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William Richard Cutter.

Genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of the state of Massachusetts; (Volume 1)

. (page 31 of 141)
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August 30, 1853, Amos Brown; xi. Mary Lee,
born September 23. 1828, died July 28, 1844;
xii. Margaret, born October 12, 1830, died
June 3, 1831. 9. Betsey, April 22, 1781, mar-
ried, October 7, 1804, Jonas Cummings. 10.
Lucy, April 24, 1784, married, November 28,
1808, Sylvester Morse.

(XV) Timothy Harden, son of Lieutenant
Bartliolomew Hutchinson, was born at Sutton,
July 31, 1774, died at Albany, Maine, March
14. 1867. He received his education in the
I)ublic schools, and for twenty years taught
school a part of the year, farming the re-
mainder of the year. He settled near the
centre of the town of Sutton, in the South
parish. Between 1808 and 1810 he removed
to Sangerville, Oxford county, Maine, and
about 1813 to Bucksfield. Maine, and in 1818
was a resident of Paris, Alaine. He sold the
property in Sutton which was inherited by his
wife from her father, Ebenezer Rawson. and
also land which he inherited from John Haven.
He also sold his own property in Sutton to his
brother Simon. In 1818 he removed to Albany,
Maine, and bought a farm at Hunt's Corner,
of two htmdreJ acres. He became a pros-
perous farmer and a leading citizen of the
town, serving as justice of the peace and in
other positions of trust and honor. He was a
man of strict temperance principles, a leader
in reform movements, and of earnest piety.
Me was a fervid supporter of the Methodist
church. In politics he was a Whig. He .served
in the militia. He married, March 24, 1797,
Nizaula Rawson, born April 18. 1777. died
Fei)ruary 25. iSCv). daughter of Ebenezer and
Sarah (Chase) Rawson, of Sutton. Children:
I. Lewis, born at Sutton. October 3, 1797, mar-
ried (first) .Abigail Merrill; (second) Febru-



MASSACHUSETTS.



103



ary 21. 1852, Caroline Packard: children: i.
Almond, born June 10, 1820; ii. Angelinc. born
May 19, 1825; iii. Freeland, born August 14,
1831 ; iv. Arvilla, born November 24, 1833.
2. Galen, Sutton. January 8, 1799, married,
June 10, 1821, Olive Flint; children: i. Eliz-
abeth, born December 31, 1822, died October
15, 1839; ii. Sullivan, born June 10, 1826, mar-
ried. January 2. 1850. Elzina Eastman and had
Auriii. born February 13, 1851, and Olive,
born February 24, 1853; iii. Galen, born De-
cember 31, 1829, died January 29, 1831 ; iv.
Timothy W., born November 21, 1832, mar-
ried. March 13, 1862, Anna E. Canby and had
Bessie, born November 12, 1864, died Septem-
ber 7, 1866, Richard C, born June 19. 1867,
and Parke S., born October 10, 1869. 3.
Nizaula, Sutton, February 13, 1801, died Sep-
tember 2, 1855; married, 1822, Herman
Towne ; children : i. Arabella, born December
7 1824; ii. Clarissa D., born July 26, 1830. 4.
Marmaduke Rawson, Sutton, February 12,
1802. married, February 28, 1827, Sophia
Cummings : chiklren : i. Lyman, born January
4. 1828, married. May 6. 1855, Martha AI.
Stone and had Fred R., born November 27,
1863, died October 9, 1865: ii. Charles, born
May 2. 1831 : iii. Daniel, born April 19, 1834,
died 1870; iv. Miranda, born September 24,
1837, married P. F. Wardwell ; v. Rowena,
born September 9, 1845, married, November
28, 1869, Ellery Wheeler and had Lizzie
Sophia Wheeler, born September 5, 1871. 5.
James Sullivan, Sutton, November 22, 1804,
died November 8. 1806. 6. Charlotte, Sutton,
died young. 7. Liberty Haven, Sutton, No-
vember I, 1808. married. December 23, 1834,
Laurinda Kimball : children : i. Horace, born
July 22, 1837, married, December 3, 1863,
Harriet Proctor and liad Ervin, born Septem-
ber 28, 1864, Laura, born May 4, 1867, died
1869. Arthur and Archie (twins), born 1869;
ii. Frederick, born December 31, 1842; iii.
Austin, born November 29, 1846, married,
1872, Lucy J. Carter. 8. Timothy Harden,
March 5, 1810. married, December 22, 1856.
Eliza A. Hazeltine ; resided at Gorham, Maine,
and was an inventor of mill machinery. 9.
Arvilla, 1812, married, January 29, 1837, Will-
iam Evans ; children : i. Edwin F., born Janu-
ary 29, 1838, married Cora Lumm and had
Wayne and Sadie Evans ; ii. Caroline, born
August 17, 1839. died October 2, 1850; iii.
\^irgil, born October 28, 1841 ; iv. Rawson S.,
born August 2, 1845, married Nellie .Seeley;
V. Sanford W., born June 27, 1847; vi. Osman
C, born March 21, 1850; vii. Clara Emily,



