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Elizabeth HUMPHREY

Elizabeth HUMPHREY

Female 1717 - Yes, date unknown

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elizabeth HUMPHREY was born on 9 Jul 1717 (daughter of Ensign Samuel HUMPHREY and Lydia NORTH); and died.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 14660BD51667459980145855ED89DAC20837

    Elizabeth married Joseph WILCOX (WILCOXSON) on 27 Oct 1735. Joseph (son of Joseph WILCOX (WILCOXSON) and Abigail THRALL) died on 15 Jan 1759 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    NOTE MARRIED


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Ensign Samuel HUMPHREY was born on 17 May 1686 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut (son of Lt. Samuel HUMPHREY and Mary Buell MILLS); died on 16 Oct 1759 in Goshen, Litchfield County, Connecticutt.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 2755C11F6AD84304AA78F550C160A8677C4F

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: Ensign Samuel, son of Lt. Samuel, married four times. His first marriage was to Hannah Phelps, his second was to Mary Tuller, third to Lydia North and fourth to Mary Orton. While a resident of Simsbury, He is said to have been a merchant trader, was a man of good education and somewhat in the habit of writing.

    Samuel married Lydia NORTH in Dec 1714 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut. Lydia and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Lydia NORTH and died.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: D8FF41AE2EA44D5FA97801D8FB4DFBF071E9

    Children:
    1. Lydia HUMPHREYS was born on 7 Nov 1715; died in 1775.
    2. 1. Elizabeth HUMPHREY was born on 9 Jul 1717; and died.
    3. Tryphena HUMPHREY was born on 29 Jan 1722 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 2 Mar 1752 in Canton, Hartford, Connecticut.
    4. Mary HUMPHREY was born in 1723; died on 2 Sep 1756.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Lt. Samuel HUMPHREY was born on 15 May 1656 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut (son of Michael HUMPHREY and Priscilla GRANT); died on 15 Jun 1736 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 97C3B4D7CFE34E8DA241EDA7225D01E85147

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: Bir-Mar-Death-Ord; FGR Film # 1274379 It appears that a close relationship between the Mills and Humphreys families continued through sucessive generations and several Humphreys-Mills marriages are rec orded. Samuel Humphrey was a prominent and highly respected citizen of Simsbury. He removed with his father from Windsor about 1669 to Simsbury. At that time it was called " Massacoe". He was made Justice of the Peace in Hartford County by the General Assembly, May 1712, 1714, 1715 and 1716. He was Representative of Simsbury in the General Assembly in 1792, 1719, and 1722-1725. He earned the rank of Lieutenant about 1709\10. His commission was signed by Governor Saltonstall and was in the possession of one of his descendants as of 1883. Biography: Bir-Mar-Ord, FGR Film# 1274379

    Samuel married Mary Buell MILLS on 15 Jun 1686 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut. Mary (daughter of Simon MILLS and Mary BUELL) was born on 8 Dec 1662 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 4 Apr 1730 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Buell MILLS was born on 8 Dec 1662 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut (daughter of Simon MILLS and Mary BUELL); died on 4 Apr 1730 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 6B2C309DF7204666873AD1E93EDB018E4A7D

