(1) Er hat eine Beziehung mit Elizabeth.
Kind(er):
(2) Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth Matthews.
Sie haben geheiratet vor Februar 1631 in England.
Kind(er):
*'''William Tuttlebel Wells, '''bp. of record Dec. 26, 1607 at Ringstead, Northamptonshire, England [Parish Rec.]. He d. suddenly in early June 1673 at New Haven, Conn. leaving no known will. By 1631 in England, William m. Elizabeth''', b. circa 1609, who d. Dec. 31, 1684 at New Haven, Conn., Æ 76.liam Tuttle's older brother''' Richard, Richard's wife Ann (nee Taylor) and their three living children (Anna [i.e., Hannah (Tuttle)(Pantry) Welles], John and Rebecca); William and Richard Tuttle's widowed mother Isabel; and William and Richard's brother John, his wife Joan (nee Antrobus), their four living children, along with wife Joan's three children by her 1st husband Thomas Lawrence and Joan's widowed mother Joan (Arnold) Antrobus; '''all left England via the Port of London aboard the ship Planter, Nicholas Trarice master. They arrived at Boston, Mass. by July 1635'''. Richard Tuttle and his family settled at Boston, and John Tuttle and wife Joan settled at Ipswich, Mass.inhabitants of the New Haven Colony to establish a separate colony on the Delaware River at present-day Salem County, NJ. William's homestead on the Green at New Haven would eventually become part of Collegiate Square and location of the first building of Yale University.ne. In 1821 all burials at the Green, including other members of the Tuttle family, were relocated to New Haven's Grove Street Cemetery.*• i. John Tuttle, bp. Dec. 8, 1631 at Ringstead, Northampton, England, d. Nov. 12, 1683 at New Haven, Conn.; m. Nov. 8, 1653 at New Haven, Catherine Lane, dau. of John and Sarah Lane of Milford, Conn. Ten children of the family.90 poss. at Stratford, Conn.; m. 1) Joshua Judson, s. of William and Grace Judson. He d. in 1661 at Stratford, Conn. leaving three infant children. Ann m. 2) Dec. 10, 1662 at Stratford, John Hurd, s. of Adam Hurd, b. likely in England. Seven children of the Hurd family. [see The American Genealogist, 30:7 for proof regarding the correct identity of William and Elizabeth Tuttle's dau. Ann (Tuttle)(Judson) Hurd.]iscilla Powell, b. in Aug. 1641 at New Haven. She d. Oct. 15, 1710 at New Haven. Nine children of the family.705 at New Haven; m. circa 1663, Rebecca Bell, dau. of Lieut. Francis and Rebecca Bell, b. circa Aug. 1643 at Stamford, Conn. She d. May 2, 1676 at New Haven. Six children of the family.id Tuttle, bp. Apr. 7, 1639 at Boston, Mass. [1st Chh. Rec.], d. an invalid and unmarried in 1693 at New Haven, Conn. at New Haven; m. May 2, 1667 at New Haven, Hannah Munson, dau. of Capt. Thomas and Joanna Munson, bp. June 11, 1648 at New Haven. Nine children of the family She m. 2) Aug. 21, 1694 at Guilford, Conn., Nathan Bradley and d. Nov. 30, 1695 at Guilford.. Nov. 22, 1663 at New Haven, John Slason, s. of George, b. May 14, 1641 at Sandwich, Mass. Four children of the family. 1691 at an unknown place of unknown circumstances; m. Nov. 19, 1667 at New Haven, Richard Edwards, only child of William Edwards and Agnes Harris, b. May 1, 1647 at Hartford, Conn. During her marriage to Richard she gave birth to a child by another man, then had six children by husband Richard before Richard was awarded a divorce in 1691. Richard subsequently m. 2) Mar 2, 1691/2 at Hartford, Mary Talcott, dau. of Lt. Col. John Talcott, Jr. and Helena Wakeman, b. Apr. 26, 1661 at Hartford, and had six more children.9 at Wallingford, Conn.; had a wife named Abigail, whose origins remain unknown. She d. in Aug. 1722 at Wallingford, Conn. Four children of the family.New Haven; d. June 13, 1677 unmarried at Stamford, Conn. after being executed for murdering his married sister Sarah.ngford, Conn. in 1695; m. May 2, 1667 at New Haven, Samuel Brown, s. of Francis Brown and Mary Edwards, bp. Aug. 7, 1645 at New Haven. He d. Nov 4, 1691 at Wallingford, Conn. Five children of the family, including a 17 year old son killed by Mercy in 1691 in a fit of insanity. at New Haven, Sarah How, dau. of Ephraim How and Abigail Hough, b. Jan. 25, 1653/4 at New Haven. She