Our Theisen & Allied Surname Family History
Notes
Matches 51 to 100 of 639
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| 51 | NOTE: Volckert Janse Douw (1610-1681) && Dorothea Jansen Douw (Van Breestede) (1627-1701) are NOT Dorothe's parents! | Volckers, Dorothe (I2168)
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| 52 | NOTE: There is no currently known supporting evidence that shows William Jenyges (Jennings) was the son of Philip Duddleston Hall Jennings (b. 1480) and Sarah First Duchess Spencer Jennings (born Churchill) (b 1490). | Jenyges, William (I2220)
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| 53 | NOTES: Middle name Voris per his death certificate, but Vora per son Walter E. Wilson's birth record. | Wilson, James Voris (I381)
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| 54 | NOTES: Albertina's date of birth of Nov 30, 1843 is confirmed on her death certificate. | Mundt, Therese Emilie (I325)
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| 55 | NOTES: John's date of birth of Oct 12, 1858 and country (German) confirmed on his certificate of death. | Gerstmann, Johann (I301)
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| 56 | Other spellings: Egbertie, Echbertie, Achbutche (old folks translation) | Van Nostrand, Egbertje (I2094)
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| 57 | The 1800 Census that lists' Daniel Hunter, also lists a female of similar age (almost certainly Susanna). She, however, is not found in the 1810 census. | Chamberlain, Susanna (I251)
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| 58 | TWIN of William Henry Wilson | Wilson, Moncrief (I4341)
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| 59 | A knight. | Gardiner, Sir Thomas (I1065)
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| 60 | Alt. marriage location--Norwich, England. -------------------- Sailed on John and Dorothy or Rose of Yarmouth, April 1637; landed in Boston, June 25, 1637. Traveled with her husband and parents. Her husband purchased territory comprising Chatham, Orleans, Harwich, and Brewster of John Quason, chief of Monyicks, for the price of 12 hatchets, 12 hoes, 12 knives, 12 homespun suits, 12 English shillings, 12 wampum shilllings, and sundry other articles. Source: handwritten pages of Nickersons, in collection of genealogical material in Hunt home. -------------------- Anne Busby and William Nickerson immigrated 08-Apr-1637 to Boston, Massachusetts; aboard the 'John and Dorothy', Captain William Andrews, Master. Anne Busby and William Nickerson removed to at Chatham, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, in 1664. William is listed as a weaver, aged 33 years old, and Anne is listed as his wife, aged 28, on that ship's registry. -------------------- wikitree: (Last edit: 19 Apr 2017) ''''Anne (Busby) Nickerson (bef. 1608 - 1686) Anne Nickerson formerly Busby Born before 2 Feb 1608 in St Mary Coslany, Norwich, Norfolk, , England ANCESTORS Daughter of Nicholas Busby and Bridget (Cocke) Busby Sister of Nicholas Busby, Catherine Busby, Abraham Busby and Sarah (Busby) Grout Wife of William Nickerson II — married 24 Jun 1625 in Norwich, Norfolk, England DESCENDANTS Mother of Harriett (Nickerson) Lord, Nicholas Nickerson, Elizabeth (Nickerson) Eldredge, Joseph Nickerson, Robert Nickerson, Thomas Nickerson, Anne Nickerson, Samuel Nickerson, John Nickerson, Sarah (Nickerson) Covell, William Nickerson III and Joseph Nickerson Died 18 May 1686 in Chatham, Barnstable, Massachusetts Profile managers: Katherine Patterson [send private message], April Dauenhauer [send private message], Merry Kennedy [send private message], Anja Opie [send private message], Anonymous S [send private message], Jonathon Myers [send private message], and Wayne Jordan [send private message] Busby-33 created 18 Feb 2011 Last modified 19 Apr 2017 Last edit: 19 Apr 2017 11:00: Al Clements edited the Death Place for Anne (Busby) Nickerson. (Removed ', USA' from death place.) [Thank Al for this Categories: Puritan Great Migration Norwich, Norfolk John & Dorothy, sailed 1637 Yarmouth, Massachusetts Chatham, Massachusetts. Anne (Busby) Nickerson migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1620-1640). Biography Anne Busby, daughter of Nicholas and Bridgett (Cocke) Busby, was baptized at St Mary Coslany, Norwich, Norfolk, England, 2 Feb 1607/8.[1][2] Anne married William Nickerson[1][2] 24 June 1625 at St Mary Coslany Church, Norwich, Norfolk, England.[3] William Nickerson, age 33, a weaver, and his wife Anne, age 28, were interviewed on 8 April 1637 for the record of ships and passengers. They had four children: "Nicho, Robartt, Elizabeth and Anne" and stated their desire to emigrate to Boston in New England.[4] On the same page of the record, six entries above the Nickerson's, is "Nichol Busbie", of Norwich, a weaver age 50, with his wife Bridgett age 53 and four children: "Nicho, John, Abraham and Sarah" who desire to emigrate to Boston, New England.[4] The Busbies are Anne Nickerson's parents and siblings.[4] They all sailed on either the John and Dorothy of Ipswich with Mr. William Andrews, Master, or the Rose of Yarmouth, William Andrews Jr. his son, Master.