per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >Tinkham, Helkiah (1655 - 1731)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser died early 1621spouse: >Eaton, Francis (<1595 - 1633)
One record said that Sarah's maiden name was Chandler. This may have been my typing error. "Mayflower Families through Five Generations" indicates that Sarah's maiden is unknown. It states that she married John Chandler ca. 1670, and was living 30 Aug 1701. It also states that she was not the daughter of Roger Chandler as claimed in Leonard Families. J.M.I. ================================================= The information above was collected by J.M. and Charlene (Petrie)Ingalls from their original research or from Gedcom data obtained from other researchers. We would appreciate receiving supporting information on Israel Hill and Lucy Emerson, and their ancestors or relatives. J.M. Ingalls 5900 Cheswood Ct. Orlando FL 32817-3289 407-679-1305 [email protected] [email protected] 22 Apr 1996 =================================================spouse: >Leonard, John (1645 - <1699)
!per Susan Roser's MAYFLOWER INCREASINGSspouse: >More, Richard (b1647 - >1696)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser poss surname "Cary" poss born 2 Aug 1667spouse: >Standish, Josiah (*1667 - 1753)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >Tomson, Peter (*1662 - <1731)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser probably died in Dartmouthspouse: >Tinkham, John (1663 - <1740)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser surname Underhill?spouse: >Dickenson, James (1675 - )
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >Doty, Joseph (1651 - ~1732)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >West, Clement (1684 - ~1789)
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997spouse: >Doty, Joseph (~1680 - 1717)SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997----------child: Doty, Sarah (r1704 - )
per History and Gen. of MF Plantersspouse: >Rogers, Joseph (1679 - )
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >Doty, Edward (1685 - 1717)
!MARRIAGE: `Stephen Hopkins MFIP' by John D Austin (1989) p97 DEATH: `Stephen Hopkins MFIP' by John D Austin (1989) p97 -mentioned in husband Nathaniel HOPKINS' will of 9 May 1752spouse: >Hopkins, Nathanial (1685 - 1766)
!per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser died between 18 Dec 1654-2 Jul 1675 some say she was Samuel and Edward FULLER's sister?spouse: >White, William (1591 - 1621)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >White, Peregrine (~1660 - 1727)
Mayflower Families In Progress - Degory Priest; Family 29spouse: >Holman, Abraham (~1672 - >1726)
!DEAT NOTE Was descendant of Mayflower passenger James Chilton.spouse: >Drinkwater, William (1710 - 1758)
!Birth: NATHAN HALE COLLECTION, MAINE CEMETERY INDEXES BY SURNAME, FHC #1316194. Death: NATHAN HALE COLLECTION, MAINE CEMETERY INDEXES BY SURNAME, FHC #1316194. Burial: NATHAN HALE COLLECTION, MAINE CEMETERY INDEXES BY SURNAME, FHC #1316194, McAllister cemetery, route 7, dover-Foxcroft, Piscataquis, ME.spouse: >Packard, Daniel (1799 - )
!MARRIAGE-SPOUSE: 2nd, Harwich and Chatham, Mass. Genealogical, by Vernon R. Nickerson Ed. P 79. Sutro Library, San Francisco, CA F74 H42 N5. NOTE: P 68 shows marriage as 19 Jul 1754, Mrs Temperance Stone.spouse: >Clark, Seth (1726 - )
!surname OTIS?spouse: >Otis, Job (*1710 - )
!BIRTH US Census Mi + NY "Abbe/Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:144spouse: >Coventry, Alexander (1844 - ~1918)!DEATH
SOURCE CITATION: Title: GEDCOM File DONSHINspouse: >Welch, Thomas (1694 - )SOURCE CITATION: Title: GEDCOM File DONSHIN
