Lemuel Hunt
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 20 Nov 1766 - Chatham, Massachusetts 1 Baptism: Death: 21 May 1831 - Chatham, Massachusetts 2 Burial: in Seaside Cemetery, Chatham 3 Cause of Death: a fall from his horse and languishment
Spouses and Children
1. *Susanna Allen (1773 - 18 Aug 1843) Marriage: 1794 Status: Children: 1. Ziba Hunt (1795- ) 2. Hannah Hunt (1796- ) 3. Keziah Hunt (1800- ) 4. Sally Hunt (1802- ) 5. Desire Hunt (Cir 1804- ) 6. Susannah Hunt (1807- ) 7. James Hunt (1812-1877) 8. Olive Hunt (1814-1847)
Notes
General:
s/o Lemuel & Desire [uncertain]
Lydia Hunt
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 1789 - Brunswick, Maine Baptism: Death: 1864 - Maine Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Ephriam Fitts (1779 - 1835) Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Sarah Fitts (1808-1856)
Notes
General:
Father: Ephraim Hunt b: 1749
Mother: Martha Lowell b: 1760
Mary Hunt
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 15 Jun 1658 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 4 Baptism: Death: Burial: 23 Aug 1676 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 5 Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Captain Peter Hunt (1615-1692) 6 Mother: Elizabeth Smith (1625-After 1676)
Notes
General:
tentative death, "Morah" instead of "Mary"
Mary Hunt
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 8 Feb 1687 - Weymouth, Massachusetts Bay Baptism: Death: 10 Jun 1706 - Windham, Connecticut 7 Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: William Hunt (1655-1727) Mother: Mary Bradford (1668-1720) 8
Spouses and Children
1. *Nathaniel Knowles (15 May 1686 - 1732) 7 Marriage: 1 Feb 1706 - Eastham, Massachusetts Status: Children: 1. Rebecca Knowles (1711- ) 2. Mary Knowles (1713- ) 3. Malatiah Knowles (1715- )
Notes
Marriage Notes (Nathaniel Knowles)
Nathaniel3 Knowles, son of Samuel, 2 and grandson of Richard1 Knowles of Eastham, Mass. came to the Vineyard abt. 1710 settling at Chilmark. He was b. 15 May 1686 and d. prob. in 1732 in Provincetown. He m. (1) Mary Hunt ( ) b. , who d. at Windham, Conn, (whither he had removed) 10 June 1716; (2) Elizabeth Bacon 25 Apr. 1717 at Windham. He prob. returned to Cape Cod and descendants now live in Washington Co., Maine. He had issue:
By First Wife:
Rebecca,4 b. 30 Jan. 1710-11; m. George Hubbard.
Mary, b. Sept. 1713; m. William Luddington.
Malatiah, b. 4 Jan. 1714-15, (daughter).
By Second Wife:
Ruth, b. 5 Apr. 1718.
Nathaniel, b. abt. 1720.
