APPENDIX A: 9/9/06 This section is under construction. Please refer all comments, questions and corrections to Marcus Morton Sherman

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Town of Dartmouth1

      Sherman family history and genealogy, especially on ANNIE ELMA SISSON’s side, is closely tied to the history of the Town of Dartmouth.

Our Sherman ancestors who lived in Dartmouth (listed alphabetically) include: ELIZABETH ALLEN, MARY BORDEN, JOHN COOKE, CALEB CORNELL, ARTHUR HATHAWAY II, MATTHEW WING, SARAH WARREN, ROBERT GIFFORD, VIOLA HEISE, ZOETH HOWLAND, WILLIAM MACOMBER II, HUGH MOSHIER II, ELIZABETH MOTT, ELIZABETH RICKETSON, FRANK MORTON SHERMAN, MD., RICHARD SISSON, ELEAZER SLOCUM, MARY SLOCUM, PHILLIP TABER II, HENRY TUCKER.

     In 1620, the Pilgrims landed in Plymouth. Colonists landing from the “Fortune” in 1620, and the “Ann” in 1623, and several other ships of later date augmented the ranks of the pilgrims. The ' first visit of white men to the locality, now Bristol County, probably occurred in June or July, 1621, when Massasoit, at his home in Pokanoket, (now Mt. Hope, R.I.) was sought out and visited by Edward WINSLOW and STEPHEN HOPKINS, accompanied by the Indian Squanto, who acted as their interpreter. Previous to Dartmouth’s purchase from the Wampanoags in 1652, there was a long rich Native American presence in the area.

     In the meantime, patents had been granted by King Charles I for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and the land called New England became widely settled. These were hard and stern times and stringent laws were made by the Plymouth colony as to the worship of God and the general conduct of the colonists. Gradually a certain group rebelling against the orthodox religion of the colony sought to break away from Plymouth. Swelled by the ranks of the members of the Society of Friends, commonly called the Quakers, our forefathers settled in the town of Dartmouth.

 

Massasoit: c.1580-1661, chief of the Wampanoag. He was also known as Ousamequin (spelled in various ways). One of the most powerful native rulers of New England, he went to Plymouth in 1621 and signed a treaty with the Pilgrims, which he faithfully observed until his death. He befriended Roger Williams and was a friend of Edward Winslow. In 1632 he fought his enemy, Canonicus, ruler of the Narragansett. Massasoit's son, Metacomet, became famous as King Philip

   On Nov. 29,1652 a deed was recorded by Gov. William Bradford at Plymouth whereby the Town of Dartmouth was purchased from the Indians. It reads in part: “ I, Wesamequen (Massasoit) and Wamsutta, my son, have sold unto Mr. William Bradford, Captain (Myles) Standish, Thomas Southworth, JOHN COOK and their associates, The purchasers or old comers: all the tracts of land lying three miles eastward from a river called Cushenagg to a certain harbor called Acoaksett (Achusnett)…and from the sea upward to go so high that the English may not be annoyed by the hunting of the Indians in any sort of their cattle.  In consideration hereof we the aforementioned are to pay Wesamequen (Massasoit) and Wamsutta as followeth: thirty yards of cloth, eight moose skins, fifteen axes, fifteen hoes, fifteen pair of breeches, eight blankets, two kettles, one cloak, 2 Pounds in wampum, eight pair stockings, eight pair of shoes, one iron pot and ten shillings in another commodity. Signed: John Winslow, John Cooke and Wamsutta (his mark MM).

    On March 7, 1652 at a General meeting of the Plymouth Purchasers, it was agreed and ordered that all the tract of lands…(later called Dartmouth)… should be given to those (purchasers) whose names are hereunder written. The full list of thirty-six original equal shareholders of Dartmouth includes The Sherman ancestors: Mr. JOHN ALDEN, Mistress (SARAH?) WARREN, GEORGE MORTON, EDWARD DOTEY, FRANCIS COOKE Pilgrim,  JOHN COOKE and GEORGE SOULE, each share comprising about 3,200 acres. Much of the land was later sold in smaller parcels to Quakers and Baptists who were seeking to escape religious persecutionof the Puritans.

     Russell's Mills: Nestled at the head of the Slocum River, beside the Mill Pond, is the Historic Village of Russell's Mills, the first settlement in an area that was to become Dartmouth. See Dartmouth Map (very large file, if using a 56 k dial up connection, expect about 2.5 to 3 minutes wait )

Russells Mills 1871 showing individuqal residences- Click to enlarge     The first settlers of Dartmouth (Russells Mills) were Ralph Russell and Anthony SLOCUM . Ralph Russell went to Dartmouth soon after the purchase of land from the Indians November 29, 1651. He established an iron forge on the west bank of the Pascamanset River20, just behind the old Sherman home at 1190 Russells Mills Rd. Ralph Russel was probably an old man when he settled in Russells Mills as it is his son, John Russell, who appears in the first early records of the town as a proprieter. Miles Standish's share of Dartmouth was purchased by John Russell on March 9, 1664. In 1665 Dartmouth was represented for the first time at Plymouth General Court by John Russell. On 5 June 1667 Philip Delano (PHILIPPE DE LANOYE) of Duxbury, husbandman, sold to John Russell Sr. of Dartmouth, yeoman, one-half share of the lands at Dartmouth "granted unto the said Phillip Delano ... as a purchaser or old comer" [PCLR 3:83]. The Russells established the first eleven water-powered mills which ground grain, sawed timbers, made shingles and processed wool. This village was at that time and for many years afterward the headquarters of Dartmouth.1  They were attracted by the fact that this was an undeveloped region, and thus it was easier to practice their religious beliefs since there was no strong church control in the community.

The selectmen of the town of Dartmouth, in 1667, were John Russell, Samuel Hickes, and Arthur Hathaway. (See Plymouth Colony Records, vol. 4, page 150.) The earliest Justice of the Peace appointed in Dartmouth was Seth Pope, who was commissioned May 27, 1692. The earliest officers commissioned to command the local militia of the ancient and original town of Dartmouth, were as follows: Captain, Thomas Taber, commissioned May 20, 1689. Lieutenants, John Smith, commissioned March 4, 1674; Seth Pope, June 4, 1686;* Jonathan DELANO, May 20, 1689. Ensigns, Jacob Mitchell, commissioned March 4, 1674, slain by the Indians; James Tripp, commissioned May 20, 1689.

Despite the attractions of the region to some groups, by 1675, the time of King Philip’s war, only thirty-seven dwellings were in Old Dartmouth. Almost all were destroyed during the war.

224 John Rrussell, son of above, m. Deborah, d. of Nathaniel Spooner, 1816, and had Mary Spooner, m. James T. Hodge; John J.; Helen, m. William Davis and William H. Whitman; and Laura. JOHN J., son of above, m. Mary A., d. of Allen Danforth, 1855, and had Helen, 1857; John, 1860; and Lydia, 1863.

     Anthony Slocum b: 1590 Somersetshire, England may be the brother of PHILLIP SLOCUM  b: 1597, in Somersetshire, England from whose son GILES SLOCUM, FRANK MORTON SHERMAN MD. is decended. Anthony was one of the forty-six "first and ancient purchasers" in 1637 of Taunton, Mass [ see (4) William Harvey, post] where he resided from 1638 to 1662. He was one of the initial shareholders of an ironworks established near Taunton in 1652-1656, the first successful and permanent ironworks in America. Having united with the Society of Friends, he disposed of his rights in Taunton and removed with his family to that part of New Plymouth incorporated later under the name of Dartmouth township. There he settled by the Pascamanset River, known locally as the Slocum River, on a piece of land known as Slocum Neck. In 1670 he moved to the vicinity of Edenton, Albemarle Co., NC

By the early 1700's Padanaram and Russells Mills (p.20) were involved in shipbuilding and maritime trades.(details?) There was a shipbuilding operation close to the Town Landing, along with a Davoll's store (William DAVOL b: 1683 in Dartmouth) Hannah DEVOL (DAVOL) and storage building to house goods delivered up Slocums River by boat.  Today the village continues to be home to Davoll's General Store, (Davoll's Photo) now operated by Beverly Glennon the town historian and co chair of the Historic Commission), Salt Marsh Pottery, Alderbrook Farm, and Village Gardens. Buy 1871 map .

     Farming was the principle occupation but early on fishing was important. Whales were hunted before the time of the American Revolution first for their oil which held off the darkness, for food and later for the valuable 'bone' as corsets came into vogue. Shipbuilding followed logically from whaling and began at Acushnet about 1780. By 1800, Fairhaven surpassed it as the center of shipbuilding. Hundreds of vessels sprang from the yards at Oxford and Fairhaven. The peak of the whaling craze was in the 1845-55 season. To give an idea how profitable the business was consider this; three Howland ships docked in April 1866. The gross value of the voyages $620,000, on a capital investment of less than $90,000; and remember, no income tax. It is no wonder that whales faced extinction.

      Within 20 years,financial instability and one single event would spell the end of whaling in the "Old Dartmouth" area. The disastrous event destroyed a good portion of the 50-ship fleet, In September 1871, 28 whale ships, including Capt. Hezekiah Allen's "Minerva.” were ruined by crushing ice. They were found when the crews returned to the fleet in the spring. The New Bedford area never recovered its preeminence as the center of whaling.

