_____________________ | _Louis I Of King Of France King Of Fr AQUITAINE _| | (0778 - 0840) m 0798 | | |_____________________ | | |--Louis II King Of E Franks | (0805 - ....) | _Count Ingram _______ | | |_Irmengard Of HESBAIN ___________________________| (0778 - ....) m 0798 | |_Unknown ____________
_Jacob BURGESS ______+ | _Ebenezer BURGESS ___| | | | |_Mary NYE ___________+ | | |--Elizabeth BURGESS | | _Benjamin LOMBARD ___+ | | |_Mercy LOMBARD ______| | |_Jane WARREN ________+
_____________________ | _Hiram COOKE ________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--Isabel Gertrude COOKE | | _William J. DODGE ___ | | |_Frances H. DODGE ___| | |_Harriet WEAVER _____+
_Micajah FREEMAN _________________ | _John C. FREEMAN ____| | | | |_Elsa Margaret "Peggy" FINCANNON _+ | | |-- FREEMAN | | _William BROWN ___________________ | | (1774 - 1846) |_Mary "Polly" BROWN _| | |_Elizabeth RIPPETOE ______________
_Henry II HOWLAND ___+ | _Samuel HOWLAND _____| | | | |_Mary NEWLAND _______+ | | |--Mary HOWLAND | | _Abraham SAMPSON ____+ | | |_Mary SAMPSON _______| | |_Esther NASH ________+
_Joseph HULL ________+ | (1594 - 1665) _Tristram HULL ______| | (1624 - 1667) | | |_Joanna COFFIN ______ | | |--Elizabeth HULL | | _____________________ | | |_Blanche UNKNOWN ____| | |_____________________
[66482] Still Living.
_____________________ | _Isaac JACKSON ______| | (1755 - 1821) m 1805| | |_____________________ | | |--Isaac Richardson JACKSON | (1807 - 1861) | _Caleb HOWELL _______+ | | (1752 - 1805) m 1773 |_Elizabeth HOWELL ___| (1789 - 1822) m 1805| |_Rebecca STILES _____ (1756 - 1799) m 1773
[105051]
[S792]
Descendants of Edward Howell
[105049]
[S792]
Descendants of Edward Howell
[105050]
[S792]
Descendants of Edward Howell
[93290]
JENNEY, JOHN -John Jenney arrived at Plymouth in 1623 on the Little James
with his wife Sarah and children Samuel, Abigail, and Sarah. Captain
Altham of the Little James (Three Visitors, p. 24) noted that "Good wife
Jennings was brought abed of a son aboard our ship." Banks called jenney
a cooper of Norwich, County Norfolk, but Leiden records of his 1614
marriage to Sarah Carey, of Monk's Soham, County Suffolk, call him a
brewer's man from Norwich (Dexter, p. 619), and Winslow also called him a
brewer and noted that he was among those Englishmen in Holland who could
speak Dutch and would sometimes take communion in the Dutch Church
(Hypocrisie Unmasked, p. 63). He owned a grain mill in Plymouth, and he
was a Purchaser, but not an Undertaker, as has been written. He was one
of the colony's leaders, however, serving as an Assistant. After he and
his wife died, his family moved to Dartmouth, with which the name jenney
became associated. See the article in TAG 35:70 by Bertha Clark, whose
excellent manuscript on the Jenney family is at NEHGS in Boston. Also of
interest is the account given of the Tenney family in Small Descendants
2:646; see also Frederick G. Jenny, "John Jenny," NEHGR 115:233. john's
son Samuel, apparently the son born on the Little James, married Susanna
Wood; daughter Sarah married Thomas Pope as his second wife; and daughter
Abigail married Henry Wood and lived in Yarmouth and Middleborough (see
Bowman, "Mistress Sarah Jenny's Will and Inventory," MD 8:171). In John
Jenney's will, dated 28 December 1643, he cautioned, "Whereas Abigaile my
eldest Daughter had somewhat given her by her grandmother and Henry Wood
of Plymouth aforesaid is a suter to her in way of marriage my will is
that if shee the said Abigaile will Dwell one full yeare with Mr. Charles
Chauncey of Scittuate before her marriage (pvided he be willing to
entertains her) that then my said Daughter Abigau have two of my cowes
and my full consent to marry wth the said Henry Wood" (MD 6:170);
however, the marriage took place four months later on 28 April 1644 (MD
13:86).
Source: Plymouth Colony Its History & People 1620-1691 by Eugene Aubrey
Stratton
__________________________________________________________________________
_________
JOHN JENNEY
ORIGIN: Leiden, Holland
MIGRATION: 1623 in Little James
FIRST RESIDENCE: Plymouth
OCCUPATION: Brewer. Miller. (On 5 March 1638/9 "Mr. John Jenney [was]
presented for not grinding corn serviceable, but to great loss & damage,
both in not grinding it well, as also causing men to stay long before it
can be ground, except his servant be fed ... and also for not keeping his
stampers going, which is much to the detriment of all" [PCR 1:118]. On 20
August 1644 "Mrs. Jenney, upon the presentment against her, promiseth to
amend the grinding at the mill, and to keep the mortars clean, and bags
of corn from spoiling and loosing" [PCR 2:76].)
CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: "As for the Dutch, it was usual for our members that
understood the language and lived in or occasionally came over to Leyden,
to communicate with them, as one John Jenny, a brewer, long did, his wife
and family, &c. and without any offense to the church" [Young's Pilgrim
Fathers 392, citing Winslow; see also MD 27:63 (which has "London"
instead of "Leyden")].
FREEMAN: In the "1633" Plymouth list of freemen, among those made free
before 1 January 1632/3 [PCR 1:3]. In list of 7 March 1636/7 [PCR 1:52].
In Plymouth section of 1639 Plymouth Colony list of freemen, among the
Assistants (annotated "dead") [PCR 8:173].
EDUCATION: The inventory of John Jenny included a "small globe," 2s. 6d.,
and a Bible and other books, �1 1s. The inventory of Sarah Jenny included
"a [p]salme booke 1s.," "Cartwright on the Remise 6s.," "Downham's Workes
6s.," "four old bookes 6d.," "Mr. Ainsworth on Genesis & Exodus 2s. 6d."
and "a great Bible & a small one 1