Mercy, b. 1722. 7
Mary Hunt
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1610 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Edmund Hunt (Est 1610- ) Mother: Dorcas Oxenbridge ( - )
Spouses and Children
1. *Thomas Bonney (Est 1600 - Between 1689 and 1693) Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Thomas Bonney (1627-1735/1735) 2. John Bonney (1664-1745) 3. James Bonney (1671-1724)
Notes
Marriage Notes (Thomas Bonney)
Children
Mary BONNEY, m John Mitchell
Joseph BONNEY, m Margaret Philips
James BONNEY, m Abigail Bishop and Desire Billington
Hannah BONNEY
Sarah BONNEY, m Nathaniel Cole
Mary Hunt
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Cir 1680 - Duxbury, Plymouth Colony Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Samuel Hunt (Est 1640-Cir 1707) Mother: Mary Glass (Est 1650-Bef 1712)
Spouses and Children
1. *Jacob Burgess (18 Oct 1676 - 1769) Marriage: 27 Apr 1704 - Duxbury, Massachusetts Status: Children: 1. Zaccheus Burgess (1705-1787) 9 2. Jedidah Burgess (1706-1741) 3. Abia Burgess (1708- ) 4. Abigail Burgess (1709- ) 5. Samuel Burgess (1711- ) 6. Jacob Burgess (1715- )Michelle Lynn Hunt
![]()
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 27 Apr 1969 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Anthony Douglas Kew (27 Mar 1964 - ) 10 Marriage: 11 Sep 1993 - Maine 10 Status: Divorce - 10 Oct 2006 Children: 1. Pandora Lianne Kew (1995- ) 10
Notes
General:
residence, 1993 - Portland, Maine
1995 - 2006 Orchard Park, New York
2006 - Skowhegan, Maine 10
Nathaniel Hunt
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 31 Dec 1670 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 4 Baptism: Death: 28 Aug 1671 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 5 Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Captain Peter Hunt (1615-1692) 6 Mother: Elizabeth Smith (1625-After 1676)Nathaniel T Hunt
![]()
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 1817 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Erleen Sophie Doane (17 Aug 1839 - ) 11 Marriage: 1 Jun 1865 - Abington, Massachusetts 12 Status:Olive Hunt
![]()
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 13 May 1814 - Chatham, Massachusetts 13 Baptism: Death: 24 Dec 1847 - Chatham, Massachusetts 14 Burial: Cause of Death: lung fever
Parents
Father: Lemuel Hunt (1766-1831) Mother: Susanna Allen (1773-1843)
Spouses and Children
1. *Samuel Dill (10 Oct 1813 - ) Marriage: 1835 - Chatham, Massachusetts Status:Peter Hunt
![]()
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 14 Jun 1650 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 4 Baptism: Death: Burial: 25 Aug 1676 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 5 Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Captain Peter Hunt (1615-1692) 6 Mother: Elizabeth Smith (1625-After 1676)
Spouses and Children
1. *Rebecca Paine (Est 1650 - 23 Feb 1718) Marriage: 24 Dec 1673 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 15 Status:Captain Peter Hunt
![]()
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: 1615 - of Titenden Parish, Lee, Buckingham Baptism: 4 Jul 1619 Death: Burial: 21 Oct 1692 - Rehoboth, Massachusetts 5 Cause of Death:
Events
• Alt Birth, , Hingham, Norfolk in Hingham, Norfolk
Parents
Father: Enoch Hunt (1594-1653) Mother:
Spouses and Children
1. *Elizabeth Smith (1625 - After 1676) Marriage: 14 Dec 1646 - Rehoboth, Massachusetts Status: Children: 1. Sarah Hunt (1646-1673) 2. Judah Hunt (1648- ) 3. Peter Hunt (1650-1676) 4. Enoch Hunt (1652-1712) 5. Elizabeth Hunt (1654- ) 6. Lieutenant John Hunt (1656-1716) 7. Mary Hunt (1658-1676) 8. Ephraim Hunt (1661-1694) 9. Tabitha Hunt (1663-1676) 5 10. Daniel Hunt (1665-1673) 11. Benjamin Hunt (1668- ) 12. Nathaniel Hunt (1670-1671)
Notes
General:
There is disputed info about his dates and places.
Peter Hunt
![]()
Sex: MAKA: Frederick Schnitzer
Individual Information
Birth: 1896 - New Jersey Baptism: Death: Apr 1967 - Orleans, Massachusetts Burial: Cause of Death:
Notes
General:
CHAPTER VIII
Peter Hunt
"PETER HUNT is the greatest salesman in the country," says John Whorf. I tell you, that fellow can sell anything."
Peter Hunt — of course you know — is the man who glorified American furniture with European peasant art. For some 35 years he operated his Peasant Village and other shops in Provincetown. For the past few years he has only operated his art shop in Orleans.
The Orleans shop is located on Route 28 across from the Southward Inn. He sells paintings, carvings, furniture and varied bibelots. In the fall of 1956 he had a small modernistic home built for himself at the rear of the shop. It was designed by Nathaniel Saltonstall, Boston architect and operator of the former Mayo Hill Art Gallery in Wellfleet. It has a living-room, bedroom, kitchen and bath. Walls on two sides are mostly glass.
