Son of the King's Commissioner.spouse: Wheelwright, Rebecca (*1651 - )
Mentioned in brother Radford's will in 1622.spouse: Caddey, Robert (*1555 - )
Mentioned in the will of his great-uncle, Radford MAvericke, 20 July 1622; probably died young.
Mentioned in his brother, Radford Maverick's will.
Mentioned in brother Radford's will in 1622, although apparently then deceased.
In 1665 Col. Cartwright states that Mr. Samuel Maverick, his fellow commissioner, "hath his mother, wife, children & brothers living there [in Massachusetts]." On 9 Oct 1666 Samuel Maverick, writing from Rhode Island to Secretary Sir William Morrice, says that his mother "presents her humble service."spouse: Gye, Mary (~1580 - >1666)
John Maverick was matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford, 24 Oct 1595, aged 18, being described as a clergyman's son. He received the degree of B.A. 8 July 1599 and that of M.A. 7 July 1603, having been already ordained at Exeter, co. Devon, as deacon and priest 29 July 1597. Perhaps he was curate to his uncle, Radford Maverick, vicar of Ilsington, the parish in which the record of his own marriage is found. On 30 Aug 1615 he was inducted at Silverton, co. Devon, by William Cotton, Bishop of Exeter, to the rectory of Beaworthy, co. Devon, on the presentation of Arthur Arscott, Esq., patron of the living. He remained at Beaworthy until his resignation shortly before his emigration to New England, his successor, John Crought, B.A., being inducted 24 Mar 1629/30. In this month John Mavericke was chosen one of the teachers of the Puritan church that was organized at Plymouth, England; and on 20 Mar 1629/30 he sailed from Plymouth in the Mary and John, one of the ships of Winthrop's fleet, with the colonists who arrived in New England 30 May 1630 and founded the town of Dorchester, Mass. He took the oath as freeman on 18 May 1631, and was minister at Dorchester until his death.
Mentioned in his brother Radford's will of 1622 as the testator's eldest brother.spouse: Tucke, Dorothy (*1556 - )
Peter Bull alias Maverick was ordained as a deacon 15 Jan 1573/74, and Peter Maverick alias Bull was ordained as a priest 17 Mar 1573/74. On 3 Nov 1580 Peter Maverick alias Bull, clerk, was admitted to the perpetual vicarage of Awliscombe. In 1612 he brought suit against William Champneys, the record of which has been of the utmost importance in compiling the Maverick pedigree.
He was matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford, 17 Nov 1581, aged 20, a plebian and of Devon; was ordained as a priest 15 June 1583; became rector of Trusham, co. Devon, in 1586; was instituted vicar of Ilsington, co. Devon 1 July 1597, resigning this charge in 1620; and in 1622 was curate of All Hallows, Goldsmith Street, Exeter. He left no issue.spouse: [Mavericke], Awdrye (*1565 - )
Came to New England ahead of the rest of the family in 1624, returned to England shortly before the restoration of the monarchy in 1662. He came back to New England in 1664 with the appointment of a Royal Commissioner. In a letter dated 9 Oct. 1666, addressed to Sir William Morice, the Secretary of State, he wrote that his mother "presents her humble service", hence was alive at that date.spouse: Cole, Amias (*1607 - )
According to Elizabeth Culp, William Mayenschein was one of eleven children. The name of the informant on his original certificate of death is Mrs. Rose Mayenschein.spouse: Noyes, Blanche Laverne "Rose" (1885 - 1921)
Named in her grandmother's will.
The Libby Family in America Vol. II Book 2 (1882-1982) P.1479----------child: Libby, Caroline (~1830 - ~1901)
John Libby, born Abt 1806. He married Philippa Maynard. He was a lay Methodist preacher. Information extracted from 1851 Cornwall Census was birth date and birth place. During this period he was working as an AG Lab on a farm at Lower Sticker, St Ewe Parish. In 1857, his widow, at the suggestion of her brother, John Maynard of Fredericton, New Brunswick, emigrated to New Brunswick and settled in the vicinity of Grand Lake with her children.
