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Topic: Samuel Penhallow


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  Brief biography of Samuel Penhallow
Samuel Penhallow, born at St. Mabyn July 2, 1665, was the son of Chamond Penhallow and Ann Tamlyn.
Samuel Penhallow was born, probably at Tregaddock his grandfather Tamlym's house, on 2nd July 1665, His father Richard Penhallow, of whom he, was the second son, was the representative of an ancient family, deriving their name from Penhallow in Filleigh, which they had for centuries possessed.
Penhallow made diligent application to his studies, and by his progress and conduct gained the affection of his master, consequently upon the latter determining to emigrate to America he was invited, with others, to accompany him, to which, with the consent of his parents, he acceded and arrived in New England in July 1686.
www.penhallow.net /samuel.html   (2383 words)

  
  Samuel Penhallow   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Penhallow, however, was sustained by Governor Samuel Shute (1662I 742), and Vaughan was removed from office in 1716.
samuel samuel morse samuel adams samuel richardson samuel beckett samuel french samuel lawrence samuel richardson pamela samuel simpson nickel samuel swift 1794 samuel taylor coleridge psycholyse samuel psychotherapie samuel lionel khou
Samuel Garth (1661-1719) Text of Samuel Johnson's biography of the poet and The Dispensary.
www.serebella.com /encyclopedia/article-Samuel_Penhallow.html   (580 words)

  
 [No title]
PENHALLOW, SAMUEL (1665—1726), American colonist and historian, was born at St Mabon, Corn,.
Penhallow, however, was sustained by Governor Samuel Shute (1662—1742), and Vaughan was removed from office in 1716.
In 1714 Penhallow was appointed a justice of the superior court of judicature, and from 1717 until his death was chief justice of that court; and he also served as treasurer of the province in 1699—1726, and as secretary of the province in 1714—1726.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?locale=en&content_id=51755   (315 words)

  
 Penhallow House   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Penhallow House, the only "saltbox" house remaining at Strawbery Banke, and one of very few left in this area, is rich in history.
Born in Cornwall and the first Penhallow to come to Portsmouth, Samuel served as a King's Councilor and as treasurer and Chief Justice of the province.
Penhallow House originally stood at the southeast corner of Court and Pleasant Streets.
www.strawberybanke.org /museum/penhallow/penhallow.html   (490 words)

  
 Definition of Samuel
7: Samuel Dash was born in Camden to Joseph and Ida Dash, i...
Penhallow, however, was sustained by Governor [[ Samuel Shute]] (1662-1742), and Vaughan was removed from...
Samuel served for a time in his father's shop; he was we...
www.wordiq.com /search/Samuel   (568 words)

  
 Boston, MA Marriages 1646 to 1751
Samuel Penhallow, Sept. 8, 1714 by Rev. Mr.
Samuel and Mildred Willise, Jan. 10, 1711 by Rev. Mr.
Samuel and Abigail Oborn, Sept. 8, 1714 by Rev. Mr.
bos-gw.rays-place.com /bos/bos-mar-16.htm   (6195 words)

  
 History of the Penhollow family
So Samuel and his school teacher Morton set out at once to the colonies and although there is no record that shows their passage over, they soon made their way to the town of Charlestown (1686).
Samuel was born October 4, 1691, went to England and married there and did not return.
Samuel Penhollow died in 1728 and was buried by the side of his wife Mary in the family burying ground in Portsmouth.
www.penhallow.net /octavia.html   (2990 words)

  
 Rear Adm. Thomas Graves of Charlestown, MA
Samuel Adams was a brother of Joseph Adams, and a son of Henry Adams and Edith Squire of Braintree, MA.
The first mention of Samuel Adams is his admission as a freeman of the Massachusetts Colony, 10 May 1643, and the next as one of the 33 Braintree petitioners concerning a land grant in Oct. 1645.
Samuel Graves (95) was born 3 Oct. 1703 in Sudbury, Mass., and died 1746.
www.gravesfa.org /gen028.htm   (6574 words)

  
 [No title]
Samuel Averill deeds to Isaiah Brown, father of James Brown in 1767.
It is from Hezekiah Porter to Samuel Averill, showing that the latter had commenced his purchases immediately after the obtaining of the charter.
Samuel Fuller died of measles; Calvin Fuller, of "spotted fever;" Jerry Fuller had his head taken off by a cannon ball; William Merriam was killed at the battle of Chippewa; Haines French died at Plattsburg; and his son Homer was killed in battle.
www.nh.searchroots.com /documents/coos-history/History_Stratford_NH.txt   (7764 words)

  
 Old Family Stories
The Penhallows had some relation who was a lawyer, of sorts, who claimed he could get money from Boston1 if they would give him the plaques as evidence of title, also some money to work on.
Captain Penhallow was the principal witness in behalf of the ship, and as may well be supposed, was subjected to many severe examinations by the lawyers for the dock company.
Benjamin Penhallow was born at Portsmouth on December 17, 1704, the second son of Samuel and Mary (Cutt) Penhallow.
www.penhallow.net /ostory.html   (2036 words)

