Ancestors of Kathleen Lowe Thomas Gilbert and Elizabeth Bennett

Ancestors of Kathleen Lowe Thomas Gilbert and Elizabeth Bennett



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Thomas Gilbert and Elizabeth Bennett




Husband Thomas Gilbert

           Born: 
     Christened: 25 Apr 1589 - Yardley, Worcester, England
           Died: Bef 5 Sep 1659 - Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut
         Buried: 


         Father: Richard Gilbert (Abt 1550-Bef 1626)
         Mother: Margery Morken (      -      )


       Marriage: 29 Aug 1610 - Yardley, Worcester, England

   Other Spouse: Joan Combe (      -      ) - 23 Mar 1638-23 Mar 1639 - Taunton, Bristol, Massachusetts

   Other Spouse: Lydia Lothrup (Abt 1586-      ) - After 12 Dec 1641 - Meriden, Warwick, England




Wife Elizabeth Bennett

           Born:  - Yardley, Worcestershire, England
     Christened: 
           Died: Prob 1659 - Wethersfield, Connecticut
         Buried: 



Children
1 M Jonathan Gilbert

           Born: 8 Jun 1617 - Yardley, Worcester, England
     Christened: 
           Died: 19 Dec 1682 - Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut
         Buried:  - Center Cemetery
         Spouse: Mary White (      -1650)
           Marr: 29 Jan 1645-29 Jan 1646 - Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut
         Spouse: Mary Alice Welles (      -      )
           Marr: Nov 1650 - Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut



2 M Thomas GILBERT 1

           Born: 16 Feb 1611-16 Feb 1612 - Berry, Pomeroy, Devonshire, England
     Christened: 16 Feb 1612 - Yardley, Worcestershire, England
           Died: 5 Jun 1662 - Springfield, Hampden, Massachusetts
         Buried: 5 Jun 1662 - Springfield, Hampden, Massachusetts
            AFN: 2ND4-07
         Spouse: Catherine Chapin (Bef 1630-1712) 1
           Marr: 31 Jul 1655 - prob Springfield, Massachusetts
         Spouse: Mary James (      -      )
           Marr: 17 Sep 1639 - St. James, Bromwich, Staffordshire, England
         Spouse: Lydia (      -After 1654)



3 M Ezekiel Gilbert

           Born: 17 Feb 1621-17 Feb 1622 - Yardley, Worcester, England
     Christened: 
           Died: After 1664 - Lynn, Massachusetts
         Buried: 



4 F Sarah Gilbert

           Born: Abt 1624 - England
     Christened: 
           Died: Bef 4 Jul 1687
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Joel Jenkins (1621-      )
           Marr: 14 Jul 1640 - Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts



5 M John Gilbert

           Born: Abt 1626 - Yardley, Worcester, England
     Christened: 
           Died: 29 Dec 1690 - Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Amy Lord (1626-      )
           Marr: 6 May 1647 - Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut



6 M Josiah Gilbert

           Born: 1628 - Yardley, Worcester, England
     Christened: 
           Died: 22 Aug 1688 - Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Elizabeth Belcher (1632-      )
           Marr: 4 Oct 1651 - Braintree, Norfolk, Massachusetts
         Spouse: Mary Harris (Ward) (1645-      )
           Marr: Jan 1687-Jan 1688 - Wethersfield, Hartford, Connecticut



7 M Obadiah Gilbert

           Born: Abt 1630 - England
     Christened: 
           Died: After 23 Aug 1674 - fairfield, Fairfield, Connecticut
         Buried: 
         Spouse: Elizabeth Burr (      -      )
           Marr: fairfield, Fairfield, Connecticut



8 U CHILD Gilbert

           Born: 
     Christened: 
           Died: 3 Nov 1624 - Yardley, Worcester, England
         Buried: 




General Notes (Husband)

Sources:
Richardson, Douglas, English Origin of Thomas Gilbert of Braintree, Massachusetts, and Wethersfield, Connecticut, The American Genealogist, July 1992

from ENG., 1635; received land grants at Springfield, MASS., 1 655; selectman, 1660; m 1655 Catherine (CHAPIN) BLISS (d 1712, dau. Dea. Samuel CHAPIN.

