Person:Joseph Peck (19)

m. Est 1622
  1. Rev. Jeremiah PeckEst 1631 - 1699
  2. John PeckAbt 1638 - 1724
  3. Deacon Joseph Peck1640/41 - 1718
  4. Elizabeth Peck1643 - Aft 1688/89
  • HDeacon Joseph Peck1640/41 - 1718
  • WSarah ParkerCal 1637 - 1726
m. Bef 1663
  1. Sarah Peck1663 - 1730
  2. Joseph Peck1667 - 1677
  3. Elizabeth Peck1669 -
  4. Deborah Peck1672 - 1711
  5. Hannah Peck1674 - 1734/35
  6. Ruth Peck1676 -
  7. Samuel Peck1678 - 1734/35
  8. Joseph Peck1679/80 - 1757
Facts and Events
Name[1] Deacon Joseph Peck
Gender Male
Christening[1] 17 Jan 1640/41 New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut, United StatesFirst Congregational Society
Marriage Bef 1663 Estimate based on date of birth of eldest known child (Sarah).
to Sarah Parker
Death[1] 25 Nov 1718 Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States
Burial[2][4] Duck River Cemetery, Old Lyme, New London, Connecticut, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Peck, in Jacobus, Donald Lines. Families of Ancient New Haven. (Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1974)
    6:1385.

    "Joseph (Peck), bp 17 Jan 1640 (church record, First Congregational Society, New Haven) [1640/1], d 25 Nov 1718 (Lyme Vital Records), æ. 78 (gravestone, Lyme); Dea.; …"

  2. Peck, Darius. A Genealogical Account of the Descendants in the Male Line of William Peck: One of the Founders in 1638 of the Colony of New Haven, Conn. (Hudson, N. Y.: Bryan & Goeltz, 1877)
    11.

    "{4.] Joseph (Peck), b. in New Haven, Conn., in Jan. 1641; was baptized there Jan. 17, 1641; m. Sarah _____, and about 1662 settled in East Saybrook, Conn., afterwards, in 1667, incorporated into the town of Lyme, and d. in Lyme Nov. 25, 1718, where his wife also d. Sept. 14, 1726, aged 90. Their gravestones are still standing in the old Lyme cemetery. He was a prominent man in Lyme, being many years a townsman, Surveyor, Recorder, Justice of the Peace and Deacon of the Church."

  3.   Norris, Henry McCoy. Ancestry and Descendants of Lieutendent [sic] Jonathan and Tamesin (Barker) Norris of Maine: in which are given the names, and more or less complete records from 1550 to 1905, of about twelve hundred persons, among whom are sixty-nine of their ancestors, nine of their children, forty-eight of their grand- children, one hundred and nine of their great-grandchildren, and one hundred and fifteen of their great-great-grandchildren. (New York: Grafton Press, 1906)
    Appendix, paragraph VIII.

    "Sarah Peck, b. 1663, was dau. of Ensign Joseph Peck, 1641-1718, of Lyme, Conn., Deputy, 1676-1710, son of Dea. William Peck, 1601-94, of New Haven, Deputy, 1640-48."

    Neither Jacobus nor Peck give Deacon Joseph Peck any military rank, and Jacobus is usually very good about that sort of thing. The source of the assertion that Deacon Joseph Peck was also Ensign Joseph Peck is not apparent.

  4. Joseph Peck, in Find A Grave.