See also

Family of Benjamin + MUNN and Abigail + BURT

Husband: Benjamin + MUNN (1620-1675)
Wife: Abigail + BURT (1623-1692)
Children: Abigail MUNN (1650- )
John MUNN (1651- )
Mary MUNN (1653- )
Benjamin MUNN (1654- )
James MUNN (1656- )
Nathaniel + MUNN (1661-1743)
Marriage 12 Apr 1649 Springfield, Hampden, MA, US1,2

Husband: Benjamin + MUNN

Name: Benjamin + MUNN
Sex: Male
Father: Benjamin + MUNN (1600-1675)
Mother: Jemima + PIERCE (1600- )
Birth 1620
Title Captain
Death Nov 1675 (age 54-55) Springfield, Hampden, MA, US3

Wife: Abigail + BURT

Name: Abigail + BURT
Sex: Female
Father: Henry + BURT (1595-1662)
Mother: Eulalia + MARCHE (1600-1690)
Birth 1623 Springfield, Hampden, MA, US
Death 3 Feb 1692 (age 68-69) Springfield, Hampden, MA, US

Child 1: Abigail MUNN

Name: Abigail MUNN
Sex: Female
Birth 28 Jun 1650

Child 2: John MUNN

Name: John MUNN
Sex: Male
Birth 8 Feb 1651

Child 3: Mary MUNN

Name: Mary MUNN
Sex: Female
Birth 1653

Child 4: Benjamin MUNN

Name: Benjamin MUNN
Sex: Male
Birth 25 Mar 1654

Child 5: James MUNN

Name: James MUNN
Sex: Male
Birth 10 Feb 1656

Child 6: Nathaniel + MUNN

Name: Nathaniel + MUNN
Sex: Male
Spouse: Sarah + CHAPIN (1668-1747)
Birth 25 Jul 1661 Springfield, Hampden, MA, US3,4
Death 31 Dec 1743 (age 82) Springfield, Hampden, MA, US

Note on Husband: Benjamin + MUNN

BIOGRAPHY: Munn Family Genealogy compiled by Jean Farrar Munn. Feb. 1980Benjamin Munn and possibly two of his brothers came to New England in 1635. They settled first along the coast of what is now Connecticut, later moving up the river of that name, into Massachusetts. Benjamin fought in the Pequot War of 1637. For his service he was awarded “by the Towne’s Courtesies” a portion of land on “the east side of Cow Pasture Lane”, now the site of Chicopee Bank in Springfield, Massachusetts. He was a viewer of chimneys and ladders. In 1649 he married Abigail Burt Ball, widow of Francis Ball who had drowned in 1648, leaving his wife with two small sons. Benjamin and Abigail had 4 sons and 2 daughters. He is reported to have been killed by Indians in 1675.

 

BIOGRAPHY: RootsWeb – Soldier in Pequot War. To Hartford 1639. To Springfield 1649. Fined there “for taking tobacco on his haycock.” In 1665 being very weak and aged he was excused from military service. Probably killed by Indians November 1675.

 

BIOGRAPHY: Genealogy Dictionary of the First Settlers to New England by James A. Savage.

Benjamin Munn was in Hartford from which he served in the Pequot War 1637. He removed to Springfield and married Abigail Burt, widow of Francis Ball. His widow married Lieut. Thomas Stebbins and his daughter, Abigail, married Thomas Stebbins, Jr.

Notes

Soldier in Pequot war, 1637. Of Hartford, CT, 1639.

 

Removed to Springfield, MA,1649. Fined 10s in 1663 for smoking in his hay-loft.

Probably killed by Indians.

 

Provided by: Hal W. Jennings

 

 

Sources: Death: A History of Deerfield, Massachusetts, by George Sheldon, 1895,

1972. Page: 243

 

His name is inscribed on the west face of the Founders Monument in Hartford, Connecticut.

 

Samuel BALL, at age 18, was sentenced to whipping post for abusing

stepfather (Capt. Benjamin MUNN) by saying to him: "A father indeed,

you are no better than an old Indian." Samuel, however, was given

the option of paying a fine of 50 schillings, which he did.

