John Pike1
M
| Father* | Robert Pike1 b. 1474, d. 24 Sep 1557 | |
| Mother* | Elizabeth Androwes1 b. 1478, d. 24 Dec 1558 | |
John Pike||p178.htm#i3185|Robert Pike|b. 1474\nd. 24 Sep 1557|p178.htm#i3176|Elizabeth Androwes|b. 1478\nd. 24 Dec 1558|p8.htm#i3177|Thomas Pike|b. 1435\nd. 1480|p178.htm#i3178|||||||||| | ||
| Relationship | 12th great-granduncle of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| John Pike is the son of Robert Pike and Elizabeth Androwes.1 |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
John Pike Capt.1
M, b. 8 November 1613, d. 9 January 1689
| Father* | John Pike Sr.1 b. c 1588, d. 26 May 1654 | |
| Mother* | Dorothy Daye1 b. c 1592, d. 20 Jan 1631 | |
John Pike Capt.|b. 8 Nov 1613\nd. 9 Jan 1689|p178.htm#i3903|John Pike Sr.|b. c 1588\nd. 26 May 1654|p178.htm#i3168|Dorothy Daye|b. c 1592\nd. 20 Jan 1631|p69.htm#i3169|John Pike|b. 1564|p177.htm#i3170|Jane Castleman|b. 1564|p46.htm#i3171|Richard Daye|b. 1566|p69.htm#i3190|||| | ||
| Relationship | 8th great-granduncle of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 8 November 1613 | John Pike Capt. was born on 8 November 1613 at Langford, Wiltshire, England.1 |
| He was the son of John Pike Sr. and Dorothy Daye.1 | ||
| Marriage* | before 1638 | John Pike Capt. married Mary Truvill before 1638 at Newbury, Essex County, Massachusetts. |
| Death* | 9 January 1689 | John Pike Capt. died on 9 January 1689 at Woodbridge, Middlesex County, New Jersey, at age 75. |
| Note* | 1667 | He About 1667 John and most of his family moved to Woodbridge NJ, where he was one of the original proprietors. This started a line of New Jersey Pikes. in 1667. |
Family | Mary Truvill b. 4 Feb 1615 | |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
John Pike Sr.1
M, b. circa 1588, d. 26 May 1654
| Father* | John Pike1 b. 1564 | |
| Mother* | Jane Castleman1 b. 1564 | |
John Pike Sr.|b. c 1588\nd. 26 May 1654|p178.htm#i3168|John Pike|b. 1564|p177.htm#i3170|Jane Castleman|b. 1564|p46.htm#i3171|Stephen Pike|b. 1532\nd. c 1600|p178.htm#i3172|Dorothy Cuffs|b. 1538|p67.htm#i3173||||||| | ||
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 9th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | circa 1588 | John Pike Sr. was born circa 1588 at Whiteparish, Wiltshire, England.1 |
| He was the son of John Pike and Jane Castleman.1 | ||
| Marriage* | 17 January 1611 | John Pike Sr. married Dorothy Daye, daughter of Richard Daye, on 17 January 1611 at Langford/White Parish, Wiltshire, England; From Charles Hendrick, p. 31: "His marriage is found recorded as follows: 'John Pike of White Parish, Wilshire, married Jan. 17, 1613, Dorothy Day, of Langford at White Parish.' They probably lived in Langford, as he was on the passenger list, from Langford.1 " |
| Death* | 26 May 1654 | John Pike Sr. died on 26 May 1654 at Salisbury, Essex County, Massachusetts; His will Probated 3 Aug 1654, names as follows: Daughters, Dorothy m Daniel Hendrick, Ann m John Fiske, Israel? m Henry..... Sons John and Robert. This John is known in records as John the Immigrant."1 |
| Note* | He From page 436 of Genealogical Dictionary of First Settlers of New England Before May 1691: "John Pike presumed to be the eighth in descent from Sir Richard, and first of the line in America. He came to the country from Southhampton on 6 Apr 1635 on the ship "James" arriving in Boston in August 1635. He settled first at Ipswich, removed to Newbury [N.B. of which he is listed as one of the first settlers] and was made freeman in 1642. | |
| Immigration* | August 1635 | He immigrated in August 1635 to Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts; He sailed from Southampton on April 6, 1635 in the ship "James" and arrived in Boston on Monday, August 1635. With him were five children.1 |
| Occupation* | 1654 | He was Attorney: The probabilities are that John Pike was a man of liberal education, and much natural ability, not only from his having two sons who ranked so high in later years, in the History of this colony and that of New Jersey, but from some evidence of Johns's personal ability. The court records show that John acted as attorney in two cases and successfully in each occasion. in 1654 at Salisbury, Essex County, Massachusetts.1 |
| Will* | 3 August 1654 | He left a will on 3 August 1654 at Essex County, Massachusetts; WILL: WILL OF JOHN PIKE, 24 May 1654 - 3 Aug 1654, In the name of god Amen. The last will & testament of John Pike senior being sick and weake in body but of pfect memory. maye 24. 