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Descendants of Michael Pierce
1.Michael1 Pierce1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 was born 1615 in probably Bristol, England, and died 26 March 1676 in Cedar Falls, Rhode Island.He married (1) Persis Eames Bet. 1642 - 1643 in Charlestown, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts, daughter of Anthony Eames and Margery Pierce.He married (2) Anna (Allen) James Abt. 1663.
Notes for Michael Pierce:
Michael PIERCE was born about 1615 in England, and emigrated to America in about 1645. He was possibly the brother of Captain William Pierce of London.He settled in Hingham, Massachusetts, in 1646, and moved to Scituate, Mass. the following year.His first wife was Persis, daughter or Anthony Eames of Hingham. She died in 1662 and he married Anna James who is named in his will.He was commissioned a Captain by the Colony Court in 1669.
He was killed during King Phillip's War, a bloody conflict between the English colonists and the Narragansett Indians which began in 1675.On Sunday morningMarch 26, 1676, after receiving word that a party of the enemy lay near Blackstone's house at Study Hill in Cumberland, he marched from Rehoboth, leading a company of 63 English and 20 friendly Wampanoag Indians. Upon reaching a ravine near Attleborough Gore, a point on the Blackstone River above Pawtucket Falls, he and his company were ambushed by about 500 to 700 Narragansett Indians led by chief sachem Canonchet.According to one account related by Hon. Edwin C. Pierce of Providence, the English retreated across the river to set up a defense on the west bank (now part of the City of Central Falls), but were attacked by a blocking force of about 300 Indians.Pierce formed his men into a circle and they continued to fight in ever decreasing numbers for about two hours, until only a few remained.Pierce was killed early in the battle. A few of the Wampanoags managed to escape by disguising themselves as attackers.Nine English were captured and taken to a spot in Cumberland, RI, now called Nine Men's Misery, and tortured to death. (Monument on grounds of Edward J. Hayden Library, Diamond Rd.) Arriving too late, a relief force found and buried the bodies of the nine.A few days later, Canonchet was captured and executed.
Another account of Michael Pierce's battle with the Indians was abstracted from Narratives of the Indian Wars 1675-1699 edited by Charles H. Lincoln, Ph.D:
Sunday the 26th of March was sadly remarkable to us for the Tidings of a very deplorable Disaster brought unto Boston about 5 a Cloak that Afternoon, by a Post from Dedham, viz., that Captain Pierce (of) Scituate, in Plimmouth Colony, having Intelligence in his Garrison at Seaconicke, that a Party of the Enemy lay near Mr. Blackstones, went forth with 63 English and twenty of the Cape Indians, (who had all along continued faithful, and joyned with them;) and upon their March, discovered rambling in an obscure woody Place, four or five Indians, who, in getting away from us, halted, as if they had been lame or wounded. But our Men had pursued them but a little Way into the Woods, before they found them to be only Decoys to draw them into their Ambuscade:for on a Sudden, they discovered about 500 Indians, who in very good order, furiously attacqued them, being as readily received by ours. So that the Fight began to be very fierce and dubious, and our Men had made the Enemy begin to retreat but so slowly that it scarce deserved that Name, when a fresh Company of about 400 Indians came in; so that the English and their few Indian Friends were quite surrounded, and beset on every Side. Yet they made a brave Resistance, for about two Hours:during all that Time they did great Execution upon the Enemy, whom they kept at a Distance, and themselves in Order.For Captain Pierce cast his 63 English and 20 Indians into a Ring, and fought Back to Back, and were double-double Distance, all in a Ring, whilst the Indians were as thick as they could stand, thirty deep.Overpowered with those numbers, the said Captain, and 55 of his English and ten of their Indian Friends were slain upon the Place; which, in such a Cause, and upon such Disadvantages, may certainly be stiled "The Bed of Honour."However, they sold their worthy Lives at a gallant Rate; it being affirmed by those few that (not without wonderful Difficulty, and many Wounds,) made their Escape, that the Indians lost as many Fighting Men, (not counting Women and Children,) in this Engagement, as were killed at the Battle in the Swamp, near Narraganset, mentioned in our last Letter, which were generally computed to be above three Hundred.