SOURCE CITATION: Title: GEDCOM File DONSHIN----------child: Welch, Jeremiah (1714 - )
!BIRTH "Abbe/Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:143spouse: >!MARRIAGE "Abbe/Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:144 "Families of Ancient New Haven" By Donald L. Jaabus P:508
!DEATH "Abbe/Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:143 " History of Van Buren County"
!SERVICE New York State Militia Records 1820-24 CT Militia - War of 1812
!BIRTH "Abbe-Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:35 "Descendants of Governor William Bradford" by Ruth Gardiner Hallspouse: >Ripley, Mary (1714 - 1770)!MARRTAGE "Abbe-Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:35 "Descendants of Governor William Bradford" by Ruth Gardiner Hall
!DEATH "Abbe-Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:35 Congregational Church Records Windham, Ct
Had Large Land holdings
!MI # 28,548
!BIRTH "Abbe-Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:35 + 76spouse: >!MARRIAGE "Abbe-Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:77
!DEATH "Abbe-Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:77
!BIRTH "Abbe/Abbey Genealogy" by Cleveland Abbe P:144 1850 US census MIspouse: >!MARRIAGE Marriage Records, Madison County, Ohio 1810-1865 by Mrs Ralph Oral Whitaker
!DEATH History of Van Buren County Mi
SOURCE CITATION: Title: GEDCOM File DONSHINspouse: >Welch, John (1699 - <1754)SOURCE CITATION: Title: GEDCOM File DONSHIN
SOURCE CITATION: Title: GEDCOM File DONSHIN----------child: Welch, Hannah (1730 - )
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997spouse: >McMullen, Marrietta (1848 - )SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997 <P> Line in Record @F368@ (MRIN 368) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _FREL Natural <P> Line in Record @F368@ (MRIN 368) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _MREL Natural <P>----------child: private
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997spouse: >Sibley, Sarah Smith (1813 - )SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997 <P> Line in Record @F366@ (MRIN 366) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _FREL Natural <P> Line in Record @F366@ (MRIN 366) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _MREL Natural <P>----------child: Abbott, Charles Sibley (1846 - )
!SOURCE:Descendants of Jeremiah Sabean of Nova Scotia FHL book #929.271/Sal3m SOURCE:York County, ME recordsspouse: >Sabin, Jeremiah (1703 - >1736)
!Sources: 1860 Census of Georgia - Glynn County; "History of Oak Grove Cemetery, City of Brunswick, Glynn County, Georgia" by Herbert L. Joiner, Sr. (1977) (references obtained by courtesy of the Brunswick-Glynn County Regional Library)spouse: >Scranton, Alexander (1806 - 1867)!Source: Records kept by Mrs. Scott Blain of Beaumont, TX.
!Source: Copy of Family Record originally kept by Miss Maria C. Blain
!Source: "A Genealogical Record of the Descendants of John Scranton of Guilford, Conn. Who Died in the Year 1671", compiled by Rev. Erastus Scranton, 1855.
!Source: Application of Hazel Blain Holmes Burns to the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of Georgia. Cites "Georgia Genealogical Magazine", p. 222, 1/23/1845 marriage of Alex. Scranton and Mrs. Mary R. Moore., Will of Mary Rebecca Abbott Moore Scranton, bequeating to children of her deceased daughter Annie E. Blain.
!Source: "Pioneers of Wiregrass Georgia", v. 5, by Folks Huxford.
!Source: Gravestone, Blain plot, Oak Grove Cemetery, Brunswick, GA. (have photo)
!Source: 1880 U.S. Census: Brunswick, Glynn Co., GA (15 Jun 1880), Enumeration Dist. 56, p. 26. Age given: 64.
