James Stackpole
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James Stackpole (abt. 1652 - bef. 1736)

James Stackpole aka Stacpole
Born about in Limerick, Irelandmap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married 1681 in Kittery, York, Mainemap
Descendants descendants
Died before before about age 84 in Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire Colonymap
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Profile last modified | Created 25 Apr 2013
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Ireland Native
James Stackpole was born in Ireland.

Contents

Biography

Origins

James apparently was born in Ireland. There were and are Stagpoles and Stackpoles in Ireland. They were a prominent family particularly in and near Limerick, so it is speculated that James Stagpole came from there. But which of those many Stackpoles were his parents is yet to be discovered.

Some suggest, noting the similarities in the names given to children, that he was the son of Philip Stackpole, born in Limerick about 1645, judging from the following inscription and died there in 1715. and his wife Jane Creagh. Everett Stackpole visited St. Mary's Cathedral there in 1897 and found the following inscription on top of a sarcophagus there: "Here lyeth the body of ald Philip Stacpole deceased Dec the 4th 1715 aged 69 years also his wife Jane Creagh who deceased May ye 3th 1717 aged 59 years." But that is not the case. Everett Stackpole concludes his extensive attempts to find a connection between James and the Irish families he examined in detail by writing: "With the information at hand, it is impossible to trace the connection."[1]

James apparently was born about 1652, based on his deposition made at age 80 in 1732. In 1732, "James Stagpole (of Dover in the province of New Hampshire) aged eighty years" made a sworn deposition in a real estate matter, recorded in York County deeds.[2]

In view of his birth apparently about 1652, it is not possible for Philip Stackpole, born about 1646 (69 years before 1715) to have been his father. James and that Philip are likely related, particularly when one notes that James named one of his sons Philip. They might even be brothers, sons of James Stacpoole), but they were not father and son. That father-son connection is not uncertain, as previously indicated: it is disproved. Therefore, his purported parents Philip Stackpole and his wife Jane Creagh have been disconnected. Further research needed.

Emigration--by Force

Tradition says that James Stagpole was taken prisoner on the coast of Ireland when a boy only 14 years old and brought to this country. Stealing young people, transporting them to America and selling them into servitude was common at the time. Many from Ireland and Scotland were forcibly taken from their beds at night by men dressed as English soldiers and compelled to go on board a vessel bound for America. The persons who practiced such a crime were called "Spirits". A royal order was passed against them in 1682. Gov. Simon Bradstreet conjectured in 1680 that there were then living 60 such Irish immigrants and 120 Scots who had been sold as "servants".(1)

Given the evidence from his deposition that he was born about 1652, the tradition, then, that he was kidnapped at 14 and brought to New England suggests that James Stagpole's involuntary emigration occurred about 1666.

Life on Both Sides of the New Hampshire-Maine Border

Where and how James Stackpole lived in New England before the year 1680 is not known. Presumably, the bulk of those 14 years were spent in his (initially involuntary) indentured service. In April of that year he is first mentioned in the "Cochecho Province Rate" as taxed two shillings and one penny.(2) In December of the same year he is incidentally mentioned as hauling boards from Thomas Holmes' mill at Salmon Falls to Cochecho Point. In 1681 he was taxed in Dover four shillings and one penny and the following year his tax was eight shillings and two pennies. It was in 1680 that he signed a petition with the inhabitants of Kittery to King Charles II asking for abatement of taxes thus indicating a previous residence in that town.(3) The inventory of the estate of John Bready of Kittery 9 Oct. 1681 included the following: "due from James Stagpoole 22S".(4)

In 1680 he settled as a squatter in Dover, now Rollingsford, NH on land that had been granted in 1656 to Joseph Austin. None of the Austin family ever lived here. The next lot north had been granted to Henry Tibbetts at the same time. James cleared a portion of both lots and built his house on that of Austin. Perhaps he had been there earlier but, probably his residence had been in upper Kittery now South Berwick previous to that date. On 20 May 1710 he received a deed from Thomas Austin, only son of Joseph Austin, who conveyed to him "for twenty pounds of current money all that tract of land granted to said Joseph Austin in 1656... lying in ye range of lots between St. Alban's Cove and Quamphegan" bounded south-east by the Newichawannock River, north-east by Henry Tibbett's hundred acre lot, north-west by Ralph Twombly's hundred acres and Thomas Hanson's hundred acres and south-west by a highway between this lot and Thomas Kenne's (Canney) hundred acre lot. The lot purchased contained one hundred acres of rich land. That the price paid was only a nominal one is shown by the fact that only four years later 30 Nov. 1714 he sold forty acres of upland from this lot to William Frost for £120.(5)

A brook flowed through his farm which is still called Stackpole's Brook as it was in the old deeds. The location of James Stackpole's house is shown in 1709 in the return of the Sligo road laid out that year. Thus we see that James had built a house just north of the creek called Stackpole's Brook some time before the took a deed of the farm from Austin. April 20th, 1743 Samuel Stacpole sold to his nephew Joshua Stackpole a small lot of land five rods by eleven on which stood the house in which James was living in 1709 just north of Stackpole Brook and including a part of the present highway. Just east of it was the Landing Place and a bridge over the brook for the repair of which the town paid in the year 1800 "for plank for Stacpole's Bridge $5.44."

