Showing posts with label 1874 John R Rollins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1874 John R Rollins. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

1738 Nathaniel Rollins

Nathaniel Rawlins
Born 1738 in Damariscotta, Maine

From Records of Families of the name Rawlins or Rollins
 In the United States, pages 5-9
Compiled by John R. Rollins
 (Printed 1874 in Lawrence, Mass. By Geo. S. Merrill & Crocker)


    Resided in Newcastle, Me., md. 1st, Lydia Clark; 2d, __________ Chadbourne.  He died before 1783; his sons Eliphalet and Nathaniel sold the farm of 438 acres, on Damariscotta Bay, to Jonathan Jones, Sept. 4th, 1783.  (Source: Lincoln Co. Deeds)

Children

1670 John Rawlins

John Rawlins--Born About 1670?

From Records of Families of the name Rawlins or Rollins
 In the United States, page 17
Compiled by John R. Rollins
 (Printed 1874 in Lawrence, Mass. By Geo. S. Merrill & Crocker)

    Resident of Exeter; removed thence to East Bradford, (now Groveland).  He lived on the river road leading from Groveland to Haverhill, near the old chain ferry, the house in which he resided being yet in a good state of preservation [1873].

Moved to Maine

    He removed with most of his family in 1736 to Damariscotta, Me., where he died, 1776.

Four Marriages and Fourteen Children

    He married first, Mary, daughter of Thomas Savary, July 31, 1722.  His second wife was Mary Glidden; third, Patience Knox; fourth, Anne Hiscock.  The children, fourteen in number, all by his first two wives, were:

1641 Thomas Rollins

From Records of Families of the name Rawlins or Rollins
 In the United States, pages 5-9
Compiled by John R. Rollins
 (Printed 1874 in Lawrence, Mass. By Geo. S. Merrill & Crocker)

Hometown--Bloody Point, New Hampshire
Death--Exeter, New Hampshire

    Thomas lived, also [as his eldest brother, Ichabod], at Bloody Point; was taxed there in 1662 and 1668, and removed to Exeter, N. H., where he remained till his death.  His farm appears to have been located on the old road leading from Exeter to Hampton.  We know but little of him; but one passage, in his life has been preserved, which tends to show that he possessed something of his father's independence, and that his ideas of justice were something in advance of those of his neighbors.  He was one of the Company of Edward Gove, a member of the dissolved Assembly of N. H., 1683, who were found in arms, and endeavoring to excite an insurrection for the overthrow of the arbitrary government of the Royal Governor--Edward Cranfield.

Charged with High Treason

    In order to gain a correct understanding of this effort at rebellion or revolution, it will be necessary to state that after the death of Capt. John Mason, one of the original proprietors of New Hampshire, which occurred in 1635, his widow, weary of the great expense and inadequate returns of the Portsmouth plantation, informed her servants that they must provide for themselves.  Some removed with their goods and cattle; others remained, keeping possession of the buildings and improvements which they henceforward claimed as their own.  The houses at Newichwannoch were consumed by fire, and nothing was left of Mason’s estate but a doubtful interest in the soil.  The people, left without a government, formed themselves, after the example of the people of Exeter, into a body politic; and those of Dover did the same.  By a written instrument, 1640, signed by forty-one persons, they agreed to submit to the laws of England, and such other laws as should be enacted by a majority of their number, until the royal pleasure should be known. [Source is listed at bottom of page but cannot be read.]  

    Matters continued thus until April 14, 1641, when New Hampshire came under the jurisdiction of Massachusetts, and the history of the two plantations, for a period of thirty years, became blended together.  In 1680 a royal commission was brought to Portsmouth, declaring New Hampshire a royal Province.  This was brought about through the influence of Robert Tufton Mason, with the design of recovering the possessions of his ancestor.  The first President under the new Commission (John Cutts), and a majority of the council were in the interest of the people and opposed to Mason’s designs.  The appointment of these men would do very well to disguise, for a time, the real object of the new government, but as their continuance in office would not further Mason’s views, he obtained, in 1682, the appointment of Edward Cranfield.  Arbitrary, needy, and rapacious, Cranfield made no secret of his object, in accepting the office, and openly sought to reciprocate the liberality of Mason, by a devotion to his claim.


