Showing posts with label family history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family history. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

James Ballou III Religious Leader and Patriot of 1776

James Ballou III was born in 1723 in an area of Massachusetts that would become Rhode Island. James was the third generation Ballou (named James) to be born in the New World.  Their patriarch Maturin Ballou, a Baptist minister, immigrated from England. Seeking freedom from the Puritans, he helped Roger Williams co-found Rhode Island. The northeast corner of the state was known as the "Ballou District."  James III’s mother, Catherine Arnold, was related to Benedict Arnold.

In 1744, now in Rhode Island, James married Tamasin Cook. Before the Revolution, they had 11 children who all survived childhood including James IV who was famous for his ability to tell the future. His daughter Elizabeth was the mother of President James A. Garfield.

James III's cousin Abner Ballou was their strict Baptist pastor.  By 1770, James broke from the family church and started his own which allowed members to worship with song.  He moved his family to New Hampshire and bought seven adjoining lots for his seven sons. He ultimately encouraged the family to believe in universal salvation. His cousin’s son Hosea Ballou became an influential clergyman now called the father of American Universalism.

In 1779 at age 56, James III joined Mooney’s Regiment of the New Hampshire Militia, raised in defense of Rhode Island. As a fifer, his job was to play the tunes that would signal the soldiers’ next action.

He lived to age 88, just in time to see the war of 1812. Twenty-one Daughters of the American Revolution list James Ballou III as their patriot ancestor.

Sunday, January 5, 2020

The Pilgrim Maiden Who Chose to Return

Young Desire Minter is one of only five Mayflower Pilgrims who - after making that treacherous voyage to eke out a new life in the wilds of Massachusetts - returned to England for good.  And she was the only female to make that decision on her own.  Who was Desire Minter? Why wasn’t she traveling with her parents? And why would she return to the Old World?

Let’s explore the rest of the story...

Desire was born about 1602 to William Minter and Sarah Willet Minter possibly in Norwich, Norfolk, England, where her parents were from.  Since they had no other children, her name might have meant it was their great desire to have a child! 

Norwich is 127 miles from Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, where William Brewster hosted the first illegal religious meetings that created the Pilgrims.

When little Desire was about eight, William Brewster and John Robinson lead their burgeoning flock from the dangers of the Church of England to the freedom of The Netherlands. The Pilgrims eventually would start a new religion in the little town of Leiden, south of Amsterdam.

We don’t know when Desire’s family joined up with this new congregation.  But we do know that when she was 11, her father William became a citizen of Leiden. To be able to work and own property in a town at that time, you had to become a citizen which meant you agreed to spend time being watched, judged, and voted on to ensure you are worthy of living in the town!

The Minter family prospered in Leiden, and when Desire was 12, her father bought a house on the Groenhasegracht (Green hair moat) near Pieterskerk (St. Peters Church) near the little Pilgrim enclave.   

As a 13-year-old, Desire may have accompanied her mother Sarah to the wedding of Roger Charles and Isabel Chilton. Sarah witnessed at least four marriages around that that time.  As the Colony’s midwife, she was a useful woman to know! Another friend of the bride, Katherine White Carver, wife of the future colony’s first governor, also witnessed this marriage.

Sadly, sometime during the winter of 1617-18, Desire’s father dies.  Single mothers do not do well in the 1600s, so while mom seeks out another husband, Desire is likely put in the care of another family. Because of his commitment to her later in life, I think it is with the family of Thomas Brewer.
Brewer is one of the three printers who form Pilgrim Press.  

Along with William Brewster and Edward Winslow, the trio publishes seditious booklets whose adversaries reach all the way to King James in England!  Talk about enemies in high places!  As a result, the men become wanted criminals.  Brewster escapes to the safety of Scrooby Manor where he has the resources to hide for three years until the Mayflower can bring them to the New World.  Winslow is too young to pursue.  But Brewer gets caught. Fortunately, he is able to talk his way out of prison, at least for a time.

Sarah is successful in her pursuit of a new husband.  On 18 August 1618, she marries Roger Simmons (also written as Simmonson).  However, Desire does not live with them.

Barely 18, Desire boards the Mayflower bound for Plymouth Colony in the wilds of Massachusetts, as a ward of John Carver, colony governor and his wife Katherine, Sarah’s friend.  Another young ward they are responsible for is Jasper More. At 12, he is one of the four More children who are pawns in a divorce battle. Jasper is also the first child to die that winter in Plymouth Harbor. 