      During the 42 years after the General Meeting of Purchasers in 1652, King Phillips War disrupted the colonists and completely dispersed the inhabitants of Dartmouth and most of their houses were destroyed. One of the four that survived was owned by Peleg Sherman , born 1692 and died in 1772 in Dartmouth. He married Elizabeth Chase on 24 May 1738 in (Intention). He was the son of Thomas Sherman4 and Sarah Sisson (son of William3, Peleg2, Phillip1) more on Phillip

     Peleg Sherman and  Annie Elma Sherman have the common ancestor of JEREMIAH GIFFORD:

     Peleg Sherman’s house was known as the old Ricketson House, built by WILLIAM RICKETSON, died in 1691,one of the original proprietors of Dartmouth. His widow Elizabeth appears on the 1694 list of proprietors.  Elizabeth married again on Sept. 4, 1696 to MATTHEW WING, starting one of Annie Elma Sherman’s three lines of WING descent from those leading Sandwich Quakers and association with the prominent New Bedford whaling family

    Or Peleg SHERMAN 6 born Aug. 10, 1777 in Dartmouth or his father: Peleg Sherman born in 1745 and died in 1824 in Dartmouth, married Peace (5) Potter, daughter of John Potter m 21 MAR 1740/1741 to Margaret GIFFORD born 15 April 1772, died 27 March 1773. (4), daughter of JEREMIAH GIFFORD, born 1681 in Massachusetts; died 1770 in Dartmouth. He was the son of Robert Gifford and Sarah Wing. He married Mary Wright 1703 in Massachusetts, born 1683 in Plymouth, died 12 March 1780 in Dartmouth. She was the daughter of Adam Wright and Sarah Soule. (3), ROBERT GIFFORD m SARAH WING (2) Wing, Stephen (1)).also. Check: Weeks.     

     Some original shareholders of Dartmouth bequeathed, transferred or divided their shares. In 1673, William Sherman the Pilgrim deeded his one full share of the lands in Dartmouth at Saconett, to his Son John, though how he received that share is unclear. On Nov. 13, 1694, the confirmatory deed of William Bradford listed fifty-six proprietors of Dartmouth among whom were our direct Sherman Ancestors:  John Shearman (?JOHN SHERMAN), ELIZABETH RICKETSON and JAMES SISSON, and the descendants of his probable uncle, Philip Sherman: William Shearman, Daniel Shearman, Edmund Shearman and Samuel Sherman.

     Sherman ancestors who lived in Dartmouth

(listed alphabetically in brown) include: ELIZABETH ALLEN, MARY BORDEN, JOHN COOKE,, ARTHUR HATHAWAY II, MATTHEW WING, SARAH WARREN, ROBERT GIFFORD, VIOLA HEISE, ZOETH HOWLAND, WILLIAM MACOMBER II, HUGH MOSHIER II, ELIZABETH MOTT, ELIZABETH RICKETSON, FRANK MORTON SHERMAN, RICHARD SISSON, ELEAZER SLOCUM, MARY SLOCUM , PHILLIP TABER II, HENRY TUCKER. 

Each family line and some antecdotal information about the family members is explained below:

COOKE FAMILY

                                                                                                                                      /SARAH COOKE\

Two lines of decent from:          FRANCIS COOKE Pilgrim => JOHN COOKE                                                           ANNIE ELMA SISSON> SHERMANS

                                                                                                                                      \MARY COOKE/ooke Family

     JOHN COOKE was among the first English owners of the Town of Dartmouth, and one of the few proprietors to actually move to the land he had bought. He selected as his portion of Dartmouth, the section now known as Oxford in Fairhaven.   At the age of 29, on March 28, 1634 in Plymouth, JOHN COOKE married SARAH WARREN, born about 1614, probably in England. Their children: SARAH COOKE born: About 1635, Elizabeth COOKE born: About 1641, Hester COOKE born: Aug. 13, 1650, MARY COOKE born: About 1652 and Mercy COOKE born: July 25, 1657 were all born in Plymouth. He was one of the owners of the first vessels built in Plymouth. They lived at Plymouth until 1659.

     Sometime between 1653 and 1660, he moved to that part of Dartmouth now known as Oxford Village, Fairhaven. Sarah, Hester, Mary and Mercy all lived in Dartmouth. In 1664 he was granted 15 acres of land near Dartmouth and he had other significant land dealings in the area, owning 3/34 of the original Dartmouth grant. He was a constant trader in lands at Plymouth and Dartmouth and owned lands at Puncatest.  

     In July 1667, John Cooke was authorized by the Plymouth Court as His Majesties representative (Magistrate) in Dartmouth to make contracts…administer oaths…commence a suite…issue warrants…and give subpoenas. Few of the shareholders actually lived in Dartmouth.  On May 29, 1670, an exact list of all the Freemen in Dartmouth showed John Cooke as one of only seven Freemen living there. In 1672, the town of Dartmouth gave him Ram (now Pope's) Island in recompense for former services. At one time he operated a ferry between Dartmouth and Rhode Island. Details?

     John was a Baptist Minister who was fined 20 shillings in October 1670 for allegedly breaking the Sabbath; he was accused of traveling on the Sabbath, even though he did travel upon his circuit as a devote preacher. He converted his home at Oxford Village (Fairhaven) into a garrison house before the Indian uprising (King Phillip’s War) in 1675. This was the haven of safety of the inhabitants in the early spring of 1676; however, The Indians later burned his home. About 1680 he established a Baptist church in what is now Tiverton, near Adamsville.   The Proprietors Records of 1884 indicate John Cooke and John Shearman were among the 14 Dartmouth men who took the oath of fidelity or freemen's oath.John Cooke Memorial

        John Cooke was the last surviving male passenger of the Mayflower. John died 23 Nov. 23, 1695 in Dartmouth, having lived through the entire life of the Plymouth Colony. The will of John Cooke of Dartmouth, County of Bristol dated November 9, 1694, proved April 16, 1696, mentions wife Sarah; son-in-law Arthur Hathaway and his wife Sarah his daughter; son-in-law Stephen West and his wife Mercy his daughter; Jonathan Delano; grandson Thomas Taber; and granddaughter Hester Perry. On December 7, 1696 widow Sarah Cooke presented the inventory.

      In Fairhaven a short distance north of the New Bedford-Fairhaven bridge, near the river, is a large boulder to which is attached a bronze tablet, on which, below a representation of the Mayflower, is an inscription. The exact location of the grave of John Cooke is, however, a matter of doubt. Somewhere in Fairhaven is about as definite as it can now be determined. The boulder with its inscription was placed 200 years after his death. That he was the "first white settler of this town" applies to Fairhaven, rather than old Dartmouth.

     ANNIE ELMA SISSON is an eighth generation descendant of their first child, Sarah

 John Cooks daughter SARAH COOKE was born about 1635 in Plymouth 5 and died after 26 Feb 1713 in Dartmouth 15. She married ARTHUR HATHAWAY II on Nov. 20, 1652 in Dartmouth 15. Arthur was born about 1625 in England 15. On Nov. 13, 1694, the confirmatory deed of William Bradford listed fifty-six proprietors of Dartmouth including Arthur Hathaway.  He died on Dec. 11, 1711 in Dartmouth, Massachusetts 15.

 
 
SARAH WARREN/ 

LYDIA HATHAWAY, JONATHON SISSON, JONATHAN SISSON II,  DAVID  SISSON,   ISAAC SISSON, \

                                                                                                                 CHRISTOPHER SISSON,  GIFFORD SISSON\

           ANNIE ELMA SISSON is an eighth generation descendant of their fourth child: Mary 

John Cook's daughter MARY COOKE was born about 1652 and died before Jan. 25, 1714/15. She was married to PHILLIP TABER II born: before 08 Feb. 8, 1646 died: before March 4,1692/93. Their oldest son Philip TABER III born: Feb.29, 1675 in Dartmouth was a selectman of Dartmouth who was distinguished by supporting the town's peoples refusal to pay an unjust tax imposed by the Massachusetts Bay Province authorities for support of a Presbyterian town minister sent by the Puritan authorities. The province rulers could not overlook the bold and defiant attitude taken by the town. The refusal of the selectmen to assess the tax was followed by their imprisonment in Bristol jail, where they remained about eighteen months. The persons who were imprisoned were Philip Taber and John Akin, selectmen of Dartmouth, and Joseph Anthony and John Sisson, selectmen of Tiverton, a part of whom were Baptists and a part Quakers.1

An embassy was sent to England. Thomas Richardson and Richard Partridge, who were Quakers, interceded in their behalf. Their petition, addressed to the King in Council, was an able document, and nobly did it plead for freedom of conscience and security of religion, civil liberty, and property. The petition was considered at the court of St. James on the 2d day of June 1724. Present were the King's most Excellent Majesty and all the lords of the Privy Council, and it was ordered that the obnoxious taxes be remitted, and that Philip Taber and his fellow-sufferers be immediately released from their imprisonment. The Governor and all other officers of the province of Massachusetts Bay were notified to yield obedience to these orders.

