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Our Family Genealogy Pages

John BEECHER[1, 2, 3]
 1580 - 1659

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  • Birth  1580  , Kent, , England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender  Male 
    Died  15 Apr 1659  New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried  New Haven, New Haven, Connecticut Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID  I85102  Brainard (Brainerd) / Foster / Fish
    Last Modified  08 Jun 2003 00:00:00 
     
    Family  Hannah MEAD, b. 1584 
    Married  Abt 1635  , , England Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. John BEECHER, b. 1620
     2. Isaac BEECHER, Sr., b. 1623, Kent, England
    Family ID  F37208  Group Sheet
     
  • Notes 


    • ID: I1
      Name: John Beecher
      Sex: M
      Birth: 28 MAR 1594 in KEN, ENG
      Death: 1637/8 in New Haven, New Haven, CT
      Note: From Dictionary of Ancestral Heads of New England Families by Holmes: "Hannah, widow of John
      BEECHER of Kent, England, came to Boston in 1637 with her family, the only son being Isaac who became
      identified with New Haven, CT."
      Note:

      James Shepard, The New Haven (Conn.) Potters, 1639. in "Genealogies of Connecticut Families from
      The New England Historical and Genealogical Register" Volume III (Painter--Wyllys), selected and
      introduced by Gary Boyd Roberts. Genealogical Publishing
      Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1983, pp 150-155:
      "1. Hannah [Potter] Beecher was the mother of the New Haven Potters, who appeared early in New
      Haven as a widow with sons: i. John, ii. William and iii. Isaac Beecher, the ancestor of Rev Henry
      Ward Beecher. Her first husband, Potter, died in
      England, where she married a Mr. Beecher."

      Note:

      "It is generally supposed that her husband was John Beecher, one of the seven whom Eaton sent to New
      Haven in advance of the colony and who died before the colony arrived. She has been considered to be
      the mother of Isaac Beecher, for she calls him
      her son in her will and gave him one third of her property; but recent investigations, it is claimed, show
      conclusively that Isaac was only a step-son, the son of her second husband by a former wife."

      Note:

      "There was in New Haven, says G.F. Tuttle, as early as 1641, a widow Hannah Potter, known as
      widow Potter the midwife. In 1643 she had two persons in the family, thirty pounds estate and twenty
      and one quarter acres of land. She is called "sister
      Potter the midwife," in seating the meeting house in 1646. She is supposed to have been a kin to the
      other Potters, but there is no record to show it. She has often been confounded with the widow Hannah
      Beecher, but the records clearly show that they
      were two different persons."

      Note:

      Donald Lines Jacobus, "Miscellanea" The American Genealogist, vol XX (2), October 1943:
      "[Kept in a locked cabinet in the Town Clerk's Office is a small old book which was used in the period
      between 1660 and 1700 for miscellaneous purposes. It seems to have been little used by genealogists. A
      digest of a few of the records is given
      below. The Beecher entry is of interest because it bears on the question of whether Isaac Beecher was
      actual son of the Widow Hannah Beecher, formerly Potter, as the present writer has always believed, or
      only a step-son, a theory favored by other
      students of the family....]"

      Note: "[Part2,p11.] Isaac Beecher senior haveing for many yeares past stood in the quiett possession of divers
      parcells of land without claime or prosecution doth now record them to himselfe, his heyres or assignes for ever."
      Note:

      "The homelott whereon he dwelleth, conaineing 3 acres more or less...
      "Alsoe halfe a piece of meadow land ....
      "Alsoe some parcells of upland...[and two other parcels]...
      "Alsoe land at ye first that was his mother Beechers (viz) Three acres & halfe in the subbarbs quarter....
      "Alsoe one parcell of meadow that at ye first belonged to bro: Jno Potter & passed over to him the sd
      Beecher at a court in the 4th Decembr 1655: containeing three acres.
      "Alsoe six acres of upland that was also his Bro: Jno Potters & alienated at the aforesd court....
      "Alsoe the second division belonging to his sd bro: Jno Potter passed in ye court aforesd...fourteen
      acres ....
      "Alsoe a parcell of land graunted him against the end of a lott he bought of Eleazer Beecher neare
      Chesnutt hill....about 9 acres....
      "Alsoe two acres one quarter twenty foure rod of land in the necke which at first belonged to Wm Potter,
      bounded westward by the mill river....which land of his on the South belonged at first to his mother
      Beecher.
      "Alsoe one parcell more in the necke which at first belonged to his bro: Jno Potter [4 Dec. 1655]
      "Nathaniell Potter son of Wm Potter appeared the 9th day of June 1684: & acknowledged those lands
      mentioned before that did belong to his sd father Wm Potter were passed over to his unkle the sd Isaac
      Beecher....
      "Entered 9 June 1684 before Wm Jones Assist, John Nash Recorder, John Alling Townesman.]"

