Leonard Genealogy - John

John Leonard 1615-76, of Springfield, MA

Person Page 196

John Sackett

M, #4876, b. 1632, d. 8 April 1719

Parents

FatherSimon Sackett (b. 1595, d. 25 October 1635)
MotherIsabel Pearce (b. 1610, d. February 1635)

Family: Abigail Hannum (b. 22 November 1640, d. 9 October 1690)

SonJohn Sackett (b. 4 November 1660, d. 20 December 1745)
SonWilliam Sackett+ (b. 20 April 1662, d. 28 March 1700)
DaughterAbigail Sackett (b. 1 December 1663, d. 3 July 1683)
DaughterMary Sackett (b. 1665, d. 19 November 1667)
DaughterHannah Sackett (b. 7 March 1669, d. 30 August 1749)
DaughterMary Sackett (b. 8 June 1672)
SonSamuel Sackett (b. 16 September 1674, d. 8 November 1709)
DaughterElizabeth Sackett (b. 27 May 1677, d. 16 June 1782)
DaughterAbigail Sackett (b. 1683, d. September 1721)

Biography

John Sackett was born in 1632 in Newton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. He and Abigail Hannum were married on 23 November 1659 in Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts. He and Sarah Stiles Stewart were married on 15 January 1691 in Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts. He died on 8 April 1719 at age ~87 in Westfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts.1
He grew up on his mother's land in Springfield and in 1653 was granted land of his own there. Shortly after his marriage he sold his house and land at Springfield and removed to property he had purhcased at Northampton. He lived there until 1665, when he again sold out and went to a farm bought of Mr. Chapin, near Westfield, on what are now Sackett's Meadows. He was one of the first settlers of Westfield. He build a house and barn, destroyed the the Indians October 27, 1675. He built a mill on the side of a creek that ran into the Westfield River, which caused a law suit from the Deweys, who claimed that the erection of the mill backed up water on their grist mill. He appears to have been a man of considerable character and ability, taking time to serve as selectman of the town.

See Charles H. Weygant, "The Sacketts of America, Their Ancestors, and Descendants, 1630-1907" and "Family History of Southern NY, Vol I," CD 157, p. 42-43. John Sacket, son of Simon Sackett the colonist and Isabel Pearce, was born in Newtown (later Cambridge), Massachusetts, in 16321 and died at the then great age of 87 in Westfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts, on 8 April 1719.1,2 He married first at Northampton, Massachusetts, on 23 November 1659, Abigail Hannum, daughter of William Hannum and Honor Capen.2,3,4,5,6,7 Abigail was born in 16405,8 and baptized at Windsor, Connecticut, on 22 November 1640.5 She died in Westfield on 9 October 1690.2,5,9,10,11,12 He married second in Westfield on 15 January 1690/91, Sarah (Stiles) Stewart, daughter of John Stiles and Rachel (___) Stiles.2,9,13,14,15,16,17
John made his will in Westfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts, on 10 May 1718, naming as beneficiaries his wife Sarah, his son John, his daughters Hannah, Mary and Abigail, his grandson William Sacket,and the unnamed children of his sons William and Samuel. Unusually, he appointed as executor his grandson William, who was still a minor (he was about 18 at the date of the will). The witnesses to the will, who included the testator's grandson Joseph Sackett, referred the matter to the Probate Court which appointed John Sackett, the deceased's eldest son, as administrator of the will until William reached 21. The will was proved in the Probate Court at Springfield on 20 May 1719.
John's date and place of birth
Weygant's statement that John was "so far as known, the first white child born in Newtown" has not been proved, although the date of birth of 1632 is in accord with Riker (Annals of Newtown)18?which Weygant is known to have used as a source?who recorded that John died at the age of 87 in 1719. Anderson in The Great Migration19 gives John's date of birth as "say 1630". Since Anderson assumes the date of migration to have been 1632, he must have assumed that John was born in England. No birth or baptism record has been found in English records, although the absence of such a record could also be explained if his father had been a Church dissident.
Whatever the precise date of John's birth, he would have been a young boy when his father died in 1635 and he would have been brought up by his mother Isabel and her second husband William Bloomfield.
Annals of Newtown
Riker's18 reference to John is brief: "His [Simon the colonist's] sons Simon and John removed in 1653 to Springfield, on the Connecticut River, where they took the oath of fidelity, Mar. 23, 1656. John afterwards removed to Northampton, and thence to Westfield, where he d. in 1719, a. 87. His posterity have been numerous in Westfield and its vicinity, and are also found in western New-York."
History of Springfield
John Sacket appears in the Springfield records when he was granted land at Woronoco in 165820.
He was also listed on 23 December 1659 in the seating plan in the meeting house. John was placed, with others, in the ninth of ten allocated seats, indicating he was at this date fairly low in the Town's pecking order.21
History of Westfield
Lockwood, in his Westfield History22, includes numerous references to John Sacket:
p58. 11 Feb 1667. A town meeting orders that a gate be erected by Sacket's house.
p80. 12 Mar 1667. John Sackett's "five acres over the brooke."
p62. 16 Feb 1669. John Sacket is appointed one of three men to lay out grants of land.
p63. 23 Mar 1669/70. The three men are sacked for neglecting their duties and are replaced.
p72. Sackett's Brook was originally called "Tomhaumucke.
p86/7. Original allotment of land.
p91. In a short biography of John, Lockwood states that John was born in 1632, three years after Simon and Isabel came from England. This implies a migration in 1629.
p101. John is included in a list of settlers who have taken an oath of allegiance to the King.
p217/8. Autumn 1675. John's house and barn are burnt by the Indians.
p226-8. 15 Jan 1675/76. John Sacket, as Constable, writes with details of the expense of maintaining a garrison of soldiers.
p231. 26 Mar 1676. John Sacket is a co-signatory to a document setting out land improvements to be carried out by townsmen.
p179. 17 Aug 1684. John Sacket is a juror in a hearing into the death of Eleezer Weller. The jury finds that death was caused by suicide by hanging.
p183. Autumn 1685. John Sackett is sued for infringing the rights of a neighbour by setting a mill higher up the brook.
Last Edited8 January 2018

