Person:Sarah Howe (28)

Browse
Sarah Howe
b.Est 1667
m. 22 Jan 1662
  1. Sarah HoweEst 1667 - 1692
  2. John Howe1671 - 1754
  3. David Howe1674 - 1674
  4. Elizabeth Howe1675 - 1764
  • HPeter Joslin1665/66 - 1759
  • WSarah HoweEst 1667 - 1692
m. Est 1685
  1. Peter Joslin1686 - Abt 1692
  2. _____ JoslinEst 1688 -
  3. _____ JoslinEst 1690 -
  4. _____ JoslinEst 1691 -
Facts and Events
Name Sarah Howe
Gender Female
Birth? Est 1667
Marriage Est 1685 to Peter Joslin
Death[1][2][3] 18 Jul 1692 Lancaster, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
References
  1. Cunniff, Dennis J. Ahnentafel of Elizabeth Joslin, Recipient: Thomas Clough. (30 December 2003)
    citing Wessler, Edith S., The Jocelyn-Joslin-Joslyn-Josselyn Family, reprinted, Higginson Books, Salem, Massachusetts, 1962. " [Peter Joslin] Escaped from Lancaster, Massachusetts to Marlborough with his parents after an Indian attack in 1675/6. Some time after 1680, when resettlement of Lancaster began, Peter returned, although the Indians continued hostile. The first pillaging took place, July 18, 1692, when a party of Indians attacked Peter's house. Sarah, Peter's wife, was baking, and fought the savages with her bread shovel until tomahawked. Widow Whitcomb, living with the family, was killed. Elizabeth Howe, Sarah's sister, a guest in the home at the time, was spinning for her imminent wedding, and singing, at the moment of attack. She and little Peter, age 5, were carried into captivity, where Peter was later killed. But Elizabeth Howe saved herself from insult and death by singing the simple ballads of the day, in response to the demands of her captors. She was in captivity three or four years when she was redeemed by the government . After her release, she married Thomas Keyes of Marlborough, to whom she had been engaged before her captivity. Though she lived to be 87 years old, she was never able to overcome the shock and terror she experienced at the time she was made a prisoner. When Peter returned from the fields, at some distance from the house, he found his wife and the three younger children barbarously butchered with hatchets, and weltering in their blood. Little Peter had begged to go to the fields with his father that morning because he said he had seen Red men skulking in the hemp near the house, but his father had quieted the fears of the child, and went afield leaving him to his terrible fate. After the massacre of his family, Peter removed to Leominster, where he purchased a large tract of land, and built a home on a commanding site, known as "Joslin's hill".
  2. Howe, Daniel Wait; Howe, Gilman Bigelow. Howe genealogies, Second Publisher: Heritage Quest, Second Address: North Salt Lake, Utah. (New England Historical Genealogical Society, Boston, 1929)
    page 7.
  3. Nourse, Henry Stedman. Birth, Marriage, and Death Register, Church Records and Epitaphs of Lancaster, Massachusetts, 1643-1850. (Clinton, Massachusetts: W.J. Coulter, 1890)
    16.

    The Massacre of July 18, 1692
    Sarah [Howe] Joslin, wife of Peter.
    Peter Joslin, Jr., aged six years, killed in capacity
    Three young children of Peter Joslin.
    ...