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: "Having been given a grant of land in the new plantation, at that time called Massaco,(after 1670) Marys' father Simon took his family consisting of himself and wife Mary, children Mary, Hannah, John and Sarah, over the Talcott Mountains, to a new home in the undeveloped plantation, later named Simsbury, Connecticut. Michael Humphreys, father of Samuel, was also one of the early Grantees at Massaco. Mary and her future husband Samuel Humphreys, grew up in Simsbury under similar conditions, both experienceing the hardships of pioneer living, and the concern caused by the Indian hostilities to be followed by the burning of Simsbury on 26 March 1676 (History of Hartford County, 1633-1884 by J. Hammond Trumbull, Vol. II, p 342). Mary and her parents lived in Simsbury about five years before, in response to a town warning, caused by an expected Indian attack, the family returned to Windsor. On this return trip, Mary then about fourteen years of age, must have shared with her mother, the care of the six other children, all younger. It may have been after Mary's brother Simon Mills Jr. was born about 1678, that the Mills family went back to continue their residence in Simsbury. By this time it is assumed that a new house had been built. A short time after their return, probably 1680, Mary married Samuel Humphreys". BIOGRAPHY: About the time of their marriage, Mary's father gave land to his son-in-law, Samuel: "Saml Humphries House lott; Land in Simsbury...belonging to Saml Humphries..one parcell which he ye sd Saml Humphries have on his father mils; fer a House lot; which house lot is Scituate at wetoug...and is by estimation four accres one rodd and Tweenty perches be it more or les s..." BIOGRAPHY: It is thought that Samuel and Mary Humphreys lived in that part of Simsbury, east of the Farmington River, known as Weatogue Houses, and that their home lot may have adjoined that of Mary's brother Simon who, in accord with the final order of distribution inherited his father's home lot." BIOGRAPHY: On 6 July 1683, Mary's father died. Mary's share of her father's Estate signed for by her husband Samuel Humphreys, as given on the original papers, is itemized and reads, in part, as follows; To Samuel Humfrys Husband to Mary the eldest dayghter--a home lott; a cow.. a rug; a bedstead; one chest...two pewter; a great kettle... two smoothing Irons; a cradle... The value totaled 13 pounds, 16 shillins and 3 pence. BIOGRAPHY: Mary's mother married Samuel Bissell of Windsor and upon her death on 24 Jun 1718 read; "Group 1 unto my eldest daughter Mary the wife of Samuel Humphreys, my pillion 2 & to said Mary, & to My Daughters Hannah and Elizabeth all my waring cloaths to be divided equally amongst them thre". BIOGRAPHY: It appears that a close relationship between the Mills and Humphreys families continued through many generations, and several Humphreys-Mills marriages are recored. dl

    Children:
    1. Mary HUMPHREY was born on 16 Nov 1681 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 18 Jul 1737 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    2. Elizabeth HUMPHREY was born on 22 Apr 1684 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died about 1778.
    3. 2. Ensign Samuel HUMPHREY was born on 17 May 1686 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 16 Oct 1759 in Goshen, Litchfield County, Connecticutt.
    4. Jonathan HUMPHREY was born on 2 Dec 1688 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 14 Jun 1749 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    5. Charles HUMPHREY was born about 1693 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 14 May 1774 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    6. Hannah HUMPHREY was born on 6 Apr 1697 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; and died.
    7. Abigail HUMPHREY was born on 13 Jan 1698 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 17 Mar 1760 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    8. Capt. Noah HUMPHREY was born on 30 Mar 1707 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died in Jul 1785 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Michael HUMPHREY was born in 1607 in Of Lyme Regis, Dorset, England; was christened on 10 Sep 1620 in Lyme Regis, Dorsetshire, England (son of Samuel HUMPHREY and Susanna); died on 19 Mar 1695 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 8EBF88C53BDA47B2A5545D2B1EF8940FE2BC

    Notes:

