Moreland tree » John Rickard II (1657-1712)

Persönliche Daten John Rickard II 

Quelle 1

Familie von John Rickard II

Er ist verheiratet mit Mary Cooke.

Sie haben geheiratet.


Kind(er):

  1. Mary Rickard  1677-1711
  2. Lydia Rickard  1679-1736
  3. John Rickard  1680-± 1680
  4. John Rickard  1681-1742
  5. Mercy Rickard  1682-????
  6. Joseph Rickard  1682-1712
  7. Mary Rickard  1683-????
  8. Mercy Mary Rickard  1683-1706
  9. Marcy Rickard  1687-1702
  10. Esther Rickard  1691-1713
  11. D12jrd Joanna Rickard  1691-1767 
  12. Abigail Rickard  1694-1722
  13. James Rickard  1696-1745
  14. Rebecca Rickard  1698-1724


Notizen bei John Rickard II

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Rickard-98 ''''John Rickard Jr. (1657 - 1712) John Rickard Jr. aka Ricard Born 24 Nov 1657 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts Son of John Rickard Sr. and Hester (Barnes) Rickard [sibling(s) unknown] Husband of Mary (Cooke) Rickard — married [date unknown] [location unknown] [children unknown] Died 25 Mar 1712 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts Profil e manager: Ellen Smith [send private message] Rickard-98 created 29 May 2011

Last modified 15 Nov 2016 Biography John Rickard, Jr., was a son of John Rickard and Hester (Barnes) Rickard. He was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts on 24 November 1657.[1] There were other men named John Rickard living in Plymouth at the same time. To help distinguish them, records commonly refer to this man as John Rickard Jr., John Rickard the son of John, or (after his father's death) John Rickard the son of John Rickard deceased. John married Mary Cooke in about 1678. There has been some unc ertainty as to whether Mary Cooke married this John Rickard, the son of John Rickard, or his first cousin John Rickard, the son of Giles Rickard. Both men had wives named Mary. In an article entitled "Which John Rickard married Mary Cooke?" in the August 1983 Mayflower Quarterly,[2] Eugene Stratton presented evidence that Mary Cooke's husband was John the son of John. As described by "jrich" in a personal genealogy page, Stratton based this conclusion primarily on a comparison of signatures.[3] Children John Rickard and Mary Cooke are recorded as the parents of seven children. All but the la st two named are listed in Plymouth Vital Records:[4] John Rickard, born 26 February 1679.[5] He apparently died before February 1684. Mercy Rickard, born 3 February 1682. [6] John Rickard, born 3 Fe bruary 1684. [7] Ester (or Hester) Rickard, born 1 April 1691. James Rickard, born 25 or 26 September 1696. Elizabeth Rickard; not in Vital Records, but named in her father's will.[8] Mary Rickard; no t in Vital Records, but named in her father's will[8] Death John Rickard's will is dated 20 April 1711. The estate was inventoried 20 June 1712. His will provided bequests to his wife Mary, sons John and James, and daughters Mercy [married name not legible], Mary Rickard, Hester Rickard, and Elizabeth Rickard. [8] John Rickard died on 25 March 1712 and was buried at Burial Hill in Plymouth, Mass achusetts. Only part of the gravestone is intact.[9] In 1892, Kingman reported that the the inscription read "Here lyes buried

