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Allen Flegg (Flagg)

Also Known As: "Flagg"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Shipdham, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
Death: April 21, 1632 (56-57)
Hardingham, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
Place of Burial: Shipdam, Norfolk, England
Immediate Family:

Son of John Flegg
Husband of Nazareth Flegg
Father of Henry Flegg; Michael Flegg; Bartholomew Flegg and Thomas Flagg
Brother of Michael Flagg / Flegg
Half brother of Rebecca Fleg and Bartholomew Flegg

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Allen Flegg

Allan's first wife was Nazareth (Deveroys) Flegg. His second wife was her sister, Elizabeth (Deveroys) Flegg. http://records.ancestry.com/allen_flegg_records.ashx?pid=1154496.

His four sons were all by Nazareth:

• Allen, born after 1570; he married Nazareth Devoroys on July 3, 1612 at age 42. The genealogist who researched the Flegg ancestry finds proof that a Thomas Flegg was baptized in Hardingham, Norfolk, England on May 6, 1621, and proceeded to prove that this was the Thomas that came to New England and establishes his lineage for several generations. Thomas was the youngest of the four sons of Allen and Nazareth (Devoroys) Flegg. He was seven years old at his father’s death and came under the control of his oldest brother Henry, which whom he probably lived with during the next few years. Nazareth was born April 3, 1583 in Hardingham, Norfolk and died in 1621. Allen died April 21, 1632 in Hardingham. Allen and Nazareth (Devoroys) had four children: 1. Henry Flagg, born 1612 2. Michael Flagg, born 1615 3. Bartholomew Flagg, born 1619 4. Thomas Flagg, born in 1621

    In 1633 William Laud became archbishop of Canterbury and started to enforce conformity upon the Puritans.  Matthew Wren became bishop of Norfolk in 1635, and his active persecutions of the Puritans caused a large migration of them to New England during the next two years.  At the same time there was great economic and industrial depression in England and young men joined this migration, not on account of religious motives, but with the object of bettering their material condition.  Thomas Flegg fit this category, however he did join the Puritan church in 1690.  Among the emigrants to New England in 1637 were twenty-five families whose records have been preserved, because the law required that lists be made of all persons leaving England.  Though many of the lists have been lost, the Public Records Office in London has a list of 115 Norfolk residents licensed to pass to New England in April 1637 on either the ship John and Dorothy or the Rose.  The family of Richard Carver of Scratby is named, and included three servants, one being Thomas Flege, age twenty-one years.

Source: Bigelow society

http://bigelowsociety.com/rod2005/flagg05.htm

Sources: Genealogical Notes on the Founding of New England: My Ancestors part in It by Ernest Flagg http://books.google.com/books?id=zPnD0kvrLf8C&printsec=frontcover#v...


GEDCOM Note

Biography

Allen Flegg was born abt 1575 in Shipdham, Norfolk, England <ref> Yates Publishing, U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900, The Generations Network, Inc., 2004. He died abt 1632 in Hardingham, Norfolk, England <ref> Ancestry Family Trees,

Allen Flegg was the father of Thomas Flegg (WikiTree Flagg-28).Thomas emigrated to Massachusetts Colony in 1637, settled in Watertown; and is the progenitor of all the Flaggs in the United States until at least 1907.See pages 428 and 432 in the most complete and reliable Flagg family history by Ernest Flagg in 1926: "Genealogical Notes On The Founding Of New England, My Ancestors Part in that Undertaking".

There are many changes in this book from the earlier "Family Records Of The Descendants Of Gershom Flagg of Lancaster, Massachusetts, With Other Genealogical Records Of The Flagg Family Descended From Thomas Flegg Of Watertown, Mass. And Including The Flegg Lineage In England. Norman Gershom and Lucius C. S. Flagg." aka "Flagg Family Records" (1907). Reference [4].

By 1926 various Flagg family members had visited Norfolk and London and researched the original records. Many early American letters had also been discovered.Wherever there is a discrepancy or even conflict between "GenealogicalNotes..." and "Flagg Family Records", the later Genealogical Notes should be used. Regarding the orthography of the family name, "Flegg" was clearly the name used in England (occasionally "Flegge") as it referred to the "Flegg" farmlands of Norfolk from whence Thomas Flegg had emigrated. Thisdistinct region of lowlands and canals lies between Norwich and Yarmouth. Lucius C. S. and Norman Gershom Flagg use the Flagg spelling onlyafter 1700. See reference 4 page 134.

In the past 50 years or so there have been significant discoveries ofancient buildings, dikes and villages buried under many feet of marshand peat in the fleggs. These have largely been the result of ground penetrating radar studies.

Sources

  • 1- Ancestry Family Trees
  • 2- Ancestry Family Trees
  • 3- Genealogical Notes On The Founding Of New England, My Ancestors Part in that Undertaking.
  • 4- Family Records Of The Descendants Of Gershom Flagg of Lancaster, Massachusetts, With Other Genealogical Records Of The Flagg Family Descended From Thomas Flegg Of Watertown, Mass. And Including The Flegg Lineage In England. Norman Gershom and Lucius C. S. Flagg.
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Allen Flegg's Timeline

1575
1575
Shipdham, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
1585
1585
Age 10
Norfolkshire, England, United Kingdom
1612
June 21, 1612
Hardingham, Norfolkshire, England, United Kingdom
1615
1615
Hardingham, Norfolk, England
1619
May 30, 1619
Hardingham, Norfolk, England
1621
May 6, 1621
Hardingham, Norfolk, England
1625
March 7, 1625
Age 50
Shipdam, Norfolk, England
1632
April 21, 1632
Age 57
Hardingham, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
1930
November 18, 1930
Age 57