genealogical register of the name and family of herrick
TRANSCRIPT
"I'M ttie ycare 1598 teas crante^ from tl/e 35cTalti's ©fffce, ©nto 3Elobert znts
?®nifam JSerfcfe, tje sonnes of 3Iol)n ffierfcfe, tfje sonnc of STJomas Sl^crfcfe, aUas
Htfcfe, of JH^ouglJton, fn tt)e Countfe of Hefcester; ®cntlanen, an^ tjjefr postetftjc
fotcber, a cetttBne ®3^3ESS, or 3S^30(Sn, namclfc: ©n a torcatjc of tfjeir colaures,
a 33S32.1l'.S %1E^19 a^rgent, rssufng fortDc of a 3l^U33i3S3L^ es^TSiSL^HHm. eCfte
iHSaSSHa, ISaiaiSa, antJ ?^©3K.'N12S, tfppeti Satlc. Co be atxnerei antJ borne
tofti) tjefr ^uncfent Coat of Serines, toMc!) is SfiHUlSaEl, a fcsse VlsmaiSiy, &3X33i
[From «Ae Records of the Herald's CoUegey London.
GENEALOGICAL REGISTER
OF THE
NAME AND FAMILY
OF
HEKEICK,FROM THE SETTLEMENT OF
HEN ERIE HERICKE,
N SALEJVI, MASSACHUSETTS 1629, to 1846..
WITH A CONCISE NOTICE OF THEIR
ENGLISH ANCESTRY.
BY JEDEDIAH HERRICK.
Tell your children of it, and let your children tell their children, and their
children another generation."
—
Bible.
BANGOR:SAMUEL S. SMITH, PRINTER
1846.
o^^
\^<o
PREFACE.
The compiler of the following work had limited his original design, to the
acquisition of some general knowledge of his Ancestors and kindred in this
country, with reference more especially to their European origin, and to the
parentage of our Anglo-American Ancestors.
In the pursuit of this object, he became interested in the enquiry ; extended
his researches and accumulated his materials, until he now finds it necessary to
print the result of his labors, as well to insure the preservation of a mass of
names, dates and gossip,—very private and fireside matters to be sure, but not
therefore the less interesting to the very private and fireside parties ; as also to
enable him in this way, to acknowledge his obligations to those friends and
kindred, who have kindly aided his researches and supplied a large portion of
his materials.
Nor will he deny himself the satisfaction of believing, that his humble effort
to redeem from oblivion something of the history and fortunes of his race, will
be received with favor by his kinsfolk ; that it will serve as a useful book of
reference, and a medium of recognition and intercommunication among relatives
otherwise strangers and unknown ; and that it may induce those sentiments of
cordiality and kindness, and of fraternal respect and communion, so grateful to
our best and holiest affections, and so desirable to have revived, and cherished
and perpetuated, among the descendants of a common ancestor, however widely
they may have been separated and dispersed over distant hemispheres ; estranged
from each other, or alienated from the land of their Fathers.
He has permitted himself to hope also, that however imperfect this first essay
may be found ; whatever of error in the names, dates, and arrangements, may be
detected ; it will nevertheless possess sufficient merit and accuracy as a whole, to
serve as a safe guide to the future explorer, as far as it has gone ; and that those
who in future times, and under more favorable circumstances, may be disposed
to look back into our early history, or to carry forward these family memorials to
other generations, may here find important aids and facilities in the prosecution
of their researches.
Our references to the dark and distant traditions of our Race, have been limited
to the settlement of Ericke the Dane, in East Anglia ; and to such events in the
lives and fortunes of himself and his descendant, Eric the Forester, as we find
sufficiently verified by our early English historians, to establish the general
authenticity of our traditionary records ; and thus to remove all reasonable doubt
of the Anglo Danish origin of our race; and of the identity of our earliest
ancestor, residing in England, with that illustrious and unfortunate chieftain.
ABBREVIATIONS, &,c.
Bapt. for baptised ; h. for born ; d. for deceased ; ?«. for married ; d. s. p. for died without
issue.
The first column of figures is a consecutive enumeration of the entire branch, in which a
number is prefixed to the name of each individual, and is never changed or omitted, how
often soever the name may be repeated. In the second column, the figures denote the number
of the descent, or remove, from the original ancestor, counting him always as 1.
\,\JiRA^w. K
englishT^mily.
EiRiKR. Eric. Erik. Erick. Ericke. Irek. Eyryk. Eyryck. Erryk.
Herik. HiRECK. Heryck. Hericke. Hearick. Heyricke. Heyrick.
Herrick. See Appendix, Note A.
The traditions of this very ancient family, claim their descent from Ericke, a
Danish Chief, who invaded Britain during the reign of Alfred, and having been
vanquished by that Prince, was compelled, with his followers, to repeople the
wasted districts of East Anglia ; the government of which he held as a fief of
the English crown. He is recognized in history as " Ericke, King of those
Danes who hold the Countrie of East Angle." Note B.
In an attempt to "unite the Danish power in Britain against the Englishmen,"
Ericke was defeated by Edward, the Son and successor of Alfred ; and was sub-
sequently slain by his own subjects for alleged severities in his government.
The Norman invasion found this name represented by Eric the Forester, who
resided in Leicestershire, and possessed extensive domains along the sources of
the Severn and on the borders of Wales. Eric raised an army to repel the inva-
ders ; and in the subsequent efforts of the English Earls and Princes, to dis-
possess the Normans of their recent conquest, and to drive them out of the
country, he bore a prominent and conspicuous part. But he shared also, in
the unfortunate issue of all these patriotic efforts. His followers and allies
were stripped of their estates, and the sources of his own power, were dried
up; and being no longer in a condition, formidable to the new government,
Eric was taken into favor by William—entrusted with important offices about
his person, and in the command of his armies ; and in his old age was per-
mitted to retire to his house in Leicestershire, where he closed a stormy and
eventful life, as became the representative of an ancient and distinguished race.
Note C.
With this ,hasty glance at our earliest family remembrances, remote and
obscure as they may be, we proceed to deduce the pedigrees of the English and
American races through the branch of the posterity of Eric the Forester, which
js still respectably known in England, and whence we derive our lineage.
ENGLISH FAMILY.
I. Henrv Eyryk, a lineal descendant from Eric the Forester, was seated at Great Stretton
in the county of Leicester, England, at a very remote period. His grandson,
Robert Evryk of Stretton, by his ) Son 14
€h.34
wife Joanna, hadWilliam, Sir, his Heir,
Robert, called Robert De Stretton,
jchaplain to Edward the Black Prince,
L. L. D. and finally Lord Bishop of
Litchfield.
His Lordship died in 1385.
John of Stretton.
Ch.
121314
151617
1819
20
212223
12
Ch.
2425
Son26
Son27
Sir William Eyryk, Knight of
Stretton, was commissioned to attend
the Prince of Wales on his expedition
into Gascony, 1355.
From Sir William descendedRobert Eyrick of Houghton on the
Hill, living 1450, who left by his wife
Agnes,Robert, who died s. p.Thomas Eyrick of Houghton, who
settled in Leicester, and is the first of
the name on the books of the corpora-
tion, where he is recorded as a memberof that body in 1511. He died in 1517,leaving
Nicholas, who married and had issue.
John.
Elizabeth, mentioned in her father's
will, 1517.
Son
31
15
Samuel Heyrick of Leicester,
Elizabeth Tyers.
161
John Heyrick, of Leicester, townIclerk, d. 1800, m. Mary Erpe.
Samiuel Heyrick, D. D., rector of
I
Brampton, in Northamptonshire, d.
|l841.
William Heyrick, vice chancellor of
the Quarter Sessions for the countyof Leicester, living 1841, and three
daughters not named.
John Eyrik or Heyrick of Leices-
ter, b. 1513, d. April 2, 1589. Wastwi^^e Mayor of that corporation,in 1559and 1572 ; m. Mary, daughter of JohnBond, Esq. of Ward End in Warwick-shire, who was b. 1514, d. Dec. 8,1611.
Note D.Robert.
Nicholas.
Thomas, d. s. p. 1623.
John.
Wilham.Ursula m. Lawrence Haweg,merch't
of London.Agnes, m. William Davie.Mary, m. Sir Thomas Bennett, Lord
Mayor of London, 1603.
Elizabeth, m. John Stanford, Esq.Recorder of Leicester.
Helen, to. Holden.Christiana, to. George Brookes, Esq.Alice, TO. Hind.
]3|10
ENGLISH FAMILY
a.ii361
Martlia, m. 1G34, John Holinstead,
Esq. of Lynn, Norfolk.
Dorothy, m. Rev. James Lancashire, \
1628.
Elizabeth, m. Beaumont Pight, Esq.
1633.
William Herrick, Esq., Beau-manor, d. 1671.
WiLLiAMHERRicK,Esq. Beaumanor,h. 1624, d. 1693, m. 1, July, 1649, Anna,eldest dau. of William Bainbridge, Esq.of Lockington, Leicestershire, byElizabeth his wife,dau.of GervasPigott,
Esq. of Thrumpton, Nottinghamshire,
who d. 1655.
William, h. 1650.
John.
Benjamin.Elizabeth, m. John Levesley, Esq.
;
m. 2d. 1657, Frances, dau. of WilliamMillward, Esq. of Chillcote, in Derby-shire, who d. before 16S1.
Thomas, b. 1662, d. 16S2.
Frances, b. 1664, d. infancy.
8 16
63
HENRY OF SALEM.
No. 48. 11. On the English Pedigree.
No. 1. I. Henerie Hireck— Hericke— Herrick. The Anglo-Amer-
ican Ancestor of a numerous race in this Country, was born 1604; came over
from Leicester, England, to Naumkeag, then first named Salem, June 24, 1629.
He married Editha, daughter of Mr. Hugh Laskin of Salem, (who was born
1614, and living in 1674,) and settled at " Cape-Ann-Syde, over against
Massies." Died 1671. Note F.
Out of a very numerous family (our traditions say 12 sons and several daugh-
ters,) seven sons and a daughter, whose names are given below, survived their
father and are named in his Will. Of these, Thomas and Benjamin, the oldest
and the youngest of the sons, and the daughter, Elizabeth, died childless. The
other five sons left male issue, and are to be regarded as the Patriarchs of their
respective branches of the posterity of Henry and Editha Herrick.
H. Children of Henry Herrick who survived infancy.
1. Thomas, whose birth is not recorded, married Hannah Ordway, d. s. p.
XL Zacharie, baptised December 25, 1636.
III. Ephraim, baptised February 11, 1638.
IV. Henry, baptised January 16, 1640.
V. Joseph, baptised August 6, 1645.
VI. Elizabeth, baptised July 4, 1647.
VII. John, baptised May 25, 1650.
VIII. Benjamin, no record, d. s. p. about 1675.
ZACHARIE OF BEVERLY.
ZACHARIE HERRICK, Beverly,
Birch Plain, d. May 20,1695 ; m. Mary,daughter of Richard Dodge of Beverly,
1653, who was b. 1632, d. August 18,
1710, aged 78 years.
Mary, b Oct. 10, 1654.
Elizabeth, b. Mar. 2, 1657, m. Sam'l
Stone.
Henry, b 1659, d. an infant.
Sarah, b Oct. 1662, vi. Morgan.Martha, h August, 1665.
Hannah, b 1669, m. Jona. Stone.
Henrv, b 1671.
Abigail, bapt. May, 1674
Mary Herkick, m. Robert Cue, of]
Salem, March 13, 1681—2.
Elizabeth, b 1682, m James Meacom,Beverly, Jan'y 20, 1702.
I
Anne.
1 Henry Herrick, Beverly, d. Sept.
28, 1747 ; m. Susannah, dau. of Sam-|uel Beedel, of Salem.
I
''
Zachariah, b Sept. 4, 1699.
Eunice, b. Oct. 5, 1701, d. June 24,
:
1714.:
Lois, b. Oct. 10, 1704, m. Ralph:
Tuck.;
James, b 1706.;
William, b 1709.:
Zachariah Herrick, Beverly, d.
1753_4, m. Abigail, 6. 1702, d. 1772.
Abigail, b Jan. 18, 1730.
Henry, b Feb. 19, 1732, d. 1736.
Hannah, b March 20, 1735, d. 1736.
Henry, b Aug. 14, 1737.
Hannah 5. May 4, 1739.
Asa, b July 11, 1742.
Jonathan, b May 10, 1745.
Asa Herrick, of Beverlv, rf. 1821,
TO. Jan. 26, 1768, Elizabeth, dau. of
Henry Stacy, Marblehead.
Elizabeth, b 1769.
Hannah, b 1771.
Henry, b 1773.
Abigail, b 1776.
Tabitha, b 1778.
Sarah, b. 1780, m. Joseph Harlow,
Jan. 4, 1803.
Asa, b 1783.
Edward Stacy, b. 1786.
6|Asa Herrick, Beverly, d. 1814.
7|
I
Asa Herrick, Beverly, d. 1834.
William Herrick, Beverly, d.
April, 1783, m Mary Tuck of Beverly,July 1, 1731.
WiUiam, b April 15, 1736.
Lemmon, b. Feb. 10, 1738.
Henry, ft Sept. 1741.
Mary, b Feb. 19, 1743.
James, b Dec. 15, 1747.
John, ft Aug. 31, 1751.
William Herrick, Beverly,
Mary Wallace, April 23, 1759.
Hannah, ft July 31, 1760.
Lemmon, ft Dec. 7, 1762.
Mary, 6 Dec. 27, 1765.
Sarah, ft Sep. 3, 1768.
Daniel, ft June 16, 1771.
William.John.
