__ | _Philip BATCHELDER __| | (1534 - ....) m 1559| | |__ | | |--Stephen BATCHELDER BACHILER | (1561 - 1656) | __ | | |_Anne FLANDERS ______| (1538 - ....) m 1559| |__
[93241]
http://www.familysear
Name is also spelled BATCHELDER, BATCHELLER, BATCHILLER or BATCHELOR.
BATCH, BACHE - Old English boece, stream, valley [OES]. A noted English
divine of Hampshire. Came in the "William and Francis",arrived at Boston,
Thursday, June 5, 1632. "An unforgiven puritan". B.A. from Oxford
University in 1586. Emigrated from Hampshire, England to Boston in 1632;
lived at
Lynn, Mass.,where his daughter Theodite lived, for 4 years; removed to
Ipswich, MA, 1636; Yarmouth, 1637; Newberry, 1638 [DG]; to Winniscunnet,
New Hamshire, 1638, which was named Hampton at his request. In 1641 was
dismissed and was heard of at Saco (Willis=37)[DG]. Removed to Casco, ME
in 1647; returned to England in 1654, leaving third wife Mary, where he
died. Henry of Reading, probably his son, was persecuted in 1660 as a
Quaker. Nathaniel of Hampton, eldest son, born about 1611, married
Deborah, daughter of John Smith. He had 17 children, 9 by Deborah, one
was named Nathaniel.
Married 2nd 31 Oct 1676, Mary (Carter) Wyman. Married 3rd, Elizabeth
_______. Burial date provided by [RH] ! The name BACHILER is variously
spelled in the old records, and not less variously at the present time by
descendants; quoted from early settlers of Nantucket in which the name
has been variously spelled, i.e., BACHELOR; and from which the following
has been extracted: Reverend Stephen BACHELOR was born in England in
1561. he was well educated and had received orders in the
established church [Church of England?] but was not in sympathy with its
rites and institutions. His unwillingnesss to conform to its requirements
had resulted in his being deprived of his ecclesiastical commissions. He
spent a few years in Holland, but returned to London. In some records we
read that "his eldest daughter had emigrated to America and had settled
in the new town of Saugus, now Lynn [MA]." Here came also Stephen
BACHELOR on June 5, 1632, and here he established The First Episcopal
Church of Lynn, according to his own ideas. Differences occurred from
time to time, but finally, when a Council of Ministers was called, it was
decided that, "Although the church had not been properly
instituted, yet the mutual exercise of their religeous duties had
supplied the defect." [sic]
On May 6, 1635, he was admitted a freeman and removed first to Ipswich,
where he received a grant of fifty acres of land and proposed to locate;
but he soon left Ipswich, and, with some friends, John WING and others,
went to Mattacheese, on Barnstable Bay, now Yarmouth, with a view to
establishing a colony there. This enterprise proved impracticable, and he
went next to newbury, and on the July 6, 1638, received a grant of land
from the town. On September 6 the General Court gave him permission to
settle a town at Hampton, a few miles from Newburyport, in New
Hampshire. In 1639 the town of Ipswich offered him sixty acres of upland
if he would reside with them; this he declined. On July 5, he sold his
house and lands in Newbury, and removing to Hampton, settled the town and
established a church, of
which he became pastor. In 1640, Hampton granted him 300 acres of land,
and he gave them "a bell for their meeting house." In 1647, he was at
Portsmouth, where he remained three years. At the age of eighty nine he
married and lived with this third wife for only a year. In 1651, he
returned to England and there died in his one hundredth year at Hackney,
near London. Edwin l. SANBORN, ll.d., in his "History of New Hampshire,"
page 53, says: "The first churches were formed at Hampton and Exeter.
Hampton claims precedence in time .... the first pastor of this firstborn
church of the new state, and the father of the town, was Reverend Stephen
BATCHELDER, and ancestor on the mother's side of Daniel WEBSTER." Lewis
and Newhall's "History of Lynn," Page 141, N.E. reflects: "Susanna
BATCHELDER, one of the descendants of Stephe
He had been silenced at Wherwell in Hampshire, emigrated in 1632 on the William And Francis , and was followed by considerable number of parishoners and supporters. The W&F sailed from London on March 9 and arrived June 5 with about 60 passengers. His
residence is listed as Newton Stacy, Hants and he settled at Saugus. He brought wife Helen and sons John, William and Stephen.
__ | _James COFFIN _______| | | | |__ | | |--Abigail COFFIN | | __ | | |_Mary SEVERANCE _____| | |__
_John COREY _________+ | _Thomas COREY _______| | | | |_Elizabeth __________ | | |--Joseph COREY | | _John II DRAKE ______+ | | |_Elizabeth DRAKE ____| | |_Esther Joyce WHITE _+
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
Date of Import: Oct 24, 2000
_Henry MATTESON _____ | (1646 - ....) _Henry MATTESON _____| | | | |_Hannah PARSONS _____+ | | |--Henry MATTESON | | _____________________ | | |_Judith WEAVER ______| | |_____________________
[103207]
[S835]
The American Genealogist (TAG) - Owen
_Job PARMELEE _______+ | _Able PARMELEE ______| | | | |_Elizabeth EDWARDS __+ | | |--Sarah PARMELEE | | _Joseph BEECHER _____+ | | |_Mary BEECHER _______| | |_Lydia ROBERTS ______+
_George Washington SANBORN _+ | _John Barton SANBORN _| | | | |_Hannah HOOPER _____________ | | |--Elias Anson SANBORN | | ____________________________ | | |_Henrietta HULL ______| | |____________________________
_William SNOW _______ | _William II SNOW ____| | | | |_Rebecca BROWN ______+ | | |--Bethia SNOW | | _____________________ | | |_Naomi WHITHAM ______| | |_____________________
[68535] bur. Plesant Hill Cem.
[119987] _UIDE5468270B505D511B01BB5D248919A39BBA9