Mary Willard1
F, #5445
Children of Mary Willard and Dr. Edward Ellis
- Maria Ellis+1 b. May 1730
- Sarah Ellis1 b. 22 Aug 1733
- Elizabeth Ellis+1 b. 22 Mar 1735, d. 1817
Citations
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, 14.
Esther Willet1
F, #6646, b. 6 July 1648, d. 26 July 1737
Esther Willet was born on 6 July 1648 in Plymouth, Massachusetts, (or 1647.)2,3 She was the daughter of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.4 Esther Willet married Rev. Josiah Flynt, son of Rev. Henry Flynt and Margery Hoar, on 24 January 1671/72 in Braintree ? the marriage is also said to have taken place in Swansea but does not appear in the vital records of that town nor of Dorchester.2,5 Esther Willet died on 26 July 1737 in Braintree, Massachusetts, at the age of 89.3
Children of Esther Willet and Rev. Josiah Flynt
- Mary Flynt6 b. 18 Nov 1672, d. 15 Dec 1673
- Rev. Henry Flynt b. 5 May 1675, d. 13 Feb 1760
- Josiah Flynt6 b. 5 Oct 1676
- Dorothy Flynt+ b. 11 May 1678, d. 29 Aug 1737
- Thomas Flynt6 b. 11 Jul 1680
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 38 p. 150.
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
- [S182] Elizabeth Cabot & James Jackson Putnam Putnam, Jackson ancestors and descendants, p. 18.
- [S34] Unverified internet information.
- [S4] Sandra MacLean Clunies, Clunies files.
- [S103] Waldo Chamberlain Sprague, Genealogies of Braintree, 1711.
Andrew Willett1
M, #5337, b. 1562, d. 4 December 1621
Andrew Willett was born in 1562 in Ely.1 He was the son of Thomas Willett and Elizabeth Stanton ?1,2 Andrew Willett married Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad, daughter of Dr. Roger Goad D.D., circa 29 September 1588.1 Andrew Willett died on 4 December 1621 in Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, from gangrene, ten days after a fall from his horse.1 and is buried on 8 December 1621 in the chancel of Barley parish church, St Margaret of Antioch. Of his eighteen children, nine sons and four daughters survived him.1
After attending the Collegiate School at Ely, he entered Cambridge University at the age of fifteen years, and was quickly elected a scholar. He graduated Bachelor of Arts in 1580; elected to a fellowship at Christmas, 1583; Master of Arts in 1584, and in the same year was incorporated as a member of the University of Oxford. He took holy orders in 1585, and was admitted, July 22, 1587, on the presentation of the Queen, to the prebendal stall at Ely, which his father had resigned in his favour. He quickly gained fame as a preacher, and was selected to read the lectures for three years in the cathedral church at Ely, and for one year at St. Paul's Church, London. He held the living of Childerly until 1594. He was graduated Bachelor of Divinity in 1591, and Doctor of Divinity in 1601, and in 1597 was admitted to the rectory of Gransden Parva, in Huntingdonshire, but shortly after exchanged to Barley, his father having died, and was instituted January 29, 1599. Twenty-three years of his life were spent here in the ministry. He was a very prolific writer, making it a rule to produce not less than one work each half year, and so learned and profound were these writings, that it was said of him that he was a "walking library," and that "he must write in his sleep, it being impossible he should do so much waking." The method and regularity with which he worked were, however, the secret of his success. He was chaplain-in-ordinary and tutor to Prince Henry, as well as a frequent preacher before the court. He was greatly admired by King James, yet able to adapt himself to his rural parishioners. It is owing to his influence with his friend, Thomas Sutton, that we owe that masterpiece of Protestant charity, Charterhouse. He fell into disfavour at court by his opposition to the Spanish marriage, and in consequence suffered imprisonment for a month.1
After attending the Collegiate School at Ely, he entered Cambridge University at the age of fifteen years, and was quickly elected a scholar. He graduated Bachelor of Arts in 1580; elected to a fellowship at Christmas, 1583; Master of Arts in 1584, and in the same year was incorporated as a member of the University of Oxford. He took holy orders in 1585, and was admitted, July 22, 1587, on the presentation of the Queen, to the prebendal stall at Ely, which his father had resigned in his favour. He quickly gained fame as a preacher, and was selected to read the lectures for three years in the cathedral church at Ely, and for one year at St. Paul's Church, London. He held the living of Childerly until 1594. He was graduated Bachelor of Divinity in 1591, and Doctor of Divinity in 1601, and in 1597 was admitted to the rectory of Gransden Parva, in Huntingdonshire, but shortly after exchanged to Barley, his father having died, and was instituted January 29, 1599. Twenty-three years of his life were spent here in the ministry. He was a very prolific writer, making it a rule to produce not less than one work each half year, and so learned and profound were these writings, that it was said of him that he was a "walking library," and that "he must write in his sleep, it being impossible he should do so much waking." The method and regularity with which he worked were, however, the secret of his success. He was chaplain-in-ordinary and tutor to Prince Henry, as well as a frequent preacher before the court. He was greatly admired by King James, yet able to adapt himself to his rural parishioners. It is owing to his influence with his friend, Thomas Sutton, that we owe that masterpiece of Protestant charity, Charterhouse. He fell into disfavour at court by his opposition to the Spanish marriage, and in consequence suffered imprisonment for a month.1
