Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: John Howland


  
  John Howland
The name of John Howland appears frequently in the Gaspee Virtual Archives owing to the fact that not only was Howland a witness to the event, he was a noted historian.
John Howland was born in Newport, the son of Joseph Howland, Jr.
Howland, who was constantly applied to from all parts of the State, as well as from abroad, for necessary information.
www.gaspee.org /JohnHowland.html   (1804 words)

  
 John Howland
John Howland's wife was born in 1607, and it is most unlikely that he, at the age of 32, married a 17 year old girl as his first wife.
John Howland is the son of Henry and Margaret Howland of Fenstanton, Huntingdon, England.
John Howland's wife was Elizabeth Tilley, the daughter of John Tilley and Joan (Hurst) Rogers (all were Mayflower passengers).
members.aol.com /calebj/howland.html   (724 words)

  
 John Howland
The name of John Howland appears frequently in the Gaspee Virtual Archives owing to the fact that not only was Howland a witness to the event, he was a noted historian.
John Howland was born in Newport, but was apprenticed to a Providence barber at an early age.
While John Howland did not directly participate in the attack on the Gaspee, he did conspire to do so, and he was later a hero in his own right by fighting in the American Revolution.
gaspee.org /JohnHowland.html   (565 words)

  
 The Pilgrim John Howland Society - John Howland
Burial Hill, Plymouth, MA On Burial Hill is a monument to John Howland erected in 1897 with funds raised by Mrs.
This earlier stone stated that John Howland’s wife was “a daughter of Governor Carver”, but after the discovery in 1856 of Governor William Bradford’s manuscript Of Plimoth Plantation, it was known that he married Elizabeth Tilley, daughter of John and Joan Tilley who were also passengers of the Mayflower.
John Howland boarded the Mayflower in England in September 1620, arrived in Provincetown Harbor, November 21, 1620 and, although called a man-servant of Governor Carver, he was the thirteenth signer of the Mayflower Compact in Plymouth Harbor on December 21, 1620.
pilgrimjohnhowlandsociety.org /john_howland.shtml   (455 words)

  
 The Pilgrim John Howland Society - John Howland
Burial Hill, Plymouth, MA On Burial Hill is a monument to John Howland erected in 1897 with funds raised by Mrs.
This earlier stone stated that John Howland’s wife was “a daughter of Governor Carver”, but after the discovery in 1856 of Governor William Bradford’s manuscript Of Plimoth Plantation, it was known that he married Elizabeth Tilley, daughter of John and Joan Tilley who were also passengers of the Mayflower.
John Howland boarded the Mayflower in England in September 1620, arrived in Provincetown Harbor, November 21, 1620 and, although called a man-servant of Governor Carver, he was the thirteenth signer of the Mayflower Compact in Plymouth Harbor on December 21, 1620.
www.pilgrimjohnhowlandsociety.org /john_howland.shtml   (455 words)

  
 John Howland Rowe   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
John Howland Rowe is highly noted for his work "in the fields of archaeology, history, ethnography, linguistics, and intellectual history" (Hammel).
John Rowe's most famous work was published in 1946 about the Inca culture at the time of the Spanish conquest.
John Rowe is first and foremost a teacher.
www.mnsu.edu /emuseum/information/biography/pqrst/rowe_john_howland.html   (504 words)

  
 MayflowerHistory.com
John Howland came as a servant for John Carver, which means he was under 25 years old at the time (i.e.
Howland's wife Elizabeth was born in 1607: a 32-year old marrying a 17-year old is an unlikely circumstance.
John Howland had several brothers who also came to New England, namely Henry Howland (an ancestor to both Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford) and Arthur Howland (an ancestor to Winston Churchill).
www.mayflowerhistory.com /Passengers/JohnHowland.php   (421 words)

  
 John Howland
John Howland was born in Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, about 1592/3 (his parish Church of Sts.
John Howland married Elizabeth Tilley, a fellow Mayflower passenger, before 1627.
The Pilgrim John Howland Society maintains the homestead property at "Rocky Nook" in Kingston and operates the "Howland House" (33 Sandwich Street, Plymouth, MA 02360).
www.pilgrimhall.org /howlandjohn.htm   (279 words)

  
 The John Howland Fund - help fight sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma
Twenty year old John is currently undergoing treatments at Burzynski Research Clinic in Houston, Texas for sinonasal undifferentiated carcinoma, a very rare form of cancer.
John is the son of John and Cheryl Gilfus Howland, is a 2004 graduate of Union Springs High School and was attending Cayuga Community College when John was diagnosed.
We are soliciting contributions, donations or in-kind services from all facets of the business community and private sector to assist us in making this event a success on behalf of John and his family.
www.johnhowlandfund.org   (266 words)

  
 Arthur Howland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Howland interferred and ejected the constable from his house declaring, as the latter certified, that he would have "a sword or gun in the belly of him." Two sons of John Rogers (of the Mayflower) refused to aid the constable.
John Tilley and his family, and the family of his brother Edward Tilley and wife Ann (Cooper), were members of John Robinson's congregation in Leiden.
Henry Howland was one of the original settlers of Duxbury and was chosen constable in 1635.
showcase.netins.net /web/ourfam/arthur.html   (2849 words)