d. in Nov. 1743 at Woodbury, Conn. Five children of the family. Symon Tuttle (____ - 1630)33 - ____)*enjamin Tuttle (1648 - 1677)*Street Cemetery, New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, USAve HAS THE WRONG INFORMATION FOR THE TWO HANNAH/ANN TUTTLES, DAU. OF RICHARD TUTTLE & WILLIAM TUTTLE. OTHER SOURCES HAVE THE HUSBANDS REVERSED.8395022*'''Spouse: TUTTLE, William homas b. 29 OCT 1648 New Haven, New Haven, CT. d. 13 JUN 1677 Milford, New Haven, CT.illiam and Elizabeth Tuttle, who came from old to New England in 1635, and settled in New Haven in 1639, with numerous biographical notes and sketches : also, some account of the descendants of John Tuttle, of Ipswich; and Henry Tuthill, of Hingham, Mass. (1883)s By The Planter.the minister at St. Albans, in Hertfordshire, and attestation from the justice of the peace, according to the Lords' order...............................Age............................17........................ 6cendantsofwil01tutt#page/n70/mode/1up............ 25uttell, husbandman..........................42ll......................................................10 husbandman............................26ell......................................................2 1/4..11Haven. from Gravesend to Boston was about ten weeks. He arrived with his family about the first of July. About a year later "Mrs. Elizabeth Tuttell united with the church in Boston July 24, 1636."* There are two subsequent entries on the church record: "Mrs. Elizabeth Tuttell brought to be baptized a son Jonathan, July2, 1637," and "Mrs. Elizabeth Tuttell brought to be baptized a son David, April 7, 1639." The colonial records of Mass., of New Haven and of Conn. conatin in a few scattered fragments nearly all that is known of William Tuttle, From these, however, we are able to form some idea of his social position, associations, circumstances, employments and of his general character.farmer was, the husbandman was a proprietor and tilled his own acres: the farmer was a leaseholder and paid rent. It appears, however, from a petition on file in the Secretary of State's office in Boston, that he was a merchant, and this might be partly inferred from his joining Mr. Eaton's company, many of whom had been engaged in commercial perseits in the old country, and whose purpose was to found a commercial city in the new. The petition is as follows, without date: "To the right worshipful Thomas Dudley, Esq., and to the magistrates and deputies of this General Court, now in Boston assembled. The humble petition of Major Nehemiah Bowne, Edward Tynge, William Tutthill, Joseph Youngs, William Payne, John Milam and James Oliver, with divers others, being merchants and owners of the ketch, called the Zebuton, now belonging to Ipswich." Abstract of Petition. __Intend to send the said ketch to the Indies and ask for two guns to arm her. This is refused.__ Mess. Arch., Vol 60, p. 168.sition of real estate. It is now 243 years since its purchase from the Indians, during which period it has been held by but five proprietors, viz; Joshua Atwater, 16yrs.; William Tuttle and heirs, 30 yrs.; Hester Coster, 5 yrs.; the First Church of New Haven, 26 yrs.; Yale College, 166 yrs.aught and achieved his "great and excellent tutorial renown." It is now and long has been the chosen gathering place of the students, where at leisure hours, they meet for general purposes or for social intercourse.ventory follows immediately after that of Benjamin Ling, which was taken June 6, 1673. ....to John Jones of New Haven 60 acres of outland near Stony River, being part of his 2d division, and Mrs. Elizabeth Tuttoll, wid. and relict and lawful administratrix of deceased, desired it might be recorded to Joane Jones, wid. of John. l administratix, and that he died suddenly.escendants, especially in the line of her namesake and daughter, while that of William (singularly) was not given to any of the eight sons, and to but one of the numerous grandsons.ve.org/stream/descendantsofwil01tutt#page/n142/mode/1upJohn Pantry; (2) June 23, 1654, Thomas Wells, jr.avid, bap. in C., April 7, 1639. In 1659 he was complained of in New Haven for not carrying arms. He settled in Wallingford, Conn., where, in 1685, he had lot No. 16 on the e. s. of Main St. During the latter years of his life he was an invalid, and was cared for by his brother Thomas, in pursuance of an agreement by which, as consideration, David conv. to Thomas his whole est., which included, besides other prop., two acres in the Governor's quarter, and four acres in the Nack. He d. unm. in 1695. After d. of Thomas, some acct. betw. David and Hannah, the widow of Thos., were adjusted by adms., 1663, John Slauson.d. unm. June 13, 1677, w. his prop. to his bro.