Children of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad
- Henry Willett1 d. 1670
- Elizabeth Willett b. 14 Jun 1601
- Thomas Willett b. 15 Aug 1602
- Anna Willett3 b. 5 Aug 1604
- Captain Thomas Willett+4 b. Aug 1605, d. 4 Aug 1674
- Rebecca Willett
- Robert Willett b. 10 Dec 1609
- Rebecca Willett b. 29 Jan 1612
- Matthew Willett b. 30 Sep 1612
- Charles Willett b. 5 May 1614
- Jacob Willett3 b. 5 May 1614
- Christian Willett b. 13 Jun 1615
Andrew Willett1
M, #7660, b. 5 October 1655
Andrew Willett. Of Boston. He was born on 5 October 1655.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 Andrew Willett married Susannah Holbrook, daughter of Thomas Holbrook and Joane Kingman, on 6 March 1693/94 in Braintree, Massachusetts.1,2
Anna Willett1
F, #24871, b. 5 August 1604
Anna Willett was baptised on 5 August 1604 at Barley, Hertfordshire.1 She was the daughter of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.1
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980.
Charles Willett
M, #9137, b. 5 May 1614
Charles Willett was baptised on 5 May 1614. He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.
Christian Willett
M, #9138, b. 13 June 1615
Christian Willett was baptised on 13 June 1615 at Barley, Hertfordshire.1 He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980.
David Willett1
M, #7659, b. 1 November 1654
David Willett was born on 1 November 1654.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1
Citations
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
Elizabeth Willett
F, #9132, b. 14 June 1601
Elizabeth Willett was baptised on 14 June 1601 at Barley, Hertfordshire.1 She was the daughter of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad and is buried on 4 July 1624.
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980.
Henry Willett1
M, #7666, d. 1670
Henry Willett was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.1 Henry Willett died in 1670.1
Citations
- [S21] Various editors, Dictionary of National Biography.
Hezekiah Willett1
M, #7656, b. 20 July 1651, d. 26 July 1651
Hezekiah Willett was born on 20 July 1651 in Plymouth.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 Hezekiah Willett died on 26 July 1651.1
Citations
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
Hezekiah Willett1
M, #7657, b. circa 6 November 1653, d. 1676
Hezekiah Willett was born circa 6 November 1653 in Plymouth.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 Hezekiah Willett married Anna Brown on 7 January 1675/76 in Swansea.1 Hezekiah Willett died in 1676.2
Jacob Willett1
M, #24872, b. 5 May 1614
Jacob Willett was baptised on 5 May 1614 at Barley, Hertfordshire.1 He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.1
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980.
James Willett1
M, #7652, b. 24 November 1649
James Willett was born on 24 November 1649 in Plymouth.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 James Willett married first Elizabeth Hunt, daughter of Peter Hunt, on 17 April 1673 at Rehoboth.1 James Willett married secondly Grace Frinck on 2 August 1677 at Stonington.1,2
John Willett1
M, #7647, b. 21 August 1641, d. 1664
John Willett was born on 21 August 1641.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 John Willett married Abigail Collins, daughter of Edward Collins, in 1663 in Charlestown.1 John Willett died in 1664.2
Col. Marinus Willett1
M, #21007, b. 31 July 1740, d. 23 August 1830
Col. Marinus Willett was born on 31 July 1740 in Jamaica, Long Island, New York.2 He married Margaret Bancker, daughter of Christopher Bancker and Mary Smith.1 Col. Marinus Willett died on 23 August 1830 at the age of 90.2
Martha Willett1
F, #7645, b. 6 August 1639, d. 1678
Martha Willett was born on 6 August 1639.1 She was the daughter of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 Martha Willett married John Saffin on 2 December 1658 in Plymouth.1 Martha Willett died in 1678.2
Mary Willett1,2
F, #6749, b. 10 November 1637, d. 1712
Mary Willett was born on 10 November 1637 (also found recorded as Plymouth 4 May 1643.)2 She was the daughter of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1,2 Mary Willett married firstly Rev. Samuel Hooker, son of Rev. Thomas Hooker and Susannah Garbrand, on 22 September 1658 at Plymouth.2 Mary Willett married Rev. Thomas Buckingham on 10 August 1703 in Farmington.2 Mary Willett died in 1712.3
Children of Mary Willett and Rev. Samuel Hooker
- Roger Hooker
- Nathaniel Hooker
- Mary Hooker
- Hezekiah Hooker
- Dr. Daniel Hooker
- Sarah Hooker
- Samuel Hooker b. 29 May 1661, d. 1730
- William Hooker b. 1663, d. 1689
- Dr. Thomas Hooker b. 20 Feb 1664/65, d. 1720
- Judge James Hooker+4 b. 27 Oct 1666, d. 12 Mar 1743
Matthew Willett
M, #9135, b. 30 September 1612
Matthew Willett was christened on 30 September 1612. He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.
