 October 1652, and was enrolled 25 June 1653 (“25.4.1653”) [Middlesex Deeds Vol.1, Page 61]. John Cloys is a witness.

“Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986,” images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9Z7-GC21?cc=2106411&wc=MC1M-ZMS%3A361613501%2C364517501: 22 May 2014), Middlesex > Deeds 1649-1670 vol 1-3 > image 104 of 645; county courthouses and offices, Massachusetts.

Contributed by Andrew Millard.
“Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986,” images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G9Z7-GC21?cc=2106411&wc=MC1M-ZMS%3A361613501%2C364517501: 22 May 2014), Middlesex > Deeds 1649-1670 vol 1-3 > image 104 of 645; county courthouses and offices, Massachusetts.

Generation 3:
PATIENCE³ GORDON (Nicholas², Alexander¹) was born in 1690. She married SAMUEL STEVENS. Samuel Stevens and Patience Gordon had the following children: i.SAMUEL4 STEVENS; ii. HEALY STEVENS; iii. EDWARD STEVENS; iv. NATHANIEL STEVENS; v. SARAH STEVENS; She married JOHN GILMAN; vi. MEHITABEL STEVENS, she married SAMUEL COLCORD; vii. PATIENCE STEVENS, she married EBENEZER COLCORD;
JOHN3 GORDON (John², Alexander¹) was born in 1697 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USA5. He married Hannah Willet on 16 Jan 1697 in Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, USA. John Gordon and Hannah Willet had the following children: i. BETTY4 GORDON was born in 1730 (not sure according to notes (if Betty is correct)); ii. HANNAH GORDON was born on 31 Mar 1734; iii. DUDLEY GORDON was born on 01 Apr 17376. iv. JOHN GORDON was born on 08 Mar 17417.
JOSEPH3 GORDON (John², Alexander¹) was born in 1705 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts, USA (9). He died in 1784 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA. He married MERCY. She was born in 1705 in , , Maine, USA. Joseph Gordon and Mercy had the following children: i. JOSEPH4 GORDON was born in 1723 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA. He died in 1746; ii. PIKE GORDON was born in 1725 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA. He died in 1746; iii. JOHN GORDON was born in 1727 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA. He died in 1746; iv. ANDREW GORDON was born on 04 Aug 1730 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA (26). He died in 1811 in Little Falls, Cumberland, Maine, USA. He married Martha Whitten, daughter of John Whitten and Ruth Merryl, on 03 Dec 1757 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA. She was born in 1736 in Maine. She died in 1769; v. MERCY GORDON was born in 1735 in Biddeford, York, Maine.; vi. ZEBULON GORDON was born in 1737 in Biddeford, York, Maine. He died in 1810; vii. AMOS GORDON was born in 1743 in Biddeford, York, Maine, USA. He died in 1803.
JONATHAN3 GORDON, (James², Alexander¹) was born in 17018. He married LYDIA (GORDON) DOLLOFF.
Jonathan Gordon and Lydia Gordon Dolloff had the following child: i. JAMES4 GORDON was born on 05 Jul 1725 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USA9. He married (1) ELIZABETH GILLMAN. She died in 1753. He married (2) ELIZABETH DOLLOFF. She died in 1803.
JAMES3 GORDON, (James², Alexander¹) was born in 170410. James Gordon had the following children: i. JAMES4 GORDON was born in 173711. He died in Sidney, Maine. He married (1) JUDITH BROWN. She was born in Salsbury. He married (2) REBECCA BUTTERFIELD. She was born in Haowel Maine; ii. ELIZABETH GORDON; iii. SARAH GORDON.
THOMAS3 GORDON, (Thomas², Alexander¹) was born on 24 Aug 1701 in Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts, USA12. He died on 27 Aug 1772 in Brentwood, Hew Hampshire. He married, MARY SCRIBNER. Thomas Gordon and Mary Scribner had the following children: i. DANIEL4 GORDON was born in 1732 in Brentwood, New Hampshire13. He married ABIGAIL JUDKINS; ii. LOVE GORDON was born in 1734. She married ENOCH BEAN (probable SPOW Desc.); iii. MARY GORDON was born in 1736; iv. ELIZABETH GORDON was born in 1738; v. THOMAS GORDON was born in 174014; vi. SCRIBNER GORDON was born in 174415.
ABNER K3 GORDON, (Daniel², Alexander¹) was born on 24 Nov 171216. He died in New Hampton, New Hampshire. He married ELIZABETH STRAW. She was born on 19 Apr 1719 in Amesbury, Essex County, Massachusetts. She died in 1790 in Henniker, Hillsborough, New Hampshire, United States. Children of Abner K. and Elizabeth (Straw) Gordon: i. SAMUEL4 GORDON was born in 1751. He died in 1764; ii. HANNAH GORDON was born in 1753; iii. AMOOS GORDON was born on 01 Oct 175517. iv. JONATHAN GORDON was born on 31 Oct 1756 in South Hampton or Hopkinton18; v. DANIEL GORDON was born in 1758; vi. ABEL GORDON was born on 18 Jan 176219. He died on 08 Mar 1837 in Henniker, Merrimack, New Hampshire, United States. He married Hannah George on 16 Jan 1787 in Hopkins. She was born on 23 Jun 1768 in Concord, Rockingham County, New Hampshire. She died on 16 Apr 1828 in Henniker, Merrimack, New Hampshire, United States; vii. ABEL GORDON was born on 18 Jan 176219. He died on 08 Mar 1837 in Henniker, Merrimack, New Hampshire, United States. He married Hannah George on 16 Jan 1787 in Hopkins. She was born on 23 Jun 1768 in Concord, Rockingham County, New Hampshire. She died on 16 Apr 1828 in Henniker, Merrimack, New Hampshire, United States; viii. MIRIAM GORDON; ix. MARY GORDON.