1654. first. I will & bequeath my soule unto god In the lord Jesus Christ & my body to be buried in Convenient burieinge place & my worldly goods to be bestowed as followeth. First I give my howse & lande at the old towne at Newbery boath uplande & meddow with my privellidge of Comon ( at Newbery ) unto my gran Child John Pike the son of my eldest son John Pike wth that parcell of my lande at the little River. & In Case the saide John Pike doe die without Issue & before he is twenty one yeare old then the saide lande shall pass to his Brother & sisters by equell portions & If they faile then it shall pass to the next of kinn. Allsoe I give that portion of my lande at the new towne caled by the name of the pitt boath upland & meddow unto my grand Child John Pike the son of my son Robert Pike & In case the saide John Pike die without Issue ( or before the age of twenty one ) the said land shall pass to his sisters & if they faile then it shall pass to the next of kinn Allsoe I give unto my Daughter Dorothy twenty pounde to be equally devided betwixt her & her Children by equall portions. Allsoe I give to my daughter Israel twenty pounde to be devided betwixt her Chilldren by equall portions, Allsoe I give to my daughter in law mary the wife of my son John fowrty shillings & I give to her Children Joseph Hanna Mary & Ruth each of (them) fowrty shillings, Allsoe I give unto my daughter in law sara the wife of my son Robert fowrty shillings & I give to her Children Dara Dorathye Mary & Elizabeth ( each of them) fowrty shillings. Allsoe I give unto my tenant samuel more the bedstead that he hath of mine. Allsoe I doe. appoynte my two sons John & Robert to bee my executors to see my will pformed & my debts & all Charges paide ( soe farr as my estate will reach) & the remainder of my estate within doare & without doare shall be devided betwixt my two said executors my sons John Pike & Robert Pike by equall portions all debts & Charges beinge first discharged & paide furthermore my will is that in Case my sons John Pike & Robert Pike should Remove out of the Cuntry with theire famillyes after my decease before my saide grande Children are of the age of twenty one yeare that then it shall be in the power of my saide sons John & Robert to dispose in the waye of sale or otherwise of the saide lande for the benefitt of my saide grand Children respectively that is to saye my son wch is the father shall dispose of that lande wch is by me given to his owne Child & soe boath respectively John Pike Witness: Henry Mondey, John R Raffe Proved in Hampton court 3: 8: 1654 by Henry Mondey and Jno. Ralfe. Inventory of estate of John Pike sr., deceased May 26, 1654, taken May 29 1654, Mr. Henry Mondy (Mondey), John Roff ( Rolf) and George ( his mark) Goldwire (Gouldwire) : His howse & Land at the old Towne of Newbery, 60li; his Lande at the new Towne, 60li. ; one yonge Cattell of 2 yeare & vantage, 39li; one bed & appurtenances, 7li; on new broad Cloth suite, 3li. 3s. 4d; one stuff sute & wascot, 2li. 2s. ; one Cloth sute, 1li. 4s; one Cloth Coate, 2li. 10s; shirts, Hankerchers & bands & other linen, 2li. 15; 4 paire of stockings & 2 hats, 1li. 14s; a paire of boots & 2 paire of shooes 1li. 2s; 2 paire of gloves & a paire of mittins, 4s; one brass pan, one warming pan, one frieinge pan, 1li. 10s; one brass pott, one brass possnett, 1li. 1s; one brand Iron, one and Iron 6s; a hatchet, a Cutting knife to Cut haye & other smale things, 6s. 6d; a Chest, a box & other lumber 16s; In books 1li; in debts 7li; a Cheese press & som other lumber 13s; total 230 li. 6s.10d. Jno. Pike and Robert Pike, executors to John Pike, sr., testified in Hampton court 3:8:1654, that the above is a true inventory. Norfolk Deeds. vol. 1, leaf 36. Daniel Henrick of Haverhill with Dorathy his wife, daughter of John Pike, acknowleged the receipt of her legacy of 20 li. from her brothers John and Robert Pike, ececutors of the will of her father, John Pike. Signed Jun 10, 1654. Witness: Robert Clements, Henry Palmer. Henry True of Salem with Israell his wife, daughter of John Pike, acknowledged the receipt of her legacy of 20 li. from her brothers John and Robert Pike, executors of the will of her father, John Pike. Signed May 1, 1655. Acknowledged May 1,1655 by Israell True and 15: 9: 1655 by Henry True before Tho. Bradbury, Commissioner of Salisbury Norfolk Deeds, vol. 1, leaf 139. Daniel Hendrick of Haverhill granted to his brother John Pike of Newbury and Robert Pike of Salisbury, executors of the will of his father-in-law, John Pike, all his upland and meadow which belonged to him according to the order of the town of Haverhill in the 4th division to be improved for the use and benefit of his children, Daniel, John, Jotham, Jabez, Israell, Hannah and Dorathie, and that in consideration, the legacy of 20 li. to be divided between his wife and children, according to the will of his father-in-law, John Pike. Signed and sealed Mar. 27, 1662. Witness: John Cheney, sr., Nathaniel Boulter.1 |
Family | Dorothy Daye b. c 1592, d. 20 Jan 1631 | |
| Marriage* | 17 January 1611 | He married Dorothy Daye, daughter of Richard Daye, on 17 January 1611 at Langford/White Parish, Wiltshire, England; From Charles Hendrick, p. 31: "His marriage is found recorded as follows: 'John Pike of White Parish, Wilshire, married Jan. 17, 1613, Dorothy Day, of Langford at White Parish.' They probably lived in Langford, as he was on the passenger list, from Langford.1 " |
| Children |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Leroy Pike1
M
| Charts | Daniel Guptill Decendents Chart |
| Marriage* | 2 April 1874 | Leroy Pike married Eliza Jane Guptill, daughter of Gowen Wilson Guptill and Eliza Jewett Bucknell, on 2 April 1874.1 |
Family | Eliza Jane Guptill b. 13 Jan 1851, d. 9 Sep 1922 | |
Citations
- [S95] Dorothy Bellen, Dec 2003.
