Person:George Walton (29)

m. Bef 1680
  1. George Walton1680 - 1769
  2. Sarah WaltonAbt 1690 - 1771
  • HGeorge Walton1680 - 1769
  • WFrances AllenAbt 1681 - Aft 1764
m. Bef 1700
  1. Samuel WaltonAbt 1700 - 1753
Facts and Events
Name George Walton
Gender Male
Birth[1] 1680 New Castle, Rockingham, New Hampshire, United States
Marriage Bef 1700 New Castle, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USAto Frances Allen
Death[1] 13 Dec 1769 Newington, Rockingham, New Hampshire, United States
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Martin Hollick, "The English Origins of Elizabeth Dowse, wife of Governor Samuel Allen of New Hampshire," , in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society)
    162:164-73.

    link FRANCES ALLEN, b. ca. 1680; d. after 1764. She m. ca. 1702 GEORGE WALTON, b. ca. 1681 (from age at death); d. Newington, N.H., 13 Dec. 1769 in his 89th year, son of Shadrach2 (George1) and "tviary (Nutter) Walton. Children: George, Shadrach, John, Samuel, Elizabeth, and Frances Walton

  2.   Walton, in Davis, Walter Goodwin, Compiler, and Introduction by Gary Boyd Roberts. Massachusetts and Maine Families in the Ancestry of Walter Goodwin Davis (1885-1966): A Reprinting, in Alphabetical Order by Surname, of the Sixteen Multi-Ancestor Compendia (plus Thomas Haley of Winter Harbor and His Descendants). (Baltimore, Maryland, United States: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1996)
    III: 523-33.
  3.   Wentworth, John. The Wentworth Genealogy: English and American. (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1878)
    187.

    George3 Walton, son of Col. Shadrach3 Walton as above, married Frances, daughter of Gov. Samuel Allen. He lived in Newington, N. H., where one of his sales of land was, 22 February 1718-19, of a field "which field is called Hall's field, and was once Henry Langstar's," bounded "easterly on ye highway ye leads from ye meeting-house to ye ferry." Tate says, "Mr. George Walton, of Newington, Dy'd Wed. Dec. 13, 1769." His Will was dated 24 September 1764.

    George Walton kept a public-house in Newcastle in 1706. By 1715 he was "late of New Castle now of Newington." He took the bankrupt's oath in 1717, but seems to have recovered financially very rapidly and became prominent in the affiars of the town. He was elected town clerk in 1717 and again in 1740. He was Newington's representative at the New Hampshire General Court from 1730 to 1741/42 and was appointed a justice of the peace in 1745/6. In 1756 he deeded to his son George Walton of Portsmouth the estate of one hundred and twenty acres in Newcastle "given me by my Grand Father Mr. George Walton at the death of my hon. Father Col. Shadach Walton who lived and died upon the same."

    His will, probated March 28, 1770, mentions his wife Frances and daughter Elizabeth, "wife of Mr. William Hight, merchant."