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Disputes and Uncertainties of Robert Harrington-100

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Contents

Disambiguation

The following persons are closely identified either in fact or in error, and a quick cross reference to their respective biographies will assist the reader.

Disputed Identities and Spouses

Uncertain Origin

Robert Harrington, who lived his adult life in Watertown, Massachusetts, was born in 1616, a date that can be calculated from his tombstone, which indicated he died in 1707 at the age of 91[1].

Beyond his calculated 1616 birth year, nothing else is known of Robert Harrington of Watertown until 1644, when he is listed as a proprietor of Watertown.[2]

Various parents have been named for Robert Harrington but there’s not yet enough evidence to determine if any of them are correct. Y-DNA testing can be used to narrow down the possibilities. So far, that’s shown that Robert Harrington of Watertown, MA, and Benjamin Harrington of Providence, RI, are not of the same line of Harringtons in England. [3]

Robert Harrington of Watertown is often shown to be the son of Robert Harrington (1578-1622) of Southwold, Sussex, England, and his wife Joan Jentilman (1595-1630). This relationship is unproven -- see below for discussion.

Was he the same Robert Harrington who was born in Southwold, England?

Robert Harrington of Watertown is often shown as Robert Harrington who was baptized in Southwold, Suffolk, England, on October 1, 1616,[4] the son of Robert Harrington II and Joan Jentilmann.[2]

Frederick Lewis Weis, in his book on Robert Harrington's family, gives the best summary of this account:

The best clue to the parentage of Robert Harrington of Watertown, Massachusetts, is that he came from Southwold, co. Suffolk, England. His father, if our surmise is correct, died before 1622 and his mother died in 1630, but he probably lived with his mother and step-father, the Reverend John Younges, between 1622 and 1630, and perhaps with his step-father until 1634. By 1634, he would be 18 years of age (he died at Watertown, Massachusetts, in 1707, aged 91 years, thus he would have been born in the year 16I6) and in those days at 18 he would have been considered able to support himself.[5]

Applications to lineage societies have reflected this understanding.[6]

Frederick Lewis Weis in his book on Robert Harrington's family asserted this view, but acknowledged it was not proved:

While we have not seen positive: proof that Robert Harrington Watertown, Masssachusetts, is identical with the Robert Herrington. who was baptised at Southwold, co, Suffolk, England, it is highly probable that he was.[5]

These arguments support the view:

  1. The 1616 dates in both locations make it plausible
  2. No records have been found of the English Robert in England after 1644, or the colonial Robert in Massachusetts before 1644 to render the view implausible.
  3. Other accounts of family and immigration support that the two are one and the same. Unfortunately, these accounts have their own problems!

These arguments oppose the view:

There is "no evidence proving that the Robert HERRINGTON of Suffolk is the Robert HARRINGTON of Watertown. You can't "cross the pond" based solely on the name and birth year.[7]

The lack of proof of the other supporting accounts throws the relationship into greater doubt than if the supporting accounts had not existed.

Did Robert Harrington have siblings?

Eugene Harrington's "Harrington Family in America" gives Robert some brothers and sisters. Unfortunately, doing this required giving Robert a different set of parents, as well!

John Harrington, with his wife, Ann (Clinton) Harrington, and two young sons, and evidently a daughter, Rebecca, later of husband, John Watson, sailed from England for America, arriving in Boston Harbor about 1630. John, the head of the family, was drowned in Boston Harbor soon after their arrival, and before 1640, the year in which the Massachusetts Colony law was passed requiring registration of vital statistics under penalty of twenty shillings. His death seems not to be of record. The younger son, Abraham, of wife, Rebecca Cutter, and the daughter, Rebecca of husband, John Watson, both settled in Charleston, Mass., where there is record of both marriages and their deaths, together with the death of the mother, and these deaths show the relationship between the mother and the two children. The date of the birth of Abraham is indicated in his desposition under date of April 15, 1673. He was ten years old at the time fo the arrival of the family at Boston in 1630 and about 12 years was then the age of his brother, Benjamin, who went into Rhode Island with Roger Williams and was among the first settlers in that Colony. He settled in Providence, R.I., where he took the oath of allegiance on Nov. 19, 1645. He married Elizabeth White, daughter of William and Elizabeth White of Boston. They reared a family of nine children whose names, together with those of both parents, appear on many pages of the public records of Providence. When John Harrington arrived in Boston Harbor in about 1630, with his wife and two young sons, Abraham, then aged 10 years, and Benjamin, then aged about 12 years, there was another Harrington boy, Robert, still in England, and who came to America some four years later in 1634, on the ship "Elizabeth," when he was 18 years old, probably at the expiration of a contract of apprenticeship. He disembarked at the same harbor in Boston, and settled in Watertown, Mass., a neighboring town to Charleston, and we find his name there on a list of land proprietors as early as 1642, and where, in 1649, he married Susannah George. It is thought that this Robert Harrington, was a brother of Abraham of Charleston, Mass., and Benjamin of Providence, R.I.[8]