[4][5] The ships arrived together at Boston on June 8th, 1637, as entered by Gov Winthrop in his journal, Vol 1, page 222.[5] Anne (Busby) Nickerson is named the will of her father, Nicholas Busby, who died in Boston, Masssachusetts, 28 Aug 1657, bequeathing Anne NIckerson his thick Bible and fifty pounds.[3] Husband: William Nickerson Wife: Anne Busby Child: William Nickerson Death 18 MAY 1686 Chatham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, Age: 79 Sources "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NRZN-ZX2 : 30 December 2014), Ann Busby, 02 Feb 1607; citing SAINT MARY AT COSLANY,NORWICH,NORFOLK,ENGLAND, reference ; FHL microfilm 993,652. "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVKQ-TVSN : 11 July 2016), Ann Busby Nickerson, 1686; Burial, Chatham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States of America, Nickerson Cemetery; citing record ID 32637521, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, "Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:936R-RTY : accessed 2016-12-16), entry for Anne Busby, submitted by slittle2711168. ↑ 1.0 1.1 The English ancestry of William and Anne (Busby) Nickerson of Chatham, Massachusetts, and of Nicholas and Bridget (Cocke) Busby of Boston, pages 251-252 ↑ 2.0 2.1 The New England Ancestry of Dorothy Chandler Stuart, pages 123-124 ↑ 3.0 3.1 New Englanders in Nova Scotia Manuscript, page 65 ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 The Founders of New England, NEHGR Vol 14, page 325 ↑ 5.0 5.1 The Planters of the Commonwealth in Massachusetts, 1620-1640, page 183 and 187 The Planters of the Commonwealth in Massachusetts, 1620-1640, by Charles Edward Banks (1930), which contains data on 3,600 passengers who sailed on 213 ships, extracted from the Custom House records of English ports, database online at Ancestry.com. Busby's family on page 184 The Founders of New England, The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1847-. (Online database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2013.) NEHGR volume 14 (1860), page 325 William Nickerson The English ancestry of William and Anne (Busby) Nickerson of Chatham, Massachusetts, and of Nicholas and Bridget (Cocke) Busby of Boston, by Richard L. Bush, TAG Vol 85 (Oct 2011), pp 242 - 253 The New England Ancestry of Dorothy Chandler Stuart, copyright (c) 2005 by Stuart Bloom, PO Box 487, Earlville, IL, stubloom@earlvillepost.com. All rights are reserved. Permission is hereby granted to link to any of these pages. You may not, however, reproduce these pages in any form without express written permission from the copyright holder. Such permission will normally be granted if the reproduction is for non-commercial purposes. New Englanders in Nova Scotia Manuscript. R. Stanton Avery Special Collections, New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, MA. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2010.) Nicholas Busby and William Nickerson Acknowledgements (contributors) Note: Ancestor of Otho M Otte (Malcolm H Patterson). Alan MacLeod, firsthand knowledge. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Alan and others. Doug Coldwell, firsthand knowledge. See the [[1]]Changes page] for the details of edits by Doug and others. This person was created through the import of Shortened files.ged on 30 December 2010. This person was created through the import of Bishop Family Tree.ged on 18 February 2011. This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011. This person was created on 19 April 2011 through the import of Stout - Trask - Cowan .ged. This person was created through the import of breesefam.ged on 09 May 2011. WikiTree profile Busby-94 created through the import of Tom.ged on Jun 1, 2011 by Tom Elliott. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Tom and others. WikiTree profile Busby-110 created through the import of Wayne Donald Jordan.ged on Jul 9, 2011 by Wayne Jordan. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Wayne and others. WikiTree profile Busby-226 created through the import of 25j82f_6507712f49d1w2i30f59c9.ged on Jan 29, 2012 by Anja Opie. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Anja and others. WikiTree profile Busby-266 created through the import of Sandysthree_2009-05-22_2009-08-21_2009-12-22_2010-01-17_2010-10-04.ged on Jun 21, 2012 by Sandy Johnson. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Sandy and others. WikiTree profile Busby-269 created through the import of perry and plumb tree.ged on Aug 18, 2012 by Merry Kennedy. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Merry and others. WikiTree profile Busby-276 created through the import of davisfamilytree-1.ged on Sep 1, 2012 by Rich Davis. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Rich and others. WikiTree profile Busby-283 created through the import of Mahler Family Tree.ged on Nov 24, 2012 by Rick Mahler. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Rick and others. ---- | Busby, Anna (I2296)
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| 61 | Anna Hermes is listed as a Godparent on her grandson Johann Joseph Theisen's baptism record on March 23, 1815. | Hermes, Anna Gertrudis (I2530)