 
 

MARY COOKE, BETHIA TABER, PHILIP MACOMBER, CONSTANT MACOMBER, TABITHA MACOMBER, MIRIAM GIFFORD\ 

                                                                                                                                                                          CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD SISSON\

                                                               

                                                         END COOKE

 

CORNELL FAMILY

 

The early English name was written Cornewell. The lineage of the family traces up through the Barons of Burford to Richard d'Cornewell son of Richard Earl of Cornewall to son of King John, younger brother of Richard Coeur de Lion. Cornwall Coat of Arms

 

Annie Elma Sherman has two lines of descent from THOMAS CORNELL. One through his first child THOMAS CORNELL II born: 1618 in from Essexshire, England. and another line through his third child ELIZABETH CORNELL born: 1644 in ?Portsmouth, Newport, Rhode Island.

check: Ancestors of Ezra Cornell, founder of Cornell University, his son Govenor of NY Alonzo B. Cornell.

                                                 /JOB ALMY   
                                        /JOSEPH ALMY                      /GEORGE CORNELL b:?1556
                       /MERCY ALMY      \ELIZABETH CORNELL              / RICHARD CORNELL
                    /WILLIAM ALMY                     >THOMAS CORNELL, STEPHEN CORNELL, 
                 /LYDIA WING                        /THOMAS CORNELL II   
                                                 /STEPHEN CORNELL
                                             /WILLIAM CORNELL 
             /JOSEPH WING CORNELL        /CALEB CORNELL 
       LYDIA ALMY CORNELL   /GIDEON CORNELL 

                          \PARDON CORNELL

 Ensign THOMAS CORNELL was born about 1595 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England. He was the son of George Cornell by his third wife, Susan Casse, whom George married on 23 Apr. 1593. Thomas' grandfather was Richard Cornewell citizen & Skinner of London.  He died in 1585. It stands written in his will that he left a portion of the wealth he had in hides to fund and endow a free grammar school in New Woodstock, "the town where I (Thomas) was born". The school stands there yet near the handsome church of Woodstock in Oxfordshire. see: an article entitled "The English Origin of the Cornwell/Cornell Family." in "The American Genealogist," Vol. 51, pp. 115-116.

 Thomas married REBECCA BRIGGS about 1620 in Essex Co., England. The Cornell family were Puritans but became Quakers. They had at least eleven and perhaps sixteen children. He came to Boston from England with Winthrop's second expedition in 1636 or 1638. Thomas purchased a house and lot #60 in Boston on the east side of Washington Street between Summer and Mill Streets. His occupation there was innkeeper. On June 4, 1639 he was fined 20 Pounds for several instances of selling wine without a liscence and selling beer at double the allowed cost.

     Thomas Cornell was living in Portsmouth, Rhode Island in 1640, and admitted freeman Aug. 6 that year, having joined Ann Hutchinson and followers at their new settlement seeking religious tolerence at Portsmouth . The Compact, which served as a basis of government among the members of this settlement was signed March 7, 1638. On Feb. 4, 1641 he was granted " a piece of meadow". The same year he was made constable. He sold his Boston house in 1643.

     After the death of Ann's husband in 1642, the Dutch Government at Manhattan on Oct 2, 1642 granted 35 families, among them Ann Hutchinson's and Thomas Cornell's, permission to settle "within the limits of the jurisdiction of their High Mightiness, and there to dwell in peace." On July 6, 1643, Gov. Kieft granted him and his associated a tract of land in what is now Westchester. (see map) He was one of the first patentees of Throggs Neck and lived there at Clason's Point, under Dutch control. Clausen's Point, is one of several peninsulas which protrude into the East River from the southern Bronx . Clason Point stands between the mouth of the Bronx River and, to the east, Pugsley's Creek. It was the site of a large Native American settlement, comprising more than seventy dwellings. It was known as Snapakins, "land by the two waters," when the first European settler, Thomas Cornell, established his farm there. He served there as an ensign under Governor Kieft in the Dutch-Indian War.

     This new settlement was soon shattered in the spring of 1643 when some Sewanoy Indians came pretending friendship, then driving the settlers' cattle and stock into the barns, setting fire to the buildings and murdering all of the settlers found in their homes. Anne Hutchinson and five of her youngest childred were killed. Thomas Cornell and his family escaped the massacre and breifly returned to Rhode Island. Thomas returned to Westchester County after the cessation of indian hostilities and on July 25, 1646 obtained a new grant of about four square miles of land on a point of land just south of Clason's point. This land since been named Cornell Point (map zoom).

     After about nine years Thomas was again driven by the indians from his lands in New York. He returned to his originial home in Portsmith, R.I. where he had secured a grant of one hundred acres of land on the Narragansetts Bay side known for a long while as Cornell's Neck & afterwards Willet's Neck. (see map). In 1653 he served on a coroners jury and in 1654 was one of the commissioners of "ye four townes re-uniting ye Colonie of Providence Plaantations.. He died Feb.8, 1656 at the Cornell Homestead in Portsmouth, Rhode Island at age 61.

     In 1664 the English defeated the Dutch in New York. soon thereafter, Cornell's grant on Glasons Point was confirmed as far east as Barrett's Creek. His wife Rebecca (Briggs) Cornell sold Glason's Point to Thomas' sister Sarah Cornell who married her brother John Briggs. REBECCA was killed on Feb.8, 1673 in Portsmouth, RI at 73 years of age under suspicious circumstances.

     THOMAS CORNELL II, the fourth of THOMAS and REBECCA'S thirteen children was born in Essexshire, England on Oct. 21, 1627. He was married twice. First to ELIZABETH ?? about 1650. Their children, All born in Portsmouth, Newport, Rhode Island were Thomas CORNELL b: 1653 STEPHEN CORNELL b: ABT. 1656 Samuel CORNELL b: ABT. 1657 Edward CORNELL b: 1658 John CORNELL b: ABT. 1669

    Second he was married about 1662 in Rhode Island to Sarah Earle b: Abt 1640. Children: John 1662, Sarah 1668, Infant 1670, Innocent b: JUL 1673.

    On 17 Mar 1655 Thomas was chosen with three others to prize land and buildings of John Wood, deceased. He had a grant of ten acres on Dec. 10, 1657. THOMAS was a farmer and also served in Rhode Island as an ensign in the British militia. On May 4, 1670 he and three others were appointed to audit the colonies' accounts. He was several times a Deputy to the General Assembly of R.I. His bill to the Rhode Island Assembly for futher encouragement of a troop of horse was referred on June 7,1671 to the next Assembly. At the same meeting it was ordered that Thomas Cornell be a messenger from the court to carry a letter to the Governor of Plymouth, and that he be supplied with 20 shillings in silver by the treasurer towards bearing his charge.

    THOMAS II and his second wife Sarah Earl were living in Portsmouth, RI with his mother Rebecca (Briggs) Cornell when she was killed under suspicious circumstances at 73 years of age on Feb. 8, 1673. The widow Rebecca Cornell had planned to move and live with her son Samuel in the spring because her life had become intolerable living with Thomas II, and his wife. Under Thomas's insistance, his mother had deeded the Portsmouth property to him only weeks before her death. He was supposed to pay her 100 pounds as compensation, but he did not. He had neglected to care for her and refused to hire a maid to do so. Rebecca died of fire to her clothing and a puncture hole to the uppermost part of her stomach.

    At the insistance of REBECCA'S brother John Briggs, a murder trial ensued. John Russell of Dartmouth, then aged 65 years, testified at the trial that George Soule, Constable of Dartmouth told him that Rebecca had confided to him that she feared she would be "made away with" before her planned move in the spring. THOMAS CORNELL II was found guilty of murdering his mother and at age 46 years, on May 23,1673 was hung by the neck from the gallows at the Newport jail until dead.

Borden Family connection

THOMAS ii married 2 Abt 1653 (or 1662) in Rhode Island to Sarah Earle b: Abt 1640. John 1662,Sarah 1668, Infant 1670, Innocent b: JUL 1673 in Rhode Island, wife of Richard (3) (John 2, Richard 1) BORDEN of Portsmouth. Richard was born Oct. 24, 1671, and died July 12, 1732. Sarah BORDEN, the oldest daughter of Richard and Innocent, born July 31, 1694. Richard BORDEN's mother, Mary EARLE (3) (William 2, Ralph 1), was first cousin of Innocent CORNELL, as the latter's mother was Sarah (2) EARLE (Ralph 1). An interesting conjecture is that Innocent, whose birth must have been near 1673, may have been a posthumous child, and that her name may have been her mother's indignent protest at the cruel judicial murder of the father of the babe. Certainly no man would in these days be executed on such weak circumstantial evidence as contained in the records of this case. The complete report of the trial is found in the book entitled State of Rhode Island the Providence Plantations, in the chapter "The Struggle for Judicial Supremacy". also: Newport Court of Trials 1671-1741 Film # 945811. Thomas is also reported to have married 3 Martha FREEMAN b: ABT 1630.

There was a Frank Morton Sherman Borden born Aug 3 1888, a carpenter registered for the WWI draft at the Fairhaven Draft Board.

