J. Alden Hoxie(b. 1912)
Given Name: J. Alden
Event: Type: resided
Date: 1951
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Daniel Beach worked in a Foundry, as a Caster Operator casting copper rods, in Sherburne, New York.
Given Name: Daniel Hugh
Occupation: was a shift supervisor at Sherburne Metal Products Inc.
Death: 7 SEP 1999
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Wesley Vernon
Occupation: was a Technical estimator at Pacific Gas and Electric Company
Date: 1951
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Harold James
Death: SEP 1976
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Sarah is the second cousin once removed of Hezekiah.
Baptism: 13 DEC 1969
Given Name: Sarah
Endowment: --Not Shown--
Temple: --Not Shown--
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Bathsheba is the second cousin of Hezekiah.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: LDS; Merged General Note: Film #: 538159
Title: LDS; Merged General Note: Film #: 538159, Page #: 34, Ordinance #: 35773; Batch #: F600047, Sheet #: 66, Source Call #: 1553321; Batch #: 8834714, Sheet #: 51, Source Call #: 1553311; Batch #: 8625203, Sheet #: 21, Source Call #: 1396232.3; Batch #: F600047, Sheet #: 66, Source Call #: 1553321; Batch #: 8834714, Sheet #: 51, Source Call #: 1553311; Batch #: 8625203, Sheet #: 21, Source Call #: 1396232.3; Batch #: F600047, Sheet #: 66, Source Call #: 1553321; Batch #: 8834714, Sheet #: 51, Source Call #: 1553311; Batch #: 8625203, Sheet #: 21, Source Call #: 1396232.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977
Title: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977 (notebook available in the Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass).
Baptism: 13 DEC 1969
Given Name: Bathsheba
Endowment: --Not Shown--
Temple: --Not Shown--
Death: 2 FEB 1821
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Alternate spelling; Hackse/Hakse/Haxie/Hauksie. He gave one pound for building a Friend's Meeting House on Feb. 7 1720.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: LDS; Merged General Note: Batch #: 8834107
Title: LDS; Merged General Note: Batch #: 8834107, Sheet #: 03, Source Call #: 1553309; Batch #: 7207506, Sheet #: 92, Source Call #: 820256; Film #: 170633, Page #: 674, Ordinance #: 25530.553309; Batch #: 7207506, Sheet #: 92, Source Call #: 820256; Film #: 170633, Page #: 674, Ordinance #: 25530.553309; Batch #: 7207506, Sheet #: 92, Source Call #: 820256; Film #: 170633, Page #: 674, Ordinance #: 25530.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Sandwich, MA VR
Title: Vital Records of Sandwich, Massachusetts gives surname of Lodawick parent of Bethshua, Gideon, and Joseph as Hackse or Hakse, as well these children.nt of Bethshua, Gideon, and Joseph as Hackse or Hakse, as well these children.nt of Bethshua, Gideon, and Joseph as Hackse or Hakse, as well these children.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Genealogical Dictionary of New England Settlers
Title: Gen. Dictionary of New England Volume 2 page 385 gives Haxie, or Hauksie for surnames of Lodowick. As well as Lodowick and Mary's children; Gideon, Hezekiah, John, and Joseph. By James Savage??e for surnames of Lodowick. As well as Lodowick and Mary's children; Gideon, Hezekiah, John, and Joseph. By James Savage??e for surnames of Lodowick. As well as Lodowick and Mary's children; Gideon, Hezekiah, John, and Joseph. By James Savage??.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977
Title: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977 (notebook available in the Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass).
Baptism: 20 JUL 1989
Given Name: Gideon
Endowment: --Not Shown--
Event: on the "old lot" at Spring Hill, near the brook, east side, bought from John Briggs
Type: resided
Occupation: followed his father's vocation, a hatter
Temple: --Not Shown--
Death: AFT 1740 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts Colony
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Mary
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: LDS; Merged General Note:Batch #: 8834107
Title: LDS; Merged General Note:Batch #: 8834107, Sheet #: 10, Source Call #: 1553309; Film #: 449522, Page #: 18, Ordinance #: 5622. .553309; Film #: 449522, Page #: 18, Ordinance #: 5622. .553309; Film #: 449522, Page #: 18, Ordinance #: 5622. .
