Difference between revisions of "Archive:NEHGR, Volume 170"

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{{Breadcrumb3|Archives|Archive:Extracts|Archive:The New England Historical and Genealogical Register}}
 
{{Breadcrumb3|Archives|Archive:Extracts|Archive:The New England Historical and Genealogical Register}}
  
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''The New England Historical and Genealogical Register''. Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1847-. (Online database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2018.)
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https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/t/55221/101/1425121176
  
 
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[p. 101]
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<center>'''Alice Goble, the First</ br>Wife of Nathaniel<sup>2</sup> Woods</ br>of Groton, Massachusetts'''</ br></ br>Allan Gilbertson</center>
  
''Timothy and Melvin Shaw of Wales, Erie County, New York: Brothers from Massachusetts'', Roger D. Joslyn, NEHGR 170 (2016), p. 104.
 
  
'''1. TIMOTHY SHAW''' ... He may have stayed the next several months in eastern New England, for on 5 May 1777, he enlisted in Rhode Island for a two-month term in Capt. Edmund Hodge's company, Col. Josiah Whitney's regiment, and was discharged in Rhode Island 5 July 1777.
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In a ''Register'' article published in 1910,<sup>[1]</sup> Henry Woods stated that Nathaniel<sup>2</sup> Woods of Groton, Massachusetts, son of Samuel<sup>1</sup> and Alice (Rushton) Woods, had four wives:  Eleanor _____, Alice _____, Sarah Brown, and Mary (Blanchard) Derbyshire. This article will show that Eleanor and Alice were the same woman, and that she was not Alice Whitney, daughter of Joshua<sup>2</sup>, but that she was almost certainly the daughter of Daniel<sup>2</sup> (''Thomas<sup>1</sup>'') and Hannah (Brewer) Goble.
  
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An examination of the town records of Groton shows that Nathaniel Woods's eleven children, born between 1694 and 1716, were recorded with "Alles" as their mother.  Three of them, Aaron, Moses, and Reuben, born 1707-1711, also have baptismal records in which their mother was called "Eleanor."  In the original handwritten town records, all the children of Nathaniel and Alles were recorded on one page.<sup>[2]</sup>  Since the same children are give with mother Eleanor only in the church records, "Alles" and "Eleanor" apparently were the same person.<sup>[3]</sup>
  
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The 1895 Whitney genealogy stated that Alice/Eleanor was the daughter of Joshua<sup>2</sup> Whitney.  This idea apparently was originally published in 1860 in Henry Bond's Watertown genealogies.<sup>[4]</sup>  In the list of Joshua Whitney's children, Bond includes "dr. Woods, mentioned in her father's will; perhaps Alice, wife of Nathaniel Woods of Groton."<sup>[5]</sup>  However, Bond was mistaken.
 
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<sup>[1]</sup> Henry E. Woods, "The Woods Family of Groton, Mass.," ''Register'' 64 (1910):35.  Mr. Woods was editor of the ''Register'' 1902-1907 and "designed the vital records series subsidized by the Commonwealth" (John A. Schutz, ''A Noble Pursuit: The Sesquicentennial History of the New England Historic Genealogical Society'' [Boston: NEHGS, 1995], 74-77, 85, 230, 257).  In addition, Ryan J. Woods, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of NEHGS, is descended from Nathaniel and Alice (Goble) Woods.
  
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<sup>[2]</sup> ''Massachusetts Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988'', images 346 and 441 of Groton vital records, online at Ancestry.com; ''Vital Records of Gronon, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849'', 2 vols. (Salem, Mass.: Essex Institute, 1926)m, 1:258-264.
  
''William<sup>1</sup> Sheffield of Braintree and Sherborn, Massachusetts with Further Notes on the Daniel[s] Family of Medfield'', Austin W. Spencer and Beverly Spooner, NEHGR 170 (2016), pp. 313-314.
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<sup>[3]</sup> According to Robert L. Ward of the Whitney Research Group, "she may have been known by the nickname Allie or Ellie (pronounced almost identically, especially with an English accent), and the record keepers tried to supply what they thought was the proper form.  The minister or his clerk may have thought Ellie was short for Eleanor" (personal communication from Robert L. Ward to the author, dated 5 April 2016).
  
Children of William<sup>1</sup> and Hannah (Bullard) Sheffield, b. in Sherborn:<sup>[144]</sup>
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<sup>[4]</sup> Frederick Clifton Pierce, ''Whitney: The Descendants f John Whitney'' (Chicago: the author, 1895), 25, repeats the idea, without providing any evidence, that Joshua Whitney had a daughter Alice who married Nathaniel Woods. Probably this identification was first published in Henry Bond, ''Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts'', 2 vols. (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1860), 1:644.
  