Citations

  1. [S196] Marriages, Births, and Deaths in Westfield, NEHGS web site, p. 266

Abigail Hannum

F, #4877, b. 22 November 1640, d. 9 October 1690

Parents

FatherWilliam Hannum (b. 1603, d. 1 June 1677)
MotherHonor Capen (b. 1616, d. 1680)

Family: John Sackett (b. 1632, d. 8 April 1719)

SonJohn Sackett (b. 4 November 1660, d. 20 December 1745)
SonWilliam Sackett+ (b. 20 April 1662, d. 28 March 1700)
DaughterAbigail Sackett (b. 1 December 1663, d. 3 July 1683)
DaughterMary Sackett (b. 1665, d. 19 November 1667)
DaughterHannah Sackett (b. 7 March 1669, d. 30 August 1749)
DaughterMary Sackett (b. 8 June 1672)
SonSamuel Sackett (b. 16 September 1674, d. 8 November 1709)
DaughterElizabeth Sackett (b. 27 May 1677, d. 16 June 1782)
DaughterAbigail Sackett (b. 1683, d. September 1721)

Biography

Abigail Hannum was born on 22 November 1640 in Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut. John Sackett and she were married on 23 November 1659 in Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts. She died on 9 October 1690 at age 49 in Westfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts. She was buried at Mechanic Saint Cemetery in Westfield, Massachusetts.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Simon Sackett

M, #4878, b. 1595, d. 25 October 1635

Parents

FatherThomas Sackett (b. 1557, d. 1615)
MotherMartha Strowde (b. 1560, d. 1632)

Family 1: Elizabeth Boyman (b. 1600, d. 1626)

DaughterChristine Sackett (b. 1620)
DaughterElizabeth Sackett (b. 1623)
DaughterMartha Sackett (b. 1625)

Family 2: Isabel Pearce (b. 1610, d. February 1635)

SonSimon Sackett (b. about 1630, d. 9 July 1659)
SonJohn Sackett+ (b. 1632, d. 8 April 1719)

