Thomas HAMMOND

Male 1603 - 1675  (~ 71 years)


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  • Name Thomas HAMMOND  [1
    • Thomas Hammond, son of William and Mary (?) Hammond, of Melford, England, and grandson of John and Agnes (?) Hammond, of Lavenham, England, was baptized at Melford, county of Suffolk, England, with his twin brother, John, Sept. 2, 1603. He was a first cousin of William Hammond, who settled in Watertown, Mass., in 1636.

      He married in Lavenham, England, Nov. 12, 123, Elizabeth Cason, b. in Great Whelnetham, a few miles north of Lavenham, before 1604, daughter of Robert and Prudence (Hammond) Cason. She was a grand-daughter of Robert and Elizabeth (?) Hammond, of Great Whelnetham.

      Thomas Hammond was one of the first settlers in Hingham, Mass. Had land granted him there in 1636. Took the freeman's oath march 9, 1636-7.

      He was on the grand jury in 1637. His two younger children were baptized in Hingham. The elder children were undoubtedly born in England, although the place of their birth has not been definitely ascertained.

      Thomas Hammond, Vincent Druce, John Parker, Nicholas Hodgdon and John Winchester all settled in Hingham at about the same time; all of these removed from there and settled in the same neighborhood, near the boundary line between what are now the towns of Newton and Brookline, Mass.

      Nicholas Hodgdon first purchased 67 acres of land on Cambridge Hill, which he sold Dec. 4, 1650, to Thomas Hammond and Vincent Druce, then of Hingham. They also bought 13 acres, granted by the town of Cambridge to Robert Bradish, and 16 acres in Muddy River, next to lands of John Parker. Hammond and Druce bought in 1658, of Thomas Brattle and others, 600 acres in Muddy River (now Brookline) called Royton farm, which they held in common for some years. The division was finally made as shown by his unsigned will. He probably removed to Cambridge Village (now Newton) about 1650, but held lands in Hingham for same years after that date. In 1652, he sold land there (Suffolk Deeds, folios 221-222)...

      In 1656, he sold lands in Hingham to William Sprague for L60. In the same year he bought of Esther Sparhawk, daughter of Nathaniel Sparhawk, 330 acres more of land, in Cambridge, for L40.

      His homestead, in Newton, was near the Brookline boundary and near a beautiful sheet of water, which has since borne his name, "Hammond Pond." the homestead remained in the family several generations, Josiah Hovey Hammond, father of Mr. George W. Hammond, of the Forest Paper Co., having been the last of the race who was born there.

      Thomas Hammond was one of the wealthiest men in town in his day. there seems to have been a close friendship between himself and Vincent Druce, but no relationship has been shown by any papers or records found.

      He died in 1675, leaving an unsigned will which was admitted to probate.....It is found in Middlesex Probate, No 7160....

      His inventory amounted to L1,139 16S 2d and was by Elder Wiswall and John Spring. It was dated Oct. 25, 1675, and states that he deceased Sept. 30, 1675. A family tradition relative to Elizabeth Cason, his wife, is given on p. 299 of Jackson's History of Newton and is as follows:

      "It is said that when a young woman, in England, she took a walk with a party of young folks and went into the Mint to see how money was coined. the master of the Mint was pleased with her appearance and chat, and gave her an invitation to try her hand in the operation. She had evidently made some impression on him, and he was desirous to know if she could make as good an impression upon the coin; so he placed a piece of silver coin upon the die, about the size of a half crown--she came forward and grasped the lever and stamped a fair impression upon the coin, where upon he presented her with the silver piece, which she bore off in triumph; and from her fair hand it has passed through those of her descendants, to the seventh generation, and is now (1854) possessed by Stephen Hammond, of Roxbury, whose son, William, of the eighth, is looking wishfully for it."

      This coin is now (1902) in the possession of Mr. George W. Hammond, of Yarmouthville, Me.
      [1]
    Birth England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Christening 2 Sep 1603  Melford, County of Suffolk, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Death 1675  [1
    Person ID I72888  Main Tree
    Last Modified 18 Aug 2013 

    Family Elizabeth CASON,   b. Bef 1604, Great Whelnetham, England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Marriage 12 Nov 1623  Lavenham, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Children 
    +1. Thomas HAMMOND,   b. Abt 1630, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 20 Oct 1678, Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 48 years)  [Birth]
    +2. Elizabeth HAMMOND,   b. Abt 1633/4, England Find all individuals with events at this location  [Birth]
     3. Sarah HAMMOND,   c. 13 Sep 1640, Hingham, Massachusetts Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Bef 1675 (Age ~ 34 years)  [Birth]
     4. Nathaniel HAMMOND,   c. 12 Mar 1643, Hingham, Massachusetts Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 29 May 1691, Newton, Middlesex Co., Massachusetts Find all individuals with events at this location (Age ~ 48 years)  [Birth]
    Family ID F29502  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 17 Aug 2013 

  • Event Map
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  • Sources 
    1. [S02417] History & Genealogies of the Hammond Families in America Vol 2.