"In 1639 Brown and one Edward Bateman purchased all
of Nequasset (present-day Woolwich, Maine) from the local Wabanaki sachem,
who was known to the English as Robinhood. In 1646 Brown and Bateman sold
Jeremisquam Neck, a large tract on the eastern side of
Nequasset, to James Phips and John White. This was apparently
the same John White who had served as apprenticeship sugar refiner under
Robert Aldworth. Aldworth had established the first sugar house in Bristol
in 1609, processing cane sugar from Madeira, the Azores, and Brazil. The
venture flourished until the mid-1630s, when Aldworth's death, combined with
competition and a decline in prices, seriously damaged the refinery business.
It is likely that White then found himself unemployed and migrated to Maine
to work on another Aldworth enterprise." (The New England Knight)
"With James Phips, bought of Edward Bateman of Kennebec
a certain large tract of land near the river of Kennebec at a place called
Negwusset, lying between that and the river called Munsweague which was the
easterly bound, there living many years, built houses and otherwise improved
it, and died seized of the whole except a certain neck of land called Jeremiah
Squam's Neck which they deeded in 1679 to Sir William Phips" John and
William Haynes witnesses. (Pope's, Pioneers; Genealogical Dictionary
of Maine and New Hampshire)
April 23, 1654, took oath of fidelity to the Commonwealth
of New England
September 5, 1665; "The residents at various points
within the Duke's territory were summoned to appear and submit to the newly
inaugurated government. Sagadahoc sent in William Frieswell, and Richard
Hammond --- undoubtedly the trader near Hockomock at Stinson's Point, on
the margin of the Cross river to Bath --- a
resident; John Miller, Robert Morgan, Thomas Parker, Marcus Parsons, Thomas
Watkins, John White, --- all probably neighbors of Hammond and residents
at the mouth of Sheepscot River." (Ancient Dominions of Maine - Sewall)
November 1669; Son David and John Sr. witnessed Miller
to Pearson. (Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire)
June 1676; Witnessed Thomas Steven's deed to Lancelot
Pierce. (Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire)
1683; Purchase heirs to Wharton. (Genealogical
Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire)
Sir Wm. Phipps' legatee, Mary, claimed the tract--"Cherysequamy
Neck (sp)"--"as by deed from John White and Mary, his wife, formerly the wife
of James Phipps of Kennebeck deceased; dated Oct. 4, 1679." [Me. H. and G.
Reg. VIII, 202.]
John White, partner of James Phipps, who married his widow;
died on the premises at Sheepscot after the first Indian War; the survivors
of his eight children were Peter, born 1653, John, born 1655, Benjamin and
Phillip, born 1662, and Sarah (Lane)." (Pioneers on Maine Rivers)
February 1704-5; Widow Mrs. Mary Howard.
How many children hers? Surely Phillip and probably Benjamin both named
in Lady Phips' will. Four of the surviving children d.s.p. before 1722,
evidence includes John Jr., and David. (Genealogical Dictionary of
Maine and New Hampshire)
1722; Peter White sold one half of his portion (at Phips
Point), which was two fifths of the moiety or half of the tract, to Paul
Dudley. He testified to the foregoing facts and that his father had eight
children of whom four had died without issue. His portion was that of the
eldest son. [York Deeds XI, 15.] Peter gave his age as 67 in 1727, which
places his birth about 1660. Peter was of Milton, innholder there 1686,
baptised with wife Rachel in June 1730, both over 70. (Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire)
York Reg. 12-376 March 20, 1727. John Lane calling himself then of Boston conveys all right inherited from his mother Sarah Lane deceased who was daughter of John White deceased at Nequasset in Kennebec, purchased by John White and James Phips of Edward Bateman upon part whereof John White lived and died. Other notes show that this John Lane was the son in law of John Wallis and so the son of James Lane. This John White was the son of Nicholas White who came early to this country, who in 1639 was employed by Trelawney in fishing voyages. His time was up in 1640. He was perhaps of Dorchester in 1652. See Suff. Deeds I 228. He owned 1/2 of House Island, Portland Harbor, also land on Mare Point and Islands. John White had married before 1679 (how long before cannot say) Mary, widow of James Phips, who was mother to Sir William Phips the Governor. As the next deed Y.R. XII. 1722, Peter White of Milton, eldest son of John White, who as he states, was a partner of James Phips, recites that his father left eight children, of whome now (1722) but four survive, and conveys 2-5 of the property, the above would seem to show that this wonderful woman, who is said to have borne twenty-six children, had eight of them by her second husband John White. Mr. John White deposes, 19 Dec. 1682, that he was aged then 58, and that 22 years before he was servant to Alexander Shapleigh. This accounts for John White being in the neighborhood of Kennebec, for Nicholas Shapleigh bought Damarscove Island there and doubtless set him down. (NEHGS Historical Register)
Biographers of Sir William Phips, Emerson Baker and
John Reid recorded in their 1998 book, The New England Knight, that John
White's marriage to Mary Phips was believed to have been his first marriage,
"This probably was White's first marriage, for his eight surviving children
were all born after this point. Only six of the children are known
by name. Therefore in Phips's extended family fourteen children reached adulthood.
