The Original Lists of Persons of Quality

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The original lists of persons of quality ... who went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600-1700

Transcript of The Original Lists of Persons of Quality

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THE ORIGINAL

LISTS.

rtgfnalOF.

PERSONS OF QUALITY;

EMIGRANTS; RELIGIOUS EXILES.; POLITICAL REBELS; SERVING MEN SOLD FOR A TERM OF YEARS; APPRENTICES;-CHILDREN STOLEN; MAIDENS PRESSED; AND OTHERS WHO WENT FROM GREAT BRITAIN TO THE

AMERICAN PLANTATIONS

1600-1700.r,

'

f

"~

WITH THEIR AGES, THE LOCALITIES WHERE THEY FORMERLY LIVED IN THE MOTHER COUNTRY, THE NAMES OF THE SHIPS IN WHICH THEY EMBARKED, AND OTHER INTERESTING PARTICULARS.

FROM

MSS.

PRESERVED IN THE STATE PAPER DEPARTMENT OF HER MAJESTY'S PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE, ENGLAND.

EDITED BY

JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN.

37

JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN LONDON, Reprinted: EMPIRE STATE BOOK CO. NEW YORK:

1874

live

JtUmba-tf 0f the

GENEALOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETIESOF THE

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,THIS COLLECTION OF THE NAMES OF

THE EMIGRANT

ANCESTORS OF MANY THOUSANDS OF AMERICAN FAMILIES,IS

RESPECTFULLY DEDICATEDBY THE EDITOR,

JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN.

CONTENTS.REGISTER OF THE1635

NAMES OF ALL THE PASSENGERS FROM33,J.J.

LONDON DURING ONE WHOLE YEAR, ENDING CHRISTMAS,

.........HopewellChristian

HS35 38

In the Ship Bonaventure

Ricrofte,

Master

...

I.

Romsey, Master... Wood, Master

...

39...

,,

J....

Planter

White, Master ... N. Trarice, Master...

42

43, 45, 47, 48, 50, 53,

55,56Peter BonaventnreI.

Harman, Master...48, 53, 53,

43,47. 5'44, 46,

HopewellElizabeth

W. Bundocke, Master W. Stagg, Master ...Hodges, Master Acklin, Master

49

5,

57, 60,

61,68Rebecca

50,545054, 57, 58,72, 76, 77,

PaulEliza SEncrease

Ann...

R. Cowper [or Cooper], Master61, 69,

78

SusanFalcon

6- Ellen...

R. Lea, Master E. Payne, Master T. Irish, MasterC. Billinge, Master.

......

55,57,58,60,61,64... ... ... ... ...

59,62,7663,14267,

...

Expectation Ann r> Elizabeth

6970

J.

Abigail

...

Brookhaven, Master R. Hackwell, Master

73, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91,

92, 96, 97, 98, 99, 10

AlexanderPlain Joane Matthew...Speedwell.

Burche

&

G. Grimes, Masters...

...... ... ... ... ...

7378

R. Buckam, Master R. Goodladd, Master Chappell, Master R. Lambard, MasterJ.

.

...... ... ... ...

808283 85

Thomas

6... ... ...

John

.

Truelove

R. Dennis, MasterJ..

...

JamesDefence

May, Master Pearce, Master

......

88,

107

...

89,

90

Vlll

CONTENTS.PAGEIn the ShipDefence...

E. Bostocke, Master105, 106

Blessing

..

J.

Lester,

Master

...

93, 108...

Philip

...

America

...

Morgan, Master W. Barker, MasterR.

9495101

Transport

E. Walker, Master...L. Belts,

... ...1

PaulPied

Master

...

103

Cow

Ashley, MasterJ.

06, 110

LoveAlice

Young, Master

.

.

109 109

R. Orchard, Master

Hopewell Assurance Primrose

T. Babb, MasterI.

...

no,

123, 130, 1441

Bromwell

1.

Pewsie, Masters...

10

Douglass, MasterC. Browne, Master

114 116117

Merchants HopeElizabeth

H. Weslon, MasterT.J.

BachelorGlobe

...

Webb, Master

...

III

Safety

...

J.J.

Blackman, Master Graunt, Master ...Severne, Masler...

119121

George

ThomasWilliam

...

&...

John

.

H. Taverner, Masler R. Langram, MasterJ. J.

124 126127I2 9

DavidTruelove

Hogg, Master Gibbs, MasterFlower, Master

...

ISI

Dorset

J.J.

...

132

John AmityConstance

Waymoth, Master

134

G. Downes, MasterC. Campion, MasterJ.

134136138

AbrahamExpeditionFriendship

Barker, Master

...

P. Blackley, Master,

139145

Master

...

PASSENGERS BY THE COMMISSION AND SOLDIERS ACCORDING TO THE STATUTE, CHRISTMAS, 1631, TO CHRISTMAS,1632I47-IS4

ENTRIES RELATING TO AMERICA, FROM THE PATENT ROLLS LISTS OF THE LIVING AND DEAD IN VIRGINIA, 16 FEBY.,1623

155-168

169-196

WALLOONS AND FRENCH EMIGRANTS TO VIRGINIAMUSTERS OF THE INHABITANTS OF VIRGINIA

197-199201-265

CONTENTS.PACE

PATENTS GRANTED TO SETTLERS1626... ... ...

IN

VIRGINIA (CIRCA)... ...

...

266-274

RETURNS OF THOSE wno EMBARKED FROM IPSWICH AND ... WEYMOUTH FOR NEW ENGLAND, 1634 TO 1637From... Ipswich, in the Ship Francis Elizabeth...

275-286

Weymouth,

in the

Ship

... 277,279 Andrewes, Master 277,280,281 Master ... 283-286 [1635]...

J.

Cuttingc, Master

VV.

,

REGISTER OF PERSONS ABOUT TO PASS INTO FOREIGN ... ... PARTS, FROM MARCH TO SEPT., 1637...FromYarmouth,

287-298289 289 296298

John Ipswich, in the in the Rose

& Dorothy/w[i638]

... ...

Southampton, in the Virgin^ 1639]

......

J

... Andrewes, Master Andrewes, Junr. Master .Weare & J. Delahay, Masters ...

W. W.

R. Batten, Master......

...

THE SUMMERNames

ISLANDS, 1673 TO 1679

...

301-314301

... of the Governor and Council of the Assembly, Aug., 1673 Account of the Lands belonging to the Summer Islands Company, taken

out of Mr. Richard Norwood's Survey Book,

made

in 1662-3

...

304

MONMOUTH REBELLION OFTIONS IN AMERICA...Receipt for

LISTS OF CONVICTED 1685 REBELS SENT TO THE BARBADOES AND OTHER PLANTA:

...

...

...

...

315

100 Prisoners to be transported from

TAUNTON, by John......

Rose, of London,

Merchant

...

...

...

316

Invoice of 68 Men-servants shipped on Board the Jamaica Merchant, Capt. Chas. Gardner, for Account of John Rose & Compy., they being ... ... to be sold for 10 Years ... ... ... ...

317

Receipt for 100 Prisoners on Mr. Nepho's Account, to be sent to Barbadoes.

[Prisoners in

Prisoners in Prisoners at

DORCHESTER Gaol to be EXETER Gaol to be transported ... ... WELLS to be transported......

transported.]...

...... ...

...317*... ...

319 319

...

List of the Convicted Rebels

on Board the Betty, of London,... ... ...

at the...

Port...

of

WEYMOUTH

320322

List of 72 Rebels

NamesSir

Granted by his Majesty to Geromc Nepho, with the ... ... ... of their Masters in Barbadoes ...

Wm.

Booth's Receipt for 100 Prisoners, on Account of James Kendall

[Prisoners in

DORCHESTER Gaol

to

be transported.]

...

...

326

CONTENTS.PAGECertificate of the Disposal of Capt. Kendall's Rebels.

A...

