Bacheler Family Tree » Isaac Perkins II (< 1611-1685)

Persoonlijke gegevens Isaac Perkins II 

Bronnen 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15

Gezin van Isaac Perkins II

Hij is getrouwd met Susanna Wise.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1631 te Of,NH.


Kind(eren):

  1. Hannah Perkins  1656-1739 


Notities over Isaac Perkins II

There are several models of alternate parentages for Isaac Perkins, b 1610/11 d 1685, m. Susannah Wise and father of Rebecca Perkins.

source: WFT 2 #216, WFT 1 #2615; WFT 1 #3882. The latter lineage lists Isaac's father as Isaac also, b 12-20-1571 and d. 1653. This Isaac was the son of Henry (b. 1510, d 1592), who was the son of Henry (b 1484, d 1547, who was the son of Thomas and Alys. WFT 1 #2615 lists this Isaac's father as Issache Perkins (m. ALice c 1596, d 12-1-1629), who was the son of Thomas and Alys. If either of these accounts proves to be accurate, they still trace back to Thomas and Alys, but just through a different line.

From Mike Faris:

Isaac Perkins came to New England between 1630 and 1634. He was in
Ipswich in 1637, as he received a grant of land there at that time.

In 1638, the town of Hampton, NH was settled, and among those who went
there were Abraham and Isaac Perkins, believed to be younger brothers of
John Perkins of Ipswich, and their families. According to tradition,
Abraham and Isaac were brothers. They appear to have made settlement
about the same time and the house lots assigned to them by the town,
each containing five acres, adjoining each other. Isaac's house was
nearly on the site of the present Baptist parsonage, and there he lived
more than ten years. In the list of shares of commons granted,
"December 26, 1645", unto the proprietors of house lots were three
shares each to Abraham and Isaac Perkins. In June, 1652, Rev. Timothy
Dalton, reader of the church in Hampton, sold to Isaac Perkins, of
Hampton, planter, for fifty pounds, his farm lying next to Salisbury
line, in New Hampshire, with seventy acres of meadow and marsh, bounded
by John Brown and John Wheelrite. Isaac Perkins probably moved there
soon after the purchase. March 23, 1663, a committee presented a report
of the owners of the shares in the cow common and how the title was
derived. Among these "original rights" Isaac Perkins title is shown to
be derived from Samuel Fogg, one share bought of Henry Roby. The old
Norfork records show conveyance by Isaac of small parcels of land and
rights of way across his land.

Among the list of persons permitted to vote at the first assembly of the
Royal Province of New Hampshire, March 2, 1680, is that of Isaac
Perkins. march 2, 1883, Isaac Perkins and eighteen others sign a
petition to Edward Cranfield, Esq., his majesty's lieutenant governor
of the province of New Hampshire to be freed from head money, all being
about and above seventy years of age, some above eighty, others near
ninety, "being heartily willing our estates should pay their proportion
to all public charges". In an address and petition from Hampton to the
King against Cranfield signed by sixty-seven persons, there are the
names of Isaac and six other male members of the Perkin's family. A
note on the families states that during the first summer Mr. Bachelor
was in Hampton, the families of Abraham and Isaac were among the number
there. They were the first to have their children baptized by Mr.
Bachelor at that place, and Abraham's son born September 2, 1639,
baptized December 15, 1639, is said to have been the first white child
born in Hampton. September 18, 1671, Abraham and Isaac Perkins and
their wives, Susanna and Mary, were among the sixty-five persons in full
communion in the church at Hampton. Isaac Perkins was a rich man; was a
ship carpenter and settled in what is now called Seabrook. Isaac
Perkins married, about 1634, Susanna, daughter of Humphrey Wise, of
Ipwich, and Abraham Perkins married Mary Wise, her sister.

A good bit and, in fact, most of the narrative on Isaac Perkins comes
from "Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire" by Sybil Noyes
- Genealogical Publishing Co, 1976 and Vol II - "Genealogical and Family
History of the State of Maine" by George T. Little published in 1909.
The first reference was also a primary source for Stephen Batchelder and
Christopher Hussey. Additional notes on Christopher Hussey are from
"History of the Town of Hampton, NH" by Joseph Dow, 1893.
Isaac PERKINS was born on 26 Jan 1611 in Hillmorton, Gloucestershire, Warwicks, Engl. He was christened on 26 Jan 1611 in St. John's Ch., Gloucestershire, Warwicks, Engl.. He died on 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton, Rockingham, NH. He was buried in Old, ?, Hampton, NH. He has reference number 9CLJ-R3. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996. Parents: John PERKINS and Judith GATES.

He was married to Susannah WISE about 1635 or 1638 in Ipswich, MA.
!Source: Genealogies of Pennsylvania Families, Vol II.
According to Donna J. Howard, he was a ship carpenter.
[Br¿derbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #0216, Date of Import: May 27, 1999]

"Isaac was baptised in the family parish, St. John the Baptist Church. He emigrated to New England between 1630 and 1634 and was in Ipswich, MA in 1637 (grant of land). In 1638 he and Abraham moved to Hampton, NH as it was being settled; their 5 acre house lots adjoined. He was a freeman in 1642. In 1652 he purchased a farm in Seabrook, adjoining Salisbury."

Ship carpenter, farmer, wealthy landowner. Among the first settlers of Hmapton (now Seabrook), NH. Isaac died leaving no will. Estate was administered 7/17/1699.
[B Sides connection.FTW]

GIVN Isaac
SURN PERKINS
ABBR Ancestral File (TM)
TITL Ancestral File (TM)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
REPO @R1@
ABBR Ancestral File (TM)
TITL Ancestral File (TM)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
REPO @R3@
ABBR Ancestral File (TM)
TITL Ancestral File (TM)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
REPO @R4@
ABBR Ancestral File (TM)
TITL Ancestral File (TM)
AUTH The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
PUBL June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
REPO @R6@
AFN 9CLJ-R3
{geni:about_me} Michelle Boyd's outstanding compilation of documents on the Hussey/Bachiler/Perkins families (http://www.boydhouse.com/michelle/hussey/isaacsusannaperkins.html) includes the following:

'''Isaac Perkins and Susanna''' —

Isaac Perkins was baptized 26 January 1611/2 in Hillmorton, Warwick, England to Isaac and Alice Perkins. Isaac married Susanna —.[1] They are first found in New England, settling at Ipswich, Essex, Massachusetts in 1637 and then at Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire in 1638, where Isaac became a freeman 18 May 1642. He became a keeper of a herd of cattle in 1648 and bought a farm from Timothy Dalton, Jr. in June of 1652. Isaac was the constable in 1650 and served in juries numerous times. He was listed as an owner of a share in the cow common in 1663 and a member of Mr. Cotton’s congregation in full communion in 1671. He made a deed to his son Ebenezer “for support of self and wife Susanna”. Isaac died in November 1685. Susanna moved with her son Ebenezer to Brandywine Hundred, New Castle, Delaware. Her estate was administered there by her son-in-law John Hussey in 1699.