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977
Title: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977 (notebook available in the Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass).
Baptism: 18 MAR 1966
Given Name: Content
Endowment: --Not Shown--
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Jashub Wing ye Son of Daniel Wing and Anne his wife Was Born the 30th day of the first mo 1674[CI:434:?4:CI]
Note: Bristol Co. Deeds 48:407 has a Deed from Jashub to his son Joseph, dated 20 JAN 1745/6; acknowledged at Barnstable 30 DEC 1746 & recorded at Bristol 22 OCT 1765.[CI:3503:?4:CI]
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: WFA, Owl
Title: The Owl published Quarterly from 1899-1934, annually from 1939; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 1998 (Wing Family of America, Inc.)6; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 19986; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 1998. Wing Family of America, Inc.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Raymond T. Wing
Title: GEDCOM file imported 2002. Updated: Sun Nov 28 12:00:14 1999 Contact: Raymond T. WingHome Page: Descendants of Matthew Wingaymond T. Wing Home Page: Descendants of Matthew Wingaymond T. Wing Home Page: Descendants of Matthew Wing.
Given Name: Jashub
Event: Type: resided
Date: 1700
Place: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Note: Jashub was admitted a townsman in Sandwich in 1700... Prior to his marriage March 10, 1697-8, by the death of his father, Jashub became possessed of the homestead estate of Daniel Wing, which describes it as "lands, meadows, goods, chattels, sheep houses, barns, fences, etc.," and making provision that Jashub must care for and maintain his mother Anna, as long as she remains a widow of his deceased father. Jashub was also executor of his father's estate, although a young man only twenty-four years of age. The late Newell Hoxie states that "Jashub Wing lived on a farm in Sandwich west of the Alms House Farm and that the present house was built in 1737." At the present time, nothing but an ancient excavation of a cellar remains to mark the spot, now grown up with small timber and bushes. Prof. Henry Newell Hoxie says the house stood near the foot of "Brown Bread Hill," and that it was standing as late as 1887.[CI:1190:?4:CI]
Event: Type: church membersh
Place: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Death: AFT 30 DEC 1746 of Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Will: Date: 30 AUG 1725
Place: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Note: written before he remarried. Mentions three sons Daniel, Joseph & Samuel (only son not yet 21), daughter Experience. brother in law Gideon Hoxie Sole Executor & guardian of Samuel.[CI:2484:?4:CI]
Reference: OWL #26
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Son of John Wing and Deborah (Bacheldor) Wing.
Daniel became active in the fishing business on the Herring River, now the Cape Cod Canal. He also participated in financing a town mill. His house was located near the center of the present Sandwich village in what is referred to as the heritage area.
By 1655 Daniel and other prominent citizens were involved in serious religious dissension, opposing the church authorities in Plymouth. Daniel was fined for supporting newly arrived Quakers. He refused to take a loyalty oath aimed against Quaker sympathizers. The scenario became ugly with public whippings and brandings. Disgusted, Daniel left the Puritan denomination of his father and grandfather, which had become as intolerant of others as the Church of England had been towards Puritans and Separatists themselves. He joined the Quakers who in 1658 established a Friends meeting at Spring Hill in Sandwich, the first in America. His brothers, John Jr. and Stephen followed later.[CI:264:?4:CI]
The importance and influence of this movement to the Wing family of America has been incalculable. The families of Daniel and Stephen Wing were among the first eighteen families to embrace the new religious teachings, demanding freedom of conscience and a separation of church and state...
The first time the name of Daniel Wing appears upon the Plymouth court records, and in fact, the first time any entry appears relative to the persecution of the Sandwich Quakers, was in March, 1657-8. It reads:
"March 2, 1657-8. Peter Gaunt, Daniel Wing, Ralph Allin, Junior, and William Allin, being summoned, appeared to answer for a tumultuose carriage att a meeting of the Quakers at Sandwich. These being admoninshed in that respect, were cleared: Notwithstanding for their irreverent carrying themselves before the Court, coming in before them with their hats on, were fined twenty shillings apiece."
