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Ann (Unknown) Moore (abt. 1570 - 1639)

Ann Moore formerly [surname unknown]
Born about in Englandmap
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of — married 1598 in Englandmap
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 69 in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts Baymap
Profile last modified | Created 4 Dec 2013
This page has been accessed 467 times.
The Puritan Great Migration.
Ann (Unknown) Moore migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640).
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Biography

Ann More was a midwife in Salem.[1]

Almost nothing is known about Thomas Moore of Salem himself. We only know about his widow Ann and two of their children: Mary Moore and Thomas Moore, Jr from Salem deeds, church and court records. These records only reveal the identity of two children Mary Moore of Salem who married Joseph Grafton [1] and Thomas Moore, Jr who married first Martha Youngs and second Katherine. [2] No births, marriages or deaths are recorded in Salem Vital Records. However, we know that the widow Ann had a family of five,[1][3] so there were possibly three other unidentified children living in 1636 in Salem besides Thomas and Mary, assuming Mary was living with her mother and included in this count and that Thomas had his own household based on his separate grant of land. [1]

There is absolutely no evidence that Thomas Moore’s wife Ann’s family name was Scarlett, Grafton or Carte. Her family name and origins are unknown. We simply know her first name was Ann. Her daughter’s husband was Joseph Graton, and in some cases, researchers have confused his surname Graton with her maiden name. A FamilySearch ancestral file shows Ann married to a Mr. Scarlett but it is completely unsourced. The name Ann Scarlett probably originated from the will of Ann Scarlet, dated 2d 1st mo., 1639, who was the sister of Joseph Grafton [1][4].

In 1928, Henry Wyckoff Belknap wrote “The Grafton Family of Salem” in the Historical Collections of the Essex Institute: Vol LXIV that Thomas Moore, Sr of Salem came from Southwold, Suffolk, England. [1] However, he provided no source for this claim. We have no record of what ship he came on or what year he arrived. We have no record of his parents. We do know that his son Thomas Moore Jr moved to Southold, Suffolk, New York. It is possible that the author simply confused Southold, Suffolk, New York with Southwell, Suffolk, England. In recent years his birthplace has even been listed as Southwell, Nottinghamshire, England on the Internet and there is absolutely not basis for this claim. However, we do know that his stepson’s family originated in Southwold, so it is possible they share a common origin. [1]

Elston believes that Thomas Moore of Salem is the same Thomas Moore who was sent by John Mason of Salem to settle in the Province of New Hampshire. [5] However, this is not proven. It could have been the Thomas Moore of Connecticut or another Thomas Moore.

Thomas Moore of Salem died before 11 July 1636. We know this because his "widow Ann" and his son Thomas Jr joined the church of Salem on that date. We do not know where he died. [6]

We can extract a few clues about his family from the following records:

