Report: individuals with associated notes
Description: personen met geassocieerde notities
Matches 1601 to 1650 of 1702
«Prev «1 ... 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 Next»
# | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
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1601 | I355 | VERMANDOIS | Beatrice | 880 | 931 | 0 | Vermandois, Neustria, Normandie, France | tree1 |
1602 | I7284 | VERMANDOIS | Elizabeth of | 1085 | 1131 | 0 | Third daughter of Hugh Magnus and Adelaide of Vermandois and as such represented both the Capetian line of her paternal grandfather Henry I of France, and the Carolingian ancestry of her maternal grandfather Herbert IV of Vermandois. As the wife of two Anglo-Norman magnates, Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester and William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey, she is the ancestress of hundreds of well-known families down to the present time. Elizabeth is reputed to have had an affair and left her first husband when he was near death. The historian James Planché claimed (1874) that the Countess was seduced by or fell in love with a younger nobleman, William de Warenne. There is no evidence that her second husband, William II de Warenne, second earl of Surrey, was that lover and only later rumors that she had a lover at all during her first marriage. William had sought a royal bride in 1093, but failed in his attempt to wed Matilda of Scotland also known as Edith, who later married Henry I,. He obtained a bride of royal blood when he married Elizabeth in 1118, very soon after the death of Earl Robert. Elizabeth survived her second husband William to later die 1131. |
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1603 | I7353 | VERMANDOIS | Herbert II | 884 | 23 Feb 943 | 0 | St Quentin, Aisne, Picardie, France | tree1 |
1604 | I7287 | VERMANDOIS | Hugh I of | 1057 | 18 Oct 1101 | 0 | He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus. | tree1 |
1605 | I1250 | VERMET | Louis | 18 Jan 1803 | 0 | Saint Henri, Levis, Quebec | tree1 | |
1606 | I381 | VERMET | Marie Rose | 17 Jan 1879 | 12 Feb 1879 | 0 | Lyster (Ste-Anastasie-de-Nelson), Québec, Canada | tree1 |
1607 | I381 | VERMET | Marie Rose | 17 Jan 1879 | 12 Feb 1879 | 0 | Lyster (Ste-Anastasie-de-Nelson), Québec, Canada | tree1 |
1608 | I1503 | VERMET DIT LAFORME | Fleury Asquet | Abt 1606 | 1669 | 0 | Source: St. Famille, Ile d'Orleans Church | tree1 |
1609 | I1238 | VERMET-DIT-LAFORME | Antoine | Abt 1636 | 25 Aug 1713 | 0 | LDS records show 1636, St Nicaise, Arras, Pas-De-Calais, France as year a nd place of birth. Pierre Vermette notes show handwritten entry for "b 1 644", with no location of birth. Civil notes show his age as 45 at the b irth of his son Jacques in 1681, making his birth year about 1636. His b irthplace is now known as Arras, Pas-de-Calais, France. At the time of A ntoine's birth however, that geographical area was known as the Spanish N etherlands and was reassigned to France in a subsequent treaty. | tree1 |
1610 | I1238 | VERMET-DIT-LAFORME | Antoine | Abt 1636 | 25 Aug 1713 | 0 | Found a church named St.Nicaise church in the town of Haisnes in Pas-de-Callais and also a St-Nicolas church in St-Nicoloas-les-arras but uncertain in which church he was baptized (if any at all) | tree1 |
1611 | I1238 | VERMET-DIT-LAFORME | Antoine | Abt 1636 | 25 Aug 1713 | 0 | Entries for death are shown in various sources as both 15 Oct 1708 and 2 5 Aug 1713 | tree1 |
1612 | I1238 | VERMET-DIT-LAFORME | Antoine | Abt 1636 | 25 Aug 1713 | 0 | Translation of information found in the museum on the I’le d’Orleans VERMET Antoine (c.1636 - Ant. 13-08-1713) said Laforme Son of Fleury Asquet (Vermet) and Marie Leblanc, of the Saint-Nicaise parish of the of city d* Arras in Atois, he married at Sainte-Famille, the Island of Orléans on Monday, August 26, 1669, Barbe Menard, daughter of René Ménard and Judith Veillon, of the city of La Rochelle in Aunis. Eight children were born from their union. This ancestor married in 1669 and settled at Saint-Famille and then Saint-François of the Orléans Island in a land of three acres frontage. On February 5th 1670, Marie-Barbe of Boulogne, widow of Louis Dailleboust, rented him a cow for five years, with 20 pounds the first year and 25 pounds for each of the remaining years. At the Census of 1681, he lived at the extreams of Saint-Famille and Saint-François of the Orléans Island. August 16, 1682, François Garinet sold a land to him at Saint-Francois of the Orléans Island