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997spouse: >Spear, Abigail (1777 - 1852)SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997 <P> Line in Record @F365@ (MRIN 365) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _FREL Natural <P> Line in Record @F365@ (MRIN 365) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _MREL Natural <P>----------child: Abbott, James P. (1813 - )
!DEAT NOTE Died from Typhoid Feverspouse: >Perkins, Elizabeth J. (1843 - 1917)!Samuel P. Abbott was a rigger when he enlisted in the Milita of New Hampshire on 8-22-1862 for a period of 3 years. Statement of Recruiting Officer states that Samual was 5 feet f 3/4 inches high, had grey eyes, dark hair, and light complexion. He was mustered into service with the Thirteenth Regiment NH Volunteer Infantry 9/12 to 10/9/1862 at Concord by Charles Holmes, Capt, 17th Inf. USA. Discharged for disability at Washington, DC 2/23/63
!SOURCE:Descendants of George Abbott of Rowley FHL film # 0896614 SOURCE: The Gilbert Family FHL book # 929.273/G377b. BIRTH: Brookfield VR.spouse: >Gilbert, John (1723 - 1806)
!Mayflower Families Progress series p 36/7 (William Bradford line)spouse: >Chauncey, Isaac (~1680 - )
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan E. Roserspouse: >Bass, John (1658 - 1724)
Married Hon. Henry William Smith, who was private secretary of President Adams, and appointed by him to the office of surveyor of the port of New York, which office he retained until 1807. Resided in Cherry Valley, NY.spouse: >Smith, Henry William (1755 - 1816)
!2 daughters; line descends through the Crane and Johnson names.spouse: >Smith, Sarah "Sally" (1769 - 1828)
Source: Mr. Adams resided for much of his earlier liefe with his parents in Europe, and early became master of several languages. He graduated from Harvard College in 1825, soon after his father was inaugurated president. He studied in the office of Daniel Webster in Boston and was admitted to the Bar in 1828. He was a member of the Whig party and of the Massachusetts Legislature, 1831 to 1836. He was nominated for the vice-presidency by the Free Soil Republicans on the ticket with Martin Van Buren in 1848; elected to Congress in 1858 and re-elected in 1860. President Lincoln appointed him minister to England in 1861, where he continued till 1868, a position which both his father and grandfather had filled before him, but which now required the highest order of diplimatic ability. With firmness and success he won lasting laurels as an American of great patriotism and diplomatic ability.spouse: >Brooks, Abigail Brown (1808 - 1889)
Capt. Elihu Adams married (pub. Sep 20, 1765) Thankful White, the daughter of Joseph White, Esq., of Randolph, Mass., and Ruth Nash. Capt. Elihu setrtled in Randolph, Mass., the part now Holbrook. He was captain of the Braintree company at the siege of Boston, when he contracted a fever. His widow was appointed guardian of the minor children, John and Elisha.spouse: >White, Thankful (1747 - )
!Graduated from Harvard College, 1821; was admitted to the bar and practiced law in Boston; represented Quincy in the Legislature, 1826; joined the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Boston, in 1826; was Orderly Serg't in 1827; became Captain of the City Guards of Boston; was Brigade Major of 3d Brigade, 1st Div., in 1828, and was lost on a steamer on Long Island Sound, April 30, 1829; not married. (Source: A Genealogical History of Henry Adams, of Braintree, Mass., and his Descendants; also John Adams, of Cambridge, Mass., by Andrew N. Adams, 1898, The Tuttle Company, Rutland, Vt.)
!Source: "Genealogies of the Families of Braintree, Massachusetts 1640-1850 ...", Compiled by Waldo Chamberlain Sprague. Published on microfilm in cooperation with the Quincy Historical Society and the New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston 1983. LDS FHL film #1405272.spouse: >Owen, Benjamin (1691 - <1754)!Source: "Genealogies of Mayflower Families from the New England Historical and Genealogical Register", Selected by Gary Boyd Roberts (1985).
!Source: "A Genealogical History of Henry Adams of Braintree, Mass., and His Descendants" by Andrew N. Adams (LC #CS71.A2 1898).
!Source: "Family Memorial Part I - Genealogy of Fourteen Families of the Early Settlers of New=England" by Elisha Thayer. LC# CS71.T37 1835.
Known as Deacon John to distinguish him from his famous son. He led a rural existence hardly different from that of his forebears except for an ardent involvement in the local parish and a determination that his son John, born in 1735, should go to Harvard College and become a clergyman. He was a cordwainer and farmer, residing in Braintree, now Quincy, Mass.spouse: >Boylston, Susannah (*1708 - 1797)
SOUR "Genealogical Study of the Family of Josiah Fisher CONT privately published, 1978 revised 1993spouse: >Cleveland, Abigail (1715 - 1782)
Adams, John (1735-1826), second president (1797-1801) and first vice-president (1789-97) of the United States, and leader in the movement for independence. His presidency was marked by rivalry with fellow-Federalist Alexander Hamilton, controversy over government measures taken to curb political opposition, and a crisis in U.S. relations with France.spouse: >Smith, Abigail (1744 - 1818)Adams was born on October 30, 1735, in Braintree (now Quincy), Massachusetts, a town in which Adamses had lived since 1638. His father had married into a wealthy Boston family, the Boylstons, and was thus able to send his son to Harvard College, from which young Adams graduated in 1755. He then selected law and soon found that in the courtroom his acquired erudition and intellectual precision overcame his natural timidity, and he became a powerful speaker and an adroit advocate. At the age of 29 Adams married Abigail Smith, a woman who was clearly his intellectual and psychological equal.
