Ancestors of David Alfred ANTHES

Fourteenth Generation

(Continued)


15542. William TRAVIS was born 1564 in Horbling, Lincolnshire, England. He died 22 Apr 1635 in , Horbling, Lincolnshire, England and was buried before 17 Jun 1635. William married William Mrs. [Parents]

SURN Travis
GIVN William
AFN 9GPT-S1
_UID D4AD51E5826EF14390377395C361703B79EF
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
DATE 23 Dec 2000
TIME 00:00:00

15543. William Mrs was born about 1568 in Horbling, Lincolnshire, England.

GIVN William Mrs
AFN 9GPT-T6
_UID E7E7A29E14629044B3981C8C8393193EB85E
From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
DATE 23 Dec 2000
TIME 00:00:00

[Child]


15552. William READ [JR] was born 1535 in Folkestone, Kent, England. He died 20 Jan 1566 and was buried 17 Apr 1567. William married Rebecca Mince MENNIS. [Parents]

15553. Rebecca Mince MENNIS was born 1540 in , Folkestone, Kent, England. [Parents]

This individual has the following other parents in the Ancestral File:
Mathew /MENNIS/ (AFN:9GMH-X4) and Unknown
Mathew /MENNIS/ (AFN:9GMH-X4) and Unknown

[Child]


15554. Michael HENEAGE [Esquire] was born 27 Sep 1540 in London, London, England. He died 29 Dec 1600 and was buried 1 Jan 1600/1601 in Cathedral Church, St. Paul'S, London, England. Michael married Grace HONYWOOD on 12 Aug 1577 in , Bowchurch, London, England. [Parents]

15555. Grace HONYWOOD was born about 1556 in Charing, Kent, England. She died 1620/1621. [Parents]

[Child]


15560. Robert PECK Jr. was born 28 Nov 1548 in Beccles, Suffolk, England and was christened 28 Nov 1548 in Beccles, Suffolk, England. He died 22 Mar 1593 in Beccles, Suffolk, England and was buried 10 Nov 1598 in Beccles, Suffolk, England. Robert married Ellen Helen BABB BABBS on 22 Jul 1573 in of, Beccles, Suffolk, England. [Parents]

GIVN Robert
SURN Peck
NSFX Jr.
AFN 2RN7-LR
DATE 6 MAY 2000
TIME 23:12:50

15561. Ellen Helen BABB BABBS was born Sep 1546 in Guildford, Surrey, Eng. and was christened 15 Sep 1546 in St. Mary, Guildford, Surrey, England. She died 31 Oct 1614 in Beccles, Suffolk, England and was buried 31 Oct 1614 in Beccles, Sf, Eng. [Parents]

GIVN Ellen (Helen)
SURN Babb (Babbs)
AFN 2RN7-MX
DATE 18 JAN 2000
TIME 00:00:00

[Child]


15562. John CLARK was born 1558/1560 in of Hingham, Norfolk, Eng.. He died 6 Jun 1615 in Hingham, Norfolk, England and was buried 6 Jun 1615 in Hingham, Norfolk, Eng.. John married Elizabeth in Hingham, Norfolk, England. [Parents]

GIVN John
SURN Clark
AFN 4TQQ-05
DATE 6 MAY 2000
TIME 23:27:51

15563. Elizabeth was born 1563/1564 in of Hingham, Norfolk, England. She died 11 Apr 1602 in Hingham, Norfolk, , Eng and was buried 11 Apr 1602 in Hingham, Norfolk, Eng.. [Parents]

GIVN Elizabeth
AFN 4TQQ-1B
DATE 6 MAY 2000
TIME 23:27:51

[Child]


15572. William BLISS was born about 1560 in Daventry, , England. He died 1636 in Rehobeth, Bristol, Massachusetts. William married William Mrs BLISS about 1580 in Daventry, , England. [Parents]