    Letter to Michael Dated 24 Jan 1648 From his parents in Lyme "My Endeared son I have not read one line from you this 10 months and now the intent is only to entreat you that you be pleased to write me a line or two wheather you may come on to me or no also of the livelihood of the place. If dead I shall entreat the pity to whom this may belong to return me an answer if by any means possible, that so I may know how passages dust go with you or any whom it may concern. And indeed I have a long time waited upon the most high God, how he hath pleased through the riches of his mercy to declare his love unto me being a nothing creature. I must say as the Psalmist doth, Oh the depth of the love of God bestowed upon me a nothing creature. I have found the goodness of God working abundantly for an through the riches of his mercy toward me. Oh the fullness of joy and sweetness is found by me in the Lord Jesus. I do speak unto Thee even this language, come my son come my dear be not dishearted tis he that worketh in us both the will and the dead. God from the scripture speaks unto us in this language and declare himself as followth I am God I change not. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I am God and change not. I am God and there is more besides me. Oh my child thou art the child of mine bosom. Fear not, God is found in them that sought him not. The tongue cannot express how he hath been found by my trouble in so much that I cannot say trouble but much joy in it. (one line in lost and it continues).... "sorrows but joy abundantly. Dear child U can say but little more, but omega the beginning and the end. Alpha everlasting none by him. My dear, the last letter I wrote unto you was the 18th of May 1648 by a friend which God was pleased to give you life, came safe to your hand. In it I advised you the rec't of your writing six months before, by whom it did take notice of your marriage and also that you were gone further."(the last fold of page ,about ten lines are lost and conclusion of the letter is the top of the reverse side of the paper) "More than that we are all dear affectionate friends to the end of the world. Mr Samuell Humphrey Susanna Hump rey 1648 1648 Know this that we are all in good health and live well." This letter has been copied from the fragments of the ancient letter, written on course paper, faintly ruled. It was written in hand with capital letters flourished and apparently of the Same hand. It is not known which parent wrote it, but both signatures are of the writer. It is assumed that it was written by Susanna. Copied by Otis M. Humphrey M.D. Boston Mass 13 July 1868 Letter to Michael Dated 24 Jan 1648 From his parents in Lyme "My Endeared son I have not read one line from you this 10 months and now the intent is only to entreat you that you be pleased to write me a line or two wheather you may come on to me or no also of the livelihood of the place. If dead I shall entreat the pity to whom this may belong to return me an answer if by any means possible, that so I may know how passages dust go with you or any whom it may concern. And indeed I have a long time waited upon the most high God, how he hath pleased through the riches of his mercy to declare his love unto me being a nothing creature. I must say as the Psalmist doth, Oh the depth of the love of God bestowed upon me a nothing creature. I have found the goodness of God working abundantly for an through the riches of his mercy toward me. Oh the fullness of joy and sweetness is found by me in the Lord Jesus. I do speak unto Thee even this language, come my son come my dear be not dishearted tis he that worketh in us both the will and the dead. God from the scripture speaks unto us in this language and declare himself as followth I am God I change not. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I am God and change not. I am God and there is more besides me. Oh my child thou art the child of mine bosom. Fear not, God is found in them that sought him not. The tongue cannot express how he hath been found by my trouble in so much that I cannot say trouble but much joy in it. (one line in lost and it continues).... "sorrows but joy abundantly. Dear child U can say but little more, but omega the beginning and the end. Alpha everlasting none by him. My dear, the last letter I wrote unto you was the 18th of May 1648 by a friend which God was pleased to give you life, came safe to your hand. In it I advised you the rec't of your writing six months before, by whom it did take notice of your marriage and also that you were gone further."(the last fold of page ,about ten lines are lost and conclusion of the letter is the top of the reverse side of the paper) "More than that we are all dear affectionate friends to the end of the world. Mr Samuell Humphrey Susanna Hump rey 1648 1648 Know this that we are all in good health and live well." This letter has been copied from the fragments of the ancient letter, written on course paper, faintly ruled. It was written in hand with capital letters flourished and apparently of the Same hand. It is not known which parent wrote it, but both signatures are of the writer. It is assumed that it was written by Susanna. Copied by Otis M. Humphrey M.D. Boston Mass 13 July 1868 BIOGRAPHY: Bir-Mar-Ord; FGR Film # 1274379 and #261240 MATTHEW GRANT, WILLIAM BUELL, MICHAEL HUMPHREYS, SIMON MILLS, AND JOHN CASE On March 20, 1630, a ship called the "Mary and John" sailed from Plymouth, England, bearing 140 persons bound for New England in the American colonies. On May 30, they anchored in New England at the harbor of Nantasket (now Hull), Massachusetts. Among these passengers was a young