The Davies Family


Samuel Shattuck [Parents] 1, 2 was born about 1610 in England. He died before 1652 in At Sea and was buried Jun 1698. Samuel married 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 Demaris Shattuck about 1630 in England.

Samuel about 1604 Dorsetshire, England. He 6 Jun 1698 Salem, Essex Co., MA.

Demaris Shattuck 1, 2, 3 was born about 1606 in Salem, Essex Co., MA. She died 4 28 Sep 1674 in Salem, Massachusetts and was buried Nov 1674. Demaris married 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 Samuel Shattuck about 1630 in England.

Other marriages:
Gardner, Thomas

Notes for DEMARIS SHATTUCK:

Source: "Memorials of the Descendants of William Shattuck, the Progentor of the Families in America that have Borne His Name," by Lemuel Shattuck, Pub. Boston: Printed by Dutton and Wentworth, 1855.

Damaris Shattuck, then a widow, was admitted to the church in Salem in 1641. At what time she came from England, whether before or after the death of her first husband, and what his christian name was, are unknown. She afterwards became the 2nd wife of Capt. Thomas Gardner, a distinguished merchant and citizen of Salem. She d. in that town, Nov.28, 2674. Capt Gardner d. Sept. 4, 1677, leaving a will, dated Dec. 7, 1668, in which he men-tions his wife, Damaris, six sons-Thomas, George, John, Samuel, Joseph, and Richard; and daughters, Sarah Balch, Seeth Grafton, and Miriam Hall, all by his first wife, Margarct Frier. Two of his sons m. daughters of their stepmother.

Damaris had by Mr. Shattuck several children, all probably born in England.

Notes for DEMARIS SHATTUCK:

Source: "Memorials of the Descendants of William Shattuck, the Progentor of the Families in America that have Borne His Name," by Lemuel Shattuck, Pub. Boston: Printed by Dutton and Wentworth, 1855.

Damaris Shattuck, then a widow, was admitted to the church in Salem in 1641. At what time she came from England, whether before or after the death of her first husband, and what his christian name was, are unknown. She afterwards became the 2nd wife of Capt. Thomas Gardner, a distinguished merchant and citizen of Salem. She d. in that town, Nov.28, 2674. Capt Gardner d. Sept. 4, 1677, leaving a will, dated Dec. 7, 1668, in which he men-tions his wife, Damaris, six sons-Thomas, George, John, Samuel, Joseph, and Richard; and daughters, Sarah Balch, Seeth Grafton, and Miriam Hall, all by his first wife, Margarct Frier. Two of his sons m. daughters of their stepmother.

Damaris had by Mr. Shattuck several children, all probably born in England.

Thomas Gardner was her second husband.

They had the following children:

  F i Sarah Shattuck was born 20 Dec 1632 and died 1724.
  M ii William Shattuck was born 1621 and died 14 Aug 1672.
  F iii Damaris Shattuck was born about 1622 and died after 1680.
  F iv Mary Shattuck was born 1624.
  F v Hannah Shattuck was born about 1625.
  M vi
Samual Shattuck was born 1, 2, 3 1630 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA. He died 4 6 Jun 1689 in Salem, Essex Co., MA.

Samual immigrated 5 to Salem, Essex, MA.
  F vii
Damaris Shattuck was born 1, 2 about 1634.

James Gardner [Parents] 1, 2, 3 was born 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 19 May 1662 in Salem, Essex Co., MA. He died 10, 11 1 Apr 1723 in Nantucket Island, Nantucket Co., MA and was buried Jun 1723. James married Patience Folger on 1695 in Martha's Vineyard, Dukes Co., MA.

Other marriages:
Starbuck, Mary S.
Gardner, Rachel
Coffin, Mary
Folger, Patience
Folger, Patience

Patience Folger was born about 1652 in Martha's Vineyard, Dukes Co., MA. She died Mar 1717/1718 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA. Patience married James Gardner on 1695 in Martha's Vineyard, Dukes Co., MA.

Other marriages:
Living


James Gardner [Parents] 1, 2, 3 was born 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 19 May 1662 in Salem, Essex Co., MA. He died 10, 11 1 Apr 1723 in Nantucket Island, Nantucket Co., MA and was buried Jun 1723. James married Rachel Gardner about 1699 in Nantucket Island, Nantucket Co., MA.

Other marriages:
Starbuck, Mary S.
Folger, Patience
Coffin, Mary
Folger, Patience
Folger, Patience

Rachel Gardner [Parents] was born 1 3 Nov 1661 in Salem, Essex Co., MA. She died 1741. Rachel married James Gardner about 1699 in Nantucket Island, Nantucket Co., MA.

Rachel 3 Aug 1661 Salem, Essex Co., MA.

Other marriages:
Brown, John

Maiden name of Gardner.

They had the following children:

  F i
Mehitable Gardner was born about 1704 in Nantucket Island, Nantucket Co., MA.
  M ii James Gardner was born 1698 and died 10 May 1776.
  M iii
James , Jr. Gardner was born 1 about 1706 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., Massachusetts. He died 10 Apr 1776 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., Massachusetts and was buried Apr 1776.

Enoch Coffin was born about 1672. He married Love Gardner about 1740.

Love Gardner [Parents] was born 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 2 May 1672 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA. She died 2 Oct 1741 in Salem, Essex Co., MA. Love married Enoch Coffin about 1740.

Other marriages:
Coffin, James


Thomas Gardner [Parents] 1, 2 was born 3, 4 4 Mar 1589/1590 in Sherbourne, Dorser, Scotland. He died 5 29 Dec 1674 in Salem, Essex Co., MA and was buried 1674 in Gardner, Salem, Essex Co., MA. Thomas married Margaret Frier on 1616 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA.

Thomas immigrated 6 1624 to Gloucester, Cape Ann, MA. He was employed 7 Innkeeper BET 1626 AND 1674 in Salem, Essex, MA. He 1626 Salem, Essex, MA.

Other marriages:
Shattuck, Demaris

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
Head of Dorchester County. Made a freeman in 1637. Captain of Train
Band. Name is French.

Husbandman. Came to America in 1624 on Zouch Phenix to Cape Ann, MA
Another researcher has wife #2 as Demaris Shattuck  m. ~ 1659

Govenor

Thomas Gardner 1591-1674 Governor of Cape Ann Colony 1623 Deputy 1637, Daggett & Skiffe & Butler History of Martha's Vineyard Vol.3

Thomas Gardner and John Tilley were the chief rulers of the Cape Ann Colony during the time which preceded the appointment of Roger Conant as Governor.

Source: Thomas Gardner Planter and Some of His Descendants, compiled and arranged by Frank A Gardner, MD, 1731, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass

Thomas Gardner married twice. We know this from the fact that in his will he mentions his wife as the mother-widow of his sons. The Margaret Gardner, who united with the first Church in 1639, is supposed to have been his wife. Various writers, including Rev. Joseph B. It, have stated that her maiden name was Fryer (or Frier), but the writer has thus far failed to find the authority for this statement.