Biography

Simon Sackett was born in 1595 in Ely, Cambridgeshire, England. He and Elizabeth Boyman were married on 2 November 1618 in Thanet, Kent, England. He and Isabel Pearce were married on 6 August 1627 in Saint John Margate, Isle of Thanet, Kent, England.1 He died on 25 October 1635 at age ~40 in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
He lived on the north side of what is now Winthrop St., in the center of the block between Brighton and Dunster Streets, Cambridge, MA, and died there sometime between August and October 1635. According to The Great Migration Begins..., he came over in 1632 with his wife, Isabel, and two sons, Simon, Jr. and John, on the Lyon. He was in company with Roger Williams, and they landed after an unusually stormy voyage at Boston, February 5, 1631 (per Family History of Southern NY, Vol. 1, CD157.

Simon Sackett, son of Thomas Sackett the younger and Martha Strowde, was born in St Peter in Thanet, Kent, in 1595. He was baptized at St Peter's Church on 23 November 1595.1 He died in Newtown (later Cambridge), Massachusetts, between 5 and 10 Oct 1635.2 He married first at St Peter's Church on 2 November 1618, Elizabeth Boyman.3 She died after only seven years' marriage and was buried at St John's Church, Margate, Kent, on 27 February 1625/26.4 He married second at St John's Church on 6 August 1627, Isabel Pearce.5,6
Simon and Isabel emigrated from Thanet, Kent, to Boston, Massachusetts, between 1630 and 1631.7 They were amongst the first settlers of Newtown, sometime before 1632, and remained there until Simon's death just a few years later in 1635. On 5 August 1633, Simon was granted half an acre for a cowyard in Cambridge.8 On 20 August 1635, he was also granted a one-acre share of meadow land.9 Administration of Simon's estate was granted by the General Court to his widow Isabel on 3 November 1635.10
After Simon's death, Isabel removed with her young sons Simon and John to Hartford, Connecticut, travelling with the hundred-strong Hooker congregation. There she married, as his second wife, William Bloomfield.
[Reverend Thomas Hooker's company arriving at the Connecticut River].11
Despite a short life?he had probably not reached forty when he died in 1635?Simon Sackett the colonist enjoys a pivotal position in the history of the Sacketts, being regarded as the progenitor of a major part of the American branch of the family.
Early migrants from England to the New World had various motivations for seeking a new life in a virtually unknown country and for undertaking the hazardous journey. Many fled religious persecution, but others removed in hopes of a better, more prosperous future. England had entered on a half-century of chronic trade depression. Propagandists for the Massachusetts Bay Company, which had been founded in 1629, were active in the recruitment of settlers. And there was the promise of boundless fertile lands. Some were escapees from threatening plague or famine. Survival in the new land would depend crucially upon the application of essential practical skills; thus, many were farmers or were engaged in allied trades. Well-placed migrants took with them their servants and these, too, were to become founding fathers of America.
Simon's reasons for embarking on his American adventure are not known. Nor do we know his occupation. Given the documentation of the time, it would seem likely that, had Simon emigrated for reasons of religious conviction, there would remain recorded evidence of the fact. But it is dangerous to speculate as to his reasons; it is to be hoped that further information will come to light. It is worth, however, considering Simon's family circumstances at the time.
Simon Sackett was born, probably in November 1595 (he was baptised on 23 November 1595), in the small rural parish of St Peter in the Isle of Thanet on the north-east coast of Kent. He was the sixth of nine children, and third of five sons, born to Thomas Sackett and his wife, Martha (nee Strowde). Simon's father, Thomas, who had died when Simon was 20, was a yeoman farmer in Birchington, a parish some five miles west of St Peter. Thomas had evidently established a farm at Birchington some time after the birth of his youngest child, Elizabeth, in 1604.
The description of Thomas, in his will made in 1615, as a 'yeoman' implies that he owned at least some of his land. However, the term does not necessarily imply significant wealth and it is clear from his will that his house and land at St Peter's were mortgaged and that his house and land at Birchington were rented. His will directed that the St Peter's property be sold to pay his debts and legacies. Thomas had inherited lands and a tenement at St Peter's from his father, also Thomas. Thomas the elder, although possessed of property, described himself in his will as a 'labourer'; again, that will does not suggest significant wealth.
