Person:Deborah Tompson (1)

Watchers
m. 22 Jul 1662
  1. Deborah Thompson1676 - 1744
m. Abt 1700
Facts and Events
Name Deborah Thompson
Gender Female
Birth[1] 29 Sep 1676 Billerica, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage Abt 1700 Guess based on birth dates
to John Hartwell
Death[2] 15 Jun 1744 Bedford, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
References
  1. Foster, F. Apthorp (ed.). Vital Records of Billerica, Massachusetts, to the Year 1850. (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1908)
    p. 190.

    TOMPSON, Deborah [dup. Thompson], d. Joseph and Mary, [born] Sept. 29, 1676.

  2. Bedford, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States. Vital Records of Bedford, Massachusetts, to the Year 1850. (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1903)
    p. 124.

    HEARTWEL, Deborah, w. John, [died] June 15, 1744. [Heartwell, June 14, CR] [Hartwell, June 14, in 68th y. GR]
    [Age 67, birth about 1676-1677.]

  3.   Densmore, Lyman Willard. Hand-book of Hartwell genealogy, 1636-1887: an account of the descendants of William Hartwell of Concord, Mass., and allied families of Bellows, Cummings, Gibson, Hill, Johnson, Jones, Kendall, Lakin, Luce, Melvin, Russell, Stiles, Stow, Wood, Tucker, Winchell, Williams, and many others. (Boston: Press of Geo. E. Crosby & Co., 1887)
    p. 169.

    "in will [John Hartwell] gives a Bible to Margaret Manning, sister of first wife; not seen whether maiden or married woman; gives no clue to family name of Deborah."
    [Actually, the will says Mary Manning of Woodstock, and Source:Manning, William H. Genealogical and Biographical History of the Manning Families of New England and Descendants, at the bottom of p. 49 discusses a gravestone in Woodstock that simply says "Mrs. Mary Manning", thought to be the wife of Ephraim Manning, namely Mary (Tompson) Manning, d/o Joseph Tompson of Billerica, who has a half-sister Deborah Tompson whose birth matches the age at death of John Hartwell's wife, no other disposition for her known.
    [Note: it turns out that an article was published in TAG, p. 76:39-40, that makes this same case.]