Rev. Charles Henry Pope, in his "Pioneers of Massachusetts" suggests that the Margaret who united with the Salem Church in 1639, may have been the wife of Edmund Gardner of Ipswich.

While Edmund's wife may have been named Margaret, it seems improbable that she was the one above mentioned as uniting with the Salem church, for the following reasons: Edmund is mentioned in the Ipswich Town Records as early as 1635, and very frequently thereafter. The Ipswich church was organized in 1634 and the wife of a man so prominent in local affairs would, in all probability, have united with the "home church."

His second wife was Damaris Shattuck, a widow, who was admitted to the church in Salem in 1641. She had several children by her first husband, one of whom, Sarah, married Richard Gardner son of Thomas. She, like most of her Shattuck relations, evidently favored the Friends, as she was called into court many times for being "present at a Quaker meeting," and for absence from her own church. In the 9th Mo. 1667, and the 4th Mo. In the year following, "Old Mrs. Gardner was fined 5 shillings for absence from public worship. She had no children by Thomas Gardner. The date of her death is given in the Salem Town Records, as 28, 9, 1674.

Thomas Gardner died the 29th 10th Mo. 1674, and was buried in the Gardiner burying ground, a hillock described as lot III.

The following extract from a deposition made by William Trask in 1677 is of interest in, this connection : "I never heard that Old Mr. Gardiner did hinder any from burring there dead there butt said att severall funeralls to friends & neighbours doe not burrey your dead by fuch a young tree for I doe defire to be burried there my felfe & accordingly to my knowledge he was buried there himselfe."

Thus ended his long and useful life. The writer feels that no eulogy can add to the glory of one who throughout his lifetime was so greatly honored by his fellow pioneers, and filled acceptably so many positions of trust and responsibility. Those were trying times, and Thomas Gardner well earned the high place which he has always held among the Old Planters.

Source: "Early Settlers of Nantucket , Their Associates and Descendants", compiled by Lydia S Hinchman, Pub., Ferris & Leach, 1901

WILLIAM C. FOLGER, in his notes on the Gardner family, makes the following entry: " Farmer, in his Register, says, 'Thomas Gardner came from Scotland;' a Nantucket tradition says he came from Sherborne, in the northern part of the County of Dorset, and that the former name of Nantucket (Sherburne) was given through the influence of his family. There is no question of the fact that they exercised considerable influence over the affairs of the town."

There are few natives of Nantucket who do not claim descent from Thomas Gardner.

From New England History and Genealogical Register, vol. xxv., pp. 48, 49, we learn that "Thomas Gardiner, the first of the Salem stock, came over in 1624 from Dorsetshire, England, near which the name had flourished for more than three centuries, and settled under the auspices of the Dorchester Company and Rev. John White, with thirteen others at Gloucester, Cape Ann, upon the grant of Lord Sheffield to Robert Cushman and Edward Winslow, made in January of that year.

Thomas Gardner, the common ancestor of the Salem-Nantucket Gardners, was born about 1592. He sailed from Weymouth and received an appointment from the Dorchester Company. He came to America in 1624 From Dorchester, England, landing at Stage Point in what is now Gloucester Harbor. Initially settling at Gloucester on Cape Ann, he was an overseer of a plantation. In 1626, the Dorchester Company moved from Cape Ann to the mouth of the Naumkeag River (Salem?). The Massachusetts Bay Colony admitted him as a freeman March 17, 1637. He died in Salem on Oct. 29, 1674. He was a prosperous merchant, a member of the General Court in 1637 an a holder of many town offices. he married twice, first to Margaret, the mother of all his children, and second to a Mrs. Damaris Shattuck. His son married a Shattuck likely the daughter of this woman. His name is listed in the register of the Society of colonial Wars, Connecticut Register. ("Thomas Gardner and Some of his Descendants" by Frank A. Gordon, MD., 1907: Ancestral Records and Portraits, Colonial Dames of America, Chapter 1, page 71).

According to "Passengers and Ships", a Thomas Gardner sailed on the Zouch Phenix with his wife (name not given in 1624. Also sailing on that ship were George Gardner (his son?), Richard Gardner, and Joseph Gardner.

"The Great Migration Begins"


GARDNER, THOMAS [1624, Cape Ann]
THOMAS GARDNER

ORIGIN:  Unknown
MIGRATION:  1624
FIRST RESIDENCE:  Cape Ann
REMOVES:  Salem 1626