  • ”11th 5th mo. 1636 Thomas Moore soone to widow Moore & his wife are received for Inhabitants and may haue one fishing lot on the neck.” (from Salem Town Records) [1] From this we can clearly deduce that Thomas Moore, Sr had died by 11 Jul 1636.
  • "Tho: Mores widdow 10 acres." “att Jeffrys Creek" (Manchester). The 3d of 1st mo. 1637 the "Widoo Moore desireth a howseloote (vpon) neere vnto the Winter Iland among the ffishermanns lotts.” [1][7]
  • June 25th 1638 “Joseph Graftons mother in law forgotten in the devision shall have her halfe acrs of marsh land.” [1]
  • “25th of 10th mo. 1637 she had 5 in her family and was therefore entitled to 3/4 of an acre.” [3]
  • 30th of the 7th mo. 1644 in Salem Town Records: ”The Widow Moore the midwiefe . . . shall . . . haue so much of the wett marsh or swampe as lyes before (her) ground.” [1]
  • “Hana alias Ann more, widow, having sold a house, land and orchard adjoining, containing about an acre and a quarter, lying in Salem between the land of Mr. Joseph Grafton, sr. and Nathaniell Grafton, came into court and declared that she sold the premises for her necessary use, and the court allowed it.” (Quarterly Court Records, June 1668)[8]
  • We know that his widow Ann died after 17 Aug 1668 when she executed a deed: “On August 17, 1668, Anne More of Salem, widow, executed another deed to John Turner, mariner, for a messuage [dwelling house with outbuildings and land assigned to its use] or tenement at Salem, a dwelling house, with all the ground adjoining containing one acre and three-forths, partly an orchard and part arable, lyng on the south by the highway that ran between the premises and the south harbor, and westerly with the house and land of Joseph Grafton, senior, northerly with the land of Edward Wollen, and easterly with the land and house of Nathaniel Grafton formerly bot of Ann More. The whole including that sold to N. Grafton, containing about two acres.” [9] However, no death date appears in vital records nor are probate records available in Essex county. Tradition is that her son Thomas helped build the house located at the foot of Turner Street. [1]
  • “His [Joseph Grafton's] first wife was Mary, daughter of Thomas and Ann Moore of Southwold, England, whose mother was certainly living here, for: ‘goodwife Grafton requesteth a pcell of land for hir mother at ye ende of hir husbands lott & it is granted to be laid out at ye discretion of the sureiors.’” 28 Aug 1637. [1]
  • “In the list of land grants 1636-7 he had forty acres and a little later thirty more of "ffreemans land" and he was "pmissed planted ground" July 12 1637. He certainly owned all the land on both sides of the present Hardy Street, from Essex Street to the harbor and back of the harbor and on the eastern side of a large lot, owned before 1661 by a Mr. More, which was conveyed by his wife Ann or Hanna, March 10, 1664/5 to Joseph's son Nathaniel Grafton, while behind this, still to the eastward, was another lot which belonged to Joseph Grafton, Sr. . . In the division of marsh and meadows, in the lists made, it is believed by Conant, he is set down as having seven in the family and therefore had one accre allotted to him. Before 1650 he sold land in South Field to James Smith of Marblehead. . .” [1]


The following list of children of Thomas MOORE and Ann has been circulating the Internet but it is also completely unsourced:

  • i. Mary Moore, born 1600 in Of Southwold, Suffolk, England; died Nov 1674 in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts; married Joseph Grafton; born 1596 in Of Southwold, Suffolk, England; died 24 Jun 1682 in Salem, Essex, Massachusetts.
  • ii. Margaret Moore, born 1602 in Southwell, Nottingham, England.
  • iii. Joseph Moore, born 1604 in Southwell, Nottingham, England.
  • iv. Thomas(1) Moore, born 1605; died 1615.
  • v. Thomas(2) MOORE1, born 20 May 1616 in Oultown, Suffolk, England; died 27 Jun 1691 in Southold, Long Island, NY; married Martha Sarah Yonges 11 Jul 1636 in Salem, Essex, MA; born 01 Jul 1613 in Reyden, Southwold, Suffolk, England; died 27 Jun 1671 in Southold, Suffolk, Long Island, NY.
  • vi. Richard Elvin Moore, born 1617 in Southwold, Suffolk, England; died 1647.
  • vii. John Moore, born 1619 in Of Southwell, Nottingham, England; died 17 Sep 1657 in Long Island, New York; married Margaret Howell.
  • viii. Ann Moore, born 1621 in Of Southwell, Nottingham, England.

The only two children that are proven by the records above are Mary Moore and Thomas Moore. Some of these children are claimed to be from Southwell which seems extremely unlikely as Southwell is nowhere near Southwold. Richard’s middle name “Elvin” may be confused with the maiden name of Thomas Moore, Jr’s step-mother. This list of children is very suspicious and probably wrong other than the two mentioned above.

