11794. George Moody, Yeoman
1New England Historical and Genealogical Register (New England Historical and Genealogical Society, Boston), 80:313 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody" (His father's will provides: "To George, my eldest son, all lands and tenements, freehold and copyhold, in Moulton, at the age of twenty-one years, to him and the heirs of his body, for ever....").2Medieval Genealogy Newsgroup.
Melissa Mytinger wrote:
"From: david greene ([email protected])
Subject: Re: Margaret MOODY 1584 England
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 1996/11/18
>
> Looking for any ancestral information on
>
> Margaret MOODY, b. October 11, 1584, England, d. November 1650,
> Wethersfield CT, m. Thomas KILBOURNE, September 5, 1604 ?
>
> Parents - George MOODY and Margaret NEWCE
>
> Thanks!
> Melissa
> ________________________________________________________
> Melissa Mytinger [email protected]
> ________________________________________________________18 Nov.1996 The statement that George Moody's wife of Margaret Newce is an error
apparently from a pedigree at the College of Arms. George Moody's wife was Margaret Chenery, daughter of John and Elizabeth
(Norwich) Chenery. See Frederick J. Nicholson,"The Chenery Ancestry of
John Moody and of Frances (Moody) Kilbourn of Hartford and Wethersfield,
Conn." TAG 64(1989):1-11. There is a later TAG article on the Norwich
ancestry; I don't have the citation in front of me. DAVID GREENE."3New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 80:313, 319 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody" (aged 14 years, 7 months at his father's IPM, he was therefore born about Sept. 1559).4New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 80:313, 319 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody" (Inquisition taken at Bury St. Edmonds, Suffolk, in which he is referred to as "Yeoman").5New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 80:313, 319 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody" (from the Parish registers of Moulton, co Suffolk).6New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 80:313, 316 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody" (lived in a mansion house, "Fryettes" which he left to his eldest son, George).7New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 80:313, 316 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody" (names Thomas Kilbourne, his son-in-law executor and residuary legatee).8New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 80:313, 316 (1926).
Lillian Redstone, "Moody".
11795. Margaret Chenery
1Medieval Genealogy Newsgroup.
Melissa Mytinger wrote:
"From: david greene ([email protected])
Subject: Re: Margaret MOODY 1584 England
Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval
Date: 1996/11/18
>
> Looking for any ancestral information on
>
> Margaret MOODY, b. October 11, 1584, England, d. November 1650,
> Wethersfield CT, m. Thomas KILBOURNE, September 5, 1604 ?
>
> Parents - George MOODY and Margaret NEWCE
>
> Thanks!
> Melissa
> ________________________________________________________
> Melissa Mytinger [email protected]
> ________________________________________________________18 Nov.1996 The statement that George Moody's wife of Margaret Newce is an error
apparently from a pedigree at the College of Arms. George Moody's wife was Margaret Chenery, daughter of John and Elizabeth
(Norwich) Chenery. See Frederick J. Nicholson,"The Chenery Ancestry of
John Moody and of Frances (Moody) Kilbourn of Hartford and Wethersfield,
Conn." TAG 64(1989):1-11. There is a later TAG article on the Norwich
ancestry; I don't have the citation in front of me. DAVID GREENE."