OCCUPATION:  Innkeeper (Thomas Gardner, Sr., was repeatedly licensed during the 1660s to retail strong drink, but in June 1667 the license was amended to allow him to sell only to "strangers" and not to townsmen [EQC 3:339, 431, 4:36, 37, 161, 269, 397]).
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP:  In list of Salem church members compiled in late 1636 [SChR 5].
FREEMAN:  17 May 1637 [MBCR 1:373].
EDUCATION:  Signed his name to several petitions and inventories.
OFFICES:  Deputy for Salem to the General Court, 26 September 1637 [MBCR 1:204].
    Essex grand jury, 25 February 1641, 27 January 1643/4, July 1644 [STR 1:120; EQC 1:33, 57, 62].  Petit jury, failed to appear and fined 29 June 1641 [EQC 1:26]; appeared 27 January 1642/3, 28 January 1646, 28 January 1647/8, 26 January 1648/9, 26 June 1649, 24 June 1651 (foreman), 29 June 1652, 28 June 1653, 6 March 1653/4, 13 June 1655, 27 November 1655, 30 June 1657, 29 June 1658 [STR 1:104, 146, 184, 186, 202, 216; EQC 1:44, 129, 153, 169, 229, 254, 283, 326, 408, 2:42, 71].  Jury, 27 August 1636, 27 June 1637 (foreman), 27 September 1639, 29 January 1640[/1] [EQC 1:3, 6, 12, 24].  Coroner's jury on Ralph Elwood, August 1644 [EQC 1:71].  
     Salem selectman, 1635, 1637, 1642-6, 1650, 1655-6 [STR 1:13, 50, 113, 121, 128, 136, 143, 164, 182, 190].  Salem constable, 1639 [STR 1:88].  Salem fenceviewer, 1636 [STR 1:41].  Overseer or surveyor for Salem highways 1637/8, 1639, 1642, 1643, 1649, 1655-8 [STR 1:67, 90, 117, 124, 158, 189, 191, 214].  Salem rater, 1639/40 [STR 1:97].
ESTATE:  In the 1636 Salem grants Thomas Gardner had one hundred acres in the freeman's land [STR 1:20].  He was granted one acre of marsh on 25 December 1637, with a household of seven [STR 1:103].
    He received a special grant by warrant, of one hundred acres in 1636 [STR 1:37].  When George Ingersoll received a ten acre lot, it was land formerly of Mr. Gardner's and others, which they had resigned to the town in favor of other land in March 1638/9 [STR 1:82].  Thomas Gardner was granted on 15 May 1639 a bank of upland near Strongwater Brook, paying 5s. an acre [STR 1:88].  He was granted half a three-quarter acre lot with Obadiah Homes, on land near the gate leading to the old mill, 20 March 1642/3 [STR 1:117].  He was granted ten acres in Salem for a house near the old mill, 8 February 1643/4 [STR 1:123].  "Mr. Gardner" was granted one acre of meadow on the north side of his farm, 31 August 1649 [STR 1:159].  "Mr. Gardner requested for himself and those that now do or hereafter shall live at those ten acre lots end or side that they may have the common land granted to them that lies at the foot of Mr. Read's hill to lie as common for their joint use; this request is granted," 27 April 1654 [STR 1:176].
    On 6 December 1671 Thomas Gardner of Salem, husbandman, sold to "Josiah Sothwick," for a valuable consideration received thirteen years earlier, two acres in the North Field of Salem [ELR 4:85].
    The will of "Thomas Gardner of Salem" was written 7 December 1668 and proved 29 March 1675 by witnesses Robert Pease and Samuel Goldthwaite [EQC 6:31].  "Weighing the uncertainty of man's life, I do therefore in the time of my health, make this my last will" giving to "my wife Damaris" all the estate she brought with her "according to our agreement" and œ8 a year paid by my six sons provided she give up her dower in my housing and lands; to "my daughter Sara Balch" œ15; to "my daughter Seeth Grafton" œ15; to "my daughter Mirian [sic] Hills two daughters, Miriam Hill, & Susanna Hill," to each of them œ5 at age eight~een or marriage; to "my sons George and John Gardner" salt meadow valued at œ20; to "my sons Samuel and Joseph Gardner" the other part of my salt meadow; residue divided in seven equal parts, two parts to my son Thomas, he paying "his mother in law forty six shillings by the year," the other sons to receive one part each and pay their mother-in-law twenty-three shillings a year; sons George and Samuel Gardner executors; "my loving friends Mr. Joseph Grafton and Deacon Horne" overseers [EPR 2:423-24].
    The inventory of the estate of "Mr. Thomas Gardner, taken 4:11m:1674" by Hilliard Veren, Sr. and John Pickering totalled œ274 16s., including real estate valued at œ201: "an old dwelling house with about 10 acres of land adjoining with the orchard, fences &c.," œ31; ten acres of ground in the Northfield, œ27; about 100 acres of upland and meadow, œ100; about 20 acres of land lying in the woods, œ3; and about 2 3/4 acres of salt marsh lying above the mill," œ40.  The inventory also included "2 old barrels of guns" valued at 5s. [EPR 2:424-5].
    Following Thomas Gardner's probate, at the November 1677 term of Essex court his sons George ("now of Hartford, Connecticut") and Samuel sued John Pudney of Salem, husbandman, over a farm let to Pudney by lease dated 1 March 1672[/3] and described as Gardner's

now dwelling house in Salem, with all his land in Northfield, about 20 acres, also his 10 acres of meadow ... for seven years from Apr. 15, 1672 at œ11 per year, and two barrels of cider, said Gardner furnishing the cask, of which œ4 were to be paid in wood at 8s. per cord, 40s. in butter and cheese, with one firkin of butter, 40s. in pork, and the remainder in corn.  Said Pudney was not to remove any muck, and Gardner reserved the right to take the meadow near Needham's if he so desired [EQC 5:356].

    On 2 September 1678 Lt. George Gardner, late of Salem & now of Hartford, merchant, and Samuel Gardner of Salem, mariner, joint executors of the last will of Mr. Thomas Gardner deceased, sold to John Swinnerton of Salem, physician, "all that part of the estate that said Gardner died possessed of and which the said executors have power to sell," including a dwelling house and ten acres in the North Field, another ten acres in the North Field, about an acre of upland by the Strongwater Brook, a farm containing one hundred acres of upland and meadow, and twenty acres of upland and meadow [ELR 5:3].

BIRTH:  About 1592 (deposed aged about sixty-nine 26 November 1661 [EQC 2:320]).
DEATH:  Salem 29 December 1674, "husband of Damaris."
MARRIAGE:  (1) By about 1614 _____ _____; she probably died in Salem in 1636, perhaps at the birth of youngest child Seeth (see COMMENTS below).
    (2) (prob.) By 1639 Margaret _____, who joined the church at Salem 24 March 1639/40 [SChR 8].  (See TAG 30:156 for discussion of claims she was Margaret Friar.)
    (3) Damaris (_____) Shattuck.  She was the "widow Shattock" when she joined the Salem Church 2 July 1641 [SChR 11]; she died Salem 28 November 1674, one month before her husband.  (See TAG 30:165-68 for discussion of this woman and her many connections to the Pope and Gardner families.)
CHILDREN:
    With first wife
    i    THOMAS, b. say 1614 (adult 1637 when he received a grant from Salem [STR 1:52]; eldest son with a double share in his father's will); m. (1) by 1643 _____ Hapscott[?] [TAG 26:108, 30:157-58]; m. (2) by an unknown date Elizabeth Horne, daughter of JOHN HORNE [TAG 26:108, 30:158-99].
    ii   GEORGE, b. say 1616 (adult when "bretherin" Thomas and George Gardiner were given ten acres in Salem 8 November 1637 [STR 1:59]); made free 27 December 1642 [EQC 1:48]); m. (1) by 1644 Hannah _____; m. (2) by 1654 Elizabeth (Freestone) Turner, bp. Horncastle, Lincolnshire, 17 October 1619, daughter of Richard and Margery (Freestone) Freestone, and widow of Robert Turner, shoemaker, of Boston; m. (3) after 1663 (inventory of her previous husband [Manwaring 1:242]) Elizabeth (Allen) Stone, widow of Rev. SAMUEL STONE.  (For the identity of these three wives we follow the work of George E. McCracken [TAG 30:158-66].)
    iii  JOHN, b. about 1624 (d. Nantucket 6 July 1706, aged 82 years); m. 20 February 1653/4 Priscilla Grafton [NanVR, citing "William C. Folger genealogical records in the possession of the Nantucket Historical Association"; this marriage probably took place in Salem].
    iv   SARAH, b. about 1627; m. about 1650 as his first of three wives Benjamin Balch, son of JOHN BALCH.
    v    SAMUEL, b. about 1629 (deposed June Term, 1680, aged "about fifty years" [EQC 7:389]); m. (1) before 1658 (eldest child b. Salem 5 August 1658) Mary White, daughter of John and Elizabeth (Herbert) White [NEHGR 150:193-95]; m. (2) Salem 2 August 1680 Elizabeth _____ Paine.
    vi   JOSEPH, b. about 1630 (about 16 in 1645/6 when he is anticipated in the train band [EQC 1:92]; near adult in 1649 [STR 1:157]); m. Ann Downing, daughter of Emmanuel Downing.  She m. (2) 6 June 1676 SIMON BRADSTREET [Hale, House 518].
    vii  RICHARD, b. about 1632 (d. Nantucket 1724, aged 92); m. about 1652 Sarah Shattuck, daughter of his stepmother Damaris (_____) (Shattuck) Gardner [TAG 30:168].
    viii MIRIAM, b. about 1635; m. by 1657 as his first wife John Hill.  He m. (2) Salem 26 August 1664 Lydia Buffum.
    ix   SEETH, bp. Salem 25 December 1636 [SChR 16]; m. (1) Joshua Conant, son of ROGER CONANT [TAG 30:156-57]; m. (2) 1 December 1659 John Grafton, son of Joseph Grafton.
ASSOCIATIONS:  Banks states without authority that Gardner might have come from Hurst, Martock parish, Somersetshire [Topo Dict 143], and other origins have been claimed.  An origin in the West County for Thomas Gardner is certain, but the name is common and none of the suggestions made to date has a firm foundation.
    George McCracken suggested that the unusual given name of the Gardner's last child, Seeth, was an indication that in previous generations there had been a marriage to someone with that surname [TAG 30:157].
    Both McCracken and Moriarty take the question of the connection between the Gardners and the Popes to task, but admit that the "relationship of the Pope and Gardner and Shattuck families is certain; the mode not yet plain" [TAG 30:164-6].
    In the painful June 1677 tangle over the burial of John Pudney's child on Mr. Gardner's hill, Pudney appealed a judgment of Major Hathorne's, mentioning the "kinship of Major Hathorne and said [Samuel] Gardner" [EQC 6:284].  This was probably a reference to the recent marriage of the Major's son to Samuel's daughter, and not an ancestral clue.

