John Locke Sr
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John Locke Sr (1627 - 1696)

Captain John Locke Sr
Born in London, Englandmap [uncertain]
Ancestors ancestors
Son of [uncertain] and [uncertain]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married 1652 in Rye, Rockingham, Massachusetts Bay Colony (New Hampshire)map
Descendants descendants
Died at age 68 in Rye, Rockingham, Province of New Hampshiremap
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Profile last modified | Created 27 Mar 2011
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Biography

John was born in 1627.

Baptism

Baptism: 16 SEP 1627 at White Chapel, London, England[1]

Emigration

Emigration Date: 1644[2]

Death and Estate

Death Date: 26 AUG 1696
Place: Rye, New Hampshire[3][1]
Cause: killed by Indians[2]

“Locke, Lieut. John, 1626-1696, Portsmouth and Hampton, N. H. Indian Wars. Killed by the Indians.”[4]

Letters of Administration were granted in the estate of John Locke on 4 March 1706, with two sons, John and Joseph, being administrators. An Inventory of the estate was made on 19 May 1707. Distributions were made to 10 living children: John, Nathaniel, Edward, William, James, Joseph, Alice, Phenea (Tryphena), Rebecca and Mary. John was also survived by his widow, as the administrators agreed to take care of her maintenance.[1] The name of one additional child, Elizabeth, is known, but it is assumed that she died prior to the settlement of the estate in 1708.

Family

Arthur M. Locke lists the following children:[1]

  1. John, m. Elizabeth Bolles (Bowles) ca, 1677; d. after 18 Dec 1733 (eldest son alive in 1708)
  2. Elizabeth, d. before 1708
  3. Nathaniel, m. Dorothy Blake 22 Jan 1688/8; d. 12 Nov 1734
  4. Alice/Elsie, m. Nehemiah Berry 14 March 1714/5
  5. Edward, m. Hannah Jenness 1692; d. ca. 1739
  6. Tryphena, m. John Webster 14 June 1693; d. 6 March 1729
  7. Rebecca, d. after 1708
  8. Mary, m. William Hepworth 31 Jan 1697
  9. Deacon William, b. 17 April 1677; m. Hannah Knowles 23 Nov 1699; d. 22 Jan 1768
  10. James, m. Hannah Philbrick 3 Dec 1713; d. after 1750
  11. Capt. Joseph, m. Salome White; d. after 15 Feb 1763 (youngest son alive in 1708)

Evolving Theories about Captain John Locke

This profile attempts to explore two theories about the origins of the Locke family: the older theory, subscribed to by authors in the 19th century, and the more modern theory.

The parents shown here are the parents traditionally assigned to John. Other theories show his parents as Nathaniel Locke and Sabina Hermins.

Old Theory of John Locke's Origins and Life

Captain John (1) Locke came from Yorkshire, England in 1644, and first settled in Dover, N. H.; thence he moved to New Castle, New Hampshire. About 1652 he married Elizabeth, daughter of William Berry, who was probably the first settler in that part of Hampton which is now Rye, New Hampshire. Captain Locke moved to Hampton in 1658 and was a carpenter. On August 29, 1696, Captain Locke was Killed by the Indians while at work in his grain field. He had been very active in resisting the Indians, and had been instrumental in defeating them on several occasions when they had attacked the inhabitants on the seacoast. Although Captain Locke was shot and supposed to be dead, he survive enough to grasp his sickle and cut off the nose of one of the Indians. There was no record of the birth of Captain Locke's children, of whom there were twelve, but the eldest, John (2) Locke[2]

During his life he resided in Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire, USA, New Castle, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USA, Rye, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USA and Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USA.

LOCKE, JOHN, Dover 1645, rem. to Hampton, m. a. 1652, Elizabeth a. of William Berry, had John; Elizabeth; Nathaniel, b. 1661; Alice; Edward; Tryphena; Rebecca; Mary; William, 17 Apr. 1677; James; and Joseph; was k. by the Ind. 26 Aug. 1696.[5]

New Theory of the Origins of the Locke family of New Hampshire

The following is a review of the origins of the Locke Family of New Hampshire.