    By his commission he was vested with extraordinary powers; he could adjourn, prorogue and dissolve General Courts; had a negative voice on all acts of government, could suspend any of the Council, appoint Judges, and all subordinate officers; and, in short, exercise the powers of Vice-Admiral.

    Within six days after the publication of his Commission, he suspended the popular leaders--Waldron and Martyn.  This was one step towards rendering him odious to the people.  Either from shame or more probably to quiet the popular clamor, he restored them to their places, Nov. 14th.

    The Assembly met the same day, and hoping to detach the Governor from the interests of Mason, they voted him L250.  This put him in good humor for a time; but the opposition of the Assembly to his measures, was so irritating that he adjourned it.  At the next session, the Assembly refused to pass a bill raising money for the support of the government, and he dissolved it.

    The dissolution of the Assembly, a thing before unknown, aggravated the popular discontent, and kindled the resentment of some, in Hampton and Exeter, who headed by Edward Gove, a member of the dissolved Assembly, declared by sound of trumpet for liberty and reformation.

    Gove went from town to town, declaring that the Governor was a traitor, and had exceeded his Commission, and that he would not lay down his arms until matters were set right; and endeavoring to incite the principal men of the Province to join in a confederacy to overthrow the government.

    His project, however, appeared so wild and dangerous, that they not only disapproved it, but informed against him, and assisted in apprehending him.  Hearing of their design, he collected his Company and appeared in arms, but on the persuasion of some of his friends, surrendered.  A special Court was immediately commissioned for his trial, of which Major Waldron sat as Judge, with William Vaughn and Thomas Daniel as Assistants.  The grand jury presented a bill, in which Edward Gove, his son John Gove, and William Healy, of Hampton; Joseph, John and Robert Wadleigh (three brothers), Thomas Rawlins, Mark Baker and John Sleeper, of Exeter, were charged with high treason.

    Gove, who behaved with great insolence before the Court, and pretended to justify his conduct, was convicted and received sentence of death in the usual hideous form.  (The sentence was as follows.--”That the prisoner be carried back to the place whence he came, and from thence be drawn to the place of execution, to be hanged by the neck; be cut down alive; that his entrails be taken out, and burned before his face; that his head be cut off, and his body be divided into four quarters, and that his head and quarter be disposed of, at the King’s pleasure.”--N.H. Historical Collections.  Vol. II, p. 44.

    The Judge, who loved Cranfield no better than did the prisoner, is said to have wept while
pronouncing the sentence.


A Conviction and Pardon

    Gove’s estate was also seized and forfeited to the Crown.  His companions were convicted of being accomplices.  They were all pardoned except Gove, who was sent to the Tower of London, and imprisoned about three years--his sentence having been commuted.

    On his repeated petitions to the King, and by the interest of Randolph with the Earl of Clarendonk, then Lord Chamberlain, he obtained his pardon, and returned home in 1686, with an order to the President and Council to restore his estate.

    Mason, for some time after, endeavored to enforce his claim, and wearied the patience of the colonists by vexatious lawsuits, but with very indifferent success, until such representations were made tot he home government, as to draw down the royal censure, and secure the removal of Cranfield.

    To one of the petitions for his removal we find attached the name of Thomas Rawlins; and his rebellious blood continued to flow in the veins of his descendants, for we find twenty or more of them, at a subsequent period, engaged in rebellion against the arbitrary government of George III, with better success.  He was unsuccessful--therefore a rebel; they successful--therefore patriots.  In the former case, the parties were to be dispossessed of lands and buildings voluntarily relinquished to them by the representative of the original proprietor, and which for years they had cultivated and improved as their own; this was the grievance which they sought to redress; in the latter case, they resisted the principle of taxation without representation.