ye body of

JOHN RICKARD

Aged about 55 years

< p> Decesd March ye 25th 1712."[10] Sources ↑ Plymouth Vital Records, p. 662 (accessed at AmericanAncestors.org): "John the son of John Rickard born the 24th day of Nov 1657." ↑ Stratton, Eu gene. "Which John Rickard marriedMary Cooke?", Mayflower Quarterly, v. 49, p. 122, August 1983. ↑ jrich, Family:John Rickard and Mary Cooke (2), WeRelate.org, 29 March 2011. ↑ "Vital Records of P lymouth," transcribed at Descendants of Stephen Hopkins - Mary Cooke ↑ Plymouth Vital Records, Page 670. "John Rickard, son of John Rickard Jr. was born on the 26th day of February 1679." ↑ Plymou th Vital Records, Page 671. "Mercye, the daughter of John Ricard, the son of John Rickard deceased was born the 12th of Feb 1682." ↑ Plymouth Vital Records, Page 671. "John Rickard, the son of John Rickard deceased, was born the 12th of Feb 1684." ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Will and probate papers of John Rickard, in Plymouth County, MA: Probate File Papers, 1686-1881, from New England Historic Genealogica l Society ↑ Find-A-Grave ↑Kingman, p. 9 Source: S17Massachusetts Vital Records to 1850 (Online Database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2010). Vital Record s of Plymouth, Massachusetts to the Year 1850, compiled by Lee D. van Antwerp, edited by Ruth Wilder Sherman; Picton Press, Camden, Maine; 1993. Find-A-Grave, John Rickard, Burial Hill, Plymouth, Mass achusetts. Kingman, Bradford. url=https://archive.org/stream/epitaphsfromburi00king. Epitaphs from Burial Hill, Plymouth, Massachusetts, from 1657 to 1892. Brookline, Mass.: New England Illustrated Hi storical Publishing Company, 1892. [ Internet Archive] Source: S1730862093 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Repository: #R17 Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=3920139=615 Repository: R17 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Note: WikiTree profile Rickard-174 created through the import of Brutsch Family Tree.ged on Jul 23, 2012 by Michael Brutsch. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Michael and others ---- ''''Jo hn Rickard Parents: John Rickard(d. bef Jan 1684) and Esther (Hester) Barnes [5] Married: # ca 1678 in Plymouth, MA John married Mary Cooke, daughter of Jacob Cooke (ca 1618-Dec 1675) & Damaris Ho pkins (ca 1628-bet Oct 1666 and Nov 1668), .[24] She was born on 12 Jan 1657/8 in Plymouth, MA. [3] Mary died in Plymouth, MA, on 28 Aug 1712; she was 55. [26] Their children include: # John Rickard (Died soon) (26 or 28 Feb 1679-) # Mercy Rickard (3 Feb 1682-) # John Rickard (3 Feb 1684-bef 29 Sep 1742) # Mary Rickard (ca 1688-aft 20 Apr 1711) # Esther Rickard (1 Apr 1691-26 Jun 1713) # James R ickard (25/26 Sep 1696-) ==Links== * http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/report/rr05/rr05_216.htm#P10657 ==Citations== * [3] “Plymouth Colony vital records,” Mayflower Descendant, Transcribe d by George Ernest Bowman, various volumes. Transcribed form marriages appearing in the Court Orders, and from “Marriages, Births and Burials” * [5]. Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration B egins: immigrants to New England 1620-1633, New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, 1995, Three volumes. * [24] Susan E. Roser, Mayflower Increasings, Genealogical Publ, Baltimore, 2nd ed. 1995. * [26] Plymouth Vital Records. Family:John Rickard and Mary Cooke..We Relate This is John Rickard Junior (b. 1657) and his wife Mary Cooke. This is not (Deacon) John Rickard Senior (b. 1652) and his wife Mary ---. In Mayflower Descendant, p. 13:64, under "Notes", George Bowman writes, "The Editor has proved that Mary Cooke married John Rickard (John, Giles) of Plymouth and had seven chi ldren. The proof of this marriage will be printed in an early issue of this magazine." This would be John Rickard Jr. However, to quote Eugene A. Stratton, in "Which John Rickard married Mary Cooke?", Source:Mayflower Quarterly (General Society of Mayflower Descendants), p. 49:122, "Unfortunately, he never did print the proof, and in his files in Boston, maintained by the Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, there is an unfinished article which purports to prove the same, but stops before it comes to anything significant..." In volume 6 of Source:Mayflower Descendant (p. 6:77), the will of John Doty is printed where John Doty calls John Rickard his brother[-in-law]. John Doty married Elizabeth Cooke, which suggests that this is the John Rickard who married Mary Cooke. On MD p. 33:115, discussing the guardianships of thechildren of John Doty, it says that "John Rickard, of Plymouth" gave bond as guardian for son Josiah in 1701. In birth records, John Rickard are clearly ide ntified as Jr. or Sr., so the use of "of Plymouth" suggests there was no longer ambiguity. In 1697, John Rickard, Sr., was dismissed to form a new church, but Plympton technically remained a precinct of Plymouth until 1707. So while it looks like this refers to John Rickard, Jr., it remains a little too ambiguous to draw a conclusion. In Source:Kingman, Bradford. Epitaphs from Burial Hill, Plymou th, Massachusetts, from 1657 to 1892, JohnRickard