GIVN William
SURN Bliss
AFN 1BR9-PDF
DATE 18 JAN 2000
TIME 00:00:00

15573. William Mrs BLISS was born about 1560 in Daventry, , England.

GIVN William Mrs
SURN Bliss
AFN 1BR9-PFM
DATE 18 JAN 2000
TIME 00:00:00

[Child]


15574. Frank John WHEATLEY [Captain] was born Mar 1562 in of, Tingsboro, Somerset, England. He died after 1595 in Maiden Newton, Dorset, England, Uk. Frank married Mary FIENES in Maiden, Newton, Dorset, England. [Parents]

GIVN Frank (John)
SURN Wheatley
NSFX [Captain]
AFN 8KK9-RD
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

GIVN Frank (John)
SURN Wheatley
NSFX [Captain]
AFN 8KK9-RD
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

15575. Mary FIENES was born 1566 in of, Maiden Newton, Dorsetshire, England and was christened 22 Aug 1591 in Maiden Newton, Dorsetshire, Eng.. She died after 1595 in Maiden Newton, Dorset, England. [Parents]

GIVN Mary
SURN Fienes
AFN 8MJQ-K6
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

GIVN Mary
SURN Fienes
AFN 8MJQ-K6
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

[Child]


15576. Thomas COWPER was born about 1580 in Hingham, Norfolk, England. He died in Hingham, Norfolk, England. Thomas married Margaret. [Parents]

GIVN Thomas
SURN Cowper
AFN 2RN9-CT
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

15577. Margaret was born about 1558 in Hingham, Norfolk, England.

GIVN Margaret
AFN 2RN9-D1
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

[Child]


15578. Zaccheus BOSWORTH was born 1576 in Hingham, Norfolk, England.

GIVN Zaccheus
SURN Bosworth
AFN 189H-RK2
DATE 11 JUL 1999
TIME 01:00:00

[Child]


15632. John FOGG was born before 2 Oct 1580 in Epping, Essex, England. He died Jan 1627/1628. John married Mary LEGATE. [Parents]

15633. Mary LEGATE was born before 12 May 1594 in Theydon, Garnon, Essex, England. [Parents]

[Child]


15634. Roger SHAW 1 was born 2 26 Aug 1584 in London, England. He died 3 29 May 1661 in Hampton, Rockingham, NH. Roger married Anne on SAY 1630. [Parents]

Copyright 2001 by J.C.Bryan. All Rights Reserved.
Information on this person may be used for private, non-commercial research only. No part may be copied or reproduced in ANY format for profit.

15635. Anne 1 was born 2 1610. She died 3 28 Jan 1661 in Hampton, Rockingham, NH.

Copyright 2001 by J.C.Bryan. All Rights Reserved.
Information on this person may be used for private, non-commercial research only. No part may be copied or reproduced in ANY format for profit.

[Child]


15640. Thomas HANSCOM was born 1593 in , Sutton, Bedfordshire, England and was christened 10 Sep 1598 in , Shillington, Bedfordshire, England. He died after 1630 in , , Bedfordshire, England. Thomas married CLAYTON. [Parents]

15641. CLAYTON was born about 1601 in of, Shillingham, Bedfordshire, England.

[Child]


15648. George MARCH. [Parents]


Data provided by Barbara Pelton, P.O. Box 431, Newbury Ohio 44065 Email address: bemer@nacs.net

[Child]


15650. John KNIGHT was born before 30 Jan 1596 in Romsey, Hants, ENG. He died 22 May 1674 in Charlestown, Middlesex, MA. John married Elizabeth VINCENTS on 29 Mar 1624 in Romsey, Hants, ENG. [Parents]

15651. Elizabeth VINCENTS was born before 30 Jan 1596 in Romsey, Hants, ENG. She died 20 Mar 1644 in Newbury, Essex, MA. [Parents]

[Child]


15652. Richard WALKER Captain was born 1611 in Wimbledon, , , England. He died 13 May 1687 in Lynn, , Massachusetts and was buried 16 May 1687 in Lynn, , Massachusetts. Richard married Sarah HEMPSTEAD about 1641. [Parents]