The following was taken from an historical address given by Hon. Edwin C. Pierce at the dedication exercises marking the site of "Pierce's Fight" in Central Falls, Rhode Island, on Saturday, Sept. 21, 1907:
"This is historic ground.It is the scene of one of the most tragic and most heroic events in early New England history.Here, in 1676, just a hundred years before the Declaration of American independence, with a valor as distinguished as that of the Greek heroes at old Thermopylae, although unvictorious, our ancestors, undaunted, fronted inevitable defeat and certain death in hand-to-hand conflict with an outnumbering savage foe.Here they died upon the Bed of Honor.
Here we, their descendants, come, two hundred and thirty-one years after the day of blood and battle on which they painfully laid down their lives for their countrymen and for posterity, to celebrate their brave sacrifice, to erect here a memorial of their heroic devotion, and to consider and, if we may, profitably interpret the lessons to be drawn from the history of that tragic event and that serious and strenuous time.
"Let us first review the facts that happened here, the actualities of the tragedy, the fortitude and desperate valor, unsurpassed in the annals of warfare, here displayed; and then consider somewhat the war in which Pierce's Fight was a bloody day, the merits of the war, the cause for which they died.
"The day of Pierce's Fight was Sunday, March 26th, 1676.It was in the midst of Philip's War.That war, the bloody and decisive struggle between the English colonists and the Indians, had been raging for nearly a year.The Narragansetts, that proud and powerful tribe with whom Roger Williams and the Rhode Island and Providence colonists had long maintained unbroken peace and friendship, had at last been drawn into hostilities towards the colonists.In December, 1675, the Narragansetts had been attacked in their strong fort in South Kingstown, defeated, slaughtered by hundreds, and their power forever broken.With the courage of despair, the still formidable remnant of the Narragansett warriors took the warpath early in the Spring of 1676, under their brave chief, who knew not fear, Nanunteenoo, better known as Canonchet, son of the famous Miantonomi.
The Narragansetts, while renewing, and with sincerity so far as may be judged, to Roger Williams pledges of immunity for him did not withhold their vengeance from settlers in Rhode Island.Parties of warriors penetrated into Plymouth Colony, ravaging and killing.Dwelling in continual alarm, the Plymouth Colony was aroused to action for the defense of the homes and the lives of its people.This defense could only be effectually made, the bloody invasion of the Plymouth country could only be repelled, by waging offensive war against the Narragansetts, by pursuing the marauding bands and attacking them wherever they might be found in their forest fastnesses.
"The duty of leading in the pursuit and attack of the Narragansetts was assigned to Captain Michael Pierce, of Scituate, that beautiful town on the Massachusetts Bay northward from Plymouth.More than twenty years before, the chivalric captain of Plymouth, of the early days, Myles Standish, had been borne to his grave in fair Duxbury, overlooked by Captain's Hill on which a stately monument has been reared in his honor.
"Now, when first afterwards occasion arose for the military defense of the Plymouth Colony, Michael Pierce, of Scituate, appears as the successor of him who so long and so worthily wielded the sword of Gideon for that defense.At the outbreak of Philip's War, Michael Pierce was about sixty years of age, having been born in England about the year 1615.He came to the Plymouth Colony about the year 1645, a quarter of a century after the landing of the Pilgrims, and settled almost immediately in Scituate, where he ever after resided.He appears to have been a brother of that John Pierce of London, who secured a patent, or royal grant, for New England, before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, which patent he assigned to the Plymouth Company after their settlement had been effected.He was also, according to the early historians of New England, a brother of that Captain William Pierce who was the most famous master of ships that came to the New England coast; the warm friend of Winslow and Bradford, who commanded the Mayflower in New England waters, although not on her first famous voyage, the "Charity" when she brought Winslow and the first cattle, the "Lion" when she arrived with provisions in the crisis of the famine, Roger Williams being his passenger upon that memorable occasion, and who while fighting the Spaniards in the West Indies was mortally wounded and found his grave in the ocean, on which he had made his long and honorable career.Michael Pierce was with the Plymouth forces in the bloody Narragansett fight in South Kingstown in December 1675.Earlier in that year he made his will which is on record in the Plymouth Colony records, the preamble of which is:
'I, Michael Pierce of Scituate, in the government of New Plymouth in America, being now by the appointment of God, going out to war against the Indians doe make this my last will and testament.'
