Dr. John Cabot1
M, #13772, b. 26 October 1704, d. 3 June 1749
Dr. John Cabot was born on 26 October 1704.1 He was the son of John Cabot and Anne Orne.1 Dr. John Cabot graduated in 1724 from Harvard A.B. and A.M. 1727.2 He married firstly Sarah Higginson, daughter of Capt. John Higginson and Hannah Gardner, on 1 December 1732 in Salem, Massachusetts.3 Dr. John Cabot married Hannah Clark on 5 June 1747 in Salem.3 Dr. John Cabot died on 3 June 1749 at the age of 44 from pleurisy.3
Jonathan Sewall Cabot
M, #24440, b. 26 May 1935, d. 14 March 1990
Jonathan Sewall Cabot was born on 26 May 1935. He was the son of Quincy Sewall Cabot and Geneviève Fox. Jonathan Sewall Cabot died on 14 March 1990 at the age of 54.
Joseph Cabot1
M, #5510, b. 29 July 1720, d. 8 December 1767
Joseph Cabot was baptised on 29 July 1720 at Salem, Massachusetts, (or 24 July - Cabot.2,3) He was the son of John Cabot and Anne Orne.1 Joseph Cabot married Elizabeth Higginson, daughter of John Higginson and Ruth Boardman, on 30 March 1744 in Salem.1,4 Joseph Cabot died on 8 December 1767 in Salem, Massachusetts, at the age of 47.1,2
Children of Joseph Cabot and Elizabeth Higginson
- John Cabot5 b. 14 Jan 1744
- Captain Joseph Cabot6 b. 19 Jan 1745
- Elizabeth Cabot5 b. 16 Jan 1746, d. 16 Apr 1747
- Elizabeth Cabot+1 b. 24 Feb 1747, d. 20 Sep 1804
- Andrew Cabot5 b. 2 Aug 1749, d. 1 Jan 1749/50
- Hon. George Cabot+6 b. 16 Jan 1751, d. 18 Apr 1823
- Nathaniel Cabot5 b. 2 May 1753
- Stephen Cabot+7 b. 26 Nov 1754, d. 1779
- Francis Cabot+1 b. 14 Jun 1757, d. 1832
- Samuel Cabot b. 19 Nov 1758
Child of Joseph Cabot and Anne Orne
- Andrew Cabot+8 b. 16 Dec 1750, d. 1791
Citations
- [S41] Leverett Saltonstall, Ancestry and Descendants of Sir Richard Saltonstall., p. 194 pedigree.
- [S157] Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Descendants of Francis Higginson, p. 20.
- [S472] L. Vernon Briggs, Cabot family, p. 38.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 100 p. 250.
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001.
- [S69] Unknown author, The Pickering Genealogy, p. 176.
- [S157] Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Descendants of Francis Higginson, p. 23.
- [S189] Frederick A. Virkus, Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy, Vol. 1. p. 150.
Captain Joseph Cabot1
M, #7525, b. 19 January 1745
Captain Joseph Cabot was born on 19 January 1745 in Salem, Massachusetts.2 He was the son of Joseph Cabot and Elizabeth Higginson.1 Captain Joseph Cabot was baptised on 26 January 1745 at Salem, Massachusetts.3 He married Rebecca Orne, daughter of Timothy Orne and Rebecca Taylor, on 4 August 1768 in Salem, Massachusetts.3,4
Louisa Storrow Cabot1
F, #26746, b. 16 November 1860
Louisa Storrow Cabot was born on 16 November 1860.1 She was the daughter of Francis Cabot and Mary Louisa Higginson.1 Louisa Storrow Cabot married John Richardson on 24 October 1883 in Brookline, Massachusetts.1
Children of Louisa Storrow Cabot and John Richardson
- Louisa Cabot Richardson1 b. 24 Oct 1884
- John Richardson1 b. 30 Sep 1886
- Charlotte Blake Richardson1 b. 10 Dec 1900
Citations
- [S639] Roger Irving Lee, Descendants of Francis Cabot.
