Person:John Warner (92)

Watchers
John Warner
b.Est 1625
m. 5 Oct 1624
  1. John WarnerEst 1625 - 1700
  2. Mary WarnerEst 1626 - Aft 1696
  3. Andrew WarnerEst 1628 - 1681/82
  4. Robert WarnerEst 1630 - 1690
  5. Hannah WarnerEst 1635 - 1682
  6. Ruth WarnerCal 1641 - Aft 1681
  7. Lieutenant Daniel WarnerEst 1642 - 1692
  8. Isaac WarnerCal 1644 - Bef 1691
  • HJohn WarnerEst 1625 - 1700
  • WAnna NortonEst 1629 -
m. 1649
  1. John WarnerCal 1659 - Bef 1741
Facts and Events
Name[1][2][3] John Warner
Gender Male
Birth[1] Est 1625
Marriage 1649 Hartford, Hartford, Connecticut, United Statesto Anna Norton
Death[2][4] 24 Jun 1700 Middletown, Middlesex, Connecticut, United States

The Estate of John Warner of Middletown

"Probate Records. Vol. VII, 1700 to 1710. Page 2-3.

Warner, John, Middletown. He died 24 June, 1700. Invt. £290-14-00. Taken September, 1700, by John Hall and David Sage.

Court Record, Page 2—7 September, 1700: Adms. to John Warner, eldest son. Rec., £200. Jonathan Warner and Robert Sandford, sureties.

Page 7—8 March, 1700-1: Order to distribute the estate, and appoint Mr. John Hamlin, Capt. Nathaniel White and Sergt. John Clark distributors.

Page 10—8 April, 1701: Report of dist. accepted. John North to be guardian to two children he had by Mary Warner, viz., Anna North and Mary North.

Record on file, 19 March, 1700: To John Warner, to Jonathan, to Hannah and Elizabeth Warner, to John North's children by his first wife, to Ebenezer Ranny in right of his wife."[4]

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Andrew Warner, in Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995)
    3:1930.

    John (Warner), b. say 1625.

  2. 2.0 2.1 John2 Warner, in Warner, Lucien C, and Josephine Genung Nichols. The Descendants of Andrew Warner. (New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Co., 1919)
    38.

    John2 Warner, son of Andrew2 Warner, died in Middletown, Conn., June 24, 1700. The date and place of his birth are unknown but he was probably born in England before the removal of the family to America. According to the records of Connecticut, October 8, 1663, he was to be made a freeman on the following day. There is no record of his early life in America but he settled early in Middletown, Conn. His name is one of those on a granite and bronze memorial unveiled in 1905 to Middletown's "Founders, Fathers and Patriots," as one of the founders of the period from 1650 to 1680. With his wife and his brothers, Robert and Andrew, and their wives, he signed the covenant of the Middletown Church, Nov. 4, 1668, the date of the beginning of the church records. The list of proprietors of Middletown, March 22, 1670, gives John Warner, with a valuation of £96, slightly larger than that of his two brothers of the same town. His lot was on the west bank of the Connecticut River, next south of Thomas Ranney's and the middle one of five lots between the roads. He seems to have spent the remainder of his life as a farmer there. His will, made March 19, 1700, mentions the following: eldest son John; John North, guardian to his two children by Mary Warner, Anna and Mary North. Distribution of the property was made to John Warner, the eldest son, Jonathan Warner, Hannah Warner, Elizabeth Warner, John North's children by his first wife, and to Ebenezer Ranney in right of his wife.

  3. John Warner, in Savage, James. A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England: Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register. (Boston: Little, Brown, and Co, 1860-1862)
    4:420.

    John (Warner), Middletown, prob. br. of Andrew of the same, m. 14 Dec. 1669, Ann Ward; but if that be true, nothing else can be, of the issue in Geneal. Reg. XIV. 135.

    NOTE: John Warner, son of the second Andrew and nephew of this man, married one Ann Ward at Middletown 14 December 1699.

  4. 4.0 4.1 Warner, John, Middletown, in Manwaring, Charles W. A Digest of the Early Connecticut Probate Records. (Hartford, Conn.: R. S. Peck & Co., 1904-06)
    2:131.