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Facts and Events
Name |
Zachariah Eddy |
Gender |
Male |
Birth[1][2] |
Bet 1639 and 1640 |
Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United StatesAge 7 in March 1646/47 |
Marriage |
7 May 1663 |
Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United Statesto Alice Paddock |
Marriage |
Aft 24 Sep 1692 |
(death of first wife) to Abigail _____ |
Will[2] |
4 Sep 1718 |
Swansea, Bristol, Massachusetts, United States |
Death? |
1718 |
Swansea, Bristol, MA |
Burial? |
|
Swansea, Bristol, MassachusettsOld Swansea Burying Ground |
Records of the Colony of New Plymouth notes that on 2 March 1646/7the following record appeared: "Whereas Samuell Edeth, & Elizabeth, his wife, of the town of Plim[outh] aforesaid, having many children, & by reason of many wants lying upon them, so as they are not able to bring them up as they desire, and out of the good respect they bear to Mr. John Browne, of Rehoboth, one of the Assistants of this government, did both of them jointly desire that he, the said Mr. Browne, would take Zachery, their son, being of the age of seven years, & bring him up in his employment of husbandry, or any business he shall see meet for the good of their child till he come to the age of one & twenty years," which Browne agreed to do.[6]
After Brown died, when Zachariah was about 22, he moved to Middleboro. Eight years later, he was among those who signed the original Swansea agreement in 1669. He was active in church life at First Baptist at Swansea.
During King Phillip's War, he probably moved his family to Plymouth, but returned by 1678. While in Plymouth, he was one of the former Middleboro residents who gathered to resettle that town. Zachariah bought land there, but did not move, instead returning to Swansea. Over the years, he acquired most of present-day Swansea Village as his property. He deeded his homestead to son Caleb on 27 Jan 1710/11.[7]
His will names wife Abigail, sons, and daughter Elizabeth Whipple.
BIOGRAPHY: ZACHARIAH, b. about 1639 [ PCR 2:112-13]; m. (1) Plymouth 7 May 1663 Alice Padduck [ PVR 663], who d. Swansea 24 September 1692 [ SwVR 212]; m. (2) after 1692 Abigail (_____) Smith, widow of Jeremiah/Dermot Smith (in his will of 4 November 1718 Zachariah Eddy names wife Abigail, and in her will of 2 January 1720 she names her Smith children [ Eddy Gen 34, 37, citing BrPR 3:488, 693]).
Footnotes
- ↑ Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995).
Profile of Samuel Eddy cites Plymouth Town Records (see notes)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Eddy, Ruth S.D., Eddy Family in America (Supplement of 1940), Boston: Eddy Family Assoc., 1940.
Testified in 1710 that he was about 70.
- 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)
2:99.
"ZECHARIAH, Plymouth, s. of the preced.[1] rem. to Swanzey, but prob. first at Middleborough, m. 7 May 1663, Alice, d. of Robert Paddock, had Zechariah, b. 10 Apr. 1664; John, 10 Oct. 1666; Elizabeth 3 Aug. 1670; Samuel, 4 June 1673; Ebenezer, 8 Feb. 1676; Caleb, 21 Sept. 1678; Joshua, 21 Feb. 1681; and Obadiah, 2 Sept. 1683; all of wh. exc. Samuel, had fams.; and d. 4 Sept. 1718. Elizabeth m. 26 Feb. 1691, Samuel Whipple of Providence. Alice and Elinor, ds. of Zechariah jun. appear on the rec. as does his m."
- Wright, Otis Olney. History of Swansea, Massachusetts, 1667 - 1917
49, 1917.
"At a town meeting lawfully warned, on the two and twentieth day of the twelfth month, commonly called February, in the year of our Lord 1669, it is ordered that all persons that are or shall be admitted inhabitants within this town, shall subscribe to the three proposalls* above written, to the several conditions and explanations therein expressed, before any lot of land be confirmed to them or any of them.
"We whose names are hereunder written, do fully, upon our admission to be inhabitants of the town of Swansea, assent to the above written agreement, made between the church now meeting here at Swansea and Capt. Thomas WILLETT and his associates, as the sd. agreement is specified and declared in the three proposalls afore written, with the severall conditions and explanation thereof concerning the present and future settlement of tis town. In witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed." (Signed by fifty-five persons.)
- Eddy Family Association
http://www.eddyfamily.com/gen1_5.htm#id152.
- ↑ Great Migration, citing Records of the Colony of New Plymouth, 2:112-13
- ↑ Eddy, Ruth S.D., Eddy Family in America (Supplement of 1940), Boston: Eddy Family Assoc., 1940.
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