Showing posts with label Elizabeth Heard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Heard. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2019

James, Martha, Samuel and Jotham Nute: Three Generations in Colonial Dover, New Hampshire


Our Nute line remained in Dover for another three generations after James Sr. immigrated to the New World. James Sr.’s two children, James Jr. (1643-1691) and Martha (1653-1718), are both grandparent ancestor lines, but they would converge two generations later when a grandchild of each, i.e., second cousins, marry each other.

We have a plethora of James, Williams, Elizabeths, Leahs, Sarahs, and Samuels, a bane to family history writers and readers alike. Bear with me. I'll try to make it as painless as possible.

Martha Nute, 8th GGM and the Dam Garrison

Martha (1653-1718) was the 4th child of James Nute Sr. In 1780, she married William Dam (1653-1718), son of 9th GGF John Dam (1611-1690) who was an early immigrant to Dover around the same time frame as our James Sr. Both James Nute and John Dam received land grands on the Back River; indeed, their lots were adjoining and Martha married the proverbial boy next door. 

William and Martha’s daughter, Leah (1695-1750) married 7th GGF Samuel Hayes (1695-1777) and their daughter, 6th GGM Mary Hayes (1728-1759) married second cousin Jotham Nute (1724-1801). Thus, the full circle comes back to the Nute family line.



Things weren’t, however, all peachy-keen between the two families. A 1709 row between the Nutes and the “whole Dam family” over a thatch bed was described as,

William Dam, Jr. (Leah’s brother) testified - “say we see James Nute (James Jr.’s son) throw our father (8th GGF) William Dam down and also call him thief and threaten to cut off his legs and bid him kiss his ass and also Richard Pinkham by violence thrown our father William down several times and hold him and called him thief.” Richard Pinkham further testified “(9th GGF) William Dam Sr. and William Dam Jr. and Jacob Allen (8th GGM Martha Nute’s son-in-law) and Martha Dam (daughter) and Sarah Dam (daughter) carry away ye thatch which James Nute had mowed and further saith he hear William Dam Jr. say he would run his pitchfork into ye James Nute’s belly or guts.” 

No love lost here between the Dam and Nute families.

Martha’s father-in-law, 9th GGF John Dam, was a carpenter and joiner. In 1656, he purchased Back River Lot 13 adjoining his Lots 11 and 12 and the Nute Lot 10, and gave the land to son William Dam on turning 21. Just before their marriage in 1675, John built a palisaded garrison for Martha and William, Jr. The garrison was spared in the 1689 Cochecho Massacre, likely due to its location across the Back River. 

Visiting the Dam garrison housed in the Woodman Institute, 2015

Dam-Drew garrison before removal to the Woodman Institute in 1915, pulled on log rollers several miles and across a bridge
The original garrison houses had no windows, only slits for rifles. The windows in the photo were likely added around the time of the Civil War. The large attic overhang had openings that allowed the women to pour boiling water on the attackers. Many had a palisade inside which about 100 people could fit if needed.

The couple lived in the garrison house for several decades and passed it down to their daughter, 7th GGM Leah Dam, who married Samuel Hayes in 1720. Samuel and Leah lived in the garrison until 1770 when it passed to Leah’s granddaughter, Leah Nute, who married Joseph Drew the following year. Joseph and Leah Nute Drew lived in the garrison until 1810 when they moved into a mansion. The garrison, however, remained in the Drew family until its removal to the Woodman Institute on the other side of the Bellamy River (Back River) in 1915. The garrison was in the Dam-Nute-Drew family for 240 years, and is today’s direct connection to the first families to settle Dover - our Nute and Dam families.

8th GGF William Dam died in March 1718, age 64, and Martha followed two months later in May 1718, age 65. They are both buried in the Nute-Dam Cemetery on the bank of the Back River with graves marked by etched stones. Daughter, Leah, is also buried in the cemetery, originally with an etched stone, but someone has placed a relatively recent headstone.
Leah in Nute-Dam cemetery
James Nute Jr. (1643-1691), 8th GGF

The eldest son of James the Immigrant lived on the Nute homestead his entire life, begat four children, and died at the young age of 48. Town records show James' level of involvement in the growing community was less than his father’s, perhaps as the Farm was across the Back River from town.