List of

90 Rebelsthey...

by the Happy Return, with the were disposed ... ...Sir

Names...

of their Masters to...

whom...

328

Win. Booth's

List of Prisoners sent to Barbadoes, with the

Names

of...

the

Towns

in Somersetshire

and Devonshire from whence they came

332

A List of 77Sir

Wm.

Convicted Rebels, imported from BRISTOL in the John frigate Booth's Receipt for 100 Prisoners 56 from the Bridewell at TAUNat

336

TON, 33 from BRIDGEWATER Prison

TAUNTON, and

n from EXETER

341

The

Sale of 67 Rebels, delivered by Capt. Charles Gardner, of the Ja... maica Ale reliant ... ... ... ... ...

342

TICKETS GRANTED TO EMIGRANTS FROM BARBADOES TO NEW ENGLAND, CAROLINA, VIRGINIA, NEW YORK, ANTIGUA, JAMAICA,1678-9

NEWFOUNDLAND, AND OTHER... ......

PLACES,...

...

345-418

BARBADOES:SERVANTS,

PARISH REGISTERS&c., 1678-9...

LISTS OF INHABITANTS

BIRTHS AND DEATHS LANDED PROPRIETORS... ...... ...

.........

418421

Parish Registers of ST. MICHAEL'SList of Inhabitants of ST.tices,

BaptismsBurials...their

425

... ... ... ... 438 ... ... ... 449-5 Jews of ST. MICHAEL'S ... Alphabetical List of Landowners in ST. MICHAEL'S, with the Number of their Acres, Hired Servants, Bought Servants, and Negroes ... 451-459

MICHAEL'S, with and Negroes Bought Servants,

Hired Servants, 'Pren-

List of the

Owners of Land in the Parish of ST. GEORGE, Number of Acres, White 460-464 Servants, and Negroes [1679]Parish Registers of ST.

GEORGE

Baptisms [1678-9]Burials...

...

...

465-6466-8

ST.

ANDREWS

Owners of Lands, Number of Acres,

... ... 469-472 Servants, Negroes, Christenings, Buriajs ... Parish Registers of CHRISTCHURCH Landowners, Acres, Servants, Ne-

groes

...

...

...

...

...

...

......

473-488489-93493-6 49 6 -7497-9

Parish Registers of

CHRISTCHURCH

Baptisms [1678-9]Burials [1678-9]...

ST. JAMES'

BaptismsBurials

...

...

Landowners, Servants, Negroes [1678-9] 500-507Parish Registers of ST. JOHN'S

Baptisms [1678-9]

...

...

57-8

CONTENTS.

XI

PAGE

INTRODUCTION.1ITTLEaction would

could even the most sanguine of the early emigrants to America have contemplated the subsequent effect which their

work upon the world's

history.

Some

of them,

it

is

true,

of position at home, with wealth and all its concomitant advantages at their disposal, but by far the greater number was composed men of little means, but possessed of of comparatively obscure men

were

men

hearts and consciences of too honest a nature to permit them quietly to submit to the intolerance which was forced upon them at home. But

those whose names are recorded in the following pages, with many others of whom no such minute particulars have come down to us, werethe seed-grains from which the mighty Republic has sprung the rapid growth of which has no parallel in the world's history. Colonization

was but imperfectly developed;

and many attempted settlements proved abortive but the first settlers in Virginia, and those in New England, carried with them the elements subsequently of success, resulting in permanent establishments. Of the history of the Colonies, and the eventual establishment ofin those early days,

Independence, I have nothing to say. My object is simply and briefly, to point out some of the causes which contributed to the early emigra-

and then to estimate the practical tion of English families to America value of the contents of the present volume as a means of assistance in;

making genealogical researches

in the

mother country.an act which raised a

One

of the earliest acts of Charles the First,

storm of indignation throughout the country,

was the imposition of a

xiv

INTR OD UCTJON.loan withoutthe grant of Parliament.

The manner in which by those called upon to contribute towards the assessment, is well illustrated by the events which took place in Lincolnshire and o relation of the part taken by the leading men of that locality, some of whom were related to, orforcedthis

unconstitutional

measure was treated

;

intimately associated with, the principal agents in the subsequent emigration to Massachusetts, under JOHN WlNTHROP, in 1630, will be

of some interest to the descendants of the

New England

emigrants.

One

of the richest

men

in

the county of Lincoln,

who

strenuously

opposed the forced loan, was ISAAC JOHNSON, who, as is well known, married the Lady ARABELLA FYNES, sister to THEOPHILUS, Earl of LINCOLN, who himself married a sister of the Lord SAY and SELE.

These two noblemen took a very active part in denouncing the loan as dangerous and unconstitutional. Lord SAY and SELE, who, during the civil war, some years later, commanded a Parliamentarian regiment,openly asserted that he would rather lose half his estate than risk the impoverishment of his posterity by the establishment of so dangerous a precedent as a loan without the sanction of Parliament.

Lord LINCOLN'S oppositionductive of dissatisfaction.

to

the loan was

But more immediately pro-

As

soon as

it

was proposed he took upon

himself to have an Abridgment of the Statutes prepared for distribution and it is not unlikely that in the compilation of this document he was aided by his former steward, THOMAS DUDLEY,;

who subsequently wentMassachusetts.relative, Sir

over to New England, and became Governor of DUDLEY had received a legal education, under his AUGUSTINE NlCHOL, one of the Justices of the Common

Pleas,

was to bring down upon himself and his servants the resentment of the King and his party, and the Abridgment was rigorously suppressed. Not only

and was therefore peculiarly fitted for the work. diate result of this act on the part of Lord LINCOLN,

The imme-

was

his lordship

proceeded againstfor the

in

the Star Chamber, but more com-

pletely to crush out the attempts

mation was issuedthe Earl, and

ROBERT

to incense the people, a proclaof JOHN HOLLAND, Steward to apprehension BLOW, the Clerk of his kitchen and further, a;

made

Groom

in the

household of his lordship was condemned

in

the Star

INTR OD UCTfON.Chamberto

xv

pay a

fine

of

3000

for his

bhare in distributing the ob-

noxious work.

The Earl was soon

the Tower, where he remained in

committed a close prisoner to custody for some years. I have notafter

found any evidence of what was the result of the attempts made to apprehend HOLLAND and BLOW, but there are reasons for supposingthat both escaped detection.

A

ROBERT BLOW,

in all probability the

person, was subsequently an ensign in the regiment of Lord SAY and SELE, the nobleman before mentioned. The only trace of HOLLAND we have met with brings out some information respecting the resi-

same

dence, at Boston, of

THOMAS DUDLEY, and

the estimated value of his

yearly income.

Letter from Sir

EDWARD HERON,

addressed to

Sir:

HUMPHREY

MAY,

Chancellor of the

Duchy

of Lancaster"

Cressye, 28 July, 1627.

"

RIGHT HONORABLE,"I

had rather offendetie .

in

too

much

officiousnes,

then negli-

I have hearde that Mr. HOLLANDE gence, especially to the king's ma who attended the earle of Lincolne, hath been in quest by the state yf;

he was scene dyvers tymes, about a month or six weekcs past vpon the terras- walkes at Sempringham but since that tyme it is privatly whispered that he is now removed to theit

be

soe, I

doe heare

for certeine, that

;

house of one Mr.

THOMAS DUDLYE,;

in Boston,

whoe did

allsoe of late

tymes wayte vpon the sayde earle

and

HOLLANDS wyfeweeke together. *"

is

observed to

make

very p'bable, because Mr. often viages frome Sempringhamit is

vnto Boston, and there to abide sometyme 2 or"

3

dayes, sometytne a

EDWARD HERON.

further to vnderstande, that this Mr. DUDLYE reported to have 300!! p. an., some saye 4Ooli, refused vpon our beynge earnest request to beare 30^. towards the loane with a neyghbourgh that

Yet maye you please

lords

was deeply charged as we have informed in our certificatts vnto the of the councell, whereof I beseech your honor to direct thedelyverye.

