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Merrill family history and genealogy to the benefit of all.

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His Civic Activities
His Marriage
His Will
The Inventory

A Merrill Memorial


    Samuel Merrill, 1928, reprint 1983

John1 of Newbury - Chapter VIII, pp102-106

   John1 Merrill, brother of our ancestor Nathaniel1, had an only child, a daughter. None of us have inherited from him the family name, but nevertheless we naturally feel a great interest in him, and in the part which he played in the little Newbury commonwealth.

   Coffin, in his History of Newbury (p. 287), gives the names of “the most wealthy of the grantees” of the town, as measured by the number of acres of land given them. This measure was in general correct, for the grants from the town were based upon the property brought by the several settlers from England. John1 Merrill’s name was the thirteenth on this list, and he received ninety-six acres. Some settlers received as little as ten acres. The grants were chiefly of arable land and meadow, the pastures being held by the town for use of the inhabitants in common. The privileges of these common lands were carofully apportioned. In the “stint of the ox and cow common,” 12 March, 1641/2, John Merrill was given a right to the pasturage of four cattle. (Currier, History of Newbury, p. 54.)

   On “this .... of ye 7th mo 1666” Richard Currier of Salisbury sold to John Merrill of “Nubery,” husbandman, for £6, three acres of salt-marsh in Salisbury. This land was “in ye 2d division of ye higgledee pigledee lotts being ye 44th in number . . . butting wth one ende uppon Merimack River.” Early in the previous year John Merrill had purchased from Richard Currier another three-acre parcel, being the twenty-fourth lot in the same higgledy-piggledy division of salt-marsh. Both conveyances are recorded with the Norfolk Deeds (at Salem), book 2, leaf 110. Whether John Merrill was a party to other conveyances, either as grantor or grantee, we cannot say. Many deeds in the time of the earlier generations in this country were never placed on record.

His Civic Activities

   John Merrill was a freeholder in Newbury in 1638, and was admitted a freeman of the Colony in 1640. Some of his activities in the affairs of the community are indicated by entries in the town records. At the time when the removal of the settlement from Parker River northward to the present site of Newburyport was under consideration, John Merrill was the first-named of a committee of four appointed to make an inventory and appraisal of all the (*) stock, land, houses and other improvements of the inhabitants. In 1649 he was appointed a member of a committee to present to the General Court the town’s claims to jurisdiction over the whole of Plum Island. He was chosen a selectman in 1665; the following year he was a member of a committee to lay out a road to connect with the Salisbury ferry, and in 1668 he was chosen one of the surveyors of highways.

   In 1670 John Merrill joined the Newbury church, and he was somewhat active in the controversy of that time (**) over questions of church discipline. He made his will in the same year, and seems soon after to have withdrawn from some of the activities of a husbandman. In his will he describes himself as “being but weake in body,” and the entries in the inventory of his estate mentioning certain live stock as leased to his grandson, John Swett, confirm the impression that his health was seriously impaired. He died 12 Sept. 1673. If he was the John Merrill who was baptised in Wherstead in 1599, he must have been seventy-four years old at his death. (See pages 38, 41.)

His Marriage

   John1 Merrill was doubtless married in England. His wife’s christian name was Elizabeth, but her family name is not known. She was admitted a member of the Newbury church in 1674. She died 14 July, 1682, in Newbury. Her will was dated 7 Dec. 1680. All her property was given to her grandchild Elizabeth Swett and her son-in-law Stephen Swett, her grandson John Swett, “whoome I have formerly donne well for,” being named as executor.

   The only child of John1 and Elizabeth Merrill was Hannah, who was born in England, and died 4 (or 14?) April, 1662, in Newbury. She married, 24 May, 1647, Stephen Swett of Newbury, who was born in 1620. Stephen Swett kept an ordinary, later known as the Blue Anchor Tavern, near the training green, 1653-67. (Currier, “Ould Newbury,” pp. 90, 109, 176.)

   The children of Stephen and Hannah Swett were:

        John, b. 20 Oct. 1648; living in 1670.
        Stephen, b. 20 Aug. 1650; d. young.
        Hannah, b. 7 Oct. 1651; m. 20 June, 1685, Joseph Plumer.
        Stephen, b. 28 Jan. 1653/4; living in 1670.
        Elizabeth, b. 17 Jan. 1655/6.
        Joseph, b. 28 Nov. 1657; living in 1670.
        A daughter, b. 25 Apr. 1660.

