Warner, Daniel (b. ABT 1640, d. 24 NOV 1696)
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Author: James Savage
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammatt Papers
Author: Abraham Hammatt
Publication: 1880 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Death: 24 NOV 1696 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Source: (Name)
Title: Pioneers of Massachusetts
Author: Charles Henry Pope
Publication: 1900 Boston, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: VR-Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: New England Marriages Prior to 1700
Author: Clarence A. Torrey
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammatt Papers
Author: Abraham Hammatt
Publication: 1880 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: BookData:
Text: Says her name was Doritha Dwitt
Source: (Name)
Title: OneWorldTree
Media: Ancestry.com
Note: www.ancestry.comData:
Text: Ancestry.com. One World Tree (sm) [database online]. Provo, UT: MyFamily.com, Inc.
Death: 9 JAN 1737/38 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Source: (Name)
Title: Pioneers of Massachusetts
Author: Charles Henry Pope
Publication: 1900 Boston, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammatt Papers
Author: Abraham Hammatt
Publication: 1880 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammatt Papers
Author: Abraham Hammatt
Publication: 1880 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammatt Papers
Author: Abraham Hammatt
Publication: 1880 Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: New England Marriages Prior to 1700
Author: Clarence A. Torrey
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: VR-Ipswich, Essex, MA
Media: Book
Source: (Birth)
Title: Wis. Birth Index
Source: (Death)
Title: Soc. Sec. Death Index
Media: Book
Death: 24 MAY 1992 Mission, Hidlago, TX
Source: (Name)
Title: Barnstable Families
Author: Amis Otis; Revised by C.F. Swift
Publication: 1888
Media: Book
Death: 1646 Barnstable, MA
Burial: 21 SEP 1646 Barnstable, MA
Death: 11 AUG 1650 Watertown, NA
Note: A physician, he came in the "Increase" on April 15, 1635 with his wife and children.
Death: 10 NOV 1658 of Watertown, MA
Source: (Name)
Title: NEHGR
Media: BookPage: 30:Jan 1876
Death: 14 SEP 1670 Watertown, Middlesex, MA
Note: William Hammond, the emigrant ancestor of this branch of the family in America, was born in Lavenham, County of Suffolk, England, where he was baptized October 30, 1575. He was the only surviving son of Thomas and Rose (Trippe) Hammond, his younger brother, Thomas, having died in infancy. He was left an orphan by the death of his father in 1589 and very little can be learned about his early life. He married there June 9, 1605, Elizabeth Paine, and their children were all born in Lavenham. It is uncertain just when he came to America, as no record has been found, but there are records in Boston of a William Hammond, as early as 1632, and this may have been the same man. This, however, is very uncertain, as it may have been the William Hammond who settled in Lynn, in 1636, and who is supposed to have been the eldest son of William of Watertown, born in Lavenham in 1607. The first positive records of this William Hammond are to be found in Scituate, Mass., prior to 1636, the name being found there as "Hamans." Deane's History of Scituate, p. 277, says "he soon deceased or removed" from there and it was undoubtedly at about this time (1636) that he became a settler in Watertown, as no record of an earlier date has been found of him there. He probably located in Watertown at about the same time as did his brothers-in-law? William Paine and Dr. Simon Eire, all of whom seem to have followed their brother-in-law, John Page, who was one of the first settlers. No record of the date of arrival in America of his elder children has been found and it is supposed that they came with him, two or more years prior to the arrival of his wife and younger children, who came in the ship "Francis," from Ipswich, England, in April, 1634. It is possible that he came with his elder children, in company with his brother-in-law, John Page, prior to, or about 1630, but it hardly seems reasonable to suppose that he was here so long before the arrival of his wife and younger children. It is probable that he was in Scituate some time before removing to Watertown.
The statement that his daughter, Anne, married Rev. John Lothrop is not proven, and though there is some evidence to show such connection, it seems IMPROBABLE. Dr. Roland Hammond, in his Hammond Geneology, published in 1894, uses the quotation from Rev. Mr. Lothrop's Journal to establish a connection in his own line, and the family of William Hammond, of Watertown, is supposed to have been connected with his line in some way. In a note on page 9 of his work he says, "Rev. John Lothrop established a church at Scituate Harbor, Mass., and afterwards at Barnstable, Mass. He is said to have married for his second wife, Anne, widow, daughter of William Hammond, of Watertown, Mass., and had Barnabas, Abigail, Bathshua and John. But the evidence that the widow, Anne, was the daughter of William Hammond is far from convincing."