On this small lot of land lived Joshua as a blacksmith. Here his widow Abigail was living in 1795. It seems that her youngest son Tobias inherited the property and he willed it to his son Ebenezer Stacpole in 1821. Jonathan Whitehouse who married Lucy Stacpole was then living in the house. Ebenezer lived here till about 1830 when he moved the house to St. Alban's Cove and the land was purchased from Tobias Stackpole by Samuel Hale on 10 Jan. 1831. The house was put in its new location in spite of the public protest of Mr. Roberts but, the location seems to be described in a deed from Daniel Goodwin to Aaron Stackpole 26 July 1765, 48 rods of land on the road from St. Alban's cove to Quamphegan, 17 rods from a stone near the brook that empties into the cove. The house is still in good condition and occupied. Originally the main entrance was in the middle of the southern side.(6)

About the time that the Indians came down on Salmon Falls in 1689 James moved to the other side of the river for protection and for several years kept an "ordinary" or tavern a few rods east of the old cemetery at Great Works on the spot where lived the Rev. John Wade and the Rev. Jeremiah Wise. The Court of Sessions at York 4 July 1693 made the following record: "Lycence is granted to James Stagpole of barwick to sell by retaile beere, Cyder, rum, provision and lodging, he giving ten pounds bond to their Majesties to observe the laws in that case provided."(21) The license was renewed annually up to 1698 and his place was called a "publick house of entertainment". At the Court of Quarter Sessions for 1694: "Lycence granted to James Stagpole to sell by retale beer Cyder victualls horsmeate & lodgeing for ye yeare Ensueing and to give bond according to law".(23) A supply of ardent spirits at such places was the rule without exception. It is true that this as usual led to some disorders and James was complained of and in 1696 he was fined 20 shillings and admonished yet, his license was at the same time renewed: "James Stagpole being presented to this Court for suffering bad orders in his house &c as p ye presentment, is for his ofence sentenced to pay twenty shillings for ye use of his Majesties and to be Admonished : & pay fees 5s"(25) At the Court of Quarter Sessions at York, 3 Apr. 1694: "Wee present James Stagpole for selling strong drinke by retalie".(22) And another time: "We present James Stagpole of Barwick for suffering severall psons to sit drinking in his House at unseasonable times to Excess & many of them Inhabitants and on ye Sabbath day."(24) His last license was granted in 1698: "Lycence granted to James Stackpole to keep a house of public Entertainmt he giving bond of 10£ to observe and keep the Law in such Cases made and provided.(26)

He bought the place where he lived in Berwick parish on 2 Nov. 1696 for £15 from Ephraim Joy (27) and sold it on 22 Nov. 1699 to John Wade, minister.

"I James Stagpoll of Dover... husbandman for a Sum of money... paid... by Mr John Wade Ministr of Barwick... do... sell... a certain parcle of Land Scituate in sd Barwick near the Meeting house which I bought of Ephraim Joy Decd Containing three Acres and a quarter... bounded... by the way going from the great work to the River... by Mr John Plaisteds land Sometime called Parkers field... by the Burying place in ye Land of Humphrey Spencer, heir to William Spencer Deceased... this twenty second day of Novembr... one thousand six hundred & Ninety nine... James Stagpoll- in presets of Thomas Goodin, Samuel Savery, Timothy Gerrish". (20)

One has to wonder if running a pub across from the church was such a good idea... but he did sell it to the minister! Perhaps all the fines and court appearances and the £10 bond he had to post made him lose interest in being a publican and he decided to move back across the river.

