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Sunday, May 26, 2024

Our Puritan Kent Line Origins

Family Line Links: (WikiTree.com)(Ancestry.com)(FamilySearch.org)

I previously wrote about our Kent line's westward migration from New England in the early 1800s. In this post, I will be jumping back another 200 years to discuss what brought them to New England to begin with.

Our Kent family were Puritans who came to America from the town of Nayland, Suffolk, England in 1643/5. This was at the tail end of the Puritan Great Migration, which brought roughly 40,000 people to the Massachusetts Bay Colony. In fact, our Kent's came from a part of East Anglia, England that was a particular hotbed for the Puritan sentiment that was developing at this time- the Stour River Valley of south Suffolk and northeast Essex.

Map of the Stour River Valley showing the location of Nayland, Suffolk, England

Suffolk County within the UK, Essex lies just to its south

Historical Background

Nayland is located at a high point along the Stour River, a major river in East Anglia that forms the boundary between Suffolk and Essex. This elevated position allowed it to become an important route of safe passage within the surrounding river flood plain. In fact, the name Nayland is said to have meant Island. For this reason, by 1227, it had become an important market town, and was ruled by wealthy cloth merchants in Tudor times.

The River Stour in Nayland

St. James Church in Nayland, Suffolk, England, original structure built in 1402

Unlike the rest of Western Europe, the early Protestant Reformation in England was more of a political than religious affair, due to the antics of King Henry VIII in trying to secure his annulment from Catherine of Aragon. In 1534, he had Parliament formally abolish papal Roman Catholic authority in England, and had himself declared as the Supreme Head of the Church of England instead. Surprisingly, his greatest supporters in this breakaway were Martin Luther's Protestants, who for entirely different reasons, had also become outspoken against papal authority. For a time, this opened up the way for moderate religious reformation within the Church of England, most of which followed a Calvinist direction.

"Edward VI and the Pope", an Allegory of the Reformation by an Unknown Artist, currently displayed at the National Portrait Gallery in London. It is meant to depict the transfer of power from King Henry VIII, on his death bed, to his son Edward VI, while highlighting a weakened, slumping pope at his feet. Also shown are the members of his Privy Council as well as an image of men pulling down and smashing Roman Catholic church idols.

Calvinists believed that the Roman Catholic Church had become corrupted by its wealth and idolatry and they opposed its elaborate, ritualistic, ceremonial rites. They saw the church as relying on these historical vestments for its authority, rather than on true adherence to the Bible's teachings. King Henry helpfully assisted with their desire for religious austerity due to his own entirely unrelated financial reasons. In 1536, his Dissolution of the Lesser Monasteries Act disbanded over 800 smaller monasteries, allowing him to confiscate their assets for his military campaigns. His son, Edward VI, actually did have some religious rather than political interests though. In 1549, he further enabled the breakaway from the former Roman Catholic rites by sanctioning the adoption of the Church of England's Book of Common Prayer, which helpfully provided a complete set of reformed rites for all religious occasions.

First page of the service for Confirmation in the revised 1552 Book of Common Prayer

The English Reformation was thrown into disarray in 1553 after King Edward died, and his devoutly Roman Catholic half-sister Queen Mary I took the throne. But Protestantism was officially restored in 1559 after Queen Mary died, and her Protestant half-sister Queen Elizabeth I came into power. With all the religious and political upheaval of the prior decades, however, Catholics and Protestants had become bitterly divided within England, and fear of a possible civil war led to the search for a middle ground. Queen Elizabeth tried to quell the disputes by both formalizing the Church of England as Reformed Protestant (a nod to the Calvinists), but also by allowing for more leeway in the interpretation of the Eucharist and the wearing of traditional priestly vestments (concessions to the Catholics). Unfortunately, it had limited success. Recusants and papists remained quietly loyal to their Roman Catholic traditions, while more zealous Calvinists (called Puritans) continued to push for more Reformation within the Church. Nevertheless, enough of a compromise was found that Queen Elizabeth did manage to hold off a civil war during her reign.

Queen Elizabeth I, known for her ornate, finely tailored gowns made of gold cloth and rich jewels- meant to convey power, wealth, and authority.

Queen Elizabeth died in 1603, after which her cousin King James VI of the Stuarts (who was also the King of Scotland and Ireland) became ruler, and his son, King Charles I, followed soon after in 1625. Unlike Queen Elizabeth, King Charles showed no desire to mollify his subjects regarding the heated religious and political tensions of the time. In the House of Stuart view, given that the King was the head of both church and state, an attack on the Church of England was equivalent to an attack on the throne itself. And King Charles believed strongly in enforcing his monarchal power of Divine Right. In 1629, he went so far as to use this divine authority to dissolve the "bothersome" English Parliament. This occurrence was particularly alarming to Puritan leaning Calvinists. King Charles had married a Roman Catholic princess named Henrietta Maria of France, and while he did not convert from Protestantism himself, he allowed for no religious leniency towards Puritans and other nonconformists. Without a Parliament to give weight to their concerns, Puritans had no political platform from which to push for further church reforms, and many began to lose hope.

King Charles I, considered a tyrannical authoritarian by many, led his divided country into civil war and was eventually executed by Oliver Cromwell in 1649. 

Some nonconformists had already given up on reforming the Church of England by the time King Charles took the throne. These more extreme Puritans were called Separatists, and in 1620, a group of them hopped on the Mayflower and headed to Plymouth Colony (which is considered the beginning of the Puritan Great Migration). But after King Charles dissolved the Parliament in March 1629, many initially non-Separatist Puritans began to reconsider their options. One such man was John Winthrop, a wealthy landowner and lawyer who found himself released from his position on the Court in 1629 due to his Puritan leanings. He came from a Suffolk town called Edwardstone that was about 7 miles north of Nayland and 11 miles NW of Dedham in Essex Co,,- a place where vigorous clandestine religious dissention had already been occurring for some time.

Dedham Vale by John Constable (1828), showing Dedham Church in the background. It is considered one of the most beautiful areas of England.

After his court dismissal, Winthrop began to involve himself in efforts to establish another colony in the New World, just north of the Plymouth Colony that the Pilgrims had recently settled. They named it the Massachusetts Bay Colony after the Massachusett native peoples that inhabited the area. Settlement of this new colony would be an act of faith, given that 2 of the 4 colonies England had attempted to establish in the New World since 1580 had completely failed. Of the two that were successful, the Jamestown Colony lost over 80% of its inhabitants the first 3 years, while the Plymouth colony lost 50% of its inhabitants the first winter. Thankfully, Plymouth Colony found its footing the second year, with help from the Wampanoag native Americans who taught them how to plant the "three sisters". And when word of the colony's quick success reached the Puritans back in England in 1622, many more became willing to undertake the 2+ month long treacherous voyage.

The Mayflower at Sea by A. S. Burbank (1919)

Indian Corn by Paula McHugh, demonstrating the "three sisters" method of planting corn, beans, and squash. The corn provides a vertical structure for the beans to grow on, while also creating shade for the squash below. Beans fix nitrogen into the soil, which are required by both corn and squash to grow well. In turn, the squash creates a ground cover, which keeps the soil moist and prevents weeds from taking over. Together, these three plants create a balanced, protein rich diet that is high in both fiber and nutrients.

The Kent Family Line

Back in Nayland, England where the Kent's still were, the King's dissolution of Parliament was causing an uproar. In one act of protest, five men of the Nayland parish refused to kneel for communion during a visit from the Archdeaconry of Sudbury in 1629 (Ref 1). One of those men was our ancestor John Kent (probably, see Note 1). It is not known how they were punished for this act of defiance, but over the next decade, most of them boarded ships and headed for the new colony. John Winthrop, who by this time had been elected Governer of Massachusetts, arranged for a fleet of 11 ships to leave for the Boston harbor that following year, beginning on 8 April 1630. It is estimated that between 700-1000 Puritans arrived on those first ships. 

The Winthrop Fleet arrives in Boston Harbour - Jun 1630

Many men initially left their wives and young children back in England so that they could more safely prepare a homestead for them before their arrival. Such caution was just, as it is estimated that about a third of the 1630 Winthrop fleet settlers perished, either on the voyage over, or due to the hardships of the first year (Ref 4). The new settlers had planned to initially join the town of Salem, MA (established 1626), but upon their arrival, Winthrop found its inhabitants to be despondent after having just endured a brutal winter. In order to preserve his group's morale, he decided to relocate them to the settlement of Charlestown, MA, established just the year prior (Ref 5). Unfortunately, this new settlement had only one freshwater spring, and with a group so large, sickness soon became a problem. Thus, by Sept. of that same year, most of the Winthrop colonist packed up once again, and moved across Back Bay to a new area that they soon named Boston. As with the Pilgrims before them, the first winter was very hard, and by Feb. the colonist were starving. Resupply from England by way of the ship "Lion" arrived just in time. Thankfully, by the end of the second year, they too had found their footing and conditions began to improve. 


Map showing the early settlements of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, including Salem (then called Naumkeag) which lies a bit NE of Boston.

As Puritan colonists continued to arrive, new settlements adjacent to Boston began to form, the first four being Dorchester, Roxbury, Watertown, and Newtowne (later reamed to Cambridge). Though most of these early settlements have now been annexed by Boston (along with Charlestown), at the time they were separate entities. During this period, it was not uncommon for new towns to begin by the willingness of dedicated members of a congregation to follow their preacher into the wilderness. Indeed, that was the ideal many were striving for (Ref 38). There, they could more freely establish a community centered on their particular set of Reformed Protestant teachings. Many of the settlers from Nayland, England initially settled in Watertown, MA (Ref 6), led by Minister George Philips, who had been the village vicar of Boxed, Essex, England (3 miles from Nayland) prior to emigrating in 1630. (Later, this town would become the residence of notable historical figure Paul Revere.)

View of Watertown in 1905 along the Charles River

The religious freedom these settlers sought came with contingencies though. Although a vast continent of land lay open before them, the reality was that it was already settled by indigenous peoples, even if their numbers had been severely diminished by the epidemic diseases the English brought. Additionally, the French had been trading with the Native Americans for over 100 years at this point, and they did not much welcome the complication of having a new trading partner thrown into the mix. Alliances and supply chains were tested, and by 1635, the situation was on the brink of war. This placed the new colonists in a very precarious defensive position, given that their initial settlements were all densely located coastal towns with nothing to their backs but the sea. Furthermore, these small settlements were already becoming crowded with the constant influx of new immigrants, and later arrivals began to feel pressured to quickly move on. For these reasons, in September 1635, it was decided that the residents of Watertown should begin to establish new inland settlements to act as a buffer for the more populated areas on the coast. These would become the settlements of Concord, Hartford, and Dedham (Ref 7, pp.4-5).