Simon was about 35 years old when he made his fateful decision to emigrate. Two of his brothers had died, older brother Thomas some eleven years earlier, and younger brother William about fifteen years earlier. Although there is no direct confirmatory evidence, it is possible that they were victims of plague or other epidemic which occurred frequently in Birchington in the early part of the 17th century12. His eldest brother John and youngest brother Henry survived and, although it had not been specified in their father's will, it would seem possible that John continued to farm the family lands in Birchington.
Simon had by then been married twice; first in 1618 to Elizabeth Boyman, and following her death in 1625/26, secondly to Isabel Pearce in 1627. Elizabeth had borne him three daughters, Christianna in 1620, Elizabeth in 1623, and Martha in 1625. Of these, only Christianna is known to have survived to adulthood, marrying Thomas Tanner in 1641. No death or burial records for Elizabeth or Martha have been found but it is reasonable to assume that they died in infancy or childhood, perhaps the victims of plague. In any event, when he emigrated, Simon left at least one young, motherless, daughter behind, presumably in the care of one of his brothers or sisters.
Although Weygant gives specific details of the dates and method of Simon's journey to Boston, Mass., on the ship Lyon from Bristol on England's west coast, it has not yet proved possible to verify from primary sources that he was a passenger on this particular voyage. Weygant's version is probable but is known to be inaccurate in the important particular of Simon's origin, Weygant stating this to be the Isle of Ely, Cambridgeshire instead of the Isle of Thanet, Kent. Other writers have proposed various dates for Simon's migration (Riker, "about the year 1628 or '29"; Savage and Anderson, 1632). The earlier dates would seem less likely as there were relatively few settlers before the sailing of the Winthrop fleet of eleven ships in 1630. If Simon was indeed on this Lyon voyage then he would certainly have met John Winthrop as the latter boarded the ship on 8 February 1631 as it rode at anchor off Long Island.
Weygant records Simon as being engaged, with others, in building dwellings in Newtown, Mass., in 1631. Confirmation of this date would be of help in determining Simon's date of migration. Although it is likely that Simon was there in 1631, it has not been possible to confirm this. The first record of Simon found in Newtown (Cambridge) is in the undated list (almost certainly of 1632) in the Cambridge Town Records. The Cambridge Historical Commission have placed a plaque in Winthrop Park stating that Dudley, Bradstreet, Lockwood, Poole, Patrick, Spencer, Kirman, and Sackett had completed and occupied houses in Newtown by 26 July 1631. However, study of the Commission's source (Lucius Paige's History of Cambridge) suggests that this rather stretches the evidence. It would perhaps be more accurate to say that Dudley and Bradstreet had built houses in Newtown by 1631 and it is likely that the others had also done so.13
Weygant relates the family tradition as told to him by his father-in-law, Samuel Bailey Sackett, that Simon with his brother, John, travelled on the Lyon in company with Roger Williams. The existence of this brother has since been challenged (by Anderson) and our further researches have revealed that Weygant's primary evidence in support of the family tradition, that John Sackett, Simon's alleged brother, filed an inventory of his own son's estate (in 1684) was mistaken. With the removal of Simon's brother, John, the question is opened of the relationship between Simon and John of New Haven (claimed by Weygant to have been the son of Simon's brother)?and, indeed, the migration of this John Sackett. Simon Sackett had person sources.1
Last Edited13 September 2014

Citations

  1. [S104] The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633

Isabel Pearce

F, #4879, b. 1610, d. February 1635

Family: Simon Sackett (b. 1595, d. 25 October 1635)

SonSimon Sackett (b. about 1630, d. 9 July 1659)
SonJohn Sackett+ (b. 1632, d. 8 April 1719)

Biography

Isabel Pearce was born in 1610 in St.Peter, Isle Thanet, Kent, England. Simon Sackett and she were married on 6 August 1627 in Saint John Margate, Isle of Thanet, Kent, England.1 She died in February 1635 at age ~25 in Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut.
Last Edited13 September 2014