Written and Submitted by Mary Gordon:
Alexander Gordon 1635-1697
As a young Scotchman, Alexander Gordon was a soldier in General Monk’s army. General Monk was defeated at the battle of Worcester, Sept 3, 1651 and his army captured. Alexander thus became a prisoner of war and with several thousand of his countrymen was held in a makeshift prison camp at Tuthill Fields, Westminster, London, near St. Margaret’s church.[Cha] There he spent the winter of 1651-52. The next season he was redeemed by Daniel Stone of Cambridge and deported to America under verbal agreement to John Cloyes to work his passage under Captain John Allen. According to the book Dudley and Allied Families, John Allen was a resident of Cambridge, Massachusetts and Captain of the ship;”Liberty”[Dud]]. For a year or more he remained with John Cloyes, a boatswain, dwelling in Cambridge on the then road to Watertown. After a year of ill treatment and no pay, he appealed to the court of Massachusetts to be released from his contract and block his sale to Samuel Stratton. 15 Oct 1652. A second appeal was filed and granted in Feb 1653-4 (Mass Hist Soc. Proc. 61.25) His history unknown for 10 yrs. [Syb39]. Though this information says he was released from his contract, I have found another entry on some of the notesfrom passenger lists from the John and Sara that state an Alexander Gorthing was sold to Samuel Stratton of Watertown. Could this be a reference to the same Alexander Gordon? In the book New World Immigrants, the text does state they consider Alexander Gordon and Alexander Gorthing to be the same person. The spelling difference could be attributed to pronunciation, as I have seen the name spelled similarly in other documents. Following is an excerpt from the book New World Immigrants which goes into a bit more detail:“It is not to be supposed that those who engaged in this traffic, euphemistically hidden with the label of “apprenticeships,” should hesitate to drive their helpless servants to the point of ill treatment, although it is not believed that this was a general situation. However, on May 23, 1655, a number of them complained of this inevitable outgrowth of bondage and petitioned the General Court of Massachusetts for freedome, but their request was refused in the following terms: In answer to the petition of several Scotshmen [who desire to be freed from their masters, the Court, seeing] no proofe nor probabilitye appearing of what the petitioners affirme, the Court sees no cause to graunt theire request.Samuel Stratton of Watertown bought one of these Scotchmen and the documents in the case are here shown. It is, of course, an open question whether these men, unable to sign their names, could read the indentures by which they were bound and in this particular case it is clear that Alexander Gordon, the party of the second part,was a victim of ill treatment. His original indenture was as follows:This indenture witnesseth that I, Allexander Gorthing Scotchman, Latley being arrived the coasts of New England, do covenant agree and promise to Serve Goodman Stratton, Planter of Watertowne the full space of six years, wherein I do promise to do him true and faithfull service not to absent myself day or night out of his family during the time of Apprentiship aforesaid without his Licence or consent, that I will not entangle or engage myself in any way of Contracts of marriage during the aforesaid time, all his Lawfull demands and injunctions I do promise to fulfill to my uttermost power and abilities, all this I the aforesaid Allexander do likewise promise, bynd and ingage myself to serve my full time to some of his sonnes untill it be fully expired if providence should take away my present master by death, witness my handAllexander GorthingHis marke & a seale.Mass. Col Rec, IV. Pt. I, 232 The same entry differently worded, is in lb., III. Pt. II, from which the words in brackets are taken. Middlesex Deeds, 1.61. Oct. 15 1652Witness, Goodman Blois, Richard Blois, Richard Norcras. Delivered by Alexander as his act and deed in the presence of us underwritten to his master Goodman Stratton. Richard Norcross, John Cloys Wee consent to the turning over of this Servant to Samuel Stratton the 19th of the 8 mo: 1652 Increase Nowell, William Hibbins. Recorded 25:4: 1653 By me Tho Danforth RecorderThis may be regarded as a typical case of the less fortunate bondservants. It would seem that after he had finished his service with his first master, or possibly before he was redeemed through the benevolence of a resident of Cambridge, even in his freedom Stratton (perhaps a typo, I believe they are referring to Gordon here)became the victim of mistreatment at the hands of a subsequent employer. The following is a statement of his subsequent difficulties addressed to the County Court at Charlestown, as well as a confirmation of the story of his travels after the Battle of Worcester:To the honored the Deputy Governor with the rest of the magistrates assembled in the County Court now held at Charlestowne this 3d of the 11th mo. 1653.