Others may have been stillborn or have died young, but
considering the low rate of infant and childhood mortality in early New England,
it is difficult to believe that Phips was one of twenty-six children born
to one mother."
John White Family
Generation No. 1
1. JOHN2 WHITE (son of NICHOLAS WHITE and DEBORAH FORD?)1 was born Abt. 1604 in England - of Bristol area?, and died Bef. 1704 of near Woolwich, Maine2. He married MARY3 Bef. 1661 in Kennebec township, Maine4. Occupation: yeoman, shipbuilder - at work on Sheepscot River with William Phipps5
Children of John White (and Mary Phips?)
i. PAUL WHITE, 1681 lived Milton, Massachusetts7
ii. JOHN WHITE8,
d. Bef. 17228. September 5, 1665;
"Sheepscot sent in William Dale, William Dyer, Christopher Dyer, Nathaniel
Draper, Thomas Gent, William James, William Marks, John Mason, Thomas Mercer,
Walter Phillips, Moses Pike, Robert Scott, A. Stolger, John Taylor, John White.
(Ancient Dominions of Maine - Sewall)
"John White, and John Lee his son in law, sowed 10 bushells
of wheat, planted 2 bushells of Indian corne, 5 bushells of peas, 17 hed
of Cattell, 16 swine, one horse." Indian losses for attack of
August 13, 1676. (Pioneers on Maine Rivers)
"John White, planter on the east side of the Sheepscot
River; the records of Scituate, where they took refuge in 1676, described
the conditions of the abandoned farms of himself and neighbors at the Eastward.
John Lee was a son in law and Lydia, his only grandchild, married Thomas Leaworthy."
(Pioneers on Maine Rivers)
"Benjamin Bullivant, albeit a hostile commentator
by virtue of his pro-dominion views, described in his journal an incident
that took place
within a few days of Phips's baptism. The background was
the arrest several weeks earlier of Daniel Turrell and John White, a joiner
and the younger half-brother of Phips, for debt at the behest of Joseph Smith.
By 30 January 1690, Turrell and White had already escaped once from prison
and had then been brought before the Massachusetts council to 'Shew Cause
(if any there be) why they should not be remanded to Prison'. Although they
successfully requested a two-day deferral, the two were subsequently returned
to jail, whence they petitioned in March for a further hearing. The
representatives were willing to agree, but the council refused, as Bullivant
noted: The Northend men headed by Sir William Phips, Milbourne and Way, apply
to the Deputies for the discharge of Turrell and White in Execution for a
Just Debt the Deputies vote for theyr discharge the magistrates Opposed,
as being in custody under their Commitment. Sir William Phips, etc.
not Contented with the opinion of the magistrates go personally to the prison,
proffer the keeper 3000 pounds verrily to bear him harmless if he would put
them at large, the Keeper refused and gives as hard Language as he receives."
"Bullivant's account carries a number of significant implications,
especially since his journal found its way into the papers of the Lords of
Trade. It is hardly surprising that Phips intervened on
behalf of his younger half-brother, and Turell was also known to him. Daniel
Turell (or Turill) was a name shared by a father and son - the son being
the one imprisoned in 1690 - who had extensive real-estate transactions in
Boston in this period, particularly in the North End. In 1687, when Mary
Spencer Phips had heard of her husband's success, the property she bought
as the site for their house had been part-owned by the elder Daniel Turell.