Richard, of Lynn, Massachusetts was married twice, his second wifebeing a
Sarah Hempstead. Some people believe, however, that his second wifewas
really Jane Talmadge, sister of his first wife. Richard is thefountain of
many of the Walkers of New Hampshire and of Maine. Richard's parentsare
not identified; however, it is plausable that he is the son of Richard
Walker who joined the London Artillary Company is 1622 and wasprobably a
native of Wimbledon, Surrey County, now a resident suburb of London,
better known for its tennis matches. Governow Winthrop mentions himas
being at Salem, where he landed as early as 1629, somewhat ahead ofthe
numerous English emigrants who came in Winthrop's fleet. Evidence ofhis
special friendship with John Endicott supports the conjecture that he
reached Salem as one of Endicott's band, probably of those who camethe
second season. If this be so, then he would have arrived on June 30,
1629, under Francis Higginson. This is very possible for he would have
been 18 years old at the time, as proven by court testimony yearslater.
He resided in Salem for only a year, but during that time he acquired51
acres of land which he subsequently sold to Richard Saltonstall, who
disposed of it in 1634 to Hugh Gunnison. It appears that Richard had
familiarity with military affairs before arriving in Salem, for in1630,
when the Lynn Train Band was formed, its officers, named by JohnEndicott,
Governor of the Mass. Bay Colony, were: Captain, Richard Wright,
Lieutenant, Daniel Howe, and Ensign, Richard Walker. Richard had also
been present in 1629-30 with a Thomas Dexter and others when Dexter
bargained with "Blacke Will" at Nahant and gave the Indian a suit of
clothes for a large tract of land there. This we know from his sworn
testimony in court.

When the Train Band had been in commission about two years, hostile
Tarratine Indians from the Penobscot region advanced in war paint on a
vengeful raid for an offense against them by Masconomo, the sagamoreof
nearby Ipswich. In late September the settlers of Lynn heard that healso
planned a raid on them. Members of the Train Band were thereforedetailed
to keep watch. One evening about midnight Ensign Walker was on guard,and
he heard bushes crack near him, and he felt an arrow pass though hiscoat
and "buff waistcoat." He called the Guard and returned to the placewhen
another arrow was shot through his clothes "betwixt his legges." Itbeing
imprudent to proceed further against a concealed enemy, the Ensigncalled
off the search till morning. The people then assembled and discharged
their two sakers (cannon) into the woods. The affair wascommemorated,
with variations of text, in several early records. A Woburn poet inlater
years wrote:

He fought the Eastern Indians there Where poisoned arrows filled theair
And two of which those savage foes Lodged in Captain Walker's clothes.

The passage of time enhances the story, for the arrows have now become
poisoned and the ensign has been promoted to captain. Richard indeedwas
to be promoted to captain of a Train Band in later years, and it is
possible that the above was written after that time.

In 1630 Richard joined with those who had begun to explore some five
miles westward, particularly at Saugus (Lynn), founded by these same
explorers in 1629. He selected land on "Walker's Plain", as it becameto
be known, and within Hammersmith Village which was named after ancient
Hammersmith in England. His land was on the west bank of the SaugusRiver,
and very near to the spot where the Lynn Iron Works was to beestablished
13 years later.

Richard signed the pledge, was certified by his minister as aqualified
resident (landowner) and as a full member (received the covenant) inthe
church and became a "Freeman" in 1634, along with his father-in-lawThomas
Talmadge and Thomas's son William.

