
"STUBBS, ...(2400) RICHARD, Hull, m. 3 Mar. 1659, (2401) Margaret Reed, at Boston. His will of 22 May 1677, pro. 21 June foll. gives all to his wid. but if she m. then only one third to her, and resid. to four ch. whose names are not kn."
-- James Savage, "A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of New England, Before 1692" c/o http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/newengland/savage/
"BAKER, ...SAMUEL, Hull, s. of Rev. Nicholas, freem. 1677, m. Fear, d. of Isaac Robinson, rem. to Barnstable, there had adm. with his w. 1687, to that ch. on dism. from H."
"BINNEY, ...(2401i[1]) JOHN, Hull 1679, may have come few yrs. bef. by w. (2401i) Mercy had (2401i_a) John, b. 31 May 1680; (2401i_b) Samuel, 1681; (2401i_c) Mercy, 15 Dec. 1682; (2401i_d) Isaac, 25 June 1685; (2401i_e) Thomas, 3 Feb. 1687; and (2401i_f) Elizabeth 3 Dec. 1690, Th. m. 12 Dec. 1710 (2401i_f[1]) George Vickers [sic] of H. He d. 10 Nov. 1698, and his wid. Mary d. 19 Jan. 1709."
Stubbs --This surname is of Norman origin, first appearing in Staffordshire
"In his will ((2400) Richard Stubbs) mentioned his wife but did not name her, and his children, all of whom were under age, and specified that his eldest son Richard was to have a share and a half, and the other three children equal portions. His inventory reveals that he left a heard of cattle as well as two home lots and other grants on hills and islands."
SRC: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Volume 143 c/o http://216.239.63.104/search?q=cache:gWEjkyZb0isJ:www.maslandtech.com/familytree/np287.htm+%2B%22richard+stubbs%22+%2B1619+%2Bnote&hl=en.
"According to the book "The Descendants of Richard Stubbs, 1619-1677 of Hull, Mass" compiled by Marjorie Anne Stubbs Heaney, the name Stubbs first appeared in England in Yorkshire, There is a small village of that name near Leeds. Before last names were used, men were called by their occupations or by some distinguishing area where they lived, such as John by the River, which later became John River as the population grew and last names became important for the general population (by the 1300s). They then took the names of trees, colors, animals, birds and so on. The many books listing the origin of names attributes the name Stubbs to tree stumps or stubs, thus the man who lived by the tree stumps. The earliest Stubbses in the records were Henry and Richard de Stubbes of Yorkshire in 1273."
-- http://genforum.genealogy.com/cgi-bin/pageload.cgi?richard,hull,yorkshire::stubbs::873.html c/o Bill Doughty wdought@suffolk.lib.ny.us
"My 7th GGrandfather, Richard Stubbs b. abt 1619, possibly Lancashire, England came to the Massachusetts Colony 1642 and was one of the founders of Hull, Mass. He may have had a brother or cousin Joshua Stubbs. So far a connection across the pond has not been established. I would welcome any information. Please e-mail me at wdought@suffolk.lib.ny.us."
-- http://genforum.genealogy.com/cgi-bin/pageload.cgi?richard,hull::stubbs::253.html c/o above
Several sites list Margaret Reade being married to John Vining (1636-1685) 11 May 1651/57 Weymouth, Norfolk, MA, with children b. 1662-1684. This cannot be (2401) Margaret Reed, since this marriage overlaps hers with (2400) Richard Stubbs.
2401. Margaret (Reed/ Reads/) Reade
REF: http://www.plix.com/~users/ncallahan/NGedcom/D0008/I820.html
-- James Savage, op. cit.
-- James Savage, op. cit.

"LOBDELL, or LOBDEN, ...(2402) ISAAC, Hull 1658, may have sev. yrs. bef. been at Plymouth, freem. 1673. I have seen it stated that his w. was (2403) Martha, d. of (4806) Samuel Ward."
-- James Savage, op. cit.
"LOBDELL, or LOBDEN, ...(2403v) NICHOLAS, Charlestown, by w. (2403v[1]) Elizabeth had Nicholas, bapt. 18 Nov. 1688; Elizabeth 8 Sept. 1689."
"PRICE, ...RICHARD, Boston, ar. co. 1658, m. 18 Aug. 1659, Elizabeth Cromwell, d. of Thomas, the prosperous privateersman, had Thomas, b. 22 July 1660; Joyliffe, 2 Mar. 1662; (2403vI[1]) Elizabeth 10 Feb. 1664; and Richard, 26 Mar. 1667, was freem. with prefix of respect, 1664."
"...Samuel (b 1699) was the son of Joshua (1671-1742) and Mary Burwell Lobdell (d ca 1710). Joshua was the son of (2403ii) Simon Lobdell (1632-1717) who came with his [grand]father (4804) Nicholas to Hingham [MA] in 1635. Nicholas (1578-1650?) was the son of William (d 1588) of Eastbourne in Sussex, son of Nicholas (1510?-1546), believed to be son of John (1480?-1543), son of William (1455?-ca 1530), son of Stephen (1430?-ca 1500?), descended from Robert de Loppedell fl. 1296. -- Jared"
--Jared Lobdell jlobdell54@hotmail.com http://genforum.genealogy.com/cgi-bin/pageload.cgi?nicholas::lobdell::387.html 19 July 2003
REF: http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/af/family_group_record.asp?familyid=4514983;
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Plains/4889/g0000274.html#I01758
-- James Savage, op. cit.
-- James Savage, op. cit.
 