Indigenous tribal settlements of New England in the early 1630s

Despite these underlying reasons for the new settlement of Dedham, the settlers had other lofty ideals for the vision their new settlement would be founded upon. If there is anything that can be said to distinguish Dedham from others forming during that time period, it would probably be how particularly earnest they were to create a Utopian Community in which all its residents would be pledged to live out their daily lives in peaceful "Christian Love" (Ref 12). There was also the expectation that all residents of able means would pay taxes and contribute time to communal town projects and duties several days a month. Furthermore, one could not formally join the Church of Dedham unless its elders were convinced that a "spiritual conversion" by faith had taken place for the individual in question (Ref. 12, p.24). (Though given the deep religious convictions most Puritans had in leaving England to begin with, such conversions were by no means rare in the church's first twenty years (Ref. 12, pp.31-32)). Only those willing to commit to these covenants would be allowed Freeman (voting) status and granted land ownership in the new settlement.

1876 bird's eye view drawing of Dedham, MA showing the town church at the center

The story of our Kent line getting to Dedham is a bit different than what was typical of other Puritans. For starters, they arrived just after 1642, which is when the Great Puritan Migration is generally said to have ended. That was because of the Civil War that finally did break out back in England in 1641. The Puritans were reluctant Separatists, and the chance of victory under Oliver Cromwell gave them hope of being able to practice their faith in their homeland someday after all. Infact, some recent immigrants chose to return to England after the war started in order to fight for that possibility (Note 1b). Second, rather than arriving as a family group of devout parents with children in tow, they instead arrived as group of 3 brothers, at least 2 of whom were still minors. However, the details of why that was are a bit fuzzy... 

Portrait of a Man and His Three Sons by Bartholomaeus Bruyn, 1530s

What we do know is that Joshua Kent was admitted as a Townsmen to Dedham on 2 May 1643 (Ref 14, p.96)(Note 0). He was granted permission to purchase land from Edward Colver, though it is not clear that he had the means to do so. Within about 5 months however, he had shown himself useful enough to the new settlement to be allotted land in the SW portion of the town (Note 6). Given the connection of Dedham's residents with both Watertown and Nayland, it seems probable that the Kent family was in some way acquainted with at least a few of its original residents (Note 3). Then, in late 1644, Joshua went back to England with a "testimonial from the church", (similar to what we would call a letter of recommendation today) and returned in 1645 with two of his younger brothers: John, Jr., who would have been about 12 at the time, and Joseph (b.1636, direct line), about 8 years old (Ref 20, p.37). Whether this recommendation was regarding an employment opportunity, the welfare of his brothers, or some other reason is unknown.

Allotment map of early Dedham, MA. Possible site of one of Joshua Kent's smaller holding marked in red, described as "lying betwene the Land of Mr John Allin past and John Luson in Rocke feild".

About a year later, in 1646, Joshua settled down with a young woman named Mary Cumbers. He was allowed to take the Freeman's Oath, meaning that he was now a member of the church and considered an adult who could vote in colony matters (Note 8). His initial role in the new settlement of Dedham appears rather humble. He was employed to beat the drum that called the townsmen to meetings, to keep the dogs out of the meeting house, to dig graves as needed, and to be the keeper of the town pound (Ref. 7, p.50)(Note 4). During a 1649 property valuation (Ref 14, p.161), his home value was at the lower end of the town's range. This may be partly due to a seemingly strange decision Joshua made in 1647. Apparently, he and his wife Mary, along with their new daughter Lydia, decided to return to England once again, for "reasons not well satisfiing his freinds or church heere." (Ref 20, p.37). Perhaps his friends were right, because they returned to Dedham for good about 18 months later. It definitely makes one wonder what was going on back in England though (Note 9).

Before town bells could be built, town drummers were used for town alerts like calls to meetings

This travel also begs the question- where were young John and Joseph Kent during this time?? The answer, in all likelihood, is that they were never living with Joshua in Dedham to begin with (Note 5). Infact, it was very common at that time to pay off the cost of a child's sea voyage by entering them into indentured servitude for a time (Ref 17). This had the added benefit of providing for their education and upbringing as well. Where might such an indentured servitude have occurred? A clue lies in the 1664 Will of Elizabeth Hardier of Braintree, Suffolk, MA (about 12 miles east of Dedham), in which she stated:

"I Giue unto John Kent & Joseph Kent, 40s apiece to bee paid within two yeares after my Decease. I Giue unto Joshua Kents three Daughters, 20s apiece, to bee paid to them when they are 18 yeares old, or at the Day of Marriage."(Ref 18)

We don't know a lot about this Elizabeth, or her husband Richard Hardier, unfortunately. She had only one child of her own, Lydia Hardier, who married to Martin Saunders, Jr., also of Braintree, but born in Sudbury, Suffolk, England. Sudbury is about 9 miles from Nayland and the Hardier and Saunders families seem to have been in association before their 1635 arrival. Martin was of a wealthy family, one that could afford many indentured servants, and perhaps the Hardiers were too. Often indentured servants were the children of relatives or friends, so the relationship between them was not always purely financial. Regardless, Elizabeth Hardier clearly had some type of special bond with the 3 brothers, and it seems possible that she is the one they lived with during their early years in America (Note 7).

Indentured servants in 17th century New England started as young as 7 or 8 years of age and sometimes worked for as long as 14 years in return for their sea passage and upkeep.

Another piece of evidence suggesting that Joseph and John may have initially been indentured servants in Braintree lies in the relationship of our ancestor Joseph with a man named William Cahoone. William and Joseph were of similar age, but Wiliam came to America as a Scottish political prisoner about 5 years after Joseph, due to having participated in the Anglo-Scottish War of 1650-52. He was placed into indentured servitude at the Braintree forge (now part of Quincy). William and Joseph seem to have become friends in Braintree, because from that point on, whenever one of them moved to somewhere new, the other was not far behind. I am guessing the friendship had something to do with Joseph's early Baptist leanings too. Even more tellingly, when William tragically died in 1675 (more on that later), it was Joseph Kent who was later made his son Joseph Cahoon's legal guardian (possibly as an apprenticeship) (Ref 19). This surely contributed to the later marriage between Joseph Kent's foster son and his brother John's daughter Hannah Kent as well.


Regardless of where they were living during their early years in America, by 1659, all 3 brothers were living in Dedham, MA (Ref 15, p.7). Both Joseph and John seemed to have moved there in about 1658. This would have been about the time Joseph reached the age of adulthood and assumably completed his indenture. But while John stayed in Dedham with his brother Joshua until about 1671, Joseph seems to have moved on again by 1660, perhaps due to religious differences. He may have been in some way involved with the preparations being undertaken for the new settlement of Block Island that year. In August of 1660, twelve men from Braintree purchased Block Island (now New Shoreham, RI) from Govenor John Endicott of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. They then spent the next 2 years preparing for the journey ahead, for at that point in the colony's history, the island was considered remote, and the cost and effort of getting there significant (Ref 21, Ref 22). Over the winter of 1660-61, two of the purchasers of Block Island, Samuel Deering and Simon Ray, paid for the construction of a shallop to transport passengers. William Cahoon was one of the indentured servants contracted to help with the boat's construction. And as the fates would have it, Simon Ray would soon become Joseph Kent's brother-in-law. 
 

Joseph Kent was not one of the original 16 settlers who set off for the island in the spring of 1662 (Note 10), but by 1663 he seems to have joined them (Ref. 22, p.8). In those first few years, the situation on the island with the Manissean peoples was very tense. During the Pequot War of 1636-38, the expanding MA Bay Colony had demonstrated its military superiority to the native tribes of CT and RI in brutal ways. The resulting Treaty of Hartford had forced the surviving Pequot peoples from their homeland, but the other tribes were allowed to remain. This war was the native peoples first experience with European-style warfare, and an uneasy truce remained in effect after their defeat for close to 38 years. Within the Manisseans, this unease expressed itself though "threatening speeches" and "smaller abuses" flung towards the colonist. Apparently, things would get especially dicey if the tribe had recently traded for some "fire-water" (Ref. 22, pp.14-19). Despite superior military power, the new settlers saw that the Manissean people outnumbered them on their isolated island by about 20:1. Eventually though, the Block Island settlers decided to bring matters to a head by formally challenging them to a battle outside their fort (Ref. 21, pp.300-304). On the appointed day, Joseph Kent and the other original 16 settlers marched in a war-like fashion to the Manissean stronghold. Their challenge was accompanied by the powerful rhythms of a "single drum beaten for dear life by Mr. Kent" (Ref. 21, p.75) who was further described as being "a very active and sprightly man, and skilful (sic) in the business" (Ref. 22, p.19). (Perhaps he learned the instrument from his brother Joshua?) Having witnessed the Pequot's demise, the island's native population knew better than to respond in kind, and instead claimed that the vigorous beating of the drum had frightened them from fighting back. From that time forward, it was said that the "small abuses" ceased, and a "friendship" between settlers and Manissean's formed.

Block Island, now New Shoreham, RI. Trim pond marks the location of where the Manissean stronghold of Fort Island was located.

In the early years of the new settlement, Joseph Kent worked closely with fellow settlers James Sands and Thomas Terry to petition the General Assembly of Rhode Island on behalf of Block Islands inhabitants (Ref 21, pp.232-233). In May of 1664, they requested that the householders of the island be formally admitted as Freemen to the colony, which was granted (Ref 22, p.9). The new settlement was also granted the right to call public meetings for "regulation and safety", to appoint a town constable and clerk, and to "grant warrants, and try cases". James Sands and Thomas Terry were made Selectmen at this time (similar to members of a city council today). Joseph Kent was not chosen as the third selectman needed, assumably because he was still a young man and not of notable social or financial standing. Though clearly he had been well trained in his indenture if he was still seen as a fitting person to represent the settlers in their early legal affairs.


Joseph Kent's first child was born in about 1665 (Ref 27), suggesting the Joseph was married in about 1664. His wife, Susannah George, was the daughter of Peter George, and stepsister of Simon Ray, both original 16 Block Island settlers (Note 11). They lived on Block Island until about 1673, at which point they moved to the newly developing community of Swansea (Ref 19, p.116), which was at that point a part of Rhode Island. William Cahoon had moved to Swansea as well in about 1670, and in 1673 he was designated the town's brickmaker. Joseph and Susannah's first 3 children were born before leaving the island. However, their youngest child, Susannah, seems likely to have been an unexpected late arrival. She was born 15 years after their next youngest child, Joshua, when Susannah would have been 45 years old (Ref 28, p.19)!