Rebecca Willett1
F, #7650, b. 2 December 1644, d. 2 April 1652
Rebecca Willett was born on 2 December 1644.1 She was the daughter of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 Rebecca Willett died on 2 April 1652 in Plymouth at the age of 7.1
Citations
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
Rebecca Willett
F, #9136, b. 29 January 1612
Rebecca Willett was baptised on 29 January 1612. She was the daughter of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.
Rebecca Willett
F, #9139
Rebecca Willett was the daughter of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad and is buried on 8 March 1608.
Robert Willett
M, #9134, b. 10 December 1609
Robert Willett was baptised on 10 December 1609 at Barley, Hertfordshire.1 He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad and is buried in 1666?
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980.
Samuel Willett1
M, #7662, b. 27 October 1658
Samuel Willett was born on 27 October 1658.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1 Said to have married and had a large family at Flushing, Long Island but there is much confusion with the descendants of another Thomas Willet who did settle in Flushing.1
Citations
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
Sarah Willett1
F, #6747, b. 4 May 1643, d. before 1666
Sarah Willett was born on 4 May 1643.2 She was the daughter of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1,2 Sarah Willett married Rev. John Eliot Jr., son of Rev. John Eliot and Ann Mountford, circa 1661.1 Sarah Willett died before 1666.
Child of Sarah Willett and Rev. John Eliot Jr.
- Sarah Eliot1 b. 21 Sep 1662
Thomas Willett1
M, #7651, b. 1 October 1646
Thomas Willett was born on 1 October 1646.1 He was the son of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown.1
Citations
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
Thomas Willett1
M, #7665, b. circa 1511, d. April 1598
Thomas Willett was born circa 1511 in Ely ?, Cambridgshire.1 He married Elizabeth Stanton ? in 1560?2 Thomas Willett died in April 1598 in Barley, Hertfordshire.1
He began his career as a public notary and officiated as such at the consecration of Archbishop Parker. Late in life he took holy orders, becoming rector of Barley, Hertfordshire, fourteen miles from Cambridge, which living had been presented to him by his patron, Bishop Richard Cox (Bishop of Ely 1559-81). He was also admitted to the fifth prebendal stall of Ely in 1560 by his patron, with whom he had been associated as subalmoner to Edward VI. He had two sons and four daughters.1
Child of Thomas Willett and Elizabeth Stanton ?
- Andrew Willett+1 b. 1562, d. 4 Dec 1621
Thomas Willett
M, #9133, b. 15 August 1602
Thomas Willett was baptised on 15 August 1602. He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad and is buried on 29 February 1604.
Captain Thomas Willett1
M, #6649, b. August 1605, d. 4 August 1674
Captain Thomas Willett. The first English mayor of New York City.2,3 He was born in August 1605 in the Rectory House, Barley, Hertfordshire, (Anderson gives a birth date of about 1610.)3,4 He was the son of Andrew Willett and Jacobine (Jacobeda) Goad.5 Captain Thomas Willett was baptised on 29 August 1605 at Barley, Hertfordshire.4 He married first Mary Brown, daughter of John Brown Sr. and Dorothy Beauchamp ?, on 6 July 1636 at Plymouth, Massachusetts.6 Captain Thomas Willett received into his family the orphaned children, Mary and Priscilla, daughters of his brother-in-law, Peter Brown, of the "Mayflower." in 1644. He married secondly Joanna Boyse, daughter of Rev. John Boyse, on 19 September 1671 at Milford.6 Captain Thomas Willett died on 4 August 1674 reputedly in Swansea, Massachusetts,7 but is buried in Little Neck Cemetery, East Providence, Rhode Island.
