Faulkner Links:
Faulkner GenForum http://www.genforum.com/faulkner/
Descendants of Richard Faulkner
Generation No. 1
1. RICHARD1 FAULKNER was born 1597, and died WFT Est. 1598-1684.
Notes for RICHARD FAULKNER:
Somewhere along lines of Faulkners was a woman Martha Faulkner, married Abiathar Richardson, birthed daughter Chloe Richardson in Attleborough 10 09/1775, married to Reverand Ebenezer Lazell b. 1761 d. 1828 ... married in 1794. See Mayflower families CD 1500-1800
Child of RICHARD FAULKNER is:
2. i. EDMUND2 FAULKNER, b. Abt. 1623, Kings Clesr, England; d. January 18, 1686/87, Andover, Essex, MA.
Generation No. 2
2. EDMUND2 FAULKNER (RICHARD1) was born Abt. 1623 in Kings Clesr, England, and died January 18, 1686/87 in Andover, Essex, MA. He married DOROTHY (ROBINSON) February 04, 1647/48 in Salem, MA.
Notes for EDMUND FAULKNER:
An entry in the Mass Transcript for May 23, 1923 states that Dorothy Robinson married by Governor Withrop, in Salem, on arrival from England to Edmond Fawlkner, Feb 1, 1647. first American citizen to be married. Will of EF speaks of stepson Joseph Robinson. He came with his mother, a child of about 4 years. Dorothy Robinson had to have come from Kings Linne, Norfolk, where there were Fawlkners. Will of Thomas Slayne of Kings Linne, Norfolk, gives, "To my youngest son, Samuel Slayne.... the pice of pasture ground in Torrington bought of Dorothy Robinson lately." Corresponding so closely to Dorothy's coming to America, this is interesting. According to the book, Pioneer of Mass. by Charles Henry Pope, Gen. Pub. Co., 1981, Edmond of Edward was licensed to sell wine in Andover, MA in 1648.
"Francis Fawconer of Kingscleare Hants, gent., bequ. to my bro. Edmond Fawconer that is living in NE 200 li., in his will dated 1 Sept., 1662, prob., 21 May, 1663"
From the book, Historical Collections of Every Town in MA by John Warner Barber, 929.3744 Vol 1 pg 159-160
The land Andover in on "was bought of CUTSHAMACHE, the sagamore of MA by Mr. Woodbridge, in behalf of teh inhabitants of Cochicheweck (now Andover). The amount paid was 6 pounds and a coat. Mr. Edmund Faulkner might have assisted Mr. Woodbridge, as there is a tradition that he purchased the town for teh settlers".
One April 19, 1676 Indians attacked the town, killing some, capturing some, and burning Edmonds house. There were many other attacks. On March 5, 1698, Hanna, Emonds daughter, and wife of Capt. Pascoe Chubb were both killed along with many others. This was the last assault on Andover.
Children of EDMUND FAULKNER and DOROTHY (ROBINSON) are:
3. i. FRANCIS3 FAULKNER, b. May 1651, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. February 19, 1731/32, Andover, Essex Co., MA.
4. ii. JOHN FAULKNER, b. May 16, 1654, unknown; d. January 18, 1686/87, Unknown, MA.
5. iii. MARY FAULKNER, b. Aft. 1655, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. Abt. 1725, unknown.
iv. HANNAH FAULKNER, b. May 1658, Unknown, MA; d. March 05, 1697/98, Andover, Essex Co., MA1,2; m. PASCOE (CAPTAIN) CHUBB, Aft. 1674, unknown3.
More About HANNAH FAULKNER:
Fact 1: On March 5, 1698 Hannah was killed in one of the last Indian attacks on Andover.
Generation No. 3
3. FRANCIS3 FAULKNER (EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born May 1651 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, and died February 19, 1731/32 in Andover, Essex Co., MA. He married ABIGAIL DANE October 12, 1675 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, daughter of FRANCIS DANE and ELIZABETH INGALLS.
