Henry Butterworth |
Henry Butterworth<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Feb 28 1602 - Halifax, Yorkshire, England<br>Christening: Feb 28 1602 - Halifax, Yorkshire, England<br>Marriage: Spouse: Mary Longbotham - Feb 2 1620 - Calderdale, West Yorkshire, Yorkshire, England<br>Immigration: 1631 - Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America<br&;gt;Death: July 6 1636 - Weymouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America<br>Burial: Massachusetts<br>There seems to be an issue with this person's relatives. View this person on FamilySearch to see this information.<br> Additional information:
LifeSketch: PLEASE DO NOT CONFUSE OR MERGE THIS HENRY BUTTERWORTH OF HALIFAX, YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND with John Butterworth of Rochdale, Lancashire, England.th (1602–ca. 1636) m. Mary Longbotham (ca. 1600–1687); Halifax, Yorks., Eng.; Weymouth, Mass.gin of this family is newly established by Clifford L. Stott, Henry¹ Butterworth of Halifax, Yorkshire, and Weymouth, Massachusetts, New England Historical and Genealogical Register 168 (2014): 58-61. This article builds upon basic works that include Mary Lovering Holman, Ancestry of Col. John Harrington Stevens and His Wife Frances Helen Miller, ed. Winifred Lovering Holman, 2 vols. (privately printed, 1948–52), 1:254-60, and David Kendall Martin, Hannah Bowerman, Wife of Anthony² Fry and of Deacon John² Butterworth of Massachusetts and Rhode Island: Butterworth–Fry–Bowerman–Hoomery, American Genealogist 78 (2002): 302-12. Most recently, William B. Saxbe Jr., Thomas¹ Clifton’s Daughters: Proven, Probable, and Proposed, New England Historical and Genealogical Register 172 (2018): 5-14, describes the documentation of the second marriage of Mary (Longbotham) Butterworth in detail., and then Weymouth in about 1635. He "testifyeth and saith [it was] about 34 yrs. since when I had been but a little while in this [country] I lived at Charlestown and then I meet with a man … and I heard that he had a little house and [six acres] at Waymotli [Weymouth] and I bought it for I and my brother; and the adjoyning to the house was six acres and the price of all was … pound and my brother and sister did enjoy two thirds of it until they went to Seconke [Rehoboth] which was about nine or ten years [later]" 26 July 1665. (Suffolk Court Files, 815, 16th paper.)e of the first purchasers of Rehoboth in 1643, and yet continued to receive land shares in Weymouth. According to Samuel's testimony, his brother settled at this time, but there is no mention of another Butterworth in Rehoboth at that early date.ohn Butterworth of Swansea, William Hayward of Swansea, his cousin John Butterworth's two sons Samuel and Benjamin, and his cousin Mary Mason, widow of Sampson.th executor.
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