"Acting under orders from the Plymouth Colony, Captain Pierce with a company comprising about fifty Englishmen and twenty friendly Cape Indians, started in pursuit of the marauding Narragansetts.The Plymouth band proceeded without encounter with the foe as far as the Rehoboth settlement which was on the extreme western boundry of the Plymouth Colony, separated from the Providence Colony by the Seekonk.
"The men of Rehoboth were living in constant expectation of attack from the hostile Indians, and the arrival of Captain Pierce's company must have been most welcome.
"Making his temporary headquarters at Rehoboth, Captain Pierce on Saturday, the 25 of March, sallied forth with a small party of his men in search of the hostiles.Discovering the Narragansetts in considerable force the colonials attacked and, without loss to themselves, inflicted considerable losses upon the enemy.Captain Pierce on this day, does not appear wanting in prudence.Rev.Noah Newman of Rehoboth in a letter written the next day, after recounting that Captain Pierce "upon discovering the enemy, fought him, without damage to himself, and judged that he had considerably damnified them," goes on to say:
'Yet he being of no great force, chose rather to retreat and go
out the next morning, with a recruit of men; and accordingly he did, taking pilots from us, that were acquainted with the ground.'
"And the account proceeds: 'But it pleased the Sovereign God so to order it, that they were enclosed with a great multitude of the enemy which hath slain fifty-two of our Englishmen and eleven Indians--18 from Scituate, including Capt.Pierce; Marshfield, 9; Duxbury, 4; Sandwich, 5; Barnstable, 6; Yarmouth, 5; Eastham, 4. Thomas Mann is just returned with a sore wound.'
"The colonial captain had received intelligence that a party of the enemy lay near Blackstone's house at Study Hill in Cumberland, and appears not to have been daunted by the apprehension reasonably to have been entertained that Canonchet with all the warriors of the Narragansett nation might be close at hand, preparing an ambuscade.The Plymouth captain, however, did not omit to summon all the force upon which he could call.Before leaving Rehoboth to march to the attack, he despatched a messenger to Captain Andrew Edmunds, of Providence, with a letter asking Edmunds to meet him at a spot above Pawtucket, on the river, and assist him in the enterprise.The messenger reached Providence on Sunday morning, but either there was delay in the delivery of the letter or the Providence men were not willing to leave Providence undefended.At any rate no reenforcement from Providence reached the Plymouth colonials.
As the ambuscade was near Quinsniket, there can be no doubt that Canonchet with perhaps seven hundred warriors of the brave and now utterly desperate Narragansett nation had made this rocky fastness his base of operations.There, under the overhanging rock of the hill top the savage chieftain held his council fire and the plan for the ambuscade was laid.The sortie of the colonials from Rehoboth on Saturday must have been reported to Canonchet, and he must have judged that encouraged by their success, the English would continue their advance, and accordingly he prepared to ambush, overwhelm and annihilate them.
"Early on Sunday morning the colonials marched from Rehoboth.Their number, recruited at Rehoboth, amounted to a few over sixty English and about twenty friendly Wampanoags from the Cape.They doubtless proceeded across the Seekonk plains and skirted the east bank of the Blackstone until they reached a point on the river above Pawtucket Falls where the river was fordable, the territory at that point being then called the Attleborough Gore.The territory on the west bank of the river is now in Central Falls.There can be no doubt as to the spot because at no other place on the river could a large body of men approach a ford.At this point the ford was approached through a ravine having a wide level ground on either side of which rose a wood crowned hill.The hills have long since been leveled.The plan of Canonchet was to draw the colonials into this defile and then attack them from the hills and to cut off the retreat by quickly throwing a strong force in their rear.As a decoy a few Indians showed themselves rambling in a wood.They fled at the approach of the colonials, limping as they ran.The colonials supposed them to have been wounded in the fight of Saturday and gave chase.There is uncertainty from the narratives whether these decoys were seen on the west bank of the river or the east.One story is that they were seen on the west bank by a party which had pushed across the river in advance of the main body of the colonials, and there is probability in this because prudence would dictate that in warfare with a foe so cunning, an advance party would be thrown across the river.
"An experienced Indian fighter like Captain Church would.doubtless have sent his spies upon the hills on the east bank before entering the ravine.