Mary Pike1
F
| Marriage* | 24 August 1674 | Mary Pike married John Allen, son of William Allen and Ann Goodale, on 24 August 1674.1 |
Family | John Allen b. 9 Oct 1648, d. 27 Feb 1696 | |
Citations
- [S145] Dave Greenberg, 2005.
Richard Pike1
M, b. circa 1360, d. circa 1410
| Relationship | 17th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | circa 1360 | Richard Pike was born circa 1360 at Pikes Ash, Moorlinck Parish, Bridgewater, Somerset, England.1 |
| Death* | circa 1410 | He died circa 1410 at Pikes Ash, Moorlinck Parish, Bridgewater, Somerset, England.1 |
Family | ||
| Child |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Robert Pike1
M, b. 1474, d. 24 September 1557
| Father* | Thomas Pike1 b. 1435, d. 1480 | |
Robert Pike|b. 1474\nd. 24 Sep 1557|p178.htm#i3176|Thomas Pike|b. 1435\nd. 1480|p178.htm#i3178||||Hugh Pike|b. c 1405|p177.htm#i3179|Elizabeth (?)|b. c 1400\nd. c 1450|p2.htm#i3180||||||| | ||
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 13th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1474 | Robert Pike was born in 1474 at Somerset, England.1 |
| He was the son of Thomas Pike.1 | ||
| Marriage* | circa 1500 | Robert Pike married Elizabeth Androwes circa 1500 at England.1 |
| Death* | 24 September 1557 | Robert Pike died on 24 September 1557 at Great Bedwyn, Wiltshire, England.1 |
| Name Variation | Robert Pike was also known as Pyke. |
Family | Elizabeth Androwes b. 1478, d. 24 Dec 1558 | |
| Children |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Robert Pike Maj.
M, b. 17 March 1616, d. 12 December 1706
| Father* | John Pike Sr. b. c 1588, d. 26 May 1654 | |
| Mother* | Dorothy Daye b. c 1592, d. 20 Jan 1631 | |
Robert Pike Maj.|b. 17 Mar 1616\nd. 12 Dec 1706|p178.htm#i3902|John Pike Sr.|b. c 1588\nd. 26 May 1654|p178.htm#i3168|Dorothy Daye|b. c 1592\nd. 20 Jan 1631|p69.htm#i3169|John Pike|b. 1564|p177.htm#i3170|Jane Castleman|b. 1564|p46.htm#i3171|Richard Daye|b. 1566|p69.htm#i3190|||| | ||
| Relationship | 8th great-granduncle of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Marriage* | Robert Pike Maj. married Martha Goldwyer. | |
| Birth* | 17 March 1616 | Robert Pike Maj. was born on 17 March 1616 at Langford, Wiltshire, England.1,2 |
| He was the son of John Pike Sr. and Dorothy Daye. | ||
| Marriage* | 3 April 1641 | Robert Pike Maj. married Sarah Sanders on 3 April 1641 at Salisbury, Essex County, Massachusetts.2 |
| Death* | 12 December 1706 | Robert Pike Maj. died on 12 December 1706 at Salisbury, Essex County, Massachusetts, at age 90.2 |
| Burial* | after 12 December 1706 | He was buried after 12 December 1706 at Salisbury Colonial Burial Ground, Salisbury, Essex County, Massachusetts.2 |
| Note* | He BIOGRAPHY: Title: Portraits of the Founders, Volume II Author: Charles Knowles Bolton Publisher: The Boston Athenaeum 1919 Pages: contains pages 339-690 BIOGRAPHY: Notes: "Portraits of Persons Born Abroad Who Came to the Colonies in North America Before 1701 with an introduction, biographical outlines, and comments on the portraits" BIOGRAPHY: Here is the biographical sketch contained therein. BIOGRAPHY: page 443 "Major Robert Pike, of Salisbury in New England, gentleman, was born early in 1616, at Langford, County Wilts, the son of John Pike and Dorothy Day. With his parents he came, in 1635, to Newbury, but in 1639 was one of the founders of Salisbury. He married, first, 3 April, 1641, Sarah Sanders, who died 1 November, 1679, having had five daughters and three sons, John, Robert, and Moses; second, Martha Moyce, the widow of George Goldwyer. Major Pike died, 12 December, 1706, having been, wrote Whittier, 'by all odds the most remarkable personage of the place and time ... one of the wisest and worthiest of the early settlers of that region.' His son, the minister at Dover, wrote in his diary: BIOGRAPHY: 'My aged & Dear father Major Robert Pike deceased in the 91 or 92 year of his age, after long weakness & Illness, but no great sickness & he was Interred upon ye 19th of ye same. He was always very temperate in Ref: to meats & drinks, & Generally very healthy.' BIOGRAPHY: He was a deputy to the General Court frequently from 1648 to 1681 ; assistant in 1682-1686, 1690, and 1691 ; member of the Council of Safety in 1689 ; and commander-in-chief of the forces sent against the common French and Indian enemy in 1690 ; coucilor in 1692-1695. BIOGRAPHY: In the winter of 1675/6 the Major and Wheelwright, the pastor at Salisbury, fell out, the former's absence from church and 'constant pleading the wicked causes of delinquents' seeming to undermine ministerial authority. Wheelwright excommunicated Pike, and the Major asked the General Court to remove Wheelwright from office. Finally, acting on a committee report, the General Court persuaded the church to receive Major Pike again, and peace reigned. BIOGRAPHY: page 444 Pike's next great battle was in 1692, when at the peril of his own life, he defended persons accused of witchcraft. BIOGRAPHY: ' This heroic act,' is has been said, 'seems to have been one of several similar efforts by hime to convince those jurists of the injustice of