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| 62 | Arnolds 2nd wife. | Bennett, Zepporah (I241)
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| 63 | Arrived with her father and mother on the Anne in 1623. [1][2] | Tracy, Sarah (I3182)
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| 64 | Baptized at Holy Cross Church-Bay Settlement, Wi. Pastor S.C. Mickers. | Theisen, Michael John (I48)
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| 65 | Birth year is a guesstimate based on husbands birth year (as of 03.24.2021). | D`Odemont zu Argentau, Anne Marie (I2518)
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| 66 | Born July 28th, in Nadeau Michagan. He was a farm boy. His father was a farmer and married Wilhelmina B. Detampel, "Mini". Mini was a farmer helper to another farm where they met and later married. The had 6 children and one pair of twins. After his father died they migrated to Milwaukee Wisconsin. The baby Louie's family died when she was 3 years old. | Theisen, Louis Raymond (I45)
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| 67 | By the 1880 census, Emeline and George were living with their son Enoch and his family in Wayne, Wayne County, Nebraska | Weeks, Emeline (I104)
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| 68 | By the 1880 census, George and Emeline were living with their son Enoch and his family in Wayne, Wayne County, Nebraska | Hunter, George (I103)
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| 69 | Changed his name to John Drawer sometime before May 30, 1786. | Van Nostrand, Jan (I4357)
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| 70 | Double wedding ceremony with her brother Tom, first couples married in the newly built Congregational church at Lake Preston (obit). | Coulson, Rebecca (I100)
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| 71 | Ebenezer was a lieutenant in Captain Edward Everett's company, Colonel Bedel's regiment in 1776 in the Revolutionary War. | Chamberlain, Sr., Lt. Ebenezer (I3824)
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| 72 | Family Search ID: 9SP6-HG8 | Chamberlain, Clement Sr (I255)
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| 73 | For most current scholarship on Francis Weekes, see | Weekes, Francis (I1766)
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| 74 | Had two wives, both maiden name Timmers (sisters). | Dinnissen, Thierri (I3492)
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| 75 | He built the sloop Ann Maria, and sailed her as captain in 1823. | Cashow, Capt. Peter (I394)
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| 76 | His father Rem's last name is spelled Kashou in the church record for the Baptizm of Nicholas. | Cashow (Kashou), Nicholas Rem (I395)
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| 77 | Hon. Samuel Foster, immigrant ancestor, was born in England in 1619, died April i6, • 1702. He married, at Dedham, Massachusetts, May 30, 1647, Esther, daughter of Edward Kemp, of Wenham, Massachusetts. In 1650 he romeved to Wenham and was admitted a freeman the same year. In 1655 he removed to Chelmsford, Massachusetts, where he became a leading citizen, deacon of the church and deputy to the general court (1679). He brought with him the Foster coat-of-arms on parchment and an old copy of it was in existence until recently. His house was on the lower edge of the southeast corner of Robbins Hill, not far from the center of the village, and is now or was lately owned by George A. Parkhurst. He is called lieutenant in the records as early as 1666. He, his son Samuel and grandson Edward, and others, bought of Jonathan Tyng his interest in five hundred acres in Wamesit. Even during King Philip's war he tried to prevent cruelty to the Indians, but he found public sentiment against him, and even the cold-blooded murder of peace-able Indians was permitted unpunished. Chief Wanalaneett's lands were confiscated and divided and though the general court gave him Tong's Island, he soon left the country and sought a home in Canada. Foster's will was dated April 30, 1692, and proved in July, 1702. He died July 10, 1702. Children: Samuel, born at Wenham, 1650, mentioned below ; Eli, horn at Wenham in 1653; Eli, 1655, at Chelmsford; Edward, April 30, 1657 Esther, November r, 1659 ; Andrew, April 30, 1662 ; Abraham, October 27, 1664 ; Nathaniel, October 14, 1667; John, September 28, 1671. | Foster, Hon./Lt. Samuel (I3803)
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| 78 | http://www.johnlisle.com/newenglandhall/genealogy/familygroup.php?familyID=F4148&tree=NewEnglandHall | Hall, Sarah (I130)
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| 79 | https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Palmer-345 | Palmer, William (I4947)
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| 80 | Illegitimate son of Catharine Theissen and whomever the man was. | Theissen (illegitimate), Nikolaus (I4667)