The 1920 Census of Westport lists Frank M. S. Borden, house carpenter, age 31 and his wife Rosella age 21.

The 1930 Westport Census lists Frank M. Borden living at Division St. and Horseneck Rd., carpenter age 41 married at age 29 not a veteren, with value of house $ 3,000 with father from Rhode Island, his wife Rosella M. age 39? married at age 19, and their daughters virginia age 8 and Florence age 2 1/2.

Frank SS# 031-18-8717 died June 1973 age 85.

The 1860 Census of Freetown lists

Borden Emery 47 M . Laborer . . R.I. . . . . . Borden Charity 36 F . . . . Mass . . . . . Borden Elisa 18 F . . . . Mass . . . . . Borden Sarah 10 F . . . . Mass . . . . Borden Otis P. 5 M . . . . Mass perhaps Frank is Otis's son?

Frank Morton Sherman, M.D. and Annie Elma Sisson lived in Dartmouth after their marriage in June 1882 till Jan. 1890.

This is especially curious. I can't find any geneological reference to FMS Borden in the geneologies so I'm left to wonder why he was named after my greatgrandfather. Perhaps because of some outstanding medical service he performed for one of the Bordens? or was he an illigetimate child of my great grandfather and named out of spite? or what?

     STEPHEN CORNELL born: 1656, freeman 1688; of Dartmouth, MA. was raised by his father and stepmother Sarah Earle. At age 17 he witnessed his father's execution for murdering his grandmother REBECCA.

Ezra Cornell Lithograph
Ezra Cornell In 1863 STEPHEN'S three-greats-grandson the Hon. Ezra Cornell (1807-1874), son of Elijah b. 1771, son of Elijah b . 1730, son of Stephen who m. Ruth Pierce, son of STEPHEN b. 1656, donated the original endowment including of 990,000 acres of land for establishment of Cornell University which is named after him.


Reference: Rev. John Cornell, Genealogy of the Cornell Family: Being an Account of the Descendants of Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth, R.I. (New York: T.A. Wright, 1902) - digital copy

PARDON CORNELL b: May 18, 1774 in Dartmouth, and his wife LYDIA (WING) CORNELL b: March 8, 1781 in Dartmouth, had a fine grandfathers clock (photo). (as told to Bonnie B. Sherman by Viola Heise Sherman): "An itinerant cabinet maker came around Dartmouth to the Cornell place in the winter. The Cornells took him in and gave him board and room all that winter and he made three clock cases. We have one. The other two are still in Dartmouth. It descended in the family until Emily Davis* (distant relative) had it in her possession. Annie Elma Sherman knew about it and went every once in a while to see it. G. Tabor (dear friend)_______?_________ bought the grandfather clock.". Writing inside door says " Bought for $ 300. this clock of Charles R. Sherman, New bedford. Gift from G. H. Tabor. A.E.S." (possibly George Hathaway TABER?) From the 1950's till his death in 1997, the clock was owned by Frank Morton Sherman III. It is now owned by Marcus Morton Sherman.

*quite possibly : Mary Emily DAVIS b: 1873, Somerset, youngest of 5 children; her mother Emily (Chase) Davis b: 1823, Freetown, m: William J. DAVIS Jr. b: 1799, Freetown, machinest, descendant of SARAH WARREN; or Emily Davis, or James E. Davis to Emily G. Hathaway at Globe Village, R.I., Nov 11, 1860 Fall River; or Emily Jane (Hathaway) Davis b: 1845, Fall River

George Taber #6007 married Susan Bowman, daughter of Samuel Bowman and Hannah Davis. 

Signature Maker Info Instruments HANDLEY, JAMES USA, fl.1865-73, Comments: NIM partner of Charles R. Sherman in C.R. Sherman and Co. Location:49 North Water Street, New Bedford, Mass. References:Moskowitz; RSW.

After John F. Emerson had taught there several years he purchased the house, removed it to William Street, New Bedford and remodeled it into a dwelling-house, which, with its additions, is now occupied by Charles R. Sherman.Birth: 9 APR 1833 in Dartmouth, Mass Father: Charles SHERMAN b: ABT. JAN 1800 in Dartmouth, Mass, questionable Mother: Edith PICKENS b: JAN 1800 in Dartmouth, Bristol, Mass

Marriage 1 Rebecca UNKNOWN b: 1808 Married: ABT. 1853 Death: 28 SEP 1865

end Cornell family

SISSON FAMILY

  

Annie Elma Sherman has two lines of descent from the RICHARD SISSON family. The SISSON GENEALOGY Site

     RICHARD SISSON born: About 1608 in Yorkshire, England. "The Sisson Family is one of the oldest families in Rhode Island. They have been continuous residents of Newport County and adjacent parts of Mass. for over 250 years and have played a prominent part in the development of that section. Married: SARAH LAWTON born: APR 1645 in Portsmouth, Newport, Rhode Island. James and George were their sons. In 1653: Freeman of the Colony in May 165?: Bought of William Hall 11/300 of the island of Qononoquett (Conanicut) and 1/300 of Dutch Island. 1656: Sold the above to Peleg Sanford, together with 1/300 bought of Thomas Manchester and 1/300 he had in his own right. 1667: Removed to Dartmouth, Mass where he purchased a large homestead and farm on the West bank of the Coakset River, at the head, in what became Westport in 1787. Their residence at the corner near the bridge became the site of a noted tavern. The location was known as 'Sisson's,' and James Sisson, his son, kept a tavern in the old homestead. His home site (still standing in 2000) is/was called Mintwater Brook Farm on 1236 East Main Rd. on Aquidneck Island in Portsmouth RI. This house was in the Sisson family until about 1996.This part of Dartmouth became a part of the town of Westport in 1787.

     He was a Grand Juror in 1667. In politics, he was reported as Huguenot [which is a term used of French Protestants, not a political term - DAS]. He was a member of the Society of Friends (Quakers). We have never found any indication of a formal occupation. Some have called Richard a surveyor, but he held that title as an appointee of the town of Dartmouth, and it is unlikely that he did much actual surveying as a profession.1671: Was Town Surveyor.  Richard and Mary returned to Portsmouth, probably before King Philip's War in the mid-1680's, and Richard died there26 FEB 1683/84, though later Mary returned to Dartmouth and died there He left a detailed will and inventory of his property. 

      /CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD SISSON b: 12 JUL 1835
     |        \ISAAC SISSON b: 08 OCT 1807
     |                 \DAVID SISSON b: 04 APR 1774
     |                         \JONATHAN SISSON II b: 04 JAN 1724/25
     |                                    \JONATHAN SISSON b: 1689
     |                                         \JAMES SISSON b: 20 NOV 1656
     |                                              \RICHARD SISSON b: ABT 1608 d: 26 FEB 1683/84
ANNIE ELMA SISSON b: 06 SEP 1861                    /MARY b: 20 ___ 1612
     |                                         /GEORGE SISSON b: 1644 d: 07 SEP 1718
     |                                    /JOHN SISSON b: 26 JUN 1688 d: 1784
     |                         /ABIGAIL SISSON b: 29 JUL 1731 d: AFT 1790

     |                 /MERCY ALMY b: 06 MAR 1758 d: 05 FEB 1850

     |           /LYDIA WING b: 08 MAR 1781

              |             /JOSEPH WING CORNELL b: 26 OCT 1804

     \LYDIA ALMY CORNELL b: 19 DEC 1836

Our first Sisson line is through:  JAMES SISSON born: 20 NOV 1656 in Dartmouth. Occupation: Yeoman, married LYDIA HATHAWAY born: 1662/63 in Dartmouth.
He inherited the homestead in Dartmouth. He kept a tavern in the old homestead; it was used as a tavern for almost two centuries. He was admitted a freeman in Westport, Plymouth Colony (later MA Bay Colony) in 1684. On May 24, 1686 he was among 42 of the Townsmen of Dartmouth who took the oath of fidelity or freemen's oath and on the same day at the town meeting , John Cook chose James Sisson and four others as Grand jury men.
He was the constable in 1686, surveyor of highways in 1685, and a selectman in 1689. He was (according to a biography of a descendant, Albert Elverton Sisson "a collector of taxes for the MA town in which he lived [Westport], and suffered imprisonment because he would not collect the Church of England tax." He died After 15 JUN 1734 in and before 02 Dec 1734, in Dartmouth.

JONATHAN SISSON born: 1689 in Dartmouth, JONATHAN SISSON II born: Jan. 4, 1724/25 in Dartmouth married HANNAH HOWLAND born: Feb.27, 1728/29 in Dartmouth, DAVID SISSON born: April 4, 1774 in Westport, was a tanner. He married NANCY HOWLAND born: July 12, 1771 in Westport. They had eight children including Isaac. She died July 11, 1818, one day before her 48th birthday and one week after the birth of her eighth child. He married again on June 13, 1819 probably in Westport to Nancy's youngest sister, Penelope HOWLAND age 33, born: March 26, 1786 in Westport, and had seven more children. His homestead was on Pine Hill Rd, Westport.