11846. Captain John Johnson
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
ORIGIN: Ware, Hertfordshire MIGRATION: 1630 FIRST RESIDENCE: Roxbury OCCUPATION: Quartermaster. On 8 September 1642 John Johnson was assigned the duty of distributing the gunpowder to the major towns in the colony "taking into serious consideration the present danger of each plantation by the desperate plots & conspiracies of the heathen" [ MBCR :26]. On 7 March 1643/4 Richard Davenport, Captain of the Fort of the Massachusetts at Castle Island, was instructed to demand at any time from John Johnson, surveyor general, for every soldier one sufficient musket, sword, rest and pair of bandilers with two fathom of match for each musket [ MBCR 2:65]. He signed a report of the committee concerning the rebuilding of the castle and batteries on Castle Island, 20 July 1652 [ MA Arch 67:102]. CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: "John Johnson" was #9 on Eliot's list among the first comers to the Roxbury Church, without comment [ RChR 74]. FREEMAN: Requested 19 October 1630 and admitted 18 May 1631 [ MBCR 1:80, 366]. EDUCATION: His inventory included "two Bibles, one psalm book and eight books more, £1 5s.," but he made his mark to his will. OFFICES: Deputy for Roxbury to General Court, 1634-57 [ MBCR 1:117, 135, 145, 164, 173, 178, 185, 192, 194, 204, 220, 227, 235, 319, 2:22, 55, 145, 186, 238, 265, 3:9, 39, 44, 62, 105, 121, 147, 183, 220, 259, 297, 422]. Committee to view ground and set bounds for Charlestown and Newton, 7 November 1632 [ MBCR 1:101]. Committee to put a cart bridge over Muddy River, 6 August 1633 [ MBCR 1:107]. Committee to purchase lands for the Indians "to live in an orderly way amongst us", 4 November 1646 [ MBCR 2:166]. Arbiter in Saltonstall vs. Watertown, 27 October 1647 [ MBCR 2:201]. Paymaster for the building of Boston prison, 17 October 1649 [ MBCR 2:282, 288]. Committee to properly supply ministers, 6 May 1657 [ MBCR 3:423-24]. Committee to settle impotent aged persons or vagrants, 14 May 1645 [ MBCR3:15], and numerous other committee appointments. Coroner's jury, 28 September 1630 [ MBCR 1:77]. Roxbury constable, 19 October 1630 [ MBCR 1:79]. Admitted to Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, 1638 [ HAHAC 1:66-67]. Surveyor General of Arms and Ammunition, 8 September 1642 [ MBCR 2:26, 3:147]. Committee to review colony defenses, 26 May 1647 [ MBCR2:197, 228]. ESTATE: On 1 April 1634 he paid 20s. toward the building of the seafort [ MBCR 1:113]. In the earliest list of Roxbury inhabitants, about 1642, John Johnson's valuation of £15 12s. and £6 8s., with six goats and four kids, was one of the highest in the town [ RBOP 4-5]. In the Roxbury land inventory in the early 1650s John Johnson held thirteen parcels, six of which had been granted to him by the town: "his house, barn and house lot on the back side of his orchard, together with liberty to enclose the swamp and brook," eight acres; three acres of marsh; twenty acres of mowing ground; ten acres of woodland; four acres by Rocky Swamp; one hundred and ten acres and one quarter in the last division, first and third allotments; fifty-one and a half acres in the thousand acres near Dedham, bought of Edward Porter and John Pettit; six acres bought of James Morgan; sixteen acres and a half bought of Richard Goad; an acre and a quarter lately the land of Thomas Lamb; three acres of woodland lately the land of John Stebbins; four acres of fresh meadow "lately bought of John Parepoynt"; and thirteen acres and twenty rods of land, wood and pasture bought of Thomas Gardner [ RBOP 16-17]. He took in a servant, Samuel Hefford, for three years on 1 December 1640 [ MBCR 1:311]. He deposed 7 September 1642 that he had sold three acres of meadow to John Sams [ SLR 1:37]. John Johnson was granted £40 "for his service done the country diverse years past" on 14 May 1645 [ MBCR 2:99, 103]. On 7 October 1646 he petitioned with others for the land formerly granted them between Dedham, Watertown and Sudbury; Johnson was to receive four hundred and thirty-six acres [ MBCR2:163, 184]. On 18 October 1648, John Johnson and others were to receive lands formerly granted between Andover and Redding "in the place whereabouts the