at the price of 150 pounds. The first of August 1684, he commited his daughter Marie-Anne to Étienne Landron, until she was married, at 36 pounds of wages the first three years and 50 pounds of wages for each of the remaining years. On the 30th of January 1685, he committed his daughter Marie-Madeleine to this same Étienne Landron untill she is ready to marry, because of 30 pounds the first three years and 40 pounds for each of the remaining years. His wife died at Sainte-Famille of the Orléans Island on 16 June 1685. On the 19th of March 1688, it is his daughter Marguerite, aged thirteen, whom he committed to Louise Delestre for three years, with his housing, his food, his maintenance and 30 pounds of wages annually. On 8th of May 1702, he committed his son John aged sixteen for four years as an apprentice Barber at Jean Chevalier with his housing, its food and its maintenance. We do not know the precise of his death before August the 13th 1713, date of the marriage contract of his son Jean. ANQGN Radhakrishnan g. 05-02-1670 16-08-1682; 0108-1684 1903 - 1688: Duquet 30-01-1685; Lepailleur 08-05-1702. https://www.ancestry.it/boards/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=135&p=surnames.vermette Antoine was a farmer who arrived in the colony of New France (Canada) from the Artois area of France about 1664 or 1665 (although, technically, it was the Spanish Netherlands at that time). He established a farm on Ile d'Orleans, an island in the St. Lawrence River east of Quebec City, Canada. Over time, Antoine's sons and their sons migrated from there south to Montreal and Michigan and east to Maine and down the New England coast of the United States. Barbe Ménard was a fil du rois, or 'Daughter of the King'. About 700 of these young ladies were given a dowry by King Louis XIV to induce them to emigrate to the colony of New France. In 1669, 16 year-old Barbe arrived in Quebec with a group of fil du rois and shortly thereafter married Antoine. Barbe was from a Hugenot family (protestant followers of John Calvin) in New Rochelle, France. She and Antoine had seven children before she died giving birth to twins in 1685. The photograph attached to the first message in this thread is of the Ile d'Orleans St. Famille parish registry for the year 1669. It shows the record of Antoine's and Barbe's marriage along with the names of their parents and the names of the witnesses. I have a transcription of the entry in French, which I do not read. I can make out the essential phrases, but if there is someone out there willing to do a translation, I'll provide the transcription and we can all share the results. For those of you who haven't connected your Vermette roots with Antoine and Barbe, post your "brick walls" here in this forum. If everyone combines their information, we can all make the connections and correct any errors in our information. As in all things genealogical, those with different information are encouraged to speak up! One of the reasons I've posted this information is to get some life back into this board! |
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1613 | I1238 | VERMET-DIT-LAFORME | Antoine | Abt 1636 | 25 Aug 1713 | 0 | Translation of parish registry: 11 April 1669. Having seen that the ba ns of marriage between Antoine Vermet, called LaForme, son of Fleury Ve rmet and Marie LeBlanc. His father and mother of the parish of St. Niqu are in the area of Arras and of Barbe Menard, daughter of Rene Menard a nd Judix Veillon. Her mother and father of LaRochelle and there being n o objections, I Morel, missionary priest perform the ceremony in the sa id Island. They were married according to the customs of the Holy Churc h in the presence of Pierre Longon and Francois DuPont, who live in the s aid Island and who have stated that there are no objections. Signed Morel, missionary priest 26 August, 1669 Translation of information found in the museum on the I’le d’Orleans VERMET Antoine (c.1636 - Ant. 13-08-1713) said Laforme Son of Fleury Asquet (Vermet) and Marie Leblanc, of the Saint-Nicaise parish of the of city d* Arras in Atois, he married at Sainte-Famille, the Island of Orléans on Monday, August 26, 1669, Barbe Menard, daughter of René Ménard and Judith Veillon, of the city of La Rochelle in Aunis. Eight children were born from their union. This ancestor married in 1669 and settled at Saint-Famille and then Saint-François of the Orléans Island in a land of three acres frontage. On February 5th 1670, Marie-Barbe of Boulogne, widow of Louis