Richard LYMAN

Male 1580 - 1640  (59 years)


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  • Name Richard LYMAN  [1, 2
    • Born and bapt. at High Ongar, Co. Kent, son of Henry Lyman and his wife Phillis - this Henry was buried at Nairstoke in Essex April 15, 1587. Richard Lyman sold in 1629 to John Gower two messuages (?), a garden, orchard and divers lands arable, also a meadow and pasture at Norton, Mandeville, in the parish of Ongar. Came with Eliot in the "Lion" 1631; settled at Roxbury; freeman Mass June 11, 1633; the Church record at Roxbury tells how he went to Conn 'when the great removal was made' and suffered greatly in the loss of his cattle. He was one of the original proprietors of Hartford and in 1639 his home lot was on the south side of the 'road from George Steele's to the South Meadow'. Will dated April 22, 1640; inv. Sept. 6, 1641; will mentions his wife but she died before Jane 27, 1642/3. [1]
    • An entry in the first volume of the records of Eliot's church in Roxbury, made probably by Eliot himself, speaks of him as "an ancient Christian but weake, yet after some time of tryal and quickening he joyned the church." This "time of tryal" delayed his admission as freeman until June 11, 1633, for none but church membrs wee entitled to this privilege. In 1636, near the beginning of June, in the company fo Revs. Thomas Hooker and Samuel Stone, though one account speaks of his not going until "towards winter," he made the journey from Boston to Hartford, more than one hundred miles through a trackless wilderness. Richard Butler, another ancestor, was of the company. With no guide but the compass, and no cover but the trees, liable at any moment to attack from hostile Indians, they made their way over mountains and across rivers, through swamps and thickets, passable only with the greatest difficulty, driving with them one hundred and sixty head of cattle and subsisting by the way on the milk of the cows. They were but two weeks upon the journey, so that they must have travelled from eight to ten miles a day, a speed quite incredible except on the supposition that the forests were far more open than we find them today. This was probably the case, for the Indian practice of burning the fallen leaves every autumn must in a great degree have kept down the underbrush and destroyed the lower limbs of the trees, leaving the woods as in some old English park or the oak openings of the West. Through such woods it might have been possible to have made the journey in this brief space, but it would have taken Hooker and his company with all their impediments twice two weeks to have penetrated the tickets and tangles which are growing up today over much of their route. It is true there was an Indian trail known as the old Connecticut road, which started from Cambridge, ran to Marlborough, thence to Grafton and Woodstock and so on to Springfield and Albany, which possibly Hooker may have followed for some portion of the way, but even then, narrow as such trails were, he could not have made very rapid progress. Both Lyman and Butler were original proprietors of Hartford and owned land there in 1639. The Indians had called the home of the new colony "Suckiage," but the Colonists soon dropped it for the less suggestive and more euphonious name of Hartford. The first winter was one of unusual severity, against which the settlers were poorly provided, particularly Lyman, whose health soon gave way under the hardships of a new country, and he died in 1640. His wife did not long survive him. [2]
    Birth 30 Oct 1580  [1
    Christening 30 Oct 1580  High Ongar, Essex co England Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Gender Male 
    Fact Son of Henry and Phyllis Lyman Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Death 1640  [1, 2
    Person ID I97826  Main Tree
    Last Modified 10 Dec 2020 

    Family Sarah OSBORNE,   b. England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Bef 27 Jan 1642/3 
    Children 
     1. Phillis LYMAN,   c. 12 Sep 1611, High Ongar, Essex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [Birth]
    +2. Richard LYMAN,   c. 24 Feb 1616/17, High Ongar, Essex, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 3 Jun 1662, Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 45 years)  [Birth]
     3. Sarah LYMAN,   c. 8 Feb 1621, High Ongar, Essex, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [Birth]
    +4. John LYMAN,   b. Sep 1623, High Ongar, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 20 Aug 1690 (Age 66 years)  [Birth]
     5. Robert LYMAN,   b. Sep 1629, High Ongar, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [Birth]
    Family ID F40344  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 10 Dec 2020 

  • Sources 
    1. [S10371] Lucius Barnes Barbour, Families of Early Hartford, Connecticut.

    2. [S12076] Charles S. Hall, HALL Ancestry A Series of Sketches of the Lineal Ancestors of the children of Samuel Holden Parsons Hall and his wife Emeline Bulkeley.