XVI

INTRODUCTION."'

Since the writinge hereof, I vnderstande that one ADDAM RESTON our brother in law vnto the s'l Mr. HOLLANDE, came ridinge through a gentlestrecte on fridayc in the nyght, the 2Oth of this month, with of Mr. HOLLANDE woman behindc him, supposed to be the wyfe

goeyngc towards Boston be knownc."

;

and an other gent, seeminge vnwillinge toconsideration that one

You maye allsoe please to take into your BENIAMINE DICKOSON of Boston adviscth, that

the toune of Boston

is

late able and ought to contribute to the charge and expencc of theyrc cause of trouble in mayor & Emv. TILLSON, or anye else, that suffer

the loanc;Collector."

and to hclpc towards theyre

losses,

p

JOHAN HOBSON,ili

The same DvKCONSON was

3!!

lands, yet sett vnto

by the

lords

at Lincoln."*

A longloan, has

list

of Lincolnshire

men who

refused to contribute to the

been preserved. committed to prison ately

Ten:

of the principal of

them were immedi-

Sir

JOHN WRAY,

Sir;

and SirSir

EDWARD

ASCOUGII, to the Gate House

THOMAS GRANTHAM, Sir WILLIAM ARMYN,Mayorof Bos;

THOMAS DARNELL, WILLIAM ANDERSON,.

Esq., the

ton,

and Alderman (EDWARD) TiLSON of that town, to the Fleet and HORWOOD, Esq., to the WILLIAM TAROLD (THOROLD), Esq., and The Boston men who refused to lend, or to enter into bondMarshalsea.his

for their appearance before

beside the Majesty's Privy Council,

ATTERTON HOWGHE (ATHERTON THOMAS LEVEHOUGH), EDMOND JACKSON, BENJAMIN DICONSON, WILLIAM COTRETT, THOMAS LOWE, THOMAS TOOLY, JOHN COPPYN, and RICHARD WESTLAND. WILLIAM CONDY, TINGTONwere Mayor, and Alderman TILSON,

(CODDINGTON), LEVERETT, CODDINGTON, and out to New England, and there attained

Of

these,

prisons were of Lonvarious parts of the country, but chiefly fronLthe city jcctors, from Essex, and Gloucestershire. don, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire,

London

soon

filled

subsequently went The positions of eminence. with the more important of the cb-

HOUGH

*

Vol. State Papers, Chas.L, Domestic Series,

V, No.

36,

Record

Office.

INTRODUCTION.

xvii

gaols being filled to repletion, and moreover the expense of maintaining the prisoners proving a heavy charge upon the State already impove-

the great majority were liberated from confinement, but were not rished allowed, however, to return to their own homes for fear of their stirring

up

fresh disaffection

among

their neighbours.

Thus a delinquent be-

longing to Essex would be sent, perhaps, to Wiltshire, or Yorkshire, and

under pain of severe punishment, forbidden to leave the town in which he was located, where, by-the-way, under the semblance of being a free

man, he was compelled to earn, or at least procure, his own living. This was a very ill-advised proceeding on the part of the Government, for each man thus removed to a distant town soon formed a focusof discontent.custody, asit

One

of the most

energetic of these

prisoners, in free

was termed, was RICHARD KNIGHTLEV, a gentleman be-

longing to Northamptonshire, an intimate friend of the leaders of thein conjunction with

Massachusetts Colony, and connected by marriage with JOHN HAMPDEN, whom he was named as executor to the will of ISAACthe

JOHNSON. Most of the proceedings against the remonstrants were taken

in

Star Chamber, the decree-books of which are unfortunately lost, or we might readily have traced many, if not all the suits, citations, fines andcensures institutedin,

or

imposed by, the Court.

The Star Chamber

was a tribunal taking cognizance of all kind of delinquencies, and there still remains in the Record Office an immense mass of documents appertaining to suits before the Court, in which, whe^ they can be sorted, arranged, and made available to the public, we may hope to find some important information respecting the personal histories of some of theoriginal settlers in

New

England.

proceedings, which were taken chiefly against the Nonconformists, caused many English families to leave their homes. Unfortunately, therecords of thecalled

The

High Court

of Commission, which has been not inaptly

to

"The English Inquisition," are very imperfect, but enough remains show that proceedings were taken in it against many of the ministers and public men who afterwards became eminent in the New England It was not until the Rev. JOHN COTTON, RICHARD BELLINGStates. HAM, recorder, and WILLIAM CODDINGTON, a member of the corpo-

xviii

INTRODUCTION.town of Boston(co.

ration of the

Lincoln),

had been fined

for

noncon-

formity, that they gave

up

their English preferments

their friends in Massachusetts.

and places to join Other instances might be adduced of

the

same

result attending prosecutions in that Court.

Money was the culminating measure that drove hundreds from England to find homes in America, and among other causes, was that which most of all contributed to bring about theimposition of Ship

The

war between the King and the Parliament. Though, after a long and tedious struggle, the levy of ship money was 'declared to be illegal, enough had been effected to make far-sighted men tremble for impending troubles, and no doubt the stand made by men of great influence and high position, such as HAMPDEN (who was intimately associated withthe leaders of the Massachusetts settlement), had an immense weight with persons of an inferior standing in worldly wealth. By the Act of Parliament, which declared the illegality of the tax, it was ordered thatall

proceedings which had been taken should be cancelled, and in consequence a wholesale destruction of documents must have taken place,

which, had they been preserved, would have been of great value to the topographer and genealogist, as the rolls of assessments were very minute.

One volumefate,

and

this

of assessments only appears to have escaped the general contains the names of all the persons assessed in theof the subsequent emigrants England, in the years 1637 and

county of Essex (with the exception of four towns), numbering about18,000, and, without doubt, includes

many

who went out from1638.

that county to

New

A copy of

this

very interesting document has been prepared for

publication.

lished his "Result

of Boston (Mass.), pubsome RtscarcJies among the British Archives, for of information relative to the Founders of New England"

In 1860, Mr.

SAMUEL GARDNER DRAKE,

That workcollection of

first

suggested the desirability of making a systematic

documents relating to the early settlers in America, not only to those who removed to the New England Statesauthentic

but to those also

who

settled in Virginia, theplaces.It

Summer

Islands, Barba-

does, Carolina, Jamaica, and other

estimate the value of these records, and

it is

is impossible to overa matter of the deepest

INTR OD UCTION.

xix

regret that comparatively so few have survived to the present time. Those that we have, therefore, of undoubted authenticity, are all the

moreis

to be prized.

It is

here submitted.

The

a transcript of some of these documents which aim of the transcriber has been to present an

absolute copy of the originals. He has not even ventured to correct mistakes in the spelling of names, or other clerical errors. palpable

Where suchor

occur,

attention to the fact, either

and they are by no means infrequent, he has called by inserting the correct word in brackets,is

by adding a

foot-note, but the text

a faithful reproduction of the

originals.

There are some papers included in Mr. DRAKE'S volume, which have not been deemed admissible in the body of this work, inasmuch as they arenot in themselveshere.official

documents, but they

may not

inaptly be quoted

The

first

to be noticed are the following

lists,

taken from the

History of Sandwich, being transcripts corporations of that port.

of records

belonging to the

AOfall

LIST

OR REGISTERin

such persons as embarked themselves

the good ship called the Hercules, of Sandwich,

of the burthen of 200 tons, John Withcrley, master, and therein transported from Sandwichto the plantation called

New

England

in

America

;

with the certificates from the ministers

where theyall

dwelt of their conversation, and conformity to the orders and discipline of the church, and that they had taken the oath of allegiance and supremacy. (The certificates,last

dated February and March, 1634, are here omitted.)Masters of Families.Children.