Robert Harrington (in some early Watertown records it is spelled Herrington) of Watertown, is not related to Abraham Errington of Cambridge[9] Robert was from southeastern England, while Abraham was from northern England. There is no conclusive evidence, as yet, that Robert was related to Benjamin of Providence[5]

Robert Harrington of Watertown did not have this set of brothers and sisters.

1634 Did he arrive on the Ship "Elizabeth?"

Weis did believe that Robert Harrington crossed the Atlantic on the ship "Elizabeth" out of Ipswich, Suffolk, England, embarking on 10 April 1634. [5] He was preceded by Frederick Adam Virkus in the belief that Robert arrived on the "Elizabeth" in 1634.[10]

However, Diana Mathiesen writes,

I have consulted three different transcriptions of the passenger manifest for this voyage, and none list Robert Harrington as a passenger. It's of profound importance whether he is or is not on this voyage because it's the foundation of Weis's claim that Robert's origin is in Suffolk.[7]

1634 Did he accompany Deacon Hastings to Watertown?

In Weis' 1958 account:

Deacon Thomas Hastings, perhaps a kinsman, at all events a friend, appears to have paid his passage to America, on condition that Robert would be his helper for six vears. We know that Robert and the family of Deacon Hastings embarked in the ship ~Elizabeth," William Andrews, Master, at Ipswich, co. Suffolk, on 10 April 1634, with many other Suffolk county families. Also we know that Watertown was settled by pioneers nearly all of whom came from Suffolk and Essex counties in England. Bond's History of Watertown names more than forty prominent Watertown families who came from Suffolk county alone. Furthermore, when Robert's time was up in 1640, Mr. Hastings gave him a homestall in Watertown.[5]

Diana Gale Matthiesen notes that:

whether or not Robert Harringtron of Watertown came to America with Deacon Hastings on the "Elizabeth" is of considerable genealogical significance (with regard to his origins), so I decided to document the fact, rather than just accept secondary sources.[11]

Matthiesen notes that:

Peter Wilson Coldham, in his "Complete Book of Emigrants,"[12] gives the passenger list of the "Elizabeth," which embarked from Ipswich for New England -- William Andrews , Master -- on 30 Apr 1634. We do find Thomas Hastings and his wife, Susan Hastings, on the list. What we do not find is Robert Harrington.
It is not the case that Robert was too young to be listed (he was 18). But even if he were, this ship's list includes, not just adult males (as is the case with many ship's lists), but women and children, including infants (with ages for all). I wondered if Coldham had erred, so I checked several other transcriptions of the same passenger list. None included Robert, or any other Harrington.

Matthiesen concludes that:

we should: (1) stop making the totally false statement that Robert HARRINGTON came to New England on the "Elizabeth" in 1634 with Thomas HASTINGS; and (2) stop asserting that Robert HARRINGTON of Watertown is even remotely proven to be the Robert HARRINGTON who was baptized 1 Oct 1616 in Southwold, co. Suffolk, England, son of Robert & Jane (JENTILMEN) HARRINGTON.These *may* be the same individual, but it never was proven, and now it's a good deal further from being proven.

Did Robert Harrington accompany his stepfather Rev. Yonges to New England in 1637?

If Robert Harrington did not accompany Deacon Hastings on the "Elizabeth", perhaps he crossed the Atlantic in some other fashion. In fact, since he was born before the crossing of the Mayflower, it is a certainty that he was not born in Massachusetts.