His Will

   The will of John1 Merrill is reproduced herewith, line for line as in the original.

  Wittnes by these prsents yt I Jno merrill of Newbury
in ye County of Essex in New England, being but weake in
body, yet of sound and perfect memory. for divers causes
and considerations me there vnto mooving, doo make
5
this my Last will and testamt, and deo aispose of my
Lands goods and Cattle as followeth: first I bequeath
my soule into ye Hands of my blessed saviour and Redemer
Jesus Christ, in an assured hope of a resurection, and my
body to bee buried, when it shall please ye Lord to call mee
10
hence: To my well beloved wife Elizabeth J give
and bequeath my house barne and Orchard and all my
Lands both Errable marsh meadoe grounds and Pasture
Lands, Lijng and being in the bounds of ye towne of
Newbury afore said wth all ye privilidges there vnto
15
belonging: as Allsoe a peice of marsh meadoc ground
about six Acrees bee it more or Lesse Lijng and being
wthin ye bounds of ye towne of Salsbury in ye County
of Norfolke in New England: To geather with all
my goods and Chattles both within dore and without.
20
All ye houseing Orchard meadoe ground Errable
Land and Pasture Land aboue mentioned, J doe give
it vnto my well beloved wife during her naturall
Life, at ye end whereof my will is yt my grand
Child Jno Swett shall peaceably & quiettly enjoy
25
all ye said house & barne; if preserved from danger
togeather wth all my Land before mentioned to him
and his heires for Ever & if ye sd Jno Swett die with
out Lawfull Heires begotten of his owne body ye sd
Land is to returne vnto ye next Heire: Except my
30
my wife haue neede to sell a small prcell of Land
either uppLand or meadoe, then my will is that shee
shall haue Liberty soe to doe: Allsoe my will is yt my
grand child Jno Swett shall pay vnto his two brothers
and two sisters tenn pound a peice in one yeare
35
after my wifes decease in case ye children bee of age,
ffurther my will is yt my well beloved wife Elizabeth
shall haue ye sole dispose of my goods and chattells
as shee seeth good, and J doe Appoint my wife to be ye sole
Executrix of this my last will and testamt: and J doe
40
Appoint mr Henry Sewall and Archelaus Woodman to bee
ye overseers of this my last will and testamt: Jn wittnes herof
J ye sd Jno merrill haue herevnto sett my hand and seale ye
eight day of September one thousand six hundred & seaventy
Wittnes Henry Sewall: and Will, Chandler

<!--Image for John's signature]-->

   This will was proved at Ipswich 30 Sept. 1673.

Line 1: The y in yt, like the y in ye, is the survival of the Anglo-Saxon character Ÿ, and should be pronounced as th.

Lines 12, 20: Errable: arable.

Line 18: (***) Norfolke: a county which comprised several towns now included in Essex County, Massachusetts, and Rockingham County, New Hampshire. This county of Norfolk was in existence, as such, from 1643 to 1680.

Line 36: ff was used, as an initial, for the capital F.

   The signature of John Merrill in this will, as given here in facsimile, was crowded in the original for lack of room.

   Henry Sewall, named as one of the overseers, or executors, of this will, and also a witness to John Merrill’s signature, was one of the founders of the Newbury settlement, and a man of some prominence. He was father of Judge Samuel Sewall, the noted diarist.

   Archelaus Woodman came from England in 1635, and spent his life in Newbury. He was deputy to the General Court, and filled other town offices. In the list of passengers on the ship by which he came he is called Hercules Woodman. Savage, in his “Genealogical Dictionary,” questions which name is correct, remarking that “both are equally heathenish.”

   William Chandler was a freeholder in Newbury as early as 1651, and was a selectman at the time when this will was executed. He died in 1701, at the age of eighty-four.

The Inventory

   The Inventory of John Merrill's estate includes the following items:

           his housing and lands of all sorts with his
      freehold and Comonages
230-00-00
  two oxen six cows: one heifer as rented to
      John Swett
40-00-00
  one mare six pound: two swine 30s
7-10-00
  14 sheep at 10s a peece; two lambs at 7s a
      peece also leased to John Swett
7-14-00

   Then follow various household utensils and supplies. The inventory showed an estate aggregating £379.12s.

* Currier, History of Newbury, p. 85.

** (See page 61)

*** A map showing the towns of Norfolk County is given to Noyes History of Hapstead p. 454.


Chapter IX

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