Because of the limited wall space he cannot possibly hang all the paintings he owns at one time. So he periodically changes them.
He owns paintings by Picasso, Maurice Sterne, John Whorf, Hans Hofmann, Lodewijk Bruckman, Ethel Edwards, Sol Wilson, Chaim Gross, Howard Gibbs, Bruce McKain and other artists.
A native New Yorker, Peter has lived most of his life there and in New Jersey. He is the author of three books: "Peter Hunt's Workbook," "Peter Hunt's How-To-Do-It Book" and "Peter Hunt's Cape Cod Cookbook."
...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.peasantvillage.com/, http://www.peasantvillage.com/Biography.htm
Folk Artist Peter Hunt
Peter Hunt was a talented folk artist, a self-made celebrity and a relentless entrepreneur who made a name for himself with his peasant decorations from the 1930s through the 1960s. A friend of the wealthy, the artistic and the odd-ball, Peter Hunt and his Peasant Village was a well-known fixture
on Cape Cod, where summer visitors could run into one of his easily recognizable friends, including high-powered executives like James Keating of Chicago, the savvy cosmetics queen Helena Rubenstein, the scandal-stirring opera singer Ganna Walska and, of course, the now-famous Provincetown artists John Whorf, Bruce McKain and Frederick Waugh.
Hunt had a habit of embellishing, not just in furniture decoration, but in stories about his beginnings. A longstanding Cape Cod legend (that Hunt originated and promoted) held that he first arrived in Provincetown in the early 1920s when the yacht Hunt shared with Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald was forced to take safe harbor in the face of a storm. Wearing a sweeping black cape and a black broad-rimmed hat, holding the leashes of his playful afghan hounds while a red-headed dwarf scurried behind, Hunt said he strolled the streets of the village and declared, “This is a wonderful place. I must stay here.”
No matter how dramatic (or ordinary) his arrival, Hunt did stay in Provincetown, bringing his parents, Ma and Pa Hunt, and
establishing himself as a folk artist and furniture director at his collection of shops called Peasant Village. On what he christened Peter Hunt Lane, an alley that spilled onto Commercial Street, he employed talented young people to decorate the stools, tables, dressers, trays and other household goods in his trademark peasant style that became so popular in the 1930s and ‘40s. Among his apprentices are now well-known modern impressionists Nancy Whorf Kelly and Carol Whorf Wescott.
Hunt’s work was originally “discovered” by the well-to-do summer people on Cape Cod, who found his colorful peasant decorations the perfect accents for their cottages and retreats. They also found Hunt to be charming, witty and a great addition to cocktail parties and dinners, and his mailbox was filled with invitations from the upper crust of Boston and New York.
Soon the buyers from upscale department stores, including Bloomingdale’s, Gimbel’s and Macy’s, got wind of society’s latest
fascination in home decoration, and they clambered for Hunt to decorate more and more furnishings and knick-knacks for their stores, often featuring him in special promotions touted with full-page ads in the New York and Boston newspapers.
When the United States began fighting in World War II, Hunt brought a new angle to his work: he could show anyone how to “transform old furniture into new” (with a sponsoring line of paints from Du Pont, of course), so people could continue to conserve and recycle as the wartime government had enjoined. His booklets for Du Pont Nemours, How to Transform Old Furniture into New in 1943 and Transformagic in 1945 were immensely popular, especially after Life, House Beautiful, and Mademoiselle magazines published feature stories and photo spreads about Hunt and his furniture decorating techniques.
As his success grew, Peter Hunt used his influence to bring along other artists. He discovered the works of American primitive artist George Edwin Lothrop piled in a corner of a Boston thrift shop, and worked to revive interest in the almost-forgotten "Poet King." When Jack Amoroso was a fledgling artist looking for work as a Peasant Village apprentice, Peter Hunt took one look at Amoroso's paintings and immediately set up the young man in his own shop on Peter Hunt Lane. Today, Amoroso is a well-know Modern expressionist artist in Coconut Grove, Fla.