-in-law, Richard Edwards, who subsequently conv. it to the bros. of Benj.II. Nathaniel, bap. Feb. 29, 1652, then called "of Branford church;" m. Aug. 10, 1682, Sarah Howe. //archive.org/stream/americana_19192amer#page/371/mode/1upe family. Branches of the ancient English family, however, were established throughout the New England Colonies in the early part of the seventeenth century. None of these have attained the distinction and note of the Connecticut Tuttles. Scions of the house have wielded large power in the industrial and commercial growth of Connecticut, and have achieved notable places in the professions and in the divine calling. The early Tuttle family played a prominent part in the public life of the Connecticut Colony, and the name is found with great frequency in important places in early Colonial registers. The early Tuttles were leaders of men, and later generations have not relinquished the prestige of the early family. The Tuttles of today are an honored and notable race. is of most remote antiquity, and its origin has been traced to the god Thoth or Toth on the Lower Nile in Egypt, vestiges of whose worship some antiquarians believe to have existed in early England. This would naturally give rise to numerous places dedicated to the worship of the god. At all events, we find throughout England "Totehills," which at the date of authentic history were hills with a good lookout against the enemy's approach. The eminent authority, Charles Wareing Bardsley, in his "Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames." states the origin of the surname to have been in the ancient Totehill, and makes no mention of an earlier origin in the worship of Thoth. In support of this, he draws attention to the fact that we still use the verb "tout" or "toat" in the sense of spying about. name "Totehill" and we find instances of the name in the very early registers. The first appearance of the name in Colonial America is in the year 1635. Numerous immigrants left the mother country and were the founders of large families. On the good ship "Planter," in 1635, came John, Richard and '''William Tuttle, from the parish of St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England, bringing with them their families'''. John Tuttle, who is recorded as a mercer, aged thirty-nine years, according to the passenger list of the "Planter," settled in Ipswich; he was in Ireland in 1654, and probably died there, for his wife went to Carrickfergus, and wrote on April 6, 1657, that he died on December 30, 1656. thering, New Haven, Conn., September 3d, 1873 / /c by Joseph F. Tuttle (1873)ies, genealogical and memorial: a record of the ..., Volume 4 edited by William Richard CutterHQ-qIrxsn&sig=63JydjNo7G9B9ePUWAzAw50tqEQ&hl=en&ei=sEbnTLicAoa6sQO4yoixCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CCUQ6AEwBTha#v=onepage&q=tuttle&f=falses wife Elizabeth and their children, were passengers on the ship "Planter" ....... He died in the early part of June, 1673, and his widow died December 30, 1684, at the age of seventy-two years, having lived for sometime with her youngest son, Nathaniel. Their children were: John, born in England, 1631; Hannah, 1632-33; Thomas, 1634-35; Jonathan, mentioned below; David, baptized in Charlestown, April 7, 1639; Joseph, baptized in New Haven, November 22, 1640; Sarah, November 9, 1645; Simon, March 28, 1647; Benjamin, October 29, 1648; Mercy, may 19, 1650; Nathaniel, February 29, 1652._____________________________________rated on ship Planter in 1635. He Parentage of William uncertain. He was