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| 81 | Immigrated to Newburryport Massachusetts in either 1635 OR 1638 (see references), aboard unknown ship. The part of town the Rolfe's were in became known as Newbury in 1764. | Rolfe, Henry (I1082)
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| 82 | Immigrated to Newburryport Massachusetts in either 1635 OR 1638 (see references), aboard unknown ship. The part of town the Rolfe's were in became known as Newbury in 1764. | Rolfe, Honour (I1083)
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| 83 | In 1910 (Census) - Robert, Alfred and Eunice Coulson were all minors and living in Illinois with their mother Estella (Coulson)(at this time Dean) and her 2nd husband Clinton Dean. | Coulson, Robert Henry Jr (I46)
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| 84 | In 1910 (Census) - Robert, Alfred and Eunice Coulson were all minors and living in Illinois with their mother Estella (Coulson)(at this time Dean) and her 2nd husband Clinton Dean. | Coulson, Eunice Ione (I62)
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| 85 | In 1910 (Census) - Robert, Alfred and Eunice Coulson were all minors and living in Illinois with their mother Estella (Coulson)(at this time Dean) and her 2nd husband Clinton Dean. | Coulson, Alfred Charles (I2581)
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| 86 | IN MEMORY OF WILLIAM NICKERSON ENGLAND 1604 - MASSACHUSETTS 1689-1690 BOSTON 1637 - FREEMAN 1638 - YARMOUTH 1640 DEPUTY TO CENTRAL COURT 1655 - FOUNDER OF CHATHAM RELIGIOUS TEACHER - USEFUL CITIZEN - FIRST OF THE NAME IN AMERICA PROGENITOR OF FIFTY THOUSAND DESCENDANTS ---------- HIS WIFE ANNE (BUSBY) NICKERSON ENGLAND 1609 - MASSACHUSETTS 1686+ ---------- THEIR CHILDREN ELIZABETH (MARRIED TRISTRAM HEDGES) - ROBERT (MARRIED - ) SAMUEL (MARRIED MARY BELL) - SARAH (MARRIED NATHANIEL COVEL) JOHN (MARRIED SARAH WILLIAMS) - WILLIAM (MARRIED MERCY WILLIAMS) JOSEPH (MARRIED RUHAMAH JONES) -------------------- The first Nickerson in this country was William Nickerson, who came from Norwich, Norfolk County, England. He arrived in this country in 1637 and settled in Yarmouth, Massachusetts. His land was granted to him by Captain Miles Standish. The First Congregational Church of Chatham, Massachusetts began with Chatham's first settler, William Nickerson, who held services in his home. His place of birth is also given as St. Peters Permontergate, Norfolk, England. William and his family sailed from Yarmouth, England, 15 April 1637 on the ship John and Dorothy, arriving at Salem, Massachusetts, 20 June 1637. Where the family lived for a few years is not known, but in 1641 they moved to Yarmouth Massachusetts. He first bought land at Monomoit from the Indian Sagamore Mattaquason in 1656 and a few years later, moved from Yarmouth with his children's families to begin the settlement of the present Chatham in the area which is now Chatham Port. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anne Busby and William Nickerson immigrated 08-Apr-1637 to Boston, Massachusetts; aboard the 'John and Dorothy', Captain William Andrews, Master. Anne Busby and William Nickerson removed to at Chatham, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, in 1664. William is listed as a weaver, aged 33 years old, and Anne is listed as his wife, aged 28, on that ship's registry. William known as the founder of Monomoy, bought land from the Indians for: a shallop, ten coats, six kettles, 12 axes, 12 hoes, 12 knives, 40 shillings in waumpom, a hat, and 12 shillings in coin. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ William Nickerson's Founding of Chatham (Momomoit), barnstable Co., Massachusettes1656 , Chatham (Momomoit), Barnstable Co., MA Chatham, Cape Cod Incorporated: 1712 Population: 6,579 Total Area: 24.33 square miles How Chatham was Settled " Along this coast we observed smoke which the Indians were making; and this made us decide to go and visit them… Here there is much cleared land and many little hills, whereon the Indians cultivate corn and other grains on which they live. Here are likewise very fine vines, plenty of nut-trees, oaks, cypresses, and a few pines... This would prove a very good site for laying and constructing the foundations of a state, if the harbour were a little deeper and the entrance safer than it is." - Samuel de Champlain, 1606 The French explorer Samuel de Champlain guided his vessel past Harding's Beach and into Stage Harbor in October of 1606. The Native Americans here, who had been here for at least 10,000 years, paddled out in their canoes and greeted Champlain hospitably. Nevertheless, two weeks of increasingly uneasy contact erupted into a fatal skirmish under circumstances that are still unclear. Three of the Frenchmen were killed and one fatally wounded. Many more Monomoyick were killed by French musket shot. After a retaliation that included an unsuccessful attempt to capture slaves, Champlain weighed anchor, giving up any ideas of making Chatham a French foundation of state, and leaving the way clear for the English. It wasn't until 50 years later in 1656, when the first English settler ran a cart down the ancient Indian pathway with an eye on living here. Englishman William Nickerson struck a deal