William Herrick, of Beverly, w.Lydia Woodman, Beverly, April 5,
1803.
John Herrick, Beverly, m. Lydia.
John, ft 1799.
Wilham, 6 1802.
Reuben, ft 1804.
Joshua, ft 1811.
James, ft 1817.
Reuben Herrick, Beverly,
zabeth.
Reuben, ft 1829.
Benjamin, 6 1831.
Francis, ft 1833.
I. Eli-
Henry Herrick, Beverly, d. July
25, 1620, TO. Mary Foster, Nov. 21,
1765.
Joseph, ft May 14, 1767, d.
Hannah, d.
Thomas, bapt. March 24, 1773.
Henry, bapt. March 23, 1777.
Thomas Herrick, Beverly, 7/i May,1795, Dorcas Punchard, Salem, whod. Jan. 17, 1804.
Thomas Foster, ft. Sept. 12, 1795.
Oliver, ft Oct. 24, 1797.
Dorcas Townsend, ft. Feb. 24, 1800,
d. 1818.
Married for his 2d wife, Mary, dau.
of Nicholas Greely, Marblehead.Emerson, ft Mav 1. 18C6.
Greely, ft Jan. 26, 1808.
Married for his 3d wife, Jane Gree-
ly, sister to 2d wife.
Sydney, ft. April 21, 1811.
Joseph Henry, ft. Oct. 31, 1812.
10 ZACHARIE OF BEVERLY.
57
^PHRAIM OF BEVERLY. U
III EPHRAIM HERRICK,of Beverly,
TO Mary Cross, of Salem,July 3, 1661 ;
settled at Birch Plain, d Sept. 18,
1693.
John, b. May 31, 1662.
Ephraim, b Aug. 13, 1664.
Mary, b June 14, 1667.
Stephen, b March 15, 1670.
Sarah.
Samuel, b June 4, 1675.
Timothy, 5 Jan. 4, 1681.
Anna, b Nov. 20, 1683.
HiRUM Herrick, Griswold, Conn,m. Anna Bromley, Preston, 1791.
Rubia, b June 23, 1792.
Persia, b March 16, 1794.
Robert, b September 16, 1797.
John, b October 14, 1799.
Lucy, b September 2, 1804.
Maria Augusta, b March 12, 1810.
William A., b June 22, 1814.
1
12 EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY.
Ephraim Herrick, Preston, mRachel Fellows, of Preston, February9, 1718—9.
Isaac, b December 16, 1719.Abigail, b Oct. 21, 1721, m Nathan
Leonard, Worthington.Ephraim, b November 10, 1725.Andrew, b February 10, 1727—8.Phineas, b February 3, 1730—1.Rachel, b May 9, 1732.Nathan, i May 31, 1734.Esther, b April 16, 1738.
Elijah, b August 15, 1740, d in the :
French & Indian war.
Isaac Herrick, of Preston, d 1819,aged 100, m Elizabeth Herrick, Pres-ton, May 9, 1743, No. 450.
Judith, b July 20, 1744.
Ebenezer, b July 25, 1746.Isaac, b February 8, 1748.Elizabeth, b March 8, 1750, m Wil-
bur, family in Ohio.
Ephraim, b April 2, 1752.
Rachel, b October 19, 1754.
Ezra, b Ootober 3, 1756, d 1759.
Mary, b July 19, 1759.
Eunice, b February 19, 1763.
Esther, b May 4, 1765,
Asa, b November 7, 1761.
90
EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY. 13
Levi Withington Herrick, Dal-ton. Mass, m Mary Hamlin of Lee.
William Hamlin.Hannah Cordilla.
George.John Frederic.
Amanda Maria Herrick, m Fred-eric Manly Couch, Lee, Mass, May 3,
1833.
Maria Louisa, born September 20,1835-
Mary Emeline, born December 20,1836-
A son, born April 11, 1842.
Marv Axx Herrick, m AsahelBeeman, of Twinsburg, Portage Co.,
Ohio, January 1, 1837, and removed to
Bedford, Cuyahoga Co., Ohio.
Grant.
Martha Cordelia Herrick, mJoel Nelson, of Tvvinsburg, settled in
Bedford.
Clark, born November 12, 1840.
A daughter, born January 1842.
Avery Herrick, Westfield, Mass.,j
m Polly Chapin, Springfield, Mass.
Moses, born 1819.
William Avery, born 1820.
Lucina, born 1822.
Henry, born 1824.
George, born 1826.
Edward, born 1828.
Maria, born 1830.
163
14 EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY.
2021
ai5i
831
Samuel Prentice Herrick, rf., mMinerva Hopkins, dau. of Gen. Sani'I
Herrick of Zanesville, Oliio.
Lucinda Prentice.
Andrew Hkrrick, Preston andPlainfield, m Abigail Hall of Plainfield,
Nov. 1748 ; removed to Plainfield,
about 1755.
Abigail, born Oct. 27, 1749.
Andrew, born April 7, 1752.
Elizabeth, Dec. 8, 1754.
Children born in Plainfield.
Mary.Lydia.Samuel.
I Abel.
I
Lois.
I Tamsen.
5| Phineas Herrick, Preston, and|thence to Canterbury and to Killing-
lly, Conn., m Sarah Leonard, 1751.
61
I
Ebenczer, born 1752.
Saraiah, born 1754.
Sally, born 1756.
I Elijah, born 1758.
I
Tryphena, born 1760.
Esther, born 1762.
Zipporah, born 1764.
Phineas, born 1766.
Charlotte, born 1768.
Stephen, born 1770.
Leonard, born 1772, died young.Elizabeth, born 1774.
232
Ch.
243244245246247248249250
233
Ch.
251252253254255256257
235
Elijah Herrick, Killingly, Conn,removed to Rutland and thence to Mil-
ton, Vt., d 1808, m Hannah Russel of
Tyrringham, Mass., 1788.
Ephraim, born in Tyrringham, Jan.
16, 1789.
Eliiah, born in Pittsford, Vt., March4, 1791.
Erastus, born in Pittsford, May 6, \
1793, lives in Erie, Penn.John, born 1795, died in infancy.
Russel, born in Rutland, Feb. 17,
'
1798.
Stephen Leonard, born April 29, '
1800.
Phineas, born July 24, 1803.
Ch.
266267268
Ephraim Herrick, of Albion, NewYork, m Amelia Spencer of Milton,
Vt., 1810.
Harriet Matilda, born Feb. 1811.
Elijah Leonard, born March, ]814.
Hannah Marilla, born Dec. 1816.
Stephen Spencer, born Dec. 1818.
Warren Noah, born April, 1821.
Elijah Herrick, Milton,
Davis, 1816.
Polly
Elizabeth, born April 1818, d 1837.
Moses Davis, born July 1820.
Elijah Parmillce, born Aug. 1822.
Luther, born Feb. 1825.
Mariah Abigail, born July 1827.
Julia Ann, born April 1830.
Martha Augusta, born Nov. 1832.
Alson Augustus, born Aug. 1835.
Erastus, Erie, Penn. m Sybel Bar-
ney, 1814.
Caroline, born Sept. 1815.
Loiza, born May 1817.
Jacob, born 1821.
Franklin, born 1823.
Lovinea, born Jan. 1827.
Lucias, born March 1832.
Lucien, born Feb. 1834.
Russel Herrick, vi Maria Tyler,
1817.
William Tyler, born Sept. 1818.
Mary Maria, born Jan. 1821.
John Russel, born May 1822.
Jane, born 1823, d 1826.
Leonard Frederic, born 1825, d 1836.
Harriet Jane, born June 1827.
Ephraim Leonard, born March 1829.
George Frederic, born April 1834.
237
EPHRAIM O?^ BE^^ERrf. 15
276
Ch.
232283284285
6 Elisha Hkrrick, Bethel, Vt.
Elizabeth Joy, Nov. 25, 1789.
Harvey, born March 7, 1791.
Eliab B. born Nov. 30, 1800.
Nathan, born April 28, 1807.
Elisha, born March 28, 1812.
Warren, born July 27, 1817.
282
Ch.
287
290291
Ch.
292
293
284
Ch.
294295
279
Son
280
Harvey Herrick, Bethel, m Rox-ana Leonard, Jan. 30, 1815.
George Leonard, born July 29, 1816.
Lanson D., born April 2, 1820.
Hirum, born March 8, 1830.
Harvey, born March 5, 1832.
Edward, born Sept. 29, 1837.
Ch.
313314315316317318
Eliab B. Herrick, Morristown, Vt.
m Miriam Raymond, Feb. 1, 1827.
Charles Raymond, born Nov. 24,
1827.
William B., born April 3, 1830.
Edmund L., born Oct. 8, 1833.
7| Nathan Herrick, Morristown,
Laura R. Small, Oct. 3, 1830.
Henry N., born May 29, 1832.
George, born Sept. 28, 1838.
Amos Herrick, settled in NiagaraCo., N. Y.
Patrick,
named.and several others, not
Ch.
319:320321
322;323
Priscilla Herrick, Preston, v
Stephen Kinny, Preston, June, 1729.
Stephen, born Dec. 18, 1732.
Jesse, born May 25, 1735.
Roswell, born May 4, 1737.
Nathaniel, born April 26, 1739.
Anna, born June 7, 1741.
Dedimus, born Aug. 7, 1743.
William Herrick, Preston, died
1752, m Mary Palmer, Stonington,
May 15, 1746.
Annabella.Judith, born April 7, 1748.
Zeruiah, born Dec. 22, 1749.
Abigail.
Lucretia.
Stephen Herrick, Beverly, re-
moved to Preston, Conn., subsequent
to 1716, m Elizabeth Trask, Dec. 3,
1692.
Born in Beverly,
Elizabeth, born Oct. 17, 1693.
Edward, born Oct. 16, 1695.
Stephen, born July 24, 1797.
Ebenezer, born May 17, 1799.
Abigail, born June 15, 1701.
Anna, born Nov. 2, 1702.
Mary, born April 15, 1705.
Lydia, born July 13, 1707.
Sarah, born Oct. 10, 1708.
Ebenezer Herrick, m in Norwich,Conn., settled finally at Tioga Point,
Susquehannah River, N. Y.
Ch299300"59
Ch.
301
302303304305306307
Ch.
308309310311
312
Nathan, Ithaca, N. Y., and a
Daughter, No. 298.
John L., born 1820.
Nathan G., born 1824.
Jerosha Herrick of Preston, mJohn Hatch, Aug. 3, 1726.
John, born June 9, 1727.
EHzabeth, born March 12, 1731.
Benjamin, born Aug. 23, 1733.
Rufus, born Dec. 5, 1735.
Joseph, born May 13, 1738.
Jerusha, born Aug. 29, 1740.
Eunice, born June 6, 1746.
Elizabeth Herrick, Preston,
John Gear, Preston, June 15, 1721.
Aaron, born May 1, 1722.
Jonathan, born June 3, 1724.
Stephen, born Feb. 22, 1726—7.Elizabeth, born May 9, 1728.
Jonathan, born June 3, 1731.
325
16 EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY.
344
EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY
407 S\ Helen Eliza Herrick, d. m Chau-
|ney N. Shipman, Aug. 1837.
I Helen Celestia.
375
18 EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY.
327
Ch.
450
EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY. 19
530
Ch.
538539540
541
542543874875.876
538
Ch.
544545546
547
Ch548549550
Stephen Herrick, Dutchess Co.,^567
N. Y., ?n Anna Fargo, Groton, ConnFeb. 25, 1747.
Stephen, born Aug. 3, 1748.
Phebe, born Nov. 22, 1749.
WilHam, killed in the battle of Mon-mouth.
Elijah.
2d marriage.
Jonathan, born Oct. 18, 1760.
Amaziah.James, 2 sons and a daughter Laura.
Smith.Mary.
Ck.
967968969970971972973
Stephen Herrick of Amenia, set-
tled at Ballstown Spa, Saratoga Co.
N. Y., 1830, d.
Sullivan.
Smith.Eli, of Barry, Orleans Co.,
8 children, aged 50 in 1845.
Bateam.
Joseph Herrick of Dutchess, din Tates Co., N. Y., 1826, m HannahNorthrop of South Salem, Conn., liv-
ing in 1846.
Four daughters, d in infancy.
Jacob, born 1790.
Nathan, born 1792.
Israel, born 1794.
Mitchell, born 1802.
Ann, born 1805.
Lydia, born 1807.
Harvey B., born 1810.
Jacob Herrick of Geneva, Wads-worth Co., Wisconsin, wife Roxie.
Smith Herrick of Barre, NFeb. 1844.
Richard.
Almon.Alvin.
Y.,d'
541
Ch.
551
552553554555556557558
6 Elijah Herrick, Norwich, Conn.
Elizabeth Rogers, New London,
Jan. 12, 1780.
Nathaniel, born Jan. 24, 1781.
Elizabeth, born May 8, 1783.
Fanny, born May 15, 1789.
Anna, born Dec. 30, 1792.
Sarah, born April 27, 1795.
Mary, born Feb. 21, 1798.
Abigail, born March 9, 1801.
Lucretia, born May 15, 1815.
968 1 7
20 EPIIIIAIM OF BEVERLY.
569
Ch.
576577578579
576
Ch.
580581
5821
JosiAii Herrick of Dutchess, Co.
N. Y. 111. Miss Hicks of Loner Island.
Stephen HicksJacobElias B.
Merchants, South-st.N.Y.
William, Merchant, Troy, N. Y.
534
Ch.
59059]
592593594595596597598
Ch.
599600<;oi
Stephen Hicks Herrick, Merch't,Coenties Slip, N. Y., m. Susan Lyon,Duchess Co.