COMMENTS:  "Mr. John Tylly and Mr. Thomas Gardener were employed as overseers of that whole business [of the plantation at Cape Anne]; the first with reference to the fishing, the other with respect to the planting on the main land, at least for one year's time" [Young's First Planters 23].
    In the Salem land grant of 1637 Thomas Gardner received acreage for a household of seven.  His sons Thomas and George were already old enough to receive grants of their own and be considered separate households.  Seven younger children of Thomas Sr. were still under age and presumably residing at home, which would make a household of eight.  One or more of the children could have been serving in another family, but this accounting raises the possibility that Thomas did not have a wife living in 1637.  This hypothesis is supported by the admission to church membership of a Margaret Gardner on 24 March 1639/40; had she been with Thomas Gardner since his arrival in New England, we would expect that she would appear in the list of church members compiled in late 1636 at the reorganization of the church.  Consequently, we propose that Thomas Gardner had three wives, the first of them of unknown name, who died at the birth of the youngest child, Seeth, whose baptism is one of the first recorded in late 1636.
    In the February Term of court 1645/6 "Mr. Thomas Gardener discharged from training when his sixth son comes in" [EQC 1:92].  Men were required to train from the age of 16 to 60, and this implies that last son Joseph was approaching 16 in 1645/6, placing his date of birth about 1630.
    "The wife of Thomas Gardner Sr." was fined for frequent absence from the public ordinances on Lord's days, along with a number of other Quakers, November Term 1660 [EQC 2:265].  This was merely the beginning of a long string of such fines and official harassment that eventually convinced several of the sons to move with their families away from Salem.  Thomas Gardner Sr. is never named as having absented himself from public worship, and history is silent on his opinion of the matter.
    When John Pudney's child died in 1677, he went with others to "Mr. Gardner's Hill," took down some fence bars, and dug a grave.  Samuel Gardner came on horseback and ordered them off his land.  Gardner had the grave filled in, but Pudney came back and succeeded in burying his child.  The resulting suit at the June Term 1677 was appealed all the way to the Court of Assistants, which, after a jury trial, found for Pudney [RCA 1:110].  The case produced a deposition by William Trask, who said

that for these twenty-seven or twenty-eight years the land where John Pudney buried his child had been a usual burying place for so many as would make use of it for that purpose and he never heard that old Mr. Gardiner hindered any from burying their dead there, but he said at several funerals, `friends and neighbors, do not bury your dead by such a young tree for I do desire to be buried there myself.'  According to deponent's knowledge, said Gardiner was buried there himself, and the draw bars that Pudney was sued for taking down stood on the town's land several feet, Mr. Gardiner having removed them several feet about five years since into the town's land.  He further testified that for twenty-eight years the inhabitants of the town, as long as there were any great trees upon the land, cut the trees and carried away the timber without any molestation, and all the neighbors looked upon it as common land [EQC 6:284].

    Thomas Gardner paid John Pickering six pounds for some indeterminate service either to the town or to himself in March of 1638/9 [STR 1:84].  Thomas Gardner's bull was set out to stud in the town herd in 1640 for a fee of 20s. [STR 1:99].  Gardner was chosen one of the commissioners to calculate damage done by cattle in Richard Ingersoll's lot 12 July 1642 [EQC 1:42].  Gardner was one of those who was to receive the corn for John Moore in 1643 [STR 1:120].  Mr. Gardner's new building is mentioned in the Salem town minutes of 30 7mo 1644 [STR 1:133].
    Thomas Gardner was one of the seven influential men who advanced Hilliard Veren as the new clerk of courts, when "he that was last chosen thereunto is now removed to the eastward" [June Term, 1658, EQC 2:102].
    Thomas Gardner Sr. took the inventory of William Bacon 26 September 1653 and provided the same service for Bacon's widow, Rebecca Bacon, two years later [EQC 1:323, 413].  He proved the will of Thomas Trussler at the June Term, 1654 and took his inventory 5 June 1654 [EQC 1:356-7]. He took the inventory of Henry Bullock, Jr., 10 January 1656 [EQC 2:49].  He was appointed administrator of the New England estate of his son-in-law Joshua Conant, who died intestate in England [EQC 2:190-1, November Term, 1659; 2:217].  With William Robinson, Thomas Gardner testified that John and Daniel Southwick had settled the division of their father Lawrence's estate [June Term, 1660, EQC 2:217].  Gardner also took the inventory of Lawrence Southwick's estate [November Term, 1660, EQC 2:263].  He took the inventory of William Cantlebury of Salem 25 June 1663, and probably was the Thomas Gardner who took the inventory of Ralph Tompkins of Salem 12 November 1666 [EQC 3:83, 379].

Govenor

Thomas Gardner 1591-1674 Governor of Cape Ann Colony 1623 Deputy 1637, Daggett & Skiffe & Butler History of Martha's Vineyard Vol.3

Thomas Gardner and John Tilley were the chief rulers of the Cape Ann Colony during the time which preceded the appointment of Roger Conant as Governor.

Source: Thomas Gardner Planter and Some of His Descendants, compiled and arranged by Frank A Gardner, MD, 1731, Essex Institute, Salem, Mass

Thomas Gardner married twice. We know this from the fact that in his will he mentions his wife as the mother-widow of his sons. The Margaret Gardner, who united with the first Church in 1639, is supposed to have been his wife. Various writers, including Rev. Joseph B. It, have stated that her maiden name was Fryer (or Frier), but the writer has thus far failed to find the authority for this statement.

Rev. Charles Henry Pope, in his "Pioneers of Massachusetts" suggests that the Margaret who united with the Salem Church in 1639, may have been the wife of Edmund Gardner of Ipswich.

