Jeremiah White and Hannah Canterbury were my sixth Great Grandparents. They were married 270 years ago today on October 9, 1740 in Weymouth, MA. The Weymouth record has a notation for their intention of marriage at The First Church, South Precinct; perhaps this is where they were married. At this time, Mr. James Bayley was the pastor of this newly formed church in South Weymouth, as noted in The History of Weymouth (1_233). Although Jeremiah and Hannah were married in Weymouth, they probably lived their married life together in Abington, MA, as all of their 9 children's births were recorded in Abington. Hannah Canterbury White also died in Abington, MA.
I am not sure when Jeremiah and Hannah moved to Abington, but it seems that both of their families were originally from South Weymouth, MA, which is probably how they met. In the book, The History of Weymouth, Hannah Canterbury's family is outlined, with Hannah's father, John Canterbury, living on 74 acres in Weymouth. When Hannah's father died, he left his land to his wife and his only son Jacob, who lived in South Parish. (3_151) Hannah died at a young age, even before her father and mother, so the land she and Jeremiah had in Abington was probably not from her family. According to the book, The Vinton memorial, comprising a genealogy of the descendants of John Vinton of Lynn... , page 373, Jeremiah's father is Samuel White of Weymouth. This book has Samuel's residence in South Weymouth, so Jeremiah's childhood was spent in South Weymouth, similar to Hannah's. The book also states Samuel died intestate and insolvent, so Jeremiah would not have been handed down this land in Weymouth. Perhaps Jeremiah and Hannah moved to Abington as a newly married couple in 1740 since they had no family land in Weymouth. We do know that their first child, Hannah, was born and died in Abington in 1742.
Jeremiah and Hannah had six girls, two died young, and three boys. Their last child, John, was born in 1760 in Abington. Unfortunately Hannah died only five years later, leaving Jeremiah to care for seven children; two of which, Luther and Anne, would have been old enough to marry at 22 and 18 years old. I have not looked for their marriage records yet to see if they were married or still living at home when their mother died. As was common during this time in history though, Jeremiah remarried after his first wife's death. His second wife, Sarah Thayer, also died before him, and Jeremiah married a third time to a Mrs. Esther Kingman.
Since Jeremiah and his family were living in Abington, MA, I searched the History of the town of Abington, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, from its first settlement, to see if there was a section on the White family. There are not many families discussed in this book, and unfortunately the White family was not included. There is a section on the Seven Years War, or the Old French War, as the book calls it. In this chapter, the book states there was a Jeremiah White who enlisted and survived this war which occurred between 1756-1763. I do not know how involved Jeremiah was in this war, but it must have been a frightening time for this young family during this period in history.
Since Jeremiah was living in 1790 according to the History of Weymouth book (d May 23 1794 (4_746)), I checked the first US Census. There is a Jeremiah White living in Abington, MA during this time. It could be our Jeremiah or his son Jeremiah. Either way, it seems Jeremiah the senior is probably living with his son, as there are two males over 16 in the household. Jeremiah the junior would have been too young to have a son over 16 years old. There is also 1 female living in the household along with 1 male under the age of 16, most likely Jeremiah and his wife's son. I will have to make sure Jeremiah's third wife Esther had died by 1790.
The History of Weymouth book has an interesting excerpt from a May 1792 Weymouth town meeting - (2_596) "a request was received by the following petitioners of Abington asking to be taken in by Weymouth, provided the general court would grant the petition to be separated from Abington : Josiah White, Lebulan Paine, Ezra Tirrell, Lebulan Paine Jr, Abiah Shaw, Joshua Curtis, Abiah Shaw, Jr., Thomas Hunt, Jeremiah White, John White and Benjamin White. voted to grant the petition." This Jeremiah is probably the junior, since Jeremiah the senior would have been over 80 years old in 1792; and Jeremiah the junior probably would have cared more about where his land was located at his younger age. I am not sure that their request passed, as I did not find any records of birth for Jeremiah and his wife in Weymouth or Abington. The following is another excerpt from Acts and laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on google books:
There is a Jeremiah White in the "Century Old Houses" section of the History of Weymouth book that lives near Reuben Blanchard and Nathaniel Loud in Weymouth, near Abington town line (2_933). Either the above petition was approved by the General Court, or Jeremiah moved within the Weymouth town line. (could be the other Jeremiah White living in Weymouth after 1799 - see note below)
to do list:
1. Samuel's father was Ebenezer White, whose land was handed down to gr.gr. grandson abiel white, not to samuel. samuel moved to south weymouth - did he buy the land from someone or was it in his wife's family. see who abiel's father was. this land was land near where eventually christopher webb would live- history of weymouth book. seemed ebenezer probably lived in weymouth landing on commercial street as that is where abiel lives according to century old houses in weymouth.
2. locate canterbury land on historic map - how did jeremiah and hannah meet - were samuel white and john canterbury neighbors. did not find. locate land records. jacob canterbury sold some of the 74 acres in weymouth to reuben burrel and thomas colson
3. write chart for asa white who wrote about family of thomas white - see relation - also history of where white's lived. in nehgr on google.