Lucy Sewall Cabot1
F, #1226, b. 17 February 1891, d. 17 July 1944
Lucy Sewall Cabot was born on 17 February 1891 in Brookline, Massachusetts.2 She was the daughter of Edward Clarke Cabot and Louisa Winslow Sewall.3,2 Lucy Sewall Cabot died on 17 July 1944 in New Bedford, Massachusetts, at the age of 53.4
Miss Lucy Sewall Cabot, 54, of 71 Mt. Vernon street, Boston, died today at St. Luke’s Hospital, New Bedford, after a short illness.
She was born in Brookline, the daughter of the late Edward C. and Louisa Sewall Cabot. She had been staying at her summer home at Nonqultt, which she inherited from her mother. George E. Cabot, president of Cabot, Cabot & Forbes, Inc., a brother, is her only near survivor. She was a member of the Boston Women’s City Club.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday noon at Salter’s Point, with burial in Walnut Hill cemetery, Brookline.4
Miss Lucy Sewall Cabot, 54, of 71 Mt. Vernon street, Boston, died today at St. Luke’s Hospital, New Bedford, after a short illness.
She was born in Brookline, the daughter of the late Edward C. and Louisa Sewall Cabot. She had been staying at her summer home at Nonqultt, which she inherited from her mother. George E. Cabot, president of Cabot, Cabot & Forbes, Inc., a brother, is her only near survivor. She was a member of the Boston Women’s City Club.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday noon at Salter’s Point, with burial in Walnut Hill cemetery, Brookline.4
Lydia Cabot1
F, #14225, b. 8 May 1787, d. 31 May 1869
Lydia Cabot was born on 8 May 1787 in Beverly.1 She was the daughter of Andrew Cabot and Lydia Dodge.1 Lydia Cabot married Patrick Tracy Jackson, son of Hon. Jonathan Jackson and Hannah Tracy, on 1 November 1810 in Boston, Massachusetts.1 Lydia Cabot died on 31 May 1869 in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 82.1
Children of Lydia Cabot and Patrick Tracy Jackson
Citations
- [S182] Elizabeth Cabot & James Jackson Putnam Putnam, Jackson ancestors and descendants, p. 31.
Margaret Cabot1
F, #13774, b. 14 June 1713, d. 13 August 1789
Margaret Cabot was born on 14 June 1713 in Salem, Massachusetts.2 She was the daughter of John Cabot and Anne Orne.1 Margaret Cabot married Benjamin Gerrish on 7 January 1737/38 in Salem.2 Margaret Cabot died on 13 August 1789 in Salem, Massachusetts, at the age of 76.2
Margaret Copley Cabot1
F, #19396, b. 15 June 1866, d. 27 November 1920
Margaret Copley Cabot was born on 15 June 1866.1 She was the daughter of Francis Cabot and Mary Louisa Higginson.1 Margaret Copley Cabot married Joseph Lee on 27 May 1897 in Brookline, Massachusetts.1 Margaret Copley Cabot died on 27 November 1920 in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 54.1
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 76, p. 214.
Marian Cabot1
F, #14299, b. 24 September 1857, d. 11 July 1932
Marian Cabot was born on 24 September 1857. She married Dr. James Jackson Putnam, son of Charles Gideon Putnam and Elizabeth Cabot Jackson.1 Marian Cabot died on 11 July 1932 at the age of 74.
Children of Marian Cabot and Dr. James Jackson Putnam
- Charles Pickering Putnam2 b. 25 Mar 1887, d. 25 Mar 1887
- Elizabeth Cabot Putnam+2 b. 21 Feb 1888
- Dr. James Jackson Putnam2 b. 16 Sep 1890
- Marian Cabot Putnam2 b. 9 Apr 1893
- Louisa Higginson Putnam2 b. 1 Feb 1895
- Frances Cabot Putnam2 b. 20 Oct 1897, d. 12 Dec 1913
Marian Cabot1
F, #26744, b. 24 September 1857, d. 11 July 1932
Marian Cabot was born on 24 September 1857.1 She was the daughter of Francis Cabot and Mary Louisa Higginson.1 Marian Cabot died on 11 July 1932 at the age of 74.1
Citations
- [S639] Roger Irving Lee, Descendants of Francis Cabot.
