Zij is getrouwd met Jacob Simcock Sr..
Zij zijn getrouwd op 15 februari 1684 te Ridley, Chester, Pennsylvania, Verenigde Staten, zij was toen 23 jaar oud.
Spouse: Alice Marie Simcock (born Maris)
Kind(eren):
=== GEDCOM Note === {{Pennsylvania Settlers}} {{LongProfiles}} == Biography ==Alice married Jacob Simcock 11 mo (January) 1684. 'The Ancestryof Richard Milhous Nixon', Third Ed ition (1971), Nixon Presidential Returned Materials Collection: [http://www.nixonlibrary.gov/virtuallibrary/documents/whsfreturned/WHSF_Box_10/WHSF10-12.pdf White House Special Files (WHSF)], box 10, folder 12 ; cites as source History of Chester Co. PA p 647 She died in 1726 at the homestead on Ridley creek Bryan, Jesse. ''Paxon ancestry: an adjunct to the Moorman-Johnson family'' (1906) [https://books.google.com/books?id=YQh267QeYU0C Google Books YQh267QeYU0C] ---- Information cleaned up from gedcom import, needs to be rewritten [[Powell-5629Powell-5629]] 18:20, 10January 2015 (EST) ''It may be well to state here that Benjamin, John and Jacob Simcock were sons of Jacob and Alice (nee Maris) Simcock, and grandsons of J ohnSimcock and John Maris, both members ofthe Provincial Council and otherwise prominent in the early history of Pennsylvania.'' Chandler, George A., newspaper entitled Philadelphia of Our Ancestor s,conducted by Frank Willing Leach: ''Old Philadelphia Families: Waln'', dated Feb 29, 1907. (Philadelphia Newspaper Feb 29, 1907) (Text: The typescript is tiny and sometimes illegible. Obviously itwas cut and pasted and not necessarily in order.) In only one instance heretofore since the beginning of this series of "Old Philadelphia Families have we traced the line of descent back to the shi p Welcome, which, with William Penn as its mostnotable passenger, dropped anchor down at Upland, a few miles below the present Quaker City, October 29, 16 We were able to add a second family to thi s list in the case of the Walns, for Nicholas Waln, the ancestor of the present Waln family, was unquestionably a Welcome passenger. [Ship records subsequently show that the Waln family came on board the "Lamb" of Liverpool-ssp] Beyond the fact that Nicholas Waln had come from Yorkshire, nothing has heretofore been known of his antecedents in England. Recently OliverHough, one of the most reliabl e and painstaking of our "local genealogists, has located Nicholas Waln "upon the other side," so to speak: an accomplishment which is the chief objective with all true genealogical enthusiasts. Fro m the registers of Settle Monthly Meeting Yorkshire it has been ascertained by Mr. Hough that the founder of the Waln family in America was a son of Richard and Jane (nee Rudd) Waln, of Bur...(Burholm e) in Bolland, Yorkshire, and that he was livingat Chapelcroft, County York,at the time of his marriage, to wit: October 1, 1673, to Jane Turner, daughter of William Turner, of Windyeats, of the sam e county. They were married at the house of the bridegroom's stepfather, WilliamBirket, at Slaineme.... county indicated. ... fellow-voyages, wended their way--unless they journeyed by boat upthe D elaware --through what was destined to be the cityof Philadelphia, but what was then only a paper town, into the regions above, and thereafter known as Bucks county. Waln took up a large tract of 10 00 acres-purchased of Penn in England, April 22, 1682--near the Neshaminy,and also contiguous to the present villages of Langhorne and Newtown.He speedily erected a dwelling for himself, and here, 1st of 11the month, 1682, old style, which means January 1, 1683, the first Quaker meeting of the locality was held, since known as Middletown Monthly Meeting. Very pronounced results had thus been att ained within the two months which had followed the arrival of the Welcome at Upland. LEADER OF COLONISTS
Waln was unquestionably the leader of the little party which had accompanied him into the wilderness region along the Neshaminy. He was a member of the first Assembly, which met at Philadelphia March 12, 1682-3, and he also represented Bucks county in that body in 1687, 1688 , 1689, 1692, and 1695. He was a member . . .In 1696 Waln removed to Philadelphia county, taking up his residences in what was then known as the Northern Liberties, which embraced at that time a muc h larger part of the county than was comprised within the subsequently incorporated district of the same name, extending afew squares above Vine street. His new neighbors seemed to place thesame valu e upon his abilities as had those of Bucks county for he wasimmediately chosen a member of Assembly to represent Philadelphia county, and served during the sessions of 1696, 1697, 1700, 1701, 1713, 17 14, 1715 and 1717. He was also named in 1711 one of the directors of the public school with James Logan, Isaac Morris, Edward Shippen, etc. As had already been indicated, Nicholas