Notes for ABIGAIL DANE:
(Petition for Mary Osgood, Eunice Fry, Deliverance Dane, Sarah Wilson, Sr., and Abigail Barker)
To the honoured court of Assize held at Salem,
The humble address of several of the inhabitants of Andover.
May it please this honoured court, We being very sensible of the great sufferings our neighbours have been long under in prison, and charitably judging that many of them are clear of that great transgression which hath been laid to their charge, have thought it our duty to endeavor their vindication so far as our testimony for them will avail. The persons in whose behalf we are desired and concerned to speak something at present are Mrs. Mary Osgood, Eunice Frye, Deliverance Dane, Sarah Wilson and Abigail Barker, who are women of whom we can truly give this character and commendation, that they have not only lived among us so inoffensively as not to give the least occasion to any that know them to suspect them of witchcraft, but by their sober godly and exemplary conversation have obtained a good report in the place, where they have been well esteemed and approved in the church of which they are members.
We were surprized to hear that persons of known integrity and piety were accused of so horrid a crime, not considering, then, that the most innocent were liable to be so misinterpreted and abused. When these women were accused by some afflicted persons of the neighbourhood, their relations and others, tho’ they had so good grounds of charity that they should not have thought any evil of them, yet, through a misrepresentation of the truth of that evidence that was so much credited and improved against people, took great pains to persuade them to own what they were, by the afflicted, charged with, and, indeed, did unreasonably urge them to confess themselves guilty, as some of us who were then present can testify. But these good women did very much assert their innocency, yet some of them said they were not without fear least Satan had some way ensnared them, because there was that evidence against them which then was by many thought to be a certain indication and discovery of withccraft, yet they seriously professed they knew nothing by themselves of that nature: Nevertheless, by the unwearied sollicitations of those that privately discoursed them both at home and at Salem, they were at length persuaded publickly to own what they were charged with , and so submit to that guilt which we still hope and believe they are clear of. And, it is probable, the fear of what the event might be, and the encouragement that it is said was suggested to them, that confessing was the only way to obtain favour, might be too powerful a temptation for timorous women to withstand, in the hurry and distraction that we have heard they were then in. Had what they said against themselves proceeded from conviction of the fact, we should have had nothing to have said for them, but we are induced to think that it did not, because they did soon privately retract what they had said, as we are informed, and, while they were in prison, they declared to such as they had confidence to speak freely and plainly to, that they were not guilty of what they had owned, and that what they had said against themselves was the greatest grief and burden they laboured under; Now, though we cannot but judge it a thing very sinful for innocent persons to own a crime they are not guilty of, yet, considering the well ordered conversation of those women while they lived among us, and what they now seriously and constantly affirm in a more composed frame, we cannot but in charity judge them innocent of the great transgression that hath been imputed to them. As for the rest of our neighbours, who are under the like circumstances with these that have been named, we can truly say of them that while they lived among us, we have had no cause to judge them such persons as, of late, they have been represented and reported to be, nor do we know that any of their neighbours had any just grounds to suspect them of that evil that they are now charged with.
Dudley Bradstreet, John Abbot, sen., Elizabeth Rite, Francis Dane, sen., Samuel Blanchard
Wm. Peters , Thomas Barnard, Wm. Ballard, Sam. Peters, Tho. Chandler, sen., Thomas Hooper
Walter Wright, John Barker, John Hooper, Hooker Osgood, Henry Ingolls, sen., Wm. Abbot
Benj. Stevens, Wm. Chandler, sen., James Russell, Ann Bradstreet, Samuel Martin
Oliver Holt , Joanna Dane, Stephen Parker , John Presson, Eliza. Stevens, Samuel Ingolls
Francis Dane, jun., Eliza. Barnard, Ephraim Stevens, George Abbot, Phebe Robinson,
Daniel Poore, Wm. Chandler, jun., Hannah Chandler ,John Ingolls, John Chandler, Hannah Dane
Henry Ingolls, jun., Joseph Robinson , Bridget Chandler, John Frie, sen., Thomas Johnson
Mary Johnson , James Frie ,Tho. Johnson, jun. , Robert Russel , John Aslebee ,Andrew Peters
Mary Russel. , Samuel Holt , Mary Peters , (Thomas Hutchinson, History of Massachusetts Bay, II, 32-33)
from The Salem Witchcraft Papers, pp. 619-620
Children of FRANCIS FAULKNER and ABIGAIL DANE are:
i. ELIZABETH DANE4 FAULKNER, b. WFT Est. 1669-16774; d. August 17, 16785.