In addition to their young wards, the Carvers have three servants: Roger Wilder (who died that winter), Dorothy (last name unknown) who married Francis Eaton and later died, and John Howland, a memorable and strong young man.

During a fierce storm at sea one night, Howland was washed overboard and should have drowned!  But miraculously, in the dark, his hand brushed a rope that was attached to the ship. Grabbing it, the sailors were able to pull him back aboard!  His courage must have made him very attractive!
Pilgrim Maiden Statue in Plymouth, MA

After the Pilgrims eventually reached land and built tiny wooden shacks to live in, they all worked hard to plant crops so they could survive another winter.  No one worked harder at this than Governor John Carver and his wife Katherine.  So much so that both of them died – he from heat exhaustion and she, it is said, from a broken heart.

So now Desire is on her own.  Likely leaning for support on John Howland who is no longer a servant. Her stepfather Roger Simmons dies back in Leiden and she may have received mail about it prompting her to consider returning.  

Within the typical 3 months though, Sarah remarries. This time to Roger Eastman. It’s not clear from the paper trail if Desire received word about this marriage.

In the 1623 land division, Desire is given one acre of land - the portion that every Pilgrim adult earned.  On this land she would have to build her own house.  In addition, she would be expected to help grow the communal crops for food.  This is where the help of a husband would come in handy.  

Desire looked around and saw her friend John Howland.  Unfortunately for her, he chose instead to marry Mayflower orphan Elizabeth Tilley.  Perhaps as a tribute, when their first child was born the next year, they named her Desire.

I think that might have been the impetus for Desire to go back to England. Or it could be the agreement that had transpired in Leiden between Thomas Brewer and Roger Eastman, Sarah’s latest husband. For reasons known only to Brewer, he volunteered to pay Desire 120 guilders a year for her care and education. And on her 21st birthday, he would gift her 1900 guilders (about $120,000 today).

Why do you think Desire returned? Not to Leiden, but to England? Whatever the reason, she lived quietly until one of the many plagues of the day struck her down at age 50.

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

DNA: The Little Thread of Life


That little thread of life with the big name - Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) - is something I have known a little about for a long time. After reading two books on it, purchasing three spit tests, and trolling the interwebs I now know a little bit more.

This is what I already knew from being marketing director for a genetic testing lab.  First, what the 23 in 23 and Me is.  Do you know? The number of pairs of chromosomes at the center of most living human cells.  Chromosomes carry genetic information in the form of genes.  I once told a boss that he should have kids someday because there’s good things going on in his genes.  Not his jeans!

The other thing I knew about DNA was it told me where my ancestors were from.  As a lifelong genealogist, I was a beta tester for the Ancestry DNA spit test.  However, my family tree had far more information than I received.  Still, my info helps test takers who have not yet researched their family trees!

So, what did I learn?  There are four kinds of DNA that are useful for genealogists.  Let’s review the basics I discovered from Emily Aluchino in Genetic Genealogy.

1. Y-DNA

Y-DNA measures the male line in a family from father to son. My father got it from his father who got it from his father.  How much did I get!?  Nada!  This is because women don’t have the Y chromosome! We have 2 Xs instead. I have 3 exes but that has nothing to do with DNA.  (Wink!)

I purchased a Y-DNA kit from Family Tree DNA for my son Brad for a one name study. This is where they research only one surname, working to find the origins and all descendants.  Can you see the DNA transfer in his 4 generations!?


2. Mitochondrial DNA

Mitochondrial DNA traces the mother’s line from mother to child.  Notice I didn’t say mother to daughter?  That’s because it passes to all her children.  But only her daughters pass it on to their children. My grandmother Gertrude got it from her mother Eunice and passed it to her daughter Pat.  But great-great grandma Ella is Gertrude’s father’s mother, so that grandma passed it only her son where it stopped.

3. Autosomal DNA
 
Autosomal is DNA that everyone has and everyone shares no matter their sex. My grandma Gertrude got some from her father, her grandfather, and her great grandmother – Gunhild the Norwegian.  I was surprised to discover that just like my grandma, Gertrude’s grandfather became deaf as an adult.   We always thought a disease caused it, but now we know it was genetic.

4. X-Chromosomal

While all DNA research is new, the X-chromosomal is the newest, so your DNA lab may not provide the test.  Everyone has some of the X-chromosome, but do you know who will have more – the brother or the sister?  Blain Bettinger, in Genetic Genealogy in Practice, tells us the sister gets about a 1/3 more than her brother.

