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Genealogy of the Descendants of Thomas Lord
  • Details
  • Claims76
Citation
  • Kenneth Lord, "Genealogy of the Descendants of Thomas Lord" (1946) (https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/38929-genealogy-of-the-descendants-of-thomas-lord-an-original-proprietor-and-founder-of-hartford-conn-in-1636).
Data
  • Category: Derivative
Detail
  • Author: Kenneth Lord
  • Publisher: 1946
Images
  • Genealogy of the Descendants of Thomas Lord
Page: 1
  • Pages: 1-3
  • Text: Thomas Lord (1)

    Thomas Lord was born in 1585, son of Richard and Joan Lord of Towcester, County of Northton, England.

    Richard Lord's will, dated May 30, 1610, probated February 7, 1611, is filed in the Archives of North Hants, Second Series, Second Valume V, folio 38, and is as follows:

    In the name of God Amen - 30th Daye of Maye in the Yeare of our Lord God 1610 - I Richard Lorde of Towcester in Co. of Northton, husbandman of whole mynde doe make this my last will and testament - my soull unto Allmighty God and my bodie to be buried in the Chuchyard of Towcester-

    1st I give towards the repare of the said parish church of Towcester xij d.

    Item I give to Elizabeth my Daughter x li. of currat money of England.

    Item I give and bequeath to Ellen my Daughter xxx li. of currat money of England to be paid unto her by my Executor hereafter named in manner and forme following - viz. the one half thereof att her daie of marriage and the other half within twelve moneths after her said daie of marriage Yf she shall then be livinge And yf it shall happen that she shall marry with one Robert Marriot of Calcot yeom then my will is that the saide sume of xxx li. be made upp xl li. and to be paid her at the said daies before married by equall porcons But if she happen not to marrye then my will is that she shall have xxx li. oneli for her porcon to be paid to her within three yeares after my Decease.

    Item I give and bequeath to Alice my Daughter 30 li. to be paid unto her by my executor the one half thereof at her daye of marrige and the other half within twelve moneths after her said daie of marrige yf she shall then be livinge But if she the said Alice happen not to marrye then my will is that her said Legacye be paid to her within five yeares after my decease

    Item I give & bequeath to Joan my wife the one half of all my goods and chattels whatsoever moveable except the long Table in my hall and the seelinge and benches about my house and my will is that she shall have & enjoye During her natural lyfe (yf so long she keepe herself my widdowe) the chamber over the kitchen where she and I due lodge and third pt of the apples & onle wch shall growe yearely in the orchard belonging to the house wherein I now dwell in Towcester

    Item I give & bequeath moreovr to my said wife during her natural lyfe (& yf so longe she keepe herself my widowe) out of my Land & tenemts & hereditamts in Towcester aforesaid the Yearlie sume and annuitie of fyve pounds of currant money of England to be paide unto her by my Executor hereafter named his heires or Assignes yearly quarterlie by equall and even porcons Provided allwaies that she my said wife shall not claym any Dower or thirde out of my said lands ten'ts or hereditenaments.

    Item I give and bequeath to Thomas my sonne and to his heires and assignes forever all my Lands ten'ts & hereditaments whatwoever in Towcester and within this Realm of England.. that he shall instly and trulie prforme this my last will & testement without fraude or deceipt And all the rest of my goods and cattels my Detts and Lgacies paid & my funerall expenses p'formed I give and bequeath to my said sonne Thomas whom I Doe make & ordaine my sole Executor of this my Last will and testement by utterly Denye all other former wills heretofore by me made given or bequeathed Provyded allwaies that if anie one of my said children Ellen Alice or Thomas Doe Decease their lyves before they are to receive their saide Legacies, That then the Legacie of the other one of them soe deceasinge shall remayne & be Due to the other two of them onely then surviving But if any two of them shall happen to Decease as aforesaid, that then my saide Daughter Elizabeth shall have fifteen pounde of their Legacies proportionablye to be paid unto her yf she the said Elizabeth shall then be livinge My Legacie guift bequest, thinge or things els whatsoevr herein expressed to the contrarie hereof in any wise notwithstanding.

    And fynally Doe earnestlie Desyre my wellbelowed friends Mr Henry Peddler and Thomas Pedder of East Purye in the Counte of Northton gent's and Paul Boughton of the same Toune clerk to be my supervisors of this my last will and testament And I Doe give and bequeath to each of them for their paynes to be taken ij s. vj. d. of currant English money.