born August 18, 1854. 10. Clarissa, January
8, 1813, married, June 20, 1833, William H.
Pingrce ; children: i. Edwin F., born July 14,
1834: ii. Harriet, born January 20, 1836; iii.
Rosanna, born February 25, 1838, married,

1858, Charles E. Dunn: iv. Mary E.,
btirn April 2, 1840, married Thomas
Smith; v. Rowena, born January 20, 1843;
vi. Caroline, born May 4, 1852. 11. Edwin
Freeman, November 16, 1815, mentioned
below. 12. Freeman. 13. Mary, February,
1817, died February, 1843; married, Septem-
ber 5, 1839, Dustin P. Ordway and had Sum-
ner V. Ordway, born March 31, 1842. 14.
Diantha, October 12, 1819, died July 16, 1868;
married, June 8, 1841, Prescott Lovering ; chil-
dren: i. Mary Elizabeth, born May 6. 1842,
died November 12. 1842 : ii. Sibra Rawson, liorn
February 8, 1845, married William .Staples; iii.
Lewis H., born April 18, 1848; iv. Francis
Hill, born January 17, 1850, married Abbie
Bennett and had Chester B. and Stanley Lover-
ing ; v. Dustin Ordway, born January 5, 185 1,
died 1853: vi. Alma Adelaide, born March 15,

1859, married Frank A. O.xnard. 15. Ebe-
nezer Sumner, Albany, Maine, December i,
1822, married, June 15, 1845, Betsey F. Pin-
gree ; children : i. Mary Ursula, born Sep-
tember 30, 1846, married, November 29, 1866,
John E. Saunders and had Mary Annette
Saunders, born December 7, 1867; ii. Orinda
D., born May 28, 1853; iii. Luella Angeline,
born June 22, 1857; iv. Ambrose Burnside,
born June 2, 1862.

(N\T) Edwin Freeman, son of Timothy
Harden Hutchinson, was born at Albany,
Maine, November 16, 1815, died 1884. hie
went to live with his sister when he was eight
years old, helping on the farm in summer and
attending the district school in winter. At the
age of fourteen he returned home and learned
the trade of shoemaker, and after the custom
of the times followed his trade in winter and
farmed in summer. When he came of age he
engaged in the building and e(|uipment of saw
mills and grist mills, in partnership with his
brother, Timothy Harden Hutchinson. They
built mills at Dixfield. Buckfield and Peru,
Maine, and at vai-ious places in New Hamp-
shire, during the next six years. In 1840 he
removed to Milan, New Hampshire, buying a
farm of tliree hundred acres on Milan Hill,
about a mile from Milan Corners. He became
a jirosperous farmer. In addition to farming he
carried on extensive lumbering operations, cut-
ting and sawing the timber from wood-lots
tliat he bought in that section. He had one



I04



MASSACHUSETTS.