The Petition of Alexander Gorden Scotchman.
Humbly Showeth Whereas by the wise providence of the Almighty God your poare petitioner (with many others of his countrymen) was taken a prisoner in the late English wars with Scotland, and with many more prisoners brought into Tottell fields, where and frome whence your poare petitioner was redeemed by monies payd by Mr. Daniel Stone of Cambridge, who hath, as appears by his bill given under his hand, freely given your poare petitioner the same, and also whereas Jno Cloise of Watertowne at the same time moved your petitioner to go along with him by sea to this place without any agreement for time or wages, only his promise to be as a father in all love and kindness to your poare petitioner, and also whereas your poare petitioner obtained his passage by his labour without any charge to the said Cloise as Mr. Jno Allen the m[aste]r of the said Ship hath under his hand given, manifesting also his willingness your poare petitioner should have the benefit of the same, also whereas the said Jno. Cloise hath (after faythfull service for about a years space performed by your petitioner and hard usage by the wife of the said Cloise) now should your poare petitioner for seventeen pounds without any recompense or consideration of his promise made to your petitioner, or the petitioners labor in the ship or on shoare whereby your poare petitioner apprehendeth himself to be much wronged, yet being a poare exile and friendless hath been willing to suffer, your petitioner do therefore now humbly Comend the Consideration of the premises to this Honored Court having no other refuge; and your petitioner shall be ready to prove the perticulars above named, and doe Humbly intreate this Honored Court to vousafe the Consideration thereof that so far as justice and equity, according to the laws of God and this Cominwealth, will tend to the relief of your petitioner, your poare petitioner may receive some help therefrome, And your petitioner shall set down well payd with the determination of this Honored Court and shall continue humbly to pray etc. Alexander Gorden [Mic79]

Little is known of Alexander once this court case was settled until 10 years later when he shows in the town of Exeter, New Hampshire. According to the write up on John Sinclair, Alexander Gordon was purchased along with 6 of his countrymen by Nicholas Lissen to work in Saw Mills owned by Mr. Lissen on the Little River in Exeter, New Hampshire. According to the book New England Marriages Prior to 1700[Cla85] Alexander married Mary Lissen, daughter of Nicholas Lissen before October 1664. He lived the rest of his life in the town of Exeter. Following are excerpts from History of Exeter: Bell History of Exeter (Pg 58, 59)

Number and Names of Inhabitants

The population made a very gradual increase, as was to be expected, for there was little in the frontier settlement to attract new comers. It was those who were content to endure had work and hard fare, in the faith of securing better things in the future, who were the bone and sinew of Exeter. Yet there was a gain in numbers.On the twelfth of October, 1669, the General Court appointed John Gilman lieutenant of the military company, at the same time declaring that there were “about sixty soldiers in Exeter.” This, if the usual ratio holds good, would imply that there were about three hundred inhabitants of all classes. A fair proportion of the early settlers had passed their lives in the town, and were succeeded by their children. Others had come in, some for a temporary, others for a permanent residence. The new names that appear upon the town records between 1640 and 1680 will be given here, together with others derived from other sources. No complete list is to be found, onthe books of the town, or elsewhere, and it is probably that the fullest that can now be gathered is quite imperfect.