Nathaniel Locke Sr marries an unknown 1st wife in England. They have two children:

  1. Captain John Locke, carpenter, born say 1626 in England died 1696[6] (aged 70 when he died in 1696) arrived by Jan 1656/7, married Elizabeth Berry daughter of William Berry and Joan Unknown.[7] He has many children
  2. Nathaniel Locke Jr arrives by 1672 leaves a widow by 5 Mar 1674 who is appointed a teacher a Great Island. Her name is unknown. They have no offspring.[8]

Nathaniel Locke Sr marries second to Sabina Hermins who is very young. They have two younger children:[9]

  1. Judith Locke born 1656 dies 19 Jan 1753, marries William Berry first and second Nathaniel Huggens.[8]
  2. Sabina Locke born 1662, marries first William Berry, second Abraham Lewis and their John Philbrick.[8]

Captain John Locke arrives in New England first by Jan 1656/7.[8] Nathaniel Locke possibly doesn't arrive until 1672. Either Sabina (Hermins) Locke arrives as a widow in 1660 with her two daughters or she arrives with her husband and two daughters and her husband promptly dies within weeks of their arrival.[8]

Widow Sabina (Hermins) Locke married Captain William Marston and has a daughter:[8]

  1. Tryphena Marston. Tryphena Marston marries Joseph Philbrick.

William Marston dies 1672 and widow Sabina (Hermins) [Locke] Marston married third to John Redman.[8]

In 1853 John Goodwin Locke published "Book of the Lockes" a fairly flawed Genealogy of the Locke family of New Hampshire. He proposed that John Locke and Nathaniel Locke were identical to the two men of the same names baptized in London to Thomas Locke and Christena French. That couple conveniently has a long pedigree. But he offers no evidence that this is the case. He hedges by saying “perhaps were the sons of John Locke, of London, who m. Christian French…”[10] Then 1916 Arthur Horton Locke published "A History and Genealogy of Captain John Lock" which just repeats what John Goodwin Locke wrote calling it "circumstantial."[11] It is a circumstantial proposition indeed! In 1938, Mary Holman published the Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury. In a footnote regarding the William Marston's wife Sabina she proposed the idea that Sabina Locke was a widow of Nathaniel Locke. She married second to William Marston and third to John Redman. She pointed to two of her probable daughters Judith Locke who married William Berry and Sabina Locke who married William Berry, Abraham Lewis and John Philbrick. In an 1810 deposition Jonathan and David Locke state That their ancestor Locke came to this country with a wife whose maiden name was Hermins and that she brought with her a coat of arms with the name John Hermins. John Locke witnessed the will of William Marston which gave most of his estate to "Trifana" Marston. Clearly John Locke was related to Trifana via her mother Sabina. She was the daughter of William and Sabina Locke.[12] In 1950 Robert Harry McIntire published Ancestry of Robert Harry McIntire and of Helen Annette McIntire, His Wife. In his treatment of the Knight family he writes that Margaret Knight married John Redman a blacksmith of Hampton and John Redman married second to Sabina (Hermins) Marston. She had married 1) Nathaniel Locke, 2) Captain William Marston, 3) John Redman.[13] Noyes, Sybil, Charles T. Libby, and Walter Goodwin Davis, published the Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire in 1972. If we attempt to parse their treatment of the Locke and Berry family things start to fall into place. Nathaniel Locke (elder) was father to four children:

  1. Captain John Locke
  2. Nathaniel Lock
  3. Judith Locke
  4. Sabina Locke

His wife Sabina being "young" when she arrived and the two sons being much older than the two daughters would imply that Sabina was the second wife of the elder Nathaniel Locke and mother of his two daughters. An unknown first wife was mother to the two older sons. So we have Nathaniel Locke (the elder) marries to an unknown first wife in England and has two sons with her: John and Nathaniel. John came to New England first by Jan 1656/7. Nathaniel Jr came over later (before 1672). Nathaniel Sr remains behind in England and remarries to Sabina Hermins in England. As noted she was described as "young" and she must have been to have remarried twice and had another daughter Tryphena Marston in addition to the two younger daughters Judith Locke and Sabina Locke born in England. This family of four, Nathaniel Locke the elder, Sabina (Hermins) Locke and their two daughters Judith and Sabina Locke arrive in 1660. Nathaniel Sr promptly dies within weeks of arrival leaving his widow Sabina who marries second William Marston and third John Redman.

