Bacheler Family Tree » Philip "Duday" Durrell (1659-± 1744)

Données personnelles Philip "Duday" Durrell 

  • Le surnom est Duday.
  • Il est né en l'an 1659Guernsey.
  • Il est décédé environ 1744Arundel
    Maine United States.
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 5 juin 2020.

Famille de Philip "Duday" Durrell

Il est marié avec NN Purinton?.

Ils se sont mariés en l'an 1685, il avait 26 ans.


Enfant(s):

  1. Joseph Durrell  1685-1751 


Notes par Philip "Duday" Durrell

{geni:about_me} Came from Jersey Island in the Channel Island Group. He had eleven children and settled in Maine.

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Evelyn's papers from the LDS church say he died in 1744 or 1749.

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Was of French blood, and a protestant. Known to have been in the Piscataqua region as early as 1679, and ten years later was a soldier int he Exeter garrison.

Philip DUDAY \ DURRELL

[2413]

ABT 1665 - ABT 1735

* BIRTH: ABT 1665, the Isle of Jersey (or Guernsey), England

* DEATH: ABT 1735, Arundel, ME

Family 1 : Wife of PHILIP

* MARRIAGE: BEF 1685

1. +Joseph, Sr. DURRELL

2. Susan DURRELL

3. Rachel DURRELL

4. Benjamin (1st) DURRELL

5. +Philip DURRELL

6. +Mary DURRELL

7. +Sarah DURRELL

8. +Elizabeth DURRELL

9. +Benjamin (2nd), Sr. DURRELL

10. +Lydia DURRELL

11. +John, Sr. DURRELL

12. a daughter DURRELL

INDEX

[2413] All data from Durrell. "Some records show the last name as Duda as seems to be the story with many of the first couple of generations of Durrells in America. I have seen Duda, Duday, Durin, Dorrill,Durrell, Durell etc. They spoke French, I think, and other people must have misheard the name when they spoke it, only a guess.

Philip Durrell came from Guernsey, according to tradition. His first appearance in local records is on 20 Feb 1689/90 when the mark of"Philip Duday" is affixed to a petition of The Inhabitants and Train Soldiers of the Providence of New Hampshire, To the Honorable, the Governor and council of their Majesties' Colony of the Massachusetts Bay, in New England asking the new authorities for protection by the government from their enemies. He served in the garrison at Exeter,New Hampshire between September and October of 1696. By 1700 he was at Cape Porpoise, York, Maine. (now Kennebunkport). "The Indians attacked Cape Porpoise on 10 August 1703. The Indians proceeded up the Kennebunk River to the house of Philip Durrell, which was near where Durrill's bridge now is and carried off Mrs. Durrell, her two daughters, Susan and Rachel, and two sons, one of whom, Philip, was an infant. Mr. Durrell himself was not at home. The Indians carried their prisoners as far as Paywacket or Fryeburg, when Mrs. Durrell persuaded hem to let her return with her infant. One of the Indians carried her child for her to the stone fort at Saco, from which place she returned home." [Bradbury's History of Kennebunkport]. Mrs. Durrell's daughters married Frenchmen and refused to return after the war wasover. The son accidentally drowned in the Saco River. After the Indian raid Philip Durrell and the remainder of his family returned to Exeter, NH. He was back in Cape Porpoise (now Arundel) in 1719. Th eIndians returned in 1726 despite a treaty of peace and carried away Mrs. Durrell, a son John (12 years old) and a daughter, (Mrs. Baxter, with a twenty-month-old son). Mrs. Durrell and Mrs. Baxter along with the infant were killed. The son John was exchanged about two years later."

Data from Olson gives Philip's surname as Durrell.

The NEHGR v. 132 states that according to family tradition, Philipcame from Guernsey with this tradition being repeated by CharlesBradbury in his History of Kennebunk Port, p. 241.

The above narrative from Durrell came in part from the NEHGRpublication.

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From [http://www.mykennebunks.com/history_d.htm History of Kennebunkport]

>DUREELL,* PHILIP, came from Guernsey. He came to this town in 1700, and settled near where Durrell’s bridge now is. In 1703, his family was carried off by the Indians, and he left the town. He returned in 1714, and had a lot of land laid out to him in 1723, "it being the same loot that he was in possession of when his family was carried into captivity by the Indians." His family was again taken in 1726, and his wife killed.

>His sons were, Philip, Benjamin, and John.

>His daughters were, Rachael and Susan, who married in Canada; Elizabeth, m. John Wakefield; Mary, James Wakefield; Lydia, Stephen Larrabee; Sarah, John Baxter; and one that married Joshua Purinton.

*This name is sometimes written Durrill on the records.

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From http://www.someoldnews.com/?tag=arundel

Indians didn’t kill or capture people indiscriminately in the early wars. They targeted those who had provoked them. Mills were burned and mill men were frequently targeted because they jeopardized one of the sources of food available to the Indians. Broken treaties and unauthorized use of Indian land could also antagonize the original inhabitants.

Phillip Durrell, whose double victimization by the Indians seemed uncommonly cruel, was in fact in possession of the Indian lodges lot both times the Indians attacked his family.

The remains of at least one Indian lodge can still be seen resting precariously close to the encroaching Kennebunk River. Les Welch, who owns the Arundel property now, would like to see what remains of the Indian lodge protected before it’s too late.

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* [https://books.google.com/books?id=XLk6AQAAMAAJ&lpg=PA555&ots=VqVTHWiW3A&dq=philip%20durell%20captured%20by%20Indians&pg=PA286#v=onepage&q=philip%20durell%20captured%20by%20Indians&f=false Indian Wars of New England:] The land of the Abenake. The French occupation ... By Herbert Milton Sylvester.

Bourne notes the capture of the Durrell's was the last act of what was termed '''Lovewell's War''' immediately affecting the settlers dwelling on the Wells frontier.

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* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dummer%27s_War

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Philip Durrell

Philip Durrell
1659-± 1744

1685

NN Purinton?
± 1663-1726


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Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Steven Adrian Bacheler, "Bacheler Family Tree", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/bacheler-family-tree/I5123561318230083249.php : consultée 15 juin 2024), "Philip "Duday" Durrell (1659-± 1744)".