Abt 1588 - 1669 (~ 81 years)
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Name |
John Dunham |
Suffix |
VI Deacon |
Born |
Abt 1588 |
Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, England, United Kingdom |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
2 Mar 1668/1669 |
Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
Person ID |
I5659336067 |
Master Tree |
Last Modified |
24 Apr 2001 |
Family 1 |
Susanna Keeney, d. 1622 |
Married |
17 Oct 1619 |
Leyden, Netherlands |
Children |
| 1. John Dunham, Jr. (VII), b. 1620, Leyden, Netherlands , d. 1692, Wellfleet, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States (Age 72 years) |
| 2. Humility Dunham, b. Abt 1621, Netherlands |
| 3. Thomas Dunham, b. Abt 1622, Leyden, Netherlands |
|
Family ID |
F5260021871 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family 2 |
Abigail (Barlow) Bailllioy, b. Abt 1600, Leyden, Netherlands , d. Aft 1699, Martha's Vineyard, Dukes, Massachusetts, United States (Age ~ 100 years) |
Married |
22 Oct 1622 |
Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
Children |
| 1. Samuel Dunham, b. 1624, Leyden, Netherlands |
| 2. Abigail Dunham, b. 1626, Leyden, Netherlands |
| 3. Hannah Dunham, b. Abt 1630, Leyden, Netherlands , d. Bef 20 May 1662 (Age ~ 32 years) |
| 4. Reverend Jonathan Dunham, b. Abt 1632, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States , d. 18 Dec 1717 (Age ~ 85 years) |
+ | 5. Persis Dunham, b. 1635, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States , d. 30 Jul 1701, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States (Age 66 years) |
| 6. Benjamin Dunham, b. Abt 1637, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States , d. Eastham, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
| 7. Joseph Dunham, b. 18 Nov 1636/1637, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
| 8. Daniel Dunham, b. Abt 1639, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
| 9. Benajah Dunham, b. Abt 1640, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States , d. 24 Dec 1680, Piscataway, Middlesex, New Jersey, United States (Age ~ 40 years) |
|
Family ID |
F5260020975 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Event Map |
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| Born - Abt 1588 - Scrooby, Nottinghamshire, England, United Kingdom |
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| Married - 17 Oct 1619 - Leyden, Netherlands |
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| Married - 22 Oct 1622 - Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
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| Died - 2 Mar 1668/1669 - Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States |
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Pin Legend |
: Address
: Location
: City/Town
: County/Shire
: State/Province
: Country
: Not Set |
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Notes |
- John Dunham was the son of Thomas and Janet (Bromley) Dunham. He
married (1) on 17 October 1619 at Leyden, Susanna Keeney, by whom he
had three children, John, Humility, and Thomas.
At the time of his marriage to Abigail Bailliou he was a widower
living at Zevenhuyser, Holland. The Baillious were probably Huguenot
refugees from England. The exact time of John's arrival in Plymouth
is not known. His name first appears on the Plymouth records in
1630, and he was taxed nine shillings in 1633. He was later a Deputy
to the General Court. He died at age 80 years.
DEACON JOHN DUNHAM
American Immigrant Ancestor
1589 - 1668
DEACON JOHN DUNHAM, son of Thomas, was born in Scrooby,
Nottinghamshire, England, in 1589. He was a member of the First
Pilgrim Church in Scrooby. He left his country at the age of
eighteen when his church moved to Holland in 1607, on account of
religious persecution. At the age of fourteen years he received his
religious instruction under the guidance of William Brewster, born in
1560 in Scrooby, England. (John's land in Plymouth is said to adjoin
Elder Brewster's.)
In the winter of 1607/8 the members of the Pilgrim Church held
its meetings in the manor house at Scrooby. In their escape from
Scrooby, the center of the Separatist movement, the exiles first went
to Amsterdam, Holland. A stay in England was especially dangerous.
After nine months in Amsterdam, they removed to Leyden, Holland,
where John was a member of the First Pilgrim Church in Leyden,
Holland.
