Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt » Reverend Thomas Dungan (1632-1697)

Persönliche Daten Reverend Thomas Dungan 

Quelle 1

Familie von Reverend Thomas Dungan

Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth Weaver.

Sie haben geheiratet rund 1663 in Newport County, Rhode Island, United States of America.Quellen 7, 8


Kind(er):

  1. Elizabeth Dungan  ± 1664-1696
  2. John DUNGAN  ± 1667-1689
  3. Clement DUNGAN  1668-1732
  4. Rebecca DUNGAN  1670-1722
  5. Thomas Dungan  1671-1759 
  6. Jeremiah Dungan  1673-1761
  7. Mary DUNGAN  1675-1769
  8. Sarah Dungan  1678-1760


Notizen bei Reverend Thomas Dungan

SOURCES:

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Dungan&GSfn=Thomas&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=40&GScnty=2249&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GRid=20707488&df=all&

Thomas Dungan

Rev. Thomas Dungan was the youngest child of William Dungan And Frances Lathom. His father died, and his mother came to America with her second husband Jeremy Clarke and four young children by her first marriage.

ARMS-Azure, six plates, three, two and one; on a chief or, a demi-lion rampant gules.

CREST- An orb argent banded and surmounted by a cross pattée or.

(Burke, "General Armory").

Rev. Thomas Dungan, soldier, legislator, pioneer, became the first Baptist minister in the Province of Pennsylvania, having been born probably in London about 1634, and came to New England with his mother about 1637.

As early as 1655 he was living at Newport, R. I., where he was Sergeant of the Newport Militia in 1676. He acquired 240 acres at Shrewsbury, New Jersey, about the year 1670. In 1678 and again in 1681 he was elected to the Rhode Island Assembly. His half brother Walter Clarke was then Deputy Governor of Rhode Island.

In 1682 he sold his estate of 100 acres in East Greenwich, R. I., and his Newport homestead of 50 acres and, having completed his education for the ministry, he shortly thereafter removed to Pennsylvania and settled at Cold Spring, Bucks County, where he founded a Baptist Church in 1684, the first of its denomination in Pennsylvania, and continued as its pastor until his death in 1687.

He married at Newport about 1663 Elizabeth, daughter of Sgt. Clement Weaver, She was born in 1647 and died at Cold Spring in 1697. His Will, probated 29 February 1688, is one of the earliest on record in Bucks County.

Abstract of will:

THOMAS DUNGAN, of Cold Spring, County of Bucks. 12th mo., 3rd day, 1686. Proved 11th mo., 24th day, 1687. Wife Elizabeth, sole extx. 3 sons, Thomas, Jeremiah, and John. Daus. Elizabeth West, Mary, Rebecka, and Sarah Dungan. Sons William and Clement.

Source: http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/bucks/wills/willabstbk1.txt Wit: Arthur Cooke, John Cook, Wm. Dungan. Appraisal made 12th mo., 4th day, 1687 by Edmond Lovet and Abraham Cox. Rev. Thomas Dungan and Elizabeth Weaver are buried in the graveyard of the Cold Spring Church. They were the parents of five sons and four daughters, all born in Rhode Island:

1. William Dungan, married Deborah Wing.

2. Elizabeth Dungan, married to Nathaniel West, Jr.

3. John Dungan, died without issue.

4. Clement Dungan, died without issue.

5. Rebecca Dungan, married to Edward Doyle.

6. Thomas Dungan, Jr., married Mary Drake

7. Jeremiah Dungan, married Deborah Drake.

8. Mary Dungan, married to Abraham Richards.

9. Sarah Dungan, married to James Carrell.

John S. Wurts, Magna Charta, Brookfield Pub. Co., Philadelphia, 1945, Part III, p. 437, 453-454.

Wilfred Jordan, Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania, Lewis Historical Publishing Co., New York, 1942, pp. 671; Coat of Arms facing p. 663.

http://pages.prodigy.net/reed_wurts/heraldry/dungan.htm

Rev Thomas Dungan. Immigrated from England to Rhode Island with his mother and step-father, Jeremiah Clark in 1637. He removed with a colony of Welsh Baptists from Rhode Island to Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1682 and established the first Baptist church in Pennsylvania. The Dungan genealogy was traced by researchers in the early 1900's back to Emperor Charlemagne, 800 A.D.

Rev. Thomas Dungan, soldier, legislator, pioneer, became the first Baptist minister in the Province of Pennsylvania, having been born in London, and came with his mother about 1637.

Thomas Dungan was the youngest son of Frances Latham and William Dungan. His father died, and his mother came to America with her second husband Jeremy Clarke and her four young children.

