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== Trial Version for Importing of Phoenix Pages ==
 
 
Moved to [[Phoenix Test]]
 
 
 
  
 
==Put Your Trial Edits Here==
 
==Put Your Trial Edits Here==
  
{| width=100%
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'''Samuel<sup>1</sup> Whiting''',
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son of John<sup>A</sup> and Sarah (-----) Whiting,
| width=80% align=center | ANCESTRY OF EVA BELLE KEMPTON
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was baptized 20 Nov 1597, St. Botolph’s, Boston, Lincolnshire, and died 11 Dec 1679, Lynn, MA, aged 82 years, per gravestone.
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|}
 
  
'''JOHN<sup>1</sup> WHITNEY''', baptized St Margaret, Westminster, England 20 July
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He married, 6 Aug 1629, Boston, Lincolnshire '''Elizabeth St. John''', daughter of Sir Oliver St. John, of Cayshoe, Bedfordshire.  She was baptized 12 Jan 1604, Bletsoe, Bedfordshire, and died 3 Mar 1676/7, Lynn, MA.
1592; died Watertown, MA 1
 
June 1673, "widdower, aged
 
abought 84 yeares" (WVR 1:36);
 
  
<center>[Signature omitted]</center>
+
Samuel Whiting received BA and MA degrees from Emmanuel College, Cambridge University. He received holy orders as a priest in the Church of England, and served as a family chaplain and as associate pastor in King's Lynn. His Puritan practices led to parishioners raising complaints about his ministry, and he subsequently moved to the Parish of Skirbeck, near Boston, Lincolnshire. Again, parishioners complained of his Puritan practices. He ultimately chose to emigrate with his family to Massachusetts Bay Colony, arriving in (new) Boston on 26 May 1636.
  
married first England say 1623
+
Rev. Whiting became a prominent minister and theologian in the colony, who had treatises and sermons published in both English and Latin. He was a colleague of Rev. John Cotton, a preeminent religious leader in Massachusetts Bay who had previously been Samuel Whiting's parish priest in Boston, Lincolnshire. Rev. Whiting was also a colleague of Rev. Increase Mather and his son Rev. Cotton Mather, who included an elegy of Samuel Whiting in his major work, "Magnalia Christi Americana." In 1654, Rev. Samuel Whiting was appointed as overseer of Harvard College (predecessor of Harvard University).
'''ELINOR (_____)''', born say 1600,
 
died Watertown 11 May 1659 (WVR 1:21); married second Watertown 29
 
September 1659 (WVR 1:22) '''JUDAH CLEMENT''', who probably died
 
before 5 April 1670 when John made a deed related to his homestead and
 
Judah was not asked to release her dower (Middlesex Deed 3:452), and
 
certainly dead by 1673 when she was not named in her husband's will.
 
  
John Whitney, son of Thomas Whitney, of the city of Westminster,
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Three of Samuel Whiting's sons graduated from Harvard College and also became ministers. Eldest son Samuel Whiting Jr. became the minister of the Congregationalist Church in Billerica, MA. Second son John Whiting chose to emigrate to England and became the Anglican pastor of Butterwick Parish in Lincolnshire. Third son Joseph Whiting succeeded his father as pastor in Lynn, MA. In 1682, Joseph Whiting accepted an invitation to leave Massachusetts and become the pastor in Southampton, Long Island, New York, where he lived the rest of his life.
yeoman, was apprenticed to William Pring of the Old Bailey, a freeman of
 
the Merchant Taylors Company, on 22 February 1607[/8] (Apprentice
 
Binding Book, Vol 5, 1606-1609, Guildhall Library MS. 314[13], page 170):
 
  
<center>[Graphic omitted]</center>
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Children of Samuel<sup>1</sup> and Elizabeth (St. John) Whiting:
  
As an apprentice he learned clerical duties and studied a varied
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:{|
curriculum, as well as a trade. William Pring probably dealt in cloth, since
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| align=right valign=top | i.
John Whitney is called a tailor in Watertown deeds (vide post).
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| '''Dorothy<sup>2</sup> Whiting''', b. ca. 1631, England; d. 31 Jul 1694, Roxbury, MA; m. 4 Jun 1650, Roxbury, MA, Thomas Weld.
 
