Lafferty Family | |||
Judith SMITH Born 1620, died 1655, 34 or 35 years Source "John Briggs of Newport and Portsmouth, RI," by Lilla Briggs Sampson --------------------------------------------- Mary Fisher's parents were Edward Fisher and Judith Smith: Note: Judith probably arrived in this country on the "Griffin" in 1633, with the Hutchinson party. Note: Judith was the "Judith at the Island" mentioned in the Confession and Trial of Richard Wayte, Boston, 1640, in the Wm. & Mary Quarterly. Wait was an adherent of the "Hutchinson Party", and Judith was "Judye Smyth", the maid-servant of Edward Hutchinson, brother-in-law of the famous Anne (Marbury) Hutchinson. She was admitted to membership in the Boston Church on 2 Oct 1634, and was cast out of the church less than three weeks after Anne Hutchinson herself was cast out of the church. Wait was also cast out, but petitioned to be reinstated. His petition was denied because he was "Keepinge Company with Lewde and wicked persons", in particular "Judah" Smith. He admitted that his carriage with her has bine wanton and too familiar, and he would have committed wickednes with her. However in later years she forgave him. Note: In later years, after Judith married Edward Fisher, Edward and Thomas Wait, both of Portsmouth, RI, were associated together. Note: From waitegenealogy.org, source The American Genealogist (TAG) Vol. 67, No. 4, October, 1992, "Judith At the Island: Judith (Smith) Fisher, the Waite Family of Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and Their English Origins" by Edwin G. Sanford. The articles begins: A recent article about the 1640 church trial of Richard Waite, a Boston tailor, caught my interest when there was a mention of a woman who was referred to only as "Judith at the I[s]land" (James F. Cooper Jr., "The Confessions and Trial of Richard Wayte, Boston, 1640," William and Mary Quarterly, hereafter Wm. & Mary Quart., 3d ser., 44[1987]:310-32." [NOTE: I highly recommend this article as well.] This was quite striking because the phrase "at the Island" was commonly understood in New England in 1640 to mean Aquidneck Island, i.e., the "Island of Rhode Island". ..... The two towns then comprised by Aquidneck Island - Portsmouth and Newport - probably had fewer than five hundred people in 1640. ... Of all the known people living on that island, there was only one person there in 1640 with the first name Judith. She was Judith (____) Fisher, the wife of Edward Fisher. Following the basic assumption that the Judith mentioned in the trial at Boston was the same person who married Edward Fisher of Portsmouth, R.I. a great many other facts seemed to fall into place. The author goes on to show that "Judith at the Island" had earlier been in Boston, associated with Richard Waite. While many people in Boston were named Judith, only one was a known follower of Anne Hutchinson and had been charged by colonial authorities with antinomianism. She was Judith Smith or "Judye Smith", maid-servant to Edward Hutchinson. Judith Smith's expulsion from the Boston church occurred less than three weeks after Anne herself had been thrown out. Judith Smith also had an association with Richard Waite's brother, Gamaliel, since Gamaliel was also a servant of Edward Hutchinson. When the Hutchinson party was banished from Boston, Judith, then a single woman, probably had no choice but to go to Rhode Island with her employer. Shortly afterwards she apparently married Edward Fisher. Edward Fisher and Thomas Waite, both of Portsmouth, were associated together for more than 25 years. The author cites records showing that they were granted houselots on adjoining lands and served as jurymen together, and more. Edward Fisher participated in taking Thomas Waite's inventory. Eventually the author concludes that "it would be logical to look for their origins in Alford, county Lincoln, long known as the origin of the Hutchinsons. It should not have been surprising to find upon examining the Internation Genealogical Index [IGI] that the names of Richard and Gamaliel, as well as a Thomas Waite, and a Judith Smith of the right years were actually there. The preponderance of these facts seems to point to the origins of the Waits of Boston, Thomas Waite of Portsmouth and Judith (Smith) Fisher of Portsmouth. The IGI has a number of inaccuracies in its records of these families, and the entries below come from Reginal Charles Dudding, ed., The Parish Registers of Alford and Rigsby in the County of Lincoln Collated with and Supplemented by the Bishops' Transcripts, A.D. 1538-1680 (Lincoln Rec. Soc. Pubs., Par. Reg. Sec., 3 [Horncastle, 1917]). (Rigsby-with-Ailby was a small chapelry attached to Alford; its register was kept separately, but only Bishop's Transcripts are available for the relevant period, except for a few Rigsby entries in the Alford register.)"