'''Isaac and Susanna's children are:'''

* 1. '''Lydia Perkins''', married Eliakim Wardell 17th 8 mo (17 Oct) 1659 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire, both were Quakers, in May of 1663, she was whipped for having gone “naked into the meeting house at Newbury”, settled in New Jersey.
* 2. '''Isaac Perkins''', baptized 8 Dec 1639, died (drowned) 10 Sep 1661.
* 3. '''Jacob Perkins''', baptized 24 May 1640, married Mary Phillbrook 30 Dec 1669, temporarily settled at Holmeshole, Martha’s Vineyard, Dukes, Massachusetts, then at the Delaware River.
* 4. '''Rebecca Perkins''', a Quaker, married John Hussey 2 Sep 1659, moved to Newcastle, Newcastle, Delaware.
* 5. '''Daniel Perkins''', died young 1 Aug 1662.
* 6. '''Caleb Perkins''', married Bethia Philbrick 24 Apr 1677.
* 7. '''Benjamin Perkins''', born 17 Feb 1649/50, died 23 Nov 1670.
* 8. '''Susanna Perkins''', born 21 Aug 1652, married 1) Isaac Buswell (drill master of Hampton) 12 or 19 May 1673 and 2) William Fuller, Jr. 22 or 29 Jun 1680.
* 9. '''Hannah Perkins''', born 24 Feb 1655/6, married James Philbrick (mariner) 1 Dec 1674, died 23 May 1739.
* 10. '''Mary Perkins''', born 23 Jul 1658, married Lt. Isaac Chase (Quaker, blacksmith) 20 Feb 1672/3 probably in Nantucket, Massachusetts, died without issue before 1675.
* 11. '''Ebenezer Perkins''', born 9 Dec 1659, married Mercy —, settled in Brandywine Hundred, New Castle, Delaware, will made 20 Jul 1703, proved 16 Sep 1703.
* 12. '''Joseph Perkins''', born 9 Apr 1661, married Martha —, settled in Brandywine Hundred, New Castle, Delaware, will made 4 Jan 1706/7, proved 19 Aug 1707.

'''Sources:'''
* 1. Vital Records of Nantucket, Massachusetts to the Year 1850, Vol. IV—Marriages (H-Z), Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1927.
* 2. Perkins in Hillmorton Parish Records (England), extracted by Jim Perkins.
* 3. Sanborn, George and Sanborn, Melinde Lutz, Vital Records of Hampton, New Hampshire to the end of the year 1900, Boston: New England Genealogical and Historical Society, 1992, p. 74.
* 4. Dow, Joseph, History of the Town of Hampton, New Hampshire, Salem, MA: The Salem Press, 1893.
* 5. Savage, James, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1990 (originally published Boston, 1860-1862).
* 6. Holmes, Frank R., Directory of Heads of New England Families, 1620-1700, New York, 1923, p. 96.
* 7. Database of the Eliza Starbuck Barney Genealogical Record, Nantucket Historical Association (created from records collected by Eliza Starbuck Barney (1802-1889)).
* 8. Lydia Wardwell, Quakeress, at http://www.bwlord.com/Ipswich/Grampy/it_was_the_law.htm.
* 9. Noyes, Sybil, Libby, Charles Thornton, and Davis, Walter Goodwin, Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Portland, Maine: The Southward Press, 1928.

===Nantucket Marriages===

'''PERKINS''' Page 153
* Mary, daughter of Isaac and Susanna of Hampton, and Lt. Isaac Chase, son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Philbrick), —,[2] P. R. 38.[3]
** '''Source:''' Vital Records of Nantucket, Massachusetts to the Year 1850, Vol. IV—Marriages (H-Z), Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1927.

===Baptisms===

26 Jan 1611/12 Isaac son of Isaac

Source: Perkins in Hillmorton Parish Records (England), extracted by Jim Perkins.

p. 74: “Eliekin Wardell & Lidia Perkins wear Joyned in mariage: 17: 8 mo: 1659”

Source: Sanborn, George and Sanborn, Melinde Lutz, Vital Records of Hampton, New Hampshire to the end of the year 1900, Boston: New England Genealogical and Historical Society, 1992, p. 74.

Chapter 2—Part 4

Care of Cows and Calves

An arrangement somewhat different from the one heretofore noticed was made in 1648, about the care of the cows and calves for the season. For convenience, the cows were to be pastured in two separate herds nearly equal, with two keepers to each herd. John Cass, for himself and Isaac Perkins, agreed with the selectmen, carefully to keep one of the herds, or one-half of the cows in the town, from the 18th of April till a fortnight after Michaelmas, or near the middle of October. The keepers were to go in the morning, to the fall-gate near Robert Tuck’s [at the angle of the roads on Rand’s hill], about half an hour after sunrise, to take charge of the cows, on all days except the Sabbath, and they were also to have the care of them every third Sabbath. For the performance of this service, the selectmen agreed that they should received £15 10s.

In payment, they were to have one pound of butter for each cow in the herd, at 6d. per pound. One half of the remainder was to be paid in wheat, to be delivered the next September, at 4s. 6d. per bushel; and the rest in the following February, in Indian corn, at 3s. 6d. per bushel. In the case of a failure, on the part of any owners, to pay their proportion in due season, it was stipulated that they should pay the keepers 6d. per week, smart money, till be debt should be cancelled.

Chapter 3—Part 3

Owners of the Shares in the Cow Common, March 23, 1663.

Origl rights and how their titles were derived from the original owners.

