Repost from An ancestor born July 13, 1600, yesterday (!) on When I Was 69 blog, 7/14/2018
----------------------------
Happy birthday to Anna Rosanna White Porter
BIRTH 13 JULY 1600 • Shalford, Essex, England
DEATH 11 MAY 1647 • Windsor, Hartford, Conn
She was the mother of Sarah Porter Judson and great grandmother of Anna Curtiss, wife of Zachariah Booth, Emigrant to American Colonies.
Daughter of Robert & Bridget (Allgar) White. Sister of three other New England emigrants: John White, Elizabeth (White) Goodwin. & Mary (White) Loomis.
She and John Porter had eleven known children. The Parish records of Shalford & Messing, Essex, England list Anne Whighte baptised July 13, 1600 in Shalford, daughter of Robert Weight. SOURCE: American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI) vol 138, Pg. 460.
And she's one of the few of my ancestors that has a birth date (actually her baptism date) for a great times 10 grandmother!
And I must mention the fact that I lived in Windsor Connecticut in the 1960s, where the Porter family had lived and Anna and her husband died. I admit I didn't walk the same paths that she did, but I probably drove the same roads that were part of her life. Just 320 years later! I must mention that my husband had grown up in the Hartford, Connecticut area in the 1950s and attended a "prep school" named Loomis. I'm sure it was founded by the same family.
It's fun to look back at any of the New England ancestors, especially those who were in leadership positions, because there are so many records about them, and if they came from a family in England (which most of them did!) who had church records about birth/baptism, marriage and death, then there are lots of records to check. However, when all the records say a man was married at 4 years of age, and another record at least lets him get to be 27 before marrying, which one am I to believe? So at this juncture, I've been looking at John Porter's father, and finding some of the dates of his death are based upon a written text (thank heavens I could find and read it) where it says, "John Porter a boy." So I doubt that this is our ancestor. I can only do this research for about a half hour at a time, because it really gives me a headache.
And in honor of Anna (Rosanna) White Porter, the records that I have give her birth, her marriage, and a whole list of children's names.
Burke's American Families with British Ancestry (pg. 2869) says her husband,
Anna Rosanna married John Porter of Windsor Connecticut, and she was the 6th of 8 children of Robert and his wife Brydgette Algar. Source: Descendants of Joseph Loomis in America, and his antecedents in the Old World, pg 104 in Loomis Genealogy.
Anna and John Porter had their first 9 children born in England. They are listed in records of their baptisms from 1621 to 1637. One son, Samuel, died at 2 months of age. This is interesting because the Burke's publication quoted above has him continuing to live, and being the head of a family. Yes, having lost the first Samuel in 1632, the Porters named another son Samuel who was born in 1635. Source: English Origins of New England Families, Second Series Vol. III, pg. 736.
In the same source, page 732, Anna White Porter and her sister, Mary White Loomis, are described living in homes next to each other in Windsor, CT.
And on page 731, same source, Anna White of Messing (England) is married to John Porter of Felsted on 18 Oct 1620. That same page talks of Anna's death (as John Porter's wife, in 1647) and her husband's will, when he died in 1648.
Much of the same information is repeated in "Families of Ancient Windsor," under John Porter, Sr.
Though there was a date of death in Windsor CT for Mrs. Porter (her given name wasn't mentioned), her burial is unknown. Her third child was Sara Porter, who married Joseph Judson, and they were my 9 times great grandparents. But their story will be for another day.
And I must mention the fact that I lived in Windsor Connecticut in the 1960s, where the Porter family had lived and Anna and her husband died. I admit I didn't walk the same paths that she did, but I probably drove the same roads that were part of her life. Just 320 years later! I must mention that my husband had grown up in the Hartford, Connecticut area in the 1950s and attended a "prep school" named Loomis. I'm sure it was founded by the same family.
It's fun to look back at any of the New England ancestors, especially those who were in leadership positions, because there are so many records about them, and if they came from a family in England (which most of them did!) who had church records about birth/baptism, marriage and death, then there are lots of records to check. However, when all the records say a man was married at 4 years of age, and another record at least lets him get to be 27 before marrying, which one am I to believe? So at this juncture, I've been looking at John Porter's father, and finding some of the dates of his death are based upon a written text (thank heavens I could find and read it) where it says, "John Porter a boy." So I doubt that this is our ancestor. I can only do this research for about a half hour at a time, because it really gives me a headache.
And in honor of Anna (Rosanna) White Porter, the records that I have give her birth, her marriage, and a whole list of children's names.
Burke's American Families with British Ancestry (pg. 2869) says her husband,
John Porter of Windsor Conn, born 1590; emigrated to America from Felsted, Essex, England ca. 1637, to the Massachusetts Bay Colony, later moving to Windsor in 1639; married Anna (who d. 1647) dau. of Robert White, and d, 1648, leaving issue, 1. Samuel, 2. Nathaniel, 3. Eleazar Porter, 4, William Porter (physician.)Her father, Robert White, left a will, which gives a lot of information about the family in England. I won't go into his life here, because I might want to feature him in a separate blog sometime.
Anna Rosanna married John Porter of Windsor Connecticut, and she was the 6th of 8 children of Robert and his wife Brydgette Algar. Source: Descendants of Joseph Loomis in America, and his antecedents in the Old World, pg 104 in Loomis Genealogy.
Anna and John Porter had their first 9 children born in England. They are listed in records of their baptisms from 1621 to 1637. One son, Samuel, died at 2 months of age. This is interesting because the Burke's publication quoted above has him continuing to live, and being the head of a family. Yes, having lost the first Samuel in 1632, the Porters named another son Samuel who was born in 1635. Source: English Origins of New England Families, Second Series Vol. III, pg. 736.
In the same source, page 732, Anna White Porter and her sister, Mary White Loomis, are described living in homes next to each other in Windsor, CT.
And on page 731, same source, Anna White of Messing (England) is married to John Porter of Felsted on 18 Oct 1620. That same page talks of Anna's death (as John Porter's wife, in 1647) and her husband's will, when he died in 1648.
Much of the same information is repeated in "Families of Ancient Windsor," under John Porter, Sr.
Though there was a date of death in Windsor CT for Mrs. Porter (her given name wasn't mentioned), her burial is unknown. Her third child was Sara Porter, who married Joseph Judson, and they were my 9 times great grandparents. But their story will be for another day.
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.