His relatives were bitter against his religious beliefs. It is
said that he came with the Pilgrims from Holland. It is not known
just when he came. It is said that he adopted the name John Goodman
in his escape from Holland. There is the name John Goodman on the
original voyage and it is said that he died in the first year. The
Mayflower Society will not accept that they are the same person.
Isaac W. Dunham has him living in Plymouth, with several grants of
land and living next to Elder Brewster after arriving.
In the book, Ancient Landmarks of Plymouth, 1633 is the first
time the name John Dunham appears. At that time all land owners had
to be recorded. At the same time, 1633, he was chosen Deacon of the
First Church of Plymouth by Elder Brewster. He was a weaver by
trade.
He married Abigail Wood Barlow, a distant relative, in Holland,
Oct. 22,1622. She was his second wife, the first was Susanna Kenney,
who had died. He had three children by his first wife Susanna.
John; Humility; Thomas
Isaac Dunham's Genealogy states that "It is said that John came
over on the Mayflower under the name of John Goodman, and his family
came later."
Passengers and Ships by Charles E. Banks states, "The Mayflower
(not the original voyage) Master William Pierce, left Groversend, in
March with thirty-five passengers mostly from Leydon, Holland,
destined for Plymouth, arrived May 15, 1629, no list of names."
All his children but John, 1620, are said to be born in
Plymouth.
Dr. Dexter's The England and Holland Pilgrims is the following
appendix. Pg. 612, Dunham-Denham. John, widow of Sussana Kenney,
betrothed to Abigail Barlow, Oct. 7, 1622, the witness, her father
Thomas and sister Ann of Langerbrugge, Holland. John was living in
Zevenhuysen in 1626. He had eleven children, according to the
History of Norway and Paris by Whitman: John, Benaiah, Jonathan,
Daniel, Persis, Samuel, Benjamin, Joseph, Hannah, Abigail, and Daniel
(Isaac Dunham names Thomas instead of Daniel twice.)
Deacon John Dunham died March 1, 1668 at the age of 80 years.
He was a servant of God and a useful man in his place, being deacon
of the Plymouth Church. He made his will Jan. 5, 1668. In his will
he mentions his oldest son John, two younger sons Ben and Daniel and
daughters Abigail and Persis. He was Deacon of the Church for thirty-
four years and twenty-one years deputy of Plymouth Colony. Plymouth
First Church Records, Part 2, page 1.
His residence after leaving the village was north of Watson's
Hill and southwest of the Village of Plymouth. To the west was a
swamp having an outlet to Town Brook, called "Dunham's Brook." By
means of a dam it became a pond and was separated by a narrow strip
of land known as "Dunham's Neck." This strip was a portion of Deacon
John's land, the highway leading to Carver. In 1907 some of the
offspring lived in the vicinity. John owned other land in Plymouth.
Dunham Coat of Arms was adopted by Sir John Dunham, 1498, as the
family shield.
Taken from Pilgrim Republic, Goodwin, Page 13:"The Pilgrims were
Separatists having openly withdrawn from the National Church. The
Puritans were Nationalist, believing that a Christian Nation is a
Christian Church."
Page 15: Henry Barrows 1593/4, a lawyer, one of Elizabeth's
former Courtiers, with John Greenwood and John Penry were hanged for
teaching Separatist Doctrines, and lived in the vicinity of Scrooby,
also.
*Reference: "Boston Transcript", issue of 27 December 1940; MD
15:214; Weston, 41; Dunham, Isaac W., 13;"The Ancestors and
Descendants of Asa Freeman Ellingwood and Florilla (Dunham)
Ellingwood" compiled by Florence Evelyn O'Connor - West Paris, Maine -
1979.; NEHGR114:115. He was a deputy of the Plymouth General
Court1639-54; a member of the Council of War, and Deacon of the
church.
Marriage to Abigail at Plymouth from Reference Book 1, Genealogy Research in
Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts: Miscellaneous Marriages before 1699
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