christened at Ringstead, Northampton, England. He married Elizabeth Matthews''', daughter of Edward Mathewes and Elizabeth Nashe, '''in 1629 at England. William Tuttle died in June 1673 at New Haven, New Haven, CT.d. May 1693, d. 19 Oct 17101 Wallingford, Connecticut By Charles Henry Stanley Davishl=en&ei=pj7nTPncI5K4sAPx9JGyCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CCQQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=tuttle&f=false brother''' John came '''from Devonshire, England, in the ship Planter, as passengers, and were registered April, 1635'''. John was born in 1596, and settled at Ipswich, Mass.; he left numerous descendants. '''William's age was put at twenty-six years, his wife Elizabeth's at 23 yrs.''', John, their '''eldest child''', at 3 1-2 yrs., Ann, 2 1-2 yrs., and Thomas at three months. '''Mrs. Elizabeth''' united with the church in Boston, July 24, 1636, and '''brought to be baptized a son''', Jonathan, July 2, 1637, and another, David, April 7, 1639. Soon after, the family re- ............ollateral branches, see Cothren's Hist. Woodbury, Conn., 723-7; Dodd's Hist. East Haven, Conn., 156-8; Hall's Hist. Rec. Norwalk, Ct., 2-3-241, 267-269, 281-290, 297; Hudson's Hist. Lexington, Mass., 248, 249; N. E. Hist. and Gen. Reg., VIII, 132-42; Otis's Gen. Otis Family; Savage's Gen. Dict., IV. 350-2; Wyman's Hunt Family Hist., 529.y history of the state of New Hampshire: a ..., Volume 2 By Lewis publishing company, ChicagoVDo-d&sig=fkMUN-p7nM4XvM3IVJZ_NwWUhho&hl=en&ei=igUATa-CG4yksQPl-ImwCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=6&ved=0CCUQ6AEwBTgK#v=onepage&q=John%20Tuttle%201663&f=false____________sD7ot97K44s17RLYf5WE&hl=en&ei=XlwATdH5LI_EsAPvt9GvCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CCsQ6AEwBzge#v=onepage&q=John%20Tuttle%201663&f=false________4/msg00031.htmls TOTEHYLL b: 1506 d: AFT 1544 d: 11 Mar 1588/1589>>>>>O.>GEN.6
/John SOUTHCOTT b: 1477mp;gt;>>>>O.>GEN.6
\Johanna HANKEFORD b: 148537 d: 1589>>>>N.>GEN.6
\Margaret KIRKHAM b: ABT 1500t;GEN.5
/John WELLS b: ABT 1500p;gt;>>G.>GEN.4
\Jennet LAWTIE b: BET 1540 AND 1550amp;gt;GEN.2\'''Elizabeth MATTHEWS''' b: ABT Feb 1611/1612 d: 30 Dec 1684p> /Robert NASHE b: ABT 1572was of nobility/royalty descent. I wrote to that man who was living on island west of Seattle, Washington for proof of it and got instead, request that I pay him for research.________________________________ I could get ahold of them, mostly TAG, and a couple of citations, I never did get ahold of the Prindle book, I found that documents such as wills establish that the Tuttles were of Northampton. My sources, as well as a summary of the disproven roots cited in older Tuttle genealogies in the United States, are below.e confusing. ll, possibly the individual below) Thomas (the Thomas I couldn't identify with '''William b abt 1609 who I didn't know where he went yesterday''' were Thomas teh son of Simon, and William Tuttle the emigrant - from Jacobus's version. '''William was not known to be born in 1607, not 1609, until his baptismal record was found at Ringstead'''. Simon of Burton Latimer, co Northampton, buried 14 Dec 1630 at Burton Latimer, m by license (why, significance?) Peterborough, dated, Mar 1616/17 Alice Jamse who was bapt at Burton Latimer 30 Jan 1591/2 and bur there Jan 1623/4, dau of Wm James. Simon m (2) Burton Latimer 26 Jun 1624, Katherine Brabooke, dau of Richard and Joan Brabooke of Burton Latimer. ollows - from Jacobus. I previously had trouble placing who this was. More people than me think that this is two separate people, because peoples' web pages have a separate and distinct William b abt 1609 placed in various places on the family tree. Greene explains that before William Tuttles baptismal record was found that shows him born in 1607, he was thought to have been born in about 1609. The date and place of death makes it clear that this is the same William Tuttle as William the son of Simon. d New Haven, 12/30/1684, aged 76 (gravestone). Settled in Boston, MA, where his wife joined the church 1636. He moved to New Haven in 1639, early enough to be an initial signer of the agreement that created