Dailleboust, rented him a cow for five years, with 20 pounds the first year and 25 pounds for each of the remaining years. At the Census of 1681, he lived at the extreams of Saint-Famille and Saint-François of the Orléans Island. August 16, 1682, François Garinet sold a land to him at Saint-Francois of the Orléans Island at the price of 150 pounds. The first of August 1684, he commited his daughter Marie-Anne to Étienne Landron, until she was married, at 36 pounds of wages the first three years and 50 pounds of wages for each of the remaining years. On the 30th of January 1685, he committed his daughter Marie-Madeleine to this same Étienne Landron untill she is ready to marry, because of 30 pounds the first three years and 40 pounds for each of the remaining years. His wife died at Sainte-Famille of the Orléans Island on 16 June 1685. On the 19th of March 1688, it is his daughter Marguerite, aged thirteen, whom he committed to Louise Delestre for three years, with his housing, his food, his maintenance and 30 pounds of wages annually. On 8th of May 1702, he committed his son John aged sixteen for four years as an apprentice Barber at Jean Chevalier with his housing, its food and its maintenance. We do not know the precise of his death before August the 13th 1713, date of the marriage contract of his son Jean. ANQGN Radhakrishnan g. 05-02-1670 16-08-1682; 0108-1684 1903 - 1688: Duquet 30-01-1685; Lepailleur 08-05-1702. |
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1614 | I1324 | VERMETTE | Blanche | Abt 1910 | 0 | 1920 census estimates 1911, but it was probably 1910 as that is the year her mother died | tree1 | |
1615 | I502 | VERMETTE | Elzear | 13 May 1872 | 7 Jun 1948 | 0 | The Portsmouth Herald 8 Jun 1948. Says he had lived at 408 Main St, South Berwick, ME for 71 years. Born in Canada | tree1 |
1616 | I502 | VERMETTE | Elzear | 13 May 1872 | 7 Jun 1948 | 0 | Perhaps Elzeard moved to the U.S. with his older brother Onesime Jr. in 1895. Not sure when his mother died, but suspect it may have been about this time. His father, Onesime Sr. was still living in Canada, in a boarding house, in 1891. But on brother Joseph's marriage certificate in 1894 it says Onesime Sr. was living in Rollinsford, NH. I need to try and sort this out more. | tree1 |
1617 | I153 | VERMETTE | Madeleine | 12 Aug 1920 | 20 Jul 2000 | 0 | Never married | tree1 |
1618 | I735 | VERMETTE | Marie Anne | 20 Nov 1876 | 13 Jan 1879 | 0 | Lyster (Ste-Anastasie-de-Nelson), Québec, Canada | tree1 |
1619 | I735 | VERMETTE | Marie Anne | 20 Nov 1876 | 13 Jan 1879 | 0 | Lyster (Ste-Anastasie-de-Nelson), Québec, Canada | tree1 |
1620 | I17894 | VERMETTE | Ronald E | 12 Feb 1942 | 10 Apr 2019 | 0 | South Berwick-Ronald E. Vermette, 77, of Fifes Lane in South Berwick died on April 10, 2019 at Lahey Clinic in Burlington MA surrounded by his loving family. Born in South Berwick on February 12, 1942 he was the son of the late Harry and Antoinette (Gagnon ) Vermette. He was raised in Dover attending St. Charles School and Dover High School. Following high school he proudly served his country in the United States Navy during the Viet Nam War where he spent much of his deployment in Danang. After his discharge he married his loving wife of fifty three years Patricia ( Bradshaw ) Vermette and together they made their home for a time in Dover and Kittery before settling in South Berwick where they would raise their family. He and Pat bought “Karen’s “ Lunch truck in 1970 and he operated it until 1975 serving folks in Kittery, Portsmouth and the construction crews on the Interstate 95 corridor as it was being built. In 1975 after serving as a part time officer for the Town of Kittery, he was appointed as a full time Police Officer proudly serving for over twenty five years, mentoring many young officers and creating memorable community relationships and fostering his second family within the walls of the station rising to Senior Patrolman prior to his retirement. He enjoyed many years of family camping escapades and cherished his time hunting, fishing, riding four wheelers and being with family and good friends at camp in Harmony Maine and Pine River Pond In N.H. He and his family were members of the Parish of the Ascension of the Lord attending Our Lady of The Angels Parish in South Berwick. Ron is survived by his loving wife Patricia of South Berwick, sons ; John, Matthew, Christopher, Douglas and their wives 4 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. A Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated on Tuesday April 16, 2019 at 11am in St. Raphael’s Church on Whipple Road in Kittery, followed by military honors at church. Following Mass all are invited to the Kittery Lions Club for an Irish Wake as he requested. Feel free to bring a dish for a pot luck meal. Online condolences may be made by visiting www.jspelkeyfuneralhome.com . In lieu of flowers donations may made in his memory to Special Olympics Maine 125 John Roberts Road Portland Maine 04106. Care for the Vermette family has been entrusted to the JS Pelkey and Son Funeral Home. |