ISAAC SISSON Isaac was born Oct. 8, 1807 on the old homestead on Pine Hill Road in Westport. He was a carpenter 1 in Dartmouth. He married Oct.22, 1829 in Westport to MIRIAM GIFFORD born: about Feb. 1808 probably in Westport. The 1856 H.F. Walling map of Dartmouth shows ISAAC SISSON residence at beginning of the lane on Russells Mills Rd., more recently the home of the Sheehan and Sylvia families (1190 Russells Mills Rd.) Both he and his wife are buried at Apponegansett Meetinghouse Burial Ground, in Russells Mills.   MSW has a picture of him…taken when his hair was white and he has a short shaggy beard. He is the grandfather of Annie Elma Sisson my great grandmother. The picture was taken by "Wolfenstein" New Bedford, MA and Betty says Dartmouth on the back. Maybe that is where he lived when it was taken. He died Nov. 23, 1885 in Dartmouth, Immediate cause of death: Strangulated Hernia. The fourth of their nine children was :

CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD SISSON born: July 12, 1835 in Dartmouth, Married LYDIA ALMY CORNELL born: Dec. 16, 1836 in Dartmouth, on May 18, 1858 in Dartmouth and resided in New Bedford, MA after about 1880. MSW has a picture of him where he appears to be about 30 years old. He was a "carpenter" per Annie's birth certificate of which MSW has a copy. He died of Enteritis May 12, 1886 in New Bedford and buried in Rural Cemetery, 149 Dartmouth St. New Bedford  (508) 991-6191. Lot 3, Section D. He is the first person buried in this lot that was purchased by his wife. Their only child was ANNIE ELMA SISSON

Our second Sisson line is through  GEORGE SISSON born: 1644 in Dartmouth was a prosperous Farmer. On 01 AUG 1667 in Portsmouth, He married SARAH LAWTON b: APR 1645 in Portsmouth. On June 5, 1671 was appointed to the Grand jury. At same date he and others were appointed to view the damage done to the Indians by horses and hogs. April 7, 1677: He sold Peleg Tripp 32 acres in Portsmouth with houses, orchards, fencing, & c., for 3/8 of a share in Dartmouth. May 19, 1683: He sold Isaac Lawton, £100, a quarter share in some Dartmouth property. Aug. 16, 1684: He was on jury whose verdict was that an Indian "murdered himself." 1687: Constable 1688: Grand Jury 1690-1702/5/7, Deputy 1703: Justice of the Peace. He died 07 SEP 1718 in Portsmouth, age 74.   The tenth of their eleven children was John.       

His son JOHN SISSON born June 26, 1688 in Portsmouth, inherited land and a house at Tiverton, R. I. and was a selectman & tax assessor.His first wife Jane PEABODY died May 1, 1714 in Middletown, R.I. soon after the birth of their third child. He remarried About 1721 in Tiverton, to REBECCA LAWTON born: about 1699 . He was one of the tax assessors who refused to collect the tax imposed by the General Court. In 1722 he was imprisoned in Bristol for protesting taxes. He died 1784 in Dartmouth. The sixth of their seven children was:

ABIGAIL SISSON, who married JOSEPH ALMY. The fourth of their thirteen children, MERCY ALMY, married JOHN WING Lt. born: April 17, 1755 in Dartmouth. The second of their nine children, LYDIA WING , married PARDON CORNELL born: May18, 1774 in Dartmouth.The third of their eight children, JOSEPH WING CORNELL, married NANCY HOWLAND born: March 6, 1812 in Dartmouth. The youngest of their five children, LYDIA ALMY CORNELL married CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD SISSON. Their only child was ANNIE ELMA SISSON 

end Sissonl family

HOWLAND FAMILY

     The Howland coat-of-arms, granted 1584, has two black bars below three black rampant lions on a silvershield. The Coat of Arms used by the New England Howland family is the same as the one granted in 1584 by Queen Elizabeth I (daughter of Anne Bolen, Henry the VIII 's second wife and Mary's sister) to the Rt. Rev. Richard Howland, who later became Bishop of Petersborough and who performed the burial rites for Mary Queen of Scots. The Howlands used this Coat of Arms as early as 1737 when it appeared on the gravestone of Yetmercy Howland in Bristol, R. I. The use of this Coat of Arms seems to point to the family of this Bishop Howland as the progenitor of Henry and his sons, John, the Mayflower Pilgrim and Arthur and Henry II who came over on the "Anne". Bishop Howland was the eldest son of John Howland, a salter in London, who was born in Newport Pond, co. Essex.

    Annie Elma Sisson’s connections to The Howlands of Dartmouth are interesting. She is descended three times from Henry Howland II through her grandfather: ISAAC SISSON:

            /DAVID SISSON b: 04 APR 1774
            |      \HANNAH HOWLAND b: 27 FEB 1728/29      
            |                 \SAMUEL HOWLAND b: 20 FEB 1703/4
       ISAAC SISSON                                 >NICHOLAS HOWLAND
            |                 /DANIEL HOWLAND b: 20 AUG 1712  |
                        /JOSHUA HOWLAND b: 04 AUG 1753        |
                   /NANCY HOWLAND b: 06 MAR 1812              |
   /LYDIA ALMY CORNELL b: 19 DEC 1836                         |
ANNIE ELMA SISSON                                             |                  
   \CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD SISSON b: 12 JUL 1835                  \  /HENRY HOWLAND II b: ABT 1604   
       \ISAAC SISSON b: 08 OCT 1807                          ZOETH HOWLAND b: ABT 1636 
           |                                                   /  \MARY NEWLAND d: 17 JUN 1674
           |                                         /HENRY HOWLAND b: 30 JUN 1672
           |                           /STEPHEN HOWLAND b: 14 MAY 1716
           |            /PRINCE HOWLAND b: 12 DEC 1745
           \NANCY HOWLAND b: 12 JUL 1771 

       HENRY HOWLAND II was born was born on 25 Nov 1604 in Fen Stanton, Huntingdonshire, England. Fen Stanton is about 1-2 miles south of St. Ives, near Huntingdon, in the area northwest of Cambridge, Huntingdonshire county no longer exists.

      He was apprenticed to his brother Humphrey, of the Draper's Company of London in 1623. Humphrey was a member of the Draper's Company that had stock and other interests in the Virginia Company and were quite influential in getting 'people of quality' to travel to the new English Colonies in America. It was probably he that encouraged young John to sail to Plymouth on the first boat to go. It appears Henry did not complete his apprenticeship. He came to America in 1923 or 24 with his older brother Arther, probably on the ship "Anne", following their oldest brother John who had come on the Mayflower in 1620 as a manservant Mr. John Carver.

      By 1624, he was first mentioned in Plymouth Colony records as the owner of a black cow. He married Mary Newland, born 16 Apr 1609 in England, on June, 16 1624 in Duxbury. They had nine children. He was a Planter, Yeoman in Duxbury who was taxed in 1632; a freeman 1633 and 1635 was town constable. 

He appears in Duxbury among its earliest settlers, some of the first inhabitants of Plymouth locating themselves there across the harbor, on the north side of the bay. Here he is referred to as living "by the bay side, near love Brewster's," and the record reads that he was "one of the substantial landholders and freemen. In 1640 he purchased five acres of upland and one acre of marsh meadow in Duxbury, the price which he paid being "Twelve bushells of Indian Corne." For several years he was surveyor of highways in the town. in 1643 he was on a list of freemen of Duxbury, and of men able to bear arms. He served on the "Grand Inquest" (grand jury) in 1636, 37, 39, 40, 49, 51, 52, 53, 56.

      He was evidently placed on the next grand jury, for his name appears in 1657, June 3d, on a list of those who refused "to serue on the Grand enquest". The apparent reason for this refusal to serve is that he had joined the Friends' sect, which was just beginning to spread in America, and the duties were such that he could not conscientiously perform them. "He and his wife MARY NEWLAND were Quakers, and apparently suffered much persecution on their faith. Plymouth Colony records show Henry, Mary, and several of their children called into court many times for "entertaining Quaker meetings," for "being abettors and entertainers of Quakers," and for "permitting a Quakers meeting and for entertaining a foreign Quaker contrary to order of the court. Henry's house and lands were once seized by the marshal for refusing to pay his fine.

     About 1651 he and others obtained a large tract of land in Dartmouth for Quakers to live in peace. In 1659, he and 26 others purchased land now part of Freetown, MA from Wamsutta and Pattapanum for the price of 20 coats, 2 rugs, 2 iron pots, 2 kettles and one little kettle, 8 pairs shoes, 6 pairs stockings, 1 dozen hats, 2 dozen hatchets, and 2 yards broadcloth.   At the division, in 1660, of "ye ffreeman's land att Taunton River," which was this purchase, he received for his share the sixth lot.

     Roger Williams had established in Rhode Island a government the charter of which guaranteed that everyone should be free to enjoy his own opinions, so long as they did not militate against the general good. The Friends and Henry and his family fled to this land of liberty. Henry's property was near the boundary line, but still within the jurisdiction of Plymouth County, in Freetown. At the commencement of the Quaker persecutions at Plymouth, Henry was one of the original purchasers of Dartmouth in 1652. He was assigned one share. He doubtless built a house on this land, the one his widow gave to their son John. He and his wife may have lived there, as his horses and cattle were there. His son ZOETH settled there as early as 1662. His sons, with the exception of Samuel, were active members of the old Apponegansett meeting.