NAMES FIRST ON THE TOWN BOOKS BETWEEN 1640 – 1680

John Barber April 1, 1678
John Bean January 21, 1660-1
Thomas Biggs September 5, 1643
Nathaniel Bolter May 6, 1645
Robert Booth February 10, 1647-8
Richard Bray October 10, 1664
William Bromfield December 1, 1664
John Bursley September 5, 1643
Philip Cartee March 29, 1668
Phillip Chesley January 21, 1664-5
John Clark August 29, 1661
Jeremy Connor October 10, 1664
Thomas Cornish January 21, 1648-9
Christian Dolloff March 30, 1668
Abraham Drake June 10, 1644
Nathaniel Drake April 22, 1649
Teague Drisco October 10, 1664
Riley Dudley April 1, 1678
Samuel Dudley May 13, 1673-4
Theophilus Dudley December 1, 1664
Eleazor Elkins March 3, 1673-4
Ephraim Folsom April 1, 1678
Israel Folsom October 10, 1664
John Folsom November 4, 1647
John Folsom, Jr. September 28, 1668
Nathaniel Folsom October 10, 1664
Peter Folsom March 30, 1670
Samuel Folsom October 10, 1664
John Garland August 26, 1650
Charles Gilman September 28, 1668
Edward Gilman, Sr. May 10, 1652
Edward Gilman, Jr. November 4, 1647
John Gilman January 12, 1648-9
John Gilman, Jr. November 4, 1647
Moses Gilman February 10, 1647-8
Charles Glidden March 30, 1674
James Godfrey March 16, 1660-1
Alexander Gordon October 10, 1664
Samuel Greenfield May 19, 1664
William Hacket October 10, 1664
Joseph Hall October 10, 1664
Samuel Hall March 11, 1678-9
Robert Hathersay (Hersey) August 5, 1644
Edmond Johnson August 26, 1650
Thomas Jones August 5, 1644
Joel Judkins April 2, 1675
Duny (?) Kelley October 10, 1664
James Kidd March 11, 1678-8
John Kimming October 10, 1664
Thomas King January 16, 1644-5
Nathaniel Ladd February 18, 1678-9
Cornelius Lary October 10, 1664
David Lawrence March 30, 1674
Jeremy Leavitt March 30, 1674
Moses Leavitt October 10, 1664
Samuel Leavitt September 28, 1668
John Legat October 20, 1642
Nicholas Liston January 12, 1648-9
Henry Magoon April 2, 1664
Richard Morgan March 29, 1668
Nicholas Norris August 30, 1671
George Person (Pearson) March 18 (about), 1679
Thomas Pettit, Jr. May 20, 1652
Robert Powell October 10, 1664
Thomas Rashleigh May 6, 1643
John Robinson April 20, 1652
Jonathan Robinson March 3, 1673-4
Jonathan Rollins October 10, 1664
Thomas Rollins March 30, 1670
John Saunders January 16, 1644-5
Edward Sewall April 2, 1675
Jonathan Sewall April 1, 1678
Robert Seward April 1, 1678
John Sinclair October 10, 1664
John Smart January 16, 1644-5
John Smart, Jr April 22, 1649
Robert Smart April 22, 1649
Edward Smith March 30, 1670
Nicholas Smith March 4, 1638-9
Francis Swain March 31, 1645
Nicholas Swain December16, 1646
Richard Swain November 4, 1647
James Taylor March 4, 1658-9
William Taylor June 26, 1650
John Todd November 4, 1647
Johnathan Thing January 22, 1659-60
Johnathan Thing, Jr. March 30, 1670
Thomas Tyler May 20, 1652
Robert Wadleigh March 15, 1667-8
John Warren April 22, 1649
Thomas Warren October 10, 1664
John Wedgewood March 3, 1673-4
William Whitridge April, 3, 1649
Gowen Wilson November 24, 1650
Humphrey Wilson June 17, 1644
John Young March 30, 1670

