from Carl Finch: WILLIAM2 HAYNES (WALTER1) was born June 06, 1624 in Renhold, Bedfordshire, England (Source: (1) Zena Grant Collier, Renhold Parish Registers, (Researched October 31, 1984)., (2) Edited by F. G. Emmison, LDS Film # 0599352, (Bedfordshire, Parish Registers, 1602-1812), and died Abt. 1651 in Salem, Essex, MA (Source: Carliton A. Finch, The Haynes Family (1600-1994), (Published 1994).). He married SARAH INGERSOLL Abt. 1643 in Salem, Essex, MA (Source: Mary E. N. Backus, New England Ancestry of Dana Converse Backus, (Private distribution (Spalding/Haynes)).), daughter of RICHARD INGERSOLL and ANN LANGLEY. She was born Abt. 1625 in Sandy, Bedfordshire, England (Source: Lillian Drake Avery of Pontiac, MI, A Genealogy of the Ingersoll Family in America, 1629-1925.), and died Abt. 1719 in Salem, Essex, MA (Source: Carliton A. Finch, The Haynes Family (1600-1994), (Published 1994).). Notes for WILLIAM HAYNES: The name of William Haynes is frequently seen in the early records of Massachusetts and meagerly described in several well known genealogical dictionaries. William Haynes arrived in America 14 September 1634, as noted in Planters of Commonwealth; by Charles E. Banks; dated 1930; pages 113 and 114; at Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colony on the ship "GRIFFIN". There were some 100 passengers plus cattle for the plantations. Among the listed was a William Haynes and Richard Haynes from county Bedfordshire, England going to Salem in Massachusetts Bay Colony. Richard was an older brother of William. William Haynes settled in Salem Massachusetts prior to 07 July 1644, when on that date he was appointed at a General Town Meeting along with several other inhabitants of Salem (Town) to patrol the settlement each Sabbath day. Each patrol consisting of two men, were instructed to take note of Sabbath breakers and report their names to the authorities( Haynes Chronicle, volume 2 #4, revision 1991). Sometime prior to July 1644, William Haynes married Sarah Ingersoll, the daughter of Richard and Ann (Langley) Ingersoll. Sarah Ingersoll was baptized 1 Jul 1627 at Sutton Parish, Bedfordshire England and since infant baptisms were the general practice at the time, it is unlikely she would have married much before 1642. William and Sarah resided in Hampton Massachusetts after their marriage. It should be noted here that the families of William Haynes, son of Walter and Mary Watford Haynes, and Sarah Ingersoll, daughter of Richard and Ann Langely Ingersoll, most probably were acquainted as a result of living in close proximity in the County Bedfordshire, England. Sarah emigrated with her family (three sisters and two brithers) on 29 June 1629 aboard the "HIGGINSON" and settled in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts. Richard Ingersoll presented letters to Massachusetts Governor Endicott and and was subsequently granted 80 acres of land on the east side of the Wooleston River plus a two acre Salem (Town) lot. At the town site he operated a ferry across the North River. To further comment on the Haynes/Ingersoll family relationship it must be noted that William and Richard Haynes emigrated as two orphan boys age 10 and 13 on the ship "Griffin" in 1634 and were destined to join the Ingersoll family in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts. Their parents had both died in 1632. In 1640 Salem census Richard Ingersoll's family is credited with nine persons and he is given an allotment of one acre(Genealogy of Ingersoll Family of America, 1629-1925, Lillian Drake Avery). Now, if circumstantial evidence may be taken as conclusive, it is reasonable to assume that the count of nine included William Haynes (age 16) living in the household. Richard Ingersoll emigrated with a family of seven (Richard and Ann, George, John, Alice, Joanna, Sarah, and Bathsheba). Nathaniel was born in Salem, Massachusetts. It is believed that Alice married William Walcott about 1631 and was not living at home. William Haynes joined the family in 1634 and would have brought the family back to nine. From Essex Town Records Richard Haynes served as a bondsman June 1640 for Daniel Huchins assuring Daniels appearance in court to respond to charges of neglecting two children who were assigned to him and brought over from England it can be concluded that he was residing on property which he earlier had purchased and not living in the Ingersoll household. With Alice Ingersoll Walcott and Richard Haynes out of Ingersoll household and 16 year William Haynes still living in the household since 1634 the family count would have been nine. As noted in the Haynes Genealogy private manuscript of Ralph E. Haynes, this close family relationship is further illustrated by William Haynes purchasing jointly with Richard Ingersoll (father-in-law) the Weston grant. Also jointly with Richard Haynes (brother) and Richard Ingersoll a portion of the Townsend Bishop grant in the northern section of the