Duxbury homestead
Hij is getrouwd met Mary Newland.
Zij zijn getrouwd
Kind(eren):
[Sharen Neal.ged]
Henry came to Plymouth as early as 25 March 1633 when he appears on tax list also on original freeman list. He was known as Henry of Duxbury, and was a Quaker. He was also a Highway surveyor for Duxbury. WILL made 28 Nov 1670, inventory 14 Jan 1670/1, named wife, Mary, sons Zoeth, Joseph, John, and Samuel, and daughters Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, and Abigail.
Reference: Mayflower Records; Plymouth Colony Its History and People 1620 - 1691, Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Ancestry Publishing, Salt Lake City, 1986.
HENRY and his wife Mary probably died at the old Duxbury homestead; Henry 17, 1, 1671, and Mary 17, 6, 1674.
Children:
86. i. JOSEPH, b. --; d. 15, 6, 1692.
87. ii. ZOETH, b. --; d. 31, 1, 1676.
88. iii. JOHN, b. --; d. --. Davis' Plymouth says this John m. Mary Walker.
My belief is he never married.(*)
89. iv. SAMUEL, b. --; d. 1716.
v. SARAH, b. --; d. --; m. 16, 11, 1672, Robert Dennis, of Portsmouth, R. I., "att the house of Joshua Coggeshall before the people of God." Her brother John signed as a witness to the marriage.
vi. ELIZABETH, b. --; d. --; m. Jedediah Allen in 1691. He was probably a son of "Georg Allen, Senier, burried at Sanawidg the 2cond of May 1648." Sandwich town records.
vii. MARY, b. --; d. --; m. James Cudworth of Duxbury.
viii. ABIGAIL, b. --; d. --; m. John Young, 2, 9, 1678. He was probably a son of John Young, who "was maried vnto . . the 13th of December 1648." P. C. R.
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Howland, Henry
Plymouth Colony, p.310
A brother of 1620 Mayflower passenger, John Howland, Henry Howland was in Plymouth at least as early as 25 March 1633, when his name appears on the tax list, and he was also on the original freeman list. On 8 April 1633, Walter Harris had his indenture transferred to Henry Howland (PCR 1:13). On 5 January 1635/36 Henry became the constable of Duxbury (PCR 1:36). He was frequently a member of trial and grand juries (PCR, passim). On 3 June 1657 he, John Tompson, Morris Truant, Ralph Allen, and Thomas Greenfield refused to serve on the grand jury (PC R 3:115). On 2 March 1657/58, the same day his brother Arthur was fined 4 for permitting a Quaker meeting in his house and 5 for resisting the constable of Marshfield in the execution of his office, Henry Howland was fined ten shillings for entertaining a meeting in his house [p.311] contrary to court orders (PCR 3:129). On 7 June 1659 the court, referring to an order disenfranching Quakers and other offenders, gave notice to four men to appear in court the following August, and on 6 October 1659 Howland had his freeman status taken away from him (PCR 3:167, 176). On 1 May 1660 Henry Howland was charged with entertaining another man's wife in his house after her husband had complained to him, and for permitting a Quaker meeting in his house and entertaining a foreign Quaker. He stiffly denied the first charge, and the court noted that the evidence "did not appeer to make it out," but he was convicted on the Quaker charges. On the same day Lt. Samuel Nash complained against Howland for stopping up a highway (PCR 3:186). On 2 October 1660 he was fined 4 for twice having Quaker meetings at his house (PCR 3:201). On 3 June 1668 he was a highway surveyor for Duxbury (PCR 4:181). He made his will 28 November 1670, inventory 14 January 1670/71, and he named his wife Mary (her surname is not known; they were possibly married in England), his sons Zoeth, Joseph, John , and Samuel, and his daughters Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, and Abigail (MD 19:32). An article by Robert S. Wakefield and the late Robert M. Sherman, "Henry Howland of Duxbury, Mass., 1633 , His Children and His Grandchildren," will appear in a forthcoming issue of NGSQ.
Of, Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, England
Arrived In Plymouth, Mass. To Be With His Brother John
Religion: Quaker
Henry Howland, yeoman, Duxbury, taxed in 1632. Frm. 1633 atba. 1643; town officer. His will dated 28 or 9 probated March 8, 1670, bequethed to wife Mary; children Zeoth, Joseph, John , Samuel, Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary & Abigail. The widow made will May 3, 1674 prob. May 26, 16 74; bequethed to sons named above and to daughters Abigail Young, Mary Cuddworth, Sarah Dennis and Elizabeth Allin. per Pioneers of Massachusetts. by Pope.
Eldredge Genealogy by Zoeth S. Eldredge July 30, 1896 -- It is not known when Henry Howland came, but the first record of him is in the allotment of cattle to the different families in Plymouth in 1624, when he appears as the owner of the "black cow." He was a freeman in 1633; served as surveyor of highways, grand juror, etc. In 1657 he had joined the Society of Friends, and his name appears that year on the list of those who refused to serve on the "Grand Enquest." Both Henry and his son Zoeth, who had also become a member of the Friends Society, were frequently fined and imprisoned for entertaining quakers, refusing to serve on the grand jury, etc.
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[GHR.FTW]
per Mayflower records
SOURCE: Plymouth Colony Its History and People 1620 - 1691, Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Ancestry Publishing, Salt Lake City, 1986.
Was in Plymouth as early as 25 Mar 1633 when he appears on tax list also on original freeman list. Quaker. Highway surveyor for Duxbury.
WILL made 28 Nov 1670, inventory 14 Jan 1670/1, named wife, Mary, sons Zoeth, Joseph, John, and Samuel, and daughters Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, and Abigail.
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Henry Howland | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mary Newland |
Date of Import: Oct 18, 2006/ Patty La Plante