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Katherine (Unknown) Walker (abt. 1607 - abt. 1643)

Katherine Walker formerly [surname unknown]
Born about in Englandmap [uncertain]
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of — married 1628 [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 36 in Portsmouth, Newport, Rhode Islandmap
Profile last modified | Created 23 Oct 2014
This page has been accessed 2,225 times.
The Puritan Great Migration.
Katherine (Unknown) Walker migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1621-1640).
Join: Puritan Great Migration Project
Discuss: pgm


Contents

Biography

Conflation

The Katherine of this profile should not be confused with any of the following Katherines.

The Katherine of this profile, who married John Walker in about 1628, has been erroneously identified as Katherina (Hutchinson), daughter of Sarah (Cooke) Hutchinson and Edward Hutchinson, brother of William Hutchinson, husband of Ann (Marbury) Hutchinson (see other conflated Katherine below). She would have been too young (13 yrs) when she married John if she were this Katherine who was born ~1615.

The Katherine of this profile has also been conflated with Katherine Hutchinson, daughter of Ann (Marbury) Hutchinson (of Rhode Island fame) and William Hutchinson, born in 1629. She would not even have been born when John Walker married. Additionally, Ann Hutchinson's daughter Katherine most likely died with most of her family in a raid by Native Americans in 1643.

See additional information in the Research Notes.


Based on the approximate birth year of her supposed oldest child, and therefore her estimated marriage year of about 1628, Katharine was probably born by 1607.

Marriage and Children

Katherine married John Walker by about 1628,[1] and together they had two daughters:[1]

  1. Sarah (Walker) Sands
  2. Mary (Walker) Earle (abt.1634-bef.1677)

Death

Katherine "died after 18 March 1647[/8] and before 2 April 1654.[1]

Research Notes

Concerning the erroneous assumptions concerning Katherine being a Hutchinson, it was noted by Cindi (Hutchinson) Laurent in the comments section:

"Further things to consider: 1) Only Sands articles/books purport the Katherine, wife of John Walker as being a Hutchinson. 2) No Hutchinson articles/books give a link to the Sands family other than the fact that James Sands did build the home on Long Island in which Anne Hutchinson died. This doesn’t prove they were related though. 3) John Osborne Austin, in his The Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island [entry for Sarah Walker Sands],[2] nowhere gives a surname for Katherine. If he had thought she was a Hutchinson he would have brought it up. 4) Katherine Hutchinson – daughter of Anne Hutchinson died at the age of 14 in the massacre of Anne’s family. 5) Katherine Hutchinson – daughter of Edward Hutchinson married Peter Walker not John Walker."

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Robert Charles Anderson, George F. Sanborn, Jr., and Melinde Lutz Sanborn, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, Volumes I-III 3:1907 (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995), image of pp. 1907, entry for "John Walker" by subscription AmericanAncestors.org.
  2. John Osborne Austin, The Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island : Comprising Three Generations of Settlers Who Came before 1690 : With Many Families Carried to the Fourth Generation (Albany: J. Munsell’s sons, 1887), image of p. 170 at InternetArchive.org.




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Comments: 25

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Is there a source for this statement in the profile: "Also According to Benjamin Sands who was son in law to Catherine via marriage to Catherine's daughter Sarah, " Catherine was the daughter of Captain Edward and Sarah Hutchinson, the elder."

Also, who is Benjamiin Sands? Her daughter's spouse was James Sands per the profile.

posted by S (Hill) Willson
Sorry but I dont have Benjamin Sands in my records. That doesn't mean he doesn't exist, I just don't have him.
posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
Hutchinson-9807 and Unknown-255526 do not represent the same person because: I do not believe it is correct to merge this into the UNKNOWN person so I willnot accept the merge as it sits.
posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
It would help greatly if you would please provide a source for her marriage to John Walker showing her last name at birth.
posted by S (Hill) Willson
Hutchinson-9807 and Unknown-255526 appear to represent the same person because: Hutchinsn was not her last name. See disputed info on Unknown-255526.