their course. It stands out against the deep blackness of the those porceeedings, like a pillar of light upon a starless midnight sky. Confronting these judges stood this sturdy old man, his head whitened with the frosts of seventy-six winters, possessing a deeply religious character, and with convictions moulded into fixed and rigid forms by the views and practices of a lifetime. He was hampered by his belief in the power of the devil and his imps, living in an invisible world close to our own, to vex and ruin the bodies as well as the souls of men ; accepting in full faith, like nearly all his comtemporaries, the most literal interpretation of those passages of Scripture supposed to bear upon the subject. The judges might have told him, as they told Phillip English, the richest and most active merchant of Salem, when he tried to persuade them to acquit his wife, that this showed he was a witch himself, and have arrested him on the charge, as English was arrested. But all such considerations, though prevailing with others, were discarded by him. He laid before the court his argument against the convictions, made not from the stand-point of our times, which would be a comparatively easy task, but from that of the judges and prosecutors themselves. He demonstrated that there was no legal way of convicting a witch, even according to the laws and beliefs of those times.' BIOGRAPHY: Instead of withdrawing to Maine with Wheelwright, or to Rhode Island with Roger Williams, or bowing to bigotry as Cotton and Higginson did, Pike held his ground and fought like a man. He deserves a large place in New England history, but his biography is unknown to the makers of encyclopedias." BIOGRAPHY: "The New Puritans," by James S. Pike. New York, 1879 BIOGRAPHY: Robert Pike was one of the founding settlers of Salisbury Massachusetts in 1639. He was recounted by Whittier as "one of the wisest and worthiest of the early settlers". Though a Puritan, he advocated religious tolerance to the Quakers, and alone stood against the judges during the Witchcraft Hysteria of 1692. BIOGRAPHY: Loyal Dissenter: The Life and Times of Robert Pike by Roland Leslie Warren ISBN: 0819184721 Publisher: University Press of America - February 1992 BIOGRAPHY: (The early Pikes were from Somersetshire; the John Pike who emigrated to the U.S. in the 1600s was from Wiltshire.) Robert Pike was John Pike's son, and he has become "famous" for having been the one Puritan who strongly opposed the Salem witch trails (and literally risked his life) and who crafted some very interesting and brilliant philosophical arguments in support of his position and definitely saved several women from a miserable death. Two books have been written about him: The New Puritan by James S. Pike (1879) and Loyal Dissenter (1992) by Roland Leslie Warren. He was also an important elected official or representative from his part of Massachusetts, and a Major and later, I believe, the equivalent of "Allied Commander" in the colonists' ongoing warfare with the Indians in that part of the world. BIOGRAPHY: June 28th 1689 Robert Pike received a letter from Richard Martyn, William Vaughn, Richard Waldron Jr., Samuel Wentworth and Benjamin Hull notifying him of the massacre at Cocheco (Dover, NH) with a request that he write the Governor in Boston. He wrote the following letter: "To the much Honored Syman Bradstreet, Esq., Governor, and the Honorable Council now sitting at Boston, these present with all speed?Haste, post Haste":?SALISBURY, 28th June, (about noon) 1689.Much Honored:?After due respect, these are only to give your honours the sad accounts of the last night's providence at Cocheco, as by the enclosed, the particulars whereof are awful. The only wise God, who is the keeper that neither slumbereth nor sleepeth is pleased to permit what is done. Possibly it may be either better or worse than this account renders it. As soon as I get more intelligence, I shall, God willing, speed it to your honours, praying for speedy order or advice in so solemn a case. I have dispatched the intelligence to other towns with advice to look to yurselves. I shall not be wanting to serve in what I may. Should have waited on your honours now, had I been well. Shall not now come except by you commanded, till this bustle be abated. That the only wise God may direct all your weighty affairs, is the prayer of your honours' most humble servant, ROBERT PIKE." BIOGRAPHY: Major Robert Pike was an associate of the court and a judge on several occasions held at Hampton and Salisbury during the 1670's and 1680's Record and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County Massachusetts, V. VI 1675 - 1678 BURIAL: Old Burying Ground (Salisbury) Essex County Massachusetts, USA BURIAL: Vital Recods of Salisbury, Essex Co., MA BURIAL: In memory ofMajor Robert Pike1616 - 1706one of the first settlers of SalisburyA leader in civil and military affairshe stood far in advance of his timehaving the wisdom and courageto proclaim witchcraft a delusionand to advocate religious freedom source: http://www.gravematter.com/cem-ma-salisbury.asp Major Robert Pike