John Wallingford, 16591709 (aged 50 years)

Name
John /Wallingford/
Given names
John
Surname
Wallingford
Birth
Type: Birth of Wallingford, John
7 April 1659 30
Birth of a sister
State: Massachusetts
Country: United States of America
Birth of a sister
State: Massachusetts
Country: United States of America
Birth of a brother
State: Massachusetts
Country: United States of America
Birth of a brother
State: Massachusetts
Country: United States of America
Death of a sister
State: Massachusetts
Country: United States of America
Death of a brother
State: Massachusetts
Country: United States of America
Death of a father
about 10 May 1682 (aged 23 years)
MARRIAGE OF WALLINGFORD, JOHN AND TUTTLE, MARY
City: Dover
State: New Hampshire
Country: United States of America
Death
Type: Death of Wallingford, John
after 12 September 1709 (aged 50 years)
Family with parents
father
mother
MARRIAGE OF WALLINGFORD, NICHOLAS AND TRAVERS, SARAH MARRIAGE OF WALLINGFORD, NICHOLAS AND TRAVERS, SARAH30 August 1652Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
26 years
younger brother
16781733
Birth: 27 June 1678 49 Bradford, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Death: about 1733Anne Arundel, Maryland, United States of America
-23 years
elder brother
16551656
Birth: 6 September 1655 26 Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Death: 6 January 1656Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
16 months
elder brother
16561682
Birth: between 2 January 1656 and 2 January 1657 28 Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Death: 10 May 1682Bradford, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
3 years
himself
16591709
Birth: 7 April 1659 30
Death: after 12 September 1709
2 years
younger sister
16611682
Birth: from 20 May 1661 to 29 May 1661 32 Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Death: 9 February 1682Bradford, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
4 years
younger brother
16651739
Birth: 6 October 1665 36 Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Death: after July 1739
-2 years
younger sister
16631732
Birth: 15 August 1663 34 Newbury or Rowley, Essex, Massachusetts, United States of America
Death: after 18 November 1732
sister
brother
brother
sister
sister
sister
Family with Mary Tuttle
himself
16591709
Birth: 7 April 1659 30
Death: after 12 September 1709
wife
1717
Death: after 28 December 1717
MARRIAGE OF WALLINGFORD, JOHN AND TUTTLE, MARY MARRIAGE OF WALLINGFORD, JOHN AND TUTTLE, MARY6 December 1687Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire, United States of America
Shared note

John Wallingford was born in Newbury, Essex County, Massachusetts 7 April 1659.(69) John died at some point after 12 September 1709. (When he made an accounting of the estate of his brother Joseph.)

He married Mary Tuttle, 6 December 1687, in Dover, New Hampshire.(70) They were married by the Rev. John Pike of Dover. Mary was the daughter of John Tuttle and Mary.
Mary died after 28 December 1717. She was mentioned in her father's will of that date. In her father's will her brother Ebenezer Tuttle was directed to pay "to his Sister Mary Wallingford the Sum of five Pounds." Her father also stated: "Item I will Demise and Bequeth all my Personal Estate that is my House hold Goods & Chattels Bills Bonds Debts Dues which are to be Demaned after the Deceace of my well Beloved wife and not Before to My Three Daughters Equally to be Divided Between Them."(71)

In a warrant dated 9 April 1680 John Wallingford and Thomas Thurla were ordered to appear in court "to answer their presentments".(72)

John is included on a 9 July 1690 military roll during King William's War. He signed as one of many in the North Regiment in Essex County who were ready to "voluntarily offer our selvis to serve God, our King & Countrye in ye designed Expedition for Canada". John March of Newbury was Captain of the Company.(73) Whether John Wallingford and the regiment actually went on this expedition isn't stated, but if they did, they were commanded by Sir William Phips and sailed off from Boston in an armada on 21 August 1690 to attack Quebec City. The invasion was completely unsuccessful due to a combination of poor military command, lack of supplies and the onset of smallpox among the attackers. If John did serve on this campaign he would have been the first Wallingford to serve in the military in America. It seems likely that he did serve on the expedition given the following fact. In 1739 the township of Bakerstown, now Salisbury, N.H., was laid out and granted to the "Soldiers in the expedition to Canada Anno 1690 under the Command of Capt John March". Included among the proprietors from Newbury was John's son Capt. Thomas Wallingford, although he was living in Dover, N.H. at the time(74).