How much DNA do we inherit?  100% of all that we have!  And 50% from each parent!  As I learned from Christa Cowan, the Barefoot Genealogist on YouTube, it is random, so you never know what you’re going to get - just like in a bowl of fish soup or cioppino. 

My father and mother loved making cioppino.  And each would add the kinds of seafood they like.  It’s like mixing all their DNA together in one gene pool.  I get my DNA from each of my parents, but it could be a different 50% from each parent than what my sister gets.  Sometimes you get the muscles and sometimes you get the shrimp. (Wink!)

So, how many ancestors make up our gene pool?  In 10 generations, like back to King George during our American Revolution, we have 1,024 ancestors based on simple math. Two parents, 4 grandparents, 8 great grandparents, and so on.  But hold on! Some of them could be related (for example, a set of 2nd cousins marry), so you may not have that many. 

If we go back 40 generations to Charlemagne, the math would equal about 2,000 times more people than who were alive at that time.  What does that say for us descendants today?  We are all related! Smile at the next person you see because they could be your 9th (or closer) cousin!

We can even prove that with my favorite part of genetic genealogy - the haplogroup - which looks at the Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA) from centuries ago! For example, the Y-DNA haplogroup starts at A  in which we all share the same base DNA.  Whenever there is a small variation in how the DNA patterns repeat adds a number to the letter like A1.  When there is a large variation called a mutation, the letter changes, like B. 

The R1 MRCA is from Southeastern Asia. And R-M2 MRCA is European. When getting more into the weeds and closer in time, the R-M269 haplogroup matches many of Mayflower Pilgrims based on their descendants.  It’s amazing how DNA led me to nine Mayflower Pilgrims that I have now confirmed by paper research!  Information that I wouldn’t have known if I hadn’t understood facts about that little thread of life!

Click the link to watch the video!

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Robert Waterman of Marshfield, Massachusetts (1616-1652)

The life of Robert Waterman has been detailed in the Waterman Descendants book by Edgar Francis Waterman in 1939.  Fortunately Google Books has digitized the entire volume and provides it for free to those searching for Robert and his descendants!  Thank you Google and thank you Edgar for researching and writing it down!


Here is an excerpt about my 10th great grandfather (on my mother's side), Robert Waterman with my notes in [brackets]:

Robert Waterman first appears in Plymouth County [Massachusetts] records in 1638, when he married a daughter [Elizabeth] of Mr. Thomas Bourne, an original Marshfield settler, and a citizen of standing. Through this marriage, he became brother-in-law of John Bradford, eldest son of [Mayflower Pilgrim] Gov. William Bradford [and Dorothy May Bradford], and also of Josiah Winslow, a brother of [Mayflower Pilgrim] Gov. Edward Winslow.

Ten months later, Robert was fined for intemperance [drinking enough alcohol to be under the influence! At that time, everyone drank alcohol - mostly beer - even for breakfast, but not being able to handle it was illegal!], and since the other three who fell under the displeasure of the Court at the same time for the same offense were all called "Mister," the prefix of respect for social standing, it appears that the young Waterman fell into error in good company. No further entry of this kind has been found, and he was not long after honored by his fellow-townsmen with important offices, so it seems fair to attribute the one lapse from sobriety to inexperience. [This is Pilgrim talk for one and done!]

A letter written by Edward Winslow to John Winthrop [Puritan leader and another of my 10th great grandfathers], dated Plymouth, 7 July 1640 shows that Winslow was indebted to Winthrop, and discharged the debt by payment in cattle [which Robert delivered by boat]. 

"Concerning your acceptance of the five cows I am willing to send them, & becawse the wether is so
hott, the flies so busie, & the woods so thick, I have agreed with Robert Waterman to bring them by water. I pray you send me a receipt under your hand for them upon the back of the note or bill I left with you." 

He was made a freeman of the Colony, 7 Mar 1642, and immediately became one of the two Grand Jurors for Marshfield. He served the town as Committee Deputy in the General Court of the Colony, 1643 to 1644 and 1646 to 1650.  

On 27 Sep 1643, Mr. Thomas Bourne, Robert Waterman, John Bourne, Roger Cook, and John Russell were appointed to keep watch at Thomas Bourne's house. Robert was a member of the military company in Marshfield. 

In 1645 he was one of the twelve men in Marshfield to establish a public school, one of the earliest in New England.