Marriage and Justice of the Peace

    Rawlins was a Justice of the Peace in 1682.  He married, about 1670, Rachel, daughter of Moses and Alice Cox, of Hampton.  (Moses Cox, born 1594; died at Hampton, May 28, 1687, aged 94.)

Death

    The precise date of his death is not known; his inventory was returned to the Probate office, Nov. 7, 1706.

Children

Thomas,    b. Exeter,    July 14, 1671
Moses,    b. Exeter,    Oct. 14, 1672
Joseph        b. Exeter,    May 6, 1674
Mary,        b. Exeter,    May 8, 1676    married Stephen Page*, of Hampton, Jan. 3, 1701, who died Feb. 1714, in his 37th year.
Benjamin    b. Exeter,    July 6, 1678
Aaron        b. Exeter,    --------------
Samuel    b. Exeter,        1690      
John        b. Exeter,    --------------
Alice,        b. Exeter,    --------------    md. Roger Shaw, of Hampton, March 2, 1705.
Rachel        b. Exeter,    --------------  


*Stephen Page, born May 14, 1677, was son of Thomas and Mary (Hussey) Page, of Hampton.  Stephen’s grandfather, Robert, one of the first settlers of Hampton, was born at Ormsby, Co. Norfolk, England; emigrated to American, 1637.  He was one of the leading men of Hampton, being a member of the first Board of Selectmen; member of the General Assembly, 1657, 1658; and Marshall of the old County of Norfolk.

Source:  James R. Rollins [he uses N.H. Historical Collection. Vol, 13?. p. 44   Story continues on pg. 5-

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Rollins Communication

Gaylene,
I spent a few days on the Internet to see what I could find about this James Rawlen from Sancreed. I'm thinking that he died in Madron, Cornwall, England on the 21st of April in 1673. If this is the same man, then he couldn't have been our guy. But this is just a guess.
I have looked in vain for my copy of John R Rawlins book on the Rawlins/Rollins line. If you have yours handy could you tell me what year he published it? The reason I'm wondering is that there was a transcript done in 1877 of the Sancreed Parish registers, and it may be that he was in contact with this man and that's where he got his information from in thinking James came from Cornwall because there are quite a few Rawling entries there and close by that early.
If you do talk to Susan, will you ask her about her sources? I see her James on the IGI, but am just wondering if she has anything other than the Parish registers to link him with the James we're looking for.
thanks,
z
From: Gaylene Johnson [mailto:gjretired@hotmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2009 11:43 PM
To: merrylu.zeller@gmail.com
Subject: RE: James Rawlin's Father
Merry Lu,

I am so impressed with your timeline and research. I would love to work with you to verify this line. I'd feel a lot better if we could have good sources ourselves. Also, I attend a Salt Lake City Family History group organized by "DearMyrtle" blogger, Pat. She gives research advice to us. She would possibly have good recommendations for us for our search efforts.

The information I have recorded on this line is: James Rollins, Chr 12 Oct 1816, Sancreed, Cornwall, England. A cousin, Susan, an avid genealogist who lives in Pocatello I believe has some sources on this, but I'm not sure. I will try to call her this week and see what she has. (Actually, I better get out the paperwork on this line and make sure she didn't already give me the sources. I'm trying to scan and digitize all my records to get them in one place.) I haven't spent a lot of time on this line, but would like to. James' father, Willyam was chr. 15 Apr 1587, Sancreed, Cornwall, England. His father, Thomas, from Cornwall, born about 1560. It would be interesting and insightful to get these records figured out.

Let's keep in touch. Perhaps, in the next few weeks or so I could come to Cache Valley and meet with you. For now I'd love to keep in touch by email. I noticed you posted a request for a picture of Enoch Param Rollins. Did you get any good responses?