Salem boundary territory. This land area subsequently came to known as Salem Farms, of Salem village and is presently Danvers, Massachusetts. William and Richard sold their two thirds part of the farm 14 November 1649. In same period both William and Richard Haynes were held responsible in a 1647 court case involving the death of two cows belonging to their adjacent neighbor, the Honorable Simon Bradstreet. As noted in letter to H. W. Haynes, Bennington, Vermont from The First Church in Salem, Massachusetts, dated 28 September 1964; William Haynes was listed as a full communicant of the First Church of Salem on 19 September 1647 and his wife, Sarah, was received in full "comunyon" on 4 January 1649. It is believed that William Haynes died in the early part of the year 1651 or if it occurred before 25th March, according to the old calendar, it would be in the year 1650. Widow Sarah Ingersoll Haynes married Joseph (Holton) Houlton whom at an earlier time had been a servant in her father's household. The marriage was recorded as Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts as 13 Nov 1651. Joseph and Sarah Haynes Houlton were seen in records as to living in Salem Village on the Weston grant property originally purchased by her father, Richard Ingersoll, and her first husband William Haynes. The will of Joseph Houlton was written 23 May 1703 and probated 27 June 1705. Notes for SARAH INGERSOLL: Joseph and Sarah Houlton were seen in records as to living in Salem Village on the Weston Grant property originally purchased by her father, Richard Ingersoll, and her first husband William Haynes. The will of Joseph Houlton was written 23 May 1703 and probated 27 June 1705. Children of WILLIAM HAYNES and SARAH INGERSOLL are: i. JONATHAN3 HAYNES, b. Abt. 1646, Salem, Essex, Massachusetts (Source: Vital Records of Salem, Massachusetts, (Baptism 4-11-1648).); d. February 22, 1697/98, Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts (Source: Vital Records of Haverhill, MA; Volume I- Births; Volume II- Marriages and Deaths.); m. SARAH MOULTON, December 30, 1674, Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts (Source: Vital Records of Newbury, MA.); b. December 17, 1656, Hampton, Rockingham, Massachusetts (Source: William Haslet Jones, The Ancestry of William Moulton & Margaret Page.); d. Abt. 1731, Massachusetts. Notes for JONATHAN HAYNES: Jonathan Haynes was baptized 11 Apr 1648 in the New Church of Salem Massachusetts (Salem Vital Records, page 416, C.R. 1). Jonathan Haynes was probably raised in Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts where his mother resided after the death of her husband William Haynes. Although Sarah remarried to Joseph Houlton at Newbury in 1651 and eventually moved back to Salem Viiiage, it appears that Jonathan remained in Newbury until around the year 1686, and then removed to Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts. Jonathan was a brick maker and farmer (Haynes family of Haverhill, Massachusetts, typewritten manualscript unpublished). In1669 he apparently contemplated moving to East New Jersey by invitation of Governor Carteret and is seen in New Jersey deed records of 1673, along with several other Newbury men, as purchasing land in Woodbridge, East New Jersey. It is not known if he actually went to New Jersey or not; several of the Newbury men did eventually settle there. But at any rate, Jonathan Haynes was in Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts on 30 Dec 1674 to marry Sarah Moulton the daughter of William and Margaret Page Moulton. Essex County Court record gives the "marriage of Jonathan Haines of Newburie to Sarah Moulton, 30 of 10th month (Dec old calendar) 1674". Some reference documents conflict on the marriage location and have shown both Salem and Hampton, Massachusetts. This may stem from boundary changes and both are within a few miles of the present New Hampshire border. Hampton was in the Massachusetts Bay Colony until 1679, at such time it was joined to the Royal Colony of New Hampshire (now Rockingham county) which is just north of the current Massachusetts border. Haverhill, Essex county, Massachusetts remained within the Massachusetts Bay Colony just a few miles south of the present New Hampshire border. Jonathan and Sarah's marriage is also recorded in Haverhill Vital Records. As per the following quotation from Coffin's History of Newbury: "At the close of the summer of 1665, by invitation of Governor Carteret of New Jersey, several persons went from Newbury, Massachusetts and settled in a township which was called Woodbridge, New Jersey. Of these emigrants, some stayed, others returned. Among them were Jonathan Haynes, Elisha Ilsley and John Ilsley." This article is of special interest to Ralph Frederic Haynes who married Edith Ilsley, a descendant of Isaac Ilsley, brother of Elisha and John Ilsley. Their common ancestor, and father, William Ilsley, is one of those mentioned on the