…Isaac Perkins Samuel Fogg, 1 share bought of Henry Roby…

Chapter 5—Part 1

…The commission for the new government was passed, September 18, 1679;--in an act, “which inhibits and restrains the jurisdiction exercised by the colony of Massachusetts over the towns of Portsmouth, Dover, Exeter and Hampton, and all other lands extending from three miles to the northward of the Merrimack River or any part thereof unto the province of Maine.” (Farmer’s Belknap, 88.) New Hampshire was created a Royal Province, to be governed by a president and council.

…Having completed the organization, a proclamation was made, for all officers to keep their respective places till further ordered. Shortly after (February 4, 1680), a warrant was sent to the selectmen of each of the towns, requiring that a list of the names of their inhabitants and inventory of their estates be sent to the president and council at their sitting on the 16th of the same month.

Being required by their commission, to call a General Assembly, and being empowered to determine who should have the privilege of choosing deputies, the president and council ordered: “that the persons hereafter named in the several towns shall meet together on the first day of March next, by 9 of the clock in the morning, and having first each of them taken the oath of allegiance (if they have not taken it already), which oath is to be administered by the member or members of the said Council there residing, choose from among themselves, by the major vote given in writing, not exceeding the number of three persons, which persons so chosen are to appear at Portsmouth on the 16th day of March following, by 9 o’clock, there to attend his Majesty’s service for the concerns of the said Province of New Hampshire, provided that we do not intend that what is now done be precedential for the future, and that it shall extend no farther than to the calling this first Assembly.” None were to be permitted to vote except those mentioned in the list appended to the order, on penalty of paying a fine of five pounds.

The list of names for Hampton follows:

…Abraham Perkins.

Isaac Perkins, Not app’d…

Chapter 19—Part 2

A farm, lying in the south part of the town, near Salisbury, was granted to Mr. Dalton’s son, Timothy Dalton, Jr., who died soon after, when the farm came into his father’s possession, and, on the 21st of January, 1652, was confirmed to him by a vote of the town. This act of the town, however, was based on the following condition: “that Mr. Dalton should free and discharge the town of Hampton from all debts and dues for his ministry till he had a set pay given him by the town.” To this Mr. Dalton agreed, and a release was executed accordingly, five days after the confirmation of the last grant. In June, of the same year, this farm was sold to Isaac Perkins.

Chapter 19—Part 4

…Mr. Cotton (the reverend of Hampton) has left a list of members in full communion on the 18th of September, 1671. The whole number at that time was 68, 30 males, and 38 females. The list is subjoined:

MALES

…Abraham Perkins…

…Isaac Perkins…

FEMALES

…Sarah Perkins

Mary Perkins…

Source: Dow, Joseph, History of the Town of Hampton, New Hampshire, Salem, MA: The Salem Press, 1893.

Volume 1

BUSWELL,

ISAAC, Salisbury, son of the preceding (Isaac Buswell also of Salisbury), married 12 or 19 May 1673, Susanna, daughter of the first Isaac Perkins, had Sarah, born 29 November 1676; and Mary, 23 December 1678; and he probably died soon after, for his widow married 22 June 1680, William Fuller, jr. of Hampton.

CHASE,

ISAAC, Hampton, son of Thomas of the same, married Mary Perkins of Hampton, removed to Edgartown, and had Thomas, born 9 November 1677; Rachel, 25 October 1679; Isaac, 21 January 1682; Abraham, 10 January 1684; James, 15 January 1686; Joseph, 26 February 1690; Jonathan, 28 December 1691; Hannah, 25 November 1693; Sarah, 15 October 1695; Priscilla, 12 November 1697; and Elizabeth 9 September 1703; and he d. 9 May 1727. Descendants of great numbers are widely diffused.

Volume 2

FULLER,

WILLIAM, Hampton, probably son of William of the same, freeman 1678, married 22 June 1680, Susanna, daughter of Isaac Perkins, and widow of Isaac Buzzell of Salisbury. Nine of this name had been graduates at Harvard in 1829, nine at Yale, three at Dartmouth and twenty-two at other New England colleges and at Union, of whom twelve were clergy.

Volume 3

PERKINS,

ISAAC, Hampton, probably brother of the first Abraham, freeman 18 May 1642, by wife Susanna had perhaps Lydia; Isaac, baptized 8 December 1639; Jacob, 24 May 1640; Lydia; and Rebecca, both of whom may have been elder; Daniel, who died young; Caleb; Benjamin, born 17 February 1650; Susanna, 21 August 1652; Hannah, 24 February 1656; Mary, 23 July 1658; Ebenezer, 9 December 1659; and Joseph, 9 April 1661; and the time of his death is uncertain. Mary married Isaac Chase of Hampton.

JACOB, Hampton, son of the first Isaac, married 30 December 1669, Mary Phillbrook, had Isaac, born 18 December 1671; Jacob, 24 December 1674; Alice, perhaps; Mary, 10 August 1678; and Benjamin, 1 August 1693; but some hesitation attends this statement. Genealogical Register XII. 82, this concurrent exactly with X. 216. Probably different generations may reconcile.

EBENEZER, Hampton, son of Isaac of the same, by wife Mercy, had Daniel, born June 1685; Abigail, 11 August 1687; and Jonathan 10 May 1691.

JOSEPH, Hampton 1678, youngest son of Isaac of the same, by wife Martha had Joseph, born 28 July 1689; John, 4 June 1691; and Caleb, 8 July 1693.

PHILBRICK,

JAMES, Hampton, son of the preceding (James Philbrick also of Hampton), married 1 December 1674, Hannah, daughter of Isaac Perkins, had Joseph, born 1693; and probably more children.

Volume 4

WARDALL, WARDHALL, WERDALL, WARDEL, WOODEL, or WARDELL, sometimes WARDWELL (and Farmer thinks the last form may be the most correct), ELIAKIM, Hampton, son of Thomas, married Lydia Perkins, was a favorer of Quakers, so far as to show his hospitality, for which he was abused, as is seen in the History of Sewel, London 4 to d. p. 330. Of his wife is told in the County Court record May 1663, the surprisingly extravagant behavior in going naked into the meeting house at Newbury, for which she was whipt, and this seems to have led Bishop, in his New England Judged, to more surprising vindication of her. See in Coffin’s History 66.