it. number of these web sites identify her as Elizabeth Mathews, none of them say where they got it, I am suspicious because as you can see above, Elizabeth Mathews is the name of a woman who married the much earlier William Tuttle, sheriff and lord mayor in Devonshire, she daughter of a Welsh aristocrat. He d New Haven, CT, 30 Dec 1684. above average size, his name often appears in records as busied in small affairs of the town, on committees and boards of arbitration, but never elected to public office or ran for public office. Fined in 1646 for falling asleep on the watch. t founded Conne4cticut. (Price has Elizabeth b 1645 Ringstead, Simon b 1641 New Haven, Simon, Benjamin and Mercy b 1647-50 New Haven. Nathaniel b 1651 Ringstead.blic affairs. Titled "Mr." . Wealthy for his times. All of his sons and daughters married into the first families of the day. Elizabeth may have been related to Robert Hill or to his first wife; they tried to get custody of the youngest stepchild from the second wife after her husband died, and she didn't particularly seem to want the child. Pictures of Tuttle descendants from this couple, from George F Tuttle's Tuttle genealogy are on my Tuttle picture page ; they looked strikingly like Amzi Allen and a number of his immediate descendants. 11/8/1653. , dau of John, of Milford, he Welles family. m John, Pantry 1649. "He was the largest and tallest man of his time in Hartford, of strong mind and estimable character. The following children, as well as marriages to John Pantry and to a Wells, are traditionally attributed to this Ann/ Hannah. But Greene argues that these two marriages and these children belong to Hannah the daughter of Richard Tuttle, William's brother.37 m Rebecca Bel; d 5/2/1676 rah b 4/1642 m John Slauson 11/22/1663 d 11/17/1676 She was murdered by her brother, Benjamin, who chopped her head apart with an axe, during a quarrel. Possibly it was about their dead father's considerable property; he said "he was afraid whe would do to him what he had done to her", whatever that meant. Her children testified that he came into her house carrying an axe and repeatedly struck her head with it, saying something about "I will teach you to Scold" and something they couldn't understand. Before this time, Sarah was a flirt, repeatedly in trouble for making out. In 1660, William Tuttle Sarah's father complained against Sarah and Jacob Murline for kissing and making out on a storage chest. The law provided for a fine aganist anyone who drew the attentions of a maid or maid servant without the permission of her parents, master, or guardians. This was not often enforced; William Tuttle was one of the few who went to such lengths of thinking they owned their children! "Mr. Tuttle pleaded that Jacob had endeavored to steal away his daughter's affections." (SAm Behling) The governor reported that Sarah had flirted and made out with Jacob in his house at a wedding. The court fined either of them 20 shillings, characterized their behavior as sinful and evil and Sarah's as bold, ordered both of them to mend their ways, and ordered Jacob to stay away from virgins. It seems Sarah's mother had told her not to keep company with him. d a premarital affair with her husband, and also with another man, such that there was doubt about who was the father of her first child. There was a lawsuit, and Elizabeth and Richard were fined for sleeping together before marriage, and Richard was found to be the father. In any case, there was trouble concerning Elizabeth caring for the child, and her father ended up raising it. Elizabeth for some reason refused to sleep with her husband for years, resulting in an at first unsuccessful bid to divorce her. For one thing, he wanted to marry Mary Talcott, who had been fined for fornication with him. At his second effort, Richard argued that he was afraid of Elizabeth. "It became clear that Elizabeth herself was, at times, not in her right mind, and often threatened to murder her husband while he was asleep." Richard was granted the divorce, married Mary Talcott, and had six children. Nothing further is known of Elizabeth. founder of Wallingford,CT