Memorial of Samuel Appleton of Ipswich, Massachusetts: With Genealogical Notices of Some of His DescendantsFor private circulation, 1850 - 183 pages |
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... Eng WALDINGFIELD , SUFFOLK , ENGLAND . Thomas , son ingfield 1586 , son of r of- of John , son of John , son of John Appulton . emigrated to Ipswich , N. E.1635–6 . B Θ OF SAMUEL APPLETON , OF IPSWICH , MASSACHUSETTS ...
... Eng WALDINGFIELD , SUFFOLK , ENGLAND . Thomas , son ingfield 1586 , son of r of- of John , son of John , son of John Appulton . emigrated to Ipswich , N. E.1635–6 . B Θ OF SAMUEL APPLETON , OF IPSWICH , MASSACHUSETTS ...
Page iii
... England , and by Nathan Appleton of Boston , with whom they were deposited , and who has made some additions to them . They have appeared sufficiently valuable to be pre- served in print . They may be considered of some interest in ...
... England , and by Nathan Appleton of Boston , with whom they were deposited , and who has made some additions to them . They have appeared sufficiently valuable to be pre- served in print . They may be considered of some interest in ...
Page v
... before the Boston Mer- cantile Library Association . It is possible that some particulars relating to the family in England may be thought by some to be needlessly multiplied ; whilst by others , embued with more PREFACE . V.
... before the Boston Mer- cantile Library Association . It is possible that some particulars relating to the family in England may be thought by some to be needlessly multiplied ; whilst by others , embued with more PREFACE . V.
Page vi
... England , and their descendants in this country have held reference to blood and descent . We have , very properly , ceased to value the individual for the merits of his ancestors , any further than he can sustain himself by his own ...
... England , and their descendants in this country have held reference to blood and descent . We have , very properly , ceased to value the individual for the merits of his ancestors , any further than he can sustain himself by his own ...
Page 7
... England , emigrated from Waldingfield , in the county of Suffolk , England , in the year 1635. The two parishes of Great and Little Waldingfield are contiguous to each other , about three miles from Sudbury , and four from Groton . From ...
... England , emigrated from Waldingfield , in the county of Suffolk , England , in the year 1635. The two parishes of Great and Little Waldingfield are contiguous to each other , about three miles from Sudbury , and four from Groton . From ...
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Common terms and phrases
aforesaid Apple Appulton argt bequeath unto Bishop of Bangor Capt church Colony comission command Commissioners COUNCIL OF CONNECTICUT County of Suffolk Court daughter decease died Edward Elizabeth England enimy Essex filia forces forty shillings further order garrison give and bequeath Governor Hadley Hartford Hatfield hath heer heerby heirs Henry hundred pounds Indians inscriptions Isaac Appleton Item JOHN ALLYN John Appleton John Wise land Leift letter Lewis Bayly Little Waldingfield Major Pynchon Major Treat married Mary Massachusetts merchant of Boston miles Munninge NATHAN APPLETON Nathaniel Northampton obijt October officers p'sent p'sently Pr SAMUEL APPLETON Preston River Robert Roger Ryece Salem Saltonstall SAMUEL APPLETON Sarah Allen Sir Edmund Andros soldiers South Benfleet Springfield Suffolk sum of forty Thomas Appleton uppon wife William William Appleton Worp ye Councill ye sd ye Town yo's yt ye απαις
Popular passages
Page 168 - Body, and knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die, do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament; that is to Say, principally...
Page 85 - Caley, or such of them as shall be living at the time of the decease of said child ; all which, my mother, brethren, and sisters, are now living in England.
Page 17 - ... those towns were preserved from running the same fate with the rest, wholly, or in part, so lately turned into ashes.
Page 17 - Mosely as stoutly maintaining the middle, and Capt. Poole the other end ; that they were by the resolution of the English instantly beaten off without doing much harm. Capt. Appleton's Serjeant was mortally wounded just by his side, another bullet passing through his own hair, by that whisper telling him that death was very near but doing him no other harm.
Page 153 - Appleton's, and there discoursed and concluded that it was not the town's duty any way to assist that ill method of raising money without a general assembly...
Page 152 - They being at that time driven away from their habitations, and put by from planting for the next year, as well as deprived of what they had in store for the present winter. What numbers of the enemy were slain is uncertain, it was confessed by one Potock, a great...
Page 88 - ... his companion they shot dead upon the place ; by this means giving a sad alarm to the town of their intended mischief, which was instantly fired in all places where there were no garrisons. The poor people having not an officer to lead them, being like sheep ready for the slaughter, and no doubt the whole town had been totally destroyed, but that a report of the plot being carried about over night, Major Treat came from Westfield time enough for their rescue, but wanting boats to transport his...
Page 89 - Mosely's company, but they were so well entertained on all hands where they attempted to break in upon the town that they found it too hot for them, Major Appleton with great courage defending one end of the town, and Capt.
Page 10 - But ordinarily the king doth only make knights and create barons or higher degrees: for as for gentlemen, they be made good cheap in England. For whosoever studieth the laws of the realm, who studieth in the universities, who professeth liberal sciences, and to be short, who can live idly and without manual labour, and will bear the port, charge, and countenance of a gentleman, he shall be called master, for that is the title which men give to esquires and other gentlemen, and shall be taken for...
Page 19 - Governor's vengeance, was allowed the satisfaction of handing him into the boat that was to convey him to his confinement in the Castle. The fact that on this occasion he was one of the council called to the provisional government of the Colony, and also one of the council named in the charter of William and Mary, in 1692, is satisfactory evidence of the confidence reposed in his abilities, integrity, and patriotism. Isaac Appleton, grandson of the preceding, born at Ipswich in 1704, was one of the...