ii. ELIZABETH FAULKNER, b. December 07, 1678, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. July 11, 1735, Concord, MA; m. JOHN BUTRICK, Aft. 1694, Unknown.
6. iii. ABIGAIL FAULKNER, b. August 12, 1683, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. December 26, 1746, Ipswich, MA.
4. JOHN3 FAULKNER (EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born May 16, 1654 in unknown, and died January 18, 1686/87 in Unknown, MA. He married SARAH ABBOT October 19, 1682 in unknown.
Child of JOHN FAULKNER and SARAH ABBOT is:
i. SARAH4 FAULKNER, b. WFT Est. 1674-16886; d. September 01, 16897.
5. MARY3 FAULKNER (EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born Aft. 1655 in Andover, Essex Co., MA8, and died Abt. 1725 in unknown. She married JOSEPH MARBLE May 30, 1671 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, son of JOHN MARBLE and JUDITH (MARBLE).
Notes for JOSEPH MARBLE:
Occupation: Mason
OUR EWING FAMILY" Page 103: Joseph Marble was born about 1650, possibley in Boston, MA. Accourding to a listing in James Savage's Genealogical Dictionary of First Settlers of New England, Joseph was very likely a son of John and Judith Marble of Boston: if so then Joseph had at least one brother, John, born to John and Judith Marble in Boston on 10 Nov. 1646. There were probably other children of John and Judith. A birthplace and birthdate for Joseph have not been located at this time. His marriage record is in Andover, Mass., where he married on 30 May 1671 to Mary Faulkner who was born about 1649 in Andover, a daughter of Edmund Falkner and Dorothy Robinson. Joseph Marble and Mary Faulkner had at least seven children. The following were all born in Andover. 1. Dorothy Marble born 16 June 1672; died 30 June, 1672. 2. Joseph Marble born 28 July 1673; married 23 April 1693 in Andover to Hannah Barnard. 3. John Marble born ca 1680; married Abigail Merriam (or Morrison) date unknown. 4. Jonathan Marble born 7 Jan. 1684; married 31 Oct. 1716 in Concord, MA to Sarah Dudley. 5. Edmund Marble born 8 Jan. 1684; married 24 Sept. 1714 in Concord, MA to Mercy Jewell, (ca 1697-1789) daughter of Joseph Jewell and Isabell Cate. 6. Mary Marble born 1 June 1691; married 26 Nov. 1713 in Marlboro, MA. to Josiah Howe. 7. Alice Marble born 1 Jan. 1693; married 12 Feb. 1737 in Salem, MA to Benjamin Swinerton. Joseph and Mary Marble were living in Marlboro, Mass., when their daughter, Mary, Married Josiah Howe in 1713. Joseph died there on 2 Aug. 1728. When and where his Mary died in not known. IGI 1988 Edition, MA: Joseph Marble married Mary Faulkner on 30 May 1671 in Andover, Essex, MA.
Children of MARY FAULKNER and JOSEPH MARBLE are:
i. DOROTHY4 MARBLE, b. June 16, 1672, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. June 30, 1672, Andover, Essex Co., MA.
More About DOROTHY MARBLE:
Fact 1: Died in Infancy
7. ii. JOSEPH MARBLE, b. July 28, 1673, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. 1749, Stow, Middlesex, MA.
iii. JOHN MARBLE, b. January 14, 1679/80, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. December 28, 1762, Stow, Middlesex, MA; m. ABIGAIL (MERRIAN) MERRIAM, Abt. 1714.
8. iv. JOHATHAN MARBLE, b. January 07, 1681/82, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. 1721-1773.
