Jonathan Holman, a Revolutionary Colonel: A Paper Read Before the Worcester Society of Antiquity, December 5th, 1893 (Classic Reprint) Buy on Amazon

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Jonathan Holman, a Revolutionary Colonel: A Paper Read Before the Worcester Society of Antiquity, December 5th, 1893 (Classic Reprint)

Book Details

Author(s)John C. Crane
ISBN / ASIN1332146481
ISBN-139781332146482
MarketplaceFrance  🇫🇷

Description

Excerpt from Jonathan Holman, a Revolutionary Colonel: A Paper Read Before the Worcester Society of Antiquity, December 5th, 1893

The earliest knowledge we have of the ancestor of the subject of this sketch in America, is given in Coffin's History of Old Newbury. The historian says:

"Solomon Holman was one of the early settlers in the west parish of Newbury. He was born in England, served seven years on board a man of war, ran away in Bermuda when sent for milk, secreted himself in the barn till the vessel sailed, and lived by milking the cows. He was discovered by the owner of the barn, who befriended him, and gave him employment. He afterwards married his employer's daughter Mary, came to Newbury, built him a bark, and then a log house on land of which he bought thirteen acres for a fat heifer. The land is now owned by Mr. Jonathan Ilsley, from whom I obtained this account. Mr. Holman died May seventh, 1753, in his eighty-second year."

Like other early settlers of Massachusetts, Solomon Holman, senior, cast about him for land beyond the confines of his home at Newbury, in the unsettled portions of the Old Bay Province. Among those who purchased land in Sutton, or emigrated thither, may be mentioned the Armsbys of Wrentham, Buckmans of Beverly, Bonds and Bullards of Watertown, Burnaps and Daggetts of Reading, Carters of Sudbury, Crossmans of Taunton, Dikes of Ipswich, Dwinnells of Topsfield, Davidsons of Essex, Singletarys of Framingham, Pierces of Woburn, Waters of Salem, Burbanks, Chases and Holmans of Newbury.

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