
(1) 1 Nathaniel Bacon, 7G Grandfather
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Birth: 12 Apr 1613
Birth Place: England
Death: 16 Mar 1691/92, age: 77
Death Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Father: William Bacon, 8G Grandfather (? -)
Spouse: Hannah Mayo, 7G Grandmother (1628-1692-1699)
Birth: 1628
Birth Place: Eastham, Barnstable Township, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusett
Death: 1692-1699, age: 64
Death Place: Unknown
Father: Rev. John Mayo, 8G Grandfather (Oct 1597-3 May 1676)
Mother: Thomasine Brike, 8G Grandmother (? -? )
Marriage: 4 Dec 1642
Marr Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cap Cod, Massachusetts
1 Child…
Mercy (28 Feb 1658/59-10 Dec 1737)
(2) 1.1 Mercy Bacon, 6G Grandmother
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Birth: 28 Feb 1658/59
Birth Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Death: 10 Dec 1737, age: 79
Death Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Father: Nathaniel Bacon, 7G Grandfather (12 Apr 1613-16 Mar 1691/92)
Mother: Hannah Mayo, 7G Grandmother (1628-1692-1699)
Spouse: John Otis, 6G Grandfather (21 Nov 1657-23 Sep 1727)
Birth: 21 Nov 1657
Birth Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Death: 23 Sep 1727, age: 69
Death Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Father: John Otis, 7G Grandfather (14 Jan 1622/23-16 Jan 1684/85)
Mother: Mary Jacob, 7G Grandmother (11 May 1632-1683)
Born September 21, 1657 in Hingham, Massachusetts
-Married Mercy Grace Bacon July 18, 1683, in Barnstable, Massachusetts
-Had the following children:
-Mary Otis, born December 10, 1685 in Hingham, Plymouth, MA
-John Otis, born January 14, 1687, in Scituate, Plymouth, MA
-Nathaniel Otis, born May 28, 1690, in Barnstable, MA
-Mercy Otis, born October 15, 1693, in Barnstable, MA
-Solomon Otis, born October 13, 1696, in Barnstable, MA
-James Otis, born June 14, 1702, in Barnstable, MA
-Died September 23, 1727
Marriage: 18 Jul 1683
Marr Place: Barnstable, Barnstable Township, Cap Cod, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
2 Children…
Mary (10 Dec 1685-bef 29 Nov 1732)
James Sr. (14 Jun 1702-9 Nov 1788)
(3) 1.1.1 Mary Otis1, 5G Grandmother
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Birth: 10 Dec 16852,2
Birth Place: Hingham Township, Suffolk County, Massachusetts
Death: bef 29 Nov 1732, age: 462,2
Death Place: unknown
Father: John Otis, 6G Grandfather (21 Nov 1657-23 Sep 1727)
Mother: Mercy Bacon, 6G Grandmother (28 Feb 1658/59-10 Dec 1737)
Research: Isaac remarried Nov. 29, 1732 to Abigail (Cushing) Thomas so Mary Otis must have died between 1722 -1732.
Spouse: Isaac Little, 5G Grandfather (21 Feb 1677/78-2 Feb 1758)
Birth: 21 Feb 1677/782,2
Birth Place: Marshfield Township, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Death: 2 Feb 1758, age: 802,2
Death Place: Pembroke, Plymouth Township, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Father: Lt. Isaac Little, 6G Grandfather (abt 1646-24 Nov 1699)
Mother: Bethiah Thomas, 6G Grandmother (abt 1650-23 Sep 1718)
The Will of Isaac Little of Pembroke, dated 15 Aug. 1751, proved 3 April 1758, names wife Abigail; daughter Mrecy under 18; sons Otis, Nathaniel, Isaac and Lemuel; daughter Mary Winslow.
On 3 April 1758 Abigail Little, widow, was appointed guardian of Lemuel and Mercy Little.
On 29 Oct. 1764 Abigail Little of Pembroke, widow of Isaac Little, dec. and guardian of her son Lemuel Little, a minor, sold lands of late Isaac Little.
On 20 March 1780, sowrn 10 April 1780, Lemuel Little of Pembroke, yeoman, and Abigail Little, widow, sold lands to Thomas Hobart.2
Misc. Notes: The Will of Isaac Little of Pembroke, dated 15 Aug. 1751, proved 3 April 1758, names wife Abigail; daughter Mrecy under 18; sons Otis, Nathaniel, Isaac and Lemuel; daughter Mary Winslow.