While Edmund's wife may have been named Margaret, it seems improbable that she was the one above mentioned as uniting with the Salem church, for the following reasons: Edmund is mentioned in the Ipswich Town Records as early as 1635, and very frequently thereafter. The Ipswich church was organized in 1634 and the wife of a man so prominent in local affairs would, in all probability, have united with the "home church."

His second wife was Damaris Shattuck, a widow, who was admitted to the church in Salem in 1641. She had several children by her first husband, one of whom, Sarah, married Richard Gardner son of Thomas. She, like most of her Shattuck relations, evidently favored the Friends, as she was called into court many times for being "present at a Quaker meeting," and for absence from her own church. In the 9th Mo. 1667, and the 4th Mo. In the year following, "Old Mrs. Gardner was fined 5 shillings for absence from public worship. She had no children by Thomas Gardner. The date of her death is given in the Salem Town Records, as 28, 9, 1674.

Thomas Gardner died the 29th 10th Mo. 1674, and was buried in the Gardiner burying ground, a hillock described as lot III.

The following extract from a deposition made by William Trask in 1677 is of interest in, this connection : "I never heard that Old Mr. Gardiner did hinder any from burring there dead there butt said att severall funeralls to friends & neighbours doe not burrey your dead by fuch a young tree for I doe defire to be burried there my felfe & accordingly to my knowledge he was buried there himselfe."

Thus ended his long and useful life. The writer feels that no eulogy can add to the glory of one who throughout his lifetime was so greatly honored by his fellow pioneers, and filled acceptably so many positions of trust and responsibility. Those were trying times, and Thomas Gardner well earned the high place which he has always held among the Old Planters.

Source: "Early Settlers of Nantucket , Their Associates and Descendants", compiled by Lydia S Hinchman, Pub., Ferris & Leach, 1901

WILLIAM C. FOLGER, in his notes on the Gardner family, makes the following entry: " Farmer, in his Register, says, 'Thomas Gardner came from Scotland;' a Nantucket tradition says he came from Sherborne, in the northern part of the County of Dorset, and that the former name of Nantucket (Sherburne) was given through the influence of his family. There is no question of the fact that they exercised considerable influence over the affairs of the town."

There are few natives of Nantucket who do not claim descent from Thomas Gardner.

From New England History and Genealogical Register, vol. xxv., pp. 48, 49, we learn that "Thomas Gardiner, the first of the Salem stock, came over in 1624 from Dorsetshire, England, near which the name had flourished for more than three centuries, and settled under the auspices of the Dorchester Company and Rev. John White, with thirteen others at Gloucester, Cape Ann, upon the grant of Lord Sheffield to Robert Cushman and Edward Winslow, made in January of that year.

Thomas Gardner, the common ancestor of the Salem-Nantucket Gardners, was born about 1592. He sailed from Weymouth and received an appointment from the Dorchester Company. He came to America in 1624 From Dorchester, England, landing at Stage Point in what is now Gloucester Harbor. Initially settling at Gloucester on Cape Ann, he was an overseer of a plantation. In 1626, the Dorchester Company moved from Cape Ann to the mouth of the Naumkeag River (Salem?). The Massachusetts Bay Colony admitted him as a freeman March 17, 1637. He died in Salem on Oct. 29, 1674. He was a prosperous merchant, a member of the General Court in 1637 an a holder of many town offices. he married twice, first to Margaret, the mother of all his children, and second to a Mrs. Damaris Shattuck. His son married a Shattuck likely the daughter of this woman. His name is listed in the register of the Society of colonial Wars, Connecticut Register. ("Thomas Gardner and Some of his Descendants" by Frank A. Gordon, MD., 1907: Ancestral Records and Portraits, Colonial Dames of America, Chapter 1, page 71).

According to "Passengers and Ships", a Thomas Gardner sailed on the Zouch Phenix with his wife (name not given in 1624. Also sailing on that ship were George Gardner (his son?), Richard Gardner, and Joseph Gardner.

"The Great Migration Begins"


GARDNER, THOMAS [1624, Cape Ann]
THOMAS GARDNER

ORIGIN:  Unknown
MIGRATION:  1624
FIRST RESIDENCE:  Cape Ann
REMOVES:  Salem 1626

OCCUPATION:  Innkeeper (Thomas Gardner, Sr., was repeatedly licensed during the 1660s to retail strong drink, but in June 1667 the license was amended to allow him to sell only to "strangers" and not to townsmen [EQC 3:339, 431, 4:36, 37, 161, 269, 397]).
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP:  In list of Salem church members compiled in late 1636 [SChR 5].
FREEMAN:  17 May 1637 [MBCR 1:373].
EDUCATION:  Signed his name to several petitions and inventories.
OFFICES:  Deputy for Salem to the General Court, 26 September 1637 [MBCR 1:204].
    Essex grand jury, 25 February 1641, 27 January 1643/4, July 1644 [STR 1:120; EQC 1:33, 57, 62].  Petit jury, failed to appear and fined 29 June 1641 [EQC 1:26]; appeared 27 January 1642/3, 28 January 1646, 28 January 1647/8, 26 January 1648/9, 26 June 1649, 24 June 1651 (foreman), 29 June 1652, 28 June 1653, 6 March 1653/4, 13 June 1655, 27 November 1655, 30 June 1657, 29 June 1658 [STR 1:104, 146, 184, 186, 202, 216; EQC 1:44, 129, 153, 169, 229, 254, 283, 326, 408, 2:42, 71].  Jury, 27 August 1636, 27 June 1637 (foreman), 27 September 1639, 29 January 1640[/1] [EQC 1:3, 6, 12, 24].  Coroner's jury on Ralph Elwood, August 1644 [EQC 1:71].  
     Salem selectman, 1635, 1637, 1642-6, 1650, 1655-6 [STR 1:13, 50, 113, 121, 128, 136, 143, 164, 182, 190].  Salem constable, 1639 [STR 1:88].  Salem fenceviewer, 1636 [STR 1:41].  Overseer or surveyor for Salem highways 1637/8, 1639, 1642, 1643, 1649, 1655-8 [STR 1:67, 90, 117, 124, 158, 189, 191, 214].  Salem rater, 1639/40 [STR 1:97].
ESTATE:  In the 1636 Salem grants Thomas Gardner had one hundred acres in the freeman's land [STR 1:20].  He was granted one acre of marsh on 25 December 1637, with a household of seven [STR 1:103].
    He received a special grant by warrant, of one hundred acres in 1636 [STR 1:37].  When George Ingersoll received a ten acre lot, it was land formerly of Mr. Gardner's and others, which they had resigned to the town in favor of other land in March 1638/9 [STR 1:82].  Thomas Gardner was granted on 15 May 1639 a bank of upland near Strongwater Brook, paying 5s. an acre [STR 1:88].  He was granted half a three-quarter acre lot with Obadiah Homes, on land near the gate leading to the old mill, 20 March 1642/3 [STR 1:117].  He was granted ten acres in Salem for a house near the old mill, 8 February 1643/4 [STR 1:123].  "Mr. Gardner" was granted one acre of meadow on the north side of his farm, 31 August 1649 [STR 1:159].  "Mr. Gardner requested for himself and those that now do or hereafter shall live at those ten acre lots end or side that they may have the common land granted to them that lies at the foot of Mr. Read's hill to lie as common for their joint use; this request is granted," 27 April 1654 [STR 1:176].
    On 6 December 1671 Thomas Gardner of Salem, husbandman, sold to "Josiah Sothwick," for a valuable consideration received thirteen years earlier, two acres in the North Field of Salem [ELR 4:85].
    The will of "Thomas Gardner of Salem" was written 7 December 1668 and proved 29 March 1675 by witnesses Robert Pease and Samuel Goldthwaite [EQC 6:31].  "Weighing the uncertainty of man's life, I do therefore in the time of my health, make this my last will" giving to "my wife Damaris" all the estate she brought with her "according to our agreement" and œ8 a year paid by my six sons provided she give up her dower in my housing and lands; to "my daughter Sara Balch" œ15; to "my daughter Seeth Grafton" œ15; to "my daughter Mirian [sic] Hills two daughters, Miriam Hill, & Susanna Hill," to each of them œ5 at age eight~een or marriage; to "my sons George and John Gardner" salt meadow valued at œ20; to "my sons Samuel and Joseph Gardner" the other part of my salt meadow; residue divided in seven equal parts, two parts to my son Thomas, he paying "his mother in law forty six shillings by the year," the other sons to receive one part each and pay their mother-in-law twenty-three shillings a year; sons George and Samuel Gardner executors; "my loving friends Mr. Joseph Grafton and Deacon Horne" overseers [EPR 2:423-24].
    The inventory of the estate of "Mr. Thomas Gardner, taken 4:11m:1674" by Hilliard Veren, Sr. and John Pickering totalled œ274 16s., including real estate valued at œ201: "an old dwelling house with about 10 acres of land adjoining with the orchard, fences &c.," œ31; ten acres of ground in the Northfield, œ27; about 100 acres of upland and meadow, œ100; about 20 acres of land lying in the woods, œ3; and about 2 3/4 acres of salt marsh lying above the mill," œ40.  The inventory also included "2 old barrels of guns" valued at 5s. [EPR 2:424-5].
    Following Thomas Gardner's probate, at the November 1677 term of Essex court his sons George ("now of Hartford, Connecticut") and Samuel sued John Pudney of Salem, husbandman, over a farm let to Pudney by lease dated 1 March 1672[/3] and described as Gardner's

