Person:Joseph Fuller (21)

m. 1644
  1. John Fuller, Jr1645 - 1720/21
  2. Elizabeth FullerEst 1646 - 1685
  3. Jonathan Fuller1648 - 1722
  4. Captain Joseph Fuller1652 - 1740
  5. Joshua Fuller1654/55 - 1752
  6. Lt. Jeremiah Fuller1658/59 - 1743
  7. Bethiah Fuller1661 - 1698
  8. Isaac Fuller1665 - 1691
  • HCaptain Joseph Fuller1652 - 1740
  • WLydia Jackson1656 - 1725/26
m. 13 Feb 1680/81
  1. John Fuller1681 -
  2. Joseph Fuller, Jr.1685 -
  3. Jonathan Fuller1686 -
  4. Lydia Fuller1691/92 - Bef 1747
  5. Edward Fuller1694 -
  6. Isaac Fuller1698 -
  7. Elizabeth Fuller1701 -
Facts and Events
Name Captain Joseph Fuller
Gender Male
Birth[1][2][3] 10 Feb 1652 Cambridge Village, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage 13 Feb 1680/81 Cambridge Village, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United Statesto Lydia Jackson
Death[1][2] 5 Jan 1740 Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Burial? Newton, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United StatesOld East Parish Burying Ground
Ancestral File Number 1ZTC-Z4

Buried Old East Parish Burying Ground, Newton Middlesex, MA This info is posted online at www.interment.net/data/us/ma/middlesex/oldeast/buryinglist.htm

Joseph was selectman for five years. A Fuller farm, the nucleus of which was given to Joseph Fuller by his father-in-law Edward Jackson at the time of his marriage to Lyldia ajackson, is now the site of Newton North High School

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Fransic Jackson.
  2. 2.0 2.1 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)
    2:217.

    JOSEPH, Newton, s. of the first John of the same, freem. 1680, was under Turner in the Falls fight, 1676, m. 13 Feb. 1681, Lydia, d. of Edward Jackson, wh. d. 12 Jan. 1726, had John, b. 15 Dec. 1681; Joseph, 4 July 1685; Jonathan, 7 Jan. 1687; Lydia, 15 Feb. 1692; Edward, 7 Mar. 1694; Isaac, 16 Mar. 1698; and Elizabeth 1 July 1701; and he d. 5 Jan. 1740.

  3. Hyslop Fuller (1914)
    page 98.