Have you done the same extensive timeline for Enoch Param Rollins as you did on James? I found where he lived on the Winter Quarters site, but have not had the chance to check Nauvoo land records for where he lived on the Mississippi. Do you have any land records on him in Nauvoo?

Last summer I met a woman from Salt Lake who is a descendant from Sophia Wing Philbrook's line. She said Sophia, visiting children in California, wasn't aware that Enoch married Sarah Jane. The family rumor is she never lived with Enoch again, angry because of this. There's also a man who works at the family history center in Draper from this line. His previous emails were vague, but he published a history in their newsletter. I keep thinking I'll go out and talk to him to see if he has any more info, but I do need to organize all the records I have.

Sorry I'm rambling on, but this is an interesting line.

Thanks!
Gaylene Johnson

P. S. I've attached Enoch's Deseret News obit. just in case you don't have it. Also, the Winter Quarters map where he lived at Council Point (near Winter Quarters). I also have all the histories available from DUP that I hope someday to combine and publish a history with all his sources and stories, but feel like there is probably more verification out there. Also, I have many census records saved on him and his family.



From: merrylu.zeller@gmail.com
To: gjretired@hotmail.com
Subject: RE: James Rawlin's Father
Date: Tue, 27 Oct 2009 15:45:29 -0600
Gaylene,
I haven't actually ever been on the New FamilySearch to tell the truth. Who is it showing as James Father? Have you by chance checked his name in the Cornwall parish records? I did a name distribution once for the 1600 in England, and the majority of those with names similar to Rawlins were all located on the
Eastern side of the island. Does your father have a place name other than just Cornwall? We could possibly double check that way. As I've been working to clean up what are obvious errors I've found very little documentation on the line. I think we're lucky that Enoch Perham did most of his family's work so hopefully the generations that he did are accurate, but further than three generations back it seems to get a little bit shaky.
If we're correct on Ichabod's birth, in 1640, and that he emigrated around 1632, and was made a freeman in 1634 he would have had to have been born at least by 1603 because there were only a few instances where men younger than 21 were allowed to sign the freeman oath before that age in Plymouth, and 16 for the Pilgrims in the Massachusetts Bay area. The sources that John R. Rollins quotes in articles that were precursors to his book, (NEHGR 1853) are:
Hon. John Wentworth
Reverend A. H. Quint
T. B. Wyman
H. G. Somersby Esq.
Farmer
Dover Records
I've never found anything on James as far as immigration records go, but I doubt he came to America as early as John R Rawlins speculates (around 1620 if I remember right) because there really wasn't anything (in Ipswich) around that time. I've attached a worksheet I've been adding everything to that I come across with James Rawlins information on it. See what you think, and let me know if you have any ideas.
thanks,
z
From: Gaylene Johnson [mailto:gjretired@hotmail.com]
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 9:30 PM
To: merrylu.zeller@gmail.com
Subject: RE: James Rawlin's Father
Hi Merry Lu,

Thank you so much for replying. This is the first time I've seen a different line. I've had an uneasy feeling there are mistakes on the Rawlins line, but haven't researched it much. I have the Rollins book and he did a great job for his time, but I believe many more records are available now. Do you feel like the line after James is correct on New FamilySearch? It's the same line I have on my file. Have you ever been able to find anything on James immigration? I've searched several lists and haven't come up with anything.

My grandmother is Bertha Rawlins, just two years older than William. I'm curious. Why did William die in Missouri?

You have done amazing research. Let's keep in touch on this line and perhaps someday we could get together.

Thank you so much.