The Coming of the Revolution
The controversy that preceded the American Revolution catapulted Adams into a position of political leadership. His Braintree Instructions (1765) was a powerful denunciation of the Stamp Act, and his oddly titled Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law (1765) was a prescient analysis of the emotional and ideological demands facing the colonists. Chosen as a lawyer for several British soldiers charged with the death of five colonists in the Boston Massacre (1770), Adams successfully defended his clients by justifying their use of force out of fear for their lives. In his essays Novanglus (1774-75), he defended colonial resistance and argued that the British Empire was in reality a league of nearly autonomous entities; thus, he anticipated 19th-century self-government of British overseas possessions.
In the First and Second Continental Congresses, Adams emerged as a powerful exponent of the historic rights of the English and the natural rights of humankind. Along with his cousin Samuel Adams, he initiated (1775) the effort to secure the appointment of George Washington as commander of the new Continental army. Adams served on the committee to draft the Declaration of Independence, but when Thomas Jefferson later claimed that Adams had given him a free hand in composing it, Adams responded indignantly that the document was "a theatrical show" in which "Jefferson ran away with the stage effect _ and all the glory of it." Thus began a rivalry that continued for more than a decade.
More clearly perhaps than any other leading patriot of his day, Adams expressed the fear that he and his fellow revolutionaries might fail in summoning forth the virtue and objectivity required to avoid loss of nerve and internal factionalism. His Thoughts on Government (1776), in which he elaborated on these warnings, became a handbook on the writing of early state constitutions and particularly influenced the preparation of those documents in Virginia, North Carolina, and Massachusetts.
Diplomatic Service and Vice-Presidency
In 1778 Congress sent Adams and John Jay to join Benjamin Franklin as diplomatic representatives in Europe. Franklin remained the American envoy to France; Adams went to the Dutch Republic and had the responsibility for opening negotiations with Britain; Jay traveled to Spain. In 1782 and 1783, the three men together negotiated the Treaty of Paris, ending the 8-year war with Great Britain.
In 1785 Adams was appointed diplomatic envoy to Great Britain, a position he held until 1788. His duties in England caused him to miss the Constitutional Convention and the ratifying debates. He had played a crucial role earlier, however, in drafting the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780. While in London he wrote the three-volume Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America. This work rebutted a French critic of American politics and reiterated Adams's belief that only formal restraints on the exercise of power and on the impulses of the populace could militate against human evil and societal weaknesses.
Because he ran second to Washington in electoral-college balloting in both 1788 and 1792, Adams became the nation's first vice-president. In that capacity, he limited himself to presiding over the Senate.
The Presidency In 1796 Adams was chosen to succeed Washington as president, winning over Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Pinckney. The threat of war with France, along with the resulting passionate debate over foreign policy and the limits of dissent, dominated the politics of his administration. The war scare was sparked by American indignation over French attempts to extort money from U.S. representatives in the so-called XYZ affair. A conflict arose over the measures to be taken in preparation for possible hostilities. Adams favored strengthening the navy and building coastal fortifications, but an opposing group led by former secretary of the treasury Alexander Hamilton persuaded Congress to create a large standing army, with Hamilton himself as inspector general. Because the possibility of a French invasion of the U.S. was remote, the clear implication of this policy was the creation of an army the size and strength of which could intimidate opposition Republican voters.
Alien and Sedition Acts
The Hamilton Federalists added substance to those fears by pushing through Congress laws restricting the rights and privileges of aliens (presumed to be potential Republican voters or, worse yet, French radicals) and punishing as sedition the printing of false attacks on the dignity or integrity of high government officials. Adams found enough merit in these bills to sign them, and he acquiesced in 14 prosecutions under the Sedition Act. The Alien Acts, however, he refused to enforce.