Same spouse, same child. Please merge to Unknown-255526

posted by S (Hill) Willson
PGM added as co-manager based on arrival by 1640 in New England. Please continue to manage profile as usual
posted by S (Hill) Willson
Citation

"John Walker" By Marjorie W. Schunke Rhode Island Roots, June 1985, pp. 21-22 Notes Notes supporting the fact that John Walker did not marry Katharine Hutchinson:

John Walker By Marjorie W. Schunke Rhode Island Roots, June 1985, pp. 21-22

John Walker was a freeman of Boston 14 May 1634. It has been widely claimed that he married Katherine Hutchinson, daughter of Edward Hutchinson, who was a brother of William Hutchinson who married Ann Marbury. Primary evidence supporting this claim has not been found, however, and the late Clarence Almon Torrey in his “Marriages before 1700” first entered the marriage and then crossed it out with “No.” Unfortunately his sources of information, though several are listed beside the entry in the manuscript at NEHGS, failed to definite evidence one way or the other.

The fact that this Edward Hutchinson was 20 years younger than his brother William, having been baptized at Alford, Lincolnshire, England, 20 December 1607, makes it unlikely that he would have been the father of a daughter old enough to be Katherine Walker (New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 45:[1914]: 166.) The idea of this Hutchinson – Walker marriage very probably arose in a misinterpretation of another marriage: Hannah Hutchinson, daughter of Edward Hutchinson and granddaughter of William and Anne, born 16 May 1658, married Peter Walker of Taunton. Hannah is named as sister in the will of Edward Hutchinson, dated 21 May 1692, as “my beloved sister Hannah Walker wife of my Brother-in-law Mr. Peter Walker of Taunton in New England,” and he named Peter Walker as one of the executors of the will (Suffolk Co. Probate File 1951).

Difficult though it may be for descendants to give up the idea of a relationship with the Hutchinson family, it remains true that John and Katharine Walker were associated with the Hutchinsons…

Further things to consider: 1) Only Sands articles/books purport the Katherine, wife of John Walker as being a Hutchinson. 2) No Hutchinson articles/books give a link to the Sands family other than the fact that James Sands did build the home on Long Island in which Anne Hutchinson died. This doesn’t prove they were related though. 3) Finally John Osborne Austin – in his “The Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island” nowhere gives a surname for Katherine. If he had thought she was a Hutchinson he would have brought it up. 4) Katherine Hutchinson – daughter of Anne Hutchinson died at the age of 14 in the massacre of Anne’s family. 5) Katherine Hutchinson – daughter of Edward Hutchinson married Peter Walker not John Walker.

Citation Source Information Ancestry.com. New England, The Great Migration and The Great Migration Begins, 1620-1635 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013.

Original data: Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633, Volumes 1-3; The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volumes 1-6. Boston: New England Historical and Genealogical Society, 1996-2011.

Charles Anderson in his fully documented article of John Walker does not assign a surname to Katherine, the wife of John Walker. Though he doesn't address the issue of her last name, he doesn't try to assign her to the Hutchinson clan.

I am a Hutchinson by birth, thus this profile greatly concerns me. A lot of people have used the family tree info on Ancestry.com, and unfortunately many, many of those trees are "infected." Therefore, I believe that this Katherine Walker should be detached from Edward Hutchinson. Thank you, Cindi Hutchinson Laurent

posted by Cindi Hutchinson
Cindy, John Walker and Katherine Hutchinson Walker were indeed connected thru descent. Katherine's father was Captain Edward Hutchinson and she was the Sister of Gov William Hutchinson married to Ann Marbury Hutchinson. I spent a long time figuring this out but its down on paper and I have records to back it up. Here is Katherine's birth christening record. She is indeed his child.

Name: Katherine Hutchinson Gender: Female Christening Date: 18 Nov 1615 Christening Place: Long Bennington, Lincoln, England Birth Date: Birthplace: Death Date: Name Note: Race: Father's Name: Edward Hutchinson Father's Birthplace: Father's Age: Mother's Name: Mother's Birthplace: Mother's Age: Indexing Project (Batch) Number: C01944-5 System Origin: England-ODM GS Film number: 1542183 Reference ID:

Citing this Record: "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/JMS3-4XM : accessed 13 February 2015), Edward Hutchinson in entry for Katherine Hutchinson, 18 Nov 1615; citing Long Bennington, Lincoln, England, reference ; FHL microfilm 1,542,183.