Servants

NATHANL. TILDEN LYDIA his wife...

of

Tenterden

yeoman andhis

i

Seven

Seven

J by)

name

by name

JONAS AUSTEN of Tenterden and CONSTANCEwife

f j

Four,

ROB.

BROOK

of Maidstone mercer and

ANNE

his

)

Seven

wife

t

THO.

HEYWARD of Aylesford taylor and SUSANNAH }})

his wife

Five

"

WILL. WITHERELL of Maidstone schoolmasterand

MARY

his wife

Three

1

One

XX-

INTROD UCT10N.Masters of Families.Children.

Servants

FANNET of Ashford hemp-dresser. THO BONEY and HEN. EWELL of Sandwich,makers

shoe-

WILL.

HATCH

of Sandwich merchant and

JANE

his

FiveFour.)

Six

wife

SAM. HINKLEV of Tenterden and SARAH his wife ISAAC COLE of Sandwich carpenter and JOAN his...

r

Two.

wife

ATHO. CHAMPION of Ashford THO. BESBEECH of SandwichJNO. LEWIS of Tenterden and SARAH his PARNEL HARRIS of Bow London JAMES SAVERS of Northbourn taylor COMFORT STARRE of Ashford chirurgion Jos. ROOTES of Great Chart.wife

Servant.

Six

three

One

Three

Three

EM. MASON of Eastwell wid.

MARGT.of

wife of Will. Johnes late of Sandwich,

now

\

New

England, painterof

JNO. BEST of the said parish taylor.

THO. BRIDGEN

Faversham

husbandman and \

his wife.

History of Sandwich, by

W. BOYS,

1792, pp. 750-1.

A TRUE ROLL OROfthe names, surnames, and qualities ofall

LISTwho havetaken passage from the

such persons

town and port of Sandwich

for the

American

plantations, since the last certificate of such

passengers returned into the office of Dover Castle.

THOMAS STARR of Canterbury yeoman and SARAH his wife EDWARD JOHNSON of Canterbury joiner andSUSANhis wife

i

child

7 children 3 servants

1NTROD UCTION.NICHOLAS BUTLERJOICEhis wife3 serv.

xxi

of Eastwell

yeoman and

3

children

5 serv.

SAMUEL HALL of Canterbury yeoman and JOANhis wife.

HENRY BACHELOR MARTHA his wife

of

Dover

brewer

andchild

4I

serv.

JOSEPH BACHELOR of Canterbury ELIZABETH his wife

taylor and

3 serv.

HENRY RICHARDSON and MARY his wife

of Canterbury carpenter

5

children

I

serv.

JARVIS BOYKETT of Chanington carpenter

JOHN BACHELOR of Canterbury taylor NATHANIEL OVELL of Dover cordwinder THOMAS CALLE of F'aversham husbandman and BENNET his wife WILLIAM EATON of Staple husbandman and

I

serv.

3 children

3 children

i

serv

MARTHASARAJANE

his wife

JOSEPH COLEMAN of Sandwich shoemaker andhis wife

4 children 4 childreni

MATTHEW SMITHhis wife

of Sandwich cordwinder and

MARMADUKE PEERCE MARY his wife

of Sandwich taylor and

serv.

Certified under the seal of office of

mayoralty 9* June, 1637.

History of Sandwich, by

W. BOYS,

1792, p. 752.

have next to notice the record compiled by Mr. DANIEL GUSHING, first printed in Mr. SOLOMAN LINCOLN'S Centennial Address, at Hingham, September 28, 1835. It contains the names of one hundred

We

and seventy-five emigrants from the county of Norfolk, who emigrated between the years 1633 and 1638, almost wholly from Hingham, Windham, and other neighbouring parishes, and who consequently called their new settlement Hingham. But there is something to be said about thisemigration, whichit is

believed has hitherto escaped notice

that

is,

xxii

1NTR OD UCTION.movement waslargely fostered by,if

that the

not directly traceable to,

the influence ofConnecticut.

JOHN HAYNES, who wasthelist

subsequently Governor ofis

The

first

name on

referred to,

that

of

THEOPHILUS

GUSHING, from Hingham, who lived several years upon the farm of Mr. HAINS, as he is described in the original. Hitherto, Governor HAYNES has always been regarded as an Essex man, and lie is said tohave married MARY, daughter of This is not in accordance with the

ROBERT THORNTON,facts of the case,

of Nottingham.

for

JOHN HAYNESGreat Hadham,

was the son of anotherand afterwards

JOHN HAYNES, whobothin the

lived at

county of Hertford, but inherited an estate in Essex, which had been purchased by his father. He married MARY, one of the three daughters and co-heirs of ROBERT THORNTON, who possessed a good estate in Hingham, Windham, and Wrampat Codicote,

lingham. Mr. THORNTON died when his daughter, who was afterwards Mrs. HAYNES, was very young, and there are reasons for the belief thatafter the marriage,

their first child, calledalogist either inleft

JOHN HAYNES went to reside at Hingham, and that JOHN (whose name is not recorded by any gene-

England, Mr.

England or America), was born there. But, before he HAYNES certainly took up his abode in Essex, on a

newly-acquired property, called Copford. Taking then the residence at Hingham of a man of the character of HAYNES, it is easy to account for the emigration from that place, especially as the first portion of the

company went out

same year indeed, there is every reason to suppose that they sailed in the same ship. There can be but little doubt that THEOPHILUS GUSHING was a trusted servant of JOHNin

the

;

a family connection on his wife's side, her maternal grandmother being the heiress of EDMUND GUSHING, by which marriage the THORNTON family acquired the estates at Hing-

HAYNES, and probably

ham, Windham, and Wramplingham, which they enjoyedMr.

at the time

HAYNESThislist

married into that family.of Mr. CUSHING'Sis

undoubtedly of great value, tending, as it does, to confirm other statements and unofficial lists, but as it is only a compilation made by a private individual, it is not inserted inthis

work.

INTRODUCTION.Thereis

xxiii

work, which

another very interesting paper included in Mr. DRAKE'S may be briefly noticed. It consists of extracts from the

municipal records of Leyden, in Holland, made by the Hon. HENRY C. MuRPHY. Many English families took refuge in Leyden, and the list referred to is a register of the births, marriages, and deaths whichoccurred thereof the

among

the exiles.

It

was from Leyden that many

first settlers in New England, popularly known as the Pilgrim Fathers, came, and embarking from English ports, sailed on board the

ships Mayflower, Fortune, Ann, and Little James. Among other notices contained in this list, are the following WILLIAM BRADFORD, of Austerfield, Eng., m. Nov. 30,:

1613,

DOROTHY MAY, of Witzbuts, Eng.* EDWARD WINSLOW, of London, m. 16 May,BARKER, of Chetsum, Eng.* JOHN JENNE, of Norwich, Eng., m.of Moncksoon.fi

1618,

ELIZABETH

Nov., 1614,

SARAH CAREY,

The

three places here mentioned;

mayof

be traced as Wisbeach, in;

Cambridgeshirein Suffolk.

Chesham,

in

Buckinghamshire

and

Monk Soham,Wisat

A

family of theto,

name

MAY

certainly lived at

beach

at the

time referred

as did one of the

name

of

BARKER

Chesham.

TheLeyden

e foregoing extracts sufficiently demonstrate the nature of th records. Further notices are unnecessary, but the list of thosein

who embarkedis

the before-mentioned shipsit

is

of sufficient value to

entitle its insertion in this place,

not absolutely official. It is Rev. Ashbel Steele, A.M., entitled " Chief of the Pilgrims, or the LifePhiladelphia, 1857, pp. 401

must be remembered that it though taken from the interesting work of the410.

and Times of William Brewster"*

Both Bradford and Winslow sailed

in the

Mayflower.

t Hisfollowing

wife probably died shortly afterwards, as thelist

name

of John Jenny

is

given alone in the

as

coming over

in the

Ann,

or Little James.

xxiv

INTR OD UCTION.LIST OF PASSENGERS IN

THE MAYFLOWER;

founders of New Being the names of those who came over first, in the year 1620, and were the This list of their Plymouth, which led to the planting of the other New England Colonies. " names " and at the close of his History, families, was preserved by Governor Bradford

andlist

them. is here presented in the order in which he placed cannot be too highly estimated.

