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- [S116] Ancestry Family Trees, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.), Ancestry Family Tree (Reliability: 0).
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=150687403&pid=2070
- [S116] Ancestry Family Trees, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.), Ancestry Family Tree (Reliability: 0).
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=150687403&pid=2179
- [S410] FamilySearch Family Tree, (MyHeritage), https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40001-298748330/jane-dabinott-in-familysearch-family-tree (Reliability: 3).
Jane Dabinott<br>Birth name: Jane Dobinott<br>Married names: Jane NewberryJane Dabinott Newberry<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: To June 12 1611 - Chardstock, Dorset, England<br>Christening: June 12 1611 - St Andrew, Chardstock, Dorset, England<br>Marriage: Circa 1630<br>Marriage: June 8 1637 - Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut, British Colonial America<br>Death: Apr 23 1655 - Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, British Colonial America<br>Burial: 1655 - Norwalk, Fairfield, Connecticut, United States<br>Parents: <a>John Dabinott I</a>, <a>Joanna Dabinott (born Collins)</a><br>Spouses: <a>Thomas Newberry</a>, <a>John Warham</a><br>Children: <a>Rebecca Russell (born Newberry)</a>, <a>Hannah Hanford (born Newberry)</a>, <a>Newberry</a>, <a>Abigail Allyn (born Warham)</a>, <a>Hepzibah Warham</a>, <a>Sarah Ann Strong (born Warman)</a>, <a>Esther Warham</a><br>Siblings: <a>Jane Penny (born Dabinott)</a>, <a>Anne Dabinott</a>, <a>Rawlina Fry (born Dabinott)</a>, <a>Joan Smith (born Dabinott)</a>, <a>Thomas Dabinot</a>, <a>John Dabinott</a><br>This person appears to have duplicated relatives. View it on FamilySearch to see the full information.<br> Additional information: AFN:8VGV-Z3LifeSketch:JANE was cousin to JOANE Dabinott - they both just happened to marry the same man. Joane was Thomas' first wife, and after she died (about 1629), Jane became his second wife (about 1630). Please do NOT merge these two women or switch their children! Joane's children are: Jospeph, Sarah, Benjamin, Mary, and John - all born before Joane's death. Jane's (known so far) children with Thomas are: Rebecca/Rebecka and Hannah, and possibly a third child. From https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Dabinott-5 NOTE: This profile is for Thomas Newberry's 2nd wife, Jane Dabinott CAUTION: Thomas Newberry married first Joane Dabinott. Jane Dabinott was Joane's cousin. Biography Jane Dabinott was a cousin of Joane (Dabinott) Newbury. Jane was born in England about 1611. Some sources say that she married Thomas Newberry as his second wife. Anderson, in The Great Migration Vol v p 240, stated the the surname of Thomas Newberry's second wife is unknown. Other sources provide sources that support her marriage to Thomas Newberry. Origins and First Marriage to Thomas Newberry Thomas Newberry married for the second time, by about 1632. His wife's name was Jane _______.[1] Anderson references another source for the suggestion that the name of his second wife was Jane Dabinott. This source reports that Thomas and Jane married about 1630, and they had three children. She was perhaps Jane Dabinott, a cousin of Thomas' first wife, Joane, and daughter of John and Johane Dabinott of Chardstock. In John Dabinott's will, dated 1 November 1624, he bequeathed £150 to his daughter Jane when married with the consent of her mother and his overseers Christopher Dabinott and Thomas Newberry. The author conjectures, "perhaps the latter 'consented' she should marry himself". John's will was proved by the sole executrix, his wife, Johane Dabynott (sic) 5 March 1624/5. [2][3] Assuming Jane ______ is Jane Dabinott, daughter of John and Johane Dabinott, she was born about 1610, at Yarcombe, Devon, England.[4] A baptism record found shows Jane Dabinot (sic), daughter of John Dabinot (sic) was christened at Chardstock, Dorset, England, June 12, 1611.[5] Jane's father, John was a yeoman of Chardstock; the distance between Yarcombe and Chardstock is less than 6 miles. Jane and Thomas Newberry had the following known children:[1] Rebecca Newberry, b about 1632; d Hadley 21 Nov 1688 at 57 years of age; m by 1660 John Russell (eldest known child b Hadley 4 Nov 1660); John was a son of John Russell (1635 Cambridge). Per Newberry Genealogy she was born in England about 1631, and other information from Anderson is verified.[6] Hannah Newberry, b say 1634; by by an unknown date Thomas Hanford, son of Eglin Hanford (1635, Scituate) Per Newberry Genealogy she was born in England about 1633 and married about 1653, and other information from Anderson is verified.[7] unnamed daughter, b about 1635; d young [8] Per Anderson, this supposed third daughter of Thomas and Jane was not included in the list of children of Thomas Newberry granted land at Windsor in 1640.[9] Jane, the second wife of Thomas Newberry, came with him to Dorchester, Massachusetts in 1634. Shortly after his death, she and the Newberry children moved to Windsor, Connecticut. Second Marriage to John Warham Once Jane was living in Windsor, Connecticut, she married (2) in 1637, Rev. John Warham, as his second wife; his first wife having died about 1634. The marriage is proved by a lease for four years made 1 May 1639 by William Gaylard, as agent for John Warham, pastor of the church of Windsor, Connecticut, and Jane, his wife and executrix of the will of Thomas Newbery (sic), Gent., deceased.[10][11] Jane (Dabinott) (Newberry) Warham and John Warham had the following known children:[12] Abigail, bp Windsor 27 May 1638; m Windsor 21 Oct 1658 Thomas Allyn, son of Matthew Allyn Hepzibah, bp Windsor 9 August 1640; d Windsor 1647 Sarah, b Windsor 28 August 1642; m Windsor 11 May 1664 Return Strong; died Dec 26, 1678[13] Esther, bp Windsor 8 December 1644; m (1) Eleazer Mather, son of Rev. Richard Mather; m (2) Rev. Solomon Stoddard, son of Anthony Stoddard; d February 10, 1736[13] Jane (Dabinott) (Newberry) Waham died at Norwalk, Connecticut on 23 April 1655.