m Abigail Beach, dau of John Beach of Wallingford d 8/1722 had three children.he way genealogies omit information. He was tried, convicted, and executed for murdering his sister with an axe. He came into her house one evening, and, in front of her children sitting at the table, beat her on the head with an axe while saying something only partially intelligible about "I'll teach you to scold!" Brown She was accused at age 14 of stealing and drinking liquor. She chopped her 17-year-old (?) son, Samuel Jr, to death with an axe as he lay in his bed. Her husband said she had seemed rational, but the day before, she said she would have the children buried in the barn, because "dreadful times are coming". He said she had "slept but little for two or three nights before". Joseph Brown, age 24, testifed that she had thrown scalding water at him and he thought her "much out of her head". Mercy's sister Simon Tuttle and his wife thought she had seemed distracted "that morning and before". Mary Moss testified that "Mercy came to their house a little before the sad accident and wished Mr. Moss to look after her husband". Neighbors testified they had come to her house for fire and when she came out with it, she went down the hill towards the swamp seeming distracted. In jail, she seemed distracted, seemed much grieved at having given offense to someone who knew nothing of it. Those who took her to New Haven for trial testified that she seemed "shaken in her understanding". Though her attorney pleaded insanity, the jury found her guilty, and the judge sentenced her to die. It wasn't a popular verdict, the town felt she should be exonerated on the basis of insanity. But confusion resulting over the removal of the governor from his office allowed Mercy to escape execution. nd Thomas 3 months, boarded the Planter 6 Apr 1635 and arrived in Boston 7 Jun 1635.shire, England. Elizabeth died on 30 Dec 1684 in New Haven, CT.30 Buried in City Burial Ground, New Haven.nah Tuttle (ca Jan 1632/3-9 Aug 1683)h Tuttle (ca 1640-Sep 1690) (ca 1648-13 Jun 1677)
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William Tuttle<br>Birth names: William TootillWilliam Totehyll<br>Also known as: William TuttellWilliam Tootell<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Oct 29 1607 - Ringstead, Northamptonshire, England, United Kingdom<br>Christening: Dec 26 1607 - Ringstead, Northamptonshire, England, United Kingdom<br>Marriage: Spouse: Elizabeth - 1629 - England, United Kingdom<br>Immigration: From Apr 3 1635 - Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America<br>Death: June 16 1673 - New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut, United States<br>Burial: From June 16 1673 - Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut, United States<br>Occupation: Farmer<br>Occupation: Husbandman<br>Occupation: Merchant<br>Occupation: Constable<br>Occupation: Landowner<br>Parents: Simon TuttleIsabell Tuttle (born Wells)<br>Spouses: Elizabeth Tuttle, Elizabeth Tuttle (born MATTHEWS)<br>Children: , Elizabeth Tuttle, Thomas Tuttle, Benjamin Tuttle, Mercy Browne (born Tuttle), Jonathan Tuttle, Joseph Tuttle, Nathaniel Tuttle, David Tuttle, Sarah Slauson (born Tuttle), Anne Tuttle, <a>Simon Tuttle, Hannah Welles (born Tuttle)<br>Siblings: Richard Tuttle, John Tuttle, Thomas Tuttle<br>This person appears to have duplicated relatives. View it on FamilySearch to see the full information.<br> Additional information: LifeSketch:A Founder of the New Haven Colonyhem ranging in age from 3-1/2 years to 3 months and nine more were born in America. g Jonathan Edwards, Aaron Burr, Winston Churchill, Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Grover Cleveland and General U.S. Grant. ized there on December 26. William, his wife, Elizabeth Mathews, three children, and a brother John came to New England in the ship Planter in 1635. William's age was put at twenty-six years, his wife Elizabeth's at 23 years, John, their eldest child at 3 1/2 years, Ann, 2 1/2 years, and Thomas at three months.24, 1636. being one of the sixteen to which the Secretary when he copied the document into the record book accorded