Ancestors of Richard Edmund Haskell

Citations


16. Capt. Samuel Haskell

1Doug Sinclair Archives, Internet website.
http://dougsinclairsarchives.com/haskell/samuelhaskell.htm.

2Vital Records, Microfiche. Beverly, MA #12T p.673, 1771-1833, Vol IV.

3Vital Records, Microfiche. Beverly, MA #26 P. 1467. Tr 8/12 p. 466, 1771/1833.
Capt.at 50 y. 2 m. G.R.4 [gravestone record, Hale Street Cemetery].

4Vital Records, Microfiche. Beverly, MA #22T p. 1243:Tr 7/12 p. 152, 1771/1833.
States "Mrs Paggy Thissele, but think this is incorrect. Should be Miss Peggy Thissell.

5Vital Records, Beverly VR, Vol. 2, Page 151.
"Samuel, and Mrs. [Miss. C. R. 2.] Paggy Thissele, Aug. 7, 1803."


17. Peggy Thissell

1Vital Records, Microfiche. Beverly, MA #13T p. 748, 1800/1850.
Children of John & Lucy THISSEL. [6th of 11].

2Vital Records, Mirofiche. Beverly, MA #T 10/12 p. 465., 1800/1850.
w. Samuel, Capt. a. 44 y. [from church record Dane St. Congregational Church]; d. Capt. John and Lucy Thissel [from gravestone record, Hale Street Cemetery].


18. George Lamson

1Vital Records, Beverly, MA T23, p. 1334.


20. Capt. William Gallop

1Vital Records.
Beverly Book.

2Family Bible, Owned by Richard E. Haskell, Gallop Family Bible, 1840.
Owned by Elizabeth Anne Haskell Fisk.


21. Nabby Baker Lovett

1Vital Records, 13TlBeverly, MA p. 695, copied 1907.

2Family Bible, Owned by Richard E. Haskell, Gallop Family Bible, 1840.
Owned by Elizabeth Anne Haskell Fisk.


22. Jeremiah Danforth

1Vital Records, Manchester, Essex, MA, p.39.
"Danford Jeremiah, s. Stephen and Lucy, Dec. 1, 1778."

2Vital Records, Manchester, Essex, MA, p. 156.
"Danforth Jeremiah, and Lydia Burges, Sept. 24, 1803. C.R.*."

3Vital Records, p. 145.
Vital Records of Manchester, Essex Co., MA.


24. Joseph Tower

1Vital Records, A 012-0116, p. 156, 1790/1856.
Marriage Register Register Westmorland County, N.B. Sackville.


26. Joseph Patterson

1Joe Patterson, Pattersons in New Brunswick.
jpatter@telsu.net (ancestry.com).

2Canadian Census, 1881 Census of Canada.
Age 75.

3ancestry.com.
JWPatterson Family Tree: owner: jpatter13.

4Joe Patterson, Pattersons in New Brunswick.


28. Mayhew Tower

1Tower Genealogical Society, Jan 2002, pg 3.

2Vital Records, Marriage Register Westmorland Co., NB B:341-2917, p. 172, 1790/1856.


