Showing posts with label Sewall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sewall. Show all posts

Monday, January 1, 2024

Family Lore: Justice Samuel Sewall ~ 52 Ancestors #1

The first week's theme for this year's 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks (from Amy Johnson Crow) is "Family Lore."

Living in New England, we learned about the Salem Witch Trials in school. We also lived close enough to Salem, Massachusetts, that we visited the various historic sites as children. From a young age, we were told that we descended from Justice Samuel Sewall, one of the well-known judges at some of these witch trials.

This family lore is true; we do descend from Justice Samuel Sewall. He is both my 7th great-grandfather and my 8th great-grandfather. (See the ancestral line below.)

1729 painting by John Smibert

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Reverend Joseph Sewall, 1688-1769 ~ 52 Ancestors #36

I am participating in this year's 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks writing challenge from Amy Johnson Crow. Each week has an optional writing prompt and last week's writing prompt was Work.

I explored my tree for unusual occupations, and found a somewhat famous minister in my ancestry.

Son of Justice Samuel Sewall of Boston, Joseph Sewall, my 6th great-grandfather, was the fourth minister of Old South Church in Boston, serving from 1713 until his death in 1769. [Church website and Wikipedia]

Old South Church is one of the older religious communities in the United States. It was organized by Congregationalist dissenters from Boston's First Church and was known as the Third Church (to distinguish it from the First and Second Congregational Churches in the city). The Third Church's congregation met first in their Cedar Meeting House (1670), then at the Old South Meeting House (1729) at the corner of Washington and Milk Streets in Boston.

The following image, in the public domain, is a John Smibert (1688-1751) oil on canvas painting done about 1735 of the Reverend Joseph Sewall. Photo credit: Yale University Art Gallery.



Son of Justice Samuel Sewall and his wife, Hannah Hull, Joseph was born at Boston on August 15, 1688, and baptized at the Old South Church on August 19, 1688. He was his parents' eighth child and sixth son. He attended Harvard College, graduating in 1707 and completing his second degree in 1710.

He was elected as associate minister of Old South in 1712 and ordained in September of 1713. About six weeks later, he married Elizabeth Walley, daughter of Hon. John Walley and Sarah Blossom. (Justice John Walley was an associate of Joseph's father, Samuel, for many years.) He and Elizabeth had two children; only one survived infancy: Samuel, born in 1715.

He was offered the presidency of Harvard College, which he declined (he wanted to remain in Boston), but did serve as a fellow of the college from 1728 to 1765.

He served as minister at Old South for 56 years, from 1713 until his death in 1769.  He baptized so many children that when I perform a search for his name in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register at AmericanAncestors.org, there are thousands of results.

Only three of his father's 14 children outlived him, and Joseph outlived all his siblings. He died at Boston on June 27, 1769 and two days later, was buried at the Granary Burying Ground in Boston. See his FindAGrave memorial, where there is a brief biography, though no gravestone photo. An obituary in the Boston Post-Boy reports that "Scarce any one ever passed through life with a more unblemished character, or performed its various duties with more universal esteem."

Sources include:
Hamilton Andrews Hill, "The Rev. Joseph Sewall: His Youth and Early Manhood," The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 46 (1896): 3-10; digital images, American Ancestors (http://www.americanancestors.org : accessed 11 September 2018).

Obituary, Joseph Sewall, Boston Post-Boy, 3 July 1769, issue 393, p. 2; digital image, GenealogyBank (https://www.genealogybank.com : accessed 11 September 2018).

"Old South Church," Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_South_Church : accessed 11 September 2018).