Susan Lyon.Laura,Edwin, Merchant, Soiith-st. N. Y.
Elijah Herrick, Dutchess County,settled in Duanesburg, N. Y. marriedMiss Kinnie of Preston.
Ephraim, Amenia, N. Y. d.
Elijah, born July 22, 1760.
William, lives in Duanesburg,no ch.
Stephen, lives in Mexico,OswegoCo.John.Roswell, Lyme, Jefferson Co.Priscilla, Steuben Co.Anna, d.
Phebe, Duanesburg.
6 Ephraim Herrick of Milan,Dutch-ess Co. m.. Anna Di.Yon.
Ephraim Milan.
A son in Jerusalem, N. Y.A daiighter in Ohio.
591
Ch.
(i02
603
604I
6051
606
1
593
EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY. 21
632 61 TiiEBE Herrick, vx.
I
! settled in Otsego Co. N.
Ck.\ 7i
648!
64!.|
651!
i%2\
6531
6541
Bonj. Black,Y.
Blarvin.
Daniel.
Phebe.Priscilla.
Klary.
Sarah.
Rueben, and three others.
6341 6i Priscilla HERRicK,TO.HenrvGnile,
I
IFlorida, settled in Otsego Co. N. Y.
Ch.\ 71
6iJ5|I
Josiah.
656 Jlary.
657| Daniel.
6581 Benjamin.
659! Herrick.
6601I
John.
6371 6] RcFus Herrick, vi. Anna French,
Florida.
:682!
Ch] 7
22 EPIIRAIM OF BEVERLY.
Daniel Hkrrick, Coventry, Conn.,thence tniknown, m Elizabeth Rust,Coventry, May 20, ]731, who died
Dec. 1.5, 1741, and thence we lose sight
ofDaniel.
Samuel, born April 2, 1732.
Margarett, born Feb. 1!), 1733.
Benjamin, born April 3, 1737.
Samuel Herrick of Norwich,Conn,afterwards of Bennington, Vt., Colonelin the Revolutionary Army, died in
Springfield, Otsego Co., N. Y., hasposterity living there, m Silenee Kins-
ley of Norwich, Conn., Feb. 26, 1754.
Born in Norwich.Ruth, born Feb. 13, 1755.
Frederic, born April 14, 1757.
Cyprian, born Oct. 27, 1758.
Wife died, m 2d and removedBennington, Vt., prior to 1775.
Daniel, born 1762.
Francis, born 1764.
David, born 1766.
Cyprian Herrick.
Nancy, born 1788.
Silence, born 1790.
Mary, born 1792.
Samuel, born 1794.
Lamonte,Lavanche,
Twins, born 1796.
Daniel Herrick, settled at Monk-ton, Vt., d June 6, 1830, m HannahSmith, h Aug. 25, 1763, d Jan. 24, 1833.
Frederic, settled at Monkton, d.
Loiza, born Oct. 3, 1785, m EzraWilcox, W. Bloomfield.
Daniel, b May 6, 1789, d March 2,
1821.
Mary, b June 26, 1791, ra JamesCrosby, Markham, U. Canada.Lyman, born May 24, 1793.
Ancil, b July 3, 1795, Monkton, maybe dead.
David, born Aug. 7, 1798, at Lima,N. Y., lives at Springwater.
Sarah, born May 10, 1802, at Scar-borough, U. C, d 1805. :
Hannah, born May 26, 1805,m Wm.\
Grover, lives at Springwater.:
Lyman Herrick, Nunda, N. Y., m1st Meonetta Gillet of Goshen, N.Y. m2d Polly Carpenter of Granville, N.Y.,January 20, 1820.
IElvira E., born July 14, 1822, who
\m June 25, 1840, A. B. Dake of Green-field, N. Y., whorZ March 1843.
I Meonetta L., born Aug. 4, 1824, dJan. 5, 1838.
I Algina, born Sept,, d. Nov. 1827.
729
EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY. 23
rsr
Ch\7631
I
7841
I
7851
7861
Ch.\
787788
1
789;
6 Rlth Herrick, m let Chailes Wil-son, Jan. 1799, who rf 1811.
Samuel, h 1799, m Almira Dowe,two children.
Mary, b 1802, m Philo Jillett Leba-non, two children.
Wealthy, b 1805,m Thomas W. Cun-ningham, one child.
Joseph, b 1808, d 1838, m HannahHunt, (/ 1837.
Married 2d Joseph Whitman.
George, born 1817.
!Loiza, born 1820.
j
Charles, born 1824 ; Mother died
I March 14,1837.
Ch.\
790
1
7941
7951
David Herrick, Mansfied, ?» Rach-el Peters.
Diantha, b 1794, m Ethan Crandall,
four children.
PameUa, b 1796.
Sarah, 6 1798, m David Aldrich, six
children.
Miranda, b 1800, m Luther Robin-son, Williamantic, one child.
Harlin D. b 1802.
Almira, b 1804, nn Nelson Jacobs,
Mansfield, three children.
7 941
I
Son\
7961
7[
Ch.
797798799800801802803804
31 Timothy Herrick, born in Besettled in Preston, Conn.
rerly.
Benjamin, born April 17, 1706-
?h:![kful, }Twins, i May 29, 1707.
1
Timothy, b June 22, 1710, d 1759.
Robert, b. March 1, 1712—13.Waitstill, b. June 1, 1715.
\
Israel, b. June 11, 1720.:
Silence, b. May 22, 1725. :
800
24 EPHRALM OV BEVERLY.
8tO
EPHRAIM OF BEVERLY. 25
692! 7| Luther Herrick.Ch.\
9481
949|
9501
951
1
9521
9531
809
Norman, born 1827.
Pamela, born 1829.
Susan, born 1830.
Avery, born 1837.
Sydney, born 1843.
Lucy Amelia, born 1845.
Ch.
954955956957958959960961
962Ch.
963964965966967968969
963
Ch.
970971
972
Lucy Herrick, m. Benijah Tracy,
born Feb. 23, 1741.
Robert.
Elias.
Barton.
Hannah.Elizabeth.
Luther.Elijah.
Safford.
964
Ch.
9737A
:975
1976
977978
Lucy, who married Israel Bromley.
Alas.
Elizabeth.
Esther L.
Amanda F.
Lucy T. .
Sinda M.Suniah M.
Alas Bromley, m. Huldah Luck-
ham, Stonington.
Huldah.Ann.Appleton.
7 Elizabeth Bromley, m. William
Bolton, Pomfret.
Elizabeth.
George.Sobriety.
Angelina.
Lucy.Harriett.
966
Ch.
983984985
967
9"65
HENRY OF BEVERLY
HENRY HERRICK, Beverly, d.
June, 1702,in herited the paternal farm,
a part of which is still possessed by a
lineal descendant, Mrs. AnnaMeacom,daughter of Col. Henry Herrick, aged92 in 1845 ; m 1st Lydia (Woodbury,I believe.)
Lydia, baptised Sept. 26, 1666, mPorter.
Joseph, bapt. Sept. 26, 1666.
Elizabeth, bapt. Dec. 6, 1668, mIsaac Woodbury.
Samuel, bapt. 1670.
Jonathan, bapt. 1672.
Married 2d, Sarah, widow of JohnGiddinge of Gloucester, in 1690, d in
Gloucester, 1711.
13
23
Joseph Herrick, Beverly, Capt. of 16a troop of Mounted Rangers in the <
French Wars, d 1726—7, m 1st, Mary.
Mary, born May 15, 1686, ?» AndrewElliott.
Henry, born Sept. 9, 1688.
Lydia,, born May 29, 1691, m Ben-jamin Woodbury.
Joanna, born 1695, m Ebenezer Ray-mond.
Joshua, born Feb. 22, 1668—9.Married 2d, Mary, widow of David
Gushing of Hingham, m Dec. 24,
1721, d June 1737. Her Gushingchildren were Theophilus, Nathaniel,
Adam, Abel, Seth, Rachel, & Hannah.
Henry Herrick, Beverly, d 1755,
Capt. in the French and Lidian War,1745, m 1st, Joanna, dau. of AndrewWoodbury, Dec. 1, 1709, d Oct. 3,
1738.
Mary, b Nov. 11, 1711, m Larcum.Joseph, born July 18, 1714, died in
Jamaica, Nov. 11, 1747, m Anna Irv-
ing, Marblehead, 1744.
Henry, born Oct. 5,1716.Eunice, born May 1, 1719, m Samuel
\
Gates, 1747.
Married 2d, widow Sarah DavGloucester, Nov. 11, 1739, d 1746.
Married 3d, widow Joanna Dodge,]
who -died 1767.
Joanna.
26
Henry Herrick, Beverly, Colonel
in the Revolution, Representative in
the Legislature of Massachusetts, died
Dec. 9, 1780, m Anna Bachelder,
Salem, 1787, who died 1815.
Joseph, born Feb. 15, 1738.
Pyam, born Jan. 17, 1740, d Mav 2,
1759.
Joanna, born April 26, 1745, vi Wm.Bartlett, 1761, d 1797.
Henry, born May 26, 1748.
EKzabeth, born Sept. 14, 1751, d1814.
Anna, born Dec. 29,1753.Mary, born Nov. 10, 1756, m Nath'l
Cleaves, Salem, one son.
Ruth, born March 4, 1759, vi HughSmith, d May 19, 1780. •
6 Joseph Herrick, Esq., of Beverly
and Greenfield, m Anna, daughter of
George Jackson & Bcthiah Bartlett his
wife, of Marblehead, (grand-daughter / /
of Doc. George Jackson of Boston,) /W/C
March 31, 1761. Removed to Green-field, N. H., about 1770, where he wasfor many years a Magistrate, Repre-
sentative in the Legislature, &c., dSept. 23, 1810.
Anna, born Oct. 22, 1761
.
Pyam, born Dec. 23, 1763.
Bethiah, born June 17, 1766.
George, born June 16, 1770.
Wilkes, ^Axanna, I Born in Greenfield,
Mar)',;.
Joanna, I No dates. .
Ruth, JHannah, born March 3, 1768.
25
HENRY OF BEVERLY. 27
George Herrick, m Sarah, settled:
in Londonderry, Vt., 1808, d 1814.
Pyam, settled in Ohio.
Joanna, b 1806, m Sheldon Peirce,;
1826.
Henry Herrick, Beverly, d 1808,
Graduate of Harvard, m Hannah Jones 1
of Beverly, March 15, 1772, who was|
born 1750, d 1786.
Sarah Endicott, born Oct. 1772, m !
1st, James Ford, 2d, Charles Dennis.
Ginger, born Aug. 25, 1774, m;
Jonas Gale.
Joanna, born July 7, 1776, m Charles
Waters.Henry, born April 3, 1778.
Achsah, born June 15, 1780, m Ne-
hemiah Smith.Mary, born May 9, 1784, d May 4,
1800.
Hannah, born Aug. 15, 1786.
John Jones, born June 5, 1782, d
Nov. 1783.
Henry Herrick, Beverly, m Elcy
Foster, Nov. 8, 1803.
Pyam, born July 1, 1S04, d Sept.
1805.
Elcy, 7ft George Kent.
I
Anna Herrick, m Capt. Ebenezer
Meacom, Ship Master of Beverly, whoIwith Nathaniel Cleaves, No. 22, was
I
lost at sea, leaving one son.
Ebenezer Meacom of Beverly, Ship
Master, who has two sons, also Ship
Masters.
Ck.
7778
Joshua Herrick, Beverly, d 1782,
in the House built by the first Henry,
on the 40 acre lot, granted him in 1636,'
above Mr. Cole; m 1st, Lydia, daughter :
of David and Mary Gushing, June 30,
1726, who died Aug. 19, 1736.
Mary, born July 1, 1728.
Lydia, born July 19, 1730.
Theopilus, born Nov. 2, 1732.
Joshua, born Jan. 25, 1734.
Deborah, born July, 1736.
Married 2d, Abigail Jacobs of Hing-
ham, 1737.
Joshua, born June 16, 1738.
Theopilus, born Nov. 20, 1730.
David, born Dec. 1741.
Abigail, born March 20, 1743.
Mary, born Feb. 22, 1745.
Hannah, born Dec. 9, 1746.
Joanna, born May 29, 1749.
Joseph, born Jan. 1751.
LvDiA Herrick, m Eben. Thorn-
dike, Sept. 5, 1750, settled at Portland,
thence removed to Thoraastown.
Lydia.
Robert, living in T. aged 77, in
'1843.
Son112
106Ch.
113114115116117
Lydia THORNDiKE,Thomastown,iRoundy, Uving in 1842, aged 84.
Son.Daughter.Daughter.
Jushua Herrick, Beverly, Sedg-
wick, 1769, m Huldah Brown, Aug.24, 1758.
Born in Beverly.
David, born Oct. 28, 1758, d.
Abigail, born Dec. 8, 1759.
Mary, born June 10, 1761.
Joshua, born Feb. 19, 1763.
Samuel, born Dec. 25, 1764.
Amos, born Nov. 23, 1766, d.
Joseph, born June 6, 1769.
Born in Sedgwick.Theopilus, born May 29, 1771.
Huldah, born May 26,1773, /ic.l844.
Joanna, born Jan. 17, 1775.
Apphia, born Sept. 2, 1778.
Hannah, born Nov. 29, 1781.
Abigail Herrick of Sedgwick, mRev. Ebenezer Eaton of Mt. Desert.
Amos, m 1st, Susannah Herrick,
No. 208 ; 2d, Widow Burnhani.
Ebenezer.David.Joshua.Mary.Abigail.