At the later date he is called "James Stackpoll of Dover in New Hampshire, husbandman". The land was 3 1/4 acres, "near the meeting house" bounded on the southeast by the way going from the Great Works to the river, northwest by the burying place "with all the housing, trees, fences and Privileges pertaining thereto." The burying place still is used and is on the hill just south of the Great Works River.(7)

"The Deposition of James Stagpole of Dover in the pvince of New Hampshire aged Eighty Years viz. that I well Remember that Edward Toogood now of Portsmouth... did sundry Years before Salmon Falls was destroyed by the Indians live at the aforesd Salmon Falls in that House which formerly belonged to James Grant then Deceased and in which said Grant lived and died and that the sd Toogood then Improved the Plantation or Land which was Improved by the sd Grant in his Life Time and that after the Destruction of Salmon Falls aforesd in the Year One Thousand Six Hundred and Ninety Two in mowing Time he the sd Toogood Improved the sd Plantation by mowing and that after that for the space of many Years... and that I never heard that any pson or psons gave him any Interruption in that his improvement or claimed the same Saving that he was interrupted by the Indians as abovesd and that Timothy Wentworth lived in the sd Plantation under the sd Toogood till he died and that his Sons now improved the same- James Stackpole..." (19)

James Stacpole had grants of land in both Dover and Kittery. "April ye 11 1694. By the committee chosen by the freeholders of ye town of Dover for granting land, given and granted unto James Stagpole his heirs and assigns forever, fifty acres of land above Indigo Hill near Salmon Falls River, not intrenching upon any former grant." This grant was confirmed in town meeting five days later.(8)

The town records of Kittery declare that 16 July 1702 there were lotted and laid out to James Stagpole Senr 20 acres of land part of a grant made in 1694 to Gilbert Warren. Four acres of it were on the north side of the Great Works River, the rest on the south side extending to the York line, adjoining Warren's land. The land passed into possession of James Jr. and was bequeathed by him to his brother John. On 20 May 1728 John sold it to Gilbert Warren.(9) James Stagpole of Summersworth, yeoman sold to Thomas Wallingsford of Sommersworth, Gent. in May 1728 for £30 the 50 acres of land which had been granted to James Stagpole Jr. 10 May 1703 and which had been given to his father.(10)

"I James Stackpole of Dover... Husbandman For & in consideration of the Sum of twenty three Pounds... paid... by Nathan Lord of Berwick... Husbandman... a certain grant of land containing fifty acres granted to me at a legal town meeting held at Kittery May the tenth 1703... I have hereunto set my Hand & Seal & Margret my Wife... February the twenty third... seventeen Hundred & twenty six- James Stackpole... in Presence of us Joseph Moulton John Bradstreet".(11)

A petition was dated 25 April 1715 by "The Inhabitanes that are Nerer ye New Meten house than ye old Cocheco Pint" asking to be assigned to the new place of worship which was at what is now Dover city. Among the petitioners were "Jeames Stagpool" and "fileon Stagpool". A footnote to the petition as given in the New Hampshire State Papers explains that the petitioners were "nearer ye new Meeting house at Cocheco than to the old on Dover Neck". The new church at Cocheco was erected in 1713 and the inhabitants of Sligo and vicinity were rated there, though it is certain that they often found it more convenient to ford the "Sluiceway" and attend church at the Great Works settlement.(12)

James and Philip signed a petition 25 April 1729 for a new parish in the north-east part of Dover. The petiton was granted and Somersworth was made a parish 19 Dec. 1730. Rev. James Pike was the first pastor of this church. He died here 19 March 1792 after a pastorage of 65 years. The church records were burned with the parsonage in 1812.(13)

In his old age James divided his homestead between his sons Philip and Samuel reserving a 3 acre lot of the southeast corner for himself. The deed to Philip was dated 17 Nov. 1732. It conveyed the northern part of his farm, 15 rods wide on the river and varying in breadth "to ye uppermost Corner or point of my land next to ye Meeting house... Excepting al ye old Apple trees yt I sot formerly which I do reserve dureing ye life of me & my wife for our own use." The lot contained 16 acres.(14)

On 20 April 1734 James, for "paternal love & affection", conveyed the southern part of his farm, 50 acres, to his son Samuel extending from the river towards the meeting house and bounded on the south by land of Thomas Hobbs with buildings thereon, "Excepting & Reserveing unto my Self out of ye premises ye House wherein I now live & ye land whereon it Stands & to extend from Ye House towards Capt. Wallingfords house by ye River & ye little field before my Dore adjoining to Thomas Hobbs land Being in al about two or three acres be it more or less & lying on ye South & South westerly side of ye Road yt leads from Thos Hobbss House to ye Gutter Behinde my own House", providing also that James and his wife Margaret should have half the produce of the land conveyed during their lives including "half of ye Syder yt may be made".(15)

James died in 1736 as shown by the inventory of his estate made by Nathaniel Perkins and Thomas Wallingford 12 Aug. 1736 and amounted to £141.10.0. Administration was granted to his son John of Biddeford 14 July 1736.(16)

