Person:Hannah Haynes (7)

Hannah Haynes
b.Abt 1640
m. Bef 1640
  1. Hannah HaynesAbt 1640 - 1690/91
  2. Sarah HaynesEst 1643 - 1691
  3. Ruth Haynes1646 - 1672
  • HJoseph RooteAbt 1640 - 1711
  • WHannah HaynesAbt 1640 - 1690/91
m. 30 Dec 1660
  1. Hannah Root1662 -
  2. Joseph Root1664/65 - 1690
  3. Thomas Root1667 - 1726
  4. John Root1669 - 1710
  5. Sarah Root1671/72 - Bef 1673
  6. Sarah Root1672/73 -
  7. Hope Root1675 - 1750
  8. Hezekiah Root1676/77 - Bef 1766
Facts and Events
Name Hannah Haynes
Gender Female
Birth[1][4] Abt 1640 Based on date of marriage
Marriage 30 Dec 1660 Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United Statesto Joseph Roote
Death[3] 28 Jan 1690/91 Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States
References
  1. Root, James Pierce. Root Genealogical Records, 1600-1870: Comprising the General History of the Root and Roots Families in America. (New York: R.C. Root, Anthony & Co., 1870)
    p. 103.

    Joseph Roote [#351] m. (1) 30 Dec 1660 Hannah, d/o Edmund Haynes of Springfield, Mass.

  2.   Messier, Betty Brook, and Janet Sutherland Aronson. The Roots of Coventry, Connecticut. (Coventry, CT: Coventry 275th Anniversary Committee, 1987)
    p. 176.

    Joseph Root m. (1) Hannah Haynes.

  3. Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Northampton, Massachusetts: Corbin Collection Volume 1: Records of Hampshire County, Massachusetts. (Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2003)
    p. 112.

    Root Hannah (Haynes) w. Joseph Jan. 28 1690/1.
    [Note: the original says deaths in 1690: "Janiry 28: Hannah Root". The identification of her as wife of Joseph and maiden name Haynes was apparently inserted by the compilers. It appears correct as son's wife Hannah was alive in 1702, and Joseph remarried by 1692, but it is not part of the record as it is made to appear.]

  4. Source:Burt, Henry Martyn. First Century of the History of Springfield, p. 459, indicates the father settled in Springfield 1643. Only daughter Ruth's birth is recorded there, in early 1646.