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1621 | I2178 | VESTJENS DE ROCHEMONT | Maria Margot Margaretha Vestjeris | Abt 1757 | Abt 1798 | 0 | Burial in Plantation Le Resouvenir, Demerara-Mahaica, Guyana | tree1 |
1622 | I2178 | VESTJENS DE ROCHEMONT | Maria Margot Margaretha Vestjeris | Abt 1757 | Abt 1798 | 0 | My info here came from Debbie Patch: Cassel (Dutch is Kassel) is a commune in the nord department in northern France. Built on a prominent hill overlooking French Flanders, the town has existed since Roman times. It was developed by the Romans into an important urban centre and was the focus of a network of roads, which are still in use today, that converge on the hill. After the fall of the Roman Empire, Cassel became an important fortified stronghold for the rulers of Flanders which was repeatedly fought over before finally being annexed to France in the 17th century. |
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1623 | I12524 | VEZINA | Marie Louise | Abt 1652 | 1 Dec 1714 | 0 | Source: PRDH Individual #32895 & Tanguay, Vol. 4 Sect. 2: Gli-Jin, page 362 | tree1 |
1624 | I12524 | VEZINA | Marie Louise | Abt 1652 | 1 Dec 1714 | 0 | Source: PRDH Individual #32895 | tree1 |
1625 | I8779 | VINSON | William | Jun 1608 | 17 Sep 1690 | 0 | Many online trees claim Francis Vincent and Sarah Paulet as the parents of William Vinson, a claim that has been disproven. (Francis Vincent had only one surviving son, Anthony Vincent, when he died in 1640.) |
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1626 | I917 | VON LUXEMBURG | Frederick II | 1004 | 18 May 1065 | 0 | Le Duc, Meuse, Lorraine, France | tree1 |
1627 | I2123 | VON NORDGAU | Hedwig | 922 | 13 Dec 992 | 0 | St Maximin, Trier, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany | tree1 |
1628 | I2123 | VON NORDGAU | Hedwig | 922 | 13 Dec 992 | 0 | wife of Siegfried of Luxembourg, first count of Luxembourg and founder of the country. They were married c. 950. She was of Saxon origin but her parentage is not known for sure. Some sources list her as the daughter of count Eberhard IV of Nordgau and Luitgard of Lotharingia. Others claim that she was connected to the family of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor | tree1 |
1629 | I10419 | |||||||
1630 | I4505 | WALDRON | Bridget | 1707 | 1712 | 0 | killed in indian raid | tree1 |
1631 | I3062 | WALDRON | John | 1665 | 12 May 1740 | 0 | khmiller856 I think there may be a few John Waldron's confused. "A" John Waldron married Mary Ham Horne a widow. He was not a Captain as he supposedly had been take off the streets of London as a very young man and became an indentured apprentice. In John Heard's Will of Jan. 1688 "...I give to my prentice John Walldron, iff he doe faithfully serve his time according to his indenture: one cow to be delivered to him.." In John Waldron's his Will of 1740 he does not refer to himself as a Captain. He received a lot of wealth through his marriage & his own fortitude. Mary Ham Horne is also the gr.daughter of John Heard whom held his original indenture. I am not sure it has been discovered who his parents were as he was pressed into "Indentured Servitude" at a very young age & brought to New Hampshire. John Heard was a Master Carpenter & John Waldron learned a trade from him that is why he is referred to as an a prentice.. I know the story says "Chore Boy", but he was more likely learning the trade of a carpenter, which I think makes the story more remarkable. 