On 3 April 1758 Abigail Little, widow, was appointed guardian of Lemuel and Mercy Little.
On 29 Oct. 1764 Abigail Little of Pembroke, widow of Isaac Little, dec. and guardian of her son Lemuel Little, a minor, sold lands of late Isaac Little.
On 20 March 1780, sowrn 10 April 1780, Lemuel Little of Pembroke, yeoman, and Abigail Little, widow, sold lands to Thomas Hobart.
Marriage: abt 17032
Marr Place: Marshfield Township, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Memo: Mary Otis died between 1722 -1732
5 Children…
Mary (9 Sep 1704-bef 5 Dec 1772)
Isaac (3 Apr 1710-died young)
Otis (3 Apr 1711-)
Mercy (28 Apr 1716-13 Jul 1723)
Captain Nathaniel (20 Aug 1722-aft 3 Apr 1795)
(4) 1.1.1.1 Mary Little, GGGG Grandaunt
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Birth: 9 Sep 17043,3
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Death: bef 5 Dec 1772, age: 684,4
Death Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: Isaac Little, 5G Grandfather (21 Feb 1677/78-2 Feb 1758)
Mother: Mary Otis, 5G Grandmother (10 Dec 1685-bef 29 Nov 1732)
General John Winslow
Spouse: General John Winslow, 3C6R (27 Mar 1702-17 Apr 1774)
Birth: 27 Mar 17024,4
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Death: 17 Apr 1774, age: 724,4
Death Place: Hingham Township, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Father: Isaac Winslow, 2C7R (1671-7 Dec 1738)
Mother: Sarah Wensley (-1753)
GEN. JOHN WINSLOW
FOURTH GENERATION
GEN. JOHN WINSLOW
John Winslow, son of Isaac Winslow, and his wife, Sarah Winslow, was horn in Marshfield, May 10, 1703, and married Mary Little in 1725, daughter of Capt. Isaac Little of Pembroke, Mass.
His portrait in the Winslow collection was painted by *John Singleton Copley, and is, with others, in the rooms of the Mass. Hist. Society.
Gen. John Winslow was a distinguished and successful Commander in 1740. He commanded a company in the expedition against Cuba, and afterwards rose to the rank of Major General in the British service.
**”In 1755, an expedition was undertaken against Nova Scotia by the British Government. The boundaries were unsettled, the English claiming the St. Lawrence, the French restricting them to the Peninsula of Arcadia.
“The French forts were captured by the English, and the whole Province reduced. He conducted the campaign with great skill. To him was also entrusted the diflRcult and ungrateful task of removing the French neutrals, who were all expelled from Nova Scotia.
“The reason of removing these French people was this. At the recovei’y of Annapolis from the French, the inhabitants were tolerated to continue there, by taking the oath of allegiance to Great Britain, so long as they did not assist the French against the English ; but they soon violated and denounced their oath, and assisted the other French and Indians, in their interest against the English in a treacherous manner; therefore they were expelled and dispossessed and proceeded against as enemies.
“A portion of the inhabitants assembled in the church at Grand Pre, on the 5th of September at 3 o’clock P. M. Col. Winslow tlius addressed them :
* John Singleton Copley attained an eminence as a portrait painter in America, belonging to the descendants of those for whom they were painted. He married Miss Susan Clark of Boston in 1769.
**Niles’ History of the French and Indian War.
37
” ‘That the duty entrusted to him was very disagreeable to his make and temper, as he knew it must be grievous to them, etc. It was not for him, however, to animadvert, but to obey his orders ; ‘ and he Ijroceeded to inform them that their lands and tenements, cattle of all kinds, and livestock of all sorts were forfeited to the Crown, with all other effects saving their money and household goods, and that they were to be removed from the Province.
“The sufferings of these poor unfortunate people, in the circum- stances of their removal, and in their sei^arate and scattered condition cannot well be conceived. Col. Winslow in a letter to the Governor of Nova Scotia, dated Grand Pre, Aug. 30, 1755, says :
” As to poor Father LeBlanc, I shall, with your Excellency’s permission, send him to my own place.”
What prevented his coming to Green Harbor does not appear.