James married Elizabeth Heard (1653-1705), daughter of 9th GGPs Captain John Heard (1612-1688) and Elizabeth Hull (1628-1710), both English immigrants. Captain Heard built a defense garrison in the Cochecho area, but died just before the massacre of 1689.

The story is told that the widow Elizabeth, a daughter, and three sons were returning by boat to the settlement from Portsmouth the night of the massacre. As the family approached the Waldron garrison, they spotted trouble and fled. Elizabeth was unable to keep up with the others and ordered them to leave her behind. While hiding in the thicket through the night, she was spotted by a young Abanaki Indian who raised his gun, aimed, then turned away. It is said Elizabeth had saved this Indian’s life as a youth several years earlier.

James and the younger Elizabeth Heard married in 1675 and raised four children on the Nute farm:
Sarah (1675-1762) m. William Furber IV
Leah (1680-1748) m. 1st, Jethro Furber, brother to William, and 2nd, Hatevil Nutter
James III (1687-1759) m. Prudence, last name unknown 
SAMUEL (1689-1765) m. ELIZABETH Pinkham (1688-1765)

Father James Jr. died at the young age of 48 in 1691, leaving a 38 year old widow, Elizabeth, with  four young children, ages two to 16 years old. 

Elizabeth remarried three years later to Lt. William Furber whose wife had also just died, leaving him with  several young children as well. Lt. Furber’s first wife was from the Starbuck mariner family who founded the whaling industry on Nantucket. His father, an early Dover settler, was a survivor of the wreck of the Angel Gabriel off the coast of Maine during a hurricane in 1635; a brother and nephew were lost at sea in 1686.  Lt. William ran the Furber ferry service from his house at Welchman’s Cove (Bloody Point), Newington, to Oyster River.

James III was only four years old and our 8th GGF Samuel two years old at the time of their father’s death. James Jr.’s will left two thirds of the house and land to the eldest son, James III, when he came of age. The other three children, including Samuel, were only to have equal shares of the “moveables.” The widow was ordered to have the children’s estate bound out to “prentice” until she remarried in which case her one-third of the estate would be secured for the good of her children.

James III lived in the family homestead in Dover, but acquired land in Rochester, New Hampshire, the community north of Dover. At his death, he bequeathed the land to his sons Paul and James IV. This acquisition shows the Nute family was already getting land outside Dover by the third generation. Incoming immigrants to Dover and the rule of primogeniture giving almost everything to the first born son was clearly making the land situation tight in Dover, particularly for the lower born sons. Disease and Indian wars had well decimated the Native population in New England by the 1700’s, making land acquisition easier for the white colonists.

The two daughters, Sarah and Leah, married their Furber step-brothers, William and Jethro. Jethro died in 1715, five years after marriage to Leah. Several months later, the widow Leah took her sister’s husband to court on a boundary dispute. Not much love lost here.

Elizabeth died at the young age of 52 after “five days of extreme sickness with fever and malaise.” The burial of Elizabeth and Lt. William Furber is presumably on the Furber family homestead at Welchman’s Cove.

The burial site of James Nute, Jr. is unknown. As he lived and died on the Nute farm, internment in the Nute-Dam cemetery with an unmarked or lost stone would be a reasonable assumption.

Samuel Nute (1689-1765), 7th GGF

Samuel was two years old when his father died, five years old when his mother remarried, and 18 when his step-father, Lt. Furber, died. He may well have grown up on the Furber homestead at Welchman’s Cove, but the town history of Dover shows he had a home in Dover as an adult.  A 1707/8 notation in James Jr.’s probate indicates guardianship of Samuel Nute, age about 18, was granted to Jethro Furber, his future brother-in-law. This would have been about the time his step-father, Lt. William, died. The notation appears to be an addendum. The guardianship may have been an apprenticeship.

In 1718, Samuel married Elizabeth Pinkham (1688-1765), age 30, old for a woman’s first marriage in those days, but there is no record of a previous marriage. Elizabeth, our 7th GGM, was a direct descendant of Henry III, King of England and Eleanor of Provence through her grandmother, Rose Stoughton, wife of Richard Otis. Henry III is, thus, our 21st GGF to my generation.

