Notes |
- The probate documents of John Hathaway of Dartmouth dated 11 July 1732 mention Hannah Boomer as a daughter.
"John, the oldest son, married Johanna Pope, daughter of Thomas Pope, and Sarah “Jenne,” both well known families in Plymouth. (A well preserved Pope cradle of 1648 is exhibited in this building.) His second wife was Patience. The first wife had six children, and the second ten, and of these, ten were sons."
John Hathaway Married (1st) Joanna Pope, daughter Thos. and Sarah (Carey) Pope.
Children:
Sarah - Married John Cadman.
Joanna - Married Elkanah Blackwell.
John - Married Alice Launders.
Arthur - Married (2) Maria Luce.
Hannah - Married ____ Boomer.
Mary - Married ____ Douglass.
John Hathaway (married 2nd) Patience.
Children:
Jonathan - Married Abagail Nye.
Richard - Married Deborah Doty.
Thomas.
Hunnewell - Married Mary (Worth?)
Abialson (or Abiah) - Married Mary Taber.
Elizabeth.
Patience - Married Reuben Peckham.
Benjamin - Married Elizabeth Richmond, Mary Hix.
James - Married Mary ____. (or Agnes Burton?)
Ebenezer - Married Ruth Hatch.
"John Hathaway’s land, chiefly on the west side of the Acushnet River, was in several tracts, and in area was about as extensive as that of his brother Thomas. His homestead extended from the river out to Mt. Pleasant Street, and began at a point 330 feet south of Davis Street at the north line of the Coffin farm, and extended north as far as Brooklawn Park. On the water front of this farm are located today the Whitman, Manomet, Nonquitt and Nashawena mills. In the northeast corner on the river was a landing place as early as 1730, and here John McPherson started the village of Belleville in 1774."
"John Hathaway had another tract of 200 acres on the south side of Hathaway Road, and extending west from Shawmut Avenue to the ledge. On Shawmut its frontage is over half a mile. On the north side of the Tarkiln Hill Road were large tracts extending down from the hill west beyond the railroad, and east about the same distance. The house that he gave his son Arthur stands there today, and is still occupied. Arthur early moved to Rochester, and owned a large tract there. John also owned a large tract to the south of Sassaquin Pond, the east part of which became the farm of Jonathan Tobey."
"In 1708 came the first clash between the Presbyterians and the Quakers, which resulted in the great struggle in 1723 when the English king, George I, overruled the general court of Massachusetts and declared the Quakers entitled to freedom from contributing toward the maintenance of Congregational churches and ministers. At the opening of the contest, which was urged chiefly in Dartmouth, a petition signed by eighty-six men who were Quakers and Baptists, was sent to the general court protesting against the church tax. This was signed by John and Thomas Hathaway. The position of Thomas can be easily understood, because his wife belonged to the leading Quaker family of Nantucket. John’s first wife was a sister of Captain Seth Pope, who was a vigorous Puritan. The second wife hasn’t yet been identified, but the second marriage may have led to his favor for the Quakers."
(source: Old Dartmouth Historical Sketch Number 31, Being the proceedings of the Old Dartmouth Historical Society, Water Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts, on December 29, 1910; Arthur Hathaway and His Immediate Descendants, by Caroline W. Hathaway; https://www.whalingmuseum.org/explore/library/publications/old-dartmouth-historical-sketches/odhs-no-31)
The following excerpt is from a different source: http://www.maxfieldgenealogy.com/hathaway01.html
"John Hathaway lived out most of his life in the Town of Dartmouth. His first wife, Joanna, died at the age of thirty-seven, leaving John, age forty-two, with children ages eleven, nine, seven, five, two, and one. In nine months he married again, and had ten more children.
John Hathaway's first wife, Joanna Pope, belonged to another family that moved to Dartmouth in its earlier days. When she was about eighteen years old, King Phillip's War broke out. The Indians attacked the frontier town of Dartmouth, killing two of Joanna's brothers and one sister-in-law, before they could reach the security of a garrison house. Everyone, including the remaining Popes and the Hathaways, left Dartmouth, returning in a few years to rebuild.
When John Hathaway married his second wife, Patience Hunnewell, he was forty-three, she twenty-two. She probably came from Scarborough, in the District of Maine. By the time Patience gave birth to her tenth child, she was forty-three, John was sixty-three. All sixteen children lived to adulthood, and fourteen married.
In 1708, when a Congregational Church was organized in Dartmouth, John Hathaway was one of eighty-six persons petitioning the Province against paying the church tax. John was probably a member of the Society of Friends, which had organized its first meeting in Dartmouth in 1699. "
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