The value

of such an accurate

Mr.

JOHN CARVERat

;

who was chosen

their firstfirst

Governor on their

arrivalhis

Cape Cod.;

He

died

the

spring.

KATHERTNE,in

wife

she died a few weeks after her husband,

the beginning

of summer.

DESIRE MINTER

;

afterwards returned

'to

her friends, in poor health, and

died in England.

JOHN ROWLANDJohn;

;

man

servant, afterwards married the daughter ofchildren.

Tillie,

and had ten

ROGER WILDER man servant, died in the first sickness. WILLIAM LATHAM a boy, after more than twenty years;

visited

Eng-

land,

and died;

at the

Bahama

Islands.

A

maid servant

JASPER MOOREMr.

who married, and died one or two years after. who died the first season. WILLIAM BREWSTER their Ruling Elder, lived some twenty-three or four years after his arrival. MARY, his wife died between and 1627. LOVE BREWSTER; a son, married, lived to 1623 the year 1650, had four children. WRESTLING BREWSTER;;; ;

youngest son. RICHARD MORE and Brotherdied thewinter.;

two boys placed with the Elder. Richard afterwards married, and had four or more children. His brother;

first

Mr.

EDWARD WINSLOW1655,his wife;

Mr.

W.

afterwards chosen Governor, died into the

when on a commissiondied thefirst

West

Indies.

winter.

Mr.

W.in

left

ELIZABETH, two children by aG.

second marriage.

GEORGE SOULE and ELIAS STORY; two menfirst

Winslow's family.

Soule married and had eight children.sickness.

E. Story died in the

INTRODUCTION.ELLEN MORE;

xxv

placed in Mr. Winslow's family, sister of Richard More, died soon after their arrival. Mr. WILLIAM BRADFORD their second Governor, author of the history

a

little girl

;

of the Plymouth Colony, lived to the year 1657. DOROTHY, his wife who died soon after their arrival. Governor Bradford;

left

a son in England to a second marriage.;

come afterwards

had four children

byMr. ISAAC

ALLERTON;

chosendiedin

first

assistant to the Governor.first

MARY,;

his wife

who

the

sickness.

BARTHOLOMEW

son,

married in England. REMEMBER and MARY, daughters. member married in Salem, had three or four children. married in Plymouth, had four children.

Re-

Mary

JOHN HOOK servant Mr. SAMUEL FULLER; ;

boy, died;

in

the

first

sickness.

their physician. His wife and and came over afterwards they had two more WILLIAM BUTTEN servant, died on the passage.; ;

child remained,children.

JOHN CRACKSTON who died in the first sickness. JOHN CRACKSTON, his son who died some five or six years after. chief in military Capt. MYLES STANDISH who lived to the year 1656; ; ;

affairs.

ROSE,

his wife

;

died in the

dish had four sons living

Capt. Stana second marriage. mj6$o, byfirst

sickness.

Mr. CHRISTOPHER

MARTIN and;

his wife

;

SOLOMON PROWER and JOHNarrival..

LANGEMORE, servants all died soon after their Mr. WILLIAM MULLINS, his wife, JOSEPH, a son these;

three died the

first

winter.

PRISCILLA, a daughter

;

survived and married;

John Alden.Mr.

ROBERT CARTER,;

servant

died the

first

winter.;

WILLIAM WHITE

RESOLVED, a son married and had five children. PEREGRINE, a son was born after their arrival at Cape Cod, he cannot therefore be numbered among the passengers proper married, and had two chil; ;

died soon after landing. afterwards married to Mr. E. Winslow.

SUSANNA,

his wife

;

dren before 1650.

WILLIAM HOLBECK and EDWARD THOMSON,after landing.

servants

;

both died soonboth lived over

Mr.

STEPHEN HOPKINS, and ELIZABETH,

his wife

;

d

xxvi

INTRODUCTION.twenty years after their arrival, and had a son and four daughters born in this country. GILES, and CONSTANTIA, by a formermarriage.ried;

Giles married

;

had four children.

Constantia mar-

DAMARIS, a son, and OCEANUS, by the present marriage. EDWARD DOTY, and EDWARD LITSTER, servants. E. Doty by a second marriage had seven children after his term of service went tochildren.

had twelve;

born at sea

children

;

Virginia.

Mr.

RICHARD WARRENmarried here.

;

his wife

over afterwards.

They

daughters were left, and came also had two sons and the daughtersfive;

and

JOHN BILLINGTON

he was not from Leyden, or of the Leyden Company, but from London. ELLEN, his wife. JOHN, his son ; who died in a few years. FRANCIS, the second son married; ;

and had eight children. EDWARD TILLIE, and ANN, his wife

HENRY SAMSONcousins.

both died soon after their arrival. and HUMILITY COOPER, two children, their Henry lived, married, had seven children. Humility;

JOHN

returned to England. TILLIE, and his wife both died soon after they came on shore. ELIZABETH, their daughter; afterwards married John Howland.;;

FRANCIS COOKE who lived until after 1650 his wife and other children came afterwards they had six or more children. JOHN, his; ;

son

;

afterwards married;

;

had four

children.

THOMAS ROGERSchildren

died in the

first

sickness.

JOSEPH, his son

;

was

living in 1650,

married and had six children.afterwards, and;

Mr. Rogers' other

came

had

families.first

THOMAS TINKER, wife and son JOHN RIGDALE, ALICE, his wifeJAMES CHILTON,his

all;

died in the

sickness.

both diedin

in the first sickness.

wife;;

both died

the

first

sickness.

their daughter

lived, married,

and had nine

children.

MARY, An-

other married daughter

came

afterwards.in the first sickness.

EDWARD FULLER,their son;

his wife;

both died

SAMUEL,in

marriedsons;

;

had four

children.all

JOHN TURNER, two

names not given;

three

died

the

INTR OD UCTION.first'

xxvii

sickness.

A

daughter came some years afterwards tohis wife

Salem and there married.

FRANCIS EATON, SARAH,and had onechild.

;

she died the

first

winter;

;

by a

third marriage he left three children.

SAMUEL, a son

married

MOSES FLETCHER, JOHN GOODMAN, THOMAS WILLIAMS, DIGERIE PRIEST, EDMOND MARGESON, RICHARD BRITTERIGE, RICHARD CLARKE these seven died in the general sickness. The wife of D. Priest, and children, came afterwards, she being the;

sister of

Mr. Allerton.lived

PETER BROWNleft

;

some fourteen years

after,

was twice married, and

four children.;

RICHARD GARDINERGILBERT WlNSLOWEngland.;

became a seaman, and died abroad.after living here a

number

of years, returned to

JOHN ALDEN "a;

Priscilla Mullens, as

hopeful young man," hired at Southampton, married mentioned, and had eleven children.

JOHN ALLERTON. THOMAS ENGLISH. WILLIAM TREVORE, andpassengers for the

ELYColony

;

two seamen

;

are

commonly, but

incorrectly reckoned in the;

number

of the

first:

company

of

Bradford himself says " Two other * * when their time was seamen were hired to stay a year both returned." Accordingly he says of the Mayflower out they;

companythe

":

These being about a hundredAfterwards he adds":

souls,

came over

in

first ship."

Of

these one hundred

persons who came over in this first ship together, the greatest half died in the general mortality, and most of them in two or

Omitting those two hired sailors who and counting the person that died and the child that returned, was born while on the passage as one passenger, we have thethree months' time.''

exact number

one liundred of the Pilgrimfirst

Company,

"

who

came over

in the

ship."

season, this enumeration"

And, as fifty-one died the first makes good those other words of the

historian, that,

the greater half died in the general mortality."

d

2

xxviii

INTR OD UCTION.