Presumably, the purchase meant that an amicable settlement had been reached
in the dispute of 1677 in which the younger Turell had successfully sued
William Phips for 13 pounds/9/_.
The imprisonment of White and Turell had its origins in
a venture of 1684 that corresponded closely with the treasure-seeking activities
being pursued by Phips at the time. Turell and White had formed a company
- with Richard Wharton, Hezekiah Usher, Joseph Smith, Thomas Mitchell, and
'several others' - for a voyage to a wreck off the Bahamas. Wharton's kinsman
Goodwin Wharton was an active treasure seeker in England, described by Keith
Thomas as 'continuously engaged in a treasure quest for which he enlisted
spirts,
fairies and the latest resources of contemporary technology'.
Although Richard Wharton was not known to share Goodwin's talent for speaking
to angels and disembodied spirits, his many commercial and speculative ventures
showed that he was equally zealous for treasure and profit. That Richard
Wharton was also an investor in Phip's Caribbean activities and that Turell
witnessed the agreement of 11 January between Phips and Robert Bronson are
strands of evidence that strongly suggest a relationship between the Phips
and White-Turell voyages in 1684. Indeed, on 14 January 1684, Turell sold
a one-eight share of the sloop Rosebud to Hezekiah Usher, presumably as part
of the undertaking.
Some treasure had been raised by the White-Turell company
by March 1684, when Thomas Mitchell received a doughboy worth 120 pounds
from an individual named John Hand. By December 1684, Mitchell had returned
to Charlestown and a series of legal proceedings had begun over the doughboy
and the venture as a whole. Mitchell sued Joseph Smith, who sued Turell and
White. The matter
was still in the courts in March 1686 when Turell and
White (as defendants in the civil case against Smith) pleaded guilty to charges
of making an illegitimate approach to the foreman of the jury. Apparently
this faux pas had no serious consequences, and Turell and White obtained
a judgement against Smith in vindication of their claim that they were the
injured parties. Smith's petition for a writ of scire facias was then dismissed,
to all appearances bringing the affair to an end. However, under what Turell
later described as 'the Unjust and Arbitrary Government of Sir Edmund Andros,'
Smith made another application for the writ, and eventually obtained a judgement
in his favor of 200 pounds. After the fall of the dominion, with Turell and
White refusing to pay, Smith had them imprisoned for debt. Thus, six
years after they had begun a venture that had links with Phips, the two North
End residents found themselves in jail for charges that seemed symbolic of
the evils of the Andros regime. That a crown led by Phips would descend
on the jail is understandable in this context.
The 'Way' referred to by Bullivant was undoubtedly Richard
Way, an attorney and merchant who was a neighbour of the Phips and Turell
families in the North End. A member of the North Church, Way had well-established
links with the Kennebec region and with associates of Phips. He had served
at one time as attorney for John Hornibrook, a Kennebec fur trader who was
later interpreter for Phips at the English-Wabanki peace conference of August
1693." (The New England Knight)
iii. DAVID WHITE8,
b. Abt. 1657, Maine; d. Bef. 17228. November 1669; David and John Sr. witnessed Miller
to Pearson. (Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire)
2. iv. SARAH WHITE, b. Abt. 1659, Maine.
3. v. PETER WHITE, b. Abt. 1660; d. January 23,
1736/37, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts - age 77.
vi. BENJAMIN WHITE8, b. Abt. 1662, Maine; d. Aft. 1729, of York, York
Co., Maine. Occupation: husbandman
4. vii. PHILIP WHITE, b. Abt. 1662, Jeremisquam
Neck, Kennebec, Maine; d. Aft. 1743, of Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.
viii. WHITE m. William Farrington?
Generation No. 2
2. SARAH3 WHITE (JOHN2, NICHOLAS1) was born Abt. 1659 in Maine. She married JAMES LANE. Inherited land from father that was of Bateman & Brown with J. Phips. There is alot of confusion about which Sarah White married which James/Joshua Lane as there appears to be records of more than one. Can anyone offer clarification?
