Parsons Family Descendants of Cornet Joseph Parsons Springfield
Born in Beaminster, Dorset, England
Descendants
Father of Joseph Parsons Esq. , Benjamin Parsons , John Parsons , Samuel Parsons , Ebenezer Parsons , Jonathan Parsons , David Parsons , Mary (Parsons) Ashley , Hannah (Parsons) Glover , Abigail (Parsons) Colton , Esther Parsons , Benjamin Parsons and Hester (Parsons) Smith
Died in Springfield, Hampden, Massachusetts
Contour terminal modified | Created 14 Sep 2010
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Contents
- one Biography
- 1.1 Immigration
- 1.2 Family
- ane.three Military Service
- i.4 Occupation
- 1.5 Land & Property
- 1.6 Decease & Legacy
- one.7 Inquiry Notes
- 2 Sources
Biography
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| Bliss Marriages |
Joseph Parsons,[1] [2] [iii] [4] [5] [vi] [7] was baptized in St. Mary'south Church at Beaminster, Dorset, England, 25 June 1620,[1] [8] [6] [vii] son of William and Margaret (Hoskins) Parsons.[8] He came to New England before 1636,[eight] [ix] Joseph Parsons is believed to take been the first of the proper noun in America.[10] "Munsell'southward American Ancestry" states that Joseph Parsons came over with William Pynchon, the leader of the Springfield colonists, who was one of the patentees of the grant by the Crown to the Massachusetts Bay Company, and a young man passenger with Winthrop, who came over in 1630.[10] It has also been suggested that he sailed to Boston from Gravesend, England, July 4, 1635, in the bark "Ship of London,"[11] Edward Walker, master ; he was then nearly eighteen years of age.[12] It is probable that he was a protege and possible relative of Pynchon, which would account for their intimate social and business relations, both with him and later with his son, John Pynchon.[x] In 1646 Joseph'due south younger brother Benjamin, known in history as Deacon Benjamin , first appeared in Springfield, where he and his family continued to reside for the greater part of his life. He was a man of great ability and purity of character, and who exerted a wide influence in laying the foundation of a Christian Land. [10]
Joseph married at Hartford, Connecticut, 26 November 1646,[x] Mary Bliss.[9] [8] [xiii] She was born in England about 1628 and died at Springfield 29 January 1711/12, daughter of Thomas and Margaret (Hulins) Bliss of Gloucestershire, England,[9] [13] and later on Hartford, Connecticut. It is possible that Joseph may take resided for a fourth dimension prior to his marriage in Hartford,[13] and it is further possible that Joseph and Mary may accept known each other in youth in One-time Devonshire.[10] Cornet Joseph Parsons died at Springfield 9 Oct 1683.[xi]
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| Indian Land Deals |
Cornet Joseph Parsons was very involved in the evolution of the colony. On July 15, 1636, he was a witness to the human action of cession made past the Indians to William Pynchon and others of a big tract of land on both sides of the Connecticut River, then called Agawan, but later Springfield,[viii] [9] the consideration beingness 18 yards of wampum, xviii coats, eighteen hatchets, 18 hoes and eighteen knives, a copy of which human activity is in the office of the Recorder in Springfield, MA. [viii] [14] [13] At that fourth dimension he was most seventeen years of age. Joseph was 1 of the founders of Northhampton and Springfield, Massachusetts.[ix] [viii] [thirteen] In the yr 1658 he was one of the witnesses to a deed regarding the town of Hadley. He later helped to negotiate the auction of that land to the people of Hadley.[x] In 1671 Joseph, with 3 others, went on an trek to explore what would later become Northfield, Massachusetts. He assistance finalize a bargain with the Indians for over 10,000 acres on the "bang-up river" (Connecticut).[10] Although it is oft overlooked that the early on settlers really purchased their state from the Indians; Joseph was one of many that did so.[ten]
