See also

Family of Benjamin + CRISPE and Bridget+

Husband: Benjamin + CRISPE (1611-1683)
Wife: Bridget+ (1615-1675)
Children: Elizabeth CRISPE (1636- )
Mary CRISPE (1638- )
Jonathan CRISPE (1640- )
Elezer CRISPE (1642- )
Zachariah CRISPE (1644- )
Mehitable CRISPE (1645- )
Mercy CRISPE (1648- )
Deliverance + CRISPE (1650-1694)
Marriage Mar 16361

Husband: Benjamin + CRISPE

Name: Benjamin + CRISPE
Sex: Male
Father: Richard + CRISPE (1589- )
Mother: Dorathie + THOMSON (1590- )
Birth 1611 Frisby, Lincolnshire, England
Occupation mason
Immigration 1631 (age 19-20) to Watertown, Middlesex, MA, US2
Census 1646 (age 34-35) Massachusetts Bay Colony, MA, US3
Death 5 Nov 1683 (age 71-72) Watertown, Middlesex, MA, US

Wife: Bridget+

Name: Bridget+
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1615
Death 13 Mar 1675 (age 59-60) Groton, Middlesex, MA, US

Child 1: Elizabeth CRISPE

Name: Elizabeth CRISPE
Sex: Female
Birth 8 Jan 1636

Child 2: Mary CRISPE

Name: Mary CRISPE
Sex: Female
Birth 20 May 1638

Child 3: Jonathan CRISPE

Name: Jonathan CRISPE
Sex: Male
Birth 29 Jan 1640

Child 4: Elezer CRISPE

Name: Elezer CRISPE
Sex: Male
Birth 14 Jan 1642

Child 5: Zachariah CRISPE

Name: Zachariah CRISPE
Sex: Male
Birth 1644

Child 6: Mehitable CRISPE

Name: Mehitable CRISPE
Sex: Female
Birth 21 Jan 1645

Child 7: Mercy CRISPE

Name: Mercy CRISPE
Sex: Female
Birth 1648

Child 8: Deliverance + CRISPE

picture

Deliverance + CRISPE

picture

Spouse: William + LONGLEY

Name: Deliverance + CRISPE
Sex: Female
Spouse: William + LONGLEY (c. 1640-1694)
Birth 1650 Watertown, Middlesex, MA, US
Death 24 Jul 1694 (age 43-44) Groton, Middlesex, MA, US

Note on Husband: Benjamin + CRISPE

ORIGIN: Unknown

MIGRATION: 1631

FIRST RESIDENCE: Watertown

REMOVES: Groton 1666, Watertown by 1681

OCCUPATION: Mason.

CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admission to Watertown church prior to 6 May 1646 implied by freemanship.

FREEMAN: 6 May 1646 [MBCR 2:294].

EDUCATION: Signed deed of 25 September 1666.

OFFICES: On 13 April 1681 Watertown selectmen ordered that "Benjamin Crispe" have "the charge of the meeting house committed to him to sweep and ring the bell and what else is needful to be done to fasten the doors and windows when the exercise is done" [WaTR 2:7, 8].

ESTATE: Granted twenty acres in Great Dividend in Watertown, 25 July 1636 [WaBOP 4]; granted three acres in Beaverbrook Plowlands, 28 February 1636/7 [WaBOP 6]; granted three acres in Remote Meadows, 26 June 1637 [WaBOP 9]; granted a sixty-four acre farm, 10 May 1642 [WaBOP 12].

In the Watertown Inventory of Grants Benjamin Crisp was credited with six parcels of land: seven acre homestall; twenty acres of upland in Great Dividend; nine acres of upland beyond the Further Plain; one acre of meadow at Beaver Brook; four acres [sic] of Remote Meadow; and three acres of plowland in the Hither Plain [Beaverbrook Plowlands] [WaBOP 88]. In the Composite Inventory Benjamin Crisp held four parcels of land: seven acre homestall; twenty acres of upland in the Great Dividend; nine acres of upland beyond the Further Plain; and a sixty-four acre farm [WaBOP 31].