      Note: further below in the abstract is noted "[Part 2, p. 40.] William Pringle conveys to son Joseph Pringle 3 Jan
      1688/9. Joseph Pringle, planter, conveys to 'my Lo: brother Eleazer Beecher of Newhaven' 6 Jan 1688/9."
      Note:

      Reference: "Saints, Sinners, and the Beechers" by Lyman Beecher Stowe, copyright 1934
      (Bobbs-Merril) Pages 17-19:
      "1637/8 John Beecher arrived in Boston, from Kent, England in a company of 50 men and 200 women
      and children. The company was led by Rev. John Davenport and Theophilus Eaton. They came on the
      ship Hector and her sister ship (name not cited). Rather
      than settle among the arguing Pilgrim colony, they moved north to Quinnipiack, Long Island Sound
      (where New Haven, CT is now). John Beecher died during the first winter, before his wife Hannah and
      son Isaac arrived the following spring. She was
      allowed to remain on John's land and accorded the title "Goodwife" as she happened to be a midwife,
      an occupation sorely needed!

      Note:

      "John, Hannah and Issac were the first of the Beechers in America. They came to this country from Kent,
      England, in 1637, with the company led by the Reverend John Davenport and Theophilus Eaton who had
      been Ambassador to Denmark and Deputy-Governor
      of India. This company crossed the ocean on the ship "Hector". The ship after a two months voyage,
      dropped anchor in Boston harbor 26 June 1637, seventeen years after the "Mayflower" had landed the
      Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock. The company consisted of
      fifty men and two hundred women and children. But they found they had come in the midst of a quarrel,
      about religion. Not wishing to buy into a quarrel, they decided to seek another area to settle in. They sent
      out a reconnoitering party under the
      leadership of Theophilus Eaton, which hit upon an old indian village of Quinnipiack on Long Island
      Sound, the site of the present city of New Haven. Here they built a rude hut and left an unfortunate group
      of seven men to hold the post for the winter,
      and prepare for the arrival of the remainder of the company in the spring."

      Note:

      "John Beecher was one of the seven. He failed to survive the rigors of his first New England winter
      because he and his companions had such inadequate protection. When Hannah Beecher and Issac arrived
      in the spring, she found her husband already
      buried in a unmarked grave. One hundred and twelve years later, in 1750, when David Beecher was a
      boy of
      twelve, workmen who were digging a celler for a house at the corner of George and Meadow streets in
      New Haven came upon human bones which were believed to be those of John Beecher."

      Note: "Since Hannah Beecher was the only midwife among them, she was given her husband's allotment of land
      upon which she and her son settled."
      Note:

      "These colonists had their social distinctions marked by dress, address and manners. Clergymen,
      college graduates, planters of good family and members of the General Court were gentlemen and were
      entitled to use the prefix Mr. before their names.
      Persons of reputable character who owned land, including laborers and tenant farmers of the better
      class, were called yeoman. A yeoman was addressed as goodman and his wife as goodwife or goody.
      John Beecher was not a gentleman, but a yeoman; his
      wife was not a lady, but a goodwife."

      Note: Reuben Beecher Hughes, in his book, quotes (p.3-4) the following letter he received from Rev. Luther Fitch
      Beecher, D.D.
      Note:

      Brookline, Mass, Feb. 3, '98
      R. B. Hughes:
      "The Beecher" name can be traced beyond the "Isaac, 1623, of your list." Not to speak of the Beecher of
      King David's time in Jewish Military History. My first record takes me back of the emigration to
      America in 1637, to Speldhurst, County of Kent,
      England, where we find them living in "Chancellor House". Having the right to display a
      "Coat-of-Arms," and in after years connected, through several generations, with the Army or the
      Government Service. Three "Tablets," commemorative of their name
      and services, are now found in the North Tower of the Speldhurst Episcopal Church, certificate copies
      of which are in the possession of Mrs. Gaston, copies of which are among my records. I have a copy of
      the letter from the last owner of the estate,
      written to Gov. Gaston some four or five years since, and or all of which are at your service if they are
      of any interest to you.
      I have, also, a history of much interest of the Beechers, located for many years at "Castle Martyrs," in
      the south-west part of Ireland, occupying three large estates, of which "Castle Martyrs" is the largest.
      Miss O'Neil, contemporary with Edmund Keene and Mrs. Siddons, was on the London stage then, under
      the management of the Kendalls. In 1819 she was married to Sir William Beecher, an Irish member of
      the British Parliament.
      Sir Henry Wrixon Beecher, baronet, now occupies the estate, having two hundred tenants, and much
      more of like history and biography, much of which must be new and of interest to you.
      No published "Beecher Genealogy" exists, so far as I know......
      Very sincerely,
      LUTHER F. BEECHER

      Note:

      In his book, Reuben Beecher Hughes, adds,
      The Mrs. Gaston referred to in the above letter was the wife of Gov. William Gaston, of Mass., the
      daughter of Laban Beecher, (now Boston), who was the son of Benjamin Beecher of New Haven,
      (familiarly called "Capt. Ben."), who lived so many years on
      Chapel street. He was "town agent, and had care of the poor."
      The motto inscribed on the "Coat-of-Arms" which the Beechers were "given the right to display" was
      "Bis vivi qui bene" - "He twice lives who lives well."v
     
  • Sources 
    1. [S254] Pedigree Resource File CD 12, ((Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 2000)).

    2. [S459] #797.

    3. [S1183] #979.

  
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