Bookmark and Share
Search for Names
Last Name:
First Name:
 
Contact us via E-mail

If you have any questions or comments about the information on this site, please contact us at

barbarowa@yahoo.com

We look forward to hearing from you.




   
Our Family Genealogy Pages

Dwight WILLIAMS
 1764 -

HomeHome    SearchSearch    PrintPrint    Login - User: anonymousLogin    Add BookmarkAdd Bookmark

Generations:      Standard    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Media

Generation: 1
  1. Dwight WILLIAMS b. Abt 1764.

Generation: 2
  1. Thomas WILLIAMS b. 12 Oct 1736; d. 10 Dec 1815.

  2. Thomas m. Abigail WILLIAMS Abigail (daughter of Elijah WILLIAMS and Lydia DWIGHT) b. 1740. [Group Sheet]

  3. Abigail WILLIAMS b. 1740.

    Children:
    1. Ebenezer WILLIAMS b. Abt 1756.
    2. Thomas WILLIAMS b. Abt 1758.
    3. Eleazer WILLIAMS b. Abt 1760.
    4. Elijah WILLIAMS b. Abt 1762.
    5. 1. Dwight WILLIAMS b. Abt 1764.
    6. Sarah WILLIAMS b. Abt 1766.
    7. Lydia WILLIAMS b. Abt 1768.
    8. Abigail WILLIAMS b. Abt 1770.

Generation: 3
  1. Eleazer WILLIAMS b. 13 Aug 1690, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts; d. 28 Mar 1753.

    Notes:
    Rev. Ebenezer Williams was a graduate of Harvard.

    Ordained first minister of church at Pomfret and preached there until his death.

  2. Eleazer m. Sarah TILESTON Abt 1724. [Group Sheet]

  3. Sarah TILESTON

    Children:
    1. Samuel WILLIAMS b. 24 Aug 1725.
    2. Sarah WILLIAMS b. 25 Oct 1727.
    3. Mary WILLIAMS b. 20 Jul 1729.
    4. Elizabeth WILLIAMS b. 25 Jul 1731.
    5. Abigail WILLIAMS b. 15 May 1734.
    6. 2. Thomas WILLIAMS b. 12 Oct 1736; d. 10 Dec 1815.
    7. Anne WILLIAMS b. 6 Apr 1737; d. 25 Mar 1827.
    8. Martha WILLIAMS b. 9 Mar 1746; d. 1829.
    9. Joanna WILLIAMS b. 15 Jan 1748; d. 16 Jun 1829.
  4. Elijah WILLIAMS b. 13 Nov 1712, Deerfield, Franklin, Massachusetts.

  5. Elijah m. Lydia DWIGHT [Group Sheet]

  6. Lydia DWIGHT

    Children:
    1. Sybil WILLIAMS b. 1737; d. 15 Apr 1750.
    2. Sarah WILLIAMS b. 1738.
    3. Lydia WILLIAMS b. 23 Mar 1740.
    4. 3. Abigail WILLIAMS b. 1740.
    5. Eunice WILLIAMS b. 17 Dec 1741.
    6. Sarah WILLIAMS b. 11 Jun 1743.

Generation: 4
  1. Samuel WILLIAMS, II b. 15 Apr 1656, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts; c. 27 Apr 1656, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts; d. 8 Aug 1735, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.

  2. Samuel m. Sarah MAY 24 Feb 1678, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts. [Group Sheet]

  3. Sarah MAY

    Children:
    1. Samuel WILLIAMS b. 6 Apr 1681, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    2. Theoda WILLIAMS b. 8 Dec 1682, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    3. John WILLIAMS b. 1 Dec 1684, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    4. Sarah WILLIAMS b. 19 May 1688, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    5. Ebenezer WILLIAMS b. 12 Aug 1690, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    6. 4. Eleazer WILLIAMS b. 13 Aug 1690, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts; d. 28 Mar 1753.
    7. Elizabeth WILLIAMS b. 12 Jan 1693, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    8. William WILLIAMS b. 24 Apr 1698, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
    9. Martha WILLIAMS b. 10 Aug 1701, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts.
  4. John WILLIAMS b. 10 Dec 1664, Roxbury (Suffolk) Massachusetts; d. 12 Jun 1729, Deerfield (Franklin) Massachusetts.

    Notes:
    Rev. John Williams was the renowned "Redeemed Captive" of history.
    His wife, Eunice, was killed and he and their children taken into captivity at the massacre of Deerfield, Mass., Feb. 29, 1704. Father and surviving children were eventually redeemed with the exception of Eunice, a child of eight years.

    The town of Deerfield, Ma gained immediate notoriety throughout New England after the events of both 1675 and 1704. That fame grew after 1707 when Deerfield's minister, the Reverend John Williams, published his view of the events of 1704 in The Redeemed Captive Returning to Zion. One part jeremiad and one part gripping captivity narrative, the book proved to be an eighteenth century "best-seller," going through six editions before 1800. The story of 1704 received still wider attention late in the nineteenth century when Francis Parkman made "The Sack of Deerfield" a chapter in his volume Half Century of Conflict.

    Rev. John Williams, a Harvard graduate, was installed as minister in Deerfield in 1686. A year later he married Eunice Mather, a member of the widespread Puritan ecclesiastical family. He was a special target for captivity as the Boston authorities held Jean-Baptiste Guyon whom the Canadians wanted returned. His memoir of the events is the famed The Redeemed Captive Returning to Zion, first printed in 1707 and reprinted continually thereafter.

    Their two little children and a negro woman were killed in the assault. He, his wife, five children, and a negro man were taken. The eldest child alone was spared -- he was away at school. His wife, having had the baby but a few weeks before, was very weak. On the second day of the journey north they said their farewells, and were separated. She fell down while wading a small river and "was plunged over head and ears in the water; after which she travelled not far, for the cruel and bloodthirsty savage slew her with his hatchet." But what else could be done on a forced march through the winter snows?

    His party took seven weeks to reach Fort Chambly. During his captivity he was constantly pressured to convert to catholicism, but ignored all blandishments. He encouraged his fellow captives as much as possible. He was redeemed, along with about 60 other captives, and arrived in Boston on 21 November 1706 with great joy.

    Four of their children were redeemed and returned to New England, one continuing in the ministry. The one that remained was the subject of endless communications between New England, Albany, and Montreal. She was Eunice Williams, who lived in Caughnawaga. She received the Mohawk name A'ongote, which means "She (was) taken and placed (as a member of their tribe)." In early 1713 she married an Indian named Arosen. They had at least three children, two daughters and a son. Both daughters married Indian men, one of whom became the grand chief of the village, the other also a prominent figure. The fact that the daughters married so well indicates that Eunice was held in high esteem in her adoptive tribe.

    A study of the known facts about Eunice has recently been published under the apposite title The Unredeemed Captive.

  5. John m. Abigail ALLYN 16 Sep 1707. [Group Sheet]

  6. Abigail ALLYN

    Children:
    1. Abigail WILLIAMS b. 1708, Deerfield (Franklin) Massachusetts.
    2. John WILLIAMS b. 23 Nov 1709, Deerfield (Franklin) Massachusetts.
    3. Eliakim WILLIAMS b. 6 Feb 1711, Deerfield (Franklin) Massachusetts.
    4. 6. Elijah WILLIAMS b. 13 Nov 1712, Deerfield, Franklin, Massachusetts.
    5. Sarah WILLIAMS b. Sep 1716, Deerfield (Franklin) Massachusetts.

  
Email barbarowa@yahoo.com

This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding ©, written by Darrin Lythgoe 2001-2004.