Page 133:
At the last name date is the first of the appointment of lot layers: John Cram and John Legat.On the same day “It was agreed that 500 acres of land next the two great lots above mentioned shall be laid for a common field, to be fenced by the town, planting ground for every man to have his equal share, that are householders.”It was also agreed “that the remainder of that [plain] before mentioned to the corner of John Cram’s lot or Bell Willix’s and so unto the fresh river, shall be [laid] out for an ox common, for working cattle and steers and horses, for every man to have his equal share, provided he do his portional share of fencing by the last day of May next, and those who do not fence are to have no right in said common.”The following grants were made in 1649: Nicholas Listen 10, “to cut firewood;”The following grants were made in 1650: Nicholas Listen 20

Pg 134:
The following grants were made in 1652: Nicholas Listen 40

Pg 134:
The following grants were made from 1654 to 1661, inclusive:1654, February 15, Nicholas Listen, 20 acres, conditionally.The following grants were made in 1664:Alexander Gordon 20; Nicholas Listen 40Pg 136The following grants were made from 1665s to 1669 inclusive:
Niccholas Listen and Robert Wadleigh 10 acres.The following grants were made from 1674 to 1678 inclusive:[Nicholas] Listen 300

Pg 138:
The following land grants were made in 1698:Alexander Gordon 60: James Gordon 60: John Gordon 20: Nicholas Gordon 30

Pg 148:
List of Town Officers
Selectmen
Nicholas Listen 1654,5,7, 62,6

Pg 320:
Encouraged by this example, a number of the more enterprising inhabitants made application to the town for mill sites……On the same April 22, 1649, liberty to set up a saw-mill was given to Edward Hilton, James wall, John and Robert Smart and Thomas Biggs, on Pascassic river; and to George Barlow, Nicholas Listen,* Francis Swain, Nicholas Swain and John Warren, at the falls at Lamprey river “a little above the wigwams.” Both these localities were probably in the present town of Newmarket.

Pg 322:
May 1652.On the same day Thomas Pettit, Nicholas Listen, Thomas Cornish, John Warreen and Francis Swain received from the town a privilege for a saw-mill at Lamprey river “on the net great fall above the fall that some of them have already taken possession of, paying five pounds a year for the privilege, beginning presently after next Michaelmas.” This fall was tin the present town of Newmarket.Pg 324The mill referred to must have been that on Little river, afterwards known as Gordon’s, and still later as Giddings’s and Rowland’s.

Pg 393:
The ancestor of the Gordon family appeared in Exeter within the first half century after its settlement. He had a mill upon the Little river. His descendants occupied lands in the southwestern part of the town, and were generally farmers, except one or two who had the control of mills at King’s falls. One, of the later generation, George William Gordon, was appointed consul at Rio Janeiro, and was afterwards postmaster of Boston. Nathaniel Gordon, a present resident of the town, was a lawyer by profession, and has been president of the state SenateAppendix IIIBicentennial Address of Hon. Jeremiah SmithExcerpt pg 456Among the persons who united their fortunes to ours during the first century (for I must confine myself for obvious reasons chiefly to that period), and whose names are still “familiar to our ears as household words,” – the men who bore the heat and burden of the day, and to whom this day must be devoted; — among these men we find the names of Gilman, Folsom, Hilton, Colcord, Thing, Gordon, Magoon, Conner, Robinson, Pearson, Lawrence, King, Odiorne, Lamson, Tilton, Philbrick, Poor, Perryman, Emery and many others. The descendantsof these respectable men still dwell among us. Time would fail me even briefly to mention the good things our records abundantly testify concerning them; — how acceptably they filled the municipal and public offices conferred upon them. But I cannot deny myself the pleasure of a brief notice of two or three.