June 1, 1658, the Plymouth Court records recite: "Att this Court Robert Harper, Ralph Allin, Senr., John Allin, Tho: Greenfield, Ed. Perry, Richard Kerby, Junr., William Allin, Thomas Urs, William Gifford, George Allin, Matthew Allin, Daniel Wing, Jonn Jenkins and George Web, all of Sandwich, being summoned, appeared to give a reason for their refusing to take the oath of fidelitie to this government and unto the state of England, which againe being tendered them in oppen Court, they refused, saying they held it unlawfull to take any oath att all. John Newland was likewise summoned and Thomas Johnson, but being lame appeered not. George Webb engaged to depart the government in a short time; the others liable to pay the fine in that case were amerced."
The disfranchisement of Daniel Wing and his brother Stephen from citizenship in the Plymouth Colony because of their religious convictions occurred in October, 1658. The records follows: Oct. 2, 1658. Daniell Winge was fined £5 for refusing to take the oath of fidelity."
"Oct. 2, 1658. Whereas, the Govr, Mr. Tho. Prince, with some other of the majistrates, were appointed & with full power authorized by the Court held at Plymouth in June, to make enquiry into and redresse of sundry grievances lying upon sundry of the ancient inhabitants of Sandwich, express't in a petition for that end unto the Court, under the hands of sundry of them, the inhabitants therefore being assembled together on the twenty-seventh of August, 1658 and the matter enquired into by the Gov'r with the rest as aforesaid, and finding sundry of the inhabitants assuming power to acte wherein they have noe right soe to doe by reason theire no legall admittance as inhabitants according to order bearing date the third of Cotober, 1659, viz: Ralph Allin, Senr, Tho. Euer, Tho. Greenfield, Richard Kerby, Junr, Henery Saunders, Matthew Allin, John Jenkins, Daniell Winge, Steven Winge have therefore ordered that those men aforesaid, and every of them shall henceforth have no power to acte in any town meeting, till better evidence appear of their legal admittance, or to claim title or interest in any towne privelidges as townes men, according to the Court orders aforesaid: and this order to take hold of any others beside whoe shall appear to have noe legall admittance as aforesaid:"...
The magnitude of these (and other) fines we can only comprehend when we recall that £5 represented the earnings of an ordinary man for a whole year.
At about this period, peculiar proceedings were resorted to by the relatives of Daniel Wing to relieve him from the payments of these excessive fines and to conserve what property he had remaining to his family. Under an old English statute, a man might be declared legally dead by the courts and his property made over to his heirs. It was in effect equivalent to a modern proceeding in bankruptcy. Threatened with financial ruin by the repeated fines imposed upon him, the shrewd old Quaker, while unyielding in his religious convictions, took advantage of this now almost forgotten law and caused his estate to be administered in his own life time. His brother, John, then of Yarmouth, seems to have conducted the proceedings for him. From the fact that Daniel, in his will made thirty-nine years later, left the bulk of his property to his younger children, born after the episode of 1659, we infer that his older children continued to enjoy the fruits of his first acquired estate.
Here follows the Court Record of the peculiar transaction:[CI:3087:?4:CI]
Daniel became active in the fishing business on the Herring River, now the Cape Cod Canal. He also participated in financing a town mill. His house was located near the center of the present Sandwich village in what is referred to as the heritage area.
By 1655 Daniel and other prominent citizens were involved in serious religious dissension, opposing the church authorities in Plymouth. Daniel was fined for supporting newly arrived Quakers. He refused to take a loyalty oath aimed against Quaker sympathizers. The scenario became ugly with public whippings and brandings. Disgusted, Daniel left the Puritan denomination of his father and grandfather, which had become as intolerant of others as the Church of England had been towards Puritans and Separatists themselves. He joined the Quakers who in 1658 established a Friends meeting at Spring Hill in Sandwich, the first in America. His brothers, John Jr. and Stephen followed later.[CI:264:?4:CI]
The importance and influence of this movement to the Wing family of America has been incalculable. The families of Daniel and Stephen Wing were among the first eighteen families to embrace the new religious teachings, demanding freedom of conscience and a separation of church and state...
