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About Samuel Small
died about 1729 in lost at sea. A whale fisherman, then a most daring and lucrative occupation in that section.
After his death an assessment of property took place consisting of 25 items which included: House and Barn 15:0:0 pounds
House Land 30:0:0 pounds
Land purchased of 20:0:0 pounds
Share of the Sixth Great
Woodlot of Eastern Harbor 14:0:0 pounds
Share of Eastern Harbor
Meadows 6:0:0 pounds
1/6th of whaleboat and oars 2:11:9 pounds
probabley lost at sea
WILLIAM2 DYER, JR. (WILLIAM1)20,21 was born 30 Oct 1690 in Barnstable, Barnstable, Ma22,23,24,25, and died Aft. 1764 in Falmouth (Portland), Me. He married (1) HANNAH STROUT26 15 Apr 1709 in Eastham, Barnstable, Ma27, daughter of CHRISTOPHER STROUT and SARAH PIKE. She was born Abt. 1690 in Barnstable, Barnstable, Ma, and died Bef. 26 Jun 1749 in Truro, Barnstable, Ma. He married (2) HANNAH COLE28 26 Jul 1749 in Truro, Barnstable, Ma29, daughter of ISAAC COLE and ELIZABETH COLE. She was born 14 May 1715, and died Unknown.
Notes for WILLIAM DYER, JR.:
William Dyer was here before 1700, and married Hannah Strout, and settled in the north part of the town.
[A Comprehensive History of Eastham, Massachusetts, Author: Enoch Pratt, Call Number: F74.E2P7]
William & brother Henry along with their nephew Micah (son of Jonathan) settled in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. REF: Higgins Genealogy p.115,171; Strout Family by Robert Taylor; Descendants of Edward Small by Lora Underhill.
He lived in Falmouth Me, 1764. [awm]
Was 11 or 12 when his father moved to Truro. Married by Mr. Samuel Trear.
Resided at Truro and perhaps at Marshfield. Children, all but last two baptized
Mar 11, 1728.
Dyer search Vol 6, No 1 p27 shows he married Hannah Strout and gives a line of
descendants incl;
Christopher and Mercy Smalley
Christopher and Hanna Randall Dyer
Jesse and Sally Pool Dyer
Newell and Mary Ann Whitmarsh
Charles Newell and. M. Antionette Ford
Charles Frederick and Mary A. Sampson
Priscilla Constance Dyer
William Dyer, Jr., a cordwainer (leather worker) by vocation, was the oldest
son of Dr. William Dyer and Mary (Taylor) Dyer... having been born in Barn-
stable (MA) 30 October 1690.
!MARRIAGE: On 15 April 1709 in Eastham (MA) at age 18 1/2, he was married to
Hannah Strout, daughter of Christopher Strout of Truro(MA) by the Reverend
Samuel Treat. Hannah was the mother of all 13 of William Jr.'s children... 3
daughters and 10 sons. He and Hannah were admitted and baptized as "adults" to the church in Truro the same day, 18 February 1727/8. ("Mayflower Descendants", Volume 9.)
!RESIDENCES: William Dyer, Jr. was of Truro as of 12 March 1736 for on that
date and in that place he addressed a letter to James Otis (of Revolutionary
War fame) in regard to a lawsuit. Evidently Otis was William's lawyer.
!LAND: On 18 May 1737, William Dyer of Falmouth on Casco Bay, cordwainer,
bought of John White of Falmouth, tanner, for 45 pounds, a certain tract or
parcel of land lying in the Second Parish in Falmouth and adjoining to the
lands of William Elwell ..... "twenty and seven acres of the same ..... it
being a part of a thirty acre lot granted to me (White) by the Town of Falmouth
and laid out by the town committee. Three acres of which I have [already] sold
to John Dyer in said Falmouth."
!LAND: On 5 December 1743, William Dyer, yeoman, of Falmouth, for fifty pounds, bought of William Elwell ten acres of land in Falmouth, "it being part of
William Elwell's homestead which lieth below the highway ..... bounded ..... by
ed Dyer's land on the easterly side and then bounded by the highway that now
is."