    In witness whereof I have hereunto put my hand & Seale the daye and yeare first aboue written.

    Signed: Richard Lord
    Sealed & Subscribed in the p'sence of us

    Thomas Pedder
    Paul Boughton
    Richard Abbot

    Richard Lord was buried at Towcester October 16 1610; his wife was buried there September 22, 1610. He was born about 1555, and they married about 1582.

    Elizabeth, born about 1583.
    Thomas, born about 1585.
    Ellen, born about 1587.
    Alice, born about 1590, married May 20, 1611, Richard Morris

    Richard Lord had a brother William, whose will is recorded in Northampton Probate Registery, pp. 1560-66, folio 72. It would seem that Richard and William descended from the Lord family of Yelvertoft, County Northampton, England.

    Thomas Lord (1) married February 23, 1610-11, Dorothy Bird, daughter of Robert and Amy Bird of Towcester, England.

    The records of the St. Laurence Church, Towcester, show that Dorothy Bird was baptiized May 25, 1588.

    There is also a record on page 25 of the ancient Marriage License Book of Petersborough (near Towcester), England, of the marriage license issued to Thomas Lord and Dorothy Bird on February 20, 1610-11.

    The Towcester Registers, 1561-1633, give the following baptisms:

    Richard Lord, baptized Jan. 5, 1611-12.
    Anne Lord, baptized Sept. 18, 1614.
    Thomas Lord, baptized Nov. 15, 1616.
    William Lord, baptized Dec. 27, 1618.
    Robert Lord, baptized May 12, 1620.
    John Lord, baptized Jan. 21, 1623-24.
    Aymie Lord, baptized Nov. 30, 1626.
    Dorothy Lord, baptized July 1, 1629.

    ("The Founding of New England" by Ernest Flagg; "Lords of Towcester" by Garvin L. Payne; "Essex Institute" Vol. LIV).
Page: 3
  • Pages: 3-5
  • Text: Thomas Lord was a man of means, position and influence, and in 1632 he sent his eldest son, Richard, then about twenty-one years of age, to America. He settled at Newtown, Mass., which afterwards became Cambridge. In 1633, Governor Haynes and the Rev. Thomas Hooker, friends of Thomas Lord, sailed for America with about two hundred passengers important to the colony, and it is thought possible that Richard Lord went in advance in order to select a place to settle.

    From Hottens "Original Lists" we learn that "on the 29th of April 1635 were registered for transportation from the port of London to New England, in the ship 'Elizabeth and Ann,' of which Capt. Robert Cooper was master, Thomas Lord, aged 50; his wife, Dorothy, aged 46; and their children Thomas, aged 16; Ann, aged 14; William, aged 12; John aged 10; Robert, aged 9; Aymie, aged 6; and Dorothy, aged 4" They landed in Boston and joined Richard Lord at Newtown. The ages of the children as given on the ship's register are probably only approximate, as they vary from the actual baptismal records.

    In 1636, with his entire family, Thomas Lord joined the party of Rev. Mr. Hooker and Mr. Stone and 100 men, women and children, which took it's departure from Newtown to form a new settlement on the Connecticut River.

    ...

    Thomas Lord thus became an original proprietor and one of the first settlers of Hartford. He lived on the north side of the highway on the bank of the Little River (now Wells Street) a near neighbor of Gov. Haynes, Rev. Mr. Hooker, Mr. Goodwin, Gov. Wyllys and others of the prominent inhabitants. His sons, Richard and Thomas, had the lots next to his. The Hartford settlers were largely a people of some culture cast into raw conditions, and there was a mingling of high breeding and rough life.