This happens to match the family tradition that a Nathaniel Locke came with a wife Sabina and was father to the Locke family in New Hampshire. I don't usually look at family tradition but it seems to be supported in large part by evidence. Whereas the proposition that Thomas Locke and Christena French of London happen to be the parents of the New England immigrants seems to be based on fairy dust.

In 1810, May 10, Jonathan and David Locke made the following deposition, which is preserved at Rye:[10]

"This may certify to whom it may concern, that the following genealogy of the ancestors, in substance as followeth, hath been told unto us by our forefathers, the truth to which we attest to, viz. :"

  • 1st, "We say that Jonathan Palmer, deceased, was the son and lawful heir to Christopher Palmer and Elizabeth Palmer."
  • 2d. "Christopher Palmer's wife Elizabeth, was daughter and lawful heir to William and Judith Berry."
  • 3d. "William Berry's wife Judith was daughter and lawful heir to the Locke and his wife who came from England, said Locke's wife's name before marriage was Hermins, and she brought with her into New England a coat of arms, so called, which referred to John Hermins. William Berry's wife Judith was daughter and lawful heir to Nathaniel Locke and his wife, whose name previous to marriage was Hermins."[10]

The records of Rye show that Christopher Palmer m. Elizabeth Locke, July 24, 1705.

Who were David Locke and Jonathan Locke? They were brothers and the great grandchildren of Captain John Locke:

  • Generation 1: Capt John Lock stated dead 26 Aug 1696 m Elizabeth Berry (Book of Locke # 1 p 326)[10]
  • Generation 2: Deacon William Locke d 22 Jan 1768 m Hannah Knowles (Book of Locke # 5 p 328)[10]
  • Generation 3: Jonathan Locke b 1702 d 2 Jan 1774 age 72 m Sarah Haines (Book of Locke # 15 p 331) had sons including:[10]
  1. Deacon David Locke b 24 Aug 1735 d 7 Jun 1810 m Hannah Lovering, lived in Rye (Book of Locke # 98/32 p 331, 337)[10]
  2. Jonathan Locke b 29 Jan 1732 d 13 Sep 1813 m Abigail Towle, lived in Rye (Book of Locke # 96/32 p 331, 336)[10]

Both were old enough to have known their grandfather William Locke son of Captain John Locke. So their deposition seems fairly credible. In this case they are authorities on the Locke who came from England and whose wife's maiden name was Hermins. That would therefore not only be the father of their ancestor Captain John Locke but also of Judith Locke who was daughter of his second wife Sabina (Hermins) Locke.

Here we have evidence for the brother of John Locke named Nathaniel Locke whose widow was a teacher at Great Island:

  • "The records of Portsmouth give evidence that there was a Nathaniel Locke there in 1672. "Mh. 4 & 5, 1672, Nathaniel Locke did two days work on Highways at Great Island" (New Castle) and Sep. 30, 1672, a note was drawn on Henry Dering for Nathaniel Locke for six shillings." Another record is "At a meeting of the Selectmen this 5th March 1674-5, upon motion made by Widow Locke to live in the school house on the Great Island in order to the teaching of children to read and sew, have granted her desire." Tradition says that the this Nathaniel Locke left no sons and John and this Nathaniel were probably brothers."[10]

Could that widow of Nathaniel been Sabina (Hermins) Locke as is sometimes posited? No it could not because widow Sabina (Hermins) Locke had already married Captain William Marston by 1662. Captain Marston died in 1672 leaving most of his estate to their daughter Tryphena Marston and names his wife Sabina. We now see why Captain John Locke was witness to the Will of Captain Marston. Tryphena Marston was his step-sister and Sabina his step-mother. Sabina had already married to John Redman by 1673 so she would hardly be described as widow of Nathaniel Locke on 5 March 1674 at the Selectman's meeting. Her third husband didn't die until 16 Feb 1700. This shows that Sabina Locke must have been the woman whose maiden name was Hermins and was step-mother to Captain John Locke and his brother Nathaniel and mother to Judith Locke and Sabina Locke. Note Captain John Locke also had a daughter named Tryphena Locke. Tryphena Marston married Joseph Philbrook. When Sabina (Hermins) [Locke][Marston] Redman died Joseph Philbrook demanded the rights of his wife's mother proving Sabina Redman was indeed the same Sabina who was the wife of Captain William Marston and mother of Tryphena Marston.