  
 Savage New England Register, Volume #1, Pgs. 487 - 497
164; Samuel, 1695; Benjamin, 1699; and Abigail, 1703.
Samuel are all; but we may suppose, that some ds.
Nathaniel of Reading, Samuel of Topsfield, and Thomas of Charlestown, in sale of the est.
www.usgennet.org /usa/topic/newengland/savage/bk1/487-497.htm   (2316 words)

  
 Samuel Penhallow
PENHALLOW, Samuel, historian, born in St. Mabon, Cornwall, England, 2 July, 1665; died in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 2 December, 1726.
Morton from teaching the doctrines of the dissenters, the latter decided to remove to New England, and, with the consent of his parents, young Penhallow accompanied his instructor, arriving in July, 1686.
Before leaving England, Penhallow received offers from the Society for propagating the gospel among the Indians to make himself acquainted with the Indian language for three years, for which they in turn would pay him twenty pounds sterling per year.
www.famousamericans.net /samuelpenhallow   (454 words)

  
 Ancestors of Allen Beagan Samuel Penhallow-[3600]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
After sundry meetings a number of persons were found who agreed to take the forty-acre lots and settle upon them, when a committee was chosen to proceed to Barrington with the proposed settlers and lay out their lots.
Samuel married Mary Cutt-[3601] [MRIN:1334] on 1 Jul 1687.
Samuel also married Abigail Oburn-[5208] [MRIN:1933] in 1714 in Portsmouth, NH (Abigail Oburn-[5208] was born of Boston.)
members.tripod.com /~Al_Beagan/APRIL4/3600.htm   (649 words)

  
 Worldwide Penhallow, Penhollow, Penharlow Family Genealogy - also derivitives of Harlow, Miller.
One such family was that which is known today as the Penhallow's, who lived in and around a small hamlet [2001 photos] of that name for almost four hundred years before any of them ventured forth.
It was resurrected when Samuel Penhallow, son of Samuel Penhallow who had previously emigrated from England to America, came to England, married and had children and brought the English family 'back to life'.
Samuel Penhallow, son of Chamond Penhallow, born at St.Mabyn, Cornwall, England, was the father of the American family.
www.penhallow.net /family.html   (1453 words)

  
 The Penhallow - Penwarin Coat of Arms
Penhallow was evidently a man of great wealth, for the money he expended in rebuilding the chamber must have represented a considerable outlay.
Anything further about John Penhallow it was difficult to learn, theough the "conies feeding" on the shield above the mantel were easily found to be part of the arms of the Penhallow family, now extinct in England, except though the female line.
After more patient research it was learned that a John Penhallow, of Cornwall, had married a Mary Penwarin in the time of Henry VIII, and that the quarterings on the shield with the Penhallow conies were the arms of her family.
www.penhallow.net /arms.html   (1064 words)

  
 Town of Townsend, Massachusetts
The authors of the town histories mention Indians only as passing through the territory or being docile, but the account of Samuel Penhallow from 1703 to 1723 gives a much different view, with settlers being taken captive, tortured and burned at the stake by blood thirsty savages.
Samuel Penhallow was born in St. Mabon, Cornwall, England in 1665.
Penhallow was an influential man and, because of his position in the community, he took part in the ratification of the treaties with the Indians.
www.townsend.ma.us /history/harbhist.htm   (5171 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: 1726
November 23 - Sophia, Princess of Zelle, queen of George I of the United Kingdom (b.
December 2 - Samuel Penhallow, American colonist and historian (b.
Samuel Penhallow (July 2, 1665-December 2, 1726), American colonist and historian, was born at St Mabon, Cornwall, England.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/1726   (2116 words)

  
 WebRoots Library U.S. History States - NH
But, on condition of their approval, the town voted to hold the measures of the convention as good and valid, and to obligate themselves, "to yield all ready obedience thereto, until their majesties' orders should arrive for the settlement of the government over them." The commissioners chosen were Henry Green, Esq., Ens.
John Stanyan and Samuel Dow, who were "to join with the representatives of the province, with full power from the freeholders and the community, to discourse, debate and determine as might be most advantageous for the peace and benefit of the province, relating to Mr.
SAMUEL SHUTE, GOVERNOR In the golden month of October, of this year 1716, a grand cortége passed through Hampton, en route for Portsmouth.
www.webroots.org /library/usahist/nh/hoh-nh04.html   (10109 words)

  
 NHBA - Bar Journal Issue
Samuel may be compell'd to answer thereto." In turn, Sherburne argued that the Ten Pound Act was "not sufficient in Law to give the Justice cognizance of the aforesaid Action...or to compel the Sd.
Samuel Bickford Mason, it is uncertain whether a challenge was presented to the Ten Pound Act at the trial before the justice of the peace.
In the three Strafford County cases, all that is known for certain is that the Inferior Court overturned the decision of the local justice of the peace before whom the cases had been originally tried on the ground that the justice in each case had exceeded his authority.
www.nhbar.org /publications/archives/display-journal-issue.asp?id=155   (10974 words)