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| Signatures (marks) on an former Indian Deed |
Cornet Joseph Parsons spent the last years of his life in Springfield, Massachusetts, where he died on Oct nine, 1683.[9] [fifteen] [i] [iv] [6] [7] [16] He was buried in Northampton, Hampshire Canton, Massachusetts, Usa[7] The settlement of his estate, dated 15 January 1683/four, was one of the largest early estates in Hampshire County.[11]
His married woman Mary Bliss was born in England in 1620 and died at Springfield, January 29, 1712.[nine] [x] [11] She had been tried as a witch at Salem and was acquitted.[10] [13]
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| Joseph & Mary Parsons |
In the historical catalog of the Northampton First Church 1661 to 1891, by the Reverend Solomon Clark, there is to be constitute the post-obit;
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- "Joseph Parsons united with the little band at Northampton in 1655. He had the title of Cornet. Kept the first house of entertainment in the place. The Parsons family there descended from him, at page 11, with reference to his son, "Joseph Parsons, Jr., third Justice of the Courtroom of Mutual Pleas, a homo of large business organization, public and private, lived with his married woman lx years, reared twelve children all married and had large families. His son Joseph, was pastor at Lebanese republic, Connecticut 1700-1708.
Clearing
- Event: Arrival
- Date: 1635
- Place: New England[3] [17]
Family unit
- Children of Joseph Parsons and Mary Bliss:
- Excerpted from Burt's History of Springfield, pp. 619-620:
- The births of Joseph and Mary'southward first iii children are not recorded in Springfield; their fourth and fifth children were born in Springfield, and the last seven were born in Northampton. 3 of the twelve children died in infancy and one child, Ebenezer, was killed past Indians at age 10.
- Joseph, built-in 1647, married Elizabeth Potent.
- Benjamin, died in Springfield on June 22, 1649.
- John, born 1649, died in infancy.
- John, born August 14, 1650, married Sarah Clarke, daughter of Lieut. William Clarke.
- Samuel, born January 16, 1652, went to Durham, Connecticut
- Ebenezer, born May i, 1665, killed past Indians on September 2, 1675.
- Jonathan, born June 6, 1657, married Mary Clark.
- David, born April thirty, 1659, died immature.
- Mary, born June 27, 1661, married first Joseph Ashley, and second Joseph Williston.
- Hannah, born August ane, 1663, married Pelatiah Glover, Jr.
- Abigail, built-in September 3, 1666, married John Colton.
- Esther (Hester), born December 24, 1672, married Rev. Joseph Smith.
Armed forces Service
- Joseph was in Male monarch Philip'south State of war, 1672-1678. In 1670 he was a member of the Aboriginal and Honorable Artillery of Boston, the beginning regularly organized military company in America. From 1672 to 1678 he was the Cornet of the Hampshire Troop.[eight] [13] [11] Captain John Pynchon's Hampshire Canton troop was the first troop of horse formed in Western Massachusetts. Joseph's rank was 3rd officeholder, and he was a color bearer of the cavalry visitor.[thirteen] Captain John Pynchon's visitor officers was comprised of a lieutenant, two quartermasters and a cornet. William Allis, of Hatfield, was the get-go cornet.[10] [xi]
- The armed forces record of Joseph Parsons is best shown by a extract from the "register of the officers and members of the New Hampshire Society of Colonial Wars."
Occupation
- Successful merchant, selectman, tavern possessor at Northampton, Massachusetts.
- Coronet Joseph Parsons' Tavern License (demand Ancestry account to view.)