LIST OF PASSENGERSBeing parts ofwith others,at

THAT ARRIVED, AFTER ONE YEAR, IN THE SECOND SMALL SHIP FORTUNE;families,left in

England or Holland the year

before.

They

arrived

New

Plymouth, on the

nth

of Nov., 1621.

JOHN ADAMS. WILLIAM BASSITE WILLIAM BEALE.

(Bassett,

probably two

in his family).

EDWARD BOMPASSE.JONATHAN BREWSTER CLEMENT BRIGGES. JOHN CANNON. WILLIAM CONER. ROBERT CUSHMAN for;;

the oldest son of Elder Brewster.

England.

He

several years the Leyden Company's agent in returned in the Fortune to act still further as;

agent for the Company was of great service in various ways but died before coming again to settle in the Colony. THOMAS CUSHMAN, son of Robert, about twelve years old came with;;

his father jn the Fortune,

in the Colony, and succeeded Elder Brewster in the eldership, in 1649.

became an exemplary man

STEPHEN DEAN.PHILIP

DE LA

NOYE."and JOHN.

THOMAS FLAVELL and son. WIDOW FORD and three children, WILLIAM, MARTHA,ROBERT HICKES. WILLIAM HILTON. BENNET MORGAN. THOMAS MORTON. AUSTIN NICHOLAS. WILLIAM PALMER (probably two in his family). WILLIAM PITT. THOMAS PRINCE, or PRENCE married the Elder's;

daughter, Patience

;

was afterwards Governor. MOSES SlMONSON.

INTRODUCTION.

xxix

HUGH

STATIE.

JAMES STEWARD. WILLIAM TENCH.

JOHN WINSLOW brother WILLIAM WRIGHT.;

of Mr.

Edward Wins low.

LIST OF

THOSE WHO CAME OVERLITTLE JAMES.;

IN

THE ANN ANDand theLittle

The

vessels parted company at sea James some week or ten days

the;

Ann

arrived the latter part of June,

later

part of the

number were the wives and children

of

persons already in the Colony.

ANTHONY ANNABAL afterwards settled EDWARD BANGS settled in Eastham.; ;

in Scituate.

ROBERT BARTLETT. FEAR BREWSTER and PATIENCE BREWSTER;Brewster.

daughters

of Elder

MARY BUCKET. EDWARD BURCHER. THOMAS CLARKE.

This

Thomas

Clarke's grave-stone

is

the oldest on

the Plymouth Burial Hill.

CHRISTOPHER CONANT. CUTHBERT CUTHBERTSON

;

was a Hollander.

ANTHONY

Dix.

JOHN FAUNCE.MANASSEII FAUNCE.

GOODWIFE FLAVELL

;

probaby the wife of Thomas

Flavell.

who came

in the Fortune.

EDMUND FLOOD.BRIDGET FULLER apparently the wife TIMOTHY HATHERLY. WILLIAM HEARD. MARGARET HICKES and her children came in the Fortune.;

of Samuel Fuller, the physician.

;

the wife of Robert Hickes,

who

xxx

INTRODUCTION.He hadsent for

William Hilton's wife and two children.his death.

them before

EDWARD HOLMAN.JOHN JENNY; had"liberty, in 1636, to erect a mill for grinding and of corn upon the brook of Plymouth." beating

ROBERT LONG. EXPERIENCE MITCHELL. GEORGE MORTON he brought with him his son, Nathaniel, and four other children. NATHANIEL MORTON son of George Morton,;;

and afterwards Secretary of the Colony.

THOMAS MORTON,Fortune.

jr.

;

son

of

Thomas Morton, who came

in

the

ELLEN NEWTON.JOHN OLDHAM a man of some note afterwards. FRANCES PALMER wife of William Palmer, who came;

;

in

the

Fortune.

CHRISTIAN PENN.Mr. Perec's two servants.

JOSHUA PRATT. JAMES RAND. ROBERT RATTLIFFE. NICHOLAS SNOW settled in Eastham. ALICE SOUTHWORTH widow, afterwards; ;

the second wife of Governor

Bradford.

FRANCIS SPRAGUE settled in Duxbury.. BARBARA STANDISH i.e., second wife of Captain Standish, married; ;

after

her

arrival.

THOMAS TILDEN. STEPHEN TRACY. RALPH WALLEN.

It

must not be imagined that the following pageslist

furnish

by any

means a complete

of the early settlers in America.

In 1637

Thomas

1NTR OD UCTION.Mayhevv was appointed,ofall

xxxi

for aleft

term of twenty-one years, to keep a record

those persons

who

Englandis

but of Mayhew's

lists

nothing

to passe into forraigne partes," to be found but the fragment com-

"

mencing at page 287, and that continues but for a few months. It cannot be doubted but that other lists were made, but they are either lost, or are among the mass of papers still uncatalogued at the Record Office.

We

learn incidentally that 'ships left

England almost daily

for

America,

but no records of them, or of their passengers, remain. Thus among the registers of deaths in the parish of Deal, co. Kent, we find that on the 4th of May, 1639, Margaret, wife of

England, was buried.

Who

Thomas Waldigraue, bound for New was Thomas Waldigraue, and with what

company

did he

sail

?

knovy that many ships sailed from Bristol, among others Tlte Angel Gabriel and TJie James, conveying the Revd. Richard Mather and the

We

Revd. Daniel Maude, but no records of departures from that port remain. Again, who were the companions who sailed in 1633 m the The Griffin, with John Haynes and the Revd. Thomas Hooker ? Where are the listsof Tlte Arabella, and other ships, in which John Winthrop and the founders of Massachusetts embarked ? Who went out with the Revd. Ezekiel

Rogers from Rowley, and with Fenwick, and the Revd. Henry Whitfield ? These are but a few instances, to show how very imperfect are our recordsof the early settlers.Further,it

should be borne in mind that only the names of those

were taken who legally left the shores of England. At page 142, for example, and elsewhere throughout the book, we find that the passengers were examined by the minister touching their conformity to the church discipline of England, and that they had taken the oaths of allegiance and supremacy elsewhere (p. 106, &c.) we find it certified that they are;

no subsidy men, thatcrown.

is,

men

liable to the

payment of a subsidy

to the

Among the thousands who emigrated to New England, it cannot be doubted but that a very large number left to avoid payment of the hateful subsidy, and that they would not take the oaths of allegianceand supremacy. no record wouldItis

These, therefore, must haveexist.

left secretly,

and of such

perhaps hardly necessary to say, that where,

in the

following

xxxii

INTRODUCTION.

stated that so many people were transported to New England, does not mean that they were sent as felons, as the word, at the present It simply means that they were conveyed. Those time, usually implies.lists,, it isit

who were convicted for upholding the cause of the Duke of Monmouth (pp. 315 342), were undoubtedly transported, as we now understand the word. The Summer Islands, mentioned at pages 301 314, and elsewhere, are now called the Bermudas. In 1609, Sir GKOKGE SOMERS, or SUMERS,persons, however,

was driven on the islands in the course of a voyage to Virginia, and from him the islands derived their name. The Virginia Company, who claimedthe islands by the right of having discovered them, sold them to a company of a hundred and twenty persons, who, having obtained a charter fortheir settlement in 1612, sent out sixty settlers, with a governor. During and immediately after the civil war in England, many persons of eminence

took refugeIslands"

others the poet WALLER, who celebrated their beauty in a poem, entitled " The Battle of tlie Summerin

the Bermudas,

among

Enough has beenandI

said to

show the great value of the

lists

here given,

trust that others

may

be induced to make further search

among

the documents in the Record Office, to bring to light the treasures there

hidden.J.

C. H.

May,

1873.

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19 18

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17 Februarij 1634.

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bound

thither,

the passenges have taken the oath of Allegeanceyeres

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JOHN HUGHES HENRY ATKYNS ROBERT KEMBER ROBERT MILLS JOHN DAVIES THOMAS CROWDER..it.]