An alternate theory is that he crossed the Atlantic with his step-family.

Robert's widow Joan married John Younges the same year, July 24, 1622. She had at least one more child by Younges and died young in England.[2]

If Robert Harrington, the child, was born 1616, he was aged 6 at the time his mother remarried, and would have grown up in the Yonges household.

Reverend John Younges emigrated to America and was an original founder of Southold, Long Island, New York. He founded the First Church (then Congregational, later Presbyterian) in Southold, Long Island, New York, where he was the minister until his death there on February 24, 1671/2, aged 74 years.[2]
Rev. Younges came to America very shortly afterward and landed in Salem but soon moved to New Haven and then Long Island, New York and helped found Southold, Suffolk County, Long Island. He became the minister of the first church of Southold. Naturally it was Congregational.[2]

This alternate theory requires that one believe Robert Harrington stayed with his step family long enough to cross the Atlantic, but stayed in Massachusetts while the rest of the family went on to Long Island, New York.

Diana Matthiesen noticed this and observed:

Families usually stick together when they immigrate, so geography argues against a connection. I discuss the HARRINGTON/HERRINGTON/ERRINGTON immigrants to New England on this page: http://dgmweb.net/FGS/H/Harrington_immigrants_to_New_England...I descend from Robert HARRINGTON of Watertown, so I would love to have "crossed the pond" and discovered his origin, but I don't believe we have.[13]
Further, the passenger list of the ship “Mary Anne” out of Yarmouth, England bound for New England, May 1637 lists John Yonges, his wife Joan and six children. Robert Harrington, age 21 in 1637, is not listed.....I cannot find any record of which ship Younges actually sailed on. I checked all published passenger lists between 1637 and 1639. Robert Harrington II may have come over sooner, of course. He was 21 years old in 1637. However I cannot find him on any passenger list between 1630 and 1640. Many passenger ship lists have never been published.[2]
==Cross Reference==

The following persons are closely identified either in fact or in error, and a quick cross reference to their respective biographies will assist the reader.

Disputed Identities and Spouses

Uncertain Origin

Robert Harrington, who lived his adult life in Watertown, Massachusetts, was born in 1616, a date that can be calculated from his tombstone, which indicated he died in 1707 at the age of 91.[1]

Beyond his calculated 1616 birth year, nothing else is known of Robert Harrington of Watertown until 1644, when he is listed as a proprietor of Watertown.[2]

Various parents have been named for Robert Harrington but there’s not yet enough evidence to determine if any of them are correct. Y-DNA testing can be used to narrow down the possibilities. So far, that’s shown that Robert Harrington of Watertown, MA, and Benjamin Harrington of Providence, RI, are not of the same line of Harringtons in England. [14]

Robert Harrington of Watertown is often shown to be the son of Robert Harrington (1578-1622) of Southwold, Sussex, England, and his wife Joan Jentilman (1595-1630). This relationship is unproven -- see below for discussion.

Was he the same Robert Harrington who was born in Southwold, England?

Robert Harrington of Watertown is often shown as Robert Harrington who was baptized in Southwold, Suffolk, England, on October 1, 1616,[4] the son of Robert Harrington II and Joan Jentilmann.[2]

Frederick Lewis Weis, in his book on Robert Harrington's family, gives the best summary of this account:

The best clue to the parentage of Robert Harrington of Watertown, Massachusetts, is that he came from Southwold, co. Suffolk, England. His father, if our surmise is correct, died before 1622 and his mother died in 1630, but he probably lived with his mother and step-father, the Reverend John Younges, between 1622 and 1630, and perhaps with his step-father until 1634. By 1634, he would be 18 years of age (he died at Watertown, Massachusetts, in 1707, aged 91 years, thus he would have been born in the year 16I6) and in those days at 18 he would have been considered able to support himself.[5]

Applications to lineage societies have reflected this understanding.[15]

Frederick Lewis Weis in his book on Robert Harrington's family asserted this view, but acknowledged it was not proved:

While we have not seen positive: proof that Robert Harrington Watertown, Masssachusetts, is identical with the Robert Herrington. who was baptised at Southwold, co, Suffolk, England, it is highly probable that he was.[5]

These arguments support the view:

  1. The 1616 dates in both locations make it plausible
  2. No records have been found of the English Robert in England after 1644, or the colonial Robert in Massachusetts before 1644 to render the view implausible.
  3. Other accounts of family and immigration support that the two are one and the same. Unfortunately, these accounts have their own problems!