Source: Savage, James, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Vol. 3, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1990 (originally published Boston, 1860-1862).

PERKINS

Abraham, born Eng.1611, settled at Hampton, NH, 1640

Edmund, married Boston 1678

Isaac, brother of Abraham, 11th generation from Pierre de Morlaix, bapt. Hillmorton, Warwickshire, Eng. 1611. Came to New England, 1630-4; located at Ipswich, Mass, 1637; removed to Hampton, NH, 1638

John, born Newent, Gloucestershire, Eng., 1590, came with Roger Williams to Boston in 1631; removed to Ipswich, Mass 1633

John, resident of New Haven, Conn., 1688

Jonathan, inhabitant Norwalk, Conn., 1671-77

Luke, living at Charlestown, Mass., 1666

Thomas, born Eng about 1600; was at Dover, NH, 1665

William, minister, son of William, a merchant tailor of London; born England 1607; came to Boston, Mass., 1632, removed Weymouth, Mass., 1643; preached Gloucester, Mass., 1651-55; second minister at Topsfield, Mass..

William, took oath of allegiance at Dover, NH, 1662.

Source: Holmes, Frank R., Directory of Heads of New England Families, 1620-1700, New York, 1923, p. 96.

Lydia Wardwell, Quakeress

May 5, 1663. Lydia Wardwell, of Hampton, wife of Eliakim Wardwell, went naked into the Newbury Meeting House “In consideration of their mizerable condition who were blinded by ignorance and superstition, tho it was exceedingly hard to her modes and shamefaced disposition.”

She was had to Ipswich for trial and condemned to be “tyed to the fence post of the Ipswich tavern and lashed with 20 or 30 stripes.

Source: http://www.bwlord.com/Ipswich/Grampy/it_was_the_law.htm

Perkins.The Hampton and Ipswich families seem related; the latter came from Hillmorton, county Warwick. Became 35th commonest name in New England.

Caleb (9, Isaac Perkins), Hampton, went to defense of Marlboro in 1676, married 24 April 1677 Bethia Philbrick (8) and in 1678 had his portion from father. Grand juror 1695. Lists 396, 52, 399a. In 1724 he deeded homestead after death of both to only surviving child Benjamin. Children: Rhoda, born 24 June 1677, married Elias Philbrook (4). Benjamin, Hampton Falls, born 11 May 1680, married 1 March 1710 Lydia Macrease. List 339a. 6 children. Ann, born 19 March 1682, died soon, probably before 1724.

Ebenezer (9, Isaac Perkins), Hampton, in 1681 said ‘my cousin Isaac Green.’ Lists 395, 52. He and wife Mercy sold out in 1693, his mother Susanna signing, and went to Delaware where he and brother Joseph bought in Brandywine hundred. Children recorded in Hampton: Daniel, born June 1685; Abigail, born 11 August 1687; Jonathan, born 10 May 1691, all in father’s will, 20 July–16 September 1703, with four more, but no wife. See N. E. Reg. 47: 483.

Isaac, brother of (1, Abraham Perkins), Hampton 1639, bought a farm next to Salisbury line, now Seabrook, [p.542] from Rev. Mr. Dalton in June 1652 and probably soon moved there. Constable 1650; jury service often. Lists 391a, 393ab, 394, 396, 398, 49. In January 1680 he deeded to son Ebenezer for support of self and wife Susanna, and died November 1685. Susanna, List 393a, was not a Wyeth (see Bursley 4, Peabody). With her consent son Ebenezer sold the homestead in 1693 and she went with him and other children to Delaware, where her estate was administered in 1699 by son-in-law Hussey, principal creditor. Children: Lydia, married 17 October 1659 Eliakim Wardwell. Isaac, baptized 8 December 1639, drowned 10 September 1661. Jacob, baptized 24 May 1640. Rebecca, married John Hussey (3). Daniel, died 1 August 1662. Caleb. Banjamin, born 12 February 1649-50, died 23 November 1670. Susanna, born August 1652, married 1st 12 May 1673 Isaac Buswell of Salisbury; married 2d William Fuller (6). Hannah, born 24 February 1655-6, married James Philbrick (2). Mary, born 23 July 1658, married Lt. Isaac Chase (2). Ebenezer, born 9 December 1659. Joseph, born 9 April 1661.

Jacob (9, Isaac Perkins), married 30 December 1669 Mary Philbrook (8) and had a mar. portion from fa. Temporarily at Holmeshole, Martha’s Vineyard, in February 1674-5. Jury (New Hampshire) 1685. Lists 396, 52. Children at Hampton: Isaac, born 18 December 1671. Jacob, born 24 December 1674. Mary, born 18 August 1678. Benjamin, born 12 August 1683. In 1693 he bought 330 acres on the Delaware River below Burlington, and went there, deeding this in 1711 to the three sons above, reserving life interest.

Joseph (9, Isaac Perkins), Hampton, had wife Martha. List 52. See also Jacob Basford. Children at Hampton: Joseph, born 28 July 1689. John, born 4 June 1691. Caleb, born 8 July 1693. These, and four more, but not wife, named in his will, 4 January 1706-7–19 August 1707, in Delaware where he bought with brother Ebenezer (4), in October 1693.

(Other families associated with Isaac Perkins):

Buswell, an uncommon Middle English surname.

Isaac, drill master at Hampton 1645, lived at Salisbury. Of his children, Isaac, married 2d Susannah Perkins (Isaac) (who married 2d William Fuller 6), and had Sarah, married William Foss (7). See Hoyt.

Chase, an East of England name, became 27th in New England.

Lt. Isaac (6, Thomas Chase), put under guardianship of brother Thomas in 1667, blacksmith, Quaker, married 1st 20 February 1672-3 Mary Perkins, aged 15, who died sine prole (without issue); 2d 5 October 1675 at Tisbury, Martha’s Vineyard, where he settled, Mary Tilton, who died 14 June 1746 aged 88. Will 12 February 1721-2, died 19 May 1727. 12 children. See Chase Genealogy 482.

Fuller, occupational surname, finisher of cloth, in the East and Southeast of England.

William, see his brother (2, John Fuller). Appeared living in Hampton with his uncle (5, William Fuller), 1671-1684 earlier or later, but retired to Ipswich or beyond. In 1679 Susannah (Perkins) Buswell, widow of Isaac, junior, had removed his household goods, and 29 June 1680 married William Fuller, jr. Known children: Abigail, recorded in Ipswich 10 March 1690.