97
28 HENRY OF BEVERLY.
107
HENRY OF BEVERLY. 29
169j
Ch.\
1811
1821
"or
Ch.
183184185
183
Harriett Allen, m Capt. Joseph 't 208Cole.
George.Joseph.
Apphia Herrick, ?re Samuel Wa£-son, Sedgwick.
Son186|
184
Eliza.1220
Ebenezer. ? 221
Reuben. 1222
Tj Eliza Watson, m Colonel Daniel\218
I
Dougherty, Sedgwick.
Daniel Proctor.
Ch.
191
192193]94195196197"92
Ch.
198199200201202203
Ebenezer WATsorReed.
Judith.
Sophia.
Hannah.Ehzabeth.
TO Widow
Reuben Watson, m Eliza Herrick,
No.
Jones, d.
Reuben.Rosella.
David, m Judith Smith, no children.
Joshua, not married.
Samuel, " "John Smith, « "
Ch.
:223:224
225226227228229230
i23]^
223
Ch.
232233234235236
232
Hannah Herrick, to John Allen.
William, d.
Edith, m Samuel Hooper.Hannah.John, d at sea.
Prince, m Elizabeth Hooper.Groves.
200
30 HENRY OF BEVERLY.
231
Ch.1>52
253254255256257
Ch.
258259260
212
Ch.261262263264265266267268
CatherineHaskell.
IIerrick, m. Amos J
Catherine, or Caroline.
Amos.Ezra.
Lydia.Asa.Sydney Haskell, Gloucester, m.
Ruth Herrick, No. 477.
Sydney.Isaac F.
Lucy Ann W.Samuel Herrick, Gloucester, d.
1764, 7ft. 1st, Kesiah Haskell, 1731, d.
s.p. 2d. Prudence Haskell, 1733, d.
1774.
Benjamin, born March, 1734.
Hannah,Lucy,Ebenezer,Andrew,Samuel,John,Daniel,
Oct. 1735.
March, 1738.
Dec. 1739.
Aug.Dec.
1742.
1744.
1747.
1750.
261
HENRY OF BEVERLY. 31
265
Ch.
333334335336337338339
1
3401
341
Andrew Herrick, Gloucester, set-
tled in Penobscot, d. 1812,m.five wives.
Reuben, settled in Northport.
Samuel, do. do.
George, do. do.
Mercie, m. Gray.
Sarah.
David, lives in Bluehill.
Alexander, do. do.
Isaac, do. do.
Joseph, do. do.
2661 51
32 HENRY OF BEVERLY.
John Herrick, Gloucester, Sedg-wick, m Phebe Osgood, Bluehill.
John.
Lucy.Phebe.Abigail.
Phineas.
Ebenezer.Isaac.
David.Daniel,
Hannah.Mary.William.
John Herrick, m Abigail Cole, d1832.
Phebe.Sarah.
Lydia.
Licetta.
Harriett m Walter Herrick, No.Abigail.
Otis.
Mary.Ann.
,268
HENRY OF BEVERLY. 33
2131 4 Thomas Herrick, Es(i. Gloucester, I
(1 1787, aged73, m Ist, Abigail Eveleth,|
1732.:
Thomas, bapt. March 1733.
Abigail, bapt. Sept. 1734, m Cole.
Sarah, bapt. April 1736, m Cole.
Lydia, bapt. Dec. 1738, m Dodge of
Bluehill, eight children.
Samuel, bapt. Aug. 1740.
Susannah, bapt. Jan. 1742, m Hull.
Married 2d, Mary, widow of Joseph
Preston, and herself a Preston, andrelative of the Compiler of this.
Ruth, born Aug. 1743.
Mary, born May, 174.5.
Triphosa, born March 1747, rf young. :
493
34 HENRY OF BEVERLY.
Sarah Tyler, m Walter Blasdell,
Esq., Lewistown.
Fidelia.
Affiance, w. Nichols.
Josiah, m Olive Bradford, Minot.
John Tyler, m Mary Gove Herrick,
No. 231.
537
HENRY OF BEVERLY. 35
()25| 41 Joseph Herrick, Concord, pur-
chased a farm in Groton, 1744, sold to
Josiah Conant, 174G, lived awhile in
Townsend, and finally settled in Brat-
tleboro', Vermont, d March 16, 1795,
m Lois Cutler, Chelmsford, 1742, whod Aug. 5, 1812, aged 92.
Jonathan, born Sept. 26, 1743.
Joseph, d s. p. about 1835, at Rum-ney, N. H.
Shadrach.Lois, born in Chelmsford, 1749.
Amos, m widow Miles, lives at Ma-son, N. H., no children.
Abner.Bethiah.
Mary.
;636
Ch.
655656657658659660661
662
Abner Herrick, Chelmsford, mElizabeth, who died 1789.
Rebecca, b Nov. 21, 1776, m Wm.Byam, Feb. 19, 1795.
Jemima, b Oct. 29, 1778, m 1st, John;
Davis ; 2d, B. Parkhurst.
Elizabeth, born Jan. 29, 1781.
I Patty, born April 26, 1783, d April
|29, 1796.
Polly, h Sept. 14, 1786, m Phineas_
Barrett, 1812.I Sarah, d May 30, 1785.
626
JOSEPH OF SALEM.
V.
or
JOSEPH OF SALEM. 37
50
38 JOSEPH OF SALEM.
Ch.
126127128129
i09~
Ch.
130131
110
Son132|
OF
Ch.
133134135136137138
CHAnr.oTTK Thompson Herrick,m Reuben K. Stetson, Esq., Merchant,Hampden, Dec. 11,1835.
Reuben Kidder, h Dec. 4, 1837.
Charlotte Herrick, b Nov. 22, 1830.
Ehzabeth Kidder.Henry, h 1845, d 1846.
Frances Tyler Herrick, m Jesse
Wentworth, Merchant of Hampden,Sep. 5, 1825, d May 20, 1829.
Frances Ehzabeth, b May 26, 1826.
Jedediah Herrick, b April 14, 1828.
Alfred Herrick, Esq., Hampden,in 1st Mary Ann, daughter of Josiah
Lane, Esq. of Prospect,Sept. 3, 1838,^/.
Alfred, b March 16, 1839.
112
Ch.
139140
George Rupert Herrick, Hamp-den and Bangor, m Mary Childs Nich-ols of Nobleboro', June 14, 1835.
Caroline Elizabeth.
Infant daughter, dHelen Maria.
Mary Erances.
George.
Sarah Thompson Herrick, m Oct.
16, 1834, Camillus Kidder, Esq., Mer-chant, Bangor, removed to Cambridge,Maryland, 1838, thence to Baltimore,
1842.
Elizabeth, b in Bangor.Jerome Henry, b Oct. 26, 1842, in
Baltimore Co., Maryland.
114
Ch.
141
142
142
44
Caroline Freeman Herrick, in
Sept. 13, 1839, Joshua Hill, Hampden,Lawyer.
George Rupert Herrick, b Nov. 14,
1840, ^Z Sept. 28, 1841.
Frances Elizabeth Wentworth, bornApril 28, 1843, d Sept. 3, 1844.
Mary Caroline, b March 15, 1846.
Ch.
143144145146147
148149150
1441
Ch\151
1
1521
153
Nathaniel Herrick,Esq., Greene,
d Jan. 25, 1821, m Susanna, daughter
of Aaron Dwinel, Esq. of Lisbon, Oct.
1804.
Amos, b &d 1805.
EUza, b Oct. 1807.
Aaron, born 1809, </.
Ruth Dwinel, b Aug. 15, 1811.
Sarah Dwinel, b Oct. 10, 1813.
Whitman, b 1815, d.
Mary Ann, b July 5, 1818.
Delana, b June 1820.
Eliza Herrick, vl John Heath,Litchfield, May 1833.
Ellen Augusta, born Oct. 1835.
Nathaniel Herrick, b Aug. 19, 1536.
Frances Ann, b 1839, d 1841.
Ch.
154155
156157158
Ch.
159160161
162
163
164|
159
Ruth Dwinel Herrick, m Wm. P.
Kilgore, 1835.
Sarah Herrick, born Aug. 21, 18,36.
Ruth Caroline, " April 7, 1838.Helen, " April 7, 1841.
Seth Herkick, settled in Hamp-den, 1804, removed to Greene, 1813,d of Consumption at Cincinnati, Ohio,Jan. 6, 1818, m Ruth, daughter of Col.
Wm. Sprague of Greene, Oct. 7, 1804,who died Dec. 26, 1835. '
Lavina Adeline.
William Alexis.
Susanna Sprague.Sarah Ann.Lucy.John Sabine.
8| Lavina A. Herrick, m Daniel[Wilkins, Greene, 1829.
I
Seth Herrick.
I
Minerva.Ruth.Daniel.
Ch.
173174175176177178
179180
Son181
William Alexis Herrick, Esq.,of Greene, m Agnes Watson of Fay-ette, Sept. 12, 1830.
Amanda, b Aug. 12, 1831.
Seth, b Sept. 27, 1834.
Alonzo.Lucy Ann.
Samuel Herrick, Greene, removedto Ohio Township, Ohio, 1813, d July4, 1822, of Yellow fever on a Steamerfrom New Orleans bound up, m Cath-erine Molloy, Oct. 1807.
Hannah Thompson.Matilda.
ICatherine.
I Eli.
I
Priscilla.
I Henry.I Martha.I Sophrona.I Widow m Wm. Ormskirke Bowler,Irf, and widow lives in Indiana.
I Samuel Herrick.
173| 8
i
Ch182|
175
Hannah Thompson Herrick, mFeb. 18, 1836, Wm. L. Davis, Clarks-
burg, Indiana, thence removed to Mis-souri.
Jesse, b Nov. 14, 1836, and another.
Catherine Herrick, 7/1 StephenParker of Indiana, 1832, rf 1834.
Nancy Jane.
JOSEPH OF SALEM. 39
Priscilla Herrick, m RaphaelJollifF, Indiana, Aug. 1834.
Catherine Ellenor.
Ehzabeth Hannah.Another.
Henry Herrick, Greene, d July'
23, 181G, 7ft Martha Cotton, daughter <
of Joel Thompson, Esq. of Lewiston,Jan. 1, 1812.
Harriett Jewett, born Nov. 28, 1812.
Eveline Thompson, h Jan. 22. 1814.
Harriett Jewett Herrick,Sept. 9, 183.5, Horace Corbett, Esq. of|
Lisbon.
Harriett Herrick, b Sept. 1, 1836.
199
Ch.
2002W|192^
Ch.
220221
222223224
Lydia Gove, m Day of Bangor.
Eveline Thompson Herrick, dMay, 1838, vi. Daniel Weymouth,Trader of Topsham, removed to Web-ster.
Francis Purrington, h April 10, 1837.
223
Ch.
225
Mary, h Dec. 23, 1780.
Oliver, h July 29, 1782.
Ebenezer, /( Oct 21, 1785.
Lydia, b Oct. 3, 1790.
191
41) JOSERH OF SALEM.
Ch.\
2491
250
1
2511
252253254255256257
24U
2581
EtiZABKTU Herrick, Lowiston,yi
1834, m Tobias Ham, Bath, settled in
Lewiston.
Abigail, d.
Elizabeth, h March 18, 1781.
Mary, b June, 1782.
K;:i Twins,..
Israel.
Tobias, d.
Thomas, d.
John.
"iAbigail Ham, Lewiston, m Nath'l
jPettingill, Lewiston.
Ch.\
2.59
1
25lT
Ch.\
2601
2611
2621
2631
2641
2(J5
2662672682692701
2711
2541
Sarah Pettingill, m John Hatch,Lisbon.
Elizabeth Ham, m Jonathan Slee-
per, 1803, who died 1804.
Ruth, h June, 1804.
Mary Ham, /m Nathan Sleeper,
who was born in N. H. 1777.
Asa, h Apr. 10,
Tobias Ham, h Jan. 27,
Nathaniel Pettingill, /; Oct. 25,
Jonathan, b Sept. 5,
Ebenezcr Herrick, h Sept. 23,
Sophronia,Nathan,Lydia Ham,Mary,Martha,Sumner,Julian Davis,
b Jan. 31
b Jan. 10,
h Mar. 13,
b July 13,
b Oct. 13,
b Mar. 15,
b Aurr. 17,
1801.
1803.
1804.
1806.
1808.
1810.
1813.
1815.
1817.
1819.
1823.
1826.
Ch.\
272
1
273
1
274
1
2751
Son\
276
7 IsRAF.L Ham, settled in Lisbon,
1st, Lucy Hinkley, Lisbon.
Sarah,
Charles.
Isaac Curtis.
I
Israel.
\m 2d, Clarissa Smith, Lisbon.
I
John.
256| 7| Thomas Ham, Lewiston, </. ?K Anna
JOSEPH OF SALEM 41
293
1
Ch.\
332333|
3341
3353361
337338
294
Ch.
3393403413423431
:J44
345346
Daniel Booker,?k Hannah Storms. \ 365
Emily.Charles.
Mary Ann.Sanford.
Benjamin.Eliza.
Lydia.
Thomas Booker,Lucretia.
Robert.
Samuel.Simon.Jacob.
Sarah.
Elvira.
Eliza.
Ellenor.
Esq., Emden,
Eli Herrick, Greene, d 1813, no
children, in Hannah, daughter of Ben-jamin Thompson, Bath, i 1844.
39
Ch.
347348
349350351
347
Samuel Herrick, Greene & Leeds,
d Sept. 5, 1834, m Abigail House of
Turner, liv. 1841.
Israel, b Jan. 17, 1791.
Eli, 6 May 26, 1793, d in 1814, a
prisoner of war, at Quebec.Mary, h Jan. 4, 1796.