4. find jeremiah's son jeremiah's wife and son dates : there is another jeremiah white (jeremiah's seniors nephew - son of benjamin) who marries a ruth derby in weymouth in 1799 - and have a son in may of 1800 who died young - the 1800 census was enumerated on 4 August 1800 according to ancestry.com, and this son dies in 1816 - so it could be this jeremiah's family and not the jeremiah jr. i did find jeremiah jr. death record for weymouth though in 1809 - so should be listed in census - perhaps he is living with a sibling - did he ever marry molly and have a child - seems to be living in abington in 1790 census though - unless that is the jeremiah the elder with another one of his children - see if other children of jeremiah senior are married with a child and not listed in census in 1790. also the jeremiah listed in the 1800 cenus is in the south parish - but cannot tell if they are near the abington line. look at other people listed in petition with jeremiah white to see if they are listed in 1800 census in weymouth or abington and estimate time frame the writer of century old houses writes about the jeremih white and others that live near the abington line - maybe he is talking about other jeremiah white.
My Family
I created this blog to keep track of my family history research. I do most of my research online.
The Francis name is my husband's which was originally Francisco from Sao Miguel, Azores, Portugal. He also has ancestors from Sweden and England. So far, I have found that my family has come from Italy, England, French Canada, Scotland, and Ulster Ireland (Scotch Irish).
I have also taken a DNA test, which shows mostly Italian, but also England and France.
The Francis name is my husband's which was originally Francisco from Sao Miguel, Azores, Portugal. He also has ancestors from Sweden and England. So far, I have found that my family has come from Italy, England, French Canada, Scotland, and Ulster Ireland (Scotch Irish).
I have also taken a DNA test, which shows mostly Italian, but also England and France.
Links
Showing posts with label White; Jeremiah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label White; Jeremiah. Show all posts
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Friday, February 5, 2010
Jeremiah White
Two Hundred and Forty Three years ago, my 6th great grandfather, Jeremiah White, married his second wife, Sarah. (He would eventually marry a third time after Sarah's death in 1769.) According to the Massachusetts Vital Records to 1850 on newenglandancestors.org, Jeremiah and Sarah Thayer were married in Abington, MA on February 5, 1767. I thought it would be interesting to find some information on courtship in New England for this time frame (middle to late 18th century). Doing a quick search, I came across the Digital History website from University of Houston. They have a section on Courtship in New England, which suggests that around the time of Jeremiah's marriage, children had more of a choice than in the past as to who their spouses would be. They also mention the notion that "romance and love" had more to do with choice of spouse as the eighteenth century came to an end. Although, as Sarah was Jeremiah's second wife, perhaps he was looking for a spouse to care for the 9 children he already had with his first wife. I will have to see what connection he had with Sarah before they were married to better understand their relationship.
I also wanted to look a little bit into Jeremiah's parentage, as he is my direct line. After searching on Google books, I came across the following book : The Vinton memorial, comprising a genealogy of the descendants of John Vinton of Lynn, 1648: also, genealogical sketches of several allied families ... , which states on page 372, that Jeremiah was the son of Deacon Samuel White and Anna Pratt.

I love these old family history books, but I can never find the source of their information. I assume they got most of their information from probate records, which is where I will start to prove their relationship. Chamberlain's History of Weymouth book usually states the probate numbers, I will have to see if the White family is covered in this book the next time I obtain it.
To Do:
1. look in History of Weymouth book for White family
2. obtain probate information on Deacon Samuel White (of weymouth)
3. find land records for Deacon Samuel White and Jeremiah White
4. obtain Descendants of Thomas White of Weymouth, Mass., 1630-1907 By C. S. Williams
5. find more information on Sarah Thayer and relationship with Jeremiah - was there a connection between Thayer family and White family.
I also wanted to look a little bit into Jeremiah's parentage, as he is my direct line. After searching on Google books, I came across the following book : The Vinton memorial, comprising a genealogy of the descendants of John Vinton of Lynn, 1648: also, genealogical sketches of several allied families ... , which states on page 372, that Jeremiah was the son of Deacon Samuel White and Anna Pratt.
I love these old family history books, but I can never find the source of their information. I assume they got most of their information from probate records, which is where I will start to prove their relationship. Chamberlain's History of Weymouth book usually states the probate numbers, I will have to see if the White family is covered in this book the next time I obtain it.
To Do:
1. look in History of Weymouth book for White family
2. obtain probate information on Deacon Samuel White (of weymouth)
3. find land records for Deacon Samuel White and Jeremiah White
4. obtain Descendants of Thomas White of Weymouth, Mass., 1630-1907 By C. S. Williams
5. find more information on Sarah Thayer and relationship with Jeremiah - was there a connection between Thayer family and White family.
Labels:
courtship,
maternal line (Amy),
White Family,
White; Jeremiah
Monday, April 7, 2008
John Adams
I have started watching the John Adams miniseries on HBO and was inspired to look at the Adams family tree. Since John Adams had connections to Weymouth, MA; where many of my ancestors are from, I thought it would be fun to see if our families were connected, even if only distantly. From my memory of doing research some years ago, there is at least one connection of my family to Abigail Adam's family in Weymouth. The Reverend Samuel Torrey (who's relationship to my family I will look into in my next entry - but I believe he is some sort of great grand uncle - generations back!) built Abigail Adam's family's house. Samuel was the Reverend of the First Church of Weymouth preceding Abigail Adams' father Reverend William Smith.