DOCUMENTS: WILL=Recorded in Vol. 1, p. 18, of the Old Hampshire County wills of Northampton , MA. and the original will and inventory are on file. (have copy [See GILBERT FAMILY book , pg. 51]The death date could be 1691. Also have a death date as 8 Feb 1681/82

Death: BEF 5 SEP 1659 in Wethersfield (Nayaug Section),Hartford,Ct (Inv. Date) 2
Note:
IMM: From ENG. to Braintree, MASS granted land 1639/40; removed to Windsor,CT 1644 to 1654; t o Wethersfield, post 1654; m ca. 1615, Lydia (d prob. 1654/55).

DOCUMENTS: NO WILL=But settlement of his estate record and dated 1663/4 a ppears on page 127 of the other end of the book. SEE: Homer Worthington Brai nard, Harold Simeon Gilbert, and Clarnece Alman Torrey, The Gilbert Family: De scendants of Thomas Gilbert 1582 (?)-1659, New Haven: 1953, page 22)

INVENTORY: Recorded and dated 1663/4:
The estate of Thomas Gilbert is cr as pr inventory appears in 127 page of the other end o f this Booke. 189: 17: 06
Payd of this to Mr. Hollister for rent due him
from the estate of 59 21: 00: 00
To charges of funeralls for him and wife 9: 17: 06
To what payd Rich Treat for a debt due 05: 06: 10
To what debt payd Jonathan Gilbert 29: 03: 10
To severall other debts due from ye estate pd 54: 19: 05
To payd Obadiah & others for worke about the
preserving of things & Thrashing, inc. 13: 06: 05
To what payd John Bernard: Dicks & Hayard 02: 05: 00
To Josiah Gilbert as a Legacy 07: 00: 00
To Obadiah Gilbert as a Legacy 07: 00: 00
To what R. Hollister is to have left on the farme 20: 00: 00
_______________
169: 18: 00
The residue is 19: 08: 07

This sume of Ninetten pounds eight shillings & seven pence is to be divided to Jonathan, Thom as, Ezekiel and John Gilbert, three pounds seventeen shillings and Ten pence apiece & to Sara h Jenkins Three pounds seventeen shillings & three pence: to be payd when they shall com & d emand it of the sayd Jonathan Gilbert and John Gilbert.
This acct and distribution of the estate was accepted & ordered by the Court to be recorde d Feb 6, 1663 (1663/4).inventory taken on 5 Sep 1659

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inventory taken on 5 Sep 1659


Sources:
Title: Compendium of American Genealogy
Author: Virkus, Frederick A.
Abbrev: Compendium of American Genealogy
Note:
ABBR Compendium of American Genealogy
Title: TITLE
Author: Brainard, H. W., Gilbert, and C. A. Torrey



The main source for the information Thomas Gilbert and his family comes from The Gilbert Family—Descendants of Thomas Gilbert .... However, the dates, places, and relationships given above are taken from The English Origin of Thomas Gilbert...; they are based on more recent research of English parish records. Most significantly, the former maintains that Lydia Gilbert, who was convicted of witchcraft and presumably hanged, was the wife of Thomas [Sr.] while the latter shows this to be very unlikely, proposing instead, that she was the second wife of his son, Thomas [Jr.]. The author of the latter wrote:

The English origin of Thomas¹ Gilbert has not been previously discovered. Since all his children were born before he emigrated, it should be possible to find him in an English parish—if the parish register survives. Here the CD-ROM version of the LDS International Genealogical Index [IGI] is invaluable since it permits a large-scale search of all English counties. Hence I ran a search for any entries that showed a Thomas Gilbert as a parent in England in the 1600s. Because the surname is very common, I found many children born to men named Thomas Gilbert in this period. However, since the immigrant had sons named Ezekiel, Josiah and Obadiah, I searched specifically for them. I was able to locate a Thomas Gilbert who had three such children baptized at Yardley, co. Worcester, in the proper time period. I then made a full search for all Gilbert entries up to 1650 on a microfilm of the Yardley parish register (Family History Library [FHL] film #1,520,013)....