As early as 1655 he was living at Newport, Rhode Island, where he was Sergeant of the Newport Militia 1676. He acquired 240 acres at Shrewsbury, New Jersey, about the year 1670. In 1678 and again in 1681 he was elected to the Rhode Island Assembly. His half brother, Walter Clarke was then Deputy Governor of Rhode Island.

In 1682 he sold his estate of 100 acres in East Greenwich, Rhode Island and his Newport homestead of 50 acres and having completed his education for the ministry, he shortly removed to Pennsylvania and settled at Cold Spring, Bucks County, where he founded a Baptist Church in 1684, the first of its denomination in Pennsylvania, and continued pastor until his death in 1687.

He married at Newport on or about 1663 Elizabeth Weaver, daughter of Sergeant Clement Weaver.

His Will, probated February 29, 1688, is one of the earliest on record in Bucks County.

--------------------------

Sources

Re: JUSTICE'S DUNGAN GENEALOGY LOOKUPS According to Justice (page 116), the line descends from Rev. Thomas Dungan (b. ca. 1634, d. 1687), son of William and Frances (Latham) Dungan, and his wife Elizabeth Weaver (b. ca. 1647, buried 1697 at Cold Spring, Bucks Co., Pa., dau. of Sergt. Clement & Mary (Freeborn) Weaver, as follows ...

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Dungan&GSfn=Thomas&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=40&GScnty=2249&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GRid=20707488&df=all&

Thomas Dungan

Rev. Thomas Dungan was the youngest child of William Dungan And Frances Lathom. His father died, and his mother came to America with her second husband Jeremy Clarke and four young children by her first marriage.

ARMS-Azure, six plates, three, two and one; on a chief or, a demi-lion rampant gules.

CREST- An orb argent banded and surmounted by a cross pattée or.

(Burke, "General Armory").

Rev. Thomas Dungan, soldier, legislator, pioneer, became the first Baptist minister in the Province of Pennsylvania, having been born probably in London about 1634, and came to New England with his mother about 1637.

As early as 1655 he was living at Newport, R. I., where he was Sergeant of the Newport Militia in 1676. He acquired 240 acres at Shrewsbury, New Jersey, about the year 1670. In 1678 and again in 1681 he was elected to the Rhode Island Assembly. His half brother Walter Clarke was then Deputy Governor of Rhode Island.

In 1682 he sold his estate of 100 acres in East Greenwich, R. I., and his Newport homestead of 50 acres and, having completed his education for the ministry, he shortly thereafter removed to Pennsylvania and settled at Cold Spring, Bucks County, where he founded a Baptist Church in 1684, the first of its denomination in Pennsylvania, and continued as its pastor until his death in 1687.

He married at Newport about 1663 Elizabeth, daughter of Sgt. Clement Weaver, She was born in 1647 and died at Cold Spring in 1697. His Will, probated 29 February 1688, is one of the earliest on record in Bucks County.

Rev. Thomas Dungan and Elizabeth Weaver are buried in the graveyard of the Cold Spring Church. They were the parents of five sons and four daughters, all born in Rhode Island:

1. William Dungan, married Deborah Wing. 2. Elizabeth Dungan, married to Nathaniel West, Jr. 3. John Dungan, died without issue. 4. Clement Dungan, died without issue. 5. Rebecca Dungan, married to Edward Doyle. 6. Thomas Dungan, Jr., married Mary Drake 7. Jeremiah Dungan, married Deborah Drake. 8. Mary Dungan, married to Abraham Richards. 9. Sarah Dungan, married to James Carrell. John S. Wurts, Magna Charta, Brookfield Pub. Co., Philadelphia, 1945, Part III, p. 437, 453-454.

Wilfred Jordan, Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania, Lewis Historical Publishing Co., New York, 1942, pp. 671; Coat of Arms facing p. 663.

http://pages.prodigy.net/reed_wurts/heraldry/dungan.htm Rev Thomas Dungan. Immigrated from England to Rhode Island with his mother and step-father, Jeremiah Clark in 1637. He removed with a colony of Welsh Baptists from Rhode Island to Bucks County, Pennsylvania in 1682 and established the first Baptist church in Pennsylvania. The Dungan genealogy was traced by researchers in the early 1900's back to Emperor Charlemagne, 800 A.D.

Rev. Thomas Dungan, soldier, legislator, pioneer, became the first Baptist minister in the Province of Pennsylvania, having been born in London, and came with his mother about 1637.

Thomas Dungan was the youngest son of Frances Latham and William Dungan. His father died, and his mother came to America with her second husband Jeremy Clarke and her four young children.

