Herrick, Israel (b. 11 JUN 1720, d. 8 MAY 1760)
Source: (Name)
Title: IGI
Media: OtherPage: AFN:GQ3M-D0
Death: 8 MAY 1760 Preston, New London, CT
Death: 13 MAY 1760 Preston, New London, CT
Death: 5 OCT 1837 Leroy, Genesee, NY
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Author: James Savage
Media: Book
Source: (Name)
Title: IGI
Media: OtherPage: AFN:FKZ6-MP
Death: 19 OCT 1744 Preston, New London, CT
Death: 3 JAN 1770 Preston, New London, CT
Source: (Name)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Author: James Savage
Media: Book
Death: 5 APR 1731 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Death: BET 1697 AND 1700 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Note: "GEORGE PARTRIDGE, the first of the family in America, arrived at Duxbury, Mass., in or sometime prior to 1636. It is stated in Winsor's "History of Duxbury" that he came from the County of Kent in England.
The first mention of his name upon the records of Plymouth County was in that year (1636), when he was granted five acres of land at Powder Point, with permission from the court to settle thereon. In the next two years and also in 1666, he received additional grants of land about Duxbury, amounting in all to about two hundred acres.
Winsor styles him "one of the most respectable yeomanry of the colony." In 1643 his name appears in a list of those able to bear arms. In 1646 he was constable. Of this office Winsor says: "This was an office of high trust and responsibility and none were elected to it but men of good standing."
Later he was a "Surveyor of Highways" and a grand-jury man. He was either a private or a non-commissioned officer in Capt. Miles Standish's Company. He was one of the original purchasers of Middleborough.
Source: At genealogylibrary.com is: Descendants of George Partridge of Duxbury, MA, George Henry Partridge, The Plimpton Press, Norwood, MA 1915
Death: 10 OCT 1695 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Death: 16 NOV 1708 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Death: 5 AUG 1681 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Death: 29 OCT 1676 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Note: Emigrated as a servant passenger on the "James" from Southampton, England arriving at Boston on June 3, 1635.
Source: (Death)
Title: Gen. Dict. of First Settlers of New England
Author: James Savage
Media: Book
Death: SEP 1641 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Death: 2 JUN 1664 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Note: He was the first minister of Duxbury, Mass. arriving at Boston in a half years passage from London, Nov. 1636 in the company of Rev. Nathaniel Rogers.
Death: 4 MAY 1658 Duxbury, Plymouth, MA
Death: BEF 1658
Note: Emigrated in "Anne" in 1623 from Leyden, Netherlands. Returned to England permanently between 1643 and 1654. Some records indicate that Stephen's wife, Tryphosa and daughter, Sarah, came in 1625 on the "Jacob".
Source: (Name)
Title: The Great Migration Begins
Author: Robert Charles Anderson
Media: Book
Note: genealogylibrary.com
Death: 20 MAR 1653/54 Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England
Death: 15 JUN 1640 England
Note: "Thomas Rose was an early settler in the southern part of Preston. His name acquired notoriety from the situation of his dwelling house. A large oak tree near the house was a noted boundary mark between Norwich and New London, standing as a stately warder precisely at the southeast corner of Norwich. It was directly upon the line running east from the head of Poquetannock Cove to the bounds of Stonington, and is referred to in several surveys, acts, and patents."
Death: 20 NOV 1743 Stonington, New London, CT
Death: 5 JAN 1744/45 Stonington, New London, CT
Note: Robert Allyn migrated to Salem, Mass. in approximately 1637, was a member of the Blynman party who moved on to New London, Connecticut in 1651, and was one of the original "proprietors" of Norwich, Conn. in 1659.
"Robert Allyn, before coming to New London, had resided at least twelve years in Salem; he was there in 1637, a member of the church in 1642, and had three children baptised there, John, Sarah, and Mary. After the settlement of Norwich, he had a house-lot in that plantation, was constable in 1669, and in deeds is styled "formerly of New London, bot now of New Norridge." After a time, relinquishing his house-lot to his son John, he returned to his farm, at the time of his death was once more an inhabitant of New London. He died in 1683, being probably about seventy-five years of age. He was freed from training in 1668, an immunity not usually granted to a man under sixty.
The heirs to his estate were five children, viz., John, Sarah, wife of George Geer; Mary, wife of Thomas Parke; Hannah, wife of Thomas Rose; and Deborah, then unmarried.
John, the only son of Robert Allyn, married Dec 24, 1668, Elizabeth, daughter of John Gager. After the death of his father, he left Norwich and returned to the paternal farm where he built a house and warehouse near the river, at a place since known as Allyn's Point." Anderson, in The Great Migration Begins, speculates he may be the brother of William Allen of Salem and Manchester: "probably the brother of Robert Allen of Salem, Manchester and New London (based on joint grant of land on 25 January 1642/43, and the simultaneous residence in Manchester [see Granberry 146 and Essex Ant 2:135]." (TGMB, p 35).
Death: 20 SEP 1683 Allyn's Point, New London, CT
This HTML database was produced by a registered copy of
GED4WEB© version 3.14 .