    Neither the date of death nor the place of burial of Thomas Lord (1) is known. There is an entry on the Hartford Town Votes, under date of January 29, 1643-4. The Governor, Mr. Hooker and several others, including Thomas Lord, Sr., and his son Thomas, were freed from "Common worck in the hyway" for the next three years. As this is the last reference to Thomas Lord Sr. in the volume, it might be conjectured that he died shortly after that time. ("The Founding of New England" by Ernest Flagg) The land records of Hartford show that Dorothy Lord owned lands as early as May 29, 1651, and that on March 7, 1652, she sold some land to Richard Goodman, and according to the laws in effect at that time (see Epaphroditus Peck's "The Property Rights of Husband and Wife under the Laws of Connecticut") a wife could not make contracts while her husband was living. The graves of Dorothy Lord and quite a number of descendants are in the graveyard in the rear of the First Church of Hartford, and the names of Thomas Lord and his son Richard are inscribed on the granite monument as among the first settlers. Dorothy Lord died in 1675 at the age of 86, and her will, dated February 8, 1669, is now on file among the probate records in the Connecticut State Library at Hartford and is as follows;

    "In the name of God, Amen. I Dorathy Lord of Hartford in the colony of Connecticutt in New England, Being stricken in yeares & at present labouring under some bodily weakness; Though through the mercy of God, I at present haue ye use of my uunderstanding & memorye - yet I know not how suddenly the Lord may put an end unto my fewe dayes in this life, & therefore according to my duty I am willing soe to setle and disspose of that little estate the Lord hath lent me, that peace may be continued amongst my children, when I am gathered to my fathers, & In order thereunto I doe declare this as followeth to be my last will and Testament. First, that all my just debts be pd out of my estate.
    I doe giue & Bequeath my now dwelling house & Barne & my Home lott & my lower lott in the North meadow unto the children of my son Thomas Lord deceased, at the age of eighteen years & if any decease before they attayne that age the suruiuor or suruiuors to possess it, & if they all dye then my son Wm or his children to possess what is giuen to them.

    "Itt: I giue unto my daughter Amy Gilbert & her children Three Acres of Meadow or Swamp in my upper lott in the Long meadow next to that Mrs Olcott hath now in possession,

    "Itt I giue unto my son Robt: Lord (If he live after my deceasse so long as to have Notice of this my will) Three Acres of my upper lott adjoyneing to that which I haue giuen my Daughter Gilbert.

    "Itt I give unto my son Wm Lord & his heires foreuer Two Acres in my great lott in the long meadow next adjoyneing to that which I haue giuen my son Robert,

    "Itt I giue unto my son John Lord Tenn pounds in Currant pay of this country,

    "Itt Whereas my Grandson Richd: Lord hath disbursed seuerall sums of money or country pay for the Building my chimneys & shingling my house & reapyres about it, I doe for the payment of him, giue grant & confimre unto him & his heires foreuer; all that my meadow lott in the long meadow which abutts upon the great Riuer east the litle riuer west Mr. Westwoods land North & Barth Barnards land south.

    "I doe also giue & bequeath unto my sd Grandson Richard Lord & his heires foreuer all the remaynder of my upper lott in the long meadow, which I haue not given to my sons Robert & Son Wm: and my daughter Gilbert & her children, he payeing this legacie hereafter exprest, to my sonn John Tenn pounds. And in case my sonn Robt: shall depart this life before he hath notice of this my last will, Then that Three Acres of Land giuen to him shall be diuided Between my Son Wm, & my Grandson Richd Lord, I doe allso confirme unto my Grandson: Richard Lord & his heires all my wood land that is all ready layd out or to be layd unto me wth in the Bounds of Hartford.

    "I giue unto my Grandchild Hanna Ingersall my youngest cowe & my other cowe I giue unto my Grandchildren Dorathy & Margery Ingersall.

    "I giue my moueable estate & Cattell to my son Wm Lord my Grandson Richd Lord my daughter Stanton my daughter Gilbert & the children of my daughter Ingersall, the whole to be divided into fiue partes, & my daughter Ingersalls children to haue one part, & the rest of them, each of them one part.

    "I giue unto the wife of Nicholas Clarke Tenn shillings.

    "I doe ordayn & constitute my son Wm, and my grandson Richd: my executors, & desire my loueing Friend Mr. John Allyn to be ouere seer of this my will, & for the confirmation hereof I have hereunto sett my hand this 8th of February: 1669:

    Dorathy Lord,
    her marke.