Abigail, h July 5, 1799.
Elizabeth, h Oct. 5, 1801.
Ch.
352353354355356
71 Israel Herrick, Esq. Leeds, mI
Feb. 27, 1822, Abigail Lamb of Leeds,
\b in Charlton, Mass, Aug. 21, 1794.
81
Margarett, h Nov. 6, 1822.
Harr.ett,J ^Aug. 1 1829, T,.^^
Horace, 5 " Dec. 21,1826,
I Harriett, b July 7, 1830.
I
Clarissa, b Dec. 7, 1834, d Sept. 4,
11837.
349 7| Mary HERRicK,Leeds,m Ira Lamb,Leeds.
Ch. 8357 Eli, b Nov. 20,1817.
358 Bemus, 6 Aug. 10, 1821.
359 Clarrissa, b April 12, 1823.
360 Calvin, b Aug. 28, 1825, d July 12,
1829.
361 Salmon, & Nov. 7,1829.
362 Calvin, b April 20, 1832.
3631 Mary, b Nov. 10, 1835, d March 10,
1836.
364 I Willard, b March 9, 1837.
40 61 Abigail Herrick, to 1st, Thomas|Smith, Topsham ; 2d, Child, of Liver-
more, liv. 1844.
Ch.I
By 1st Marriage.
Ch366367368369370
371
367
Elizabeth Smith, in Mark Pettin-
gill ofTopsham, Feb. 3, 1814, settled
at Old Town, 1824.
Mark, b Feb. 12, 1815.
Mary Ann, b Jan. 16, 1817.
John Herrick, b Oct. 16, 1819.
Olive Jane, b 1821.
Converse, b March 3, 1823, d Jan.
16, 1837.
Charles Fuller, h Dec. 3, 1837.
Marv Ann Pettingill, Old Town,TO John B. SmitJi, Esq. Old Town, re-
moved to Milwaukie, Wisconsin.
Gilbert Mottier, b July 26, 18.36.
Eliza Frances, b Sept. 12, 1838.Florence Eveline, b March 7, 1842.Charles Albert, b Jan. 6, 1844.
Percy Bysshe, b Jan. 7, 1846.
Ch.
377
378
379
380
381
382383
377
Ch.
384385386387388389390391
392
Edward Herrick, Methuen, Mass.d Sept. 22, 1756, m Sarah Kimball,Boxford, Oct. 9, 1744.
Lydia, bapt. in Wenham, June 2,
1751.
Sarah, bapt. in Wenham, June 2,
1751,7/1 1st, Tr^cey, 2d, SafFord, 3d,
Abbott.
Mary, bapt. in Wenham, June 2,
1751.
Anna, bapt. in Wenham, June 2,
1751.
Benjamin, b Dec. 6, 1752.
Edward, b Oct. 9, 1754.
John, b Oct. 6, 1756.
Widow, TO Isaac Blunt, Andover.
6 Lydia Herrick, TO Parker Richard-
son, Methuen.
Parker, lives in Mt. Vernon, N. 11.
Caleb, lives in Andover, Mass.Isaac, " Vermont.John, d.
Kimball, d.
Lydia, Methuen, living in 1842.
Bodwell, d.
Bill, Boston.
Larkin, d.
i
Son393
Anna Herrick, m George Dodge,
Salem, settled in EOingiiam, N. H.,
after the decease of his father, he re-
turned to Salem and to the possession
of a large property, d 1808.
Larkin, Salem, d. s. p. and his
widow TO Mark Newman, Andover,father of Professor Newman, BowdoinCollege. Here the male line of George
Dodge and Lydia Herrick, No. 21, be-
comes extinct.
42 JOSEPH OF SALEM.
381
JOSEPH OF SALEM. 43
'lElijah Lawrence Herrick, Esq.,
Andover,?n. Hannah Abbot of Andover.
I
Phebe Abbot, b March 25, 1816, mGates of Rockford, 111.
Ephraim Abbot, h April 28, 1817.
John William, h July 21, 1819.
Elijah Lawrence, b Sept. 30, 1820.
IEdward, b April 7, 1822.
I George, 6 March 7, 1824.
I
Hannah Jane, b May 21, 1825.
Sarah, t March 21,1827.
Martha,Samuel,
b June 1, 1829.
b Nov. 11, 1835.
449
44 JOSEPH OF SALEM.
61 Rebecca Herrick, m NehemiahRichardson, Pelham.
Mary Herrick.
Abijah.
Israel Herrick.
Olive.
Rhoda.Hayward Herrick.Rebecca.Nehemiah.
28
iOSEPII OF SALEM. 45
536
4G JOSEPH OF SALEM.
I
640
1
6416421
6431
644
IN'ehemiaii Hkrrick, of Topsfield, '< 669 7
inherited by his grandfather's will, a\
large portion of the homestead in Tops- '
field, and also the estate of his aunt '/
Hannah; removed to Cavendish,Vt.ab't\ (
1792, where he d. suddenly, in his field, '.
m. 1st Mary Nichols, Danvers, 1760, ) (
who d. April 19, 1768. i (
Joseph, d. Nov. 25, 1777.;
Nehemiah, d. Dec. 15, 1777, m. 2d, ',
Miriam Upton, of Reading, Oct. 19,'
1768.i
Daughter, who d. Jan. 31, 1783.
Marv.\
Edith.^
Hannah.i
Nehemiah.^
Joseph.j
m. 3d, Elizabeth Greene, Topsfield, '/
1785.I
Mirriam.j
Lucy.Aaron.Abigail.
Benjamin.}
Sarah. i
JVote. After the decease of Nehemiah|
Herrick, his family removed to Platts-\
burg.
J 7^
David Ames Herrick, No. 97,Wm.Street, N. Y., house No. 58 Adams-st.Brooklyn, m Maria L. Clark, Brook-lyn, February, 1842.
Joseph Herrick, settled in Fayette,Medina Co. Ohio, in Mary Tripp.
Nelson.Mary.Elijah.
a Son.
John Herrick, Salem, 1719; his
farm was in Wenham, d. 1742, vi AnnaWoodbury, b 1674, d 1769, aged 95.
Zachariah, b. Oct. 14, 1696, <Z Jan. 5,1722.
Josiah, b Oct. 5, 1698, d young.John, b Feb. 20, 1701, rf Jan. 29,1722.Josiah, b Feb. 6, 1704.Sarah, bap. Feb. 15, 1707.
Anna, bap. June, 1710.Jerusha, bap.
Lois, bap. 1715.
Mary Herrick, m. Piatt, d.
Mirriam.Nelson, lives in Peoria, Illinois.
Rehef.Daniel, lives in Peoria, Illinois.
Edith, 7« Barrett Millar, Plattsburg.
Priscilla. " " "
Mary.Elizabeth, m. PlattThorn,Plattsburg.
Josiah Herrick, Wenham, d. May14, 1772, m Joanna Dodge, Beverly,Nov. 2,1725, d Aug. 27, 1755.
Sarah, d Jan. 16, 1755.John, bap. July 4, 1731.
Josiah, b Nov. 10, 1733.Zachariah.
Daniel, bap. Apr. 1736.Joanna, bap. Apr. 1738.
Anna, b May 26, 1744.Mary, b May 24, 1747.
David, bap."May 7, 1748.
Joshua, bap. Nov. 3, 1751.
Edith Herrick, m. Israel Brown,Rumney, N. H., living 1840, d. Oct.1841.
Hannah.Fanny.Maryann.Elliott.
Elbridge.
Susan.
659
Ch.
665666667668
JOSEPH OF SALEM. 47
726
Ch.
736737788739740
741|
7^7"
Son742"
Ch.
743744745
724
710
Ch747748749
750751752753754755756
757]j
750
I
John Herrick, Salem, old Boston
Iroad, TO. Eliza Foster, 1828.
Frances Elizabeth, h. Sept. 1828.
Ellen Jane,
John Everett,
Cynthia Foster,
George Edmund,Horace, b. 1837.
h. May, 1830.
b. Nov. 1831.
b. May, 1833.
h. March, 1835.
7 Israel Herrick, Boxford, d. Oct.
30, 1815, TO. Elizabeth Hale, 1805, whod. Nov. 1806.
William Hale Herrick, Boxford,
b. Feb. 4, 1806, m. Lois Kilhain, grand-
dau. to my grand-uncle, John Kilham.
William A.Isaac.
Samuel Kilham.
752
Ch.
769770771
772
773i
753
6i Joanna Herrick, of Boxford, m.iDea. Wm. Dodge, Wenham, No. 860.
I
Abraham, m. Miss Hani, Shapleigh,
I
Maine.
JosiAH Herrick, Wenham, settled
in Amherst, N. H. d. April, 1799, aged
66, TO. Mary Low^e of Ipswich, who d.
Oct. 1807, aged 70.
Mary, d April 6, 1836, not m.Joanna, lives in Milford.
Josiah, lives in Antrim, to Esther
Tarbell, Hudson, no children.
Lydia, h April, 1765.
William, h Jan. 19, 1767.
Elizabeth, b May 7, 1769.
DanielLow, 6 Dec. 4, 1771.
Jonathan, b Jan. 22, 1774.
Joseph, b Nov. 3, 1775.
Sarah, b Feb. 28, 1778.
Hannah, b 1780.
Ch.
758759
751
Ch760761762
Ch763
Lydia Herrick, d Sept. 23, 1806,
aged 41, m. John Capron, Amherst.
Josiah.
Mary.
764765766767768
6 Elizabeth Herrick, m JosephCraggin of Amherst, N. H.
William.Daniel.
Luther.Elizabeth.
Mary
.
Ch778r9
781782
William Herrick, of Essex, Mass.
TO Elizabeth Kilham, of Wenham.
William, b Aug. 13, 1798.
Elizabeth, m Nicholas Lamb, Boston.
Jonathan Kilham, merchant, New-York and London, wholesale stationer,
TO 1st, Caroline Kemp, March 17, 1825.
Elizabeth, h Dec. 1825.
m 2d, Elizabeth Keller, Cornwall, Eng-land, Oct. 25, 1832.
Caroline, b Dec. 5, 1826.
Elizabeth, b in London, July, 1833.
William, do do 1835.
Charles, b in New York, Oct. 1837.
Mary, do do June 25,1840.
6 Daniel Low, Merrimac, N. H., mHannah Weston of Amherst.
Franklin.
Isaiah.
Thirza.
Anstress.
7 Franklin Herrick, Bangor,Apphia S. Jordan, Bangor.
Sarah.
Franklin.
754
48 JOSEPH OF SALEM,
798
JOSEPH OF SALEiVl. 49
867, 4; Benjamin Herrick, Lynn, d June,11747, m Sarah Potter, (who m 2d,
IWilHam Upton of Reading, about
I
!1749.
Son\ 5|
S71jI
Martvn, 6 iMay 30, 1747, d July 4,
j11820, Graduate of Harvard, 1772, Phy-sician in the Army and Navy duringthe war of the Revolution, m SarahWright,whose mother was Sarah Rich-ardson ; settled in Reading.
Sarah Richardson.Clarissa.
Susan Baker.Maria Martyn.
6| Sarah Richardson Herrick, m[Oliver S. Hartshorn, Portland, Mer-
910911
912
913914
1
908"
5] Elizabeth Herrick,! Porter, Danvers, d 1816.
I
Joseph, and four others.
Joseph
I
Samuel Herrick, settled in Fitch-
burg, Mass. m Ehzabeth Flint of Read-ling, Nov. 19, 1767.
Samuel, b June, 1763.
j
Flizabeth, b Nov. 19, 1770, m John'Davis, Chelmsford, settled in Spring-field, Vt., eleven children, all living.
Amos, lives in Barre, Mass. 6 cli.
Hannah, b July 14, 1772, m Hall,
lives in Springfield, Vt., five ch.
Benjamin Flint, Providence, R. I..
four children.
Mary, m Amos Gould, Ipswich, d.
Sarah, m Hammond, d.
876
50 JOSEPH OF SALEM.
897
Ch.
941942943944
Ch.
945946947948949950951
952
946
Ch.
Ruth Heriuck, in Isaac Brooks,Westminster, Mass.
Ruth.Samuel, lives in Westminster.Isaac, lives in New York.Deborah, and another.
Susanna Herrick, d Feb. 25, 1825,
m Stephen Putnam, Danvers.
Moses.Samuel.Jacob.
Ebenezer.Susanna, m Putnam, Danvers.Ruth, m Bachelder.Hannah.Sarah, d.
Samukl Putnam, Shoe Merchant,Danvers, m Mary Herrick, No. 824.
Ch.\
960961
962963964965966
Son967
966
Ch.
968Q69970
965[
Benjamin HEKRicK,settledin Fitch-
burg, 771 1st, Elizabeth Kidder of Bil-
lerica, Dec. 1778.
Elizabeth, m John Gale, Plattsburg.
Benjamin.Martyn, Washington Island, N. Y.Sarah, m Abner Sawyer, Danvers.William, d.
Jacob.
William.Married 2d, Rebecca Chase, d 1826.
Rufus, d.aged 21.
6i William Herrick, Boston, d April,
1827, aged 33.
Sarah.
Hannah.Maria.
Ch.\
971j
9721
9731
900
Ch.
9749759761
9779781
6] Jacob Hekkick, South Boston, b
1796.
7
Julia Malvina.William.Benjamin.
Jacob Herrick, Graduate at Har-vard, 1777, m Sarah Webster, Brad-ford, Mass., July, 1780, settled a Con-gregationalist Minister, Durham, Me.,d 1833.
Sarah, b Feb.Elizabeth.
Thomas, d.