9. v. EDMUND MARBLE, b. January 08, 1684/85, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. 1756, Conway, Franklin, MA.
vi. MARY MARBLE, b. June 01, 1691, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. Aft. 1714; m. JOSIAH HOWE, March 26, 1713.
Notes for MARY MARBLE:
Other family page- pedigree #618 says marriage date 11/22/1713
vii. ALICE MARBLE, b. January 01, 1693/94, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. WFT Est. 1738-1789; m. BENJAMIN SWINNERTON, February 12, 1733/34, Salem, Essex Co., MA.
Generation No. 4
6. ABIGAIL4 FAULKNER (FRANCIS3, EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born August 12, 1683 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, and died December 26, 1746 in Ipswich, MA. She married THOMAS LAMPSON April 06, 1708 in Andover, Essex Co., MA.
Notes for ABIGAIL FAULKNER:
Dialogue based on the examination of Sarah Good by Judges Hathorne and Corwin, from The Salem Witchcraft Papers, Book II, p.355
The Salem Witch Trials 1692 Chronology Of Events
Visit the Massachusetts Enquirer For Additional Coverage
& A Fragment Of The Trial Proceedings
Visit the Witch Trials Memorial, dedicated in 1992.
Visit The Salem Web
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January 20
Nine-year-old Elizabeth Parris and eleven-year-old Abigail Williams began to exhibit strange behavior, such as blasphemous screaming, convulsive seizures, trance-like states and mysterious spells. Within a short time, several other Salem girls began to demonstrate similar behavior.
Mid-February
Unable to determine any physical cause for the symptoms and dreadful behavior, physicians concluded that the girls were under the influence of Satan.
Late February
Prayer services and community fasting were conducted by Reverend Samuel Parris in hopes of relieving the evil forces that plagued them. In an effort to expose the "witches", John Indian baked a witch cake made with rye meal and the afflicted girls' urine. This counter-magic was meant to reveal the identities of the "witches" to the afflicted girls.
Pressured to identify the source of their affliction, the girls named three women, including Tituba, Parris' Carib Indian slave, as witches. On February 29, warrants were issued for the arrests of Tituba, Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne.
Although Osborne and Good maintained innocence, Tituba confessed to seeing the devil who appeared to her "sometimes like a hog and sometimes like a great dog". What's more, Tituba testified that there was a conspiracy of witches at work in Salem.
March 1
Magistrates John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin examined Tituba, Sarah Good, and Sarah Osborne in the meeting house in Salem Village. Tituba confessed to practicing witchcraft.
Over the next weeks, other townspeople came forward and testified that they, too, had been harmed by or had seen strange apparitions of some of the community members. As the witch hunt continued, accusations were made against many different people.
Frequently denounced were women whose behavior or economic circumstances were somehow disturbing to the social order and conventions of the time. Some of the accused had previous records of criminal activity, including witchcraft, but others were faithful churchgoers and people of high standing in the community.
March 12
Martha Corey is accused of witchcraft.
March 19
Rebecca Nurse was denounced as a witch.
March 21
Martha Corey was examined before Magistrates Hathorne and Corwin.
March 24
Rebecca Nurse was examined before Magistrates Hathorne and Corwin.
March 28
Elizabeth Proctor was denounced as a witch.
April 3
Sarah Cloyce, Rebecca Nurse's sister, was accused of witchcraft.
April 11
Elizabeth Proctor and Sarah Cloyce were examined before Hathorne, Corwin, Deputy Governor Thomas Danforth, and Captain Samuel Sewall. During this examination, John Proctor was also accused and imprisoned.
April 19
Abigail Hobbs, Bridget Bishop, Giles Corey, and Mary Warren were examined. Only Abigail Hobbs confessed.
William Hobbs
"I can deny it to my dying day."
April 22
Nehemiah Abbott, William and Deliverance Hobbs, Edward and Sarah Bishop, Mary Easty, Mary Black, Sarah Wildes, and Mary English were examined before Hathorne and Corwin. Only Nehemiah Abbott was cleared of charges.