of Plymouth d. 1712, aged 55. This matched John Jr. born in 1657. He also lists a Mary Rickard d. 1712 aged 35. No age is given in the death record f or Mary in the Plymouth VRs. Since an ageof 35 is inconsistent with children born by 1681, this looks like John's daughter Mary, except that most people use the 1712 death date for the mother. Could the age at death be reported wrong? This hypothesis is confirmed by the transcription in Source:Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States. Burial Hill, Plymouth, Massachusetts which gives the a ge on the gravestone as 55. Therefore, this Mary was born 1657, which matches Mary Cooke. One would expect a husband and wife would be buried in the same spot, so this suggests Mary Cooke married John Rickard, Jr., but as we don't know whenJohn Rickard Sr.'s wife was born or died, so it is not conclusive. In the Mayflower Quarterly article cited above, Eugene Stratton compares the John Rickard s ignature of three documents: the guardian bond for Josiah Doty mentioned above, i.e., the husband of Mary Cooke [thought to be 1701, the date is obscured by a hole in the document]; the 1711 will of J ohn Rickard Jr.; and the 1714 administrator's bond of John Rickard Sr. pertaining to the estate of his sister Mercy. Stratton believes the signatures of the first two are the same, within acceptable l imits, showing that John Rickard Jr. was the one who married Mary Cooke. [My comment is that he is probably right, but it is not clear beyond all doubt, partly because the signature of the will in 171 1 is an infirm man with a shaky signature. --Jrich 23:40, 29 March 2011 (EDT)] This is John Rickard Junior (b. 1657) and his wife Mary Cooke. This is not (Deacon) John Rickard Senior (b. 1652) and h is wife Mary ---. In Mayflower Descendant, p. 13:64, under "Notes", George Bowman writes, "The Editor has proved that Mary Cooke married John Rickard (John, Giles) of Plymouth and had seven children. The proof of this marriage will be printed in an early issue of this magazine." This would be John Rickard Jr. However, to quote Eugene A. Stratton, in "Which John Rickard married Mary Cooke?", Sourc e:Mayflower Quarterly (General Societyof Mayflower Descendants), p. 49:122, "Unfortunately, he never did print the proof, and in his files in Boston, maintained by the Massachusetts Society of Mayflo wer Descendants, there is an unfinished article which purports to prove the same, but stops before it comes to anything significant..." In volume 6 of Source:Mayflower Descendant (p. 6:77), the will of John Doty is printed where John Doty calls John Rickard his brother[-in-law]. John Doty married Elizabeth Cooke, which suggests that this is the John Rickard who married Mary Cooke. On MD p. 33:115 , discussing the guardianships of thechildren of John Doty, it says that "John Rickard, of Plymouth" gave bond as guardian for son Josiah in 1701. In birth records, John Rickard are clearly identifie d as Jr. or Sr., so the use of "of Plymouth" suggests there was no longer ambiguity. In 1697, John Rickard, Sr., was dismissed to form a new church, but Plympton technically remained a precinct of Ply mouth until 1707. So while it lookslike this refers to John Rickard, Jr., it remains a little too ambiguous to draw a conclusion. In Source:Kingman, Bradford. Epitaphs from Burial Hill, Plymouth, Ma ssachusetts, from 1657 to 1892, John Rickard of Plymouth d. 1712, aged 55. This matched John Jr. born in 1657. He also lists a Mary Rickard d. 1712 aged 35. No age is given in the death record for Mar y in the Plymouth VRs. Since an age of 35 is inconsistent with children born by 1681, this looks like John's daughter Mary, except that most people use the 1712 death date for the mother. Could the ag e at death be reported wrong? This hypothesis is confirmed by the transcription in Source:Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States. Burial Hill, Plymouth, Massachusetts which gives the age on the gravestone as 55. Therefore, this Mary was born 1657, which matches Mary Cooke. One would expect a husband and wife would be buried in the same spot, so this suggests Mary Cooke married John Ricka rd, Jr., but as we don't know when John Rickard Sr.'s wife was born or died, so it is not conclusive. In the Mayflower Quarterly article cited above, Eugene Stratton compares the John Rickard signatu re of three documents: the guardian bond for Josiah Doty mentioned above, i.e., the husband of Mary Cooke [thought to be 1701, the date is obscured by a hole in the document]; the 1711 will of John Ri ckard Jr.; and the 1714 administrator's bond of John Rickard Sr. pertaining to the estate of his sister Mercy. Stratton believes the signatures of the first two are the same, within acceptable limits, showing that John Rickard Jr. was the one who married Mary Cooke. [My comment is that he is probably right, but it is not clear beyond all doubt, partly because the signature of the will in 1711 is a n infirm man with a shaky signature. --Jrich 23:40, 29 March 2011 (EDT)] -------------------- '''John Rickard.''' was born on 24 Nov 1657 in Plymouth, MA. [3] John died in Plymouth, MA, on 25 Apr 171 2; he was 54. [26]