  
 The Andrews Family Lines: Thirteenth Generation
John Howland was born in Plymouth, Plymouth, MA 24 February 1626/1627.
Jabez Howland was born in Plymouth, Plymouth, MA 1644.
Isaac Howland was born in Plymouth, Plymouth, MA 16 November 1649.
www5.pair.com /vtandrew/family/i0011497.htm   (605 words)

  
 Valley News Web Story Layout   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Howland, who died Friday evening at age 88 in his West Windsor home, is survived by his wife of 62 years, five children, two siblings, a dozen grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and a multitude of memories of how he helped Windsor County.
John Howland Jr., a former deputy state auditor and deputy secretary of state in Vermont, said his father was an “open, guileless man who never had a secret agenda.”
Howland then served as executive secretary of the Vermont Association of Insurance Agents and was elected to the legislature as a Republican, where he served as chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
www.vnews.com /12242003/1489948.htm   (873 words)

  
 Howland Cultural Center - General Joseph Howland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Howland never returned to the estate, reportedly because the memories of her late husband made it too difficult.
On Burial Hill is a monument to John Howland erected in 1897 with funds raised by Mrs.
John Howland boarded the Mayflower in England in September, 1620, arrived in Provincetown Harbor, November 21, 1620, and, although called a manservant of Governor Carver, he was the thirteenth signer of the Mayflower Compact in Plymouth Harbor on December 21, 1620.
www.howlandculturalcenter.org /General.html   (1948 words)

  
 Family of John Howland
John Howland's wife was born in 1607, and it seems difficult to imagine having a first wife that is 15 years younger.
John Howland signed the Mayflower Compact, and to do so he would have had to be at least 18 years old, and probably 21.
John is an ancestor of President's George Bush, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, as well as Edith (Carrow) Roosevelt, the wife of President Theodore Roosevelt.
members.cox.net /trm/HowlandJohn.htm   (1120 words)

  
 Plymouth Colony Archive Project, Archaeological Excavations
The property owned by the PJHS is located on a small peninsula of land called Rocky Nook and represents the core of the farmstead purchased by John from John Jenny in 1638 and held by three generations of Howlands.
The square stone pad and the corner of the foundation were identified as the remnants of a barn also conveyed to John Howland by the 1638 deed.
Second, if the dwelling did date to John Howland's lifetime, then it is one of only a small handful of buildings dating to the first expansion of Plymouth's colonists out of the original fortified town.
etext.lib.virginia.edu /users/deetz/Plymouth/Fieldschool/fieldsc1.htm   (1805 words)

  
 JOHN HOWLAND   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Later events showed that Gov. Carver's high estimate of the man was well placed, for John Howland afterwards took a prominent part in the affairs of the Colony.
"His servant, John Howland, maried the doughter of John Tillie, Elizabeth, and they are both now living, and have 10 children, now all living; and their eldest doughter hath 4 children.
Copies of the wills of John Howland and his wife are given in the Howland Genealogy, pp.
www.usgennet.org /usa/topic/colonial/mayflower/howland.html   (287 words)

  
 John R. Howland - Professional Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
John worked extensively on water policy including conservation, acquisition and reclamation; fossil fuel and renewable-source generated electrical power; easement issues; contracting and contract procedures; environmental mitigations and the LADWP budget.
John served as a liaison with candidates, election officials and voter education groups nationwide.
John earned a bachelor of arts in Political Science from the University of California, Santa Barbara and spent several years of graduate studies in American Government at the University of Virginia and at Rice University.
www.cerrell.com /bios/john.html   (367 words)

  
 HOWLAND   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
‘Elizabeth (Tilley) Howland, widow of John Howland and daughter of John Tilley, died at Swansea on Wednesday, 21/31 December, 1687, at the house of her daughter Lydia, the wife of James Brown.
LDS Ancestral File, Descendancy Chart for Henry Howland states she was born in 1607 at Henlow, Bedfordshire, Eng.
LDS Ancestral File, Descendancy Chart for Henry Howland states she was born about 1634 at Plymouth, and that James Brown was born in 1623 in England.
www.pivot.net /~jlinscott/howland.htm   (1158 words)

  
 John Howland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
John Howland is an ancestor to President Bush and t Edith (Carrow) Roosevelt.
John Holland came on the Mayflower and is best known for having fallen overboard during a high sea and luckily grabbed a rope trailing in the sea and was rescued.
John Howland was a manservant to John Carver He was listed as a manservant on Bradford's passenger list.
pharmacy.isu.edu /~cady/genealogy/PS11/PS11_394.HTM   (150 words)

  
 The Genealogy of Richard L. Aronoff
John died 23 Feb 1672/1673 in Plymouth, MA, at age 80.
Hope Howland was born in Plymouth, MA August 30, 1629.
Elizabeth Howland was born possibly in Maine c1631.
www.aronoff.com /family/i0000190.htm   (272 words)

