76
��THE GR.^NITE MONTHLY.
��57. Samuel Storer. an "active and enterprisiag man,"' lived and died in Wells, Maine.
58. Hannah Fessenden was born in 1649, in Canterbury, England. From her brotlier descended Hon. William Pitt Fessenden, of Maine. >She died in 1723.
59. John Sewall was born in 1654, in Badesley, England. He and his brother Samuel, afterwards Chief Justice of Massachusetts, and other small cliil- dren, embarked with their mother in the Prudent Mary, for America in 1661. Died in 1699.
60. Simon Wainwright removed from Ipswich to Haverhill, Mass., prior to 1689, and was killed by the Indians in 1708.
61. Mary Bowles died in 1704.
62. Major Charles Frost was born in 1631, and lived in Kitterj% Maine. He was a prominent man ; for many years was deputy from Maine to the general court; was a member of Danfortli's council ; was lour times of tire council of Maine, and was major commandant of the Yorkshire regiment of Maine. He and his wife and servant, on their way from cliurcli, were killed by the Indians, July 4, 1697. For ancestry see No. 113.
63. Marshall of Woburn, Mass.
64. Sarah was born in England in 1625. and died in 1685.
65. Richard Cutting was born in 1623; came from England in the Elizabeth in 1634 (in company with six other pioneers, whose blood is united in Hon. E. A. Rollins) ; was one of the original pro- prietors of Watertown, Mass., and died in 1695.
66. Mehitable Bartlett was born in July, 1640, and was married January 16, 1657.
67. Henry Spring was born in England in 1628, and was brought to America in 1834. He was the father of two sons and three daughters.
68. Sarah Honians of Dedham, Mass.
69. Samuel Parker of Dedham Mass.
70. Sarah Baker was married Febru- ary 19, 1671, and died in 1726.
71. Sebas Jackson was born in 1642, at sea it is conjectured, as he was named Seaborn by his parents. He lived in Newton, Mass., on the premises after- ward held by his descendants for over two centuries, and died in 1696.
72. Mary Snell of Portsmouth, N. H.
73. Hon. John Wheelwright was town clerk of Wells lor foity years ; was a councillor, ajudge of Court of Common Pleas, a slave holder, a colonel of the military forces, and actively engaged in the Indian wars.
��74. Mary Pickering was born in 1668, and was married in 1682.
75. Hon. John Plaisted. born in 1659, was a member of the New Hampshire Assembly from 1693 to 1727; speaker in 1096. 1717. and 1727. He was a member of the ro}^al council from 1702 to 1716; judge of superior court from 1699 to 1719, and chief justice in 1716.
70. Mary Hubbard was married Nov- ember 17, 1686.
77. Tobias Langdon, born in 1664, lived in Portsmouth. He was the father of .John Langdon, and the grandfather of Gov. John Langdon. He died in 1725.
78. Sarah.
79. John Shapleigh, born in 1040, was one of the leading men of Kittery, Maine, where he was killed by the In- dians, near the Congregational church. April 29. 1706.
80. Oner Langdon, sister of Tobias Langdon (77), was married June 13, 1686.
81. John Leighton, born in 1661, lived in Elliot; was Sheriff of York County. Maine, for several years, from 1717, and died in 1724.
82. Mary Sears.
83. James Carr was born in 1650; was married November 4, 1687; was the father of eight children, and lived in Ntfwbury. He owned the ferry across the Merrimack, the value of which was destroyed, by grant of Sir Edward Andros, to another partv-
84. Elizabeth. (Knight ?)
85. Ezekiel Wentworth was born in 1651, and lived in what is now Salmon Falls village. He was a member of the legislature when he died, in 1711.
86. Mary Heard was born in Dover, January 26, 1649.
87. John Ham of Dover.
88. Mary 'J'ibbets lived across the river from Ichabod Rollins, at Dover Neck.
89. Ichabod Rollins, born before 1640, was taxed at Newington, then Dover, in 1665, and was killed by the Indians May 22, 1707.
90. Benjamin Storer of Wells, Maine, was killed by the Indians April 13, 1677.
91. Jane bummer was born in 1627; was married March 25, 1646, and died January 13, 1701.
92. Rev. Henry Sewall was born in 1614. and came to Ipswich in 1634, to Newburjr in 1635. He was urged to settle in Boston, by Rev. John Cotton, but preferred Newbury. He returned to England in 1646, and preached till 1659 ; opposed by the English hierarchy, he returned to Newbury, and died in Rowley, on the north side of the Merri.
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