- 1642: In 1642 he was one of the founders of the colony at Northampton, and i of the outset purchasers of Indian lands there in 1645.[9] He was a fur trader[9] and bought the sole right to castling and traffic in furs in the Connecticut Valley for an annual fee of £12. He accumulated a large estate. [10]
- 1646: In January, 1646, Joseph Parsons and Thomas Merrick were chosen surveyors[11] [thirteen] in Springfield to lay out and make a certain road from Mill River to Long Meadow. In 1652 he was an assessor and selectman[viii] [xiii] of Springfield. [10] [xi]
- 1646: The records at Springfield show that in 1646 Joseph Parsons was elected Town Surveyor,[8] which indicated that he was a young man of good education and enjoyed the confidence of his beau colonists, as it was a near responsible office, where property lines for ownership and for roads and for all civil divisions had to be made in a wilderness country.
- 1647: The records too show that in 1647 he was a taxpayer with 50-ii others in Springfield. In 1650 he was overseer of fences and, in 1651 he was elected a selectman,[13] the highest, elected town role.[10] [11]
- 1650: Chosen, along with John Clarke, as overseer of the fences.[13]
- 1652: Joseph was chosen as Selectman, a position of bang-up honor.[13]
- 1653: Joseph was chosen as Surveyor of the Highways.[13]
- 1654: He was Selectman in Northampton in 1654. Returned to Springfield in 1679. Was Selectman in Springfield in 1681. [8] [11]
- 1655: Nearly 1655, he purchased of William Pynchon, for the sum of twelve pounds per year a monopoly of the Connecticut River beaver or fur trade, in which he was successfully engaged.
- 1661: In March, 1661, he was licensed to keep an ordinary, or house of entertainment in Northampton.
- 1664: In 1664 he was one of a committee of the boondocks of Northampton sent "to deliver the listen of the town to the Indians", who desired land upon which to build a fort, the conditions being "that the Indians do not piece of work, game or carry burdens within the town on the Sabbath nor pow wow here, nor anywhere else, nor get liquor nor get drunk; nor admit stile at one place from without the town, nor break down fences, but get over a stile at one place nor acknowledge amidst them the murderers, Calamanc, Wuthowhan and Pacquellant, nor hunt, nor kill cattle, sheep or swine with their dogs."[ten]
- 1675: On 15 May 1675 "Joseph Parsons of Northampton...Merchant" purchased a warehouse in Boston.[11] He purchased land in Boston, then returned to Northampton by 1678.[xi]
Country & Property
- Residence: Massachusetts[eighteen]
- 1646: Prior to his marriage in 1646, a firm lot and other lands were allotted to him in Springfield at near the aforementioned time Margaret Bliss (widow of Thomas) and her children removed from Hartford to Springfield. [13]
- 1652: Joseph possessed a packet of land in the Long Meadow that his house stood on, from Alexander Edwards (in Springfield).[13] He also had an eighteen acre lot, among other holdings.[13]
- 1655: In 1655 Joseph, with others, purchased from the Indians a large tract of state at Noltwog, now Northampton, MA where Joseph was selectman for several years, except the second year when he paid the town twenty schillings not to elect him to any office, so that he might attend to his individual affairs. At a town meeting, held February, 1656, "It was agreed that Joseph Parsons, paying twenty shillings, shall exist freed from whatever office in the Town of Northampton for one year."[10]
- 1657: Joseph sold all of his Springfield properties. The properties were most likely sold some time previous to this date; but the state was transferred at that time.[13] In Northampton, he was given six acres of Swamp land that same year.[13]
- 1658: The Parsons house, dated 1658 is still in Northampton, MA. A historical society has its headquarters there.[10] The town of Northampton gave Joseph three acres of meadow that year.[13]
- 1659: The boondocks of Northampton gave Joseph ii acres of upland joining to his half-dozen acres of swamp over the Mill River.[thirteen]
- 1660's: Joseph became a large country owner in Springfield, Hadley and also Northampton. He owned ii valuable lots in Boston, a residence and a storehouse on Boston Harbor.[10]
- 1660's: He bought and sold land in Waranoke (now Westfield) and was the owner of more land in Northampton Meadow than whatever other person ; he bought of diverse parties upwards of one hundred acres of upland meadow at a place called Pascommuck, at the foot of the north cease of Mt. Tom.[10]
- 1662: In 1662, he took of Weakwangon and his wife a mortgage of Hockanum Meadow, a peninsula continued with Hadley on the east side of the Connecticut River to secure a debt which the Indians owed him ; he sold this meadow and his right and title to the Hadley settlers ; the mortgage and deed are on record in Springfield, Massachusetts.[xiii]
- 1668: In 1668, a sawmill existence needed, a grant of twenty acres was made, but the grantee declining in his contract, Joseph Parsons purchased the site and made it a success.[x]
Death & Legacy
- The settlement of his estate, dated fifteen January 1683/4, was one of the largest early estates in Hampshire Canton.[11] The probate mentioned his widow Mary Joseph Jr "Eldest Son," John "2ᵈ Son," Samuel "3ᵈ Son," Jonathan "4ᵗʰ Son," and iv daughters: Mary, Hannah, Abigail, and Esther.[11] The Inventory amounted to £2008 9s, and was recorded 25 March 1684.[11]
Research Notes
Sources
- ↑ 1.0 1.ane 1.two SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ., 2002) plus data to 2004 Original data - Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970. Louisville, Kentucky: National Lodge of the Sons of the American Revolution. Awarding on Ancestry$ Notes: Isaac Parsons, born 12/23/1715 died 7/11/1796, and his married woman Lucina Strong b Northampton, Mass 8/8/1722, died 5/26/1801
- ↑ Holmes, Frank R. Directory of the ancestral heads of New England families, 1620-1700 (Baltimore : Genealogical Pub. Co., 1999), 181.Besides on Beginnings$ Text: nascency engagement: 1618 birth place: England Proper name: Joseph Parsons
- ↑ three.0 3.one Filby, P William. Passenger And Immigration Lists Index: a Guide to Published Arrival Records of About 500,000 Passengers Who Came to the Us And Canada In the Seventeenth, Eighteenth, And Nineteenth Centuries. (Detroit, Mich.: Gale Enquiry Co., 1981), 215. Note: Alphabetize bachelor on Ancestry$. TEXT Name: Joseph Parsons, Inflow Twelvemonth: 1635, Inflow Identify: America, Folio: 215.
- ↑ four.0 four.ane Holbrook: p 184 on Beginnings$ Data: Text: Name: Joseph Parsons death date: 9 Oct 1693 death place: Northampton, Massachusetts vital appointment: 9 October 1683 vital place: Springfield, Massachusetts
- ↑ White, Lorraine Cook. The Barbour collection of Connecticut boondocks vital records (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Pub Co, 1994), 37. Available on Ancestry$. TEXT Elation, Mary, m Joseph Parsons, Nov 26, 1646; in Volume D, p 22 & FFS, p 27.
- ↑ half dozen.0 vi.1 vi.2 Torry, Clarence A. New England Marriages Prior to 1700 (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004), 562. Available on Ancestry$. Text: marriage appointment: 20 Nov 1646 wedlock identify: Hartford birth date: 25 June 1620 nascence place: Great Torrington, Devonshire, England Name: Joseph Parsons death date: 9 October 1693 death place: Northampton, Massachusetts
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 seven.2 7.3 Discover A Grave, database and images (https://world wide web.findagrave.com : accessed 26 Jan 2018), memorial page for Joseph "Cornet Joseph" Parsons (1620–ix Oct 1683), Find A Grave: Memorial #36038380, citing Springfield Cemetery, Springfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts, U.s. ; Maintained past Richard Baldwin Cook (correspondent 47181028) .
- ↑ eight.00 8.01 eight.02 8.03 eight.04 viii.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.ten Green, Mason Arnold. Springfield, 1636-1886 : history of town and city : including an account of the quarter-millennial celebration at Springfield, Mass., May 25 and 26, 1886 (Springfield, MA: C.A. Nichols & Co., 1888), 14.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 ix.iv 9.5 nine.six 9.vii ix.8 Parsons, Langdon Brown. History of the Boondocks of Rye, New Hampshire: From Its Discovery and Settlement to December 31, 1903 (Concord, NH: Rumford Print. Company, 1905), 474.