These arguments oppose the view:

There is "no evidence proving that the Robert HERRINGTON of Suffolk is the Robert HARRINGTON of Watertown. You can't "cross the pond" based solely on the name and birth year.[7]

The lack of proof of the other supporting accounts throws the relationship into greater doubt than if the supporting accounts had not existed.

Did Robert Harrington have siblings?

Eugene Harrington's "Harrington Family in America" gives Robert some brothers and sisters. Unfortunately, doing this required giving Robert a different set of parents, as well!

John Harrington, with his wife, Ann (Clinton) Harrington, and two young sons, and evidently a daughter, Rebecca, later of husband, John Watson, sailed from England for America, arriving in Boston Harbor about 1630. John, the head of the family, was drowned in Boston Harbor soon after their arrival, and before 1640, the year in which the Massachusetts Colony law was passed requiring registration of vital statistics under penalty of twenty shillings. His death seems not to be of record. The younger son, Abraham, of wife, Rebecca Cutter, and the daughter, Rebecca of husband, John Watson, both settled in Charleston, Mass., where there is record of both marriages and their deaths, together with the death of the mother, and these deaths show the relationship between the mother and the two children. The date of the birth of Abraham is indicated in his desposition under date of April 15, 1673. He was ten years old at the time fo the arrival of the family at Boston in 1630 and about 12 years was then the age of his brother, Benjamin, who went into Rhode Island with Roger Williams and was among the first settlers in that Colony. He settled in Providence, R.I., where he took the oath of allegiance on Nov. 19, 1645. He married Elizabeth White, daughter of William and Elizabeth White of Boston. They reared a family of nine children whose names, together with those of both parents, appear on many pages of the public records of Providence. When John Harrington arrived in Boston Harbor in about 1630, with his wife and two young sons, Abraham, then aged 10 years, and Benjamin, then aged about 12 years, there was another Harrington boy, Robert, still in England, and who came to America some four years later in 1634, on the ship "Elizabeth," when he was 18 years old, probably at the expiration of a contract of apprenticeship. He disembarked at the same harbor in Boston, and settled in Watertown, Mass., a neighboring town to Charleston, and we find his name there on a list of land proprietors as early as 1642, and where, in 1649, he married Susannah George. It is thought that this Robert Harrington, was a brother of Abraham of Charleston, Mass., and Benjamin of Providence, R.I.[16]

Robert Harrington (in some early Watertown records it is spelled Herrington) of Watertown, is not related to Abraham Errington of Cambridge[17] Robert was from southeastern England, while Abraham was from northern England. There is no conclusive evidence, as yet, that Robert was related to Benjamin of Providence[5]

Robert Harrington of Watertown did not have this set of brothers and sisters.

1634 Did he arrive on the Ship "Elizabeth?"

Weis did believe that Robert Harrington crossed the Atlantic on the ship "Elizabeth" out of Ipswich, Suffolk, England, embarking on 10 April 1634. [5] He was preceded by Frederick Adam Virkus in the belief that Robert arrived on the "Elizabeth" in 1634.[18]

However, Diana Mathiesen writes,

I have consulted three different transcriptions of the passenger manifest for this voyage, and none list Robert Harrington as a passenger. It's of profound importance whether he is or is not on this voyage because it's the foundation of Weis's claim that Robert's origin is in Suffolk.[7]

1634 Did he accompany Deacon Hastings to Watertown?

In Weis' 1958 account:

Deacon Thomas Hastings, perhaps a kinsman, at all events a friend, appears to have paid his passage to America, on condition that Robert would be his helper for six vears. We know that Robert and the family of Deacon Hastings embarked in the ship ~Elizabeth," William Andrews, Master, at Ipswich, co. Suffolk, on 10 April 1634, with many other Suffolk county families. Also we know that Watertown was settled by pioneers nearly all of whom came from Suffolk and Essex counties in England. Bond's History of Watertown names more than forty prominent Watertown families who came from Suffolk county alone. Furthermore, when Robert's time was up in 1640, Mr. Hastings gave him a homestall in Watertown.[5]