3 years ago khmiller856 There are three different John Heards that have been confused also. The one who has John Waldron in his Will was John Heard who married Elizabeth Hull but he was not a captain & did not have a ship. It is difficult to be sure because the three different John's have been muddled together for so long & each one is said be a ship master but not all were or any. John Heard may have bought John Waldron as a "Indentured Servant" when he arrived in New England. He refers to him as a prentice in his Will which could mean he taught him the trade of carpentry as he was a Master Carpenter. "Indentured servant" was a labor system where young people paid for passage by working for someone for a number of years sadly sometimes people were also kidnapped. John Heard did not necessarily kidnap Waldron as he was living in NH not England & he had 12 children between 1644 -1667. It would be tough to get to England & kidnap a child then return. He could however have bought out his passage when he arrived in New England. John Heard gave John Waldron a cow in his will when his indenture was finished. That was a very expensive gift to give to someone & John would later marry his gr. daughter. 3 years ago khmiller856 The only one of the three John Heards that seems to be a Captain was John b. 1667 d. 1751. Capt. Heard was the same age as John Waldron so could not have kidnapped him in England. 3 years ago embear624 I totally understand about the several "John Waldron" stories floating around. Have you seen https://amoena.wordpress.com/2009/05/17/descendants-of-john-walderne/ 3 years ago khmiller856 Thanks so much difficult to keep straight. |
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1632 | I4508 | WALDRON | Sarah | 1703 | Jul 1712 | 0 | killed in indian raid | tree1 |
1633 | I17276 | WALERAN | 1191 | 0 | at the Siege of Acre during the Third Crusade | tree1 | ||
1634 | I9446 | WALKER | John | 1640 | 25 Sep 1711 | 0 | Charlestown, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States | tree1 |
1635 | I10463 | WALTER | IV | 1205 | 1244 | 0 | Walter was captured, tortured before the walls of Jaffa, and ultimately turned over to the Egyptians after the Khwarezmian defeat before Homs in 1246. He was imprisoned in Cairo and murdered by merchants whose caravans he had robbed, with the sultan's consent. | tree1 |
1636 | I10455 | WALTER | V | 1278 | 15 Mar 1311 | 0 | Battle of Halmyros | tree1 |
1637 | I14752 | WALTON | MARGARET | 5 Apr 1738 | May 1793 | 0 | Father Robert Source N Yorks Records Office page 111 yorkshire Bapt Transcipts (Find my Past) | tree1 |
1638 | I19797 | |||||||
1639 | I16169 | WARE | Rebecca | 1620 | 28 Nov 1682 | 0 | Rebecka Ware immigrated from the vicinity of Wrentham, Suffolk, England to New England with the family of Rev. John Phillips in 1638. Rev Phillips referred to Rebecca as his servant. | tree1 |
1640 | I3410 | WARREN | Daniel | 25 Feb 1626 | 13 Feb 1716 | 0 | Nayland, Essex, England | tree1 |
1641 | I3431 | WARREN | John | 1 Aug 1585 | 13 Dec 1667 | 0 | http://www.maintour.com/family/reid/warren028.htm | tree1 |
1642 | I4856 | WARREN | John Barnard | 1 Aug 1555 | Oct 1613 | 0 | John "the middle", a cardmaker, was born ca 1555 at Nayland, England and died there in 1613. He was taxed xvi d. on lands in the subsidy of 8 James I (1611). He married first, Elizabeth Scarlet on October 4, 1584 at Nayland. Elizabeth, the daughter of John Scarlett and Emma (____), was baptized in Nayland on August 30, 1561. She was buried there March 27, 1603/4. John married secondly, Rose (____), who was buried August 11, 1610, and thirdly, Rose Riddlesdale on April 23, 1611. All his children were by his first wife. His Will was dated March 27, 1613, and proved November 4, 1613. He bequeathed to wife and children, and twenty shillings to poor people of Nayland. | tree1 |
1643 | I10511 | WARREN | Joseph | 19 Feb 1661 | Oct 1755 | 0 | Respected farmer who died in October 1755 when he fell off a ladder while gathering fruit in his orchard | tree1 |
1644 | I3449 | WARREN | Richard | 1580 | 1628 | 0 | · "Richard Warren is among the most enigmatic of the pioneers who crossed the Atlantic in 1620 in the Mayflower. Clearly a man of rank, he was accorded by Governor William Bradford the prefix "Mr.", pronounced Master, used in those times to distinguish someone because of birth or achievement. From his widow's subsequent land transactions, we can assume that he was among the wealthier of the original Plymouth Settlers." And yet, Wm Bradford did not mention him in his "History of the Plimouth Plantation" except in the List of Passengers. "In 'Mort's Relation', published in 1622, we learn that Warren was chosen, when the Mayflower stopped at Cape Cod before reaching Plymouth, to be a member of a ten-man exploring party, and he was described as being 'of London.' Charles Edward Banks, in 'Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers' tells us: 'Richard Warren came from London and was called a merchand of that city (by Mourt) Extensive