He made a trip back to England, probably late 1634, possibly toarrange
for equipment and marketing arrangements for a planned Nahant venture.He
was a likely person to make this trip as he was the only bachelor inthe
group. There are no records of the outward voyage to England, but hisname
was entered in a shipping office at London on 15 April, 1635, as oneof
those licensed "to go beyond the seas." On that day he took therequired
"oath of allegiance and Supremacy" before William Whitmore and SirMiles
Runton and was put down as a passenger "in the Elizabeth de London;Mr.
Stagg for New England." He gave his age as 24 at that time whichagrees
exactly with the age he gave at three subsequent court affidavits. In
this same ship there was a young lad of 15 by the name of WilliamWalker
who may well have been a younger brother to Richard. James Walker, age15,
and Sarah Walker, age 17, were also listed as passengers. This Jamesand
Sarah were most likely cousins of Richard. There seems to be some
confusion as to whom Sarah married in New England. According to some
records she married a John Brown in 1640. However, according toSavage's
General Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Vol. 1V, page
398, Sarah married a John Tisdale, not Brown. Richard apparentlymarried
Jane Talmadge shortly

after his return. He may have known her in England, but certainly theymet
regularly as they were neighbors on the Saugus River. It was intothis
home that his first two sons, Richard Jr. and John, were born andwhere
his wife Jane died, not unlikely upon the birth of the younger ofthese
two boys. The Talmadge family records show that by 1640 Richard was a
widower, as shown by the disposition of the will of her uncle who was
still in England and apparently unaware of her death at the time ofthe
drawing up of his last will and testament, for he left her money inthe
will.

Richard Walker, Thomas Talmadge, Sr., and Thomas Talmadge, Jr., one of
Jane's brothers, held adjacent land along the banks of the river, whenin
1638, the first division of lots was made. Richard, who was head ofthe
committee, and Thomas Sr. both received a grant of 200 acres, landwhich
they had already been homesteading for several years. Thomas Jr.received
20 acres. This Talmadge property may have been transferred toWilliam,
the son who had remained in Boston all these years, for about 1640Thomas
Sr. Robert, and Thomas Jr. were on Long Island where the new town of
Southhampton was rising. A few years later, in 1649, they were to be
founders of Easthampton, Long Island. These Talmadges had good
connections in both the old country and the new, and at his deathThomas
Sr. was the wealthiest man in Easthampton.

Richard, along with other notable men of Lynn, were also involved as
fishermen and planters at Nahant, as shown by the following Lynnrecord of
a town meeting on 11 Jan. 1635.

"It is also voted by the freemen of the town that these menunderwritten
shall have liberty to plant and build at Nahant and shall possess,each
man for the said purpose and proceeding in the trade of fishing. Mr.
[John] Humfreys, Daniel How[e], Mr. [William] Ballard, Joseph Rednap,
Timothy Tomlins, Richard Walker, Thomas Talmadge [Sr.] Henry Feakes,
Francis Dent."

During Richard's time in Saugus the "Military Company of the
Massachusetts", afterwards called the Ancient and Honorable Artillary
Company of Boston, was formed, the charter being granted on the first
Monday of June, 1638. It embraced members from the surrounding townsof
the colony "to act as a sort of regulator of military affairs and as a
school for instruction in tactics." Six charter members were chosenfrom
Lynn, among them Nathaniel Turner, Daniel Howe, and Richard Walker,who
were all officers of the Lynn Train Band. Richard, at this time, was27
years of age, and as he was several years the junior of these other
officers, this was recognition of his counsel and valor in Indianfighting
which continued until he was a very old man.

In the years after the death of his wife Jane Talmadge, about 1640,
Richard became a first settler at Lynn Village, later incorporated as
Reeding, later Reading, in a locality now called Wakefield, some eight
miles up the Saugus River. His brother Samuel had moved there in 1642and
Richard received three tracts of land in Reading in 1642. The town
meeting that year having voted him 27 acres of upland " laying on the
plain," which is identified as being "on the northernly side of the
present Elm Street, at the northerly end of the Highway where theearly
Train Band paraded." The same town meeting voted him "a parcel ofswampy
medow," bounded by the Great Pond on the East and the Highway on the
South, and the northwest by the first-mentioned acreage." There wasfirst
voted to him "a neck of upland containing ten acres more or less."This
was north of his first tract. The original homestead was aboutone-third
of a mile southwest of the entrance of the stream from Bear Hill intothe
Pond.