HISTORY OF EXETER: PART II FAMILY REGISTER

FROM THE EXETER RECORDS, Pg 21-22

Alexander Gordon, said to be Scotch soldier of Charles II, taken prisoner by Parlimentarians, sent to America 1651, md. 1663 Mary Listen, dau. Of Nicholas Listen of Exeter.
Their children:
Elizabeth, b 23 Feb 1664
Nicholas, b 23 March 1665-6
Mary, b 22 May 1668
John, b 26 Oct 1670
James, b 22 July 1673
Alexander, b 1 Dec 1675
Thomas, b 1678
Daniel, b 1882

[Cha88]
On November 30, 1677 Alexnder took the oath of allegiance to King Charles II. He served on various scouting parties against the Indians in King William’s war. [Hol79]

Alexander Gordon, Sr. died. Exeter 1697

The Alexander Gordon line is the earliest known Gordon family in the New World according to the House of Gordon DNA Project, and descends from Adam de Gordoun through Sir William Gordon 1265 Laird of Strathbogie (now Huntly). According to the site Sir William Gordon is the progenitor for the Southern or Lowland Gordons of Lochinvar and Kenmure.[TAG14]

Alexander Gordon entered into a contractual agreement with John Cloise while still at Tothill Fields near London.

Page 57 of Social and Economic Networks in Early Massachusetts: Atlantic Connections by Marsha L. Hamilton:

“Non-Puritan servants also arrived in Massachusetts in the 1650s under individual contracts. ALEXANDER GORDON, for example, petitioned the Middlesex County court in 1653 to stop the sale of his labor by his master, John Cloise. Gordon had been captured during the Battle of Worcester in 1652 [1651] and sent to Tothill Field, near London, to await deportation. While there, he agreed to go to Massachusetts with Cloise “without any agreement for time or wages, only his promise to be as a father in all love and kindness” Gordon paid for his passage by working on the ship and then worked for Cloise for a year without pay, receiving only room and board. Cloise later sold him for seventeen pounds, prompting Gordon’s complaint.”

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Bean (Beme), John

Battle:Battle of Worcester in Worcester, Worcestershire, England
Ship/Arrival:John & Sara, May 1652
Prisoner and List:Beme, John, 1, Bean, John, 2
Name Variations:Beme, Bean, McBean, Baine
Residences:Exeter, New Hampshire
Other SPOW Associations:Alexander Gordon, Henry Magoon
Every attempt has been made to ensure accuracy; please independently verify all data.

Published: 02 December 2014
Updated: 25 Mar 2020
Researchers: Linda Burkell, Dorothy Greene, Andrew Millard, Teresa Rust
Editor: Teresa Rust


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First Generation in the New World

1. JOHN BEME [BEAN], was born presumably in Scotland about 1634 and died at Exeter, (now Rockingham County), New Hampshire between 24 Jan. and 8 Feb. 17183 and is buried at the Old Meeting House Churchyard, (now Belknap County), New Hampshire. He married, first, at Exeter on 18 Apr 1654, HANNAH LISSEN, and she died at Exeter in 1659 “during birth of their 3rd child” according to the Clan MacBean organization online. He married, second, at Exeter before 16 Nov 1660, MARGARET REES.

Biographical Notes:
1. Contributed by Dr. Andrew Millard in July 2018, from, Lost Lives, New Voices: Unlocking the Stories of the Scottish Soldiers at the Battle of Dunbar 1650, (England: Oxbow Books, 2018), on page 255, John is categorized as: Doubtful [that he is a Dunbar prisoner transported on the Unity] Bean/McBean/Baine, John. Residences: Exeter NH. Appears: 1654. B.c.1634. D.1718. Probably John Beme on the John & Sara list. [Exiles; DR; SPOWS] For explanations of the category, abbreviations and references see List of Dunbar prisoners from Lost Lives, New Voices.
3. Famous descendants: John Greenleaf Whittier and L. L. Bean

Children of John and Hannah (Lissen) Bean:
2. i. MARY BEAN, b. at Exeter on 18 Jun 1655; d. at Exeter in 1743; m., 1st, JOEL JUDKINS; m., 2nd, DAVID ROBINSON.
2. ii. HENRY BEAN, b. at Exeter on 5 Mar 1657; d. Exeter in 1662/3; DIED YOUNG.
2. iii. HANNAH BEAN, b. at Exter in 1659; d. at Kingston, (now Rockingham County), New Hampshire; m., ABRAHAM WHITACRE.