now dwelling house in Salem, with all his land in Northfield, about 20 acres, also his 10 acres of meadow ... for seven years from Apr. 15, 1672 at œ11 per year, and two barrels of cider, said Gardner furnishing the cask, of which œ4 were to be paid in wood at 8s. per cord, 40s. in butter and cheese, with one firkin of butter, 40s. in pork, and the remainder in corn.  Said Pudney was not to remove any muck, and Gardner reserved the right to take the meadow near Needham's if he so desired [EQC 5:356].

    On 2 September 1678 Lt. George Gardner, late of Salem & now of Hartford, merchant, and Samuel Gardner of Salem, mariner, joint executors of the last will of Mr. Thomas Gardner deceased, sold to John Swinnerton of Salem, physician, "all that part of the estate that said Gardner died possessed of and which the said executors have power to sell," including a dwelling house and ten acres in the North Field, another ten acres in the North Field, about an acre of upland by the Strongwater Brook, a farm containing one hundred acres of upland and meadow, and twenty acres of upland and meadow [ELR 5:3].

BIRTH:  About 1592 (deposed aged about sixty-nine 26 November 1661 [EQC 2:320]).
DEATH:  Salem 29 December 1674, "husband of Damaris."
MARRIAGE:  (1) By about 1614 _____ _____; she probably died in Salem in 1636, perhaps at the birth of youngest child Seeth (see COMMENTS below).
    (2) (prob.) By 1639 Margaret _____, who joined the church at Salem 24 March 1639/40 [SChR 8].  (See TAG 30:156 for discussion of claims she was Margaret Friar.)
    (3) Damaris (_____) Shattuck.  She was the "widow Shattock" when she joined the Salem Church 2 July 1641 [SChR 11]; she died Salem 28 November 1674, one month before her husband.  (See TAG 30:165-68 for discussion of this woman and her many connections to the Pope and Gardner families.)
CHILDREN:
    With first wife
    i    THOMAS, b. say 1614 (adult 1637 when he received a grant from Salem [STR 1:52]; eldest son with a double share in his father's will); m. (1) by 1643 _____ Hapscott[?] [TAG 26:108, 30:157-58]; m. (2) by an unknown date Elizabeth Horne, daughter of JOHN HORNE [TAG 26:108, 30:158-99].
    ii   GEORGE, b. say 1616 (adult when "bretherin" Thomas and George Gardiner were given ten acres in Salem 8 November 1637 [STR 1:59]); made free 27 December 1642 [EQC 1:48]); m. (1) by 1644 Hannah _____; m. (2) by 1654 Elizabeth (Freestone) Turner, bp. Horncastle, Lincolnshire, 17 October 1619, daughter of Richard and Margery (Freestone) Freestone, and widow of Robert Turner, shoemaker, of Boston; m. (3) after 1663 (inventory of her previous husband [Manwaring 1:242]) Elizabeth (Allen) Stone, widow of Rev. SAMUEL STONE.  (For the identity of these three wives we follow the work of George E. McCracken [TAG 30:158-66].)
    iii  JOHN, b. about 1624 (d. Nantucket 6 July 1706, aged 82 years); m. 20 February 1653/4 Priscilla Grafton [NanVR, citing "William C. Folger genealogical records in the possession of the Nantucket Historical Association"; this marriage probably took place in Salem].
    iv   SARAH, b. about 1627; m. about 1650 as his first of three wives Benjamin Balch, son of JOHN BALCH.
    v    SAMUEL, b. about 1629 (deposed June Term, 1680, aged "about fifty years" [EQC 7:389]); m. (1) before 1658 (eldest child b. Salem 5 August 1658) Mary White, daughter of John and Elizabeth (Herbert) White [NEHGR 150:193-95]; m. (2) Salem 2 August 1680 Elizabeth _____ Paine.
    vi   JOSEPH, b. about 1630 (about 16 in 1645/6 when he is anticipated in the train band [EQC 1:92]; near adult in 1649 [STR 1:157]); m. Ann Downing, daughter of Emmanuel Downing.  She m. (2) 6 June 1676 SIMON BRADSTREET [Hale, House 518].
    vii  RICHARD, b. about 1632 (d. Nantucket 1724, aged 92); m. about 1652 Sarah Shattuck, daughter of his stepmother Damaris (_____) (Shattuck) Gardner [TAG 30:168].
    viii MIRIAM, b. about 1635; m. by 1657 as his first wife John Hill.  He m. (2) Salem 26 August 1664 Lydia Buffum.
    ix   SEETH, bp. Salem 25 December 1636 [SChR 16]; m. (1) Joshua Conant, son of ROGER CONANT [TAG 30:156-57]; m. (2) 1 December 1659 John Grafton, son of Joseph Grafton.
ASSOCIATIONS:  Banks states without authority that Gardner might have come from Hurst, Martock parish, Somersetshire [Topo Dict 143], and other origins have been claimed.  An origin in the West County for Thomas Gardner is certain, but the name is common and none of the suggestions made to date has a firm foundation.
    George McCracken suggested that the unusual given name of the Gardner's last child, Seeth, was an indication that in previous generations there had been a marriage to someone with that surname [TAG 30:157].
    Both McCracken and Moriarty take the question of the connection between the Gardners and the Popes to task, but admit that the "relationship of the Pope and Gardner and Shattuck families is certain; the mode not yet plain" [TAG 30:164-6].
    In the painful June 1677 tangle over the burial of John Pudney's child on Mr. Gardner's hill, Pudney appealed a judgment of Major Hathorne's, mentioning the "kinship of Major Hathorne and said [Samuel] Gardner" [EQC 6:284].  This was probably a reference to the recent marriage of the Major's son to Samuel's daughter, and not an ancestral clue.