Citations

  1. [S104] The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633

Simon Sackett

M, #4880, b. about 1630, d. 9 July 1659

Parents

FatherSimon Sackett (b. 1595, d. 25 October 1635)
MotherIsabel Pearce (b. 1610, d. February 1635)

Biography

Simon Sackett was born about 1630. He died on 9 July 1659 at age ~29.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Sarah Bloomfield

F, #4881
Last Edited7 December 2009

Sarah Stiles Stewart

F, #4882

Biography

John Sackett and Sarah Stiles Stewart were married on 15 January 1691 in Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts.
Last Edited7 December 2009

William Hannum

M, #4883, b. 1603, d. 1 June 1677

Parents

FatherWilliam Hannum (b. about 1577, d. 1603)
MotherElizabeth Dyer (b. about 1581, d. 1603)

Family: Honor Capen (b. 1616, d. 1680)

DaughterAbigail Hannum+ (b. 22 November 1640, d. 9 October 1690)

Biography

William Hannum was born in 1603 in Dorchester, Dorset, England. He and Honor Capen were married about 1636 in Dorchester, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.1 He died on 1 June 1677 at age ~74 in Northampton, Hampshire County, Massachusetts.
He came on the "Mary and John."
Last Edited7 December 2009

Citations

  1. [S105] Torrey: New England Marriages CD

Honor Capen

F, #4884, b. 1616, d. 1680

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Family: William Hannum (b. 1603, d. 1 June 1677)

DaughterAbigail Hannum+ (b. 22 November 1640, d. 9 October 1690)

Biography

Honor Capen was born in 1616 in Dorchester, Dorset, England. William Hannum and she were married about 1636 in Dorchester, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.1 She died in 1680 at age ~64 in Westfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Citations

  1. [S105] Torrey: New England Marriages CD

Bernard Capen

M, #4885, b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638

Parents

FatherGeorge Capen (b. 1540, d. 1561)
MotherMargery Urdde

Family: Joan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

SonBernard Capen (b. 1597)
SonJames Capen (b. about 1598)
DaughterRuth Capen (b. 7 August 1600)
DaughterSusanna Capen (b. 11 April 1602)
DaughterDorothy Capen (b. 1603)
SonJohn Capen (b. 26 January 1613)
DaughterHonor Capen+ (b. 1616, d. 1680)
DaughterElizabeth Capen (b. 29 October 1616)

Biography

Bernard Capen was born about 1561 in Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England. He and Joan Purchase were married on 31 May 1596 in Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England. He died on 8 November 1638 at age ~77 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. He was buried at North Burying Ground in Dorchester, Massachusetts.
He came over in 1633, arriving in Boston about July 24, 1633, resided first in Dorchester, and was a shoemaker. He became a freeman on May 25, 1636. He was granted a 30 acre lot in Dorchester, MA, on August 5, 1633. He was christened in 1568.

He may have been related to George Dyer, who also came over on the "Mary and John" and who is referred to as "his brother" in his will.

See Capen Family and Culter's Genealogical Memoirs of Massachusetts. Bernard Capen had person sources.1
Last Edited1 April 2018

Citations

  1. [S104] The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633

Joan Purchase

F, #4886, b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653

Parents

FatherOliver Purchase (b. 1552, d. 1633)
MotherThomazine Harris (b. 1556, d. 1633)

Family 1: Bernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)

SonBernard Capen (b. 1597)
SonJames Capen (b. about 1598)
DaughterRuth Capen (b. 7 August 1600)
DaughterSusanna Capen (b. 11 April 1602)
DaughterDorothy Capen (b. 1603)
SonJohn Capen (b. 26 January 1613)
DaughterHonor Capen+ (b. 1616, d. 1680)
DaughterElizabeth Capen (b. 29 October 1616)

Family 2: Bernard Capen (b. 1 January 1562, d. 8 November 1638)

DaughterSusan Capen+ (b. 5 April 1602, d. 14 November 1666)

Biography

Joan Purchase was born on 25 March 1578 in Dorchester, Dorset, England. Bernard Capen and she were married on 31 May 1596 in Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England. Bernard Capen and she were married on 31 May 1596 in Dorchester, Dorset, England. She died on 26 March 1653 at age 75 in Dorchester, Massachusetts. She was buried in March 1658 in Dorchester North Burying Ground, Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts.
Joan Purchase was buried at North Burying Ground in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Or was her birth date 4 Apr 1578?

