Person:George Granger (1)

m. 4 Jan 1654
  1. John Granger1654/55 -
  2. George Granger1658 - 1729
  3. Elizabeth Granger1661/62 - 1691/92
  4. Dorothy Granger1663/64 -
  5. Samuel Granger1668 -
  6. Abraham Granger1673 -
  7. Mary GrangerEst 1679 -
m. 26 Apr 1693
  1. John Granger1694 - 1782
  2. Rebecca Granger1697 - Aft 1772
Facts and Events
Name George Granger
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 28 Nov 1658 Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage 26 Apr 1693 Suffield, Hartford, Connecticut, United Statesto Lydia Younglove
Death? 6 Aug 1729 East Granby, Hartford, Connecticut, United States (Turkey Hills)Citation needed

"George Granger, s. of Launcelot; b. 28 Nov., 1658, at Newbury, Mass.; d. at Turkey Hills in Simsbury, Connecticut.; m. 26 April, 1693, to Lydia, dau. of Rev. John Younglove and Sarah _____ of Suffield, Ct.

George Granger was granted a lot upon the High Street of Suffield next north to that given his father, and sold it in 1714 for £45 to Captain Asaph Leavitt. He was not married until 1693, and probably then lived in the village, although at one time he had a farm of fifty acres. …

George Granger married the minister's daughter Lydia on April 26, 1693, and made no more of a success in supporting a family than did his father-in-law at expounding the Word. Indeed, before his marriage he had shown himself to be a shiftless fellow. In the old court records of 1691 I find 'George Granger of Suffield being presented to this court for neglecting publick worship of God, &c., petitioning this court pleading his sickness, weakness, and want of clothes this cold winter, this court ordered that the worshipful Col. Pynchon send for him, before him, and admonish him.' Like all the men of that day he became the father of a large number of children. Soon after his marriage he seems to have risen to the dignity of a fence viewer, but that appears to have ended his office holding in the town. On November 29, 1716, the town voted 'To be at the charge at present with respect of the wife of George Granger,' and also 'To be at the charge of a petition to send to the General Court to see what may be don with respect to the maintenance of the wife of George Granger'; and further voted 'To alow Goodman Banes seven shillings for his trouble about keeping the wife of George Granger.'

On June 19, 1717, the town voted 'To sue George Granger for the money which the town had necessarily expended on his wife or may expend for her relief before process be made in the law thereabout'; also, 'The town did by a clear vote make choice of John Kent, Jr., in their behalf to sue George Granger as above voted, and to proceed therein as Captain Ebenezer Pumrey shall advise.'

On October 7, 1717, the town voted: 'It is agreed and voted that upon condition that John Granger the son of George Granger do take care of his mother will give the Town of Suffield sufficient security in the judgement of the Selectmen to secure the town from any future charge with respect to his mother Liddia Granger; that then the Town will defray all charge that has been passed with respect to the said Liddia Granger and quit─all other perticular persons excepting only the bond of thirty shillings given to the Selectmen by the said John Granger; but if the said John Granger do not speedily do as aforesaid, then to proceed to sue George Granger according to a former vote of the Town.'

On November 29 it was voted: 'The Town granted William Huxley half a crown for digging George Granger’s child’s grave.'

Evidently these attempts to force husband or son to support the wife and mother were failures, for ten years afterward the town voted 'To alow three shillings a week for the keeping of Liddia Granger,' and still later voted 'To bare the charge of caring [carrying] Liddia Granger the wife of George Granger to the House of Correction' [poor-house].

Poor Lydia’s last appearance as a town charge was in December 1724, and it may be presumed she soon after died in the poor-house neglected by husband and children. These unhappy events, however, seem to have driven George and all his children from Suffield, and few, if any, of his descendants ever since have lived within its bounds. George and his family settled in the parish of Turkey Hills in the adjoining town of Simsbury (now East Granby) about five miles west from the Suffield meeting-house. Here they lived, married, and died for several generations, but today only one of the name remains in East Granby."[1]

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Granger, James Nathaniel. Launcelot Granger of Newbury, Massachusetts and Suffield, Connecticut: A Genealogical History. (Hartford, Conn.: Press of the Case, Lockwood & Brainard Company, 1893)
    61-64.
  2. Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Newbury, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849. (Salem, Mass.: The Essex Institute, 1911)
    1:193.

    "Granger, Georg, s. Lancelot, [born] Nov. 28, 1658."

  3.   George Granger, in Find A Grave.

    Inscription is not recorded in the Hale collection; highly unlikely that this man would have been taken to Hartford for burial.