It is probable that as at that time of the year only the evergreens of the forest were in leaf, the colonials were beguiled into a sense of security, not deeming it possible for the enemy to lie in ambush in great numbers, and advanced with less caution than if it had been later in the season.Doubtless they swept the low hills with their eyes, and doubtless the foe, with the exception of a concealed spy, lay a considerable distance back from the brow flat upon the ground and covered by dry leaves and hidden behind rocks and trees.
"At any rate, Captain Pierce led his company into the ravine and approached the river, probably following the advance party of his men which had crossed in safety.Suddenly the silence was rent with savage cries, and springing from their concealment on the commanding hills, the Narragansetts directed their deadly and painfully wounding arrows upon the colonials who were thus entrapped.Canonchet with all his warriors was upon them.The highest estimate of the number of the Narragansetts that attacked Capt. Pierce's little force is about a thousand.Other narratives estimate six or seven hundred.If there were six hundred, the colonials must have realized that their doom was sealed, except indeed for the hope that Capt. Edmunds would shortly arrive with his Providence company. instantly the colonial captain, realized that his only chance lay in getting out of the defile by crossing the river.On the west bank there was an open, or at least not heavily wooded, plain, in which his men would be out of arrow shot from the hills and where they could at least make a better defense than was possible in the ravine.Then, too, they would be on the side on which Capt. Edmunds might be marching to their aid.It seems probable that in order to make the decoy successful, the warriors on the west side lay in ambush a good distance from the river, so that the colonials were able to cross the river, probably not without loss, and gain the open space where they proposed to make their stand.
"While the enemy was swarming down the ravine and across the river in
hot pursuit, a band of at least three hundred Narragansetts rushed upon the colonials from their concealment on the west side, so that the colonials were now completely surrounded.Capt.Pierce now threw his men into a circle placing his men in ranks, back to back and facing the foe they thus fought to the death.
No banners waved, no martial music stimulated their ardor, no sounds except the reverberations of musketry and the terrifying yells of the infuriated warriors who encompassed them about.The colonials were indeed better supplied with firearms than the enemy, but they were of the ancient, slow firing sort, while the arrows of the foe were directed against them from behind trees and rocks with unerring aim, and tomahawks hurled through the air by the powerful savage were felling them to the ground.Resolved to sell their lives as as dear a rate as possible, the colonials stood their ground with ever thinning ranks, for about two hours, keeping themselves in order and the enemy at a little distance.
The formation of the order of battle is related by a chronicle of the time in these words:
'Captain Pierce cast his sixty-three English and twenty Indians into a ring, and six fought back to back, and were double, double distance all in one ring, whilst the Indians were as thick as they could stand thirty deep.'
"Imagine the horror of that Sunday morning scene on the bank of the Blackstone.It was both a fight and a massacre.See that circle of determined men fighting their forlorn hope!See the circle ever contracting as the men fall in their places!The dead lie thick upon the ground, and how many fall covered with bleeding arrow wounds which disable but do not immediately kill!Doubtless as the circle narrows, those who are still in the language of the old chronicle 'keeping the enemy at a distance and themselves in order,' pull their wounded and dying comrades within the circle to save them to the last from the tomahawks of the nearer drawing foe.Sustained for the first hour by the hope that succor from Providence would come, as the second hour wears on, that hope has died in their hearts.Less than half of the original circle still survive and they are bleeding, exhausted and despairing.Their captain lies dead on the field.Michael Pierce fell early in the fight.But to soldiers such as these it little matters that the leader falls.They fight on, still keeping themselves in order.In ordinary warfare the soldier when clearly overpowered may either retreat or surrender, and surrendering save his life.They could not retreat, and it was better to die than surrender.They can now do less execution upon the enemy and the infuriated savages are rushing upon them with uplifted tomahawk.Still the men of Plymouth stand in order and hold at bay for yet a little longer the warriors of Canonchet.And with them to the end stand their faithful Indian allies."The effectiveness of the defence appears by the great loss suffered by the Narragansetts.Some of them taken prisoners a few days later confessed that one hundred and forty were killed before their victory was won.Drake's Indian Chronicle estimates the loss of the Narragansetts at above three hundred, but this is probably an exaggeration.
