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Ancestors of John Burton Kaherl
3978.Jarrett Haddon, born ca. 1608 in of Salisbury, Massachusetts; died Bet. 1687 - 1689 in Amesbury, Massachusetts.He married 3979. Margaret.
3979.Margaret, born ca. 1611; died March 20, 1672/73 in Amesbury, Massachusetts.
Notes for Jarrett Haddon:
Name variations: Jared, Jerad, Jarrett, Gerhard, Gerard, Garrett; Haddon, Hadden
Family Tree Maker Online: GenealogyLibrary.com, Old Families of Salisbury and Amesbury, MA, Vol 1 by David W. Hoyt, Call Number: R929.H868v.1, Snow & Farnham, Providence, 1897, pg 191:
JARRETT [or GERHARD] HADDON [or HADDEN] of Salisbury(*) and Amesbury, "tailor" and "planter," b. ab. 1608; m. Margaret (???), who d. March 20, 1672-3[A NkS]. He recd. land in the "first division" and 1640; prob. rem. to the west side of the Powow in 1644; commoner and taxed 1650; one of the first settlers of A., 1654-5, where he recd. land 1654-'64, etc. He recd. seat in A. meeting house, 1667; but was member S. chh. 1677 and '87. He recd. "children's land" in A. for his dau. in 1659, and a "township" for one of his daus. in 1660; selectman 1680. He d. in A. ab. 1689; will Jan. 20, 1686-7; March 20, 1689-90.
Children:
2 I MARY,2 b. (???); m. ab. 1656, (2) HENRY2 BLAISDELL. +
3 II SARAH,2 b. Jan. 15, 1639-40[S]; m. 1st, (1) EDMUND1 ELLIOT; 2d, bef. Sep., 1685, (???) YOUNGLOVE.
Family Tree Maker Online: GenealogyLibrary.com: Haddon, McClure, Curry and Allied Families ,OUR HADDON, McCLURE, CURRY AND ALLIED FAMILIES, Compiled and Edited by ELIZA HADDON BREVOORT - DORIS BOND WHEELER , Vincennes, Indiana, BURKERT-WALTON CO., 1952: Page 1
EARLY RECORDS OF THE HADDON FAMILY
CHAPTER I
The Haddons came to America very early. "The name is of ancient origin. It is an English name, but is found in Scotland, Ireland and Wales-(Coat of Arms). The name has been spelled in various ways. Thus - Hedden - Hedde - Hedin - Headden - Hodden - Haddon - Haydon." Ref. - See vol. 3 - 1119 - 1145 Mass. Genealogy of the Newark, N.J., Heddens.
"Jared" or "Gerard" (Jarrett) Hadden is recorded by Savage - 1608.) He is among the first hundred members of the Boston Church, in the Militia, prior to any second arrival of freemen, May 14, 1634. He lived in Cambridge and Amesbury; was one of the first settlers in the latter place. He mentions two daughters, Sarah and Mary. (George?). Wife was(???)m.(???). Jared died in Amesbury(???)1689. Will dated Jan. 20, 1686. Wife died Mar. 20, 1672. Jared Haddon was a tailor and planter.
The Great Migration Begins, Vol I-III, by Robert C. Anderson, NEHGS ONLINE (at http://www.newenglandancestors.org)
GARRETT HADDON
ORIGIN: Unknown
MIGRATION: 1630
FIRST RESIDENCE: Boston
REMOVES: Cambridge 1632, Salisbury by 1640, Amesbury 1654
OCCUPATION: Tailor; planter.
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admitted to Boston church as member #96 [BChR 14], which would be late in 1630 or early in 1631. On 11 October 1640 "Our brother Garrett Haddon and our sister Margarett his [wife] were granted to be dismissed to the Church at Coul Chester [Salisbury]" [BChR 32].
FREEMANSHIP: 14 May 1634 (as "Jerad Hadden") [MBCR 1:369].
EDUCATION: He made his mark to his will.
OFFICES: Served occasionally on petit (1648, 1653) and grand (1667, 1674) juries [EQC 1:149, 310; 3:404; 5:293, 405]. In 1673, one of three to end small causes at Amesbury [EQC 5:165].
ESTATE: On 4 August 1634 granted an unknown number of acres in Westend Field, Cambridge [CaTR 9]. Granted a proportional share of « in the undivided meadow ground, 20 August 1635 [CaTR 13].