After the war, when trade with Europe re-opened and new styles in home furnishings could be imported, Hunt’s wealthy clients began looking abroad for interior designs. Taking advantage of the resurgence in industry and trade, Hunt began creating designs for mass market sales, and his peasant images and embellishments could be found on Meyercord decals, Rideau pottery, and Jerywil woodcrafts. Despite his efforts, the public’s interest in his peasant designs began to wane.
Hunt decided to sell Peasant Village’s properties in 1959, saying “When a customer complains about the price of a $2.50 Christmas ornament, well, then I know there’s no more money in Provincetown.” He opened Peacock Alley in Orleans on Cape Cod the following year.
At Peacock Alley, Hunt invited other artists to open shops in the rambling house, including glass artisan Bill Sydenstricker. Hunt opened his own eclectic shop, selling a combination of antiques and his peasant decorated furnishings, with his former apprentice Nancy Whorf Kelly, now grown, decorating a number of pieces on consignment that Hunt would sign and sell.
Those last years were devoted to exploring new forms of art and crafts. Hunt experimented, with some success, with decoupage
and his own version of psychedelic art in an effort to attract a new audience.
One night, in April 1967, Peter Hunt went to bed, fell asleep and never woke up. A coroner later declared the cause of death as a heart attack. A reporter attending Hunt’s funeral said of the varied people in the crowded chapel “there was at least one millionaire and one beach comber.”
The following year, Hunt’s estate was auctioned off, with the artworks and goods left from both the Peacock Alley shop and his home, garnering only $40,000.
For many years, Hunt’s pieces drifted from public notice, many forgotten in attics or sold at tag sales. But, in the past 10 years, as interest in restoration has strengthened along with a fascination with folk art and antiques, Hunt pieces are finding a new audience.
Now, in Cape Cod and New England homes Hunt pieces again take center stage as interiors and exteriors are decorated to reflect homes of days gone by. Across the country, Hunt’s peasant designs command superlative prices at antique shops, estate sales and online auctions.
Peter Hunt is back – again.
------------------------
Peter Hunt was charming, funny, outrageous and shrewd. He was a man of many talents.
Telling the truth wasn’t one of them.
That’s why it took author Lynn Van
Dine almost a decade of research and interviews to track down the real story of the magnetic Cape Cod artist in her new book, The Search for Peter Hunt (The Local History Company, 2003).
In an uncommon approach to telling the story of a most uncommon man, The Search for Peter Hunt sorts through the legends and the facts of a life of art, celebrity and struggle. And in the course of the book, Peter Hunt adds his own acerbic spin.
A Cape Cod folk artist from the 1920s through the 1960s, Peter Hunt was wildly popular across the United States for decorating furniture with whimsical designs inspired by European peasants.
Born in a New Jersey tenement, Peter Hunt reinvented his background to better win over wealthy New York and Boston matrons. With inexhaustible gaiety, he told wild stories of a royal heritage and adventures around the world to manipulate his way into New England’s poshest circles.
His ruses worked. Peter Hunt’s decorated pieces made their way into the finest homes and, soon after, they were displayed at the best department stores in New York.
All the while, Hunt was working and playing in the midst of a cultural upheaval in America. In his Bohemian circle sparkled famous and almost-famous artists, actors and writers -- playwright Eugene O’Neill, novelist Somerset Maugham, French actress Cecile Sorel, screenwriter Colin Clements, politicalwriter John Reed, singer Ganna Walska and the glamorous Helena Rubenstein.
Peter Hunt attained and maintained his high profile by promoting his painting techniques for “making old things new,” an idea seized upon by women trying to keep up their households through the Depression and World War II.
After the war, he held center stage by publishing two books on decorating furniture and selling his designs to mass market manufacturers of china, linens, paints, fabrics and home accessories.