The part of Swansea, MA that the Kent's lived in belongs to Barrington, RI now. Joseph Kent, Sr. was probably Baptist (or at least a Congregationalist with Baptist leanings), and neither Plymouth nor Massachusetts Bay Colony wanted anything to do with Baptists at that point. (While the Puritans may have come to New England to be religiously free, they were really only looking for freedom to practice their particular form of Reformed/Calvinist theology, not religious freedom for any belief system at all.) They wanted to get rid of them so much that in 1667 they allowed a group of them from Rehoboth/Seekonk, MA to have land in a part of the Sowams purchase. Anything to get them far enough away that they would no longer be able to negatively influence Plymouth Colony's inhabitants with their disturbing "heresies". And so, in about the spring 1670, a group of settlers moved far enough south to be just outside the boundary of Plymouth Colony, settling on the upper half of New Meadow Neck.


New Meadow Neck, also called Chacacus at that time, is now part of the Hampden Meadow's neighborhood of Barrington, RI.

Swansea had a novel system for admitting town residents (Ref 25, pp.157-161). It decided to admit townsmen to one of three ranks based on "ability, character, or influence". The higher the rank, the more land that would be allotted, effectively setting up a landed aristocracy as in England. Most people were understandably less than enthused. Joseph Kent, Sr. took issue with the system in 1677 (Ref. 25, p.160). Apparently, he had previously purchased the land of John Harding, who was a 3rd (lowest) rank inhabitant that had been ordered to leave the town in 1674 due to "not fulfilling the fundamental order of the town." The Town Counsil initially felt that this meant Joseph should be considered 3rd rank as well, however, Joseph felt he was entitled to a rank of 2nd tier. Although it took 4 years, the town eventually consented and granted him this status, along with the additional land it entitled. Before this resolution though, in 1675 he was found to have "Trespassed upon ye Lands of ye sd Town" by putting up a fence around the part he felt was due to him, and so the fence was torn down (Ref 25, p.174). 

Present day view across the Barrington River from New Meadow Neck

During those four years of appeal, however, there were much more serious issues to contend with for the new Swansea settlement- namely, King Philip's War. I have previously written a small amount about this conflict here, regarding our Seaman line. But the war had both such immediate devastation, as well and long-term impacts for the colonies as a whole, that I plan to discuss it in more detail in a future post. For now, we will say that "King Phillip" was the English name given to the Paramount Chief (Sachem) of the Wampanoag peoples, who were the Native Americans present in the area of Plymouth Colony before the Pilgrims arrived. By the 1660s, a new generation of Colony born English were ready to expand into homesteads of their own. Gradual land encroachment by the colonists into Wampanoag territory eventually brought matters to a boil (Ref 29). Swansea's location, to the immediate north of King Phillip's seat of government on Mt. Hope, resulted in this new settlement being at the frontline of the war that broke out in 1675.

In 1664, Sachem Metacomet (ie "King Philip") attempted to address his people's land grievances with the settlers in the Plymouth Colony general court. However, the court ruled that from that point forward, King Philip must take up these concerns with the town councils of the offending settlement themselves, which largely chose to ignore them.

Between June 20-24th, 1675, Wampanoag warriors initiated a series of attacks on Swansea by raiding food stores, shooting cattle, and burning farms. New Meadows Neck settlers fled to the nearby garrisoned home of Rev. John Myles, but were ambushed along the way. Several people were severely wounded, and eventually two brave men, one of them William Cahoon, volunteered to try to run for help. They never made it- their mutilated bodies were instead discovered 2 days later, along the road near Palmer River Cemetery, by two military commissioners (Ref. 24, p.68). In the brutal 2 years that followed before the Native Americans were defeated, the initial upper New Meadows Neck settlement of Swansea was destroyed, and the settlers forced to relocate. No doubt, Joseph Kent was one of these, and it is unknown where he found refuge during this time- perhaps back in the Boston area with his brothers. There is no record of him having participated in the war itself.

The first garrisoned home of Rev. John Myles, to which settlers fled during the outbreak of King Philip's War. Though it was destroyed by fire in the early 20th century, this picture shows the gabled roof and center chimney that were typical of the building style during that time.

After the war, the town center of Swansea shifted, instead becoming more developed in the Tyler's Point area, which was located at the southern tip of New Meadows Neck. Rev. Myles was convinced to return from Boston, where he had resided during the war, and a new church and home were built for him near where Tyler's Point Cemetry still stands today. (Note that at that time, Tyler's Point was often simply referred to as "The Place of Trade"). As the area grew, it spread east across the Palmer River to Brooks Pasture (now called Warren), and west across the Barrington River to Phebe's Neck. Eventually, in 1717, the western area was separated from Swansea and became the town of Barrington.

1776 map of New Meadow Neck (though labeled as Newberry Neck here). Arrow shows the possible general location of the Kent family homestead after King Phillip's War based on later plat maps. Note Miles Bridge in the upper right corner, to the left of which was the garrison property of Rev. John Myles before King Phillip's War.

Tyler's Point Cemetery, now surrounded by the Tyler's Point Marina

In 1680, Joseph Kent signed the Freeman's covenant for the settlement of Brook's Pasture (Ref 25, p.178)(Ref 31), though it does not seem likely that he ever actually moved there (Note 12). By about 1700, this area had become built up enough that the Baptist Church was moved across the river as well (Ref.25, pp.184-185), to an area now called North Swansea. However, this move was also due to a change in ministry that had occurred after the death of Rev. Myles in 1683. His post was taken up by Elder Samuel Luther. Apparently, Rev. Myles had been fairly liberal in his willingness to tolerate the Pedobaptist belief in infant baptism. Elder Luther was not so tolerant, and before long, a new Congregational denomination separated off west into what became Barrington. At least some of Joseph's children seems to have chosen the Barrington side in this split.

Present day New Meadows Neck, now part of Barrington, as well as the town of Warren, once called Brook's Pasture.

Joseph Kent's oldest son, Joseph Kent, Jr. (b.1665, direct line) chose a different path, though one that seems to have been influenced by his father. Although Joseph Kent, Sr. did not die until the age of 68, because of how late in life his youngest, Susannah, was born, she was still a 16-year-old minor when he passed in 1704. His friend, Deacon Samuel Newman of Rehoboth, was given guardianship over her (Ref 34, p.342). Back in 1696/7, both Deacon Samuel Newman and Joseph Kent, Sr. had been chosen as representatives to the General Court (Ref 33, p.131, Ref 23, p.58), and perhaps that how the families became acquainted (Note 13). And Deacon Samuel Newman was also the son of Rev. Samuel Newman of Rehoboth (ie the church the followers of Rev. John Myles had split away from at Swansea's 1667 founding). Deacon Newman must have had a profound effect on Joseph, because about a year after his court appointment, he and his wife joined the Newman Congregational Church of Rehoboth and his daughter, Susannah, was baptized there as well (Ref 36). Joseph Kent, Jr. was the only child of Joseph, Sr. who also joined the Newman Church though, and according to land records (Ref 35)(Note 14), he likely moved to Rehoboth, MA (now Rumford, MA) in about 1714.

The Newman Congregational Church today, built across the street from the original meeting house which was destroyed in 1676 during King Phillip's War.

Joseph Kent, Jr. and his wife Dorothy Brown (who was the granddaughter of Mayflower passengers John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley) had 8 children- 4 boys and 4 girls, of whom, their oldest son, Joseph Kent, III (b.1693), was our direct ancestor. In 1728, after his wife Dorothy died, he was married again in the Newman church to Mary Carpenter. Actually, it was a double wedding- his son Hezekiah married to Ruth Cooper on that same day. By the time Joseph Jr. passed in 1735, he had amassed considerable land holdings throughout the Bristol County area, and his children all received comfortable sums (Ref 34, p.342), in particular his oldest son Joseph III (Note 15). Almost all of Joesph Kent, Jr.'s children were married in the Newman Congregational Church, and were probably baptized there as well, though the records that far back have been lost.

"Here lies ye Body of Mr. Joseph Kent, Decd. March ye 20th 1734/5 in 70th Year if his Age."

Joseph Kent, III married Bethia Thurston in 1721. They had 9 children, all of whom appear to have been baptized in the Newman church (Note 16). Three of them died in childhood, however, and one died as a young adult. Their 5th child, Jabez Kent (b.1732), was our direct ancestor. Despite the relative land wealth of his inheritance, Joseph Kent, III decided not to stay in Rehoboth (though the rest of his siblings did). Instead, in 1745, three years after their youngest was born, the family moved to Stafford, Tolland Co. (then a part of Hartford Co.), Connecticut (Ref 36, p.475). Given the Baptist leanings of our branch of the Kent line, it seems likely that the relocation was due, at least in part, to the split occurring within the Congregationalists at this period. This was during the time of the First Great Awakening in Britain and the Colonies, and many "Old Light" Congregationalists were embracing more liberal "New Light" Baptist principles. Inspired by the revivalist preaching of theologians like Johnathan Edwards, the Colony of Connecticut was at the forefront of these New Light sentiments.

Location of the famous "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" sermon given by Johnathan Edwards in Enfield, CT (about 13 miles west of Stafford) in 1741.

After settling in Stafford, Tolland, CT, the Kent family finally remained in place for 3 generations, until moving westward again in the 1830s. The town was settled by Puritans in about 1718, and was initially known for its mineral rich spring water that had been used by the indigenous Nipmuc peoples for many years. Due to its widely pronounced curative properties, it soon became the site of the first health spa in Colonial America. Its resort town status was further enhanced in 1767 when a direct stagecoach route was established from Boston to Stafford (called Stafford Springs at the time) to make it more easily accessible. Future president John Adams visited the site himself in 1764. That same year, our ancestor Jabez Kent married Sarah Johnson, and they began a family of 9 children together, 7 of whom lived to adulthood. Their 3rd child, and oldest son, Elijah Kent (b.1769), was our direct ancestor.

In 1802, Dr. Samuel Willard bought the property that contained the Stafford natural spring and built the Stafford Springs House to accommodate patrons of its "miracle water".

We do not know very much about the Kent family during their time in Stafford, CT. They seem to have been well educated. At least two of Elijah Kent and Margaret Denison's sons were school masters, including our ancestor Orvin Kent (b.1808). Orvin's older brother, Merrill, is said to have been able to read in 7 different languages, as well as write in converse in 3 of them! In later years, Orvin described himself as of the Swedenborgian faith. The Kent family's move to Lagrange Co., IN in the 1830-40s was likely tied up in the Second Great Awakening that was occurring in America during this time of westward expansion. Clearly our Kent line has a long and dedicated history of seeking spiritual truth.