Philbrick,Philbrook. Uncommon. Nothing known supports tradition this family came from Lincolnshire or in the Arbella.

Lt. James (1, James Philbrick), mariner, Hampton, married 1 December 1674 Hannah Perkins (9, Isaac Perkins). Had the homestead. Selectman 1702, 1712, 1719, 1723; surveyor and lot-layer. Lists 52, 396. See also Lewis (16). He died 4 November 1723, widow 23 May 1739. A deed 1722 names children and grandchildren: Hannah, born 30 April 1676, married Stephen Sanborn. James, weaver, Hampton 1702, New Castle 1703. His wife Sarah joined Hampton Church 1701; married 2d Benjamin Emerson 14 January 1707-8 in Haverhill, where her 4 children, born 1701-1706, married, though the only son Benjamin married his 1st wife in Salisbury. Daniel, born 19 February 1678-9, and Jonathan, born 9 December 1680, neither mentioned 1722, but one undoubtedly husband of ‘daughter-in-law’ Penelope then living with (2, Lt. James Philbrick) and father of her son Jonathan, who married Lydia Linscott (1) and had 6 children recorded York 1729-1742; List 279. Widow Penelope married 2d Elias Philbrick (4). Sarah, born 11 June 1682, married 1st John Sanborn, married 2d Lt. Thomas Rollins (6 jr.). Ebenezer, Rye, born 29 Oct. 1683, married Bethia Moulton (12). Will, 1755–1760, names 4 children. Apphia, born 8 April 1686, helpless 1722, died 23 Sept. 1759. Isaac, born 5 August 1688, married 27 October 1717 Mary Palmer (20); died 16 October 1757. Daughter Hannah mentioned 1722. Abigail, born 1692, married Thomas Haines (11); son Malachi living 1722. Deacon Joseph, born 3 February 1694, married 1st 5 December 1717 Anne Dearborn (John 3 jr.), who died 30 July 1718; married 2d 26 November 1719 Elizabeth Perkins (12), who died 26 March 1736; married 3d 18 November 1736 Sarah Nay. Will, 1760 (died 2 December 1761), names wife Sarah (died 9 December 1779), 4 children by 2d wife, 1 by 3d, out of 14 recorded. Nathan, blacksmith, Hampton, Rye, born 19 August 1677, married 31 October 1721 Dorcas Johnson (James 15 jr.) who died 22 February 1764. His will, 12 (died 23) April 1749, names her and 7 children. Mary, baptized 7 December 1701, not mentioned in 1722.

Wardwell, found in various Lincolnshire parishes, including Alford.

Eliakim(2, Thomas Wardwell), Hampton, witness with John Wheelwright in 1654 and was willed much by Jeffrey Mingay in 1658. He married 17 October 1659 Lydia Perkins (9, Isaac Perkins), and the same year, with Nathaniel Weare (6), bought Hampton property from Thomas Kimball. As Quakers he and wife encountered trouble and made a new home in New Jersey after he was fined in 1662 for absence from meeting 26 days, both fined in 1663 for absence 20 days and she ordered whipped in May 1663 for going into Newbury meeting-house naked. Evidently he was at Hampton in October 1663, called sometime of Hampton 1669, at Shrewsbury, New Jersey, 1670. Monette’s ‘First Settlers of Piscataway and Woodbridge’, 5: 873; 6: 1232, names children: Joseph (born at Hampton 29 December 1660), William, Margaret (born at Hampton 23 May 1664), Elizabeth, Esther, Lydia, Mary, Meribah, Patience, Eliakim.

Source: Noyes, Sybil, Libby, Charles Thornton, and Davis, Walter Goodwin, Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, Portland, Maine: The Southward Press, 1928.

Footnotes

[1] It has been claimed that Susannah was the daughter of Humphrey Wyeth or Wise. In GDMNH, p. 541, it states, “That she (Mary, the wife of Abraham Perkins, the brother of Isaac) and Susanna wife of Isaac, were daughters of Humphrey Wyeth, as often claimed, though not true of Susanna, may have been true of Mary…” In this same book, under the entry for Humphrey Wyeth, on p. 773, it names a daughter Susanna, as follows: “Susanna, not named with minor children, married John Bursley.”

[2] Note in Vital Records: “Intention not recorded.”

[3] Note in Vital Records: “P. R. 38—private record, from the William C. Folger genealogical records in possession of the Nantucket Historical Association (This compilation has been used because of the valuable clues it affords, but its statements should be received with caution, as it is not free from errors. It should also be understood that in many instances the events recorded did not take place in Nantucket, and in a few cases attention has been called to the question of residence.)”

© 2004 by Michelle Boyd, All rights reserved.

To contact me: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

Last updated 1 Jul 2004.

http://www.boydhouse.com/michelle/hussey/isaacsusannaperkins.html

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'''Isaac PERKINS''' was born on 26 Jan 1611 in Hillmorton, Gloucestershire, Warwicks, Engl.
* He was christened on 26 Jan 1611 in St. John's Ch., Gloucestershire, Warwicks, Engl..
* He died on 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton, Rockingham, NH.
* He was buried in Old, ?, Hampton, NH.
* He has reference number 9CLJ-R3. From Ancestral File (TM), data as of 2 January 1996.
* Parents: John PERKINS and Judith GATES.
* He was married to Susannah WISE about 1635 in Ipswich, MA.

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'''Source:''' Excerpted from Genealogical and Family History of the State of Maine (1909), by Henry Sweetser Burrage and Albert Roscoe Stubbs. Lewis Historical Pub. Co. Available online on Google Books or archives.org.