On 25 September 1666 "Benjamin Crispe of Watertown, mason," joined by "Bridget Crispe, his wife," for a valuable sum of money sold to Thomas Boyden of Groton four parcels of land in Watertown: seven acres of upland and buildings; twenty acres of Great Dividend; twelve acres in Lieu of Township; and a fifty-three acre farm [MLR 3:173]. (Since the Lieu of Township land was the same as the upland beyond the Further Plain, and since the farms, as finally surveyed, were somewhat smaller than originally granted, these four parcels are the same as the holdings more than twenty years earlier in the Composite Inventory.)

BIRTH: About 1610 (deposed aged forty-five in 1656, fifty-two in 1662 and seventy-seven in 1683 [Sarah Hildreth Anc 56, presumably from Middlesex Court Files]).

DEATH: Watertown between 5 November 1683 and 21 December 1683 (Frederick C. Warner suggests this range of dates because on the latter date Crisp was replaced in his duties about the meetinghouse, but on the former date at a town meeting no mention was made of the need for such a replacement [WaTR 2:15]; certainly he is seen in no record after 31 October 1682 when he sold his son Jonathan's property [MLR 8:227]).

MARRIAGE: (1) By 1636 Bridget _____; she d. Groton about the time of King Philip's War, and perhaps in consequence of the raid on Groton during that conflict.

(2) After 29 November 1680 Joanna (Goffe?) Longley, widow of William Longley Sr. [TAG 62:26]; she died at Charlestown 18 April 1698, aged 79 [ChVR 1:173; Wyman 248, citing gravestone]. She settled her estate on her Longley children [MPR 9:231; MLR 12:77].

CHILDREN (all born Watertown):

With first wife

 

i ELIZABETH, b. 8 January 1636/7 [WaVR 4]; m. Watertown 29 September 1657 George Lawrence [WaVR 20].

 

ii MARY, b. 20 May 1638 [WaVR 5]; m. by 1661 William Green (eldest child b. Cambridge 21 May 1661) [TAG 62:25, citing MLR 20:338, 25:555].

 

iii JONATHAN, b. 29 January 1639/40 [WaVR 6]; served in King Philip's War [Bodge 122, 272, 359, 360], and d. before 25 October 1680, when his father administered his estate [MPR 5:109; see also MLR 8:227]; apparently unmarried.

 

iv ELEAZER, b. 14 January 1641/2 [WaVR 9]; no further record (but see TAG 62:27).

 

v ZACHARIAH, b. say 1644; served in King Philip's War (including duty at Groton garrison) [Bodge 71, 360]; did not marry, but had an illegitimate child with Mary Stanwood (see Sarah Hildreth Anc 58 for details on his "turbulent youth").

 

vi MEHITABLE, b. 21 January 1645/6 [WaVR 12]; no further record.

 

vii MERCY, b. say 1648; m. Chelmsford 11 April 1667 Robert Parish (or Parris).

 

viii DELIVERANCE, b. about 1650 (deposed in 1670 aged twenty [TAG 62:27]); m. by 1674 William Longley Jr. of Groton [TAG 62:27, and sources cited there].

 

ASSOCIATIONS: A "Mr. Crispe" came on the Plough in 1631 and settled briefly at Watertown, the same year and place where BENJAMIN CRISP is first seen. This is suggestive, but may be mere coincidence.

COMMENTS: On 7 October 1656 Benjamin Crisp, aged about forty-five, deposed that he was a servant to Major [EDWARD] GIBBONS "25 years agone" (original not found, but cited by Warner and others).

Benjamin Crisp appears every two years or so involved in minor Watertown town business, from 1647 to 1662 [WaTR 1:14, 34, 44, 54, 55, 59, 75].

BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE: Walter Goodwin Davis in 1958 published an excellent account of BENJAMIN CRISP and his family [Sarah Hildreth Anc 55-58]. Frederick C. Warner, in an article published posthumously, improved upon the work of Davis with regard to the daughters, untangling a confusion between Mary and Mercy, and thus adding a daughter and son-in-law, and also elucidating the life of the youngest daughter, Deliverance [TAG 62:25-27]. (Warner had also treated the Crisp family earlier, in his typescript "The Ancestry of Samuel, Freda and John Warner," which was completed in 1949 and is available at the NEHGS library.)

The Great Migration Begins

Sketches

PRESERVED PURITAN

Sources

1"US and International Marriage Records, 1550-1900" (on-line, Yates Publishing, Provo, UT).
2"Passenger and Immigrations Lists Index 1500-1900".
3"MA Census, 1790-1890".