*”The family who filled the place intended for him, bore the name of Mitchell. To this family. Gen. Winslow and his descendants were ever uniformly kind. A person now living well recollects the last living members of this family and the pensive gentility of their deportment.
The order of the English Government was that they should be dispersed and sufficiently provided for, and supported at the charge of each Government where they were sent. They were scattered over the land, these French people, and their blood courses through the veins of many respectable families bearing the names both of Massachusetts and Connecticut r among others are included the names of Drew, Peters, Winslow and Thomas.”
Previous to the commencing of the campaign of 1756 against Crown Point, Gen. Abercrombie sent for Gen. Winslow, and to him was to have been entrusted an attack on Ticonderoga, which was suspended by orders of Lord Loudon, in consequence of the disasters at Oswego.
In 1756, he commanded at Fort William Henry, on Lake George; he was also a Counsellor for the Province.
Gen. Winslow was genial and hospitable, and remarkable for his skill in horsemanship. He imported a valuable horse from England, and it was among his greatest delights to be mounted on his favorite animal.
* M. A. Thomas Memorials of Marshfield.
38
Thatcher relates an anecdote, that, “on a cei’tain occasion, a numher of gentlemen of Plymouth formed a partj” with Gen. Winslow for a pleasure excursion to Saquish in Plymouth Harhor and to return to dine. While there Winslow fell asleep. The other gentlemen with- drew and pursued their journey to return. When he awoke and found himself deserted, he mounted and daringly plunged his steed in the channel, swam his horse across more than a half mile, from whence he rode into the town, making the whole distance but six miles while his companions were riding fourteen miles. On their arrival, they were astonished to find the General seated in the Tavern, prepared to greet them with a bowl of punch. ‘ ‘
Gen. Winslow, late in life, married a widow Johnson. He died in 1774, and was placed in the tomb at Marshfield, aged 71. He left two sons by his first wife, Mary Little.
Pelham, born in 1737.
Isaac, born in 1739.
The town of Winslow, in Maine, was named in honor of Gen. Winslow, incorporated in 1771.
As far as can be obtained, genealogical sketches are inserted of those families who have married into the line of succession of Edward Winslow.
Gen. John Winslow married Mary Little. Following is a sketch of her family, copied from M. A. Thomas Memorials of Marshfield :
“Thomas Little was born in Plymouth after 1630, where he married Ann, one of the daughters of Richard Warren. He was probably a lawj’er. He removed to Marshfield about 1650, and settled in the eastern part of the township, a locality since known as Littletown in the surrounding region. He had eleven children.
“Lieut. Isaac Little, son of Thomas Little and Ann Warren, pur- chased the Biddle Estate, now owned by Waterman Thomas (on Marsh- field Neck). He and his wife Bethia had five children. He died in
1712.
“Thomas, born in 1675, graduated at Harvard College in 1695, was a lawyer and physician at Ph-mouth.”
Capt. Isaac Little, born in 1677, removed to Pem])roke. His daughter Mary Little married Gen. John Winslow of Marshfield in
1725. Her brother Isaac owned the estate in Pembroke. After him his son Isaac and now his son, Otis Little. Mary Little’s l)rother’s
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daughter, Judith’s grandson, AVilliam Rogers, married her great, great grandchild Helen M. Whitman.
Thus far, the lives in this line have been brought together and arranged, as events and history have made the record.
The valuable works of Moore’s American Governors, Young’s Chronicles of the Pilgrims, and M. A. Thomas Memorials of Marshfield, have been largely drawn upon, together with the volumes of the Mass. Hist. Society. These refer back again to Davis, Morton, Thatcher, Baylies and Savage, those valuable men whose indefatigable research has saved this Icnowledge from the wreck of time.
The period of 1758, and onward, was one of great agitation. Wise men, in view of the situation, felt disheartened. The result of the struggle, in the independence of the Colonies, and the establishment of the great republic, was to men’s minds then, and is even now, a miracle. But, the thoughtful, the philosophic, see in it the evidence and the consequences of the invariable and eternal laws of cause and effect. The Pilgrims planted in faith; their deeds, even when weak and insignificant, were ever with an inspiration to the infinite wisdom for guidance, and then, as now, as through all ages, the answer comes back to man’s higher and his lower nature, “Ask and ye shall receive,” for “Wliatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap;” and may we not feel that the wonderful preservation of this Nation is the answer to the Pilgrim’s prayer and trust?
