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Mary Cross

Female 1671 - Yes, date unknown


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Mary Cross was born between 1667 and 1671 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts (daughter of Robert Cross and Martha Treadwell); and died.

    Notes:

    From "The Essex Antiquarian: An Illustrated Magazine Devoted to the Biography, Genealogy, History and Antiquities of Essex County, Massachusetts, Volume 1, 1897" edited by Sidney Perley. Available on GoogleBooks.

    "Mary Cross, who married Benjamin Carrill, in Ipswich, March 3, 1701-2, was daughter of Robert and Martha (Treadwell) Cross of Ipswich, and granddaughter of Robert and Hannah (Jordan) Cross of the same place. The first Robert Cross was born about 1613, and was living in Ipswich as early as 1637. His wife Hannah was daughter of Stephen Jordan. She died Oct. 29, 1677; and Mr. Cross married secondly, Mary-------. Both Mr. Cross and his wife Mary were living in 1697. His son Robert was born about 1641, and died about 1713. He married Martha Treadwell Feb. 19, 1664. She was born March 16, 1643-4; and died March 3, 1738, aged ninety-three."----Ed. (page 150)

    Mary married Benjamin Carryl on 3 Mar 1701 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts. Benjamin (son of Nathaniel Carryl and Mary Haynes) was born between 1670 and 1679 in Hopkinton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Hannah Carryl was born about 1707 in Hopkinton, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Robert Cross was born about 1641 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts; died about 1713 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    In 1667, after a day spent in military training, Robert Cross, his cousin John Andrews, jr., and a few other young men, probably under the influence of too much "sack," or aqua-vitae, committed what the court with some justice termed a "barbarous and inhuman act." They opened the grave of the Indian Sagamore of Agawam, who had been a constant friend of the first settlers of Ipswich, scattered his bones and carried his skull on a pole. Cross was apparently the ring-leader, and he was sentenced to jail until the next lecture day when he was to sit in the stocks for an hour after meeting, then to be taken back to prison to remain until he had paid a fine of L6: 13:4. After his release he was bound to good behavior and obliged to bury the sagamore's bones and erect a cover of stones two feet high on the grave. The case naturally caused a great sensation, the mildest comment being that the fines and imprisonment punished the culprits' parents, who had to find the money and replace their labor, more than it did them.*(Records and Files, III:400). Drink was Robert Cross's curse. He owned that he drank excessively in 1670, he was "much in drink" in Gloucester in September, 1671, again in Salem in 1673, and was fined for breach of the peace in 1677.
    Cross seems to have been in the coasting trade, dealing in lumber. In 1673 he had sold 2000 feet of sawed boards to Ezekiel Needham of Lynn and sued for payment of L3 in goods and a pair of shoes, winning the case. His brother Stephen Cross, who testified against him, had guaranteed Needham against loss and damage and acknowledged a judgment which Needham obtained in 1676. (Records and Files, V:185). Robert won another case against Hugh March in 1677, receiving payment of 16,000 feet of merchantable pine boards which he had twice gone to Exeter to fetch. (Records and Files, VI:285). John Lee sued him in 1680 for not delivering 3,160 feet of pine boards which he was to obtain at Lamperill river and deliver in Boston. (Records and Files; VIII:11).
    In 1680 Cross leased land on "the little neck" and engaged in a continuous feud with the fishermen who were accustomed to use the beach there. There also, in 1686, he broke open the hut of an old shepherd, Capt. John Ayres, who kept the flock on the neck, and brutally assaulted him.
    On August 29, 1694, he released to his brother Stephen all of his interest in the paternal farm at Chebacco, Stephen promising to acquit him of all obligations toward their father. (Essex Deeds, 10:49)
    On June 3, 1707, Robert Cross deeded his son Ralph Cross all his housing on "the little neck," on the south side of Jeffrey's neck where the grantor was then living, Ralph to enjoy two-thirds and to pay the grantor's son Nathaniel Cross one-third. (Essex Deeds, 19:172
    Administration on the estate of Robert Cross of Ipswich was granted to Martha Cross, his widow, and Nathaniel Cross, his only son, Abraham Foster and James Foster being their sureties, on June 27, 1713. The small property was valued at L79 by Simon Wood and Thomas Hodgkins on July 3, 1713. (Essex Probate, No.6644.

    Copied from "Descendants of Robert Cross"
    http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/w/e/i/Prudy-A-Weil-1/BOOK-0001/0067-0003.html


    Said to be the son of Robert Cross and Hannah/Anna Jordan. (Six, Wierschke Families & More).

    Robert married Martha Treadwell on 19 Feb 1664 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts. Martha was born on 16 Mar 1643 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts; died on 3 Mar 1738 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Martha Treadwell was born on 16 Mar 1643 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts; died on 3 Mar 1738 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts.

    Notes:

    Said to be the daughter of Thomas Treadwell and Mary Taylor. (Six, Wierschke Families & More). Other sources show her instead as a daughter of Thomas Treadwell and Sarah Titcomb. (Descendants of Robert Cross).

    Children:
    1. 1. Mary Cross was born between 1667 and 1671 in Ipswich, Essex County, Massachusetts; and died.