bridge should be built" [ MBCR 2:256]. He sold one hundred acres to Richard Parker, 24 May 1650 [ MA Arch 45:17]. On 22 June 1652, John Johnson received land in Roxbury from Thomas and Dorothy Hawley [ MA Arch 67:102]. In May 1656, John Johnson and Eleazer Fawer were instructed by the General Court to divide the estate of Barnabus Fawer equally so that Johnson's third wife, Grace (Negus) Fawer, and her son Eleazer Fawer received half each [ MBCR 3:402]. On 6 May 1657, "Mr. John Johnson having been long serviceable to the country in the place of surveyor general, for which he hath never had any satisfaction, which this Court considering of, think meet to grant him three hundred acres in any place where he can find it" [ MBCR 3:430]. Within the year, Johnson had sold this land to Mr. William Parks [ MBCR 4:1:354]. In his will, dated 30 September 1659 and proved 15 October 1659, "John Johnson of Roxbury" bequeathed to "my beloved wife" my dwelling house and certain lands "I have already given" during her natural life according to a deed, also £60 for her household furniture "which house and lands, after my wife's decease, I give unto my five children to be equally divided, my eldest son having a double portion"; to "my two grandchildren who have lived with me, Elizabeth Johnson and Mehittabel Johnson" £5 each; to "my sons Isaak Johnson & Robert Pepper" confirm the parcel of lands of fifty-five acres in the third division "I have formerly given" them; residue to "my five children equally divided, my eldest son having a double portion"; sons Isaac Johnson & Robert Pepper executors; "my dear brethren Elder Heath and Deacon Park" overseers; "If my children should disagree in any thing I do order them to choose one man more, to these my overseers, & stand to their determination" [ SPR Case #218]. The inventory of "John Johnson late of Roxbury" was presented 15 October 1659 and totalled £623 1s. 6d., of which more than £350 was real estate: "20 acres of meadow," £80; "the house and land about it," £190; "one lot near Stoney River let to John Peairepoint for years," £40; "in the Great Lots one pasture of about twenty acres," £40; and "about ten acres of land near the Great Lots and twelve acres bought of Thomas Garner," £[blot]. Among the many domestic luxuries in this inventory were a considerable number of linens, cushions, rugs and blankets. His personal military accoutrements included "two fowling pieces and one cutlass, £2" [ SPR Case #218]. In her will, dated 21 December 1671 and proved 29 December 1671, "Grace Jonson" "very weak in body" bequeathed to "my two brothers Jonathan and Benjamin" all my estate equally divided; "my brother Jonathan Negus" executor; "they shall give to them that was helpful to me in my sickness" [ SPR7:175]. BIRTH: By about 1588 based on date of first marriage. DEATH: Roxbury 30 September 1659 ("John Johnson, Surveyor General of all the arms, died & was buried the day following" [ RChR 176].) MARRIAGE: (1) Ware, Hertfordshire, 21 September 1613, Mary Heath; she was buried at Ware 15 May 1629. (2) By 1633 Margery _____. "Margery Johnston [sic] the wife of John Johnson" was #90 on Eliot's list and probably came to New England in the spring of 1633 [ RChR 79]. "Margery Johnson, the wife of John Johnson," was buried at Roxbury 9 June 1655 [ RChR 176]. (3) By 1656 Grace (Negus) Fawer, widow of Barnabas Fawer [ MBCR 3:402]; she died after 21 December 1671 (date of will) and before 29 December 1671 (probate of will). CHILDREN:
"JOHN JOHNSON
i MARY, bp. Ware 31 July 1614; m. (1) by 1636 ROGER MOWRY <M.asp> ; m. (2) Rehoboth 16 March 1673/4 John Kingsley.
ii ISAAC, bp. Ware End, Great Amwell 11 February 1615/6; m. Roxbury 20 January 1636/7 Elizabeth Porter [ NEHGR 148:45].
iii JOHN, bp. Ware End, Great Amwell 8 April 1618; bur. Ware 8 July 1627.
iv ELIZABETH, bp. Ware End, Great Amwell 22 August 1619; m. Roxbury 14 March 1642/3 Robert Pepper.
v HUMPHREY, bp. Ware End, Great Amwell 5 November 1620; m. (1) Roxbury 20 March 1641/2 Ellen Cheney; m. (2) Roxbury 6 December 1678 Abigail (Stansfield) May, widow of Samuel May.
vi JOSEPH, bp. Ware End, Great Amwell 20 April 1622; bur. there [blank] May 1622.
vii SUSAN, bp. Ware End, Great Amwell 16 July 1623; bur. at Ware 16 August 1629.