Diana Gale Matthiesen notes that:

whether or not Robert Harringtron of Watertown came to America with Deacon Hastings on the "Elizabeth" is of considerable genealogical significance (with regard to his origins), so I decided to document the fact, rather than just accept secondary sources.[19]

Matthiesen notes that:

Peter Wilson Coldham, in his "Complete Book of Emigrants,"[20] gives the passenger list of the "Elizabeth," which embarked from Ipswich for New England -- William Andrews , Master -- on 30 Apr 1634. We do find Thomas Hastings and his wife, Susan Hastings, on the list. What we do not find is Robert Harrington.
It is not the case that Robert was too young to be listed (he was 18). But even if he were, this ship's list includes, not just adult males (as is the case with many ship's lists), but women and children, including infants (with ages for all). I wondered if Coldham had erred, so I checked several other transcriptions of the same passenger list. None included Robert, or any other Harrington.

Matthiesen concludes that:

we should: (1) stop making the totally false statement that Robert HARRINGTON came to New England on the "Elizabeth" in 1634 with Thomas HASTINGS; and (2) stop asserting that Robert HARRINGTON of Watertown is even remotely proven to be the Robert HARRINGTON who was baptized 1 Oct 1616 in Southwold, co. Suffolk, England, son of Robert & Jane (JENTILMEN) HARRINGTON.These *may* be the same individual, but it never was proven, and now it's a good deal further from being proven.

Did Robert Harrington accompany his stepfather Rev. Yonges to New England in 1637?

If Robert Harrington did not accompany Deacon Hastings on the "Elizabeth", perhaps he crossed the Atlantic in some other fashion. In fact, since he was born before the crossing of the Mayflower, it is a certainty that he was not born in Massachusetts.

An alternate theory is that he crossed the Atlantic with his step-family.

Robert's widow Joan married John Younges the same year, July 24, 1622. She had at least one more child by Younges and died young in England.[2]

If Robert Harrington, the child, was born 1616, he was aged 6 at the time his mother remarried, and would have grown up in the Yonges household.

Reverend John Younges emigrated to America and was an original founder of Southold, Long Island, New York. He founded the First Church (then Congregational, later Presbyterian) in Southold, Long Island, New York, where he was the minister until his death there on February 24, 1671/2, aged 74 years.[2]
Rev. Younges came to America very shortly afterward and landed in Salem but soon moved to New Haven and then Long Island, New York and helped found Southold, Suffolk County, Long Island. He became the minister of the first church of Southold. Naturally it was Congregational.[2]

This alternate theory requires that one believe Robert Harrington stayed with his step family long enough to cross the Atlantic, but stayed in Massachusetts while the rest of the family went on to Long Island, New York.

Diana Matthiesen noticed this and observed:

Families usually stick together when they immigrate, so geography argues against a connection. I discuss the HARRINGTON/HERRINGTON/ERRINGTON immigrants to New England on this page: http://dgmweb.net/FGS/H/Harrington_immigrants_to_New_England...I descend from Robert HARRINGTON of Watertown, so I would love to have "crossed the pond" and discovered his origin, but I don't believe we have.[21]
Further, the passenger list of the ship “Mary Anne” out of Yarmouth, England bound for New England, May 1637 lists John Yonges, his wife Joan and six children. Robert Harrington, age 21 in 1637, is not listed.....I cannot find any record of which ship Younges actually sailed on. I checked all published passenger lists between 1637 and 1639. Robert Harrington II may have come over sooner, of course. He was 21 years old in 1637. However I cannot find him on any passenger list between 1630 and 1640. Many passenger ship lists have never been published.[2]