Getting back to John Adam's family though, I found a family tree for John Quincy Adams online (click on view tree), and looked for names that were similar in my tree. (I also found another Adams family tree from the Massachusetts Historical Society.) There was really only one surname, White, that may connect our families, so I went to ancestry and tried out their "find famous relatives" link under the One World Tree database. I first had to find one of my White ancestors in One World Tree, so I searched for Jeremiah White (my 6th great grandfather) who married Hannah Canterbury. I found him, clicked on the famous relatives link, and hoped for something interesting to come up. (side note - "find famous relatives" is a search function that links your family with famous people, but uses data that has been entered by other users, so further research would be involved to verify the accuracy of data.) I browsed quickly and did not see a John Adams link come up, but did see his cousin, Samuel Adams, on my famous relatives page. According to this data, Samuel Adams is my 6th great grandfathers (Jeremiah's) 4th cousin, 2 times removed. Kind of neat. Of course this led me to do some other research on my White family - so I started looking into Jeremiah White's parents. I have found in many family trees online that Jeremiah is the son of Samuel White, a deacon in Weymouth; I guess I was looking for more verification - such as a reference to a probate record or something. The closest I came to such a reference was on google books website; page 373 in the book: The Vinton Memorial : Comprising A Genealogy of the Descendents of John Vinton of Lynn, 1648, which states Samuel White died intestate and insolvent, August 18, 1760, age 84 - so if this source is accurate, there is no will to find. Perhaps land records will lead me to prove that Samuel White is Jeremiah's father. If this is Jeremiah's line of descent - the immigrant ancestor is Thomas White of Weymouth who came to Massachusetts around 1635. I did a quick look at the Great Migration project to see if a sketch had been done on Thomas. At this time the Great Migration series is only up to The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England: 1634-1635, Volume V, M-P; so I will have to wait to read about Thomas White.
To Do
1. Look into the Torrey line again - find the link to Rev. Samuel Torrey in Weymouth
2. Find out what county Weymouth was in for early 1700s - I think it was Suffolk County.
3. Find any deeds on Samuel White which ties him with Jeremiah White (at probate court - or indexed in this book Suffolk County, MA deeds, 1639-1885 [microform] at NEHGS library and FHL. Also the Massachusetts State Archives has this book Record books, 1629-1800.
Links On Topic
1. John Adams timeline from the Massachusetts Historical Society
2. John Adams manuscripts from the Massachusetts Historical Society
Getting back to John Adam's family though, I found a family tree for John Quincy Adams online (click on view tree), and looked for names that were similar in my tree. (I also found another Adams family tree from the Massachusetts Historical Society.) There was really only one surname, White, that may connect our families, so I went to ancestry and tried out their "find famous relatives" link under the One World Tree database. I first had to find one of my White ancestors in One World Tree, so I searched for Jeremiah White (my 6th great grandfather) who married Hannah Canterbury. I found him, clicked on the famous relatives link, and hoped for something interesting to come up. (side note - "find famous relatives" is a search function that links your family with famous people, but uses data that has been entered by other users, so further research would be involved to verify the accuracy of data.) I browsed quickly and did not see a John Adams link come up, but did see his cousin, Samuel Adams, on my famous relatives page. According to this data, Samuel Adams is my 6th great grandfathers (Jeremiah's) 4th cousin, 2 times removed. Kind of neat. Of course this led me to do some other research on my White family - so I started looking into Jeremiah White's parents. I have found in many family trees online that Jeremiah is the son of Samuel White, a deacon in Weymouth; I guess I was looking for more verification - such as a reference to a probate record or something. The closest I came to such a reference was on google books website; page 373 in the book: The Vinton Memorial : Comprising A Genealogy of the Descendents of John Vinton of Lynn, 1648, which states Samuel White died intestate and insolvent, August 18, 1760, age 84 - so if this source is accurate, there is no will to find. Perhaps land records will lead me to prove that Samuel White is Jeremiah's father. If this is Jeremiah's line of descent - the immigrant ancestor is Thomas White of Weymouth who came to Massachusetts around 1635. I did a quick look at the Great Migration project to see if a sketch had been done on Thomas. At this time the Great Migration series is only up to The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England: 1634-1635, Volume V, M-P; so I will have to wait to read about Thomas White.
To Do
1. Look into the Torrey line again - find the link to Rev. Samuel Torrey in Weymouth
2. Find out what county Weymouth was in for early 1700s - I think it was Suffolk County.
3. Find any deeds on Samuel White which ties him with Jeremiah White (at probate court - or indexed in this book Suffolk County, MA deeds, 1639-1885 [microform] at NEHGS library and FHL. Also the Massachusetts State Archives has this book Record books, 1629-1800.
Links On Topic
1. John Adams timeline from the Massachusetts Historical Society
2. John Adams manuscripts from the Massachusetts Historical Society
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