  
 SAMUEL PENHALLOW (1665... - Online Information article about SAMUEL PENHALLOW (1665...
Penhallow, however, was sustained by Governor See also:
Samuel Shute (1662—1742), and Vaughan was removed from See also:
In 1714 Penhallow was appointed a See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /PAS_PER/PENHALLOW_SAMUEL_16651726_.html   (500 words)

  
 History of Harmon's Snowshoe Company
In 1725 Captain Samuel Willard in 1725 was ordered to scout to Pequawket and then down the Kennebec and Androscoggin rivers.
Samuel Penhallow reported that it was the custom of the men under Church's command "to rest in the Day, and row in the Night; and never fire at an Indian if they could reach him with a Hatchet, for fear of alarming them."
Essentially, what we are portraying is a certain kind of provincial soldier, a man living on the frontier, a veteran of many raids and patrols, the kind of soldier Robert Rogers learned his techniques from (No, he didn't make them up.
www.snowshoemen.com /History.htm   (1567 words)

  
 White Dove's Native American Indian Site Historians and Indians
Roger Williams deviated from Winthrop's war propaganda by writing A key into the Language of America, which is still regarded as an excellent source for the culture and society of the Narragansetts.
But Williams was exceptional in New England, where a litany of hate was continued by Judge Samuel Penhallow, somewhat cynically delivered by the Unitarian clergyman George Edward Ellis, and raised to a shriek of invective by Ellis's successor, John Gorham Palfrey.
In place of Samuel Purchas's dismissal of Indians as nonpersons, we now have demographers trying to estimate native populations before European invasion and what happened to those populations' descendants.
users.multipro.com /whitedove/encyclopedia/historians-and-indians.html   (1485 words)

  
 Tyler, A History of American Literature. Ch. XIV.
The style of Turell’s book is superior to Samuel Mather’s, being pure and pleasant; and his admiration for his subject, while it is hearty and reverent, never betrays him into hyperboles of laudation.
William Hubbard was born in England in 1621; came to New England in his childhood; and was one of that remarkable group of nine young men whom Harvard College sent forth, in 1642, as the first specimens of high culture achieved in the woods of America.
Another fine old chronicler of the Indian troubles was Samuel Penhallow, born in England in 1665, and educated at the celebrated dissenting academy of Charles Morton in Newington Green, where he may have had Daniel De Foe for a school-mate.
www.dinsdoc.com /tyler_m-1-14.htm   (5812 words)

  
 langdonnh
Samuel b 9 June 1753 d 5 Jul 1834 m Lydia Brewster d 21 May 1840 d/o Samuel Norris.
John Langdon, the subject of this sketch, was sent to the school of the celebrated Major Samuel Hale.
The leading Piscataqua men of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth century sent their sons to Harvard for an education in the law, rather than in religion, so that they could cope more effectively with the economic and political affairs of their families and of the colony.
homepage.mac.com /wkfisher1/Genealogical_Glean/LangdonNH.html   (2307 words)

  
 WebRoots Library U.S. History
Samuel Penhallow, a contemporary New England writer, notes the timely warning given on the eve of the Deerfield massacre by "Colonel Schuyler who was always a kind and faithful intelligencer."[*]
Penhallow tells of one such party sent up the Connecticut from Northampton in 1704, consisting of Mr.
Notwithstanding their disappointment, the colonists urged upon the home government a new attempt upon Canada, but the Tory ministers were deep in the negotiations for peace, and in 1712 secured a general suspension of hostilities.
www.webroots.org /library/usahist/pa000003.html   (13501 words)

  
 Tyler, A History of American Literature. Front Matter to Vol. II.
—Samuel Sewall—His brave life—The man—His attitude toward witchcraft and slavery.—His “Selling of Joseph”—Among the prophets—”A Description of the New Heaven”—The New Jerusalem to be in America—A gallant champion of the immortality of the souls of women.
—Samuel Willard—His “Complete Body of Divinity”—His career—His theological lectures—Their great influence—Their publication in 1726 in the first American folio—Strong qualities of the book.
—Samuel Davies—Born and educated in Pennsylvania—Acquires in Virginia great fame as a pulpit-orator—His mission to England—Becomes president of the College of New Jersey—His death—Great popularity of his published sermons down to the present time—His traits as a preacher—Passage from his sermon on “The General Resurrection.”
www.dinsdoc.com /tyler_m-1-0c.htm   (1642 words)

  
 Descendants of Andrew Brown Sr: First Generation
Their children were: Mary, Samuel, Sarah, James, Hannah, Elizabeth, John.
Samuel Brown (#6387) was born in Scarborough, Cumberland, ME 1662.
Samuel; witnessed the deed from Henry Watts to Andrew Brown, Jr.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~arlene/Brown/d0/i0006374.htm   (3292 words)

  
 Portsmouth Athenaeum Finding Aids
Samuel Langdon was born in Boston in 1722.
In 1755, Samuel Penhallow began his tenure as clerk, a position he held for about fifty years.
January 1, 1746 – Samuel Langdon is officially invited to be minister of the Parish of Portsmouth
www.portsmouthathenaeum.org /findingaids/ms036/findingaid.htm   (15834 words)

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