In his old age James lived down by the river near the wading place which was at the head of Little Johns Falls opposite Chadbourne's mill. The spot is easily found by the bricks which the frost brings to the surface. It is probable that here he built a cabin before the year 1680 and that he returned to it in his declining years leaving the house north of the brook to his son Samuel. Five pounds was all the old shack was worth. His widow Margaret had the use of it till her death and then the house and three acres passed into the possession of Thomas Wallingford. The price paid for it was £120.(17)

The cemetery on the hill is the spot where rest four generations of the Stackpole family. There are good reasons for believing that the following persons were buried here: James and his wife Margaret (Warren), Samuel Stacpole who died in 1758, Philip Stacpole and wife Mercy (Thompson), Joshua Stacpole and wives Lucy (Baker) and Abigail (Hobbs), James Stacpole and wife Elizabeth (Pierce), Stephen Stacpole and first wife Esther (Warren), Philip Stacpole Jr. and wife Elizabeth (Tibbetts), and Anne (Grey) wife of William Stacpole.(18)

Children

James and Margaret Stackpole had, in York and Berwick: [3][4][5]

  • James, b. about 1678, died 1706, unmarried, no children. In his will, dated 11 Nov 1706, he made bequests to his father and to his brothers John, Philip, and William
  • John, b. about 1680, m. about 1707 Elizabeth Brown, d. about 1767
  • Catherine, b. about 1683, m. about 1700 Alexander Junkins, son of Scottish Prisoner of War Robert Junkins, d. about 1757
  • William, b. about 1684, still living in 1706 when he is mentioned in his brother's will.
  • Margaret, b. about 1686, m. 7 Jan 1707 Dr. Jonathan Young, d. about 1758
  • Philip, b. about 1690, m. Mercy Thompson, then Martha Stevens
  • Samuel, b. 1693 in Dover, or perhaps later, since not mentioned in his brother James's 1706 will, bp. 15 Oct 1721 in Berwick, d. intestate shortly before his brother was named administrator of his estate on 22 Feb 1758. Apparently unmarried with no children.
  • Honor, bp. 20 May 1716, had a child out of wedlock with Joshua Roberts in New Hampshire before July 1721, then m. 24 Jan 1734 Joseph Freathy


Sources

  1. Stackpole, Everett Schermerhorn, History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family (Lewiston, Me., Journal Printshop and Bindery, 1920), p. 50.
  2. York Deeds, Vol. 15, folio 98, page 271
  3. [https://scottishprisonersofwar.com/james-warren-108-on-the-dunbar-prisoners-list/ Scottish Prisoners of War Society website, James Warren page
  4. Stackpole, Everett Schermerhorn, History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family (Lewiston, Me., Journal Printshop and Bindery, 1920), pp. 62-64,.
  5. Warren, Orin. Warren; a Genealogy of the Descendants of James Warren Who Was in Kittery, Maine, 1652-1656. (Haverhill, Mass., The Chase Press, 1912) , p.11
  • (1) History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family- Everett S. Stackpole, p.55; also Declaration of Deputy Governor Samuel Symonds- Frederic Kidder, NEHGR- Vol. 19, pp.55-6 (Jan. 1865)
  • (2) Collection of the New Hampshire Historical Society- Vol. VIII, p.16
  • (3) Ibid- Vol. IV, p.511; Mass. Archives- Vol. III, p.288
  • (4) York Deeds- Vol. V, pt I, fol. 14
  • (5) History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family- Everett S. Stackpole, p.57
  • (6) Ibid- pp.66-7
  • (7) Ibid- pp.58-9
  • (8) Ibid- p.58
  • (9) Ibid
  • (10) York Deeds- Vol. 31, p.100
  • (11) History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family- Everett S. Stackpole, pp. 59-60 quoting York Deeds- Vol. XIII, fol. 118
  • (12) Ibid- pp.62-3
  • (13) Ibid- p.63
  • (14) Ibid- pp.65-6
  • (15) Ibid- p.66
  • (16) Ibid- p.63; New Hampshire Probate Records- Vol. 14, p.284; NH State Papers- Vol. XXXII, p. 577
  • (17) History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family- Everett S. Stackpole, pp. 63-4
  • (18) Ibid- p.71
  • (19) York Deeds- Vol. XV, fol. 98
  • (20) Ibid- Vol. VI, fol. 61
  • (21) Ibid- Vol. V, pt. II, fol. 19
  • (22) Ibid- fol. 26
  • (23) Ibid- fol. 31
  • (24) Ibid- fol. 72
  • (25) Ibid- fol. 75
  • (26) Ibid- fol. 120
  • (27) Ibid- Vol. IV, fol. 104
  • Genealogical Dictionary of Maine & New Hampshire- p.654
  • Collection of the Maine Historical Society- Vol. IV, p.511
  • Source: S1 Author: Ancestry.com Title: OneWorldTree Publication: Name: The Generations Network, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Repository: #R1
  • Repository: R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com E-Mail Address: Phone Number:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/71891063/james-stackpole : accessed 9 December 2021), memorial page for James Stackpole Sr. (1652–Aug 1736), Find A Grave: Memorial #71891063, citing Stackpole Family Burial Ground, Rollinsford, Strafford County, New Hampshire, USA ; Maintained by bluesma36 (contributor 47501790) .
  • Source: S492 Author: Ancestry.com Title: Warren : a genealogy of the descendents of James Warren, who was in Kittery, Maine, 1652-1656 Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005.Original data - Warren, Orin,. Warren : a genealogy of the descendents of James Warren, who was in Kittery, Maine, 1652-1656. Haverhill, Mass.: The Chase Press, 1902.Original data: Warren,; Repository: #R1 NOTEIncludes index.
  • Source: S493 Author: Ancestry.com Title: History and genealogy of the Stackpole family Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005.Original data - Stackpole, Everett Schermerhorn,. History and genealogy of the Stackpole family. unknown: unknown, 1920.Original data: Stackpole, Everett Schermerhorn,. History and genealo; Repository: #R1
  • Source: S596 Author: Ancestry.com Title: U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970 Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.Original data - Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970. Louisville, Kentucky: National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution. Microfilm, 508 rolls; Repository: #R1
  • Source: S616 Author: Ancestry.com Title: Maine Court Records, 1696-1854 Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2003.Original data - York County Court of Common Pleas (1696-1760), Kennebec County Supreme Court (1799-1854), and Washington County District Court (1839-46). Index obtained from Maine Depar; Repository: #R1
  • Source: S630 Title: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 Publication: Name: Yates Publishing. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.; Repository: #R1
  • Source: S632 Title: Family Data Collection - Individual Records Publication: Name: Edmund West, comp.. Family Data Collection - Individual Records [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000.; Repository: #R1
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Notes