Gaylene Johnson
Sandy, Utah


From: merrylu.zeller@gmail.com
To: vardneen@comcast.net; gjretired@hotmail.com
Subject: RE: James Rawlin's Father
Date: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 17:27:15 -0600
Dear Gaylene,
My name is Merry Lu (Rawlins) Zeller, I am the one who submitted the work on James Rawlins linking him to Edward and Mary Rawlin. If you wish you may go to my blog and see the steps I've taken in finding James and his possible family (http://rawlins-research.blogspot.com/, in particular the entries for August and October of 2005) and see the extraction work I've been able to do. Our family too had the information about James being from Cornwall, information that seems to have originated from John Rodham Rawlins' research in the 1800's as his mention was the earliest I could find recorded. I spent considerable time searching all of the things published by Mr. Rawlins, and found that he left very few sources, other than ones that used Mr. Rawlins as their original source. My next step was to search for immigrants from Cornwall during the early 1600's. There were only 30 some recorded and as it was not an active participant in the Reformation movement I started to search elsewhere, namely Ipswich England, as a hunch that most Puritans/Pilgrims named the areas they arrived in after their homes in England. I searched each parish in an outward circle from Ipswich until I found references to what I thought might perhaps be the James I was looking for. I do not have conclusive proof that this is the link that I have been searching for for the past 10 years, but I didn't want to leave a family unsealed so requested that Aunt JaNeen have the temple work done for this little family that was extracted out of the Groton Parish records, hoping that it was the link to our family as well. Below is the will that I found for Edward Rawlin of Shelley. As you will notice he was also a blacksmith, a skill that James would have likely learned to become a wheelwright in his own stead.
I hope this has been of help to you. If you have any comments, helps or hints they would be most graciously accepted and welcomed.
Sincerely,
Merry Lu Zeller
25 East 200 South
Hyrum, UT 84319
In the Wills from the Archdeaconry of Suffolk: 1629 - 1636 pg 1635 Will # 923
Abstracts of wills contained in Register No 63 and/or file No. 71 of wills proved in the court of the Arch deacon of Suffolk I found:

R(W) Edward Rawlin (X) of Shelley, blacksmith 13 June 1635.
Sick in body. I give and bequeath to my son James the posted bedstead standing in the parlour. I give to my son Edward the bellows in the shop and also the stith*. I bequeath to my son Thomas all my clothes, both linen and woollen. I give to my daughter Mary, wife of Thomas Blosse, 20s. to be paid to her 3 months after my decease, and 5[pounds] to my daughter Anne to be paid at the same time. I give my grandchild Mary Blosse 10s. to buy her a bible. All the residue of my goods, my debts, legacies and funeral charges being paid, I give to my loving wife Mary whom I make sole exrx. Witnesses: Robert Goodwin, Thomas Gravener. Pr at Ipswich 10 July 1635.

R-register copy avail
W-the original is avail
X-his or her mark

* - An anvil; a stithy. [Obs. or Prov. Eng.]
[1913 Webster]
He invented also pincers, hammers, iron crows, and the anvil, or stith. --Holland.
From: JaNeen and Ivard Budge [mailto:vardneen@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 9:22 AM
To: Merry Lu Zeller
Subject: Fw: James Rawlin's Father
Do we know the answer to this lady's question?
Also check out Nathaniel Rawlins and David Walters & Elizabeth Price from Wales or David Fender and Eliza Price from North Carolina. What the heck? I'm too old for this mess. HELP!!!!!
Hope all is well with you!
Love You! Aunt JaNeen

----- Original Message -----
From: Gaylene Johnson
To: vardneen@comcast.net
Sent: Sunday, October 25, 2009 10:32 PM
Subject: James Rawlin's Father
Hi JaNeen Budge,

I'm Gaylene Johnson, a descendent of James Rawlins, through Enoch Param Rollins, Enoch P Rollins & Sarah Jane Walters. The father I have for the original James Rawlins who came to America is Willyam Rowlen, 15 Apr 1587, Sancreed, Cornwall, England. I'm not sure where that info came from.

You have on New FamilySearch that James Rawlin's father is Edward Rawlins, 3 November 1577, Groton, Suffolk, England.

I was wondering if you have the sources. Could I get them from you? This is something I would like to know more about. Have you done a lot of research on the Rollins/Rawlins line? Who do you come through?

Thanks!

Gaylene Johnson