  
 John Howland
John Howland by William F. Draper; oil on canvas, 40 by 31 inches, 1957.
John Howland was born in New York City.
Howland interned at the New York Foundling Hospital from 1899 until 1900, and after two years of study in Europe, he entered private practice and began teaching pediatrics at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.
www.medicalarchives.jhmi.edu /sgml/howland.html   (333 words)

  
 John Howland Lathrop
John Howland Lathrop (June 6, 1880-August 20, 1967) was a distinguished Unitarian minister, social activist and peace advocate.
Lathrop was born in Jackson, Michigan, the son of Arthur D. Lathrop, a banker, and Alice McDora Osborne.
As he contemplated the end of his life, "no world" interested him "so much as this world with all of its problems." Having spent his life searching for solutions to these problems, his wish was to "live to see the gradual lines along which" they would be solved.
www.uua.org /uuhs/duub/articles/johnhlathrop.html   (1110 words)

  
 Notes for John HOWLAND,   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
John Howlands grave is marked with a large purplish colored stone on which is carved the above extract from the old records, and at the top of which is cut of the ship Mayflower.
The traditional date that has been ascribed to John Howland's birth is 'about 1592', and this has never really been questioned.
John Howland is an ancestor to Presidents George and George W. Bush as well as First Lady Edith (Carrow) Roosevelt (Mrs.
www.frontiernet.net /~marypie/nti01675.html   (947 words)

  
 John Howland Family
The second volume in the Howland series lives up to the first volume in quality documentation and writing.
John Howland was of Fenstanton, Huntingdonshire, England, son of Henry and Margaret ______ Howland.
John Tillie, Elizabeth, and they are both now living; and have.10.
www.mayflowerfamilies.com /mayflower/john_howland_family.htm   (153 words)

  
 Pane-Joyce Genealogy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
John died at Swansea, MA, on 5 Feb 1677.
On 26 Oct 1651 John married Mary Lee (6193), daughter of Robert Lee (1674) (ca 1600-) and Mary Atwood (-Oct 1681), at Plymouth, MA.
John died at Oyster Bay, LI, in Oct 1682.
aleph0.clarku.edu /~djoyce/gen/report/rr03/rr03_216.html   (524 words)

  
 The Pilgrim John Howland Society - Rocky Nook
Located on a small peninsula of land, Rocky Nook represents the core of the farmstead purchased by John Howland from John Jenny in 1638 and held by three generations of Howlands.
Upon John’s passing, the property went to his second eldest son, Joseph, who in turn gave it to his son James.
James sold the property off in pieces, with the last being sold out of the Howland hands in 1725 (until the PJHS reacquired the land in 1920).
pilgrimjohnhowlandsociety.org /rocky_nook.shtml   (202 words)

  
 Rogers Ancestry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
She married John Howland in Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA, abt1625.
(John Howland is #1942.) John was born Fenstanton, Huntington, England abt1599.
John was the son of Henry Howland and Margaret.
home.att.net /~rogersgenealogy/d3/i0001946.htm   (101 words)

  
 Howland House
The Howland House is the only house left standing in Plymouth where Pilgrims actually lived.
After John's death in 1673 (Age 8O) and the fire that destroyed their Rocky Nook Farm, Elizabeth lived here until 1680 with her son Jabez and his family.
This bedroom was used by John Howland when he and wife Elizabeth stayed here during the winter months before John's death and Elizabeth remained until son Jabez sold the house in 1680.
www.ocmayflower.org /howland.htm   (450 words)

  
 Pane-Joyce Genealogy
Ca 1673 Mary married John Allyn (2477), son of Thomas Allyn (657) (ca 1600-ca 1679) and Winifred [Crawford].
John died at Killingly, CT, on 15 Aug 1715.
John died at Barnstable, MA, on 14 Feb 1737/8.
aleph0.clarku.edu /~djoyce/gen/report/rr07/rr07_041.html   (531 words)

  
 Genealogy
John came to America in the Mayflower in 1620, Arthur and Henry who came 1623 or 4.
I, Orange F. Howland was born the 20th of May, 1807 in Dutchess Co., N.Y. All my parents and Grandparents were Quakers.
The NY Howlands were quakers and Quaker records are said to be very accessible and complete.
home.pacbell.net /tomjdnh/genealogy.html   (1808 words)

  
 (Bowdoin)
Howland, John L. Surprising Archaea, Oxford University Press, New York, in Press, 1999.
Howland, J. course in bioenergetics based upon student-generated computer models.
Howland, J. L., and P.J. Villiotte*, P. Riefsnyder*, and J. Bloomstone*.
academic.bowdoin.edu /faculty/J/jhowland   (211 words)

  
 (John HOWLAND - Mary HOWLAND )   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
John HOWLAND (24 APR 1627 - AFT 18 MAY 1699)
Lydia HOWLAND (ABT 1633 - AFT 11 JAN 1710/1711)
Mary HOWLAND (23 JAN 1665/1666 - 29 JAN 1742/1743)
www.ristenbatt.com /genealogy/html/index/ind0144.htm   (53 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.