Source of Information: Ancestry of Col. John Harrington Stevens and

Francis Helen Miller by Mary Lovering Holman, Concord, N.H. 1948.

 

1632 Owner of land in Hartford, CT

1637 Soldier in the Pequot War; received land for his services

BEF. 1649 Moved from Hartford to Springfield

1665 Weak and aged, exempted from military service

1663 Fined 10 shillings for taking tobacco on his haycock

Nov. 1675 possibly killed by Indians in Deerfield

 

Was a member of Capt. Mason's Company, engaged in the Pequot war,and was

at the attack on the fort at Groton, where several hundred of Indians

were slain.

 

Source: "The Life & Times of Henry Burt of Springfield" (1893)

 

Re: Benjamin Munn/CT/MA/Genealogy

Posted by: Dulcie Date: September 14, 2000 at 08:21:44

In Reply to: Re: Benjamin Munn/CT/MA/Genealogy by dona of 739

 

 

Benjamin Munn (b. 1625)is the last on the Munn line that I have. I have a source being the townhall of Gill, MA for information on Benjamin Mun(n). In 1645, Samuel Ball was presented to the court for abusing his father-in-law, (in actuality his stepfather)for which he (Samuel) was whipped on his "naked body" 20 stripes except he paid a fine of fifty shillings. In 1649, he married Abigail Burt Ball, but it is not known how long he lived in Springfield, MA. In 1659, 1662, and 1661 he occupied Seat No. 3 in the Meeting House in Springfield, MA. He was granted lands in 1655. Also check for the "Life and Times of Henry Burt and some of his Descendants" by Henry & Silas Burt, 1893, p. 235. He was excempt from military service for being of great age in 1665, and died in 1675 noted in the Records of Death for Springfield in Volume One, p. 180. If there is anything else please let me know. Dulcie

 

• Religion: Puritan (one of Rev. Thomas Hooker's followers)

 

Benjamin Mun was a resident of Hartford in 1637, but moved to Springfield the same year. He joined John Mason's Company in an expedition against the Pequots in 1637 and was at the attack on the fort at Groton, CT, where several hundred Indians were slain; this expedition followed an attack made by the Indians upon Weathersfield, where many settlers were killed. In May, 1637, Mason set out with his followers and was joined by Uncas, chief of the Mohegans. Mason's company consisted of only 77 Englishmen, while the savages numbered about ten times that. As they were strongly entrenched behind almost impassable palisades, the Mohegan and Narragansett Indians that had joined the expedition deserted before the assault took place, and upon the return of Mason's company, Benjamin received, with others, by "the town's courtessie" in 1639, a grant of land on the east side of the "cow pasture lande" now know as North Main Street. He was the official "Viewer of Chimneys and Ladders" in Springfield, the duties of which referred to precautionary measures to prevent fired originating in the thatched roofs then universally used.

 

The following soldiers of Hartford received grants of land for services in the Pequod war. Their names are preserved in the ancient Town Record of Hartford:

John Brunson William Blumfield Thomas Bull

Thomas Bunce Thomas Barnes Peter Blachford

Benjamin Burr John Clarke Thomas Root

Rev. Samuel Stone John Warner Nicholas Clarke

Capt. John Cullick Sergt. Philip Davis Nicholas Disborough

William Heyden Thomas Hales Samuel Hales

John Hills Thomas Hollybut Thomas Spencer

George Steele John Halloway Jonathan Ince

Benjamin Munn Nicholas Olmstead Richard Olmstead

John Purchas William Pratt William Philips

Thomas Stanton Samuel Whitehead -The above list is copied from "Hartford in the Olden Time," by "Scaeva." The author adds the names of Thomas Munson, Stephen Hart, Zachary Field, and William Cornwell as probable names to be added to the list.

Sources

1"US New England Marriages prior to 1700".
2"US and International Marriage Records, 1550-1900" (on-line, Yates Publishing, Provo, UT).
3"MA Town and Vital Records 1620-1988 Record".
4Henry Fitz-Gilbert Waters, "The New England Historical and Genealogical Register" (NEHGS).