That Sabina Hermins is the matriarch of this whole family there can be little doubt. However, no contemporary evidence exists to prove the name of her husband was indeed Nathaniel as is usually supposed. Therefore we may wish to consider wring this genealogy with widow Sabina (Hermins) Locke and her husband (?Nathaniel) Locke giving some authority to the deposition made in 1810 but not certitude.

New Biography

Captain John Locke of Rye, Carpenter was the son of Nathaniel Locke and probably a first unknown wife. His father remarried to a second wife, Sabina Hermins.[8] He married Elizabeth Berry in Rye.[1] Elizabeth Berry was the daughter of William Berry and his wife Jane who arrived in 1639 at Piscataque, Maine. They settled in Hampton in 1640 and moved to Rye in 1648.[14]

Children:[1]

  1. John, b. ± 1653-4.
  2.  ?Elizabeth, only one not in div.
  3. Nathaniel, b. ± 1661-2.
  4. Alice. One Alice (Ellis) adm. Greenl. Ch. 1718 and had negro Peggy bp. 1721.
  5. Edward,
  6. Tryphena, m. at Haverh. 14 June 1693 John Webster.
  7. Rebecca.
  8. Mary. One Mary m. in Boston 31 Jan. 1697 Wm. Hepworth.
  9. William, b. 17 Apr. 1677, d. in Rye 22 Jan. 1768, m. 23 Nov. 1699 Hannah Knowles (2), who d. 12 Sept. 1769, ag. 91. Both adm. Greenl. Ch. 1716. List 338b. Lieut., Deacon. 11 ch.
  10. James, Rye, liv. 1742-3, m. 2d in Greenl. 3 Dec. 1713 Hannah Philbrick. Ch. incl. James m. in Greenl. 25 Oct. 1720 Sarah Kemick.
  11. Joseph, gent., Rye, d. Mar. 1768, m. in Greenl. Salome White. Both adm. to Greenl. Ch. 1718. List 338b. Town officer. Called Ensign 1728, Capt. 1735. 7 ch. 1710-28

DNA

Could Captain Locke be related to John Locke b1611? Interestingly the purported parents of Captain Locke includes the name FRENCH known to be a name associated with the group of YDNA testers of a descendant of John LOCKE b c1611.

Ydna results for the LOCKE family project suggests that descendants of Captain John LOCKE are in Group 3, whereas this John LOCKE's descendant is in Group 9.

Military

“Portsmouth and Hampton, N. H. Indian Wars. Killed by the Indians.”[15]