When was Thomas Moore of Salem born? His daughter Mary Moore married Joseph Grafton [1]. They had a daughter Priscilla (Grafton) Gardner [10] of Salem married to John Gardner on 20 Feb 1653 in Nantucket, Nantucket, Massachusetts. [11] Based on this fact we might estimate that Priscilla Grafton was perhaps born about 1626 and therefore her mother Mary Moore was probably born between 1600 and 1608. That would mean that Thomas Moore was probably born before 1588 and possibly earlier. That’s a very rough estimate but it is the best I can come up with at this point. We might assume that Ann was about the same age.

Son Thomas Moore Jr married Martha Youngs in Salem. [2][12] Thomas, Jr. was in Salem until at least 1650 before moving to Southold, Long Island, where Rev John Youngs was located. [2] He must have moved to Southhold, Long Island, New York in about 1651 when his daughter, Elizabeth married Richard Clark. [2] Daughter Mary Moore married Joseph Grafton and died in Salem. [1][13]

Biography by Roland Henry Baker, III

Research Notes

Directory. Great Migration Directory entry: Moore, Thomas: Unknown; 1636; Salem [STR 1:17, 21, 25, 37, 67, 92, 102, 132; SChR 6; ELR 2:100v, 3:48-49, 4:209; NYGBR 15:57-68; SCHSR 1:4-5; EIHC 64:49-51; Winthrop-Babcock 357-58].

LNAB. From the profile, "There is absolutely no evidence that Thomas Moore’s wife Ann’s family name was Scarlett, Grafton or Carte. Her family name and origins are unknown. We simply know her first name was Ann." Her LNAB was updated to "Unknown" in 2023.

Sources

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 “The Grafton family of Salem” Reprinted from the historical collections of the Essex Institute, volume LXIV, by Henry Wyckoff Belknap. p 1 -4. Essex Institute. Salem, Massachusetts. 1928. The Grafton family of Salem
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 “Long island genealogies. Families of Albertson, Andrews, Bedell, Birdsall ... Willets, Williams, Willis, Wright, and other families. Being kindred descendants of Thomas Powell, of Bethpage, L. I. 1688.” Compiled by Mary Powell Bunker. p 250. Munsell's sons. Albany New York. 1895. link At Harvard link "Thomas1 Moore b. in England before 1600, d. at Salem, Mass., 1636, wife Ann, dau Mary2 m. Joseph Grafton of Salem… Thomas2 Moore, shipbuilder, at Salem in 1676, m. Martha Youngs b. 1613, dau. of Rev. Christopher Youngs (Vicar of Reyden, Suffolk Co. Eng. he d. 1640) and Margaret Elvin, dau. of Richard who d. in Boston 1647," 17 Feb. 1636-7, XX for Yong was received for inhabitant of Salem…. THOMAS2 MOORE came to Southold, L. I. in 1650, wife Martha and 8 children followed in 1651, he d. June 27, 1691, 2d wife Catharine survived him, no children by her.”
  3. 3.0 3.1 Roger Conant's list, which probably refers to the division of "the Marsh & meadow lands" (See Belknap).
  4. Historical Collections of the Essex Institute
  5. “Descent from seventy-nine early immigrant heads of families” by James S Elston. Chedwato Service. Burlington, Vt. 1962. Page images at HathiTrust
  6. Suffolk County Historical Society Register, Vol 1, No. 1, Jun 1975
  7. List of grants, December 26, 1636, to July 12, 1637 (see Belknap).
  8. “The Moore Family of Southold, Long Island,”by Charles B. More. New York Genealogical and Biographical Record. Apr 1884.
  9. February 9, 1668 (12 mo. 9), Salem, Lib 3 of Deeds, p. 49.
  10. “The Annals of Salem: From Its First Settlement,” by Joseph Barlow Felt. W. & S. B. Ives, Salem, Mass. 1827. link
  11. U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700, Torrey
  12. “Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England,“ by James Savage link "THOMAS, Salem 1636, prob. s. of Thomas, to whose wid. Ann, a midwife, was next yr. gr. of ld. made, by w. Martha had Thomas, and Martha, both apt. 21 Oct. 1639, soon aft. the parents were rec. of the ch.; Benjamin, 2 Aug. 1640; Nathaniel, 3 July 1642; Hannah, 9 Dec. 1644; Eliz. 31. Jan. 1647; Jonathan, 3 June 1649; and Mary, 15 Dec. 1650; was freem. 27 Dec. 1642, and in few yrs. rem."
  13. “The Pioneers of Massachusetts A Descriptive List drawn from Records of the Colonies, Towns and Churches and other Contemporaneous Documents” by Charles Henry Pope. Boston, Mass. 1900.