for four square miles of land with the Monomoyick Sachem, Mattaquason. For this he paid a shallop, ten coats, six kettles, twelve axes, twelve hoes, twelve knives, forty shillings in wampum, a hat and twelve shillings in coins. This transaction took place, however, without the approval of authorities in the Plymouth Colony, and so, for sixteen years his purchase would be disputed until he settled with the courts by paying a fine of 90 pounds and obtaining written deeds from Mattaquason and his son John. This place was then called "Monomoit", as the Indians called it, and Nickerson immediately appealed to the court for incorporation of Monomoit as a town, but was refused on the grounds that there was no resident minister. Until the time when there was a population sufficient to support a church Monomoit would be known not as a town but as a constablewick. Nickerson gave land to each of his 5 sons and 3 daughters and built his house on Ryder's Cove on a spot now marked by the Nickerson Family Genealogical Research Center. Early Chatham History A handful of settlers soon trickled in to join the Nickerson family here. The early houses were not much different from the infamous Cape Cod-style houses of today. They were built with low roofs to withstand nor'easters and hurricanes, and were often situated in protective hollows facing southerly for maximum exposure to the sun. Seaweed, washed and dried over the summer, often was often heaped around the foundation to provide insulation. The small farming village consisted of twenty or so families when Reverend Hugh Adams became the resident minister in 1711. The town wasted no time and the next year a second petition for incorporation was then drawn up and subsequently approved in Boston with the condition that the constablewick give up its Indian-derived name of Monomoit in favor of something a little more English. On June 11, 1712 the constablewick of Monomoit was incorporated under the name of Chatham, taken from a seaport town in England. But most of the residents were farmers, rather than fishermen. Early Chatham settlers cultivated such crops as corn, rye, wheat, and tobacco on farms of thirty acres or more. The typical family owned a horse or two for transportation, several oxen for work on the farm, and raised sheep to provide wool for New England textile mills. Corn, introduced by the Monomoyick natives centuries before, already grew readily here, and soon became the town's priniciple crop. In fact, the cultivation of corn was so important in Chatham, that a law was passed in 1696 which stated that all householders were required to kill 12 blackbirds or 3 crows each year, delivering the heads to the selectman or forfeit a tax of 6 shillings. Farming remained an important part of the Chatham economy well into this century. As late as 1921 there were still 125 cows resident in town, ten active farms, and votes were still being cast to pay a bounty of twenty-five cents for each crow. The Godfrey Mill, built in 1797, ground corn until 1929. You can now see it at the head of Chase Park, one of the last visible reminders of the importance of farming to the first people of Chatham. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) about William Nickerson Name: William Nickerson Birth Date: 1604 Birthplace: Eng, Massachusetts Volume: 125 Page Number: 189 Reference: Gen. Column of the " Boston Transcript". 1906-1941.( The greatest single source of material for gen. Data for the N.E. area and for the period 1600-1800. Completely indexed in the Index.): 9 Apr 1934, 8265; 9 Nov 1934, 9346; 14 Nov 1934, 9346; 26 Jun 1935, 498; 8 Jul1935, 498 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 about William Nickerson Name: William Nickerson Gender: Male Birth Place: EN Birth Year: 1604 Spouse Name: Anne Busby Spouse Birth Place: EN Spouse Birth Year: 1607 Marriage State: of MA Number Pages: 8 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about William Nickerson Name: William Nickerson Year: 1637 Age: 33 Estimated birth year: abt 1604 Place: Boston, Massachusetts Family Members: Wife Anne 28; Child Robartt; Child Anne; Child Elizabeth; Child Nicho Source Publication Code: 3540 Primary Immigrant: Nickerson, William Annotation: From documents in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, and the Public Record Office, London. Passengers to New England on the John and Dorothy and the Rose, pp. 21-23; passengers to New England on the Marey Anne, pp. 29-30; passengers to Holland not indexed. Full Source Bibliography: JEWSON, CHARLES BOARDMAN. Transcript of Three Registers of Passengers from Great Yarmouth to Holland and New England, 1637-1639. (Norfolk Record Society Publications, 25.) Norwich: Norfolk Record Society, 1954. 98p. Reprinted by Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, 1964. Page: 22 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Family Data Collection - Deaths about William Nickerson Name: William Nickerson Death Date: Sep 1690 City: Chatham County: Barnstable State: MA Country: USA -------------------- William Nickerson, was born in Norwich, Norfolk County, England. He married Anne Busby, daughter of Nicholas Busby and Bridget Cooke, who were married at St. Mary's in Norwich on June 24, 1605. William Nickerson was a weaver. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- On 28 April 1621, at the age of about eighteen, his father took William and his brother Richard on as apprentices in the tailoring business. William learned the craft of weaving, and was admitted a worsted weaver and freeman in Norwich on 18 May 1632. He continued to practice his craft after leaving England, since he often signed his name as a "weaver." In his will dated 20 July 1567, his father-in-law Nicholas Busby -- also a weaver -- left William one of his looms. William's decision to emigrate to America probably was a result of the persecution visited upon Puritans and other nonconformists by Bishop Wren of Norfolk, coupled with a rise in taxes and a slump in the economy. These forces joined to drive over 3,000 small craftsmen out of the country over a period of several years. William and his family -- including his in-laws the Busbys -- were "desirous to go to Boston in New England and there to inhabit," and prior to their departure were examined by customs officials on 8 April 1637, in the port of Yarmouth, England. William gave his profession as weaver, his age as thirty-three, and that of his wife as twenty-eight. They sailed from Yarmouth aboard the ship John & Dorothy on 15 April 1637, and arrived at Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts Bay Colony, on 20 June 1637, after a voyage of sixty-six days. On 2 May 1638, he took the freeman's oath at Boston; records indicate that he was living in Watertown with the Busbys at the time. On 1 December 1640, though, he was proposed as a freeman at the Plymouth Colony Court, which shows that he intended to move to that Colony. He took the Plymouth oath of fidelity on 1 June 1641, and settled in Yarmouth where he is later listed as serving as a grand juror. His home in Yarmouth was in the northeast part of town, near Follen's (Little Bass) Pond at the head of the Bass River. In the final land allotment on 14 May 1648, he received ten acres of upland and six acres of meadow at Little Bass Pond. This was the farm he had lived on for eight years, and it appears that the 14 May allotment simply confirmed him in those lands. He had, however, also acquired new lands -- six acres of meadow -- at Nobscusset Meadows, later known as Hockanom. His nonconformist religious views, partly responsible for his leaving England, also got him into trouble with the colonial authorities. In 1641, he was complained of as being "a scoffer and jeerer of religion." Records show that for the next few years he had several run-ins with the church authorities. His outspokeness and temper also caused problems with his fellow citizens. On 2 October 1650, several suits for defamation by and against William were brought before the court. In two of them, both parties were found at fault. In one by Edward Dillingham and sixteen others, "the court doe judg yt the said William Nickerson, in regard to his offencive speaches against sundry of the towne, to have carried himselfe therein unworthyly, and desire him to see his evell therein, and to bee ready to acknowlldg it; and yt those hee hath offended in that behalfe should rest therin." Despite these problems, he held a series of civil offices. In March of 1643/4, he was listed as able to bear arms in defense of the colony in Yarmouth, and he served on a committee chaired by Capt. Miles Standish to settle land boundary disputes. In 1641, 1647, and on 7 June 1651, he served on grand juries, and on 8 June 1655 he served as Deputy from Yarmouth to the General Court. Around 1656, William purchased a sizable tract of land -- about 4,000 acres -- at place called Monomoy (present-day Chatham). The sellers were a chief named Mattaquason and his son John Quason, and the deal was consumated without the permission of the colonial government, contrary to a law passed in 1643, ... ------------------------------------------------- William was a weaver by trade and no doubt belonged to the Weaver's Guild of Norwich. On account of the persecutions of Bishop Wren, of Norfolk, whose zealous efforts against non-conformists drove over 3,000 small craftsmen out of the country, he and his wife Anne Busby decided to go to America. Their examination just before their departure from England reads thus: "The examination of William Nickerson of Norwich, in Norfolk, weaver, aged 33, and Anne, his wife, aged 28, with four children, Nicho, Robartt, Elizabeth, Anne, are desirous to go to Boston in New England there to inhabit. April 8, 1637." This taken from the Complete Book of Emigrants. They sailed from Yarmouth, England on April 15, 1637 on the ship "John and Dorothy" and arrived in Salem June 20 1637. With them sailed Anne's parents. In the same party was 18 year old Samuel Lincoln, the ancestor of Abraham Lincoln, and also Joseph Lincoln, the famous author of Cape Cod stories. On May 2, 1638, William took the oath of a free-man at Boston though it was likely that he was living in Watertown with his wife's people who came there after a brief stay in