He kept the spotlight by writing his Cape Cod Cookbook and illustrating a teenage romance set in Peter Hunt’s Peasant Village, Betty Cavanna’s Paintbox Summer.
But in the end, Peter Hunt was undermined by his own success. His designs so saturated the market, collectors and discriminating buyers eventually lost interest. His fondness for self-indulgences soon depleted his fortune. As his money evaporated, so did many of his friends. He died alone in a tiny, three-room cottage.
Peter Hunt climbed to the top on the strength of his charm, talent and an endless supply of complete fabrications. He told every story but his own.
The Search for Peter Hunt tells all the stories, real and invented in a way Peter Hunt would enjoy.
16
Sally Hunt
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 16 Jan 1802 - Chatham, Massachusetts 13 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Lemuel Hunt (1766-1831) Mother: Susanna Allen (1773-1843)Samuel Hunt
![]()
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1700 - of Braintree, Mass. Baptism: Death: 1755 - Easton, Massachusetts Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Experience Paine (17 Mar 1702 - 17 Jun 1775) Marriage: 1724 Status:
Notes
General:
Father: John HUNT
Mother: Ruth QUINCY
Samuel Hunt
Sex: M
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1640 Baptism: Death: Cir 1707 Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Mary Glass (Est 1650 - Bef 22 Feb 1712) Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Mary Hunt (Cir 1680- )Sarah Hunt
![]()
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 21 Jan 1646 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 4 Baptism: Death: 27 Oct 1673 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 17 Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Captain Peter Hunt (1615-1692) 6 Mother: Elizabeth Smith (1625-After 1676)
Spouses and Children
1. *Samuel Peck (3 Feb 1638 - 15 Mar 1699) Marriage: 1 Jun 1666 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 18 Status: Children: 1. Ann Peck (1667- ) 2. Sarah Peck (1669-1738) 3. Judeth Peck (1671-1681)
Notes
Marriage Notes (Samuel Peck)
needs work - a mess
The Gertridge genealogy has Samuel Peck, b 1638, marry Sarah on 6/1/1666, no children noted; then has John Peck, b 1623, marry Sarah 11/21/1677, with 7 children mostly preceding that marriage. The parents' places and dates are a jumble.
Children:
Jathniell Peck, b 7/24/1660; Anna Peck, 12/22/1667; Sarah Peck, 2/2/1669; Judith Peck, 7/26/1671; Noah Peck, c 1673; Jaiel Peck, 6/14/1680; Rebecka Peck, 10/22/1681; all born in Rehoboth.
19
Susannah Hunt
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 11 Aug 1807 - Chatham, Massachusetts 13 Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Lemuel Hunt (1766-1831) Mother: Susanna Allen (1773-1843)
Spouses and Children
1. *Lyman Ryder (Est 1804 - ) Marriage: 19 Mar 1833 - Chatham, Massachusetts 20 Status:Sybil P Hunt
![]()
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: Est 1820 - (Georgetown, Massachusetts) Baptism: Death: Burial: Cause of Death:
Spouses and Children
1. *Charles Boynton (Est 1820 - ) 21 Marriage: Status: Children: 1. Charles A Boynton (1842- ) 21 2. Ira Warren Boynton (1849-1849) 21 3. Olive Ann Boynton ( - ) 21Tabitha Hunt
![]()
Sex: F
Individual Information
Birth: 14 Sep 1663 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony 4 Baptism: Death: Burial: 14 Oct 1676 - Rehoboth, Plymouth Colony Cause of Death:
Parents
Father: Captain Peter Hunt (1615-1692) 6 Mother: Elizabeth Smith (1625-After 1676)
Sources
1. Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:118.
2. Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:208.