viii SARAH, bp. Ware 12 November 1624; bp. Ware 12 November 1624; m. (1) by 1647 Hugh Burt (possibly Hannah below was his wife); m. (2) by July 1653 William Bartram (child b. before April 1654).
ix JOSEPH, bp. Ware 6 March 1626/7; bur. Ware 30 March 1627.
x HANNAH, bp. Ware 23 March 1627/8; no further record unless she is the wife of Hugh Burt, above. ASSOCIATIONS: John Johnson's first wife, Mary Heath, was sister to WILLIAM HEATH and Isaac Heath of Roxbury. While there is no doubt that one of the five children named by John Johnson in his will was at one time the wife of Hugh Burt, it is not certain which daughter, Sarah or Hannah, she might have been. Sarah is the more likely candidate, and if it was she, then she went on to marry William Bartram. This difficult and unsolved problem has been discussed by Helen S. Ullmann and by Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn [ TEG 6:178-84; Angell Anc 390; see also NEHGR 149:230-39]. COMMENTS: John Johnson was the confidant of powerful men, filled an important position in the affairs of the early colony and in the development of its defenses, and was involved as an overseer, attorney, witness and appraiser in the affairs of many of his neighbors [ Lechford 60, 207, 255, 294; SPR Case #43, 83, 96, 134, 196; SLR 1:30, 107, 137, 215, 238 327 2:237-38, 341; MA Arch 15B:151]. He owned a considerable estate at his death. With all these advantages, he kept a low profile in his personal life and never achieved a consistent rank of "Mr." John Johnson was freed from training, paying 10s. a year to the company, 31 October 1639, and the following year was freed entirely, in "regard of other public service without any pay to the company" [ MBCR 1:282, 315]. This implied that he was not yet sixty years old in 1640. A great tragedy to the Johnson family as well as the town of Roxbury, occurred when John Johnson's house, with a substantial supply of the colony's gunpowder therein, caught fire and burned in March of 1645. Many of the major diarists of the time recorded the event: John Johnson, the surveyor general of ammunition, a very industrious and faithful man in his place, having built a fair house in the midst of the town, with diverse barns and other outhouses, it fell on fire in the daytime, no man knowing by what occasion, and there being in it seventeen barrels of the country's powder, and many arms, all was suddenly burnt and blown up, to the value of four or five hundred pounds, wherein a special providence of God appeared, for he, being from home, the people came together to help and many were in the house, no man thinking of the powder till one of the company put them in mind of it, whereupon they all withdrew, and soon after the powder took fire and blew up all about it, and shook the houses in Boston and Cambridge, so as men thought it had been an earthquake [ WJ 2:259]. Eliot remarked, In this fire were strange preservations of God's providence to the neighbors & town, for the wind at first stood to carry the fire to other houses, but suddenly turned & carried it from all other houses, only carrying it to the barns and outhousing thereby, & it was a fierce wind, & thereby drove the vehement heat from the neighbor houses [ RChR 188]. At the General Court 14 May 1645, John Johnson moved that copies be made of important documents that had "very hardly escaped" the fire [ MBCR 3:13]. Assistant Governor, Thomas Dudley, was a close associate of John Johnson's, and Dudley bequeathed to "John Johnson, surveyor general of the Arms and one of his beloved friends" £5 if he lived two years after Dudley's death, and asked that Johnson and the others should "do for me and mine as I would have done for them & theirs in the like case" [ SPR Case #129]. Pope, for no apparent reason, credited John Johnson with a son John who "came to Roxbury" and was an "efficient citizen." BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE: John Johnson has been frequently treated in print by excellent genealogists. In 1948 Mary Lovering Holman produced an account that would be the standard for many years [ Stevens-Miller Anc 318-22]. In 1992 Douglas Richardson and the team of Dean Crawford Smith and Melinde Lutz Sanborn simultaneously and independently discovered the English origin of John Johnson and published useful information on his family and his many connections with other early New England immigrants [ NEHGR 146:261-78; Angell Anc 377-91]."2Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins.
