SAMOi a /r PAINE GENEALOGY, IPSWICH BRANCH. INCLUDING A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE NOKMAN RACE (TO WHICH ALL FAMILIES OF " PAINE" BELONG) FROM ITS ORIGIN UNTIL THE CONOJJEST AND THE CRUSADE IN WHICH HUGH DE PA YEN SERVED. BY ALBERT W. PAINE, BANGOR, ME. BANGOK, MAINE: PRINTED BY O. F. KNOWLES & COMPANY. 1881. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1881, by ALIJEKT W. PAIXK, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. To THE VERY NUMEROUS INDIVIDUALS, MALE AND FEMALE, ON BOTH SIDES OF THE ATLANTIC, WHO HAVE CONTRIBUTED SO MANY OF THE STATISTICS COMPILED IN THIS FAMILY HISTORY, THIS WORK IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED, WITH THANKS, BY THE AUTHOR. PREFACE. THE present work, now submitted to the public eye, was originally undertaken and prosecuted by the writer, in moments of leisure and as a matter of diversion for his own and his family's use alone. Subsequent conference with the Editor of " The Paine Family Records" led him to make his discoveries more public and general, through the pages of that valuable periodical. The suc- cess which has attended his investigations and the grat- ifying character of the results, have induced him to give a more specific form to his work, by embodying the facts respecting the lineage, gained at the expense of so much time and labor, in a separate volume, as more likely to perpetuate the history and make it acceptable to all such as are interested in the family in question. The different families of -PAINE" are very numerous, having no connection whatever with each other, as will be seen from a perusal of the book. Of all these, one alone is selected for the subject of this publication. That one is the family to which the writer belongs, and to which he has given the name of the ''Ii'swicii BRANCH." from the fact that it was at Ipswich, Mass., the family made their first permanent settlement in America. BANGOR, ME., May i, iSSi. PART I. ANTE-EMIGRATION HISTORY. CHAPTER I. Introduction . HUME, in his ''History of England," commences his work by an allusion to "the curiosity entertained by all civilized nations of enquiring into the exploits and adventures of their ancestors," a sentiment universally felt and recognized. Such being the case, how much more curiosity and interest must every individual feel to enquire into the history of his own lineage, whose blood he in- herits, and whose character has, to a greater or less extent, determined his own. Few apothegms have more of truth and beauty in them than that which lies at the foundation of all genealogical enquiry, that " The glory of children are their parents." And no teaching is of more import- ance as bearing upon that almost divine command of ''know thyself" than this very one of family history. The doctrine of heredity, as now developed and con- firmed, when faithfully studied and applied to any individual person, can be most implicitly relied upon to give his true character in all its natural and fundamental characteristics and propensities. "Like father, like son." Hence the importance of the subject. True and perfect genealogical research, in its investi- gation backwards to the origin of any particular family, does not cease with a knowledge of the individual ances- 6 Paine Genealogy. tors of the line, but where that ends, alike interesting and important work is found in tracing the history of the race to which they belonged and with which they acted. The clew is thus followed which leads to the determination of all that is most interesting and important in one's full his- tory and character. The different families of "Paine," as existing in vari- ous parts of the country, being mainly, if not wholly, of Norman extraction and descent, as will be hereafter shown, it becomes a very important as well as interesting studv to trace the historv of that people, so far as its genealog- ical character is involved, back to its origin and thence down to the time whence distinctive lines of familv lineage can be established. To satisfy this curiosity the fol- lowing brief outline is produced as gleaned from volum- inous pages of history and authority. Ipswich Branch. CHAPTER II. Aryan and Scandinavian History. TRADITION, as well as the nature of language, teach us, that long before the beginning of recorded his- tory, the inhabitants of the earth formed distinct races, among which the Aryan or Japhetic, and the Semitic or Shemite, were the most prominent, both having their origin in Asia, where it would seem the human species was first planted by its maker. In the course of time their increased numbers, their overstocked population, made necessary an exodus of these people to other and more western countries. No exact history, of course, exists as to the order of their emigration, or the time of its prog- ress, but the truth is no less patent that such an exodus did take place, and all European history is based on this great fact. While the Semitic race more generally kept to the warmer regions of the new land, the Aryan, originating in Persia, (so called from Arya its ancient name,) pursued a more northerly course and followed the higher latitudes of Europe. The western portions of this great division of the earth thus received their first great impulse of life, by a flood of Aryan blood poured out, as it were, over their hills and plains. Their first "invasion" as histo- rians have been accustomed to call it was evidently that by the Celts, who having spread themselves over the coun- try now known as Germany, scattering as they went, were gradually pressed forward over the channels until S Paine. Genealogy, large numbers found and established their permanent homes in Ireland. Wave after wave of successive emi- grations worked this and gave to the island its distinctive and lasting Celtic character. After the Celts, the Teutons, another branch of the great Aryan family, made their sure progress across the continent by a more northerly course, until they came to the shores of the now so called Baltic Sea. Crossing this they filled the spaces now occupied by the kingdoms of Norway, Sweden and Denmark, the ancient Scandinavia, displacing the aboriginal tribes of Laps and Fins, who were probably the offspring of a still earlier Asiatic emi- gration. Along with this tide were others who, taking a more southerly path, forced their way into Gaul, forming the settlements known as the Western Franks, and in many cases passing over the channel to the Island of Great Britain. As yet, however, and for a long time, all these people had adopted no form of government and sustained no relation with each other as inhabitants of the new coun- try. Such, however, as had found homes across the Baltic, gradually improved their condition and formed themselves into distinct governments under names such as they now l>ear, and adopted codes of law suited to their rude con- dition of life. The same course was also adopted by their neighlx>rs of Gaul and England, though for ages no com- mercial or other relation existed between them : but all were strangers to each other, and for centuries remained so, though the common descendants of the great Aryan. Teutonic race. The difference in place, however, and corresponding difference in climate and other natural characteristics of territory, worked a like difference in the character of the people, giving to the Scandinavians more Ipswich Branch. 9 of that spirit of bravery, courage and enterprise which has ever signalized the inhabitants of the north over those of more southern and warmer countries. As one of the results, Norway and Sweden have ever succeeded in re- sisting all efforts at their subjugation and maintained their independence of all other powers. Ages and centuries passed, when again the necessity was imposed upon the people of these governments, as in their old Asiatic home, to seek new homes for their overstocked population and new scenes for their industry and enterprise. This led to frequent incursions against the neighboring islands and shores of Western Europe in the lower latitudes, extending even to the Mediterranean and along its coasts. By these oft repeated adventures they came to be regarded as "Scourges," or "Scanzia," [hence "Scandinavia"], as history represents them, all along the line of their meanderings. At a later date these incursions were made inland, until the principal part of the continent became "infested" by them. The hard and sterile soil and the rigors of the northern climate made necessary these removals and new settlements from the overgrowth of population in their old home. Be that as it may, a very large exodus of inhabitants took place from what came to be known as Scandinavia, and all por- tions of Western and Southern Europe became more or less the scene of their operations. For want of a better name, that of "Northmen" was given to them, and as they came to make their appearance at different points of adventure, they were known as "Goths" and "Vandals," "Kimbri," "Kelts," etc., names of derision in intention, but more worthily esteemed as names of honor for their enterprise and real merit. io Paine Genealogy. During all these ages, nothing was generally known of the place whence all these "hordes" came, but their land was a terra incognita among the nations. It was noticed that these people ever exhibited a remarkable profusion of amber, worked into ornaments of various kinds which greatly excited the curiosity of the inhabitants among whom they settled. This led to an extensive trade with the Northmen in the places of their new settlement, and a consequent desire to seek out and become acquainted with the country which sent forth such quantities of rich and rare commerce. The Phoenicians had early engaged in it largely and made frequent ventures in that direction, reporting gener- ally what they found both in the way of trade and in re- lation to the various characteristics of the people, whom they represented as given up to the religion of Baal and identical with the various races of barbarians. But still a very general ignorance prevailed every-wherc both with reference to the locality and character of the people at home, who were thus filling Europe with their hosts. After centuries of this kind of life, the government of Marsilia, the modern Marseilles, in the year 350 IB. C., sent Pvtheas, a contemporary of Alexander the Great, to inquire "into the position and nature of the Northern lands from which the Phoenicians brought away tin and amber and other products, which they could not obtain nearer home." .lie executed his mission by visiting the land of the Northmen, passing through England, and making himself generally acquainted with the object of his journey. He made a report of his discoveries, in which he detailed facts showing that nearly 2300 years ago these people had already secured to themselves many of the useful arts and comforts of life. Ipswich Branch. 1 1 After Pytheas, the next reliable evidence which was had of the character of the Northmen was under Alfred the Great, in A. D. 871, being 1,200 years after Pytheas, when two travelers, Wulfstan and Ohthere, came to the King's court and reported their journey. In the mean- time, however, these Northmen were constantly passing south, and making their homes over different parts of Europe and the southern coasts of the Mediterranean. In the interim between these two visits, the great Ro- man Empire had grown up, become the mistress of the world, gone into decline, become utterly subverted, and passed away. The Cassars had come and conquered and died, and their glory been extinguished. Christ had come and "established His kingdom" in the far East; and, fol- lowing the track of Asiatic emigration and outliving the Roman authority, His doctrines had reached the western shore of the continent, and began to be recognized by the people of that region. Strange as it may seem, during all the period of Roman authority, although this tide of emigration from the north was setting so strongly across its dominions, threatening, as at last it effected, the total extinction of its power, yet the government seems never to have turned its attention to the subject, or sought to learn whence the tide came, or what might be its final future result. Like its corre- sponding tide of the ocean, they quietly saw its flow, ac- quiesced in its operation, and succumbed to its power, until its overflow blotted out all that remained of possible defence and opposition. The Northmen thus became, every-where in Europe, the masters of the situation, fill- ing even Italy and Rome itself with its emigrants, and blotting out the Roman power and name from existence, save as they had established themselves in history. 1 2 Paine Genealogy. We are not, however, to suppose, as is most frequently done, that these "incursions," as they are more generally called, either from Asia into Europe, or from Scandinavia into the more southerly portions of the continent, were of an unfriendly, much less of a warlike character. We have nowhere any account of any pitched battles being fought, or of sieges planned or executed. Occasional skirmishes of a quasi military character there may have been, but nothing that could be legitimately styled as "war" is to be found in their long history. On the con- trary, they were of a peaceful quality, and prosecuted under no pretence of invasion as hostiles or conquerors. The stories so commonlv told of their overrunning the countries, and subjecting the former inhabitants of the Roman Empire to their dominion, so far as they partake of the warlike idea, are all unreliable. Looking back from our present standpoint, we are apt to view the work of ages as performed in a day, and con- clude that it was done so suddenly only by force of arms of contending tribes and people ; but quite otherwise is the actual truth. These Northmen were for ages and centuries gathering from the east, and for other ages dispersing themselves over the other more productive and less burdened fields of the continent and neighboring islands. The history of those days was, in truth, only the same which has been repeating itself over the centuries which have since elapsed and is still in progress. What has happened in our own country in the gradual occupation of its vast territory by the inhabitants of other nationalities, descendants, indeed, of these very people from Asia and Scandinavia, is a good illustration and proof of what has now been said. Ipswich Branch. 13 The settlement of America, in the iyth century, and its more modern history in the same line, is the same with that of the periods spoken of. Not by armies, nor indeed by force, but by peaceful "incursions" of gradual immi- gration, were the colonies formed all along the great Atlantic, from the rock of Plymouth to the shores of Carolina, and thence inland, until all the original thirteen states were formed. But still, even as late as our Revo- lution, the vast fields of Ohio, Illinois and other Western States were vacant and uninhabited, save as the hunting grounds and homes of the aborigines, or cared for only by the wild beasts of the forests and the prairies. To the later clays of the I9th century was it left to make "incur- sions" into these regions and reduce them to the wants of civilized life. Thus "the West." like Europe, became the victim of "invasion" and "conquest," and the conse- quent abode of active citizenship. To a still later day, that of our own time, has it been left to "subjugate" the broad fields of the Pacific coast and the intermediate territory, up to the line of the West- ern border. Texas. California and Oregon, Colorado. Arizona and the Great Plains, covering broader fields than Northmen ever found in Europe, have in our day been "invaded" and taken possession of by Eastern "hordes" of emigrants and made subservient to the uses of man ; and the great work is still going on. The exodus of the black man into these regions, like his ancestors of the Hamite invasion, is likely to meet the same result in his new home, and Kansas, perhaps, repeat the history of Africa. If language does not vary we may in fancy look back to our times from the standpoint of ages yet to be. and there read of the wonderful "incursions of the Yankees" 14 Paine Genealogy. in first possessing themselves of the territory of New England, and then by successive waves of adventure and conquest making themselves masters of all the land em- braced within the broad boundaries of the two oceans. As in our days the Choctaws and Cherokees, Sioux and Cheyenes, and other tribes have given way to the march of civilization, so in the other case, the Laps and Fins and other aboriginal races gave way to the peaceful march of a higher life. As in our case so in this, occasional conflicts have taken place and the sound of war has been heard, but these in both cases are but the mere attendants upon the greater work, accidental events, happening like the occasional stroke of lightning, or the flooding of a farm, or the burning of a camp or cottage in the vast work of peopling a continent. Ipswich Branch. CHAPTER III. Norman Genealogy. BY this general exodus of the Scandinavians from their northern home into the more southerly parts of Europe through the series of centuries, as has now been described, every part of Western Europe was more or less affected. In the year 885, A. D., bodies of them from Norway, went up the Seine even to Paris, where Odo did great things in resisting them and thereby obtained the title of "King of the West Franks." They withdrew and made a settlement at the mouth of that river, at what was afterwards known as Rouen. This rapidly increased in strength and numbers under Rolf or Rollo, their chief, who in 913 or 918, made a treaty with Charles the Sim- ple, brother and successor of Odo, by which the colony had its title confirmed to a large tract of territory at that point, whereby, says Hallam, "the kingdom was at once .relieved from a terrible enemy and strengthened by a race of hardy colonists." Rollo soon after became a convert to the Christian religion, and was baptized and learned the French language, and his example being followed by the people of the villages, that religion came to be well established. They assumed the name of Normans instead of Northmen, and "Normandy" was adopted as their fu- ture cognomen. Rollo assumed the title of duke and was thenceforth recognized as the "Duke of Normandy," and he and his successors ranked as among the most powerful princes of that part of the whole country. The colony 1 6 Paine Genealogy. thus became an independent sovereignty and soon as- sumed an importance unequaled among the states of Eu- rope. Its limits gradually extended, and at one time reached to the gates of Paris. Its dukes maintained high character for skill and bravery until about the middle of the nth century, when William was made chief, and added Maine to his dukedom. Its population, too. had also been rapidly enlarged by constant immigrations, until overstocked, it began, like its predecessors, to send oft* colonies to other parts still further south. Italy and .Sicily were especiallv the recipients of these emigrants, and to such an extent that the character of the people there be- came generally affected by their inhabitancy. A treaty was made with Pope Leo IX., in 1053, which cemented a close and lasting alliance between the two peoples. The Channel Islands, especially that of Jersey, were also recipients of the same Norman emigration and very early became identified as a part of the same state. By the treaty with Charles the Simple it was donated to Duke Rollo and afterwards passed to the English Crown under William the Conqueror. It has ever since main- tained its distinctive Norman character, evidenced not only by its dialects, but also by its legal tenures, its feudal customs and its grand old castle; these all betraying, as writes a modern traveler, "the unmixed Norman blood that still fills their veins." It was under such a state of things that William suc- ceeded to the dukedom as the heir of his father Robert, whose bravery he also inherited and to whose ambition he added that of his own early years. Firmly seated in authority at home, he turned his attention to the prose- cution of his claim to the government of England, and under the pretence of right to iU crown, he, in 1056, Ipswich Branch. 17 crossed the channel with his army. By the battle of Hastings he secured a foothold of authority, which rapidly led to the consummation of his scheme of being universally recognized as king under the now familiar name of "William the Conqueror." Throned in power, he par- celled out the lands of the dominion among his soldiers and followers, and thus turned the tide of Norman emi- gration across the channel. The Norman blood and spirit thus became generally diffused throughout the island, and gave its character to the people of that whole country, a character for courage and enterprise, which that nation has ever since maintained both at home and abroad, as the great civili/er of mankind and promoter of the race in new homes and new industries. William died in 1087. leaving his crown to his younger son. William Rufus. and his Dukedom to his eldest son, Robert. Each entered upon his distinct authority, and the two countries became each an independent power. The excitement of the First Crusade arose soon after- wards, to redeem the Holy Places from the hands of Infidels. Robert caught the infection, and turning his back upon his Ducal possession, which he pledged to his brother for a loan of 6,666 to carry on his invasion, vol- unteered with others, at the call of the Pope, to march to Jerusalem. This was in 1099, when large bodies of Normans from their native state and from England, Italv and Sicily, eagerly joined in the magnificent scheme. Their march was a victorious one, resulting in the con- quest of Jerusalem and possession of its sacred places. Inflated with glory. Robert returned, but only, as it were, to attain an ignominious death in durance at Cardiff. The particular interest connected w r ith the history now produced, consists in the fact that all families of "Paine" 2 1 8 Paine Genealogy. (however variously the name inav be spelled) are of Nor- man descent or extraction and that, however it may be with other families than that of the Ipswich Branch, the ancestor of the latter was involved in the crusade to the Holy Land, where he acquired fame and the title to knighthood by his prowess and courage. Ipswich Branch. 19 CHAPTER IV. The Family Patronymic. HAVING in the last chapter traced the history of the Norman race from its genesis in Persia through its various exodus to Scandinavia, and thence to Normandv and Great Britain, the subject now takes naturally a more limited scope. The patronymic of the family now in question, the surname of "Paine " in its various forms of spelling, proves beyond a doubt its direct Norman origin or birth. In Bardsley's "History of English Surnames," a minute history of the name is given, and to it we are mainly indebted for the following account of its origin. Allusion has already been made, in the previous chap- ter, to the fact that Rollo or Rolf, in the 9th century, having firmly established himself in power as Duke of Normandv. became a convert to the Christian religion,' and that with his encouragement and support the doctrines had become generally received in the villages of his Dukedom. The people of the country, however, outside of the larger places, still held very generally to their former creeds, and resisted the new innovation. So gen- erally was this the case, that to be a "countryman," came to be merely another name for an "unbeliever," so that the same word "pagan us" came to represent, or express, the two-fold meaning of both. Hence the word, originallv and solely meaning a dweller in the country as distin- guished from one in the city, or large town, came to be regarded as a repi'oach, as expressive of the idea of an 2O Paine Genealogy. enemy of the Christian religion, or. literally translated, a pagan." In the same way the two words peasant" and "pagan," both from the same root as above given, came to be generally used as expressive of the same idea, a liver in the country and a disbeliever. This was jxrculiar to Normandy, where alone the perversion existed. The name, coming thus to be generally adopted, gradually invaded the larger places and soon came to be applied to all who refused to receive baptism after Rollo became a convert. When William the Conqueror passed over to England, a large number of this class of citizens went with him. or soon followed, and thus the term came to be very generally spread over the island. At about the same time the habit became prevalent of using surnames to indicate the unity or identity of family connections, and hence the word was very naturally adopted for that pur- pose and necessarily became one of the most common and familiar, lasting long after its original significance had ceased. The name gradually changed its form from Pajjamis to Pagan. Pa gen. Paven. Payne and Paine, as on . also Payson and Pyson and others, all of which were merely different forms of the same appellation. In Domes- dav. compiled in 1086. the name was uniformly written Pagen." And not only did the name thus become a favorite and familiar one in England and Normandy, but also wherever else the Norman exodus pervaded. In the Isle of Jersey, before mentioned, an island embraced within the same treaty that secured the independence of Normandy from West Gaul, the name has ever been most common, as also in Italy to which so many Normans emigrated, it there assuming the form of Paganini" or Pagani." Ipswich Branch. 21 Such being 1 the derivation of the name, it readily fol- lows that it by no means indicates any personal relation- ship between those who bear it, but only a common Norman descent. In connection with this name. Bardsley remarks that "at the close of the Norman dynasty, it had threatened to become one of the most familiar appella- tions in England, and thus while in our dictionaries pagan' still represents a state of heathenism, in our directories it has long been converted to the purposes of Christianity and become at the baptismal font a Christian name." 22 Paluc Genealogy, CHAPTER V . Donicsdav and Pagcn. WHEN William the Conqueror became fully seated in power, as has been already stated, he divided the lands of his kingdom largely among his soldiers and followers from his native state. Hume relates that "he did this, with few exceptions, into baronies and then con- ferred them, with the reservation of stated services and payments, on the most considerable of his adventurers. These great barons who held immediately of the Crown shared out a great part of their lands to other foreigners who were denominated knights and vassals, and who paid their lord the same duty and submission in peace and war which he himself owed to his Sovereign." Previous to the Conquest, in the reign of Edward the Confessor, himself the son of a Norman mother, many Normans, by his encouragement, had settled in England, who readily gave to the Conqueror their adhesion and aid. These, too, he of course took into his especial favor and patronage. After this general division, he caused an inventory and appraisal of the whole kingdom to be made, taking ac- count not only of the names of the parties occupant, but also of all their estates with the names of the dispos- sessed owners and the higher chiefs or barons under whom they held. These reports made by different commission- cm, appointed in dillerent counties, were all reduced to order and compiled under the name, so well known Ipswich Branch. 23 through the centuries since, of ; 'TiiE DOMKSDAY." The original compilation was in 1086, A. D., and has been ever since preserved with all the care of Holy Writ, and copies of it are now to be found in some of our largest libraries in fac-simile print, or* Zincotype, though no English translation of it has ever yet been published. A short study of its forms, however, makes us familiar with its unique contents, and gives us most valuable in- formation relative to the various individuals which at that time formed a part of the great English people. This was especially true of all Norman families who, by the action of the King as already described, came to occupy the most prominent positions in all parts of the kingdom. The following translation of some of the entries may be of interest to the reader as a sample of the whole work, the name of the former, or expelled owner, being inserted as well as that of the present occupant : "Thomas de Paine occupies two ox ploughings which belonged to Hugo Brown and pays in per annum two portions of wheat and two tribute portions on horned cattle." This Thomas is reported as resident of "Highhington- shire," modern Huntingdonshire. In "Liecestershire," modern Leicestershire, are other entries of similar char- acter, as for instance : "Pagen holds of William Peverell," &c. In Hampshire, or "Hants," is another, ''Pagen holds of the KING i Hide, i Yardland in Buckbolt, and it was held in parcenary by Sawin and assessed at 5 yardlands. but it is now in the Forest. * * It was worth 100.?." The land was part of that taken by the King to form his New Forest. These are only a few of the large number of instances contained in Dowestfav" showing the holding bv Pasfen 24 Paine GciicaJogy. ( Payne) in various parts of England at the time when the examination and inventory were made. A fuller inves- tigation leads to some very interesting results in relation to the family now traced. It has already been remarked in the extract from Hume, that the lands thus parcelled out by the King were generally "divided into baronies, and conferred on the most considerable of his adventurers." Among these the records show that this "Pagen" who in one of the extracts above given, is related to hold "of the King," and whose land is "now in the Forest." was ranked as one. As a consequence, his name is re- ported as holder of lands either "of the King," or others, in at least sixteen different counties, and to the number of thirty-eight or more holdings in all, and the significant remark is added by the commissioner of returns, that "he could go whithersoever he would." These holdings were so located in different counties, that leaving Hants or Hampshire by the Isle of Wight, where the New Forest was located, he could travel north to "the Wash" on the North Sea ; thence west across the island to the Irish Sea : thence south to the Bristol Channel ; thence east to the place of starting, and at every step be in a county where he owned land, and consequently had right of protection. This was his peculiar baronial privilege arising from his rank and probable connection with the King. He had settled in England from Normandy before the Conquest, as is plainly evidenced by the record, and was consequently there to share with the Conqueror the brunt of battle and the crown of success. He died about the same time that Domesday was compiled in 1086. leaving Edmund his eldest son and heir to inherit his immense estate and dig- nities, as well as his favor with the King. Ipswich Branch. 25 When the King made the great sacrifice of private interests by establishing his "'New Forest" of thirty miles extent, absorbing farms, dwellings and churches to gratify his pleasure, this Pagen's name is often found in the roll of lands taken ; "Lands now in the Forest." and for these he had other lands assigned to him in other localities. From these various references and entries, it would seem that this same Pagen was, according to Hume's record, one of the barons upon whom the Conqueror bestowed his favors as among "the most considerable adventurers." And of so marked a character was his favor to the family, that his "son Edmund" w r as also made to share his bounty and enjoy his baronial privileges. The facts now related are very important, as intimately con- nected with other particulars in the subsequent history of the family. On this broad Norman plateau and its various fields as now described, every family of "Paine" may find his an- cestral home, if only he is able to trace it out. The work is of course difficult, if not impossible, the seeker being obliged to span the space of eight centuries. And just here it is very appropriate to remark, that all efforts to define or trace any particular family lineage, of the class now discussed, to an earlier date than that now given, when the Normans possessed themselves of English soil, are utterly vain and hopeless. No such line is prac- ticably traceable to any earlier period of time. All families of Scandinavian, Norman, Saxon and Celtic descent may regard themselyes as forever and irretrievably shut out from all earlier knowledge of their especial ancestry. Prior to that time, or a generation earlier, surnames had not been adopted, and hence no means of identification existed to 26 Paine Genealogy. distinguish one line of ancestry, or. indeed, one family from another, beyond any particular generation then alive. Neither had Coats of Arms been then invented which, more truly than any other species of evidence, goes to establish identity of lineage, when other proof is lack- ing. Even British Royalty, in all its pride of ancestry, is obliged, in its backward march for an origin, to stop short with the Conqueror, whose very name of "William," (helmet bearer) had but just then been invented. To say nothing of his doubtful parentage, not a single previous generation of ancestry can be safely defined as a basis of his lineage. We have, it is true, mythical accounts of the Sagas and "Runic Rhymes" of Scandinavia, and we read howOssian sung on the Scottish Highlands of the early days, but in spite of all these, the truth has to be confessed, that be- hind the thick veil which separated Scandinavia from South- ern Europe, all is darkness and night : and as separate families and nations come out thence into the open day of history, they are utterly undistinguishable from each other without any knowledge of their descent more than that which is enjoyed of the birds and beasts of the forest. And indeed, could it be otherwise, the knowledge at- tainable, by any one. of his ancestry, behind that veil, would aHbrd but little satisfaction to the seeker, inasmuch as the inevitable result would be to find his progenitors for centuries there a part only of a crude mass of individ- uals, almost if not quite undistinguishable among them- selves, people of little culture, and all alike tillers of the soil for a mere subsistence, substantially without govern- ment or refinement, or perhaps, any other desirable quality. Ipswich Branch. 27 CHAPTER VI. The Crusades and Hugh de Pay en. FOLLOWING close upon the Norman conquest of England, in the latter part of the eleventh century, the Crusades began to rage, as has heen already related. The history of the first, which was composed largely of Normans under the leadership of Robert. Duke of Normandy, and which commenced its march in the last year of that century, has a peculiar importance to the Paine race. Without any more particular rehearsal of the events which occurred in connection with it, than that it was successful in wresting the Holy Places from the hands of Infidels, the following portion of its history is of great interest. At the termination of the Crusade now spoken of. the celebrated Hugh de Payen remained behind for the purpose of more surely securing its grand results. For long months he acted the part of guide, with others, for all such pilgrims as might need aid and conduct to their journey's end. and more particularly from the crossing of Jordan to the city of Jerusalem. For this purpose he organized a force adapted to the occasion and diligently attended to the work. In company with Godfrey de St. Omer, he instituted an order known as the ''Templars of the Cross," the sole object of which was to further the great objects of the Crusaders' mission by protecting the Holy Places and rendering safe the journey of all pilgrims to the Holy Shrine. The original organization embraced onlv seven others besides themselves. They were both zS Paine Genealogy. poor, but their undertaking was patronized by the King of Jerusalem, Baldwin II.. who not only gave them his countenance, but assigned to them their lodgings in his palace, and made them the recipients of his personal favor and society. Of their poverty they made no secret, but emblazoned it on their seal by adopting as a device "a horse with two riders." Starting from this small beginning, the order soon began to extend its limits and its power, until it came to be the most powerful and opulent of all organizations then probably existing in the world, controlling the fate of nations, and even demanding and receiving from the Pope an acknowledgement of its asserted rights. Its original or- ganization was in A. D. 1118, and continued to exist until 1312, nearly two centuries, when, after five or six years of violent action, Philip the Fair of France, and Pope Clement V. succeeded in abolishing it and appropriating its immense possessions to the use of the various sover- eigns of the different nations where they were deposited. In Portugal, the order still exists under the name of the "Knights of Christ." The pledge of every Templar bound him to defend at the peril of his life, the mysteries of the Christian faith, to perform military service beyond the seas whenever called upon to do so, and ''never to flv before three Infidels even when alone." During all these ages while the order had life, and ever since, the two original founders have been celebrated for their work as it* originators and patrons, and during its continuance, even after their death, as its peculiar protectors and guar- dians. Sir Walter Scott, in Ivanhoe. Vol. II., Chapter XII., put into the mouth of the (irand Master, answering Con- rade. while dilating on the evils prevailing even among the Templars : Ipswich Branch. 29 "I shame to speak, I shame to think of the corruptions which have rushed in upon us even like a flood. The souls of our pure founders, the spirits of Hugh de Payen and Godfrey de St. Omer, and of the Blessed Seven who first joined in dedicating their lives to the service of the Temple, are disturbed even in the enjoyment of Paradise itself. I have seen them. Conrade, in the visions of the night, their sainted eyes shed tears for the sins and follies of their brethren, and for the foul and shameful luxury in which they wallow. 'Beaumanoir, they say, thou sluin- berest. Awake ! There is a stain in the fabric of the Temple deep and foul as that left by the streaks of leprosy on the walls of the infected houses of old. * * Beau- manoir, thou sleepest ! Up and avenge our cause ! Slay the sinners, male and female ! Take to thee the brand of Phineas ! ' The vision fled. Conrade. but as I awaked I could still hear the clank of their mail and see the waving of their white mantles." Proctor in his "History of the Crusades" (p. 202) gives also an interesting account of the order, and of Payen's participation in its founding. Who Hugh de Payen was. genealogically, or to what line he belonged, of the numerous families now existing, is a matter of much interest. That he was a Norman is very clear, for at that early day the name had not gone beyond the field of its orgin, for only a single generation, or two. had then passed since surnames had been first adopted. His name, too. indicates that he was the son of a father who bore the same name, and who lived nec- essarily during the war and reign of the Conqueror. He was too. as a Norman, in the Crusade, one of the soldiers or followers of Robert the Duke. The success and sud- denness with which he entered upon his great work and organixed the order and advanced its cause, show most conclusivelv that he must have had what is often 30 Paine Genealogy. spoken of as a "good start" in life. A footman's, or private's position in an army is ever a place not only of difficulty, but of impossibility, from which to arise at once to eminence or favor. In order to do this he must have had the prestige of noble birth, or other extraneous ad- vantages, as well as of personal merit, to give him such an impetus as he actually enjoyed. Thus, and thus only, could he have attained so suddenly the high pinnacle of fame and favor to which he arrived. This conclusion .is supported by the facts already stated with reference to his favor with Baldwin II.. King of Jerusalem, who gave him lodgings in his palace and the prestige of his high office. From the readings of Domesday we have seen that Pagen. or Pavcn. was one of William the Conqueror's chief barons, on whom he especially bestowed his favors: and Robert the Duke, under whom Hugh went to the Crusades, was the son of the Conqueror, thus placing the two sons (if sons they were) in direct communication of friendship with each other. The conclusion is at least very natural and certainly very probable, that Hugh de Pa yen (the son of Payen) was really the son of him of Domesday. Edmund being his oldest son and heir. That he was poor though thus the son of a rich father, is readily explainable by the fact that the then prevailing law of primogeniture gave the whole inheritance to the oldest son and left the younger poor, a fact of so much importance that it led in the days of heraldry to the adop- tion of a particular feature on the Coat of Arms to express it. This feature was the placing on the shield a Martlet '. or footless bird, to indicate that the party had no land to stand on. and hence no use for feet. Ipswich Branch. 31 One of the extracts from Domesday is the following : 'Edmund, the son of Pagen, holds of the King, and Hugh holds of him." That this Hugh thus spoken of was Hugh de Payen cannot certainly be determined, but the fact that his sur- name is not given, but simply his Christian name, rather implies that his surname \vas the same with his under whom he held, and who is related as being ; 'the son of Pagen." The conclusion can hardly be resisted that the great Crusader was the son of him on whom King William so abundantly showered his favors, and that it w r as this favor with King William which opened the palace doors of King Baldwin at Jerusalem, and gave to the poor son a home and the prestige of his influence and his power as before related. The presumed ages of the different parties at the time makes this conclusion all very probable. The above ex- tract was written in 1086 when Domesday was com- piled, which was 13 years before the Crusade. At or about that time Pagen died. If he died at the age of 60 in that year, and the average of human life be applied in this case, giving 33 years as the average of a generation. Hugh would be 27 years old at the time spoken of, which would make him, say 40 years old at the Crusade, and 59 at the time of the Templar formation in 1 1 18, thus show- ing the naturalness of the hypothesis we are making. A continuation of this subject more appropriately fol- lows the next chapter. 3 a 2\iine GcneaJogy. C II A P T E R VII. Coats of A i- ins. "TT^EVV subjects connected with the early history of any JL family has more interest than that of the Coat of Anns, adopted by its early founders. This not only tells of the general character or specific virtues of the assumer or his progenitor, but furnishes the best and most reliable evidence of family identity, especially where direct and positive means of knowledge are wanting. Like the bea- con light at sea it tells to the far ort* vovager. despite all intervening space and objects, the certainty of his course and the identity of his position. Further than this, it artbrds a clear and often conclusive proof of the most im- portant facts in the history and character of the lineage. An eminent writer on the subject uses the following language with reference to that class whose Coats of Arms bear evidence of service in the Holy Wars : "The Croisades. so called from the little crosses which those who undertook the expedition to the Holy Land against the Infidels, received from the hands of the bish- ops and priests and sewed on their garments, likewise gave occasion not only to the bearing of several new figures till then unknown in arms, as bezants, martlets, escallops, alerions. crosses, etc.. but also improved the mode and greatly augmented the number and variety of armories. The glory which, from the expedition, re- sulted to those who bravely risked their lives and fortunes in the defense of the Christian religion brought these arms which had been worn on the occasions into esteem .so that the assumers> when returned from the Holy War. not Ipswich Branch. 33 only continued during their lives the use of such arms as they had assumed, but their issue did the same, making them the hereditary gentilian marks of their family and priding themselves in exhibiting and perpetuating such certain proof of the purity, virtue and valor of their parents." The pertinency of our author's remarks will be seen when applied to families which have, among their heir- looms, this interesting and valuable acquisition. Family Coat of Arms. The Coat of Arms of the family in question is that which. in works of heraldry is known as "The Arms of Payne of Market Bosworth, County of Leicester and of the County of vSuttblk." The reason of this designation will be found further on, where it will be seen that the family settled first in Leicester and afterwards removed to Suffolk, from whence the original American ancestor emigrated, bringing with him, for use, this highly prized armorial ensign. That such was the case, is evidenced in many ways in heraldic and genealogical works, and by the correspondence of the original emigrant ancestor of the line and his son. The impression or engraving of this Coat of Arms is given at the introduction of this volume and is here re- peated. It is proper to remark, however, that the presen- tation of the "Arms" in printer's ink fails to give either the beauty or significance of the article. In order to a correct understanding of the several parts, it should be borne in mind that no part of the whole is black, save only the three "martlets sable" the "crest" or wolf's head being azure or light blue, the border and belt red, the shield silver, the bezants or coins and mascles gold. 3 PAYNE. Ipstuich Branch. 35 The "Arms" are thus described in Burke's Encyclopae- dia, page 604 : Argent (i),on a fesse (2), engrailed (3), gules (4), be- tween three martlets (5) sable (6), as many mascles (7), or(S), all within a bordure(9)of the second (io),bezantee (n), crest, a wolf's head erazed(i2), azure (i3)charged with five bezants (14), salterwise (15). The interpretation or explanation of the several parts or indications is as follows : 1. "Argent." Silver, referring to the shield, purity. 2. "J?esse."The belt of a Knight. 3. ** Engrailed." Indented or wavy edges, denoting that the honor was obtained with difficulty. 4. "Gules." Red. referring to the belt, coiirage. 5 . ' Martlets." Birds of a swallow kind without feet, denoting a younger son, having no landed inheritance. 6. "Sable." Black, denoting antiquity of lineage. 7. "Mascles." The three rhombs or lozenge forms in the middle of the belt, signifying meshes of a net ; fishing privileges. 8. "Or" Gold, goodness. 9. ^Bordure." An additional honor or mark of ca- dency distinguishing one branch from another. 10. "Second." Of the second color named, red. 1 1. Bezantee. Sprinkled with round pieces of gold, said to indicate the coins of Byzantium or Constantinople, and that they had been to the Crusades and ransomed. 12. "Erazed." When the head is torn from the body and presenting at the neck a rough or ragged ap- pearance instead of straight, showing strength as against skill, with the sword. 13. ''Azure" Blue, truth and fidelity. 14. "Bezants." Substantive of bezantee, gold coins. 15. " Saltenvise." Arranged in the form of a cross X, sijrnifvinsr Crusade service. 36 Paine Genealogy. CHAPTER VIII. Hugh de Payen a -progenitor of Ipswich Branch. HAVING in the foregoing chapters given more par- ticular attention to the history of the Norman race, to which all families of "Paine" belong, and to such facts as have a general bearing on the subject in hand, a more particular application of the facts already elicited, comes now in place. From the history already given, it may be regarded as presumably established that Hugh de Payen was the son of Pagen, alias Payen of Domes- day, whose important connection with William the Con- queror shows him to have been one of the nobles upon whom the King was accustomed to bestow his favors, as already related. The question now arises as to the present representative of that family, and whether it is not the family to which we have given the name of the "Ipswich Branch." To settle this question, the first resort is to the Coat of Arms used by the family, a particular description and interpretation of which has been given in the last chapter. The teaching or inference derived from this, is that the assumer or progenitor, whose honors and virtues he inherited, was a Crusader, engaged in the Holy War, that there he, by his bravery and virtue, earned the honor of Knighthood, that he was a younger son and thus poor and without inheritance, and that his lineage was not only honorable but ancient. In connection with this fact, it is to be noted that the "arms" itself is of so early date as not to be included in works explanatory of heraldic Ipswich Branch. 37 history, as it antedates the earliest that such history under- takes to explain. At what period of time and in which particular Crusade he served, the evidence does not testify, but the history of the Holy Wars leaves little or no doubt on the subject. The first Crusade, which commenced its march in the last year of the eleventh century, was really the only one that was to any considerable extent patronized by Normans, and the only one indeed in which the English nation was in any great degree engaged, except that in which Richard, Coeur de Lion, served so conspicuously. The first was largely made up of Normans from their native state and England, as well as Italy, where that race had so numer- ously settled. They went, too, under the leadership of their own Duke Robert, son of their new King, William the Conqueror, and brother of his successor William Rufus. The party in question being thus a Norman, in the days when clanship prevailed over every other con- ceivable motive and prompter to action, there can be no reasonable doubt that he went in that company, where alone he could find true and natural companionship. The Crusade service was a volunteer one and, in those days, no relation of friendship, or even of humanity, prevailed outside of one's own kinship or race, and especially be- yond the limits of a common dialect and habits of life. It was as it may be in the distant future, when the ques- tion may be asked with reference to any particular white man or Indian, on which side he served in the wars of the States against the Aborigines. The conclusion is clear and inevitable, that the progenitor in question must have served in that Crusade, which Robert the Duke led, and which was undertaken A. D. 1099. 38 Paine Genealogy. This conclusion is strongly corroborated by the fact, so noticeable in the history of those times, of the names given to the children in the successive generations which followed the events related. Allusion has already been made to the fact that surnames were first adopted in Nor- mandy and England about the time of the Norman Con- quest, which was but a few years before the first Crusade took place. The adoption of surnames is only another expression for the use of what we call Christian names, and the rules of adoption are very simple and intelligible, not only from what one's reason teaches, but also from what we learn from history. The name of "Pay en." being adopted as a surname, for reasons already related, no prefix or Christian name could be so natural as that of the Conqueror, whose fortune they had followed in the war, or that of the Duke, who led them in victory to the Holy Places. This readily explains the striking fact, that the names of William and Robert were most commonly used, and were constantly found in the family in question, down to the time of emigration and several generations afterwards. From what has already been advanced, it is quite ap- parent that, whoever the person may have been whose valor and virtue are signalized by the Coat of Arms of the family, he served in the first Crusade in which Hugh also served. The Coat of Arms presents him as a younger son, and bv reason thereof poor, or without inheritance, thus like Hugh, having Edmund, his elder brother, the inheritor of all his father's estate. "The banner and seal of the Order of Knights Templar bore a cross gules, on a field argent." The family Coat of Arms spoken of represents the assumer or his progen- itor to be a knight^ and contains also the two indications Ipswich JB ranch. 39 thus on the Templar's banner, showing quite conclusively that he was one who had a right to Templar fame. All these facts, with the additional one of identity of name, would seem to fix, almost beyond doubt, the identity of person. The story, simply otherwise told, is that two men of the same name, both Normans and both poor, by reason of being younger sons and thus without inheritance, both Templars, shared in the same Crusade the honor of Knighthood for valor and virtue exercised, and both, necessarily from the nature of things, alike nobly con- nected by blood or other relationship. It is more natural to suppose them to be one and the same person rather than two. But what makes the conclusion all the more certain is the fact, that, in the compilation of "all the known crests of Great Britain and Ireland," by Fairbairns, in which twenty-six different ones are given to the name of "Payne," only one has the sign of Crusade service upon it, being that of the family in question, or of Leices- ter and Suffolk Counties ; the sign being that of a cross formed by five bezants saltier, thus establishing, by neg- ative proof, what is often the strongest kind of the affirm- ative, according to the old legal maxim : Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. This conclusion has more weight from the fact that Hugh's prominence as a Crusader, and as founder of the order of Knights Templar, would very naturally make his virtues to be greatly sought for by all his heirs who had a right to claim and use them on their Coats of Arms. So brilliant a prize could not have been overlooked or disregarded in such an age, for such a purpose. That "order" maintained its existence and immense popularity for about 200 years, until the I4th century, when Coats of Arms were introduced with such general favor. Under 40 Paine Genealogy. such circumstances, Hugh's virtues would be grasped and appropriated with greatest avidity by his heirs who had the only right. We can scarcely conceive of one, having so rich an heir-loom at his command, allowing it to be thrown away or neglected. More readily would such heirs have abandoned the richest pecuniarv inheritance. But, as has just been shown, such abandonment must have been suffered, unless the Coat of Anns in question was the one which was adopted, for none other exists having upon it the particularly desirable indications of Crusade service and Templar fame. It is not supposed that the Coat of Arms was that of Hugh de Payen himself, for he died before Coats of Arms were adopted in England, but only that the assumer was of his lineage, none other having a right to assume his characteristics save his heirs, these being, as a sacred heir-loom, their title alone. Some one or two centuries passed before such Coats of Arms were adopted, and. very shortly after that, we find that of "Leicester and Suffolk Counties" used by the progenitor of the Ipswich Branch, then living at Market Bosworth in the county first named. A marked characteristic of this is the three martlets sable, indicating antiquity of lineage by its sable or black color. As the qualities, which earned the coat at all. were gained by Crusade service, and Hugh was in the first, no more ancient lineage could have been indi- cated, while we are almost, as it were, forbidden the right of ascribing a later period for earning the reputation of "Antiquity" Ipswich Branch. 41 CHAPTER IX. The Family Litieage. r I ^HE first definite information which we have of the 1 lineage of the family in question, besides what has already been written, is that which we find in the "Visi- tation of Suffolk County," a work originally compiled in 1561, but afterwards extended, at two or three different times, within the next century. This work was afterwards supplemented by Gage in his "History of Suffolk County," both works treating quite fully of the family in question. These writers both describe the family as resident in Leicestershire, upon the famous field of Bosworth where the last great battle of the Roses was fought, and the fate of the Houses of York and Lancaster decided by the death of Richard III., on Aug. 22, 1485. Though gen- erally known as "Bosworth," the more accurate name of the place was "Market Bosworth." situate in Leicester County, near the central point of the Kingdom, being one of the places where Pagen^ of Domesday fame, had land. The identity of lineage is made certain by the continued use made of the same Coat of Arms by the family at Bosworth, and afterwards in Suffolk County, and by the original American families for two generations after emigration. 43 Paine Genealogy. GENERATION I. Sir Thomas Payne* Knight. 1. Beginning with the history of the family as pre- sented in the "Visitation," we have first in the list, the name of SIR THOMAS PAYNE, KNIGHT, of Market Bos- worth, who married Margaret, daughter of Sir Thomas Pultney, Knight, the ancestor of William Pultney, Earl of Bath, the celebrated statesman, who actetl so import- ant a part, first as Minister of War, and afterwards as Premier of England in the early part of the last century. The dates of Sir Thomas' birth, or death, are neither of them given, but the dates at which his descendants came upon the stage of active life, show that he must have been born in the early part of the fifteenth century. He had three sons : 2. Robert. 3. William. 4. Edmund. The dates of their births are neither of them given, but the record shows the younger of the three alive in the 32d year of Henry VIII., or A. D. 1540, at which time he had a grandson, then a rich and active man, as will be more apparent in what follows. This fact would seem to establish the birth of Sir Thomas, the great-grandfather of a wealthy business man, according to the usual average of life and birth, at, or nearly as early as, the year 1400. What became of the two elder sons of Sir Thomas is not recorded, which shows conclusively that neither of them removed to Sufiblk County, and as no mention is made of them in the "Visitation of Leicestershire," it is equally clear that they did not remain there and have progeny. In the "Visitation of Huntingdonshire," an Ipswich Branch. 43 adjoining county, the genealogy of a "Robert Payne" is given, the particulars of which would seem to establish identity with Robert, the son of Thomas, except that his Coat of Arms was not identical. As different sons often did adopt different coats from their father, this fact alone does not disprove the identity. This family was generally set- tled at St. Neot's, a place but little remote from the place where Edmund's family resided, in and about St. Ed- mundsbury and Nowton in the County of Suffolk. Just here it may be appropriate to call attention to the peculiar naming of these three sons, as the names used often afford a most important clew to the family genealogy. The frequent recurrence of the names of William and Robert in the line, and the reason of it, have already been spoken of. The name of Edmund thus found in the first family of which we have mention, most naturally carries us back to Edmund, the son of Pagen, whom we have ventured to credit as the elder brother of Hugh, and also the ancestor of the family in question. The proof is not conclusive, but for those days it was a coincidence of no small force as evidence. GENERATION II. (4.) EDMUND PAYNE, youngest son of Sir Thomas(i), alive in 32d of Henry VIII., or A. D. 1540, married Elizabeth the daughter of Robert Walton, of Leicester County, and had several sons. His place of residence was undoubtedly that of his birth, at Bosworth. Among his sons were : 5. William Payne, the eldest of them all and his heir. GENERATION III. (5.) WILLIAM PAYNE, son of Edmund (4) and his heir, grandson of Sir Thomas (i), removed to Suffolk County, and took up his residence at Hengrave in that 44 Paine Genealogy. county- Carrying with him the use of his grandfather's Coat of Arms, this came thenceforth, in heraldic history to he known as the ''Coat and Crest of Leicester Countv. and Suffolk County," and is especially known as belonging to "Payne of Hengrave." He was a man of much note and importance in his day, being in the service of Edward Stafford, Duke of Buckingham, as bailiff of his Manor of Hengrave. In 1521, the Duke having been convicted of conspiring against King Henry VIII. to establish him- self in power, as his successor, was, by order of the King, put to death. The office thus becoming vacant by the death of the Duke, Payne lost his place as deputy, and was obliged to retire to private life. The Duke's suc- cessor, however, appointed Payne's son to the office held by the father, as will be mentioned in his history. Payne married Margerv daughter of Thomas Ash. by whom he had twelve children : 6. Henry, who never married. 7. yohn. who married, and his widow married Win. James. 8. Thomas. 9. George. 10. Nicholas, who married Ann Howies of Haldock. 1 1. JZJward, who married. 12. Ant/tony, who married Martha Castell. 13. Agatha, who married John Pratt. 14. Elizabeth, who married Oliver Sparrow. 1 5 . Agnes. 16. Anna. 17. Prances. GENERATION IV. (6.) HENRY PAINE, son of William (5). grandson of Edmund (4), and great-grandson of Sir Thomas (i), Ifs-wich Branch. 45 came to reside in Bury St. Edmunds, in the County of Suffolk. He was a lawyer by profession, a member of Lincoln's Inn, Esquire. During his life it was that Henry VIII. dissolved so large a part of the Catholic monas- teries of England, and seized upon their effects, converting them to his own use and purposes. In the 37th year of that King's reign, A. D. 1546, Paine purchased of the Crown and received a grant in fee of the Manor of Nowton, the advowson of the church and the hereditaments in Nowton belonging to the dissolved monastery of St. Ed- mund, one of the most celebrated monasteries in the Kingdom. He also purchased the Grange in Thorpe Riggnoll, in the County of York, parcel of the lands of the Priori of Worksop. For the grants he paid to the Crown, as consideration, the sum of 647 i8.y. 2v John, born in 1632. married Sarah Parker. 56. Daniel, born in 1635, died without issue. (43.) ROBKRT PAIXE, the younger brother of Wil- liam (42), was born in Suffolk County, England, in 1601, married Ann, daughter of John Whiting, of Hadleigh, in same County, and with her emigrated to America, in about the year 1640. He settled in Ipswich, and as has been already stated, was one of the persons to whom the Legislature made a grant of land "with leave to settle a village there." He was admitted "freeman" June 2, 1641, and continued to live there until his death. His wife Ann having died, he married a second wife. Dorcas , whom he survived two or three years. He was a man of much usefulness and importance in his dav, and one who was almost constantly called to the performance of public and private trusts. Being like his brother, a man of good estate, he was liberal in its use, and thus made himself to be regarded as a public benefactor as well as a useful citizen. To such an extent was this the case, that the local historian of the time wrote of him as a "right Godly man, and one whose estate hath holpen on well the work of this little Com- monwealth." He sustained the principal offices of the Ipswich Branch. 75 town, was one of its original corporators, and feoffee of the Free or Grammar school, towards the establish-, ment and endowment of which, with his brother, he was a most liberal and active party. He was the ruling elder in the first church of the place, and as the historian of Ipswich relates, "his profession and office were adorned by a life of active, exemplary usefulness." In 1647, 8 and 9, he was deputy to the General Court as the representative of his town, was on the committee of trade for Essex in 1655, and held the office of countv treasurer from 1665 until he resigned just before his death in 1683. In furtherance of the Free School, besides his pecuni- ary donations, he gave the use of a dwelling-house and two acres of land to its master in 1652 or 3, and after his death his son Robert and wife gave the property outright to the town for the use of the school. It has ever since remained the town's property for that use until 1880, when it was sold and the fund invested for the same purpose. Gage says of him : "He had a good estate and was lib- eral in the use of it." He died in 1684, at the age of 83 years, leaving two sons, both born in Ipswich. 57. John. 58. Robert. (44.) ELIZABETH PAINE, sister of William and Robert, (42,43,) married William Hammond, who emigrated to America in 1632 and was admitted freeman May 25,1636. His wife followed him in 1634. in the ship Francis, she being then 47 years old. "He is related to have had a good estate," and settled in Ipswich where descendants of theirs may still be found. He died Oct. 8, 1662. aged 94 vears. Thev had five children, viz : 76 Paine Genealogy. 59. Will lam Hammond* baptized Sept. 20. 1607. 60. Ann, baptized Nov. 19, 1609, and died soon. 61. John* baptized Dec. 5, 1611. 62. Ann, baptized July 14, 1616. 63. Thomas, baptized Sept. 17, 1618^ (4v) DOROTHY PAINE, another sister of William and Robert, married Dr. Simon Eyre, and came over together, with William in the "Increase," which sailed from London, April 15. 1635. He was a surgeon by pro- fession, of much eminence in his day, and was a man largely trusted for his probity and good business habits. He settled in Watertown. and was made freeman April 17. 1637; represented his town in the State Legislature in 1641 ; was a selectman from 1636 to 1643, and town clerk from 1641 101645. lie afterwards moved to Boston where his wife died Aug. n, 1650. They had children born in England as follows : Afary aged 15 at emigra- tion ; Thomas, 13 ; Simon. 1 1 ; Rebecca, 9 ; Christian, 7 ; Ann, 5 ; Benjamin. 3 : Sarah, 3 months. Besides, they had born in America, Jonathan, March 20, 1638. Dorothy, June 14, 1640. (64 to 69.) (46.) PIIKBK PAIXK, a third sister of William and Robert, married John Page, and came over with their two children in ship with Gov. Winthrop in 1630. lie took the oath of fidelity the same year. Settled in Water- town, and was first constable of the town, made so by the Court. Sept., 1630. His house was burnt April 21. 1631. Gage speaks of his "wife and two children whose sufferings the first winter were duly thought of by his former min- ister, blessed John Rogers." He died Dec. 18, 1676, at the age of about 90. and his wife. Sept. 25, 1677, aged 87, both at Watertown, where thev lived ever after their im- Ipsivich Branch. 77 migration. Their children were William, (?) John. Samuel, Daniel, Elizabeth, 3Iary, Phebe, and Joseph. (70 to 75.) 78 Paine Genealogy, CHAPTER XII. GENERATION II. HANNAH PAINE, (54), daughter of William (42), married Samuel Appleton, the ancestor of the extensive family of that name. She died leaving three children, after which her husband married Mary Oliver, from of whom descended the whole race of their descend- ants, now bearing the Appleton name. Hannah's three children were as follows : 76. Hannah* who married VVm. Dowries, and died leaving an only child, a daughter. 77. Judith, who married Samuel Wolcott. of Windsor, Conn., and had eight children ; Samuel, Josiah. Hannah* Sarah. Lucy. Abigail. Elizabeth and Mary. 78. Samuel, who married Eli/abeth Whittington, a descendant of John Calvin's sister, by whom he had a son Samuel, and two daughters, Hannah and Martha. This Samuel married John Gerrish's daughter Anna, and died in 1728, leaving an only child. Samuel, who died young and without issue. Hannah married Wm. Clark in 1705. and Martha married Joseph Wise in 1708. The Paine-Appleton line thus became extinct in name. John Paine. (55.) JOHN PAINE, son of William (42), was born in England, in 1632. and came to America with his fathvr at the age of three years, and made a part of his father's family at Watertown and Ipswich. lie married Sarah Ipswich Branch. 79 Parker, daughter of Richard Parker, in 1659, and took up his residence in Boston. The various enterprises, in which his father was engaged at death, he continued, and especially his mills at Watertown, Iron Works at Lynn, trade at Boston and Portsmouth, and that of the "Free Adventurers" in Western Massachusetts. He was also interested in business at Ipswich, and at Dover and Exeter. He appears to have been a man of great business capac- ity and enterprise. Just prior to his father's death, the Legislature had, upon his and others' petition, ordered negotiations entered into with the Dutch government, for the purpose of securing the free navigation of the Hudson river, by Fort Aurania, and thence to the ocean. Soon after his father's death, John Paine appeared at New York for that purpose, as also to adjust the southern boundary of the Colony. The Dutch having about that time been conquered at home, the result was that they evacuated New York, and of course the English succeeded to the right of free naviga- tion, without conflict. In recognition of his services in these different trusts, and especially of "the great pains taken by him," a grant of land was made to Mr. Paine by the Legislature in 1672. ten miles square, in the neigh- borhood of the "Free Adventurers." and another in 1673, extending the grant to Hudson river. On May 12, 1675, an additional grant of 1800 acres was made, and soon after still another of 4000. the latter being expressly in consideration of "the great services in running out our south line," for which duty he had previously been ap- pointed by the Legislature. The first of these grants was made on condition "that he should settle twenty families on the territory, and then procure and maintain a Godly and Orthodox ministry there." So Paine Genealogy. PRUDENCE ISLAND OR ''SopHv MANOR." While thus in New York, in 1671, he became inti- mately acquainted with Gov. Lovelace, who had just then, on the retirement of the Dutch, assumed the governorship of the Colony, under appointment from King Charles II., and was then engaged in the erection or "re-edifying" of Fort James, situated "at the point of land formed by the Hudson river and the Sound." This was at the foot of Broadway, at or near the spot now known as ''Bowling Green." Previous to this time, as a wedding gift, his wife's father, Richard Parker, had conveyed to Paine a tract of land containing about 700 acres at the north end of Prudence Island, situate in Xarragansett bay, near Providence. R. I., which gave him an interest therein, and led to the following very romantic history. But for the indubitable proof of its accuracy, it might be regarded as a tale of fiction. The historian of Rhode Island briefly relates the leading facts, but the particulars and the identity of the principal actor have never before been fully established, though often attempted. A careful investigation, however, has brought out both the facts and the actor into full light. After the conveyance by Richard Parker to Paine as already mentioned, upon the occasion of his marriage, the latter had mortgaged the same lands to Samuel Ap- pleton to secure the .1500 legacy made in his father's will to the Appleton grandchildren, and still later he had also made a conveyance of the same property in trust for the benefit of his own three daughters according to the verbal agreement made at the time of the wedding gift. The intimacy which grew up between (joy. Lovelace and Paine, led the latter to aid in the erection of the fort already mentioned, and also to its furnishing, by advanc- Ipswich BrancJi. Si ing the necessary means out of his own private resources. By this act of munificence, he so far won the favor of the Governor and the Duke of York, afterwards King James II., that a patent or "confirmation " was made by them to him of the island named, to be held in fee as a Free Manor by the name of "Sophy Manor" forever. The patent was made subject to the annual quit-rent of "two barrells of syder and six couple of capons." This was in August, 1672. The following week, Paine was made Governor of the island for life, with a council to be chosen from the inhabitants, and courts of limited juris- diction and a regular constitution of government was ordained and promulgated for the people, one article of which asserted the principle of religious freedom, as then understood. On account of further payments made to- wards finishing the fort, he was released from the quit- rent and the island relieved from taxes. This latter was more particularly granted in consideration "that the said island lying so remote from any fortified place within the Duke's territories, so that they cannot expect any sudden aid or relief, but must depend upon their own capacities, as well relating to men, as all other warlike provisions for their defense against foreign invasions, or disturbance by the natives at home." The island was thus held bv him in fee and as an absolutely independent state, the smallest in America, being about six miles long and one broad. His commission as Governor for life was soon after confirmed. The "Patent" and "Commission" thus granted are now on file in manuscript in the Capitol at Albanv. Their curi- ous and interesting character renders their publication here, from copies obtained for the purpose, as peculiarlv appro- priate, and important to a fuH understanding of the history. Sz Paine Genealogy. A Patent or Confirmacon of Prudence Island Graunted unto M. r John Paine. Francis Lovelace Esq. one of ye Gentlemen of his Ma tt * Hon b . u Privy Chamber & Governour Gen r ." under his Royall Highness James Duke of Yorke & Albany &c : of all his Territoryes in America, To all to whom these Presents shall come, sendcth Greeting : Whereas there is a certaine Island scituate lying & being in Narhygansett Bay comonly called and known bv the Indyan Name of Chebatevvesett & ye English Name of Prudence Island, which Stretcheth itselfe Lengthwise, nearest North and South in the said Bay, w"! 1 said Island was heretofore purchased for a valuable consideracon of the Sachems of the Narhigansett & other Indyans, true Proprieto thereof, by the Predecesso? of Air John Paine & himselfe, in the Pos- session and Occupation of whom it hath Continued for the space of Thirty Years & upwards & soe doth still re- maine And the said Island having Received an Addi- ti on a 11 Improvement by the means and encouragement of the said Jn? Paine in Selling Severall ffamilyes there- upon, being also Capable of receiving more, wf h said Island hath not hitherto been legally or Certainly under the Gov- ernmen 1 or Direction of any of his Ma u . e> Colonyes, but the Proprieto? thereof have kept themselves intire, without any such dependency untill this time that the p'sent Pro- prietor doth suppose upon the Increase of People there, it will bee requisite to have some forme of Lawes amongst them & that y* said Island should depend upon some Certaine Government for Protection, y c said p'esent Proprietor John Paine having been made acquainted, that the said Island, Together w'! 1 manv other Islands in those Parts, are included in his Royall Highness his Gen r ." Pa- tent from his Ma** as by a Commission under the Great Seale of England appeares, and is expressed in these & other inclusive Words. And also all those Severall Is- lands called and knowne by the Name of Martins Vine- yard and Nantukes otherwise Nantukett, Together w 1 ! 1 all the Lands,Islands,Soyles, Rivers, Harbo?&c. doth properly Ipswich Branch. 83 belong to this Province, the w c . h is likewise the Desire of the said John Paine that the said Island and Inhabitants should bee Govern'd & bee under the Protection of his Royall Highness, the w ch I have thought fitt and reason- able to Grant Now for a Confirmacon unto him the said John Paine, in his Possession and Enjoyment of the said Island and Premisses ; Know Yee, that by virtue of the Commission and Authority unto mee given, by his Royall Highness, upon whom as -well by the Resignation and Assign- ment of the Heyres of William Earle of Sterling, as also by Grant & Patent from his Royall Ma Ue Charles the second, y e Propriety & Govern m l of Long Island Mar- tins Vineyard & Nantuckett together with all those Lands & Islands amongst other things is settled, I have given & Granted & by these Presents doe hereby Give, Ratify Confirme & Grant unto y e said John Paine, his Heyres & Assignes forever, the said Island called Chebateweset or Prudence Island & Premisses, to bee Erected into a Manno r & y e Plantacons & Dwellings thereupon for the future, to bee called & known by the Name of Sophy Mannor together with all y e Lands, Islands, with their Beaches or fflntts to the lowest Refluse or Ebbing of the Tydes, w th the Soyles, Woods, Meadows, Pastures, Qiiar- reys. Mines, Mineralls, (Mines Royall excepted) Marshes, Lakes, Waters, ffishing, Hawking, Hunting & ftbwling within the Bounds & Lymitts of the said Island & Prem- isses Contained & being as above expressed : And all other Proffitts. Commodityes, Emoluments & Heraedita- ments thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining To bee holden according to the Manno r of East Green- wich in the County of Kent in England, in Free & Com- mon Soccage & by ftcalty only, and the said Mannor of Sophy shall be held, deemed, reputed, taken & bee an en- tire Enfranchised Manno r of itselfe & shall allwayes. from time to time have hold and Enjoy like & equall Priveledges with any Mannof within the Government ; and shall in noe Manner or anywise bee under the Rule, Order or Direction of any other Place, but in all Matt 115 of Governm! shall bee 84 Paine Genealogy. Ruled, Ordered & Directed by the Governo r & his Conn- cell or the Court of Assizes only, according to the Instruc- tions, Directions & Priveledges herewith Given and Granted for the Governm* of that Island, to y 6 Good & Welfare of the Proprietor or Proprietor* together with the Inhabitants thereof. To have and to hold the said Island with all and Sin- gular the Appertenances & Premises, together w* the Priveledges, Immunities, ffranchizes & Advantages herein Given & Graunted unto the said John Paine his I ley res & Assignes unto the Proper use behoofe & Benefitt of him, the said John Paine, his Heyres & Assignes forever, in tfee Simple, as a Lawfull Inheritance forever, fully, freely and clearly in as Large and ample manner & forme & with' such full and absolute Immunityes & Priveledges, as before is exprest & as if hee had the same immediately from his Ma a . e the King of England or his Successo ; Yielding, Rendring & Paying yearly and every yeare unto his Royall Highness, the Duke of Yorke & his Heyres or Successo? or to such Governo r> or Governo?as from time to time shall bee by him Constituted and Ap- pointed, as a Qiiitt Rent, the Quantity of two Barrells of Syder & six Couple of Capons. Given under my Hand & Sealed with the Seale of the Province, at fforte James in New Yorke, this 25 th day of July in the 24* Year of the Reigne of our Soveraigne Lord Charles the Second of England, Scotland, rtrancc Ireland. King, Defender of the flaith &c : Annoq Dom- ini 1672. (Seal.) FRANCIS LOVELACE. Orders & Priveledges for y" Welfare & Good Govern- in 1 of Prudence Island. Francis Lovelace Esq r Sic : Whereas M. r John Paine Ownf Proprietor of a Certaine Island in Xarh vgansett Kay.comonly known by the Indyan name of Chebatewcsett Hi by the English Name of Prudence Island, hath by his Ipsivich Branch^ 85 Predecesso and himselfe, Purchased the said Island of the true Indyan Proprieto? and Possessed & improved the same for above thirty years, settling diverse ffamilyes there- upon, at his Great Expence & charges, which yet is capa- ble of receiving more, and hath, out of his Good Inclinacon and affection to promote & Augment his Royall Highness (the Duke of York's) Interest in these his Territoryes, in America, not only Submitted the same under the Dukes Protection and Government, within whose Generall Pa- tent the said Island is Comprized, but hath advanced & Paid towards the Support of the said Government, by Supplyes of Sundry Natures towards the Re-edifying of ftbrte James in New York, (particularly of Powder to recruit the Store of the said fforte) to a valluable Consid- eracon, in these times of Warr abroad ; Now know yee that, by virtue of the commission & author- itv unto mee given by his Royall Highness, I have, for & in respect to the Consicleracons before exprest, and for diverse other Reasons mee there unto especially moving, as also for the better Assurance of the said John Paine, in his quiet Possession and -Enjoyment of the said Island, called Prudence Island & Premisses, Given & Granted unto the said Jn Paine my Patent of Confirmaeon for the same And withall doe give and grant unto him the said John Paine, his Heyres and Assignes, for the Regulations of all Affayres thereupon, these ensueing Orders & Priveledges Viz.* 1. Inprimis : That the said John Paine as Owner and Proprietor of the said Chebatewesett or Prudence Island shall and may Peaceably Possess enjoy and improve y e same, with all its Premisses and Appertenances, as his ftree Inheritance to the only proper use, behoofe and Benefitt of him the said John Paine his Heyres & assignes forever, as in the Patent is exprest, of w ch said Island hee is to cause a Survey to bee made and a Platt thereof, contain- ing the quantity of Ground, to bee sent hither. 2. That hee the said John Paine is & for his Lifetime shall be Governo r under his Royall Highness and Chief 86 Paine Genealogy. in Power, in and over the said Island, both in Attayres Civill & Military & in all Votes shall have the Decisive or Casting Voice. 3. That y* said John Paine in Case of his Absence at any time from the said Island, about his other ArTayres, shall have and hereby hath Power to Constitute and Ap- point a Deputy in his Place and Stead. 4. That y' said Governo' together \v th the Inhabitants of the said Isl* shall have and hereby hath Power to make choice of two or three Assistants, & also inferiour Offic both Civill fc Military, \v ch Assistants with the Governo' have Power to make and Ordaine such Lawes & Ord as shall bee most Necessary & Suitable to y* Condicon & Constitucon of the Place & will conduce to the Well Governm' of the People, w rh said Lawes & Ord are to bee transmitted unto mee or such other his Royall High- ness his Governo r as shall from time to time bee here, for a Ratification of the same : Provided they bee not Re- pugnant to the Lawes of England nor of this Government. 5. That y Office, there holding Court, shall have &. hereby have Power to hearc & Determine any Action or Cause of Debt, Damage, Trespass or any other matter or thing whatsoever, arising or happening upon the said Island, that shall not exceed fiftv Pounds, without Appeale and have also the Power of Pillory, Whipping. Stocks son of Robert, Sen., (43), was also born at Ipswich ; graduated at Harvard Univer- sity in the class of 1656, and studied for the ministry. Whether or not he actually practiced his profession does not certainly appear, but Felt speaks of him as "a preach- er." On July 10, 1666, he married Elizabeth Reiner. By her he had four children, viz. ; Elizabeth, born June 15, 1677, married Daniel Smith, and died 1717 ; John, born Oct. 24, 1684; Robert, who died Dec. 24, 1693, and Dorcas, who married Matthew Whipple, son of Lt. Col. John Whipple. No children are spoken of as born to either. Mr. Paine was distinguished as the foreman of the Grand Jury that found all the indictments for witchcraft at Salem, though we have reason to believe that he was not an active prosecutor of the accused, or if at any time he was so, he changed his mind before his death and took measures to allay the delusion. 94 Paine Genealogy. Upham, in his ''History of Witchcraft," relates that in 1692, chief among the causes or influences which finally- led to the breaking up of the witchcraft excitement, was a favorable letter written to Jonathan Convin, a man and judge who had much to do yvith the administration of justice at the time. The letter had great yveight in opening the eyes of those who read it, to the enormous wrongs suffered by the community from this cause. The argument is certainly most able and ingenious, showing a mind of great strength and culture worthy of an age and time centuries later. The original document is still preserved by the "Essex Institute," at Salem, and a copy of it is published by Mr. Upham in his history noyv re- ferred to. It bears the initals of "R. P." as its author, and underneath this signature, in another handwriting, is written the name of "Robert Paine." Just when this name was written is not known, but it has been long there, probably ever since the letter has had a public ob- servation. The authorship of Mr. Paine, however, is denied by the friends of Robert Pike who lived in the neighboring town of Salisbury, where it bears date. Mr. Upham enters at great length into a discussion of the matter, and sides yvith Mr. Pike, though admitting that it bears internal evidence "of a theological education, and a familiarity yvith matters that belong to the studies of a minister," yvhich Mr. Paine was and Mr. Pike yvas not. "Whoever was its author." says Mr. Upham. "he did his duty nobly, and stands alone above all the scholars and educated men of his time in bearing testimony openly, bravely, in the very ears of the Court, against the dis- graceful and shocking course they were pursuing." 1 It- adds, "if composed by him it is truly a marvelous pro- duction, an intellectual phenomenon not easily to be Ipswich Branch. 95 paralleled." The fact of Mr. Paine's having been foreman of the jury as above related, is taken as evidence conclusive by Mr. Upham of his not being the author. But to this view, there is certainly another side leading to an oppo- site conclusion. Such a mind as his, educated for the gospel ministry, and so constantly brought in closest inti- macy with the accused and accusers, could not, it would seem, fail to be convinced of the truth, and at the same time of his duty to work out a correction. Mr. Pike was a militarv man, wearing the title of "Major," a fact which very properly comes into consid- eration in such a case, especially when the contestant for the prize is an educated man, as there is no evidence that Mr. Pike was, and admitted to be of a theological turn, such as the composition indicates. The internal evidence, afforded by the writing, is very strongly in favor of him, whose name is annexed to it, and the conclusion is sup- ported by all the facts, that the interpretation given to "R. P." was by one who knew, and knowing made his knowledge practical in the way he did. It certainly de- tracts much from the weight of Mr. Upham's conclusion, that his reasoning is wholly against Robert Paine, Sen., the father and not the son, he not being aware, as was the fact, that the father had been dead several years before the letter was written. This change of person, introduc- ing the son instead of the father as a competitor with Mr. Pike, thus a vounger man, educated for the ministry, as the document evidences its author to be, the conclusion can hardly be resisted that Robert Paine and not Robert Pike was the writer of the article in question, as the paper itself witnesses. Paine Genealogy. CHAPTER XIII. GENERATION III. WILLIAM PAINE, (79). son of John (55), was born, probably at Boston, March 15, 1664; mar- ried Ruth Grover. March 9, 1691, who was born in 1667. He removed to Maiden where the records show him to be living during all his manhood. His wife died April n, 1722. at the age of 55^ years. He died April 14. 1741. at the age of 77. No administration seems to have been taken out on his estate. They had two children : 83. William^ born (probably) Nov. 16. 1692. 84. Jo/in, born 1701. GENERATION IV. (83.) WILLIAM PAINE, son of William and Ruth (79), was born at Maiden, Nov. 16. 1692, and died Jan. 29, 1784, at the age of 92 years, though there is some doubt about the day of his birth. He had, at least, the reputation of being much older than that, some stories giving him as long a life as 105 years. The dates of his birth and death, as now given, are those which are the most reliable. He was a man of great vigor of mind, strong constitution, obstinate and determined, and a devoted friend of freedom. Many stories are told of him in con- nection with these traits of character. At the time that Washington was stationed in front of Boston at the outbreak of the Revolution, on occasion of an alarm, he marched thither with his son and grandsons to volunteer in the service, being then about 83 years old. Ipswich Branch. 97 The old gentleman was introduced to the General, who enquired of him why he had come to camp. "I come," said he, "to encourage my son and grandsons and see that they do their duty to their country." He was born in Maiden, and lived there until after the birth of four children, when he removed into Norton, into that part which was afterwards incorporated into the town of Mansfield. At the time of his removal, the country was new and much infested with wild animals, and queer stories are told of his adventures. On one occasion it is said of him that hearing in the night a pack of wolves howling around his house, he opened the window and fired "his king's arm " into their midst. An increased howl was the consequence and the morning revealed the strange fact, that fourteen dead wolves were found lying around the premises. Not, as is added, that his one shot had been so fatal, but that the wounded ones, in their rage, added largely to the number of the dead. The story, though probably somewhat exaggerated, yet has enough of truth undoubtedly in it, to give some idea of the state of the country at the time, and the dangers which our fathers had to encounter, even in the immediate neigh- borhood of Boston. He was twice married. His first wife was Tabitha Waite, whose birth took place in 1692, marriage, April 18, i7 J 7i an d who died April 7, 1721, at the early age of 29 years, leaving an only son : 85. William Paine, born June 26, 1720. He married for his second wife the widow Elizabeth Sweetsir, on Nov. 6, 1722, at Maiden, by whom he had five children : 86. Elizabeth, born in 1723, married Dea. Benjamin Williams. 7 98 Paine Genealogy. 87. Edward, born in 1724. 88. Thomas, born in 1726, March 27. and died young. 89. Ruth, who married Eleazer Fisher. 90. Susannah, who married Putter. The first three were born in Maiden, and the last two in Norton. (84.) JOHN PAINE, brother of the next preceding, was born in 1701, married Abigail , 1724, and died Feb. 25, 1753. They had five children, as follows: 91. John, born Dec. 15, 1726, -died in a few weeks. 92. Abigail, born Feb. 17, 1728, died Aug. 2, 1738. 93. Hannah, born Jan. 23, 1731, died August 10, 1738. 94. Rachch born Feb. 14, 1737-8. 95- Jacob, born July 7, 1743, died Aug. 13, 1775. GENERATION V. (85.) WILLIAM PAINE, son of William andTabitha, (83), the only child of his mother, was born at Maiden. June 26, 1720, and married Mary Bull, of Foxboro. in 1743. He was a man of astonishing industry and perse- verance, of great firmness and independence, xealous in religious matters and loyal to the cause of freedom. With his aged father and two or three of his own sons, he vol- unteered to march to Boston at the outbreak of the war, and during the war, it is said, several of his sons, at one time or another, were found engaged in it. His wife, too, is represented as a "woman of remarkable strength of mind as well as of body, strong mental! v and phvsic- ally, strong in her friendships and strong in her prejudices, a very good woman, and very useful in the neighborhood. She was looked up to as a woman of superior judgment, but somewhat of a tyrant, of great personal industry, and yet a great reader. Her personal appearance was pre- Ipswich Branch. 99 possessing and impressive and her eyes brilliant and sparkling to the last." Many stories are told of the husband, which go to characterize him as a member of society. When the bass-viol was introduced into the choir of the church, where he attended, he would go out, whenever it was played. "He would not sit still and hear the fiddle scraped in the house of God." It was related of him that he once bought a farm while the Continental currency was in circulation and gave his notes payable in it. When his notes matured, the bills had become, not only greatly depreciated, but at last, almost worthless. Still he kept his promise "to the letter" and paid as he had agreed. "He eyed the hand of Provi- dence in the depreciation of the paper money." "He did more," writes a correspondent, "with his own hands, to make the wilderness blossom as the rose, than any other man in town," and notwithstanding his extreme old age, he continued to work till within a few days of his death. He died suddenly July 17, 1811, his wife having preceded him to the grave only a few months before, in Feb., 1810, after having lived together in mar- ried life 67 years. He died at the age of 94. They had 1 2 children : 96. William, born Nov. 13, i743? married late in life a lady of nearly his own age and died without issue. 97. Mary, born June 10, 1745, and died in infancy. 98. John, born Aug. 20, 1746- 99. Lemuel, born April 4, 1 748. 100. Jacob, born Feb. 7? I 75- 101. James, born Sept. 30, 1751. 1 02. Mary, born May 8, 1753- 103. Ablel, born Nov. 20, 1754. ioo Paine Genealogy. 104. Isaac, died in infancy. 105. Asa, born 1758. 1 06. Jcrusha, born March 10. 1760, never married. 107. Hannah, born Aug. 9, 1763, never married. (87.) EDWARD PAINE, son of William (83) and Elizabeth his second wife, was born at Foxborough, April 18, 1724, married Elizabeth Tiffany, June 24, 1746. and died Jan. 29, 1784, aged 60 years. He lived all his life in Foxboro, nearly all the time on the farm adjoining the town line of Mansfield. They had ten children, as fol- lows : 108. Joseph, married Mary Conner. 109. Joel, married Azubah Williams. no. Enoch, born in 1752. married Thankful Morse. 111. Jemima, married Isaac Richardson. 112. Rachel, married Jacob Grover. 113. Olive, married Amasa Grover. 114. Sally, married - Day. 115. Jesse, b. March 18, 1759. m. Polly Robinson. 116. Edward, born April 8. 1761 m. Abigail Smith. 117. Z,ebediah. married Sarah Richardson. (89.) RUTH PAINE, daughter of William (83) and Elizabeth, married Eleazer Fisher and had three children, daughters, Ruth. Rebecca and Molly, all of whom died unmarried. (95.) JACOH PAINE, son of John (84). was born July 7. 1743. married Sarah Brown. Oct. 12. 1769. and died Aug. 13. 1775. He lived in Maiden and died child- less. Ipswich Branch. 101 CHAPTER XIV. GENERATION VI. JOHN PAINE, (98), son of William, (85), was born at Foxboro, Aug. 20, 1746, married Rhoda Well- man, of Boston, who died in 1842. at the age of 93 years. He died Sept. 25, 1822, at the age of 76, at Marshfield. They had six children, as follows : 118. Sarah, born Jan. 2, 1781. 119. Achsa, born Nov. 2, 1783. 1 20. Jane, born Nov. 2, 1783. 121. Sullivan, born July 27, 1785. 122. Rachel, born July 5, 1790. 123. Eunice, born July 5, 1790. (99.) LEMUEL PAINE, son of William, (85), was born April 4, 1748, married Rachel Carpenter, who was born Jan. 31, 1757, and died Sept., 1828. He died at Foxboro, Dec. 22, 1794. They had seven children, as follows : 124. Lemuel, born Dec. 2, 1777. 125. Otis, born Aug. 26, 1779. 126. Asa, b. July 28, 1781, died in boyhood, at 13 yrs. 127.. Esther, born Oct. 25, 1783. 128. Frederic^ born Nov. 21, 1785. 129. Lucas, born Feb. 28, 1787, died in six hours. 130. Rachel, born Aug. 2, 1789. After the death of Mr. Paine, his widow married for her second husband, DBA. ISAAC PRATT, of Wrentham, May 4, 1797. by whom she had three children : IO2 Paine Genealogy. An infant son who died without a name. 131. Eunice Pratt, who married Willard Plimpton. 132. Amanda, who died unmarried at the age of 22 yrs. Mr. Plimpton died Nov. 5, 1877, at the age of 83 years, leaving four children: Willard P., born May 7. 1821, married Clarissa M. Wright ; Ann Eliza, horn Nov. 10. 1823. married Julius Carroll ; Ellen Maria, horn Feb. 10. 1828, married Henry A. Field and John M. Pcckett, and Frederick Sanford. horn Feb. 22, 1834. married Lucy J. Pratt. (100.) JACOB PAINE, son of William (85), was born at Foxboro, Feb. 7, 1750, married Hannah Morse, June 5, 17^4. He was represented as a man of fine intellect and fond of argument. He had a large family of children, all born in Foxboro, after which he removed, with several of them, to Paris. Oxford Co., Maine. Having resided there a few years, he removed to the neighboring town of Greenwood, where he resided until his death on June 5. 1836, at the age of 86 years. His wife survived until 1848. He was an active business man and sustained a high character for integrity and correctness of life. They had ten children, as follows : 133. Stephen, born Dec. 27, 1776. 134. Mary, b. Jan. 24. 1 778, d. single 1870. see ( 140) . 135. haac. born May 24, 1780. 136. /)a niel, born April, 1782. 137. /)avis, born June, 1784. 138. William, born Sept. 16, 1790. 139. Nathan, born July 14. 1792. 140. Asa M., born Feb. 19, 1794. 141. Turner, born June 20, 1796. 142. Kcziah. born Feb. 19, 1798. Ipswich Branch. 103 (101.) JAMES PAINE, son of William (85), was born at Foxboro, Sept. 30, 1751, married Anna Richards, of Sharon. He died July 24, 1800, at Foxboro, at the age of 49. She died Oct. 20, 1836, act 79. They had three children, all of whom died childless : 143. James, born March 6, 1785. 144. Robert W., born June 30, 1788, died Feb. 3, 1850, unmarried. 145. Abijah, born Oct. 19, 1794, died at the age of 40 years, unmarried. (102.) MARY PAINE, daughter of William (85), was born May 8, 1753, married Amos Boyden, of Fox- boro, and had one child, a daughter. 146. Hannah, who married Roger Sumner. They had one daughter who married John Davenport, of Wil- ton, at the age of 60, where the line ceases. Mr. Boyden married a second wife, Amy Morse, and died Feb. 5, 1823. Hannah, born 1781, died Feb. 4, 1799. Mrs. Davenport, alive in 1879, at the age of So years. (103.) ABIEL PAINE, son of William (85), was born Nov. 30, 1754? married Cynthia Robinson, of Foxboro, and died Jan. 3, 1840, at the age of 86 years. She died Oct. 30, 1826, after which time he lived with his two maiden sisters, (106 and 107), all three of whom arrived at almost four-score and ten years. He was one of tk the boys" that went to the war, and his name was in the list of pensioners, under the general government. He was a man rather small in stature, of great integrity, industrious and active, and a "true Christian." They had seven children, viz. : 147. Cynthia, born Oct. 2=;, 1779. 148. Catharine. 149. Lucinda, born Sept. 5. 1782. 104 Paine Genealogy. 150. Emerson* born Dec. 5, 1786. 151. A polios. 152. Daniel. 153- Zina G. (105.) ASA PAINE, son of William (85), was born Feb. 3, 1757; married Patty Bacon, daughter of Elias Bacon, of Wrentham. Me died May i, 1810, aged 53 years. She died Oct., 1839, at the age of 91 years, having been born Feb. 18, 1747. They had six children : 154. Har-cey* born July 4, 1793. 155. Asa Warren* born Dec. 3, 1795. 156. Elias Bacon* born Dec. 13, 1797. 157. Martha Z 1 ., born June 12, 1799. 158. Joseph Add i son* born May 24. 1802. 159. Nathaniel Ware* born Jan. 3. 1806. ( 1 06 and 107.) JBRUSH A PAINE and HANNAH PAINE, (laughters of William (85), were born at Foxboro, the former March 10, 1760, and the latter Aug. 9, 1763. The former died Jan. 26 1851, at the age of 91 years, and the latter June 18, 1853, at the age of 90 years. Neither of them was ever married, but both of them lived together, in single blessedness, all their long lives, in the same house in which thev were born, and in which they died. During all their lives, the straw business was the great industry of Foxboro, and both earned their livelihood by it, the one in splitting and the other in braiding the article, neither knowing how to practice the other's trade. Though within an hour's ride of Boston by rail, yet neither of them ever enjoyed a sight of the city. "Aunt Jerusha" and "Aunt Hannah" will never be forgotten, during the life of the longest liver of their day, for they were famed for their industry and all Christian graces. fpsivich Branch. 105 (108.) JOSEPH PAINE, son of Edward (87), married Mary Comer, and died March 17, 1787. They had six children : 160. Rhoda, born July 26, 1776. 161. Sally, born May 13, 1778. 162. Joseph, born Nov. 14, 1780. 163. Mary or Polly, born April 7, 1783. 164. Nancy, born Feb. 21, 1785. 165. Submit, born May 31, 1787. (109.) JOEL PAINE, son of Edward (87), married Miss Azubah Williams, of Mansfield, and died about 1807, having had eight children : 1 66. Peddy. 167. Roxalina. 1 68. Betsey, married William Story. 169. Polly. 170. Hosea, born in 1792, and died in 1812, aged 21. 171. Williams. 172. Joel. 173. Nelson. (no.) ENOCH PAINE, son of Edward (87), married Miss Thankful Morse, Nov. 17, 1779, and died Nov. 9, 1822. She died Nov. 5, 1833. Children : 174. Amos, born Sept. 3, 1780. 175. Elizabeth, born Jan. 31, 1782. 176. Isaac, born April 8, 1786. 177. Lois, born Aug. 12, 1791. 178. Esther, born Feb. 23, 1802. (in.) JEMIMA PAINE, daughter of Edward (87), married Isaac Richardson, May 4, 1786, and had four children : 179. Allen Richardson, born Feb. 12, 1789. 1 80. Isaac, io6 Paine Genealogy. 181. Nancy, born Nov. 3, i 796. 182. Fanny, born June 15, 1804. (112.) RACHEL PAINE, daughter of Edward (87), married Gideon Grover, about 1773, and by him had two daughters : 183. Fanny Grover, married Isaac Tiffany. 184. Nancy, married Dea. Samuel Williams. Gideon Grover then died, and Rachel, his widow, married Jabez Grover, in i 780, and by him had two children, and died : 185. Calvin Grover, married Ruth Billings. 1 86. Sally, married Lemuel Starkey. (113.) OLIVE PAINE, daughter of Edward (87), married Amasa Grover, of Foxboro, and had six children : 187. Amasa Grover, born Aug. 9, 1786. 188. Willard P., born April 27, 1789. 189. /V- both of whom died unmarried. 253. Charlotte, \ (124.) LEMUEL PAINE, son of Lemuel (99), was born at Foxboro, Dec. 2, 1777 ; married Nov. 28, 1805, Jane T. Warren, daughter of Judge Warren, of Foxboro, who was the brother of Gen. Warren, of Bunker Hill fame. He graduated at Brown University in 1803, and studied law with David Gilbert, Esq., of Mansfield, and was admitted to the bar in due course. Immediately after his marriage, he removed to Winslow, in the County of Kennebec, Maine, performing his journey thither in a sleigh the whole distance. There he bought a farm which he afterwards cultivated all his life, and at the same time devoted much of his time to the practice of his profession. For a while he was copartner in business with Gen. Ripley, a man who afterwards distinguished himself as an officer in the War of 1812. In this course of life he continued till his death, a man of great industry, remarkable for his scholarship and general intelligence, as also for his genial character and his many virtues. He aided largely in establishing and sustaining the College at Waterville, and was always a firm and active supporter of all educational enterprises within his reach. He held a seat for one term in the Massachusetts Legislature in 1 1 2 Paine Genealogy. 1810. and during the year 1829. was a member of the Executive Council of Maine. Throughout his life he was very generally and frequently employed as arbitre or referee in matters of dispute, and never failed as such to give satisfaction, for his decisions came to be regarded, by both sides, as exact justice, and hence acquiesced in accordingly. His wit was proverbial, and it was one of his agreeable pastimes to set it off in rhyme. On one occasion, he rendered his decision, in a case referred to him, all in verse, including a statement of the case, the argument of counsel, and his decision, with the amount of damages and costs. No objection was made, of course, to its acceptance and performance. He often indulged in this propensity, to express in rhyme his censure of par- ticular acts and persons. Among those now at hand, are the following as specimens : "111 bodes that house however great. However blest with riches ; Where niggard meanness sneaks within. Or Madam wears the breeches." Copy of lines written in the Court House. 1809. "How various are thy ways. Oh. Lord ! To humble human pride We read recorded in thy word. And see exemplified. When Israel's sons too haughty grew. Thou mad'st them Pharaoh's drudges ; To us more culpable than those, Thou givest tools for judges." Being invited to write an appropriate epitaph for the gravestone of a lately deceased neighbor, he at once penned the following : "If Heaven is ple.isud when sinners cease to sin, If Hell is pleased when sinners enter in. If 1 '.in ili is pleased when dies the rebel knave, All three were pleased when D 1 tilled this grave." Branch. 113 He was ever an active politician of the Old Federal School, and "was never ashamed of his party." Of lib- eral Christian views, he gave no one credit for any religious character, further than it was evidenced by sincere acts of a good life. On the I pth of July, 1852, having spent the day act- ively employed in haying, and not returning to supper as usual, he was sought by one of the family, who found him lying in a natural position, but lifeless, upon a bed of hay, with his rake by his side, in the calm sunshine, with no sign of suffering, but as if quietly asleep. His wife sur- vived her husband until April 19, 1860, when she died at the age of 83 years. They had three children : 252. Ebenezer Warren, born Dec. 13. 1808, died July 13, 1830 2^3. Henry William, born Aug. 30. 1810. 254. Edward Augustus, born Nov. 27, 1816. (125.) OTIS PAIXE, son of Lemuel (99), was born at Foxboro, Aug. 26, 1779. He was a man of great inge- nuity and inventive genius. His name is often found among the inventors, in the Patent Office, at Washington. He largely interested himself in perfecting inventions for the application of steam power to machinery. He was quite intimatelv connected with Robert Fulton in that work, but to what extent can not now be determined. In a letter written from New Jersey, to a friend at home, (the last that was ever heard from him) , under date of Jan. i. 1816, he speaks of his invention of a ''steam battery" which, with one Col. Hatch, he "went to Washington with, and which met the approbation of Commodores Decatur. Barney and Perry, and that the celebrated Fulton also approved of it, who agreed to join Col. Hatch in it, but instead went to Government, got $500,000 appropri- 1 1 4 Paine Genealogy. ated for the purpose, and has built one at New York on the same principle, which is now ready for sea, and is highly approved by all." Upon reference to the Patent Office Reports, they show that Fulton, just at that time, secured his patent for the improvement, claimed by Mr. Paine, but how much credit the latter was entitled to, for his part of the invention, will never be known. Soon after that letter was written, all traces of Mr. Pa i ne's whereabouts were lost, and no certain knowledge exists as to his subsequent life or his death. Vague stories are told of his having been married and having children, but no confidence can be placed in any such. , The whole of lire subsequent life is in darkness. Though not blessed with the advantages of a liberal education, he was, by no means, devoid of a literary turn of mind, but exhibited rare traits in that direction. Allu- sion is particularly made to a work published by him in 1813. entitled, ''True and Infernal Friendship." contain- ing 176 pages, 12 mo., being a most severe and bitter satire, in neat pentameter verse, consisting of an allegory, in which the serpent plays a conspicuous part, overcom- ing Eve and her spouse in the garden. ( 1 27.) ESTHER PAINE, daughter of Lemuel (99). was born Oct. 25, 1783, married Jesse Boyden, in 1802. and died May 7. 1863, and had four children : 255. Mary Ann Hoyden, born Dec. !/ 1803. who married Mason White, and had five children : Harriet .I/., born fan. 6. 1825; Mary Ann. born July 10, 1827: Elizabeth M.. born May 30. 1829: Esther 7V., born May 18. 1834. and Ellen //.. born May 15, 1837. all of whom except the first were married. 2^Cy. Ariel .I/., born Aug. 7. 1806, married Caroline S. Freeman. 1844. and had one child. Abief Jesse, born Aug. 25, 1849, died young. Ipswich Branch. n^ 257. Harriet E., married Nathan N. Crocker, Oct. 23, 1832. and had four children : N. Henry Crocker, born Aug. 16, 1833: Ariel B.. born March 18. 1835; Wil- liam B., born Oct. i, 1836. and Harriet J/.. born May 22, 1840, all married except the last. 258. Esther J\f., who died Aug. 5, 1834. ri years old. Mr. Bovden died Dec. 8, 1862, at age of 82 years. (128.) FREDERIC PAINE, son of Lemuel (99), was born Nov. 21, 1785. at Foxboro, Mass., married Abiel Ware, a descendant of old Robert Ware, of Wrentham, on Sept. 21, 1809, and removed to Winslow, Maine, with his brother Lemuel (124), and there resided during the remainder of his life. He was a cooper by trade, but during his whole life, he devoted a large portion of his time to agricultural pursuits. In 1815, he was appointed post-master of Winslow, a place which he held for about 30 years. He was also, for many years, the treasurer of the town. In 1818, the two, with another couple, alone, joined to form a church of the Congregational order, and were both ever afterwards active members of it, and for- ward in every work connected with it. Their house was always open for the entertainment of all ministers, and nothing ever gave them greater pleasure than to entertain them on the old church plan of "free and welcome." They were consequently constant church-goers, their pew being never vacant, and seldom less than full. Storm and cold afforded no excuse for non-attendance, but ever an additional reason for promptness in the opposite direc- tion. Their religion was of a kind free from all bigotry, but liberal in practice and charitable towards all. Mrs. Paine was born at Wrentham, Dec. 6, 1787, and died Jan. 12, 1852. at the age of 64 years. He died on the 1 1 6 Paine Genealogy. i 2th day of March, 1857, at the age of 71 years. They had eight children : 259. Charles Frederic, born June 18. 1810. 260. Albert Ware, born Aug. 16. 1812. 261. Benjamin Cro'vningshicld, b. March 10.1815. 262. Caroline ^fatilt{a, born Nov. 2. 1817. 263. Harriet Nciucll, born Jan. i. 1822. 264. Timothy Otis, born Oct. 13, 1824. 265. Charlotte Elizabeth* born Feb. 13. 1827. 266. Sarah Jane, born Jan. 10, 1830. (130.) RACHEL PAIXE, daughter of Lemuel (99). was born Aug. 2. 1789, married Harvey Partridge, Nov. 6, 1814, and removed to Warwick, Mass.. where they re- sided until death. He died March 28. 1862. and she, Aug. 30. 1858. They had seven children : 267. Jlar-cey Pratt Partridge, born July 28, 1815, married Adclia E. Dering, Feb., 1839, aiu ' second wife, Annie L. Shope, of St. Louis, and had three children : Sarah Adelia. William //., and Ella Agnes. 268. Angclihe* born Jan. 15,1817, died Aug. 26, 1833. 269. Lucas W.. born March 1 1 . 1816. married Martha S. Wheeler, died July i. 1862. 270. Lcvina, born Nov. 30, 1819. married Daniel 1 Icy wood, March 4. 1845, and had four children : Hannah E.. Frances D.. William //. and George /\ 271. Horace, born May 27, 1822. married Martha A. Stratton. and had five children : ycnnv Li ml. Frank Pcircc. Xcllie Rosalie^ Lizzie Lucille and Horace. 272. Amanda Pratt, born Nov. 8, 1824. married Addison Sherwin, died March 24. 1^79. and had five children : Robert Addison. Olivia Amanda, Frederic //.. George II. and Flora Estc/fe. Ipswich Branch. 117 273. Sarah Gilman, born May 19, 1833. died Jan. 2 2, 1834. (133.) STEPHEN PAINE, son of Jacob Paine (100). was born in Foxboro, Dec. 27, 1776, married Abigail Morse, Oct. 16, 1798, who was born May 23, 1781, and died in 1857. He removed to Paris, Me., with his father, and -spent the remainder of his life there, and died in 1859, at the age of 82. They had six children : 274. Otis, born Sept. 29, 1799, died in 1844, married, but without issue. 275. Hartford, born June 26. 1802. died in 1818. 276. Abigail, born March 29, 1807. 277. Stephen, born 1816. died at the age of 19, in 1835. 278. Elisha, born Feb. 10, 1824, died in 20 days. 279. Elizabeth, born Feb. 10, 1824, twin of Elisha. (135.) ISAAC PAINE, son of Jacob Paine (100), was born at Foxboro. May 24, 1780. He was twice married. His first wife, of whom all his children were born, was Abigail A. Thomas, daughter of Dea. Briggs Thomas, of Marshfield, born June 16, 1780, and died Dec. 14, 183:;. His second wife was his cousin, Rachel Paine (122), who is still alive in 1881. He was a physician of much emi- nence, practicing at Marshfield. He was a student of genealogy and took a great interest in that of his own lin- eage. Though he spent much time and labor in the search, he failed, like all others, in ascertaining the true origin of his American line and settled upon a wrong conclusion. His papers have afforded the writer much aid in his investigations. He died Jan. 5, 1869, at the age of 89 years. His first marriage took place Oct. 27. 1807, and his second. May 13, 1837. By his first wife he had seven children : 280. Roland G., born Oct. 30. 1808. 1 1 8 Paine. Genealogy. 281. Kt'iggs T., born Aug. 5, 1810. 282. Calvin B., born Sept. 12, 1811. 283. Isaac, Jr., born July 9, 1813, died in 1827. 284. Abigail, born June 21, 1815, died in 1827. 285. Waterman, born Sept 25, 1816. died in 1820. 286. Israel II., born June 28, 1822. (136.) DANIEL PAINE, son of Jacob (100), born April, 1782, married Mary Paine, of Rehoboth. and died in 1826, without issue. He was ship-master and died, on a voyage, at Porto Bello. (137.) DAVIS PAINE, son of Jacob (100), was born June, 1784, and married Charlotte Hathaway, of Scituate, Mass. Resided in Woodstock, Me., and had ten children : 287. Davis, born April 15, 1808. 288. James, born May 7. 1810. 289. Mary, born April 25. 1812, married Crosby Curtis, and has one child. 290. William, b. March 12, 1814. died without issue. 291. Charlotte, born Jan. I, 1816. m. Daniel Curtis. 292. Hartford, born Oct. 8. 1818. 293. Jacob, born Jan. 4, 1821. 294. Silas, born Oct. 12, 1822. lives in Woodstock, Me., unmarried. 295. Paulina, born May 5. 1825. m. Stephen Hacon. 296. Fanny, born Jan. 8. 1829, died May 9, 1829. (138.) WII.MAM PAINE, son of Jacob (100). was born Sept. 15. 1787. married Anna D. Stanley, Jan. 11. 1807. He was killed by the fall of a tree, in the woods, at Farmington, Me.. Feb. 8, 1824. His wife, born April 12. 1784. and died. Dec. 5. 1830. They had six children : 297. Hannah /:., born July 11. 1810. 298. Cynthia C.. born Nov. 25, 1812. 299. William /).. born March 26, 1815. Ipswich Branch. 119 300. Daniel S., born Aug. 3, 1817. 301. Horace, born April n, 1823 . 302. Henry, born April n, 1823, died April 30, 1823. (139.) NATHAN PAINE, son of Jacob (100), was born July 14, 1792, married Susan F. Dingley, in 1811, and lived and died in Worcester, Mass. Was in the Texas war and was wounded. Children : 303. Charles 1VI., born Dec. i, 1812. 304. Henry M. 30^. George P. 306. Hannah M. (140.) ASA M. PAINE, son of Jacob (100), born Feb. 19, I794- settled in Greenwood, Me., with his father. Never married, but after their parent's death, he and his sister Mary (134), lived, both single, at the old homestead until their deaths. She died in 1870. During that time they adopted and brought up seven children. (141.) TURNER PAINE, son of Jacob (109), born June 20, 1796* married Nancy Fisher, and died in 18^7. leaving one son : 307. Daniel J/. (142.) KEZIAH PAINE, daughter of Jacob (100), was born February 19, i79^' married Benjamin Jackson, of Woodstock, Me., Jan. 12, 1815. and there they reside. Their children are 308. Caroline C. Jack son * born October 17. 1818, married John Cummings. 309. Mahala F., born March 5. 1823. m. John Day. 310. Benjamin, born Sept. 9, 182=5. 311. Susan* born June 19. 1830. 312. Nelson, born April n, 1833. 313. CharJes P., born Aug. 19. 1837. 1 2O Paine GcncaJogy. (143.) JAMES PAINE, son of James (101), was born at Foxboro, Mass., March 6, 1 785, married Anna Richards, of Sharon, and died Dec. i, 1831, leaving his wife a widow, who died June i, 1850. He was a man of great goodness of character, and highly prized as a citizen, a person of fine physique and manly qualities. They had no children, save only a still-born infant, whose loss the parents greatly deplored, and over whose grave they erected an appropriate tombstone with an expressive in- scription. The wife and mother's head-stone records that ''She was a professor of Religion, and bequeathed her property to the cause of missions." (147.) CYNTHIA PAINE, daughter of Abiel (103). was born Oct. 25, 1779. married Joseph Tiflany. and had three children : 314. Joseph Tiffany j also a son and daughter, whose names are not known to the writer. (150.) EMERSON PAINE, son of Abiel (103), was born Dec. 5. 1786, married Lydia R. Pcndleton. April 30, 1816. She was born Sept. 20, 1792. He graduated at Brown University in 1813. During the high party times which existed during the War of 1812, he delivered an address of a political character, which gave very great oilense to his opponents, and largely affected all his sub- sequent life. "It was visited," writes his son, "upon him in various ways in his after life, by political opponents of his class, and caused much trouble to him, even involving danger to life of himself and family." He studied for the ministry, and for a while preached in Abington, as asso- ciate pastor with Rev. Mr. Niles. He afterwards settled in Middleboro for six years, then in Little Compton, R. I., for 14 years, and finally in Halifax, Mass., about 10 years. His health failing him. he preached only occasionally, Ipswich Bra nch. 121 until his death, on April 25, 1851. His wife survived him, and died March 24, 1876. They had five children : 315. Joseph E., born Oct. 20, 1817. 316. Charles H., born Jan. 5, 1820. 317. Horatio E., born June n, 1822. 318. Mary TV., born Nov. 27, 1823. 319. Sarah, born Sept. 24, 1830, died at 2 yrs. of age. (151.) APOLLOS PAINE, son of Abiel (103), was born at Foxboro, and married a Miss Harding. They died, having had three children : 320. Luna. 321. Jane. 322. Anna. (152.) DANIEL PAINE, son of Abiel (103), was also born at Foxboro, and married Sarah Brown, of Little Compton, R. I., in 1824. He died in 1826, leaving no children. (153.) ZINA G. PAINE, son of Abiel (103)., born at same place, married Mary Tompkins, of Little Compton. R. I., in about 1822. He was a physician of consider- able eminence, and practiced a few years at Taunton, then at Fowlerville, N. Y., afterwards at Parma, and finally at Lockport, where he died in March. 1865. They had several children, among them 323. Mary T. 324. Charles. 32 v William Henry. Any further particulars of the family the writer has been unable to gather, though very many efforts have been made in that direction. (154.) HARVEY PAINE, son of Asa (105), was born at Foxboro, July 4, 1793, married Hannah Forrest, Feb. 25, 1823. He afterwards settled in Amenia, N. Y., 122 Paine Gcnealogv. SJ where he died May 18, 1839. leaving four children, all. hut the youngest, now living in Amcnia : 326. Hannah Maria, born Nov. 25. 1823. 327. Eliza Bnrrill, horn Jan. 25, 1826. 328. Pamela Forrest, born Feb. 23. 1828. 329. yoscph Harvey, born April 28. 1830, went to California in 1851, and has since never been heard from. (155;.) ASA WARREN PAINE, son of Asa (105), was born at Foxboro, Dec. 3, 1795. and died in Newton, April 19, 1847. He was never married. He was a man of intellectual turn of mind, and though not having what is called a liberal education, he was yet a man of much culture, and of scholarly habits. He was of a misan- thropic nature, and ill at ease with himself and the world. He eschewed all religious creeds, and finally became the disciple of his namesake, Thomas Paine, whose works he greatly admired, as it is said. He was a lawyer by profession, practising at the Boston bar, but residing at the time in West Newton. He traveled much throughout the Eastern Continent, and especially in Egypt, at a time when such travel was rare and traveling correspondents unusual. During these meanderings he became quite famed for his letters to the public press at home, written over his well known signature of "Rcis EfVendi." In the short obituary over his grave, allusion is made to his character as exhibited "in public station." This goes to confirm the information otherwise obtained, that while absent, abroad, he was consular agent of government, at Alexandria. The certainty of this, how- ever, the writer has been unable to determine. His body lies in the burial ground at Foxboro. his tombstone bear- ing the following inscription : Ipswich Branch. 123 A SISTER'S MEMORIAL IN Loving Memory OF ASA WARREN PAINE, ESQ. Born Dec. 3. 1795. Died at West Newton, April 19, 1847. A Sound Lawyer : a discreet Counsellor : In professional life. Ever true to duty ; in action faithful ; in honor clear. In public station Vigilant, prudent, wise and honest. Filling places of trust With credit to himself and honor to his country. Of polite as well as profound learning He was both the ornament and patron. In all the relations of life His conduct was uniform and consistent. He lived beloved he died lamented. (156.) ELIAS BACON PAINE, son of Asa (105), was born at Foxboro, Dec. 13. 1797. married Emmeline Wheelock, and died at Boston, March 3, 1868. He was a wholesale dry goods merchant of that city, for many years, during all which he maintained a high character for integrity and trustworthiness, and was a general fav- orite ''with the trade." They had eight children : 330. Emmeline Warren, who died in infancy. 331. Joseph Warren, born March 20, 1832. 332. Emmeline Wheelock, born June 2. 1834. 3323. Elias Edwin, died in infancy. 332b. Helen TrvpJicna. died in infancy. 1 24 Paine Genealogy* 333- Georgianna^ born Oct. 3. 1840. 334- J anc Frances, born Dec. 23. 1842. 335- Antoinette E/iza. horn July n, 1844. (157.) MARTHA T. PAINK. daughter of Asa (105). was horn June 12, 1799. married Preston II. G rover, and died Nov. 3, 1873, without children. They resided at Springfield, Mass. (158.) JOSKPII Annisox PAINE, son of Asa (105), was born May 24, 1802. married Julia O. Dudley, a descendant of Gov. Dudlev. lie resided at one time in Waterville. Me., thence went West, and tinallv settled in Salem, Mass., where he died July 14, 1872. He left five children : 336. Joseph Addison. 337. Isabella. 338. Frank, , twins. 339. Frances. 340. Julia, died unmarried. (159.) NATHANIEL WARE PAINE, son of Asa (105), was horn Jan. 3, 1806, and died Nov. 2, 1870. was twice married, first to Abigail Ann G rover, and after her death, to Lucv D. Paine, but had no children bv either. * - (160.) RIIODA PAINK. daughter of Joseph (108). born July 26. 1776, married Lemuel Wight, and died in 1848. at the age of 72 years. He died in 1851, at the age of 82 vears. They lived in Foxboro. where thev had four children born, and then removed to Westmoreland. N. II., where eight more were added to the list: 341. Willnrd Wight, born Dec. 8. 1795. 342. Foster, born Jan. 18. 1797. 343. Joseph Xclsott, born Oct. 11. 1798. 344. /W/yor J/tfry, b. .Sept. 12.1800,111. Asa Hartshorn 34 v Guilford. Branch. 125 346. Herman. 347. Stilman. 348. Rhoda Maria. 349. Caroline. 350. Albert. 35 1 . Hartshorn . 3^2. Nancy. (161.) SALLY PAINE, daughter of Joseph (ioS),boni May 13, 1778, married Oliver Leonard, and had three children : 353. Oliver Leonard^ born Oct. 4, iSbi. 354. Sally, born Dec. 10, 1804. 355. Arville, born March 29, 1808. (162.) JOSEPH PAINE, son of Joseph (i 08), born Nov. 14, 1780, married Nancy Carpenter, who died Aug. u, 1821. He died Dec. u, 1811, having one child: 356. Richard, born May 25, 1806. (163.) MARY OR POLLY PAINE, daughter of Joseph (108). born April 7. 1783. married Harvey Pattee. and died, having seven children : 3^7. Maria Pattee, born Jan. 27. 1804, d. unmarried 3>S. Caroline, born June 9. 1805. 359. Wm. Warren, born July 25, 1808, d. unmarried 360. James Harvey, born Aug. 22, 1810. 361. Charles, born May n, 1814. 362. Nancy Jane, born April 20, 1817. 363. Eliza, born Aug. i. 1819. (164.) NANCY PAINE, daughter of Joseph (108), born Feb. 21, 178=;. married Richard Hartshorn, of VValpole; Mass, and died July 3. 1835. He^lied April 1 8, 1854, having had nine children : 364. Charles Hartshorn, b. Nov. 17. 1807, m. thrice. 36^. Albert, born May. i. 1809, died in 1810. 1 26 Paine Genealogy, 366. Richard, born Jan. 15. 1811. married thrice. 367. George, born Feb. 12. 1814. married thrice. 368. Warren, married. 360. Aff//f)'. married. 370. Newell, born July 1 2. 1821, married thrice. 371. Mary, born July 18, 1824, married. 372. Hannah, born Feb. 2, 1826. married. (165.) SUBMIT PAINE, daughter of Joseph ( 1 08). born May 31, 1787 ; married Amos Morse, Jr., and died May ii. 1862. He died Oct. 30. 1825. They had six children : 373. Leonard Morse, born March 14,1806: married Lucinda Briggs. and had five children. 374. McHnda, born Jan. 22. 1808. married Samuel Gilbert, and had one child. 375. Nc~Mell, born Sept. 11, 1810. married Sally Mann, died Sept. 30. 1871, having six children. 376. Nelson, born April 28, 1813. married Betsey Everett and had one child. 377. Mary, born Feb. 14, 1815. married John J. G. Fisher and had five children. 378. Eliza, born March 28. 1817. married Albert Plimpton and had six children. (166.) PKODV PA INK. daughter of" Joel (loy), mar- ried Haskins and had numerous children, the names of which the writer has been unable to ascertain. (167.) ROXALINA PAIXK. daughter of Joel (109). married Amos Paine (174), April 5, 181 2. and died with- out issue, December, 1847. (169.) POLLY PAINK, daughter of Joel (109). mar- ried Isaac I'aine, (170). April 5, 1812. and had several children to be given under his name below. She died May 4. 1852. Ipswich Branch. 127 (171.) WILLIAMS PAIXE, son of Joel (109), married Nancy G rover (190), Nov. 23, 1816, died Aug. 4, 1830. They had three children : 379. Thomas Willard. 380. Joseph Anson. 381. Laura Ann. (172.) JOEL PAINE, son of Joel (109), married En- nice Lane, and died June, 1827. They had three children : 382. Joseph. 383. Henry M. 384. Theodore^ married and died in California. ( 1 73.) NELSON PAINE, the youngest son of Joel ( 109) , married Belinda Shaw, June 19, 1828, at Foxboro. He died June 22, 1876, at the age of 72 years. She, still alive, 1881, and has aided much in the compilation of these statistics. They had five children : 385. Frederick, born April 12, 1829. 386. Sarah 5., born March 22, 1831. 387. Henry N.. born Feb. 5, 1834. 388. Chloe S.* born March 4, 1836, unmarried. 389. Edivard Payson, born Aug. 21, 1842. (174.) AMOS PAINE, son of Enoch (no), born Sept. 3, 1781, married Roxalina Paine (167), April 5, 1812, and died without issue. She died December. 1847. (175.) ELIZABETH PAINE, daughter of Enoch (110), born Jan. 31, 1783, married Timothy T. Fisher, April 2, 1812. and had five children: 390. Timothv W. Fisher. 391. Betsey L. 392. Amos Morse. 393. Hcnrv Benjamin. 394. Comfort O. 1 .28 Paine Genealogy, (176.) ISAAC PAINE, son of Enoch (i 10). born April 8, 1786, married Polly Paine (169), April 5, 1812, died March 28, 1864, and had six children: 39 v Augustus ll'/l/iains. born June i. 1812. 396. Hosea Erastus. born July 22, 1814. 397- James Edward* born July 10. 1823. 398. Loci Nelson* born July 21, 1827. 399. Mary Ann. born Sept. 22. 1816, died young. 400. Susan Adcle. born Oct. 27, 1818, died young. 4uoa. Elizabeth W.. born Dec. 4, 1820, died young. (177.) Lois PAIN K. daughter of Enoch (no), born Aug. 12. 1791. married Charles Simpson and died with- out issue. (178.) ESTHER PAINE, daughter of Enoch ( 1 10). born Feb. 23, 1802, married Comfort Titus, July 4. 1822. and had six children : 401. James M. Titus* born Sept. 4. 1827. 402. Lewis. . 403. Olive, born Nov. 12. 1822. 404. Maria, married French. 405. Benjamin. 406. Jane /,.. born May 3, 1830. (179.) AMASA GROVER, son of Olive (113). born Aug. 9, 1786. married Nellie Pattee. and had four chil- dren : 407. Emily G rover. 408. Abigail. 409. Preston. 410. Joseph tis. (188.) ^VIU.ARD P. GROVER. son of same, born April 27. 1.789. married and had two children : 411. Willard (trover. 412. Sarah Ann. Ipswich Branch. 129 (191.) ALVIN GROVER, son of same, born Sept. 8, 1 798, married Arabella White, and had five children : 413. Alvin Grover. 414. Manly. 415. Maria. 416. Mary. 417- Elizabeth. (192.) LUTHER GROVER, son of same, born March 3, 1804. married Anna Caswell, and had four children : 418. Luther Grover. 419. Reuben. 420. Lyman. 421. (193.) EARL PAINE, son of Jesse (115), born Oct. 9, 1785. married Samantha Clark in 1810, and settled in Vershire, Vt., and there died without children. (194.) SALLY PAINE, daughter of same, born at Fox- boro March 22, 1787, married Michael Titus Aug. 10. 1810, and settled in Vershire, Vt., and had six children : 422. Hosea Titus. 423. Lucinda. 424. Marinda. 425. Rhoda. 426. Sarah, married Jared Ames. 427. Juliana. (195.) DAVID PAINE, son of same, born in Plainfield, N. H., Nov. 8, 1788, and married Polly Drake, Dec. 2. 1812, and settled in Vershirtf, Vt., was a volunteer in the War of 1812. and had four children : 428. Cynthia. 429. Lyman. 430. David. 43 1 . Louis. 9 130 Paine Genealogy. ( 196.) POLLY PAINE, daughter of same, born in Plain- field, X. H., July 17, 1/90, married Jonathan Clark, of Vershire, Nov. i, 1815, and had five children: 432. Sidney Clark. 433. Edna. 434. Tila. 435. Zina. 436. Sophia, (197-) JOSEPH PAINE, son of same, horn at same place, April 21, 1792, married Adelia Clark, Dec. 18. 1818, and removed to Wisconsin, and had seven children : 437. Harrison. 438. Henry. 439. Harriet. 440. Martha. 441. Ed-ward. 442. George. 443. Maria. (198.) CLARISSA PAINE, daughter of same, horn at Vershire. Jan. 4. 1794, married Asa Mattoon. Nov. 13. 1818. of Orange, Vt., and has two children: 444. Stratton Mattoon. 44 v Sophia ) married Ilenrv Huntingdon. (199.) SOPHIA PAINE, daughter of same, horn Sept. 12, 1795, married Benjamin Hatchelder. Oct. 2. 1820. of Vershire, and has seven children : 446. David lyatchcldcr. 447. Jesse. 448. Earl. 449. Clarinda. m. Sylvester Godfrey; two children. 450. Martha. 451. Hazen, M. I). 452. //arrcy. Ipswich Branch. 131 (201.) ROBERT PAINE, son of same, born Jan. 23, 1799, married Lucia Patterson, of Vershire, Dec. 2, 1824, and has four children : 453. Azro. a cripple, unable to walk. 454. Charles E. 455. Ellen, married Orison Maltby, and has one child. 456. Philanda, married Uriah Colburn. (203.) WARREN PAINE, son of same, born Sept. 13, 1802, married Susan Thompson, settled in Barre, Vt. No children. (204.) LONEY PAINE, daughter of same, born in Vershire, Aug. 18, 1809, married Ebenezer Sawyer, March 17, 1824, and has two children : 457. James Sawyer. 458. John. (205.) EDWARD PAINE, son of same, born at same place. July 6, 1806, married Lucinda Goodrich, Nov. 28, 1827, and settled first in Vershire, and about thirty years ago, removed to Wisconsin, and has four children : 4^9. Lticina. 460. Abner. 461. Luc i en. 462. Ed-ward. (206.) ISAAC PAINE, son of same, born at same place, April 26, 1808, married Martha L. G. Knights, May 27, 1830, removed to Windsor, Vt., and afterwards to Middle- port. O.. where he died April 27, 1879, having five chil- dren : 463. Milton Kendall, born July 15. 1834. 464. Georgianna, born Feb. 10, 1836. 465. Isaac Newton, born Oct. 3. 1837, died May. 1850. 466. Jesse Clinton, born May 10, 1839. li ves at Win- chester, Mass. 13- Paine Genealogy. 467. yoscph Webster, born Aug. 14, 1841, died, 1875. (208.) TIIADDEUS PAINE, son of Edward ( 1 16), born Nov. 14, 1788, lived at Leicester, Vt., married Esther Hump, and died June 21, 1819, leaving a widow who married again. They had two children : 468. Statia, b. March 26, 1818, married Wm. Ward. 469. Thaddcus J/., born Oct. 6, 1819. (212.) ENOCH PAINE, son of same, born Dec. 29, 1796, married Rebecca Burdett, and is still alive, in 1878. Has four children : 470. Abbie, born Aug. 31, 1820. 471. George, born Feb. n, 1824. 472. Susan, born May 5, 1828, died, 1873. 473. Olive, born June 27, 1841, died July 10. 1873 (213.) JOHN PAINE, son of same, born June 30, 1798, married Lucy Whitney, and died Aug. 7, 1876, having four children : 474. Lucia J/.,born Sept. 27. 1826, married Otis H. Capron, and died April 3. 1871. 475. Ed~jcard, born Jan. 19, 1829. 476. German G., born Sept. 20. 1830. died March 477- James .S'., born June 4, 1832, died Feb. iH, 18^7. (214.) ASA PAINE, son of same, born Aug. 26. 1801. married first. Harriet Harton. and second. Sallv Keeley. He died Sept. 24, 1867, leaving one child In his first. and four by his second wife : 478. Sa rah, born Apr. 23. 1825. in. Franklin Winslow. 479. Harriet, born April 26, 1835. 480. Olive /?.. 1). Aug 13. 1836. m. \V. \V. Thomas. 481. /{(/ward /.. born April 3. 1841. 482. Catharine, born June 21. 1844. d. July 4, 1848. Ipsivich Branch. 133 (216.) ICHABOD PAINE, son of same, born Dec. 15, 1804, married, first, Clarissa Dow, and second, Julia E. Knight, and died March 4, 1870, having three children, by his first wife : 483. Lenora. b. March 20, 1832, d. March 18, 1835. 484. Alanson, born Feb. 25, 1836, d. Jan. 12, 1868. 485. Myron, born March 27, 1845. (217.) DAVID PAINE, son of same, born Aug. 21, 1806, and married three times: First, Eunice Page; second, Caroline Ashley ; and third, Harriet Ashley, and died May 4, 1852, having two children : 486. Jennette, born in 1831, died Feb. 21, 1842. 487. David Wallace, born May 20, 1834. (220.) MELZER PAINE, son of Zebediah (117), born at Westmoreland, N. H., married Polly Blanchard, and died in 1848. at the age of 68 years, having seven children : 488. Sophronia, m. B. Smith, both d. without issue. 489. Mary, unmarried, died March 23, 1880. 490. Jotham L., born Oct. 28, 1810. 491. Esther, m. Lockhart Brockway ; three children. 492. Per sis, unmarried. 493. Harriet, married Samuel Ells, d. without issue. 494. Martha M., married Geo. D. Paine (495), died April 6, 1880. (221.) ZEBEDIAH PAINE, son of same, born at same place, and married, first, Nancy Hutchins, and second, Dolly Dodge, died 1845, having seven children : 495. George D., born in 1820, married (494). 496. David H., born May 9, 1826. 497. Willard D., born Nov. 29, 1829. 498. Lucy Ann, married John Williams, and died. 499. Mary Ellen, m. L. T. Britton, of Elgin, 111. 1 34 Paine Genealogy. 500. Susan Caroline, married B. Lawrence and J. H. Garrison, and has two daughters. 501. War/ey *]faria. horn 1824, married Luther C. Kellcy. and died childless, in 1851. 50111. Sarah Jane, b. 1840. died at 5 1-2 years of age. (222.) ISAAC PAINE, son of same, married Polly Chapin, died by suicide, having three children : 502. Charles, lives in Lynn. 503. Emeline, married, and had one child, all dead. ^04. Justin, died without issue. Ipswich Branch. 135 CHAPTER XVI. GENERATION VIII. HENRY M. PAINE, (249), -son of Sullivan (121), born Sept. 28, 1810, married in 1805, Julia A. Perkins, of Norwich. Connecticut, born in 1832. She died November 9, 1867. He is a blacksmith, living at Stoughton, Mass. By this wife he had one child : 505. Henry S., born Jan. 3, 1837. After her death, he married again, Mrs. Susan Cram, born in 1822, married May 20, 1869, but has by her no children. (2=50.) GEORGE S. PAINE, son of same, born Sept. i, 1814, married Elizabeth Pike, of Biddeford, Me., born in 1818, married in 1840, and lives in West Lynn. Have five children : 506. Mary E.. born Aug. 27, 1842, d. May 31, 1844. 507. George H., b. May 16, 1845, lives in Lynn. 508. Mary E., b. Aug. 14, 1846, m. James Lovejoy, and has three children. 509. Carlos, lives in Lynn, unmarried. 510. John* drowned in 1872 or 3. (253.) HENRY WM. PAINE, son of Lemuel (124), was born at Winslow. Me., Aug. 30, 1810. Graduated at Waterville College, 1830. Was admitted to practice, as attorney at law, at Kennebec bar in 1834. He prac- ticed as such for several years, at Hallowell. with great success, during which time he represented his town, for two or three vears. as representative to the Legislature, 136 Paine Genealogy. He subsequently removed to Massachusetts, where he still resides, living in Cambridge and practicing'at Boston. While living in Maine, he was repeatedlv ofVered a seat on the bench of the Supreme Judicial Court, and since his removal to Boston the like office has been tendered him there, all which he declined, choosing rather to remain at the bar. In 1863, he was candidate of the Democratic party for the office of Governor of Massachu- setts, but was unsuccessful. He has ever been a close and devoted student, and most popular among the literati. An intimate, personal and professional friend, who has long known him. (the eminent Chief Justice Appleton, of Maine,) bears the following testimony to his character: "He is a gentleman of a high order of intellect. of su- perior culture. in private life one of the most genial of companions, in his profession a profound and learned lawver, as well as an accomplished advocate." He has accordingly always enjoyed a large and lucrative prac- tice, both in the State and Federal Courts, and especially as Referee and Master in Chancery, in most difficult and important causes. In recognition of his merit, his Alma Mater some years since conferred upon him the honorarv degree of LL. D. While living in Hallo well, on May I. 1837. he married Lucy E. Coffin, of New- burvport. Mass. She, born Jan. 11. 1817. They have an only child : 511. ycannie Warren* born July 16, 1838. (254.) EDWARD Aroi'STfs PAINE, son of Lemuel (124), was born at Winslow. Nov. 27. 1816. and has ever lived nt the old homestead of his father, wholly en- gaged in the work of an agriculturist, on the large farm which his father industriously cultivated during his life. He married Sibyl Stratton. of Winslow. who was born Ipswich Branch. 137 Dec. n, 1816, and both are still alive in 1881, having two children : 512. George S., born Dec. 29, 1849. =513. Lucy, born July 27, 1852, unmarried. (259.) CHARLES FREDERIC PAINE, son of Frederic (128), was born at Winslow, Me.. June 18, 1810, and always resided there, until his death. Married Esther Loring, who was born April 2, 1813, and still survives. He had a great mechanical talent, and genius for inven- tion. He lost his life May 21, 1848, by boiler explosion, on board of a steamboat, of which he was master and principal owner. They had seven children : 514. Charles, b. Aug. 20, 1834, d. June 18, 1876, not m. 515. Ellen Maria, born March 2. 1836. 516. Harriet Newell, born July 31, 1838. 517. Esther Matilda, born Sept. 20, 1840. 518. Otis Frederic, born Oct. 3, 1842, unmarried. 519. William Loring, born Nov. 21,1 845 , unmarried . 520. Emma Frances, b. Aug. 29, 1847, d. Dec. 6, 18=53 (260.) ALBERT WARE PAINE, son of Frederic (128), was born at* Winslow, Me., Aug. 16, 1812. Graduated at Waterville College, in the class of 1832. Studied law with Hon. Thomas Rice, and Gov. Samuel Wells, and was admitted to practice, as attorney at law, in 1835, at Bangor, Me., where he has ever since resided. Was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of the United States, at Washington, February 16. 1853. From the time of his admission, in 1835, to tne present, (iSSi), he has, without any intermission, continued busily en- gaged in the practice of his profession, though at times, he has had other business to occupy his attention. Dur- ing the years 1868 and 9, he held the office of ; 'Bank and Insurance Examiner," and then having, bv his efforts. 1 38 Paine Genealogy. secured the establishment of the State Insurance Depart- ment, he resigned his former office and received that of "State Insurance Commissioner," which he held for three years. In 1874 he held the temporary office of Tax Commissioner. Though never a member of cither house of the Legis- lature, yet he has had much to do with the legislation of the Suite, in procuring the enactment of laws, on various subjects. Among these are the Savings Bank and Insur- ance Statutes, and many others of less importance. But chief among his efforts, in this line, has been the procure- ment of the Act making parties, accused of crime, legal witnesses, in their own defense, in Court. Until this was accomplished in 1864, in no Court in the United States, or England, was this privilege granted to the partv ac- cused. However innocent, he was liable to the severest penalty of the law. without being allowed to testify a word in his own favor, or to make the least defense, by his own testimony or explanation, before the jury. As ab- horrent as this doctrine now appears to all. yet until then it was the universal law of all English speaking people. Fixed in his purpose of doing away with this barbarity. Mr. Paine caused the matter to be brought before the Legislature of his State for five successive vearlv sessions, and pressed upon its attention, until the enactment of a law was efVected. allowing parties, respondent in crim- inal cases, to be heard as witnesses, in their own defense. The object having been accomplished at home, he next addressed himself to the work of introducing the same practice in other states, but more especially. Massachu- setts, through the medium of the Boston press, where he had the pleasure of seeing it adopted within two years after, under the leadership of Hon. John Qiiincy Adams. Ipswich Branch, 139 then a member of the House of Representatives. Thus started, the rule became generally popular, and was adopted by one state after another, until all, or nearly all, the states have enacted it, including also the Congress of the United States and the Parliament of Great Britain. The labor of investigating his lineage, and compiling the statistics of this work, in moments of leisure, has been one of great interest to him. and he hopes this publica- tion may prove useful and instructive to all members of the family interested in their ancestral history. On the ninth day of July. A. D. 1840, he married Mary Jones Hale, a descendant of Rev. John Hale, the early pastor of the church in Beverlv, Mass., who had so much to do in dispelling the Salem Witchcraft delusion. She. born May 8. 1816. They have four children, all daughters, viz : 521. Mary Abby, born April i, 1841. 522. Selina Ware, born Dec. 24, 1847. 523. Lydia Augusta, born Jan. 10, 1850. 524. Eugenie Hale, born May i, 1853. (261.) BENJAMIN C. PAINE, son of Frederic (128), was born March 10, 1815, at Winslow, Me., where he has ever lived, on the paternal homestead, which his father devised to him by his last will and testament. On Dec. 16. 1841, he married Miss Elizabeth Hayden, who was born Dec. 13. 1822. They had three children, all of whom died early : 525. Daniel Benjamin, born Oct. 20. 1842. died March 30. 1866. 526. Anna Elizabeth, born Oct. n, 1843, died Jan. 18, 1848. 527. Frederick Hayden, born Aug. 30. 1849. died Sept. 22. 1849. 1 40 Paine Genealogy. (262.) CAROLINE MATILDA PAINE, daughter of same, horn Nov. 2, 1817, married Dr. Preserved B. Mills, of Bangor, where she has ever since resided. He died leaving her a widow. No children. (263.) HARRIET NEWELL PAINE, daughter of same, horn Jan. i, 1822, and died June 9. 1837. at the youthful age of 15 years and 6 months. Although called away from earth at so early a period of her life, vet there was that in her history which seems* to call for a space here. She was a girl who had developed a remarkable character for intelligence, amiability and the graces of life. A few weeks previous to her death, she had been called to part with a loving companion, to whom she felt strongly attached, and from that time she seemed to have a strong presentiment of her own early removal. Among her pa- pers was found a beautiful original hymn, addressed "To a Weeping Mother," also an inscription for her grave stone and a text for her funeral discourse. This was all the more remarkable from the fact, that at the time, she had no symptoms of disease and was in perfect health. During her short sickness, she felt no anxiety to avert her certain fate, but, with all composure, made arrangements to meet it, by giving away her little keepsakes without emotion. When the time of her final exit arrived, after lying perfectly free from pain and in a full state of con- sciousness, for two or three hours, during which she fre- quently conversed, her face suddenly assumed a most beautiful smile, and she began to make gyrations with her finger and pointing forcibly upward, as if she saw some pleasant object and would attract attention to it. This she repeated, when she seemed to meet her little friend and twice called her name, "Oh! Abbie. Abbie !" with almost an ecstasy of delight. She then began to sing and Ipswich J3 ranch. 141 was understood to repeat the words, "They sing the song of Moses," when her voice became inaudible, though her lips continued to move and her hands to pass backward and forward, with a motion of her ringers, as if playing on an instrument. After a few minutes of quiet, she pleasantly bid "good bye" to her attendants, closed her eyes, and was apparently breathing her last. A word from her mother seemed to bring her back, for a moment, during which she assured her that she had seen her friend, then again bidding ''farewell" she calmly passed away. (264.) TIMOTHY OTIS PAINE, son of same, was born at Winslow. Oct. 13. 1824, graduated at Waterville Col- lege in 1847, studied for the ministry of the New or "Swedenborgian" Church, and was installed Aug. 14, 1864, as pastor of the Society at East Bridgewater, Mass., where he commenced preaching in 1856, and has ever since resided. Since 1865. until the present time, he has been Semitic Professor in the Theological School of the General Convention of the New Church in the United States and Canadas, and is member of the American Oriental Society of Yale, and of the Harvard Semitic Club, at Cambridge. Since 1852, he has been a diligent student of the Archaic Architectural forms, described in the Scriptures ; and to aid him in understanding them, he has studied all the languages of antiquity, that throw light upon these forms, viz : Hebrew, Chaldee, Syriac, Samaritan, Coptic, Talmuclic, Rabbinic and Egyptian in Hieroglyphic characters ; Latin, Greek, German and French, of course were also studied as necessary aids. But he has studied none of these Oriental languages ex- cept to enable him to understand the Scriptures. To him the writer is indebted for the information derived from "Domesday" as given in the early pages of the present 1^2 Paine Genealogy. volume, a work never yet translated, in full, from its mediu-val difficult text. In Egyptology, he has made the remarkable discovery that the Pre-historic Nile dwellers knew" that every one is raised from the dead and enters the future world "before his coffin is carried into the sep- ulchre." These ancient men speak of this as "a fact too well known to require comment, and fully describe the life after death." As an Egyptologist he has come to be regarded as one of the most learned of the class in Amer- ica, being often applied to for interpretations of the most difficult inscriptions. For a few years past, he has been engaged in the translation, for the first time, into English, of the old Egyptian "Book of the Dead. "a work "grown white with age before Moses wrote, or Abraham was born," buried for almost unnumbered centuries in the sar- cophagus of some distinguished Egyptian. In 1852. he began to show his skill in the investigation of hidden facts, by a restoration of the ruins of Fort Hal- ifax on the Kennebec, a fort which had existed a century before and which had mostly disappeared for two or three generations. lie succeeded in finding and tracing out the palisades in the deep sand of the plain and on the hill, and in thus restoring all of the three forts in draw- ings of such perfection, as to be recognized, with excla- mations of delight, by a survivor, who had seen the originals in her childhood, and had lived to see the pic- tures thus produced. At about the same time, he began the work of restoring the form of Solomon's Temple, or the Temple of the Kings and E/ekiel. as also the Tabernacle of Sinai, and the House of the King, or the House of the Forest of Lebanon. These forms have all been restored by him from descriptions contained in the Scriptures alone, and Ipswich Branch. 143 afterward illustrated by light derived from his Oriental studies. In 1861, he published the first edition of his work, since which time he has spent a large portion of the intervening twenty years in preparing a second edition, to be soon given to the public. The Index, in one portion, contains more than 6,000 references to the Scriptures, and the book will contain some thirty full page engravings, besides numerous figures or illustrations, scattered through o the text. His Egyptian and other Oriental studies and investiga- tions have, besides, led to very many other important results, which, it is hoped, the world will yet have the benefit of, but which are now too imperfect to be de- scribed. He is still in the midst of his work. In recog- nition of his merit, his Alma ]\Iater, in 1875, bestowed upon him the degree of LL. D. On Oct. 13, 1856, he married Agnes Howard, only child of Rev. Adonis Howard, of Medford, Mass., born April 17, 1826. They have had eight children: 528. Edith, born June 18, 1857. 529. Howard, born Oct. 7, 1858. 530. Miriam, born Feb. 25, 1860, died Jan. 29, 1861. 531 . Joseph, b. Aug. 24, 1861 , d. same day of its birth. 532. Isabel, born Sept. 25, 1862. 533. Bertha* born Oct. 19, 1866. 534. James* born Sept. 27. 1869, died young. ^35. Herbert Ware, born Nov. 20. 1870. (265.) CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH PAINE, daughter of same, was born at Winslow, Feb. 13, 1827, was married to George Sumner Leavitt, May 22, 1851, and reside at Foxboro. They have had four children : 536. Frederic Sumner Leavitt, born Feb. 19,1852, died June 5. 1870. 1 44 Paine Genealogy, ^37. Charles Paine, born Nov. 9, 1853. 538. Arthur Herbert, horn May 29, 1861. ^39. Harrv l*linipton, horn Dec. 16, 1862. (266.) SARAH JANE PAINE, daughter of same, born Jan. 10, 1830. married George Copeland, of Bridgewater, Mass., now reside in Jefferson, Wis. Have no children. (276.) ABIGAIL PAINE, daughter of Stephen (133). horn March 29. 1807, married Eleazar Dunham, and lives in Oxford County, Me. They had four children : ^40. Abbie y. Dunham, in. I). Rawson. One child. 541. Louisa G., in. Charles Felton. No children. 542. Elizabeth A., m. Charles Buck. Two children. ^43. Enoch /,.. died at 4 years of age in 1849. (279.) ELI/AHETH PAINE, sister of the next preced- ing, horn Feb. 10. 1824, married - Dyer, and by him had two children : 544. Prances A. Dver. in. D. \V. Allen : ^ children. ^4^. Otis II. . married Lena Brown, had one child. By her second husband, Rodney Titcomb, she has one child. They reside in South Paris, Me. 546. Charles M. Titcomb, not married. (280.) ROLAND G. PAINE, son of Isaac (135), was born Oct. 30, 1808, and married Sarah II. Cook. Dec. 14. 1834. She died June 26, 1856. Have had three children, one of whom died unmarried. The others are 547. Ellen Gre.cn, born April 5, 1841. 548. Eugene Waterman, born April 8. 1845. (281.) BRKJGS T. PAINE, brother of next preceding. born Aug. 5, 1810, married Lucy S. Weston. Dec. 2^. 1833, and have one child : ^49. Abigail Kriggs, horn Nov. / 1824, married Jotham Hatch, of Mansfield. Jan. 10, 1858. Ipswich Branch. 145 (282.) CALVIN B. PAINE, brother of the next pre- ceding, was born Sept. 12, 181 1, married Harriet Baker, Jan. 26, 1834, anc l died Jan. 5, 1878, having had five children, one of whom died young, and the others are 550. Ellen Ro-wena, b. March 23, 1836, d. Nov. 7, 1839 551. Isaac Martin, b. Nov. 13, 1840, unmarried. 552. Charles Henry, b. Aug. 25, 1843, d. Nov. 5, 1843 553- Francis Turner, born Sept. 10, 1846. (286.) ISRAEL H. PAINE, brother of next preceding, was born Jan. 28, 1822, married Susan M. Witherell (236), April 25, 1854. Live in Marshfield, and have one child : 554. Walter Alanson, born in 1864. (287.) DAVIS PAINE, son of Davis (137), born April 15, 1808, married Hepzibah Parker, of Portland. Live in Groton, Mass., and had two children : 555. Caroline. 556. Mary. (292.) HARTFORD PAINE, son of same, born Oct. 8, 1818, married Dorinda How, of Greenwood, and had two children. Several years ago he was missing, and has never since been heard from. 557. Charles. 5^8. Mary. (293.) JACOB PAINE, brother of next preceding, born Jan. 4, 1821, married Eliza Frances Whitman, and re- sides in Oakfield, Wis. Have six children : 559. Frederic H., born July 2, 1852. 560. Paulina A., born May 28, 1855. ^6i. Jacob W., born Feb. 5, 1857. ^62. Hannah /?., born Nov. 10, 1860. 563. Grant D., born Nov. 3, 1868. 564. Rliza E., born Oct. 29, 1872. 10 1 46 Paine Genealogy. (297.) HANNAH E. PAINE, daughter of William (138), married Charles Heath, of Farmington, in 1830, and died Sept. 8, 1848, and had five children : 565. Susan Heath,\*. Nov. 1832, m. J. Beedy in 1849. 566. Leonard^ born 1833, died 1834. 567. Zera, b. 1835, m. G. Batchclder, 1861, d. 1875. 568. Emily //., b. 1838, m. Roscoe Whitney, 1861. 569. Cynthia A., born 1841 , m. Jacob P. Curtis, 1868. (298.) CYNTHIA C. PAINE, sister of next preceding, was born Nov. 25, 1812, married Elias Thompson, July I, 1835, who died Aug. 16, 1874. They lived at Thomaston, Me., and had three children : 570. Cynthia A. Thompson^). Jan. 24. 1839, no * nl> 571. Helen E., born June i, 1844. 572. Theresa E., born Oct. i, 1848. (299.) WILLIAM D. PAINE, son of William (138), born March 26, 1815, at Paris, Me., married Diana Jordan Nov. 12, 1848, and died Dec. 16, 1865. at same place, and had three children : 5573. Horace C., who died in 1861. 574. Azclia. 575. William B. (300.) DANIEL S. PAINE, brother of next preceding, born Aug. 3, 1817, and married Eli/abeth Ridlow. in Thomaston, Oct. 29, 1845. Had one child: 576. Elias 7'., b. Nov. 18, 1848, died Nov. 29. 1848. (301.) HORACE PAINE, brother of same, born April 11, 1823, married Ro/.illa Stevens. He was in the War of the Rebellion, and died at Baton Rouge. Aug. 9, 1863, having four children : 577. yoscfih I)., born in 1854. 578. Ida E.i born in 1852. died in 1854. 579. Alice .I/., born June 26. 18^6. died in 1877. Ipswich Branch. 147 580. Walter H., born July 24, 1858, died in 1877. (303.) CHARLES M. PAINE, son of Nathan (139), was born Dec. i, 1812, and married Eliza P. King. He resides in Cambridge, Mass., but does business, as an optician, in Boston. He has seven children : 581. Eliza A., born April n, 1839. 582. Charles A., born July i, 1841. 583. Adelaid F., born Aug. 30, 1843. 584. Caroline R., born Dec. 26, 1844. 585. Emma L., born Sept. 30, 1848, not married. 586. Frederick W., born March 23, 1850: not m. 587. Ermina D., born March 15, 1854. (304.) HEXRY M. PAIXE, brother of next preceding, lives in Newark, N. J., married Betsey Brown, and has three children : 588. Ellen V. 589. Ed-win A. 590. Alice. (305.) GE"ORGE P. PAIXE, son of Nathan (139), mar- ried Abilena ChafFee, and lives in Worcester ; no ch. (306. ) H AXXAH M. PAIXE, daughter of Nathan (139) , married Winchester Whitman. They live in Wapawn, Minn., and have four children: 591. Eliza F. Whitman, born July 26, 1833. 592. Arabell A., born March 9, 1835. 593. Charles //., born July 15, 1838. 594. Anson C., born Nov. 26, 1852. (3 I 5-) JOSEPH E. PAIXE, son of Emerson (150), was born at Middleboro, Mass., Oct. 20, 1817, married Eliza P. Glover, of Milton, Mass., Nov. 23, 1852, and now lives in Brooklyn, N. Y. He is distinguished as a skillful expert in handwriting, and is very frequently called as witness in cases of forgerv and on occasions where the 1 48 Paine Genealogy. genuineness of handwriting is in question. In a recent case of law in the Superior Court of New York, the pre- siding Justice used the following complimentary remarks relative to Mr. Paine, who had testified as a witness in the case. Speaking of the evidence ottered, the Judge, according to the Court Report, remarked: "And in addition, there was the testimony of the expert, Mr. Paine, which it is impossible to carefully examine, with- out being impressed by the extent, the minuteness and the relevancy of his illustrations and the force of his opinions and conclusions. They seem to indicate, that skill and the resources of science are destined to discover forgery, with a certainty, but little short of a mathematical demonstration." (37 N. Y. Sup. Ct. Rep., 26.) They have had four children, all born in Brooklyn : 595. Rosalie, born Jan. 3, 1854. 595a. A daughter, born Jan. 31, 1857, died same day. 595b. Laura W.,\>. Feb. n, 1858, died Mar. 10, 1868. 596. Mary Eliza, born Dec. 17, 1859. (316.) CIIAKLKS H. PAINE, son of Emerson (150), was born Jan. 5, 1820, married Cordelia Bryant, of Hal- ifax, Mass., where he resides. He is. at present, county commissioner for his county. Had nine children : 597. Lydia K., born Feb. 10, 1846, d. Feb. 8, 1854. 597a. Charles J., born Aug. 24, 1847. 597b. Lucy C., born July. 12. 1849, d. Sept. 13, 1852. 597c. Edward E., b. Oct. 20, 1851, d. Sept. 15, 1852. 597<1. Lucy E., born June 25. 1853. d. June 20, 1857. 598. Annie /?., born Nov. 13. 1854. 599. l^rank E.. born June 29, 1857. 600. Emerson, born March 31. iS6o. 601. Lena /*'.. born Oct. itS. 1866. Ipswich Branch. 149 (317.) HORATIO E. PAINE, son of Emerson (150), born June 1 1 , 1822, married Sarah Atherton, of Brockton, Mass., and lives in Boston, and has four children : 602. Bradford. 603. Mary, married Lyman Howe. 604. Walter. 605. Annie. (318.) MARY N. PAINE, daughter of Emerson (150), born Nov. 27, 1823, married Oliver Holmes, of Halifax, Mass., and resides at East Bridge-water, and has six children : 606. Charles E. Holmes, born Aug. ^, 1844, married Augusta Osborn, Aug. 27, 1871, and has one child, Ernest, born Aug. 27, 1874. 607. Sarah B., born Nov. 9, 1845, married Charles Dunbar, Aug. 30, 1872, having one child, Gertrude, born Oct. 5, 1875. He died September n, 18.77, an ^ sne married Henry M. Howard, Dec. 24, 1880. 608. Mary Amanda, born Dec. 3, 1847, married Robert Pratt, Sept. 17, 1865, and has Walter, born May 4, 1868, and Warren, born March 3, 1877. 609. Joseph Wendall, born Aug. 9, 1851, married Lizzie Huntington, Dec. 20, 1870, and died Aug. 24, 1879. Had Harrison, born May 21, 1874, and Wilfred, born May 22, 1877. 610. Ellen B., born Dec. n, 1854, married Martin A. Hayward. Aug. n, 1879. 611. Willard T., born April i, 1858. (326.) HANNAH MARIA PAINE, daughter of Harvey (154), born Nov. 25, 1823, married Edwin Curtis Bird, Oct. 26, 1841, .and lives at Amenia, N. Y. Has four children : 612. Georgia M. Bird, born March 17, 1843. 1 50 Paine Genealogy. 613. Helen .!/., horn May 16, 1845. 614. George Henry, born May 2, 1847. 615. Afary Curtis, born May 30, 1852. (328.) PAMELA FORREST PAINE, daughter of same, was born Feb. 23, 1828, married George Henry Swift, March 17, 1847, ani ' nas seven children: 616. Emily Eddy Swift* b. Jan. 21. 1848. d. June 20, 1855. 617. Elizabeth Reeves, born July 23, 1849. 6 1 8. George Paine, b. March 26, [ 85 1, d. Nov. 19, 1864 619. Harvey Warren. b. July 23, 1855. d. Dec. 10.1864 620. Maria /?., b. May 12, 1860, d. Nov. 29, 1864. 621. Susan Forrest, born June 10, 1862. 622. George H,, b. Jan. 8, 1871, d. Jan. n. 1871. (33 1 . ) JOSEPH WARREN PAINE, son of Elias B. Paine (156), was born at Boston, March 20, 1832. and "died in his country's sen-ice at New Orleans, Nov. 25, 1864." He was a young man of marked ability, and a pleasant writer both of prose and poetry, using the now de plume of "Perigrine." At one time he was associate editor, with Prof. Mathews. of the ''Yankee Blade" newspaper. In the summer of 1863, he entered the service of his country, in the War of the Rebellion, as first lieutenant of the 131!) N. Y. Cavalry, and served with ability and success in Virginia, gaining great credit for the persistence with which he hunted Mosby. the guerilla, whom, on one occa- sion, he chased for one hundred hours. Early in 1864, he was commissioned as Major of Colored Cavalry, and at once proceeded to the Gulf to join his new command. It is said of him. that he probably recruited more men for the corps d' Afrique. than any other officer in it. In the Red River expedition he won especial honor and distinc- tion for hia bravery and courage. The post assigned him Ipsivich Branch. 151 was one of great danger, and he volunteered to occupy the place of greatest exposure, being stationed in that part of the boat against which the fire of the enemy was particularly directed. Just before encountering the danger, and in anticipation of it, he wrote a letter to his father explaining his position and duties, and closed with these words : ''Should harm come to me, believe my assurance in this solemn moment, that I have no more serious regret, than for the unhappiness that my thoughtlessness may have caused you and my beloved mother." From a letter of a business man who was in the expedition with Major Paine, the following extract is made: "Col. Wilson, of his regiment, informs me that on the Red River expedi- tion, Major Paine did the work of ten men. Always at his post, never flinching from either work or danger, he was most invaluable." "To the colored people he was the best of friends." A leading newspaper of the day spoke of him : "Though a young man, his life has been a very eventful one, and has closed at a period of great promise." He died, at the headquarters of the Army at New Orleans, very suddenly, after only a few days' confinement, from disease contracted by exposure in service. A beautiful "memorial" was published by some of his friends, con- taining an account of his military services and notices of his death, with selections from his writings, and various communications from his associates in civil and military life. He married Mrs. Sallie E. Sawtelle, Feb. 2, 1858, at Cincinnati, but afterwards resided at New York, until his death, as above stated. They had no children. She still survives. (332.) EMMELINE WHEELOCK PAINE, daughter of Elias B. (156), was born June 2, 1834, at Boston, mar- ried Thomas F. Frobisher, April 27, 1857, and resides in Cleveland. Ohio. Has three children : 152 Paine Genealogy. 623. Agnes Frobishcr, b. May 4, 1858, <1. Sept-5, 1858. 624. Emma Frances ', horn July 16, 1860. 625. Nettie, born May 27, 1864, died Aug. 27. 1864. (333-) GEORGIAXNA PAINE, daughter of same, horn at Roxbury. Mass., Oct. 3, 1840, married Nov. 24. 1864. Dr. A. Everett, of Cleveland, Ohio, where they still reside. Have no children. (334.) JANE FRANCES PAINE, sister of next preced- ing, born in Boston, Dec. 23, 1842, married George Francis Leslie, of Saxonville, March 15, 1864. and died June 30, 1870. He died soon after, leaving an only child, who was adopted by Dr. Everett and wife (333) : 626. Emma Louise Leslie, born Feb. 18, 1867. (335.) ANTOINETTE ELIZA PAINE, sister of foregoing, born in Boston, July 11. 1844, married Win. Mansfield, of Marlboro, Mass., Jan. 10, 1870. and died Jan. 2^. 1871, having no children. (356.) RICHARD PAINE, son of Joseph (162), was born in Foxboro, May 25, 1806. formerly lived in Spring- field, Mass., and now in Stony Creek, Conn. He is an engraver of seals, dies, etc., and to him we are indebted for the engraving of the "Coat of Arms" of the family, which forms a part of this book. He was formerly en- gaged as manufacturer of small arms in the Ames Manu- factory, at Springfield. Mass., and in 1843, was appointed Inspector, in the Navy Bureau of Ordnance, at Wash- ington City, reporting to the Commodore. He was afterwards transferred to Philadelphia, under Commodore Warrington. chief of the bureau, since which time he has been employed, at diiVcrent times, in several different places in the government service/but more particularly at Springfield, under command of the late lamented Gen. Ripley. Superintendent of the Armory. He married Avis Ipswich Branch. 153 Kinsley, of Canton, Mass., born Dec. 29. 1814. They have had four children : 627. Nancy B., born Aug. 28, 1837. 628. Richard. Jr., born July 17, 1839. 629. James C., born March 8. 1845, died in infancy. 630. Martha, born February. 1849. (379.) THOMAS WILLARD PAINE, son of Williams (171), married Mary Merton, lives in Milbury, and has two children : 631. George 7"., born in 185^. 632. Henry W., born in 1856. (380.) JOSEPH ANSON PAIXE, brother of next pre- ceding, married Amanda Burlington, and has had four children : 633. Clara C. 634 . Willia m A . 635. Amanda, died in 1862, at 19 years of age. 636. Robert, died in 1872, at 18 years of age. (381.) LAURA ANN PAINE, sister of foregoing, mar- ried Joseph Graflbrd, of Providence, R. I., and has three children : 637. Eli 'cry Gr afford. 638. Robert. 639. A daughter. (383.) HENRY M. PAINE, brother of next preceding, lives in Chicago. Has two children : 640. Charles Henry. 641. Henrv Charles. (38 v) FREDERICK PAINE, son of Nelson (173), born in Foxboro, April 12, 1829, married Martha A* Day, Oct. 30. 1853, resides at Mansfield, and has one child : 642. Charles Frederick, born March 7, 1855. 1 54 Paine Genealogy. (386.) SAKAII S. PAIXK. sister of next preceding, born March 22, 1831, in Mansfield, married Simmer A. Bragg, and have had seven children : 643. Emma Rragg, horn April 8. 1853. died young. 644. George //., horn Jan. 30, 1855. 645. William A., horn Dec. 24, 1856. 646. Herbert S.^ born Aug. 4, 1860. 647. Emma J/., born July 16, 1863, died young. 648. Frank A 7 "., born Jan. 27, 1867. 649. Edward /*., horn June 22, 1869. (387.) HENRY N. PAINE, brother of preceding, born Feb. 8, 1834, at Mansfield, married Mary E. Belcher, Dec. 31, 1855, and has five children : 650. Mary //., born Oct. 2, 1856, died Jan. 30, 1861. 651. Carrie /,., born May 3, 1858. 652. Lillie A., born March 28, 1860, d. Feb. 13. 1881 . 653. Jennie G., born July 17. 1862. 654. Henry N., born Dec. 25, 1869. (389.) EDWARD PAYSON PAINE, brother of preceding, born Aug. 21, 1842, married first, Hannah Topi iff, Jan. 10, 1869 : second, Judith Cole, Oct. 7, 1873. and had two children : 655. Harold E.i who died in infancy. 656. Howard N., born May n. 1877. (395.) AUGUSTUS WILLIAMS PAINE, son of Isaac (1/6). born June i. 1812, married first, Khoda A. Phillips, and second, Isabel Green, lives in Richmond. Me., and has two children : 657. \V illiam A., born Aug. 4. 1841. 658. George W.* born March 2, 1857. (396.) HOSKA EHASTI'S PAINE, son of same, born July 22, 1814, married Sarah Phillips, and lives at N. VaMalboro, Me., and lias two children: Ipswich Branch. 155 659. Mary. 660. Anna. (397.) JAMES EDWARD PAINE, son of same, born July 10, 1823, married Fanny J. Billings, Aug. i, 18^2, lives in Mansfield, Mass., and is a trader. Has two children : 661. Edgar Clarence, born Oct. 2, 1857. 662. Carrie Elizabeth, born Oct. 25,. 1864. (398.) LOEL NELSON PAINE, son of same, born July 22, 1827, married Martha J. Watson, Oct. 2, 1846, and died Aug. 27, 1870, having four children : 663. Francis E., born Oct. 6, 1847. 664. Adrian Emmons, born Nov. 6, 18^2. 665. Elmer Watson, born Oct. 9, 1854. 666. Jonathan May, born Sept. 10. 1861. (429.) LYMAN PAINE, son of David (195), born at Vershire, Vt., married Wealthy Robinson, and has two children : 667. Nelly. 668. Arthur. (430.) DAVID PAINE, son of same, born at Vershire, Vt., married Clarissa Chandler, and has two children : 669. Adda. 670. Eva. 454. CHARLES E. PAINE, son of Robert (201), mar- ried Sarah Colburn, and has two children : 671. Cora. 672. Alice. (463.) MILTON KENDALL PAINE, son of Isaac (206), born in Boston, July 15, 1834, married Helen A. Austin, at Athol, Mass., May, 1857. She died Sept. 16, 1864, and he married again, Mrs. Mary L. Smith, May 6. 1872. He is a druggist, doing business at Windsor. Vt.. and is i $6 Paine Genealogy. now on the Start* of the Governor of that State. Has one child : 673. Jennie Louise , horn Aug. 15, 1861. (469.) TiiADDEi's.M. PAINE, son of Thaddeus (208), born Oct. 6, 1819, at Leicester, \ T t.. married Mary B. Chandler, of Wisconsin, lives in Waupaca, Wis., and has two children : 674. Fhebc E., born Dec. 31, 1853, married Edwin G rover, 1874. 675. John W.^ born Oct. 21, 1857. (471.) GEORGE PAINE, son of Enoch (212), born Feb. 11, 1824, at Leicester, Vt., where he still resides; married Eli/a Cotton, but has no children. (475.) EDWARD PAINE, son of John (213), born Jan. 19, 1829, married Sarah Laird, Dec. 3, 1857, lives at Leicester and has one child : 676. Addle L.. born Sept. 23, 1858, married Marshal O. Snow. (481.) EDWARD L. PAINE, son of Asa (214), born April 3, 1841, resides at Pittsford, Vt., married Francelia M. Ames, June 17, 1869, and has two children: 677. Clinton A., born Oct. 21, 1872. 678. Jessie J/.. born Oct. 13. 1875. (485.) MYKOX PAINE, son of Ichabod (216), born March 27. 1845, at Brandon, Vt., where he still resides, married Delia Lindsey, May 25, 1865. of Hubbardston, Vt., and has one child : 679. Delmer /?., born Nov. 7, 1869. (487.) DAVID WALLACE PAINE, son of David (217), born May 20, 1834, at Brandon, Vt., resides at Wiota, Cass CQ., Iowa, married Marinna E. Lan^don. of New Haven. Vt.. May 24, 1853, and has five children : 680. /.////> />.. born Nov. 23. 1854. Ipswich Branch. 157 681. Selia J., b. Nov. 23, 1854, m.M. A. Sands, 1874. 682. Wesley W., born July 7, 1857. 683. Leslie L., born July 7, 1857. 684. Wilton Albert, born Jan. 21, 1867. (490.) JOTHAM L. PAINE, son of Melzar (220), born Oct. 28, 1810, lives at Westmoreland, N. H., married Jerusha Streeter, June 8, 1841. She was born Jan. 13, 1818, and died June 20, 1861, leaving six children : 685. Jotham Melzar, born Oct. 25, 1842. 686. Maria J., born Oct. 22, 1844. 687. Frank H. , born Jan. 26, 1847. 688. Eunice E., born Dec. 30, 1850. 689. Addie E., born Dec. 5, 1853. 690. Alexander, born May 5, 1857. (495.) GEORGE DUNBAR PAINE, son of Zebediah (221), born in Westmoreland in 1820, married in 1847, Martha M. Paine (494), who died April 6, 1880, at Waukegan, 111. He died March 19, 1851, leaving two children : 691. Sarah Jane* born in 1849. 692. Georgianna, born July n, 1851. (496.) DAVID H. PAINE, son of same, born at Ches- terfield, N. H., May 9, 1826, married Sarah F. Larrabee, April 20, 1862, of Worcester, Mass., where he resides, and has one child : 693. Anne Morris, born Feb. 28, 1869. ' (497.) WILLARD D. PAINE, son of same, born in Chesterfield, N. H., Nov. 29, 1829, and now resides in Exeter, Nebraska, married Mary A. Moses, of Green- wood, 111., Aug. 29, 1854. Enlisted in the War of the Rebellion, and was in Sherman's "March to the Sea." Has one child : 694. Charles W., born May 6, 1860. 158 Paine Genealogy. (498.) LUCY ANN PAINE, daughter of same, born Dec. 14, 1831, married John Williams, of Ballston Spa, N. Y., in 1853. Bv him she had a son, who died young, and her husband died soon after, and she married again, James McMillan, of Adrian ; was again a widow, and herself died at Detroit, childless, June 28. 1870. (499.) MARY EI.LEN PAINE, sister of next preceding. l>orn June 28, 1835, married L. F. Britton. of VValpole, Jan. 23, 1840, and now lives in Elgin, 111., and has two sons and a daughter, having lost three sons by death, at a very early age : 695. George Henry Britton, born June 26, 1850. married and has several children. 696. Allen E.. born June 17, 1859. 697. Caroline .!/., born May 8, 1879. (500.) SUSAN CAROLINE PAINE, daughter of same, born June 29, 1838, married James H. Garrison. of Green- wood, 111., in 1861 ; has two young daughters: 698. Millie Maud Garrison, born Jan. 19, 1874. 699. ycnnic Bell, born March 10. 1877. Ipswich Branch, 159 CHAPTER XVII. GENERATION IX. HENRY S. PAINE (505), son of Henry M. (249), born Jan. 3, 1837, '^ Stoughton, Mass., married Ellen R. Riggs, and had one child, (700). (512.) GEORGE S. PAINE, son of Edward A. (254), born at Winslow, Me., Dec. 29, 1849, married Isa M. Kendall, of Vassalboro, Me., in 1877. Graduated at Waterville College in 1871, studied law, and admitted to practice in due course. Settled in practice at Ottawa, 111., and has one child : 701. Roscoe R., born Aug. 8, 1878. (514.) CHARLES PAINE, son of Charles F. (259), born at Winslow, Aug. 20, 1834. Held the office of postmaster of his native town, after the resignation of his grandfather. Died, unmarried, June 18, 1876. (=515.) ELLEN MARIA PAINE, daughter of same, born March 2, 1836, at Winslow, married Wm. A. Stratton, Oct. 16, 1865, and now lives in Chelsea, Mass., and had five children : 702. Carrie Evans Stratton, born Aug. 24, 1866. 703. Edivard Bowman, b. March 21 , i87oat Chelsea. 704. Esther Loring, born Feb. 25. 1872, at Chelsea. 705. Mabel Jackson, b. March i, 1878, d. in 2 weeks. 706. William At-wood, b. Mar. i, 1878, d. in 3 weeks. (516.) HARRIET NEWELL PAINE, daughter of same, born at Winslow. July 31, 1838, married Augustus Mar- 1 60 Paine (wt'nca/ogy. shall, Nov. 22. 1861, resides in Newton, Mass. Is a photographer in Boston. Has four children: 707. Emma Frances Marshall, born Aug. 24, 1862. 708. Charles Paine, horn Feb. 13, 1865. 709. Helen Louise, born Sept. 24. 1868. 710. Loring Livingston, born March 27, 1876. (517.) ESTIIKK MATILDA PAINE, daughter of same, born Sept. 20, 1840. married Joel Harris Gittings, of Washington. D. C., Sept. 25, 1880. (523.) LVDIA AuorsTA PAIXK. daughter of Albert W. (260). was born at Bangor, Me., Jan. 10. 1850. mar- ried Henry II. Carter, of Boston, Oct. 29. 1872. He does business as publisher and bookseller in Boston, resid- ing at Newtonville. Has two children : 711. Albert Paine Carter, born Dec. 13, 1873. 712. Martha, born Jan. r, 1876. (528.) EDITH PAINE, daughter of Timothy (). (264). was born in E. Bridgewater, Mass., June 18, 1857, mar- ried George Benedict, Nov. 3, 1878, lives at Assonet. Mass., and has one child : 713. Ralf Chapman Benedict, born Feb. 2, 1880. (^29.) HOWARD PAINE, brother of next preceding, was born Oct. 7, 1858, at East Bridgewater. Mass., where he resides. Nov. 24, 1880, married Mary Frances Cook. (547.) ELLEN GKEEN PAINE, daughter of Roland G. (280), born April 5, 1841, married Abel \V. Keene. of Pembroke, Mass., April 15, 1865, and have six children : 714. Francis W. Kccnc, born May 17, 1866. 715. Sarah /.., born Dec. 8, 1867. 716. Mabel A., born Nov. 23. 1869. 717. Nellie R., born Jan. 12. 1874. 718. Chester />'. . born April 8, 1878. 719. Abbie /I., born Sept. 3. 1880. Ipswich Branch. 161 (^48.) EUGENE WATERMAN PAINE, son of Roland G. (280), born April 8, 1845, married Alice H. Curtis. Jan. 15, 1871. Reside at Pembroke, Mass., and have one child : 720. Grace E., born Sept. 23, 1875. (553.) FRANCIS TURNER PAINE, son of Calvin B. (282), born Sept. 10, 1846, married Ella Thomas in January. 1878, and lives in Cambridgeport, Mass. (571.) HELEN E. THOMPSON, daughter of Cynthia (298). born June i, 1844. married Henry A. Willis, of Thomaston. Me., Nov. 23. 1870. and has thi'ee children : 721. Charles H. Willis, born April i, 1872. 722. Theresa J/., b. Sept. 15. 1874, d. Oct. 12. 1874. 723. Helen E.. born Dec. 23. 1876. Mr. Willis is now postmaster of Thomaston. He served in the War of the Rebellion, and was twice taken pris- oner. and confined in Andersonville and Libby prisons. While being removed from one to the other, he jumped from the railroad train and escaped to the North. He had made a previous attempt but failed. (572.) THERESA E. THOMPSON, daughter of same, born Oct. i. 1848. married Stephen R. Estes, of Thom- aston, Sept. 18, 1871, but has no children. They now reside in Ilallowell. He was also in the War of the Rebel- lion, having first served in the ist Maine Infantry, then in the loth Maine, two years as Corporal, and afterwards, until the end of the war, in the 291)1, as Sergeant. (^81.) ELIZA A. PAINE, daughter of Charles M. (303). born April ii, 1839. married Frederick Win. Jones, July 24, 1860, and died Oct. 11, 1863. No children. See (582.) CHARLES A. PAINE, son of same, born July i, 1841, married Cordelia F. Hobbs, Aug. 31. 1871, died Jan. 31, 1874. No children. 11 1 62 Paine Genealogy. (583.) ADKI.AIDK FRANCES PAINE, daughter of same, l>orn Aug. 30, 1843. married Alplicus K. Smith, Dec. 3. 1863, and has three children : 724. Charles Lemuel Smith, born Nov. 9. 1864. 725. William Frederick, born Jan. 4, 1873. 726. JIarry Kitnball, born May 25. 1877. (584.) CAKOI.INK R. PAIXK. daughter of same, born Dec. 26, 1844. married Frederick Win. Jones. Sept. 29. 1864. lie died March 5, 1875. 'No children. (587.) EKMIXA D. PAINE, daughter of same, born March 15, 18^4, married Sunnier II. Daily, April 21, 1873, and has one child : 727. Florence Mabel Daily, born Feb. 20, 1874. (597 a -) CHARLES J. PAINE, son of Charles II. (316). b.Aug. 24, 1847, m. Annie M.Cushman, May 26,1867, noch (598. ) ANNIE R. PAINE, daughter of same, born Nov. 13, 1854, married Herbert L. Wood, Oct. 30. 1876. and afterwards S. Alden. Jr., June 5, 1880. has one child : 728. Herbert Wood, born April 25, 1877. (599.) FRANK E. PAINE, son of same, born June 29. 1857. married Julia M. Drew, Dec. 20, 1879. and has one child : 729. ^fil^lrc^1 R.. born Oct. 13. 1880. (600.) EMERSON PAINE, son of same, born March 31. 1860. married Sarah Drew, Julv 6. 1879: no ch. (627.) NANC-Y H. PAINE, daughter of Richard (356), was born Aug. 28. 1837. married W. F. Davis, resides at Stonv Creek. Conn., and has had seven children : 730. Antoinette ('. /Jtfiv.v. born Aug. 28, 1861. '731. J/tit'v H.. born Oct. 8. 1863. 732. Louis A'., born Feb. 16. 1866. died Dec.. 1880. 1\\. Gertrude, born [an. 28. 1869. 734. George ('., bom Sept. 14. 1872. Ipswich Branch. 163 73 v Mabel, born May 14. 1874. died Feb. 15. 1877. 736. Edith, born March 25. 1877. (628.) RICHARD PAIXE. JR., son of same, born at Canton. Mass.. July 17. 1839. married Marian L. Page, .Sept. 15. 1861. He was a member of 6th Regt. Conn. Vols., in the War of the Rebellion, and served three years as private, was then promoted to the position of Sergeant, and honorably discharged. Was at the attack upon Fort Wayne, at Charleston. Has four children : 737. Joseph B., born Aug. 20. 1866. 738. WiUiam Carpenter, born Aug.. 1870. 739. R. Sawyer * born Nov. 18. 1878. 740. -Effie Eliza, born April 30. 1880. (661.) EDGAR CLARENCE PAIXE. son of James Ed- ward (397). born Oct. 2.1857, married Alice E. Codding. March 17, 1880. Lives in Mansfield, Mass. (685.) JOTHAM MELZER PAINE, son of Jotham L. (490) ,born at Westmoreland, Oct. 25. 1842, married Perses M. Bod well, of Hallowell, Me.. Jan. 2, 1871. She. born Aug. 26, 1844. After a short course of study at Tufts' College, he went to St. Lawrence University, at Canton, N. Y.. where he graduated in 1869, and prepared him- self for the ministry of the Universalist persuasion. Or- dained soon after as pastor of the church at Gardiner and Hallowell. Me., and remained three years. In 1872, installed pastor of the church in Norwich. Conn., but owing to a severe accident which betel him there, lie soon left the place and the ministrv and entered upon a new course of life. He removed to Hallowell. and entered into the employ of the Bodwcll or Hallowell Granite Company as cashier and director, and there remained until his failing health compelled him to resign. From the effect of the accident he never recovered, and an early 1 64 Paine Genealogy. death was the result, it taking place on Sunday. Sept. 19, 1880, at the age of 38 years. He was a person of schol- arly attainments, of taste and culture, a kind husband and father, an accommodating neighbor and honest man, highly respected and beloved as a useful member of so- ciety, and a devoted and successful pastor. His loss was deeply felt by the community in which he lived. The several newspapers in his neighborhood and county joined in eulogistic notices of his death and character, expres- sive of the public sentiment entertained respecting him. He left a widow and one child : 741. Charles Bothcc//, born May 28, 1873. (686.) MAKIA J. PAIXK, daughter of same, born at Westmoreland, Vt., Oct. 22, 1844, married Dr. W. R. Dunham. June 6, 1876. and resides in Keene. N. 11. lias no children. (688.) ErxicK E. PA INK. daughter of same, born Dec. 30. 1850. married Frank P. Clark, of Springfield, 111., fan. 13. 1876, and has one child : 742. Florence l\iinc (.'lark, born Oct. 21. 1876. (691.) SAKAII ]. PAINK. daughter of George I). (f95). born at \Valpole. N. II.. in 1849. and married Henry Harvev. of \Vaukegan, III., in 1867. and there died, Sept. 5. 1870. Had one child who died young: 743. yrsxf llarvev. (692.) GEOKCHAXXA PAINK. daughter of same, born at Walpole. N. II.. July 11. 1851. married James Judge, in March. 1871. and now lives in Elgin. 111., having one child: 744. Caroline ymlge. (694.) CJIAKI.KS \V. PAINK. son of \Villard I). (497). born Mav 6. 1860. married Jennie V,. Taylor, born the hame day. Married May 6. 1878. and have one child : 745. Albert Clayton, born June 16. 1879. Ips%vich Branch. 165 CHAPTER XVIII. ADDENDA. Will of William Paine. last will and testament of the original immigrant 1 ancestor, and American father of the line, of which a general account has been given, on page 72, is regarded as a document of too much interest to his descendants to be omitted here. The following is an exact copy, except that the spelling of the words is changed to conform with modern lexicography. WILL. I. William Paine, of Boston, having been for a long time by the hand of God, much exercised with infirmity of body, yet in perfect memory, do make my will. Unto Hannah, my wife, 200, and my dwelling-house, situate in Boston, with all the out-houses, orchard, gar- dens, &c. ; also, my mill at Watertown, with the houses, lands, &c. ; also, all my household stuff', the use and im- provement of it for life. Unto my three grand-children, which were the children of my daughter, Hannah Appleton, deceased, the sum of 1500, viz., to Hannah, 600, to Samuel, 500, and to Judith, 400. And if any of my said grand- children depart this life leaving no issue, then the said legacy or legacies shall remain to them that survive and their heirs forever. If they depart this life, leaving no issue, then my will is that the said 1500 be repaid back unto my son John Paine, to him and his heirs. Said legacies shall be paid unto my grand-children as thev 166 Paine Genealogy. shall attain unto age. or upon the (lav of marriage. I give to Hannah Appleton. my said grandchild, all the household sturV that now standeth in the hall chamber, to remain to her after mv wife departs this life. The rest of my household stuH' I give unto the other of my grand- children, after my wife's decease. I give unto the children of Simon Evers, Sen., de- ceased, vi/. : Benjamin. Mary. Rebecca. Christian. Ann and Dorothy, 5 each. To Simon Eycrs, the son of Simon Eyers. Jr.. deceased. 5. to be paid when of age. Unto mv sister Page, 3 per vear during life. Unto mv kinsman. John Page, which now is in his hands, the sum of .5, and to the other children of mv said sister Page. vi/. : To Samuel, Eli/.abcth, Mary and Phebe, 5 to each. Unto the children of mv sister Hammond, vi/. : To John, Eli/aheth and Hannah, 5 to each. To my kinswoman. Eli/aheth House, daughter to Samuel and Eli/aheth House, 10. Unto the two daughters of mv cousin John Tall, 40.?. to each when of age : unto my son- in-law. Samuel Appleton. 10: to William Howard. 15 : to Jeremy Belcher. 40.^. : unto Mr. Anthony Stoddcr. .10: unto Christopher Clark. 10: unto Mr. Joseph Taintcr, 10: unto Oliver Purchess. 10: unto Mary Ingion. 4<).v. yearly during life. I give unto the Free School of Ipswich, the little neck of land at Ipswich, commonly known by the name of Jeferries Neck, the which is to be and remain to the ben- efit of the said school of Ipswich forever, as I have for- merlv intended, and therefore the said land not to be sold nor wasted. I give unto the College at Cambridge. io. the which is now paid for that end into the hands of the worshipful Mr. Thomas Davenport, of Cambridge, and shall remain in the hands of the Committee and President Ij>s^v^ch Branch. l6y of the College, and by them for the time being, and their successors after them forever, employ said 20 for the benefit of said college. But the said 20 not to be ex- pended, but to remain as a stock to the college forever. I give unto my reverend friends, viz. : Mr. Norton and Mr. Wilson, pastor and teacher of the church of Boston. 40^. to each ; to Mr. Sherman, pastor of the church at Watertown, to Mr. Brown, pastor of the church at Sud- bury, to Mr. Cobbitt, pastor of the church at Ipswich, to Mr. Fisk, pastor of the church at Chelmsford, to Mr. Phillips, teacher of the church at Rowley, to Mr. Mayhew, pastor of the new church of Boston, 40.9. each. All the rest of my estate unto my son John Paine. If John depart this life leaving no issue, nor children of said issue, then my will is that the houses and lands which of right do belong unto me, within the bounds of Ipswich, with the privileges, etc., I give unto the children of my said daughter Hannah Appleton, deceased, namely : Hannah, Judith and Samuel, or so many of them as shall be then alive as co-heirs to the same, to them and their heirs for- ever, according as there is provision made in a deed of gift, formerly given unto my son John Paine. If John depart this life leaving no issue, nor children of said issue, then my will is that the children of my sister Page, men- tioned above, shall have out of my estate the sum of ,300. to be equally divided between them. If my wife should depart out of this life, before myself, then my will is that the children of Simon Eyres, Sen., deceased, shall have 5 apiece added to their former 5. and the children of my sister Page and sister Hannah, shall have 5 apiece added to their former 5. I do hereby earnestly request Oliver Purchess to be helpful to my son. John Paine, concerning the Iron Works 1 68 Paine Genealogy. and the accounts thereof, whose abilities and faithfulness I have had experience of. unto whose care I do commit the said accounts. I make my son, John Paine, my son-in-law, Samuel Appleton, and Mr. Anthony Stodder, niv executors : and I do request Mr. Christopher Clark. Mr. Joseph Taintcr and Mr. Oliver Purchess to he my overseers and feoffees in trust of this, my will. My will is, that if my said overseers, with my executors, shall see just case for some pious use and necessary work, to give 100. they shall have power to take it out <>f my estate. 