tract of seven hundred acres of timber land at
Jericho, New Hampshire. He kept some
thirty-five head of cattle and fifty sheep. In
the last year of his life on the farm he raised
eight hundred bushels of potatoes. He was a
skillful mechanic with all kinds of tools. He
built his own house from timber that he cut
on his own land. About 1867 he removed to
Auburn, Maine, selling his farm and property
at Milan, buying a small place at Stevens Mills
and engaged in the building Ijusiness. After-
wards he lived for a time with his daughter
at Auburn. In 1878, at the time of his second
marriage, he removed to North Norway,
Maine, and settled on a fifty acre farm that
he owned, devoting himself to the culture of
fruit and having one of the best apple orchards
in that section. He was an active, energetic
man, much respected in the community in
which he lived. Early in life he became inter-
ested in temperance reform and signed the
total abstinence pledge, which he always kept.
He was devoted to his family and much beloved
by his children. He was brought up in the
Methodist faith, but in later years became a
Universalist. In politics he was a Republican,
and was selectman of the town of Milan. He
also held other positions of trust. He mar-
ried (first) July 23, 1843, Elizabeth Ann Flint,
born at Norway, Maine, April 6, 1821, died
April, 1873, daughter of Benjamin and Eliz-
abeth (Merrill) Flint. Her father was a
fanner. He married (second) Mrs. Eliza
Hutchins. Chililren : i. Liberty Haven, born
March i, 1844, mentioned below. 2. Harlan,
November 21, 1845, f''*^''! August 15, i8fi3. 3.
Freedom, August 6, 1847, mentioned below.
4. Luella, June 18, 1849, died December 10,
1854. 5. Melvin, August 27, 1851, mentioned
below. 6. Arabella Libby, June 26, 1853, ^''^^
July 20, 1863. 7. Etta, March 26, 1855, mar-
ried, .'Xjiril 13, 1887, (ieorge Dexter Bearce,
of .Auburn, Maine, who died August 26, 1887;
children: i. Winfield Dexter, born .August 16,
1880, graduated from University of Maine in
June, 1906, married, September 8, 1906, Mae
Lora Cook, son, Winfield Hutchinson Bearce,
born April 19, 1908 ; ii. Edwin Freeman, born
February 2, 1882, graduated from University
of Maine, June, 1905; iii. Clara Florence, born
January 19, 1884, died December C\ 1890; iv,
C/eorge Dunham, born December 14. 1887, he
is now student at University of Maine, class
of 191 1. 8. Lizzie Florence, June 20, 1859,
married (first) Frank Tarr "and (second)
Millard F. Haskell, of Poland. Maine. 9. Ella
May, April 9, 1864.



(XVH) Liberty Haven, son of Edwin Free-
man Hutchinson, was born at Milan, March i,
1844, died at Lewiston, Maine, September 9,
1882. He attended the public schools of his
native town, fitted for college in the academy
at Lancaster, New Hampshire, and graduated
from Bates College in the class of 1871 with
the degree of A. B. He inherited strong intel-
lectual powers and at acomparativelvearlvage
displayed those sterling characteristics that
later won for him success and honor in his pro-
fession. He began the study of law in 1871
in the office of M. T. Ludden and was admitted
to the bar the following year. He began to
practice in Lewiston and continued with con-
stantly increasing success and distinction until
his death. During his later years he was a
law partner of Hon. Albert R. Savage, now
justice of the Maine supreme court, and his
esteem for his partner is shown by the fact
that he named his eldest son for him. During
his brief but brilliant career he had many
important cases. He was especially gifted as
a public speaker and effective in addressing
juries. Of good judgment, great learning,
keen intellect, upright in character and high
in ideals he made this influence widely felt and
attained a leading position in his profession
and in public life. For a number of years he
was a member of the Lewiston school board.
He represented his district three terms in the
state legislature and in 1881, his last year, was
speaker of the house of representatives, elected,
it should be said, by a unanimous vote. Just
before his death he was prominently mentioned
as Republican candidate for congress. He
was a member of the Lodge of Free Masons
of Lewiston. He was a member of the L^ni-
tarian church of Lewiston and for a time
superintendent of its Sunday school. He en-
joyed to the fullest extent the respect and
esteem of his townsmen and the confidence of
the whole state. He married, November 20,
1869. Mary Wyatt Emery, of West Newbury,
Massachusetts, born .-\pril 7, 1850, daughter of
Nehemiah Follansbee and Mary .\nn (Wyatt)
Emery, of West Newbury. Children, born at
Lewiston: i. Annie Luella. .August 12, 1870,
married, June 29, 1892, William Henry Green,
of Lynn, Massachusetts: children: i. William
.Albert, born August 24, 1893: ii. Grace Kath-
erine. born May 26, 1895; '•'• Edwin Thomas,
born December 3, 1903. 2. Albert Savage,
October 27, 1 87 1, mentioned below. 3. Edwin
Liberty, November i, 1872, married, Septem-
ber, 1899. Mary Elizabeth Mower, of Lynn;
child, Mary Eleanor, born July 21, 1900. 4.





