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Thomas Clarke - Son of John and Mary (Morton) Clarke, baptized Stepney (London) c. 1599-1600. Came over as a young, unmarried man and was allotted one share in the 1623 (as Tho. Clarke) and 1627 divisions. Member of the 1626 Purchaser investment group.
By his wife Anne, Pakington is said to have had two daughters, Ursula (d.1558), [24] who married William Scudamore (d.1560), [24] by whom she was the mother of Sir John Scudamore (1542–1623), [24] [25] and Bridget, who married Sir John Littleton of Frankley, Worcestershire, [3] and after his death three other husbands.
Mary Anne Talbot also known as John Taylor [1] (2 February 1778 [2] – 4 February 1808) was an Englishwoman who wore male dress and became a soldier and sailor during the French Revolutionary Wars. Life
This ship brought with it the first two women to come to Jamestown, one of whom was Thomas Forrest's second wife Margaret Foxe and the other Anne Burras, Margaret's "maid". Thomas Forrest is said in genealogies [1] that he and Margaret had married on August 16, 1605, in St. Giles in the Fields, London, England, four years after Peter was born ...
John Colepeper "of Feckenham" was the father of that Thomas Colepeper who married his cousin Katherine St Leger: their children included John Colepeper (born 1633), leader of Culpeper's Rebellion, and Frances Colepeper (born 1634), wife successively of Samuel Stephens, Sir William Berkeley and Philip Ludwell of Virginia.
Thomas and Anne Lodge had six sons and two daughters of their own: [82] [83] William Lodge, eldest son and heir, baptized on 8 July 1554, who on 14 October 1577 married Mary Blagrave, the daughter of Thomas Blagrave, Master of the Revels. [84] Thomas Lodge (baptized 23 May 1556, buried 4 June 1556), second son. [85]
William Dyer was baptized at Kirkby Laythorpe, Lincolnshire, England, on 19 September 1609, the son of William Dyer. [1] In 1625, while a teenager, he was apprenticed to Walter Blackborne, a fishmonger, and 16 years later, while he was in New England, he was taxed back in England as a member of the "Fishmonger's Company," though his profession before leaving there was that of a milliner. [1]
Thomas Putnam was born on March 22, 1652 (new style March 12, 1651) in Salem Village, Massachusetts Bay Colony, a son of Lieutenant Thomas Putnam Sr. (1615–1686) and his first wife, Ann Holyoke. He was baptized on February 16, 1652, at the First Church of Salem.