genealogy of Patty Rose

 

 


Genealogy of Patty Rose


Name David KINCADE
Birth abt 1655, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts
Death 1722, Lee, Strafford, New Hampshire
Marriage 1696
Spouse Ann TOZIER
Birth 1667, Salmon Falls, York, Maine10
Death 1736, Durham, Strafford, New Hampshire10
Father Richard* TOZIER (~1620-1675)
Mother Judith* SMITH (~1635-<1683)
Other Spouses Stephen JENKINS
Thomas POTTS
Notes for David KINCADE
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KINCADE, David, came to Boston from Cambridge in 1680, employed by widow NEAL to draw beer, Thos. Dewer being surety for him and his family to the town of Boston. Member of the Scotch Charitable Soc., 1684. Bef. 1690 he mov. to Oyster Riv. where his homestead, still kn. as Kinket's field, is now part of N.H. College. His 2d w. was Anne, wid. of Stephen Jenkins, who was adm. to the ch. 10 Feb. 1722-3, and who m. 3d Thomas Potts. In 1723 she deeded Kincade prop. in Lee called 'Camsoe,' doubtless a corruption of Campsic, a par. in co. Sterling, Scotland, in which is a village of Kincaid field. Attacked by Ind. in 1708 he and his ?ad escaped (Pike). Will, 23 June 1719 - 6 Mar. 1722-3, ment. wid. and executrix and ch: Naphtali. Hannah, m. one Hay, adm. to ch. 1 Sept. 1723, and had ch. Mary, Samuel and Hannah bp. Sarah. [ref 22]
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Notes for Ann TOZIER
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Tozier, Ann Father: Tozier, Richard Tozier Mother: Smith, Judith Birth Date: 1667 [ref 10]

Tozier, Ann Death Date: 1736 Durham NH [ref 10]
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Ann, m. 1st Stephen Jenkins, m. 2d David Kincade, m. 3d Thomas Potts. [ref 22]
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Ann and children taken captive to Canada; returned 11 Jun 1695, testified at Boston trial of Chief Bomazeen (she saw him kill husband Stephen and child) [these children may have all been from Stephen's first marriage]
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On July 18, 1694, Ann Jenkins and 48 of her neighbors were taken captive. A year later, June 11, 1695 she gave testimony in the trial of the Indian Chief Bomazeen in Boston. Her deposition follows:

Ann Jenkins, of full age, Testifieth and saith, that at Oyster River, on the eighteenth of July last past, in the morning about the dawning of the day my husband being up went out of the dore, and presently returning cried to me and our children to run for our lives, for the Indians had beset the town: whereupon my husband and myself fled with our children into our corne field, and at our entrance into the field, Bomazeen, whouume I have seen since I came out of captivity in the prison, came towards us and about ten Indians more: and the sd Bomazeen then shot at my husband and shote him down, ran to him and struck him three blows on the head with a hatchet, scalped him and run him three times with a bayonet. I also saw the said Bomazeen knock one of my children on the head and tooke of her scalp and then put the child into her father's armes; and then stabbed the breast.

And Bomazeen also then killed my husband's grandmother and scalped her, and then led me up to a house and plundered it and then set it on fire and carried me and my three children into captivity, together with the rest of our neighbors, whose lives were spared, being at first forty nine: but in one miles goeing, or thereabouts, they killed three children, so there remained forty six captives. and that night the company parted and the captives were distributed, but before they parted I, this deponent, numbered one hundred and fourty of Indians and fourteen frenchmen and then, when I tooke account, there were more firing at Woodmans garrison and at Burnhams garrison, but the number unknown to me.

Myself with nine captives more were carried up to penecook and were Left with three Indians, and that party went to Greaten, Bomazeen being their Commander. In nine days they returned and brought twelve captives; and from thence with their canoes, sometimes a float, and sometimes carried, untill that we came to Norridgeawocke, which took us fifteen dayes, and staid about two months there, then dispersed into the woods, twoe or three families in a place, and kept moving toe and froe, staeing about a week in a place, until they brought us down to pemaquid and delivered us to Capt. March.

Bomazeen was my Master; his wife my Mistriss, untill Bomazeen was taken at pemaquid; after that I belonged to his wife, untill about two months before I was brought down to pemaquid; for then the Indian Minister, called Prince Waxaway, bought me, when I was brought to great weakness and extremity by their bad usage, and showed me great kindhess; by whose means, under God, my life was preserved. My mistriss was very cruel to me and I was cruelly whipt seaven times and they intended so to proceed, once a week, untill they had killed me; but that the Indian Minister had compassion on me and rescued me. That Indian Minister also bought three captives more, and freed them from their hard usage. Their names are Nicholas Frost, Sarah Braggonton and Thomsand Drue.

AN (her mark) JENKINS.
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Last Modified 6 Feb 2004 Created 4 Jan 2005
 

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