Person:Patience Saxton (1)

m. 16 Apr 1647
  1. Sarah Saxton1647/48 - 1687/88
  2. John Saxton1649 -
  3. Mary Saxton1651 -
  4. Richard Saxton1654/55 - 1675
  5. Patience Saxton1658 - Bef 1730
  6. Francis Sackett1661 - 1662
  • HJohn RobertsBef 1663 - Bef 1735
  • WPatience Saxton1658 - Bef 1730
m. Bef 1688
  1. William Roberts1699 - 1761
  2. Rev. Nathaniel RobertsCal 1704 - 1776
Facts and Events
Name[1] Patience Saxton
Married Name Patience Roberts
Gender Female
Alt Birth[1][2] 28 Jan 1658 Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Birth[1][2] 28 Jun 1658 Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Marriage Bef 1688 Estimate based on date of birth of eldest known child (Penelope).
to John Roberts
Death[3] Bef 13 May 1730 Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut, United States (probably)
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Richard Saxton, in Starr, Frank Farnsworth. Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan) Goodwin of Hartford, Connecticut. (Hartford, Conn.: The Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Press, 1915)
    1:138.

    "Children of Richard and Sarah (Cook) Saxton …
    Patience b. June 28,1658; or Jan. 28, 1658; mar. before Jan. 24, 1688, John Roberts of Simsbury, Conn."

  2. 2.0 2.1 Windsor Vital Records [NEHGS], in Connecticut, United States. The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Vital Records
    253.

    "Saxton, … Patience, d. [Richard & Sara], b. Jan. 28, 1658 [MG]"
    "Saxton, … Patience, d. Richard, b. June 28, 1658 [1:34]"

  3. Roberts Family, in Ferris, Mary Walton. Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines: A Memorial Volume Containing the American Ancestry of Rufus R. Dawes; and A Memorial Volume Containing the American Ancestry of Mary Beman (Gates) Dawes. (Milwaukee, WI: Cuneo Press, 1931-1943)
    2:711-12.

    "At different times [John1 Roberts] gave tracts of land to his sons, Richard2, John2 and Nathaniel2, and on May 13, 1730, signed a deed giving all of his remaining real estate to his son William2, under the provisions of a bond made by the latter at the same time which admitted a debt of £300, owed in return, unless he allowed his father the use of all the new house, half of the cellar, half of the barn and half of the product of the land during the father’s life. John had married, date and place unknown, Patience2 Saxton but she evidently had died before this transaction for another clause of the agreement provided that if the father should marry and leave a widow she should have one-third of the product of the land as long as she remained his relict."