Thomas.Jacob.
12, 1781.
Ch.
979980981982983984
985986987988989
9JW978
Thomas Herrick, Esq., Harmony,Me., m Catherine, daughter of JosephWeeman of Durham, Sept. 1810, whowas b May 18, 1789.
Mary Webster, h Feb. 20, 1812.
Catherine Weeman, b May 9, 1814.
Thomas Webster, b July 20, 1816.
George Washington,^ May 9, 1818.
Jacob Vaughan, b Jan. 29, 1820.
Joseph Weeman, b Oct. 16, 1821.
John Ware, b May 12, 1823.
Sarah Webster, b May 8, 1825.
Horatio Nelson, b May 27, 1827.
Catherine Elizabeth,// Aug. 4, 1829.
Harriett Atwood, b Aug.24, 1831.
Frances Maria, b Aug. 4, 1834.
993
994995
902"
6 Jacob Herrick, Esq., Durham, mAbigail Scott.
William Bently, Physician, Hills-
boro', 111.
Josiah Burnham, b 1821, Hillsboro',
Illinois.
Elizabeth Augusta, m a Williams ofLewiston.
Harriett Ellen.
Ann Maria.
999
10001001
100210031004
10051006
"997
Ebenezer Herrick, Reading, d,
Jan. 7, 1842, m Lydia Eaton, Read-ing, Sept. 26, 1782, settled in NewMarlborough, N. H.
Ebenezer, b in Reading, March 2,
1783.
Henry, b in Reading, d.
Lydia, m Gove, fllethodist Preach-er, Roxbury, N. H.Hannah, m Jere. Bemis, Weathers-
field, Vt.
Elizabeth, in Russell of Marlboro'.
Sophronia, m Newell, Weathers-field.
Mary, d nged 11.
Samuel.Osgood, Congregational Minister,
Milbury, Mass., m. d. s. p. 1837.
Jeremiah.
Martyn, b 1802.
Ch.
1007
1008
1009
10101011
1012
Ebenezer Herrick, Cavendish &Proctorsville, Vt.
Loiza, b July 9, 1811, m SamuelFay, March 11, 1830.
Lucretia, b Oct. }8, 1813, m Josiah
Fitch, June 15, 1840.
Mary, // Jan. 16, 1815, w Rev. Ira
Beard,' Methodist Preacher, June,1839.
Emily G., b April 6, 1818.
Marcellus Aurelius, b Aug. 27,
1821, student in medicine.
Eliza Jane, b Feblll, 1831.
9971 6
JOSEPH OF SALEM 51
1003
52 JOSEPH OF SALEM.
1053
JOHN OF BEVERLY.
JOHN HERRICK of Beverly, d.
1680, m Mary Redinglon of Topsfield,March 25, 1G74.
John, b April, 1675.
Mary, b 1677.
Daniel, b March, d Oct. 1679.
JOHP1722—
Herrick, Beverly, d Jan. 29, '.
i, m Sarah Kimball, 1606.
John, b March 2, 1698—9.Robert, b May 2, 1701.Daniel, b Aug. 17, 1706.Jonathan,^ Aug. 10, 1710.
Ck.
8
9
"i1213141
John Herrick, Bevarly, <i 1777, mMehitabel Tarbox, 1720.
Mary, b April 2, 1722.John, b August, 1724, d 1726.Sarah, /> Nov. 4, 1726, ?« Israel
Green, Salem, 1748.
John, b March 3, 1729.Samuel, b June 30, 1731.Benjamin, 6 Jan. 16,1734.Robert, b July 20, 1737.
11 5
54 JOHN OK BEVERLY.
531 G
Ch.\
70
John Herrick, Methuen, settled in
Barre,Vt. d 1809, m Deborah Pettengill
of Middleton, 1786.
Born in Methuen.Hannah, b Jan. 3, 1789.
Lydia, b in Topsfield, Feb. 1, 1791
.
John, b Dec. 10, 1793.Deborah, b Oct. fj, 1796.
Ele)', b Sept. 29, 1799.
Ira, b May 4, 1801.
Roxanna, b 1804, m William Nichols,
Northfield, Vt.
Hirum, b 1808.
7 Hannah Herrick, m. BenjaminFiske, Burlington, Vt.
Delphina, b Dec. 10, 1807.
Benjamin Philander,^ 1811, d 1834.
John Dennison, b May 13, 1823.
Caroline, b Sept. 16, 1828, d 1832.Sophia, b April 8, 1819.
Rosina, b April 6, 1821, d 1823.
John, b Sept. 20, 1826.
65 7
JOHN OF BEVERLY 55
137
5C JOHN OF BEVKRLY.
179
Ch.
2082092102112122132U192
Ch.
2152162172182193201
221
222228
194
Ch.
224225
195
Ch.
226227
1
G> Daniel Knowmon, m Mary Stock-cr, Jan. 13, 1793.
7J
j
Five sons and two daughters.
JosHU.\ Herrick, Corinth,
sey Guile, Feb. 4, 1812.
Bet-
David Guile,
Betsey Matilda,
Joshua Manning,Charles,
Joseph Colbj',
Rhapsima Blake,Nathan,Emily Ann,Charlotte Ball,
6 Oct. 3, 1812.
i April 12, 1814.
h Nov. 11,1815.b Feb. 10, 1819.
b Mar. 22, 1821.
b July 4, 1825.
b Aug. 22, ]e27.
b June 21, 1830.
b April 1, 1835.
Stephen Herrick, New London,Corinth, 1826, m Mary D. Keith,March 16, 1824.
Charles Henry, b Sept. 9, 1825.
Ann Frances, 6 Feb. 28, 1828.
Zenas Herrick, Levant, m SarahEverett, Nov. 1822.
Sarah Ann, born Sept. 15,
Mary Marinda, b Aug. 5,
1823.
1828.
199
Ch.
1i28
^29230
GEORGE OF SALEM.
GEORGE HERRICK, an emigrantfrom England, came to Salem, 1684 or
5, Marshall and Deputy Sheriff 1691,
2, &3, rf 1695, wife Martha.
Martha.Howett.George, born in Beverly, Jan. 2,
1695-6, after the decease of his father.
HowETT HERRicK,7reAbigail Wheel-er, Sept. 10, 1715.
Jonathan, born April 30, 1717.
George, born March 12, \72l,d. s. p.Abigail, born April 7, 1723.
Andrew, born April 28, 1725.
George, born Jan. 24, 1727, d. s. p.David, bapt. May 8, 1730, d.
26
GEORGE OF SALEM. 69
8
60 JAMES OF SOUTHAMPTON, N. Y.
JAMES HERRICK, settled at
Southampton, Long Island, then with-
in the jurisdiction of Connecticut, prior
to 1657, d 1687, wife Martha, who sur-
vived him.Recorded.James.William, born 1654.Thomas, d. s. p. prior to 1707.Martha, m Zerubbabel Phillips,1687.
3 2
IRISH FAMILY. JOHN OF SHIPPOOL.
Ck.
JOHN HERRICK, Esq. of Ship-pool, Co. of Cork, 6.1612, d. 1689, cameover from England in 1647, an Ensignin Col. Gainsboro's Regiment, and in
the company commanded by CaptainSeagreeve of Leicester. At the close
of the war, and in the sale and distri-
bution of the estates of the Irish reb-
, Mr. Herrick acquired title to the
castle and estates of Lord Roche, at
Polenelory, (equivalent to the Englishname of Sliippool,) on the Kinsaleriver : all which are still possessed byhis lineal posterity, according to his
;
first intent, and without resort to anyof the contingent provisions of his
Will. Mr. Herrick w^as twice married ;
by his first marriage, he had a son]
and heir.
Gershom, b. 1665, and by his second\
wife, Margarett, who survived him.
John.Francis.
Mary.
Son7
Gershom Herrick, Esq. of Ship-pool, m 1693, Susannah, only child
and heir of Swithin Smart, Esq. byFrancis his wife, eldest daughter ofEdward Riggs, Esq. of Riggsdale, in
the county of Cork, and left a son andsuccessor.
Edward Herrick, Esq. of Ship-
pool, b 1694, Tre Elizabeth,dau. of CalebFalkenner, Esq. of the city of Cork,and had si.x sons and two daughters
;
he was succeeded by his son
Falkener Herrick, Esq. of Ship-pool, 6>1729, m June, 1753, Sarah,eldest daughter of Thomas Bousfield,
Esq. of Cork, and left a son and twodaughters, viz :
Thomas Bousfield.
Jane, m Rev. Ambrose Hickey.1
Elizabeth, d uniiiarried, aged 36.
Thomas BousFiELf/ Herrick, Esq,of Shippool, b 1754, m 1783, Anne,only daughter of Henry Moore, Esq.of Frankfort House, county of Cork,and d. 1796.
William Henry.Henry Moore, Capt. of 45th Regi-
ment. Killed at the storming of Bad-ajos.
Edward, Leutenant, Royal Navy.Anne, m Jan. 1818, Richard Plum-
er Davis, Esq. Captain, Royal Navy.
11
APPENDIX.
EIRIKR. ERIC. ERIK.
This very ancient and much cherished Scandinavian cognomen has passed throughnumerous variations and mutations in England, some of whicli may have been ideomatic, butgenerally they are referable to the prevailing fancy of the early ag% of English literature,
and the absence of anything like an established orthography. When the most distinguished
scholars wrote their own names in the most fanciful and often fantastic forms. When the
name of Villcrs was spelled fourteen different ways in the deeds of that family ; and the
most simple, dissyllabic name of Percy, is found in the family documents, spelled fifteen dif-
ferent ways. Dudley, Earl of Leicester, wrote his name eight different ways ; and that dis-
tinguished Statesman and scholar. Sir Walter Rawleigh, had contrived such various and irre-
concileable forms of writing and spelling his own name, that the learned of a subsequent agecould by no means determine its orthography, or its euphony, until a long forgotten pun ofKing James came up to the rescue, and helped them to the sound of iJaio-leigh, but left themin hopeless perple.xity for a reason why it should have been that in preference to almost any-
thing else.
Recurring to the Enghsh orthography of our own name, in all its variety and mutability
for many centuries, we perceive something like a progressive transition, from the original
Scandinavian Eirikr, down to the settled and permanent English Heyrick, and Herrick ofthe seventeenth century. The earliest English forms were Ericke, Eric, and Erik, withoccasional variations in the final letter, and some few instances ofthe substitution of I instead
of E as the initial. In the twelfth century, Henry, of Great Stretton, spelled his nameEyryk. A. D. 1450, Robert of Houghton wrote Eyrick, and about A. D. l.'iOO, his son
Thomas, spelled his name Eyricke, and Eyrick ; and his son, John of Leicester, merelyindulged in a great variety, as : Eyrik, Eyrek, Eyricke, to whicli last, the engraver of his
epitaph, for the first time on record, prefixed the H, unless, indeed, it may have been previ-
ously assumed by his son Nicholas of London, who had early chosen the name Heryk, whichhis sons again changed to Herrick, about the middle of the seventeenth century ; at this time,
or a few years earlier, the sons of John of Leicester had fixed the orthography of the namesHerrick, and Heyrick, which have remained permanent and unchanged to this day:—Robert,
the eldest son, having assumed the latter, and the other sons of John, the former.
Previously to the institution of sir-names, we have frequent significant suffixes to the
name Eric, indicative of some quality, attribute, or pretension of the individual, as : Eric the
Red, Eric Blodox, Eric the Forester, &c. ; but we are not aware that it was ever used as a
mere prenomen, or fore-name, followed by a sir-name ; on the contrary, we find this amongthe early sir-names, adapted by the higher orders of European Society.* The brothers
Henry and Allan Eyryk, resided at Great Stretton in the 12th century ; and there is noevidence that these were the first of that branch whose ancient name had become their
sir-name. A. D. 14.50, Nicholas Eric, was commissioned an ambassador of Peace, fromSweeden and Norway to England, France and Ireland. It may be here remarked, as amongthe curiosities incidental to the Ipose and mutable condition of our ancient names, that while
the ancient Scandinavian Erick, is still found in England ; the English Herrick, has found
its way into Sleswick, the father-land of the earliest Danish invaders of Britain.
* Sir-names were being gradually introduced among the common people and small leaseholders in Eni;lnnd,
prior to tlie Conquest; but would seem to have been assumed by the larger land holders and gentry, at a later
period, and then but slowly and reluctantly ; a plurality of names being viewed as an onerous imposition upontheir personal dignity and unmistakable individuality. At a much later period, a Scottish chief very emphati-
cally and indignantly remark(Ml to an English traveller, who had used the word Mister, in addressing him :
—
" There are many Mr. McDonald's, and there are many Captain McDonald's, and Colonel McDonald's jbut there
is but ONE McDonald.
64 APi>KNDIX.
B 1.
Capt. WiLLiJtM Henrv Herrick, R. N., in a letter addressed to Alfred Henick, Esq.,October 19, 1836, says :
" It is also probable that we have sprung from the same old stock,Erryck, the Danish chief, who was one of the invaders of England during the reign of Alfredtiie Saxon King of Britain, and h}' whom he was overcome and compelled to settle in EastAnglia, in which is that part of England now called Leicestershire, and where his descendants.still reside in great affluence."
Holinshcd's Chronicle, Sixt Booke, page 680.