was the first and strongest representative of the right of petition in New England. (For a lengthier discussion see The Essex Antiquarian, 4:113-117) According to Hoyt: "Maj. Robert and Mrs. Pike were first on the list of members of the Salisbury church in 1687; and he was the most prominent citizen of Salisbury during the last half of the 17th century. ... He took the oath of freedom May 17, 1637...He was very decided in his opinions, which were liberal in advance of his time...He has been called the 'moral and fearless hero of New England'; 'the first and strongest representative of the right of petition'; the 'power which squelched the witchcraft delusion', etc." From Charles Hendrick p. 31-32, a slightly modified version of what appears in the Bradbury Memorial, p. 68-70: "He was one of the founders of Salisbury, Mass., and became one of the leading men on committees and commissions for the transaction of the public business. At the age of thirty-two he was chosen a member of the General Court, and had a much longer service in that capacity and as councilor and assistant, than any of his contemporaries. He had a good education and wrote a fine, flowing hand. He was an easy, eloquent and forceful speaker. He was engaged in at least three conspicuous controversies during his life. The first was his arraignment by the General Court in 1653, for his hostility to the persecution of the Quakers. The second was his resistance of the dogmatic authority of some of the clergy, in the person of his pastor, Rev. John Wheelwright. The third was his bitter opposition to the witchcraft prosecutions in 1692. In all these controversies, Robert Pike stood practically alone. He was a century in advance of his time, and a century has more than vindicated his advanced positions. The historian of the Salem witchcraft delusion says that "not a voice comes down to us of deliberate and effective hostility to the movement, except that of Robert Pike in his cool, close and powerful argumentative appeals to the judges who were trying the witchcraft cases. It stands out against the deep blackness of those proceedings like a pillar of light upon a starless Midnight sky." Confronting the judges stood this sturdy old man, his head whitened with the frosts of seventy-six winters and protested that there was no legal way of convicting a witch, even according to the laws and beliefs of those times. It required no small amount of courage for him to take the stand he did against the opinions of the highest judicial tribunal in the province when no one was safe from the charge of having dealings with the evil one, and he himself might be the very next one accused of being a witch! But having the courage of his convictions he rose to the demands of the situation and proclaimed his opposition by a formal and thorough exposition: The great merit of this position, so far as it has come down to us, belongs entirely to him, and no man of his time is entitled to greater honor. It is a marvel how he breasted the storm when any resistance to the popular demamd was deemed evidence of complicity with the witches, imps and all the powers of darkness, to overthrow the true church on earth. He defended and plead the cause of several of the accused, among whom were Mrs. Mary Bradbury, who was condemned but not executed, and Susanna Martin, whose memory is perpetuated by John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet." The 1914 "Americana" comments briefly about Robert Pike: "...he appears as one of the earliest exponents in America of Legislative assemblies, and acquittal in courts of law in default of sufficiently conclusive evidence." Robert Pike was one of the leaders of the group that overthrew New England Governor Edmund Andros in 1689 and sent him back to England. The Governor had begun restricting freedoms of the people such as assembling and had become quite unpopular. at Essex County, Massachusetts.2 |
Family 1 | Martha Goldwyer | |
| Marriage* | He married Martha Goldwyer. | |
Family 2 | Sarah Sanders d. 1 Nov 1679 | |
| Marriage* | 3 April 1641 | Robert Pike Maj. married Sarah Sanders on 3 April 1641 at Salisbury, Essex County, Massachusetts.2 |
Stephen Pike1
M, b. 1532, d. circa 1600
| Father* | William Pike b. 1500, d. a 1532 | |
| Mother* | Alice Bowering1 b. 1510, d. c 1560 | |
Stephen Pike|b. 1532\nd. c 1600|p178.htm#i3172|William Pike|b. 1500\nd. a 1532|p178.htm#i3174|Alice Bowering|b. 1510\nd. c 1560|p34.htm#i3175|Robert Pike|b. 1474\nd. 24 Sep 1557|p178.htm#i3176|Elizabeth Androwes|b. 1478\nd. 24 Dec 1558|p8.htm#i3177|Thomas Bowering|b. c 1484|p34.htm#i6051|||| | ||
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 11th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1532 | Stephen Pike was born in 1532 at Somerset, Wiltshire, England.1 |
| He was the son of William Pike and Alice Bowering.1 | ||
| Marriage* | 1555 | Stephen Pike married Dorothy Cuffs in 1555 at Norfolk, England.1 |
| Death* | circa 1600 | Stephen Pike died circa 1600 at Whiteparish, Wiltshire, England.1 |
Family | Dorothy Cuffs b. 1538 | |
| Children |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Thomas Pike1
