no image
Privacy Level: Open (White)

Edward Stebbins (bef. 1595 - bef. 1668)

Deacon Edward Stebbins
Born before in Black Notley, Essex, Englandmap [uncertain]
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married about 1629 in Englandmap [uncertain]
Descendants descendants
Died before at about age 73 in Hartford, Hartford, Connecticutmap
Profile last modified | Created 25 Sep 2010
This page has been accessed 6,593 times.
The Puritan Great Migration.
Edward Stebbins migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640). (See Great Migration Begins, by R. C. Anderson, Vol. 3, p. 1750)
Join: Puritan Great Migration Project
Discuss: pgm

Contents

Biography

Deacon Edward Stebbins (Stebbin), Cambridge, 1633; freeman, Massachusetts, May 14, 1634; on Committee to consider Endicott's "defacing the colors," May, 1635; an original proprietor of Hartford; his home-lot in 1639 extended from the Meeting-House Square to the street now Front St.[1]

Probably the Edward Stebbing baptized at Black Notley, Essex, 24 February 1594/5, son of William Stebbing. Came (probably) from Braintree, Essex to Massachusetts Bay in 1633. First settled in Cambridge (called at the time Newtown).

Deacon Edward Stebbing was a follower of Reverend Thomas Hooker of Braintree, England. Edward, with twenty-four other men, left Cambridge October 15, 1635 to settle Hartford and prepare for the main group of settlers who followed in May of 1636. He is believed to have returned with eleven other men to Cambridge November 26, having completed their mission of helping those who would stay the winter, building the palisade, etc. [2] [3]

Married by about 1629 Frances (Tough) (Chester) Smith, daughter of Ralph Tough of Burrough-on-the-Hill, Leicestershire, and widow of Sampson Chester and Thomas Smith. She died between 12 November 1673 (date of codicil to her will) and 23 December 1673 (date of inventory of her estate).

Edith (Stebbins) (Day) (Maynard) Holyoke, wife successively of Robert Day, John Maynard and Eliazer Holyoke, was a younger sister of Edward Stebbins. In his will, Edward left "forty shillings apiece to the children of my sister Holyoke".[4] Edward and Edith Stebbins may have been related to the brothers Rowland and Martin Stebbins.[5]

He served as constable in 1638; deputy various times from 1639 to 1656; leather sealer, 1659.[6]

Died between 8 October 1663 and 19 August 1668 (date of inventory), and probably closer to the latter date. His will is dated August 24, 1663; inventory August 19, 1668, £669. 2. His widow Mrs. Frances Stebbin's will is dated May 20, 1670, and November 12 1673; inventory December 23, 1673; both wills name "son, Mr. John Chester, now living in or near London."

Birth

Alt birth: 24 FEB 1594/95, Braintree, Essex, England; (note: Black Notley is a village 2.3 miles south of Braintree)

Christening

24 FEB 1594/5, Black Knotley, Essex, England

Marriage

ABT 1629, England
Alt marriage 1622/3, London, England

Children

Edward Stebbins and Frances (Tough) (Chester) (Smith) Stebbins his wife, had two daughters, Mary (Stebbins) Gaylord, and Elizabeth (Stebbins) (Wilson) Cadwell.
A daughter, Lydia Stebbins, is falsely attributed to Edward and or Frances Stebbins in various trees. See her profile for details of how this confusion came to exist, and documentation of why Lydia Stebbins is a "Legend"
In addition, Frances had a surviving son John Chester from her first marriage, to Sampson Chester. Edward, in his will in 1663, referred to John Chester as "our beloved son John Chester", and Frances in her will in 1670 referred to "her dear and beloved son Mr. John Chester now living in or near London".

Research Notes

Erroneous Interpretation of Codicil to Will

These notes may be edited and/or deleted as per the preference of the profile managers once they have had opportunity to read and collaborate on them. Dellinger-332 15:52, 12 June 2016 (EDT)
Why do we often see trees with "Lydia Stebbins" married to John Chester, or John Wilson, Jr.? Did either of them marry a daughter of Edward Stebbins? The short answer is: no they did not. Did Edward Stebbins OR his wife Frances have a daughter named Lydia? Again - no, definitely not.
The longer answer is in a misinterpreted codicil to the will of Frances Tough who married Sampson Chester, Thomas Smith and Edward Stebbins aka Stebbing. She left some clothing to her grandson's wife but, in combination with other wills, this was misunderstood until Coddington brought together enough evidence to sort it out.
Deacon John Wilson of Hartford, 1650-1698, eldest son of Robert Wilson and Elizabeth Stebbing, married Lydia Cole, who received a bequest of clothing in the 1673 codicil to the will of Mrs Frances Stebbing. page 204, in TAG Vol 30 (1954) by Coddington
QUOTE: By some curious error, James Savage in Geneal. Dict. Of New England, under “Stebbins,” says that Lydia was a dau. of Edward and Frances Stebbing, whereas of course she was in fact their granddaughter-in-law. [Quoted from page 204, in TAG Vol 30 (1954) by Coddington]
In Wilson’s will, he called Edward and Thomas Cadwell (his half-brothers) “my Cousins.” [Clearly this innocent mistake on Wilson's will compounded the confusion over the identity of Lydia Cole.]
To further confuse the issue, the identity of John the son of John Wilson and Elizabeth Stebbins, has been conflated and mixed with the identity of John Chester the son of Sampson Chester and Frances (Tough) (Smith) Stebbins. John Wilson is a nephew of John Chester, who is a half-brother to Elizabeth Stebbins.


