Notes


Note    N00046         Index
Note: some of the children may have belonged to the first wife.


Notes


Note    N00047         Index
"About the year 1635 or 36 he m. Mary Allerton, the third child
of Isaac Allerton, who came over in the Mayflower in 1620. ...
She was then about 11 years of age. ... She survived him seven
or eight years, and died at the advanced age of ninety."
b. BEF 8 Feb 1607-8, Canterbury, Eng.
bp. 8 Feb 1607-8, Canterbury, Eng.
d. 10 Dec 1691, Plymouth, MA

Notes


Note    N00048         Index
REF CAG7. He was the 5th signer of the Mayflower Compact.
He moved to New Amsterdam in 1639.
b. c. 1586
r. New Haven, CT
d. Feb 1658-9, New Haven, CT

Notes


Note    N00049         Index
REF Kingston 1
There are some references to the Washburn family in the early history of Kingston, Massachusetts. This is where she married. The Washburn family later moved to Ohio. (This may be a different Washburn family - PBM)
Most of the references to Sarah Washburn indicate that her name was written in pencil.

Notes


Note    N00050         Index
REF Mayflower1, REF MD14:217
Gravestone: Died 25 Dec 1796, wife of Elisha Thomas.
"A devoted wife, A loving parent". Age 46yr. 2mo. 17da.
b. 4 Oct 1754, Middleboro, MA
d. 25 Dec 1796, Middleboro, MA

Marr

Notes


Note    N00051         Index


REF Russell1. Name was shown as Jeremiah Weston.
REF Mayflower2. Name is shown as Zachariah Weston.
b. 21 Dec 1728, Plympton, MA
d. 9 Apr 1794, Middleboro, MA

Notes


Note    N00052         Index
On July 4, 1734 parts of Middleborough, Pembroke, and Plympton
established Halifax.
b. 24 Jan 1732, Halifax, MA
d. 28 Jul 1769, Middleboro, MA

Notes


Note    N00053         Index
See E-mail from Loreene_D._Terry.ESCP10@xerox.com: shaw7.
E-Mail
b. 1663
d. AFT 14 Dec 1728
bur. Carver, MA

Notes


Note    N00054         Index

Daughter of Alexander CARPENTER

b. 1584
bp. 1584, Bath, Somerset, Eng.
r. Wrington near Bath, Somerset, Eng.
d. 19 Feb 1664-5, Plymouth, MA

Notes


Note    N00055         Index
REF GDNE. He came to Plymouth on the "Anne" in 1623.
REF PlymouthCH. Other references NEHGR 114:115, 116:188, NGSQ48:184.
b. 1602 or 1610, Purleigh, Essex, Eng.
r. 1623, Plymouth, MA
d. 29 Nov 1653-4


Notes


Note    N00056         Index
REF Mayflower2 Date of death is given as 13 Sep 1738, and
date of birth was adjusted accordingly to match age at death.

Notes


Note    N00057         Index
Hazard genealogy, #1003:
"He was sometimes called, by way of distinction, "Squire Hazard." His father died when he was but seven years of age, leaving his mother with six small children. Her means for the support of the helpless little family were not large, as a relative had taken advantage of her unprotected condition to defraud her of the patrimony left to her by her grandfather James Perry. She herself taught school for a time, to help feed her little brood, and her sons were taught serviceable trades. Jonathan, her third son, learned the carpenter's trade. About 1820 he commenced manufacturing coarse woolen goods, in company with Isaac Peace Hazard, at a place called Brushy Brook, in the western part of the town. This enterprise was very successful for a few years. Mr. Hazard then moved to Rocky Brook and operated Thomas R. Hazard's mills, in that place; here he was successful. Thomas R. Hazard was enabled to retired from business a few years afterwards, with what was at that time considered a fortune.
"Jonathan Hazard then bought one of the mills on his own account, which he run until about 1837, when he gave up the manufacturing business; and after one year spent in Newport, he bought one-half of a property in Narragansett Pier. At this time he ran a line of sloops to Providence, Newport, and New York. The sloop Washington made three trips a week to Providence and Newport; the Point Judith and Pettasquamscutt sailed one each week to New York. These sloops were built and launched at the "Pier," near when the Casino now stands, and were built by Capt. John Saunders.
"Mr. Hazard was an exceedingly quick-tempered, but also an exceedingly kind-hearted and sympathetic man. While scolding a miserable drunkard for his improvidence and neglect of his family, he would at the same time busy himself in filling a basket with provisions, and to the last denunciatory word he would add, "Come for more when that is gone." He truly understood the meaning of the word, "neighbor." One one occasion, seeing a heavy thunder-storm coming up, and also seeing his neighbor's hay, that was well cured and ready for the barn in danger of injury, and knowing his friend was away from home, Mr. Hazard called some men from his mill, and taking his teams, went to the field and gathered the hay into the barn. When thanked for his kind deed, he said, "There is nothing to thank me for; am I not they neighbor?" His wife was a member of the Society of Friends, and thus his changing fortunes did not prevent his children from being well educated in the Friends' School in Providence."