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Myrtie Bisbee Chart 2.1.1 -- Mercy Sprout

 

 

[-------- James Sproat

[           b. 1605

[

[------------ Robert Sprout

[                b. 1634 (??); died 1712, Middleboro, MA

[

Mercy Sprout, 7th Great-grandmother

b. 15 Jul 1662                  

[

[                                                   [-------- Matthew Plummer

[                                                   [

[                             [-------- Ann Plummer [GMD]

[                             [           b. 1620, Reeth, York, Eng.

[                             [                     [

[                             [                     [-------- Elizabeth Metcalf

[                             [

[------------ Elizabeth Sampson

       b. 1639, Duxbury, MA (married 1661 in Scituate)

                    [                                            [--------- John Samson

[                                            [

[                      [-------- James Samson

[                      [

[-------- Henry Sampson [GMD]

  b. 15 Jan 1603/04, Henlow, Bedfordshire, Eng.

             [

             [-------- Martha Cooper

     SEE Bisbee Chart 2.1.1.1

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301-655-5197

Mailing Address: 

635 SE Linn Street, Apt. A, Portland, OR  97202

The Hatfield Attack

 

Robert and Editha also had a daughter Sarah (Thomas’ sister) who married Samuel Kellogg.  Sarah and her infant son Joseph were killed by Indians Sept. 19, 1677 in the attack on Hatfield.  Her son Samuel was taken prisoner by the Indians and carried to Canada; he eventually returned to Colchester, CT., bought land from his brother Nathaniel and married Hannah Dickinson.  

 

While men were out working in the fields, the Indians attacked, burning houses, killing 12 people and capturing 21.  It is likely that Samuel was returned from Canada by Benjamin Waite and Stephen Jennings, two Hatfield men whose wives and children were taken captive.  

 

Waite, an accomlished Indian scout, and Jennings got approved as agents to bargain for the captives, built a canoe and went up Lake George and Lake Champlain in the winter to Quebec City, Canada.  They may have been the first English colonists on Lake Champlain.  They were able to secure the release of 17 captives and returned to New England in May 1678.  A quarter century later, Waite was killed in the Deerfield Massacre that was part of Queen Anne’s War. 

 

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