One of Adams's most fateful decisions was to retain the cabinet he had inherited from Washington, several members of which were personally loyal to Hamilton. Together with Hamilton's supporters in Congress, they engineered the creation of the new army, which Hamilton in actuality controlled.
Agreement with France
Adams did, however, demonstrate the power of the presidency to confront challenges to executive leadership. In February 1799, he appointed new peace commissioners to go to France and reopen negotiations. Adams's timing and judgment were acute; the French foreign minister Charles Maurice de Talleyrand had sent a distinct diplomatic signal that he wanted peace with the U.S. Thus, when the secretary of state Timothy Pickering, a Hamilton follower, tried to sabotage the peace mission, Adams fired him; the two nations quickly came to terms.
The peace initiative enabled Adams to dismantle the new army, much to Hamilton's embarrassment. Adams's foreign policy, however, split the Federalist party on the eve of the 1800 election and contributed significantly to the election of Thomas Jefferson as well as to Republican victories in both houses of Congress.
Retirement
Adams lived for a quarter century after he left the presidency, during which time he wrote extensively. His guiding principles were embodied in a Whig philosophy to which he clung stubbornly. Ill-suited to adapt to the transition to 19th-century romantic culture, he was nevertheless a magnificent exponent of the pessimistic view of human society. He died in Quincy, Massachusetts, on July 4, 1826.
Contributed by: Robert M. Calhoon
Biographic entry: B1256, B1258
"Adams, John," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk + Wagnall's Corporation
John Adams entered Harvard in 1751. In 1758 he was admitted to the bar. In 1774 he was a delegate to the First Continental Congress, and in 1775 he was also a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, at which time he nominated George Washington as Commander in Chief. He signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776. Sailing to France in 1778, he signed the Treaty of Paris in 1783. In 1789 he was elected Vice-President under George Washington, and was re-elected to that office again in 1792. In 1796 he ran as a Federalist and was elected as the 2nd President of the United States. His Vice-President was Thomas Jefferson. His inauguration took place on March 4, 1797 at Federal Hall in Philadelphia. He lived to see his son, John Quincy Adams, elected as the 6th President of our nation in 1825. It is an unusual coincidence that on July 4, 1826, the day John Adams died, Thomas Jefferson also died.
per Ances of Pres 2nd US President
!Two daughters: line descends through the Johnson name. John was married to his cousin, Mary Hellen, in the White House, Washington, D.C. (Source: A Genealogical History of Henry Adams, of Braintree, Mass., and his Descendants; also John Adams, of Cambridge, Mass., by Andrew N. Adams, 1898, The Tuttle Company, Rutland, Vt.)spouse: >Hellen, Mary Catherine (1807 - 1870)
!John Quincy Adams sailed for Europe in 1778 with his father. There, in 1781, he entered Leyden University in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, returning to the United States in 1785. He graduated from Harvard in 1787, and was admitted to the bar in 1790. He political career began in 1794 when he was appointed Minister to The Netherlands. In 1796 his father, John Adams, was elected President. He was elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1802, and in the following year to the United States Senate. John Quincy became Minister to Russia in 1809. He signed the Treaty of Ghent in 1814 which ended a long war between France and Russia, and also ended the War of 1812 between England and the United States. He became Minister to Great Britain in 1815, and was appointed as the Secretary of State of the United States in 1817. Running as a Federalist John Quincy Adams sought the presidency in 1825. Neither he nor John Calhoun had the necessary majority vote, so the election was up to the House of Representatives, who chose John Quincy Adams as the Sixth President of the United States. John Calhoun served as his Vice-President. His inauguration took place on March 4, 1825 in the Hall of the Representatives, Washington, D.C. After 1825 he chose to become a National Republican. After his term as President, he was elected as Massachusetts representative to Congress. John Quincy Adams was deeply religious and made it a point to read the entire Bible at least once each year, usually a few chapters each morning before breakfast. He read from English, French and German Bibles. After his memorial service, Henry Clay rode with his coffin from Washington to Quincy, along with John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. A little-known congressman from Illinois, Abraham Lincoln, was in charge of the funeral arrangements. !per Ances of Pres 6th US Presidentspouse: >Johnson, Louisa Catherine (1775 - 1852)
2 daughters + 4 sons.spouse: >Crowninshield, Fanny Cadwalader (1840 - 1911)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan E. Roserspouse: >Bass, Hannah (1667 - 1705)Joseph Adams married (1) Mary Chapin; (2) Hannah Bass, and (3) Elizabeth Hobart. Joseph was selectman in Braintree in 1673 and in 1698-99. Joseph Adams and John Bass were credited to Braintree for services in the war with the Indians, Aug., 1676.