M, b. 1435, d. 1480
| Father* | Hugh Pike1 b. c 1405 | |
| Mother* | Elizabeth (?)1 b. c 1400, d. c 1450 | |
Thomas Pike|b. 1435\nd. 1480|p178.htm#i3178|Hugh Pike|b. c 1405|p177.htm#i3179|Elizabeth (?)|b. c 1400\nd. c 1450|p2.htm#i3180|Thomas Pike|b. 1390\nd. 1440|p178.htm#i3181|||||||||| | ||
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 14th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1435 | Thomas Pike was born in 1435 at England.1 |
| He was the son of Hugh Pike and Elizabeth (?).1 | ||
| Death* | 1480 | Thomas Pike died in 1480 at England.1 |
Family | ||
| Child |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Thomas Pike1
M, b. 1390, d. 1440
| Father* | Richard Pike1 b. c 1360, d. c 1410 | |
Thomas Pike|b. 1390\nd. 1440|p178.htm#i3181|Richard Pike|b. c 1360\nd. c 1410|p178.htm#i3182|||||||||||||||| | ||
| Relationship | 16th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1390 | Thomas Pike was born in 1390 at England.1 |
| He was the son of Richard Pike.1 | ||
| Death* | 1440 | Thomas Pike died in 1440 at England.1 |
Family | ||
| Child |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Thomas Pike1
M
| Father* | Robert Pike1 b. 1474, d. 24 Sep 1557 | |
| Mother* | Elizabeth Androwes1 b. 1478, d. 24 Dec 1558 | |
Thomas Pike||p178.htm#i3184|Robert Pike|b. 1474\nd. 24 Sep 1557|p178.htm#i3176|Elizabeth Androwes|b. 1478\nd. 24 Dec 1558|p8.htm#i3177|Thomas Pike|b. 1435\nd. 1480|p178.htm#i3178|||||||||| | ||
| Relationship | 12th great-granduncle of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Thomas Pike is the son of Robert Pike and Elizabeth Androwes.1 |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
William Pike
M, b. 1500, d. after 1532
| Father* | Robert Pike1 b. 1474, d. 24 Sep 1557 | |
| Mother* | Elizabeth Androwes1 b. 1478, d. 24 Dec 1558 | |
William Pike|b. 1500\nd. a 1532|p178.htm#i3174|Robert Pike|b. 1474\nd. 24 Sep 1557|p178.htm#i3176|Elizabeth Androwes|b. 1478\nd. 24 Dec 1558|p8.htm#i3177|Thomas Pike|b. 1435\nd. 1480|p178.htm#i3178|||||||||| | ||
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 12th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1500 | William Pike was born in 1500 at Somersetshire, Wiltshire, England. |
| He was the son of Robert Pike and Elizabeth Androwes.1 | ||
| Marriage* | circa 1530 | William Pike married Alice Bowering, daughter of Thomas Bowering, circa 1530 at England.1 |
| Death* | after 1532 | William Pike died after 1532 at England.1 |
Family | Alice Bowering b. 1510, d. c 1560 | |
| Child |
| |
Citations
- [S97] James J. Jackson & Catherine Mary Murphy Murray, The Family of Henry True.
Carrie Lynn Wagner Pittman1
F, b. 22 January 1980
| Birth* | 22 January 1980 | Carrie Lynn Wagner Pittman was born on 22 January 1980 at Youngstown, Mahoning County, Ohio.1 |
| Graduation* | 15 August 2002 | She was graduated on 15 August 2002 at Marion, Grant County, Indiana; Indiana Wesleyan University, Summa Cum Laude.1 |
Citations
- [S391] Sharon Diane Wagner, May 18, 2009.
Susannah Pittman1
F
| Marriage* | 29 May 1810 | Susannah Pittman married George Barnhouse, son of John Barnhouse and Mary Talbot, on 29 May 1810 at Randolph County, West Virginia.1 |
| Married Name | 29 May 1810 | As of 29 May 1810,her married name was Barnhouse.1 |
Family | George Barnhouse b. 1780, d. c 1821 | |
| Children |
| |
Citations
- [S262] Don & Jeanine Hartman, 4 Apr 2007.
Elizabeth Pitts1
F, b. circa 1624, d. 9 September 1696
| Father* | William Pitts b. 1592, d. 28 Sep 1668 | |
| Mother* | Elizabeth (?) b. c 1586, d. 15 Apr 1655 | |
Elizabeth Pitts|b. c 1624\nd. 9 Sep 1696|p178.htm#i5908|William Pitts|b. 1592\nd. 28 Sep 1668|p178.htm#i5982|Elizabeth (?)|b. c 1586\nd. 15 Apr 1655|p2.htm#i5983||||||||||||| | ||
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 9th great-grandmother of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | circa 1624 | Elizabeth Pitts was born circa 1624 at England.2 |
| She was the daughter of William Pitts and Elizabeth (?). | ||
| Marriage* | circa 1640 | Elizabeth Pitts married Capt. William Holbrook, son of Thomas Holbrook and Jane Powyes, circa 1640 at Weymouth, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.2 |
| Death* | 9 September 1696 | Elizabeth Pitts died on 9 September 1696 at Scituate, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.2 |
Family | Capt. William Holbrook b. b 12 Jun 1620, d. 3 Jul 1699 | |
| Children |
| |
William Pitts
M, b. 1592, d. 28 September 1668
| Charts | Daniel Curtis Phillips Petigree Chart |
| Relationship | 10th great-grandfather of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1592 | William Pitts was born in 1592 at Hingham, Norfolk, England.1 |
| Marriage* | 8 August 1613 | He married Elizabeth (?) on 8 August 1613 at Hingham, Norfolk, England.1 |
| Death* | 28 September 1668 | William Pitts died on 28 September 1668 at Marblehead, Essex County, Massachusetts.1 |
| Immigration* | 10 August 1638 | He immigrated on 10 August 1638; William and Elizabeth.1 |
Family | Elizabeth (?) b. c 1586, d. 15 Apr 1655 | |
| Child |
| |
Citations
- [S311] Keith BucK, 2008.