29. Eunice Ward

1Internet, www.woodburyober.com, Email, Stuart Ward.
"The fact that John could sign his name and held many positions of importance in the community implies he had an education. During his time in Salem he was Constable, Assessor, Deputy from Salem to the Massachusetts Bay General Court, Essex Petit jury foreman on two occasions, Surveyor, Lot layer, and Selectman. John Woodbury, Capt Trask, Roger Conant, Peter Palfrey, and John Balch were each granted 200 acres of land at the head of Bass River in what is now Beverly, on 25 Jan 1635 or 6. The houses of John Balch and Roger Conant are still to be seen in 2000. Plaques mark the head of Bass River and the supposed location of John's grant. "The 27 th of the 11 th mo 1636. "Its ordered that John Woodbury and Capt Trask and John Balch shall lay out two Hundred acres of land for Mr Endicot next adjoying the land which was formerly granted him. Salem, Febru. 23d 1682-3. pr John Hathorne, * who write this Copy from Salem Records." From the 18 th Edition, Vol. 2 of Burke's Landed Gentry (Pgs. 651-2): "Lineage -- A pedigree of this family, of descent, in the male line, from John Woodberye (1579-1641), was recorded at the College of Arms 1953. The family Wills at the Exeter Probate Registry were destroyed during World War II but descent can be presumed from James Woodbarye, named in the Lay Subsidy of Burlescombe, Devon 1523-4, where the Woodbury family had been freeholders since the close of the 14 th century, when the overlordship of the deClaville family ended." "John Woodberye, "junior", of Burlescombe, lived at East Coker, Somerset after 1605 and was sent to Cape Ann, Massachusetts Bay by the Dorchester Co..." It may be important to note that the Coker's are just north of Dorchester which is just north of Weymouth a sailing port.Some of John's data was taken from a "Sketch of John Page Woodbury" by Charles Jeptha Hall Woodbury. John requested to become a Freeman on 19 Oct 1630 and took the Oath of Freemen on 18 May 1631, C.R., Vol. I. pp. 73, 74. See: N.E.H.G. Register, Book #3, Pg. 90. John first came over in 1624 on the "Zouch Phenix." According to "The Planters of the Commonwealth," by Charles Edward Banks (Boston, 1930), p. 58: "She was consort of the 'Unity,' or arrived with her in the spring of this year. It is believed she sailed from Weymouth, and brought the following passengers, who settled at Cape Anne"* (*Banks MSS). Representative of Salem in General Court between 1635 and 1639. Selectman and Surveyor. Returned to England in 1627 as Agent for the Dorchester Co., (Burke's American Families Pg. #2983). See: Frederick Virkus's Compendium, Pg. #634... On Pages #2054 to 2057 of "The Great Migration Begins" there is a piece about John Woodbury: "John Woodberye" was on a list of Salem church members that was compiled in 1636, a later notation "dead" appears [SChR5]. Among the founders and settlers of the first Puritan settlement, Cape Ann and Naumkeag, 1623-1627: Allen, Balch, Conant, Cushman, Gardner, Gray, Jeffrey, Knight, Lyford, Norman, Oldham, Palfrey, Patch, Pickryn, Winslow, Woodbury John is frequently mentioned in the genealogies of other early settlers to New England. On Sept. 24, 1639, John Woodbury, Peter Palfrey, and John Balch, [3 of the original "Planters"], three of the Salem selectmen, brought civil suit against Isabel Babson. There is no specific charges mentioned, but cases like this frequently involved land disputes. (See: The Babson Genealogy 1637-1977). John spent six months in England and, soon after the issuance of the grant for their lands on March 19, 1627-8, he sailed for New England bringing with him son, Humphrey. They arrived in Salem on the June 28, following. See: Gates and Allied Families pp. 823-828. While searching for more information on John Woodbury, Robin Bush traced a marriage license between a John Woodberrie of Dorchester, Dorset, husbandman, and Ann Napper of Hardington, spinster, at Hardington on 19 March 1627/8, (ref: D/D/01 26, p. 222, also in D/D/01 25, p.53), It seems likely that this could be John's second marriage. In the Bishop's transcripts for West Coker there are three entries that may be relevant: John Woodberye and Johan Bishop, married 3 May 1607. Johan daughter of John Woodberie, bpt. 23 March 1607/8 Humfrey son of John and Joane Woodberry, bpt. 25 July 1611 John Bishopp on 16 Apr 1605 (Johan's 1st husband, father?) From Robin Bush's research "Search for the Passengers of the Mary and John 1630" Vol. 25; New Ancestral Discoveries. Robin Bush was Deputy Archivist in the Somerset County Record Office, Taunton, England.
John married Joanna Humphrey on 21 Jun 1596 in Burlescombe, Somersetshire, England. Joanna Humphrey died in Mar 1602 in England and was buried on 25 Mar 1602 in England.".