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I'm
Rob Salzman of
4130 SW 117th Ave # 415 Beaverton, OR,
97005 USA.
Welcome to e-familytree.net. E-familytree.net is my personal genealogy hobby site.
The data contained here has been gathered through 20 years of genealogy. Some small
part of it is my original research, but most of it has been shared with me.
It is important to understand:
This is SPECULATIVE DATA. Most of it is unverified. Use it for hints and pointers, but DO
YOUR OWN RESEARCH!
You can leave a comment on each page here. If you want to be notified
when this site changes, you can leave contact information here. I can
always be reached at the mailing address above, or by email at genealogy at e-familytree dot net.
This website updated on March 15, 2010.
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Family Sheet
HUSBAND
Name: John Parmelee IiiMale [1] Note
Born: Abt 1615 1615-1-1 at England England [2]
Married:
Died: Abt 31 Jan 1687 1687-1-31 [4]
Father: John Parmelee Ii
Mother: Anne Howell
WIFE
Born: Abt 1619 at Guilford [6]
Died: 24 Sep 1651 [7]
CHILDREN
Born: 1645 at New Haven Co., Connecticut
Died: 1676 at See Notes
Wife: Sarah French
SOURCES
1). Ray Downing
2). Ray Downing
4). Ray Downing
5). Ray Downing
6). Ray Downing
7). Ray Downing
NOTES
1). 18401.ged From the correspondence of Linda J. Dolby ljdolby@airmail.net John Parmelee III had sailed from London April 13, 1635, aboard the Elizabeth and Ann Roger Cooper, masterinto the Bay Colony of Boston. John first lived in New Haven, but then moved to Guilford with his father in 1639. He was a planter and the Guilford Village sextant. John s 1.5 acre homesite was on the east side of Crooked Lane, the 4th lot north of Back Lane, just around the corner from his father. Through his second wife, he obtained Plaine s home lot and four and a half acres of marsh land. In a November 7, 1648, lawsuit filed by planter Thomas Jones against John, Richard Bristow, and Goodwife Bushnell, Jones sought damages after their hogs had rooted through his corn crop. The outcome of the case is not known. John took the oath of freeman in Guilford on February 14, 1649, and became the drummer of the town train band. Downing.ged From the correspondence of Linda J. Dolby ljdolby@airmail.net John Parmelee III had sailed from London April 13, 1635, aboard the Elizabeth and Ann Roger Cooper, master into the Bay Colony of Boston. John first lived in New Haven, but then moved to Guilford with his father in 1639. He was a planter and the Guilford Village sextant. John s 1.5 acre homesite was on the east side of Crooked Lane, the 4th lot north of Back Lane, just around the corner from his father. Through his second wife, he obtained Plaine s home lot and four and a half acres of marsh land. In a November 7, 1648, lawsuit filed by planter Thomas Jones against John, Richard Bristow, and Goodwife Bushnell, Jones sought damages after their hogs had rooted through his corn crop. The outcome of the case is not known. John took the oath of freeman in Guilford on February 14, 1649, and became the drummer of the town train band.
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