The first time the name of Daniel Wing appears upon the Plymouth court records, and in fact, the first time any entry appears relative to the persecution of the Sandwich Quakers, was in March, 1657-8. It reads:
"March 2, 1657-8. Peter Gaunt, Daniel Wing, Ralph Allin, Junior, and William Allin, being summoned, appeared to answer for a tumultuose carriage att a meeting of the Quakers at Sandwich. These being admoninshed in that respect, were cleared: Notwithstanding for their irreverent carrying themselves before the Court, coming in before them with their hats on, were fined twenty shillings apiece."
June 1, 1658, the Plymouth Court records recite: "Att this Court Robert Harper, Ralph Allin, Senr., John Allin, Tho: Greenfield, Ed. Perry, Richard Kerby, Junr., William Allin, Thomas Urs, William Gifford, George Allin, Matthew Allin, Daniel Wing, Jonn Jenkins and George Web, all of Sandwich, being summoned, appeared to give a reason for their refusing to take the oath of fidelitie to this government and unto the state of England, which againe being tendered them in oppen Court, they refused, saying they held it unlawfull to take any oath att all. John Newland was likewise summoned and Thomas Johnson, but being lame appeered not. George Webb engaged to depart the government in a short time; the others liable to pay the fine in that case were amerced."
The disfranchisement of Daniel Wing and his brother Stephen from citizenship in the Plymouth Colony because of their religious convictions occurred in October, 1658. The records follows: Oct. 2, 1658. Daniell Winge was fined £5 for refusing to take the oath of fidelity."
"Oct. 2, 1658. Whereas, the Govr, Mr. Tho. Prince, with some other of the majistrates, were appointed & with full power authorized by the Court held at Plymouth in June, to make enquiry into and redresse of sundry grievances lying upon sundry of the ancient inhabitants of Sandwich, express't in a petition for that end unto the Court, under the hands of sundry of them, the inhabitants therefore being assembled together on the twenty-seventh of August, 1658 and the matter enquired into by the Gov'r with the rest as aforesaid, and finding sundry of the inhabitants assuming power to acte wherein they have noe right soe to doe by reason theire no legall admittance as inhabitants according to order bearing date the third of Cotober, 1659, viz: Ralph Allin, Senr, Tho. Euer, Tho. Greenfield, Richard Kerby, Junr, Henery Saunders, Matthew Allin, John Jenkins, Daniell Winge, Steven Winge have therefore ordered that those men aforesaid, and every of them shall henceforth have no power to acte in any town meeting, till better evidence appear of their legal admittance, or to claim title or interest in any towne privelidges as townes men, according to the Court orders aforesaid: and this order to take hold of any others beside whoe shall appear to have noe legall admittance as aforesaid:"...
The magnitude of these (and other) fines we can only comprehend when we recall that £5 represented the earnings of an ordinary man for a whole year.
At about this period, peculiar proceedings were resorted to by the relatives of Daniel Wing to relieve him from the payments of these excessive fines and to conserve what property he had remaining to his family. Under an old English statute, a man might be declared legally dead by the courts and his property made over to his heirs. It was in effect equivalent to a modern proceeding in bankruptcy. Threatened with financial ruin by the repeated fines imposed upon him, the shrewd old Quaker, while unyielding in his religious convictions, took advantage of this now almost forgotten law and caused his estate to be administered in his own life time. His brother, John, then of Yarmouth, seems to have conducted the proceedings for him. From the fact that Daniel, in his will made thirty-nine years later, left the bulk of his property to his younger children, born after the episode of 1659, we infer that his older children continued to enjoy the fruits of his first acquired estate.
Here follows the Court Record of the peculiar transaction:[CI:3087:?4:CI]
Note: The inventory of "Daniel Wing late of Sandwich who deceased the 10th day of march 1697/8" was taken by William Bassett and Thomas Smith, on 21 March, 1697/8.[CI:2244:?4:CI]
Note: The descendants of Daniel and Stephen Wing have nearly all been connected with the society calling themselves Friends. The place in Sandwich where they have from the first worshiped, is near Spring Hill, about three miles eastward from the central village.