COMMENTS:  "Mr. John Tylly and Mr. Thomas Gardener were employed as overseers of that whole business [of the plantation at Cape Anne]; the first with reference to the fishing, the other with respect to the planting on the main land, at least for one year's time" [Young's First Planters 23].
    In the Salem land grant of 1637 Thomas Gardner received acreage for a household of seven.  His sons Thomas and George were already old enough to receive grants of their own and be considered separate households.  Seven younger children of Thomas Sr. were still under age and presumably residing at home, which would make a household of eight.  One or more of the children could have been serving in another family, but this accounting raises the possibility that Thomas did not have a wife living in 1637.  This hypothesis is supported by the admission to church membership of a Margaret Gardner on 24 March 1639/40; had she been with Thomas Gardner since his arrival in New England, we would expect that she would appear in the list of church members compiled in late 1636 at the reorganization of the church.  Consequently, we propose that Thomas Gardner had three wives, the first of them of unknown name, who died at the birth of the youngest child, Seeth, whose baptism is one of the first recorded in late 1636.
    In the February Term of court 1645/6 "Mr. Thomas Gardener discharged from training when his sixth son comes in" [EQC 1:92].  Men were required to train from the age of 16 to 60, and this implies that last son Joseph was approaching 16 in 1645/6, placing his date of birth about 1630.
    "The wife of Thomas Gardner Sr." was fined for frequent absence from the public ordinances on Lord's days, along with a number of other Quakers, November Term 1660 [EQC 2:265].  This was merely the beginning of a long string of such fines and official harassment that eventually convinced several of the sons to move with their families away from Salem.  Thomas Gardner Sr. is never named as having absented himself from public worship, and history is silent on his opinion of the matter.
    When John Pudney's child died in 1677, he went with others to "Mr. Gardner's Hill," took down some fence bars, and dug a grave.  Samuel Gardner came on horseback and ordered them off his land.  Gardner had the grave filled in, but Pudney came back and succeeded in burying his child.  The resulting suit at the June Term 1677 was appealed all the way to the Court of Assistants, which, after a jury trial, found for Pudney [RCA 1:110].  The case produced a deposition by William Trask, who said

that for these twenty-seven or twenty-eight years the land where John Pudney buried his child had been a usual burying place for so many as would make use of it for that purpose and he never heard that old Mr. Gardiner hindered any from burying their dead there, but he said at several funerals, `friends and neighbors, do not bury your dead by such a young tree for I do desire to be buried there myself.'  According to deponent's knowledge, said Gardiner was buried there himself, and the draw bars that Pudney was sued for taking down stood on the town's land several feet, Mr. Gardiner having removed them several feet about five years since into the town's land.  He further testified that for twenty-eight years the inhabitants of the town, as long as there were any great trees upon the land, cut the trees and carried away the timber without any molestation, and all the neighbors looked upon it as common land [EQC 6:284].

    Thomas Gardner paid John Pickering six pounds for some indeterminate service either to the town or to himself in March of 1638/9 [STR 1:84].  Thomas Gardner's bull was set out to stud in the town herd in 1640 for a fee of 20s. [STR 1:99].  Gardner was chosen one of the commissioners to calculate damage done by cattle in Richard Ingersoll's lot 12 July 1642 [EQC 1:42].  Gardner was one of those who was to receive the corn for John Moore in 1643 [STR 1:120].  Mr. Gardner's new building is mentioned in the Salem town minutes of 30 7mo 1644 [STR 1:133].
    Thomas Gardner was one of the seven influential men who advanced Hilliard Veren as the new clerk of courts, when "he that was last chosen thereunto is now removed to the eastward" [June Term, 1658, EQC 2:102].
    Thomas Gardner Sr. took the inventory of William Bacon 26 September 1653 and provided the same service for Bacon's widow, Rebecca Bacon, two years later [EQC 1:323, 413].  He proved the will of Thomas Trussler at the June Term, 1654 and took his inventory 5 June 1654 [EQC 1:356-7]. He took the inventory of Henry Bullock, Jr., 10 January 1656 [EQC 2:49].  He was appointed administrator of the New England estate of his son-in-law Joshua Conant, who died intestate in England [EQC 2:190-1, November Term, 1659; 2:217].  With William Robinson, Thomas Gardner testified that John and Daniel Southwick had settled the division of their father Lawrence's estate [June Term, 1660, EQC 2:217].  Gardner also took the inventory of Lawrence Southwick's estate [November Term, 1660, EQC 2:263].  He took the inventory of William Cantlebury of Salem 25 June 1663, and probably was the Thomas Gardner who took the inventory of Ralph Tompkins of Salem 12 November 1666 [EQC 3:83, 379].

Margaret Frier [Parents] was born 1, 2 25 Jan 1588/1589 in Ixsworth Parish, Suffolk, England. She died 28 Sep 1674 in Salem, Essex Co., MA. Margaret married Thomas Gardner on 1616 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA.

Subscriber Cece Bibby sent us a photocopy of a page from "Batchelor Family Correspondence", that was a letter from Edgar Batchelor. Dated August 2, 1978. Edgar wrote the following:

"I believe I have found the Margaret Frier who married Thomas Gardner. She was baptized 25 Jan 1589, daughter of Francis Frier, in Ixsworth parish, Suffolk England."

The record was located at the Society of Genealogist in London.

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
No authority for this marriage although it appears as if Thomas was
married to a woman by the name of Margaret.

Subscriber Cece Bibby sent us a photocopy of a page from "Batchelor Family Correspondence", that was a letter from Edgar Batchelor. Dated August 2, 1978. Edgar wrote the following:

"I believe I have found the Margaret Frier who married Thomas Gardner. She was baptized 25 Jan 1589, daughter of Francis Frier, in Ixsworth parish, Suffolk England."