Child of SARAH WHITE and JAMES LANE is:
i. JOHN4 LANE, b. March 26, 1684, Boston,
Suffolk Co., Massachusetts. In 1727, received land from mother - the same that was purchased
of Bateman & Brown by White and Phips9
ii. SARAH LANE, b. February 6, 1684, Boston, Suffolk
Co., Massachusetts.
3. PETER3 WHITE (JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)10 was born Abt. 166011,12, and died January 23, 1736/37 in Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts - age 7712. He married RACHEL BADCOCK12 Abt. 1682, daughter of GEORGE BADCOCK and MARY. She was born March 08, 1659/60, and died October 20, 1732 in Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts. Christened with wife Rachel, both over 70, June 1730, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts14. 10 children - born Milton, Massachusetts 1683 - 170512. In 1722 as the oldest surviving son, sold 1/2 of his portion of father's Maine property to Paul Dudley13,14. In 1727, age 6714.Occupation: 1686, innkeeper at Milton14
Children of PETER WHITE and RACHEL BADCOCK are:
8. i. JOHN4 WHITE, b. September 03, 1683,
Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts; d. Bet. 1752 - 1753, Dighton, Bristol
Co., Massachusetts.
ii. PETER WHITE135, b. February 20, 1684/85, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts;
m. SARAH COLE135, October 06, 1709, Boston, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts;
b. Abt. 1688.
iii. GEORGE WHITE135, b. October 05, 1686, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts.
iv. SARAH WHITE135, b. December 21, 1692, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts;
m. JOSEPH FENNO135, December 03, 1726, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts.
v. PAUL WHITE136,137,138,
b. February 20, 1694/95, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts; d. January 13,
1695/96.
vi. ENOCH WHITE147,
b. March 24, 1696/97, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts.
vii. PAUL WHITE147, b. July 24, 1699, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts;
d. February 26, 1715/16.
viii. BENJAMIN WHITE147, b. February 06, 1700/01, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts;
d. February 15, 1718/19.
ix. PHILIP WHITE147, b. July 26, 1705, Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts.
4. PHILIP3 WHITE
(JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)16 was born Abt. 1662
in Jeremisquam Neck, Kennebec, Maine17, and died Aft. 1743 of
Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts18. He married DEBORAH MANSFIELD19
Bef. 1685, daughter of ANDREW MANSFIELD and BETHIA GEDNEY. She was
born January 01, 1665/66 in Lynn, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died Aft.
1722 of Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts. Lived in Maine until
about 167621. 7 children - born Beverly, Mass. 1686 - 170521
Occupation: carpenter, housewright, Beverly, Massachusetts.
"The record of
the interrogation of Dr. Roger Toothaker of Billerica and Beverly has not
survived, but a dpostition drawn up two days later revealed why he must have
become a suspect. Toothaker, the only male medical practitioner to be accused
of witchcraft in seventeenth-century New England, had practiced countermagic.
A year earlier, Roger had boasted that 'his Daughter had kild a witch' through
a method he had taught her---filling an 'Earthen pot' with an afflicted person's
urine and placing it 'stopt...very Close' in 'a hott oven' overnight. At
about the same time, Toothaker had also diagnosed 'strangly sick' children,
one from Salem and one from Beverly, as being 'under an Evill hand.' The
second of those afflicted youngsters, an unnamed child of Philip White of
Beverly, was the niece or nephew of Sir William Phips." (In the Devil's
Snare by Mary Beth Norton)
Children of PHILIP WHITE and DEBORAH MANSFIELD are:
i. JOHN4 WHITE186,187,188,
b. February 04, 1684/85, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts; d. Bef.
1707; m. MARY195; b. Abt. 1690.
9. ii. PHILIP WHITE, b. November 16, 1686, Beverly,
Essex Co., Massachusetts; d. of Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.
iii. DEBORAH WHITE196,197,198, b. May 26, 1688, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
Christened: January 31, 1688/89, First Church of Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts.
iv. SARAH WHITE205,206,207, b. Abt. 1693, Beverly, Essex Co.,
Massachusetts. Christened: July 02, 1693, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts,
First Parish Unitarian Church.