See aso--

  • “The Grafton family of Salem” Reprinted from the historical collections of the Essex Institute, volume LXIV, by Henry Wyckoff Belknap. p 1 -4. Essex Institute. Salem, Massachusetts. 1928. The Grafton family of Salem
  • “Long island genealogies. Families of Albertson, Andrews, Bedell, Birdsall ... Willets, Williams, Willis, Wright, and other families. Being kindred descendants of Thomas Powell, of Bethpage, L. I. 1688.” Compiled by Mary Powell Bunker. p 250. Munsell's sons. Albany New York. 1895. link At Harvard link "Thomas1 Moore b. in England before 1600, d. at Salem, Mass., 1636, wife Ann, dau Mary2 m. Joseph Grafton of Salem… Thomas2 Moore, shipbuilder, at Salem in 1676, m. Martha Youngs b. 1613, dau. of Rev. Christopher Youngs (Vicar of Reyden, Suffolk Co. Eng. he d. 1640) and Margaret Elvin, dau. of Richard who d. in Boston 1647," 17 Feb. 1636-7, XX for Yong was received for inhabitant of Salem…. THOMAS2 MOORE came to Southold, L. I. in 1650, wife Martha and 8 children followed in 1651, he d. June 27, 1691, 2d wife Catharine survived him, no children by her.”
  • Roger Conant's list, which probably refers to the division of "the Marsh & meadow lands" (See Belknap).
  • “Descent from seventy-nine early immigrant heads of families” by James S Elston. Chedwato Service. Burlington, Vt. 1962. Page images at HathiTrust
  • Suffolk County Historical Society Register, Vol 1, No. 1, Jun 1975
  • List of grants, December 26, 1636, to July 12, 1637 (see Belknap).
  • “The Moore Family of Southold, Long Island,”by Charles B. More. New York Genealogical and Biographical Record. Apr 1884.
  • Salem, Lib 3 of Deeds, p. 49. February 9, 1668 (12 mo. 9),
  • “The Annals of Salem: From Its First Settlement,” by Joseph Barlow Felt. W. & S. B. Ives, Salem, Mass. 1827. link
  • U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700 Torrey
  • “The Pioneers of Massachusetts A Descriptive List drawn from Records of the Colonies, Towns and Churches and other Contemporaneous Documents” by Charles Henry Pope. Boston, Mass. 1900.
  • '“Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England,“ by James Savage link "THOMAS, Salem 1636, prob. s. of Thomas, to whose wid. Ann, a midwife, was next yr. gr. of ld. made, by w. Martha had Thomas, and Martha, both apt. 21 Oct. 1639, soon aft. the parents were rec. of the ch.; Benjamin, 2 Aug. 1640; Nathaniel, 3 July 1642; Hannah, 9 Dec. 1644; Eliz. 31. Jan. 1647; Jonathan, 3 June 1649; and Mary, 15 Dec. 1650; was freem. 27 Dec. 1642, and in few yrs. rem."
  • An American Family History
  • Coldham, Peter Wilson, compiler. Lord Mayor's Court of London: Depositions Relating to Americans, 1641-1736. (National Genealogical Society Publications, 44.) Washington, D.C.: National Genealogical Society, 1980. 119p.
  • Colket, Meredith B., Jr. Founders of Early American Families: Emigrants from Europe, 1607-1657. Cleveland: General Court of the Order of Founders and Patriots of America, 1975. 366p. Page: 199
  • Bill Putman, "The Moore Family PDF."
  • Michael Cooley's Genealogy Pages
  • Stark/Smith/Austin/Boarman by Louis L Stark
  • CROUCH GREGORY MOORE STEWART STONESIFER
  • “Town records of Salem Massachusetts 1634-1659:” Second Series, Vol 1. The Essex Institute. Salem, Massachusetts. 1868. link
  • "Ancestors of Frank Herbert Davol and his wife Phebe Downing Willits," by Joseph C Frost. F. H. Hitchcock. New York. 1925.
  • https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/126493873/ann-moore
  • Frost, Josephine C. Ancestors of Henry Rogers Winthrop and His Wife Alice Woodward Babcock. Publisher Not Identified, 1927. pp 357-58. Internet Archive Accessed 4 May 2023.
  • Moore, Charles B. "The Moore Family of Southold , L. I." The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record (New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 1887) pp 57-68. HathiTrust.