"Old South Meeting House," Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_South_Meeting_House : accessed 11 September 2018).

~~~~~~~

My descent from Reverend Joseph Sewall is as follows. His third great-grandson, Samuel Sewall Greeley, married his fourth great-granddaughter, Eliza May Wells.

Joseph Sewall
|
Samuel Sewall
|
Dorothy Sewall
|
Louisa May (sister of Elizabeth Sewall May)
|
Samuel Sewall Greeley (married Eliza May Wells)
|
Ethel May Greeley
|
Lowell Townsend Copeland
|
my mother
|
me

Second line:
Joseph Sewall
|
Samuel Sewall
|
Dorothy Sewall
|
Elizabeth Sewall May (sister of Louisa May)
|
Elizabeth Sewall Willis
|
Eliza May Wells (married Samuel Sewall Greeley)
|
Ethel May Greeley, see above


Samuel Sewall Greeley and Eliza May Wells were first cousins once removed.

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Close to Home - Joseph May of Boston - 52 Ancestors: #9

For this week's 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks writing challenge from blogger Amy Crow Johnson of No Story Too Small, the theme is "Close to Home."

I have lived most of my life in suburban Boston, Massachusetts. My parents, my grandparents, and my great-grandparents all were born outside of Massachusetts. Only three of my 16 2nd great-grandparents were born in Massachusetts. (See my "heritage pie chart" for those sixteen here.)

Joseph May
However, I do have plenty of earlier Massachusetts ancestors. One prominent Boston ancestor is Joseph May, a 4th great-grandfather (and my 5th great-grandfather; I descend from him two ways).

He was born in Boston on March 25, 1760, one of thirteen children of Samuel May and Abigail Williams. He lived his entire life in Boston.

He attended the Latin school and was there until the outbreak of the Revolution. At that time, his family began to associate themselves with Old South society which identified with the patriot movement. Joseph was a talented singer from a young age and supposedly sang at Old South as a youth (as well as enjoyed music and singing throughout his lifetime). Joseph's father moved his family from Boston to Connecticut for a short time during the war for their safety.

The Old South society used King's Chapel for its services between 1777 and 1783 (because the Old South Church was being used by British troops), and when Old South returned to its own church in 1783, Joseph remained at King's Chapel, becoming very involved with the church and close friends with the ministers who served here.

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Tombstone Tuesday ~ Henry and Jane Sewall

Several years ago, my husband and I explored the First Parish Burying Ground in Newbury, Massachusetts, where some of my early immigrant ancestors are buried.

My husband took the following picture of my 8th great-grandfather's gravestone.


MR HENRY SEWALL (SENT BY
MR HENRY SEWALL HIS FATHER
IN YE SHIP ELSABETH & DORCAS
CAPT WATTS COMMANDER)
ARRIVED AT BOSTON, 1634.
WINTERD AT IPSWICH HELPD
BEGIN THIS PLANTATION 1635
FURNISHING ENGLISH SERVANTS
NEAT CATTEL & PROVISIONS
MARRIED MRS JANE DUMMER
MARCH YE 25 1646
DIED MAY YE 16, 1700
AETAT. 86. HIS FRUITFUL
VINE, BEING THUS DISJOIND
FELL TO YE GROUND JANAUARY
YE 13. FOLLOWING AETAT. 74.
PSAL - 27 - 10.

Henry died on May 16, 1700, and his wife, Jane, died eight months later, on January 13, 1700/01.

The gravestone was erected by his eldest son, Justice Samuel Sewall.

Psalm 27, verse 10 reads: "When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord will take me up."

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Surname Saturday ~ Henry Sewall of England and Massachusetts

Coventry, England
Courtesy Wikimedia Commons
My immigrant Sewall ancestor is Henry Sewall. He was baptized at St. Michael's Church, Coventry, Warwickshire, England, on April 8, 1576. His actual birth date is unknown, but could be as much as three years earlier.

Coventry is the red area in the image at right. According to The Descendants of Henry Sewall 1576-1656, by Eben W. Graves, an invaluable source for Sewall descendants, the Sewalls were in Coventry, or at least parts of Warwickshire, for generations. What I share here is only a brief summary of the wealth of information to be found in this book, which I purchased soon after its 2007 publication by the Newbury Street Press.

In 1591, Henry Sewall entered the Drapers Company of Coventry, for a nine-year apprenticeship. According to Wikipedia, the Drapers Company was a large trading guild in Coventry. A draper is an old term for one who sells cloth and dry goods.

At some point between 1611 and 1615, Henry moved about 100 miles north from Coventry to Manchester, where he, his wife, and his infant son are listed in the Manchester parish records in the summer of 1615.

Henry's wife was Anne Hunt, who died soon after the baptism of their son, Henry, in 1615. Not much is known about her except for the record of her burial on July 1, 1615. Within a year, Henry Sewall married Ellen (Mosley) Nugent, a young widow. They had six children, all of whom died young. The Sewall family lived in or near Manchester, England, from about 1615 to about 1631. By April 1634, Henry Sewall was back in Coventry, selling property in preparation for leaving England.

Newbury, Essex Co., Mass.