The record was located at the Society of Genealogist in London.

They had the following children:

  M i Thomas Gardner Lt. was born about 1614 and died 15 Jul 1689.
  M ii George Gardner Lt. was born about 1616 and died 20 Aug 1679.
  M iii Samuel Gardner was born about 1629 and died BET 2 AND 11 OCT 1689.
  M iv Joseph Gardner Capt. was born about 1630 and died 19 Dec 1675.
  F v Sarah Gardner was born about 1627 and died 15 Apr 1686.
  M vi Richard Gardner was born about 1632 and died 23 Jan 1687/1688.
  F vii Miriam Gardner was born 1632 and died 1664.
  F viii Seeth Gardner was born 25 Oct 1636 and died 17 Apr 1707.
  F ix Ruth Gardner was born about 1635 and died 1707.
  M x Captain John Gardner was born about 1624 and died 6 Jul 1706.

Captain John Gardner [Parents] 1, 2, 3, 4 was born 5, 6, 7, 8 about 1624 in England. He died 9, 10, 11, 12 6 Jul 1706 in Nantucket, Nantucket County, Massachusetts and was buried May 1706. John married Priscilla Coffin about 1645.

John immigrated 13, 14 about 1624 to Gloucester, Cape Ann, MA. He had a will probated 15 2 Oct 1706 in Nantucket, Nantucket County, Massachusetts.

Other marriages:
Grafton, Priscilla

Was one of the first Commissioners to the General Court at Boston in 1692 with William Gayer.

Priscilla Coffin was born about 1625. She married Captain John Gardner about 1645.


Nathaniel Starbuck [Parents] was born 20 Feb 1634/1635 in Dover, Strafford, NH. He died 6 Jun 1719 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA. Nathaniel married Mary Coffin on Apr 1662 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA.

Nathaniel joined religion 1789 in Quaker. He was employed in Ran a Trading Post with the Indians. He was employed in Financed Whaling ventures. He resided in Home was called Parliament House.

Other marriages:
Coffin, Deborah

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
At time of death was doubtless the wealthiest man on Island.  Owned
three full shares of land. Was town clerk for several years.

Mary Coffin [Parents] 1, 2, 3 was born 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 20 Feb 1643/1644 in Haverhill, Essex Co., MA. She died 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 13 Sep 1717 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA and was buried 17 14 Nov 1717 in Quaker Burying Grounds, Nantucket, MA. Mary married Nathaniel Starbuck on Apr 1662 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA.

Mary joined religion 1701 in Quaker. She joined religion 18 Quaker 1701.

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
Noted as one of the ablest women on Nantucket.  Her advice and
influence were noteworthy factors in the conduct of affairs.  Leading
spirit in the Society of Friends.

"She was a remarkable woman, anticipating by two centuries the advanced views of women of today."

Friends Cemetery

They had the following children:

  F i Mary S. Starbuck was born 30 Mar 1663 and died after 1696.
  F ii Elizabeth Starbuck was born 9 Nov 1665 and died 1706.
  M iii Nathaniel Starbuck was born 8 Aug 1666 and died 29 Jun 1755.
  M iv Jethro Starbuck was born 14 Dec 1671 and died 12 Aug 1770.
  M v
Barnabas Starbuck was born about 1673.
  F vi Eunice Starbuck was born 1 Apr 1674 and died 12 Feb 1766.
  F vii Priscilla Starbuck was born 24 Oct 1676 and died 14 Mar 1762.
  F viii Hephzabeth Starbuck was born 2 Apr 1680.
  F ix
Ann Starbuck was born about 1682.
  M x
Paul Starbuck was born about 1684.

Nathaniel Starbuck [Parents] was born 20 Feb 1634/1635 in Dover, Strafford, NH. He died 6 Jun 1719 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA. Nathaniel married Deborah Coffin about 1661.

Nathaniel joined religion 1789 in Quaker. He was employed in Ran a Trading Post with the Indians. He was employed in Financed Whaling ventures. He resided in Home was called Parliament House.

Other marriages:
Coffin, Mary

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
At time of death was doubtless the wealthiest man on Island.  Owned
three full shares of land. Was town clerk for several years.

Deborah Coffin [Parents] was born 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 15 Nov 1642 in Haverhill, Essex Co., Massachusetts. She died 7, 8, 9 8 Dec 1642 in Haverhill, Essex Co., Massachusetts and was buried Dec 1643 in Haverhill, Essex, MA. Deborah married Nathaniel Starbuck about 1661.


Edward Starbuck [Parents] was born 16 Feb 1603/1604 in Nantucket, Nantuckey, MA. He died 12 Apr 1690 in Nantucket, Nantucket, MA. Edward married Catherine Reynolds on 30 Aug 1638 in Dover, Dover, NH.

Edward 4 Feb 1689/1690 Nantucket, MA.

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
Very important among the so called first purchasers of Nantucket.
While he was not one of the first ten who bought the Island, he was
with Tristram Coffin when he first wen to the Island, and he was one
of the two boys who were with Thomas Macy and family when they left
Salisbury to make a new home on Nantucket.  He was a man of great
firmness and had great influence among the Indians.

Catherine Reynolds [Parents] was born 1609 in Wales, British Isles. She died 4 Feb 1690/1691 in Dover, Strafford, NH. Catherine married Edward Starbuck on 30 Aug 1638 in Dover, Dover, NH.

Catherine 1609 of Dover, Strafford, NH. She about 1610 Wales.

Other marriages:
Conley, Abraham
Austin, Joseph

They had the following children:

  F i Sarah Starbuck was born 1630 and died 6 Jun 1719.
  M ii Nathaniel Starbuck was born 20 Feb 1634/1635 and died 6 Jun 1719.
  M iii
James Starbuck was born about 1637 in Dover, Strafford Co., NH.
  F iv Esther Starbuck was born about 1638 and died before 1664.
  F v Dorcas Starbuck was born 1639 and died Oct 1696.
  F vi Abigail Starbuck was born 1641 and died before 1683.
  F vii Susanna Shuah Starbuck was born 1648 and died before 13 Aug 1729.
  F viii Esther Starbuck was born 1650 and died before 13 Aug 1694.
  M ix
Jethro Starbuck was born 27 May 1651 in Dover, Strafford Co., NH. He died 27 May 1663 in Nantucket, Nantucket Co., MA.

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
Killed by the overturning of a cart at twelve years of age.

Joseph Hull was born 25 Apr 1594 in Crewkerne, Somersetshire, England. He died 19 Nov 1665 in Old Parish, Accomenticus, York Co., ME. Joseph married Joanna Coffin on 1618 in Crewkerne, Somersetshire, England.

Joanna Coffin [Parents] was born 1, 2 about 1608 in Crewkerne, Somersetshire, England. She died 1632 in Crewkerne, Somersetshire, England. Joanna married Joseph Hull on 1618 in Crewkerne, Somersetshire, England.

[Abernath.ged]

INDIVIDUAL_NOTE
remained in England and married there.

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