MARRIAGE: By 1637 Mary Johnson, daughter of JOHN JOHNSON . She married (2) Rehoboth 14 January 1673 John Kingsley [ ReVR 220] and was buried at Rehoboth 6 January 1678/9 [ Early Rehoboth 1:32]. CHILDREN: vi MEHITABLE, b. say 1644; m. (1) Providence 9 May 1662 (or shortly thereafter) Eldad Kingsley [ PrTR 3:23]; m. (2) by 1685 as his second wife Timothy Brooks, son of Henry Brooks (they made a deed together on 3 June 1685 [ PrTR 14:129-31])."
"ROGER MOWRY...3New England Historical and Genealogical Register (New England Historical and Genealogical Society, Boston), 146:261, 274 (1992).
Douglas Richardson, "The Heath Connection: The English Origins of Isaac and William Heath of Roxbury, Massachusetts, John Johnson, Edward Morris and Elizabeth (Morris) Cartwright".4Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins.
"MARRIAGE: (1) Ware, Hertfordshire, 21 September 1613, Mary Heath; she was buried at Ware 15 May 1629."
11847. Mary Heath
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
2New England Historical and Genealogical Register (New England Historical and Genealogical Society, Boston), 146:261, 268 (1992).
Douglas Richardson, "The Heath Connection: The English Origins of Isaac and William Heath of Roxbury, Massachusetts, John Johnson, Edward Morris and Elizabeth (Morris) Cartwright".3Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins.
"MARRIAGE: (1) Ware, Hertfordshire, 21 September 1613, Mary Heath; she was buried at Ware 15 May 1629."
11850. Richard Wright
1Harriet W. Hodge, revised by Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Family of John Billington (General Society of Mayflower Descendants, Plymouth, MA:2001), 21:13.
11852. John Billington
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
ii FRANCIS, b. about 1606 (deposed 10 July 1674 "68 years of age" [ MD 2:46, citing PCR 1:81]); in the Plymouth tax list of 25 March 1633 and 27 March 1634 assessed 9s. [ PCR 27]; m. Plymouth __ July 1634 "Christian Eaton" [ PCR 1:31]. She was CHRISTIAN (PENN) EATON, widow of FRANCIS EATON.
"JOHN BILLINGTON
ORIGIN: Unknown
MIGRATION: 1620 on Mayflower FIRST RESIDENCE: Plymouth ESTATE: In the 1623 Plymouth land division John Billington received three acres as a passenger on the Mayflower [ PCR <javascript:APop(p3197,140,168);> 12:4]. In the 1627 Plymouth cattle division John Billington Senior, Hellen Billington and Francis Billington were the eleventh through thirteenth persons in the seventh company, and John Billington [Jr.] was the tenth person in the ninth company [ PCR 12:11, 12]. BIRTH: By about 1582 based on estimated date of marriage.
DEATH: Hanged September 1630 at Plymouth [ Bradford 234; WJ 1:43].
MARRIAGE: By about 1607 Elinor _____; she married (2) between 14 and 21 September 1638 Gregory Armstrong and was living as late as 2 March 1642/3 [ MF 5:34].
CHILDREN:
i JOHN, b. say 1604; d. Plymouth between 22 May 1627 and September 1630.
COMMENTS: In his list of passengers on the Mayflower Bradford includes "John Billington and Ellen his wife, and two sons, John and Francis" [ Bradford 442]. In his 1651 accounting of the Mayflower families, Bradford reported that "John Billington, after he had been here ten years, was executed for killing a man, and his eldest son died before him but his second son is alive and married and hath eight children" [ Bradford 446]. (The man murdered by Billington was JOHN NEWCOMEN.)
In a Survey of 1650 for the manor of Spalding in Lincolnshire is a lease for three lives in which one of the lives is "Francis Billington son of John Billington." In describing the three lives involved, we are told that "Francis Billington (as it is informed) was living about a year since in New England aged forty years or thereabouts" [ NEHGR 124:116-18]. The estimated age for Francis Billington is probably less accurate than his own deposition in 1674, but this record does provide an excellent clue for further research on the English origin of the family.