the prefix of respect "Mister."h Haven, and was there in 1659, on land that belonged to the estate of Governor Eaton. He was a subscriber to the compact for the settlement of East Haven. y headed 1643 in the printed copy, but which must be placed about 1640, his family consisted of seven persons and his estate was rated at £450, well above the average size.cially, of any of the colonists, yet though his name often appears in the records as busied in the small affairs of the town, on committees and "boards of arbitration," he was never elected to public office nor, apparently, ran or put himself forward for office. One interesting record notes that "Mr. Wm Tutle" was fined in 1646 for falling asleep at the watch-house.a connection between the Tuttles and the family of Robert Hill, for after Hill died in 1663, there were negotiations for Hill's widow (a second wife) to give up her interest in her youngest Hill stepchild and for the Tuttles to raise him, "Mrs. Tuttle being next akinne." Perhaps Elizabeth Tuttle was aunt or a much older sister or Robert Hill or of Hill's first (unknown) wife, whose children were born between 1647 and 1659. On June 7, 1664, "Mr. Tuttle informed the Court, that his Cousin, Widdow Hill, had come to tearmes of agreemt." showed his humanity by making a plea in behalf of a young girl who had been found guilty of pilfering and other mischief. He said "that though her sin had been very great yet he did much pitty her & would doe her all the good he Could & he therefore desired the Court would shew her what favour they could & that she might be in such a place & family where she might enjoy the meanes of grace & be well educated for the good of her soule: The Court told her that shee sees how her unkle is affected towards her for her soules good" and proceeded to sentence "That shee be publikely & severely whipped to morrow after Lecture, that others may heare & feare & doe no more soe wickedly." How this girl, Azuba Lampson, was related to the Tuttles, is not known. She was the orphan daughter of Thomas Lampson, who died December 28, 1663, by his unknown first wife. Her mother may have been a sister of Elizabeth Tuttle. Perhaps William felt empathy because of what his own daughter, Sarah, experienced in the courts. death completing a land transaction, and because he left no will [will is found and attached below]. His estate was valued at £440.en living with her youngest son, Nathaniel, who, at a court held in New Haven, July 28 1685, presented her will, but the other children objected and the court would not allow it. The inventory, taken February 3, 1685 by Moses Mansfield and John Alling. g the north wall of that enclosure. A part of the inscription is still plain: a part is obscure by the crumbling of the stone, and a part is entirely gone.In her widowhood, Elizabeth faced several family crises which very few would have the courage to face or the strength to endure. heir own children became noted for homicidal insanity.Robert Charles Anderson, "The Great Migration, Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635", volume VII, T-Y (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2011)Also see data about Joane's children John, Thomas and William Lawrence. Please also see document from The Thomas Book in Memories that shows the members of this family that immigrated to America together. The Great Migration data is in agreement. rtfordshire who settled at Ipswich; he had been married at St. Albans to Joan or Mrs. Joane Antrobus Lawrence and came on the Planter with Joan, age 42, John Lawrence age 17, William Lawrence, age 12, Marie Lawrence, age 9, Abigail Tuttell, age 6, Simon Tuttle, age 4, John Tuttell, age 1. Also with Joan Antrobus, age 60, mother of Mrs. Joan Tuttell, Joan (Lawrence) Giddings, age 20 and her husband George Giddings, age 25. Jane Giddings was the daughter of Joan Antrobus Lawrence Tuttle. in 1656. Apparently Joan had followed John there as she wrote from there in 1689 to George Giddings. Son Thomas Lawrence came later. See the Thomas Book, page 399. families were brothers of John as confirmed by pages 129 and 135 of the Great Migration