Marianne Cabot
F, #19400, b. 7 February 1802
Marianne Cabot was born on 7 February 1802. She married Frederick Cabot, son of Francis Cabot and Anna Clarke.
Child of Marianne Cabot and Frederick Cabot
- Francis Cabot+ b. 16 Jun 1825, d. 11 Apr 1905
Mary Cabot1
F, #687, b. 4 June 1709, d. 1737
Mary Cabot was born on 4 June 1709 in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts.2,3 She was the daughter of John Cabot and Anne Orne.4 Mary Cabot married Mitchell Sewall, son of Major Stephen Sewall and Margaret Mitchell, on 4 June 1729 in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts.5,2,3 Mary Cabot died in 1737.5
Children of Mary Cabot and Mitchell Sewall
- Catherine Sewall+1 b. 1731, d. Nov 1803
- Margaret Sewall b. c 1735, d. 3 Nov 1773
- Mary Sewall b. 13 Mar 1736/37, d. b 10 Feb 1794
Citations
Mary Cabot1
F, #13228, b. 4 February 1778, d. 2 August 1802
Mary Cabot was born on 4 February 1778.1 She was the daughter of Stephen Cabot and Deborah Higginson.1 Mary Cabot died on 2 August 1802 at the age of 24.1
Citations
- [S157] Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Descendants of Francis Higginson, p. 23.
Mary Ann Cabot1
F, #5515, b. 9 May 1784, d. 25 July 1809
Mary Ann Cabot was baptised on 9 May 1784 at Salem, Massachusetts.2 She was the daughter of Francis Cabot and Anna Clarke.1 Mary Ann Cabot married Nathaniel Cabot Lee, son of Joseph Lee and Elizabeth Cabot, on 11 April 1803 in Salem, Massachusetts.1,2 Mary Ann Cabot married secondly Francis Blanchard on 29 August 1808 in Boston, Massachusetts.2 Mary Ann Cabot died on 25 July 1809 at the age of 25.1
Child of Mary Ann Cabot and Nathaniel Cabot Lee
- John Clarke Lee+1 b. 9 Apr 1804, d. 19 Nov 1877
Mary Currie Cabot1
F, #19583, b. 8 September 1922
Mary Currie Cabot was born on 8 September 1922 in New York City.1 She was the daughter of Francis Higginson Cabot Jr. and Currie Duke Mathews.1
Citations
- [S472] L. Vernon Briggs, Cabot family, p. 781.
Mary Joy Cabot
F, #24439, b. 26 September 1933, d. 25 December 2007
Mary Joy Cabot was born on 26 September 1933 in District of Columbia. She was the daughter of Quincy Sewall Cabot and Geneviève Fox. Mary Joy Cabot married firstly Jehan Pierre de Noüe, Comte de Noüe in 1955. Mary Joy Cabot died on 25 December 2007 in Fort Collins, Larimer County, Colorado, at the age of 74.1
Citations
- [S210] Social Security Death Index.
Maud Bonner Cabot1
F, #1869, b. 1 March 1903, d. 14 March 1999
Maud Bonner Cabot was born on 1 March 1903 in New York.1 She was the daughter of Francis Higginson Cabot and Maud Bonner.2 Maud Bonner Cabot died on 14 March 1999 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the age of 96.3
Maud Morgan, 96; Eclectic Artist
Maud Morgan exhibited alongside Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko, two giants of Abstract Expressionism. She mentored Frank Stella, buying one of his first paintings when he was 18.
But her own brilliant career went largely unsung during her lifetime. At her death Sunday in Cambridge, Mass., at the age of 96, the woman who was called Boston's modernist doyenne left eight decades of wide-ranging works, from still lifes to abstractions and self-portraits in watercolor, oils and the medium she favored in her 90s, collage.
Morgan, who died of complications resulting from pneumonia, led an exotic life. She was a New York Cabot whose eccentric mother forced her to spend a year as a debutante and, because Maud Bonner Cabot was a big-game hunter, required her to shoot a moose.