10. v. ANDREW WHITE37,
b. September 09, 1694, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts38;
d. March 30, 1770, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts age 7639
vi. MARY WHITE42,
b. November 06, 1698, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts43;
died young44. Christened:
June 18, 1699, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts, First Parish Unitarian Church45
vii. MARY WHITE45, b. April 29, 1705, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts45.
Christened: July 21, 1706, First Church of Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts46
Generation No. 3
8. JOHN4 WHITE (PETER3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)293 was born September 03, 1683 in Milton, Norfolk Co., Massachusetts293, and died Bet. 1752 - 1753 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts293. He married ELIZABETH HATHAWAY293 December 10, 1716 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts293, daughter of EPHRAIM HATHAWAY and ELIZABETH TALBOT. She was born May 28, 1690 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts293, and died 1753 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts293.
Children of JOHN WHITE and ELIZABETH HATHAWAY are:
i. ELIZABETH5 WHITE293, b. August 10, 1717, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts;
d. May 06, 1741; m. SAMUEL POOL293.
ii. BENJAMIN WHITE293, b. April 22, 1722, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts;
d. December 12, 1722.
iii. JOHN WHITE293, b. May 18, 1723, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts;
m. MARY293.
iv. PETER WHITE293, b. June 06, 1726, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts;
m. HANNAH WHITEMARSH293, June 06, 1747, Dighton, Bristol Co.,
Massachusetts.
14. v. SARAH WHITE, b. February 19, 1728/29, Dighton,
Bristol Co., Massachusetts; d. March 14, 1789, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
9. PHILIP4 WHITE (PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)294,295,296 was born November 16, 1686 in Beverly, Essex
Co., Massachusetts, and died in of Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.
He married ANNA PEPPER303,304,305 December 02, 1730 in Boston,
Suffolk Co., Massachusetts. She was of Roxbury, Massachusetts309,310,311,
and died Aft. 1749312,313,314. PHILIP WHITE: Christened:
April 29, 1690, First Church of Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts315,316,317
ANNA PEPPER: July 1721, admitted into full communion Roxbury
Church318,319
Children of PHILIP WHITE and ANNA PEPPER are:
i. PHILIP5 WHITE320,321,322, b. 1731.
ii. ANN WHITE326,327,328,
b. 1733.
iii. JACOB WHITE332,333,334, b. 1735.
10. ANDREW4 WHITE (PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)338,339,340 was born September 09, 1694 in Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died March 30, 1770 in Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts age 76344,345,346. Christened: September 16, 1694, Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts, First Parish Unitarian Church353,354,355. He married MARY347,348,349 Bef. 1717. She was born 1698. 8/22/1713; Philip White of New Town sold land to Eliezer Moody of Dedham. Mentioned is Eprhaim Wheeler. Philip's wife Deborah signed. Witnesses: Andrew White and Humphrey Thomas. (Middlesex Co. Deeds 16:363) May 06, 1738, baptized "under the bonds of the Covenant"356,357,358. August 1738, 5 of his children baptized at Roxbury, MA church. 9/16/1748; Andrew White, a cordwainer of Dudley, sold to Nathaniel Sprout of Middleborough, MA, husbandman, 100 acres in Hardwick, bounded by 1000 acres owned by Mr. Ruggles at al. and land of Mr. Haskel, Col. Dudley and Ammidown. Recorded July 11, 1750. (Worcester Co. Deeds 30:23)
Children of ANDREW WHITE and MARY are:
15. i. SAMUEL5 WHITE, b. August 12, 1717, Newton,
Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.
ii. PHILIP WHITE365,366,367, b. November 20, 1718, Newton, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts368,369,370; m. ELIZABETH BEARISTO371,
February 20, 1739/40, Boston, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts; b. Abt. 1719.
iii. MARY WHITE372,373,374, b. February 27, 1719/20, Newton, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts375,376,377; m. JOHN DAVIS378,
September 30, 1742; b. Abt. 1716.