There, in the midst of a thickly settled neighborhood of the same faith, now rises the neat and commodious house of worship, which has succeeded one or two less costly structures before it. It has no spire, but being on an eminence can be seen from afar. It is divided into two parts, for the men and women respectively, and a partition is so contrived that it can be let down between them on such occasions as require separate meetings. The seats, which are occupied by the ministers, are three in number, gradually ascending one above the other, extending on each side of this partition, and divided by it, so as to accommodate the male and female preachers. On the days when the writer was present (1874), the house was well filled with intelligent worshipers, and the preachers' seats were occupied by about a dozen men and women of a venerable and devout aspect, inhabitants of Sandwich, and during the week engaged in ordinary employments.
Here, for six generations, this people have worshiped God according to their simple forms, little affected by the changes of the outer world, and sincerely witnessing for their original principles. Even during our first Revolutionary and the late Civil Wars, though they showed in many ways on which side their warm sympathies were, they could not be induced to act inconsistently with their peculiar tenets. In 1692 the liberty of conscience which had been secured to them only by royal order was guaranteed by the new charter, and they were no longer called upon to support other establishments. Near the house of worship are two cemeteries, the oldest of which is now filled with graves, which, however, are invisible above the smooth green turf, in accordance with the principle formerly entertained that monuments and inscriptions were too generally expressions of an ostentatious and flattering spirit. In the more recently constructed graveyard low tombstones are allowed, on which may be inscribed only the names of the deceased with the dates of their birth and death. We seek in vain, therefore, to identify the precise spot in which the dust of any one of the family in its earlier generations now reposes. We only know that within that ancient enclosure are probably buried more of the name than can be found in any other in America.[CI:2289:?4:CI]
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: WFA, Owl
Title: The Owl published Quarterly from 1899-1934, annually from 1939; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 1998 (Wing Family of America, Inc.)6; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 19986; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 1998. Wing Family of America, Inc.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Pierce, Frederick, Batchelder Gen.
Title: Pierce, Frederick Clifton, Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy. Descendants of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, of England, a Leading Non-conformist, who settled the town of New Hampton, N.H. and Joseph, Henry, Joshua and John Batcheller of Essex Co., Massachusetts
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 12 JAN 1999 (Chicago, by the author, W.B.Conkey Company, 1898.)ts of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, of England, a Leading Non-conformist, who settled the town of New Hampton, N.H. and Joseph, Henry, Joshua and John Batcheller of Essex Co., Massachusetts
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 12 JAN 1999ts of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, of England, a Leading Non-conformist, who settled the town of New Hampton, N.H. and Joseph, Henry, Joshua and John Batcheller of Essex Co., Massachusetts
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 12 JAN 1999. Chicago, by the author, W.B.Conkey Company, 1898.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Savage, James, Gen. Dic. of New Eng
Title: James Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register. vol. I & II. pub. 1860, vol. III. pub. 1861, vol. IV. pub. 1862
REFN: 26
TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume
DATE: 7 MAY 1999 (Boston, Little, Brown and Company; reprinted by Higginson Book Co., Salem, MA, c1995)gland, Showing Three Generations of Those who came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register. vol. I & II. pub. 1860, vol. III. pub. 1861, vol. IV. pub. 1862
REFN: 26
TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume
DATE: 7 MAY 1999gland, Showing Three Generations of Those who came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register. vol. I & II. pub. 1860, vol. III. pub. 1861, vol. IV. pub. 1862
REFN: 26
TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume
DATE: 7 MAY 1999. Boston, Little, Brown and Company; reprinted by Higginson Book Co., Salem, MA, c1995.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Torrey, Clarence A., NE Marr. bef. 1699
Title: Torrey, Clarence Almon, New England Marriages Prior to 1700
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 30 DEC 1998 Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co. (1985,reprinted 1990)
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 30 DEC 1998
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 30 DEC 1998. Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co. (1985,reprinted 1990).
