Genealogy of Winfield Gallup and Florence Miles

Notes


George Freeston

Notes:
George was a Yeoman. He and Mary had three sons and one daughter, all of whom were born and died in Alford, England.


Mary Hutchinson

Notes:
Mary and George had four children. She subsequently re-married (____) Cuthbert, and was still living in 1611, with her sons Richard Freeston and Nathaniel Cuthbert.


John Hutchinson

Notes:
John was baptised 18 May 1595, not 1598 as reported by some. He was also of Alford, and described himself in his will, dated 7 Jun 1644, as a Woollen Draper. John and Bridget had 10 children, all baptized at Alford.


Augustine Storee (story)

Notes:
Augustine is known to have come to New England.


Susanna Hutchinson

Notes:
She is mentioned in her brother John's will of 1644 as his "sister Shor."


Anne Hutchinson

Notes:
Anne, was mentioned in her brother John's will as his "sister Levitt" [her married name]


Mary Hutchinson

Notes:
John and his wife, Mary, William Hutchinson's youngest sister, came into the MA colony 26 May 1636. Mary is mentioned in her brother John's will of 1644 as his "sister Wheelwright." Mary was John Wheelwright's second wife.


Edward Hutchinson Jr.

Notes:
[Edward was a 9th great granduncle of Winfield Gallup. Though not an ancestor, this lengthy biographical note gives us further background on the life and times of this important family line.]
Edward was a brother of Samuel Hutchinson and William Hutchinson; brother-in-law of Rev. John Wheelwright and Augustin Storre; uncle of Edward Rishworth, all of whom came to New England later in the 1630's. Married by 1633 to Sarah (____) with whom he emigrated from Alford, Lincolnshire to Boston in 1633 , probably in the ship "Griffin" from Lincolnshire. . In Oct 1633, Edward Hutchinson, the elder, became a member of the Boston church. His wife, Sarah Hutchinson, and his servant, Gamaliel Wait, joined on the following 15 Dec. It would seem almost a certainly that Gamaliel Wait and Judith Smith were the servants of the Hutchinson's in England and that they probably came with them to Boston. Referred to as a member of the Boston church as late as 29 Apr 1639 (after he was in RI). Freeman 4 Mar 1633/4. He was on a committee to assess various rates for Boston, 10 Nov 1634. On 20 Nov 1637 he was in the list of those from Boston who were disarmed. In Feb 1637/8 William Baulston and "Edw[ard] Hutchinson" were given license to "depart out of this jurisdiction, provided that they submit to the order of the General Court in regard of the censure they lie under". (That these records applied to the uncle and not the nephew is confirmed by a record of 12 Mar 1637/8, in which "Edward Hutchinson, Junior" was ordered to post bound with regard to controlling access to his mother. So it was after his departure that "John Marshall, husbandman, having served with our brother Mr. Edward Hutchinson" was allowed an inhabitant of Boston, 24 Feb 1639/40. On 29 Apr 1637 "our brother Edward Hutchinson" was granted a garden plot at the south end of Mr. Robert Keayne's garden. He is in the church records called "Senior" and was one of the principle men, whose heresy made it necessary to disarm them in 1637; and withdrew from the "sanguine cloud" that overcast the whole sky of MA going to RI. He removed to Portsmouth, RI, in 1638, with his family shortly after the birth of last child. He was a Freeman at the foundation of Portsmouth, RI, 7 Mar 1637/8 where he was one of the signers of the Portsmouth compact. In Rhode Island his occupation was a baker. On 5 Nov 1638 it "is ordered that Mr. Edward Hutchinson shall bake bread for the use of the plantation and that his bread for the assize shall be ordered by the body." (RI CR1:61). On 16 Nov 1638 "Sergeant Hutchinson" was one of three men "appointed for the venison trade with the Indians".

On 2 Nov "Sergeant Hutchinson" (glossed in the margin as "Sergeant Edward Hutchinson") "being convented for having his hand to the seditious libel, justifying the same, & using contemptuous speeches, the Court did disfranchise him, fine him in ?40, put him from office, & commit him during the pleasure of the Court." (Immediately following a similar sentence was passed on William Baulston, and the fine for both was remitted during the general amnesty of 6 Sep 1638). He owned a lot at Mount Wollaston [Braintree] which he sold by 29 Apr 1639 to Thomas Matson. Granted six acres "next the Cove on the north side of the Great Cove" at Portsmouth, 20 May 1638. On 21 Feb 1638/9 it "is ordered that that lot which was reserved for Valentine Hill is granted to Sergeant Hutchinson as part of his second division, if so be Valentine Hill doth not come to inhabit and build thereon." Granted two hundred acres at Portsmouth, 10 Feb 1639/40. After the death of his brother William he returned to England before, or in, 1644, as he was one of the witnesses to his brother John's will. There he became a member of the Ironmonger's Company. Both he and his wife are mentioned in his brother Richard's will in 1669, as still living, and probably in England, as he bequeathed to them ?10, in cloth for mourning. Edward and Sarah never returned to New England.


Grace Draper

Notes:
Grace is reported to have married second a John Crabtree 26 Sep 1603. Since we do not have a date of death for Thomas Waters, we have no satifactory explanation for these two marriages being so close together, or it could have been one or the other. More research needs to be done here.