    Signed in presence of us
    John Allyn
    Steuen Hopkins"

    After the general distribution by the Will, a supplementary disposal of special articles was ordered by Dorothy Lord, as follows, in abstract:

    To Richard Lord's wife her iron dripping-pan and great pewter pie-plate; to Richard Lord, Jr., her great brass pot. To Mrs. Haynes one pair of her best sheets, two napkins, a pewter pie-plate (the smaller one) and a pewter candle-stick. To her daughter Stanton her great brass pan and her great Bible. To her son William Lord "my Siluer drinking-Bowle," and her great brass kettle. To her daughter Gilbert her smaller brass pan, a brass skimmer, a brass chafing dish two "Joynt-Stooles." To Elizabeth Gilbert a great pewter platter. To her widowed daughter Lord (widow of Thomas) the bed she lay on, a feather bolster and a brass skillet. To Dorothy Phelps her coverlet, a feather pillow and a "beere" (pillow-case). To Margery Ingersoll a white blanket and a pillow. To Hannah Kelsey her hood, scarf and hat, a great white chest, a feather-bed, two blankets, a bolster, two pillows, two pair of sheets, a small brass pot, a small brass kettle, a warming pan, a pair of curtains and curtain rods, a brass candle-stick and all her earthen ware. To the children of her son Thomas all the fire utensils in her house, a table, "forme" and chairs. To Mary Lord Jr. (daughter of her son Thomas) her bedstead. To Marjery Ingersoll 20 shillings; to her sister Dorothy Ingersoll 20 shillings - if remaining after all her debts and funeral expenses are paid.

    The articles were inventoried as 187.17.8 pounds. The larger number of brass and pewter articles, the linen, curains, etc. selectd for these special gifts, indicate a handsome style of living for the time.

    Dorothy Bird Lord sealed her will with the arms of "Lord alias Laward" family (Argent on a fess gules between three cinquefoils azure, a hind passant between two pheons or). The crest on the seal is a demi-hind issuant, and not the demi-bird with wings expanded as given on the Salisbury Chart, and this is confirmed by the statement of the Committee on Heraldry in the New England Genealogical Register, Vol. 86 (1932) page 270.
Page: 55
  • Pages: 55-56
  • Text: Anne Lord II

    Anne Lord, bapt. England,, Sept. 18, 1614, the eldest daughter of Thomas I, married in Hartford, Conn., in 1637, Thomas Stanton. He was an Indian interpreter for John Winthrop, Jr., in Connecticut before the Pequot War. Served in the PPequot War and rendered valuable services at Saybrook Fort. He was an Indian interpreter to the General Court in all cases where the controversy was between the whites and the Indians. (Ref. of Soc. of Col. Wars, 1896, p. 393). He bore the title "Interpreter General to the United Colonies" (from title-page of Rev. Abraham Pierson's Indian Catechism). In 1653, the Rev. Abraham Pierson of New Haven and Thomas Stanton were appointed to write a Catechism in the Indian language. It was "left to the two commissioners for the Massachusetts to give order for the printing of five hundred or a Thousand Catechismes in the Indian langwidge and to allow paper and the charge of printing; and that the work may bee carried on more exactly and to better satisfaction it is ordered that Thomas Stanton's help bee used in the same; and for his incurragement the Commissioners for the present thinke fitt to allow him ten pounds and forty shillings toward his Charges; and if his Time and paines Require more they will consider it and make further allowance att the next meeting." (Acts of the Com'rs of the United Colonies, II, 106). The Catechism was printed in 1658. The only known copy with the original title-page is in the N.Y. Pub. Library.

    Their first home in Hartford was on Ford Street where the building occupied, until a few years ago, by Jewell's Lether Belting Co. now stands. They had twelve children. Thomas Stanton died in Stonington in 1688. The Woquetequock Burial Ground Ass'n, on August 31, 1899, dedicated a monument which had been erected as a memorial to the first four settlers of Waquetequock - William Chesebrough, Thomas Minor, Walter Palmer, and Thomas Stanton. Each side of the monument carries an epitaph, above which has been carved a coat of arms. The Stanton epitaph reads, as follows:

    Thomas Stanton

    Interpreter General for the
    New England Colonies, died
    Dec. 2, 1677, aged 62 years.
    He came from England in 1635,
    was of Boston in 1636, Hartford,
    1637, and Stonington in 1650.
    Was Marshall of the colony,
    county commissioner, member
    of the General Count and one
    of the founders of the First
    Church in Stonington. A man
    of widespread and lasting
    importance to the colonies,
    and identified with nearly
    every transaction between
    the natives and colonists
    up to the year of his death.

    The Stanton motto: "In God we trust. Moderate acquisitions are lasting."