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Locke, Arthur M., A.M. A History and Genealogy of Captain John Locke [1627-1696] of Portsmouth and Rye, N.H. and his Descendants also of Nathaniel Locke of Portsmouth.... Publication: reprint 1979. Page 1ff, Estate: Page 7ff
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wentworth, Edward Norris, Jr. The Genealogy of Edward Norris Wentworth Junior. Publication: Chicago, Cook, Illinois, USA; Date: June 1928; NOTE Special Project Submitted in Courses in Community Life and Advance Biology at the University High School, University of Chicago. Page: 50
  3. Sanborn, George Freeman, Jr., and Sanborn, Melinde Lutz. Vital records of Hampton, New Hampshire : to the end of the year 1900. Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1992. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2016) Page 118 AmericanAncestors
  4. “Supplement to the General register of the Society of Colonial Wars,” General Society of Colonial Wars (U.S.); General Society of Colonial Wars (U.S.),1906, https://archive.org/details/supplementtogen190306gene/page/333
  5. Savage, James A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May 1692, On the Basis of the Farmer ...., transcribed and corrected by Robert Kraft Publication: originally published 1860, electronic ver. copyright R. Kraft July, 1994; Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co, Inc. Lib of Cong.# 65-18541, ISBN# 0-8063-0309-3. Vol. 3, Page 102
  6. Langdon B. Parsons, History of the town of Rye, New Hampshire : from its discovery and settlement to December 31, 1903 (Concord, N.H.: Rumford Print. Co., 1905)
  7. Clarance Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700 (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, April 2011) Vol 2 p 958 ("Torrey 2:957 LOCKE, John (?1626-1696) & Elizabeth [BERRY]; ca 1652; Hampton, NH/Rye, NH {Kittery 34; Locke 11; Lincoln (1923) 25; GDMNH 90, 441; Sv. 1:171; Pillsbury Anc. 356; Robie (1956) 54; Hampton 822}")
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 Noyes, Sybil, Charles Thornton Libby and Walter Goodwin David, Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, (Baltimore: Gen. Publ. Co., 1990),
    • ("3½ ‘NATHANIEL,’ of whom no contemp. ev. is found, was traditionally the fa. of John (2), Judith Berry (13) and Sabina Berry (14). Nathaniel (4) would also be a poss. s. The theory is put forward that he came to Hampt. 1660 (preceded by his s. John) accomp. by a young w. Sabina (Hemins) and her ch., that he soon d., and that his wid. was that Sabina who m. Wm. Marston (10) and John Redman (1). In 1672 the will of Marston, naming his w. Sabina and making their dau. Tryphena (b. 1663) his chief heir, was wit. by John Locke (2) (who also had a dau. Tryphena), Locke’s mo.-in-law and her 2d husb. Tryphena Marston m. Joseph Philbrook, and, after the death of her mo. (then Sabina Redman), Hampt. was disturbed by Philbrook’s demands for ‘rights sometime his w.’s mo.’s. A few yrs. aft. the death of that Sabina Locke who m. 1st Berry (14), 2d Lewis (1) and 3d Philbrook (4), a Berry gr.s. wrote in his Bible ‘Sabina Phil-brick b. on the ocean acc. to report d. 1761 ag. 95.’ This indicates 1666 as the yr. of her birth, but as her supposed mo. Sabina (Hemins) Locke had m. Capt. Marston bef. 1663, either the yr. or age is doubtful. In 1810 Jonathan and David Locke depos.: Wm. Berry’s w. Judith was the dau. of Nathaniel Locke and his w. who came from Eng., and Locke’s w. bef. marriage was Hemins and she brot with her a coat-of-arms which referred to John Hemins (N. H. Gen. Rec. i. 139). Poss. study of the lands of John Redman, Wm. Fifield, Richard Sloper etc. (especially of puzzling entries in Hampt. rec. 2: 125,128) might confirm this trad.")
    • ("Locke 4 NATHANIEL, Great Isl. 1671, worked on highways there Mar.-Sept. 1672; soon d. s. p. See (3½).:)
    • ("Locke: 2 CAPT. JOHN, Rye, carpenter, presum. nearly relat. to (4) and to Wm. Marston’s w. Sabina. By trad. 1st at Dover, but seen 1st at Portsm. in Jan. 1656-7, getting 8 a. ho.-lot bet. John Jackson and Wm. Cotton. He had prev. m. Elizabeth Berry (12), with her sold his orig. gr. and the bldgs. in Mar. 1660-1. In 1661 she depos. ab. the fight bet. the Abbott-Cate wives. Capt. L.’s Portsm. fine remitted 1665. O. A. 2 Oct. 1666. Ab. 1666 he settled, without authority, on Jocelyn’s, later Locke’s Neck, now called Straw’s Point, in Rye, then Hampt., and aft. much controv. was accepted inhabt. by Hampt. 