In the Cambridge land inventory on 5 October 1635, Haddon held three parcels of land: one house with backside and planting ground, about three acres, in the West End; three acres in West End Field; and two acres in the Great Marsh. This holding is consistent in size and location with what a single man would have. Two of these three parcels appear within a few years in the hands of William Holman [CaBOP 25, 48].
On 9 April 1662 "Jarrett Haddon & Margerite his wife" of Salisbury, planter, sold to John Eyer of Haverhill "two lots of sweepage one of them being formerly the lot of Henry Brown containing 3 acres & 66 rod ... as also another lot of sweepage containing two acres & sixteen rod ... as also another lot of sweepage containing two acres & sixteen rod"; "Margerite" is later referred to in this deed as "Mary" [NLR 1:139]. On 10 April 1662 "Jarret Haddon of Salisbury," tailor, sold to Richard Currier of Salisbury "eight acres of upland ... lying in the new town at Salisbury in the Lyon's Mouth between the land of the widow Colby & the highway leading to the great swamp" [NLR :132]. On 3 April 1663 "Jarret Haddon of Salisbury, husbandman," sold to George Carre of Salisbury, shipwright, "all that my meadow lot & flats lying & being in a place commonly called the Boggy Meadow" in Salisbury containing four acres [NLR 2:4]. On 17 April 1663 "Jarrett Haddon of Salisbury" sold to Isaac Colby of Salisbury "my forty acre lot of planting ground ... granted unto me by Salisbury new town lying within the bounds of the said town between the lots of William Huntington & the lot of Anthony Colby (late deceased) upon the champion land butting with each end upon common land" [NLR 1:165].
On 14 April 1664 "Jarrett Haddon of Salisbury, planter, sold to Thomas Sargent of the same "in consideration of the full sum of ten pound paid unto my son-in-law Edmund Elliot ... a four & twenty acre lot of upland" [NLR 2:62]. On 6 August 1667 "Jarrett Haddon of Salisbury, planter, sold to Nathanell Eastman of the same "all that my sweepage lot of marsh now lying & being at a place commonly called the beach" in Salisbury [NLR 2:98].
On 13 April 1670 "Jarret Hadden of the town of Amsberie ... planter" sold to Richard Currier of the same eight acres of land [NLR 2:178]. On the same day he sold to Richard Bartlett of Newbury, cordwainer, " a parcel of land containing two hundred acres of upland as it was laid out to me in the township of Amsberie ... being the eighteenth lot" [NLR 2:178]. In 1669 (day and month left blank) "Jaret Hadon & Margerite his wife" of Amesbury sold to John Pressie of Amesbury forty acres in Amesbury being "all that our lot of upland" [NLR 2:209].
In his will, dated 20 January 1686/7 and proved 20 March 1689/90, "Gerhard Hadden of the town of Almesbary ... being weak of body" bequeathed to "my son-in-law Herry Blasedell Senior three quarters of an acre of land ... at the northeast corner of my homelot ... also all my wearing clothes"; to "my grandson John Elliot all the rest of that part or division of my homelot ... also one half of my boggy meadow in Salisbury township"; to "my grandson Ebenezer Blaisdell, the other half of my homelot ... and the other half of my boggy meadow and my great swamp lot"; to "my grandson Henry Blasdell Junior my forty acre lot of upland on the west side of the pond meadow and two acres and a half of the pond meadow"; to "my grandson Ralph Blasdell my lot in the ox pasture and my cow and my gun"; to "Elizabeth wife of John Huntington of Almesbury in addition unto what she hath already had of me (being 6s.) 34s. more out of my estate"; "to "my loving daughter Mary Blasedell my warming pan"; to "my loving daughter Sarah Younglove my great iron kettle"; to "my granddaughter Mary Rawlins my bed on which I used to lie, with all the bedding and bedclothes"; for "full satisfaction already in hand" to "Ensigne John Wood of Almsbury ... all that land at the upper end of my home lot, be it ten acres more or less ... as also all my right in [illegible] of Merrimack River in Almsbury [illegible]"; residue to "be equally divided amongst my three grandchildren, viz: John, Jonathan and Sarah Blaisdell"; "my son-in-law Henry Blaisdell Jr. of Alsmbury to be sole executor" [EPR 304:288-89].