B '^
. qil"" "After this, other of tlie Danes assembled themselves togither, and in
„. j-j Straffbrdshire, at a place called Tottenhall, fought with the Enghshmen, andaf\.er great slaughter made on both parties, the Danes were overcome, and so
likewise were they afterwards at Woodfield, or Wodenfield. And thus King Edward put theDanes to the woorse in each place connnonlie where he came ; and hearing that those in
Northumberland went to breake the peace, he invaded the countrie, and so afflicted thesame, that the Danes which were inhabitants there, gladly continued in rest and pea'ce."
p, , " But in the mean time, Ericke* the King of those Danes ichich held the countrie^ ' of East /Ir^le, was about to procure new.warre, and to allure other Danes to join
with him against the Englishmen, that with common agreement they mio-lit set upon theEnglish nation and utterly subdue them. King Edward having intelligence hereof, proposedto prevent him, and thereupon entering with an army into his countrie, cruelly wasted andspoiled the same. King Ericke having alreadie his people in armour, through, displeasure
conceived hereof, and desire to be revenged, hasted foorth to encounter his enemies, and so
they met in the field, and fiercelie assailed each other. But as the battell was rashlie begunon King Erick's syde, so was the end very harmfull to him, for with small adoo^ after great
losse on both sides, he was vanquished and put to flight.
After his coming home, bicause of his great overthrow and fowle discomfiture, he began to
govern his people with more rigour and sharper dealing than beforetime he had used.Whereby he provoked the malice of the East Angles so highlie against him, that they fell
upon him and murthered him;yet did they not gaine so much hereby as they looked to
have oone, for shortlie after, they being brought low, and not able to defend their countrie,
were compelled to submit themselves to King Edward."B. 3. Another of this name who was sometime Governour of Northumberland may
Hon. Geo. P. have been mistaken for Ericke of East Anglia; this was" Eirikr or EricMarsh. Blodox,- son of Harald Harfagri, King of Norway." His story is thus told
by Thiery, page 28. " Ethelstan boasted in his charters of having subduedevery people foreign to the Saxon race, inhahitting the Island of Britain. To the Anglo-Danes of Northumberland, he gave a Norwegian for their Governour. (This was Eric, son
of Harald, an old pirate, who turned Christian to obtain this Government.) OnA.D.937. the day of his baptism he swore to keep and defend Northumberland from the
pagans and pirates ; and from being a Sea-King,t he became King of a province,
* " Eirikr, son of Harold Gormson, King of Denmarli." Hon. Oeorge P. Marsh, of U. S. Saiate.
t VI KINGR. SEA KINGS.This title was appropriated by the ancient Scandinavians as expressive of their assumed domhiion over the
seas, which, originating in a rightful jurisdiction over the narrow Seas and Sounds, which every where sur-
rounded and intersected their country, they did not scruple to e.xtend to the Baltic, the North Sea, the British
Channel, and the broad Atlantic, as their increasing power and resources enabled them to sustain their preten-Fions. This Marine Empire was usually conceded to the younger sons and remoter branches of the RoyalHousehold, who, vested with the title and dignity of Vi Kingr, assembled under their Standard all the braveand adventurous younger sons and cadets of the country, with their retainers and dependents. And thus wereconstituted those fierce and fearless Squadrons, which, for many centuries, were the terror and the scourge ofSouthern Europe, and finally became the permanent possessors of some of the fairest portions of it.
Such was their professional pride,—confidence in their own resources, and disregard for all adverse circum-stances and contingencies, that the Sea Kings and their forces made their ships their home,—contemning the
hospitalities of their friends, " it was their boast, that they never drained the drinking horn, by a cottage fire,
but on lands acquired by their own swords."Nor was there any thing dishonorable implied either in the motive or manner of these predatory wars. They
were in accordance with the spirit and practice of the world for many ages; nor can modern war claim higheror purer motives, while private property shall be subject to seizure and destruction by private armaments
;prize
money awarded to public ships, and the plunder of cities reward the conquerors. E-Xclnded by the law ofprimogeniture, from all participation in the family honors and Estates—from the throne, as well as from the
most humble freehold ; the junior branches of Scandinavian society, were driven to the only available and hon-orable resource,—WAR ! Nor could their direct and simple politics comprehend the legal refinements and dis-
tinctions, and scruples, and the obscure moralities, of the international law of more modern times. They fought
for subsistence ; for wealth ; for honor and renown ; for permanent dominion, and a home for their name andrace. They seized upon and colonized waste and unoccupied countries, as Iceland and Greenland ; and theysubdued and dispossessed their less warlike neighbors.
It is true that the Italians, the Franks, and the Anglo-Saxons, denounced these Sea Kings and Rovers, as
pirates and robbers ; but they treated with them as with legitimate powers. Alfred executed summary vengeanceupon the Danish prisoners at Winchester; but he negotiated with Hastings, Guthrum, Ericke, and other DanishChiefs, as with Sovereign Princes ;—assigned them extensive domains in Britain, with all the attributes of Sov-roignty, reserving only, the paramount supremacy of the English crown. The king of France, also, submittedto similar arraiigemems with UoUo, the Dane ; who acquired by treaty the quiet enjoyment of the countries he
APPENDIX. 65
as t]ie Scandinavians expressed it. But this too peaceful dignity soon grew irksome to him,and he betook himself to his ships. After an absence of some years, he returned to visit the
Northumbrians, who gave him welcome, and re-appointed him their cliief, without the consent
of the Saxon King Edred, successor to the son of Ethelstan, (A. D. 946.) Edred marchedaorainst them and forced them to abandon Eric, who, in his turn, in revenge for their
desertion, came and attacked them, along with five Corsair chiefs from Denmark, the
Orkneys, and the Hebrides. He fell in tlie first battle, together with the five Sea-Kings, his
allies. This death, glorious to a Scandinavian, was celebrated by the scalds, or bards of the
North, who, without taking into their account the baptism which Eric had received amongtlie English, placed him in an ideal Paradise, quite different from that of tlie Christians.
" I have liad a dream," said the panagyrist of the pirate ;" I found myself at the dawn of
day in the Hall of Valhalla, preparing all things for the reception of those slain in battle, I
awakened the heroes from their sleep ; I persuaded them to rise, and arrange the benches,
and prepare the drinking cups, as for the arrival of a King."" Whence all this turmoil r' exclaims Bragg; " Whence is it that so many men are active
in placing the benches .'" Odin replies, " It is because Eric is coming ; I expect him ; arise
and go to meet him." And why does his coming give thee more delight than that of another
king .''" " Because many are the places in which he has stained his sword with blood, manyare the places where his blood-stained sword has been drawn."
" Hail to thee, Eric ! Brave Warrior, enter, thou art welcome in this abode. Tell us whatkings accompany thee. How many come with thee from the combat.-'"
" Five kings come," answers Eric ;" and I am the sixth."
c.
" Jonathan Swift, father of the distinguislied Dean of Saint Patricks, married Abigail Erick
of Leicestershire, descended from the most ancient family of the Ericks, wlio derived their
lineage from Erick tlie Forester, a great commander, who raised an army to oppose the
invasion of William the Conqueror, by whom he was vanquished, but afterwards employedto command tiiat Prince's forces, and in his old age retired to his house in Leicestershire,
where his family have continue* ever since, but declining every age, are now in the condition
of very private gentlemen. The family of Eric, which has produced many eminent men, is
still represented by two respectable branches, the Heyricks of Leicester-town, and the
Herricks of Beau-Manor. Of both these branches, distinct pedigrees and many curious
historical anecdotes are given in the ' History of Leicestershire.' " [Vol. H, page 215. Vol.
HI, page 148.] Scott's Life of Sicift, App'x, jjage 341, 342.
D 1.
The following epitaph on the Tomb-stone of John Heyricke, Esq., and Mary Bond, his
wife, is found in St. Martin's Cliurch, Leicester, at the east end of the north aisle, in a part
thereof called " Heyrick's Chancel," being appropriated as a burying place for that family.
" Here lieth tlie body of John Heyrick, late of this Parish, who departed this life ye 2d of
Aprill, 1589, being about the age of 76. He did marry Marie, ye daughter of John Bond of
Wardende, in the Countie of Warwicke,Esquire, and did live with the said Mary, in one house,
full fifty-two yeares ; and in all that tyme,never buried man, woman, or cliild, though they weresometimes twenty in house-hold. He had yssue by ye said Marie, 5 sonnes and seven
daughters. The said John was Mayor of this towne in anno 1559, and again in anno 1572.
The said Marie departed this life ye 8th of December, 1611, being of the age of 97 years.
She did see before her departure, of her children, and children's children, and their children,
to the number of 142."
D. 2. No. 13. Nicholas, the second son of John of Leicester, was a Goldsmith, Banker, and
Merchant, in London; and the eflicient friend and patron of his young brotlier William,
whom he saw established and in high credit and trust at the Court of Queen Elizabeth.
Of his sons, Thomas, No. 33, and William, No. 36, nothing lurthor is known than that
Thomas resided in the country, and was the reputed ancestor of Thomas Heyrick, Curate of
Market Harborough, and author of a volume of Poems, published in 1691, and of several
very loyal and higlily spiced political sermons, in which the rebels against King James II,
are very severely handled.
had rocontly subdued by his sword. And IiPrn it may bfi remarked as a rnrioiis hi>toiipal coincidrnco, that
the various and successive conquerors of Britain, siiiee the secession of the Romans, have \n:rn Danes, or
natives of the present Danish dominions. The Saxons from the Danisli Diitihv of Ilolstcin; tlie Kn^les or
Angles, from the Dutchy of Sleswick, and the Jules from the Danish penin-^iila of .liitlaml. I'hc Danrs -nder
Sweyn, Canute, Hastings, Gulhriim,and (lth^rs,from Deninaik proper ; and tinally,tlie Ac iiiians under W illiam,
who were the descendants of Kollo and his Danes, the I'ounders of the Norman nam and power in France.
6G APPENDIX.
No. 34. Nicholas, the third son, was a Merchant in London, hving in 16G4, on the
occasion of the decease of his son, Nicholas, who was a Merchant in the Levant, and anextensive and intelligent traveller in Syria, Egypt, and Palestine. He is honorably alluded
to by a recent traveller, for his researches into the manners and customs of the Turks.
No. 35. Robert was a Clergyman, and Vicar of Dean Prior in Devonshire ; and sharedin the varied fortunes and sufferings of his loyal Brethren, during the rule of Cromwell, andthe two Charles'. He was chiefly distinguished as the author of the Hesperides, a work ofgreat and singular merit—with all its faults, and which, the publication ofa recent and elegantedition, has brought into new life, and into high favor with the literati of Europe andAmerica ; and has awarded to its author the praise so justly his due.*
A writer in the Retrospective Review, Vol. V., page 157, thus speaks of Herrick andhis works. " We do not hesitate to pronounce him the very best of English Lyric Poets.
He is the most joyous and gladsome of bards; singing like the grasshopper, as if he wouldnever grow old. He is as fresh as the Spring, as blithe as the Summer, and as ripe as
Autumn. We know no English Poet who is so abandojine, as the French term it, who so
wholly gives himself up to his present feelings, who is so much heart and soul in what hewrites, and this, not on one subject only, but on all subjects alike. The spirit of song dancesin his veins, and flutters around his lips—now bursting forth into the joyful and hearty voice
of the Epicurean ; sometimes breathing forth strains soft as the sigh of " buried love ;" andsometimes uttering feelings of the most delicate pensiveness. His Poems resemble aluxurient meadow, full of King-cups and wild flowers, or a July firmament, sparkling witha myriad of stars. His fancy fed upon all the fair and sweet things of nature, it is redolent
of roses and jessamine; it is as light and airy as the thistle down,, or the bubbles whichlaughing boys blow into the air, where they float in a waving line of beauty. Like the sunit communicates a delightsome gladness to everything it shines upon, and is as bright andradient as his beams ; and yet many of his pieces conclude with the softest tones of sensibility
and feeling. Indeed it is that delicate pathos, which is, at the same time natural and almostplayful, which most charms us in the writings of Herrick. And as for his versification, it
presents one of the most varied specimens of rythmical harmony in the language, flowingwith an almost wonderful grace and flexibility."
Another Critic writes thus: "Variety, indeed, is the |[reat characteristic of Herrick'swritings, for there is scarcely a subject which he has not touched, or a species of versification
with which he has not dallied. He is alternately gay and melanchoUy, witty and tender,
didactic and descriptive. He is too, at all times, and in every sense, an English poet.
English scenery and English manners are his constant themes ; and his pages record manyancient and interesting national customs, of which no trace is to be found elsewhere. Others,
again, which are more familiar, are described with infinite truth and fidelity. His colouring,
too, is occasionally hightened by excursions into the enchanting regions of Fairy-land ;
where, with magic art, he raises airy halls, builds leafy bowers, conjurs up the most glorious
scenes, and peoples them with the most fantastic beings. Herrick's poetry, in all its
diversities, is ever tJie offspring of a rich and exuberant, although sometimes an unlicencedimagination. His flowers are not tied up in garlands, nor his fruits crushed into baskets, butspring living from the soil in all the dew and freshness of youth."The father of Robert Herrick died 1692, while his family were yet in infancy, and had lefl
them in very moderate circumstances. Fortunately for Robert, however, he early attracted
the notice of his uncle, Sir William, who richly repaid the debt of gratitude he owed to the
father, by educating and otherwise patronizing the son.
No. 15. John Herrick, the fourth son of John Eyrick of Leicester, was many years anAlderman of that Borough, and died 1613, leaving a son, Thomas, and a daughter, Susanna,on record ; and this is all we know of his family and posterity. In the absence of all meansof arriving at truth and certainty, in the research, at this time, we can do nothing more thanto commend to our friends a more careful and searching enquiry among the posterity of John,for their John of Shippool, and James of Southampton. Those patriarchs may have been the
'
Grandsons, or Great Grandsons, of John. And so, also, they may have decended fromNicholas of London, in the same degree. But while we deem their Leicester parentage as
quite the most probable, and claiming our first and most careful examination, we are onlypermitted to repeat our earnest desire that at some future day, and by the vigilence of somemore favored investigator, all doubt may be removed, and the exact relationship of all thevarious branches of the numerous descendants of good old John of Leicester, fully ascertained,
and recognized and cherished, till the name and race shall become extinct.