     Henry and Mary probably died at the old Duxbury homestead; Henry on January 17, 1671, and Mary on June 17, 1674.

Ref: A Brief Genealogical and Biographical History of Arthur, Henry, and John Howland & their Descendants, of the USA & Canada, By Franklyn Howland, First Edition, New Bedford, MA: Published by the author 1885.

     During the King Phillip's War “Dartmouth was laid waste". A great number of whites were killed and the Indians were practically exterminated. Many Indians were captured, sold as slaves and shipped to other countries. Henry II’s third son: ZOETH HOWLAND, (Zoeth Howland) born about 1636 in Duxbury,  was killed Jan. 21, 1676, by Indians during King Phillip's War, in Tiverton, RI, what was then called Pocaset, RI..  After an English skirmish with Indians in Tiverton, Newport, RI, south of Howland's Ferry, "Howland was passing through Pocasset, as he was wont to travel, for the purpose of attending the Quaker meeting at Newport. He was waylaid by 6 savages, one of whom went by the name Manasses. Without any provocation, the peaceful Friend was slain in cold blood and the assassins satisfied their passion by mutilating the dead body. Then they carried the mangled corpse to the stream which flows into Nanaquaket Pond at the foot of Highland Road and threw him in the water. His horrified friends, when they discovered the outrage, called the brook 'Sinning Flesh River' the nameby which it has been known to the present day". His son, Daniel owned the ferry [Howland's Ferry] at Tiverton, and Zoeth might also have been at Tiverton to visit his son.

      Zoeth's second son HENRY HOWLAND descended to ANNIE ELMA SISSON.  July 29, 1709. Henry Howland was agreed with to make a pair of stocks and whipping post.

      Zoeth's first son: NICHOLAS HOWLAND, once owned Gooseberry Neck at the mouth of Buzzards Bay. He had the ferry at Stone Bridge.. Nicholas' first son: SAMUEL HOWLAND born: Feb. 20, 1703/4, and second son DANIEL HOWLAND born: Aug. 20, 1712 both lived in Dartmouth and descended seperately to ANNIE ELMA SISSON.

     Two U.S. Presidents, Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon, also descend from Henry Howland II.

       HENRY HOWLAND II's brother was John HOWLAND Pilgrim born: about 1599 in Fen Stanton, Huntingdonshire, England. John Howland came to America aboard the Mayflower, as a servant to the John Carver family. "John Howland is called a "manservant" in William Bradford's passenger list. The following account of a mishap, which befell him on the voyage hither to Plymouth, was found in a fragment of Gov. Bradford's MS. History, “In a mighty storm, John Howland, a Passenger, a stout young man, by a heeling of ye ship was thrown into the sea. But it pleased God, he caught hold of ye Topsail Halyard that we hung overboard and ran out their length. He kept his hold, though several Fathoms under water, till He was drawn up by ye same Rope to ye surface, & by a boat hook & other means got into ye ship: &, though sorrowly ill because of it, he lived many years & became a useful member both in Church & Commonwealth."

      His indenture document, dated May 6,1623, containing his autograph signature and containing nearly 1,200 words, refers to him as a salter of London. About 1624 in Plymouth, he married a fellow Mayflower passenger Elizabeth TILLEY, born: Aug. 30, 1607 in Henlow, Huntingdonshire, England. They had ten children between 1624 and 1649. Her father was John TILLEY Pilgrim who died the first winter.

      In 1626, he was one of the settlers, called purchasers, who assumed the Colony's debt to the Merchant Adventurers. In 1633, he was an Assistant or a member of the Governor's Council. In 1634, he commanded the Pilgrim's Trading Post at Kenebec, ME. He held the office of Plymouth Colony Assistant, Jan 1 1632/33 to Jan 1, 1634/35. He was Deputy for Plymouth to General Court, Jun 1, 1641, Oct 28, 1645, Jun 1, 1647 to Jun 1, 1658 and Jun 4, 1661, Jun 1, 1663, Jun 1, 1666, Jun 5, 1667. He died Feb. 23, 1672/73 in Plymouth and left a will. In speaking of his death, the Old Colony Records speak of him as a godly man, and an ancient professor of the ways of Christ.  One of the first comers, he proved a useful instrument of good in his place, and was the last male survivor of those who came over in the Mayflower in 1620."   

He was honorably interred at Plymouth, where his remains rested for upwards of a century without a stone, until a suitable gravestone was 
placed over them. His wife is buried in Little Neck Cemetery, Riverside, Rhode Island, in a plot owned by her son-in-law's family (Brown's 
plot). She was living with her daughter in Swansea, MA, when she died. The stone is identical to the one erected on Burial Hill in Plymouth , 
for John Howland." The Howland House built in 1667 still stands in Plymouth. 
(photo) CAPT. FRANKLYN HOWLAND is a descendant of Henry Howland.
It is supposed that John Howland, of the "Mayflower," and Henry were brothers. The descent comes from Henry
1 through Zoeth 2, Nathaniel3, James4, Thomas5, Thomas6, William7, Stephen8, and Franklyn9. Zoeth's sons, 
Nathaniel, Benjamin, Henry, and Nicholas, were among the original proprietors and settlers of old Dartmouth. They were sturdy, well to 
do, highly respected men. The Howlands of this part of Bristol County all trace their descent from three brothers. 
     Franklyn's grandfather, William, above mentioned, married Innocent Wilber, of Little Compton, R. I., where he settled, and was frequently 
honored with public office. Innocent was a daughter of William Wilbor, who was born in England in 1580, and whose son Samuel was one of 
the original proprietors of the island of Rhode Island. Her nephew, Philip Wilbor, was formerly Governor of that State. Her cousin, John 
Wilbor, was leader of the " Wilborite" faction of Friends. His father Stephen married Lucy P., daughter of Rev. Israel Washburn, a descendant 
of John Washburn, who was a resident of Evansham, county of  Worcester, England, Secretary of the Council of Plymouth in England, and the 
first secretary of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in America. He subsequently moved from the Plymouth Colony, and was one of the original 
proprietorsof Bridgewater, the descent being John’, John', Jaui&, Mose8, Moses', Jr., Lettice~, Israel'. 
     Rev. Israel Washburn was born in Acushnet, 24th 10th month, 1796. At an early age he took orders in the Methodist Episcopal Church, and continued in the itinerancymost of the time ' till he died. His last appointment by the Conference was to the Methodist Episcopal Church in Acushnet village, but he did not live to move to it. He was an earnest advocate of all moral reforms, especially of total abstinence and anti-slavery, being classed with the Garrison abolitionists. He was for many years a resident of Acushnet.

    A remarkable family line of militaty service is that: Moses, Washburn Jr., was in the Revolutionary war. His son Lettice Washburn was in the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. His grandson, Rev. Israel Washburn, offered his services to the government in 1862, at seventy-two years of age, and was made chaplain of the Twelfth Massachusetts Volunteers on September 1st of that year. At the battle of Antietam he contracted a disease of which he died April 23, 1864.   His great grandson, A. Gardiner Washburn, a former resident of Acushnet, a graduate of Brown University and the Albany Law School, subsequently a newspaper editor, died of disease contracted in the service. His great-great-grandson, Franklin Washburn, also served in the Civil War. A United States pension was granted on account of the last four, and the last three held the same rank of Captain.

                                     /JAMES SISSON b: 20 NOV 1656,RICHARD SISSON b: ABT 1608
                     /JONATHAN SISSON b: 1689               
                     |              |        /ARTHUR HATHAWAY II b: ABT 25 1620, /ARTHUR HATHAWAY b: ABT 1605 =>
                     |               \LYDIA HATHAWAY b: 1662/63 
                     |                         |     /JOHN COOKE b: ABT 01 JAN 1607 =>
                     |                          \SARAH COOKE b: ABT 1635 
                     |                               \SARAH WARREN b: ABT 1614,
                                                                 \ RICHARD WARREN Pilgrim
                  /JONATHAN SISSON II b: 04 JAN 1724/25
          /DAVID SISSON b: 04 APR 1774
          |      |                               /GEORGE SOULE Pilgrim b: 1590 
          |      |                             /GEORGE SOULE II b: ABT 1639
          |      |                            |        \MARY BECKETT b: 17 JAN 1599  =>
          |      |                   /WILLIAM SOULE b: BEF 1671 
          |      |            /SARAH SOULE b: 08 NOV 1703 
          |      \HANNAH HOWLAND b: 27 FEB 1728/29      
          |                   \SAMUEL HOWLAND b: 20 FEB 1703/4
        ISAAC SISSON                                  >NICHOLAS HOWLAND
          |                   /DANIEL HOWLAND b: 20 AUG 1712  |
                        /JOSHUA HOWLAND b: 04 AUG 1753        |
                  /NANCY HOWLAND b: 06 MAR 1812               |
   /LYDIA ALMY CORNELL b: 19 DEC 1836 <=WILLIAM RICKETSON     |
ANNIE ELMA SISSON                                             |                  
   \CHRISTOPHER GIFFORD SISSON b: 12 JUL 1835                  \    /HENRY HOWLAND II b: ABT 1604  
       \ISAAC SISSON b: 08 OCT 1807                         ZOETH HOWLAND b: ABT 1636 
          |                                                    /    \MARY NEWLAND d: 17 JUN 1674
           \                                         /HENRY HOWLAND b: 30 JUN 1672
            \                          /STEPHEN HOWLAND b: 14 MAY 1716
             \            /PRINCE HOWLAND b: 12 DEC 1745
              \                        \LUCY WASHBURN, REV. ISREAL WASHBURN, LETTICE WASHBURN, 
                                                                               \MOSES WASHBURN JR,=>JOHN WASHBURN
               \NANCY HOWLAND b: 12 JUL 1771 