The inventory of the estate of Gerhard Haddon of Almsbury" was taken 1 June 1689 and totalled £181 5s., including £165 10s. in real estate: "his houselot," £80; "five acres of meadow," £30; "forty acre lot of land beyond the pond," £30; "a lot of meadow at the pond," £6; a "lot of land in the ox pasture," £10; "a division in the peeke & common right," £1 10s.; and "a great swamp lot," £8 [EPR 304:290].
BIRTH: About 1605 (deposed on 14 April 1668 "aged about sixty years," on 2 June 1668 aged sixty-three years, and on 29 September 1674 "aged sixty-nine years" [EQC 4:26, 5:401; SJC #931]).
DEATH: Amesbury between 20 January 1686/7 (date of will) and 20 March 1689/90 (probate of will).
MARRIAGE: By about 1637 Margaret _____, who was dismissed with him to the church at Salisbury in 1640. (Since she did not join the Boston church as Haddon's wife, she may well be one of the many unattached Margarets who appear as being admitted to the Boston church before 1635.) She died at Amesbury on 20 March 1672/3.
CHILDREN:
iMARY, b. say 1637; m. by 1657 Henry Blaisdell (eldest child b. Salisbury 17 October 1657).
iiSARAH, b. Salisbury 15 Jan. 1639/40; m. (1) by 1660 Edmund Eliot (only known child b. Salisbury 25 September 1660); m. (2) after 2 January 1683/4 (inventory of estate of Edmund Eliot [Hoyt 151-52]) and before 20 January 1686/7 (father's will) Samuel Younglove [Hoyt 374].
ASSOCIATIONS: His association with JOHN BOSWORTH , ANTHONY COLBY and JOSEPH REDDING implies that he may have been a servant of SIMON BRADSTREET and may have come from the vicinity of Horbling, Lincolnshire (see JOHN BOSWORTH ).
Three other persons by the name of Haddon have been claimed as relatives of Garrett, all without any supporting evidence: Ferman Haddon, George Haddon and Catherine Haddon. The first of these lived in Charlestown, and the latter two in Cambridge.
COMMENTS: Mary Rawlins and Elizabeth Huntington who received bequests in the will of Garrett Haddon were his granddaughters, daughters of his daughter Mary (Haddon) Blaisdell: Mary Blaisdell married Robert Rawlins of Amesbury, and Elizabeth Blaisdell married John Huntington of Amesbury [Hoyt 63, 83-84, 881].
More About Jarrett Haddon:
Occupation: tailor and planter
Source 1: Old Fam of Salis.Amsbury, by Hoyt, 1897pg 63
Source 2: FTM CD194, MA&ME, V1, pg 184
Source 3: Grt.Mig. (GarrettHaddon), NEHGS Vol I-III
Source 4: 1857, Early Stlrs,Salis.,MA,NEHGR 8:157
Will: January 20, 1686/87, Dated-proved, 3-20-1689
More About Margaret:
Source 1: Old Fam of Salis.Amsbury, by Hoyt, 1897
Source 2: Grt.Mig. (GarrettHaddon), NEHGS Vol I-III
Source 3: 1854, Early Stlrs,Salis.,MA,NEHGR 8:157
Child of Jarrett Haddon and Margaret is:
1989 | i. | Mary Haddon, born ca. 1634; died December 12, 1691 in Amesbury, Massachusetts; married Henry Blaisdell ca. 1657. |
3986.Thomas Stevenson, born ca. 1618 in of Cocheco (Dover), New Hampshire; died December 7, 1663 in Cocheco (now Dover), New Hampshire.He married 3987. Margaret ca. 1639.
3987.Margaret, born ca. 1620; died November 26, 1663 in Cocheco (now Dover), New Hampshire.
Notes for Thomas Stevenson:
History of The Town of Durham, New Hampshire (Oyster River Plantation) by E.S. Stackpole and L. Thompson, 1913:
Thomas Stevenson owned land on the south side of Oyster River as early as Jul 5, 1643. In 1644, 3 acres at the Oyster Point were granted to Thomas Stevenson. He was rated at Oyster River in 1648. He had a grant of three acres at Oyster Point in 1649. He was of Cocheco (Dover, NH) in 1648, 1650 and 1658.