16. iv. ANDREW WHITE, b. 1721, of Newton, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts; d. March 30, 1770, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
v. JOHN WHITE379,380,381,
b. March 18, 1724/25, Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts382,383,384;
m. ESTHER WHITNEY385, March 08, 1744/45, Roxbury, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts; b. Abt. 1729.
vi. ELIZABETH WHITE386,387,388, b. 1727, Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts389,390,391,392;
m. BENJAMIN392, March 24, 1748/49392. Christened:
August 07, 1738, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
vii. SARAH WHITE396,397,398, b. 1731; m. NATHANIEL POND402,
May 1756; b. Abt. 1727. Christened: August 07, 1738, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
viii. SUSANNAH WHITE406,407,408, b. July 22, 1734, Newton, Middlesex Co.,
Massachusetts409,410,411,412; d. September 01, 1818; m. JOHN
DAVENPORT412, September 14, 1758; b. Abt. 1731. Christened:
August 07, 1738, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
17. ix. KATHERINE WHITE, b. Bef. 1738, Newton, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts.
Generation No. 4
14. SARAH5 WHITE (JOHN4, PETER3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)422 was born February 19, 1728/29 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts, and died March 14, 1789 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts. She married JAMES PAUL422 November 16, 1749 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts, son of WILLIAM PAUL and MARY WHITEMARSH. He was born May 20, 1725 in Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts, and died 1814 in Westminster, Windham Co., Vermont.
Children of SARAH WHITE and JAMES PAUL are:
i. SARAH6 PAUL422,
b. 1752, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
ii. ELIZABETH PAUL422, b. 1754, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts; d.
Kalamazoo, Michigan.
iii. JOHN WHITE PAUL422, b. 1756, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts; d.
January 20, 1804, Westminster, Windham Co., Vermont.
iv. MARY PAUL422,
b. 1765, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
v. SIBYL PAUL422,
b. January 31, 1763, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
vi. SILENCE PAUL422, b. February 1759, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts;
d. June 27, 1822, Westminster, Windham Co.,Vermont. Burial: West Parish Cemetery,
Westminster, Windham Co., Vermont
vii. JAMES WHITE PAUL422, b. April 25, 1768, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
viii. BENJAMIN PAUL422, b. July 02, 1750, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
ix. PETER WHITE PAUL422, b. November 20, 1760, Dighton, Bristol Co., Massachusetts.
15. SAMUEL5 WHITE (ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)423,424,425 was born August 12, 1717 in Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. He married ESTHER LYONS429 December 13, 1739 in Roxbury, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts429, daughter of ELIPHALET LYONS and ELIZABETH JORDAN. She was born November 09, 1718 in Roxbury, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.
Children of SAMUEL WHITE and ESTHER LYONS are:
i. SAMUEL6 WHITE429, b. December 14, 1740, Roxbury, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts;
d. September 08, 1793.
ii. JOHN WHITE429,
baptised January 09, 1742/43.
iii. ESTHER WHITE429, baptised February 17, 1744/45, Roxbury, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts429.
iv. SARAH WHITE429, baptised February 17, 1744/45, Roxbury, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts429; d. August 30, 1815, Roxbury, Middlesex
Co., Massachusetts.
v. DAVID WHITE429,
b. March 15, 1746/47, Roxbury, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts; d. April 30,
1816.
vi. ELIZABETH WHITE429, b. April 08, 1753, Roxbury, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts.
16. ANDREW5 WHITE (ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)430,431,432 was born 1721 of Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, and died March 30, 1770 in Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts436. He married (1) LYDIA CONANT437,438 February 14, 1744/45 in Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts. She was born February 05, 1720/21 in Beverly, Essex Co., Massachusetts, and died February 23, 1763 in Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts442. He married (2) DOROTHY LAMB442 Aft. December 10, 1763.
Children of ANDREW WHITE and LYDIA CONANT are:
i. LYDIA6 WHITE442, b. May 20, 1747, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts;
d. February 26, 1828, Thompson, Windham Co., Connecticut.
ii. EBENEZER WHITE442, b. February 03, 1748/49, Dudley, Worcester Co.,
Massachusetts; of Charlton, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
21. iii. ASA WHITE, b. August 18, 1750, Dudley,
Worcester Co., Massachusetts; d. November 29, 1816, Monson, Hampden Co., Massachusetts.
iv. JOHN WHITE442,
b. March 23, 1752, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts; d. August 25, 1828,
Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
v. REBECCA WHITE442, b. May 27, 1754, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
vi. PHILLIP WHITE442, b. January 14, 1757, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
vii. MARTHA WHITE442, b. May 10, 1761, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
Children of ANDREW WHITE and DOROTHY LAMB are:
viii. DOLLY6 WHITE442, b. July 20, 1768, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
ix. PERLEY WHITE442, b. January 29, 1770.