research in every avaiavble source of information -- registers, chancery, and probate, in the London courts, proved fruitless in an attempt to identify him.' Although research has continued since Banks, we still cannot find records of Warren's parentage of activities in England." "He was not of the Leyden, Holland, Pilgrims, but joined them in Southampton to sail on the Mayflower, leaving his wife and five daughters to follow in 1623 the "Anne." His two sons were born in Plymouth. From: Caleb Johnson's Mayflower Web Pages More erroneous information has been published about Richard Warren than any other Mayflower passenger, probably because he has so many descendants (note that all seven of his children grew up and married). It is time here to debunk many of the mistakes that have been published over the past hundred years. Common mistake #1. Richard Warren's wife is not Elizabeth (Jewett/Jonatt/Juett) Marsh. This is easily disproven. Elizabeth (Jewett) Marsh was born in 1614, which makes her not only younger than Richard Warren's two oldest children, but also makes her only fourteen years old when Richard Warren died. [Mayflower Descendant 2:63]. Common mistake #2. Richard Warren is not a proven descendant of any royalty, whether it be Sir John de Warrene or Charlemagne. Richard Warren's parents have not even been identified, despite extensive searches in the records of England (see the Mayflower Quarterly, 51:109-112 for a summary of one such search). The only concrete things we know about Richard Warren's ancestry are that he was a merchant of London--whether he was born there or not is an entirely different question. We also know that his wife was named Elizabeth. He had five daughters baptized in England somewhere, and perhaps the true records will some day be brought to light. There is a Richard Warren who married an Elizabeth Evans on 1 January 1592/3 in St. Leonards, and a Richard Warren who married an Elizabeth Doucke on 1 November 1596 in Sidmouth, Devon. However, since Richard's first child was born about 1610, a marriage in 1592 or 1596 seems most unlikely. ============================= Richard Warren's English origins and ancestry have been the subject of much speculation, and countless different ancestries have been published for him, without a shred of evidence to support them. Luckily in December 2002, Edward Davies discovered the missing piece of the puzzle. Researchers had long known of the marriage of Richard Warren to Elizabeth Walker on 14 April 1610 at Great Amwell, Hertford. Since we know the Mayflower passenger had a wife named Elizabeth, and a first child born about 1610, this was a promising record. But no children were found for this couple in the parish registers, and no further evidence beyond the names and timing, until the will of Augustine Walker was discovered in December 2002 by Edward Davies. In the will of Augustine Walker, dated April 1613, he mentions "my daughter Elizabeth Warren wife of Richard Warren", and "her three children Mary, Ann and Sarah." We know that the Mayflower passenger's first three children were named Mary, Ann, and Sarah (in that birth order), and that they were born c1610, c1612, and c1614, so this put the nail in the coffin and we can say with near certainty that Richard Warren of the Mayflower married in Great Amwell, Hertford to Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker. Additional research is currently being sponsored by MayflowerHistory.com to see if anything further can be learned about these families. Very little is known about Richard Warren's life in America. He came alone on the Mayflower in 1620, leaving behind his wife and five daughters. They came to him on the ship Anne in 1623, and Richard and Elizabeth subsequently had sons Nathaniel and Joseph at Plymouth. He received his acres in the Division of Land in 1623, and his family shared in the 1627 Division of Cattle. But he died a year later in 1628, the only record of his death being found in Nathaniel Morton's 1669 book New England's Memorial, in which he writes: "This year [1628] died Mr. Richard Warren, who was an useful instrument and during his life bare a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of the first settlement of the Plantation of New Plymouth." All of Richard Warren's children survived to adulthood, married, and had large families: making Richard Warren one of the most common Mayflower passengers to be descended from. Richard Warren's descendants include such notables as Civil War general Ulysses