May 2
Sarah Morey, Lydia Dustin, Susannah Martin, and Dorcas Hoar were examined by Hathorne and Corwin.
Dorcas Hoar
"I will speak the truth as long as I live."
May 4
George Burroughs was arrested in Wells, Maine.
May 9
Burroughs was examined by Hathorne, Corwin, Sewall, and William Stoughton. One of the afflicted girls, Sarah Churchill, was also examined.
May 10
George Jacobs, Sr. and his granddaughter Margaret were examined before Hathorne and Corwin. Margaret confessed and testified that her grandfather and George Burroughs were both witches.
Sarah Osborne died in prison in Boston.
Margaret Jacobs
"... They told me if I would not confess I should be put down into the dungeon and would be hanged, but if I would confess I should save my life."
May 14
Increase Mather returned from England, bringing with him a new charter and the new governor, Sir William Phips.
May 18
Mary Easty was released from prison. Yet, due to the outcries and protests of her accusers, she was arrested a second time.
May 27
Governor Phips set up a special Court of Oyer and Terminer comprised of seven judges to try the witchcraft cases. Appointed were Lieutenant Governor William Stoughton, Nathaniel Saltonstall, Bartholomew Gedney, Peter Sergeant, Samuel Sewall, Wait Still Winthrop, John Richards, John Hathorne, and Jonathan Corwin.
These magistrates based their judgments and evaluations on various kinds of intangible evidence, including direct confessions, supernatural attributes (such as "witchmarks"), and reactions of the afflicted girls. Spectral evidence, based on the assumption that the Devil could assume the "specter" of an innocent person, was relied upon despite its controversial nature.
May 31
Martha Carrier, John Alden, Wilmott Redd, Elizabeth Howe, and Phillip English were examined before Hathorne, Corwin, and Gedney.
June 2
Initial session of the Court of Oyer and Terminer. Bridget Bishop was the first to be pronounced guilty of witchcraft and condemned to death.
Early June
Soon after Bridget Bishop's trial, Nathaniel Saltonstall resigned from the court, dissatisfied with its proceedings.
June 10
Bridget Bishop was hanged in Salem, the first official execution of the Salem witch trials.
Bridget Bishop
"I am no witch. I am innocent. I know nothing of it."
Following her death, accusations of witchcraft escalated, but the trials were not unopposed. Several townspeople signed petitions on behalf of accused people they believed to be innocent.
June 29-30
Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Sarah Wildes, Sarah Good and Elizabeth Howe were tried for witchcraft and condemned.
Rebecca Nurse
"Oh Lord, help me! It is false. I am clear. For my life now lies in your hands...."
Mid-July
In an effort to expose the witches afflicting his life, Joseph Ballard of nearby Andover enlisted the aid of the accusing girls of Salem. This action marked the beginning of the Andover witch hunt.
July 19
Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth Howe, Sarah Good, and Sarah Wildes were executed.
Elizabeth Howe
"If it was the last moment I was to live, God knows I am innocent..."
Susannah Martin
"I have no hand in witchcraft."
August 2-6
George Jacobs, Sr., Martha Carrier, George Burroughs, John and Elizabeth Proctor, and John Willard were tried for witchcraft and condemned.
Martha Carrier
"...I am wronged. It is a shameful thing that you should mind these folks that are out of their wits."
August 19
George Jacobs, Sr., Martha Carrier, George Burroughs, John Proctor, and John Willard were hanged on Gallows Hill.
George Jacobs
"Because I am falsely accused. I never did it."
September 9
Martha Corey, Mary Easty, Alice Parker, Ann Pudeator, Dorcas Hoar, and Mary Bradbury were tried and condemned.
Mary Bradbury
"I do plead not guilty. I am wholly innocent of such wickedness."
September 17
Margaret Scott, Wilmott Redd, Samuel Wardwell, Mary Parker, Abigail Faulkner, Rebecca Eames, Mary Lacy, Ann Foster, and Abigail Hobbs were tried and condemned.