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Internet web site
Title: Internet World Wide Web site; REFN: 42; TYPE: Manuscript; DATE: 30 DEC 1998EC 1998EC 1998.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: NEHGS, Register
Title: New England Histoical and Genealogical Register
REFN: 26
TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume
DATE: 1 JAN 1999
REFN: 26
TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume
DATE: 1 JAN 1999
REFN: 26
TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume
DATE: 1 JAN 1999.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Raymond T. Wing
Title: GEDCOM file imported 2002. Updated: Sun Nov 28 12:00:14 1999 Contact: Raymond T. WingHome Page: Descendants of Matthew Wingaymond T. Wing Home Page: Descendants of Matthew Wingaymond T. Wing Home Page: Descendants of Matthew Wing.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Mayflower Descendant
Title: George Ernest Bowman, ed. (vol. 1-34); Alicia Crane Williams (v. 35-), The Mayflower Descendant vol. 1, 1899 - vol. 34 (1937); vol. 35 (1985) -; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 2 JAN 1999 (Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Inc.)he Mayflower Descendant vol. 1, 1899 - vol. 34 (1937); vol. 35 (1985) -; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 2 JAN 1999 (Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Inc.)he Mayflower Descendant vol. 1, 1899 - vol. 34 (1937); vol. 35 (1985) -; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 2 JAN 1999 (Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Inc.)
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Stratton, Eugene A., Plymouth Col. Hist & People
Title: Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony: Its History & People, 1620-1691
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 23 APR 1999 (Ancestry Publishing)91
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 23 APR 199991
REFN: 1
TYPE: Book, Simple
DATE: 23 APR 1999. Ancestry Publishing.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Caroline Lewis Kardell & Russell A. Lovell, Jr. Vital Records
Title: Caroline Lewis Kardell & Russell A. Lovell, Jr. Vital Records of Sandwich, Massachusetts to 1885
REFN: 54; TYPE: Vital Rec., N.Eng.; DATE: 28 APR 1999 (3 Vols. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, 1996)ch, Massachusetts to 1885 REFN: 54; TYPE: Vital Rec., N.Eng.; DATE: 28 APR 1999ch, Massachusetts to 1885 REFN: 54; TYPE: Vital Rec., N.Eng.; DATE: 28 APR 1999. 3 Vols. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, 1996.
Given Name: Daniel
Event: Type: resided
Date: 28 JUN 1640
Place: Sandwich, Plymouth Colony
Note: June 28, 1640, Andrew Hallet, being about to remove to Yarmouth, conveyed certain landed property to Daniel Wing, the instrument being witnessed by John Wing and Edward Dillingham. This was undoubtedly a farm in the immediate neighborhood of the parental mansion. The house in which he resided was probably not far removed from the spot supposed to be the residence of his father. This is the oldest known deed to property in Sandwich.[CI:2227:?4:CI]
About a mile from Sandwich, nestling at the foot of hills at the head of the lower pond, surrounded by a growth of shrubbery and trees, stands the ancient Daniel Wing house. Its age is still problematical. Daniel purchased the land upon which it stands of Andrew Hallett in 1640. In September, the year following, he married Hannah Swift. It is probable that he immediately set about building his home, and that it is in this house that his twelve children were born; that it was here that he brought down the wrath of the Plymouth authorities upon himself by "entertaining Quakers," and that it was within its walls that he died, March 10, 1697. It is to be regretted that this ancient seat of the family has, within the present generation, passed into the hands of strangers. It was the property at the time of our visit in July of the New York sculptor, F. Edwin Elwell. Mr. Elwell has made some modern improvements upon the house, built a porch around it, etc., and uses it for a summer home.