Richard and Margery (Morken) Gilbert were living in Yardley parish when their children were born (1576–89). (Yardley is now a suburb of Birmingham lying to the southeast of the city center. It was originally in Worcestershire county, but became part of Birmingham in 1911. The old church in Yardley is dedicated to St.Edburgha.) Likewise, their son, Thomas, married Elizabeth Bennett in Yardley, and the records of the baptisms of all of their children (except Sarah) are there (1612–29). Later, in the Connecticut Colony, their son, Jonathan owned a farm between the present city of Meriden, Connecticut, and the old Kensington parish of Berlin, Connecticut. He named this farm Meriden and the name also appears in his will of 1682. There is a parish named Meriden about 12 miles ESE of Birmingham, very close to Yardley. One could hyphothesize that the Connecticut farm was affectionately named after the English parish. Something must have happened to cause them to uproot and move to America in about 1638 when Jonathan was about 21. For Jonathan to have such an attachment to the name Meriden, the family must have lived there satisfactorily during his late teen years.

The Meriden, Connecticut, home page gives the following. "Meriden, originally a part of Wallingford, was settled in 1661 when Jonathan Gilbert of Hartford was granted by the Connecticut Colony "a farm to ye number of 300 acres of upland and 50 acres of meadow." Mr. Gilbert called his farm "Merrideen" or "Merridan." The source of the name is the Meriden Farm, Warwickshire, England.

The earliest mention of Thomas Gilbert in any New England record is found in Boston Town Records (vol. 2, page 49 of the printed records). This is a record of grants of land to 32 men at Mt. Wollaston, formerly in the town of Braintree, but now within the limits of Quincy, Massachusetts. The record in part is as follows:

The same 24th day of twelfth month February 1639/40 [note: at that time, March was still the first month of the year]... and at the same meeting there was granted to Thomas Place of Mount Wollystone for five heads 20 acres there upon the covenant of 3s per acre.... The like to Thomas Gilbert of the same for 7 heads 28 acres there upon the same covenant of 3 shillings per acre.

Thomas Gilbert's name stands eighth in the list of grantees, a position presumably of no significance. The expression "seven heads" means that his family consisted of the husband, wife, and six sons, the female children not being considered in the grant. He had also a servant or employee named Joel Jenkins. [This last sentence is incorrect because Thomas's eldest son, Thomas, did not accompany the family to the Colony; therefore, the "7 heads" was somehow alloted for Thomas, wife, five sons, one daughter, and one employee.] It thus appears that Thomas Gilbert with his large family and a servant was engaged in farming upon a grant of new land within the limits of the present town of Quincy from 1639 to 1646 (date of a petition against him; see next paragraph) or a little later. In 1668 the heirs of Thomas Gatlive of Braintree sold to Lieut. John Holbrook all their rights to the mill, mill-ponds, water and water courses, commonage, feedings, messuages, tenements or dwelling houses, together with 40 acres of upland lying near the said mill within a common fence, bounded with the said mill brook and pond toward the north and easterly with the land of Goodman Gilbert. [Suffolk County Deeds , vol. 5, p. 526.] Lands of Gregory Belcher are mentioned in this deed. As the site of the mill is known, the location of Gilbert's land can be approximated.

The site of the mill is marked at "Fort Square" (Granite and Pleasant Streets) in Quincy, Massachusetts and was probably directly north of Gilbert's land. There is a small "Gilbert Street" nearby. See the blueprint of land grants at Old Braintree, 1640–45, drawn in 1940 by Waldo C. Sprague of the Quincy Historical Society.

A petition of 14 of the men of Braintree, dated May, 1646, was addressed to the General Court "for the prswading or forcing Thomas Gilbert either to forbeare feeding yt iland or upland with certaine medowes of their environs, or else to lett it on reasonable termes to the petitioners." The Court determined that an order of Court made in 1643 applied to this case. [See Records of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay, vol. 2, p. 49 and vol. 3, p. 67.]

Around 1651 three of Thomas's sons, Jonathan, John and Josiah, moved from Braintree to Wethersfield (now Glastonbury, Connecticut) and leased a farm from Lt. John Hollister of Nayaug. At an unknown time Thomas [Sr.] (and presumably his wife) also moved to Wethersfield and assumed the operation of the farm. Thomas was clearly in Wethersfield by August 17, 1658. On that date a petition signed by him and others in support of Lt. Hollister was presented to the Governor and Magistrates of the Connecticut Colony.