N255James was kidnapped off the streets of Limerick, Ireland at the age of 14 to work on a British ship bound for Boston. When he arrived, He became an indentured servant to a man who had a quarry in NH. At a later date, he acquired land in Rollinsford, known as Sligo, Where he had an "entertainment establishment". He lived there until his death. In his old age, he lived down by the river, opposite Chadbourne Cemetery on the hill. The house was just north of the creek, Stackpole Brook,on Sligo Rd. Tradition says he was born circa 1654. His whereabouts prior to 1680 are unknown. Source: History and Genealogy of the Stackpole Family, by Everett Schermerhorn Stackpolr, 1920. 2nd edition.
"___ had a grant, as Mr. Quint tells,1694,but says he was born 1653, meaning, I suppose, in England. Possibly this name has become Stackpole." Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England by James Savage. Vol. IV,p.160 reprint1994,Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc. Tradition says he was from Ireland. Stackpole is originally an English name, taken it is thought, from a columner mass of Limestone on the south coast of Wales, about six miles from Pembroke. It is an inlet or pool, named from the rock, Stack pool. The castle, remodeled on the same foundation, called Stackpole Court. It is present seat of Earl of Cawdor. The Coat of Arms of 1250 is red rampart lion having a gold collar on a silver shield. The lineage of the Stackpole family is on record at College of Heraldry, London. Sir Robert Stackpole went with Strongbow to conquest of Ireland in 1168. His decendants became numerous in Ireland, especially Dublin, Cork and Limerick. James Stackpole,born 1652, as deposition shows, probably from Limerick, although tradition says he came from Sligo. He married Margaret, daughter of James and Margaret Warren and kept a tavern at Great Works, S, Berwick, Maine. ( This was from a book I found on line. However, I failed to record ntitle,etc. R>Roberts)

Acknowledgments

Thank you to Jon Myers for creating WikiTree profile Stackpole-67 through the import of MYERS-EVEY Family WikiTree.ged on Apr 18, 2013.

Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Jon and others.





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Comments: 2

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He is my 8th great grandfather.
posted by Emmy (Dunham) Frost
Stackpole-67 and Stackpole-100 appear to represent the same person because: Although places differ slightly, same dates and same wife. Please merge and, if you can't resolve differences, make note of them in resulting profile. Thanks.
posted by Vic Watt

S  >  Stackpole  >  James Stackpole

Categories: Limerick City, Ireland | Dover, New Hampshire