Captain Edward Hutchinson shows having been married to 3 women , Susan K Turtle Hutchinson Wheelright, Katherine Hanby, and Sarah Cooke and had 16 children with them. ---


I descend from Katherina and you are wrong to detach her from Edward as she is just as connected to him as any of his other children. I request this record be corrected here on Wiki.

posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
edited by Barbara (Klein) Mills
From: http://www.longislandsurnames.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I0835&tree=Dodge Email from D. M. Kenyon Feb 27, 2012 Sarah's father, John Walker, did not marry Catherine Hutchinson as commonly broadcast on Ancestry.com. His will indicates that his wife's name was "Katherine", but no maiden name is given. The Catherine Hutchinson that died in 1643 was the young, unmarried, childless teenage daughter of Anne Hutchinson of Puritan fame. Catherine was killed with her mother in an Indian attack in 1643. John Walker's wife is currently a historical mystery. He registers at the church in Roxbury in 1633 or 1634 as being married to a Katherine. Catherine Hutchinson would have been five years old at that time

Sarah Walker Sands, daughter of John and Katherine Hutchinson Walker [Katherine’s last name is unknown!/ps] married "Captain" James Sands in 1651 [?? date as Sarah Mary was born in 1645/ps] in Portsmouth, Mass. James was born in Reading, Berkshire, England and was listed as being in Boston in1633. o He was listed as a Freeman in 1655 and was o Named Representative to the General Court of Commissioners at Newport, May 19, 1657. o About 1660, he and Sarah left Taunton, Mass and bought 1/16 of Block Island, RI. They owned lots #12,14, and 15. o James held leadership roles in getting the island incorporated and gave it the name "New Shoreham," which apparently didn't catch on. James and Sarah built a large stone house with a mill on a mill pond. I believe this was a woolen mill as several ancestors owned woolen mills. o They were attacked in "Philip's War," by French Privateers coming into the bay. Rev. Samuel Niles, their grandson, tells how they all ran to the woods until the English came and subdued the French. o They were also attacked by Indians, and the house was heavily garrisoned. Sarah had 6 children between about 1658 and 1672: John, Samuel, Sarah, Mercy, Edward, and James. * She served as the island's "surgeon," although she apparently did not have training. She ministered to the needs of all on the island and her home served as a church, hospital, and was a haven for any stranger. Although she had at least 4 black indentured servants, they apparently were happy and named their children with some of the same names as her children. She specified that they were to be freed, at specific times, in her will. Sarah's children were prosperous and involved in the resistance during the Revolution. James and Sarah both died and are buried on Block Island. Sarah Walker was born about 1626 (based on her marriage) in England. She was the eldest of 3 known children. She had a younger sister, Mary, who married William Earle, and another sister, Dorcus, who was buried 12 Apr 1640 in Portsmouth, RI (I presume as a baby.) Sarah married in 1645 to Capt. James Sands (Sandys) and settled on Block Island as original white settlers. Sarah was the island's midwife and thus was an important lady in the island's development. As to her ancestry, Austin in his Rhode Island Genealogical Dictionary, under Walker gives a good report on this family. I also found an excellent study of this family in the June 1985 issue of Rhode Island Roots magazine by a Marjorie W. Schunke. Let me quote from her first couple of paragraphs: "John Walker was a freeman of Boston 14 May 1634. It has been widely claimed that he married Katherine Hutchinson, dua. of Edward Hutchinson, who was brother of William Hutchinson who married Anne Marbury. Primary evidence supporting this claim has not been found, however, and the late Clarence Almon Torrey in his "Marriages before 1700" first entered the marriage and then crossed it out with a "No". Unfortunately his sources of information, though several are listed beside the entry in the manuscript at NEHGS, failed to disclose definite evidence one way or the other. The fact that this Edward Hutchinson was 20 years younger than his brother, William, having been baptized at Alford, Lincolnshire, 20 Dec 1607, makes it unlikely that he would have been father of a daughter old enough to be Katherine Walker (New York Genealogical and Biographical Record 45:[1914]: 166). The idea of this Hutchinson - Walker marriage very probably arose in a misinterpretation of another marriage: Hannah Hutchinson, dau of Edward Hutchinson and grandau of William and Anne, born 16 May 1658, maried Peter Walker of Taunton. Hannah is named as sister in the will of Edward Hutchinson, dated 21 May 1692, as "my beloved sister Hanah Walker wife of my Brother-in-law Mr. Peter Walker of Taunton in New England," and he named Peter Walker as one of the executors of his will (Suffolk Co. Probate file 1951)." ---

posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
Marriage 1 John WALKER , of Boston & Rhode Is.,

o Immigrant o b: ABT. 1599 in ENG o Married: BEF. 1625 in v Portsmouth, Newport, RIFrom: http://bobrugo.us/GenealogyFiles/MatzPublic/WC02/WC02_322.HTM born: ca 1626, Portsmouth, RI Died: 24 Nov 1700, Plymouth, Mass Children: John Sands (1649 - 5 Mar 1712); Sarah Sands (1651-1726); Mercy Sands (1654 - 1704); Samuel Sands (1656 - 1716); James Sands (1662 - 21 Sep 1732); Edward Sands (1672 - 1715) [Place of birth & date/place of death are incorrect--her parents didn't come to America until 1633. Place of death is also incorrect per memories of grandson who stated that both Sarah & husband, James died on Block Island./pscoggin, 8th great granddaughter) Sources: o 1): http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=heinrichmeyer&id=I39745 o 2): http://files.usgwarchives.net/ri/washingt/history/sands3.txt o 3): http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~rigenweb/blockisl3.html Name: Sarah Sands Sex: F Change Date: 25 OCT 2004 Death: ABT 1709 Note: Livermore's History of Block Island, RI, 1877 Bridgewater, MA Pages 268 to 286 continued MRS. SARAH SANDS This lady had virtues and culture, which entitle her to more than a passing notice. Although at this distant day we can give but a few outlines of her character, yet these may indicate to some the beauty of the portrait had it been properly delineated in due season. There is also incidental, collateral information obtained from the biographical fragments of her no w presented. In speaking of Captain James Sands, one of the first settlers, his grandson, Rev. Samuel Niles, says: "His wife was a gentlewoman of remarkable sobriety and piety, given also to hospitality. She was the only midwife and doctress on the Island, or rather a doctor, all her days, with very little, and with some and mostly, no reward. at all. Her skill in surgery was doubtless very great, from some instances I remember she told me of. One was the cure of an Indian, that under disgust, as was said, he had taken at his wife or squaw, shot himself, putting the muzzle of his gun to the pit of his stomach, and pushing the trigger. The bullet went through him, out and opposite at his back. He instantly fell, and one of the spectators who haphappened to be in the field at the time, and heard the report of the gun, told me, after he was fallen and wallowing in the blood, he saw the blood and froth issue out of his back and breast as often as he drew his breath. He was perfectly healed, and lived a hearty, strong man even to old age; whom I afterward knew, and often saw the scar at the pit of his stomach, as large or larger in circumference than our ordinary dollars passing among us." "Another signal cure she told me God made her an instrument of making, was on a young woman that was struck with lightning through her shoulder, so that when she administered to her by syringing, the liquid matter would fly through from the fore part to the hinder, and from the hinder part to the foremost, having a free and open passage both ways, yet was cured, and had several children, and lived to old age. I also knew her long before her death. She had also skill, and cured the bites and venomous poison of rattlesnakes." Her husband, in his last will, made her the sole executrix of his estate which, after his death, was inventoried as follows: o James Sands' Estate, March 13, 1694: o "About 400 acres of land; o Fifty-six head. of cattle, small and great: o Three horses - mare, colt, one horse: o Thirty swine, old and young: o About 300 sheep: o A negro woman - house and barn, and mill. o Sundry household goods not appraised." Mr. Sands died in March, 1695, and in March, 1699, Mrs. Sarah Sands, his widow, had a lawful record made of the following emancipation of her slaves: o "Know all men by these presents that I, Sarah Sands, of Block Island, alias New Shoreham, in the Colony of Rhode Island, Providence Plantations, in New England, Wife to Mr. James Sands, of Block Island, and made sole executrix by my said husband, James Sands, at his death, and having three Negro children born under my roof and in my custody, being left to my disposing by my above said, husband." o * "Know ye therefore that I, the above Sarah Sands, do hereby and voluntarily give and bestow of them as followeth, that is to say: o * "First: I give to my granddaughter, Sarah Sands, daughter to my son, Edward Sands, one of the Negro girls named Hannah: The other Negro girl I give and bequeath unto my granddaughter, Catharine Niles, daughter to my son-in-law, Nathaniel Niles, of Point Judith in the colony above said - the two Negro girls I freely and voluntarily give to my two grandchildren above named until the said Negroes come to the age of thirty years, and then I do by these presents declare that they shall be free from any service, and be at their own disposal - the Negro girl given to my granddaughter, Catharine Niles, is named Sarah. The other negro above said being a boy named Mingo, I freely give and bequeath to my grandson, Sands Raymond, son to my son-in-law, Joshua Raymond, of Block Island above named, which I give freely until that he the said Negro boy comes to the age of thirty-three years, and then to be free and his own man and at his own disposal forever after that he shall arrive to the age of 33 years; for I Sarah Sands do by these presents freely declare that I have made a promise that no child whatsoever born under my service and care shall be made a slave of any longer than is above specified, and for the confirmation and ratification of this my free and voluntary act, I have under set my hand, and affixed my seal this ninth day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and ninety-nine." Signed in presence of SAMUEL NILES. SARAH SANDS. Two years and a half passed away and Mrs. Sands, conscious of her approaching end, in her last will, left a preamble to it that speaks well for her character, revealing a faith which was her brightest ornament through her long and eventful life mostly spent among her fellow-Islanders, many of whom she had seen in their barbarous state, and all of whom, with her devoted companion, she had labored to improve both socially and religiously.

posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
HER WILL.

"In the name of God, Amen. I Sarah Sands of Block Island, alias New Shoreham, in the colony of Rhode Island, and Providence Plantations, in New England, being aged and weak in body, but of sound and perfect memory - Praise be given to Almighty God for the same - and knowing the uncertainty of this life on earth, and being desirous to see that things in order be done before my death, Do make this my last will and Testament in manner and form following: "I being wife to Mr. James Sands deceased, and. made sole executrix by my said. husband., as by will bearing date June the 18th, 1694, may plainly appear, That is to say, First, and Principally; I commend my soul to Almighty God my Creator, assuredly believing that I shall receive full pardon and free remission of all my sins, and be saved by the precious death and merits of my blessed Saviour and Redeemer Christ Jesus; and my body to the earth from whence it was first taken, to be buried in such decent and Christian manmanner as to my executor hereafter named shall be thought most meet and convenient: And as touching such worldly estate as the Lord in mercy hath lent me, my will and meaning in the same shall be implied.... [Things specified for each.] That they shall be equally divided. amongst my five children, viz.: John Sands, James Sands, Samuel Sands, Sarah Niles, and Mercy Raymond..... Signed in presence of SARAH SANDS. SAMUEL NILES, and HANNA ROSE, Oct. 17th, 1703." In Sept., 1704, she gave her negro woman to her grandson, Rev. Samuel Niles, to be kept by him ten years, at the expiration of which time she was to be free for ever thereafter. --- [The above is from both sources. The following is from the 2nd source listed above./ps] ' MR. SANDS’ STONE HOUSE, AND THE SANDS’ GARRISON. Their location is established, in the writer’s mind beyond a doubt, by the following circumstantial evidence, to have been nearly where Mr. Almanzo Littlefield’s residence is now standing. THE HOUSE. That Captain James Sands had a stone house, used as a garrison and hospital, in times of necessity, is admitted, and shown by Mr. Niles’ History. 1. 1. His sixteenth of the Island - nearly all of it, as seen in the original plat, a copy of which is in the possession of Col. S. Ray Sands, embraces the house lot, and mill-pond now owned by Mr. A. Littlefield. 2. 2. Rev. Mr. Niles, grandson of Capt. J. Sands, lived some years with his grandparents in the stone house, arid he says the mill-pond was "near the house." He speaks of that pond as having a "flume." 3. 3. He says that house was "not far from the Harbor," which then was the "Old Pier." 4. 4. The house was within musket shot of a French privateer lying at the Pier. After the French had plundered it and returned to their vessel they "fired many pens at the house," says Mr. Niles, and adds: "I heard several bullets whistling over my head." 5. 5. When the French took the stone house they "set up their standard on a hill on the back side of it" [the house]. After it had stood there some hours an English vessel hove in sight, which "put the Frenchmen into a great surprise, whereupon: 6. 