Her sister, Aquila Purchase, set sail on the same ship, but died enroute to America in 1633, with Mrs. Anne Purchase, Oliver Purchase, Thomas Purchase, and Sarah Purchase. She was christened on 4 April 1578 in Dorchester, Dorset, England. She died on 26 March 1653 at age 75 in Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay.
Last Edited1 April 2018

James Capen

M, #4887, b. about 1598

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Biography

James Capen was born about 1598.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Ruth Capen

F, #4888, b. 7 August 1600

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Biography

Ruth Capen was born on 7 August 1600.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Susanna Capen

F, #4889, b. 11 April 1602

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Biography

Susanna Capen was born on 11 April 1602.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Dorothy Capen

F, #4890, b. 1603

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Biography

Dorothy Capen was born in 1603. Nicholas Upsall and she were married on 17 January 1630 in Holy Trinity, Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England.
Dorothy's husband was a Quaker and suffered many indignities by the Massachusetts Court as a result.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Nicholas Upsall

M, #4891

Biography

Nicholas Upsall and Dorothy Capen were married on 17 January 1630 in Holy Trinity, Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Elizabeth Capen

F, #4892, b. 29 October 1616

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Biography

Elizabeth Capen was born on 29 October 1616. Thomas Swift and she were married on 18 October 1630 in Holy Trinity, Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Thomas Swift

M, #4893

Biography

Thomas Swift and Elizabeth Capen were married on 18 October 1630 in Holy Trinity, Dorchester, Dorsetshire, England.
Last Edited7 December 2009

John Capen

M, #4894, b. 26 January 1613

Parents

FatherBernard Capen (b. about 1561, d. 8 November 1638)
MotherJoan Purchase (b. 25 March 1578, d. 26 March 1653)

Biography

John Capen was born on 26 January 1613.
Last Edited7 December 2009

Willliam Bloomfield

M, #4895
Last Edited7 December 2009

Penelope Bement

F, #4896, b. 11 October 1735, d. 17 April 1804

Parents

Family: James Howland (b. 30 June 1729, d. before 2 March 1790)

DaughterMary Howland (b. 23 March 1777, d. about 1787)
SonAnsell\Anselm Howland (b. 22 June 1779)

Biography

Penelope Bement was born on 11 October 1735 in Wethersfield, Hartford County, Connecticut. James Howland and she were married before 1777 in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.1 She died on 17 April 1804 at age 68.
Or was his 2nd wife Elizabeth Sickels?
Last Edited15 February 2019

Citations

  1. [S363] John Howland of the Mayflower, Vol. 2, p. 333

Jabez Howland

M, #4897, b. 27 January 1731

Parents

FatherJabez Howland (b. 16 September 1701, d. 6 July 1758)
MotherElizabeth Percival (b. 22 February 1704, d. 18 October 1775)

Biography

Jabez Howland was born on 27 January 1731 in Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts.
Last Edited15 February 2019

Elizabeth Howland

F, #4898, b. 26 October 1732

Parents

FatherJabez Howland (b. 16 September 1701, d. 6 July 1758)
MotherElizabeth Percival (b. 22 February 1704, d. 18 October 1775)

Biography

Elizabeth Howland was born on 26 October 1732 in Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts.
Last Edited15 February 2019

Nathaniel Howland

M, #4899, b. 9 October 1736

Parents

FatherJabez Howland (b. 16 September 1701, d. 6 July 1758)
MotherElizabeth Percival (b. 22 February 1704, d. 18 October 1775)

Biography

Nathaniel Howland was born on 9 October 1736 in Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts.
Last Edited15 February 2019

Mercy Howland

F, #4900, b. 15 August 1734

Parents

FatherJabez Howland (b. 16 September 1701, d. 6 July 1758)
MotherElizabeth Percival (b. 22 February 1704, d. 18 October 1775)

Biography

Mercy Howland was born on 15 August 1734 in Barnstable, Barnstable County, Massachusetts.
Last Edited15 February 2019