This old homestead, of interest to hundreds of the descendants of Daniel Wing, scattered throught the land, was first sold out of the family to Mr. Elwell by the heirs of Ebenezer Wing. Mr. Wing died at Sandwich in 1859, a bachelor. His line of descent was through Paul,6 Zaccheus,5 Daniel,4 to Daniel,3 the builder. It is probable that the property came down to Ebenezer through his ancestors we have named.[CI:2474:?4:CI]
Event: Type: Inventory of Es
Date: 3 MAY 1659
Place: Sandwich, Plymouth Colony
Note: On 3 May, 1659, "the following Inventory was prsented to the Court and attested to by John Wing and Steven Winge as being a true Inventory of a smale estate Confeirmed to the Children of Daniell Wing;" The real estate was: "a Dwelling house . . . . ten acrees of upland betwixt three or foure Acrees Improved . . . . three acrees of meddow"
"The Court hath likewise taken Cecuritie for the estate to bee forth Coming; of John Winge for the use of the said Children"[CI:1915:?4:CI]
Event: Type: Inventory of Es
Date: 21 MAR 1697/98
21 MAR 1697
Place: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Note: The inventory of "Daniel Wing late of Sandwich who deceased the 10th day of march 1697/8" was taken by William Bassett and Thomas Smith, on 21 March, 1697/8. The real estate was: "one Shear in Scorton Neck" £25; "all the Rest of his lands and meadow ground & housing" £200. Jacob Wing made oath to the inventory, 5 April, 1698[CI:1914:?4:CI]
Event: Type: Administration
Date: 11 APR 1698
Place: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Event: Type: court case (civ
Date: 2 MAR 1657/58
2 MAR 1657
Place: Sandwich, Plymouth Colony
Event: Type: military muster
Date: AUG 1643
Place: Sandwich, Plymouth Colony
Death: 10 MAR 1697/98 Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Burial: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Will: Date: 10 MAR 1697/98
10 MAR 1697
Place: Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Reference: OWL #5
Change: Date: 2 Feb 2005
Note: Son of Jashub Wing and Ann (Hoxsie) Wing.
Note: Joseph Wing son of the sd Jashub and Anne Wing was born the third day of may Anno dom 1706[CI:509:?4:CI]
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977
Title: Mabel Gould Demers Hinkley of Portland, ME 1977 (notebook available in the Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass)he Barnstable, Mass).
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: WFA, Owl
Title: The Owl published Quarterly from 1899-1934, annually from 1939; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 1998 (Wing Family of America, Inc.)6; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 19986; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 30 DEC 1998. Wing Family of America, Inc.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Raymond T. Wing
Title: GEDCOM file imported 2002. Updated: Sun Nov 28 12:00:14 1999 Contact: Raymond T. WingHome Page: Descendants of Matthew Wingaymond T. Wing Home Page: Descendants of Matthew Wingaymond T. Wing Home Page: Descendants of Matthew Wing.
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Mayflower Descendant
Title: George Ernest Bowman, ed. (vol. 1-34); Alicia Crane Williams (v. 35-), The Mayflower Descendant vol. 1, 1899 - vol. 34 (1937); vol. 35 (1985) -; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 2 JAN 1999 (Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Inc.)he Mayflower Descendant vol. 1, 1899 - vol. 34 (1937); vol. 35 (1985) -; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 2 JAN 1999 (Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Inc.)he Mayflower Descendant vol. 1, 1899 - vol. 34 (1937); vol. 35 (1985) -; REFN: 26; TYPE: Book, Multi-Volume; DATE: 2 JAN 1999 (Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, Inc.)
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Internet web site
Title: Internet World Wide Web site; REFN: 42; TYPE: Manuscript; DATE: 30 DEC 1998EC 1998EC 1998.
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: Caroline Lewis Kardell & Russell A. Lovell, Jr. Vital Records
Title: Caroline Lewis Kardell & Russell A. Lovell, Jr. Vital Records of Sandwich, Massachusetts to 1885
REFN: 54; TYPE: Vital Rec., N.Eng.; DATE: 28 APR 1999 (3 Vols. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, 1996)ch, Massachusetts to 1885 REFN: 54; TYPE: Vital Rec., N.Eng.; DATE: 28 APR 1999ch, Massachusetts to 1885 REFN: 54; TYPE: Vital Rec., N.Eng.; DATE: 28 APR 1999. 3 Vols. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, 1996.
Source: (Death)
Abbreviation: LDS Ancestral File 4.16
Title: Ancestral File, version 4.16; REFN: 68; TYPE: Lds Church; DATE: 12 JAN 1999AN 1999AN 1999
Given Name: Joseph
Event: Type: resided
Date: ABT 1728
Place: Dartmouth, Bristol, Massachusetts
Note: We assume, from that circumstances that his father Jashub was a widower, his elder brother Daniel a bachelor, and his younger brother Samuel and sister Experience still minors, and that Joseph brought his bride to the father's house in Sandwich and kept the household for him, and that in this way, Jashub met Deborah's sister, the widow Dorothy Wing, and married her.