+
|-
When he reached his majority in 1614, John was made free by his
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| align=right valign=top | ii.
master, William Pring (Court Minute Book, vol.6, Freemen 1607-1618,
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| '''Samuel Whiting''', bapt. 25 Mar 1633, Skirbeck, Lincolnshire; d. 28 Feb 1712/3, Billerica, MA; m. 12 Nov 1656, Billerica, MA, Dorcas Chester.
Guildhall Library Ms. 327 (31), page 483: Freedoms), and ten years later,
+
|-
on 8 November 1624, "Robert Whitney, son of Thomas Whitney of the city
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| align=right valign=top | iii.
of Westminster, Gentleman, was apprenticed to John Whitney in
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| '''Joseph Whiting''', b. 6 Apr 1641, Lynn, MA; d. 9 Apr 1723, Southampton, NY; m.(1) Sarah Danforth; m.(2) Rebecca Bishop.
Thistleworth" (another name for Isleworth).
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|-
 +
| align=right valign=top | iv.
 +
| '''John Whiting''', b. ca. 1637, Lynn, MA; d. 16 Oct 1689, Leaverton, Lincolnshire; m. ca. 1662, England, Esther Brown.
 +
|-
 +
| align=right valign=top | v.
 +
| '''Elizabeth Whiting''', b. ca. 1638; d. 1633, Hartford, CT; m. 6 Apr 1659, Topsfield, MA, Jeremiah Hobart.
 +
|}
  
:Robertus Whitney filius Thome Whitney de Civitate Westminster Gent pose appren[tice] John Whittney modo Comanone in Thistleworth pro Septem annis a die dat hor[umm] pr[e]d[i]c[tu]m dat Octavo die Novembris, Anno Dm 1624 Annoque regis Jacobis Anglie vicesimo secundo (Apprentice Binding Book, Vol.9, 1623-1628, Gulldhall Library Ms 315 [18], page 93: Apprenticeships)
+
== References ==
  
Robert, in turn, was made free by his brother on 14 January 1632 (Court
+
* Ancestral File.
Minute Book: Freemen 1630-1642, Guildhall Library Ms 329 [331,
 
unpaginated).
 
  
 +
* FamilySearch.org Family Tree.
  
 
----
 
----
{|
+
Copyright &copy; 2021, [[User:Rlward|Robert L. Ward]] and the [[Whitney Research Group]].
| width=10% |
 
| width=80% align=center | WHITNEY
 
| align=right | 529
 
|}
 
 
 
<center>[Graphic omitted]<center>
 
 
 
<center>John Whitney's London in the 1620s</center>
 
  
In the 1620s, his children's baptisms in the St Mary Mdermary's parish
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[[Category:Connecticut]]
register showed that John lived on Bow Lane and that he was a tailor.
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[[Category:Hartford County, Connecticut]]
 
+
[[Category:Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut]]
John sent his eldest son to the Merchant Taylors' School, affording him
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[[Category:England]]
the finest education available to the son of a yeoman intended for
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[[Category:Lincolnshire, England]]
business. The younger John Whitney appears in the Merchant Taylors'
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[[Category:Boston, Lincolnshire, England]]
School Register from 11 December 1631 until 1634 (Merchant Taylors'
+
[[Category:Leaverton, Lincolnshire, England]]
School Register, 132). This attendance was contemporary with the
+
[[Category:Skirbeck, Lincolnshire, England]]
Kemptons, who likely knew the Whitneys (see Kempton chapter).
+
[[Category:Massachusetts]]
 