Elizabeth’s grandparents, Richard Pinkham and Richard Otis, were both early arrivals in Dover and both families had garrison houses. 9th GGF Richard Otis, and two of his children were killed in the Cochecho massacre in 1689. Her 39 year old uncle, Stephen Otis, was killed in the garrison fight. Elizabeth’s young cousin, three-month old Margaret, was taken captive to Canada, renamed Christine, and raised by French nuns in Quebec. Elizabeth’s mother, 8th GGM Martha Rose Otis was taken captive, but released in Conway, New Hampshire.

Indians ambushed Elizabeth’s uncles, Nicholas and Richard Otis, and cousin while they were returning home from public worship in 1696. Nicholas, was killed, Richard wounded, and Nicholas’ son was carried away to Penobscot.

Scales’ History of Dover indicates Samuel and Elizabeth lived “on the north side of the road leading from the main road to the old Pascataqua bridge to Capt. Thomas Nute’s (the original Nute homestead).”

Children of Samuel Nute and Elizabeth Pinkham:
JOTHAM (1724-1801) m. Mary Canney, 6th GGPs. Their son Jotham, enlisted in the Revolution at age 16; son, William, fought with the 3rd New Hampshire in the War of 1812.
John (1728-1800) m. Hepzibeth last name unknown; their son, Samuel (1749-1828) was a Captain in the Revolution and fought at Bunker Hill.
Sarah (1729-aft 1777) m. Josiah Clark
Martha (1732-1783) m. Benjamin Dam
Elizabeth (1736-bef. 1765) m. unknown Nute; her son, Obed, likely served three years in the Continental Army from Massachusetts.

Samuel and Elizabeth died the same year in 1765, he at age 75 and she age 77. His will written the year before indicates he had “homestead lands,” pasture land, corn, hay, and fruit orchard. The property had a barn and cellar under the house. Son, John, received 60 acres of the first division in Rochester on which John was already living, as well as title to Samuel’s acreage in the third division. Son, 6th GGF Jotham, received the Dover homestead land, barn, and farm equipment, 12 additional acres in Dover, and land in the second division in Rochester. He left 50 pounds cash each to daughter Sarah and grandson Obed, and a feather bed and livestock to his granddaughter Elizabeth.

As an aside, there is a curious story about the grandson, Obed. Samuel’s first will in 1749 left property to his youngest daughter, Elizabeth, but he changed his will in 1764 leaving money to Elizabeth’s son, Obed. Evidently, Elizabeth, the youngest daughter, married an unknown Nute after 1749 and was deceased at the time of the second will. Obed married and moved near Casco Bay, Maine. He had a son, also Obed, then suddenly disappeared when the child was three-weeks old. Obed, Sr. was last seen sitting on a log beside the trail between his home and Casco Bay where he had gone for provisions. He appeared ill, but refused assistance. It is believed Obed did not die, but absconded from his family responsibilities. A man by the same name enlisted in the Continental Army in Framingham, Massachusetts, two years later (1776) and served 3 years. The Goodspeed genealogy identifies the wife as Thankful Bangs who moved to the Cape Cod area with young Obed and married John Goodspeed.

Jotham Nute (1724-1801), 6th GGF

Indian attacks continued in the Dover area, with the last foray at Knox Marsh in 1725 when members of a Quaker family who refused to use the garrisons for shelter were killed or captured.

6th GGF Jotham Nute was born around the time of the Knox massacre and remained in Dover most of his life. His father’s will indicates Jotham inherited the land referred to in Scales History of Dover on which his father Samuel and Phebe lived.

Jotham married 6th GGM Mary Hayes (1728-1759) in Dover before 1749, the year our 5th GGF Samuel was born to the couple. No marriage records have been located. Jotham and Mary were third cousins with shared great-grandparents, immigrants James and Sarah Nute.

Mary Hayes’ paternal grandfather, 8th GGF John Hayes, immigrated from England or Scotland about 1680 and settled in Dover. Mary’s maternal GGF, 9th GGF William Horne, immigrated as early as 1630, settled in Dover by 1659, and was killed in the Cocheco massacre in 1689. Her mother, 9th GGM Elizabeth Cough, was taken captive by Indians in 1707 while walking along the road.

