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Facts and Events
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 2. Thomas1 Harris, in West, Randy A. The English Origin of Thomas1 Harris of Winnisimmet (Chelsea), Massachusetts. New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (New England Historic Genealogical Society, Fall 2002)
176:367.
"John2 Harris, b. say 1610, d. Rowley, Mass., 15 Feb. 1694[/5]; m. (1) say 1644, Bridget _____, bur. Rowley 4 Aug. 1672;1271 m. (2) Rowley 24 Oct. 1677, Elizabeth (Rowlandson) Wells, daughter of Thomas Rowlandson of Ipswich, Mass., and widow of Richard Wells of Salisbury, Mass., bur. Rowley 29 Dec. 1679; m. (3) Alice _____."
- ↑ Thomas Harris, in Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995)
2:864.
"John (Harris), b. say 1616; …"
- ↑ Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Rowley, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849. (Salem, Massachusetts: Essex Institute, 1928-1931)
471.
'Harris, … John, Feb. 15, 1694."
- Roberts, Gary Boyd. Ancestors of American Presidents. (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009)
p. 519.
John, son of Thomas Williams alias Harris, m. Bridget Angier; ancestor of Franklin Pierce through son Timothy.
- Patricia Law Hatcher in an article in The American Genealogist, said "… Samuel Angier is probably the son of Edmond Angier and Bridget Rogers, daughter of the Rev. John Rogers, and hence nephew of New England immigrant Nathaniel Rogers of Ipswich. He is surely part of the extended Angier family of Dedham, Essex (the parish adjoining Stratford St. Mary, Suffolk, on the south); hence he is related to immigrant Edmund Angier of Cambridge, and connected collaterally to the Sparhawks of Cambridge and to the Shermans of Watertown and Roxbury; but his sister, Bridget, is probably not the wife John Harris of Rowley as suggested by Henry F. Waters, Genealogical Gleanings in England, 2 vols. (Boston, 1901), 1:232 fn. …" The reasons for this conclusion are not discussed.
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