8 Mar. 1667. No. Yarmouth witn. 1672. Tr. j. 1684, 1685; gr. j. 1698. Lists 323, 326ab, 330ab, 328, 312cd, 313ab, 331b, 52, 55b, 96. K. by Ind. 26 Aug. 1696, supp. ± 70; Minister Pike then called him Lieut. Wid. liv. when div. made 4 May 1708, to be maint. by the adms. John and Jos. Ch., all daus. called Locke in div: John, b. ± 1653-4. ?Elizabeth, only one not in div. Nathaniel, b. ± 1661-2. Alice. One Alice (Ellis) adm. Greenl. Ch. 1718 and had negro Peggy bp. 1721. Edward, Tryphena, m. at Haverh. 14 June 1693 John Webster. Rebecca. Mary. One Mary m. in Boston 31 Jan. 1697 Wm. Hepworth. William, b. 17 Apr. 1677, d. in Rye 22 Jan. 1768, m. 23 Nov. 1699 Hannah Knowles (2), who d. 12 Sept. 1769, ag. 91. Both adm. Greenl. Ch. 1716. List 338b. Lieut., Deacon. 11 ch. James, Rye, liv. 1742-3, m. 2d in Greenl. 3 Dec. 1713 Hannah Philbrick. Ch. incl. James m. in Greenl. 25 Oct. 1720 Sarah Kemick. Joseph, gent., Rye, d. Mar. 1768, m. in Greenl. Salome White. Both adm. to Greenl. Ch. 1718. List 338b. Town officer. Called Ensign 1728, Capt. 1735. 7 ch. 1710-28,")
  9. Clarance Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700 (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, April 2011) Vol 2 p 958 ("LOCKE, Nathaniel & Judith/Sabina? [HERMINS/HEMINS], ?m/2 William MARSTON, ?m/3 John REDMAN. by 1656; Newcastle, NH {Locke 565; Pillsbury Anc. 356; GDMNH 441; McIntire Anc. 211}")
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 John Goodwin Locke, Book of the Lockes. A genealogical and historical record of the descendants of William Locke, of Woburn. With an appendix containing a history of the Lockes in England, also of the family of John Locke, of Hampton, N. H., and kindred families and individuals (Boston : J. Munroe and co. 1853) link and link
  11. Arthur Horton Locke, A history and genealogy of Captain John Locke (1627-1696) of Portsmouth and Rye, N.H., and his descendants; also of Nathaniel Locke of Portsmouth, and a short account of the history of the Lockes in England [Concord, N.H.: The Rumford Press, 1916?] p 565
  12. Mary (Lovering) Holman, Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury and John Sargent Pillsbury. . ., 2 vols. ([Concord, N.H.]: Rumford Press, 1938) p 356 link
  13. Robert Harry McIntire, Ancestry of Robert Harry McIntire and of Helen Annette McIntire, His Wife (Norfolk, Va., 1950) 211 link
  14. Noyes, Sybil, Charles Thornton Libby and Walter Goodwin Davis, Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, (Baltimore: Gen. Publ. Co., 1990), 90.
    • ("Berry: 12 WILLIAM was at Strawberry Bank bef. 1636; in 1645 his land adj. Turpin and Cummings; of Str. Bk. 10 July 1648, he sold to Anthony Ellins. Land at Sandy Beach was gr. him 31 Jan. 1648, and 40 a. more in 1652, over which his ch. and grch. scattered, undiv. until 1719. Selectman 1646, const, for lower part of Str. Bk. 1650, gr.j. 1650. Lists 41, 321, 323, 324, 330c. Adm. gr. 28 June 1654 to wid. Jane, who dep. in 1686, ag. 67, that she and her husb. liv. here bef. Mr. (Francis) Williams came. She m. 2d Nathaniel Drake (5). Ch: John, b. 1637. Joseph. Elizabeth, m. ab. 1652 John Locke. Mary, m. John Foss (1). James. Rachel, m. John Marden. William. Most of the grdaus. are unkn. Sarah, who m- Samuel Dowse (2) 1 Mar. 1688-9, was evid. one, likelier (7).")
  15. “General Register of the Society of Colonial Wars, 1899-1902.” New York, 1902, p698, https://archive.org/details/generalregistero00soci/page/697
  • Find A Grave: Memorial #102309579
  • Pope, Charles Henry: "The Pioneers of Maine and New Hampshire 1623 to 1660"; page 129 (Locke)
  • Family records and Ancestry.




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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with John by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with John:

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Locke's Neck



Comments: 3

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Shouldn't these profiles reflect either facts based on record evidence or unbiased theories only?
posted by Rae Laura
Locke-4400 and Locke-147 appear to represent the same person because: Same information regarding birth and death.
posted by Thomas Holmes
Locke-432 and Locke-147 appear to represent the same person because: while the parents are different, neither set is proven, they are both just a theory. This person is intended to be the same person based on the biographies, wives and children. Please merge and document the theory of the second set of parents.
posted by Robin Lee

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Categories: King William's War | Killed in Action, King William's War