Governor John Winthrop, Jr., who for many years was governor of Connecticut, son of the Governor John Winthrop who was founder of Massachusetts, practiced medicine as well as politics. His medical journal has been preserved. In it is an entry indicating that Winthrop attended or prescribed for Thomas Gilbert in his illness in 1659 and giving his age as 77 years (while his age reckoned from the Yardley baptismal records would be 70).

The inventory of the estate of Thomas Gilbert, accepted by the court on October 4, 1659, is on file at the State Library, Hartford. There is a copy of it, made in 1663, in volume two of the records of the Particular Court and Probate, page 127, probate side. The other documents concerning this estate are also copied in this volume, the original papers having perished.

The estate of Thomas [Sr.] consists of 78 entries with a total value of £189.7s.6d. It included: 16 cattle, 5 oxen, 3 horses, 11 pigs, bees; amounts of wheat, corn, oats, hemp, cheese; and a large assortment of tools and farm implements. Household effects were a bed, three pillows, bedding, a chest with "waring clothes wolen and lin'g"; a "forme" [table?], two stools, one chair, wooden ware, tubs, spoons, and trenchers [flat boards that served as plates], earthenware, tinware, pewterware, brassware. It also included a bible; it is possible that Thomas or his wife could read. Charges against the estate include:

Payd of this to Mr. Hollister for rent due him
from the estate for 59 [1659] £21:00:00
To charges of funeralls for him and wife 9:17:06
To what payd Rich Treat for a debt due 5:06:10
To a debt payd Jonathan Gilbert 29:03:10
To severall other debts due from ye estate pd 54:19:05
To payd Obadiah & others for worke about the
preserving of things & Thrashing, etc. 13:06:05
To what payd John Bernard: Dicks & Hayward 2:05:00
To Josiah Gilbert as a Legacy 7:00:00
To Obadiah Gilbert as a Legacy 7:00:00
To what R Hollister is to have left on the farme 20:00:00
Leaving a residue of 19:08:07

The sume of Nineteen pounds and eight shillings & seven pence is to be divided To Jonathan, Thomas, Ezekiel and John Gilbert, three pounds seventeen shillings and Ten pence apiece & to Sarah Jenkins Three pounds seventeen shillings & three pence: to by payd when they shall com & demand it of the sayd Jonathan Gilbert and John Gilbert. ...

All seven of Thomas's adult children are mentioned in the probate of his estate. It would be interesting to know why only Josiah and Obadiah were left legacies of £7.

This information is taken from The Gilbert Family... where it is written about Thomas [Sr.]. The author believes that it applies to Thomas [Jr.].

Francis, Henry, and John Stiles, brothers, were early settlers in Windsor, Conn. Previous to February 28, 1640/1, Francis Stiles held lands described as follows: "A homelot granted by the plantation, with some additions, thirteen and a quarter acres, bounded north by William Gaylord, Jr., south by John Stiles, west by Rocky Hill, east by his own meadow; also nine acres of meadow lying east of his home lot; also some addition in upland, thirty-two acres towards Pine Meadow, bounded north by Joseph Clark, south by Mr. St. Nicholas; also fifteen hundred acres east of the Great River."

About the time that Thomas Gilbert came to Windsor, Francis Stiles was preparing to remove to Stratford and had sold to William Hayden about 26 acres of his 32-acre piece of upland, and on January 24, 1644/5, he sold the remainder, about five acres, to Thomas Gilbert. The deed contains the words "upon good consideration to me secured," which indicates that Gilbert paid little or no money down. Some years later and prior to August 20, 1652, this lot was in possession of John Drake, Sr., and had upon it "a Seler," house, garden, and fencings. These improvements were probably the work of Thomas Gilbert and probably built before April 22, 1649. The "Seler" was in all probability Gilbert's first habitation in Windsor, an underground house or dugout, commonly used by the first settlers, because it could be quickly and easily constructed, and thus afford shelter until a frame house could be built.