The family of John Billington has been treated thoroughly by Harriet Woodbury Hodge in the fifth volume of the Five Generations Project of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants, and she lists the many occasions on which John Billington or his sons were in trouble with the Plymouth authorities in the first decade of the colony's existence [ MF 5:31-34].
Among these incidents the most significant was Billington's outspoken support for Lyford and Oldham in their revolt against Bradford and the rest of the Leiden contingent [ Bradford 156-57]."2Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins.
"BIRTH: By about 1582 based on estimated date of marriage."3Harriet W. Hodge, revised by Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Family of John Billington (General Society of Mayflower Descendants, Plymouth, MA:2001), 21:5.
4Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins.
"MARRIAGE: By about 1607 Elinor _____."
11853. Elinor
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
MARRIAGE: By about 1607 Elinor _____."
"From the John Billington entry:2Harriet W. Hodge, revised by Robert S. Wakefield, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Family of John Billington (General Society of Mayflower Descendants, Plymouth, MA:2001), 21:5.
11856. John Adams
1Burton W. Spear, Search for the Passengers of the Mary & John 1630 (Mary & John Clearing House, Toledo, OH 1992).
2Burton W. Spear, Search for the Passengers of the Mary & John 1630.
3Burton W. Spear, Search for the Passengers of the Mary & John 1630.
The earliest record of John Adams was in 1596 when he was named administrator of his father's estate. On 27 May 1597 he became bondsman for Agnes, widow of John Stone of Barton St. David, executrix of the will of her late husband. John Adam's wife was also named Agnes, so John may have become the surety for his mother-in-law, a common ocurrence.Three days before he was buried, 22 March 1603/4, his will was drawn up, but it was neither signed nor witnessed. It was not brought before the ecclesiastic probate court for five years and it was never registered. However, the original document was preserved in the Probate Registry.Summary of will of John AdamsTo Roger and Judith Warfield, children of Roger Warfield (son-in-law) of Charleton Mackrell, Somerset.To John, Stephen, and Mary French, children of Richard French (son-in-law), of Misterton, Somerset.To Katheren Adams, dau. Of John Adams (Jr.) of Misterton, Somerset.To son, John and his children, John and Katerene. Note: son, John, was left 20 pounds to be paid after four years, if at that time he was providing for himself and his children. If not, he shall receive ten pounds and ten should go to his children.Will was exhibited, 26 June 1609, by Roger Warfield of Charlton Adam, who was made guardian of John's children, John and Katherene.In the Diocesan Records there is a bond for administration for this estate by widow Agnes, 7 Aug. 1605, her sureties being John and Richard Bartlett.
11857. Agnes Stone
1Burton W. Spear, Search for the Passengers of the Mary & John 1630 (Mary & John Clearing House, Toledo, OH 1992).
11858. Henry Squire
1Burton W. Spear, Search for the Passengers of the Mary & John 1630 (Mary & John Clearing House, Toledo, OH 1992).
11860. James Penniman
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
BIRTH: Baptized Chipping Ongar, Essex, 29 July 1599, son of James and Annis (Wilcock) Penniman [ TAG 71:12-14].
11861. Annis Wilcock
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
BIRTH: Baptized Chipping Ongar, Essex, 29 July 1599, son of James and Annis (Wilcock) Penniman [ TAG 71:12-14].
11862. Bennet Elliot
1Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, NEHGS (Boston, 1995).
From the section on James Penniman, the husband of Bennet Elliot's daughter, Lydia Elliot. MARRIAGE: High Laver, Essex, 26 July 1631 Lydia Eliot, sister of JOHN ELIOT and JACOB ELIO , and daughter of Bennet Eliot of Widford and Nazeing, Essex. (The High Laver parish register omits her maiden name [ NEHGR 107:236; Waters 904-05].) She married (2) Medfield 7 [December?] 1665 as his second wife Thomas Wight."
"2Carol C. Johnson, A Genealogical History of the Clark and Worth Families and Other Puritan Settlers in the Massachusetts Bay Colony (1970).
11863. Lettice Aggar
1Carol C. Johnson, A Genealogical History of the Clark and Worth Families and Other Puritan Settlers in the Massachusetts Bay Colony (1970).