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<sup>[5]</sup> Bond, ''Watertown'' [note 4], 1:644.
  
:v. SARAH SHEFFIELD, b. 18 June 1706; m. Sherborn 25 Nov. 1725, PAUL MORSE,<sup>[163]</sup> b. Sherborn 14 Feb 1700/1,<sup>[164]</sup> d. Holliston before 19 Sept. 1760 (inventory,<sup>[165]</sup> son of Jonathan and Jane (Whitney) Morse.<sup>[166]</sup>
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<font size=-1><sup>144</sup> ''Vital Records of Sherborn'' [note 13], 83.
 
 
 
. . .
 
 
 
<sup>163</sup> ''Vital Records of Sherborn'' [note 13], 169.
 
 
 
<sup>164</sup> Morse and Leavit, ''Morse Genealogy'' [note 35], 69.
 
  
<sup>165</sup> Middlesex County Probate, file 15567, Paul Morse.
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[p. 102]
  
<sup>166</sup> Morse and Leavit, ''Morse Genealogy'' [note 35], 34.</font>
 
  
  
 
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Copyright &copy; 2017, [[User:Rlward|Robert L. Ward]] and the [[Whitney Research Group]].
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Copyright &copy; 2020, [[User:Rlward|Robert L. Ward]] and the [[Whitney Research Group]].

Revision as of 22:46, 6 October 2020

Archives > Archive:Extracts > Archive:The New England Historical and Genealogical Register > NEHGR, Volume 170

The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1847-. (Online database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2018.)

https://www.americanancestors.org/DB202/t/55221/101/1425121176


[p. 101]

Alice Goble, the First</ br>Wife of Nathaniel2 Woods</ br>of Groton, Massachusetts</ br></ br>Allan Gilbertson


In a Register article published in 1910,[1] Henry Woods stated that Nathaniel2 Woods of Groton, Massachusetts, son of Samuel1 and Alice (Rushton) Woods, had four wives: Eleanor _____, Alice _____, Sarah Brown, and Mary (Blanchard) Derbyshire. This article will show that Eleanor and Alice were the same woman, and that she was not Alice Whitney, daughter of Joshua2, but that she was almost certainly the daughter of Daniel2 (Thomas1) and Hannah (Brewer) Goble.

An examination of the town records of Groton shows that Nathaniel Woods's eleven children, born between 1694 and 1716, were recorded with "Alles" as their mother. Three of them, Aaron, Moses, and Reuben, born 1707-1711, also have baptismal records in which their mother was called "Eleanor." In the original handwritten town records, all the children of Nathaniel and Alles were recorded on one page.[2] Since the same children are give with mother Eleanor only in the church records, "Alles" and "Eleanor" apparently were the same person.[3]

The 1895 Whitney genealogy stated that Alice/Eleanor was the daughter of Joshua2 Whitney. This idea apparently was originally published in 1860 in Henry Bond's Watertown genealogies.[4] In the list of Joshua Whitney's children, Bond includes "dr. Woods, mentioned in her father's will; perhaps Alice, wife of Nathaniel Woods of Groton."[5] However, Bond was mistaken.


[1] Henry E. Woods, "The Woods Family of Groton, Mass.," Register 64 (1910):35. Mr. Woods was editor of the Register 1902-1907 and "designed the vital records series subsidized by the Commonwealth" (John A. Schutz, A Noble Pursuit: The Sesquicentennial History of the New England Historic Genealogical Society [Boston: NEHGS, 1995], 74-77, 85, 230, 257). In addition, Ryan J. Woods, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of NEHGS, is descended from Nathaniel and Alice (Goble) Woods.

[2] Massachusetts Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988, images 346 and 441 of Groton vital records, online at Ancestry.com; Vital Records of Gronon, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849, 2 vols. (Salem, Mass.: Essex Institute, 1926)m, 1:258-264.

[3] According to Robert L. Ward of the Whitney Research Group, "she may have been known by the nickname Allie or Ellie (pronounced almost identically, especially with an English accent), and the record keepers tried to supply what they thought was the proper form. The minister or his clerk may have thought Ellie was short for Eleanor" (personal communication from Robert L. Ward to the author, dated 5 April 2016).

[4] Frederick Clifton Pierce, Whitney: The Descendants f John Whitney (Chicago: the author, 1895), 25, repeats the idea, without providing any evidence, that Joshua Whitney had a daughter Alice who married Nathaniel Woods. Probably this identification was first published in Henry Bond, Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, 2 vols. (Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1860), 1:644.

[5] Bond, Watertown [note 4], 1:644.


[p. 102]



Copyright © 2020, Robert L. Ward and the Whitney Research Group.