Military: Commanded a company in the Cuba expedition of 1740; was Colonel in the expedition to Nova Scotia in 1755; was a comander-in-chief at Fort William Henry on Lake George in 1756 during the French and Indian War.1
Marriage: 16 Feb 17254
Marr Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
3 Children…
Josiah (5 Sep 1730-1 Mar 1731)
Pelham (8 Jun 1737-)
Isaac (27 Apr 1739-)
(5) 1.1.1.1.1 Josiah Winslow, 1C5R
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Birth: 5 Sep 17305,5
Birth Place: Plymouth Township, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Death: 1 Mar 1731, age: <15,5
Death Place: Plymouth Township, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: General John Winslow, 3C6R (27 Mar 1702-17 Apr 1774)
Mother: Mary Little, GGGG Grandaunt (9 Sep 1704-bef 5 Dec 1772)
(5) 1.1.1.1.2 Pelham Winslow, 1C5R
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Birth: 8 Jun 17375,5
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: General John Winslow, 3C6R (27 Mar 1702-17 Apr 1774)
Mother: Mary Little, GGGG Grandaunt (9 Sep 1704-bef 5 Dec 1772)
Pelham Winslow, the eldest son of Gen. John Winslow and his wife Mary Little, was born at Marshfield, June 8th, 1737. He graduated at Harvard College and settled as a lawyer in PljTiiouth, and married Joanna, daughter of Gideon White, who was the grandson of Peregrin White. He died at forty-five years of age at Flushing, L. I., N. Y., 1784, leaving two daughters :
Mary, who married Henry Warren, Esq. ;
Joanna, who married Dr. Nathan Hayward of Plymouth.
Mrs. Pelham Winslow, daughter of Gideon White, Esq., after the death of her husband, lived in PljTnouth, surrounded by a large circle of relatives and friends, and in the enjojTuent of the sympathy and affection of her two daughters. She died and was buried in Plymouth May 1st, 1829, aged eiglitj’-four years.
Isaac Winslow
(5) 1.1.1.1.3 Isaac Winslow, 1C5R
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Birth: 27 Apr 17395,5
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: General John Winslow, 3C6R (27 Mar 1702-17 Apr 1774)
Mother: Mary Little, GGGG Grandaunt (9 Sep 1704-bef 5 Dec 1772)
DR. ISAAC WINSLOW
FIFTH GENERATION
DR. ISAAC WINSLOW
Fifth Generation
Isaac Winslow, second sou of Gen. John Winslow, and bis wife, Mary Little, was born in Marslitield, April 27, 1739. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Benj. Stockbridge of Scituate, and lived at the Winslow Homestead.
He was a skilful physician of large practice, which in those days involved much of personal discomfort and hardsliip. Like his father, he was skilful in horsemanship. His travel, often in thick darkness, through unbroken jjaths, sometimes obliged to resort to snowshoes, was lightened by his elastic and facetious temperament.
He enlivened his hospitable home, in his relation and perception of the comic side of life, in his varied and wide experience. That large estate, that home with its portraits, its many relics and associations, is yet clear and vivid in the memory of these of the seventh generation. His portrait, which is in the collection of Winslow portraits, in the Mass. Hist. Soc, was painted by Johnson. His wife Elizabeth died 1790, and was placed in the tomb. He married a second time Fannie, daughter of Rev. Edwin Gay of Hingham, called by a meudjer of tlie household “The Good Samaritan”. She never had children.
Dr. Isaac Winslow died Oct. 19, 1819. The scene was impressive, when the long procession of friends, in carriages from every part of the country, were seen winding their way up the hillside to witness his deposit in the tomb of his ancestors, and to testify their affection and respect. His widow died October, 1846, aged 83 years.
Dr. Isaac Winslow and his first wife, Elizabeth Stockbridge, had five children :
Isaac, died in infancy.
Elizabeth, the eldest, married Hon. Kilboru Wliitman. Ruth, married first Josiah Shaw, second Thomas Dingley. Sarah, married Judge Eben Clapp, of Butler, Me. John, married Susan Ball, of Northborough, Mass.