8th GGM Mary Horne, daughter of William and Elizabeth who died so tragically, married 8th GGF John Hayes when she was but 13 years old and he 25. The couple had their first child within the year. She died at age 30.

Jotham’s children with 1st wife Mary Hayes:
SAMUEL Nute (1749-1825) m. PHEBE Pinkham
Leah (1752-1815) m. Joseph Drew and lived in the Dam Garrison until 1810; Joseph is a DAR patriot for his service of signing the petition to request formation of committee of safety.
Mary (1754-after 1820 in Athens, Maine) m. James Tuttle; James served in the Revolution.

Jotham's children with 2nd wife Mary Canney (1724 - ), widow of Daniel Canney:
Jotham Jr. (1760-1836) m. Sarah Twombley, served in Continental Army in Revolution (see below)
Elizabeth (1763- ), no marriage or death records located
William (1764-1812) m. Mary Polly Davis; served in War of 1812
Jonathan (1768- ) m. Charity Smart; served in War of 1812 as an artificer (skilled in working on artillery devices in the field)

The list of Rochester proprietors shows Jotham’s father, (7th GGF Samuel), uncle (James III) and Thomas Tuttle shared an original 1722 proprietorship in Rochester just north of Dover. Samuel’s 1765 will bequeathed Rochester property in the first division to his son John and land in the third division to Jotham, indicating additional Rochester land had been acquired during the senior Samuel’s lifetime. John was already living on his property in Rochester by 1765. Jotham opted to stay on the family homestead in Dover and leave it to 5th GGF Samuel to settle the Rochester property.

In 1760, Jotham was elected Constable of Dover, but refused to serve. The family of Joseph Nute, compiler of our genealogy, had a receipt for the five pounds he had to pay for the refusal.

The death date of Jotham’s wife, widow Mary Canney, is unknown, but census evidence in Rochester indicates she died before 1790 and that Jotham was living with his son, 5th GGF Samuel, in Rochester. The 1800 census indicates Jotham is still living with Samuel before his death from palsy in 1801.


Jotham was the last generation to live in Dover. His son, Samuel, married and had several children in Dover before moving north to the new town of Rochester, NH, and carving out a farmstead on Nute's Ridge with his half-brother, Jotham.

Sources:
John Scales, Colonial Era History of Dover, New Hampshire, 1932
George Wadleigh, Notable Events in the History of Dover, New Hampshire, 1913

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

James Nute (1613-1691), our Nute Immigrant


Our surname Nute extends from modern-day descendants and our grandfather, Raymond Nute Sr., through multiple geographic migrations back to the first Nute immigrant to southeastern New Hampshire in 1631.

Sporadic fishing and trading settlements had been in the area of modern day Dover Point and Portsmouth between 1603 and 1630. Serious permanent settlement began when Captain John Mason, one of the Grantees of New Hampshire, sent over two men to manage settlement of the area - Captain Thomas Wiggin responsible to the upper settlement (Dover and north) and Captain Walter Neal to run the lower settlement (Portsmouth, Rye, and Newington). 

Map of Dover/Portsmouth Landmarks
An unsourced list of settlers brought to the area by Captain Neal in 1631 includes our 9th GGF James Nute and 10th GGF Thomas Canney. The immigrants who settled at Strawberry Banke (now Portsmouth) were described as a “rag-tag group of adventurers, servants, and planters.” Captain Wiggin, governor of the Upper Plantation of New Hampshire, brought over a group of Puritan settlers on the ship James to the Dover area in 1633, and more carpenters and millwrights followed in 1634.

Wadleight’s Notable Events in the History of Dover, New Hampshire names heads of families in Dover in 1633, including James Nute, John Dam, Thomas Canney, Richard Pinkham, William Pomfrett, and Henry Tebbetts, all grandparent ancestors.

The reliability of all these passenger lists is called into question as there are no direct records. In any event, when the people of Dover established a formal government in 1640 with the Dover Combination, signers included ancestors James Nute, Richard Pinkham, John Heard, William Pomfret, and Thomas Canney.