S. Grant, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Alan B. Shepard, Jr. the first American in space and the fifth person to walk on the moon. ==================== Edward J. Davies has found evidence for Augustine Walker, Great Amwell, Hertfordshire, as the father of Elizabeth, who married Richard Warren on 14 April 1610, in that same location. (The American Genealogist, April 2003, v. 78, no. 2, p. 81-86) ==================== An article by Edward J. Davies in the April 2003 issue of The American Genealogist gives evidence that Elizabeth Warren may have been the daughter of Augustine Walker. An Elizabeth Walker, daughter of Augustine Walker, married a Richard Warren in Great Amwell, Hertfordshire, on April 14, 1610. The will of Augustine Walker, dated April 19, 1613, refers not only to his daughter Elizabeth Warren but also her 3 daughters : Mary, Ann and Sarah. These three Warren daughters correspond to three of the Warren daughters who were passengers on the Anne in 1623. ================ A 1620 Mayflower passenger, Richard Warren is unusual because, although Bradford in his "decreasing and increasings" gives him the honorific title "Mr.", he does not mention him at all in the test of his history, and very little is known about him except for a few brief mentions elsewhere. In "Mourt's Relation" p. 15, Winslow lists ten men on an early expedition at Cape Cod, them of whom, including Richard Warren, were from London. Judging from land transactions of his widow, Elizabeth, who came over in 1623 on the ship Anne with daughters Abigail, Anna, Elizabeth, Mary and Sarah, the family appears to have been one of the wealthier ones at Plymouth. Richard and Elizabeth Warren had two sons born at Plymouth, Nathaniel, who married Sarah Walker, and Joseph, who married Priscilla Faunce. Richard Warren, prob. b. England. d Plymouth 1628. He m. prob. England prior to 1610 Elizabeth ________, b. ca 1580; d. Plymouth 2 Oct. 1673 aged above 90 years. The wife and 5 daughters came on the "Anne" in 1623. The 22 May 1627 division of cattle names Richard Warren, wife Elizabeth Warren, Nathaniel Warren, Joseph Warren, Mary Warren, Anna Warren, Sara Warren, Elizabeth Warren and Abigail Warren. In a codicil to his will dated 16 July 1667 Nathaniel Warren mentions his mother Elizabeth Warren, his brother, Joseph Warren, and his sisters Mary Bartlett, Anna Little, Sarah Cooke, Elizabeth Church and Abigail Snow. On 4 March 1673/4 Mary Bartlett, the wife of Robert Bartlett ack. she had received full satisfaction for her share of the estate of Mistris Elizabeth Warren, deceased; and John Cooke in behalf of all her sisters testified to the same. The court settled the remainder of the estate on Joseph Warren. Richard Warren (Mayflower, 1620) was born in England between 1580 and 1590. He was a merchant of Greenwich, Kent, died at Plymouth in 1628. "Grave Richard Warren, a man of integrity, justice and uprightness, of piety and serious religion, a useful citizen, bearing a deep share of the difficulties and troubles of the plantation." He joined the Pilgrims at Southampton. He married Mrs. Elizabeth (Jouatt) Marsh. (NOTE - THIS IS INCORRECT). Elizabeth was not a Mayflower passenger, but came to Plymouth in 1623 on the "Anne" with their five daughters, Mary, Ann, Sarah, Elizabeth and Abigail. They also had two sons, Nathaniel and Joseph, born in Plymouth. Richard Warren was born pre 1590, poss. London, Eng; his origins have not been found. He died in 1628. Richard married pre 1610, poss. London, Elizabeth (___). Despite what has previously appeared in print (e.g. Marsh, Jowett) her maiden name is unknown. Richard, of London, came in the "Mayflower"; signed the Company; settled at Plymouth; "an useful instrument; bore a deep share in the difficulties and troubles of settlement." (Mor.) His wife and children came in the "Anne" in 1623. In the division of cattle in 1627 shares were given to him, to his wife Elizabeth, and to ch. Nathaniel, Joseph, Mary, Anna, Sarah, Elizabeth and Abigail. He d. before 1628. Richard, b. by about 1578 based on estimated date of marriage; d . 