                          \PHEBE TRIPP,JOHN TRIPP,EBENEZER TRIPP,JOSEPH TRIPP,JOHN TRIPP The Founder b: 06 FEB 1610  =>

 

 

 

                             /HENRY TUCKER b: 1619 d: 09 SEP 1694
                     /ABRAHAM TUCKER b: 13 AUG 1653 d: 16 MAY 1725
                     |       \MARTHA BARLOW d: 09 SEP 1697
             /HENRY TUCKER b: 30 AUG 1680 d: 1763
             |       |               /PHILIP SLOCUM
             |       |       /GILES SLOCUM d: 1682
             |       |       |       \CHARITY BICKHAM
             |       \MARY SLOCUM b: 30 MAY 1660 d: 25 SEP 1689
             |               \JOAN d: 1679
     /HENRY TUCKER II b: 08 DEC 1713 d: BEF 06 MAY 1794
     |       \PHEBE BARTON
ELIZABETH TUCKER b: 18 AUG 1749 d: 12 NOV 1807
     |               /N RICKETSON d: 1691
     |       /WILLIAM RICKETSON 
     |       |       \ELIZABETH MOTT b: 05 AUG 1659 
     \ELIZABETH RICKETSON b: 17 MAR 1714/15
             |                       /PHILIP SLOCUM
             |               /GILES SLOCUM d: 1682
             |       /ELEAZER SLOCUM
             \MERIBAH SLOCUM b: 28 APR 1689 

ELIZABETH TUCKER married GIDEON CORNELL. They were the parents of PARDON CORNELL

    end Howlans family

GIFFORD FAMILY

Peleg Sherman and  Annie Elma Sherman have the common ancestor of JEREMIAH GIFFORD: WILLIAM GIFFORD Arrived in New England after 1643. William was a Quaker and his wife, Mary, was a "vagabond" "travelling" Quaker missionary. Per Little Compton Families which cites the Tallman family records by William M. Emery: "William Gifford, a member of the Society of Friends. Although he suffered the persecutions visited upon the Quakers of that time, he prospered in material affairs and became a large land owner. It is supposed that he was the William Gifford who in 1647 or earlier was ordered by the court at Stanford to be whippped and banished. He is found at Sandwich in 1650 and lived at Sandwich until his death 9 Apr 1687.

     He was there except for the years 1665 - 1670, when he and others became proprietors of Monmouth Co., N.J., by purchase of land from the Indians. In a deed by his son Christopher, he was described as a tailor. On 10 Nov Mr. Gifford bought of mistress, Sarah Warren of Plymouth, widow of Richard Warren, one half her share in the land at Dartmouth, which by deed 6 May 1683 he gave equally to his sons Christopher and ROBERT. He also owned land in Sandwich, Falmouth, and Rhode Island. 

                                                                                                                                                                                  /Philip SHERMAN b: BEF 5 FEB 1609

                                                                                                                                                               /Peleg SHERMAN b: 1638

                                                                                                                               /William SHERMAN b: 3 OCT 1659               \Sarah ODDING b: 5 FEB 1609

                                                                                                   / Thomas SHERMAN b: 1684                            \Elizabeth LAWTON b: 10 SEP 1637

                                                                           /Peleg Sherman b: 1745                              \ Martha WILBORE b: ABT 1662

                                                                         /                         \ Ruth POTTER m:  May 6, 1727

                                                                         Peleg SHERMAN 6 b: Aug. 10, 1777             / Aaron and Hopestill (----) Potter

                                                                         \                          / John POTTER  Sept. 5, 1723-1773                  

                                                                           \Peace POTTER b: Sept.13, 1746          

                                                                                                    \Margaret GIFFORD b: 15 April 1722           

                                                                                                                                                                        \                                           /ROBERT GIFFORD b: ABT 1656, WILLIAM GIFFORD b: 1617

                                                                                                                              / JEREMIAH GIFFORD, b: 1681               

                                                                                                                                     /JONATHAN GIFFORD                                     /ADAM WRIGHT b: ABT 1645

                                                                                                          /DELE GIFFORD                                 \ MARY WRIGHT b: 1683

                                                                            /GIDEON CORNELL,                                                                                                    \ SARAH SOULE b: ABT 1660

                                                  /PARDON CORNELL

                           / JOSEPH WING CORNELL

                         /                        \LYDIA WING b: 08 MAR 1781, JOHN WING Lt.………                                                                          <=MATTHEW WING

              / LYDIA ALMY CORNELL

ANNIE ELMA SISSON 

       During the Civil War, the Seventh Regiment was composed almost entirely of Bristol County men, and was recruited by Col. (subsequently
 Maj.-Gen.)  Darius N. Couch. It was officered as follows: Colonel, Darius N. Couch, Taunton Company B (Fall Rivet). -Captain, John 
Cushing; First Lieutenant, Jesse D. Bullock; Second Lieutenant, George W. Gifford? (may be George W. Gifford who married Hannah S. 
SIMMONS fourth child ofPerry SIMMONS on 27 Aug 1857.  Father: Issac Gifford. The regiment rendezvoused at Camp Old Colony (now 
known as Bristol County Agricultural Grounds), Taunton, where it was mustered into the United States service by Capt. J. H. Marshall, U.S.A. 
June 15, 1861, and shortly after left for Washington, D. C.,Thwy saw active service an many fronts and returned to Taunton June 20, 1864 and 
was warmly welcomed back by the citizens, who turned out en mame. June 27, 1864, the regiment was mustered out of service, and the gallant 
Seventh, with its laurels won on many a hard-contested field, passed into history. 
 end Gifford family

   

Historic Sherman Family Home at 1190 Russells Mills Rd, Up the Lane

 

     In the late 1650's or early 1660's it is likely that Ralph and then John Russell resided at the site of the old Sherman home at the crest of the south facing hill overlooking the small mill pond on the West side of the Pascamanset River, whether that residence was incorperated in the present building is unknown.

    The first settlers of Dartmouth (Russells Mills) were members of the Russell family. Ralph Russell went to Dartmouth soon after the purchase of land from the Indians November 29, 1651. He established an iron forge on the west bank of the Pascamanset River, just behind the old Sherman home at 1190 Russells Mills Rd. Ralph Russel was probably an old man when he settled in Russells Mills as it is his son, John Russell, who appears in the first early records of the town as a proprieter. Miles Standish's share of Dartmouth was purchased by John Russell on March 9, 1664. In 1665 Dartmouth was represented for the first time at Plymouth General Court by John Russell.    

photo taken from "Dartmouth" by Beverly Glennon, pg 125 The powerfull Native American Sachem of the Poconocet tribe and Chief of the Wompanog tribal alliance, Metacomet, known to the English as King Phillip, was rumored to have hidden at this house during King Phillips War in the mid 1670's. On July 8, 1675 Wampanoags attacked Middleborough and Dartmouth. It was one of the few English houses in Dartmouth not burned by the Indians. Native American oral history indicates this house was not destroyed because "it was out of the way and forgotten" presumably by the English who were preoccupied with evacuating the area and defending the garrisons at John Cook's in Oxford Village in Fairhaven, Palmers Island (New Bedford), and John Russell's Garisson on Elm St. in Padanaram. The new year of 1676 saw Philip somewhat weakened. In January, he and his band traveled further west to Mohawk territory, seeking, but failing to secure, an alliance.

(photo) The front door step of this house is made from 1/2 of a millstone from the grist mill. The other 1/2 of the millstone is_?______________. (photo)A stone table in the lawn on the south side of the house is made from a full round mill stone from the grist mill. (photo) An ancient indian stone mortar sits in the lawn just southwest of the front porch of the house.

    The house was originially built before ?1675 by? Ralph Russell or his son (there is controversy whether John was the son of Ralph) John Russell (born abt Aug 1607, married Dorothy, died December 18, 1687, died 13 Feb 1694, Dartmouth) and the property subsequently owned by his son Joseph Russell (born May 6, 1650, Marshfield, married Elizabeth Baker (or Forbes) born June 6, 1657; died Sept. 25, 1707, died Dec. 11,1739), his son John Russell died 1767, subsequently his nephew Abraham Russell died 1815 ?4 Jul 1770, Joseph Tripp, Alden Macomber, Phillip Dunham, after 1856*: Robert Gifford past 1864 till died 1879 and Abigail Gifford died 1882.