"Grace" by Eric Enstrom (abt. 1920)


References

1) Bartlett, J. G. "Gregory Stone Genealogy: Ancestry and Descendants of Deacon Gregory Stone of Cambridge, Mass. 1320-1917", p.43. The Stone Family Assoc. Boston, Mass, 1918. https://archive.org/details/fl-57081-tn-195526/page/42/mode/2up : 2024.

2) Banks, C. E. "The Winthrop Fleet of 1630: An Account of the Vessels, the Voyage, the Passengers and their English Homes from Original Authorities", pp.52-53. Boston, Mass. : Houghton Mifflin company, 1930. https://archive.org/details/winthropfleetof100bank/page/50/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

3) Pope, C. H. "The pioneers of Massachusetts, a descriptive list, drawn from records of the colonies, towns and churches and other contemporaneous documents", p.267. Boston, Mass., 1900. https://archive.org/details/pioneersofmassac00pope/page/266/mode/2up?q=Kent&view=theater : 2024.

4) The Winthrop Society. 2022. Home | The Winthrop Society : 2024.

5) Mayo, L. S. "The Winthrop Family in America". Boston, Mass: Mass. Historical Soc., 1948. https://archive.org/details/winthropfamilyin00mayo/page/18/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

6) Banks, C. E. . "Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England 1620-1650", p.158. Brownell, Elijah Ellsworth : Philadelphia, PA, 1937. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/282459/?offset=0#page=197&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= : 2024.

7) Smith, F. "A history of Dedham, Massachusetts". Dedham, Mass. : Transcript Press, 1936. https://archive.org/details/historyofdedhamm00smit/page/5/mode/2up: 2024.

8) NEHGR. "Notes: Braintree Mass., Items.", Vol. 62, p.94, No. 188, 11th paper. New England Historical and Genealogical Register : Boston, Mass., 1874. https://archive.org/details/newenglandhisto19unkngoog/page/94/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

9) Savage, J. "A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of new England", Vol. 3, p.12. Boston, Mass. : Little, Brown & Co., 1861. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/465140/?offset=&return=1#page=17&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= : 2024.

10) Griswold, G. E. "The Griswold family, England-America : Edward of Windsor, Connecticut, Matthew of Lyme, Connecticut, Michael of Wethersfield, Connecticut" Vol. 2., pp.13-14. Middleboro, Mass. : Griswold Family Association of America, 1935. https://archive.org/details/griswoldfamilyen02gris/page/n23/mode/2up : 2024.

11) Suffolk Archives, West Suffolk branch: Surname Index. HA 541/1/67: "KENT, John, late of Nayland, now of Kinsington [Kersington], Middlesex, [England] party to deed - 1636, 1657. KENT, Alice of Nayland, party to deed - 1636." suffolkarchives.co.uk : 2024.

12) Lockridge, K. A. "A New England town : the first hundred years : Dedham, Massachusetts, 1636-1736". Norton : NY, 1984. https://archive.org/details/newenglandtown00lock/page/60/mode/2up : 2024.

13) Marr, J. S., & Cathey, J. T. (2010). "New Hypothesis for Cause of Epidemic among Native Americans, New England, 1616–1619". Emerging Infectious Diseases, 16(2), 281-286. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1602.090276 : 2024.

14) Hill, D. G. "The Early Records of the Town of Dedham, Massachusetts. 1636-1659.", Vol. 3. Printed Records of the Town : Dedham, Mass., 1892. https://archive.org/details/earlyrecordsofto03hill/page/34 : 2024.

15) Hill, D. G. "The Early Records of the Town of Dedham, Massachusetts. 1659-1673.", Vol. 4. Printed Records of the Town : Dedham, Mass., 1886. https://archive.org/details/earlyrecordsofto04dedhiala/earlyrecordsofto04dedhiala/page/4/mode/2up?q=Kent : 2024.

16) Cook, L. A. "History of Norfolk County Massachusetts, 1622-1918", Vol 1, pp.117-133. New York, NY : The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1918. https://archive.org/details/historyofnorfolk01cook_0/page/116/mode/2up : 2024.

17) Rutyna, R. A. "Social Mobility in Puritan Massachusetts: A Case Study of Fifty Indentured Servants and Apprentices in Essex County entices in Essex County, 1630-1680", p.10. College of William & Mary : Williamsburg, VA, 1961. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3959&context=etd : 2024.

18) Abstracts of Early Wills. New England Historical and Genealogical Register 13:12. (1859).

19) Briggs, L. V. "Genealogies of the different families bearing the name of Kent in the United States, together with their possible English ancestry A.D. 1295-1898", p.115. Boston, MA : Rockwell & Churchill Press, 1898. https://archive.org/details/genealogiesofdif00byubrig/page/114/mode/2up : 2024.

20) Hill, D. G. "The Early Records of the Town of Dedham, Massachusetts. 1638-1845.", Vol. 2. Printed Records of the Town : Dedham, Mass., 1888. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/125699/?offset=0#page=49&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q= : 2024.

21) Livermore, S. T. "History of Block Island, Rhode Island". Greenfield : Bridgewater, Mass., 1877 https://archive.org/details/historyofblockis1961live/page/270/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

22) Sheffield, W. P. "A Historical Sketch of Block Island". Newport, RI : Newport, J. P. Sanborn & Co., Printers, 1876. https://archive.org/details/historicalsketch00shef/page/n9/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

23) Wright, O. O. “History of Swansea, Massachusetts, 1667-1917". Town of Swansea : Swansea, Mass., 1917. https://archive.org/details/historyofswansea00wrig/page/n9/mode/2up : 2024.

24) Tilton, G. H. “A History of Rehoboth, Massachusetts; Its History for 275 Years, 1643-1918, in Which Is Incorporated the Vital Parts of the Original History of the Town”. Publ. by Author : Boston, Mass., 1918. https://archive.org/details/ahistoryrehobot00blisgoog/page/n8/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

25) Bicknell, T. W. “A History of Barrington, Rhode Island”. Providence, RI : Snow & Farnham, Printers, 1898. https://archive.org/details/historyofbarring00bick/page/n15/mode/2up : 2024.

26) King, H. M. “Rev. John Myles And The Founding of The First Baptist Church in Massachusetts : An Historical Address Delivered at The Dedication of a Monument in Barrington, Rhode Island (Formerly Swansea, Mass.) June 17, 1905. https://archive.org/details/revjohnmylesfo00king/page/n5/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

27) "Web: Rhode Island, U.S., Historical Cemetery Commission Index, 1647-2008". Rhode Island Historical Cemetery Commission. https://rihistoriccemeteries.org/newgravedetails.aspx?ID=96438 : (accessed 12 May 2024). Joseph Kent burial (died on 20 Mar 1735) in NEWMAN CEMETERY, Rhode Island, USA. Born in 1666.

28) Rounds, H. L. P. “Vital Records of Swansea, Massachusetts to 1850". NEHGS, 1992.https://archive.org/details/vitalrecordsofsw00roun/page/480/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

29) Anderson, V. D. (1994). King Philip’s Herds: Indians, Colonists, and the Problem of Livestock in Early New England. The William and Mary Quarterly, 51(4), 601–624. https://doi.org/10.2307/2946921 : 2024.

30) Bowen, R. L. "Early Rehoboth, documented historical studies of families and events in this Plymouth colony township", Vol. 3, pp.47-48 & p.64. Rehoboth, Mass. : Rumford Press, 1945. https://archive.org/details/earlyrehobothdoc03bowe/page/48/mode/2up : 2024.

31) Fessenden, Gu. M. "The history of Warren, R.I., from the earliest times", Supplement, pp.60-62, p.75, pp.80-84, pp.116-118). Providence, RI : H. H. Brown, 1845. https://archive.org/details/historyofwarrenr00fess/page/62/mode/2up?view=theater : 2024.

32) Bowen, R. L. "Early Rehoboth, documented historical studies of families and events in this Plymouth colony township", p.168. Rehoboth, Mass. : Rumford Press, 1945. https://archive.org/details/earlyrehobothdoc03bowe/page/168/mode/2up : 2024.

33) Bliss Jr., L. "The history of Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts". Boston, Mass. : Boston, Otis, Broaders & Co., 1836. https://archive.org/details/historyofrehobot01blis/page/130/mode/2up : 2024.

34) Roser, S. E. "Mayflower Deeds and Probates: From the Files of George Ernest Bowman at the Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants", p.342. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publ. Co., Inc., 1994. "Mayflower Deeds and Probates, 1600-1850". https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/10706:3223 : 2024.

35) "Massachusetts Land Records, 1620-1986," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9Z7-8QBM?cc=2106411&wc=MCB5-8WG%3A361612901%2C362169901 : 22 May 2014), Bristol > Deed index (grantee) 1686-1795 vol 1-2 > image 344 of 494; county courthouses and offices, Massachusetts.

36) Arnold, J. N. "Vital record of Rhode Island : 1636-1850 : first series : births, marriages and deaths : a family register for the people", Vol. 9, pp.474-566. Internet Archive. (1891). https://archive.org/details/cu31924096442359/page/510/mode/2up : 2024.

37) Bicknell, T. W. "Sowams; with ancient records of Sowams and parts adjacent--illustrated", p.95. (1908). Internet Archive. https://archive.org/details/sowamswithancien00bick/page/94/mode/2up : 2024.

38) Turner, J. G. "They knew they were pilgrims: Plymouth Colony and the Contest for American Liberty". Yale University Press, 2020. https://www.amazon.com/They-Knew-Were-Pilgrims-Plymouth/dp/0300225504 : 2024.

Notes

0) Up until 1752, England and the Colonies used the "Old Style" calendar system, in which the new year started on March 25th (Lady Day) rather than Jan 1st. In this system, what we would think of as 15 Jan 1651, they would write as 15 Jan 1650. Also, during the month of March, they wrote the year as 1650/1. So what we would write as 15 Mar 1651, they would write as 15 Mar 1650/1. From the 25th of March, the dates were written similarly through Dec. Additionally, sometimes they referred to dates as simply "the 2nd month of the year", by which we would mean Feb, but they meant April. When reading secondary sources, dates are not always adjusted correctly, and it can sometimes be hard to interpret what the original text might have said.

