Person:Mary Butterick (1)

Watchers
m. 19 Dec 1718
  1. Samuel Butterick1718 - 1814
  2. Mary Butterick1720 - 1793
  3. Jonathan Butterick1721/22 - 1775
  4. Joseph Butterick1723/24 - 1803
  5. Nathan Butterick1725 - 1812
  6. Elizabeth Butterick1727 - 1805
  7. Abigail Butterick1729 -
  8. Col. John Butterick1731 - 1791
  9. Rachel Butterick1733 -
  10. Ephraim Butterick1735/36 - 1785
  11. Daniel Butterick1738 - 1743
  12. Lois Butterick1740 - 1783
  13. Sarah Butterick1742 - 1827
  14. Willard Butterick1746 -
m. 30 Aug 1743
  1. Daniel Heywood1744 - 1748
  2. Silas Heywood1745/46 - 1825
  3. Amos Heywood1748 -
  4. Mary Heywood1750 -
  5. Daniel Heywood1752 - 1810
  6. Lucy Heywood1754 - 1756
  7. Eunice Heywood1756 -
  8. Lucy Heywood1757 -
  9. Elizabeth Heywood1759 -
  10. Levi Heywood1761 -
  11. Thaddeus Heywood1764 -
  12. Alpheus Heywood1764 -
Facts and Events
Name Mary Butterick
Gender Female
Birth[1] 18 Apr 1720 Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage 30 Aug 1743 Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United Statesto Amos Heywood
Death[2] 21 Jan 1793 Holden, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
References
  1. Concord, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States. Births, Marriages, and Deaths, 1635-1850. (Boston: Beacon Press, 1891)
    99.

    Mary Butterick ye Daughter of Jonathan Butterick and Elisabeth his wife was born April 18 day 1720

  2. Holden, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States. Vital records of Holden, Massachusetts, to the end of the year 1849. (Worcester, Massachusetts: Franklin P. Rice, 1904)
    p. 215.

    HEYWOOD, Mary, wid. Capt. Amos, [died] Jan. 21, 1793, in her 73d year.

  3.   Source:Cutter, William Richard. Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts, p. 4:1914, where the family of Jonathan Butterick is discussed, does not say anything about a marriage for Mary. However, the text indicates that 13 of 14 children survived their father, who d. 1767, and Daniel appears to be the one who died young. She is called Mary Heywood in her father's will, so clearly Cutter's research is somewhat superficial.