Person:Caleb Carr (1)

Gov. Caleb Carr
b.4 Dec 1616
m. 2 Sep 1613
  1. Robert Carr1614 - Aft 1694
  2. Gov. Caleb Carr1616 - 1695
  3. Richard Carr1620 - 1695
  4. Andrew Carr1622 -
  • HGov. Caleb Carr1616 - 1695
  • WAnn Easton1631 - 1651
m. Bef 1650
m. 1654
  1. Nicholas Carr1654 - Bef 1709
  2. Mercy Carr1656 - 1660
  3. Caleb Carr1657 - 1700
  4. Samuel Carr1659 - 1693
  5. Mercy Carr1660 - 1717
  6. John Carr1664 - 1714
  7. Edward Carr1667 - 1711
m. 1677
  1. Francis Carr1678 - 1717
  2. James Carr1680 - 1701
  3. Sarah Carr1682 - 1765
  4. Elizabeth Carr1684 -
Facts and Events
Name Gov. Caleb Carr
Alt Name Governor Caleb Carr
Gender Male
Birth? 4 Dec 1616 Citation needed
Alt Birth[3] 9 Dec 1624 London, EnglandCitation needed
Immigration[1] 9 May 1635 on the Elizabeth & Ann
Residence[1] Aft 1635 Newport, Rhode Island
Marriage Bef 1650 to Ann Easton
Marriage 1654 Rhode Islandto Mercy Unknown
Marriage 1677 to Sarah Clarke
Will[2] 8 Mar 1694 Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, United States
Occupation[1] Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, United StatesMagistrate
Death[1][3] 17 Dec 1695 Rhode Island, United Statesper Carr Family, cited in Great Migration, below.
Reference Number? Q5019222?


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Caleb Carr (1616 - 17 December 1695) was a governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, serving a very short term prior to his death. In 1635, at the age of 19, he sailed from England on the ship Elizabeth and Ann with his older brother Robert.[1] Carr's name appears on a list of Newport freemen in 1655, and he began serving in a civil capacity the year prior when he became a commissioner. He served in this capacity for a total of six years between 1654 and 1662, and then served as deputy for 12 years from 1664 to 1690. During the years when he wasn't serving as deputy, he was an assistant, serving in this role for a total of ten years.[1] From 1677 to 1678 he was the justice of the General Quarter Session and Inferior Court of Common Pleas.

Between 1658 and 1663 Carr purchased several large tracts of land on Conanicut Island (later becoming Jamestown), and following his death he willed this property to his sons.[1] He owned a boat, and in 1671 he was paid four pounds for services rendered with the craft.[1] In 1676 he bought the services of an Indian captive, for which he paid 12 bushels of Indian corn.[1] Carr was an enslaver, bequeathing at least two enslaved persons in his will.

Carr became governor of the colony in 1695, and in this capacity he wrote to Governor Fletcher of New York in answer to a request for 48 men from Rhode Island to assist in the defense of New York. He agreed to either send the men, or some comparable assistance.[1] Carr died late in 1695 and was buried in a family cemetery in Newport. He was succeeded as governor by Walter Clarke.

Carr had 13 children, nine with his first wife, Mercy (three died young), and four with his second wife, Sarah Clarke. His second wife was the widow of John Pinner and a daughter of Frances Latham and former colonial President Jeremy Clarke.

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Caleb Carr (governor). The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Carr, Caleb, in Anderson, Robert Charles; George F. Sanborn; and Melinde Lutz Sanborn. The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635. (Boston, Massachusetts: NEHGS, 1999-2011)
    Vol II p 11-16.

    A fully developed biography of Caleb Carr. P. 16 cites his immigration from London at age 11 on the Elizabeth & Ann. thus born about 1624, but no confirmed date.

  2. Jamestown Land Evidence, in Alden G. Beaman. Rhode Island Genealogical Register. (The Rhode Island Genealogical Research Institute)
    2:65, Oct 1979.

    Caleb Carr of Newport, aged. Will dated 8 Mar 1694, proved 6 Jan 1696, pps. 90-93.
    Wife Sarah.
    Sons: John, Nicholas, Caleb, Edward and Samuel;
    Daughter Mary Paine wife of Thomas Paine. These children being children of unnamed first wife.
    Children by wife Sarah:
    Sons: Francis and James both under age;
    Daughters: Sarah Carr and Elizabeth Carr both under age 18.
    Grandson Job Carr son of Samuel Carr.
    Brother Robert Carr.

  3. 3.0 3.1 Caleb Carr (governor), in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.
The Elizabeth and Ann (1635)
The Elizabeth and Ann, also known as the Eliza and Ann sailed in the spring of 1635. The passengers are found scattered amongst a number of entries in Hotten's Emigrant Ancestors.
Sailed: May? 1635 from London, England under Master Roger Clapp
Arrived: July? 1635 at Boston, Massachusetts

Passengers:
~100
Joseph Alsop - Thomas Alsop - Baker family - Gamaliell Beomont - John Birden - Grace Bulkley - Robert Carr - Sara Cartrack - Clement Chaplin - James Cobbet - Josias Cobbet - William Courser - Henry Curtis - Thomas Dane - Eaton family - Joseph Faberr - Elizabeth Fabin - Richard Goard - Amivell Hall - O. Halsey - Robert Hans - Robert Hawkins - Thomas Hedhall or Hedsall - John Holloway - Thomas Hubbard - Percy King - Henry Jackson - Robert Jefferies family - Thomas Lord family - Morecock children - Oldham children - George Orris - George Parker - Thomas Pond - Vincen Potter - William Read - William Samond - Richard Sanpson - Nicholas Sension - Robert Standy - Christopher Stanley - William Swayne - M. Swynden - Jo. Thomson - John Whitney family - Washburn family - Edmund Weston - Richard White - Andrey Whitton - Henry Wilkinson - George Wylde - John Wylie

Resources: Transcription of records from Hotten Founders of New England (NEHGR)


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Caleb Carr (1616 - 17 December 1695) was a governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, serving a very short term prior to his death. In 1635, at the age of 19, he sailed from England on the ship Elizabeth and Ann with his older brother Robert.[1] Carr's name appears on a list of Newport freemen in 1655, and he began serving in a civil capacity the year prior when he became a commissioner. He served in this capacity for a total of six years between 1654 and 1662, and then served as deputy for 12 years from 1664 to 1690. During the years when he wasn't serving as deputy, he was an assistant, serving in this role for a total of ten years.[1] From 1677 to 1678 he was the justice of the General Quarter Session and Inferior Court of Common Pleas.

Between 1658 and 1663 Carr purchased several large tracts of land on Conanicut Island (later becoming Jamestown), and following his death he willed this property to his sons.[1] He owned a boat, and in 1671 he was paid four pounds for services rendered with the craft.[1] In 1676 he bought the services of an Indian captive, for which he paid 12 bushels of Indian corn.[1] Carr was an enslaver, bequeathing at least two enslaved persons in his will.

Carr became governor of the colony in 1695, and in this capacity he wrote to Governor Fletcher of New York in answer to a request for 48 men from Rhode Island to assist in the defense of New York. He agreed to either send the men, or some comparable assistance.[1] Carr died late in 1695 and was buried in a family cemetery in Newport. He was succeeded as governor by Walter Clarke.

Carr had 13 children, nine with his first wife, Mercy (three died young), and four with his second wife, Sarah Clarke. His second wife was the widow of John Pinner and a daughter of Frances Latham and former colonial President Jeremy Clarke.

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Caleb Carr (governor). The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.