1) Many accounts list the names of John Kent's 3 sons who came to the MA Bay Colony between 1643-1645 but I have not yet seen any that list the father John himself. A ship manifest of the 1645 voyage lists the brothers as being from Nayland, Suffolk, England, and the Suffolk Archives does not find land records of any other Kents in Nayland during this time, so it seems reasonable to assume that this was their father. Of yet, I have found no baptism records to support this though. Many people list a John Kent and Alice Woodthorpe of Lamarsh, Essex as their parents and say they were married in Chilton, Suffolk, England in 1625. Lamarsh is only about 6 miles west of Nayland and Chilton only about 8 miles north, so this would make sense, but other than a baptism record for Alice, I have yet to find a primary source that verifies it. (Please contact me if you have one!)

1b) The deed record for John and Alice Kent of Nayland on Fen Street in the Suffolk Archives suggests that a mortgage transfer was made on 17 Jan 1636 between John Kent and Christopher Scarlett. That is very interesting because Christopher Scarlett was one of the other five men that refused to kneel back in 1629. Of those 5 men, only Christopher Scarlett is known to have stayed in England for certain (Ref 1). John Warren and John Firmyn probably both left in the initial Winthrop Fleet. A third man from Nayland, Gregory Stone, seems to have left for Watertown, MA in about 1635/6. It is possible that our John Kent did initially leave for America at the same time, but then chose to return when the Civil War began. I think this possibility would actually go a long way towards explaining why young Joshua was so willing to cross the ocean alone and also so easily taken in at the new Dedham settlement, despite having no real occupational skills or wealth to speak of. If the Kent family did initially come to Watertown in 1636, Joshua would have made the acquaintance of many of the future residents of Dedham during his early teenage years.

These same records indicate that John Kent was a Clothier who had moved to Kensington, Middlesex, England (now part of London) by 1657. His wife Alice had passed by then, and he was remarried to a widow named Ann Hull from Stoke by Nayland. Additionally, he seems to have been fined in 1642, which would correspond to the hard times that must have come if his first wife Alice did indeed die in 1641.

Sorting this out will have to be another installment. (If you do have primary records for any of these facts, please contact me. Thanks!)

2) The only primary birthdate source I have been able to find for any of the three brothers is for Joseph. He was a witness in a 19 May 1653 court case of Faxton vs. Wilson in Braintree, MA, in which his age was stated as "16 years or thereabouts" (Ref 8). This means he would have been born in about 1637 and he was the youngest known child. Thus, John Kent could not have left England before 1636.

3) In 1635/6, a large number of Puritan immigrants from the Stour River Valley of Suffolk/Essex, England made their way to Massachusetts, and many ended up in Watertown and/or Dedham. One possibility is Henry or Nicolas Phillips, who were likely related to the George Phillips from Boxed, Essex (near Nayland) that became the Pastor in Watertown. George Phillips was an outspoken voice for the Puritan cause in England before leaving in 1630, and the Kents would have likely been influenced by his sentiments. Another possibility is the family of Samuel Morse, also born in Boxed, Essex, England, though probably living in Redgrave, Suffolk, England around the time of his 1635 immigration. Philemon Dalton, a linen weaver in the town, is another possibility.

I should also mention here that some researchers say that our John Kent (b.1600) had a sister named Dorothy Kent (b. 1603) who married a John Browne. They are supposed to have come to America in about 1632 and settled in Watertown, MA. This Dorothy probably remarried later to a William Potter after her first husband died in 1636. This could be an alternate reason that Joshua decided to come over in 1643. Though I'm not sure why he would have gone to Dedham rather than Watertown nearer his aunt in that case. I haven't found much info to either support or refute this possibility. Unfortunately, John Browne is just about as common a name as you can get for that time period, so it's pretty hard to trace him from Watertown back to England. And the records that do exist list his wife as Dorothy, but don't give a last name, so it is tough to be sure.

4) Some researchers have previously assumed that by "pound" the authors meant money or tithes. But a much more likely explanation is the animal pens that colonial towns kept at this time for loose cows and the like. Pound keepers were paid when people retrieved their animals from the town pound. See the link above for more information.

5) The wording of the town record about this issue is "md ye sd Joshuah Kent having brought ov'r 2 of his brothers & placed them in ye country..." (Ref 20, p.37) which suggests that 1) Joshua possibly had other brothers/siblings as well, and 2) they were housed somewhere outside of Dedham.

6) The practice at this time was to receive small houselots within the village center, as well as larger farming lots within a common field. In Dedham, allotments were granted as 12 acres for married men and 8 acres for single men (Ref. 7, p.12). Before his marriage, Joshua Kent was granted 2 acres in the Rocky Field SW of town, and 6 acres of "upland where it may be found convenient" but there is no further clarification of where this second allotment was made.

7) Even more interesting is her connection to the Saunders family.  And in Martin Saunder's 1706 will, he mentions the Kents again:
"I Give unto Mary Kent, forty shillings or a Sowe, at the choice of my Executor, to be paid within a year after the decease of my Loving wife
I Give unto Susannah Kent forty shillings or a Sowe, at the Liberty of my Executor, to be paid within a year after the Death of my wife."
Likely these were the younger 2 daughters of Joshua Kent, though there is evidence from a baptism record in Stoke-by-Nayland that John and Alice also had at least one daughter named Mary in 1636. Perhaps multiple children were sent to the New World as indentured servants after Alice died??

8) Usually, one had to be 21 years of age to take the Freeman's oath, but there were exceptions. Occasionally, if one was a member of the church and had contributed in some significant way to the welfare of the settlement, and/or had demonstrated maturity through property ownership and/or marriage, the oath was allowed earlier. If he was at least 21 years of age, he was born in 1625 or earlier. That would be a larger separation in age from his younger brothers than one might expect, but perhaps he was trying to help his father out with his youngest siblings after his mother died. It is also doubtful that he would have married before age 18, so even if allowed to take the oath early, a birth of 1625-1627 seems most likely.

9) The Dedham town record of Ref 20 went on to state that:
"...md ye said Joshuah Kent upon ye trobles arising againe in England & wares ther 1648 he returned wth his wife againe about ye 8m yt yeare" (ie Joshua Kent went to England again in about 1648, but upon troubles arising there as before, he once again returned with his wife.")

And now for some wild speculation based on preliminary data. The more pieces of information I gather, the more sense I get of Joshua as a pious and earnest, but also still somewhat fickle lad in his early 20s. If his father is who I think he was, then he was a Clothier who likely helped to produce and arrange for the sale of cloth goods between London and Nayland. Unfortunately, the Suffolk Wool Towns were in severe economic decline at that time. Perhaps young Joshua, caught up in Puritan idealism, was also running away from expectations on him as the oldest son of a dying family business??? Or perhaps he and his father just did not get along very well. Or he found the atmosphere in England towards Puritans still too stifling. We will probably never know for certain.

The other sense I get of the 3 brothers is that while they were not wealthy themselves, they seem to have had a lot of connections with people who were, and those connections definitely helped them to get a leg up in the New World, particularly Joseph. Perhaps their father back in Nayland had been a Clothier for some of the wealthy families in the area and had good connections, though I did not find the Kents listed as among the wealthiest Clothiers of Suffolk or Essex themselves. Still, his property description in Nayland in 1636 was listed as "Messuage and dyehouse buildings, 1 messuage called Godings (alias Moline) and garden and 1 messuage anciently called Balls in Fen Street, Nayland, 1636", so he was not poor either.

10) Some accounts say this happened in 1661 instead, but a good description of the events necessary to undertake a new settlement was laid out in Ref. 21, p.19, and I am inclined to agree with his assessment of the timing. Of note, the future Block Islanders seem to have stayed in Taunton, MA from 1661-1662, while the land surveying was completed and final preparations were made. This would have been a much more convenient location than Braintree from which to make frequent trips to and from the island before permanent settlements could be undertaken.

11) There is no primary record for when this marriage occurred, though some secondary sources cite Rehoboth. Although Joseph and Susannah were likely both living on the island in 1664, the island did not obtain its first minister until 1700, and that one lasted only 2 years. Instead, the islanders continued holding services in one another's homes until a permanent Baptist minister was finally found in 1765! It was then that the town established the First Baptist Church, now known as Harbor Church. Without a minister in 1664, however, it is likely that Joseph and Susanna would have had to be married on the mainland. Furthermore, given their Baptist leaning sentiments, going to Rehoboth, where Rev. John Myles had arrived in 1663, would have made sense, and could also explain their later move to Swansea. It is also possible they could have gone to Newport, Warwick, Portsmouth, or Providence though, all of which were strongholds for the Baptist sentiments not allowed in the other colonies at that time.

12) The burial stones for Joseph's other two sons, Samuel and Joshua, are both in the Tyler's Point Cemetery, near where he is known to have owned land after the war. Joseph, Jr., on the other hand, is buried in the Newman Cemetery up in Rumford, RI, which is right next to the Rumford Cemetery. I am guessing that the Find-a-Grave profile for Joseph Sr. that discusses him possibly being buried in "the Old Rumsford Cemetery" comes from someone either mistaking his son's grave for his, or just assuming he was buried in the same place. In the Inventory of Estate taken for Joseph after his death in 1704, he is stated to be "of Swansea MA." (Ref 34, p.342). Thus, I think Joseph Kent, Sr. is likely buried in the Tyler's Point Cemetery as well. Unfortunately, most of the early markers in the Tyler's Point cemetery are at this point unreadable.

13) Also, in 1692, Samuel Newman, III of Rehoboth along with Joseph Kent, Jr. and his brother Samuel, were witnesses to a Rehoboth land transfer made after the death of Swansea resident John Viall in 1691 (Ref 32, p.168). Later their families would more formally intertwine when Deacon Newman's grandson Noah Newman (son of David Newman) married Joseph Kent, Jr.'s daughter, Dorothy Kent, in 1721.

14) Land record (Ref 35) show that Samuel and Joshua both purchased land in Swansea, MA shortly after their father's estate was settled in 1704. As the eldest, Joseph Jr. was probably living on the original New Meadow Neck homestead with his mother still. The earliest record of a Joseph Kent buying land in Rehoboth occurred in 1714, which is probably when he relocated. Perhaps this was when his mother Susannah (George) died. He was definitely living in Rehoboth by 1727 when his first wife Dorothy (Brown) died, as she was buried in the Newman Cemetery as well.

15) "Will of Joseph Kent of Rehoboth, MA...dated Mar 1734/5...to son Joseph Kent, the house in which he now dwells, all lands in Watchamoket neck [now East Providence], three acres of meadow in Mile Brook adjoining to Isaac Perrin's meadow, ten acres of land att ye north end of my homestead, five acres of meadow att ye south end which I bought of John Mason, a quarter parte of cedar swamp att Squanemaconk [probably Seekonk], twenty acres on ye east side of Squanamaconk and twenty pound right in Commonage in Rehoboth, he paying to my daughters twenty pounds each..."