"At last when, as the tradition is, scarcely twenty of the colonials maintain their footing, they give over futile resistance and break and run, each man for himself.Nine of them are seized and made captive.One of the friendly Indians, Amos, fought until the colonials had ceased to fight and then by blacking his face with powder, as he saw the Narragansetts had done, mingled with them and escaped.A few other of Capt.Pierce's Indians and fewer still of the Englishmen, perhaps three or four, by artifice and good fortune, managed to escape.
The Narragansetts proceeded with their prisoners to the spot in Cumberland now called "Nine Men's Misery." There, according to tradition, the captives were seated upon a rock, a fire lighted, and the war dance preparatory to the torture was begun.The chronicles say that, differing among themselves as to the mode of torture, the Indians dispached their prisoners with the tomahawk.But, of what happened at Nine Men's Misery there is no real evidence.The bodies of the prisoners were found and buried by the English a little later, and a monumental pile of stones erected in honor of the brave and unfortunate men.
"We may imagine the wild and vengeful joy with which the warriors of Canonchet celebrated their victory in their fastness at Quinsniket.Encouraged by their success, the very next day after the fight the Narragansetts descended upon Rehoboth and burned forty houses, and before the end of March Providence was attacked and fifty-four buildings burned.
"Arnold's History narrates as follows:
'Two places in the town had been fortified mainly through the efforts of Roger Williams, who, although severity-seven years of age, accepted the commission of Captain.A tradition is preserved, that when the enemy approached the town the venerable captain went out alone to meet and remonstrate with them.'Massachusetts,O said he 'can raise thousands of men at this moment, and if you kill them, the King of England will supply their places as fast as they fall.' 'Well, let them come,' was the reply, 'we are ready for them.But as for you, brother Williams, you are a good man; you have been kind to us many years; not a hair of your head shall be touched.' The savages were true to their ancient friend.He was not harmed, but the town was nearly destroyed.'
"The capture of Canonchet soon followed, on the 4th of April.Arnold thus relates this decisive event:
'Four companies of Connecticut volunteers, with three of Indians, immediately marched to attach Canonchet.Capt.George Denison of Stonington, who led one of the companies, was conspicuous for his zeal and bravery.This force surprised Canonchet near the scene of Pierce's massacre at
Pawtucket, and a rout ensued.The Sachem fled, but having slipped in wading the river, was overtaken on the opposite bank by a Pequot and surrendered without resistance.The first Englishman who came up to him was a young man named Robert Stanton, who put some questions to the royal captive.'You much child!Let your brother or chief come.Him I will answer!' was the contemptuous reply after regarding the youth for a moment in silence.His life was offered him on condition of the submission of his tribe.He treated the offer with calm disdain and when it was urged upon him, desired 'to hear no more about it.' He was sent in charge of Capt.Denison to Stonington, where a council of war condemned him to be shot.When informed that he must die, he made this memorable answer, which may challenge the loftiest sentiment recorded in classic or modern history. 'I like it well; I shall die before my heart is soft, or I have said anything unworthy of myself."'
Capt. Pierce's will, dated Jan 15,1675, was proved Jul. 22, 1676. It provided as follows:
I, Michael Pierce of Scituate, in the government of New Plymouth in America,being now by the appointment of God going out to war, against the Indians, doe make this my last will and testament: First I do committ myself and wayes unto the Eternal God; nextly concerning that estate which God has blessed me with, I thus dispose. First I give unto my beloved wife Annah Pierce, during her life, the westward end of my now dwelling house in Scituate aforesaid which I last built to dwell in, and the bed in it, with what appertenances to it, to use and dispose of, as she shall see cause, and the one half of my other household stuff for her use during her life, and then to be disposed of to my children as she shall see cause. Also my will is that for my wifes yearly maintenance, that my son Benjamin Pierce shall pay unto her twelve pounds per year, one half in money and the other half in provisions, and also sufficient firewood for her use in the house during her life; and I give unto my son Benjamin aforesaid my now dwelling house and barn in Scituate afroesaid, and all the land which I have in Scituate excepting that I bought of Benjamin Bates of Hingham, and that which I bought of William James of Scituate and excepting the abovesaid westerly end of my abovesaid house, during my wife's life as abovesaid, out of which abovesaid Estate in house and lands given to my son Benjamin, he shall pay unto my aforesaid wife for her maintenance twelve pounds a year, as abovesaid during her life, and sufficient firewood also as abovesaid. And I give unto my son John Pierce all my lands in Hingham, in the Massachusetts, and my land in Scituate which I bought of William James, of Scituate, paying out of it to my son Ephraim's two children Eserikum Pierce and Ephraim Pierce, to each of them fifteen pounds at the age of twenty and one years; provided that neither my son Ephraim aforesaid, nor either of his after him, or any by or under him, shall go about to molest my said John of or upon the attempt of the three or four acres of meadow land in Hingham aforesaid which my father gave unto my said son Ephraim which is not yet so fully confirmed to me as by my son Ephraim's promise it should have been.