When he took his second wife Sarah (there is some confusion as to justwho
this Sarah was, a Talmadge or a Hempstead) about 1644, it was naturalfor
him to occupy these grants. The Talmadges had already left for Long
Island. His move up the river was also probably hastened by theopening
of the first iron works in New England, which was the very extensive(6
places, 3 miles square in each place) Lynn Iron Works with one siteright
beside his grant. The mining of bog iron over such a large adjacentarea,
with heavy black smoke from the forge and furnaces, would wroughthavoc
with any nearby farms. That he still owned the farm in 1644 is shownby
his tax of L1 out of a total town tax rate of L80.

Richard and his second wife Sarah therefore had a considerablehousehold
in their early married years at Reading. It included four sons, bornin
Lynn, as follows: Richard, Jr. (1637-1721), who was six when they
settled in Reading, John (1640-1721), four at the time, both childrenof
Jane, Shubael (1641-1689), two at the time and whose name is from the
Talmadge family, and Obediah (1643-1675), near his first birthday.Three
additional children were born at Reading: Nathaniel (1645-1683),Tabitha
(1647- ), and Elizabeth (1649- ). Both girls married while intheir
teens, sons of Captain Daniel King, Sr. (1602-1672), a Lynn pioneerfrom
Waterford in Hertfordshire, and apparently dwelt at Swampscott.

In 1645 Lieut. Richard Walker was chosen by Governor Endicott alongwith
his neighbor and friends Capt. Bridges and Sergeant Thomas Marshall to
negotiate with d'Aulney, the commander of Acadia. Upon their returnfrom
Nova Scotia, the General Court (of which Richard had already been a
member) voted Bridges, Walker, and Marshall L10, L4, and 40 shillings,
respectively for their "good services." This trip was to be thebeginning
of further trading activity with Acadia by Richard and his associates.

Richard had been promoted to lieutenant when he first arrived atReading
and there is mentioned in 1647 of "the Reading Train Band led byLieut.
Walker" that organization then being required to train eight days ayear.
When a new Train Band was formed in 1651, Richard was named as Captainby
the Middlesex Court.

He is mentioned in 1648 as one of the church at Reading (Wakefield),along
with his brother Samuel. During a part of his residence there on thewest
side of Lake Quannapowitt, Rev. Samuel Haugh was his pastor. Thechurch
stood at Albion and Main Streets on what is now Wakefield Common.Sarah
Haugh, the pastor's daughter, married Obediah Walker and thus became
Richard's daughter-in-law. She was to figure in extensive business
transactions with Richard, the Haughs having been relatively wealthy.He
headed a petition in 1662 "to keep ye dogs out of ye meeting house onye
Lord's day" by employing a dog whipper. This apparently did not
accomplish the desired results for the next action was to impose fineson
the owners of the offending canines. The scope of this problem ishard to
understand until you place yourself back in time to when every familyhad
one or more dogs who were with men and boys throughout the day andthat on
the Sabbath they would accompany their master to the church and thenbe
left outside with a score of other dogs to wait for hours for anyoneto
again emerge to pet or to be with them.

Richard was also active in performing his civic duties and served onthe
board of selectmen in Reading in the years 1647, 1649, 1652, and 1658.He
also served as chairman of "the seven Prudential Men" of Lynn for two
years. He was elected as Representative, or Deputy, to the GeneralCourt
for the Colony from Lynn for the years 1640-1642, and again on hisreturn
to Lynnin 1679 and 1680. He was elected from Reading for the years
1647-1652, and 1658 and 1660.

In 1666 he moved into Boston Proper for a period of 11 years where he
lived in the North End and became a menber of the Old North Church.S.
Walker, propably his second wife, was admitted there in 1666, whichwas
about the time that they moved there from Reading. Richard's nameappears
as a member of the board of trustees in 1671, along with Sir Thomas
Temple, his associate in numerous business undertakings, as empoweredto
purchase land for the church. Richard then returned to Lynn in 1677for
the last ten years of his life.