September 19
Giles Corey was pressed to death for refusing a trial.
September 21
Dorcas Hoar was the first of those pleading innocent to confess. Her execution was delayed.
September 22
Martha Corey, Margaret Scott, Mary Easty, Alice Parker, Ann Pudeator, Wilmott Redd, Samuel Wardwell, and Mary Parker were hanged.
October 8
Ater 20 people had been executed in the Salem witch hunt, Thomas Brattle wrote a letter criticizing the witchcraft trials. This letter had great impact on Governor Phips, who ordered that reliance on spectral and intangible evidence no longer be allowed in trials.
October 29
Governor Phips dissolved the Court of Oyer and Terminer.
November 25
The General Court of the colony created the Superior Court to try the remaining witchcraft cases which took place in May, 1693. This time no one was convicted.
Mary Easty
"...if it be possible no more innocent blood be shed...
...I am clear of this sin."
Chronology courtesy of the Salem Office of Tourism and Cultural Affairs
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Declaration of Regret - Salem Jurors
We whose names are underwritten, being in the year 1692 called to serve as jurors in court at Salem, on trial of many who were by some suspected guilty of doing acts of witchcraft upon the bodies of sundry persons, we confess that we ourselves were not capable to understand, nor able to withstand, the mysterious delusions of the powers of darkness and Prince of the air, but were, for want of knowledge in ourselves and better information from others, prevailed with to take with such evidence against the accused, as, on further consideration and better information, we justly fear was insufficient for the touching the lives of any (Deut. xvii) whereby we fear we have been instrumental, with others, though ignorantly and unwittingly, to bring upon ourselves and this people of the Lord the guilt of innocent blood; which sin the Lord saith in Scripture he would not pardon (2 Kings xxiv.4) - that is, we suppose, in regard to his temporal judgments. We do therefore hereby signify to all in general, and to the surviving sufferers in special, our deep sense of, and sorrow for, our errors in acting on such evidence to the condemning of any person; and do hereby declare, that we justly fear that we were sadly deluded and mistaken - for which we are much disquieted and distressed in our minds, and do therefore humbly beg forgiveness, first of God, for Christ's sake, for this our error, and pray that God would impute the guilt of it to ourselves nor others, and we also pray that we may be considered candidly and aright by the living sufferers, as being then under a strong and general delusion, utterly unacquainted with, and not experienced in, matters of that nature.
We do hereby ask forgiveness of you all, whom we have justly offended, and do declare, according to our present minds, we would none of us do such things again, on such grounds, for the whole world - praying you to accept of this in way of satisfaction for our offense, and that you would bless the inheritance of the Lord, that he may be entreated for the land.
Thomas Fisk, Foreman
William Fisk
John Bacheler
Thomas Fisk
John Dane
Joseph Evelith Thomas Pearly, Sr.
John Peabody
Thomas Perkins
Samuel Sayer
Andrew Eliot
Henry Herrick, Sr.
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1692 (9/17) NEng/MA Andover* 1 Faulkner, Abigail (Jr) f
Tried and condemned, pleaded Pregnancy. (Sources: Boyer and
Nissenbaum. The Salem Witchcraft papers. 1977)
1692 (9/17) NEng/MA Anover* 1 Faulkner, Abigail (Sr) f
Tried and condemned (Sources: Boyer and Nissenbaum. The Salem
Witchcraft papers. 1977))
1692 NEng/MA Andover* 1 Faulkner, Dorothy f
Examined (Sources: Boyer and Nissenbaum. The Salem Witchcraft
papers. 1977)
Child of ABIGAIL FAULKNER and THOMAS LAMPSON is:
10. i. ELIZABETH5 LAMPSON, b. Aft. 1715, Ipswich, MA; d. Bef. 1835, unknown
7. JOSEPH4 MARBLE (MARY3 FAULKNER, EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born July 28, 1673 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, and died 1749 in Stow, Middlesex, MA. He married (1) HANNAH BARNARD April 23, 1695 in Unknown, daughter of STEPHEN BARNARD and REBECCA HOWE. He married (2) RUTH RAND November 17, 1730 in Stow, Middlesex, MA.
