
Family of James Pendleton
(This person
can be viewed within the Melton/Sharp Ancestry Chart by clicking here)
1. CAPT. JAMES5
PENDLETON (BRIAN4,
EDWARD3,
EDWARD2,
THOMAS1)1
was born Abt. 1628 in Birmingham, Warwickshire, England, and died November 29,
1709 in Westerly, Washington Co., Rhode Island.
He married (1) MARY PALMER October
22, 1647 in Sudbury,
Middlesex County, Massachusetts. He married (2) HANNAH GOODENOW April 29,
1656 in Sudbury, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, daughter of EDMUND GOODENOW and ANNA BARRY. She was born November 28, 1639 in Sudbury,
Middlesex Co., MA, and died April 05, 1688 in Sudbury, Middlesex Co., MA.
Notes for CAPT. JAMES PENDLETON:
HISTORY OF STONINGTON Ct, by Wheeler, page 532,
533.
Was first at Watertown
MA, then at Sudbury
MA, and came to Westerly
RI in 1669. He was in the
early Colonial wars. He was admitted to the First
Church of Stonington,
CT, Nov 7, 1680.
His will is dated Feb. 9, 1702, but does not mention his son
James, by the first wife, nor daughters Sarah or Patience by the second wife.
They probably died young or without children.
BRIAN PENDLETON AND HIS DESCENDANTS, 1599-1910,
Compiled by Everett Hall Pendleton, Privatley Printed MCMX, found in the DAR
Library, Washington, DC.
Page 1-77.
Capt. James Pendleton, was born in England about
1627, or 1628, ans indicated by the facts that he was admitted freeman at
Watertown, Mass., 10 May 1548, and that on the 26th of July 1672, he testified
at Portsmouth, NH, he was forty-four years of age.
On the 21st of Oct 1650, James Pendleton and Mary,
his wife, of Watertown, Mass., sold to George Parkhurst, "Same towne"
five or six acres known as "crocked meadow" (Middlesex Co., Mass.,
Deeds, I, 17). Shortly afterwards he removed to Sudbury,
Mass., where he
served on a coroner's jury in May, 1654.
In 1671, James began to dispose of the property he
had accumulated at Portsmouth
and vicinity, with his wife, Hannah, he sold land and buildings at Portsmouth
to Thomas Thatcher.
On the 25th Jany. 1688, James Pendleton bought of
Nathaniel Lynde 1,000 acres on the sea-coast of Westerly,
including Watch Hill. He sold a small part of this land and the rest he willed
to his sons, Joseph, Edmund, and Caleb.
His death occurred in Westerly
on the 29 Nov, 1709.
Like his father he was active in public affairs until the time of his death and
like his father too, wherever he went he became at once one of the leading
citizens.
The will of James-2 Pendleton, names wife, Hannah,
sons: Joseph, Edmund and Caleb, daughters Ann Borwn, Eleanor Pendleton and
Dorothy Pendleton, "children by my present wife, Hannah," and
daughters Mary and Hannah "had by my former wife."
No reference is made by Capt. James Pendleton to
his sons, James-3 and Brian-3, named in his father's will in 1677, or to any
heirs of these sons, and as no mention of any such has elsewhere appeared, it
would seem indisputable that James-3 and Brian-3 died without issue. James-3
had died previous to 1698, but we have nothing to show what became of Brian-3.
Researching this line is Jean Reid, 106 Beal's
Court, Tama, Iowa
52339
Researching this line is Nancyann Norman at
exis.net
Sources: History of Stonington
by Wheeler, Genealogical and Biographical
Record of New London
County, Conn.,
by Beers; Westerly
and Its Witnesses
(974.59, H2d); Early New England Pendletons by
Everett Hall Pendleton; Babcock and Allied Families; National Society,
Daughters of Colonial Wars; AF; R.I. Genealogical Register, v4, #4, p355;
NEHGR, v7, p 357; v12, p238, and v17, p255.
Went to Watertown,
Mass., with parents from England.
They moved to Sudbury,
and he was given 140 acres of land by his father. Moved to Portsmouth,
N.H., where he was in
business with his father. There he was a selectman, 1663 to 1668; town clerk,
1663 and 1664; one of the commissioners (local magistrates) to determine small
actions from 1667 to 1671, and captain of the Portsmouth
military company from 1666 until 1674, his last year in Portsmouth.
He owned property on the Great
Island and continued
in business after his father moved to Winter
Harbor (Saco),
Maine, in 1665.
He moved to Stonington,
Conn., being granted land,
and also had some 700 acres of land given him by his father. Those 700 acres
are in what is now Westerly, Rhode Island,
but both Connecticut
and Rhode Island
once claimed the Westerly area. (The land
was given him in trust, with instructions it be passed on to his children by
his second wife.)
James, a staunch Puritan, favored Connecticut over
the more liberal Rhode Island, but he eventually lost that fight. He continued
his business activities and was affluent enough to be referred to as
"Esquire" and "Gentleman."
He was a selectman in both Stonington
and Westerly, sold
intoxicants, imported sugar from Barbados
and had dealings with tobacco planters in Maryland.
Dealing in liquor was not considered reprehensible in those days, and a man
could engage in that business, as well as in politics, and still be a community
leader and a pillar of the church.