^^-^^




t^^UiyO<t<?'^^K^



MASSACHUSETTS.



105



Mary Elizabetli, November 16, 1874, died Jan-
uary 17, 1899. 5. Grace Lyndon, April 19,
1879, died Sejiteniber 16, 1904.

(X\"11I) Albert Savage, son of Liberty
Haven Hutcliinson, was born at Lewiston,
October 27, 1871. He attended the public
schools of his native city, and graduated from
Bowdoin College in the class of 1893 ^"'' from
Harvard Law School in the class of 1899.
From 1893 to 1896 he taught school at Pough-
keepsie. New York. He was adniittetl to the
bar in January. 1899, and has practiced since
then in Boston. He has an office in the Ames
Building and resides in Newton Highlands,
Newton. Massachusetts. He married, October
I. 1904, \'irginia Walker Mellen, of Newton
Highlands, born at Worcester, Massachusetts.
May 15. 1878. (laughter of George Henry and
Nora (Walker) Mellen. They have one child,
\ irginia Walker, born February 10, 1908.

(X\T1) Freedom, son of Edwin Freeman
Hutchinson, was born at Milan, New Hamp-
shire. August 6, 1847. He attended the public
schools of his native town and the Nichols
Latin School of Lewiston. Afaine, and entered
Bates College in that city. He took high rank
in scholarship and had the English oration at
Commencement in the class of 1873. During
the next two years he was principal of the
Topsham high school, Topsham, Alaine. He
l)egan to read law in the office of his brother's
firm. Hutchinson & Savage, of Lewiston, and
was admitted to the bar at .\uburn, Maine,
in April. 1876. He came at once to Boston
where he was admitted to the bar of Suiifolk
county. May 9, 1876, and where he has since
practiced his profession with uniform success.
His business has been of a general civil char-
acter with a considerable specialty in corpora-
tion matters. He has had charge of the legal
interests of the Swift Brothers of Chicago and
Boston, now Swift and Company, meat packers,
during the past twenty-five years. He has
attended to the organizing and incorporation
of the numerous meat-packing, slaughtering,
rendering and transportation companies of this
concern, as its attorney.. He has represented
these clients also in court in many important
cases in Massachusetts and other states. He
has attained a distinguished rank as a lawyer
and is reckoned among the leaders of the
Boston bar. He resided in Boston from 1876
to the fall of 1892 when he removed to New-
ton Highlands. He has lately removed from
Lincoln street to a handsome residence that
he built on Center street, Newton. In yjolitics
he is a Republican. He was a member of the



comiuon council of Newton in 1895-96. He
was made a Free Mason in Henry Price Lodge
of Charlestown. and is now a member of
Columbian I,odge of Boston. He belongs to
many clubs and social organizations of Boston
and Newton. Among them are the Middlesex
Club, the Hunnewell Club of Newton ; the
Katahdin Club of Maine composed largely of
Newton men; the Civic Club of Newton; the
Braeburn Country Club of West Newton and
the .Xewton Golf Club. He is a member of
the I'nitarian church of Newton Center and
for the past thirteen years has been chairman
of the executive committee and ex-officio presi-
dent of the society. He married, February 15,
i88fi, Abbie Laighton Butler, born May 9,
1865, daughter of Dr. David Presbury and
Eleanor (Bisbee) Butler. Her father was a
prominent physician, a pioner in the develop-
ment of systematic exercises for the health
and development of the body. Children: i.
Eleanor Butler, born October 31. 1887, student
at Smith College. 2. Harlan Freedom, July
4. 1893. t'i^cl June 24. 1894. 3. Sumner Free-
dom, March 13, 1897.

(.W'll) Melvin, son of Edwin Freeman
Hutchinson, was born in Milan, New Hamp-
shire, August 27, 1 85 1. He attended the public
schools of his native town and of Auburn,
Maine, working on the farm during his boy-
hood. He learned the carpenter's trade of his
father and worked with his father until he
was twenty years old, when he left home and
during the next seven years worked in the
shoe factory of Aloses Crafts at Auburn. For
three years he was employed in the same busi-
ness in the factory of Miller & Randall, also
of Auburn. He came to Lowell, Massachu-
setts, in June, 1882, in the employ of a sewing
machine dealer. After a short time he re-
moved to Providence, Rhode Island, and was
for seven years with the Davis Sewing
Machine Company. Then he was with the
Standard Sewing Machine Company at Bos-
ton eight years and later with the W'heeler
& Wilson Sewing Machine Company. He
was engaged in the sewing machine busi-
ness in various j)ositions and departments
for a period of twenty years. In recent years
he has been in charge of the eyelet department
of the United Shoe Machinery Company of
Beverly. He is the company's expert in
machinery for eyeletting and has charge of
the rejiairs and setting up of this kind of
machinery in all parts of the country. His
headc|uarters are at the Boston office, 205 Lin-
coln street. In religion Mr. Hutchinson is a