More About JOSEPH MARBLE:
Fact 1: Occupation: Mason & Farmer
Children of JOSEPH MARBLE and HANNAH BARNARD are:
i. HANNAH5 MARBLE, b. December 13, 1697, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. October 13, 1706, Andover, Essex Co., MA.
More About HANNAH MARBLE:
Fact 1: Died at age 9, 4 days after Sister Dorothy
11. ii. JOSEPH MARBLE, b. August 15, 1699, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. Bef. 1749, unknown.
iii. DOROTHY MARBLE, b. November 1701, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. October 09, 1706, Andover, Essex Co., MA.
More About DOROTHY MARBLE:
Fact 1: Died at age 2, 4 days before Sister Hannah
iv. JACOB MARBLE, b. February 1705/06, Andover, Essex Co., MA; d. Bef. 1749.
v. JOHATHAN MARBLE, b. May 22, 1713, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. Abt. July 1713.
More About JOHATHAN MARBLE:
Fact 1: Died in Infancy
vi. MARY MARBLE, b. June 09, 1714, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. Aft. June 1715, Stow, Middlesex, MA.
More About MARY MARBLE:
Fact 1: Died in Infancy
vii. REBECCA MARBLE, b. March 10, 1714/15, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. Bef. 1835.
viii. DAVID MARBLE, b. April 21, 1718, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. Bef. 1838.
Notes for DAVID MARBLE:
In records of the Second Church of Scituate... now the 1st Unitarian church of Norwell, MA
1743 "Abigail Marble, wife of David"... do not know if this was refering to a marriage or a death??
Plymouth * Mayflower families 1500-1800
Child of JOSEPH MARBLE and RUTH RAND is:
12. ix. ASA5 MARBLE, b. Abt. 1721, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. Bef. 1841.
8. JOHATHAN4 MARBLE (MARY3 FAULKNER, EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born January 07, 1681/82 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, and died 1721-1773. He married SARAH DUDLEY October 31, 1716, daughter of JOSEPH DUDLEY and ABIGAIL GABLE.
More About JOHATHAN MARBLE:
Fact 1: Occupation: BrickLayer
Child of JOHATHAN MARBLE and SARAH DUDLEY is:
13. i. JONATHON JR5 MARBLE, b. March 27, 1721; d. Bef. 1841.
9. EDMUND4 MARBLE (MARY3 FAULKNER, EDMUND2, RICHARD1) was born January 08, 1684/85 in Andover, Essex Co., MA, and died 1756 in Conway, Franklin, MA. He married MERCY (MARY "MARCY") JEWELL September 24, 1714 in Concord, Middlesex, MA, daughter of JOSEPH JEWELL and ISABEL CATE.
More About EDMUND MARBLE:
Fact 1: Also listed as having died in Stow, MA
Children of EDMUND MARBLE and MERCY JEWELL are:
i. JAMES5 MARBLE, b. July 08, 1717, Sudbury, Middlesex, MA; d. March 17, 1745/46; m. KEZIAH BUCK, March 17, 1742/43, Andover, Essex, MA.
More About JAMES MARBLE:
Fact 1: James was not listed on another family sheet as being a child of Edmund
ii. DOROTHY MARBLE, b. September 25, 1719, Sudbury, Middlesex, MA; d. April 11, 1760; m. MOSES CHANDLER, June 08, 1742.
14. iii. NATHANIAL MARBLE, b. 1722, Sudbury, Middlesex, MA; d. June 08, 1802, Harvard, Worchester, MA.
iv. ESABLE (ISABEL) MARBLE, b. May 30, 1728, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. WFT Est. 1759-1822; m. LEMERAL PERHAM, July 03, 1754.
v. DANIEL MARBLE, b. July 07, 1730, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. 1756.
15. vi. ABNER MARBLE, b. June 19, 1740, Stow, Middlesex, MA; d. September 24, 1792, GA.