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Ananias Wing

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Yarmouth, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony
Death: August 30, 1718 (66)
Harwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
Immediate Family:

Son of John Wing and Elizabeth Wing
Husband of Hannah Wing
Father of Deborah Weeks; Hannah Austin; Elnathan Wing; Samuel Wing; Rachel Fletcher and 4 others
Brother of Susannah Parslow; Ephraim Wing; Oseah White; John Wing, III and Joseph Wing

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Ananias Wing

  • The "Old Northwest" genealogical quarterly (1898)
  • https://archive.org/details/oldnorthwestgen00socigoog
  • https://archive.org/stream/oldnorthwestgen00socigoog#page/n101/mode...
  • Pg.73
  • LUCIUS BLISS WING.
  • By Samuel Carroll Derby, A. M.
  • Professor of Latin, Ohio State University ; Historian of The " Old Northwest " Genealogical Society.
  • Lucius Bliss Wing, a member of the "Old Northwest" Genealogical Society, was born at Wilmington, Vermont, November 15th, 1822, and died at Newark, Ohio, February 1st, 1902. He was a descendant, in the sixth generation, from John1 Wing, whose arrival in America, June 5, 1632, is thus noted by Governor Winthrop in his journal: "Arrived, the William Francis, Mr. Thomas, master ; which left London on the 9th of March, and reached this port [Boston] after a voyage of eighty-eight days, with about sixty passengers, whereof were Mr. Welde and old Mr. Batchelder, being aged 71, with their families, and many other honest men."
  • John1 Wing, with his mother, Deborah Wing, and his three brothers appear to have been considered as a part of the family of "old Mr. Batchelder," his grandfather, and a non-conforming clergyman, whose religious opinions, it was more than intimated not long after his arrival in New England, were " very much tainted with Antinomian and Familistical errors." This accusation came from a theological opponent, but it may be admitted that a disposition to think for themselves in matters of religion is readily discoverable in the descendants of Mr. Batchelder's daughter, Deborah Wing ; several of these soon became Quakers. Recent genealogical researches have made it clear that Deborah (Batchelder) Wing was the widow of the Rev. John Wing, third son of Matthew Wing, and grandson of Godfried Wing (Wynge), a well-kown Protestant refugee from Belgium, who after a life spent at various places in England and on the continent, became, in 1563, minister of the Dutch Church in London, where he died September 30, 1599. His grandson, John Wing, admitted B. A. at Oxford, February 16, 1603, became pastor of the church at Sandwich in England, to which his grandfather, also, had preached. Later, the Rev. John Wing served as pastor of various
  • https://archive.org/stream/oldnorthwestgen00socigoog#page/n102/mode...
  • Pg.74
  • churches in Holland, but died at St. Mary Aldermary, London, about 1630. He was married in 1610 to Deborah Batchelder, born 1592, and had at least five children ; Deborah born 1611, and married previous to her father's death, Daniel, Matthew, Stephen, born 1621, and John1 who was born 1613.
  • June 22, 1624, a license "to pass beyond seas" was granted to "Debora Wynge, 32 years old, wife of Mr. John Wynge preacher resident of Flushing." This town is in the province of Zealand, Holland.
  • Mr. Batchelder, the father of Deborah Wing, became a prominent and sharply criticised personage in the early history of the colony of New Hampshire and, after a troublous life, died in his 100th year. The date of the death of Deborah Wing has not been ascertained. After a short sojourn at Saugus (Lynn, Mass.), she, with her sons, John, Daniel, Matthew and Stephen, removed to Sandwich, Mass. In this town, probably named for the English seaport where the Wings, Godfried and John had been pastors — or in its vicinity — the first three generations of their American descendants lived and died. Their chief occupation was that of tilling the soil, and such, also, was the employment of the grandfather and father of the subject of this sketch, who thus inherited his interest in agriculture from five consecutive generations of New England farmers.
  • John1 Wing, the emigrant ancestor, married about 1646, Elizabeth ___ , and had seven or eight children. His second wife was Miriam Deane. John1 died in Harwich, Mass., in his 84th year.
  • Ananias2 Wing, born 1651, married Hannah Freeman, was a soldier under Capt. John Gorham in the "Narragansett War," and died in 1718, fifteen years before Massachusetts made a tardy grant of lands in its border settlements to the survivors of "King Philip's War," or to their legal representatives.
  • John3 Wing, born in 1702, married, 1728, Mary Knowles ; served against the French, probably in the siege of Louisburg, and died about 1773.
  • John4 Wing, born May 8, 1732 ; removed about 1767 to Conway, Berkshire Co., Mass., where he died, 1822, aged 98 years. He was thrice married and had eighteen children born to him. His unusual physical strength and health continued to the end of his life. _____________________________________
  • The Wing Family by Beatrice Eva Wing Carroll
  • http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Wing_Family.html?id=4-9ungE...
  • John Wing (1584-1630) was a son of Matthew and Mary Wynge, and married Deborah Bachiler (daughter of Rev. Stephen Bachiler). They immigrated to Holland, and returned to England in 1630, intending to immigrated to Massachusetts. John died in England, and Deborah and the family immigrated (with her father) to Saugus, Massachusetts in 1632, moving to Sandwich, Massachusetts in 1637. Descendants and relatives lived in New England, New York, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Kansas and elsewhere.
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  • Wing Genealogy: The Reverend John Wing of Banbury, Oxfordshire, England and His Wife Deborah Bachiler : Their Ancestry and Descendants Through Five Generations
  • http://books.google.com/books/about/Wing_genealogy.html?id=D9UjRAAA...
  • No Preview available __________________

Genealogical outline of the Cram, Walker, and Weekes families [pg. 41]

"Ananias Wing, the son of John and Elizabeth Wing, of Yarmouth, died 30 Aug. 1718. Wife, Hannah. His daughter, Deborah, b. 2 May 1687, married George Weekes, the Preacher. "A short distance beyond the new cemetery in Harwich, in an open field where there are a few ancient graves, is one with this inscription: George Weekes, born in Dorchester, Mass., A.D. 1683, came to Harwich, married Deborah Wing Oct. 15, 1714, preached to the Indians, and perished in a snow storm when an old man in the hollow one hundred rods south of this spot. He was a grandson of George Weekes, a Huguenot, who fled to England, and came to America in 1630." The statements on this stone are not wholly correct. George Weekes, first came to Dorchester in 1636-7. Ananias Wing was "among the inhabitants of Yarmouth who lost horses in the first expedition to Mt. Hope against King Philip in 1675." "He went as a private soldier under Capt. John Gorham in the second expedition against the Narragansett Indians in 1676. In 1733, grants were made of lands to those who had served in the Indian wars and Ananias Wing was one of those mentioned in the Act." At the time of his death, he was possessed of a large landed estate."

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Ananias Wing's Timeline

1651
November 15, 1651
Yarmouth, Cape Cod, Plymouth Colony
1687
May 2, 1687
Harwich, Barnstable County, Dominion of New England
1690
August 2, 1690
Harwich, Barnstable County, New Plymouth Colony
1692
October 20, 1692
Harwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
1694
August 4, 1694
Harwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
1697
December 20, 1697
Harwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts, British Colonial America
1699
February 1699
Harwich, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States
1702
April 3, 1702
Harwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
1704
May 18, 1704
Harwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts