Jeremiah HOWES

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Jeremiah HOWES (son of Jeremiah HOWES and Sarah PRENCE).

    Jeremiah married Mary DAGGETT after 18 Oct 1693. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Jeremiah HOWES was born about 1637 in England (son of Thomas HOWES and Mary BURR); died on 9 Sep 1708.

    Jeremiah married Sarah PRENCE. Sarah (daughter of Gov. Thomas PRENCE and Mary COLLIER) was born about 1646; died on 03 Mar 1706/7. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah PRENCE was born about 1646 (daughter of Gov. Thomas PRENCE and Mary COLLIER); died on 03 Mar 1706/7.
    Children:
    1. 1. Jeremiah HOWES
    2. Prence HOWES was born about 1671; died on 2 Oct 1753.
    3. Ebenezer HOWES was born about 1673; died on 08 Jan 1726/7.
    4. Thomas HOWES died on 3 Aug 1700.
    5. Elizabeth HOWES
    6. Sarah HOWES
    7. Mary HOWES was born about 1672.
    8. Bethiah HOWES died between 7 Mar 1746/7 and 30 Jun 1748.
    9. Mercy HOWES was born about 1682 in Massachusetts.
    10. Susannah HOWES
    11. Thankful HOWES
    12. Rebecca HOWES died on 23 Mar 1724/5.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Thomas HOWES was born in England; died between 6 Oct 1665 and 13 Oct 1665.

    Notes:

    Name:
    Thomas Howes was first in Lynn and afterward settled in yarmouth, of which he was one of the three original proprietors. He settled at Nobacusset on the north side of Cape Cod, which afterwards became a part of the town of Dennis. he was one of those in August, 1643, between 16 and 60 years of age, able to bear arms in yarmouth. he was one of the deputies from yarmouth to the General Court at Plymouth for six years, commencing in 1652. The tax of his widow (then also the Widow of Gov. Prence) in 1676 towards the charges of the late war" was L1 3s. 4d.

    The first mention of Thomas' Howes is in the court records of Essex county n September, 1633. At the 10th Quarter Court, held at Salem Sept. 25, 1633, in the suit of Mr. Holgrave against Thomas Howes for trespass, the jury found for the plaintiff seven bushels and a half of corn and four shillings costs. At the same court Abram Temple obtained a verdict for two bushels of corn, five shillings damages and four shillings costs against Mr. John Humphreys, Mr. Howes and Mr. Hawks for trespass done by their horses; Hugh Browne, a verdict for three bushels of corn, seven shillings and sixpence damages and four shillings costs against Thomas Howes for trespass; James Molton a verdict for eleven bushels and one peck of corn and four shillings costs against Mr. Howes and Mr. Hawks for trespass; James Hinds, a verdict against the same two for four bushels and a half of corn and four shillings costs for trespass; and Henry Skerry, a verdict against the same two, also for trespass for the same amount of corn and costs....

    Thomas married Mary BURR. Mary was born in England; died on 09 Dec 1695 in Yarmouth; was buried on 11 Dec 1695. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary BURR was born in England; died on 09 Dec 1695 in Yarmouth; was buried on 11 Dec 1695.
    Children:
    1. Joseph HOWES was born before 1634 in England; died on 19 Jan 1694/5; was buried on 21 Jan 1694/5.
    2. Capt. Thomas HOWES, Jr. was born in England; died on 20 Nov 1676.
    3. 2. Jeremiah HOWES was born about 1637 in England; died on 9 Sep 1708.

  3. 6.  Gov. Thomas PRENCE was born before 1600 in Probable near Lechlade, Gloucestershire, England (son of Thomas PRENCE and Elizabeth TODLERBY); died on 29 Mar 1673 in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachusetts; was buried on 08 Apr 1673.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Fact: Treasurer of Plymouth Colony
    • Fact: Served Plymouth Colony as Governors Assistant
    • Fact: Elected as the 4th Governor of Plymouth Colony
    • Fact: Served as Commissioner of the United Colonies
    • Fact: Second term as governor of Plymouth Colony
    • Fact: Elected Governor of the Jurisdiction of New Plym

    Notes:

    Thomas came in the "Fortune" that arrived at Cape Cod November 9, 1621.

    Excerpt from "Dawes-Gates, Ancestral Lines":
    His residence was first at Plymouth, but before the spring of 1632 he had followed his father-in-law, William Brewster, to Duxbury, where Patience Brewster, the wife of Thomas Prence, died in 1634 and where the residences of these two families continued until 1644, at which time the beloved Elder William died and Thomas Prence removed with his family to Nauset on the Cape. In this change he was accompanied by six other families, including those of John Doane, Josiah Cooke, and Edward Bangs, a total of forty-nine souls. there he was instrumental in forming the fourth church in the infant colony and in 1651 the settlement was renamed Eastham. While Thomas was still resident in Duxbury, and aged on about thirty-four, he was elected governor in 1634, serving then for the term of one year. In 1638 he was again the recipient of the same honor, but five years previously a law had been passed requiring the governor to reside in Plymouth, so he declined the office. On the insistence of the court he agreed to accept the position if the residence clause were waived. That request was granted, and he served during the year 1638. For more than forty years after 1632 he continuously served as an assistant or magistrate, except while holding the chief office of governor.
    While resident in Eastham, and immediately following the death of Governor Bradford, Thomas Prence was unanimously chosen to succeed him, and thereafter for sixteen consecutive years, or until his own death in 1673, he held the office of governor. On his election in 1657 the court again granted him the special concession of waiver of residence, permitting him to continue to live at Eastham, where he had a farm of at least two hundred acres of the richest land in the vicinity.

    Name:
    Thomas Prence was the most distinguished of the settlers of Eastham, though not the best educated. At the time of his removal in 1645, he was holding the position of an assistant to Gov. Bradford, and had twice been chosen governor of the infant colony --first election in 1634, and second election in 1638. He was a native of Lechlade, a parish in Gloucestershire, England, it is understood, and born about the year 1600. He came to Plymouth in the ship Fortune, in November 1621. At the time of his removal he was residing in Duxbury. His farm at Eastham contained many acres, It was situated northwest of Town cove, in that part now included within the present town of Eastham.His house stood on the east side of the county road, near where Mr. E. Doane's house now stands. It is said his farm comprised the "richest land" in the place. the famous old pear tree planted by him while a resident, and which was blown down in 1849, stood but a few rods westward from the site of his house. He was a large landowner. He owned land in what became afterwards Harwich and Truro, besides tracts at Tonset and other localities in the Colony. He disposed of most of his landed estate before his death. His tracts at Sauquatucket, now Brewster, which came to him by grant, on the account of having been a "Purchaser or Old-Comer," he sold to his son-in-law, Major John Freeman, in 1672. His "half share" at Paumet, both "purchases and unpurchased," or Lovell's Creek," he sold to Mr. Thomas Paine in 1670......

    Gov. Prence continued in the office of an assistant by successive elections till 1657, when he was unanimously elected to the office of governor, as successor to Gov. Bradford, who died that year. As the law required the governor to reside at the seat of government, a dispensation was obtained for him, and he was allowed to remain at Eastham, as he desired. Mrs. Bradford was engaged to entertain him and his assistants while at Court; an attendant was appointed to attend him in his journey to and from Plymouth, and occupied the place provided by the government at a place called Plain Dealing, which the late Judge John Davis, a native of Plymouth, says was "nearly two miles from the centre of the town on the road to Boston." The late William Russell in his Guide to Plymouth, says the place called Plain Dealing, "extended near "Mr. Hedges," and in the vicinity of "Starts Hill." At this place, while occupying the gubernatorial chair, he died March 29, 1673, in his 73d year. He was "honorably interred at Plymouth, April 8th." Judge Davis says" "the Plymouth church records, in expressing Mr. Prence's character and his amiable and pleasant conversation, depart from their usual course by an indication of his personal appearance, from which it ay be supposed that it was peculiarly dignified and striking. He was excellently qualified for the office of governor. He had a countenance full of majesty, and therein, as well as otherwise, was a terror to evil doers. Besides holding the office of governor, Mr. Prence was a great number of years an assistant of Gov. Bradford. He was one of the commissioners of the United Colonies many years; colonial treasurer and one of the council of war. He was one of those who stood bound to the adventures for the payment of the sum they demanded for their interest in the stock, trade, etc., of the colony, when the purchase was made in behalf of those who came in the three ships, viz; Mayflower, Fortune, and Ann.

    Thomas married Mary COLLIER on 01 Apr 1635 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA. Mary (daughter of William COLLIER and Jane YATES) was christened on 18 Feb 1611/2 in St. Olave's Parish, Southwark, Surrey; died before 08 Dec 1662 in Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Mary COLLIER was christened on 18 Feb 1611/2 in St. Olave's Parish, Southwark, Surrey (daughter of William COLLIER and Jane YATES); died before 08 Dec 1662 in Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA.
    Children:
    1. Mary PRENCE
    2. Elizabeth PRENCE
    3. Jane PRENCE was born on 01 Nov 1637 in Duxbury, Plymouth Co., Massachusetts; died between May and 28 Jun 1712.
    4. 3. Sarah PRENCE was born about 1646; died on 03 Mar 1706/7.
    5. Judith PRENCE