Chandler, Rhoda (b. 24 JAN 1787, d. ?)
Source: (Name)
Title: Desc. of William Chandler
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Desc. of William Chandler
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Death: 6 JUN 1659 Roxbury, MA
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Media: Book
Baptism: --Not Shown--
Baptism: 30 JAN 1590/91 Burton Latimer, Northampton, England
Death: 1623 Burton Latimer, Northampton, England
Burial: JAN 1622/23 Burton Latimer, Northampton, England
Note: According to "The Great Migration", Anne "Joanna" [Taylor][Tuttle][Shatswell] married John Green after March 1647.
Source: (Death)
Title: The Great Migration Begins
Author: Robert Charles Anderson
Media: Book
Note: genealogylibrary.comPage: pg 813
Death: 17 APR 1673 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Death: 1687
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammatt Papers
Author: Abraham Hammatt
Publication: 1880 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Death: 10 NOV 1733 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Death: ABT 1647 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Death: 1653
Death: 3 MAR 1711/12 Amesbury, Essex, MA
Note: The claim that Nathaniel Rogers was descended from the Puritan “proto-martyr” John Rogers, burned at the stake in 1555 during the reign of “Bloody” Queen Mary of England, has been repeatedly disproven, even though it still appears on many genealogical websites.
Rogers, Nathaniel (1598–1655), divine, second son of the puritan John Rogers (1572?–1636) [q.v.], by his first wife, was born at Haverhill, Essex, in 1598. He was educated at Dedham grammar school and Emmanuel College, Cambridge, which he entered as a sizar on 9 May 1614, graduating B.A. in 1617 and M.A. in 1621. For two years he was domestic chaplain to some person of rank, and then went as curate to Dr. John Barkham at Bocking, Essex. There Rogers, whose chief friends were Thomas Hooker [q.v.], the lecturer of Chelmsford, and other Essex puritans, adopted decidedly puritan views. His rector finally dismissed him for performing the burial office over ‘an eminent person’ without a surplice. Giles Firmin [q.v.], who calls Rogers ‘a man so able and judicious in soul-work that I would have trusted my own soul with him,’ describes his preaching in his ‘reverend old father’s’ pulpit at Dedham against his father’s interpretation of faith, while the latter, ‘who dearly loved him,’ stood by.
On leaving Bocking he was for five years rector of Assington, Suffolk. On 1 June 1636 he sailed with his wife and family for New England, where they arrived in November. Rogers was ordained pastor of Ipswich, Massachusetts, on 20 Feb. 1638, when he succeeded Nathaniel Ward as co-pastor with John Norton (1606–1663) [q.v.] On 6 Sept. he took the oath of freedom at Ipswich, and was soon appointed a member of the synod, and one of a body deputed to reconcile a difference between the legalists and the antinomians. He died at Ipswich on 3 July 1655, aged 57.
Death: 3 JUL 1655 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Source: (Name)
Title: English Origins of New England Families
Media: Book
Death: 23 JAN 1674/75 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Note: Rogers, John (1572?–1636), puritan divine, a native of Essex, was born about 1572. He was a near relative of Richard Rogers (1550?–1618) [q.v.], who provided for his education at Cambridge. Twice did the ungrateful lad sell his books and waste the proceeds. His kinsman would have discarded him but for his wife’s intercession. On a third trial Rogers finished his university career with credit. In 1592 he became vicar of Honingham, Norfolk, and in 1603 he succeeded Lawrence Fairclough, father of Samuel Fairclough [q.v.], as vicar of Haverhill, Suffolk.
In 1605 he became vicar of Dedham, Essex, where for over thirty years he had the repute of being ‘one of the most awakening preachers of the age.’ On his lecture days his church overflowed. Cotton Mather reports a saying of Ralph Brownrig [q.v.] that Rogers would ‘do more good with his wild notes that we with our set music.’ His lecture was supressed from 1629 till 1631, on the ground of his nonconformity. His subsequent compliance was not strict. Giles Firmin [q.v.], one of his converts, ‘never saw him wear a surplice,’ and he only occasionally used the prayer-book, and then repeated portions of it from memory. He died on 18 Oct. 1636, and was buried in the churchyard at Dedham. There is a tombstone to his memory, and also a mural monument in the church. His funeral sermon was preached by John Knowles (1600?–1685) [q.v.]. His engraved portrait exhibits a worn face, and depicts him in nightcap, ruff, and full beard. Matthew Newcomen [q.v.] succeeded him at Dedham. Nathaniel Rogers [q.v.] was his second son.
It's important to note that John Rogers did NOT have any children by his 2nd wife who was Elizabeth Gale/Gold NOR by his 3rd wife, Dorothy Stanton.
Death: 18 OCT 1636
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