Following John's marriage to the daughter of Judge John Tuttle of Dover, N.H. they lived at Bradford, Mass. In 1702 Colonel Paul Wentworth and Judge John Tuttle became partners in a lumber business on the Salmon Falls River in Dover. Judge Tuttle invited his son-in-law John Wallingford to come to Salmon Falls to help with the operation of the saw mill and lumber business. The family moved to that area later on.(75)

On 27 September 1701 John "of Bradford" gave bond with Robert Mullican of Bradford for the administration of the estate of his brother Joseph Wallingford, late of Bradford deceased intestate, said bond being witnessed by John and Hannah Higginson. An inventory was taken that showed an estate worth only £12, 18s, 4p. Richard Kimball and Jonas Platts signed the inventory. John made an accounting of the estate of Joseph on 12 September 1709, nearly eight years later, and at the bottom is a list of first names who all received one pound two shillings from the estate, this list obviously being his surviving siblings Nicholas, John, James, Benjamin, Sarah, Mary, Hannah, Elizabeth, Esther and Abigail.(76)

On 27 September 1701, the same day he gave bond for the estate of his brother Joseph, he did the same on the estate of his brother Benjamin, apparently on a false report of his death. He was "of Bradford" when he gave bond again with Robert Mullican, said bond also being witnessed by John and Hannah Higginson. An inventory was taken on 22 October 1701 by the same Richard Kimball and Jonas Platts which included "about sixten acres of land and Medow".(77) But Benjamin was alive and well and living in Maryland, and he was back in Massachusetts in 1709, evidently to rectify the situation. On 4 April 1709 John, still said to be "of Bradford" and Benjamin signed an agreement -- John "did In ye Absence of Benja Wallingford take out Admn on said Benja Lands as may appear by Record. It is agreed by both parties yt if said administration shall have ye Improvement of said Estate for ye Time past. In consideration of his trouble Charge & care In Managing said Estate & do hereby acquitt & release ye said Admr for any reckoning considering his Adminstration & ye said Benja to Enjoy & possess all his [illeg.] of right Divided to him."(78)

John Wallingford "of Bradford" was administrator of the estate of his mother "Sarah Wallingford alias Mash" [sic], giving bond on 22 August 1709 with Joseph Peasley of Haverhill, Mass. and John Wicom of Newbury, Mass. He signed by mark, not a signature. On the back of this bond notice he is called "eldest surviving son of Sarah Wallingford alias Mash", and she is described as "Relict of Nicholas Wallingford of Bradford".(79)

Master Tate's diary reports that "Mrs. Susannah Wallingford, Widow of Jn. Wallingford, deceased, died on Sunday, February 9, 1772"(80). Shackford(81) speculates that this John may have taken this Susannah as a second wife, but the differences in their apparent ages makes this unlikely, unless, of course, he married a young girl while he was an old man.

All of John and Mary's children seem to be accounted for with no apparent gaps in years after their marriage. But if they moved part or full time to Dover, N.H. after the birth of Abigail in 1702 is it possible that they had other children born in that area who weren't recorded? It might explain several unconnected Wallingfords around that time period.

  • from http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~teschek/wallingford/i0000003.htm#i3

Notes and references:

  1. Essex County, MA, Quarterly Court Rec, 2:182; and Newbury, MA, VR, Published, 1:534 (from town records).
  2. Dover Historical Society, Vital Records of Dover, New Hampshire, 1686-1850, (Bowie, MD: Heritage Books, 1977, originally published 1894), p.128 (hereafter cited as Dover, NH, VR, Published).
  3. Probate Records of the Province of New Hampshire, (New Hampshire State Papers Series) Various publishers and dates, 1:816 (hereafter cited as NH Probate Records, State Papers Series).
  4. Essex County, MA, Quarterly Court Rec, 7:23.
  5. Mass. Archives Coll., 36:155.
  6. Newbury, MA, History of (1902), p.516.
  7. Alfred Catalfo, Jr., The History of the Town of Rollinsford, New Hampshire, 1623-1973 (Somersworth, N.H.: New Hampshire Printers, 1973), p.637 (hereafter cited as Rollinsford, NH, History of (1973)).
  8. Essex County, MA, Deeds, File 28810.
  9. Essex County, MA, Probate, File 28802.
  10. Ibid., File 28810.
  11. Ibid., File 28820.
  12. Joseph Tate, "The Diary of Master Joseph Tate of Somersworth, N.H., From a Manuscript in the Possession of the New England Historic Genealogical Society," New England Historical and Genealogical Register, vol. 73-74 (Oct 1919, Jan, April, July 1920), 74:182 (hereafter cited as Tate, Diary).
  13. Shackford, Wallingford Records, p.4.