man named Matthew Grant. The "Mary and John"'s passengers stayed briefly at the nearby town of Dorchester, Massachusetts. In September 1633, some of them set sail again, down the New England Coast to a site where a scouting colony had designed a section of land for a new town of Windsor, Connecticut. In the coming months, Matthew Grant, like other members of the "Mary and John"'s party and some other colonists, made the short voyage to help establish Windsor. In 1635 Windsor's settlers began dividing the land into lots for distribution among the town's founders. As a professional serveyor, Matthew Grant was closely involved in this process. Michael Humphreys, was a pitch-and-tar manufacturer who received land title in 1647, the same year he married Matthew Grant's daughter Priscilla. In the 1660's, a major dispute wracked the Windsor Community Church (and other churches across New England). Most New England churches, including Windsor's, were governed by townsmen with strict Puritan inclinations. As immigration in the region grew, increasing numbers of settlers arrived who were more sympathetic to the established Church of England than to Puritan beliefs. Legally, these non-Puritan settlers had little choice other than to attend the Puritan worship services and to pay taxes to support the church and the pastor's family. The non-Puritan settlers began to insist that the laws governing church membership and support be modified to reflect the changing mix of Windsor's residents. Michael Humphreys was particularly outspoken on this point, even standing trial in local court for his challenge to the community church. By 1669, he had had enough. He left Windsor to helped establish the nearby settlement of Simsbury. Also among our Windsor ancestors to move to Simsbury were John Case and Simon Mills, Jr., the son of the early settler of Windsor, and his wife Mary Buell, the daughter of William Buell. Bradley Rymph Genealogy Page. BIOGRAPHY: hum3.paf Moved to Windsor, CT 1642, Freeman in 1657, to Simsbury 1669 Lived in 1642 at Main St. S of Sandy Hill Road, house on W end opposite where road turns N Engaged in making tar and pitch in Simsbury with John Tinker and John Griffin, in 1662 engaged in mercantile transactions with his brother Samuel and Henry Pose in St. Malo, France (see Private Controversies, Vol I, Docs. 48-59. State Library, Hartford). As a member of the Church of England he protested, together with James Eno and others, against paying taxes for the support of ministry in Windsor. In 1667, is one of the Windsor "dragoons". In 1669 became one of the earliest 13 and most prominent settlers of Simsbury (formerly Massacco). In 1670, one of the State deputies to General Court. Resided in that part of Simsbury known as Westogue. 1681-1685 was active in establishing the ministry, etc, in Sims; was evidently a leading man in civil and ecclesiastical matters; date of death not known, but division of his estate was 19 March 1695/6. Contents of Letter to Michael Dated 24 Jan 1648 from his parents in Lyme Regis, Dorset, England My Endeared Son I have not read one line from you this 10 months and now the intent is only to entreat you that you be pleased to write me a line or two wheather you may come on to me or no also of the livelihood of the place. If dead I shall entreat the pity to whom this may belong to return me an answer if by any means possible, that so I may know how passages dust go with you or any whom it may concern. And indeed I have a long time waited upon the most high God, How he hath pleased through the riches of his mercy to declare his love unto me being a nothing creature. I must say as the Psalmist doth, Oh the depth of the love of God bestowed upon me a nothing creature. I have found the goodness of God working abundantly for an through the riches of his mercy toward me. Oh the fullness of joy and sweetness is found by me in the Lord Jesus. I do speak unto Thee even this language, come my son com my dear be not dishearted tis he that worketh in us both the will and the dead. God from the scripture speaks unto us in this language and declare himself as followth I am God I change not. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end. I am God and change not. I am God and there is more besides me. Oh my child thou art the child of mine bosom. Fear not, God is found in them that sought him not. The tongue cannot express how he hath been found by my trouble in so much that I cannot say trouble but much joy in it. (one line in lost and it continues)...."sorrows but joy abundantly. Dear child U can say but little more, but omega the beginning and the end. Alpha everlating none by him. My dear, the last letter I wrote unto you was the 18th of may 1648 by a friend which God was pleased to give you life, came safe to your hand. In it I advised you the rec't of your writing six months before, by whom it did take notice of your marriage and also that you were gone further."(the last fold of page, about ten lines are lost and conclusion of the letter is the top of the reverse side of the paper) "More than that we are all dear affectionate friends to the end of the world. Mr. Samuell Humphrey Susanna Humprey 1648 1648 Know this that we are all in good health and live well." This letter has ben copied from the fragments of the ancient letter, written on course paper, faintly ruled. It was written in hand with capital letters flourished and apparently of the same hand. It is not know which parent wrote it, but both signatures are of the writer. It is assumed that it was written by Susanna. Copied by Otis M. Humphrey M.D. Boston Mass 13 July 1868 CONFLICT: birth date 10 sep 1620, hum3.paf