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Comments: 8

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Hello, could anyone let me know where this "Born 1570 in Southwold, Waveney District, Suffolk, England" came from? If there is no credible documentation, then, I think it should be "about 1570" and England should be birth location. What do you think?
posted by Katherine Cappon
The bio mentions the claim is from Henry Wyckoff Belknap “The Grafton Family of Salem” in the Historical Collections of the Essex Institute: Vol LXIV, but also says it provides no documentation. The Great Migration Directory lists the origins of her husband as unknown. I've updated the birthplace to England.
posted by M Cole
edited by M Cole
Why is no one changing Ann's maiden name to Unknown? She was not a Grafton. This has been asked several times by others but no response.

The only Grafton in the family was Ann's daughter Mary who was married to a Grafton.

posted on Grafton-110 (merged) by Katherine Cappon
edited by Katherine Cappon
Puritan Gurus, can you give her Unknown LNAB, please?

Also, if we have no idea who she was how do we know precisely where she's born? Suggest remove that. (I agree with the point in the bio that Southwold is a likely garble for Southwell; and then, it is suspicious she's been given her husband's garbled birthplace. If we fixed that for him, we should fix it and/or remove it for her.)

Is there a marriage record there, or another contemporary primary source for her current birthplace?

Lastly, regardless, Southwold was not in Waveney council district in this era; because, it didn't exist at the time. If we prefer to retain Southwold as her notional birthplace even lacking sources for that, then it can be simply Southwold, Suffolk, or East Suffolk.

posted on Grafton-110 (merged) by Isaac Taylor
A little nudge to this request for a change of LNAB. The first request to change the name was in 2016, and then this one in 2019. I've reviewed the sources available online from the Great Migration Directory (couldn't find the Suffolk County Historical Society Register), but the others all gave her as Ann _______.
posted on Grafton-110 (merged) by M Cole
Hi Andrew!

I'm adding this profile to PGM: http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Grafton-110 Can you do me a favor and please change the maiden name at birth to unknown? (Also sent via PM) Best regards, Roland

posted on Grafton-110 (merged) by [Living Baker]
There is absolutely no evidence that Thomas Moore’s wife Ann’s maiden name was Scarlett, Grafton or Carte. Her maiden name and origins are unknown. We simply know her first name was Ann. Her daughter’s husband was Joseph Graton and in some cases researchers have confused his surname Graton with her maiden name. A familysearch ancestral file shows Ann married to a Mr. Scarlett but it is completely unsourced. The name Ann Scarlett probably originated from the will of Ann Scarlet dated 2d 1st mo., 1639 who was the sister of Joseph Grafton.
posted on Grafton-110 (merged) by [Living Baker]
Anne's surname could possibly be CARTE instead of Grafton.

Her daughter correctly married a Joseph Grafton.

posted on Grafton-110 (merged) by Deborah (Hoffman) Weiner

[Do you know Ann's family name?]  |  M  >  Moore  >  Ann (Unknown) Moore

Categories: Puritan Great Migration