About the time he moved to Stonington,
the King Philip's War broke out, and Capt. James took part. He also may have
participated in the great Narragansett fight. He was awarded land in Voluntown
for his services during the war. He also obtained captive Indians whom he sold
into slavery. Eventually, James obtained more property in Rhode
Island, buying 1,000 acres at Watch Hill in Westerly.
His Watch Hill home still stands. It is unclear when he moved from Stonington
to Westerly.
There is a great deal more information in Early New
England Pendletons.
Westerly: Capt. James Pendleton, among Westerly
freemen named in 1727. Page 151.
Babcock and Allied Families: James Pendleton, born
in England
in 1627 or 1628. He resided in Watertown
and Sudbury, MA; Portsmouth,
N.H., and Westerly,
RI. Made a captain of the Portsmouth
military company 2 Oct. 1666.
Served in King Phillip's War from Connecticut,
receiving land in Voluntown, CT,
for his services. [Much more info on pages 81-83.] Colonial Wars: James
Pendleton, born 1627/8 in London,
England;
died Westerly, R.I., 29 Nov.
1709. Married (2) Hannah Goodenow 2 April 1656/9 in
Sudbury, Mass.
"Captain in the Portsmouth
(N.H.) Military Company, 10
Oct. 1666 by Court." Also saw active service in King
Philip's War on 17 May 1676; in Cedar Swamp Lot Drawing 1701, Connecticut
Colony. [See pages 645 and 646 for children and grandson.]
RIGR: Westerly
Town Council and Probate, Vol. 2 (1), 1699-1719. Capt. James Pendleton of
Westerly, being aged. Will dated 9
Feb. 1702/3 and codicil, proved 21 Dec. 1709, pgs 104-6, 108. Mentions
father Brian Pendleton, deceased, testate; Unnamed former wife; present wife
Hannah; daughters Mary and Hannah (no surnames) that I had by former wife, 5
pounds each, no more because they received land in Wells, Maine, from
testator's father, Brian Pendleton. [Note: pg 108: Nicholas Mowrey signed a
receipt for 5 pounds due me from Capt. James Pendleton's will, dated Freetown 7
Sept. 1716--suggesting that Nicholas Mowrey married one of the two daughters,
Mary and Hannah.]; sons of present wife Hannah, Joseph, Edmond and Caleb
Pendleton; daughters of present wife Hannah, Ann Brown, Eleanor Pendleton and
Dorothy, no surnamed. [Note: pg 108: 9 Jan. 1709/10 We John Lewis, Nocholas
Cottrell Jr. and Caleb Pendleton, husbandmen, and Hannah Pendleton, widow, all
of We stand bound unto the town council for 250 pounds re will of James
Pendleton--suggesting that possibly John Lewis and Nicholas Cottrell Jr.
married the daughters Eleanor and Dorothy. Further note the will dated 1745 of
Caleb Pendleton (the last son this will, without doubt, since he had the same
child as the son...]
Ancestral File records list two other death dates:
Nov. 20 and 29, 1709.
NEHGR: Cited in Sudbury,
Mass., records as father of
Brian and James Pendleton. From Vol. 7 article, "Early Settlers of Essex
and Old Norfolk":
James Pendleton, Portsmouth
(New Hampshire),
1668; wife Hannah. Vol. 12, listed as a free inhabitant of Westerly
3 March 1679/80.
_______________________________________
Will: 9
FEB 1701/02 does not mention his son James, Jr., by his
first wife, nor the daughters Sarah and Patience by his second wife. These
children probably died young or were without children.
Reference Number: 5669
Note: 1. James was first at Watertown, Middlesex
County, Massachusetts where he was admitted freeman May 10, 1648, then at Sudbury,
Middlesex County, Massachusetts where he received in 1656 a deed of gift to his
father's homestead and other property and was chosen selectman, keeper of the
town books in 1662 and 1663 and town clerk until March, 1665 He apparently
removed to Rhode Island where he was admitted freeman in September 11, 1666,
chosen Captain of the Portsmouth Military Company October 2, 1666 and granted
land in 1667 becoming one of the founders of a school in March 1670 and ordered
the school house built, forming the first church in Portsmouth with the Rev.
Joshua Moody in 1671, and continued living there until 1673 when he removed to
Stonington, New London County, Connecticut where he was admitted to the First
Church of Stonington November 7, 1680 and was Justice of the Peace 1686-1689. .
Records indicate he was in Westerly, Washington County, Rhode Island before,
after and even while in Stonington where he purchased 1,000 acres from
Nathaniel Lynd on the seacoast of Westerly and chosen as a town council man of
Westerly in 1689 and other offices there until 1709. He served in the early
Colonial wars.
_____________________________________________________
More About JAMES PENDLETON and MARY PALMER:
Marriage: October 22, 1647, Sudbury,
Middlesex County, Massachusetts
More About JAMES PENDLETON and HANNAH GOODENOW:
Marriage: April 29, 1656, Sudbury,
Middlesex County, Massachusetts
Child of JAMES PENDLETON and HANNAH GOODENOW is:
i. ANN6 PENDLETON, b. November 12,
1667, Portsmouth,Rockingham Co.,New Hampshire; d. 1727, North Stonington, New
London, CT; m. ELEAZER BROWN, October 18, 1693,
Stonington, New London Co., CT1; b. August 04, 1670, Lynn,
Essex County, Massachusetts1; d. November 30, 1734,
Stonington, New London County, Connecticut1.
More About ANN PENDLETON:
Burial: Cedar
Swamp Cemetery,
No. Stonington, CT