2 Oct.. i6f>o. WILL. PAINK. (Seal.) Postscript. I give unto Dr. Clark. 5. and I do give to Capt. Thomas Clark Company to huv their cullers, the sum of 5. In presence of us. JOHN MAYO, ClIKISTOIMIKIt Cl.AltK. \VlI.I.. IIoWAKO. 14 Nov., 1660. Mr. Samuel Apple-ton appeared before the Court, and declared by reason of his remote living, and inability to manage such a trust, he did renounce his executorship of the will. Also. Anthony Stoddard. on request of Mr. John Paine, son of the late William Paine, did renounce his executorship to the will, which was done before the probate of the will. KDWAK1) RAWSON. Recorder. 14 Nov., 1660. John Mayo. Christopher Clark and Win. Howard, deposed. Ipswich Branch, 169 LETTER TO Gov. WIXTIIROP. On previous page 61, mention is made of a series of letters, written by William Paine to the t\vo Govs. Winthrop, and now perpetuated by the Mass. Historical Society in their "Historical Collections." The following one is published as a sample. The others are all on busi- ness subjects, connected with the various enterprises de- scribed in the previous Chapter XI : WILLIAM PAINE TO JOHN WIXTHROP. To the Right Worshipful and much honored loving friend, the Governor, Right Worshipful and much honored in the Lord : These are to give your Worship to understand, that whereas Goodman Metcalf made some speech of your not having forty bushels of corn, he should not have needed, for, although Coley did not deliver his, which I might have had of him when I was there, yet, however I would fall short of this forty, it will be delivered according to your direction. Sir, there is another business w r hich I hear your Wor- ship is to have the hearing of, which is between one Smith and my brother Hammond's daughter. For when I was at the Bay, he made a great stir about it, and much desired that we could go to Mr. Phillips or Mr. How. to have them hear the business, that was between him and the maid : resolving, if he might not safely leave her. when he heard Mr. Phillips he would then be ruled by his judgment: and so he told his tale. Mr. Phillips' an- swer was, that he could not leave her, except she were willing, or else that he could prove something that would make a nullity. And then he resolved, at that time, to go on and proceed. 1 70 Paine GeneaJogy. More I might say, but I shall not at this time. This. I am sure, he had done the maid a great deal of wrong, and for my part. I think if they had been wise as they should, she may make as good a man's wife, as he is. But I could desire that it might be made an end of. that the Court might not be troubled with it. Hut if it should come to the Court, then I should desire that I might have word. But thus leaving and commending you and all your affairs to the Lord's good guidance, thus remaining vours to command, to his power, witli my service to your Worship. WILLIAM PAIXK. From Ipswich, the 2/st of 2<1 month. 1640. SAL K M W IT C II C H A FT . On page 94. mention is made of a letter signed "R. P.." which had a powerful influence in dispelling the witch- craft delusion at Salem in 1692 : and on page 139, allusion is made to Rev. John 1 1 ale's efforts and success in effecting the same result. The following additional facts and reasons, bearing on the same subject, are re- garded as important and altogether appropriate to be related here, in connection with the family history now traced. The character and effect of the letter have been already described, leaving for decision simply the ques- tion of its authorship. At the time the letter was written, there stems to have been no abatement of the spirit with which the illusion was prosecuted by the public. Subsequent events, how- ever, show most conclusively that such was not the case with individual minds in the community. There evidently existed to some extent a feeling of distrust on the subject, especially among the more intelligent and thoughtful men of the day, but the practice of "crying out" against some member of the family of any one who Ipswich Branch. \*j\ ventured to doubt the guilt of the accused, had the effect to smother every expression of opposition. How far this practice may explain the reason for accusing Mrs. Hale, cannot now be determined. An inference, however, may be very properly drawn from the fact. that, at about the same time with the writing of the letter in question. Judge Corwin's mother-in-law was accused in the same manner. Mr. Paine, as foreman of the Grand Jury, more than any one else had the opportunity to become acquainted with the "true inwardness" of the accusations, and being of an intelligent and educated mind, would very naturallv be led to abhor the whole business. Of the same class of mind and education. Rev. Mr. Hale, who, as pastor of the church where the delusion existed, was brought con- stantlv in contact with it, would naturallv be similarly affected. By men such as these, we should expect to find the first steps taken for reform, and the succession of events goes to prove or confirm the idea that such was the case. The letter was written Aug. 9. 1692, and was, as Mr. Upham writes, ''the first undisguised and unequivocal opposition to the proceedings." On the 9th and lyth days of the next month, fifteen persons were tried, and all found guilty and condemned, and eight actually ex- ecuted on the 22d of the same month, for the crime of being "possessed." Immediately following these events, in October. Mrs. Sarah Noyes, the wife of Rev. John Hale, was suddenly accused of the same crime. 'Her genuine and distinguished virtues. "savsMr. Upham. "had won for her a reputation, and secured in the hearts of the people a confidence which superstition itself could not sullv nor shake." "This broke the spell by which 172 Paine Genealogy. they had held the minds of the whole colony in bondage." Thus in about two months after the letter was made public, the fallacy was exposed and the whole order of things reversed. "A sudden collapse took place." as the history records, "after the executions on Sept. 22. and the court met no more. The executive authority intervened, and their functions ceased. The curtain fell unexpectedly and the tragedy ended." "The special court being no longer suffered to meet." another court was established for the trial of the witches, and held a term in Salem shortly after, when twenty persons were tried, all but three of whom were acquitted. Public opinion, at that time, had become so strong in condemnation of the whole affair, that Sir \Vm. Phipps, by proclamation, discharged all those in prison, about 150 in number, and thus ended the whole delusion. Why the "special court" was thus treated does not appear, but an explanation may be fairly drawn, it would seem, from the fact that its Judge was the person to whom was written the letter in question, which betook such care to preserve. Though undoubtedly many causes combined to produce the grand result now described, yet the two just now treated of, are the only specific ones especially dwelt upon by the author of the history quoted in the foregoing re- marks. The character and tendency of this letter have been already explained, and what effect the open opposi- tion of Mr. Hale produced, every one knows who has the least knowledge of the subject in question. It is not however to be supposed, that it was solely the accusation made against his wife that led him to denounce the whole infamy, much less that it was the original cause of his disaffection. Much more likely was it. as* already suggested, that the accusation was the result of his previous coldness Ipswich Branch. 173 or known doubts on th.e subject. Though he knew of his wife's innocence, it by no means followed that he disbe- lieved in the existence of the crime. Her innocence did not disprove the guilt of others, any more than the charge of theft against an innocent party, disproves the crime of larceny. Be that however as it may, that accusation was the culminating point, the last feather which broke the back of the infamy and placed the parson openly on the side of the opposition. But he must have had doubts before, however ''active he may have been in all previous proceedings." The writer of the letter and the parson must have had the sympathy of each other, and would very naturally be fellow workers, perhaps secretly, to undo the great evil then overshadowing the community. And just here comes in the important fact, that Robert Paine and John Hale were both ministers, of the same faith, residing in the same neighborhood, both graduates of Harvard University, in college together for three years, the former graduating in 1656, and the latter in 1657, both probably having pursued their theological studies together, and been, of course, ever after on most intimate terms of friendship. It can hardly be otherwise than that they sympathized in their efforts to put down the great evil which existed, and took mutual counsel to ac- complish their object. The writing of the letter and the open opposition of Mr. Hale were only about two months apart. The removal of Judge Corwin immediately followed and a new Court instituted, and Sir Wm. Phipps' procla- mation soon closed the scene. The almost exact contem- poraneousness of all these events show how much they had to do with each other in effecting the result, while the acknowledged character of the letter itself, in the language of Mr. Upham. as already quoted, "indicates a 1 74 Paine GencaJogy. theological education ami familiarity with matters that belong to the studies of a minister." It would seem that a more certain demonstration of the authorship of the letter could hardly be asked and that the other fact related by the same author, "that Jonathan Corwin pre- served the document and placed it in the permanent files of his family papers," is certainly very suggestive of the conclusion that he. himself, added the name of the writer, whose initials alone were written bv its author. VISITATIONS." On page 41. of this volume, mention is made of the "Visitation of SuHblk County." as an authority from which Jias been derived much of the pre-emigration his- tory of the particular family to which this work is de- voted. A brief description of this authority may be of interest to the reader. In the latter part of the i6th century, and the early part of the lyth. a very general interest seems to have existed to collect and perpetuate the history and lineage of leading and prominent families in diilerent parts of England. The work was done by a class of men known as "Heralds." who perambulated the country and made note of their discoveries. These were afterwards pub- lished under the name of ''Visitations," each work us- ually embracing a single county or city. The principal counties of England and the city of London were thus visited and their genealogical histories made public. The great interest existing at the present day. in such litera- ture, has led to the republication of these books, mostly under the favor of the "Ilarleian Society " of London. They are replete with information of the choicest kind, to all \\lio are interested in the history of such families as found admission to their pages. Ipswich Branch. 175 Among the compilations thus made, is that of Suffolk County, above mentioned. It is not, however, one of the Harleian Societv publications. As New England \vas largely settled by Suffolk County emigrants, the book has a peculiar value to their many descendants, now widely dispersed over the whole country. CONCLUSION. The history now produced has been made to embrace the genealogv of the family, individually and by race, from the earliest pre-historic period : from the cradle, so to speak, of the human race, down to the cradles of the present dav. Commencing with the origin of the race in Japhetic times, its history has been followed across the fields of Europe, through the ages of Scandi- navian and Norman existence, across the channel to Eng- land, and dow r n its centuries to the early American emigration. From that time, every family of the line, bearing its own patronymic, is believed to have been recorded in this work, down to a late year of the present century. Since, however, the broad fields of the Great West and the Pacific States have absorbed so many of the children of New England, it has been found impossible to trace all such as belong to the family in question. But vet the exceptions are few. however much the Norman spirit of enterprise may have led its sons to seek new homes in new lands. Though not pursued by the writer as a matter of business, but only as a diversion in hours outside of office work, yet the effort has been 'made to fill every point and make the roll complete, both in names and dates. The book is respectfully presented to the many members of the family and others interested, with the hope that its perusal may afford at least, a passing pleasure, if not a 1 76 Paine Genealogy. permanent benefit to them, from knowing who were their fathers, whose blood now flows in their veins, and whose spirit controls or influences their lives. At the same time, the writer cannot hesitate to express the sentiment, that all members of the line may justly reuli/e as applicable to them, the truth of the adage, with which this history begins. " The (iforv of Children are their Fathers" GENERAL INDEX. PAGE. American History of the Family 57 Ante-emigration History of the Family 5 Argument of John Paine on his Trial 89 Arnold's History of Rhode Island, reference to 92 Aryan History 7 Aurauia Fort 60, 79 Baldwin II., King of Jerusalem 28, 30 Book of the Dead, account of 142 Boston Merchant, William Paine 69 Boston Property owned by same 68 Bosworth and Market Bosworth 33, 41 Boundary of Colony run by John Paine 79 Bradford's History 66 Braintree Iron Works 64, 66 Buckingham, Duke of 44, 45 Calvin, John 78 Canpmcus, Indian Chief 88 Celtic Invasion 7 Channel Islands 16 Charles II., King 80 Coat of Arms of Family 33, 38, 44, 91 Coat of Arms, Description of 35 Coat of Arm?, Engraving of 34 Coitt of Arms of John Paine 92 Coats of Arms 26,32, 91 Coats of Arms as Evidence of Family Identity 32 Commission of John Paine as Governor 82 Conflrmatoin of Prudence Island Title 82 Conclusion 175 Corwin, Jonathan, Judge 94, 17;S Crusade, First ...17,27,37 Crusader, Progenitor of Family was a 36 Davenport, Rev. John 61 Domesday 22, 141 Dudley. Gov 61, 62 Dutch Government of N. Y 60 Edmund, Nnme of, &n 24, 38, 43 Educational Traits of Wm. Paine 71 Egyptological and Oriental Studies 141 Emigration of Original A merican Family 55, 57 Expert Practice in Handwriting 147 Family Lineage 41 Family Patronymic, History of 19 Franks, Western 8 Free Adventurers Enterprise 5fl, 79 Free School of Ipswich 71, 75 Gage's History of Suffolk County 41 Godfrey de St. Omer 27, 29 Goths and Vandals 9 Grave of Wm. Paine 73 Hale. Rev. John 139,170 Halifax, Fort 142 Hammersmith Iron Works 63 1 7 8 General Index. ll.ii ..-i.ii, Society 174 Hunting*. Battle of 17 Hengrave. Komoval of Family to 43 Henry VIII. Sale of Monastery to Paine 45 Hennr VIII. Execution of Buckingham 44 Heraldry as aid to Genealogy ::_' Homilty, Doctrine of 5 Hugh de Payen 27, 29, 30, 39 II 11 i: li de Pay en a Progenitor of Ipswich Branch 3<> Hume's Htatory 6, 22 Immigration of Original American Family 55, .17 Interesting Death Scene 140 Inventory of Win. Paine'H Estate 70 Ipuwich incorporation (irant f>'.> I vanliue, Extract trom _*> .1 HUM II., King 81 .1 IIM.->. Fort 80 Japhetic Race 7 Jeneries' Neck 71 Jersey Isle 16, 20 Knight, Progenitor of Family was 36,42 Knight* of Christ 28 Knighthood of Payne 35,36 Laps and Fins 8, 14 iaiaetter County Home of Paine 33. 41 I .otters of Wm. Paine 61, 1H Lineage of Family 41 I xm'laoo. Oov 80, 82, HI Lynn Iron Work* 62, 66, 79 Massachusetts Historical Society Publications 61, 92, 169 Manor Lord of . Nowton et als 45, 46, 47, 4S, 50 Monastery of St. Edmund 45 Name of "Paine," its Origin 6. 19, jo Names, Important, in Tracing Descent 38, 4.1 N.-iin-i of William, Robert and Edmund 38, 4.1 New Haven I ron Works 65 Norman History and Genealogy 15 Northmen 9 Orders ami Privileges of Sophy Manor or Prudence Island 84 i >>, i. u i J6 Parties made Witnesses in Criminal Suits 138 Patronymic of Family 19 Pallium, Pa^en, Pagiml 19, '.', 30, :> Patent of Prudence Island 82 PaelixhiiH'nt OK Prudence Inland or Sophy Manor 80 to 91 Pre-hlstoric Niln Dwellers 142 Pultney. Sir William 42 Pythea*' Visit 10 Rod River Expedition 150 Robert, Duke 17, 27 Rollo, Ihike 15, 19 "R. P." Letter 94,170 lUlnm Witchcraft 94, 170 Scandinavian Hlittory 7 Scott, Kurort from 29 Soloinon'H Teoiple 142 Sopiiy Manor 80 Stnrlirtdtt* Uad Minns fifi SurnaiiKM Adopted 20, 3H General Index. PAGE. Suffolk County, Removal to ........................... ...................... 43 Templars of Cross.. t ..................................................... 27, 38 Templar's Pledge ........................................................... 28 Teutonic Race ............................................................... 8 Thompson's Island ......................................................... 67 Upham's History of Witchcraft ....................................... 94, 170 Visitation of Suffolk County and Leicestershire ...................... 41, 42, 174 Visitations ........... . ................................ _____ ............... 174 Watertown Mills .................................................... . ..... 62 Will of Anthony Paine .................. ..... ....... .................... 47 Will of Henry Paine .............. ................................... 45 Will of Win. 'Paine ......................... . ............................ 72, 165 William the Conqueror .................................... . ........... 16, 20, 2(t Williams, Roger ......................................................... 88 Witchcraft Delusion. . . .............................................. 93, 170 Wiuthrop, Gov ........................................ 61,63,64,65,67,169 Wulfstan and Ohthere ..................................................... H York, Duke of ............................................................ 81 INDEX OF CHRISTIAN NAMES. Abbie .......................... 470 AbieJ ............................ 103 Abijrail .................... 9'2, 209. 276 Abigail B ........................ 649 Abijah ......................... 145 Abner .......................... 460 Acbsa ........................... 119 AclMa A ......................... 251 Adda. .......................... 669 AUdieE ....... ............... 689 Addle L .................... 676 A.l.-litide F .................... 583 Adrian ........................ 004 Agatha ........................ 13 AKiiea .......................... 16 Alxnson .......................... 484 All.-rt C ...................... 745 Aliwrt P ..................... 711 Albert W ........................ 260 A li-xander .................... 690 Alice ........................ 590, 672 Alice M .......................... 579 Amanda ...................... 635 A nine ........................... 174 Ann ....................... 23,36,48 Anna... ............. 16,82,322,660 A nna B ........................ 626 Anne ............................ 29 Anne M ....................... 693 Annie ............................ 606 Aimi.-K ........................ 698 Anthony .............. ....... 12.39 Antoinette B ................ XL r < Aa ...................... 105, 126, 214 Asa M ........................... 140 AsaW ......................... 155 Apollos .......................... 151 Arthur ........ '. ............... 668 Aiijjustus W ............ ........ 396 A/..;li ........................ 674 Arro ......................... 463 Benjamin C .............. ....... 261 H.-rtlia ....................... 633 BeUey .......................... 16K Uradford ........................ 02 J81 :alvlnB ...................... 282 Carlo* ........................... 6011 Caroline ......................... 656 Caroline M ...................... 262 Caroline K ..................... 684 Carrie K ........................ 662 Carrie L ......................... 651 Catharine ................. 141. 411 Charter .............. 324, 602, 514, 657 OliarlM A ......................... 683 CI,arlB ........................ 741 < l,:ili.. K I" t No. Charles F 2-V.i, r.ij Chnrles H 316, ftftj, 1140 Charles.) M7a Charles M 303 Charles W 94 Chiirlotte 2!tl CharlotteE 206 Chloe S 38* ClaraC 633 Clarissa 1!8 Clinton A 677 Cora 671 Cynthia 147, 207, 428 Cynthia C 1KW Daniel 56, 136, 152 Daniel B 625 J>aniH M... >7 Daniel S 300 David 195, 217, 4:) David H 46 David W 487 Davis 137,287 Deliuer B C7! DoriMs 58 Dorothy .. 22, 45 Earl 193 KdgarC 661 Ebt'iieeer W 252 Kdith 52 Edmund 4 Edward, 11, 47, 87, 116, 205, 210,441 462, 475 Edward A 2. r >4 Edward E . r !t7 Edward L 4M Edward P 38!l Edwin A 589 I. 740 Elian B If* Elian K 332a EliasT f.76 Eltaha 278 EllEa 218 ElitaA f*\ ElitaB 327 Ellita B 5U4 Elizabeth.... 14, 34, 44, 68, 86, 175, 279 Eliwtbetb W 400a Ellen 455 Ellen 547 KlI.-nM 615 Kll.n R 5fti Ellen V f*8 Elnnjr W M Emma F 620 KmmaL 586 Emellna 503 150, 000 Index of Christian Names. 181 No. Emmeline W 330, 332 Enoch 110, 212 ErminaD 587 Esther 127, 178, 224, 491 Esther M 517 Eugene W 548 Eugenie H 524 Eunice. . . 123 Eunice E 688 Eva 670 Fanny 296 Frances 17, ;-39 Francis E 663 Francis T 553 Frank 338 Frnnk E 599 Frank H 687 Frederic 128.385 Frederic H 527,559 B^rederic W 586 George 9, 442, 471 George D 495 George H 507 George P 248,305 George S 250, 512 (ieorge T 631 George W 658 Georgianna 333, 464, 692 German G.. . . 476 Grant I> 563 Grace E 720 Hannah 54,81,93,107 Hannah E 297 Hannah M 306.326 Hannah R 562 Harriet 439, 479, 493 Harriet N 263,516 Harrison 437 Harold E 655 Harvey 164 Hartford 275, 292 Helen T 332b Henry 6, 24, 33, 37, 41, 49, 302, 448 Henry C 641 Henry M 249, 304 383 Henry N. 387, 654 HenryS 505 Henry W 253, 632 Herbert W 5:55 Horace 301 Horace C 573 Horatio E 317 Hosea 170, 200 Hosea E 396 Howard 529 Howard N 656 Ichabod 216 IdaE 578 Isaac 104, 135, 176, 206, 222, 283 Isaac M 551 Isaac N 465 lsal>ell 532 Isabella 337 Israel H 286 Jacob 95, 100, 293 Jacob W 561 James.... 101,143,288,534 James 629 panics E. 37 No. James S 477 Jane 120, 321 Jane F 334 Jeannie W 511 Jemima Ill Jennette 480 Jennie G 653 Jennie L 673 Jerusha loo Jesse 115 Jesse C 466 Jessie M B78 Joel 109,172 John, 7, 26, 31, 55, 57, 58, 84, 91, 98, 213 510 John W 675 Jonathan M 666 Joseph 108, 162, 197, 382, 531 Joseph A 158,336,380 Joseph B 737 Joseph D 577 Joseph E 315 Joseph H 329 Joseph W 331, 467 Jotham L 4!K) Jotham M 685 Julia 340 Justin 504 Kesiah 142 Laura A. 381 Laura W 5951) Lemuel 99,124 LenaF .... 601 Lenora . 483 LillteA 652 LillieD 680 Leslie L 683 Loel N 398 Lois 177, 211 Loney 204 Louis 431 Lucas 129 Lucia M 474 Lucieii 461 Lucina 459 Luciuda 149 Luna 320 Lucy .... 513 Lucy A 498 Lucy C 597b Lucy E 597d LydiaA 523 Lydia K 597 Lytiian 429 Maria 443 Maria J 680 Marinda 202 Mary, 21, 30, 35, 97, 102, 134, 163, 289 489, 556, 558, 603, 659 Mary A., 399,521 Mary E 499,500,508,5% Mary H 650 MaryN 318 MaryT 323 Martha 40, 440, 630, 712 Martha M 494 Martha T 157 Melzer 220 Millie 220 Milton K 463 Miriam 530 lS2 fmtex of Christian Names. Myron 486 Nancy 191 N.tn.-y H 627 Nancy M SOI Nathan 139 Nathaniel W 159 Nelly 667 NeUon 173 Nicholas 10 OliTO 113,219,225,473 Olive E 480 Otis 120,274 OtisF 518 Pamela F 328 1'iuilina 886 I'.niliiiaA 560 Peddy 166 Porals 492 Phebe 46 Phebe E 674 Philander 456 P82 Downes .... 76 I Batolielder. Beedy 199,567 565 Drew Dudley 599, 600 .... 158 James Jones ....581, 584 Benedict... Beriffs Bigg Biggs Billings ... Bird 528 37 51 35 .... 1X5, 3!>7 326 Dunbar Dunham.... 238, Dyer Edson Ells Kstes 607 276. 686 .... 279 226 493 .... 572 Jordan Judge Keeley Keene Kelley.... Kendall... 2!>9 692 214 547 501 512 Bex 1 well Bowles Boyden Bragg Bridgham . Briggs 685 10 , 102, 127 386 21 373 Everett Eyre Felton Field Fisher, 89, 141, 333,376 King .... 45 Kinsley Knight .... 541 Knights ... 131 175,241. i Laird 377 Lane 303 -.6 216 206 475 172 Brockway.. Brown,.. 95, Bryant 491 152, 545, 304 316 Forrest Freeman French 154 Langdon... 256 Larrabee... 404 Lawrence 33'' Lnuvitt: 487 496 500 265 Buck Buflingtoii Bull.. . ... 542 380 85 Garrison Gerish .... 500 .... 78 Leonard, . . Leslie .. Lindsey 161 334 4S5 Burdett Carpenter.. Carroll Carter Ciistell Chaffee.... Chandler.. Chap in Clienerv. . . . '.ML' 99. 102 131 523 12 . . 305 ....430, 469 19 (lest Gilbert :;6 374 517 Loring Lovejoy M'Millaii .. Maltby .Mann Mansfield.. 259 508 498 455 375 335 510 Godfrey Goodrich Graltord Green Grigson Glover Grover. 79, 112, 118, 157, 159, Ha<*er .... 449 .... 205 .... 381 395 ....; 4 .... 315 113,113, 171, 674 228 Mattoon. . . . I'M Merton .... 379 Mills > Clark. .'.78, Codding. . . 193, 196, 197 688 661 Mor8elOO,110,l33,140,ll>r. Moses. . . <*"" Hale '60 Nichols Coffin 253 44 Cogswell . . . Colburn . . . Cole 57 454,456 38!) Harding Harvey 121, 151 .... 691 137 Oliver 54 606 Coiner 108 Hartshorn .164, 344 166 Ozier 23 Cook . . . . 280 529 Page 46, 217, 628 135, 136, 159 169, 174, 176 286. 494.495 Copeland . . Cotton 266 ........ 471 Hart Harton 232 . 214 Paine.. 122, 167. 236. Cram 249 Hatch . . . 549 Crocker... .. 257 Havden . . . . 261 12711 .S 4 Jntfcx to Intermarriages. Parker PartriJjje. . No. 55,287 130 Shaw Sberwln.. . No. 173 272 Tuel No. .. .. 225 Walton .. . 4 Patt .. 1C3 Shope 287 201 177 83 I'-i-kett 13| Sin nil .:.>,! Snuw Sparrow... f>,4K,4(>3,. r >l<3 .....'" 14 128 Pendleton. P. ikins... Phillips ... 1WI 24!> "Hlft 3!*6 Warren .... 124 .... 3SIK \\i-llman.. . . Weston .... 98 . 29.281 P.k- PUytorn Plimpton.. . Pratt 13, Puffer ... . ....239,250 30 131, 378 ''. 1.11, '" Spring.... Stanley . . . Stevens . . . Story 26 ....138, IM: 301 2(59 ... 156 Whipple 58 Stratton .. .271, 'JM, Sir, I'" 1 Whit- WhitliiK Whitney . Whiltlugton. . . ... 2.Vt ... 43 .213, 58 7K 1 Uawson.. . K 1 K-iner 540 224 58 Sninii-r. . . 14C, SweeUir. . . Swift Taylor 83 328 \Vliilin in Wi"'ht . . .293. 30T, 16O Ki.-lianl*... ...lol. 143 WiVllaiiis . -'. 120 Willis 230,' 4!IS ... 671 478 Ki.-li:trclson.ll|, 117, 2TKI Kiillow -"VKi Thomas... Thompson TilTany . K, 4KO. 553 .J 103, 115, 42!l 245 Wlthereil.. .. Wise 119, 2W! . 7K Sawtelle. ... 331 Titus 178, liM WoU'Ott . . . 77 15.'} Wo< >< 1 Sawyer.... . 204 Topi i IT... .. 389 Wiiulil . '.'. 131 University of California SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY 305 De Neve Drive - Parking Lot 17 Box 951388 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90095-1388 Return this material to the library from which It was borrowed. JUL 2 7 2001 SRLF 2 WEEK LOAN CENTRAL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY University of California, San Diego DATE DUE DEC 14 198! NOV 1 1 88? UCSD Lifcr