(XI) '''Isaac (2), son of Isaache (1) Perkins''', was
* probably '''born in January, 1611''', as the '''record of his baptism, January 26, 1611''', appears in the register of the church of St. John the Baptist in Hillmorton, in the county of Warwick, England.
** Also is recorded there, in 1608, John Perkins and Judith Gater, married 9th of October. This is John Perkins, later of Ipswich, Massachusetts.
* Isaac Perkins died in Hampton, New Hampshire, November 13, 1685, aged seventy-four.
* This Isaac Perkins '''came to New England between 1630 and 1634'''. He was in Ipswich in 1637, as he received a grant of land there at that time.
* In 1638 the town of Hampton, New Hampshire, was settled, and among those who went there were '''Abraham and Isaac Perkins, believed to have been younger brothers of John Perkins, of Ipswich''', and their families.
** According to tradition Abraham and Isaac were brothers.
** They appear to have made settlement about the same time and the house lots assigned to them by the town, each containing five acres, adjoined each other.
* Isaac's house was nearly on the site of the present Baptist parsonage, and there he lived more than ten years.
* In the list of shares of commons granted "23, 12 mo. 1645" unto the proprietors of house lots were three shares each to Abraham and Isaac Perkins.
* In June, 1652, Rev. Timothy Dalton, reader of the church in Hampton, sold to Isaac Perkins, of Hampton, planter, for fifty pounds, his farm lying next to Salisbury line, in New Hampshire, with seventy acres of meadow and marsh, bounded by John Brown and John Wheelrite. Isaac Perkins probably removed there soon after the purchase.
* March 23, 1663, a committee presented a report of the owners of the shares in the cow common and how the title was derived.
** Among these "original rights" Isaac Perkins's • title is shown to be derived from Samuel Fogg, one share bought of Henry Roby.
** The old Norfolk records show conveyance by Isaac Perkins of small parcels of land and rights of way across his land. Among the names on a list of those permitted to vote at the first assembly of the Royal Province of New Hampshire, March 16, 1680, is that of Isaac Perkins.
* March 2, 1683, Isaac Perkins and eighteen others sign a petition to Edward Cranfield, Esq., his majesty's lieutenant governor of the province of New Hampshire, to be freed from head money, all being about and above seventy years of age, some above eighty, others near ninety, "being heartily willing our estates should pay their proportion to all public charges." In an address and petition from Hampton to the King against Cranfield signed by sixty-seven persons, there are the names of Isaac and six other male members of the Perkins family.
* A note on the families in Hampton states that during the first summer Mr. Bachelor was in Hampton, the families of Abraham and* Isaac Perkins were among the number there.
** They were the first to have their children baptized by Mr. Bachelor at that place, and Abraham's son, born September 2, 1639, baptized December 15, 1639, is said to have been the first male white child born in Hampton.
* September 18, 1671, Abraham and Isaac Perkins and their wives, Susanna and Mary, were among the sixty-five persons in full communion in the church at Hampton.
*Isaac Perkins was a rich man; was a ship carpenter and settled in what is now called Seabrook.
* Isaac Perkins married, about 1634, Susanna, daughter of Humphrey Wise, of Ipswich, and Abraham Perkins married Mary Wise, her sister.
* Susanna Perkins survived her husband and died a widow in 1699 in Newcastle, Delaware, where she was living with her daughter, Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey.
* Isaac and Susanna had two children born in Ipswich, the others were born in Hampton.
** They were: Lydia, Isaac, Jacob, Rebecca, Daniel, Caleb, Benjamin, Susanna, Hannah, Mary, Ebenezer and Joseph.

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https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Perkins-602

Isaac Perkins

Born before 26 Jan 1611 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England,

Son of Isaac Perkins and Alice (Unknown) Perkins 2nd

Brother of Sara Perkins [half], Marie Perkins [half], Elizabeth Perkins [half], Thomas Perkins [half], Jacob Perkins, Abigail Perkins, Hannah Perkins, Lydia Perkins andMary (Perkins) Green

Husband of Susanna (Unknown) Perkins — married before 1639 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire [uncertain]

Father of Isaac Perkins, Lydia (Perkins) Wardell, Jacob Perkins Sr, Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey, Daniel Perkins, Caleb Perkins, Benjamin Perkins, Susanna (Perkins) Buswell, Hannah (Perkins) Philbrick, Mary (Perkins) Chase, Ebenezer Perkins and Joseph Perkins Sr

Died 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton, Colony of New Hampshire

Profile last modified 26 Jul 2019 | Created 3 Jan 2011

The Puritan Great Migration.

Biography

Isaac Perkins[1] was the son of Isaache Perkins. He was christened on 26 Jan 1611/12 at Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England.[2][3]

Isaac arrived in New Hampshire in 1639.[1] He resided for more than ten years where he first settled in Hampton, New Hampshire. In Jun 1652, Rev. Timothy Dalton sold him his farm that was located near the Salisbury line, in Seabrook.[4]

Isaac married about 1638 in Ipswich, Massachusetts, Susanna ___[5] (some say Wise[citation needed]) and they had the following children:[4]

Lydia, m. Wardwell;
Isaac, 1639-1661;
Jacob, bap. 1640, m. Mary Philbrick;
Rebecca, m. Hussey;
Daniel, d. 1662;
Caleb, m. m. 24 Apr 1677 Bethia Philbrick; [6]
Benjamin, 1650-1670;
Susanna b.1652, m1. Buswell, m2. Fuller;
Hannah, b. 14 Feb 1656, d. 13 May 1739; m. Philbrick; another source says she married in Hampton 4 Dec 1674 "Capt. James ___?___ , Jr, (b. 13 July 1651, a mariner of Hampton) . They resided on the homestead, and had 8 sons and 3 daughters. His will is dated 14 July 1722. [6]
Mary, b.1658; m. Isaac Chase, born in 1674. He was sometime of Hampton, bur removed to Edgartown, where he died May 9, 1727.[7]
Ebenezer Perkins, b. 1659;
Joseph, b.1661.
Isaac died in on the 13th of November 1685, in Hampton, New Hampshire.[2][4]

Burial: Place: Old, ?, Hampton, New Hampshire?
Research Notes

Residence: 1642 Freeman 18 May, Massachusetts Colony, MA[8] This conflicts with his arrival year in NH of 1639.
Sources