Thomas (Stimpson) Stevenson received a grant of thirty acres of land at Oyster River in 1649 and thirty more in 1654. He was living at Oyster River in 1643 in Cocheco (Dover) NH in 1648, 1650, and 1658. Thomas died Dec 7 1663 and his wife Margaret died Nov 16, 1663. Two sons, Joseph and Thomas, were killed by Indians, probably in the massacre of 1663. Thomas on Dec 7, 1663 as was his father.
FTM CD523, Pioneers of ME and NH by Charles Henry Pope, pg 198:
STEVENSON,
Thomas, Dover, had lawsuit in 1642; taxed in 1648. His wife Mary died 26 Nov. 1663; he died 7 Dec 1663 (Dov. Hist. Coll.) Admin. of his estate was granted 28 June 1664, to his son Joseph; he chose Wm. Follett guardian, who gave bonds for payment of portions to Joseph and his brothers and sisters. Brother Bartholomew admin. on estates of Thomas and Joseph in 1694.
FTM CD523, Geneal. Dict., ME & NH by Sybil Noyes, Charles Libby, Walter Davis, GPC, Baltimore, 1979.
pg661:
THOMAS, Oyster River, owned on the so. side by July 1643, was gr. 30 a. at Oyster Point in 1649 and had ano. gr. in 1654. Lawsuit 1655. Wife Margaret d. 26 Nov., he 7 Dec. 1663. Adm. 28 June 1664 to s. Joseph, a minor. He chose as gdn. Wm Follett, who gave bond to pay the other ch. In Dec. 1667, Joseph was ord. to allow his 3 sis. and 2 bros 6 pounds apiece but to have the bros.' portions for bring them up and all the rest of the est.; Mr. F. to be reimbursed 6 pounds for physick for sis. Chapman. Ch: MARGARET, m. William Williams. JOSEPH, +/- 26 in June 1673, in 1678 and later had difficulties with Nicholas Follet and the Thomas Drews over bounds; served on j. in June 1694. Adm. on his and br. Thomas' est. gr. to br. Bartholomew 4 Aug. 1694. A p/a given by Williams's 7 wks. later recites that they wre k. by Ind., s.p. ELIZABETH, m. Robert Chapman. MARY, +/- 44 in Aug 1705, m. Enoch Hutchins. THOMAS, +/- 29 in Aug 1680, prob. nearer correc that +/- 26 in Sept. 1683, as he was drunk in 1670. BARTHOLOMEW.
Genealogical Items relating to Dover, N. H., NEHGR, 1854, Vol 8, pg 130:
Stevenson, Thomas, was in Dover before 1641; owned land, which he sold to Jonas Binns, "being next to the point at the Enterance into Oyster River, Compassed wth the Riuer eurie way only the south side, and that Joynes uppon the Land of Mr. Francis Matthewes;" was at O.R. in 1661; his wife Margaret died 26 Noiv. 1663; he died 7 Dec. 1663; "Tho. Steuenson his estat" taxed in 1661.
More About Thomas Stevenson:
Cause of Death: killed by Indians
Issue: At least 6 Children
Source 1: Durham, NH, Stackpole&Thompson, 1913
Source 2: FTM CD523Gen.Dict.ME & NH, 1979
Source 3: Pioneers of ME & NH by Charles Pope
Source 4: 1854, Geneal. Items, Dover,NH, NEHGR 8:130
More About Margaret:
Source 1: Durham, NH by Stackpole & Thompson, 1913
Source 2: 1854, Geneal. Items, Dover,NH, NEHGR 8:130
Child of Thomas Stevenson and Margaret is:
1993 | i. | Mary Stevenson, born ca. 1651 in Cocheco (now Dover), New Hampshire; died February 1723/24 in prob. Kittery, Maine; married Enoch Hutchins April 5, 1667 in Dover or Durham, New Hampshire. |
3992.John Hill, born ca. 1594 in England; died 1647 in Boston, Massachusetts.
Notes for John Hill:
History of Dover, NH by John Scales:
John moved from Plymouth, England to Boston in 1630 and was one of the grantees of "Nashway" in 1640. He was made a freeman 18 March 1642 and in the same year he received a grant of land in Dover, NH: "A Record of ye 20 Acker loets as theay waer in order given and layed out to ye inhabetance hoes names are here under menshened with the nomber of the loet to each pertickler man. As it was fowned Recorded by William Walden in a Pec of paper in ye yeir 42, wich lots as in Breadth at ye water sied 40 poell and in lenketh 80 poll into ye woods... Sameewell Haynes 15. This 15th lott was resived to John Hill, and by him sold unto Wm. ffollett as was acknowledged." John was taxed in Dover 8 Oct. 1639.
