Person:John Page (5)

m. 30 Sep 1583
  1. John Page1586 - 1676
  2. Robert PageAbt 1587 -
  3. Richard Page1589 - 1635
  4. William Page1590 - 1663
  5. Frances Page1593 - 1673
  6. Henry PageAbt 1594 -
  7. Thomas Page1595 - 1682
  8. Barbara PageAbt 1597 -
  9. Jean PageAbt 1599 -
  10. Audrey PageAbt 1601 -
  11. Thomas Page1605 - 1677
m. 5 Jun 1621
  1. Daniel PageEst 1625 - 1634
  2. Phebe PageEst 1627 - Bef 1684
  3. John PageAbt 1630 - Bef 1713/14
  4. Samuel Page1633 - Bef 1704
  5. Elizabeth PageEst 1635 -
  6. Mary PageEst 1637 -
Facts and Events
Name John Page
Gender Male
Christening[1] 25 Sep 1586 Boxted, Essex, England
Marriage 5 Jun 1621 Lavenham, Suffolk, Englandto Phoebe Paine
Death[1] 18 Dec 1676 Watertown, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Burial? 20 Dec 1676 Watertown, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Questionable information identified by WeRelate automation
To check:Christened/baptized after mother died


References
  1. 1.0 1.1 John Page, in Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995).

    ORIGIN: Dedham, Essex MIGRATION: 1630 FIRST RESIDENCE: Watertown
    BIRTH: Perhaps the John Page baptized Boxted, Essex, 25 September 1586, son of Robert and Susanna (Syckerling) Page [ NEHGR 105:26].
    DEATH: Watertown 18 December 1676 "aged about 90 years" [ WaVR 41].
    MARRIAGE: Lavenham, Suffolk, 5 June 1621 Phebe Paine; she was baptized Lavenham 1 April 1594, daughter of William and Agnes (Neves) Paine [ NEHGR 69:251]; she died Watertown 25 September 1677 "aged 87" [ WaVR 42].

Founders of Watertown, MA

Located along the Charles River, Watertown was one of the first settlements in Massachusetts Bay Colony. After a brief stay by Roger Clapp and others who then went on to settle Dorchester. In late July 1630, Sir Richard Saltonstall led a group of about 115 households to settle at Watertown, which at the time included parts of present-day Cambridge and much of the surrounding area; the population approached Boston's in the mid 17th century. In 1632 the residents of Watertown protested against being compelled to pay a tax for the erection of a stockade fort at Cambridge; leading to the establishment of representative government in the colony.

Full list of original heads of households

See also: History of Watertown - Wikipedia entry - Richard Saltonstall on Wikipedia

Watertown Founders' Monument

Current Location: Middlesex County, Massachusetts   Parent Towns: None   Daughter Towns: Cambridge, Weston, Waltham, Belmont, Lincoln