Ref: Pope's Pioneers of Mass. p. 446. Will of William Talmadge, uncleof
Jane Talmadge.

The following is from the manuscript of Ernest George Walker, writtenin
1926: Coloniel names, linked by marriage with Captain Richard Walker,his
sons and grandsons - and with his brothers and their progeny - troopinto
the picture in long array. A complete roster of them can hardly begiven.
Town and family records, incompletely written oftentimes, frequently
omitted maiden names in marriages or failed to indicate bachelors and
spinsters. But through the first three American generations - which
carried this Walker life stream beyond 1700 - the category of thoseallied
to the Richard Walkers by marriage included Talmadge, Story, Coburnand
Greenough; Leger and Mirick; Jewett and Hazeltine; the Hough and Dyer
families. On the distaff side were Walker daughters who married intothe
King family; the Larkin, Moore, Barker, and Sargent families; theAyers,
Bailey, Greeley, and Pierson families. Akin to the stock of Captain
Richard Walker's brothers were the Moses, Philbrook, and Brookings
families, the Roberts, Reed, Carter, Wyman, Baldwin, Leppingwell,Pierce,
Haywood, Bruce, and Cook families; and the Snow family.

Much as a diary of outstanding achievements by Captain Richard's
descendants might quicken reading interest, only a few have beenmentioned
and in an incidental way. Anything more would involve monumentalsearch
beyond the schope of this little volume. The men and women of Captain
Richard's blood have given a good account of themselves down throughthe
ages, have gained positions of leadership and earned rewards in thehigher
brackets of business and the professions. Two Walker members of aHarvard
College class some years ago - belonging to widely separated families-
were descendants, one of Captain Richard [George Albert Walker, Jr.
Harvard, Class of 1894], the other of his brother Samuel. One ofthese
afterward resided near a Walker neighbor, , of like ancestry, who was
identified with prominent social and financial circles at Washington.In
the same city - far from the ancestral homesteads in New England - was
another descendant of Samuel, who had an active career there as an
attorney. Attributes of character and ability prevail among these nowfar
flung descendants of the great old Puritan founder of this Walkerclan.

A few hours pilgrimage easily covers the scene of much of his life's
activities and brings back on some measure the environment of hiscareer.
Starting at Salem - where he landed after a sixty day voyage fromLondon -
the way is on to Lynn and the west bank of the Saugus [River]. Therehe
started his home and family with Jane Talmadge. On this ground onecan
contemplate his disappointment when the Iron Works were built at hisfront
door. Grief over his young wife's death gradually yielded to interestin
a new home a few miles up the Saugus River. There, in 1644, theGeneral
Court incorporated "Lynn Village" four miles square. Later it was "totake
the name of 'Reddding.'" and still later to be known as Wakefield.

The adjacent hills are differently crowned these days than when they
looked down upon the early Puritans. But there is the same horizonover
the broad Atlantic; the same circuitous channel up the Saugus to Lake
Quannapowitt and Cowdry's Hill. One can readily picture the many boat
trips up the river with the rising tide and down again when the waters
were ebbing; welcomes galore from wife and children on Cowdry's Hillwhen
work was finished; silent appreciation for the scenic glories of that
beautiful region.

Subsequent years of residence at Boston's North End - only a few miles
away- active associations with Sir Thomas Temple during the turbulent
period; the closing decade at Lynn with continued occupation atprivate
and public affairs, could hardly have erased memories of Wakefieldwhere
his business grew to be prosperous and his children by two marriages
became men and women.

Pursuits that took him far afield oftener than surviving recordsindicate;
voyages eastward to Arcadia; frequent journeys from Lynn and Readingas a
Deputy to the General Court, duties at Lynn, Reading, Charlestown and
elsewhere as a surveyor; family visits with brother William of Easthamon
the Cape [Cod]; with cousins at Rehoboth and Taunton near there; with
brother Samuel at Woburn; with married sons and daughters at Boston,
Bradford, Ipswich, Charlestown, and Lynn - these and very much more,
modern day descendants may visualize on a pilgrimage.