The marriage of William's daughter, Elizabeth, to Samuel House, of Scituate, which must have taken place soon after her arrival in this country, however, establishes a connecting link between Scituate and Watertown. Dea?e's History of Scituage, p. 289, says, "Samuel House had lands assigned, by the committee for laying out lands, in 1634, south-east of Colman's hill, between the lots of Rev. Mr. Lothrop and Richard Foxwell. He probably was one of Mr. Lothrop's Church, who came with him from London." The Pastoral ?ournal of the Rev. John Lothrop, reprinted in the N. E. Hist. Gen. Register (Vol. IX, pp. 279-87; Vol. X. pp. 37-43) contains the following entry: "Elizabeth Hammond, my sister, having a dismission from the church in Watertown, was joined April 16, 1638," which shows relationship between the families. If Elizabeth was the mother of the elder children of Samuel House she must have been his wife prior to this time, as the records show that he had a daughter Elizabeth baptized in 1636. It seems probable, however, that she was his second wife and not the mother of this child. No record of her marriage has been found and she was a widow at the time of her father's death in 1662, House having died in 1661. It is probable that William Hammond's other children were in Scituate with their married sister a part of the time, at least, as the youngest son, John, is recorded as able to bear arms there in 1643. William Hammond was admitted freeman in Watertown, May 25, 1636, and was grantee of seven lots and purchaser of three lots before 1644. His homestead of 40 acres was situated on the west of Common Street. It was bounded on the east and north by lands of his brother-in-law, Dr. Simon Eire, on the west by John Simson, Isaac Sterne and John Warren, and on the south by Thomas Boyden. Bond's Hist. of Watertown (p. 1088) says, "It is probable that William Hammond settled first on the Cambridge Road, very near the Cambridge line. Whether this was a grant to him the records do not show. He sold it early and settled on his 40-acre homestall, situated east of Pequusset meadow. He also owned three small lots in Pequusset meadow, one of these granted to him and the other two purchased. This homestall passed to his son (grandson) Thomas." March 10, 1642, in the division of lands, he was granted lot No. 76, in the 4th Division, containing 165 acres, and this, with his other holdings, made him one of the largest land owners in the town. The records do not show that he was often an office holder in the town and this may have been due to his independence in religious matters, which may have made him unpopular with his more puritanical neighbors, although he does not appear to have been so unpopular as some of his most intimate friends. His near neighbor and most intimate friend appears to have been John Warren, who came from the same locality in Suffolk County, England, and between whose family and his own there appears to have been considerable intimacy for several generations prior to the settlement in America. Mr. Warren seems to have had even less regard for the rigid puritanical regulations of the time than his friend, Hammond, and to have become rather more unpopular thereby. In Oct. 1651, Warren was fined 20 shillings "for an offense against the laws concerning baptism," and April 4, 1654, "for neglect of publick worship" 14 Sabbaths at 5 shillings each. March 14, 1658, he was ordered to be "warned for not attending publick worship," but "old Warren was not to be found in town." May 27, 1661, the houses of "old Warren and Goodman Hammond" were ordered to be searched for Quakers, for whom they were known to have considerable sympathy.
Source: (Name)
Title: NEHGR
Media: BookPage: 30:Jan 1876
Baptism: 30 OCT 1575 Lavenham, Suffolk, England
Death: 8 OCT 1662 Watertown, Middlesex, MA
Source: (Name)
Title: Hammond Familes in America
Death: 1661 Scituate, MA
Note: He came to New England in the "Susan and Ellen" in April 1635 at age 40. Settled at Ipswich, Mass. He was a commoner in 1641; was one of the 27 richest inhabitants whohad 2 shares in Plum Island in 1664.
Source: (Name)
Title: Pioneers of Massachusetts
Author: Charles Henry Pope
Publication: 1900 Boston, MA
Media: BookPage: pg 375
Death: BET 28 AUG AND 28 NOV 1672 Ipswich, Essex, MA
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