* This work had been lone out of print ; and the very few copies to be found, were valued at enormous prices.A copy in one of the public Libraries was prized at £8. 8. and an innperfect copy at £5. 5.
APPENDIX. 67
sir William Herrick was a successful courteir and politician, from 1575, when he first
attached himself to the Court of Queen Elizabeth, by whom he was commissioned on animportant embassy to the Ottomon Porte ; and as a reward for his singular diplomatic success
with the hitherto intractable Turk, he was appointed to a lucrative situation in the Exchequer,which he held through the remainder of this, and the following reign of James. " Byhonorable service, and great diligence in business, he acquired a very large property, andbecame one of the great monied men of his time." He had early purchased the estate of the
unfortunate Earl of Essex, at Beau Manor Park, in the Parish of Loughboro', and County ofLeicester, which is still in the possession of his decendants, in the direct line, and has been,
for the last two hundred and fifty years, the Head Quarters of our Race.
The civil wars found Sir William exempted, by great age, from the responsibilities,
although it could not protect him from the sufferings and losses, incident to that stormy anddistracted period, and attaching to him, especially, as a man of wealth, and an old and faithful
servant of the crown.
F. 1.
Henry, the fifth son of Sir William Herrick, and whom we claim to have been our Henryof Salem, 1629, was born at Beau Manor in 1604. He was named by connnand of the
unfortunate Prince Henry, eldest son of James I. His sponsors were Sir David Murray,Sir John Spillman, and Lady Aston.
The evidence of the identity of our Henry of Salem with the fifth son of Sir WilKamHerrick, is, to be sure, rather circumstantial than direct, and some of it of a negative, rather
than of a positive character. It is still quite as conclusive and satisfactory as evidence of this
kind, and at this distance of time, can be hoped to be found. The principal points on whichwc rest the conclusion are these :
—
First. No other Henry is found on the English pedigrees of the time.
, ,^ , J 1 AT' u 1 Second. Henry of Beau Manor is no otherwise recognizedLetter quoted by Nichols,
^ ^^^ ^^^^ J ^.^ ^y^j^^^ ^^^^^ infancy, than as residingfrom Henry to his brother
^^^^^g^ .^ ^^53^ ^^^^ ^j^^,^ ^^^^^^ circumstances indicatingJonn, July, Ibo-i.
America as the place of his residence.
Third. The identity of the coat of arms of the family at Salem and Beverly with that ofthe Leicestershire family, and especially of the crest, with that of which Sir William was oneof the original Grantees.*
Fourth. The secession of one branch of the Leicester family from the
Letter from John established church. It is known that all the other branches were devotedMorris, of to their Church and King, and that Henry of Salera was a puritan, andShrewsbury, cared little for the Chvrch and less for the King. Desirable therefore, as
Wales. it may be, to determine our English parentage with perfect certainty, andbeyond all doubt, and it has been a chief inducement to all my researches
;
we must be content with the evidence as we find it, and recognize Henry of Beau Manor,as an Anglo-American ancestor, until some more fortunate explorer shall correct our errors.
F. 2. Henry Herrick, settled on " Cape-Ann-Syde" of Bass River, (now Beverly,) onwhich his farm was bounded. He purchased several farms at Birch Plains and Cherry Hill, onwhich he settled his sons Zacharie, Ephraim, Joseph and John. Joseph resided on CherryHill, where he acquired a good estate ; Zacharie, Ephraim and John, at Birch Plains ; Henryinherited the Homesteading, at lower Beverly, a pleasant and valuable farm, and a part of
which is now the property of Mrs. Anna Meacom, a widow lady, aged 93, and a lineal
descendant, of the fifth remove, from Henry, jr. With the exception of this small farm, all
the real estate possessed by Henry Herrick, seinor, and his sons, has long since passed outof our name and kindred. And here it may bo remarked that, with the exception of the
posterity of Zacharie, and some minor shoots from other branches, all of which have beendeclining for the last hundred years, the posterity of Henry of Salem have disappeared fromthe land of their fathers, and have become widely dispersed over tbe eastern, northern, and
* 1. Sir William Herrick was Knighted in 1605. On that occasion he obtained some additional embellish-ments on his crest, which I find preserved on the copies in Beverly, Mass., and also, on the gravestone of Wil-liam Herrick, Esquire, of Southampton, New York, who died 1708. I give Edminstone's description frommemory. " Crest, a Bull's head argent. Scalp Sable. Mussel and Eares tipp'd sable. Homes argent, perfesse or and gules, tipp'd sable. Gorged with a chaplct of roses or, leaved vert."
2. A very different coat of arms is supposed to pertain to a family of our nnme, and an offset, also, from the
Leicestershire stock, residing in the county of Cheshire, or the neighboring county of Flint, of which the fol-
lowing is a description, viz.
:
" He beareth Sable. A fesse argent, between four balls, or. Crest, an Eagle displayed, sable. By the nameof Herrick, an aitcient family in the We.^t of England.
3. The disarrangement of the words of our Motto, from the original copy, wag an error of the engraver.
C3 APPENDIX.
western States of the Union, while they are scarcely known or remembered in the neighbor-
hood of their ancient plantantions.
" He sung of the companions of our youth, and the days of former years ; when we met on" the banks of Lego, and sent arotmd the joy of the shell."
*' Be thy soul blest, O Carrill, in the midst of thy eddying winds. Why dost thou not" speak to me in my grief, and tell when I shall behold my friends .' But thou passest away" in thy murmuring blast : And thy wind whistles through the gra/y hair of Ossian."
F. 3. Henry Herrick was a husbandman, in easy circumstances, but undistinguished bywealth, or by civil rank and influence in the colony. He was a very good and honest•dissenter from the established church, and the friend of Higginson, who had been a dissenting
Minister in Leicester. Mr. Herrick and his wife Editha, were among the thirty, whofounded the first church in Salem, in 1629 : and on the organization of a new parish, on" Ryal-Syde" 1667, they, with their sons and their sons' wives, were among the foundersof the first church in Beverly, also. But there are reasons to suspect that neither Henry,nor his sons were, at all times, and in all things, quite as submissive to the spiritual powersof their day, as they should have been. On the Court records of Essex County is an entry
like this : " Henerie Hericke, and Edith his wife, are fined 10 s., and 11 s. for costs ofCoort, for aiding and comforting an excommunicated person, contrary to order."
At a later period, but still early for such an enterprise, (1711-14,) Joseph Herrick, senior,
and such of his sons as dwelt in that territory, were active and ethcient members of the newParish called "Salem and Beverly Precinct," and in the settlement of the Reverend JohnChipman, and the organization of a chvirch upon a foundation much more liberal than hadhitherto been recognized in Massachusetts. In their covenant or platform, which still
remains, without the alteration of a word or a letter, the foundation of a numerous churchand society, under the Pastoral care of that worthy successor of Mr. Chipman, the ReverendEdwin M. Stone, the peculiarities of Calvinism can no where be detected. Several onerousconditions to the admission of members, also, have been dispensed with by Mr. Chipman andhis associates, which had theretofore been deemed all important, but which, in fact, hadoperated to encourage hypocracy and imposture, while they had embarrassed the churches,and excluded from their communion very many good and worthy, but delicate and scrupulouschristians.
The sons of Henry Herrick were all farmers, and with the exception, perhaps, of Joseph,
were exclusively farmers. Joseph acquired a considerable property, more than could well
have been derived from the profits of agriculture at that time, and by a person charged withthe support of a family of ten children. But we have now no clue to his pecuniaryjesources, unless it may be detected in the scanty gleanings from his very barren andobscure history, which here follow : Late in life he is stiled " Governour," on the churchrecords, and also, on the Diary of the Rev. Mr. Greene of Salem, and after his decease, hebears the same title on the records of the Probate Court. Whence he derived his right to
this distinction is no longer known to us. The Rev. Mr. Felt thinks he was at one timeGovernour of one of the British W. L Islands. Nor is this impossible. Mr. Herrick seemsto have been absent from Salem, for several years, subsequent to the decease of his first wife,
and prior to his second marriage. We have a tradition, also, that he visited England aboutthat time ; and at Liverpool encountered his cousin, Gershom, the heir of the Irish family,
by whom he was persuaded to entertain a proposition to remove his family to Ireland, but heabandoned the design on his return to America, for reasons which have not come down to
us. We have referred to these obscure reminisences, solely for the purpose already indicated.
And without claiming any heritable rights in these undefined honors of our ancestor : wemay be permitted to remark that, the title of" Governour," in that age, was by no means anidle or empty appelative. So astute and punctilious were our New England ancestors, in
everything regarding official rank and dignity, that, from the Governour of the Province, downto a corporal in the Provincial Militia, the appropriate official title was used, as well in the
ordinary intercourse of life, as in the more solemn transactions of their Judicial Courts, andvarious Civil and Ecclesiastical bodies.
G.
George Herrick came from England to Salem 1685,—was appointed Marshall of the
Colony, and Deputy Sheriff of the County of Essex, which offices he held to the time of his
decease in 1695.
Good old John Dunton, speaks of " good Mr. Herrick, who saved his life at sea." Andhaving visited him in Salem in 1686, he describes him as " a very tall, handsome man ; veryregular and devout in his attendance at church ; religious without bigotry ; and having every
mans good word.''
George Herrick i» supposed to have been the heir, in remainder, to an estate in England,which at the time of his decease was possessed by two aged maiden relatives. But the claimhas never been prosecuted. George died young, leaving an infant family in very humble
APPENDIX. G9
circumstaiiceB ; the documentary evidence left by him, cannot be traced to a later date thanthe da3'sof his grand-children; nor have his posterity ever been in a condition to prosecutean enterprise of this kind to a successful result. George was a kinsman of Henry, but in
what degree is not known. There are reasons to conjecture that he was a descendant ofNicholas of London, No. 13 ; and the traditions of the family have located the estate, abovealluded to, at ymithfield, in that city.
H.
James Herrick of Southampton, Long Island, N. Y., was also an emigrant from Englandat sometime prior to lGo7, when his name is first found on the records of that town. Ourtraditions claim the Connecticut Patriarch, (without a name,) and John of Shippool, Ireland,
!ind our own Henry of Salem, as brothers. But there is certainly no evidence of such a
relationship on the" part of Henry, who must have belonged to a generation prior to that of
James and John, of whose fraternity, if there is now no positive proof, there are manyconfirmatory circumstances. They were about the same age, and therefore, may have beenbrothers. John went to Ireland an ensign in Cromwell's army, in 1647. James came to
America about 1650. His second son, William, was born in 1654. James died 1687, andJohn in 1689. John made his brother James, his heir, on failure of his own issue. Noother James Herrick, is found in England or America, answering to the time.
In an investigation of this kind, nothing can satisfy the mind which is not certain and clear
of all reasonable doubt. In the present case, however, inasmuch as, after a very thoroughexamination of every available source of information, no such absolute certainty has beenattained ; and yet numerous circumstances have presented themselves, indicative of a proba-
ble hypothesis ; it may not be uninteresting to our friends of the present time, nor useless in
a farther pursuit of the enquiry, to submit our own conclusions, with the hope that they maybe hereafter verified, or corrected, by some more fortunate and successful investigator.
We say, then, that from a patient consideration of all the evidence now in our possession, wefind no reasonable doubt that Henry of Beau Manor, was our Henry of Salem. Nor are there
any stronger reasons to question the fraternity of John of Shippool and James of Southamp-ton :—Of their paternity, the indications are far less satisfactory. That they may have beenthe grandsons or great-grandsons, of Nicholas of London, No. 13, through his sons Thomasor William ; or from John of Leicester, No. 15, in the same degree, is about all we can say
;
no circumstance decisive of their superior claim to either parentage, has come to our knowl-
edge. If it be true, however, as the late John Farmer has recorded, that there was a William
Herrick in this country, concerned in a land purchase on Long Island in 1639-40, it mayraise a strong presumption that he was William, No. 36, son of Nicholas, and father of Jamesand John. Nor is this improbable. There are certainly stong indications of the early
residence of persons of our name at Oyster Bay, on the site of the first English plantations onLong Island ;* whence the planters were ejected by the Dutch of Manhattan, 1640. And if
William Herrick was concerned in that enterprise, he probably remained on the original
location, as he is not found at Southampton, nor any other person of tlio name, until 1657,
when James is first recognized as a resident there.
With these obscure indices, and feeble lights, we commend the farther investigation of our
English history and parentage, to the attention of some antiquarian friend, who may resumethe enquiry under more favorable circumstances than we have been obliged to suspend it, and
may prosecute it to a more satisfactory conclusion.
*A considerable villatrc in North Hempstead, near Oyster Bay, Iiai always born* tbe name of "TheHerricki," the origin of wiiicii is long since forgotten.
THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATESTAMPED BELOW
LIBRARY USERETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED
LOAN DEPT.THIS BOOK IS DUE BEFORE CLOSING TIME
ON LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW
LIBRARYliSl
0Cri9-fi4.
T?ecO LDTianj,
'^4%5Ptf
LIBRARY USE
0«T2O-64-^
fectitx
:sa. s%
LD 62A-50m-2,'64(E3494sl0)9412A
General LibraryUniversity of California
Berkeley
UC BERKELEY LIBRARIES
CDMEflBLSBD
f