This Thomas Willett may not be the Thomas who was baptised in 1605 if his age at death given on the Rhode Island headstone is correct. A sibling of the same name died before he was born and it is possible that a subsequent one may also have lived for a short time in the intervening period.
This Thomas Willett may not be the Thomas who was baptised in 1605 if his age at death given on the Rhode Island headstone is correct. A sibling of the same name died before he was born and it is possible that a subsequent one may also have lived for a short time in the intervening period.
"He was but sixteen years of age when his father died, and he continued to live with his widowed mother and maternal grandmother until he had attained his majority. Shortly afterward he went to Leyden and joined the second Puritan exodus to the New Plymouth plantations, and Governor Bradford mentions him as "being discreet and one in whom they could place trust." He was admitted a freeman in 1633 after he had become a successful trader with the Indians, and soon became a large ship owner trading with New Amsterdam. He was elected one of the assistant governors of the Plymouth Colony, and as a proof of his worth of character and commanding abilities, he was frequently chosen to settle disputes between the rival colonies of England and Holland. He also became captain of a military company.
Early in 1660 he left Plymouth and establishing himself in Rhode Island became the founder of Swansea. Accompanying the English commander, Nicholls, he greatly contributed to the peaceable surrender of New Amsterdam to the English, September 7, 1664, and when the colony received the name of New York, Captain Willet was appointed the first mayor, June, 1665, with the approval of English and Dutch alike. The following year he was elected alderman, and became mayor a second time in 1667. Not long afterward he withdrew to Swansea, where he spent the remainder of his life. In his religious views he was an independent. His descendants were numerous and included Colonel Marinus Willet, the friend of Washington, who himself became mayor of New York, and the "Dorothy Q." of the poem of Oliver Wendell Holmes, was the great-granddaughter of Captain Thomas Willet, and the great-grandmother of the poet."8
Early in 1660 he left Plymouth and establishing himself in Rhode Island became the founder of Swansea. Accompanying the English commander, Nicholls, he greatly contributed to the peaceable surrender of New Amsterdam to the English, September 7, 1664, and when the colony received the name of New York, Captain Willet was appointed the first mayor, June, 1665, with the approval of English and Dutch alike. The following year he was elected alderman, and became mayor a second time in 1667. Not long afterward he withdrew to Swansea, where he spent the remainder of his life. In his religious views he was an independent. His descendants were numerous and included Colonel Marinus Willet, the friend of Washington, who himself became mayor of New York, and the "Dorothy Q." of the poem of Oliver Wendell Holmes, was the great-granddaughter of Captain Thomas Willet, and the great-grandmother of the poet."8
Children of Captain Thomas Willett and Mary Brown
- Mary Willett+2 b. 10 Nov 1637, d. 1712
- Martha Willett6 b. 6 Aug 1639, d. 1678
- John Willett6 b. 21 Aug 1641, d. 1664
- Sarah Willett+2 b. 4 May 1643, d. b 1666
- Rebecca Willett6 b. 2 Dec 1644, d. 2 Apr 1652
- Thomas Willett6 b. 1 Oct 1646
- Esther Willet+9 b. 6 Jul 1648, d. 26 Jul 1737
- James Willett6 b. 24 Nov 1649
- Hezekiah Willett6 b. 20 Jul 1651, d. 26 Jul 1651
- Hezekiah Willett6 b. c 6 Nov 1653, d. 1676
- David Willett6 b. 1 Nov 1654
- Andrew Willett6 b. 5 Oct 1655
- Samuel Willett6 b. 27 Oct 1658
Citations
- [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families, p. 176.
- [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families.
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 1998.
- [S21] Various editors, Dictionary of National Biography.
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 1999.
- [S64] Robert Charles Anderson and George F. Sanborn Jr. & Melinde Lutz Sanborne, The Great Migration, p. 2000.
- [S460] MI, "unknown cd."
- [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families, p. 1250 [from DNB].
- [S34] Unverified internet information.
(?) William X, Duke of Aquitane1
M, #9917
(?) William X, Duke of Aquitane married Aenor de Rochefoucauld, daughter of Aimery I de Rochefoucauld Viscount de Châtellérhault.1
Child of (?) William X, Duke of Aquitane and Aenor de Rochefoucauld
- Eleanor of Aquitane+ b. c 1122, d. 1 Apr 1204
Citations
- [S147] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Families, p. 60.