To see objects with which Captain Richard must have been familiar; to
traverse places where he and one or two Walker generations after himwent
their several ways, heightens comprehension of the long and unusual
American family line that he founded.

The information contained herein dealing with the life of CaptainRichard
Walker, of Lynn, was provided by Ernest George Walker via hismanuscript,
written in 1935.

Richard arrived in Salem, MA 30 Jun 1629. He was a farmer, fur trader, surveyor and military officer. He was one of the first settlers and help lay out the town of Lynn, MA in 1630. He was the Ensign of the watch in 1631 and admitted freeman 14 Mar 1634. He was and Ensign in the Ancient & Honorable Artillery Company of Boston, attaining the rank of Lieutenant, then Captain in 1653. From 1640 to 1649 he served as aDeputy to the Massachusetts General Court for Lynn four different terms. In 1648-49 he helped found the townof Reading, MA. Either he or his son Richard served as Deputy to the Court from Reading in 1650 and 1660.
In 1642 he appointed the embassy to French Acadia to negotiate peace between La Tour and D'Aulney. In 1645 he was appointed Deputy Governor of Acadia by Cromwell. From 1662 to 1670 he served under Sir Thomas Temple, Baronet and nephew of the Earl of Lincoln. In 1667 King Charles II ordered the return of Acadia to France under the treaty of Breda, and in Aug 1670, Captain Walker surrendered Fort Pentagoet (or Penobscot) to the Chevalier de Grnad Fontaine.
Captain Walker is believed to have been the grandson of John Walker (1540-1584), an early explorer of the Penobscot Bay area and the present state of Maine.

15653. Sarah HEMPSTEAD.

Many people believe that this Sarah, second wife of Captain Richard
Walker, was really Sarah Talmadge, sister of his first wife, Jane
Talmadge.

[Child]


15654. Joseph JEWETT was born 1 31 Dec 1609 in Bradford, West Riding, Yorkshire, England. He died 26 Feb 1659/1660 in Boston, Norfolk, Massachsuetts and was buried 26 Feb 1659/1660 in Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts. Joseph married Mary MALLINSON on 31 Oct 1634 in Bradford, Yorkshire, England. [Parents]

15655. Mary MALLINSON was born 1 29 May 1606 in Bradford, West Riding, Yorkshire, England. She died 12 Apr 1652 in Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts and was buried 12 Apr 1652 in Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts. [Parents]

[Child]


15656. Edward SMALL was born 1 1600 in Bidesford, Devon, England. He died 10 Feb 1664/1665 in Bidesford, Devon, England. Edward married Elizabeth SHURTT on WFT Est. 1618-1649 in Bidesford, Devon, England. [Parents]

Custom Field:<_FA#> Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: UnitedStates/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of Import: Jun 25, 1996, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.30362.36
REFN2166
World Family Tree Vol #1 Tree# 3960 & 630
[Brøderbund Family Archive #17, Ed. 1, Birth Records: United
States/Europe, Birth Records, AAI Birth Records Extraction, Date of
Import:Jun 25, 1996, Internal Ref. #1.17.1.30362.36]
Individual: Small, Edward
Birth date: Abt 1599
Birth place: ENG
CD# 100

15657. Elizabeth SHURTT was born 1603 in Bidesford, Devon, England. She died 10 Feb 1664/1665 in Bidesford, Devon, England. [Parents]

REFN2812

[Child]


15658. Thomas LEIGHTON was born 1604 in Glasgow, City Of Glasgow, Scotland. He died 22 Jan 1671/1672 in Dover, Strafford, NH. Thomas married Joanna SILSBY about 1630 in Glasgow, City Of Glasgow, Scotland. [Parents]

15659. Joanna SILSBY was born 1616 in Glasgow, City Of Glasgow, Scotland. She died 16 Jan 1702/1703 in Dover, Strafford, NH.

[Child]


Home First Previous Next Last

Surname List | Name Index