3. Robert Paine Carlson, Cape Cod Gravestones, 2003 ff. Eastham MA. CapeCodGravestones.com.
4. James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 646.
5. James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 838.
6. Robby Robinson, Gencircles - Robby1940 (Gencircles - Robby1940).
7. Charles Edward Banks, M.D, The History of Martha's Vineyard, Dukes County, Massachusetts. in three volumes (1911. Boston: George H Dean [online]
1966. Edgartown Massachusetts: Dukes County Historical Society. (reprint)), 3:228.8. Charles Edward Banks, M.D, The History of Martha's Vineyard, Dukes County, Massachusetts. in three volumes (1911. Boston: George H Dean [online]
1966. Edgartown Massachusetts: Dukes County Historical Society. (reprint)), 3:212.9. Leonard H. Smith, Jr, Vital Records of Sandwich, Massachusetts (1982. Vital Records of Southeastern Massachusetts, Vol. 3
compiled from The Mayflower Descendant, with an index of persons), 218 (MD30:103).10. A. Kew, Anthony Kew family, email.
11. births by family 1628-1855, in "Vital Records of Eastham and Orleans, Massachusetts" (2002. Oxford, Mass: Holbrook Research Institute (2 CDs). files H01_01a - H01_01g), 145.
12. Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910 (Massachusetts Archives. [online at AmericanAncestors.org (NEHGS) and FamilySearch.org]), Abington.
13. Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:119.
14. Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:399.
15. James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 198.
16. Frank Crotty, Provincetown Profiles. and others on Cape Cod (1958. Barre MA: Barre Gazette), 37-38.
17. James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 861.
18. James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 282.
19. "Gertridge Connections" (2003. gencircles), Peck - Sarah Hunt family. Lots of typos.
20. Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:252 (Nathan Underwood Esqr).
21. Vital Records of Georgetown Massachusetts to the end of the year 1849 (Salem MA: Essex Institute. 1928), 11.
1 Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:118.
2 Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:208.
3 Robert Paine Carlson, Cape Cod Gravestones, 2003 ff. Eastham MA. CapeCodGravestones.com.
4 James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 646.
5 James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 838.
6 Robby Robinson, Gencircles - Robby1940 (Gencircles - Robby1940).
7
Charles Edward Banks, M.D, The History of Martha's Vineyard, Dukes County, Massachusetts. in three volumes (1911. Boston: George H Dean [online]
1966. Edgartown Massachusetts: Dukes County Historical Society. (reprint)), 3:228.
8
Charles Edward Banks, M.D, The History of Martha's Vineyard, Dukes County, Massachusetts. in three volumes (1911. Boston: George H Dean [online]
1966. Edgartown Massachusetts: Dukes County Historical Society. (reprint)), 3:212.
9
Leonard H. Smith, Jr, Vital Records of Sandwich, Massachusetts (1982. Vital Records of Southeastern Massachusetts, Vol. 3
compiled from The Mayflower Descendant, with an index of persons), 218 (MD30:103).
10 A. Kew, Anthony Kew family, email.
11 births by family 1628-1855, in "Vital Records of Eastham and Orleans, Massachusetts" (2002. Oxford, Mass: Holbrook Research Institute (2 CDs). files H01_01a - H01_01g), 145.
12 Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910 (Massachusetts Archives. [online at AmericanAncestors.org (NEHGS) and FamilySearch.org]), Abington.
13 Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:119.
14 Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:399.
15 James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 198.
16 Frank Crotty, Provincetown Profiles. and others on Cape Cod (1958. Barre MA: Barre Gazette), 37-38.
17 James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 861.
18 James N. Arnold, Vital Records of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, 1642-1895 (1897. Providence: Narragansett Historical Publishing Co. [online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/0-rehoboth_index.htm]), 282.
19 "Gertridge Connections" (2003. gencircles), Peck - Sarah Hunt family. Lots of typos.
20 Sheila M. Dann Westgate and Anna Lowell Tomlinson, Vital Records of Chatham, Massachusetts, 1696-1850. vol. 1 (1991. Chatham Mass.: Chatham Historical Society), 1:252 (Nathan Underwood Esqr).
21
Vital Records of Georgetown Massachusetts to the end of the year 1849 (Salem MA: Essex Institute. 1928), 11.
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