io6



MASSACHUSETTS.



Universalist ; in politics an independent Re-
publican. He was a delegate to the state con-
vention of the Greenback party in Maine, when
Governor Harris M. Plaisted was nominated.
He is a member of Abouben Adhem Lodge
of Odd Fellows, of Auburn, Maine, of Pejeb-
scot Encampment and of Patriarch Militant.
He married. June 5, 1890, Anna Lydia Raw-
son, born at Oxford, Alaine, November 15,
1856, daughter of Solon and Lydia Hackett
(Downing) Rawson, of Oxford. Her father
was a contracting painter and farmer ; also at
one time a grocer. They have no children.



The several attempts of gcnealog-
SEARS ists to trace the pre-American an-
cestry of the Sears immigrant
have met with many discouraging obstacles
and few satisfactory results: and while it
seems to be pretty well established that the
family is one of great antiquity there has
always existed a doubt regarding its origin,
and there are those who are disposed to place
it among the old Holland families and bring
forth Dutch intermarriages in support of their
reasoning. In these annals no attempt is made
to investigate the subject of the origin of the
family of the Sears immigrant, for it is not
known where or when he was born, and noth-
ing of liis parentage, although there are vari-
ous traditions and vague conclusions regard-
ing his forebears. The family in America is
full strong enough in every material respect to
stand forever without the warrant of distin-
guished pre-American lineage. Rut in regard
to the apparent lack of earlier data the Sears
family is only one in the long list of our best
colonial families whose history back of the
immigrant is unknown, and the absence of
definite knowledge of his ancestors is not to
be taken as evidence of doubtful or obscure
origin ; for the simple truth is that it has been
found im])0ssible to trace his lineage in the
mother country.

(I) Richard Sares appears in our New Eng-
land colonial history with the mention of his
name in the records of the Plymouth colony
tax list in 1633. when he was one of forty-four
persons there assessed nine shillings in corn at
six shillings per bushel. From I'lymouth he
soon crossed over to Marblehead, Massachu-
setts, and was taxed there, as shown by the
Salem lists, in 1637-38. He also had a grant
of four acres of land "where he had formerly
planted," from which it aiijiears tiiat he may
have bc^n in that iilantation at some previous
time. In 1639 '1*-' ji^'iiied tiie colonists under



Anthony Thacher and went to Cape Cod and
founded the town of Yarmouth. His first
house was built on Quivet Neck, and after-
ward built another house a short distance to
the northwest of his first home there. In 1643
the name of Richard Seeres appears in the
list of inhabitants of Yarmouth "liable to bear
arms." He was made freeman in 1652, took
the oath of allegiance and fidelity in 1653, was
constable in 1660, grand juror in 1652. and
rejiresentative to the court in Plymouth in
i()f)2. In 1664 Richard Sares. husbandman,
purchased for twenty pounds from Allis,
widow of Governor William Bradford, a tract
of land at Sesuit. He died in August, 1676,
and was buried on the 26th of that month. His

wife was Dorothy , who was buried

March 19, 1678-79; but it is not certain that
she was his only wife, or the mother of all or
even any of his children. Indeed, there is a
presumption that he was previously married
and that his children may have been born of
his former wife. So far as known his chil-
dren were as follows: i. Paul, born 1637-38.