On September 12, 1647, Francis Stiles sold all his remaining holdings in Windsor to Robert Saltonstall, gentleman, of Massachusetts, and describes part of it "as at present in the tenure of Thomas Gilbert and John Bancroft." Clearly Gilbert leased more of the land than the five-acre lot which he purchased. It is not clear that the tenure terminated at the time of this sale or of the next in 1648, but it is probable that it terminated on or soon after November 24, 1648, when Saltonstall sold his Windsor holdings to Nicholas Davison of Charlestown, Mass. On March 31, 1665, Mr. Davison's widow sold the land to Josiah Ellsworth, and it continued in that family down to recent times. It is the land that lies about the Judge Oliver Ellsworth house, near Hayden's Station, in the northern part of Windsor. It is therefore possible to locate Thomas Gilbert's first residence in Windsor rather closely.


The Ellsworth House is owned and maintained by the Daughters of the American Revolution and may be seen on certain week days. Its location is indicated on the "Map of Haydens", 1885. See the Record of the Connecticut Line of the Hayden Family by Jabez H. Hayden, 1888; also Stiles, Ancient Windsor, maps facing pp. 145 and 149, vol. 1.

In the month of March or April, 1649, Thomas Gilbert associated himself with Henry Stiles, and this, although with entire innocence on Gilbert's part, led to great misfortune to himself and his family. Stiles was a man of mature age, being past fifty, without wife or family, and boarded in Gilbert's house. Mrs. Gilbert performed many services for him in making and repairing his clothing, tending him in sickness and the like. There is not the slightest trace of any discord or ill feeling of either party to this arrangement. On November 3, 1651, Henry Stiles was accidentally shot in the back and died in consequence of the wound. It was on a training day and the trainband, according to the tradition preserved by President Ezra Stiles, was waiting upon Gov. John Winthrop when he was embarking for England to obtain the Connecticut charter. This charter was obtained in 1662. Therefore this tradition cannot be correct. Tradition apart, the death of Henry Stiles did occur at the time and in the manner related, as the records of the Particular Court, held December 4, 1651, attest:

Indictment of Thomas Allyn. "Thomas Allyn, thou art indited by the name of Thomas Allyn that not having that due fear of God before thine eyes for the preservation of the life of thy neighbor, didst suddenly, negligently, carelessly cock thy piece, and carry the piece just behind thy neighbor, which piece being charged and going off in thine hand, slew thy neighbor to the great dishonor of God, breach of the peace, and loss of a member of this commonwealth. What sayest thou, art thou guilty or not guilty?"

"The inditement being confessed, you (the jury) are to Inquire whether you finde the act to bee manslaughter or homicide by misadventure."

"The said Thomas Allyn, being Indited for the fact, the Jury finds the same to be Homicide by misadventure."

"The Court adjudges the said Thomas Allyn to pay to the country as a fine £20 for his sinful neglect and careless carriages in the premises and that he shall be bound to his good behavior for a twelve- month and that he shall not bear arms for the same term."

"Matthew Allyn Acknowledgeth himself bound to this commonwealth in a Recognizance of £10 that his sonne Thomas Allyn shall carry his good behavior for the space of a year ensuing."

The jury who brought in this just verdict numbered ten, four of them residents of Hartford, six of them residents of Windsor. This fact should be remembered in connection with another trial, soon to be related.

Thomas Gilbert brought in a bill against the estate of Henry Stiles. This bill shows that Gilbert, although careful and methodical in his business matters, could not write his own name, for he signs with his mark, a large "T". The account bears witness to the relations of Gilbert and his wife to Henry Stiles. It is more probable that Thomas Gilbert, after the sale of Francis Stiles's land in 1648, went to live in the house of Henry Stiles, than that Stiles went to live with Gilbert, because he was a landowner and Gilbert seems not to have been at this particular time. Of course both theories may be incorrect. They may have done these things as neighbors, without change of abode.

Sources:
Brainard, Homer Worthing; Gilbert, Harold Simeon; and Torrey, Clarence Almon; The Gilbert Family—Descendants of Thomas Gilbert, 1582(?)–1659 of Mt. Wollastin (Braintree), Windsor, and Wethersfield, 1953
Richardson, Douglas, English Origin of Thomas Gilbert of Braintree, Massachusetts, and Wethersfield, Connecticut, The American Genealogist, July 1992
Jacobus, Donald Lines, History and Genealogy of the Families of Old Fairfield (reprinted with corrections), Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., 1991 (1930); vol. 1, pp.216–223
Roberts, Gary Boyd, Ancestors of American Presidents, 1989, p. 221

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Walter Gilbert:



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Sources


1 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R) (Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998).


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