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Elizabeth Stockbridge, who married Dr. Isaac Winslow, was the daughter of Dr. Benj. Stockbridge of Scituate and his wife Ruth Otis. She was born March 17, 1738. On her marriage she removed to Marsh- field, where her penetrating eye and great practical ability assisted her husband, whose profession absorbed his time, in bringing into order the disturbed affairs of the estate. Her household skill (whose rules are yet remembered) contributed to the comfort of the many of the hoi;se- liold who shared its hospitality. The peculiar significance of many of her words and expressions passed away with the last generation and its habits. In parting with these customs and interchanges of expres- sion, we lose one of the most refining influences of society.
92
DR. BENJAMIN STOCKBRIDGE
*”Dr. Benj. Stockbridge succeeded his father Benjamin, who married Mary Tilden in 1701, and who owned the original Stockbridge mansion and mills. It was a garrison in Philip’s War. He was in direct descent from John Stockbridge, who took the oath of fidelity in Seitnate, 1638, and was one of the Conihansett partners, 1646. He was educated under Dr. Bulfinch of Boston, and there is evidence that he was one of the great physicians of the day. His account books exhibit that he was a consulting physician in a circle embracing tlie full country from Falmouth to Worcester, and to Ipswich.”
He is described as a gentleman of wit and taste, eminently pleasing, and the delight of literary society. He had made attainments in the science of music rare at that time. He married Ruth Otis, daughter of Job Otis, and left two children, Charles and Elizabeth.
Dr. Charles Stockbridge, son of Dr. Benjamin, attained a high reputation. Like his father, he was pleasing in his manners, and accomplished in all literature and tasteful arts, with the rare qualifica- tion (asserted by one who experienced it) of the capacity for and the expression of warm, pure, disinterested friendshii:). He married
Eleanor and deceased leaving five children, all born in
the mansion at Scituate:
Dr. Charles, who died early in practice, a bachelor.
Eleanor, who died single.
Mary, who married Capt. Bowers.
Samuel, married Lydia, daugliter of William Bassett, and settled at Mt. Blue, and has descendants in that vicinity.
Ruth, who married Thompson, and whose daugliter
married Rev. Dr. Vinton of Boston.
The beautiful place is now owned by Elizabeth Winslow Williams, granddaughter of Elizabeth Stockbridge, who married Dr. Isaac Winslow. The present house was built by Mary, daugliter of Dr. Charles Stockbridge and wife of Capt. Bowers.
* Dean ‘s History of Scituate.
93
The record and sketch of the Otis familj’, with the Coat of Arms, is inserted. They came into the line of succession of tlie Winslows through Elizabeth, whose mother was Ruth Otis, daughter of Job Otis, who married Dr. Isaac Winslow, and also intermingled when Penelope, daughter of Hon. Isaac Winslow, married James Warren, whose mother was daughter of Hon. James Otis of Barnstable, and whose son Henr^’ married Mary Winslow, daughter of Pelham Winslow, and granddaughter of Gen. John Winslow.
Elizabeth Stockbridge
Spouse: Elizabeth Stockbridge
(4) 1.1.1.2 Isaac Little, GGGG Granduncle
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Birth: 3 Apr 17103,3
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Death: died young3,3
Father: Isaac Little, 5G Grandfather (21 Feb 1677/78-2 Feb 1758)
Mother: Mary Otis, 5G Grandmother (10 Dec 1685-bef 29 Nov 1732)
(4) 1.1.1.3 Otis Little, GGGG Granduncle
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Birth: 3 Apr 17113,3
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: Isaac Little, 5G Grandfather (21 Feb 1677/78-2 Feb 1758)
Mother: Mary Otis, 5G Grandmother (10 Dec 1685-bef 29 Nov 1732)
Spouse: Elizabeth Howland (7 Jul 1709-)
Birth: 7 Jul 17096,6
Birth Place: Bristol, Massachusetts
Marriage: 3 Oct 17336
Marr Place: Bristol, Massachusetts
3 Children…
Charles (15 Jun 1734-)
William (1736-)
Mary (Jun 1738-)
(5) 1.1.1.3.1 Charles Little, 1C5R
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Birth: 15 Jun 17346,6