    Michael married Priscilla GRANT on 14 Oct 1647 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut. Priscilla (daughter of Matthew GRANT and Priscilla GREY) was born on 14 Sep 1626 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 21 Oct 1669 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Priscilla GRANT was born on 14 Sep 1626 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut (daughter of Matthew GRANT and Priscilla GREY); died on 21 Oct 1669 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: FA5C0E454E604302B52A953C63C8A3F50F58

    Children:
    1. Sgt. John HUMPHREY was born on 7 Jun 1650 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 14 Jan 1697 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    2. Mary HUMPHREY was born on 24 Oct 1653 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died after 1697.
    3. 4. Lt. Samuel HUMPHREY was born on 15 May 1656 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 15 Jun 1736 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    4. Sarah HUMPHREY was born on 6 Mar 1658 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 20 Nov 1726.
    5. Martha HUMPHREY was born on 5 Oct 1663 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died in 1730.
    6. Abigail HUMPHREY was born on 23 Mar 1666 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 27 Jun 1697 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    7. Hannah HUMPHREY was born on 21 Oct 1669 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 20 Dec 1750 in Connecticut.

  3. 10.  Simon MILLS was born on 16 Sep 1637 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut (son of Simeon MILLS and Sarah BISSELL); died on 8 Jun 1683 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 2CCDC3B56E9C495BAFFB6778C896E4382280

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: Simons' parents died when he was very young, about 1637/1638. It is believed that he was cared for by his uncle Simon. This uncle Simon Mills was an early settler, baker, and trader. It is believed that Simon grew up near the southern shoreline of the Farmington River where his uncle had land granted by a plantation in 1640. On the 10 of May 1653, when Simon was about 16 he purchased a houselot, with meadow adjoining (Loomis 1:64a) or his Uncle purchased it for him. Records show that this uncle kept an account with John Pynchon, a merchant of Springfield, Massachusetts for at least 14 years after the purchase of this land so it is presummed that this land was used just for grazing cattle because it was some distance for the Mill Brook district. This land has been identified as property on Broad Street (between Rowland Lane on the east, and Broad Street on the west and between the present "Windsor House" at the corner of Broad and Center Streets at the northern end, and the Windsor Library at the southern end of Windsor centere Green) (Stiles 2:500). After Simon married Mary Buell they made there residence on this land and that it was where their first seven children were born, three of whom died young. On March 23, 1660, Simon was chosen "Fence Viewer" by the Town of Windsor (Windsor Town Acts, 1:47b) and he was named as security in the pruchase of two stears and a cow by Edward King of Thomas Ford. Simon became a supporting member of the First Church in Windsor organized in 1630 and built in Windsor on the site marked by Founders Monument in 1960. Simon purchased a short seat, holding 3 persons. Mary's father was the carpenter who built the church. After 1670, Simon, having been given a grant of land in the new plantation, at that time called Massaco (later called Simsbury), took his family, wife Mary and children Mary, Hannah, John and Sarah, over the Talcott Mountains to a new home in the undeveloped plantation. When the town was burned in 1675 by King Philip's Indians, they returned temporarily to Windsor. Information from Hazel Bird. BIOGRAPHY: Some sources site Simons father as Simon instead of John. BIOGRAPHY: MATTHEW GRANT, WILLIAM BUELL, MICHAEL HUMPHREYS, SIMON MILLS, AND JOHN CASE On March 20, 1630, a ship called the "Mary and John" sailed from Plymouth, England, bearing 140 persons bound for New England in the American colonies. On May 30, they anchored in New England at the harbor of Nantasket (now Hull), Massachusetts. Among these passengers was a young man named Matthew Grant. The "Mary and John"'s passengers stayed briefly at the nearby town of Dorchester, Massachusetts. In September 1633, some of them set sail again, down the New England Coast to a site where a scouting colony had designed a section of land for a new town of Windsor, Connecticut. In the coming months, Matthew Grant, like other members of the "Mary and John"'s party and some other colonists, made the short voyage to help establish Windsor. In 1635 Windsor's settlers began dividing the land into lots for distribution among the town's founders. As a professional serveyor, Matthew Grant was closely involved in this process. BIOGRAPHY: Indeed, Matthew Grant was one of the most influential persons nvolved in the establishment of Windsor. In addition to being the town's surveyor for several years, he served as its Town Clerk for some terms. He maintained a thorough volume called the Old Church Records, which is one of the most important records documenting Windsor's early history. BIOGRAPHY: Michael Humphreys, was a pitch-and-tar manufacturer who received land title in 1647, the same year he married Matthew Grant's daughter Priscilla. In 1653, Simon Mills, a trader, bought land in Windsor, and, at some point, John Case also bought land in the town. BIOGRAPHY: In the 1660's, a major dispute wracked the Windsor Community Church (and other churches across New England). Most New England churches, including Windsor's, were governed by townsmen with strict Puritan inclinations. As immigration in the region grew, increasing numbers of settlers arrived who were more sympathetic to the established Church of England than to Puritan beliefs. Legally, these non-Puritan settlers had little choice other than to attend the Puritan worship services and to pay taxes to support the church and the pastor's family. The non-Puritan settlers began to insist that the laws governing church membership and support be modified to reflect the changing mix of Windsor's residents. BIOGRAPHY: Michael Humphreys was particularly outspoken on this point, even standing trial in local court for his challenge to the community church. By 1669, he had had enough. He left Windsor to helped establish the nearby settlement of Simsbury. Also among our Windsor ancestors to move to Simsbury were John Case and Simon Mills, Jr., the son of the early settler of Windsor, and his wife Mary Buell, the daughter of William Buell. Bradley Rymph Genealogy Page.