6. They were seen "running up to their standard on the hill, then down again, and others doing the like." 7. 7. Mr. Niles, when the French landed, was "in fair sight of the house," and at the same time "saw them coming from the water-side," while just behind him was a "large swamp." 8. 8. The outlines of a cellar still visible between the present old water-mill and Mr. Almanzo Littlefield’s house, and he states that part of a cellar-wall is there covered up. 9. 9. No other mill-pond on the Island could have had a "flume," and a flume implies the presence of a mill. 10. 10. The mill-pond now there has been there from the Most ancient traditions. 11. 11. Mrs. Sarah Sands, widow of the above James Sands, in her will transmitted to her son the "mill," and the "mill" was in the inventory of her husband’s estate soon after death. 12. 12. The stone house of Mr. Sands was "garrisoned." This implies the presence of a body of soldiers. 13. 13. That garrison existed when the men of the Island were only "sixteen and e boy." 14. 14. The mill-pond and mill were near the house and garrison when Mrs. Sands had "but one little child, a girl, just able to run about and prattle a little" when she was drowned in said mill-pond. 15. 15. Said garrison was established in the time of "Philip’s War," as a protection against the Block Island Indians. 16. 16. The earth work of an ancient garrison that commanded said stone house on three sides, is now seen, directly east of the spot where said house stood, and within pistol-shot of it, with a sharp hill back of it or east of it, and adjacent from which the whole region around was visible to a sentinel. 17. 17. The "upland in a great swamp" to which Mr. Niles fled the first time the French came to Mr. Sands’ house, was convenient place of concealment, lying a short distance northwest of the location of said house. The upland and swamp remain, and are easily pointed out, lying a little distance west of Erastus Rose’s house

Father: John Walker Mother: Katherine ??? (no maiden name given/ps) Marriage 1 James Sands b: 1622 in Reading, Berkshire, England Children o 1. Sarah Sands b: 15 AUG 1645 in Block Island, RI o 2. Samuel Sands b: ABT 1652 o 3. John Sands b: 1652 o 4. Mercy Sands b: 1665 in Block Island, RI o 5. James Sands b: BEF 1673 in Block Island, RI o 6. Edward Sands b: 14 JUN 1673 in Block Island, RI --- From: http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Walker-5390 Born 1626 in Lincolnshire, England Daughter of John Walker and Katherine Hutchinson [sibling(s) unknown] Wife of James Sands - married 1645 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States Mother of Margaret Sands, Mercy Sands, Sarah Sands, Sarah Sands, John Sands, Mercy Sands, Samuel Sands, James John Sands, Mercy Sands, Job Sands and Edward Sands Died 1709 in Block Island, Newport, Rhode Island, United States ---

posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
Barbara, the question is, why do you think the Katherine Hutchinson daughter of Edward baptized on 18 November 1615 (which you posted) is the same person as Katherine wife of John Walker?

If John and Katherine Walker's daughter Sarah married James Sands by 1648 and so was born say 1625-1629, she could not be the daughter of someone born in 1615.