1628, Plymouth, MA; m. by about 1609, Elizabeth (____). Emigrated from London in 1620 to Plymouth on the "Mayflower". In his accounting of the passengers of the Mayflower Bradford include d "Mr. Richard Warren, but his wife and children were left behind and came afterwards." As of 1651, Bradford reported that "Mr. Richard Warren lived some four or five years and had his wife come over to him, by whom he had two sons before he died, and one of them is married and hath two children. So his increase is four. But he had five daughters more came over with his wife, who are all married and living, and have many children." Many attempts, all fruitless, have been made to discover the English origin of Richard Warren and the identity of his wife. Richard Warren was in the party that explored the outer cape in early Dec 1620; he was described as being of London. In the 1623 Plymouth division of land Richard Warren received an uncertain number of acres (perhaps two) as a passenger on the Mayflower, and five acres as a passenger on the Anne (presumably for his wife and children). In the 1627 Plymouth division of cattle Richard Warren, his wife Elizabeth Warren, Nathaniel Warren, Joseph Warren, Mary Warren, Anna Warren, Sarah Warren, Elizabeth Warren and Abigail Warren were the first nine persons in the ninth company.2 3 4 5 6 7 · Event: Separatist Religion Ancestry Hints for Richard Warren 2 possible matches found on Ancestry.com Marriage 1 Elizabeth Walker b: Abt 1583 in England c: Sep 1583 in Great Amwell, Hertford, EnglandMarried: 14 Apr 1610 in Great Amwell, Hertford, England 8 Note: **Richard Warren and Elizabeth Walker are the ancestors of Shana Wallace (though daughter Mary), and US Presidents Gran (though son Nathaniel) and FDR (through Nathaniel, Sarah, Abigail, and Elizabeth). Children· Mary Warren b: Abt 1610 in England · Anna Warren b: Abt 1612 in England · Sarah Warren b: Abt 1613 in England · Elizabeth Warren b: Abt 1616 in England · Abigail Warren b: Abt 1618 in England · Nathaniel Warren b: Abt 1624 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts · Joseph Warren b: Abt 1626 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts Sources:· Title: Mayflower Increasings, 2nd Edition Author: Roser, Susan E. Publication: 2nd ed., 1995, Genealogical Pub. Co., Inc., 1001 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21202 · Title: Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Families of the Pilgrims - Richard Warren (Second Revision, 1986) · Title: Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume 18, Part One: Richard Warren Author: Wakefield, Robert S., compiler Publication: [Plymouth MA:] The General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1999 · Title: Richard Warren of the Mayflower and His Descendants for Four Generations Publication: General Society of Mayflower Descendants · Title: Susan E. Roser, Genealogical Publishing Co. (Roser) (Genealogical Publishing Co.) · Title: Charles Henry Preston, Descendants of Roger Preston of Ipswich and Salem Village (The Essex Institute) · Title: Robert Charles Anderson, NEGHS (NEGHS) · Title: The American Genealogist Repository: |
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1645 | I3473 | WARREN | Sarah | 1614 | 25 Jul 1686 | 0 | Shoreditch, London, , England | tree1 |
1646 | I9863 | WEARE | Peter | 14 Dec 1618 | 25 Jan 1692 | 0 | Peter was one of the settlers killed in the Candlemas Day Massacre | tree1 |
1647 | I2846 | WENTWORTH | Benjamin | 1670 | Aug 1728 | 0 | drowned "at 11 o'clock at night, going home from Dover Neck, he missed the boom and drove into the river." | tree1 |
1648 | I3041 | WENTWORTH | Benjamin | 30 Jul 1731 | 4 Nov 1813 | 0 | Great Falls | tree1 |
1649 | I3707 | WENTWORTH | Daniel | 5 Jan 1715 | 19 Jun 1747 | 0 | Elisha Webb, daughter of a free white woman and a Negro slave of Northampton, Virginia, was legally free from birth, due to her mother’s status. According to Virginia law, children born to white women were free, even if their father was a slave. A Virginia court bound out Elisha, like many other mulatto children, as an apprentice for eight years. Seven years into her apprenticeship, a Portsmouth, New Hampshire, sea captain, William Loud Jr., bought the remainder of her time, but treated her instead as a servant for life, or slave. Loud later sold her “forever” to Daniel Wentworth, one of Governor Benning Wentworth’s younger brothers. Wentworth retained a bill of sale to that effect. With the help of Judge Thomas Cable in Virginia, who had originally set up Elisha’s apprenticeship, and of an able Portsmouth attorney, Matthew Livermore, she was able to prove in 1741 to the satisfaction of the court in Portsmouth that she had been born free. from https://www.nhhistory.org/Timeline |
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1650 | I2808 | WENTWORTH | John | 1369 | 1413 | 0 | Kirby, Yorkshire, England | tree1 |
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