    Simon married Mary BUELL on 23 Feb 1659 in Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut. Mary (daughter of William BUELL and Mary POST) was born on 3 Sep 1642 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 24 Jun 1718 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Mary BUELL was born on 3 Sep 1642 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut (daughter of William BUELL and Mary POST); died on 24 Jun 1718 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: CCA7E0BF2D254E00BC75E520FD1B8D52DFFD

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: The original Will and original Inventory, which is kept on file at the Connecticut State Library, for the Estate of Mary Buell Mills Bissel, dated 9 Apr 1718 named her daughters, Mary, Hannah and Elizabeth, and grandchildren, heirs of son John Mills and heirs of daughter Sarah Ellsworth. She named son Simon Mills Jr., sole Executor of her Estate, and signed the document "Mary Bifel". A few of the items listed on the Inventory are: one mohair coat, one serge manto, riding hood, one silk hood, one pair of shoes, two pairs of gloves, a blue calico apron, one feather bed, two blankets, a warming pan, a spinning wheel, a great wheel, wool cards, one cow and one sheep. Information from Hazel Bird.

    Children:
    1. Samuel MILLS was born on 23 Apr 1661 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 19 May 1661 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; was buried in May 1661 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    2. Simon MILLS was born on 21 Jan 1662 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut; died in 1662 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    3. 5. Mary Buell MILLS was born on 8 Dec 1662 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 4 Apr 1730 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    4. Hannah MILLS was born in 1665 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died after 5 May 1721 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    5. Simon MILLS was born on 1 May 1667 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died before 6 Jul 1683 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    6. John MILLS, II was born on 23 Jun 1668 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died on 12 Mar 1697 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    7. Sarah MILLS was born on 16 Sep 1670 in Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; died on 25 Mar 1719 in Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America; was buried in 1719 in Edwards Cemetery, South Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut Colony, British Colonial America.
    8. Abigail MILLS was born in 1672 in East Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut; died on 24 Jul 1691 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    9. Elizabeth MILLS was born in 1673-1674 in East Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut; died in Jan 1777.
    10. Prudence MILLS was born in 1676 in East Simsbury, Hartford, Connecticut; died in 1683 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.
    11. Simon MILLS, Jr. was born about 1678 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; was christened on 11 May 1679 in Windsor, Hartford County, Connecticut; died after 8 Mar 1760 in Simsbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.