Haben Sie Ergänzungen, Korrekturen oder Fragen im Zusammenhang mit John Rickard II?
Der Autor dieser Publikation würde gerne von Ihnen hören!

Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von John Rickard

John Rickard
1657-1712


Mary Cooke
1657-1712

Mary Rickard
1677-1711
Lydia Rickard
1679-1736
John Rickard
1680-± 1680
John Rickard
1681-1742
Mercy Rickard
1682-????
Mary Rickard
1683-????
Marcy Rickard
1687-1702
James Rickard
1696-1745

Mit der Schnellsuche können Sie nach Name, Vorname gefolgt von Nachname suchen. Sie geben ein paar Buchstaben (mindestens 3) ein und schon erscheint eine Liste mit Personennamen in dieser Publikation. Je mehr Buchstaben Sie eingeben, desto genauer sind die Resultate. Klicken Sie auf den Namen einer Person, um zur Seite dieser Person zu gelangen.

  • Kleine oder grosse Zeichen sind egal.
  • Wenn Sie sich bezüglich des Vornamens oder der genauen Schreibweise nicht sicher sind, können Sie ein Sternchen (*) verwenden. Beispiel: „*ornelis de b*r“ findet sowohl „cornelis de boer“ als auch „kornelis de buur“.
  • Es ist nicht möglich, nichtalphabetische Zeichen einzugeben, also auch keine diakritischen Zeichen wie ö und é.



Visualisieren Sie eine andere Beziehung

Quellen

  1. Geni World Family Tree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco..., 6. April 2021
    Added via a Record Match
    The Geni World Family Tree is found on www.Geni.com. Geni is owned and operated by MyHeritage.

Historische Ereignisse

  •  Diese Seite ist nur auf Niederländisch verfügbar.
    Van 1650 tot 1672 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Eerste Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • Im Jahr 1657: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 13. Februar » In München findet die Uraufführung des musikalischen Dramas Oronte von Johann Caspar von Kerll statt.
    • 20. April » Der englische Admiral Robert Blake besiegt im Englisch-Spanischen Krieg in der Seeschlacht von Santa Cruz eine spanische Kriegsflotte vernichtend, womit die spanischen Schatzschiffe aus der Neuen Welt den englischen Freibeutern ausgeliefert sind.
    • 8. Mai » Oliver Cromwell, seit 1653 Lordprotektor von England, lehnt die ihm vom Parlament angebotene Königskrone ab.
    • 19. September » Im Vertrag von Wehlau erhält Kurfürst Friedrich Wilhelm die Souveränität über Preußen von Polens König Johann II. Kasimir.
    • 6. November » Im Vertrag von Bromberg erhält Brandenburg-Preußen die Lande Lauenburg und Bütow und, als Pfand für Geldhingabe, die Starostei Draheim vom polnischen König Johann II. Kasimir.
    • 10. November » Schwedens vormalige Königin Christina lässt ihren früheren Favoriten und Stallmeister Giovanni Monaldeschi unter dem Vorwurf des Hochverrats im französischen Schloss Fontainebleau töten.
  • Die Temperatur am 25. April 1712 war um die 12,0 °C. Quelle: KNMI
  •  Diese Seite ist nur auf Niederländisch verfügbar.
    Van 1702 tot 1747 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Tweede Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • Im Jahr 1712: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 29. Januar » In Utrecht beginnt ein Kongress europäischer Mächte mit dem Ziel, den Spanischen Erbfolgekrieg zu beenden. Der Friede von Utrecht wird als Ergebnis am 11. April des Folgejahres geschlossen, doch von Kaiser Karl VI. nicht akzeptiert.
    • 15. Februar » Zar Peter der Große befiehlt in einem Erlass, in Tula eine Fabrik zu errichten, die als Tulski Oruscheiny Sawod mit der Herstellung von Waffen die Zeiten überdauert.
    • 29. Februar » In Schweden folgt auf den 29. Februar noch der 30. Februar, um den Schwedischen Kalender wieder dem Julianischen Kalender anzupassen.
    • 12. März » Schweden wechselt zurück zum Julianischen Kalender. In Schweden ist das Datum der 1. März, der Tag davor war der 30. Februar.
    • 24. Juli » In der Schlacht bei Denain gelingt im Spanischen Erbfolgekrieg dem von Claude-Louis-Hector de Villars geführten Heer Frankreichs ein großer Sieg über alliierte Truppen unter Befehl Prinz Eugens.
    • 25. Juli » Die Zweite Schlacht von Villmergen wird von den Einheiten der reformierten Orte Bern und Zürich gewonnen. Die Schlacht gilt als entscheidend dafür, dass in der Schweizer Eidgenossenschaft die konfessionelle Parität möglich wird.


Gleicher Geburts-/Todestag

Quelle: Wikipedia

Quelle: Wikipedia


Über den Familiennamen Rickard

  • Zeigen Sie die Informationen an, über die Genealogie Online verfügt über den Nachnamen Rickard.
  • Überprüfen Sie die Informationen, die Open Archives hat über Rickard.
  • Überprüfen Sie im Register Wie (onder)zoekt wie?, wer den Familiennamen Rickard (unter)sucht.

Die Moreland tree-Veröffentlichung wurde von erstellt.nimm Kontakt auf
Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Christina Moreland, "Moreland tree", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/moreland-tree/I502875.php : abgerufen 23. Januar 2026), "John Rickard II (1657-1712)".