17. KATHERINE5 WHITE (ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)443,444,445 was born Bef. 1738 in Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts. She married EZEKIEL HOVEY449,450,451 November 12, 1747 in Roxbury, Massachusetts, son of CALEB HOVEY and MARY WINCHESTER. He was born Abt. 1734455, of Brookline, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts then Dudley, Worcester Co., MA. KATHERINE WHITE: Christened: August 07, 1738, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
Children of KATHERINE WHITE and EZEKIEL HOVEY are:
22. i. JOSIAH6 HOVEY, b. Abt. 1748; d. 1815.
ii. EZEKIEL HOVEY462,463,464, Christened: September 30, 1750, Brookline,
Middlesex Co., Massachusetts; m. EUNICE PEASE468,469,470, November
19, 1772, Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts.
iii. ELIZABETH HOVEY477,478,479, Christened: March 01, 1752, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
iv. OLIVE HOVEY486,487,488, Christened: August 12, 1753, Dudley, Worcester
Co., Massachusetts; m. ALBROUGH RUNOULDS492,493,494, Abt. 1771,
of Woodstock, Windham Co., Connecticut.
Generation No. 5
21. ASA6 WHITE (ANDREW5, ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)556,557 was born August 18, 1750 in Dudley, Worcester Co., Massachusetts, and died November 29, 1816 in Monson, Hampden Co., Massachusetts561. He married MARGARET DODGE562,563 November 11, 1773.
Child of ASA WHITE and MARGARET DODGE is:
28. ii. ASA7 WHITE, b. July 01, 1774, Monson, Massachusetts.
22. JOSIAH6 HOVEY (KATHERINE5 WHITE, ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)567,568,569 Christened: November 20, 1748, Brookline, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, and died 1815. He married HANNAH MAY576,577,578 November 25, 1773.
Child of JOSIAH HOVEY and HANNAH MAY is:
29. i. LUTHER7 HOVEY, b. 1789.
Generation No. 6
28. ASA7 WHITE (ASA6, ANDREW5, ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)745,746 was born July 01, 1774 in Monson, Massachusetts. He married CLARISSA KEEP750,751 1800 in Cortland Co., New York.
Child of ASA WHITE and CLARISSA KEEP is:
i. HORACE8 WHITE, d. Aft. 1832. He married
CLARA DICKSON816,817 Bef. 1832, daughter
of ANDREW DICKSON. She died Aft. 1832.
They had; HONORABLE ANDREW DICKSON WHITE823,824,
b. November 07, 1832, Homer, New York; d. November 04, 1918, Ithaca, New York;
m. (1) MARY A. OUTWATER831,832, September 1857; d. Aft. 1857;
m. (2) HELEN MAGILL838,839, 1890; d. Aft. 18904.
1852, graduated A.B., Yale - A.M. 1856, L.L.D., University
of Michigan 1867. 1886, graduated Cornell University, Yale 1886. St. Andrews
- Scotland 1902. 1902, John Hopkins, Dartmouth 1906, Hobart 1911, L.H.D.,
Columbia 1887. 1889, P.H.D. at Jena in Germany, D.C.L., Oxford 1902.
Town offices: 1861, - 1865, 1st President Cornell U.
ii. HAMILTON WHITE, b. May 06, 1807, Homer,
Cortland Co., New York. He married SARAH RANDOLPH RICH860,861. They had;
HAMILTON SALISBURY WHITE, b. December 21, 1853.
29. LUTHER7 HOVEY (JOSIAH6, KATHERINE5 WHITE, ANDREW4, PHILIP3, JOHN2, NICHOLAS1)755,756 was born 1789.
Child of LUTHER HOVEY is:
i. HIRAM H.8 HOVEY, d. 1903. He had a daughter
MARTHA S. HOVEY, b. 1841; d. 1915.
A WORK IN PROGRESS!
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