    *Robert Gifford operated the grist mill at the end of the lane till 1864. He was married to Abigail 'Nabby' WING, the daughter of JOHN WING Lt. and MERCY ALMY. He was the brother of MIRRIAM GIFFORD born: 1808,Who married ISAAC SISSON born: 1807. They were the grandparents of ANNIE ELMA SISSON. The H.F. Walling map of 1856 shows ISAAC SISSON residence at beginning of the lane on Russells Mills Rd. and R. Gifford residing at the house up the lane.

    Since Robert Gifford died in 1879 and his wife Nabby died in May 1882 both childless, and Frank Morton Sherman, M.D. and Annie Elma Sisson are known to have lived in Dartmouth after their marriage in June 1882 till Jan. 1890. It is probable that the Shermans resided at this old home after the Giffords. Residents of the house after 1890 are unknown, but the property remained in the family with residents unknown till at least 1911.

    FRANK MORTON SHERMAN Jr, born: Feb. 25, 1883 in Dartmouth, married Viola HEISE, on Sept. 6, 1911 in West Newton. By late 1911 Frank and Viola Morton Sherman Jr. were probably living there. FRANK MORTON SHERMAN III born: Aug. 27, 1920 at 11 Fairview Terrace in West Newton, spent his childhood in Russell’s Mills. Viola Sherman (Mrs. Frank Morton Sherman Jr.) was an antiques dealer, operating the thriving “Up The Lane Antique Shop” from the barn on Drumlin Farm as it was then known. The 1930 U.S. Census lists F. Morton Sherman Jr. as a 47 year old antique dealer working at home

    Frank M. Sherman inherited the property in 1971 after the death of his mother Viola Morton Sherman Jr..  The property was purchased by Joseph P. Silveira Jr.on Nov. 18, 1976. Joe Silveira subdivided the property, Donating the wooded southern parts, back to the Paskamansett River and the mill ponds, to the Childrens Museum and keeping the house and immediate ajoining property for his daughters use and later as a rental property. It was most recently owned by his daughter Sandra Silveira, 161 Old Farm Rd. Leominster, Ma 01452 and operated as a rental property.
    The Dartmouth Children's Museum ceased operations in July 2000 because of several years of severe financial difficulties and merged with YMCA Southcoast in October 2000 after.. It is now formally known as the Dartmouth YMCA and is a division of YMCA Southcoast.

in 2003 the Town of Dartmouth Tax assessors office list the property as:1190 RUSSELLS MILLS RD
MBLU : 28/ 59/ / /

Parcel Value Item Assessed Value, Buildings 124,800, Extra Building Features 3,100, Outbuildings 6,300, Land 270,000, Total: 404,200
Owner of Record
SILVEIRA SUSAN P, 150 CLARK RD, BROOKLINE, MA 02445

Ownership History Owner Name Book/Page Sale Date Sale Price SILVEIRA SUSAN P 5013/ 194 5/30/2001 1 SILVEIRA JOSEPH P & NANCY M TR 02701/0297 10/2/1991 0 SILVEIRA JR JOSEPH P 01729/0808 11/18/1976 0

Land Use Code Land Use Description, 1010 SINGLE FAM Land Line Valuation Size Zone Assessed Value, 0.92 AC SRB 270,000 Construction Detail Item Value, Style Colonial, Model Residential, Occupancy 1, Grade Average +20, Stories 1 1/2 Stories Exterior Wall 1 Wood Shingle, Roof Structure Gable/Hip, Roof Cover Wood Shingle, Interior Wall 1 Plastered, Interior Floor 1 Pine/Soft Wood Heat Fuel Oil, Heat Type Forced Air-Duc, AC Type None, Bedrooms 3 Bedrooms, Bathrooms 1 1/2 Bathrms

Building Valuation Item Living Area 1,648 square feet ,Replacement Cost 222,887, Year Built 1850, Depreciation 44%, Building Value 124,800

Outbuildings Code Description Units, BRN2 1 STORY W/BSMT 680, FGR3 GAR-LOW COST 324

Extra Features Code Description Units, FPL2 1.5 STORY CHIM 1, FPO EXTRA FPL OPEN 1

Subarea Summary:Code Description, Gross Area, Living Area FHS Half Story, Finished 780 468 FOP Porch, Open, Finished 178 0 UBM Basement, Unfinished 1180 0 BAS First Floor 1180 1180 EAU Attic, Expansion, Unfinished 400 0 Total 3718 1648

The H.F. Walling map of 1856 shows ISAAC SISSON residence at beginning of the lane on Russells Mills Rd., now1192 Russells Mills Rd. This house was previously owned by John "Jack" Sheehan family. Jack was a close childhood friend of Frank Morton Sherman III.  He was a U.S.Army Air Corps pilot killed in combat during WW II.

MBLU : 28/ 61/ / / Location: 1192 RUSSELLS MILLS RD Owner Name: SILVEIRA SANDRA Account Number:

Parcel Value Item Assessed Value Buildings 200,400 Extra Building Features 3,300 Outbuildings 12,400 Land 185,500 Total: 401,600

Owner of Record SILVEIRA SANDRA 161 OLD FARM RD LEOMINSTER, MA 01453

previously owned by John "Jack" Sheehan family. Jack was a close childhood friend of Frank Morton Sherman III. He was a U.S.Army Air Corps pilot killed in combat during WW II.

Other:

-Michael Woyciechouski, a carpenter, and chairman of Dartmouth Local Historic District Study Committee.

-Russells Mills Village Historic District--Dartmouth (Bristol) Russells Mills Village Nick Name/Alias Class: District Feature(s): Architecture: Greek revival, Architecture: Late Victorian, Architecture: Federal, Listing: National Register, Ownership: Private, Ownership: Local Detail(s): The architectural design was provided by multiple sources. The criterion of the site is 'Religious Property'. It has a cultural affiliation of: American, urban. Places: Dartmouth, (Bristol) MA

end old sherman house

                                                                                        

Dartmouth References:

DR1-The History of New Bedford, Bristol County, Massachusetts: including the History of the Old Dartmouth Township and the present townships of Westport, Dartmouth and Fairhaven, From their settlement to the Present Time, By Daniel Ricketson , New Bedford: Published by the Author. 1858. 412 pages.

2- History of Bristol County Massachusetts with Biographical Sketches of many of its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Compiled under the supervision of D. Hamilton Hurd, Illustrated, Philadelphia: J.W.Lewis & Co., 1883.- Online Book in progress:  Scanned and OCRed by David Blackwell 1998, for the Free Books Online Effort!!! 

3-See the Index to available books for Massachusetts

4- Massachusetts Census for Bristol County,

5-1790 Federal Census Bristol County Massachusetts -Dartmouth

6-Dartmouth,The Early History of a Massachusetts Coastal Town by Beverly Morrison Glennon, More than 500 pages and 800 photographs Hardbound, gold-stamped, American Printing, New Bedford, Ma. 2001

7-Borden, A. (1899) The city of New Bedford

8- Manufactures. In Our County and its People, a descriptive and biographical record of Bristol County Massachusetts, p. 410- 421. The Boston History Company, Boston.

9-Online History Books

10-Colonial America

1871 Map of Town of Dartmouth; insets of North Dartmouth and Russells Mills; Dartmouth Business Notices. Reproduced from the 1871 Beers Atlas of Bristol County.

11-Lloyd Center

12- Contact Whaling museum library research 508 997-0046, ext. 134 to arrange, Judy Lund and Judy Downey of the Old Dartmouth Historical Society/New Bedford Whaling Museum, and Paul Cyr of the New Bedford Public Library.

13-History of Bristol County (this book originally owned by Marcus Morton II)

14-Bristol County Massachusetts Genealogy: Resources for Family ...

15-Massachusetts Guide to Genealogical Research - Tools and Finding ...

16-CHAPTER XV. history of dartmouth

History of Russells Mills, Henry Barnard North collection 59, Dartmouth Historical Society, New Bedford, unpublished handwritten Manuscript, 100+ pages, no illustration.

17-Barrett Russell, "The Descendants of John Russell of Dartmouth, Mass.", New England Historical and Genealogical Register, vol. 58 (Dec 1904), p. 365.

18-The American Genealogist, vol. 24 ?

19- Rhode Island Historical Society Library, 121 Hope Street, Providence, RI 02906 Phone: (401) 273-8107 Fax: (401) 751-7930

20- INDIAN HISTORY, BIOGRAPHY AND GENEALOGY PERTAINING TO THE GOOD SACHEM MASSASOIT OF
THE WAMPANOAG TRIBE AND HIS DESCENDANTS With an Appendix, By EBENEZER W. PEIRCE OF FREETOWN, MASS.
      APPENDIX No. 9 Page 34, 234

-russells,

-Borden

-VITAL RECORDS OF DARTMOUTH MASSACHUSETTS TO THE YEAR 1850 
PUBLISHED BY THE NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
- The Dartmouth vital records are available at Family Tree Maker online genealogy library.   
The Soule births From Vital Records of Dartmouth  to the year 1850 volume I-Births and
 SOULE marriages from Vital Records of Dartmouth to the year 1850 volume II-Marriages. 

 -check richard borden & innocent cornell

 

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