The New England Indian Wars began in 1675 and continued for 50 years, ending at Knox Marsh in 1725. The first of 15 garrisons, or fortified houses, in Dover were built in 1675, and more constructed after tension with local Indians increased in the 1680s. The Pinkham, Dam, Tibbitts, Hayes, Otis, Wentworth, and Heard ancestor families were among those with garrison houses built in defense against Indian attacks. The original Dam garrison is housed in the Woodman Institute in Dover.

Coordinated Indian attacks against the garrisons in 1689, known as the Cocheco Massacre, resulted in the deaths and kidnappings of dozens of Dover inhabitants. The treachery began on the part of white settlers in Dover in 1676 when peaceful Indians fleeing the war in Massachusetts were deceived, rounded up for return to Massachusetts, and hanged or enslaved. Hostilities worsened in Dover between settlers and natives over the next several years.

On the evening of June 27, 1689, Indian women requested shelter in several garrisons. During the night the women opened the gates to the attacking Indians. Twenty three people were killed and 29 taken captive.

Ninth great-grandfather Richard Otis, 72, and his children, Hannah, 2 (and yes, that age is correct), and Stephen, 39, were killed. His wife, infant daughter, 3 daughters from his first marriage, and 2 grandchildren were taken captive to Canada. The garrison was burned to the ground.

Ninth great-grandfather William Wentworth, 76, was guarding the Heard garrison while neighbor 8th great-grandmother Elizabeth Heard was away. He was wakened by dogs and able to close the gates against the attack.

Tenth GGF Thomas Canney and 9th GGF James Nute who arrived at Strawberry Bank in 1631 and 9th GGF John Dam who arrived in Dover in 1633 appear to be our earliest ancestor settlers in Dover. Over the next twenty years numerous other grandparent ancestors arrived. These included Richard Otis and wife Rose Stoughton, Richard Pinkham, Henry Tibbitts and wife Elizabeth Austin, Joseph Austin, Thomas Canney and wife Mary Loame, Thomas Cook and wife Katherine Preece, Thomas Downes, John Heard, John Hayes, Thomas Nock, William Pomfret, Edward Starbuck and wife Catherine Reynolds, William Hackett, William Horne,  and William Wentworth. Several immigrant or first generation women from the coastal families of Maine and Massachusetts married men of 17th century Dover, including grandmother ancestors Mary Horne, Elizabeth Knight, Martha Miller, Elizabeth Hull, Elizabeth Clough, Sarah Taylor, Mary Atkins, and Elizabeth Kenney.

All told, we have not just the Nute progenitor from Dover, but at least 30 ancestor families who converged on Dover, New Hampshire in the 17th century. 

James Nute Sr, Immigrant

James’ birth is estimated to be about 1613, extrapolated from the age scratched into his tombstone. He is believed to be from Tiverton, Devonshire, where a distinguished family with this surname lived during the reign of Elizabeth. The first two generations in New Hampshire spelled the name “Newte.”

At least three immigration scenarios are possible:
  • James was with the group of "stewards and servants" sent by Captain Mason to work the settlement of Strawberry Banke, now Portsmouth, in 1631. He would have been 18 years old at the time of arrival in the New World. With the death of Captain Mason in 1635, arrival of settlers on Dover Point, and opportunity to own land in Dover, James crossed the river at Bloody Point and settled in Dover, likely around 1635.
  • James arrived with Captain Wiggin on the ship James in 1633, and settled directly into Dover.
  • James arrived with a later group of immigrants, but was in Dover by 1640 when he signed the Dover Combination.
The first scenario has been the most popular, but direct evidence is lacking. Dover was in political and religious turmoil during the 1630s and no records of the time are available in the town itself. Further, some believe that records may have been destroyed related to a lawsuit brought by the heirs of Captain Mason. 

In 1640 at age 27, James had enough stature in the town that he was a signer of the Dover Combination to establish a formal government. He received a 20-acre land grant in town in 1642. His home was on Low Street of Dover Neck just west or northwest of the Meeting House, on the current Neck Road at Little Johns Creek which flows into the Back River. His lot is at the angle of the creek and river on the south side. His neighbors on Low Street were Captain Wiggin, 10th GGF William Pomfrett, and 9th GGF John Damme.

