Person:Renew Weeks (4)

m. 1650
  1. John Weeks1651/52 -
  2. Elizabeth Weeks1653 -
  3. Mary Weeks1656 -
  4. George Weeks1658 - Bef 1664
  5. Renew Weeks1660 - 1703
  6. Jane Weekes1662 - 1735
  7. George Weeks1664 -
  8. Sarah Weeks1666 -
  9. Hannah Weeks1668 -
  10. Samuel Weeks1669/70 - Bef 1683
  11. Submit Weekes1671/72 - 1748
m. Abt 1679
  1. Benjamin Carpenter1680 - 1727
  2. Jotham Carpenter1682 - 1760
  3. Renew Carpenter1684 -
  4. Elizabeth Carpenter1685 -
  5. Hannah Carpenter1688 - 1768
  6. Jane Carpenter1690 - 1690
  7. John Carpenter1691 - 1766
  8. Submit Carpenter1693 - 1741
  9. Job Carpenter1695 -
  10. Keziah Carpenter1696/97 - 1763
  11. Hezekiah Carpenter1699 - 1749/50
  12. Edward Carpenter1700 - 1778
Facts and Events
Name Renew Weeks
Gender Female
Birth[1][2] 12 Aug 1660 Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts
Christening[3] 19 Aug 1660 Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
Marriage Abt 1679 Dorchester, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United Statesto Benjamin Carpenter
Death[1] 29 Jul 1703 Swansea, Bristol, Massachusetts, United States

Their children were baptized at Dorchester, probably by the right of the mother.

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Joseph3 Carpenter (William2-1) of Rehoboth and Swansea, Massachusetts, in Zubrinsky, Eugene Cole. Carpenter Sketches: Links to Sketches And Articles Representing the Most Current and Reliable Scholarship Concerning Early Generations of the Carpenter Families of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, and Providence, Rhode Island and Their Ancestors. (Carpenters' Encyclopedia of Carpenters, 2008)
    page 3.
  2. Boston (Massachusetts). Record Commissioners. A Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston: Containing Dorchester Births, Marriages, and Deaths to the End of 1825. (Boston, Massachusetts: Rockwell and Churchill, city printers, 1890)
    p. 7.

    'Renew Weekes the Daughter of William Weekes was Born the 12 (6) 1660.'

    Old-style date (6th month = August)

  3. First Church (Dorchester, Massachusetts). Records of the First Church at Dorchester in New England, 1636-1734. (Boston, Massachusetts: G. H. Ellis, 1891)
    page 171.