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m. 1635 - Samuel BishopAbt 1645 - Bef 1687/88
Facts and Events
References
- ↑ Savage, James. A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England: Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register. (Boston: Little, Brown, and Co, 1860-1862)
I:186.
BISHOP SAMUEL, Boston, s. of Nathaniel of the same, or perhaps of Thomas, was gr. H. C. 1665; and mark. as d. 1687 by the latest catal[ogue] yet in an earlier one, was said to d. 1703.
- ↑ "Ipswich Grammar School", in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society)
Vol. 6, p. 69.
"...from August 1, 1660, twenty-three years, during which time there went from Ipswich to Harvard College, Samuel Bishop, probably, son of Thomas Bishop; [list of others skipped]"
- ↑ "Materiels for the History of Ipswich", in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society)
Vol 7, page 77.
Feb'ry 18 1678 a List of ye Names of those psons y't haue right of Comonage according to Law and order of this Town. ... Sam'l Bishop
- ↑ "Ancrestry of the Princess of Wales", in The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society)
Vol 136, page 99.
Samuel Bishop b.Ipswich ca 1645 . d. there shortly before 2 March 1687,graduate of Harvard College in 1655 (See John Langdon Sibley "Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Harvard University Vol 2 1659-1677. Cambridge, 1881.) m. at Ipswich as her first husband,; . Hester Cogswell b. Ipswich ca 1656 d. after 17 Jan 1703/4. She ma. 2nd at Ipswich 16 Dec 1689, Thomas Burnham.
- ↑ Waters, Thomas Franklin; Sarah Whipple Goodhue; John Wise; and Ipswich Historical Society (Massachusetts). Ipswich in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. (Ipswich, Massachusetts: The Ipswich Historical Society, 1905-17)
Volume 2.
p. 71: "Thomas Bishop's house, near the site of the Public Library, was open to the public and Joseph Lee and William Downing had an altercation there one March day in 1663, after the Lecture, 'shoving one another in the corner and Downing was struck in the face by Lee,'... Samuel Bishop succeeded to the business on the death of his father... His hostelry was known far and near. Here the Quarter Sessions Court held its sittings. Major Samuel Appleton, Assistant, issued a warrant to the Marshal to secure the appearance of everyone who knew anything of the will of Thomas Andres, the schoolmaster, before him at 'Goodman Sparks,' July 12, 1683. Mr. Andres died at the house of Samuel Bishop and Bishop was charged with concealing his will."
p. 226: "Poor Toby Tailer, a boy bound to Samuel Bishop, came to Jacob Perkins, Sen. and 'showed his wrist swollen where tied up and flogged, his back with long red wales.'"
- ↑ Massachusetts (Colony). Quarterly Courts (Essex County). Records and files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County, Massachusetts. (Salem, Massachusetts: The Essex Institute, 1911-1925, 1975)
Vol. 3, p. 346.
17 Sep 1666: Thomas Clarke, aged twenty-eight years, and Samuell Bishop, aged twenty-one years, deposed ... [Birth about 1645]
- ↑ Census 1678 Massachusetts.
CENSUS: 1678 BISHOP, SAMUEL Ipswich, Essex County, MA MA Earkt Cens us Index page 77
- "Essex County Estates Administered in Suffolk County, Prior to 1701", in Essex Institute Historical Collections. (Salem, Massachusetts: Essex Institute Press)
Vol. 41, p. 180.
Samuel Bishop, of Ipswich. Administration granted March 2, 1687-8 to Esther Bishop his widow. - Docket, No. 1621.
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