2. Silas, died Yarmouth, January 13, 1697-98.

3. Deborah, born Yarmouth, September, 1639.
(II) Captain Paul Sears, son of Richard,

the immigrant, is supposed to have been born
in Marblehead, Massachusetts, sometime after
February 20, 1637-38. and died at Yarmouth,
February 20. 1707-08. He took the oath of
fidelity in 1657, held a commission as captain
of the militia, and made a claim for a horse
lost in the war with the Narragansett Indians;
but there is no further record of his military
services. He was one of the original pro-
prietors of Harwich, Massachusetts, grand
juror there in 1667, and appears to have been
of considerable importance in the ])lantation.
His estate was ajjjiraised at the value of four
hundred and sixty-six pounds, hence he was
well possessed in lands and goods. He mar-
ried, at Yarmouth, in 1658, Deborah Willard,
ba])tized Scituate. September 14, 1645, died
Yarmouth. May 13. 1721, daughter of George
\\'illard. of Scituate. They had ten children,
all liorn in Yarmouth: I. Mercy, July 3. 1659.
2. r.ethia, January 3, 1 66 1, died 1724. 3.
Samuel. January, 1663-64, 4. A daughter,
October 24 i6()6. ^. Paul, June 15, 1669. 6.
Mary, or Margery, October 24, 1672. 7. Ann,
March 27, 1675, died November 14, 1745. 8.
John. 1677-78. died April 9, 1738. 9. Richard,
16S0-81. died May 24, 1718. 10. Daniel, 1682-
83, died August 10, 1756.

(ITT) Captain Sanniel, eldest son of Cap-
tain Paul and Deborah (Willard) Sears, was



MASSACHUSETTS.



107



born in Yarmouth "the last of January," 1663-
64, and (hed in Harwich, Massachusetts, Jan-
uary 8. 1741-42. He was one of the first set-
tlers in Harwich, and was constable there in
1702, lieutenant in 1706, and in 1715, "Captain
Sears granted liberty to build a pew in the
meeting-house." He married Mercy Mayo,
born 1664. died January 20, 1748-49, daughter
of Deacon Samuel and Tamzin (Lumpkin)
Mayo, and granddaughter of Rev. John Mayo.
They had eleven children, all born in Harwich :
I. Hannah, July i, 1685, married John Vin-
cent. 2. .Samuel. September 15, 1687. 3.
Nathaniel, September 23, 1689. 4. Tamsen,
November 13. 1691, died July 17, 1761. 5.
Jonathan, September 3, 1693. 6. Captain
Joseph. July 15, 1695, died .August 25, 1765.
7. Joshua, May 3, 1697. 8. Judah, October 29,
1699. 9. John, July 18, 1701. 10. Seth. IMay
27. 1703. II. Benjamin, June 16, 1706.

(I\') Jonathan, son of Captain Samuel and
Mercy (Mayo) Sears, was born in Harwich,
September 3, 1693. died September 3, 1738.
He was a farmer and well-to-do man in every
respect, leaving an estate which after his death
inventoried at three hundred and seventy-four
pounds in personal and five hundred and sev-
enty-five pounds in real property. He married,
in Yarmouth. June 29, 1721. Elizabeth Howes,
born November 7, 1697. admitted to the church
in Harwich in 1723. and died January 8, 1748-
49. daughter of Deacon Joseph Howes, of
Harwich. They had nine children, all born
in Harwich: i. David, September 22, 1722,
died in infancy. 2. David, March 26, 1724,
died in infancy. 3. Jonathan, September 29,
1723. 4. Joseph, Afay, 1728. died March 14,
1758. 5. Mary, baptized July 12, 1730, died
young. 6. Sarah, born July 28, 1731, died
December 16. 1749. 7. Prince, baptized July
30. 1732, died October 31, 1732. 8. Nathan,
born September 25, 1733, died young. 9.
Prince, baptized .'^pril 13, 1735.

(V) Jonathan (2), son of Jonathan (i)
and Elizabeth ( Howes ) Sears, was born in
Harwich. September 29. 1725, died December
16. 1752. He was a mariner and made his will
March 28, 1752, "being then very sick." The
inventory of his estate was filed February 6,
1753, and amounted to one hundred and
twenty-eight pounds, twelve shillings. He
married. June 29, 1749, Priscilla Sears, born
Harwich. December 31, 1730. died April 12,
1819, daughter of Seth and Priscilla (Ryder)
Sears. She married (second) .'\pril 11, 1754,
Deacon John Sears. Jonathan and Priscilla
(Sears) Sears had two children, both born in



Harwich: i. Jonathan, May 7, 1750. 2. Eliz-
abeth, January 4, 1752, married, 1773, Samuel
Hall, born March 7, 1752.

(VI) Sergeant Jonathan (3), only son of


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