Morgan complied with her mother's wishes. But soon afterward, she escaped her aristocratic bonds and fled to Paris for art studies. She traveled to Russia to observe communism firsthand. She went to India, where she met Gandhi. She knocked around Europe with James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway.
In Paris, she met her husband, an artist named Patrick Morgan. He introduced her to painting when he offhandedly gave her a brush to keep her busy while he finished a still life in his Paris studio.
They later moved to New York, where Morgan exhibited some of her paintings in 1938. This was the heyday of Abstract Expressionism and Morgan was represented by Betty Parsons, the legendary dealer who championed Pollock and Rothko. The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney bought paintings from her show.
Just as Morgan's career was blooming, she moved to Boston, where her husband had accepted a teaching job. Removed from the all-important New York art orbit, she was a woman painter working in a Boston suburb, circumstances that severely undermined her chances for serious recognition.
Some critics said that Morgan suffered because her work was not identifiably feminine. Unlike Georgia O'Keeffe, who was celebrated for her flower paintings, or Frieda Kahlo, who was known for her images of her crippled body and disastrous marriage, Morgan's work did not conform to "our notions of female art," critic Mary Sherman said.
In an 1996 interview in the Boston Globe, Morgan said she had no doubt that the move to Boston was the crucial blow.
"I was in just the right hot spot. I think I could have made it into--I'm not saying the top echelon--but I could have made . . . a certain kind of fame."
Parsons, the New York dealer, once said the problem was that "Maud's paintings were too beautiful." Morgan was a superb colorist who was fond of tropical hues. She defied many critics' attempts at categorization because she worked in representational and abstract styles. She created dozens of self-portraits, for instance. Many of them were wildly funny, such as "My Rain Hat," in which she appears to be wearing a towering wedding cake on her head.
In her last decade, Morgan favored collage because it required less physical exertion than painting. She produced 400 collages, many of them made of ordinary colored paper mixed with wallpaper scraps and burned matches.
"You can see abstraction's history in her new works, in the finicky daintiness that resembles Malevich and Kandinsky, and in the expert use of color Morgan may have absorbed in part from Hans Hofmann, who was her teacher," Boston Globe critic Christine Temin wrote of a 1996 showing of Morgan's collages at Barbara Singer Fine Art in Cambridge.
In 1993, on the occasion of Morgan's 90th birthday, friends donated funds to Boston's Museum of Fine Arts to establish an annual prize in her name. It is awarded to Massachusetts women artists.
Morgan is survived by a daughter, Victoria Benedict, and a son, Alexis Morgan, both of Cambridge. Los Angeles Times, March 17, 1999, Elaine Woo, Times Staff Writer.
Maud Morgan, 96; Eclectic Artist
Maud Morgan exhibited alongside Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko, two giants of Abstract Expressionism. She mentored Frank Stella, buying one of his first paintings when he was 18.
But her own brilliant career went largely unsung during her lifetime. At her death Sunday in Cambridge, Mass., at the age of 96, the woman who was called Boston's modernist doyenne left eight decades of wide-ranging works, from still lifes to abstractions and self-portraits in watercolor, oils and the medium she favored in her 90s, collage.
Morgan, who died of complications resulting from pneumonia, led an exotic life. She was a New York Cabot whose eccentric mother forced her to spend a year as a debutante and, because Maud Bonner Cabot was a big-game hunter, required her to shoot a moose.
Morgan complied with her mother's wishes. But soon afterward, she escaped her aristocratic bonds and fled to Paris for art studies. She traveled to Russia to observe communism firsthand. She went to India, where she met Gandhi. She knocked around Europe with James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway.
In Paris, she met her husband, an artist named Patrick Morgan. He introduced her to painting when he offhandedly gave her a brush to keep her busy while he finished a still life in his Paris studio.
They later moved to New York, where Morgan exhibited some of her paintings in 1938. This was the heyday of Abstract Expressionism and Morgan was represented by Betty Parsons, the legendary dealer who championed Pollock and Rothko. The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney bought paintings from her show.
Just as Morgan's career was blooming, she moved to Boston, where her husband had accepted a teaching job. Removed from the all-important New York art orbit, she was a woman painter working in a Boston suburb, circumstances that severely undermined her chances for serious recognition.