!Rev. Joseph graduated at Harvard College in 1710. He was ordained and settled at Newington, New Hampshire on November 16, 1715, and remained as pastor for 66 years; was very influential and widely known. He was called by the Hon. Jeremy Belknap, "his old friend the bishop of Newington". He died in his 95th year.spouse: >Janvrin, Elizabeth (*1698 - 1757)!DEAT NOTE Buried in tomb beneath the Newington Church.
!Graduated Harvard University, settled as minister at Newington, NH 1714 Reverend Joseph Adams was uncle to John Adams, 2nd President of the US.
studied medicine and graduated Harvard. Practiced at Newington. Resided at what was known as "Brasbridge Place".spouse: >Gilman, Johanna (*1725 - 1767)
Source: Died in infancy.
!NAME Louisa Catherine "Sister Lou" /ADAMS/spouse: >Kohn, Charles (1821 - 1899)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan E. Roserspouse: >Bass, Samuel (1660 - 1751)
Capt. Peter Boylston Adams was a Representative in the General Court from Braintree in 1792 and 1794.spouse: >Crosby, Mary (*1746 - )
*spouse: >Kingsley, Amos (1697 - 1787)! SOURCE: "Mayflower Families in Progress", by Harriet Woodbury Hodge Submitted by: Louise McCormak
*
7 children; all die without issue. (Source: A Genealogical History of Henry Adams, of Braintree, Mass., and His Descendants; also John Adams, of Cambridge, Mass., 1632-1897, by Andrew N. Adams; The Tuttle Company, Printers, Rutland, VT., 1898.)spouse: >Harod, Ann "Nancy" (1774 - 1846)
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roserspouse: >Bradford, Alice (~1659 - 1746)Was a clergyman and was ordained in Dedham on 3 Dec 1673. Was made a freeman on 9 Jan 1674.
William died of a helpless infirmity.
Line in Record @I1415@ (RIN 206) from GEDCOM file not recognized: RESIspouse: >Marble, Alice Carey (~1842 - )
[appendAUG.GED]
?William Brady Adams?? per Lynn Marble ....
Line in Record @F68@ (MRIN 68) from GEDCOM file not recognized: REFN 7449 <P>----------child: private
!per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser Also has Ancestral File Numbers PJGM-5Q and 8LFX-H9.spouse: >Brewster, Benjamin (1633 - 1710)
Found on IGI - shows first name as Adelia and adds place of birthspouse: >Thompson, Alexander (*1803 - )
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997spouse: >Doty, Jacob (~1682 - )SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997
per MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS by Susan Roser
SOURCE CITATION: Title: (See source comments) Source Comments: Br�derbund WFT Vol. 7, Ed. 1, Tree #1141, Date of Import: 25 Apr 1997----------child: Doty, John Derrick (*1717 - )
!Edson, Jarvis Bonesteel, EDSONS IN EMGLAND AND AMERICA AND GENEALOGY OF THE EDSONS, printed by The Knickerbocker Press, 27 W. 23rd St. NY, NY, 1903. p.465.
!MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Paddock, Judah (1681 - 1770)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roser died CT or Duxburyspouse: >Stanford, Lydia (*1693 - )
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Snell, Josiah (1674 - 1753)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roser married between 3 Oct 1707-1 Jan 1709/10spouse: >Brewster, Hannah (~1688 - 1763)
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Southworth, Mary (1654 - >1718)
!DEAT PLAC Purchade Cemetary, N. Middleboro. Mass.spouse: >Fobes, Ruth (1744 - 1817)
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Pabodie, William (~1620 - 1707)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roser
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Walley, John (1662 - <1702)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Chandler, Edmund (*1630 - 1717)died between 21 Feb 1738-2 May 1757
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Snow, Benjamin (~1669 - 1743)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Seabury, John (~1673 - 1759)
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Snow, Joseph (<1664 - 1753)
!Edson, Jarvis Bonesteel, EDSONS IN EMGLAND AND AMERICA AND GENEALOGY OF THE EDSONS, printed by The Knickerbocker Press, 27 W. 23rd St. NY, NY, 1903. p.465.
!MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Allen, Mehitable (1664 - >1727)!Alden, Mrs. Charles L., ALDEN GENEALOGY published in GENEALOGIES OF MAYFLOWER FAMILIES FROM THE NEW ENGLAND HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL REGISTER, Vol 1, pub by Genealogical Publishing Co., In., 1985. p.29.
!MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Mullins, Priscilla Molens (~1602 - 1687)!Featured in Wadsworths poem about Miles Standish Sailed to New World as a Pilgrim on the Mayflower
!THE GREAT MIGRATION BEGINS by Robert Charles Anderson, NEHGS was hired as a cooper in Southampton "In early 1634 he became involved in an incident in which a party of Plymouth men led by himself and John Howland became embroiled with a group of men from the Piscataqua settlement which would grow into Dover. One man on each side was killed, and in the aftermath Alden was detained at Boston as security against the final resolution of the conflict."
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >?, Elizabeth (*1631 - )
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roser
!MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Phelps, Elizabeth (~1669 - 1719)
!MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >White, Hannah (1681 - 1732)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Briggs, Hannah (1684 - 1740)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Hallett, Abigail (~1645 - 1725)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Arnold, Elizabeth (*1697 - 1731)
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Simmons, Mary (1638 - >1697)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Dunham, Hannah (~1670 - 1748)!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY; DEACON JOHN DUNHAM OF PLYMOUTH, MASS. 1589-1669 AND HIS DESCENDANTS, printed Norwich, CT, 1907. p. 301.
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
!DEAT PLAC Purchade Cemetary, N. Middleboro. Mass.spouse: >Hall, Hannah (*1723 - 1766)
!Edson, Jarvis Bonesteel, EDSONS IN EMGLAND AND AMERICA AND GENEALOGY OF THE EDSONS, printed by The Knickerbocker Press, 27 W. 23rd St. NY, NY, 1903. p.465.
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roser living 13 Jun 1688, unmarriedspouse: >Delano, Thomas (1642 - 1723)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roser died between 1665/66-28 Apr 1667 probably Boston
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.
!Edson, Jarvis Bonesteel, EDSONS IN EMGLAND AND AMERICA AND GENEALOGY OF THE EDSONS, printed by The Knickerbocker Press, 27 W. 23rd St. NY, NY, 1903. p.465.
!Dunham, Isaac Watson, DUNHAM GENEALOGY. pub. by Bulletin Print, Norwich, CT, 1907. p.301.spouse: >Eaton, Barnabus (1703 - 1790)
!Ansel E. Packer, 806 W. Nelson, Savannah, MO 64485. John (1) Alden, Mayflower Pilgrim Joseph (2) Alden, b. 1624, d. 1697, Bridgewater, MA., m. 1659 Mary Simmons, Dau of Moses Simmons. Dea. Joseph (3) Alden, b. 1667, d. 1747, Bridgewater, Ma. m.1690 Hannah Dunham, b. 1671, d. 1748 dau of Daniel and Mehitable (Hayward) Dunham. Samuel (4) Alden, (1705-1785) of Middleboro, m. 1728 Abiah Edson, b. 1706, dau of Capt. Josiah and Sarah (Packard) Edson Mehitable Alden, b. 1732, m. Joshua Packard Marriage: Mitchell, Nahum, HISTORY OF THE EARLY SETTLEMENT OF BRIDGEWATER, MASS., pub. Boston 1840, p. 278. (intention) DEATH-from Journal of Laura Belle Packard Daniels in possession of Carolyn D. Rodosta, 1880 Valencia, Carlsbad, CA 92008spouse: >Packard, Joshua (1730 - 1806)
MAYFLOWER INCREASINGS By Susan E. Roserspouse: >Burrill, John (*1664 - 1731)