16) There is a bit of confusion in the church records here actually, though the town clerk records appear to be correct. Jabez's baptism record lists his name as Joseph rather than Jabez (Ref. 36, p.510), and then doesn't list the second Joseph (IV) born to the family in 1737 (the first Joseph died in 1735 just before turning 13). I'm guessing this is a transcription error, given that it would not have made much sense for Joseph III and Bethia to have baptized all but one of their children, especially given he did not die as an infant. Also, all other records for Jabez confirm that his name was Jabez, not Joseph.


Kent Lineage

Monday, February 26, 2024

The Stutzman-Hochstetlers : Our Swiss-German Amish Line

Family Line Links: (WikiTree.com)(Ancestry.com)(FamilySearch.org)


Our Stutzman line has been a tricky one to research. Believe it or not, there were no less than 3 different Christian Stutzman's living in Berks Co., PA during the mid-1700s! Sorting them out has been no easy task, especially given the wide variety of incorrect information that currently abounds on the internet. Of course, I can't promise that I haven't made my own errors here. But I have looked over everything currently available to draw my conclusions, and I will try to lay out my own assumptions clearly in the Notes section. The effort has been well worth it, because this is a fascinating story.

Lake Thun area of Canton Bern, Switzerland, near where our Stutzman line is likely from. Due to the isolation created by its mountainous valley landscape, the area is largely rural with dairy farming, fruit, and cheese as some of its main exports. This geography has also led to a people with an independence streak regarding both church and state. During the Reformation, it became an early stronghold for Anabaptists sentiments, and was also the birthplace of Jakob Ammann, founder of the Amish.

Map showing the Canton of Bern within Switzerland. Most followers of Jakob Ammann were from the Lake Thun and Obersimmental-Saanen (Oberland) areas. Ammann was born in Erlenbach, which lies within the Simme Valley of Oberland.

Historical Background

To begin with, you might be wondering what it means to be an Amish. Especially a Swiss-German one like in our line. It all goes back, once again, to that fateful posting of the 95-Theses on the church doors by Martin Luther in 1517. His questioning of the Roman Catholic Church's authority kicked off the Protestant Reformation throughout Europe. The resulting reexamination of where the authority of a governing body should come from eventually had revolutionary repercussions throughout the Western World. However, the Reformation's newfound freedom for religious scholars to question doctrine also allowed for many different interpretations to be reached. While people in future Germany and France began to convert to Lutheranism, or Calvinism, in Switzerland it was the Anabaptist movement that primarily took hold instead.

One of the early distinguishing beliefs of the Anabaptist movement was the "believer's baptism" (ie the idea that one should not be baptized until they are able to make a conscious profession of their faith, as opposed to as an infant). Michael Sattler (b.1490) was an early founder of the Anabaptist movement. Sattler was originally a Benedictine Monk, born in the now German city of Staufen (back then considered a part of the Holy Roman Empire). However, he came to believe that the only true moral authority on religious doctrine was that which came through strict interpretation of the Bible itself. In 1525, he chose to leave the Catholic Church, and instead began a mission to teach this scripture-based theology, thus beginning the Anabaptist movement. His followers across Baden-Württemberg (SW Germany) and northern Switzerland, became known as the Swiss Brethren.

Swiss Brethren Believers Baptism, based on Acts 2:41. Interestingly, the Amish tradition for males of a beard without a mustache is a symbol of both their non-violence doctrine and a show of commitment and fidelity to their spouse.

 In 1527, Sattler is believed to have written the seven articles of the Schleitheim Confession, considered the most representative statement of Anabaptist principles. In addition to a "believer's baptism", another key doctrine in its articles is that of non-resistance to violence, patterned after the words of Christ in which he told his followers to "turn the other cheek" to an attack (Matthew 5:38-40). For this reason, Anabaptists refused to participate in the military defense of the nations which they inhabited. These two Anabaptist doctrines in particular placed them in direct conflict with the Roman Catholic Church, which was the same as the government at that time. Because of this, the Swiss Brethren were severely persecuted, sometimes to the point of death, and often expelled from their homelands. The Anabaptist Hutterites of Moravia/Slovakia, as well as the Mennonites of the Netherlands/Northern Germany, experienced similar forms of oppression.

Mass execution of Anabaptists in Alzey, Kurpflaz, Germany in 1539, during the 30 Years War. Women in the Anabaptist faith were able to take on roles of higher authority than in most other religions at that time, and thus were arrested and punished at a higher rate than occurred within most other religiously persecuted groups in history.

Starting in the mid-1600s, large numbers of Anabaptists from persecuted regions began to flee (or be expelled) to more religiously tolerant areas of western Europe, such as the Palatinate region (now in western Germany), the Netherlands, and the Alsace region (now in eastern France). In about 1680, a man from Canton Bern, Switzerland named Jakob Ammann fled to Sainte-Marie-aux-Mines, Alsace with a group of about 60 religious refugee families. Ammann had even stricter views on scriptural doctrine than many of his fellow Swiss Brethren at that time, particularly on the issue of "shunning" those who had committed transgressions (based on 2 Thessalonians 3:14). In 1693, his teachings created a rift within the Anabaptists, with Ammann's side, mainly in Alsace, becoming known as the Amish, while the opposing side, mainly in Switzerland and the Palatinate, being called Mennonites (or Reists).

Then, in 1712, King Louis XIV issued an edict expelling the Anabaptist from Alsace, France as well. Most Amish were forced to flee to nearby territories, where they began searching, once again, for a safe place to call home. Their prayers were answered by William Penn's desire to create a British colony based on the ideal of religious tolerance. Starting in 1736 (Note 0), small groups of Alsace Amish began undertaking the treacherous sea voyage to America, in order to seek religious freedom. Most settled in upper Berks County (then Lancaster Co.), PA, spreading outward from the Northkill Creek and the Schuylkill River into what is today Upper Bern, Penn, and Tilden Twps. One of these Alsace refugees was Maudlin Stutzman (b.1700), a widow with at least two children, Johann "Hans" and Christian Stutzman (Note 1). In 1738, Maudlin Stutzman warranted 50 acres of land in Upper Bern, Berks Co., PA near Wolf Creek. Then, in 1747, her now adult son Hans settled on adjacent land, while her son Christian resurveyed and expanded the original homestead. (See Note 2) (Ref 2).

Upper Bern Township within Berks Co., PA (originally Lancaster Co. until 1752). The Northkill Creek defines its western boundary with Upper Tulpehocken Township. Penn Twp. lies to its southwest, while Tilden Twp. lies to the east, bounded by the Schuylkill River. (Of note, the "kill" part of these two names comes from the word "kil" used by early Northern European explorers of the area, which meant creek.

Northkill Creek, near the former Hochstetler farm, about a mile west of Shartlesville, PA

Approximate location of Maudlin Stutman's (and later Christian Stutzman and Barbara Hostetler's) homestead. The original land of Maudlin Stutzman lied between Wolf Creek Rd and Valley Rd., on the north side of Pheasant Drive. Hans Stutzman purchased adjacent land to the east of Wolf Creek, while Christian later expanded his land holding to the west of Wolf Creek, both north and south of Feick Dr. The Jacob Hostetler farm was located off Olde 22, between Northkill and Wolf Creek roads.

Anabaptists had started coming to PA as early as 1683, initially settling in Germantown, now a northern suburb of Philadelphia. However, wanting to stay true to their beliefs, the Amish tried to set themselves apart from other Anabaptists by settling separately in more remote areas. They lived a very simple way of life in which they avoided new fashions and technologies, and kept themselves removed from politics and government affairs. This was seen as the way to humble themselves before God and remain outside the “sinful nature” of the wider world (Ref 3). The settlement of the Northkill Amish Community, officially established in 1740, is often cited as the first known Amish settlement of the New World. However, there was also an early Amish settlement founded in Oley Twp., Berks Co., PA in 1714, which included the Yoder family among its first inhabitants.

William Penn's 1681 advertisement (in German) encouraging religious refugees to come to Pennsylvania in order to seek their religious freedom.

Our Stutzman Family Line

Maudlin's son Christian Stutzman, (born by 1725 in Alsace, France), married Barbara Hochstetler, the daughter of Jacob Hochstetler (b.1712) in 1752 (Ref 4). Barbara's family had a similar background to Christian's own. The Hochstetler line was originally from Schwarzenburg, Bern, Switzerland, but was forced to flee to Echery, Haut-Rhin, Alsace in the late 1600s. Jacob was born there in 1712, where he later married Anna Burki (Note 3). In 1738, at the age 26, he and his wife left for Pennsylvania with their two young children, John and Barbara (b.1732). They initially warranted for 58 acres of land in Oct. 1739, and would eventually increase their holdings to 310 acres by 1755. Their son-in-law, Christian Stutzman, lived just to the south with their daughter Barbara's growing family.


Land warranted to the Stutzmans (blue) and the Hochstetlers (green). A larger version of this document can be viewed here

The Northkill settlement was located at the westernmost frontier of Pennsylvania at that time. At its peak, it contained about 200 Amish families. It was situated at the southern base of the Blue Mountains, to the north of which was Delaware (Lenape) Indian territory, while farther west were the Shawnee tribes. Both the Lenape and the Amish were generally peaceful peoples, and for the first 18 years of the settlement’s existence, they lived without major conflicts despite frequent encounters (Ref 5). Then the French and Indian War (ie The Seven Years' War) began in 1754.

Pontiac's Rebellion by Robert W. Griffing

The French openly encouraged Native American tribes to attack the English settlers. In exchange, they promised the return of land to them that had been taken by the encroaching British. Many other PA settlements set up "vigilante groups" at this time, who set about trying to "rid themselves" of the "Indian menace" (Ref 6). In contrast, the Northkill Amish maintained their pacifist beliefs, and were thus accused of "not being realistic" about the dangers the colonists faced. In Nov 1755, Indians began to attack south of the Blue Mountains for the first time (Ref 4, p.23). On Nov 2, 1756, an attack finally came directly to the Northkill Amish community, when a daughter of Andrew Wolbeck was captured and taken away to an unknown fate.


