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Massachusetts governor John Winthrop reacted to this when he wrote in 1639, "at Providence things grew still worse: for a sister of Mrs. Hutchinson, the wife of one Scott, being infected with Anabaptistry… was re-baptized by one Holyman." [5] He went on to criticize the Baptists for denying infant baptism and having no magistrates. [3]
Her father was Francis Scott, 2nd Earl of Buccleuch, her mother Margaret Leslie, daughter of John Leslie, 6th Earl of Rothes. [2] Scott had two elder sisters, Mary and Margaret, but no brothers. [3] Scott's father died the same year she was born, and her sisters died, Margaret in 1652 and Mary in 1661, leaving Scott to inherit the titles and ...
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.
Anne Firor Scott (April 24, 1921 – February 5, 2019) was an American historian, specializing in the history of women and of the South. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Early life and education
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.
Susanna Hutchinson was baptized in Alford, Lincolnshire on 15 November 1633. She was the youngest child of William and Anne Hutchinson to accompany her parents on the voyage from England to New England in 1634. [1]
NEW YORK (AP) — Anne Firor Scott, a prize-winning historian and esteemed professor who upended the male-dominated field of Southern scholarship by pioneering the study of Southern women, has died.
Halkett's writings include an extensive autobiography (c. 1677), religious meditations, and Instructions for Youth. [2] For Halkett, writing about what she had read, her dreams, and her hopes for her children were a part of her daily domestic devotions as well as for pleasure. [17]