Some critics said that Morgan suffered because her work was not identifiably feminine. Unlike Georgia O'Keeffe, who was celebrated for her flower paintings, or Frieda Kahlo, who was known for her images of her crippled body and disastrous marriage, Morgan's work did not conform to "our notions of female art," critic Mary Sherman said.
In an 1996 interview in the Boston Globe, Morgan said she had no doubt that the move to Boston was the crucial blow.
"I was in just the right hot spot. I think I could have made it into--I'm not saying the top echelon--but I could have made . . . a certain kind of fame."
Parsons, the New York dealer, once said the problem was that "Maud's paintings were too beautiful." Morgan was a superb colorist who was fond of tropical hues. She defied many critics' attempts at categorization because she worked in representational and abstract styles. She created dozens of self-portraits, for instance. Many of them were wildly funny, such as "My Rain Hat," in which she appears to be wearing a towering wedding cake on her head.
In her last decade, Morgan favored collage because it required less physical exertion than painting. She produced 400 collages, many of them made of ordinary colored paper mixed with wallpaper scraps and burned matches.
"You can see abstraction's history in her new works, in the finicky daintiness that resembles Malevich and Kandinsky, and in the expert use of color Morgan may have absorbed in part from Hans Hofmann, who was her teacher," Boston Globe critic Christine Temin wrote of a 1996 showing of Morgan's collages at Barbara Singer Fine Art in Cambridge.
In 1993, on the occasion of Morgan's 90th birthday, friends donated funds to Boston's Museum of Fine Arts to establish an annual prize in her name. It is awarded to Massachusetts women artists.
Morgan is survived by a daughter, Victoria Benedict, and a son, Alexis Morgan, both of Cambridge. Los Angeles Times, March 17, 1999, Elaine Woo, Times Staff Writer.
Nathaniel Cabot1
M, #25525, b. 2 May 1753
Nathaniel Cabot was born on 2 May 1753 in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Joseph Cabot and Elizabeth Higginson.1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001.
Nicholas Cabot
M, #19566, b. circa 1555, d. September 1623
Nicholas Cabot was born circa 1555.1 He was the son of Thomas Cabot and Thomasse Le Morgue.2 Nicholas Cabot married Collette Hamon, daughter of Richard Hamon.1 Nicholas Cabot died in September 1623 and is buried on 7 September 1623 in Trinity, Jersey.1
Child of Nicholas Cabot and Collette Hamon
- John Cabot+ b. c 1587, d. Mar 1649/50
Citations
- [S472] L. Vernon Briggs, Cabot family, p. 6.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.illuminati-news.com/0/… [October 2008].
Norman Winslow Cabot
M, #15007, b. 1 July 1876, d. 13 April 1928
Norman Winslow Cabot was born on 1 July 1876 in Brookline, Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Edward Clarke Cabot and Louisa Winslow Sewall.2 Norman Winslow Cabot married Phyllis Ada Tuck, daughter of William Henry Tuck, on 13 September 1919 in Manchester, Massachusetts.3 Norman Winslow Cabot died on 13 April 1928 in Brookline, Massachusetts, at the age of 51.4
Perrin Cabot1
M, #19569, b. between 1490 and 1500, d. circa 1568
Perrin Cabot probably married (unknown) Norman.2 Perrin Cabot was born between 1490 and 1500.2 He was the son of Collin Cabot.2 Perrin Cabot died circa 1568.1
Child of Perrin Cabot and (unknown) Norman
- Thomas Cabot+3 b. bt 1516 - 1526, d. c 1585
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.illuminati-news.com/0/… [October 2008].
- [S472] L. Vernon Briggs, Cabot family, p. 4.
- [S472] L. Vernon Briggs, Cabot family, p. 5.
Philip Wentworth Cabot1
M, #26752, b. 14 June 1871, d. 21 July 1871
Philip Wentworth Cabot was born on 14 June 1871.1 He was the son of Francis Cabot and Mary Louisa Higginson.1 Philip Wentworth Cabot died on 21 July 1871.1
Citations
- [S639] Roger Irving Lee, Descendants of Francis Cabot.