He married before 1643, age 30, to Sarah, last name unknown, and started his family.

James bought 20 acres (Lot 10) on the west side of Back River in 1650 and received another land grant of 40 acres in 1656. He was a proprietor of communal ox pasture land bordering Low Street in 1652. He moved from “town” to the Back River farm in about 1661. In 1671, he conveyed the family farm of 60 acres to his son, James II, and the 12 acres in Dover Neck to son Abraham. The conveyance indicates he and his wife Sarah would continue to live on the farm as well. The Nute farm remained in the family at least until the 1920’s, at the time thought to be the oldest land in continuous family possession in the country.

James was on a tax list in Dover in 1648, and several tax lists as late as 1685. He was an upright citizen, served on the Grand Jury in 1643, and a Petit Juror at Strawberry Bank on August 8, 1650.  He served as Selectman in 1659-1660, but was fined in 1663 for missing church meetings and entertaining Quaker missionaries.

Children of James Nute Sr. and Sarah:
1. JAMES Jr. (1643-1691) m. ELIZABETH Heard
2. Abraham (1644-1724) m. 1st, unknown; 2nd, widow Joanna Stanton
3. Sarah (1646 - ) m. James Bunker
4. MARTHA (1653-1718) m. WILLIAM DAM
5. Leah (1656-1726) m. 1st, John Knight; 2nd, Benedictus Tarr

James Jr./wife Elizabeth Heard and Martha/husband William Dam are both grandparent ancestors.

The population of Dover dropped to 146 in 1675, likely due to the Indian wars.

Family lore has been that 78-year old James Sr. was killed in his garden by Indians in 1691, two years after the Cocheco massacre. Supposedly, he left his gun in the house when he went to work the fields and became involved in an altercation with three Indians. He killed two Indians with a hoe before being killed himself by the third.

James is buried in the Nute-Dam cemetery on the banks of the Back River on the Bellamy Wilderness Preserve. The cemetery is not easily accessible, as I learned during a visit in 2015. The visitor would be wise to use mosquito repellent and wear boots to get through the marsh between the entry point at the Bellamy Wilderness Preserve and the woods where the cemetery lies.
Marsh leading to woods of the Nute-Dam Cemetery

James’ original gravestone in the Nute-Dam cemetery reads Mr. J. Nute, age 78.  A photo on file at New England Historical and Genealogical Society shows the headstone in 1915.


Mr. I Nute Ae 78
A modern-day headstone placed by E.F. Nute in 1968 reads,

James (Newte) Nute
Born 1613
Landed in Portsmouth 1631
Settled in Dover 1640
Killed by Indians 1691
Original and new gravestone for James Nute, Sr.
Other burials in the Nute cemetery  include daughter Martha, and her husband William Dam,  Leah Dam, wife of Samuel Hayes. In a field closer to the main road is a small cemetery, unkept, with headstones for Paul Nute, Ephraim, Nute, Greenleaf Nute and his wife Susan.

Personal communication with Lee Nute who has extensively researched the family histories and been in communication with others who have researched our common ancestor shows that James Sr., not James Jr., was killed by Indians, although James Jr. also died in 1691. James Jr. left a will when he died at age 48, indicating most likely that he had a potentially terminal illness.

According to Lee, he learned from Judge Eugene F. Nute in Farmington that academics at the University of New Hampshire decided to excavate the grave of James and the two Indians. The Judge “stopped the foolishness,” had the remains reinterred, and placed the granite marker over the grave to prevent any further intrusion.


The short Nute Road off Spur Road (may have been the old Low Road) on Dover Neck may be the location of James’ 20-acre lot on Dover Neck bordering the east bank of the Bellamy River.

Next installment: Our Nute line from Dover to Woodstock, ME.

Sources: 
John Scales, Colonial Era History of Dover, New Hampshire, 1923
Dover Historical Society, Vital Records of Dover, New Hampshire, 1686-1850
George Wadleigh, Notable Events in the History of Dover, New Hampshire, 1913
Mary Thompson, Landmarks in Ancient Dover, NH, 1892
John Scales & Alonzo Quint, Historical Memoranda Concerning Persons & Places in Old Dover, NH, 1900