    Genealogy

    II Anne Lord, bapt. England, Sept. 18, 1614, d. Stonington, Conn., 1688; m. Hartford, Conn., 1637, Thomas Stanon, b. England, 1616, d. Stonington, Dec. 2, 1677. son of Thomas and Katheine Washington Stanton, who went from London to Virginia in 1635 and then to Hartford. Lived in Hartford and Stonington.
Page: 58
  • Text: III. Mary Stanton, b. Hartford, Conn., 1643; m. New London, Conn., Nov 19, 1662, Samuel Rogers, b. probably Stratford, Conn., 1640, d. New London, Dec. 1, 1713, son of James and Elizabeth Rowland Rogers. He m. (2) Joanna, widow of Thomas Williams.

    ...

    IV. Sarah Rogers b. Aug. 9, 1676, d. Nov. 13, 1748; m. 1696, Lieut. James Harris.
Personal Names
PersonClaimDetailEvidence
Amy _____NameAmy _____ [S2082:1]
derivative
Ann LordNameAnn Lord [S366:702] [S662] [S2055:176] [S2081] [S2082:1]
secondary
Ann LordNameAnne Lord [S2082:55]
derivative
Dorothy BirdNameDorothy Bird [S366:473] [S662] [S2082:1]
secondary
Dorothy BirdNameDorothy Lord [S662] [S2081] [S2082:3]
research
Elizabeth RowlandNameElizabeth Rowland [S366:633] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
secondary
James RogersNameJames Rogers [S366:633] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
secondary
Joan _____NameJoan _____ [S2082:1]
derivative
Mary StantonNameMary Stanton [S366:634] [S688:154] [S2055:176] [S2081] [S2082:58]
secondary
Richard LordNameRichard Lord [S2082:1]
derivative
Richard LordNameRichard Lord of Towcester [S662] [S2082:1]
research
Robert BirdNameRobert Bird of Towcester [S2082:1]
derivative
Samuel RogersNameSamuel Rogers [S366:634] [S688:154] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
secondary
Dr. Thomas LordNameThomas Lord [S366:473] [S662] [S2055:176] [S2082:1] [S2082:3]
secondary
Dr. Thomas LordNameThomas Lord [S366:473] [S662] [S2055:176] [S2082:1] [S2082:3]
secondary
Thomas StantonNameThomas Stanton [S366:702] [S662] [S2055:176] [S2081] [S2082:55]
secondary
Relationships
PersonClaimDetailEvidence
Sarah RogersFatherSamuel Rogers (1640-1713) [S688:154] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
research
Sarah RogersMotherMary Stanton (1643-) [S688:154] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
research
Samuel RogersFatherJames Rogers (~1615-1688) [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
derivative
Samuel RogersMotherElizabeth Rowland (e1616-) [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
derivative
Mary StantonFatherThomas Stanton (1616-1677) [S2055:176] [S2081] [S2082:58]
derivative
Mary StantonMotherAnn Lord (1614-1688) [S2055:176] [S2081] [S2082:58]
derivative
Ann LordFatherDr. Thomas Lord (1585-) [S662] [S2055:176] [S2081] [S2082:1]
research
Ann LordMotherDorothy Bird (1588-~1675) [S662] [S2081] [S2082:1]
research
Dr. Thomas LordFatherRichard Lord (~1555-<1610) [S662] [S2082:1]
research
Dr. Thomas LordMotherJoan _____ (e1556-~1610) [S2082:1]
derivative
Dorothy BirdFatherRobert Bird (e1561-) [S662] [S2082:1]
research
Dorothy BirdMotherAmy _____ (e1562-) [S2082:1]
derivative
Events & Attributes
PersonClaimDateDetailAgeEvidence
Richard LordBirthabt 1555England [S2082:1]
derivative
Richard LordMarriageabt 1582Joan _____, England [S2082:1]
derivative
Dr. Thomas LordBirth1585England [S366:473] [S662] [S2081] [S2082:1]
secondary
Dorothy BirdBaptismMay 25, 1588Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S662] [S2082:1]
research
Richard LordWillMay 30, 1610Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S2082:1]
derivative
Joan _____BurialSep 22, 1610Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S2082:1]
derivative
Richard LordDeathbef Oct 16, 1610Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S2082:1]
derivative
Richard LordBurialOct 16, 1610Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S2082:1]
derivative
Richard LordProbateFeb 7, 1611Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S2082:1]
derivative
Dr. Thomas LordMarriage LicenseFeb 10, 1610/11Dorothy Bird, Petersborough, Northamptonshire, England [S366:473] [S2082:1]
secondary
Dr. Thomas LordMarriageFeb 23, 1610/11Dorothy Bird, Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S366:473] [S662] [S2082:1]
secondary