As early as 1655 he was living at Newport, Rhode Island, where he was Sergeant of the Newport Militia 1676. He acquired 240 acres at Shrewsbury, New Jersey, about the year 1670. In 1678 and again in 1681 he was elected to the Rhode Island Assembly. His half brother, Walter Clarke was then Deputy Governor of Rhode Island.

In 1682 he sold his estate of 100 acres in East Greenwich, Rhode Island and his Newport homestead of 50 acres and having completed his education for the ministry, he shortly removed to Pennsylvania and settled at Cold Spring, Bucks County, where he founded a Baptist Church in 1684, the first of its denomination in Pennsylvania, and continued pastor until his death in 1687.

He married at Newport on or about 1663 Elizabeth Weaver, daughter of Sergeant Clement Weaver.

His Will, probated February 29, 1688, is one of the earliest on record in Bucks County.

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Quellen

  1. Ancestry Family Trees, Ancestry Family Tree
    http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=110860350&pid=7000
  2. U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current, Ancestry.com
  3. U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700, Ancestry.com, Genealogical Publishing Co.; Baltimore, MD, USA; Volume Title: New England Marriages Prior to 1700
  4. Pennsylvania and New Jersey, Church and Town Records, 1669-2013, Ancestry.com, Historical Society of Pennsylvania; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Historic Pennsylvania Church and Town Records; Reel: 855
  5. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900, Yates Publishing, Source number: 458.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Submitter Code: SS0
  6. Family Data Collection - Individual Records, Edmund West, comp., Birth year: 1645; Birth city: Newport; Birth state: RI

Historische Ereignisse

  • Stadhouder Prins Frederik Hendrik (Huis van Oranje) war von 1625 bis 1647 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1632: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 9. März » Kaiserliche Söldner unter dem Befehl von Johann T’Serclaes von Tilly siegen im Dreißigjährigen Krieg in der Schlacht bei Bamberg über schwedische Einheiten unter Gustaf Horn.
    • 21. April » Das Dordrechter Bekenntnis wird angenommen. Mit diesem Glaubensbekenntnis niederländischer Mennoniten sollen unterschiedliche Auffassungen von Kirchengemeinden auf eine gemeinsame Basis gestellt werden.
    • 23. Juli » Gottfried Heinrich Graf zu Pappenheim nimmt im Dreißigjährigen Krieg die Reichsstadt Dortmund ein und verlegt sein Hauptquartier dorthin.
    • 17. August » Die Truppen von Gottfried Heinrich zu Pappenheim scheitern im Dreißigjährigen Krieg bei einem Sturmangriff auf die niederländischen Soldaten, die die Stadt Maastricht in den Spanischen Niederlanden belagern. Der von einer durch die Infantin Isabella Clara Eugenia von Spanien versprochenen hohen Belohnung angelockte kaiserliche Heerführer zieht sich nach dem Misserfolg plündernd Richtung Saale zurück.
    • 30. Oktober » In Toulouse wird Henri II. de Montmorency, gemeinsam mit Gaston von Orléans, dem jüngeren Bruder von König Ludwig XIII., Organisator eines Adelsaufstands im Languedoc gegen Kardinal Richelieu, hingerichtet. Mit ihm sterben die Montmorencys aus.
    • 16. November » In der Schlacht bei Lützen im Dreißigjährigen Krieg besiegen die Schweden unter Gustav II. Adolf die kaiserlichen Truppen Wallensteins, wobei jedoch der schwedische König fällt.
  • Stadhouder Prins Willem III (Huis van Oranje) war von 1672 bis 1702 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1688: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 6. September » Kaiserliche Truppen mit dem bayerischen Kurfürsten Maximilian II. Emanuel an der Spitze erobern das in osmanischer Hand befindliche Belgrad. Sie können die Stadt zwei Jahre halten.
    • 24. September » Kaiserliche Truppen nehmen im Großen Türkenkrieg die Balkan-Stadt Niš ein, die vom Osmanischen Reich gehalten wurde.
    • 30. Oktober » Nach 32 Tagen Belagerung kapituliert die Besatzung der Festung Philippsburg im Pfälzischen Erbfolgekrieg gegenüber französischen Truppen unter General Sébastien Le Prestre de Vauban.
    • 5. November » Die Landung Wilhelm von Oraniens bei Brixham ist der Auftakt für die Glorious Revolution gegen Jakob II. in England.


Gleicher Geburts-/Todestag

Quelle: Wikipedia

Quelle: Wikipedia


Über den Familiennamen Dungan

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Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Elizabeth Cromer, "Family tree Cromer/Russell/Buck/Pratt", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-cromer-russell-buck-pratt/P5053.php : abgerufen 22. Mai 2024), "Reverend Thomas Dungan (1632-1697)".