Issue-
I. JOHN b.c.1624, m.16 Jan. 1656 Boston, MA, ELIZABETH STRONG, d. after 1698 Greenland, NH
Family Tree Maker, GenealogyLibrary.com, Old Kittery and Her Families by Everett Stackpole, 1925,1903:
Pages 514-5: HILL.
John Hill moved from Plymouth to Boston in 1630. He was made freeman 18 March 1642. Another John Hill was admitted as freeman, at Boston, 6 March 1645, perhaps son of the first. The first John Hill was one of the grantees of "Nashaway" in (1) The Town Records say that land was laid out, 19 July 1694, to "Roger Dearing, Robert Mitchell, Joseph Couch and Dennis Hicks, to be divided among themselves as they see cause." There are two other similar records. It may be a division of property of the first Roger Deering among his heirs. The fact also that Joan Crafts, widow of the first Roger Deering, made her home in her old age with Sarah Hicks points to the conclusion that Dennis Hicks married Sarah Deering
1640 and died in 1647. (1) He seems to have been interested in land speculation in several places.
A John Hill was taxed in Dover, N. H., the 8th of the 10th month, 1639. This could not have been the John Hill of Dover, who in 1659 deposed that he was about thirty-five years of age, for he was, therefore, born about 1624 and would be only fifteen years of age in 1639. If born in 1624, he would have become of age in 1645, and so would well correspond to the John Hill who was admitted as freeman in Boston in that year. John Hill of Dover had wife Elizabeth, and John Hill of Boston married Elizabeth Strong, 16 Jan. 1656. The births of his children so far as known, indicate that the John of Boston was the John of Dover. It is probable that his father, the first John Hill mentioned above, acquired land in Dover and was taxed for it in 1639; that he returned to Boston and died in 1647; that his son John Hill inherited land of his father in Dover and was taxed for it in 1650; that he married Elizabeth Strong in Boston in 1656 and settled in Dover at once, where he was taxed in 1657 and is often mentioned till 1685.(2)
John Hill lived in that part of Dover called Oyster River, now Durham, N. H. He was a grand juryman in 1668 and in 1671.
(1) Drake's Boston, p. 132. Cf. Davis' Landmarks of Plymouth. See also Drake's Boston, pp. 278, 285, 291 and 313. Suffolk Deeds, Vol. VI. 224. Mass. Colony Records, Vol. II. pp. 136, 212.
(2) Hist. Memoranda of Ancient Dover, pp. 353, 350, 349, 356, 363. Some have supposed that John Hill of Dover was a brother to Valentine Hill of that place. This is disproved by the fact that John, brother of Valentine Hill, was a merchant of London. His will, dated 14 Dec. 1665, shows plainly that he was not the John Hill of Dover, N. H. See Water's Gleanings. Vol. I. 5.
The Great Migration Begins, Vol. I-III by Robert C. Anderson, NEHGS ONLINE (http://www.newenglandancestry.org)
JOHN HILL
Governor William Bradford and the Assistants of Plymouth Colony wrote on 6 February 1631/2 to their Massachusetts Bay counterparts saying "Now there are diverse gone from hence, to dwell and inhabit with you, as Clement Brigges, John Hill, John Eddy, Daniel Ray, etc., the which if either you, or they desire their dismissions, we shall be ready to give them" [WP 3:65].
COMMENTS: CLEMENT BRIGGS went to Weymouth, JOHN EDDY went to Watertown and DANIEL RAY went to Salem. With many John Hills in evidence in the 1630s, it is difficult to determine which, if any of them, the Plymouth man might be. While the Dorchester John Hill appearing as an abutter in 1633/4 is a strong possibility [DTR 5], no firm identification is made here.
More About John Hill:
Emigration: 1630, From Plymouth, England to New England
Source 1: Hist. of Dover by Scales
Source 2: Old Kittery & Fam's, Stackpole, 1925, 1903, pg 514-5
Source 3: Grt.Mig.,(John Hill), NEHGS ONLINE Vol I-III
Child of John Hill is:
1996 | i. | John Hill, born 1624 in England; died Aft. 1698 in Greenland, New Hampshire; married Elizabeth Strong November 16, 1656 in Boston, Massachusetts. |
Page 159 of 637
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