[14][15] She died at the home of her daughter, Hannah Newberry.[13] Research Notes Reviewing information in multiple Find a Grave has information with sourcing from Anderson's Great Migration Study Project, indicating that 1st wife was Joanne Dabinott and 2nd wife was Jane Dabinott, cousin of his first wife. who later married Warham. Thomas Newberry Find a Grave page [16] Thomas Newberry MARRIAGE: (1) By about 1619 Joane Dabinott, daughter of Christopher Dabinott of Yarcombe, Devonshire. (2) By about 1632 Jane _____. (Bartlett suggested that she was Jane Dabinott, cousin of his first wife. She married (2) by 1638 Rev. JOHN WARHAM (on 1 May 1639, "John Warham, pastor of the [Windsor] church, and Jane his wife, executrix of the last will and testament of Thomas Newberry, gent., deceased," leased to Richard Wright of Mount Wollaston, husbandman, the farm "which the said Thomas Newberry purchased of William Pyncheon." She died at Norwalk on [2]3 April 16[4]5. Thomas Newberry was undoubtedly planning to make the move from Dorchester to Windsor. Evidence that he did not may be found in the 1662 petition of his children, where they state that after their father's death "in their minority [they] were transported to Conecticut." Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project Joane Dabinott Newberry's FindAGrave page [17] Thomas Newberry married (1) by about 1619 Joane Dabinott, daughter of Christopher Dabinott of Yarcombe, Devonshire. They had five children: Joseph, Sarah Wolcott, Benjamin, Mary Clark, & John. Based on the reference to "3 of my younger daughters," secondary sources have included a third daughter for Thomas Newberry with his second wife. The 1645 petition states that there were seven children alive at that time, four of whom "are now of full age." These four would be sons Joseph and Benjamin and daughters Sarah and Mary. The three youngest would then be John, Rebecca and Hannah. On this basis, a solution would be that the drafter of the will of Thomas Newberry entered "daughters" where the word should have been "children," and that this error was followed slavishly in the 1645 documents. Without this solution, son John Newberry, who was still living in 1645 but not yet of age, would not have been represented in the 1645 documents. (Note also that this supposed third daughter with the second wife is not included in the list of children of Thomas Newberry granted land at Windsor in 1640. Jane Warham's Find a Grave page [18] Thomas Newberry married (2) By about 1632 Jane _____. (Bartlett suggested that she was Jane Dabinott, cousin of his first wife.) They had two children: Rebecca Russell & Hannah Hanford. The marriages of the two youngest daughters, Rebecca to John Russell and Hannah to Thomas Hanford, are stated confidently in secondary sources, but without evidence. We have treated them here as if these identifications are correct, but more research is required. The Rev. John Warham married (2), by about 1637, Jane (_____) Newberry, widow of Thomas Newberry (on 1 May 1639 "John Warham, pastor of the church [at Windsor], and Jane his wife, executrix of the last will and testament of Thomas Newbery gent. deceased," leased to Richard Wright of Mount Wollaston, husbandman, the farm "which the said Thomas Newbery purchased of William Pyncheon." She died at Norwalk on 23 April 1655. They had four children: Abigail Allyn, Hepzibah, Sarah Strong, & Esther Mather Stoddard. Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project Sources ↑ 1.0 1.1 Anderson, Robert Charles, Great Migration 1634-1635, M-P. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2010.) Originally published as: The Great Migration, Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume V, M-P. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2007. Reference page 240. $Subscription ↑ Bartlett, J. Gardner, Newberry genealogy : the ancestors and descendants of Thomas Newberry of Dorchester, Mass., 1634. Boston: Published by the author for John Strong Newberry, 1914. Accessed via $Ancestry May 17, 2019. Reference pages 43, 129-130. Author cites "P.C.C. 30 Clarke" for this information. ↑ New England Marriages to 1700. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2008.) Originally published as: New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2015. Reference Volume 2, page 1085. $Subscription ↑ Bartlett, pages 129-130 ↑ England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975, database, FamilySearch : 10 February 2018, Jane Dabinot, ); citing items 1-4, index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 1,279,491. FamilySearch link ↑ Bartlett, page 46 ↑ Bartlett, page 46 ↑ Bartlett, page 46 ↑ Anderson, citing WiLR 1:2-8] ↑ Bartlett, page 43, citing Lechford's Note Book, printed vol, pp 124-126) ↑ New England Marriages to 1700. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2008.) Originally published as: New England Marriages Prior to 1700. Boston, Mass.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2015. Reference page 1596. $Subscription ↑ Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, Volumes I-III. (Online database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2010), (Originally Published as: New England Historic Genealogical Society. Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, Volumes I-III, 3 vols., 1995). Reference page 1927 ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 Flagg, Ernest, Genealogical Notes On the Founding of New England. My Ancestors Part in that Undertaking. Baltimore, Maryland: Reprinted for
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