p329 NICHOLSON
John, Watertown, propr. 1637.
p329 NICHOLSON
John, Watertown, propr. 1637.
William, weaver, ae. 33, of Norwich, Eng. with wife Anne, ae. 28 (more information – children listed)
p356 PHELPS, see Phillips
George, Dorchester, also called Phillips, propr. 1632, frm. May 6, 1035. Rem. to Windsor, Conn, and later to Westfleld. Will dated April 24, 1683, prob. June 6, 1687, Beq. to wife; to son Joseph of Windsor; sons- Isaac, Jacob, John and Nathaniel; to Isaac’s son Isaac.
Henry, came in the Hercules April 10, 1634. Res. at Salem. Lawsuit, 1045. [Es. Files.] He was charged in 1660 with enter- taining Quakers. His son John was placed in care of an uncle, Edmund Batter; and to have a portion which had been left him by his grandmother. [Es. Files.]
William, Dorchester, propr., juryman Nov. 9, 1630, constable in 1031, frm. May 18, 1631; deputy 1634. Rem. to Windsor, Conn.
p. 362 PIKE, PYKE
James, Charlestown …
John, Ipswich propr. witness in Court at Cambridge Aug 4, 1605. (more information below)
p. 365 NICHOLSON
Pollard, George . . (A natural inference is that he is George Marblehead, his will, dated 1646 beq. to goodman Tiler of Lynn, John Hart, the younger, and Christopher, son of Edmund Nicolson. . .
page 382 REDNAP, REDNAPE, REDKNAPP
Joseph, late of Hampton, Co. Middlesex, and citizen and cooper of London, came early to Lynn. Frm. Sept. 3, 1634; propr. before 1638. Juryman, 1638. He sold land called Blackbush, near Hampton Court, Mdx. Co. Eng., now in possession of his mother, Elizabeth Redknap, Oct. 25, 1640. [L] [Suff. De. 99] He deposed 30 (4) 1669, ae. between 70 and 80 years old.
He was bur. Friday, Jan. 22, 1684-5; “a man of 110 years old.” [8] Made will 20 May, 1681, prob. at Boston 28 Oct 1686, beq. to sons Nathaniel and Benjamin.
Click here for PDF document p. 382
A descriptive list Drawn from Records of the Colonies, Towns and Churches, and other Contemporaneous Documents
by Charles Henry Pope
Butler Center, Little Rock, Arkansas
F63.P821
also – https://archive.org/details/pioneersofmassac00pope