commerative plaque on the lower commons in old Newbury, as a founder of the town of Newbury. History and some family lore also states that Jonathan had previously married Sarah's sister Mary Moulton on 01 January 1674 and that she died on 17 July 1674; but The Moulton Annals, pp. 256-8, by Henry W. Moulton, dated 1906 gives the will of William Moulton of Hampton, Massachusetts, dated 8 March 1663/4, proved 11 October 1664, which names both daughters, Mary and Sarah. In listing the children it states that Mary died 24 June 1664. The Genealogy Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, under Moulton, states that Mary Moulton died 27 July 1664; and that Sarah, born 17 December 1656, " m. 30 December 1674 (Mary- by Newbury records) Jonathan Haines." "The dates, 30 December 1674 and 1 January 1674/5, are only two days apart, and aside from the strong prevailing prejudice against marriage to a deceased wife's sister, it is absurb to suppose that Jonathan married the Moulton sisters at such an incredibly brief interval. Mary Moulton died unmarried, as there is a record to prove. We can only conclude that Jonathan had his marriage entered in Newbury and that a careless clerk miscalled Sarah as Mary." (The American Genealogist, Donald Lines Jacobus, M.A., of New Haven, Connecticut) In a 1682 Essex County court case Jonathan Haynes gave his age as "about 36 years" and his wife, Sarah as "about 26 years" and this would place his birth date as about 1646 and Sarah's about 1656 (Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County, 8:387). Jonathan and Sarah lived in Newbury, Massachusetts and they had six children born there, removed to Haverhill, Massachusetts about 1685 and had five more children there. Jonathan lived in Haverhill until he was killed by the Indians February 22, 1697/1698. Haverhill, founded in 1640, inland on the Merrimac River was a frontier town and it suffered severely from Indians. During King William's war; on 16 Aug 1696 Jonathan Haynes and his children was working out in a field near Bradley Mills. The Indians attacked taking Jonathan and his children Mary, age 19, Thomas, age 16, Jonathan, age 12 and Joseph, age 7 all captive. The Indians took them to Penacock (Concord), NH where they were divided. The father and his eldest son, Thomas were taken to an Indian village in ME from which they later escaped. After days in the wilderness, Jonathan collapsed from hunger and exhaustion. Thomas went to the top of a hill and climbed a tree and his quick ear caught the sound of a saw mill. He ran to the sound and told his story to the settlers of Saco, ME. The settlers helped him with his father and Jonathan and Thomas Haynes remained in Saco, until their strength returned and than they started home to Haverhill, MA (The History of Haverhill, Benjamin L. Mirick). In the meantime the Indian party took the other children Mary, Jonathan, and Joseph into Canada where they sold them to the French. Mary was redeemed the following winter for a ransom of 100 pounds of tobacco (taken to Canada on sled) and she was returned to Haverhill, Massachusetts. Jonathan and Joseph remained in Canada and grew up as Frenchmen, married into French-Canadian families and forgot their native English language. Family lore passed from Guy C Haynes Esq. of East Boston, MA, native of Haverhill, Massachusetts is as follows; "In one of the companies in the Canadian expedition of 1757 were three brothers named Haynes (probably Joseph, David and Ammi-Ruhamah). While in Canada they had leave granted to make a search for the captive brothers and found them. The brothers had lost their knowledge of their English language and spoke only French. Thus they could only talk through an interpreter. One of them asked about his sister, who had one of her fingers accidently cut off by a young lad, the son of a neighbor, a short time before her capture. He recollected the circumstance and ask if she was still living. Neither of them could be persuaded to return." In the year 1698 the Indians commenced their attack on settlers unusually early. On 22 Feb 1698 a party fell upon Andover, Massachusetts killing five inhabitants and capturing as many more. On their return north, the same party killed Jonathan Haynes and Samuel Ladd and captured a son of each. Jonthan's son Thomas was kidnapped the second time by the Indians. Administration of her husband's, Jonathan Haynes', estate was granted to Sarah Moulton Haynes on Dec. 05 1698 in Salem Court. She and three other residents of Haverhill, MA signed a petition dated 17 Aug 1701, addressed to the Lieutenant Governor and council begging that the resolution which had been passed for redeeming of captives be put into execution as speedily as possible. Jonathan Haynes is buried in West Parish (Haynes) Cemetery on Carleton Street, Haverhill, Essex, MA. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 •Residence: BEF 1634 Dunstable, Bedfordshire, England, UK 9 6 7 •Immigration: 18 SEP 1634 Boston, Suffolk, MA U. S. A. •Note: See the 'Passenger List for the Griffin.' This vessel sailed from London to Boston or Plymouth in 1634. The list states that: "WILLIAM HAINES of Dunstable, county Bedford (settled in) Salem" and "RICHARD HAINES of Dunstable, county Bedford (settled in) Salem" immigrated to New England. 9 6 •PROP: part of the 540 acres "Weston Grant" (now Danvers, MA) BEF 1644 Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. •Note: William Haynes purchased jointly with Richard Ingersoll, from John Pease, the Weston Grant, and jointly with Richard Haynes a portion of the Townsend Bishop Grant of 540 acres in the northern end of the Salem Town boundary territory. 6 •Residence: BEF 7 JUL 1644 Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 10 4 11 12 1 •Event: appointed to patrol on the Sabbath to make sure people attended church services Misc 7 JUL 1644 Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 6 •Event: mentioned in the will of his father-in-law Richard Ingersoll Misc 21 JUL 1644 Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. •Note: He referred to "Richard Pettingell and William Haines my sons-in-law." 10 11 6 •Religion: a full communicant of the First Church of Salem 1647 Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 13 12 •Event: found guilty (with brother Richard) in court case involving death of 2 cows of Hon. Simon Bradstreet Misc (no was) 1647 Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 6 •Death: BEF 13 NOV 1651 in Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 6 •Occupation: husbandman 12 •Event: the twin brother of Robert Misc 6 HintsAncestry Hints for William Haines 3 possible matches found on Ancestry.com Ancestry.com Father: Walter HAYNES b: ABT 1582 Mother: Mary WATFORD b: ABT 1586 Marriage 1 Sarah INGERSOLL c: 1 JUL 1627 in Sutton, Bedfordshire, England, UK•Married: ABT 1644 in Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. •Note: from SAVAGE: "WILLIAM, Salem 1644, perhaps brother of James or Richard m. Sarah, daughter of Richard Ingersoll. They had: a. Thomas, of Amesbury, who took oath of fidelity 20 Dec 1677 and m.1676 Sarah Rea. b. Perhaps others." === from TORREY: HAINES, William & Sarah [INGERSOLL], m/2 Joseph HOLTON 1651; ca 1644; Salem 6 11 14 15 16 5 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Children1.Has Children Jonathan HAYNES b: ABT 1646 in Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. c: 11 JAN 1647/8 in Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 2.Has Children Sarah HAYNES b: ABT 1650 in Salem, Essex, MA U. S. A. 3.Has Children Thomas HAYNES b: ABT APR 1651 Sources: 1.Abbrev: Torrey's New England Marriages Title: New England Marriages Prior To 1700 Clarence Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior To 1700 (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1985) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA 2.Abbrev: SAVAGE'S DICTIONARY Title: A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register James Savage; compiled by O. P. Dexter, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register (The best known and most frequently used genealogical dictionary.This monumental work gives the name of every settler who came to New England before 1692, regardless of his rank, station in life or fortune. Traces the descendants of each person, giving dates of marriage and death, dates of birth, marriage and death of his children, and the birth dates and names of his grandchildren, thus recording the beginning of the third generation in New England. Binding is 4 vols. 2,541 pp.) Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 65-18541 (Boston: 1860-1862 Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139, And A Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes of the Genealogical Dictionary of James Savage, by O. P. Dexter, 1884. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, 1965,1969,1977,1981,1986, 1990) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: Vol. 2, p. 391 and p. 521 3.Abbrev: 700 Ancestors Title: Lewis Keeler Leonard and Melvena Burris Leonard, Seven Hundred Ancestors (Privately published, 1975) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 50 4.Abbrev: Topographical Dictionary (Banks) Title: Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England 1620-1650 Charles Edward Banks, Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England 1620-1650 (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1976) This "Dictionary" comprises genealogical records of nearly 3,000 emigrants, giving their English homes, names of ships in which they sailed, towns in which they settled in New England, and references to the printed or manuscript sources from which the information derived. In collecting data for this work, Col. Banks made seven visits to England, searching the records of nearly 2,000 parishes in order to connect the New England immigrants with their native parishes. Additional information is provided in a series of indexes: Index to Emigrants to New England; Index of the Wives and Children of the Emigrants; Index of Parishes; Index of Ships; and Index of Towns in New England. Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 1 5.Abbrev: Backus Anc. Title: The New England Ancestry of Dana Converse Backus Mary E. N. Backus, The New England Ancestry of Dana Converse Backus (Salem, MA: Newcomb & Gauss Company, 1949 [GenealogyLibrary.com]) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 85, p. 92 and p. 113 6.Abbrev: GM Title: GREAT MIGRATION BEGINS and GREAT MIGRATION Project Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633 [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000. Original data: Robert Charles Anderson. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633, vols. 1-3. (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 1062 7.Abbrev: All Saints Church, Renhold, Bedfordshire, England, UK Parish Records Online Title: All Saints Church, Renhold, Bedfordshire, England, UK Parish Records Online http://www.all-saints-church-renhold.org Page: http://web.ukonline.co.uk/robert.gaskell/parishregisters/baptisms1602to1812.pdf 8.Abbrev: Haynes Family (1994) Title: The Haynes Family, 1600-1694 by Carliton A. Finch (1994) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. 9.Abbrev: Planters of the Commonwealth (Banks) Title: Planters of the Commonwealth Charles Edward Banks, Planters of the Commonwealth 1620-1640 A Study of the Emigrants and Emigration in Colonial Times: to which are added Lists of Passengers to Boston and to the Bay Colony; the Ships which brought them; their English Homes, and the Places of their Settlement in Massachusetts (Boston: 1930 [Republished Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1997]) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 114 10.Abbrev: NEHGR Title: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Boston, MA: New England Historical and Genealogical Society) The NEHGR or "Register" is the oldest and best known genealogical publication in North America. It focuses primarily on the genealogy of New England and the northeastern United States. New England Historic Genealogical Society 101 Newbury Street Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. http://www.newenglandancestors.org Telephone: +1 (617) 536-5740 and +1 (888) 296-3447 Fax: +1 (617) 536-7307 membership@nehgs.org Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Text: Vol. 6, p. 342 (1852) "Early Settlers of Essex and Old Norfolk" 11.Abbrev: NEHGR Title: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Boston, MA: New England Historical and Genealogical Society) The NEHGR or "Register" is the oldest and best known genealogical publication in North America. It focuses primarily on the genealogy of New England and the northeastern United States. New England Historic Genealogical Society 101 Newbury Street Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. http://www.newenglandancestors.org Telephone: +1 (617) 536-5740 and +1 (888) 296-3447 Fax: +1 (617) 536-7307 membership@nehgs.org Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: Vol. 9, p. 157 (1855) "Hills and Ingersoll" 12.Abbrev: Pioneers of MA (Pope) Title: Pioneers of Massachusetts Charles Henry Pope, Pioneers of Massachusetts 1900 (Republished Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1991) This descriptive list of pioneers of Massachusetts was taken from colonial, town, church and other contemporary documents. It lists over 5000 persons who settled the colony and were instrumental in its growth. Including settlers from as far back as the Mayflower, researchers will find birth, occupation, marriage and death information along with a list of known descendants. For those seeking ancestors from the colonies of Massachusetts and Plymouth, this can be a helpful source of information. The total number of ,'Pioneers" on record is about 6,000. Of these the occupations of only 1,725 were mentioned; 323 being called tillers of the soil, (including both wealthy landholders and humble plowmen,) 210 house and ship carpenters, 115 tailors, 103 merchants, 91 ministers, 81 shoemakerS, 75 sea-captains, 62 weavers, and so on. We have further some 471 cases in which the records specify the settlers. Text: Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 207 13.Abbrev: Farmer's Register Title: Farmer's Genealogical Register John Farmer, Genealogical Register of the First Settlers in New England This four volume set was written from 1860-1862 and reprinted in 1873 and 1884. This book "shows the three generations of those who came before May 1692, on the basis of Farmers Register. It also includes "Genealogical notes and errata" by Mrs. D. H. Dall and a "Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes" by O. P. Dexter Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1998 (reprint) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 