- ↑ 10.00 10.01 10.02 10.03 10.04 ten.05 10.06 x.07 10.08 10.09 x.10 x.eleven 10.12 x.thirteen ten.14 10.15 10.16 10.17 10.18 10.19 ten.twenty Parsons, Henry. Parsons family unit; descendants of Cornet Joseph Parsons, Springfield, 1636--Northampton, 1655 (NY: Frank Allaben genealogical company, 1920), 29-36, 39-49.
- ↑ 11.00 11.01 xi.02 11.03 eleven.04 11.05 11.06 11.07 11.08 eleven.09 eleven.10 11.11 11.12 11.xiii 11.14 Parsons, Gerald James. "The Early Parsons Families of the Connecticut River Valley." "Cornet Joseph Parsons of Springfield, Northampton, and Boston." The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. 148:215, 216- (1994) link ($) AmericanAncestors
- ↑ Hotten, John Camden. The original lists of persons of quality; emigrants; religious exiles; political rebels; serving men sold for a term of years; apprentices; children stolen; maidens pressed; and others who went from Great U.k. to the American Plantations, 1600-1700 (London: Hotten, 1874), 474.
- ↑ 13.00 13.01 13.02 13.03 13.04 13.05 13.06 13.07 xiii.08 13.09 xiii.10 13.11 13.12 13.13 thirteen.14 13.15 13.16 13.17 13.eighteen 13.xix 13.xx xiii.21 Burt, Henry M Cornet Joseph Parsons 1 of the founders of Springfield and Northampton, Massachusetts; Springfield, 1636; Northampton, 1655. (Long Island, N.Y: A. R. Parsons, 1898), v.
- ↑ (Information technology is published in full in Volume 15, New England History and Biological Annals, pp. 140-141.) At that time he was about seventeen years of historic period, equally he testified at the March term of the court at Northampton in 1662, on proof of said deed. This deed was made but sixteen years after the landing of the Pilgrims, and but half dozen years after the start settlement of Boston.
- ↑ Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, U.s.: Beginnings.com Operations, Inc., 2011.
- ↑ Edmund West
- ↑ Filby
- ↑ Paige
- Ferris, Mary Walton, "Dawes-Gates Ancestral Lines, A Memorial Volume Containing the American Ancestry of Mary Beman (Gates) Dawes" Volume 2, p 624-636.come across at hathitrust
- Parsons, Henry. Parsons Family, Descendants of Cornet Joseph Parsons (Frank Allaben Genealogical Co., 1912) Folio 39-49
- Burt, Henry. The First Century of the History of Springfield (Henry M. Burt, Springfield, Mass., 1898) Vol. 2 p. 617-620
- Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s (Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2012)
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- on Ancestry$
- on Beginnings$
- on Ancestry$
- on Ancestry$
- Springfield, Massachusetts; Yr: 1635; Page Number: 52.
- America; Yr: 1635; Folio Number: 215.
- New England; Year: 1620-1650; Page Number: 27.
- Paige, Lucius R.. List of Freemen of Massachusetts. Boston, MA, U.s.: New England Historical and Genealogical Society, 1849. on Ancestry$ Residence: Massachusetts
- See Likewise:
- Ancestry Family Trees (Provo, UT, The states: Ancestry.com) Family Tree files submitted past Ancestry members. on Ancestry$
- Edmund West, comp. Family Information Drove - Deaths (Provo, UT, U.s.: The Generations Network, Inc., 2001)
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- Ancestry$ Link
- Death: 9 October 1683 Springfield, Hampden, MA
- Yates Publishing, U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 (Provo, UT, The states, The Generations Network, Inc., 2004)
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- on Ancestry$
- on Ancestry$
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