!LAND: In April 1743, William Dyer of Falmouth, cordwainer, bought for 26
pounds, of Thomas Millett, twenty acres of the grant made to him (Millett) by
the Falmouth Proprietors.
!LAND: William Dyer, cordwainer, of Falmouth sold property on 6 July 1749 to
his son, Samuel Dyer of Falmouth, fisherman, for 200 pounds, including a house and 25 acres of land on "Barren Hill ..... joining to the land of Christopher Dyer's Farm he now live on" near the road which leads to Black Point.
!MARRIAGE-SPOUSE: The marriage intention of William Dyer of Falmouth to Hannah Hagans (Higgins) of Truro was recorded in Falmouth 26 June 1749. On 26 July 1749, William Dyer of Falmouth in Casco Bay was married to Hannah Higgins of Truro by the Reverend John Avery of Truro. Two days later they were "Dismist" to the First Church in Falmouth.(NEHGR 14:225) She was Mrs. Hannah (Cole) Higgins, widow of Reuben Higgins.
On 16 January 1764, William Dyer of Falmouth conveyed land to his "loving
daughter, Isabel Ficket, wife of John Ficket of Cape Elizabeth, yeoman."
In November 1760, William Dyer was one of the petitioners to the Governor of
Massachusetts Bay for a grant of a township on the northern and western side of the Island of Mount Desert and on the mainland next adjoining the same.
Info sources: Linwood Dyer, Scarborough, Maine.
Aurie W. Morrison, 1545 56th Square W, Vero Beach, FL 32966-2397.
Charles S. Rogers, 108 Snowgoose Ct., Daytona Beach, FL 32119.
!DEATH: From David Sylvester P.O. Box 135, Searsport, ME 04974 - Sep 5, 1996: d. Aft 16 Jan 1764
!RESIDENCES: Berry, Marcelia Dyer Rennard "The Dyers from England to Cape Elizabeth 1557-1987 - Descendants of Henry, 3rd son of Dr. William Dyer", Manuscript,p15; NOTE: 1725 William moved from Truro to what is now So. Portland, Maine.
- Note:
Everything in this file has not been verified, so be sure you verify it and not take it for the gospel, but rather as a starting point.
Seven children. (Sinnett)
Sources:
1. Title: Dee Reynolds.ged
Repository:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 20, 2000
2. Title: Gdr.ged
Repository:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 20, 2000
3. Title: deereynolds11st.FTW
Repository:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 30, 2000
4. Title: FIRSTA
Repository:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: May 24, 2000
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The Proprietors of Truro recorded 26 Apr 1715 that land was sold to Samuel Smalley, Francis Smalley, William Dryer and Jonathan Dyer, and a further division of land to these proprietors was ordered. In a list of proprietors living in Truro 16 Feb 1730 appears the name Francis Smalley and Isabel Smally, then widow of Samuel Smalley. It is probable that Samuel Smalley was a "Whale-fisherman", then the most daring and lucrative occupation of that area, and that he was lost at sea. The inventory of Samuel Smalley, late of Truro, deceased, was taken 20 Aug 1729. On 10 Jul 1730, Isabel Smalley petitioned the court for assistance due to her low circumstances and having 7 small children to care for. On 27 Jan 1730/31 she became the third wife of Joseph Hatch, then of Provincetown.
"Samuel (Smaley) owned the covenant in the church at Truro, February 19, 1726-7" 18
Хронология Samuel Small
1690 |
1690
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Truro, Barnstable County, Massachusetts
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1714 |
15 сентября 1714
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Barnstable Village, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
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1716 |
15 сентября 1716
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Truro, Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States (США)
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1719 |
2 августа 1719
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Truro, Barnstable, MA, USA
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1721 |
1 октября 1721
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Truro, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts, British Colonial America
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1724 |
апрель 1724
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Truro, Barnstable, MA, USA
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1727 |
март 1727
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Truro, Barnstable, MA, USA
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1729 |
11 апреля 1729
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Truro, Barnstable, Massachusetts, Colonial America
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июль 1729
Возраст 39
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