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1

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xj" Marcij 1634de sjochia Sci )Egiddij [Giles] f Cripplegate.:"-'

HEIS vnder written names are to be transported to MSB New England having brought Certificate from the

Minister of the pish the ptie hath taken the oaths Justices of the peace of Allegeance Supremacie.

PETER HOWSON xxxjTurris

yeres

his

Wife ELLIN

HOWSON

39 yeres old.

HEIS

vnder written names are are

(sic)

to be transported

London

from the Justices

Certific to New-England having brought attestacon to the LLs Minister of the pish according of peace

hath taken the oaths of Allegeance [Lords] of the Councells order the ptieSupremacie.yeres

THOMAS STARESSUZAN JOHNSON

3

1

12

1

6 Marcij 1634

MildredBredstret

HEIS

vnder-written names are to be transported toe

M

r

England imbarqued in y Christian de Lo: JO: bound thither, the Men have taken ys ported p Cert: from All S Stayning's Mark-lane of their Conformitie to the Church of England.

New England

A Taylor TllO:

PAGE ELIZABETH PAGE THO: PAGE KATHERIN PAGESPARK'S

29 28

\

2 (-wife

2 children.

i)22)(.

EDWARD

KAT: TAYLOR

2 serv's

24

j

ROGER Coop [COOPER]

M

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:

Theis pties

herevnder expressed are to be imbarqued for New-England likewise brought having taken the oaths of Allegeance Supremacie Certificate both from the Ministers where their abiding's were Justiceslatlie

of their conformitie to the discipline

orders of the Church of

England,

y l they are no Subsedy Men.

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2935

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HUBBARD

YE

PORT OF LONDON.

59

8N the Susan f

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EDWARD PAYNE Mr

for

New- England

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MenHusbandman JOHN PROCTER.

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30 20

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BURROW PHILLIP ATWOODM

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W

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very

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the second letter

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however,

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15

May

PENELOPY PEI.LAM

16 yers to passe to her brother plantao" [plantation]

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ROB

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for

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ROBERT CORDELLGouldsmithin

SAMUELL ANDREWES aged

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ROB

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aged 22 yeres.... aged 30 yeres .... aged 21 yeres_

Allegance f Supremacye,

andLimbert Stret*sent

haue

ROB TB SANKEYGIBBONS

brought Certeficat of their

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conformety

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day

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JANE the wife

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Cert, of their Conformity.

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written

names

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the ptie prd e having brought Certificat's from the Minister f Justices of y Peace of his conformitie to the Church of Englandyeres

in the Increase

de Lo:

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3037

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( 2

children.

i

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vnder written hath brought Certififrom two Justices of peace, cate from the Minister of Wappingthe Increase prd.ptie

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of his Conformitie to y e Church of England: to passe in y e said Shipfor

New-England

Lynnen wever THO: CHITTINGDENvxor

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Carlisle.

yeres

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the

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transported

to

Virginea

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M

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their conformitie to the ordersit

discipline of the

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2616

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PASSED FROMyeres

[1635yeres

WW

M

PAUI

2017

ROB T POOLETHO: JONES THO: EWYNN

2017

W" BATESSAinvELL SHORT

241

16

HOOPER RICHARD HURT Withi WELLSTHO: DENEJo: Jo:

M

8

SVMON BARCOTTGEO: CALVERLIK

16 14 161817

1717 171821

EDWARD PARXELI

W" LEE

A

Negroe

W

M

TAYLERGIBBS

RICHARDS

EDWARD

17

ANT BULLOCKTHOMAS BASSIT EDWARD ALEWORTH* EDWARD VYNCENTJo:

191

8

JAMES REASON JACOB WILSONBEN: STRANGE

271

8

131

18 21

8

RALPH VENNABLE

TRIPPATT

17 17

ANT COOPERJo:

LAKE:

161618 18..

RIC R TAYLER THO: MORDIN

EDWARD SELLROGER WittMs [WILLIAMS]Jo:

HEDLEY THOMSON STONWORD SAlTlVELL HUBBARD THOMAS BULLDANIELL HAIHONDGEO:Jo:

THO: THO: THO: HEN:

BLOES

101 1

17131

6

13 12 12

1618

BAYLIE FRANCIS WOODCOTT

MORGAN

1617 171

Jo:

BEER:

RIC GREENE GEO: PALMER THO: SMITH NATHANIEL WiitoisoN [WIL-

BARNES ABRAHAM CLAXSON JAMES ASTONRIC K

1617

2213 1215

8

DAUGHTON

14

MATHEW STEEVENSTHO: LARKYNN

LIAMSON] PHILLIPP WHARTON

17

141812

W W

M

HENRY

GEO: SAIRES

Nic: GAUGHTON

1413

EDWARD HEDLEYM

SARES*

17

DAVID JONES GEORGE HANMER ROGER HODGES M POWELL SAMPSON MEVERILL HENRY CARTER Jo: YATES

15

241715

W

20 42

48

[May, however, be read as

ALDWORTH.]

PORT OF LONDON.ycres

Jo:

BROWNE FRANCIS RAYNNE [or RAYMIE]

16

JOSIAS FORSTER

432414 161818

1013

THO: HALL

FRANCIS HEDGES DAVIE MORRIS THO: WEST

1817

HUGH WENTWORTH ANN TAYLORELIZABETH GROVESJo:

442435i

HUMFREY SMITH FRANCIS WATSON KATHERIN WHITE ELIZABETH CLARK ELLIN BURROWESJo:

303321 3133.

GROVES BLANCH ROBERT'S2 Ministers.

qr20

JO:

OXENBRIDGE'

24 243035

HENRY

JENNING'S

PAGE THO: JENNICOM SARA PAGE SARA PAGE MARY PAGE RICHARD HARRISJEFFERY WRIGHT SAMVELL MAYO

mo.17

18

BENIAMIN MILLER HENRY FLETCHER

1018 12

EDWARD STAUGHTON

50

MARIE GOFFF. Jo: BROOKES

xv" Jitnij 1635

iHEIS vnder

writtenin the

names

are to be transported to

r H: HACKWELL: The ptie Abigail de Lo: imbarqued Certificate from the Minister of Thisselworth* of his having brought conformitie to the orders f discipline of the Church of England. He hath-

M

New-England:

taken the oaths of Allegeance f Supremacie.yeres

DENNIS GEERE ( ELIZABETH GEERE 2 wife \ ELIZABETH GEERE children SARA GEEREI j

.

30 223

ANNS PANCRUSTELIZ: TASELIE

165512

.

CONSTUNT WOOD

2

*

[Is

it

possible that this

is

intended for

IsLEWORTH?

I

can find no

TmssELWORTH.]

88

PASSINGER

PASSED FROM

[1635

19

Junij 1635to be transported to

IHEIS vnder

writtenine

names are

New-England

the pties having y Abigail: imbarqued Certificate from the Minister of the pish of the litle Miniries of brought his conformitie opinion of the discipline of the Church of England.

HACKWELL

M

r

W

yeres

M

TILLY..

28

ROBERT WHITEMAN

20

CHARLES JONES LIDDIA BROWNE..

21.

16

jBOARDTayler THO:

the James Jo:

MAY4028

for N. England.

EWER

SARA EWERELIZABETH EWER THO: EWER

SARA BEALE ELIZABETH NEWMANJo:

28

2416

4ii

SKUDDER

xx"'

June 1635in the

IHEIS vnder Written names are to be imbarqued HACKWELL bofid de Lnd [London] m'

Abbigall

to

New Engtd

Conforable [conformable] haue taken oathe of Allegance Supremacie 1 e Ch as from Two Justices of Peace minsf of S< Lawrence to y p Cerin

Essex

HENRY BULLOCKESUSANhis wife

4Oyers428

husbandman

MARY

62

{HENRY THO:

1635]

W-

PORT OF LONDON.