Waln was active in the councils of the Quakers.He was practically the founder ofthe Middletown Monthly Meeting as previously set forth, and in 1703 the Philadelphia Meeting authorized him, in conjunction with John G oodson, to purchase four acres in the Liberty Lands for the useof the Friends. Here was established the Fair Hill Burying Ground--on Germantown road--and about 1706 or 1707 the Fair Hill Meeting Hou se was erected. He continued active in the Society of Friends until his death, which occurred in 1721. According to a certificate granted by the Settle Monthly Meeting, dated 4 mo. 7, 1682, Nichola s Waln was accompanied to Pennsylvania by his wife (nee Jane Turner) and three children. the Settle register shows the birth of the following children in Yorkshire: Jane, 5 mo. 16, 1675; Margaret, 8 mo. 3, 1677; Richard, 4 mo. 6, 1678, and Margaret, 11 mo. 12, 1682; the first Margaret died in infancy. The Middletown Monthly Meeting register exhibits the dates of birth ofthe three children who c ame from Yorkshire, together with those of five others born in Bucks county. Two of the three dates relative to the elder children do not exactly correspond in the two records. The youngest three of the twelve children were born in Philadelphia county, and the dates of their respective births are found on the register of the Philadelphia Monthly Meeting. The eleven children, with dates of bir th, as taken from the registers of the two meetings were as follows: :Jane 6 mo. 16, 1675; :Richard 4 mo 6 1678; :Margaret 11 mo. 10 1680; :Hannah, 7 mo. 21, 1684; :Mary, 2 mo 7, 1687; :Ellen, 1 mo. 27, 1690; :Sarah, 4 mo. 9, 1692; :John, 6 mo. 10, 1694; :Elizabeth, 1 mo. 27, 1697; :Nicholas, 1 mo. 24, 1699; and :William, 1 mo. 15, 1700-1. It will be observed that of these children seven w ere daughters. These will be disposed of first, and briefly. The eldest, Jane Waln, was married. 3 mo 27, 1691, to Samuel Allen, Jr., son of Samuel Allen, whoarrived at Chester in the ship Bristol F actor, December 11, 1681. TheAllens were settled on Neshaminy creek in what wasafterward Bensalentownship. They were prominent in early times in Bucks, and intermarried with the leading county famil ies. Margaret Waln, the next daughter, died young. Hannah Waln became thewife, first, of Thomas Hodges and secondly, of Benjamin Simcock. Mary Waln married John Simcock, brother of the above. El len Waln died unmarried in 1707. Sarah Waln married Jacob Simcock, another brother. It may be well to state here that Benjamin, John and Jacob Simcock were sons of Jacob and Alice (nee Maris) Simco ck, and grandsons of John Simcock and John Maris, both members of the Provincial Council and otherwise promintent in the early history of Pennsylvania. Elizabeth Waln, the.... == Sources == &l t;references /> See also:* Futhey, John Smith and Gilbert Cope. ''History of Chester County, Pennsylvania, with Genealogical and Biographical Sketches'', L.H. Everts(1881), [https://books.goo gle.com/books?id=jcYxAQAAMAAJ GoogleBooks] ==Contributors== [[Amnelin-1Johanna Amnelin]], [[Austin-1452
Ken Austin]]. JDS_09_17_10.ged, 09 February 2011.[[Stevens-2498
Sara P atton]], Maris-80, hayzlett-hughart-black-waln-adams.ged, Mar 10, 2013; [[Stevens-2498
Sara Patton]], Maris-82, hayzlett-hughart-black-waln-adams.ged, Mar 10, 2013; [[Main-448
Jeff M ain]], e0f2u2_97416381af1n202520exk2.ged, Jan 22, 2013. ----''Note:'' I protected this profile (under the [http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Project:Arborists Arborists project]) because I noticed that a Maris profile had been merged away into a De maris profile (aside from the capitalization issue, [http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Name_Fields_for_European_Aristocrats EuroAristo naming convention guideli nes] say not to include "de" in the "Last Name at Birth" field). Thanks! [[Noland-165
Noland-165]] 15:09, 8 September 2014 (EDT)
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Alice Marie Maris | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1684 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jacob Simcock Sr. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Added via a Record Match
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Alice Simcock (born Maris) Gender: Female Birth: Oct 17 1660 - Inkborough, Worcester, England Marriage: Jan 15 1684 - Chester County, Pennsylvania Death: Dec 10 1726 - Chester County, Pennsylvania, British America Father: George Maris Mother: Alice Maris (born Wellsmith) Husband: Jacob Simcock Children: John SimcockMary Harvey (born Simcock)Benjamin SimcockHannah Simcock Sarah Worthington (born Simcock) Siblings: Richard Maris (born De maris)Elizabeth Mendenhall (born Maris)George MarisSusannah MarisAnn Worrilow (bor n Maris)John Maris
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