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 Watertown Records Comprising the Third Book of Town Proceedings and the Second Book of Births Marriages and Deaths to the end of 1737 also Plans and Register of Burials in Arlington Street Burying Ground Prepared for Publication by the Historical Society (Watertown, Mass Press of Fred G. Barker 1900)(Free e-book. Available at Google Play). Second Book of Births, Marriages and Deaths, p. 34. Also noted in Bond, Henry, M.D., Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, Including Waltham and Weston(Boston: Little, Brown & Company 1855) )(Free e-book. Available at Google Play).
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 "Genealogist' Report cited by Diana Gale Matthiesen at Robert Harrington (c1616-1707) of Watertown MA." Ancestry Boards, 21 Dec 2011.
  3. See Diana Gale Matthiesen’s page http://dgmweb.net/FGS/H/Harrington_immigrants_to_New_England.html; Check out E.W. Harrington’s The Harrington Family in America, 1907; Check out Early Generations of the Family of Robert Harrington of Watertown MA 1634 and Some of his Descendants, by F. L. Weis, Worcester, Mass., 1958. Comments of D. Pane-Joyce at http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/report/rr02/rr02_275.html#P17432 Accessed August 22, 2015
  4. 4.0 4.1 Bond, Henry, Genealogies of the Families and Descendants of the Early Settlers of Watertown ... (Pages 272, 1016-17) Boston: N.E. Historic-genealogical Society, 1860, OpenLibrary.org accessed March 20, 2015
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 Frederick Lewis Weis, Early Generations of the Family of Robert Harrington of Watertown, Massachusetts, 1634, and Some of His Descendants, Worcester, Massachusetts. 1958. p. 7
  6. Source:#ADB 1 SAR #42918
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Diana Gale Matthiesen, "Robert Harrington (c1616-1707) of Watertown MA." Ancestry Boards, 21 Dec 2011.
  8. Authorities: "Nugae Antiquae," "Harrington Family in America" by Eugene W. Harrington, F.M. Steele, Los Angeles, Calif., and published vital records for Charleston, Cambridge, and Watertown, Mass., also vital records of Providence, R.I.; cited in Appendix, Manuscript: Harrington Family Genealogical Gazetteer and cited by Chris Hoyt, Wikitree G2G, Sept 10, 2013
  9. Bate, Kerry William, "The English Origins of the Cambridge, Massachusetts Errington Family", The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol.132 (January, 1978), p.44
  10. Frederick Adam Virkus, "The Compendium of American Genealogy" 1942, v. VII, p. 856.
  11. Diana Gale Matthiesen, "Astonishing error re: Robert Harrington of Watertown, *1642*" December 07, 2002. Harrington Family Genforum #3118.
  12. 1987, Gen. Publ. Co., Balto., v. I, p. 31
  13. Diana Gale Matthiesen, [ http://boards.ancestry.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=3280&p=surnames.harrington "Robert Harrington (c1616-1707) of Watertown MA."] Ancestry Boards, 21 Dec 2011.
  14. See Diana Gale Matthiesen’s page http://dgmweb.net/FGS/H/Harrington_immigrants_to_New_England.html; Check out E.W. Harrington’s The Harrington Family in America, 1907; Check out Early Generations of the Family of Robert Harrington of Watertown MA 1634 and Some of his Descendants, by F. L. Weis, Worcester, Mass., 1958. Comments of D. Pane-Joyce at http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/gen/report/rr02/rr02_275.html#P17432 Accessed August 22, 2015
  15. Source:#ADB 1 SAR #42918
  16. Authorities: "Nugae Antiquae," "Harrington Family in America" by Eugene W. Harrington, F.M. Steele, Los Angeles, Calif., and published vital records for Charleston, Cambridge, and Watertown, Mass., also vital records of Providence, R.I.; cited in Appendix, Manuscript: Harrington Family Genealogical Gazetteer and cited by Chris Hoyt, Wikitree G2G, Sept 10, 2013
  17. Bate, Kerry William, "The English Origins of the Cambridge, Massachusetts Errington Family", The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol.132 (January, 1978), p.44
  18. Frederick Adam Virkus, "The Compendium of American Genealogy" 1942, v. VII, p. 856.
  19. Diana Gale Matthiesen, "Astonishing error re: Robert Harrington of Watertown, *1642*" December 07, 2002. Harrington Family Genforum #3118.
  20. 1987, Gen. Publ. Co., Balto., v. I, p. 31
  21. Diana Gale Matthiesen, [ http://boards.ancestry.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=3280&p=surnames.harrington "Robert Harrington (c1616-1707) of Watertown MA."] Ancestry Boards, 21 Dec 2011.




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