description

My own life and my opinions are shared at When I was 69.

REMEMBER: In North America, the month of September 1752 was exceptionally short, skipping 11 days, when the Gregorian Calendar was adapted from the old Julian one, which didn't have leap year days.

Friday, December 8, 2017

Hopestill Tyler 1646–1734


Hopestill Tyler

1646–1734
Birth 28 JAN 1646 Andover, Essex, Massachusetts Colony
Death 20 JAN 1734 Preston City, New London, Conn

Hopestill was one of twins born to Job Tyler (his life in this blog HERE) and Mary Horton Tyler, (She's in this blog here) but his twin, John, didn't live through his birth.  Hopestill was thus the second son born in the family in which 6 of the 9 born lived to adulthood )

His father, Job Tyler (1617-1700) apprenticed him to Thomas Chandler and father Job decided for some reason to back out of the agreement.  He even stole the document of the apprenticeship from the home of Nathan Parker where it was being kept.  And this dispute was in various courts over a 10 year period, with the conclusion that, due to Job Tyler being poor, he would need to pay "not more than six pounds", and write an apology to be posted in both Andover and Roxbury, to be legible, and to remain up for 14 days, starting Jan 25, 1665.  The confession is transcribed in the source document North America, Family Histories 1500-2000, p 7. It is amusing in that he continues to slander Thomas Chandler by repeating his derogatory comments about him, while asking his forgiveness.

Hopestill married by 1667 when he was 20 or 21 years old.  Since the court case was finally adjudicated in 1665, he could have completed an apprenticeship easily in that time, and started his own business. (NOTE: SEE BELOW!)

He married Mary Lovett, who's father Daniel Lovett performed the ceremony.  The Hopestill Tylers had 10 children, of which at least the last birth was twins.  They lived either in Mendon, Roxbury or Andover, MA at different times.

However, this family was caught up in the Salem Witch Trials of 1692, with his wife, Mary and three of their daughters being accused of witchcraft. 



I will dedicate a separate post to Mary Lovett Tyler.  But Hopestill and his whole family moved away from Andover MA to Preston, CT as a result of the hysteria and defamation of his family. He sold his Andover property in 1697.  (Source: Pequot Plantation: The Story of an Early Colonial Settlement, Richard A. Radune)

In 1698 Hopestill joined the church in Preston, CT, and a year later his wife did. 


His headstone once said something, but the Preston City Cemetery record only says:
Hopestill Tyler, died Oct. 7, 1762, age 78 (SEE BELOW FOR ANOTHER LISTING)

Preston Cemetery, CT

I just found a great description of Hopestill's life at the Find a Grave site...and I'll include it here to answer some of my questions.  More of it is also saved for other family member's histories.




Third of eight children, third son and twin of fourth son of Job Tyler (1619-1700) and Mary Horton (1619-1700).
Husband of Mary Lovett married 28 Jan 1668 in Menden, Worcester, MA.
 Father of:

* Mary Tyler 1669-1733
* Daniel Tyler Sr. 1673-1734
* Martha Tyler 1676-1741
* John Tyler 1677-1754
* Hannah b abt 1679
* Johannah/Joanna Tyler 1681-1717
* James Tyler b 1683
* Hopestill Tyler Jr. 1685-1762
* Abigail Tyler 1687-1771
* Mehitable Tyler 1687-1771

Hopestill would move from Andover to Roxbury when driven away from their forest home by Indians, yet returned within a few years with their eight children and returned to the business of black smithing.

In 1692, Mary and her daughter, Joanna were among the women accused of witchcraft and confessed after torture, were arrested in August, January 13, 1693 were released for one hundred pounds guarantee, found guilty and finally released in February. Several Tyler men of Andover did their fair share of accusations as well. After all was said and done, Hopestill sold all their belongings and moved to Preston, CT where they lived until he died.

Found and shared by Findagrave volunteer Richard Chichester:

Hopestill Tyler was the village blacksmith and resided in the forest a mile east of the church. A part of the dwelling-house erected by him, including the stone chimney, still remains, the rest of the building having been burned and rebuilt. He was the son of Job and Mary Tyler of Andover, Mass., where he was born in 1645. The father, according to tradition, was from Shropshire, England, and first appears in Andover about 1640. Hopestill Tyler was made a freeman in Mendon, Mass., in 1673, was driven by the Indians to Roxbury, and at length returned to Andover. An old record says that he was apprenticed a blacksmith, and in 1687 his native town "granted him liberty to set up a shop in ye street near his house." Soon after this the witchcraft persecution began, and Mrs. Tyler and two daughters were imprisoned at Salem. They were acquitted, however, in 1693. Perhaps, in part, because of this persecution, in 1697 he sold his land and removed to Preston. The value of the smith's craft to the community in the early days is illustrated by the vote of Preston [Andover more likely] in 1693, offering fifty acres of land to a smith who should settle there, upon certain conditions, one of which was that "he doe ingage to supply the town with smith work five yere." That Mr. Tyler availed himself of this offer, when he removed to Preston four years later, does not clearly appear. He survived his wife, who died March 3, 1732, and died at Preston Jan. 20, 1733. Both were interred in the public cemetery at Preston City.

~The Bi-centennial Celebration: First Congregational Church of Preston, Connecticut, 1698-1898. Together with Statistics of the Church Taken from the Church Records; Conn Preston First Congregational Church; Richard H. Gidman; The Society, 1900.

Family links:
 Parents:
  Job Tyler (1619 - 1700)
  Mary Horton Tyler (1619 - 1700)

 Spouse:
  Mary Lovett Tyler (1653 - 1732)*

 Children:
  Mary Tyler Farnum (1669 - ____)*
  Martha Tyler Geer (1676 - 1741)*
  James Tyler (1683 - 1754)*
  Hopestill Tyler (1685 - 1762)*
  Abigail Tyler Fitch (1687 - 1771)*

 Siblings:
  Moses Tyler (1641 - 1727)*
  Hopestill Tyler (1646 - 1734)
  Samuel Tyler (1655 - 1695)*
  John Tyler (1659 - 1742)*

*Calculated relationship

Inscription:
'In memory of Mr. Hopstill Tyler who dyed January ye 20th 1734 in the 89th year of his age.'
Burial:
Preston City Cemetery
Preston
New London County
Connecticut, USA
Plot:

Maintained by: Anne Shurtleff Stevens
Originally Created by: LindaCh5
Record added: Mar 10, 2007
Find A Grave Memorial# 18323382

Hopestill Tyler is my 8th great grandfather on the Swasey Family tree.

Today's Quote:


The older I get, the greater power I seem to have to help the world; I am like a snowball -- the further I am rolled the more I gain.
Susan B. Anthony

No comments:

Post a Comment

Looking forward to hearing from you! If you leave your email then others with similar family trees can contact you. Just commenting falls into the blogger dark hole; I'll gladly publish what you say just don't expect responses.