89

JN

the defenceCert, froij

more xx"' 1635 de Lond m' PEARCE

bod

for

New Engtd

p

Justices of PeaceM

Ministr of All Saint's homan.* in

Northapton.

W

HOEMANWINIFRID...

40 yers35

husbandmanamaid Seruant.

his wife

ALCE ASHBEY5

20 yers8

Chlldren

(HANNA{

JEREMY

6

MARYSARRA

42..i

ABRAHAM

q" r

xx"'

IN the Abbigall de Lo. m'Cer'from.'fN

June 1635 HACKWELLfrom

bod

for

New Engtdof

of

his

Conformity

Justices

Peace

p f

Ministr Eaton BrayJ in

Co Bedford. 4[?

Jo

HOUGHTON

40] yers old.

f> Jully 1635|N theCertBedfordsher:defence de Lond. m'froij

EDWARD

BOSTOCKEII PLAr.CS vrs

Justices of peace

mim'str fro Dunstable in

New Engtd p Com1

ROBERT LONGEELIZA: his wife*

45 yers

Inholder

30

no place bearing this name in Northampton. Query, is it a misspelling of the name HOEMAN in next line, wrongly written in here, and not afterwards erased ?] t [Sic. The word must be omitted, to make sense.][Thereis

J [Eaton Bray[Or|]

is

a

EDMOND.

Township in the Hundred of Manshead.] The word is blotted in the original.]There would seemto

[So in the original.

have been more than one ship called the Defence,:

we find the names of four different commanders to ships so named EDWARD BosTOCKE (as here) TEARCE (June 20) EDWARD BOSWELL (June 22) THOMAS BOSTOCKsince;;

;

(July 2).]

12

9o

PASSIffGSX'MlCHELL

PASSED FROM20"^

['635

JOSHUA

3

q

r trs

old

SARRA ROBERTELIZAx Children{

18

1612

LUCE MERCER... iS.aseruant

ANNE MARYREBECCAJo*

10

98

64.

^ZACHERY

xx"'

June 1635PEARCEvrs

IN

the Defence de

Lond m'

New Engtdin1'

p Cert

fro

two Justices of Peace f Minstr of Towcester

Co Northampton

JO

GOULD GRACE his wifeN

25 yers

husbandman

25 yers

xxij"'

June 1635HACKWELL42 yers 3910vrs

JN the Abbigall de Lond. m'

New Engtd

p

Cer< fro Minstr of Crancbroke* in Kent.

EDW. WHITEf his wifeij

husbandman

MARTHA(.MARY

Children

(MARTHA ,.

0830 yers

Jo*

ALLEN

husbandman

his wife

ANNE

30 p Cert hernehil* in Kentin

*

[Both Cranbrook and Herne-Hill are

the Lathe of Scray.J

1635]

YE

PORT OF LONDON.

9t

|N

the Abbigall.1 p Cer from Justice peace-

Minisf of Stepney.43 yersGlouer.

GEO: HADBORNEhis wife(

ANNE..............

4610

REBECCAx

2Ch.ldren]'

\

INJNA

4>

JOSEPH BOREBANCKE

24l6

Seruant's to GEO: HAL>-

JOAXE JORDEN

J

BORNE.

|N the Defence de Lo. m' EDW: BOSWELL vrs New England p from S r Henry Mildmay f Ministr of Baddow* in Essex. Jos

BROWNE/-

27 yers.

Taylor.

THO: HART

..... .

24 2419

his 3 seruant's-J

MARY DENNY

V.ANNELEAKE

..

26

Jun

ij

1635

N

the Abigail

ROBERT HACKWELLJo:

M

r

to

New-England p23

Cert:

from Northton Tho. Martin Maior f

2 Justices

ShoemakerBricklayer

HARBERT ................ RICHARD ADAMS ............ SUZAN ADAMS ..............

29 26

4'*

7*//x............15

HENRY SOMNER ELISA. SOMNER*

............ 18Little, in the

[There arc two BaJdovs, Great and

Hundred

of Chelmsford.]

12

2

PASSINGER We" PASSED FROM

[1635

17

Junij 1635are to be transported to

New-England, r imbarqued in the Abigail ROBERT HACKWELL p Cert from the Minister f Justices of Peace of their Conformitie, being no Subsedy Men. they have taken y oaths of Alleg: Supremacy being all Hus-

jHEIS vnder

written

names

M

bandmenyeres

RALPH WALLIS RALPH ROOTE JN FREEMAN WALTER GUTSALL RICHARD GRAVES ROBERT MERE SAMVELL MERE EDMOND MAKINGTHO: JONESGEO: DREWRIE

405035

MARY MON ING'S MARY MONNING'S

30

ANNA MONNING'SMlCHELALIELL MONING'S ELIZABETH ELLIS ELLIN JONESISACK JONES HESTER JONES THO: JONES SARA JONES..

9 63

3423

16

433

368

40 4019

633.

mo:15

MARSHALL THOMAS KNORE JOHN HALMACK GEORGE WALLISRABECCA PRICE MARIE FREEMANJo:

W

M

4033 3815

CESARA COVELL

JOAN WALL

1915

W" PAYNENOLL KNORE SARA KNORE ROB T DRIVER ELIZABETH MERE JOHN MERE

297 8

14

50

SYCILLIEJo:

FREEMAN FREEMAN WEST

9 41 1

304

3.

mo:

|N

p Cer': from the Minister of their conformitie from the Justices, that they are no Subsedy men.the Abigailf>r A:

CHRISTOPHER FOSTER

32

|

vxor FRANCIS

FOSTER

25

Y PORT OF LONDON.(RABKCCA FOSTER(jo: FOSTER EDWARD IRESON. .

5

ELIZABETH ROOKMANJo: ROOKEMAN HUGH BURT ANN BURT

31

children/NATHANIELL FOSTER

2i

935

32

32

W* ALMONDMARY JONES AWDRY ALMOND ANNIS ALMYCHRI: ALMIE

34303283 15

W"

BASSETT

98

EDWARD BURTTHO: FREEMAN

W

2414

YATES ELIZABETH IRESON

M

273515

JOHN STROWDE

EDWARD RAINSFORDROB T SHARIJOHN ROOKEMAN

262045

Jo:Fox RICHARD Fox Jo: PAYNE

14

EDMOND FREEMAN

45

names are to be transported to New-England r the Blessing Jo: L.ECESTER the pties having imbarqucd Cert from the Minister of their conformitie being no Justices brought

|HEIS

vnder-writtenin

M

Subscdy Men, tooke y e oaths of Alleg:

Supremacie.

WiltM COPE

26 2421

RICHARD COPE THOMAS KING Jo: STOCKBRIDGE ROBERT SAIEWELL M BROOKE GILBERT BROOKE NATHANIELL BYHAM Jo: WASSELL W* VASSALL

ROBERT TURNER ELIZA: HOLLYVASSALL MARGARET VASSALL MARY VASSALL ELIZABETH ROBINSON SARA ROBINSON Nic: ROBERTSON Jo: MORY.... CHARLES STUCBRIDGE JAMES SAIEWELL

2430 62i

ANN

27

W

30 2014 14 10

32\.\

3019i

RIC K

:

MORE

,

42 20

i-J

94Jo:

PASSINGEJl5

PASSED FROMSARA TYNKLERFRA. VASSALL

['635

ROBINSON ANN STOCBRIDGE SUZAN SAIEWELI ANN VASSALL SUZAN KING JUDITH VASSALL

15

21

12

25

THOMAZIN MUNSONKAT: ROBINSON MARY ROBINSON

1412

42 3016

7

ROB T ONYON

26

20 Junij 1635

]HEIS

vnder-written names are to be transported to Virginea im" the Men have barqued in the Phillip RICHARD MORGAN

M

1

been examined by the Minister of the towne of Gravesend of their conformitie to the orders discipline of the Church of England: And tooket