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Ann Lippincott (Barber)

Also Known As: "Ann Barbour", "Ann Lippincott", "Ann Barber"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Probably England
Death: 1707 (60-61)
Shrewsbury, Monmouth County, Province of New Jersey, Colonial America
Place of Burial: Shrewsbury, Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Probably Joseph Barber and Probably Elizabeth
Wife of John Lippincott
Mother of John Lippincott; Preserved Lippincott; Mary Hooten; Ann Colvin; Margaret Tilton and 2 others
Sister of Margaret Lippincott

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Ann Lippincott

The parents of Margaret and Ann Barber are unknown despite what you may see on the web. The question of parentage has been asked for more than 100 years and no primary sources have turned up. Attached to "Documents" is a query in the Genealogical Section of The Boston Transcript. In it the reader posits that the parents must be named Joseph and Elizabeth because Remembrance and Margaret named their two firstborn (twins) by those names. Their next boy and girl are named after their paternal grandparents. Because the first two children die in infancy, the names John and Elizabeth are given again in the family.

The Lippincott/Barber marriages could have taken place in 1665 in Rhode Island where the Lippincotts were living, or later in New Jersey. The families were living in Monmouth, New Jersey in 1666. Quaker meetings were held in the home of Richard and Abigail Lippincott in the early years before a meeting house was built. Quaker and New Jersey records for this period are scanty.

Although there are church records for the Lippincott family in Boston and Dorchester when they were officially Puritans, there are no records for Barbers in these towns during the period in question. George Barbour of Dedham and Elizabeth Clark could not be their father as he was not a Quaker, and the births of his children are all recorded and he did not have children by these names. In the 1660's Quakers were being hung in Boston. Torrey's New England Marriages Prior to 1700 does not list a John and Elizabeth Barber. However, during this time period couples were not required to register their marriages with a government entity and few Quaker records exist for this period. They also could have been married in England. Therefore, where Margaret and Ann Barber were born, and who their parents were and where they were married, may never be learned. -rj

Sources checked:

New Jersey Marriage Records 1665 - 1800 by William Nelson, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1973

Documents Relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey, Volume XXI, Edited by William Nelson, Paterson, N.J.: The Press Printing and Publishing Co., 1899

New England Marriages Prior to 1700, Clarence Almon Torrey, NEHGS, Boston 2011

A Report of the Record Commissioners Containing Boston Births, Baptisms, Marriages, And Deaths, 1630 - 1699, Boston, Rockwell and Churchill, City Printers, 1883

Boston Births, Baptisms, Marriages, Deaths, 1630 - 1699, Edited by William S. Appleton, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1978

A Report of the Record Commissioners Containing Dorchester Births, Marriages, And Deaths To The End Of 1825, Boston, Rockwell and Churchill, City Printers, 1890

Vital Records of Charlestown, Massachusetts To The Year 1850, Volume 1, Compiled and Edited by Roger D. Joslyn, NEHGS, Boston 1984

Vital Records of Dedham, Massachusetts 1635 - 1845, Revised and Expanded Edition, Robert Brand Hanson, Editor, Picton Press, Camden, Maine

Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume II (NJ & PA), William Wade Hinshaw, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.


Ann was probably born in the 1650s in Boston, in the Massachusetts Bay colony. She married John Lippincott in Monmouth County, New Jersey in 1670 (the same year her sister (?), Margaret married John's older brother, Rememberance). John was the son of Richard Abigail Lippincott. His father had been a "Freeman" of the Massachusetts Bay colony in but the family returned to England in 1652 after Richard was excommunicated from the church. In England he was jailed for religious dissent and thereafter the family returned to the new world about 1663 to Rhode Island. Here John's father joined with other patentees to start the first English colony in New Jersey. They resided on Passequeneiqua Creek, a branch of the South Shrewsbury River, about a mile and a half from the town of Shrewsbury, in what was to become Monmouth County. Here John and Ann Barber farmed. Ann had the following eight children: John – 1671 – m. Sarah Huet Robert – 1673 – dy Preserved – 1675 - m. Elizabeth Williams Mary - 1677 – m. Thomas Hooten Ann – 1680 – m. Joseph Wing Margaret – 1683 – m. John Tilton Robert – 1685 – m. Freelove Lawton Deborah – 1690 Ann died about 1707 and John then passed away on April 16, 1720. Like so many other resting places of the very early colonists, the grave marker and the exact location of this person's remains has been lost after almost three centuries of development and changes of land usage.

Family links:

Spouse:
 John Lippincott (1644 - 1720)*
  • Calculated relationship

Burial: Lippincott Family Burial Ground Shrewsbury Monmouth County New Jersey, USA

Created by: Jerry L. Lippincott Record added: Dec 06, 2012 Find A Grave Memorial# 101806285

view all 12

Ann Lippincott's Timeline

1646
1646
Probably England
1670
May 4, 1670
Shrewsbury, Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
1675
September 15, 1675
1677
January 4, 1677
Shrewsbury, Monmouth, New Jersey, United States
1680
June 17, 1680
Shrewsbury, Monmouth County, East Jersey
1683
May 7, 1683
Shrewsbury, Monmouth, New Jersey, United States
1685
December 12, 1685
1690
May 30, 1690