Early in 1651 he was found guilty of an offense, the exact nature of which is not known, save that the charge was made by Sarah wife of James Pitney of Marshfield. The wording of the record is not pleasant, but should not be construed too harshly, remembering that comparatively trivial episodes, such as a kiss in fun or a casual caress, were serious infractions of Puritan manners. The [small] size of the fine indicates that Waterman sinned against the manners of the period rather than against morality. 

There is little on which to base a characterization of Robert Waterman. Well connected by marriage, he possessed some native ability, sufficient to warrant his neighbors in returning him to the General Court for several terms. He seems to have been of a social disposition, and perhaps was too jovial or exuberant in temperament to suit the staid manners of the period. [I inherited this trait!] 

He died in the prime of life, probably under forty years. [Since then, we know his death was in 1642 at age 36 leaving behind his young widow Elizabeth and their 10-year-old son John who grew up to marry Ann Stuartevant and have 6 healthy children who survived to adulthood!]



Friday, December 20, 2019

Welcome to Family History Tyd Byts!

I'm so excited to share this inaugural post of Family History Tyd Byts!  As an avid and lifelong family historian, I've discovered wonderful and evocative stories that make up world history from a very personal view.  Sadly, after I share them with friends and family, I move on to the next discovery and they are lost in the depths of my vast family tree.

All that loss stops now!  Here, I will share the people and stories that I find who make up the rich fabric of not only my family, but America's family, and even the world's family!  I love the personal stories of history and I share them with various groups.

Recently I spoke to members of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants in Florida's capitol about the four brave Pilgrim women who survived the first disastrous winter in Plymouth, Massachusetts.  I'll tell you more about them in another post.  One of the audience members brought me a letter (transcribed) that had been in her family since it was written in 1802.

It's the beautiful and tragic story of a young mother whose 39-year-old husband has just died.  She's writing to his brother with the sad news and more.  I hope (like me) you can appreciate the language and ideas that she (and our ancestors) might have used. Sometimes as family historians we are more concerned with the dates and locations than the effects and consequences of those events.  Betsey is lucky to be able to write at all.  It was not common for girls to be taught reading and writing.  I keep her spelling as a reminder that in 1802, there were no dictionaries or spelling conventions.  Webster's Dictionary didn't appear until 1828.   Betsy also uses no punctuation, but I have added it for ease of understanding.

-----

Personal letter from Betsy Hawks in Rutland, Vermont to her brother-in-law 
6 November 1802

Dear Brother -
I am through the mournfull dispensation of providence called to mourn the loss of my beloved pardner. Att the same time you are called upon to lement the loss of a dear and affectionate Brother.  The loss is great to you, but to me it is much greater. Here is my little ones sighing out that mournful complaint, "What shall we do? For Papy is gone."

You may judge for yourself the distriss I am in.  Your brother was sick five weeks with a long billious attack fever [possibly malaria causing jaundice]. Then a nervis fever [possibly typhoid causing delirium] set in which put a period to his life.  He was exercised with great pain through the whole of his sickness and often said he should never get well.

I asked him is he was willin to die.  He said he was. That was a great sattisfaction to me.  I often told him I should be willing to part with him, as my loss was his unspeakable gain. That if God saw fit to take him away in the midst of his days, I desire to acquiess in it.

He often told me that I should take good care of the children, which words drew tears from my afflicted eyes.  He was much concerned about Moses for fear he would not have good learning. He often called him to his bed and would talk to him til it seemed that his little heart would break.  He often called the little girl and gave them good council and told them he was going to leave them, which word pierced Fanny to the very heart.

He died 26th of October in the 39th year of his age.  My Mamma died 30th September with a billious fever.  She lived only seven days after she was taken.

I would inform you of our health which is good at presant, through devine goodness.  I have been better this fall than usual.  My brother desired me to write to you in regard to what Mr. Hawks owed you and how long could you conveniently wait for our pay, as we have a payment to make for our farm from the first money we collect.  That is if you can wait.

I wish you to send word now how much it is that we can tell better how to calculate.  I wish you to write the first opportunity & wish you to come and see us, if it is in your power.

I want to see you very much. I hope you will write soon for I want to hear from you and your family very much.  I conclude by subscribing my self your sincere friend and much afflicted sister -
Betsy Hawks

P.S. You must excuse my errors for I have not wrote so much for seven years.  We have this day received a letter westward and they are all well.

-----

This is a gentle reminder how hard life was for those who came before.  Betsy is lucky to have her brother nearby to help.  We know that her son Moses grew up to become a grandfather and thus continue the family line.

See you next time for another family history tyd byt (which is Pilgrim spelling for tidbit)!