NOTE: The LDS Ancestral file shows (viii[1]) William Perry to be the son of Thomas Perry (ABT 1644-) and Sarah Stedman. This is apparently an error, perpetuated by Deane's History of Scituate. The vital records of Scituate show that (4661) Sarah did not marry Thomas Perry, but rather Samuel Perry. According to Alice H. Dreger, "William Perry of Scituate and Marshfield, Massachusetts", American Genealogist 70 (Jan. 1995): 42-48: p. 43, (viii[1]) William is the son of William Perry [(ABT 1625-AFT 1674) and Susanna Carver] and the brother of Thomas.
-- cf. Kendall Mellem jimell@swbell.net
 

http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=nhfirstsettlers&id=I18418 c/o Forrest Perreault Psomersworth@aol.com
"Pioneer Irish in New England
"There was a (2405ii) Thomas Manning [prob. not ours] at Ipswich in 1657, in which year he was recorded as the grantor of a homestead and lands at that place to William Buckley...
"Among ye passengers that came in ye shipe "Hannah & Elizabeth", New England Historic-Genealogical Register, Vol. 28.29 which arrived at Boston on November 4, 1679, there were seven members of a family named Manning, described as from St. Patricks Parish, Darthmouth, [Devon,] England. With the exception of (1202) Dennis of Nantucket, I am unable to find any authority for saying that these Mannings were Irish, because there are English as well as Irish families of the name. The Irish Mannings originally were OMao-ineins, but in course of time the name was anglicised Mannin, Manion and Manning, and their coat of arms bears a triple three-leaf Shamrock."
-- Franklin-Rogers Family Tree c/o Debbie Krauss commhousemom@hotmail.com http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2624402&id=I544157710
I gave a "figure of merit" for the names in the Dennis Manning line, based on LDS Manning listings during the 1645-1685 time period, and came up with the following counties of residence:
Devonshire 184; Suffolk 106; Essex 68; Sussex 64;
Gloucester, Northants 57 each; London 55; others less than 50 each.
Take this all with a grain of salt, though: If Dennis Manning were indeed Irish, those (heavily England-skewed) LDS listings are irrelevant.
There seems to be confusion on some sites between (1202) Dennis Manning and (2405iii) Daniel Manning, son of a Thomas Manning, Carpenter of Ipswich, Essex, MA. That Thomas mentioned no son Dennis in his will. If our Dennis did indeed have a father named Thomas from Ipswich, he must have been the second Thomas mentioned there, namely, the Gunsmith.
CHAPTER XIV
page 230:

2406. Alexander Innis/ Innes/ Aines
Innes -- a name of Flemish origin, first appearing in Moray, Scotland
"(2406) Alexander Ennis was shipped to Lynn, MA to work at the Saugus Iron Works. He had been captured by Oliver Cromwell in Scotland at the Battle of Dunbar and came to America on the Unity, as an indentured servant, through Joshua Foote and John Becx, owners of the Saugus (Lynn)and Braintree (Quincy) Iron Works."
-- http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bobbidodge&id=I12155
"Those who made up Leslie’s new army (incl. Alexander Ennis were Lowlanders, from Glasgow, Ayrshire, Edinburgh and Fife... In addition to regular units formed as mentioned, the Covenanters fielded clan forces. There is little record of their numbers, but it is safe to say that they formed company-sized units."
"[(2406) Innes's] wife, Katherine, was an Irish woman, and was probably one of the few Irish captives shipped to New England as indentured servants after Cromwell's Irish campaigns."
"The Irish (2407) Catherine and Scottish (2406) Alexander clashed with the Puritans of Taunton on at least one occasion. Saxbe writes, “‘an Irish woman named Katheren Aines’ was brought before the court at Plymouth in February, 1656/7, ‘vpon suspision of comiting adultery.’ The trial was the following month, and justice was swift and harsh:‘Att this Court, William Paule, Scotchman, for his vnclean and filthy behauiour with the wife of Alexander Aines, is centanced by the Court to bee forthwith publickly whipt…which accordingly was p(er)formed…Katheren Aines, for her vnclean and laciuiouse behauior with the abouesaid William Paule, and for the blasphemos words that shee hath spoken, is centanced by the Court to bee forthwith publickly whipt heer att Plymouth, and afterwards att Taunton, on a publicke training day, and to were a Roman B cutt out of ridd cloth and sowed to her vper garment on her right arme; and if shee shalbee euer found without it soe worne whil shee is in the gou(vern)ment, to bee forthwith publickly whipt…Alexander Anis, for his leauing his family, and exposing his wife to such temptations, and being as baud to her therin, is centanced by the Court for the p(re)sent to sitt in the stockes the time the said Paule and Katheren Ainis are whipt, which was p(er)formed…’”[
"Block Island was constantly being raided by pirates, (Alexander) moved some of his family to Upstate New York."
INDEX
-- http://www.scotwars.com/html/battle_of_dunbar.htm
-- http://armidalesoftware.com/issue/full/Thaler_706_main.html
-- http://www.boydhouse.com/Fmichelle/Fennis/Falexanderinnes/Falexanderinnes.html
-- http://www.armidalesoftware.com/issue/full/Thaler_706_main.html
= siblings

STUBBS & READE LINES continued



LOBDELL & WARD LINES continued
Return to Generation Four