Mary Hawks1
#2504, (23 May 1652 - )
Relationship | 6th great-grandaunt of William David Lewis |
Father* | John Hawks1 (s 1610 - 1662) | |
Mother* | Elizabeth _____1 (1621 - 1689) |
Family 1 | Experience Hinsdale b. 1645/46 |
Family 2 | John Evans |
Her married name was Evans.2 | ||
Her married name was Hinsdale.2 | ||
Birth* | 23 May 1652 | She was born on 23 May 1652 at Windsor, Connecticut.1 |
between 1659 and 1661 | She removed with John Hawks and Elizabeth _____ between 1659 and 1661 to Hadley, Hampshire Co., MassachusettsG.3 | |
Marriage* | 10 October 1672 | She married Experience Hinsdale, son of Robert Hinsdale and Ann Woodward, on 10 October 1672.4,2 |
Marriage* | July 1677 | She married John Evans in July 1677.4,2 |
Citations
- [S291] Connecticut Vital Records to 1870 (Online Database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2011.) From original typescripts, Lucius Barnes Barbour Collection, 1928.
- [S498] Hawkes Family Genealogy Page, online www.hastingscountry.com/hawkes.html, Children of John Hawkes and Elizabeth Browne:
1. John
2. Nathaniel (died young)
3. Elizabeth, m. 1) Joseph Gillett, 2) Nathaniel Dickinson
4. Anna, married Thomas Hastings
5. Isaac, drowned at age 8
6. Mary, m. 1) Experience Hinsdale, 2) John Evans
7. Joanna, m. William Arms. - [S290] Sylvester Judd and Lucius Boltwood, History of Hadley, including the Early History of Hatfield, South Hadley, Amherst and Granby Masssachusetts (Springfield, Mass.: H.R. Hunting and Company, 1905), "In the same year, 1658, some of the withdrawers desired propositions from Northampton in regard to Capawonk meadow, which belonged to that town. In October, 1658, the town of Northampton voted to "give away" Capawonk, on four conditions:— 1st. The Hartford men are to settle two plantations; one on each side of the river. 2d. They are to maintain a sufficient fence against hogs and cattle. 3d. They are to pay 10 pounds, in wheat and peas. 4th. They are to inhabit here by next May.
The Agreement or Engagement of those who intended to remove from Connecticut to Massachusetts, is dated at Hartford, April 18, 1659, and is recorded on the first book of Hadley records. The following is a copy of that Agreement and of some proceedings of a later date recorded with the other:
"At a meeting at Goodman Ward's house, in Hartford, April i8th, 1659, the company there met engaged themselves under their own hands, or by their deputies, whom they had chosen, to remove themselves and their families out of the jurisdiction of Connecticut into the jurisdiction of the Massachusetts, as may appear in a paper dated the day and year abovesaid. The names of the engagers are these: [those marked * did not relocate or stayed just a short time]
—
John Webster
William Goodwin
John Crow
Nathaniel Ward
John White
John Barnard
Andrew Bacon
William Lewis
William Westwood
Richard Goodman
John Arnold*
William Partrigg
Gregory Wilterton*
Thomas Standley
Samuel Porter
Richard Church
Ozias Goodwin*
Francis Barnard
James Ensign*
George Steele*
John Marsh
Robert Webster*
William Lewis Jr.*
Nathaniel Standley
Samuel Church
William Markum
•/ Samuel Moody
Zechariah Field
Widow Westly*
Widow Watson*
Andrew Warner
Mr. John Russell Junior
Nathaniel Dickinson
Samuel Smith
Thomas Coleman
John Russell, senior
John Dickinson
Philip Smith
John Coleman
Thomas Wells
James Northam
Samuel Gardner
Thomas Edwards*
John Hubbard
Thomas Dickinson
Robert Boltwood
Samuel Smith Jr*
William Gull
Luke Hitchcock*
Richard Montague
John Latimer*
Peter Tilton
John Hawkes
Richard Billings
Benj. Harbert*
Edward Benton*
John Catling*
Mr. Samuel Hooker*
Capt. John Cullick* (not fully engaged)
Daniel Warner"
pp11-12. - [S290] Sylvester Judd and Lucius Boltwood, History of Hadley (rev. ed.), 67.