Also I give unto my aforesaid son Benjamin all my movable estate in cattle and boats, and household goods, and such like, excepting that which I have disposed of to my wife as abovesaid, out of which said movable estate my said son Benjamin shall pay these legacies which I give to my children as followeth:
first I give unto my son Ephraim Pierce, five pounds.
2I give unto my daughter, Abigail Holbrook five pounds.
3I give unto my daughter, Elizabeth Pierce 30 pounds.
4I give unto my daughter, Sarah Pierce 30 pounds.
5I give unto my daughter, Anna Pierce, fifty pounds.
6I give unto my daughter, Mary Holbrook, 20 pounds.
7I give unto my daughter, Abiah Pierce, thirty pounds.
8I give unto my daughter, Ruth Pierce, thirty pounds.
9I give unto my daughter, Persis Pierce, 50 pounds.
Also I give unto my grandchild Elizabeth Holbrook five pounds to be paid her by my son Benjamin aforesaid at her day of marriage or 21 yers old.
Also I give unto my grandchild Abigail Holbrook five pounds, to be paid her by my son John Pierce aforesaid at her day of marriage, or twenty-one years of age.
Also my will is, that if it should please God that my beloved wife
aforesaid should be afflicted with lameness or sickness so that the abovesaid
12 income be not sufficient to maintain her in comfortable manner, that then
what shall be meet by my overseers to be added for her comfortable maintenance
shall be equally payed her yearly by my son Benjamin Pierce and my son John of that estate which I have given them as aforesaid.
Also I make my abovesaid wife my executrix and my son Benjamin Pierce abovesaid my executor of my last will and testament, and also I the abovesaid Michael Pierce my truly and will beloved friends Cornett Robert Statson and Isaac __________ and my brother Mark Jennes and my brother Charles Stockbridge overseers or witnesses of this my abovesaid last will and testament. In witness wereof I set my hand and seal this fifteenth of January 1675.
Witnesses: Benjamin WoodworthMichael Pierce
Charles Stockbridge
More About Persis Eames:
Date born 2: 1621
Died 2: 31 December 1662, Scituate, Mass
Notes for Anna (Allen) James:
Widow Anna James and family resided in Marshfield in 1650.She married Capt. Michael Pierce abt. 1663.
Children of Michael Pierce and Persis Eames are:
| + | 2 | i. | Abigail2 Pierce, born in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died 29 September 1723 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. | |
| 3 | ii. | Persis Pierce, born 7 January 1644/45 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died 1646; Stepchild. | ||
| + | 4 | iii. | Benjamin Pierce, born 1646; died 1730. | |
| + | 5 | iv. | Ephraim Pierce, born 1647 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died 14 September 1719 in Warwick, Kent, Rhode Island. | |
| 6 | v. | Elizabeth Pierce, born Abt. 1652 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts; Stepchild.She married Holbrook Abt. 1673 in of Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. |
| More About Elizabeth Pierce: Date born 2: Abt. 1652 |
| 7 | vi. | Deborah Pierce, born Abt. 1653 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. | ||
| 8 | vii. | Anna Pierce, born Abt. 1657 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. |
| More About Anna Pierce: Date born 2: Abt. 1657 |
| + | 9 | viii. | John Pierce, born Abt. 1660; died June 1738. | |
| 10 | ix. | Persis Pierce, born Abt. 1662 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts; died 3 December 1695.She married Richard Garrett 3 December 1695 in of Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. |