+
[[Category:Essex County, Massachusetts]]
Bond says the Whitneys embarked at London, England in April of 1635
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[[Category:Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts]]
for New England in the ship Elizabeth and Ann, Roger Cooper, master.
+
[[Category:Middlesex County, Massachusetts]]
The family consisted of John, age 35; Ellin, age 30; sons John, age 11;
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[[Category:Billerica, Middlesex County, Massachusetts]]
Richard, age 9; Nathaniel, age 8; Thomas, age 6; and Jonathan, age 1 year
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[[Category:Topsfield, Essex County, Massachusetts]]
(Bond, 642). John's age is grossly understated in this passenger list, but
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[[Category:Norfolk County, Massachusetts]]
 
+
[[Category:Roxbury, Norfolk County, Massachusetts]]
----
+
[[Category:New York]]
 +
[[Category:Suffolk County, New York]]
 +
[[Category:Southamptno, Suffolk County, New York]]

Latest revision as of 15:40, 12 March 2021

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Samuel1 Whiting, son of JohnA and Sarah (-----) Whiting, was baptized 20 Nov 1597, St. Botolph’s, Boston, Lincolnshire, and died 11 Dec 1679, Lynn, MA, aged 82 years, per gravestone.

He married, 6 Aug 1629, Boston, Lincolnshire Elizabeth St. John, daughter of Sir Oliver St. John, of Cayshoe, Bedfordshire. She was baptized 12 Jan 1604, Bletsoe, Bedfordshire, and died 3 Mar 1676/7, Lynn, MA.

Samuel Whiting received BA and MA degrees from Emmanuel College, Cambridge University. He received holy orders as a priest in the Church of England, and served as a family chaplain and as associate pastor in King's Lynn. His Puritan practices led to parishioners raising complaints about his ministry, and he subsequently moved to the Parish of Skirbeck, near Boston, Lincolnshire. Again, parishioners complained of his Puritan practices. He ultimately chose to emigrate with his family to Massachusetts Bay Colony, arriving in (new) Boston on 26 May 1636.

Rev. Whiting became a prominent minister and theologian in the colony, who had treatises and sermons published in both English and Latin. He was a colleague of Rev. John Cotton, a preeminent religious leader in Massachusetts Bay who had previously been Samuel Whiting's parish priest in Boston, Lincolnshire. Rev. Whiting was also a colleague of Rev. Increase Mather and his son Rev. Cotton Mather, who included an elegy of Samuel Whiting in his major work, "Magnalia Christi Americana." In 1654, Rev. Samuel Whiting was appointed as overseer of Harvard College (predecessor of Harvard University).

Three of Samuel Whiting's sons graduated from Harvard College and also became ministers. Eldest son Samuel Whiting Jr. became the minister of the Congregationalist Church in Billerica, MA. Second son John Whiting chose to emigrate to England and became the Anglican pastor of Butterwick Parish in Lincolnshire. Third son Joseph Whiting succeeded his father as pastor in Lynn, MA. In 1682, Joseph Whiting accepted an invitation to leave Massachusetts and become the pastor in Southampton, Long Island, New York, where he lived the rest of his life.

Children of Samuel1 and Elizabeth (St. John) Whiting:

i. Dorothy2 Whiting, b. ca. 1631, England; d. 31 Jul 1694, Roxbury, MA; m. 4 Jun 1650, Roxbury, MA, Thomas Weld.
ii. Samuel Whiting, bapt. 25 Mar 1633, Skirbeck, Lincolnshire; d. 28 Feb 1712/3, Billerica, MA; m. 12 Nov 1656, Billerica, MA, Dorcas Chester.
iii. Joseph Whiting, b. 6 Apr 1641, Lynn, MA; d. 9 Apr 1723, Southampton, NY; m.(1) Sarah Danforth; m.(2) Rebecca Bishop.
iv. John Whiting, b. ca. 1637, Lynn, MA; d. 16 Oct 1689, Leaverton, Lincolnshire; m. ca. 1662, England, Esther Brown.
v. Elizabeth Whiting, b. ca. 1638; d. 1633, Hartford, CT; m. 6 Apr 1659, Topsfield, MA, Jeremiah Hobart.

References

  • Ancestral File.
  • FamilySearch.org Family Tree.

Copyright © 2021, Robert L. Ward and the Whitney Research Group.