A widower.spouse: [Riddlesdale], Joan (*1541 - )
After Gurdon died, Agnes moved to 1 Whalley Avenue, New Haven where she took in Yale students to room and board.spouse: Noyes, Gurdon Wheeler (1818 - 1887)
Alexander and Anne had 5 children.spouse: Frampton, Anne Wilkins (1834 - 1895)
James and Margaret had 3 children.spouse: Parker, Margaret (*1837 - )
He was an architect and builder. Designed Philadelphia City Hall, some of the buildings of Lafayette College, and many churches. John and Matilda had 6 children.spouse: Prevost, Matilda Mallet (1829 - 1901)
Sometimes spelled Margarate. The first person to be buried in the yard of a church designed by John McArthur, in Calkins, Wayne, near Damascus, Pennsylvania.
William and Nancy had 3 children.spouse: Hartwell, Nancy (1819 - 1905)
Asa MacFarland, son of James and Elizabeth (Barbour) MacFarland, was reared on the farm of his father, and graduated at Dartmouth College in 1793, when twenty-four years of age. He was principal of Moore's charity school at Hanover two years, and a tutor in Dartmouth two years.spouse: Dwight, Clarissa (*1777 - 1799)
On March 7, 1798, the date of his ordination to the ministry, he became pastor of the First Congregational church in Concord, N. H. The clergymen who officiated at this ordination were: Rev. Stephen Peabody of Atkinson, Rev. John Smith, of Hanover, Rev. Joseph Woodman, of Sanbornton, Rev. Zaccheus Colby, of Pembroke, Rev. Frederick Parker, of Canterbury, Rev. Jedediah Tucker, of Loudon, and Rev. Josiah Carpenter, of Chichester.
Rev. Dr. MacFarland's pastoral labors appear to have been of the most exhaustive character. Rev. Dr. Bouton's History of Concord (1856) says: "Beside preaching two written discourses on the Sabbath, he usually attended a third service at the town-hall or at a school-house, when he preached extemporaneously. In seasons of revival he preached frequently in outer districts of the town, sometimes spending a day or two in visiting from house to house, and attending meetings in the evenings without returning home. Three years and a half he officiated as chaplain in the State-prison, preaching to the convicts once on the Sabbath. Dr. MacFarland was a leader in vocal music. Beside doing much to promote good singing in the church, he was a member of the Merrimack County Musical Association, and for some time president of it."
Men are not accustomed to overvalue the work of their predecessors in any profession, and probably Dr. Bouton was not an exception in this respect.
It is known that Rev. Dr. MacFarland performed some missionary services in the Pequaket country about Conway, N. H., and Fryeburg, Maine. He seems also to have been in demand as a preacher at ordinations. A not very extended research discloses the fact that he performed that office at Amherst (at the ordination of Rev. Nathan Lord, afterward President of Dartmouth, College), Candia, Epsom, Groton, and other places. He preached the election sermon before the Executive and Legislature of the State, June 1, 1808, although Bouton's History of Concord, p. 740, gives that honor to another. Copies of this sermon are still in existence. For twenty-seven years he was clerk of the Ecclesiastical Convention of the State. The General Association of Congregational and Presbyterian Ministers of New Hampshire was organized in his study, June 8, 1809. He served as a Trustee of Dartmouth from 1809 to 1821 (which covered the exciting period of the Dartmouth College controversy); was also President of the New Hampshire Missionary Society. He left the manuscripts of two thousand and fifty-four sermons, and the names of four hundred and forty-one persons were added to the rolls of the church during his ministry, which terminated in 1824, on failure of health. He found time to write, in 1806, a book entitled "An Historical View of Heresies and Vindication of the Primitive Faith," 12 mo., p. 276, published by George Hough. The degree of Doctor of Divinity was conferred upon him by Yale College in 1809, during the Presidency of Rev. Timothy Dwight. He died February 18, 1827. His son Asa wrote of him in 1876: "All my recollections of my father are of a very agreeable description. He was of commanding person and handsome countenance; in stature nearly six feet."
He was a carpenter and auctioneer. He served in Co. A, 2d Mass. Regt., from May 25, 1861, to June 19, 1862; enlisted in Co. E, 38th Mass. Regt., Aug. 13, 1862; and deserted at Camp Cram, Md., Sept. 14, 1862.spouse: Kenniston, Anna (1841 - )
Charles H. McIntire enlisted in Co. K, 30th Me. Regt., Jan. 12, 1864, and was taken prisoner, Apr. 23, 1864. After the war he served at Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, in the regular army. He was a mail carrier, mechanic, shingle and bracket maker, and manufacturer of children's shoes.spouse: Harnden, Phebe G. (*1851 - )