Courtesy Wikimedia Commons
In 1634, Henry Sr., about 58 years old, sent his son, Henry, Jr., about 20 years old, ahead to New England to "begin a plantation." Henry, the father, arrived in New England by July 1635, when he first appears in records in Essex County.

Henry Sewall was a founder of the town of Newbury, Massachusetts, (where my early Lowell ancestors lived), which was settled in 1635. He later moved to Rowley, just south of Newbury. (See a great map of Essex County here.) Henry died, intestate, in Rowley in March 1655/6. It took a couple of years for his estate to be settled.

Generation 2: Henry Sewall, the only child to survive to adulthood, was baptized at Manchester Cathedral, Lancashire, on June 25, 1615. Various records imply a birth year between 1611 and 1614. He immigrated to New England on the ship Elizabeth & Dorcas in 1634, ahead of his father and step-mother. He was sent with plenty of provisions for setting up a new home for the family.

He spent his first winter in Ipswich (two towns south of Newbury in the above map), where he had received a grant of 40 acres. He sold this land in the spring of 1635 and, along with his father, became one of the first settlers of Newbury.

Henry married Jane Dummer at Newbury, Massachusetts, on March 25, 1646. In late 1646, Henry and Jane returned to England with his in-laws, the Dummers, and lived in England until 1659, where he served as a minister at North Baddesley, Hampshire. Henry (the son) visited his father, Henry, in New England once, in 1650, when he bought several parcels of land in Newbury.

Henry and Jane had eight children, five born in England between 1649 and 1659 (Hannah, Samuel, John, Stephen, Jane), and three born in Newbury between 1662 and 1668 (Anne, Mehitable, Dorothy). After Henry returned to New England in 1659 to finish settling his father's estate, it took him a couple of years for him to decide he would stay and he finally sent for his wife and children. They arrived in July 1661.

Henry died on May 16, 1700, in Newbury, Massachusetts, and was buried in the First Parish Burying Ground there. His wife, Jane, died eight months later on January 13, 1700/01 and was also buried at First Parish Burying Ground.

I descend from their oldest son, Samuel Sewall.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Cousin Louisa May Alcott

This past summer, I read Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women by Harriet Reisen, a must-read for fans of the story of Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. There are several references to family members in the book, many of whom are relatives of mine, direct ancestors and cousins.

The first chapter gives a little genealogy of Louisa May Alcott's ancestry. Since I am descended from her maternal grandparents, it adds to what I know about Joseph May (1760 - 1841) and Dorothy Sewall May (1758 - 1825), my 4th great grandparents.

The names in red below are daughters of Joseph and Dorothy.

Reisen refers to Louisa May Alcott's cousin, Sam Greele several times. This is (my 2nd great grandfather) Samuel Sewall Greeley (1824 - 1916), whose mother, Louisa May (1792 - 1828), was an older sister of Louisa May Alcott's mother, Abigail May (1800 - 1877). According to Reisen, the author was named after her aunt Louisa. (And Louisa May Greeley (1827 - 1903) is the name of Samuel Sewall Greeley's only sibling.)

On page 132, Reisen notes that Louisa May Alcott wrote in her journal about the death of Annie, cousin Sam Greele's wife, in January 1864, and about attending the wedding of her cousin Sam (Samuel Sewall Greeley) to their mutual cousin (his second wife) Eliza May Wells in September 1866. These are my 2nd great grandparents.

Eliza May Wells (1839 - 1880) is not a first cousin, but the daughter of a first cousin of Louisa May Alcott (1832 - 1888) and Samuel Sewall Greeley. Eliza's mother was Elizabeth Sewall Willis (1820 - 1900), daughter of Elizabeth Sewall May (1798 - 1822), a sister of Louisa and Abigail. (This makes Eliza May Wells a first cousin once removed of her husband, Samuel Sewall Greeley, as well as Louisa May Alcott.) Harriet Reisen also suggests that Louisa May Alcott's sister Elizabeth (1835 - 1858) was named after this sister of her mother's.

Occasionally in the book, Reisen also refers to Wells cousins and Willis cousins. These are also relatives.

If you haven't already figured it out, this family can get confusing. Cousins married cousins, and many names are used over and over, especially if someone died young, either as a child or young adult. It doesn't help that I am descended from Joseph May (1760 - 1841) and his wife Dorothy Sewall (1758 - 1825) in two different ways.

Louisa May Alcott's descent from Joseph May and Dorothy Sewall > Abigail May > Louisa May Alcott.
My descent from Joseph May and Dorothy Sewall > Louisa May > Samuel Sewall Greeley > Ethel May Greeley > Lowell Townsend Copeland > my mother > me.

       Louisa May Alcott is my first cousin four times removed. 

My descent from Joseph May and Dorothy Sewall > Elizabeth Sewall May > Elizabeth Sewall Willis > Eliza May Wells > Ethel May Greeley > Lowell Townsend Copeland > my mother > me.

       In this case, Louisa May Alcott is my first cousin five times removed.