Newbury, MA. On December 1, 1640, he was proposed as a free-man at the Plymouth Colony Court, evidently planning to settle in the jurisdiction of the Old Colony rather than that of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. He took the oath of fidelity June 1, 1641, and on the same date he was on the grand jury and was propounded to be a free-man at the next court, being described as of Yarmouth. Evidently, he moved his family to Yarmouth about this time. His house and farm were near Folland's [sic] Pond (then known as Little Bass Pond) at the head of the Bass river. When he later moved to Monomoyick (Chatham), he sold his Yarmouth farm to James Mathews. With others he was complained of March 1, 1641, as a "Scoffer and jeerer of religion", which was true to his spirit of a non-conformist. Several times in the next twenty years he was in trouble with the church, and very likely that had much to do with his decision to move into the wilderness of Monomoy. His trouble with the minister seemed in no way to affect his standing as a citizen, because he continued to be chosen for responsible civil offices as long as he remained in Yarmouth. He was among those between 16 and 60 able to bear arms in Yarmouth. Was chosen on the committee headed by Captain Myles Standish to settle disputes over land boundaries which had become acute in Yarmouth. May 14, 1648, in the final allotment of lands at Yarmouth by the Standish Land Court, 10 acres of upland and 6 acres of meadow were laid out to him at Little Bass Pond ("toward the South sea", the record reads). This was the farm he had lived on for about 8 years and he also had purchased 6 acres of meadow in "Nobscusset Meadows", now known as Hockanom. Prior to or early in 1656 William had bought of the Indian Chief Sagamore Mattaquason and his son John Quason, a tract of land at Monomoy without the consent of the authorities, which was contrary to a law of June 6, 1643, and he had obtained no deed thereof. On June 3, 1656, William was brought before the court. "Att this court William Nicarson appeered, being summoned to answare for his buying of land of the Indians, contrary to the order of the Court, and for selling of a boat to the Indians, against a warrant directed to Yarmouth strictly prohibiting the same, haveing left the boate to bee the Indians; concerning his breach of order in buying of land, hee lyeth under the fine and penalty expressed in the order for the breach thereof; and for his contempt of the warrant, he is disfranchised his freedom." His purchase was again before the Court on June 3, 1657: "In answare unto a petition preferred to the court by William Micarson, desiring to have liberty to enjoy the land hee purchased att Mannamoiett, - the court have ordered, that the said land shall be viewed by some that shall be deputed; and afterwards, upon their report to the court, hee is to have competency or proportion out of it allowed unto him, and then to asigne up the remainder unto the court." In 1657, the family returned to Boston. Prior to January 5, 1661/2 William was back in Yarmouth with his family. Probably his older sons had been keeping his farm going for him in his absence. On November 27, he sold his Boston property to Phillip Gibbs for 150 pounds. July 4, 1663 William Nickerson presented a petition to the Plymouth Colony Court for permission to settle at township at Monomoyick, now Chatham. In the spring of 1664, William, then being about 60 years old but still physically and mentally rugged, left the comparatively settled community of Yarmouth and moved with his wife and all but one son (Nicholas) to the wilderness of Monomoick. His sons and daughters cleared farms and built homes of their own and were the first settlers of the area. In the Records of Plymouth Colony, we find several instances with William Nickerson being fined: March Court-20 pounds (p. 119); June 6, 1667-Debts due by rates and fines-20 pounds (p.120); October 1667-For sending scandalous writings to General Nichols-10 pounds (p.122); Jul 8, 1669-Item due to county also in debts and fines-20 pounds (p.127) In 1682, William deeded a part of his land to his daughter Elizabeth. This was only part of the thousands of acres he had purchased, beginning in 1656, from the Indian Sagamore Mattaquason, who had accepted in pay cows, cloth, wampum, and other trade goods. Together they staked out the metes and bounds, some of which are landmarks to this day; but the Sagamore could give no written deed because the Plymouth real estate operators had passed a law that no Indian could sell property without the consent of the colony. William claimed that the land was the Indian's to do with as he saw fit, but it took him 20 years and a substantial kick-back to the speculators before Mattaquason was allowed to set his hand to a deed. Their house in Monomoit stood between White Pond and Emery Pond, just south of Old Queen Anne Road, and his father provided him additional properties as he did for all his children, except Nicholas, who remained in Yarmouth. John's lands were located at Oyster Pond, Stage Neck and Buck's Creek. In the division of common land, he received