Hatevil Nutter, born ca. 1603 in England, settled in Dover, New Hampshire about 1637. Descendants lived principally in New Hampshire and other parts of New England.
This is a family history journey that begins in the very first days of New Hampshire settlement by English colonists. The story follows the Williams families through the bloody Indian Wars of the late 17th Century and their movement west to Illinois. There, in the first half of the 19th Century, John G. Williams married Ursula Miller whose family also can be traced back to colonial New England and Long Island, New York.
Ancestors, descendants and relatives of John Parker Hanaford and his wife, Mary Elizabeth Neal Hanaford. John, son of Nathaniel Perkins and Zulema Webster Prescott Hanaford, was born 14 September 1853. On 1 January 1890 he married Mary Elisabeth Neal, daughter of Smith and Sarah Elisabeth Smith Neal. She was born 2 October 1853 in Merideth, New Hampshire. They were residents of Rockford, Illinois in 1915. John was a descendant of John Hanford, mariner of Boston who married Hannah Button (died 1653). Ancestors and descendants lived in Massachusetts, Illinois, New Hampshire, Idaho, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, Arizona, Ohio, California, Colorado, Virginia, Florida, Texas, Tennessee, New Jersey, Maine, Vermont, Iowa, Nebraska, New York, Canada, and elsewhere.
Shadow Echo Me The Life and Times of Thomas Wiggin, 16011666 The Making of American Values by Joyce Wiggin-Robbins Thomas Wiggin, captain and governor in Colonial New Hampshire, was an accumulation of moral values, religious principals, political and European conflicts, and all the desires typical for a man of his era. With a heritage as a son of the clergy, being well educated, with a history of advantageous networking, Thomas would become the example of the discipline and strength needed to establish a home in the New England wilderness of the seventeenth century. Turning his back to a cultured, established, and predictable life in England, he chose to bring a wife and carve a life out of the wilderness and bring up his children in a place of wide-open opportunity and freedoms. It was men like Thomas Wiggin who became the backbone of the future United States of America.
Volume 1 contains the first three generations of the Corson ancestry, including basic information on the fourth generation children and the names of their fifth generation children.
Chiefly a record a record of seven charter members of New Holderness, New Hampshire, William Cox, Charles, Cox, John Cox, Edward Cox, Joseph Cox, William Cox, Jr., and Charles Cox, Jr. Includes some descendants of these men. Descendants lived in New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, Connecticut, Maine, Washington, Canada and elsewhere.