Over the next year and a half, at least 7 other attacks occurred on this close-knit community, including several murders, one of which involved the Miller family only 3 miles away from our Stutzman-Hochstetlers (Ref 4, p.24). Then, on Sept 19-20, 1757, tragedy struck for our family line as well, at the home of Barbara (Hochstetler) Stutzman's parents. [Note, most of the account to follow is taken from Ref 4., p.24-34. Other sources show some variation in the exact timing and details of events.] That night, after a social evening of paring and slicing apples with the neighbors, Jacob Hochstetler's son, Jacob, Jr. was awakened by a noise in the yard. When he opened the front door to assess the situation, he was shot in the leg by a group of about 8-10 Indians standing in the yard near the bake oven. Jacob Jr. managed to close and lock the door before the Indian's could enter, while the rest of the family raced to their feet. Jacob's sons, Joseph and Christian (aged 13 and 11 at the time), grabbed hunting rifles and prepared to fight. But their father admonished them that it was never God's Will to take another's life, even to save one's own. After a few unfettered minutes of consultation, the small group of Shawnee Native American's decided to set fire to the house instead, trapping the family inside.


The family of 6 huddled in the cellar, trying to withstand the fire by sprinkling cider on the burning embers that fell down below. Meanwhile, their eldest son John, already married and living on an adjacent farm with his wife, Catherine Hertzler, heard the commotion and came out to investigate. Quickly assessing the situation, he ran home to hide his wife and young child, concealing them in some nearby brush. He then ran back to his parent's home and hid himself as he watched the rest of the night's events unfold in horror, wondering what he could possibly do to save them. Initially, the family almost escaped. Despite the heat and smoke, they came out from their hiding through a cellar window only much later, after they believed the Shawnee had finally left. Unfortunately, they misjudged, as one man (Tom Lyons) still lingered behind, gathering apples from the prior day's bounty. When he saw them appear, he quickly called the rest of the group back to his side. 

Depiction of the Hochstetler Farm Massacre

It was said that the mother, Anna, was "of ample means" and had difficulty getting herself out of the window, which slowed the family's escape. Their son Joseph managed to run quickly up into the hills, where he hid himself behind a large log. But the rest of the family was soon surrounded. The oldest son, Jacob Jr, who had been previously shot, was of no use to the Indians given his injury. He was tomahawked and scalped, as was the youngest daughter (considered a warrior's death). The mother was stabbed instead, and then scalped, supposedly for some previous slight involving the refusal to give food to passing tribesmen (Ref 4, p.25). Jacob Hochstetler Sr. and his son Christian, as well as his son Joseph, who was soon found hiding by the log, were taken prisoner. The oldest two married Hochstetler children, John and Barbara (our ancestor), were left behind to grieve their family's destruction.

Map (use link to enlarge) showing the western route Jocob Hochstetler and his two sons were forced to march for 17 days after being taken into captivity. Also depicted is the escape route Jacob used when fleeing back home to the Northkill community.

The captives were taken west into Ohio territory and separated from one another. Christian Hochstetler was the youngest of the abducted family members, about 11 at the time. He was said to have had striking blue eyes that enamored the Shawnee. An elder Indian adopted him as a son and Christian became very attached to him. After the old man's death, Christian was allowed to choose an Indian brother, and became very close with him also. His brother, Joseph, who was about 13 at the time of his capture, was similarly treated. He was taken to the Native American town of Tulhillas, where he was also adopted and became close enough to a few of the Shawnee that he considered them as his brothers. It was only Jacob Sr. Hochstetler who was continually watched by the Shawnee with suspicion. As well they should have given that he never lost his desire to return home. Unfortunately, the Indians had taken them so far from their homeland that Jacob saw nothing familiar around him to help orient his way back. Additionally, they changed camps frequently with the seasons. His luck changed about three years into his captivity when he happened upon a group of older men explaining the local geography to a group of Shawnee boys by drawing in the ashes with a stick. Jacob pretended not to know what they were discussing, but he heard the names of various rivers and mountain ranges spoken as they were pointed to on the crude map.

Jacob shared what he had learned with another captive man named John Specht, and they made their escape together that night, finding an enclosed area some ways from the village to sleep. Unfortunately, a lone Indian from another camp had had a similar idea and came upon them by accident. They made a pretense of being on a hunting mission, saying that they needed to gather wood for a bigger fire and find some game for dinner, while actually planning to meet again further up the nearby brook. Specht, however, never reappeared at the new site, and Jacob feared he had been killed by the suspicious Indian. From that point on, he fled by night only, concealing himself during the day. He often waded through streams and avoided paths to prevent being tracked. Eventually, the river grew large enough that he was able to make a log raft. Tired and starving, at one point he came to a sharp turn in the river that caused him to fear he was headed in the wrong direction. He went to shore in despair and fell asleep, during which time his dead wife appeared to him in a dream and told him to continue, for he was on the right path. When he awoke, he did just that, never hesitating again.


By the time his raft reached Fort Augusta in PA, he was too weak to stand, and his rescue came just in time. He was taken to Fort Harris for debriefing, where one of the women at the fort nursed him back to health, and before long he was able to continue on his journey home. Once reunited with his remaining family, Jacob began seeking a way to bring his 2 sons home as well. Though the war still continued, at times prisoner exchanges were negotiated, although the Native Americans often claimed that most of the captives did not want to return. On Aug 13, 1762, a friend helped Jacob to write a petition to the Govenor directly, asking him to intercede on behalf of his sons. Finally, on Oct 17, 1764, as the war was coming to an end, an agreement to return the remaining 103 White prisoners was accepted by the Shawnee. A number were returned in Nov of 1764, just before the winter set in. The remainder rejoined their prior communities in the Spring of 1765. It is unknown when, exactly, Joseph and Christian were reunited with their birth family. What is known is that after having made a family for themselves among the Shawnee, they both struggled with the decision of whether or not to return. Joseph is said to have continued to visit with his Native American brothers for many years after. Christian is said to have "dramatically" converted to the Dunkard faith, who practiced baptism by immersion, and soon became a preacher in Somerset Co. Both he and Joseph eventually married and settled down within their White communities, but were also said to have retained "unusual" habits that never fully left them.

Northkill Amish Historical Marker found on Old US Hwy. 22, just west of Shartlesville, VA

Grave marker at the end of the drive where the old Jacob Hochstetler homestead was located

Barbara (Hochstetler) Stutzman must have been overjoyed to have her remaining family members returned. On the day of the massacre in 1757, Barbara was about 25 years old, and she and her husband Christian had 3 young children, with one more on the way. Living a half mile away, they probably did not hear the initial commotion, though they likely saw the smoke when they awoke. Their child Christian Stutzman, Jr. (our direct ancestor) was born just three and half months after the attack in Jan. 1758. While Jacob Hochstetler and his two sons were gone, Christian Stutzman Sr. is said to have helped Jacob Hochstetler's oldest son John to manage his father's large farm. By the time her younger brothers were returned, he and Barbara had added 3 more children, and in 1770 they completed their family of 11.


After the attacks, a number of the original Amish families began to move away from the Northkill community, though the settlement continued to grow until the 1780s. In 1760, one group resettled near Churchtown in Lancaster Co., PA in what is now the oldest Amish community still in existence. Then, in 1772, after land west of the Allegheny mountains was opened for settlement, another group set out for Somerset Co., PA, near Johnstown, which is now the second oldest Amish community (Brothersvalley). Many of Christian Sr. and Barbara (Hochstetler) Stutzman's children chose to resettle in the Somerset community upon reaching adulthood. As the oldest son, however, Christian Jr. Stutzman chose to stay in Berks Co., where he inherited his father's land after his death in 1770. His first wife, Esther Steiner, died shortly after they were married, perhaps in childbirth. By 1786, he had remarried to Susanna Miller/Müller and started a family of what would become 11 children (Note 4). His third born child, Abraham Stutzman (b. 1787), was our direct ancestor.


After the Revolutionary War ended in 1783, the west began to open up further. In 1791, several Amish families in Lancaster Co. decided to purchase farmland in the Big Valley (Kishacoquillas Valley) of Mifflin Co., PA. The land there was very fertile, and it became a prosperous community. By 1800, the settlement had grown to about 50 Amish households. Though getting on in their years, in about 1812, Christian Jr. and Susanna (Miller) Stutzman decided to join with the Big Valley Amish group, accompanied by most of the families of their adult children as well (Ref. 7, p.48; Ref 4, p.612). Between 1810-1820, a number of other Northkill Amish community members made a similar journey. Christian Jr. and Susanna purchased 150 acres of land in Derry Township, which they later sold to their son Abraham in about 1817 (Ref 13, Gen 2 & endnotes, Ref 14, p.420).

Farms of the Big Valley in Mifflin Co., PA by Delmas Lehman (2017)

One of the earliest Berks Co. settlers to relocate to the Big Valley was the family of Joseph Yoder and Elizabeth (Jutzi). Joseph and Elizabeth had 9 children, and three of them were joined in marriage with the children of Christian Jr. and Susanna (Miller) Stutzman. Our ancestor, Abraham Stutzman, married Catherine Yoder in about 1815. Christian Jr. passed on 12 Sept 1825 (Note 5), leaving his sons Daniel and Abraham to administer his estate (Ref 8, Gen 2, fn 4). Shortly after his death, his son Michael moved his family to Green Twp., Wayne Co., OH, where his brother Daniel was helping to found a new Amish community which would eventually become the Oak Grove Amish Mennonite Church (Ref 10). However, starting in 1834, some Amish families broke away from this new community under the guidance of David Zook, to move southward into Fairfield Co., Ohio, and our Stutzman line seems to have been involved with this relocation (Ref 11). By 1850, the families of all but Christian and Susanna Stutzman's oldest daughter, Elizabeth Schmucker, had resettled in one of these two Ohio communities. Other related Amish Stutzman lines settled in Tuscarawas, Holmes Co., OH, which is still the largest Old Order Amish Community of the USA.

Modern day Amish Barn Raising Event in Holmes Co, OH. Jonas "Der Weiss" Stutzman settled here in 1809, near present day Walnut Creek, and built the areas first sawmill. He is said to have worn all white and carried about an oversized chair he built for "Christ to sit in judgement" upon at the second-coming.

Abraham and Catherine (Yoder) Stutzman moved to North Berne, Fairfield Co., OH (2 miles south of Colfax) by 1840. They had five children who lived to adulthood, though their daughter Elizabeth Plank died in childbirth at the age of only 21. Their oldest, Emanuel Stutzman (b.1816) was our direct ancestor. The Fairfield community thrived for a few decades, but cheap, fertile land out west continued to lure both old and new Anabaptist immigrants to westward locations. At the same time the Civil War was raging, the Stutzman's left this slowly withering community and made their way to the growing Lagrange-Elkhart Old Order Amish Settlement of Indiana (Ref 13). This community was founded in 1841 and still thrives today.

Indiana Amish/Mennonite Settlements as of 1950s. Isaac Schmucker (b.1810), a grandson of Christian and Susanna (Miller) Stutzman, became the first Amish Bishop of northern Indiana.