a lot in East Harwich. At Monomoit, the years between 1664 and 1672 must have been arduous and cheerless for the first tiny group of settlers. The forest areas in some placed "wooded to the brink of the Sea", and wild, dense thickets that had to be cleared away are rather hard to imagine now. Present day old-timers will tell you that if you take a small dirt road from Wellfleet to Truro you can see, toward the bay, a stretch of tangled thicket which remains today as it was then. Quite isolated from the other Cape colonists, William and his children's families were the only white and English-speaking inhabitants in that neigh borhood - and relatively few others joined them in twenty-five years. Fortunately, they maintained cordial relationships with their Monomoic Indian neighbors, which "reflects the charity of the Indians at least as much as their own benevolence." -------------------- wikitree: ( Last modified 17 Sep 2016) ''''William Nickerson (1685 - 1738) Mr. William Nickerson Born 1685 in Monomoit, Massachusetts, New England ANCESTORS Son of John Nickerson and Sarah (Williams) Nickerson Brother of Sarah Nickerson and John Nickerson Husband of Hannah (Ellis) Nickerson — married [date unknown] in Chatham, Barnstable, MA DESCENDANTS Father of Zilpha Nickerson and William Nickerson Died 10 Oct 1738 [location unknown] Profile manager: Douglas Coldwell [send private message] Nickerson-262 created 26 Sep 2011 Last modified 17 Sep 2016 Biography William was born in 1685. He is the son of John Nickerson and Sarah Williams. He passed away in 1738. [1] He married in Barnstable Hannah Ellis and had 8 children Martha, b. Chatham, Barnstable, MA d. Bef Oct 1731 Hannah, b. Chatham, Barnstable, MA d. Aft 1735 David, b. Abt 1710, Chatham, Barnstable, MA d. Bef Jan 1750 (Age ~ 39 years) Elizabeth, b. Chatham, Barnstable, MA d. 1735 Sarah, b. Chatham, Barnstable, MA d.1735 William, b. Chatham, Barnstable, MA Ruth, b. Aft 1714, Chatham, Barnstable, MA d. 1735 (Age ~ 20 years) Zilpha, b. Chatham, Barnstable, MA Sources ↑ Entered by Doug Coldwell, Sep 26, 2011 Nickerson Family Association The Next Generation ---- | Nickerson, William lI (I2295)
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| 87 | John Williams’ wife Sarah died 15 Feb. 1793 and on 4 Oct. 1803 John married, second, Hitty [Mehitable] Wilkins, daughter of Amos and Lydia Wilkins, who was born at Lines born, N.H. And died 21 Aug. 1886 aged 100/4/7 (Springfield V.R.) Yet neither Sarah nor Hitty was buried beside John. | Williams, John (I2915)
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| 88 | LifeSketch: Sarah Rowley, dau. of Henry Rowley and Sarah Palmer, was b. circa 1630 in England. She purportedly d. at Falmouth, Mass. before her husband wrote is will omitting her on 15 Sep 1710, but there is no confirmation of any death date. On Apr. 11, 1646 at Barnstable, Mass., Sarah m. Jonathan Hatch. They had eleven known children. | Rowley, Sarah (I3169)
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| 89 | Marian was born on April 27, 1924 to Chris and Minnie (Stensen) Koch in Onida, South Dakota. She spent her childhood in Sully County and helped raise her brothers and sisters in Onida and Gettysburg. She was the fourth child of nine other siblings, and the first girl, so she worked hard and helped her mother tremendously. She later married Doyle Johnson, Gettysburg, on April 2, 1945 in Pierre, South Dakota. | Marian Emma (I987)
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| 90 | Marriage record: FHL Film Number: 574538 | Pitzen, Gertrud (I2532)
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| 91 | Marriage record: FHL Film Number: 587651 | Hermes, Joannes Peter (I2548)
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| 92 | Name confirmed with Latin to English translator. Last name spelled "Pitzen." | Pitzen, Nikolai (I3006)
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| 93 | Name confirmed with Latin to English translator. Last name spelled "Pitzen." | Margaretha (I3007)
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| 94 | Nicholas Busby sailed to Boston in 1637 aboard either the "Rose" (most likely due to leaving from Yarmouth) or the "John and Dorothy." | Busby II, Nicholas (I2308)
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| 95 | One of the first settlers of McKean County Pennsylvania (per coorespondance letter from their historical society). | Hunter, Capt. Arnold Esq. (I240)
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| 96 | Other last name spellings: Stuard | Stewart, Ensign Hugh (I5385)
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| 97 | Other possible first name spellings: Marguerite. | Hardenberg, Maragriete (I591)
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| 98 | Other possible last name spellings: Cossart. | Cashow, Johannes Jacob (I1522)
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| 99 | Other possible maiden last names: Simonson. | Symonsen, Marytje (I1523)
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| 100 | Other spellings Weekes, Wickes, Wyckes | Weeks, Henry (I1377)
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