Also, why do you think the Edward Hutchinson of Long Bennington is the same person as Edward Hutchinson of Alford (father of William Hutchinson etc.)? In fact, I think we can clearly say they are not the same. Edward Hutchinson of Long Bennington married Elizabeth Watson there on 15 June 1611 and had children there including your Katherine in 1615. Therefore, Katherine (b. 1615) cannot be the daughter of Edward Hutchinson of Alford and sister of William Hutchinson as you say.

posted by Joe Cochoit
The first sentence of this comment, while it shows no reliable sources, supports that John Walker's wife's last name at birth was not Hutchinson
posted by S (Hill) Willson
Beth, to answer your question: Each of the two profiles for Katherine has a daughter Sarah Walker, born in 1626, that also need to be merged. That's why WikiTree is alerting you to a possible problem. It just means that these two profiles need to be merged, and then the two profiles for the daughter Sarah also need to be merged.
posted by Kay (Johnson) Wilson
I see no reason not to merge these two (unk 431274 and unk 255526, except that wikitree tells me that that makes her 8 mos different in age from her sibling.... need some advice here, please....
Unknown-431274 and Unknown-255526 appear to represent the same person because: Please agree to merge these duplicate profiles. Thanks!
posted by Kay (Johnson) Wilson
Deborah, I looked up the records on this family as per your question, using New England Historic and Genealogical Society, which include Anderson's Great Migration series.

See Edward Hutchinson, who married Sarah ___, and had two sons,

and Capt Edward Hutchinson who married 2nd, Katherine Hamby, and their daughter named Katherine died young and unmarried.

The source references for these profiles and the rest of the Hutchinson family include Douglas Richardson's Royal Ancestry and the Great Migration by Anderson. Records to refute those would have to be primary records that showed different evidence than what has been gathered by professional genealogists.

Hutchinson family has many 'creative' trees.

In records I see on Ancestry.com, I see a Catherine Hutchinson whose parents are Capt Edward Hutchinson and Sarah, who was born between 1596-1600 and died before 1654. It says she married John Walker. Is this a possibility for this Catherine?
Hutchinson-1987 and Unknown-255526 appear to represent the same person because: same person, spouse, child
posted by [Living McQueen]
Suggest the profile for Katherine Hutchinson-284 be made into Katherine Unknown, as the maiden name for John Walker's wife is unknown. In addition, she could not have been the Katherine Hutchinson who was the daughter of Anne (Marbury) Hutchinson.
posted by Cynthia (Billups) B
The Katherine Hutchinson who is the partner of John Walker is the SISTER of William Hutchinson. I provided a copy of her christening record on this page on another post.
posted by Barbara (Klein) Mills
This profile was a combination of two people: Katherine Hutchinson, who died age 14 in the Indian massacre of her widowed mother and siblings, and Katherine Last Name at Birth Unknown, who married John Walker and is the mother of Sarah Walker Sands.

I have removed the data for Katherine Hutchinson to Katherine Hutchinson, where she is with her parents and siblings.

This profile is of Katherine (Unknown) Walker, wife of John Walker.

If there are questions, please see the sources quoted below and on the Hutchinson-2677, or contact April Dauenhauer.

Managers Frank, Scott, Cliff, Dave:

Please respond to the comments and sources regarding Katherine Hutchinson.

[Great Migration 1634-1635, G-H. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009.) Originally published as: The Great Migration, Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Volume III, G-H, by Robert Charles Anderson. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2003. page 481]

Robert Anderson (see source above) states Katherine apparently killed with her mother in 1643.

Katherine Hutchinson is a sister of Edward Hutchinson, and sister-in-law of Katherine Hamby, his wife. Hamby is on Douglas Richardson's list of Gateway Ancestors (colonial immigrants whose ancestry leads to the surety barons).

The Magna Carta project has an interest in these profiles and would like to see the discrepancies addressed as soon as possible.

thank you,

April D.D.

Katherine and John Walker (my great grandparents x10) were married in England about 1628. They had Sarah Walker (my grandmother x9) about 1630. They emigrated to the Boston area in 1633. It isn't known what Katherine's maiden name was. It is known and proven that Katherine died in Portsmouth, Rhode Island in 1654. It would not be possible for Katherine to be the daughter of Anne Marbury Hutchinson and William Hutchinson, since their daughter Katherine died in the Pelham Bay Massacre in 1643, according to the journal of Governor John Winthrop. And, Katherine and John Walker were not married in Roxbury, MA or Roxbury CT in 1638. It is possible they might have repeated their vows in MA in 1638 but they were married in England prior to their daughter Sarah's birth and prior to their emigration in 1633 on the Griffin to the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
posted by Susan Frost

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Categories: Puritan Great Migration