140 14.Abbrev: Genealogical Guide to Early Settlers (Whittemore) Title: Genealogical Guide to the Early Settlers of America Henry Whittemore, Genealogical Guide to the Early Settlers of America (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1967) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 280 15.Abbrev: ME & MA Families (Walter Goodwin Davis) Title: Maine and Massachusetts Families in the Ancestry of Walter Goodwin Davis Walter Goodwin Davis, Maine and Massachusetts Families in the Ancestry of Walter Goodwin Davis (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1996) Family Tree Maker CD #194 Three volume set: I. Allanson to French, II. Gardner to Moses, and III. Neal to Wright. The multi-ancestor compendia compiled and published by Walter Goodwin Davis is one of the major achievements of twentieth-century genealogy. These volumes authoritatively cover 180 families, all of Davis's colonial forebears plus nineteen English families in the immediate ancestry of American immigrants. The Davis opus is undoubtedly the premier work for northern New England, and an often essential companion volume to the celebrated Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, which it considerably expands, especially for many Essex County families with ties further north. Almost anyone with considerable New England ancestry--and as many as 100 million living Americans, about 40 percent of the population, have some colonial New England forebears--will descend from one or more, often a dozen or more, of the families herein. Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: Vol. 2, pp. 337-342 16.Abbrev: SAVAGE'S DICTIONARY Title: A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register James Savage; compiled by O. P. Dexter, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register (The best known and most frequently used genealogical dictionary.This monumental work gives the name of every settler who came to New England before 1692, regardless of his rank, station in life or fortune. Traces the descendants of each person, giving dates of marriage and death, dates of birth, marriage and death of his children, and the birth dates and names of his grandchildren, thus recording the beginning of the third generation in New England. Binding is 4 vols. 2,541 pp.) Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 65-18541 (Boston: 1860-1862 Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139, And A Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes of the Genealogical Dictionary of James Savage, by O. P. Dexter, 1884. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore, 1965,1969,1977,1981,1986, 1990) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: Vol. 2, p. 521 17.Abbrev: NEHGR Title: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Boston, MA: New England Historical and Genealogical Society) The NEHGR or "Register" is the oldest and best known genealogical publication in North America. It focuses primarily on the genealogy of New England and the northeastern United States. New England Historic Genealogical Society 101 Newbury Street Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. http://www.newenglandancestors.org Telephone: +1 (617) 536-5740 and +1 (888) 296-3447 Fax: +1 (617) 536-7307 membership@nehgs.org Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: Vol. 109, p. 163 18.Abbrev: EIHC (Essex Institute Historical Collection) Title: The Essex Institute Historical Collection Essex Institute Historical Collection (Salem, MA: 1859 onwards) Peabody Essex Museum, East India Square, Salem, MA 01970 U. S. A. www.pem.org Repository: Name: Essex Institute Historical Collections 132 Essex Street Salem, MA 01970 U. S. A. Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: Vol. 43, p. 187 19.Abbrev: TAG Title: The American Genealogist (TAG) For more than three quarters of a century, America's premier independent genealogical journal has been 'The American Genealogist,' affectionately known as TAG. TAG was founded in 1922 by Donald Line Jacobus (1887?1970), the father of scientific genealogy in this country and the first person elected to the National Genealogical Society's National Genealogy Hall of Fame. TAG was Jacobus?s vehicle for elevating genealogical scholarship to the same high standards as other scholarly disciplines, and it was at the center of what is now known as the ?Jacobus School,? a group of professional and amateur genealogists who were dedicated to these standards. Throughout its long career, TAG has emphasized carefully documented compiled genealogy and analyses of difficult genealogical problems, all directed toward providing serious genealogists with examples of how they too might solve such problems. The American Genealogist PO Box 398 Demorest GA 30535-0398 U. S. A. http://americangenealogist.com E-mail: amgen@windstream.net Text: Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: Vol. 27, p. 129 20.Abbrev: Bassett-Preston