Sources

  1. James Hammond Trumbull, editor, The memorial history of Hartford County, Connecticut, 1633-1884, Volume 1 (Boston, Massachusetts: Edward L. Osgood, 1886), page 261. Retrieved: 3 May 2011 from Google Books
  2. "The Colonial History of Hartford: Gathered from the Original Records", Google Books: 2008. by William DeLoss Love, Ph.D. (Hartford, Connecticut, William DeLoss Love, 1914). page 7-16.
  3. History of Early Hartford, database, Society of the Descendants of the Founders of Hartford, entry for History of Early Hartford, entry for Edward Stebbins, image of 'Courageous Adventurers' plaque.
  4. Hale, House and Related Families: Mainly of the Connecticut River Valley,, database, FamilySearch.org: (accessed 13 Nov 2013), entry for Edward Stebbins, extracted from Donald Lines Jacobus and Edgar Francis Waterman, book of the same name (Baltimore, Massachusetts: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1978), page 510
  5. Find A Grave Memorial #34128306, Created by: Linda Mac, Record added: Feb 23, 2009.
  6. The Memorial History of Hartford County, Connecticut, 1633-1884, Internet Archive, Hammond Trumbull Editor, (Boston, Massachusetts: E. L. Osgood 1886), page 261.
See also:
  • Edward Stebbins at FAG, Find A Grave, database and images, (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 29 April 2018), memorial page for Edward Stebbins (24 Feb 1594–1663), Find A Grave Memorial no. 34128306, citing Ancient Burying Ground, Hartford, Hartford County, Connecticut, USA ; Maintained by Linda Mac (contributor 47062703) .
  • The Memorial History of Hartford County, Connectiut, 1633-1884, database, Internet Archive, extracted from J. Hammond Trumbull Editor, The Memorial History of Hartford County, Connecticut, 1633-1884 (Boston, Massachusetts: E. L. Osgood 1886), page 261. (NOTE: some of the facts in this source are proven erroneous in TAG Vol 30, pages 193 - 212)
  • "The Colonial History of Hartford: Gathered from the Original Records", database, Google Books: 2008. Extracted from William DeLoss Love, Ph.D. The Colonial History of Hartford: Gathered from the Original Records. Hartford, Connecticut, Publisher: William DeLoss Love, 1914. page 7-16.
  • Barbour, Lucius Barnes, 1982, Families of Early Hartford, Connecticut, Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc., Baltimore, Maryland and Connecticut Society of Genealogists, Inc., Glastonbury, Connecticut pp.575
  • History of Early Hartford, database, Society of the Descendants of the Founders of Hartford, entry for History of Early Hartford, entry for Edward Stebbins, image of 'Courageous Adventurers' plaque.
  • Ancestral File Number: 2P9Q-0G




Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com

DNA
No known carriers of Edward's DNA have taken a DNA test. Have you taken a test? If so, login to add it. If not, see our friends at Ancestry DNA.


Comments: 2

Leave a message for others who see this profile.
There are no comments yet.
Login to post a comment.
Stebbins-484 and Stebbins-42 appear to represent the same person because: I adopted Stebbins-484 only to help initiate the merge. It's a clear duplicate (no info) with duplicate spouse as well (already proposed her merge).
When I worked on the biography for Editha Stebbins sister of Edward Stebbins, in 2013 I adopted some orphan biographies hoping to use the same sources to document the family.

Two of those profiles, UNKNOWN-33609, and Stebbins-80 were linked to Edward Stebbins as his 1st wife Mary, and their daughter Lydia.

A TAG Vol 30 article by John Coddington, F.A.S.G., which Jillaine Smith brought to my attention this week, shows that Edward did not have a wife named Mary or a daughter Lydia.

Please read the NOTES I have appended to Edward's profile, and then collaborate and edit and/or delete them.

I am working to document all the profiles involved in this tangle, and hope PMs will access the article in TAG through whatever means possible, to achieve agreement on the outcomes.

Featured Eurovision connections: Edward is 28 degrees from Agnetha Fältskog, 18 degrees from Anni-Frid Synni Reuß, 23 degrees from Corry Brokken, 17 degrees from Céline Dion, 24 degrees from Françoise Dorin, 23 degrees from France Gall, 25 degrees from Lulu Kennedy-Cairns, 24 degrees from Lill-Babs Svensson, 18 degrees from Olivia Newton-John, 31 degrees from Henriette Nanette Paërl, 30 degrees from Annie Schmidt and 14 degrees from Moira Kennedy on our single family tree. Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.

S  >  Stebbins  >  Edward Stebbins

Categories: Founders of Hartford | Puritan Great Migration