source cited above. They were sons of Simon Tuttle and Isabel Wells from Ringstead, Northampton, England.HARD TUTTLE, age 32, husbandman of Ringstead, Northamptonshire, to settle at Boston;WILLIAM TUTTLE, age 26, husbandman of Ringstead, Northamptonshire, wife Elizabeth, age 23, to settle at Boston with 3 young children. brother John Tuttell, 1596, also of the Planter in 1635 was confirmed by "The Great Migration," vol 7, T-Y, pages 129 and 135. One source for William that cites sources is http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=jbbullock&id=I20852&op=GET That source also lists William's children and where they were each born.at also immigrated to Massachusetts. They have been greatly mixed. It has taken much time but now many are successfully separated.ur distinct families by the name of Tuttle immigrated from England in 1635, and three of them arrived at Boston on the ‘Planter’ in the spring of that year. THE HEADS OF THESE THREE FAMILIES WERE: JOHN, WHO SETTLED IN IPSWICH; RICHARD, WHO REMAINED IN BOSTON; WILLIAM, WHO WENT TO NEW HAVEN. THE FOURTH WAS THAT OF ANOTHER JOHN TUTTLE, WHO EMBARKED ON THE ILL-FATED ‘ANGEL GABRIEL’ WHICH WAS WRECKED ON THE ROCKY COAST OF MAINE, AUGUST 15, 1634. THIS JOHN TUTTLE SETTLED IN DOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE, prior to 1640, and became the progenitor of a numerous posterity. another immigrant, whose descendants are numerous and have been conspicuously identified with the history of New York from a very early period in it settlement to the present day. Many prominent citizens of Orange county have borne and now bear the name.”YET ANOTHER DIFFERENT JOHN TUTHILL WAS THE SON OF HENRY TUTHILL, FROM SAXLINGHAM, NORFOLK, ENGLAND. Henry, son of John Tuthill, born 1580, resided at Tharston, Norfolk, England. He married Alice Gooch as confirmed by his will. Their son “HENRY WAS BAPTIZED 28 JUNE, 1612 AT THARSTON. HE MARRIED IN ENGLAND, BRIDGET WHO ACCOMPANIED HIM TO AMERICA IN 1635. IN THAT YEAR HE SETTLED IN HINGHAM, MASSACHUSETTS, where he had a planting lot at Broad Cove and a house lot in 1637. He was admitted freeman in March, 1638, and served as constable in 1640. He sold his property there June 20, 1644, and removed to Southold, New York, where he died before 1650. His wife survived him and married (second) William Wells, of Southold. Children: John, Elizabeth, Nathaniel, Daniel.” The Houghton history attached has some good information for this nuclear family, but the birthplace of John Tuttell, 2nd husband of Joane Antrobus, does not have a source and all that is known is that he married at St. Albans about 1627. Origin unknown. Please do not confuse this Joane Antrobus Lawrence Tuttell with her mother, the widow Joan Arnold Antrobus, (her married name) that is mentioned on the immigration record.Life Sketch:William came with the first settlers to New Haven in 1639. In 1656, he bought of Joshua Atwater his home, homelot and barn in the Yorkshire Quarter near Constable's. The Tuttle homestead was the only land owned by Yale College for nearly thirty years. In the two hundred forty three years from its first purchase from the Indians, it was held by five proprietors: Joshua Atwater, sixteen years; William Tuttle; Hester Coster, five years; First Church of New Haven, twenty-six years; and Yale College, one hundred sixty-six years. William Tuttle and Mr. Gregson were the first owners of land in East Haven, Connecticut. Thomas Tuttle's lot adjoined his father's on the south. In seating the Meeting House, the first seat near the pulpit, was a seat of honor. This was given to William Tuttle. He had twelve children born and raised in the old homestead . William then settled in Charlestown, at the age of twenty-six years, he was prominent in New Haven as early as 1647, and held many important positions.Life Sketch:William Tuttle (1607-1673) and his wife Elizabeth came to America on the ship "Planter" in 1635. William was 26 and Elizabeth 23. They had three children with them ranging in age from 3-1/2 years to 3 months and nine more were born in America. One daughte
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