Title: Basset-Preston Ancestors Mary Isabella Preston, Bassett-Preston Ancestors; a History of the Ancestors in America of Marion Bassett Luitweiler, Howard Murray Bassett, Preston Rogers Bassett, Isabel Bassett Wasson, and Helen Bassett Hauser, Children of Edward M. and Annie (Preston) (New Haven, CT: The Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Company, 1930) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 159 21.Abbrev: Salem, MA History (Sidney Perley) Title: The History of Salem, Massachusetts Sidney Perley, The History of Salem, Massachusetts (Salem, MA: privately published, 1928 [republished on Broderbund FTM CD #117]) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: Vol. 1, p. 131 and Vol. 2, p. 282 22.Abbrev: EA (Essex Antiquarian) Title: The ESSEX ANTIQUARIAN Edited by Sidney Perley and George Francis Dow, The Essex Antiquarian The Essex Antiquarian was published from 1897 to 1909 by Sidney Perley and George Francis Dow, both noted Essex County Genealogists and Historians. The purpose and accomplishments of the Antiquarian are best described in the words of Perley and Dow, as published in the final edition Vol. 13, No. 4, October 1909: "The Essex Antiquarian was purposed to fill a want. It was designed to be a leader in scientific historical research; and to present copies or abstracts of records and compilations in an exhaustive and systematic manner, so that as far as the publication extended further investigation along those lines would be needless. Repeated examinations of records tend to their destruction, and thousands of dollars have been spent locally upon the same records for the same purpose by various persons who were ignorant of costly examinations made by others. This purpose, if prosecuted, would preserve the records and make further expenditure of money and labor unnecessary. This has been the particular reason of the appearance of the genealogies in alphabetical order, the gravestone inscriptions, abstracts of the Salem and Ipswich quarterly court records and files, old Norfolk county records, all wills in the order of their probate, Essex Gazette notes, abstracts of titles to land, etc., as shown in Salem, Haverhill, Ipswich and Marblehead in 1700, and in Georgetown and Topsfield in 1800. During the thirteen years of its existence there have been published in The Essex Antiquarian genealogies of all families from Abbe to Brown; all gravestone inscriptions dated prior to the year 1800 in Amesbury, Andover, Beverly, Boxford, Bradford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Gloucester, Groveland, Hamilton, Haverhill and Ipswich; all wills proved in the county prior to June, 1666; the record of the Essex County Revolutionary soldiers and sailors alphabetically to Brown; abstracts of the old Norfolk records to 1675; Salem and Ipswich quarterly court records and files to 1659; and abstracts of all records in the first ten volumes of the Suffolk county registry of deeds relating to Essex county persons and property, where parties resided or property was located in Essex county, covering the period prior to 1678." (Salem, MA: The Essex Antiquarian, 1897 [Reprinted Lecanto, FL: Essex Books www.essexbooks.com, 1999]) http://www.newenglandancestors.org/research/Database/Essex_antiquarian/default.asp Text: Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: Vol. 2, p. 30 23.Abbrev: Woolson-Fenno Title: Lula May Fenno Woolson, The Woolson-Fenno Ancestry and Allied Lines, with Biographical Sketches (Boston, MA: privately printed, 1907) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 69 24.Abbrev: Ingersoll Family in America (1926) Title: Lilliam Drake Avery, A Genealogy of the Ingersoll Family in America, 1629-1925, Comprising Descendants of Richard Ingersoll of Salem, Massachusetts, John Ingersoll of Westfield, Massachusetts, and John Ingersoll of Huntington, Long Island (NY: F. H. Hitchcock, 1926) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 4 25.Abbrev: Hinds Title: Albert Henry Hinds, History and Genealogy of the Hinds Family (Portland, ME: The Thurston Print, 1899) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 10 26.Abbrev: Stone (1926) Title: Gardner Bartlett Gardner, Simon Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Deacon Simon Stone of Watertown, Massachusetts, 1320-1926 (Boston, MA: Stone Family Association,1926) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 82 27.Abbrev: Wolcott Genealogy (1912) Title: Arthur Stuart Walcott, Wolcott Genealogy (Rochester, NY: The Genesee Press, 1912) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Page: p. 10 28.Abbrev: Ingersoll (1909) Title: Richard Ingersoll of Salem, Massachusetts and Some of his Descendants, by Major-General A. W. Greely (Essex Institute, Salem, MA: 1909) Repository: Name: New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston, MA 02116 U. S. A. Repository: Name: Patrick McDonald Personal Library Dural, NSW 2158 AUSTRALIA Page: p. 5