↑ 1.0 1.1 Gale Research Title: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations; BETTER SOURCE SOUGHT
↑ 2.0 2.1 Hall, Kristin C. "Perkins Register Report" 6/9/04, ©1992-2004 by Kristin C. Hall. Page 16, #75: son of Isaac, bap. 26 Jan 1611/12 in Hillmorton (citing Hillmorton Parish Recs), d.13 Nov 1685 in Hampton NH.
↑ See the Entry in the Parish Register
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Dow, Joseph. History of the Town of Hampton, New Hampshire, from its Settlement in 1638 to the Autumn of 1892. Salem MA: L. E. Dow, 1893. Accessed online at Archive.org, p.908-910: farm purch, d. Nov 1685, m. Susanna; ch.
↑ Source: #S304 Page: Birth year: 1618; Birth city: Ipswich; Birth state: MA
↑ 6.0 6.1 Chapman, Reverend Jacob. A Genaealogy of the Philbrick and Philbrook Families, Descended from the Emigrant, Thomas Philbrick 1583-1667 (Exeter, NH: Exeter Gazette Steam Printing House,1886), 10.
↑ Chase, George B Genealogical Memoir of the Chase Family of Chesham, Bucks, in England, and of Hampton and Newbury in New England, with Notices of Some of Their Descendants (Boston: H. W. Dutton & Son, 1869), 10.
↑ Author: Ancestry.com Title: Massachusetts, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1790-1890 Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 1999;
See also:

Perkins, D. W. "Perkins Families in the United States in 1790." Utica NY: D.W. Perkins, 1911. Accessed online at Archive.org: son of Isaac, bap. 26 Jan 1611.
Boydhouse.com
Acknowledgments

Thank you to all those who have contributed to this profile, including: Buck Howe, Richard Draper, Buck Howe.
WikiTree profile created through imports by Amy Morganstein, Brian McCullough, Toby Rockwell, Justin Cash and Jacqueline Sabharwal.

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https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-432746

Susanna Perkins formerly [surname unknown]

Born about 1613 [location unknown]

Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]

[sibling(s) unknown]

Wife of Isaac Perkins — married before 1639 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire [uncertain]

Mother of Isaac Perkins, Lydia (Perkins) Wardell, Jacob Perkins Sr, Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey, Daniel Perkins, Caleb Perkins, Benjamin Perkins, Susanna (Perkins) Buswell, Hannah (Perkins) Philbrick, Mary (Perkins) Chase, Ebenezer Perkins and Joseph Perkins Sr

Died before 17 Jul 1699 in New Castle, Delaware

Profile last modified 26 May 2019 | Created 24 Jul 2018

Susanna (Unknown) Perkins migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1620-1640).

Biography

SUSANNA’s maiden name is unknown.[1][2][3] She was not the sister of Mary (Wythe) Perkins who married Abraham Perkins of Hampton.[4] Mary (Wythe) Perkins did have a sister named Susanna Wythe but this woman was married to a John Bursley of Hampton and Exeter. Records establishing the New England origins of SUSANNA (____) and Isaac PERKINS are sparse to non existent.

Isaac Perkins was baptized on 26 Jan 1611/12 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and most likely came to New England with his parents and siblings between 1630 and 1637.[1] Susanna was very likely from England, of similar age and born say about 1613. Their arrivals may have mirrored the large family of Isaac’s 50 year old cousin John and Judith (Gater) Perkins of Hillmorton who arrived in Salem, removed briefly to Boston by 1632 and settled in Ipswich by 1633. It is only known that Isaac’s father owned land and was a proprietor in Ipswich by 1637[5] and that he died there in 1639.[1][5]

By 1639, the 27 year old Isaac and his much older half-brother Abraham Perkins, age about 36, were married men with children when first mentioned as living in Hampton, New Hampshire. Torry records that the brothers were both married by 1639 in Hampton[3] but each of them had children by 1637-38. (Isaac’s brother Abraham Perkins was married to Mary Wythe by about 1637/38 when the first of their 13 children was born. Abraham’s first child was a daughter, also named Mary, who was baptized 15 Dec 1639 along with her brother Abraham Jr. (not a twin) in Hampton. But since Abraham Jr. was born 2 Sep 1639, it follows that daughter Mary was likely born sometime before the end of 1638.) SUSANNA and Isaac’s first son, Isaac III was baptized 8 Dec 1639 when they are reported living in Hampton, NH. However, their first child, Lydia (Perkins) Wardwell (c1636/7-1670+), has no record of birth or baptism. SUSANNA (____) and Isaac Perkins were probably married elsewhere and no later than Jun 1638.

SUSANNA (____) Perkins was living in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire, probably from about 1637 until 1652. Isaac became a freeman while in Hampton on 18 May 1642[5] and the two were there on 04 Nov 1645 when Eunice Cole was punished for slandering "Susan Perkings and Lidia Pebody" & breach of bond.[6] In Jun 1652 Isaac Perkins bought a farm from Rev. Mr. Dalton[4] and they moved to Seabrook, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

Isaac Perkins died in 1685[4] and most of the family decided to move. SUSANNA consented to Ebenezer's sale of homestead in Seabrook in 1693, and she moved with him and other children to New Castle, Delaware.[4] She was living with her son-in-law John and daughter Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey in New Castle, Delaware at the time of her death sometime before 17 Jul 1699 when her estate was administered by John Hussey.[4]

Family

Husband: Isaac Perkins II[1][2]
Wife: SUSANNA _______ [1][2]
Marriage: about 1636-1639 Hampton NH[3][1]
Children (all but the first born in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire)[1][2][4]
Lydia (Perkins) Wardwell (c1636/7-1670+) m. 17 Oct 1659 to Eliakim Wardwell
Isaac Perkins III (1639-1661) bp. 8 Dec 1639, drowned 30 Oct 1661
Jacob Perkins Sr (1640-1731) bp. 24 May 1640, m. 30 Oct 1669 to Mary Philbrick
Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey (c1642-1707) m. 21 Sep 1659 to John Hussey, mother of 16 children
Daniel Perkins (c1645-1662) died 01 Aug 1662
Caleb Perkins (c1648-1724+) m. 24 Apr 1677 Bethia Philbrick
Benjamin Perkins (1650-1670) born 17 Feb 1650, died 23 Nov 1670
Susanna (Perkins, Buswell) Fuller (1652- __) m.(1) 12 May 1673 Isaac Buswell Jr, m.(2) 22 Jun 1680 William Fuller Jr of Hampton
Hannah (Perkins) Philbrick (1655/56-1739) m. 04 Dec 1674 James Philbrick, died on 23 May 1739 age 83
Mary (Perkins) Chase (1658-c1674) probably m. Isaac Chase (Isaac m.(2) Mary Tilton 5 Oct 1675)
Ebenezer Perkins Sr (1659-__) m. Mary (or Mercy) _____
Joseph Perkins Sr (1661-__) m. Martha _____ before 1689 (Joseph Perkins Jr b 28 Jul 1689).
Sources

↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 MORTENSEN, Paula Perkins, English Origin of Six Early Colonist by the Name of Perkins
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 BROWN, Asa W, “Perkins Family of Hampton, N.H.”; NEHGR vol 012 (1858) - Page 82
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 TORRY, Clarence A., New England Marriages to 1700 (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org, , 2008), AmericanAncestors.org, Volume 2, Page 1166 of 1482. Record for Isaac Perkins — PERKINS, Isaac & Susanna ____; by 1639; Hampton, NH {Hampton 908-9; Salisbury Fam. 799; GDMNH 541-2; Allen (,1) 81; Tingley-Meyers 279-280; EIHC 13:93; Reg. 10:216, 47:483; Warner-Harrington 789}.
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 NOYES, Sibyl, LIBBY, Charles T., DAVIS Walter G., Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire ([database online] Portland, Maine, USA, The Southward Press, 1928), Ancestry.com, Surnames, O-P; Page 555-566 of 809 [541-542]. Record for Isaac Perkins
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 DAVIS, Walter G, The ancestry of Dudley Wildes, 1759-1820, of Topsfield Massachusetts (Portland, ME, , 1959), HathiTrust.org, Volume VII; Page 89. Record for Isaac Perkins
↑ ANDERSON, Robert C., New England, The Great Migration and The Great Migration Begins, 1620-1635, Great Migration, Vol 5, M-P; Page 522 (408 actual) of 779 (Provo, UT, USA, , 2013), Ancestry.com, Record for Susan _____ — “Susan Perkings” was the wife of Isaac Perkins of Hampton [mention in connection with 4 Nov 1645 breach of bond for good behaviour by Eunice Cole for slandering Lydia Peabody & Susan Perkings] ALSO [that Lydia & Susan possibly connected].
MORTENSEN, Paula Perkins, English Origin of Six Early Colonist by the Name of Perkins (363 So. Park Victoria Drive, Milpitas, CA 95053-5708, Paula Perkins Mortensen, 1998), Higginson Book Company, 148 Washington St, Salem MA 01970, pages 07 & 09-10. Record for Isaac Perkins II — 21. Isaac (11) Perkins II (son of 18. Isaac Perkins I [page 7], bp 26 Jan 1611/2 in Hillmorton Parish, d 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton NH; m Susanna __?__ d c1699 New Castle DE.
BROWN, Asa W, “Perkins Family of Hampton, N.H.”; NEHGR vol 012 (1858) - Page 82. Record for Isaac Perkins — XV. ISAAC PERKINS of Hampton, a younger man than Abraham, born 1613-1613, died 13 Nov 1685. Wife named Susanna. Children: 1. Lydia Perkins m. 17 Oct 1659 to Eliakim Wardhall; 2. Isaac Perkins III bp. 08 Dec 1639, drowned 30 Oct 1661; 3. Jacob Perkins Sr bp. 24 May 1640, m. 30 Oct 1669 to Mary Philbrick; 4. Rebecca Perkins m. 21 Sep 1659 to John Hussey, mother of 16 children; 5. Daniel Perkins died 01 Aug 1662; 6. Caleb Perkins m. 24 Apr 1677 Bethia Philbrook; 7. Benjamin Perkins born 17 Feb 1650, died 23 Nov 1670; 8. Susan Perkins was born 21 Aug 1652, m.(1) 12 May 1673 Isaac Buswell Jr, m.(2) 22 Jun 1680 William Fuller Jr of Hampton; 9. Hannah Perkins born 24 Feb 1655/56, m. 04 Dec 1674 James Philbrook, died on 23 May 1739 age 83; 10. Mary Perkins born 23 Sep 1658, prob. m. Isaac Chase of Hampton; 11. Ebenezer Perkins born 09 Dec 1659 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire. m. Mary _____ ; 12. Joseph Perkins 09 Apr 1661 m. Martha _____. No Will or settlement of estate. No descendants remain in Hampton except those of Caleb.
NOYES, Sibyl, LIBBY, Charles T., DAVIS Walter G., Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire ([database online Portland, Maine, USA, The Southward Press, 1928), Ancestry.com, Surnames, O-P; Page 555-566 of 809 [541-542]. Record for Isaac Perkins] — PERKINS, 9 ISAAC (brother of 1 ABRAHAM), Hampton 1639. June 1652 bought a farm next to Salisbury line, now Seabrook, from Rev Mr. Dalton and soon moved there. 1650 Constable; Jury service often. Lists 391a, 393ab, 394, 396, 398, 49. Jan 1680 deeded property to son Ebenezer for support of self and wife Susanna. Isaac died Nov 1685. Susanna _____(List 393a) was not a Wyeth (see Bursley 4, Peabody). In 1693, with her consent, son Ebenezer sold the homestead and she went with him and other children to Delaware, where in 1699, her estate was administered by son-in-law John Hussey(3), principle creditor. Children (Lydia, Isaac, Jacob, Rebecca[m John Hussey(3)], Daniel, Caleb, Benjamin, Susanna, Hannah, Mary, Ebenezer, Joseph).
DAVIS, Walter G, The ancestry of Dudley Wildes, 1759-1820, of Topsfield Massachusetts (Portland, ME, , 1959), HathiTrust.org, Volume VII; Page 89. Record for Isaac Perkins — Isaac Perkins in 1637 Ipswich owned “land lying above the street called Brook street, six acres”. He died before 15 Jun 1639 when widow Alice sold the lot to Joseph Morse. [ Suggests that Isaac may be the 11yrs older uncle of the articles subject John Perkins (1583-1654) who married Judith Gater 9 Oct 1608 in Hillmorton. and, that Isaac and Alice Perkins may have been the parents of the brothers Abraham (freeman 1640) and Isaac Perkins (freeman 1642) of Hampton ].
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=== GEDCOM Note ===
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Thomas Perkins
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Isaac Perkins
< 1571-< 1639

Isaac Perkins
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1631

Susanna Wise
1614-< 1699


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