Allet Pletjes
F, b. 1583
| Father* | Driessen Pletjes b. c 1560, d. 22 May 1608 | |
| Mother* | Adelheid Goebels b. c 1562 | |
Allet Pletjes|b. 1583|p178.htm#i7491|Driessen Pletjes|b. c 1560\nd. 22 May 1608|p178.htm#i2586|Adelheid Goebels|b. c 1562|p98.htm#i2587|||||||Sylli Goebels|b. 1532|p98.htm#i2588|||| | ||
| Marriage* | Allet Pletjes married John Jasper. | |
| Birth* | 1583 | Allet Pletjes was born in 1583 at Westphalia, Germany. |
| She was the daughter of Driessen Pletjes and Adelheid Goebels. |
Family | John Jasper b. 1592 | |
Driessen Pletjes
M, b. circa 1560, d. 22 May 1608
| Marriage* | Driessen Pletjes married Adelheid Goebels, daughter of Sylli Goebels. | |
| Birth* | circa 1560 | Driessen Pletjes was born circa 1560 at Kempen, Westphalia, Germany. |
| Death* | 22 May 1608 | He died on 22 May 1608 at Kempen, Westphalia, Germany. |
Family | Adelheid Goebels b. c 1562 | |
| Children |
| |
Margaret Grietjen Pletjes
F, b. 16 November 1588, d. 5 June 1643
| Father* | Driessen Pletjes b. c 1560, d. 22 May 1608 | |
| Mother* | Adelheid Goebels b. c 1562 | |
Margaret Grietjen Pletjes|b. 16 Nov 1588\nd. 5 Jun 1643|p178.htm#i2493|Driessen Pletjes|b. c 1560\nd. 22 May 1608|p178.htm#i2586|Adelheid Goebels|b. c 1562|p98.htm#i2587|||||||Sylli Goebels|b. 1532|p98.htm#i2588|||| | ||
| Birth* | 16 November 1588 | Margaret Grietjen Pletjes was born on 16 November 1588 at Kempen, Westphalia, Germany. |
| She was the daughter of Driessen Pletjes and Adelheid Goebels. | ||
| Marriage* | 16 August 1605 | Margaret Grietjen Pletjes married Herman Op Den Graef on 16 August 1605 at Aldekerk, Muir, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. |
| Death* | 5 June 1643 | Margaret Grietjen Pletjes died on 5 June 1643 at Krefeld, Westphalia, Germany, at age 54. |
| Note* | She Is the mystery of the Op Den Graff windows all serendipity? Did our Bishop Hermen and his wife, Grietje attend Krefeld Market one day and find two or more window frames for their townhouse? The frames just happened to have hints of the Hebrew Cabala and signs of the Mysteries of the Rosary on them. Nevertheless, Hermen and Grietje decided such fancy work would be good advertising for the linen business and cloth industry. Their Pletjes family niece, Margaret Jasper had married a Van Der Schuren and migrated to Ireland to escape the ridiculous Religious wars over church real estate and to invest in or inherit her own real estate; and her crazy son from her second marriage (William Penn, one of the largest real estate investors in history) had not yet been born to sit down, as if in front of the second window, to write or pen a pamphlet, entitled: "No Cross, No Crown." So, after all this recitation, we are still confronted by a haunting mystery displayed on a beautiful set of stained glass windows dated 1630 AD: One Hermen Op Den Graff, one Blessed Mother of Christ, one missing family seal, one family motto, two extant windows, two different Lohengrin Swan Seals, three shields of a multiple Dukedom, three rectangular insets, four family seals, five centuries of Mennonite-Anabaptist Witness, twenty mystical circles of frame decoration, twenty centuries of Apostolic Interrogation: Who shall separate us from the love of God? Readers of this Thesis are encouraged to discuss it with Glen Wayne Miller. Commentary, documentation and even logical speculation are welcome. You may write to: GW Miller, 136 West Price Street, Philadelphia, PA 19144, or Kevin L. Sholder, 414 Blackstone Dr., Centerville, OH 45459-4111. [http://www.siscom.net/~rdrunner/HTML/Questions.html] | |
| Married Name | 16 August 1605 | As of 16 August 1605,her married name was Op Den Graef. |
Family | Herman Op Den Graef b. 15 Nov 1585, d. 27 Dec 1642 | |
| Children |
| |
Magdalene Mary Pluck1
F, b. 10 June 1774, d. 4 September 1838
| Charts | Theis DeHaven Decendents Chart |
| Birth* | 10 June 1774 | Magdalene Mary Pluck was born on 10 June 1774.1 |
| Marriage* | 22 February 1793 | She married Jesse Dehaven, son of Samuel Dehaven and Catherine Ramey, on 22 February 1793.1 |
| Death* | 4 September 1838 | Magdalene Mary Pluck died on 4 September 1838 at age 64.1 |
Family | Jesse Dehaven b. 10 Sep 1773, d. 11 Jan 1835 | |
Citations
- [S228] Don Shockey updated J. Patterson, "William Dehaven 1714-1784",
Copyright © 1997 by Don Shockey. This copy contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives.
USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents.
Updated 7/2002 J Patterson
http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/pa/philadelphia/bios/…
Alicia Gail Poe
F, b. 1987
| Father* | Lonnie Poe | |
| Mother* | Brenda Gail Nix b. 1959 | |
Alicia Gail Poe|b. 1987|p178.htm#i839|Lonnie Poe||p178.htm#i837|Brenda Gail Nix|b. 1959|p160.htm#i589|||||||Malvin P. Nix|b. 1927\nd. 2000|p160.htm#i586|Kattie A. Phillips|b. 1932|p172.htm#i535| | ||
| Charts | Jourdan Phillips Decendents Chart |
| Relationship | 3rd cousin 2 times removed of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1987 | Alicia Gail Poe was born in 1987. |
| She is the daughter of Lonnie Poe and Brenda Gail Nix. |
Isabella F. Poe1
F, b. 14 December 1851
| Charts | Philip Coontz Decendents Chart |
| Birth* | 14 December 1851 | Isabella F. Poe was born on 14 December 1851 at Taylor County, West Virginia.2 |
| Marriage* | 20 November 1871 | She married Samuel Morgan Dallas Coontz, son of Samuel Adams Coontz and Sarah Stalnaker, on 20 November 1871 at Taylor County, West Virginia.3 |
| Married Name | 20 November 1871 | As of 20 November 1871,her married name was Coontz. |
| Residence* | 8 April 1930 | Isabella F. Poe lived on 8 April 1930 at Belington, Barbour County, West Virginia; Living with her son Grover C. Coontz.4 |
Family | Samuel Morgan Dallas Coontz b. 14 Dec 1844, d. 11 Nov 1928 | |
| Children |
| |
Citations
Jacob Kyle Poe
M, b. 1985
| Father* | Lonnie Poe | |
| Mother* | Brenda Gail Nix b. 1959 | |
Jacob Kyle Poe|b. 1985|p178.htm#i838|Lonnie Poe||p178.htm#i837|Brenda Gail Nix|b. 1959|p160.htm#i589|||||||Malvin P. Nix|b. 1927\nd. 2000|p160.htm#i586|Kattie A. Phillips|b. 1932|p172.htm#i535| | ||
| Charts | Jourdan Phillips Decendents Chart |
| Relationship | 3rd cousin 2 times removed of Daniel Curtis Phillips Sr. |
| Birth* | 1985 | Jacob Kyle Poe was born in 1985. |
| He is the son of Lonnie Poe and Brenda Gail Nix. |
Kathy Jean Poe1
F, b. 12 July 1956
| Marriage* | Kathy Jean Poe married Alan Elbert Goodpasture, son of Louie Elbert Goodpasture and Thelma Pearl Payne.1 | |
| Birth* | 12 July 1956 | Kathy Jean Poe was born on 12 July 1956.1 |
Family | Alan Elbert Goodpasture b. 30 Mar 1956 | |
| Children |
| |
Citations
- [S163] Interview, Thelma Pearl (Goodpasture) Payne, December 1990.
Lonnie Poe
M
| Charts | Jourdan Phillips Decendents Chart |
| Marriage* | Lonnie Poe married Brenda Gail Nix, daughter of Malvin Purcy Nix and Kattie Azziline Phillips. |
Family | Brenda Gail Nix b. 1959 | |
| Children |
| |
Elizabeth Ellen Poling1
F
| Charts | Philip Coontz Decendents Chart |
| Marriage* | 24 December 1900 | Elizabeth Ellen Poling married John Wesley Coontz, son of Williamson R. Coontz and Elizabeth Jane Finley, on 24 December 1900 at Barbour County, West Virginia.1,2 |
| Married Name | Her married name was Coontz.1 |
Family | John Wesley Coontz b. 24 May 1879, d. 10 Apr 1946 | |
| Children |
| |
Citations
- [S340] Unknown name of person, Certification of Death.
- [S289] West Virginia Marriage Records, 1863-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2000. Original data: See Description for original data sources listed by county., online unknown url.
- [S66] 1930 Film, unknown repository address, 1930 United States Federal Census.
Hannibal Poling1
M, b. January 1839
| Birth* | January 1839 | Hannibal Poling was born in January 1839 at Randolph County, West Virginia.1 |
| Marriage* | 17 November 1879 | He married Elizabeth Ramsey, daughter of John W. Ramsey and Margaret Digman, on 17 November 1879 at Barbour County, West Virginia.1 |
Family | Elizabeth Ramsey b. Aug 1842 | |
Citations
- [S263] Sarah Cox Smith, 30 May 2006.
Martin Poling1
M, b. 4 July 1796
| Birth* | 4 July 1796 | Martin Poling was born on 4 July 1796 at Maryland. |
| Marriage* | before 29 April 1819 | He married Anna Wright, daughter of William Wright and Anna Marsh, before 29 April 1819 at Virginia.1 |
Family | Anna Wright b. c 1800, d. 29 Jun 1866 | |
Citations
- [S266] Sarah Moore CORN, "Isaac Price and Mary Elizabeth Stonestreet Family," e-mail to Daniel Curtis PHILLIPS, 20 July 2007.
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