Birth Place: Pembroke Township, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: Otis Little, GGGG Granduncle (3 Apr 1711-)
Mother: Elizabeth Howland (7 Jul 1709-)
(5) 1.1.1.3.2 William Little, 1C5R
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Birth: 17366,6
Birth Place: Pembroke Township, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: Otis Little, GGGG Granduncle (3 Apr 1711-)
Mother: Elizabeth Howland (7 Jul 1709-)
(5) 1.1.1.3.3 Mary Little, 1C5R
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Birth: Jun 17386,6
Birth Place: Pembroke Township, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: Otis Little, GGGG Granduncle (3 Apr 1711-)
Mother: Elizabeth Howland (7 Jul 1709-)
(4) 1.1.1.4 Mercy Little, GGGG Grandaunt
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Birth: 28 Apr 17163,3
Birth Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Death: 13 Jul 1723, age: 73,3
Death Place: Marshfield, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Father: Isaac Little, 5G Grandfather (21 Feb 1677/78-2 Feb 1758)
Mother: Mary Otis, 5G Grandmother (10 Dec 1685-bef 29 Nov 1732)
(4) 1.1.1.5a Captain Nathaniel Little*7,8,7,8,3,9,3,9, GGGG Grandfather
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Birth: 20 Aug 17223,9,10,3,9,10
Birth Place: Marshfield Township, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
Death: aft 3 Apr 1795, age: 725,5
Death Place: Belpre, Ohio
Census: 1790, age: 6711,11
Census Place: Bridgewater Census
Memo: Showed 1-1-3
Father: Isaac Little, 5G Grandfather (21 Feb 1677/78-2 Feb 1758)
Mother: Mary Otis, 5G Grandmother (10 Dec 1685-bef 29 Nov 1732)
Occupation: ferryman soldier, yeoman & farmer12
On 29 Jan. 1754 Nathaniel Little of Triverton, ferryman, sold land in Dartmouth to Peleg Slocum; wife Lydia released her dower.
On 5 March 1785 Nathanial Little of Kingston, Gentleman, sold land in Pembroke to Thomas Hobart. His father Issac Little bought this land from Capt. Thomas Barker; Keziah Little gave up her right to dower.
On 9 March 1785 Nathaniel Little of Kingston, Gentleman, sold all his rights to land in Kingston to Nathaniel Cooper. Wife Keziah gave up her right to dower.
On 25 April 1785 Nathaniel Little of Kingston, Gentleman, sold all his rights to land in Marshfield to Barker Little of Dartmouth, Adams Bailey and Luther Bailey. This land had been set off to his wife Lydia in the division of the estate of her father Isaac Barker of Pembroke.
Nathaniel Little as 1-1-3 in the 1790 census of Bridgewater.
On 3 April 1795 Nathaniel Little of Bridgewater, yeoman, and Keziah his wife sold land in Plymouth to Rossiter Cotton. This land had been laid out to their father John Wood, late of Plymouth.12
Military: Captain American Revolution & Head Quartermaster
Misc. Notes: On 29 Jan. 1754 Nathaniel Little of Triverton, ferryman, sold land in Dartmouth to Peleg Slocum; wife Lydia released her dower.
On 5 March 1785 Nathanial Little of Kingston, Gentleman, sold land in Pembroke to Thomas Hobart. His father Issac Little bought this land from Capt. Thomas Barker; Keziah Little gave up her right to dower.
On 9 March 1785 Nathaniel Little of Kingston, Gentleman, sold all his rights to land in Kingston to Nathaniel Cooper. Wife Keziah gave up her right to dower.
On 25 April 1785 Nathaniel Little of Kingston, Gentleman, sold all his rights to land in Marshfield to Barker Little of Dartmouth, Adams Bailey and Luther Bailey. This land had been set off to his wife Lydia in the division of the estate of her father Isaac Barker of Pembroke.
Nathaniel Little as 1-1-3 in the 1790 census of Bridgewater.
On 3 April 1795 Nathaniel Little of Bridgewater, yeoman, and Keziah his wife sold land in Plymouth to Rossiter Cotton. This land had been laid out to their father John Wood, late of Plymouth.
Spouse: Keziah Atwood, GGGG Grandmother (18 Apr 1721-Apr 1814)
Birth: 18 Apr 172113,13
Birth Place: Plymouth Township, Massachusetts
Death: Apr 1814, age: 9214,14
Death Place: Belpre, Ohio
Father: John Atwood, 5G Grandfather (1 May 1684-6 Aug 1754)
Mother: Sarah Leavitt, 5G Grandmother (8 Feb 1688/89-22 Jan 1725/26)
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