[:ITAL] Title: Portsmouth Genealogy, Url: http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/portsmouth/index.html Abbrev: Portsmouth Genealogy web Author: David Pane-Joyce Title: waitegenealogy.org, Url: http://www.waitegenealogy.org/ Abbrev: waitegenealogy.org (web) Author: Sue Waite-Langley Page: citing TAG 67 no. 4, Oct 1992, "Judith At The Island" Another Judith Smith came to the colonies in 1638 on the "Diligent". No further investigation at this time. Married/ Related to: Edward FISHER Born 1615, died 1677 at Portsmith, RI, 61 or 62 years Of Portsmouth. RI Records. Will dated Sept. 18, 1665, names daughters Hanna BRIGGS, (her husband John BRIGGS of Portsmouth), Ruth POTTER, (wife of John POTTER of Warwick), and Mary FISHER, and wife Judith. The will was proved, 5 Oct, 1677, and receipt given for legacies from father-in-law Edward FISHER by Thomas BRIGGS of Dartmouth, husband of Mary BRIGGS; John POTTER, husband of Ruth PORTER; and John BRIGGS, husband of Hanna BRIGGS, on 6 Jan 1682. This means that Mary was married between 1665 and 1682. Her marriage record is filed in Newport Co. RI marriages and probate records. A freeman in 1655, of Portsmouth. Birthdates from Sherwood Orison Cole, World Family Tree, Vol 27, Tree1809 Also listed in Ancestral Heads of New England Families, Surnames E-F, page-83, and as a representative in Portsmouty, 1672 and 1673 (Peirce's List) Mentioned in the will of President John Sanford, founder of the Sanford family of Rhode Island., who died in 1653 who named his brother in law Edward Hutchinson and a loving and trusty friend, Edward Fisher of Portsmouth as overseers of his will. (Found in Genealogies of Rhode Island Families, Vol II, page 139 Children: 1. Hannah FISHERBorn ± 1644, died after 1727 at Tiverton, RI In 1727, she was declared non-compis mentos and guardians were appointed for her. From Lila Sampson, 1930, viz:Henry Howland and John Russell Hannah was the sister of Mary FISHER who married the brother of John Jr., Thomas BRIGGS. Will dated Sept. 18, 1665, names Hanna. She and husband John acknowledge receipt of land in 1677 and deed recorded in 1682. Newport Co. RI Marriages Probate records show that John and Hannah (of Edward and Judith) were married 1665. In 1727, she was declared non-compis mentos and guardians were appointed for her. From Lila Sampson, 1930 Her sister, Frances, may have been the one who married another John BRIGGS of North Kingston, RI. (2003--indeed she did. See Frances and Mary FISHER.) Hannah was the sister of Mary FISHER who married the brother of John Jr., Thomas BRIGGS Will dated Sept. 18, 1665, names Hanna. She and husband John acknowledge receipt of land in 1677 and deed recorded in 1682. Newport Co. RI Marriages Probate records show that John and Hannah (of Edward and Judith) were married 1665. 2. Mary FISHERDied 1717 In Lilla BRIGGS SAMPSON's manuscript she is inconsistent in naming the father of Mary FISHER. On p.5 of the section on John, she states that John's son John married Hannah FISHER, daughter of Edward FISHER and sister to Mary FISHER who married his brother, Thomas BRIGGS. And on p.1 of the Thomas section, she states that Mary was the daughter of Samuel FISHER. WRONG! (In late 2003, I learned the other sister Frances, who is married to another John, is also my ancestor.) See notes on Frances FISHER Since John Osborne Austin states on p. 26 of his book that Mary was the daughter of Edward and Judith FISHER, that is probably the correct parentage. (Lilla Elizabeth BRIGGS SAMPSON made many errors in her manuscript, and I do not consider her an authority. She combined my second great grandfather, Giles BRIGGS, with another Giles, and it took me many years to find the correct combination. EL) per Lila Sampson, 1930: In 1727 she was declared non-compos mentis and guardians were appointed for her.In Lilla BRIGGS SAMPSON's manuscript she is inconsistent in naming the father of Mary FISHER. On p.5 of the section on John, she states that John's son John married Hannah FISHER, daughter of Edward FISHER and sister to Mary FISHER who married his brother, Thomas BRIGGS. And on p.1 of the Thomas section, she states that Mary was the daughter of Samuel FISHER. WRONG! (In late 2003, I learned the other sister Frances, who is married to another John, is also my ancestor.) See notes on Frances FISHER Since John Osborne Austin states on p. 26 of his book that Mary was the daughter of Edward and Judith FISHER, that is probably the correct parentage. (Lilla Elizabeth BRIGGS SAMPSON made many errors in her manuscript, and I do not consider her an authority. She combined my second great grandfather, Giles BRIGGS, with another Giles, and it took me many years to find the correct combination. EL) 3. Name filtered PRIVACY FILTER |