Abraham and Catherine (Yoder) Stutzman died within a few years of moving to Indiana and are buried in the Maple Grove Cemetery of Topeka, LaGrange Co., IN. In his 1867 Will, Abraham directed his property to be sold and the proceeds divided equally among his children, but he made sure to also include his grandson Amos Plank, the only child of his daughter Elizabeth who had died in childbirth. Our ancestor, Emmanuel Stutzman, had married Catherine Berkey back in 1839, and by 1867 had a family of 7 children (one having died as an infant). They settled in Eden Twp, LaGrange Co., IN. Their 4th child, Magdalena Stutzman (b.1846) was our direct ancestor.

Headstone of Abraham Stutzman (1787-1867) at the Maple Grove Cemetery of LaGrange Co., IN

Only three of Emmanuel and Catherine (Berkey) Stutzman's children stayed in the LaGrange-Elkhart Amish Settlement area. By the 1880s, most Native Americans had been confined to reservations, and the investment in railroad infrastructure following the Civil War had connected the nation like never before. The modernization of the industrial age caused tensions within Amish communities, particularly among the Old Order Amish who were more conservative. By 1878, most Amish communities had chosen to join with more progressive Mennonite communities (who are more accepting of new technologies), thus becoming Amish Mennonites, (many later dropped the Amish from the name altogether). It is noticeable that between 1870-1880, while these shifts within the Amish community were occurring, three of the families of Emmanuel and Catherine’s grown children chose to relocate. The family of their daughter Lizzie Plank moved on to Davis Co., IA, where a more progressive Mennonite community was forming. Their daughter Catherine Hartzler's family moved to a nearby Amish community in Starke Co., IN that tried to preserve more of the Old Order traditions. Meanwhile, their daughter Anna Crosby's family left for Rhea Co., TN, where no known Amish community existed. Their youngest, Ephriam, initially went back to the diverse Mennonite area encompassed by the Big Valley of PA, but eventually retired to CA. Even for the three children who remained, (Rebecca Greenwalt, Magdalena Kent, and Abraham Stutzman), the Amish-Mennonite Community of Elkhart-LaGrange fractured and evolved as well. 

The current Amish population map closely mirrors the migration path taken by our Amish Stutzman ancestors. It is said that at one time, Amish communities were plentiful enough to create a migration trail network of settlements that reached all the way from PA to IN. Most of those settlements have gone extinct by today. 

Rebecca Greenwalt and Catherine Hartzler are found in Mennonite records, and most likely remained in the faith. Anna Crosby and Ephriam most likely did not. Our ancestor, Magdalena "Martha" Stutzman, married Robert Kent in 1870. Robert father, Orvin Kent, had described himself as a Swedenborgian, but his son Robert was a Methodist, and that seems to be the faith they followed. Martha was blessed with only 2 children, the first of whom died in early infancy, and perhaps that affected her faith as well. Their surviving son, Bernis Kent, shows no indications of having ever been affiliated with the Amish faith. Most likely we still have Amish Mennonite relatives out there somewhere though, and this Stutzman line has clearly been deeply involved in the Anabaptist movement for over 200 years!



Stutzman Descendancy



Research Notes

0) In 1732, the colony of PA secured a release from the Delaware Indians on the land that would later become Berks Co., thus allowing it to be opened for White settlement. In 1736, the immigration of the families of Melchoir Detweiler and Hans Sieber were sponsored by Amish church leaders from Alsace. They were to determine whether or not this new land was a suitable resettlement area for their Amish refugee community. They purchased land in future Upper Bern Twp., settling along both the Northkill and Irish Creeks. A favorable report soon followed, and the following year a ship called the Charming Nancy brought another 21 Amish families to the area. Additional ships soon followed, with another large group arriving in 1742, and smaller groups in between. (Duane Kauffman, Mifflin County Amish and Mennonite Story, 1791-1991, pp. 19-20.) 

1) Maudlin Stutzman is assumed to be a widow due to having purchased the land in her own name. Also, her name has not been found on any ship manifest from that time (Ref 15, Ref 13), which usually only recorded the names of male passengers at the age of 16 or older. It is furthermore assumed that her children were minors at the time of voyage, due both to them not appearing on any ship records, and to not having purchased any land of their own until 1747. (The minimum age for purchasing land was 21 at the time, so they must have been born by at least 1726. But to be less than age 16 in 1736, they must have been born after 1720 as well. Thus, Christian and Hans were probably about 10-15 years of age during the voyage.) It is possible that Maudlin had more children as well. We only know of her 2 sons because of land records, and so daughters or children who died before adulthood would be much harder to track. It is also possible that her husband died as late as on the ship journey itself, which at that time took about 2-3 months under horrible conditions. What is known is that many children did not survive early ocean crossings, particularly infants. Nor did the sick or elderly. 

2) There was a Christian Stutzman and Magdalena (Steck) banished from Bern, Switzerland in 1711 according to "Gingerich, Hugh F., and Kreider, Rachel W., Amish and Amish Mennonite genealogies. Gordonville, Pennsylvania: Pequea Publishers (1986), p.848". In the past it has been suggested that Magdalena was Maudlin were the same person, and thus Christian Stutzman was her husband, who must have died before 1738. However, newer research has shown this not to be the case. Not only are they too old, having been born in 1677 and 1674 respectively, but evidence shows them to have resettled and remained in the Netherlands instead. 

In 1747, the same year Hans Studzman warranted land on an adjacent plot to Mandlin Stuedsman (assumed to be Maudlin Stutzman), her son, Christian Stutzman, resurveyed and expanded the original land holding. When Maudlin died in 1760, this land was passed to him (Ref 7, p.65), suggesting that Christian was the oldest son (though it also appears Hans may have died by this time). Also of note, there are land records in the same area for two other Berks Co. Christian Stutzmans, as well as a couple unrelated Jacob Stutzmans. These land records were initially conflated by Harvey Hochstetler to be the same people, but that has since been disproven (Ref 13).

3) Many people in the past have cited Anna Lorenz (a notable family) as Jacob Hochstetler’s wife based purely on speculation put forth in Ref 4, but there has been no evidence to support this (see section titled “Mrs. Jacob Hochstetler”). Immigration records do show her first name as Anna. More recent evidence suggests her maiden name may have been Burki, though this has not yet been firmly established. Given the repeated presence of the Bürki/Berkey surname in our own Stutzman/Hochstetler lines, as well as the Berkey's that were living close to the Hochstetler's in Northkill, I find this to be a likely possibility. At the very least, it seems more likely than the prior Lorenz assumption, though neither option is yet based on primary sources.

4) Regarding Christian Jr.’s 3 wives - Harvey Hochstetler identified his wife as Elizabeth Steiner (Ref.4, p.612), whereas Paul Hostetler identified her as Susanna Miller (Ref. 7, p.48). The record for his marriage to Elizabeth Steiner can be found in Ref 8. The evidence for his marriage to Susannah Miller can be found in Ref 9. In this source, a discussion of Christian Stutzman Jr.'s appointment to administer the estate of David Bearinger is presented, in which he is described as the deceased's brother-in-law. This relationship comes through the deceased's widow, Elizabeth Mueller/Miller, who was the sister of Susanna Mueller/Miller. Based on the 1786 date of this case, I have assigned our ancestor Abraham (b.1787) to be the son of Susanna Miller rather than Elizabeth Steiner. As for the third wife, Mary Beiler, I have found no direct proof of this, but it has been reported in enough places that I have kept it for now. The Beilers were a closely associated family within the early Amish settlements.

5) This date is often misstated as 3 Jan 1834, but this is actually the date for another Christian Stutzman who lived in Somerset Co. rather than Mifflin Co.


References

1) Baughman, J. Ross. "Apart from the world: an account of the origins and destinies of various Swiss Mennonites...", Edenburg, VA : Shenandoah History Publishers, 1997. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/records/item/148167-apart-from-the-world-an-account-of-the-origins-and-destinies-of-various-swiss-mennonites-who-fled-from-their-homelands-in-remote-parts-of-the-cantons-zurich-aargau-and-bern-as-well-as-alsace-the-kurpflaz-sic-and-later-along-the-edges-of?offset= : 2024.

2) PA State Archives, Warrantee Township Maps. r017-Map2602-Berks-UpperBernTwpWeb.pdf (state.pa.us) : 2024. (Warrants 83, 101, 102, and 111).

3) Explore PA History, Northkill Amish Historical Marker. explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=1-A-52 : 2024.

4) Hostetler, Harvey. "Descendants of Barbara Hochstedler and Christian Stutzman". Scottdale, Pa.: Mennonite Pub. House, 1938. Descendants of Barbara Hochstedler and Christian Stutzman : Hostetler, Harvey, 1857-1939 : 2024.

5) "Northkill Amish : The Hochstetler Story." Sheaf House Publishers : 2015.  The Hochstetler Story (northkill.com) : 2024.

6) Miller, J. Virgil. "From an Indian Perspective": Descendents of Jacob Hochstetler. Indian Issues & Interactions | hochstetler (jhfa.net) : 2024.

7) Hostetler, Paul V. "Bishop Jacob Hertzler and his Family". Hamden, CT : Privately-published, 1976. Bishop Jacob Hertzler and his family (familysearch.org) : 2024.

8) Stutzman, Charles J. "Genealogy Report: Descendants of Christian Stutzman". Geneology.com, 2003. Charles-J-Stutzman - User Trees - Genealogy.com : 2024.

9) Hostetler, James. TNG 14 Database. Swiss Anabaptist Genealogical Association, 2023. SAGA Home (saga-omii.org) : 2024.

10) Umble, John S. "Wayne County Amish (Ohio, USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1959. Web. 22 Feb 2024. Wayne County Amish (Ohio, USA) - GAMEO : 2024.

11) Umble, John S. "Fairfield County (Ohio, USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1956. Web. 22 Feb 2024. Fairfield County (Ohio, USA) - GAMEO : 2024.

12) Wenger, John C. and Russell R. Krabill. "Indiana (USA)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1987. Web. 22 Feb 2024. Indiana (USA) - GAMEO : 2024.


14) David Luthy. "The Amish In America: Settlements That Failed, 1840 - 1960", p.420. Pathway Publishers, Lagrange, Indiana : 1986. The Amish in America : settlements that failed, 1840-1960 (familysearch.org) : 2024.

15) Strassburger, Ralph Beaver, and Hinke William John. "Pennsylvania German Pioneers: a Publication of the Original Lists of Arrivals In the Port of Philadelphia From 1727 to 1808". Norristown, Pa.: Pennsylvania German Society, 1934. Catalog Record: Pennsylvania German pioneers; a publication... | HathiTrust Digital Librar : 2024.