Ann LordBaptismSep 18, 1614Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S662] [S2082:1] [S2082:55]
research
Ann LordBaptismSep 18, 1614Towcester, Northamptonshire, England [S662] [S2082:1] [S2082:55]
research
Thomas StantonBirth1616England [S2082:55]
derivative
Thomas StantonImmigration1635Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States, Vessel: Bonaventura [S2081] [S2082:55]
derivative
Ann LordImmigration1635Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States, Vessel: Elizabeth & Ann [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Dr. Thomas LordFlourishedApr 29, 1635London, Middlesex, England [S662] [S2082:3]
enrolled as a passenger on the Elizabeth and Ann
50y
research
Dr. Thomas LordImmigrationApr 29, 1635Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States, Vessel: Elizabeth & Ann [S662] [S2081] [S2082:3]
research
Ann LordFlourishedApr 29, 1635London, Middlesex, England [S662] [S2082:3]
enrolled as a passenger on the Elizabeth and Ann
14y
research
Dorothy BirdImmigrationApr 29, 1635Cambridge, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States, Vessel: Elizabeth & Ann [S662] [S2081] [S2082:3]
research
Dorothy BirdFlourishedApr 29, 1635London, Middlesex, England [S662] [S2082:3]
enrolled as a passenger on the Elizabeth and Ann
46y
research
Dr. Thomas LordLivingbef 1636Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States [S2082:3]
derivative
Dorothy BirdLivingbef 1636Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States [S2082:3]
derivative
Ann LordLivingbef 1636Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States [S2082:3]
derivative
Ann LordMoved1636Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Dr. Thomas LordMoved1636Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Dorothy BirdMoved1636Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Thomas StantonLiving1636Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States [S2081] [S2082:55]
magistrate
derivative
Thomas StantonMarriageabt 1637Ann Lord, Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S366:702] [S662] [S2082:55]
secondary
Thomas StantonLiving1637Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S2082:55]
derivative
Samuel RogersBirthDec 12, 1640Stratfield, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States [S366:634] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
secondary
Mary StantonBirth1643Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S2081] [S2082:58]
derivative
Dr. Thomas LordLivingJan 29, 1643/44 [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Thomas StantonLiving1650Stonington, New London, Connecticut, United States [S2082:55]
derivative
Dorothy BirdLand SaleMar 7, 1652Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S662] [S2082:3]
sold one parcel to Richard Goodman
research
Thomas StantonPosition1653Interpreter General of the United Colonies [S2082:55]
derivative
Samuel RogersMarriage 1stNov 19, 1662Mary Stanton, New London, New London, Connecticut, United States [S2082:58]
derivative
Dorothy BirdWillFeb 8, 1669/70 [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Dorothy BirdDeath1675Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United States [S2082:3] 86y
derivative
Sarah RogersBirthAug 9, 1676New London, New London, Connecticut, United States [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
derivative
Thomas StantonDeathDec 2, 1677Stonington, New London, Connecticut, United States [S366:702] [S2081] [S2082:55] 62y
secondary
Ann LordDeath1688Stonington, New London, Connecticut, United States [S366:702] [S2082:55]
maybe 4 September 1688
secondary
James HarrisMarriage 1st1696Sarah Rogers [S2082:58]
derivative
Samuel RogersDeathDec 1, 1713New London, New London, Connecticut, United States [S366:634] [S2055:176] [S2082:58]
secondary
Dr. Thomas LordShipElizabeth & Ann, Vessel: Elizabeth & Ann [S662] [S2081] [S2082:3]
research
Dorothy BirdShipElizabeth & Ann, Vessel: Elizabeth & Ann [S662] [S2081] [S2082:3]
research
Ann LordShipElizabeth & Ann, Vessel: Elizabeth & Ann [S662] [S2082:3]
research
Thomas StantonOccupationIndian Interpreter [S2082:55]
derivative
Last Modified: August 15, 2024
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