Joseph Wing, after the birth of his oldest child, Anna, and before the birth of his second child Savory, in 1729, seems to have removed from Sandwich to Dartmouth, and it is believed he settled in that part of Dartmouth now called Acushnet. The birth records of all of his seven children, with the exception of Anna, are found in Dartmouth[CI:3481:?4:CI].
Event: Type: birth2 (conflic
Date: 8 MAY 1706
Death: AFT 23 OCT 1765 Dartmouth, Bristol, Massachusetts
Reference: OWL #98
Change: Date: 2 Feb 2005
Note: Mercy (Hoxey) Webb daughter of Peleg Hoxey and Frances (Pittman) Hoxey.
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Bruce H. Richardson
Title: GEDCOM file imported 2002. Rich Ged Com Contact: Bruce H. Richardsonbhr@charter.net>bhr@charter.net>
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: Jerry W. Wilson
Title: GEDCOM file imported on 9 Oct 2002.; Van Patten Ancestry: Updated: Wed Oct 2 01:03:24 2002 Contact: Jerry W. WilsonHome Page: Van Petten, Van Patten & Van Patter Ancestryd Oct 2 01:03:24 2002 Contact: Jerry W. Wilson Home Page: Van Petten, Van Patten & Van Patter Ancestryd Oct 2 01:03:24 2002 Contact: Jerry W. Wilson Home Page: Van Petten, Van Patten & Van Patter Ancestry
Source: (Birth)
Abbreviation: The Hoxie Family-Three Centuries in America
Title: Leslie Ray Hoxie, The Hoxie Family-Three Centuries in America (1950)Page: p. 25
Given Name: Mercy
Death: 18 FEB 1847 Hickory, Lake County, Illinois
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Savory
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Dorothy
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Joshub
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Josephine
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Source: (Individual)
Abbreviation: James M. Parker; Imported GEDCOM file
Title: GEDCOM file imported on 22 Jan 2002. Subject: Linville / Prosser / Soule / Wing; Author: James M. Parker; Uploaded By: JPARK10; Date: 05/27/96le / Wing; Author: James M. Parker; Uploaded By: JPARK10; Date: 05/27/96le / Wing; Author: James M. Parker; Uploaded By: JPARK10; Date: 05/27/96
Given Name: Anna Hoxie
Death: 31 JUL 1797 Smithfield, Providence, Rhode Island
Burial: 3 AUG 1797 Friends Ground, Smithhfield, Providence, Rhode Island
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Given Name: Deborah
Death: Y
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
Note: Son of Benjamin Hoxsie and Mary (Stanton) Hoxsie. Thomas resided in Quonochontaug Neck where he built a house. He served in Rhode Island Senate from 1799 to 1804. He served as Justice of Court of Common Pleas from 1818 to 1822.
Note: HISTORICAL CEMETERY #: WY011 FRIENDS' CEMETERY WESTERLY RI north of OLD POST RD & RT #1 at TEL pole # 7202 20 burials with 7 inscriptions from 1827 to 1870 150 ft x 200 ft in fair condition enclosed with a stone wall; sign in fair condition NOTE: By this name, rather than that of any family, is recognized the burying ground situated on the old post-road leading to Charlestown, on the north side of the road a little east of the Wilcox Church near the late residence of Ephraim Gavitt, Esq. It is substantially enclosed by a wall and furnished with gates. Most of the graves being those of Quakers are without inscribed headstones, though here lie the remains of persons of eminent worth. Six persons not Quakers have inscribed marbles. In this ground lie the remains of two famous Quaker preachers Peter Davis, Sen and Peter Davis, Jr of whom mention is made in the religious history of the town. This cemetery has been recorded but not checked.
Baptism: 8 JUL 1975
Given Name: Thomas
Endowment: --Not Shown--
Temple: --Not Shown--
Death: 24 JUN 1832 Charlestown, Washington, Rhode Island
Burial: Westerly, Washington, Rhode Island
Change: Date: 22 Aug 2003
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