Children of John and Margaret (Rees) Bean:
2. iv. JOHN² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 15 Aug 1661; d. at Exeter on 18 May 1666. Died young.
2. v. DANIEL² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 23 Mar 1663; d. at Exeter before 27 May 1718; m., MARY FIFIELD.
2. vi. SAMUEL² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 23 Feb 1666; d. bef. 31 May 1738.
2. vii. JOHN² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 13 Oct 1668; d. at Exeter on 3 Jun 1719; m., SARAH WADLEIGH.
2. viii. MARGARET² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 27 Oct 1670; d. at Kingston on 6 Nov 1766; m., WILLIAM TAYLOR, JR.
2. ix. JAMES² BEAN, b. Exeter on 17 Dec 1762; d. at Kingston on 6 Jan 17–; m., 1st, SARAH BRADLEY; m., 2nd, MARY PRESCOTT; m., 3rd, SARAH COLEMAN.
2. x. JEREMIAH² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 10 Apr 1675; d. Exeter in 1727; m., RUTH JOHNSON.
2. xi. ELIZABETH² BEAN, b. at Exeter on 24 Sep 1678; d. Exeter aft. 1730; m., JOHN SINCLAIR. (A SPOW???)
2. xii. CATHERINE² BEAN, b. at Exeter in 1680; d. Exeter aft. 1744; m., RICHARD DOLLOFF.

Second and Third Generations

2. i. MARY² BEAN, (John¹), was born at Exeter on 18 Jun 1655 and died at Exeter in 1743. She married, first, on 25 Jun 1674, JOEL JUDKINS, he died after 1714. She married, second, DAVID ROBINSON.

Children of Joel and Mary² (Bean) Judkins

3. i. JOB³ JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. ii. SARAH³ JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. iii. HANNAH³ JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹), was born on 13 Nov 1676. She married Ebenezer Webster on 27 Jul 1709. She was the great-great-grandmother of Daniel Webster.
3. iv. MARY JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. v. SAMUEL JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. vi. JOSEPH JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. vii. JOEL JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. viii. JACOB JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. ix. BENJAMIN JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),
3. x. JOHN JUDKINS, (Mary², John¹),

2. ii. HENRY² BEAN, (John¹), was born at Exeter on 5 Mar 1657 and died at Exeter in 1662/3. Died young and never married.

2. iii. HANNAH² BEAN, (John¹), was born at Exeter in 1659 and died at Kingston, (now Rockingham County), New Hampshire on 18 Jul 1692. She married, at Exeter, in Apr 1681, ABRAHAM WHITACRE. Hannah and husband and all but one child were killed my marauding Indians.

Children of Abraham and Hannah² (Bean) Whitacre:

3. i. HANNAH³ WHITACRE, was born in Exeter, Rockingham, New
Hampshire, about 1683. She married before 1715, HOLDRIDGE KELLY. She is the only child that survived.

2. iv. JOHN² BEAN, (John¹), was born at Exeter on 15 Aug 1661 and died at Exeter on 18 May 1666. Died young and never married.

2. v. DANIEL² BEAN+, (John¹), was born at Exeter on 23 Mar 1663 and died at Exeter before 27 May 1718. He married, MARY FIFIELD. They had at least four children.

Children of Daniel² and Mary (Fifield) Bean

3. i. DANIEL³ BEAN, (Daniel², John¹), b. Exeter 1685; d. Kingston 1745; m., ANN SANBORN.
3. ii. JOHN BEAN, (Daniel², John¹), b. 1688; d. 1732
3. iii. SAMUEL BEAN, (Daniel², John¹), b. 1694; d. 9 Apr 1737.
3. iv. MARY BEAN, (Daniel², John¹), b. 1696;

2. vi. SAMUEL² BEAN, (John¹), wasb. at Exeter on 23 Feb 1666; d. bef. 31 May 1738.

2. vii. JOHN² BEAN, (John¹), wasb. at Exeter on 13 Oct 1668; d. at Exeter on 3 Jun 1719; m., SARAH WADLEIGH.

2. viii. MARGARET² BEAN, (John¹), wasb. at Exeter on 27 Oct 1670; d. at Kingston on 6 Nov 1766; m., WILLIAM TAYLOR, JR.

2. ix. JAMES² BEAN, (John¹), was born at Exeter on 17 Dec 1672 and died at Kingston on 6 Jan 17–. He married, first, SARAH BRADLEY. He married, second, MARY PRESCOTT. He married, third, SARAH COLEMAN.