Quincy Sewall Cabot1
M, #1868, b. 4 September 1901, d. 30 March 1957
Quincy Sewall Cabot was born on 4 September 1901 in Manhattan, New York, New York.2 He was the son of Francis Higginson Cabot and Maud Bonner.3 Quincy Sewall Cabot graduated in 1923 from Harvard. He married Geneviève Fox, daughter of Lyttleton H. Fox and Geneviève O'Brien, on 19 June 1930 at the Villa Mille Fiori, Southampton, Long Island, New York.4 Quincy Sewall Cabot died on 30 March 1957 at the American Hospital of Paris, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, at the age of 55.5
Children of Quincy Sewall Cabot and Geneviève Fox
- Mary Joy Cabot+ b. 26 Sep 1933, d. 25 Dec 2007
- Jonathan Sewall Cabot b. 26 May 1935, d. 14 Mar 1990
Ruth Cabot1
F, #11137, b. 1865, d. 1949
Ruth Cabot was born in 1865 in Massachusetts.2,3 She was the daughter of Walter Channing Cabot and Elizabeth Rogers Mason.1 Ruth Cabot married Robert Treat Paine 2nd., son of William Cushing Paine and Hannah Hathaway Perry, on 28 May 1890 in Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.1,4 Ruth Cabot died in 1949 in Brookline, Massachusetts.5
Children of Ruth Cabot and Robert Treat Paine 2nd.
Citations
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 98 p. 86.
- [S585] 1940 US Census.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0405 Rogers-Mason-Cabot Family Papers.
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts State Vital Records, 1841-1920.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Massachusetts, Death Index, 1901-1980.
Samuel Cabot1
M, #15004, b. 1784
Samuel Cabot was born in 1784.2 He married Elizabeth Perkins, daughter of Col. Thomas Handasyd Perkins, in 1812.2
Children of Samuel Cabot and Elizabeth Perkins
- Edward Clarke Cabot+1 b. 17 Apr 1818, d. 5 Jan 1901
- Elizabeth Perkins Cabot3 b. 6 Aug 1823
Samuel Cabot
M, #27240, b. 19 November 1758
Samuel Cabot was born on 19 November 1758 in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts.1 He was the son of Joseph Cabot and Elizabeth Higginson.
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Massachusetts Births and Christenings, 1639-1915.
Sarah Cabot1
F, #14206, b. 24 October 1779, d. 27 September 1861
Sarah Cabot was baptised on 24 October 1779 at Beverly.1 She was the daughter of Andrew Cabot and Lydia Dodge.1 Sarah Cabot married Dr. James Jackson, son of Hon. Jonathan Jackson and Hannah Tracy, on 24 December 1818 in Boston, Massachusetts.2 Sarah Cabot died on 27 September 1861 in Boston, Massachusetts, at the age of 81 (24 September according to her husband's obituary.)1,2
Sewall Cabot1
M, #15006, b. 8 March 1875, d. 1938
Sewall Cabot. Electrical engineer. He was born on 8 March 1875 in Massachusetts.2 He was the son of Edward Clarke Cabot and Louisa Winslow Sewall.1 Sewall Cabot married Julia Abbott Shewell, daughter of Thomas R. Shewell and Laura Davis, on 25 September 1918 in First Parish Church, Brookline, Massachusetts.3 Sewall Cabot died in 1938 in Dartmouth, Massachusetts.4
Stephen Cabot1
M, #7527, b. 26 November 1754, d. 1779
Stephen Cabot was born on 26 November 1754 in Salem, Massachusetts.1,2 He was the son of Joseph Cabot and Elizabeth Higginson.3 Stephen Cabot married Deborah Higginson, daughter of Judge Stephen Higginson and Elizabeth Cabot, on 29 March 1777 in Salem, Massachusetts.1,3,4 Stephen Cabot died in 1779 in Salem, Massachusetts.2
Child of Stephen Cabot and Deborah Higginson
- Mary Cabot3 b. 4 Feb 1778, d. 2 Aug 1802