Biographical Notes:
Joshua Bean, of Exeter, Brentwood and Gilmanton, N. H., and some of his descendants by Drummond, Josiah H. (Josiah Hayden), 1827-1902; c1903, Bean family Publisher, Portland, Smith & Sale, printers. https://archive.org/details/joshuabeanofexet01drum/page/2/mode/2up

Children of James and (_____) Bean:

3. JOHN BEAN, m. SARAH

4. SINKLER BEAN,
4. JOSHUA BEAN, b. at Exeter about 1713; m., HANNAH ROBINSON.4

3. JAMES BEAN,

2. x. JEREMIAH BEAN,(John¹), wasb. at Exeter on 10 Apr 1675; d. Exeter in 1727; m., RUTH JOHNSON.

2. xi. ELIZABETH BEAN,(John¹), was b. at Exeter on 24 Sep 1678; d. Exeter aft. 1730; m., JOHN SINCLAIR. (A SPOW???)

2. xii. CATHERINE BEAN,(John¹), wasb. at Exeter in 1680; d. Exeter aft. 1744; m., RICHARD DOLLOFF.


SOURCES AND NOTES:

I am a 10th generation descendent of #7 John Beme whose name was changed to John Bean (of Exeter) according to Bernie Bean’s research (1970) “The Life and Family of John Bean of Exeter and His Cousins”. Any additional info other than what is included in the book would be greatly appreciated. John Bean’s descendent David Bean built the Old Bean Tavern approx 1750 in Raymond, NH. It still exists today.~ George Bean

PLEASE SEE THE CLAN MACBEAN ORGANIZATION WEBSITE FOR SOURCES!
Linda Burkell says:
May 14, 2016 at 3:20 pm
“The Lane Memorial Library in Hampton, NH has an excellent history and genealogy section with much online (http://www.hampton.lib.nh.us/) that includes information on John Bean’s family. Also see the book by Bernie Bean “The Life and Family of John Bean of Exeter and his Cousins,” (Seattle Genealogical Society, Inc., 1970). John is my 7th gr-grandfather.”

Bean, Bernie, 1906-. The life and family of John Bean of Exeter and his cousins, (Seattle : John Bean of Exeter Family Association, 1970) at Archives.org. This book can be borrowed electronically for 14 days! ~ Teresa

Dorothy Greene says:
May 11, 2016 at 10:19 pm
About 10 years ago I found a book in the library at NEGHS called The MacBean Clan (I think that that was the name. It was something like that) It appeared to be a well researched book. It had the father of John MacBean the POW who was in Exeter NH (my 6th great grandfather) born in Strathdern, Invernes-Shire, Scotland about 1634 and the son of Donald MacBean. I live in Austin TX during the winter and will soon be going back to my small condo in Amesbury MA which is about 15 minutes from Exeter NH for the summer.”

24 Oct 1676: Paid for military service at Exeter, New Hampshire.

Of Exeter, paid £9,4,0 on 24 Oct 1676 for his military service (Soldiers in King Philip’s War, p449).

He lived at Exeter, N.H.. See Exeter History Minute.

A quick search for “John Bean 1620-1700” at www.americanancestors.org finds this :

Exeter, New Hampshire TRANSCRIPTIONS dated Aug 30, 1905:
Birth: John Bean 15 Aug 1661, son of John Bean
Death: John Bean 18 May 1666, son of John Bean
Birth: John Bean 13 Oct 1668, son of John Bean

Census: 1680 – John Bean- “Petitioners, New Hampshire Territory”

There are many more records of other John Beans for several generations. I never saw a MacBean just BEAN. ~ Teresa

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Book page
Sources used for this book.
Pages of a book
More sources used for book.
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  1. A list of the passengers aboard the John and Sarah of London John Greene Mr. bound for New England, dated 11 Nov 1651. Suffolk Deeds. 12 lib, Volume 1 Suffolk Mass 1880 Google Books []
  2. #3 on George S. Stewart’s Captured at Dunbar list [DOUBTFUL]” []
  3. Noyes et all (Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire 84) wrote that he d[ied] betw[een] 24 Jan. and 8 Feb. 1718,” those dates being, presumably, the date of a will (0r codicil) and probably the date of an inventory of his estate.~D. B. Robinson []
  4. Joshua Bean, of Exeter, Brentwood and Gilmanton, N. H., and some of his descendants by Drummond, Josiah H. (Josiah Hayden), 1827-1902; c1903, Bean family Publisher, Portland, Smith & Sale, printers. https://archive.org/details/joshuabeanofexet01drum/page/2/mode/2up []