Anteres Lascelle

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Anteres Lascelle

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Daughter of Gershom Lascelle and Meribe Lascelle
Wife of ? Pierce
Mother of Female Pierce; Ebenezer Pierce; Edward? Pierce; Michael Pierce; Stephen? Pierce and 6 others
Sister of Meribe Marcelle Lascelle
Half sister of Meribe Lascelle

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About Anteres Lascelle

  • 'The Greene family and its branches from A.D. 861 to A.D. 1904 (1904)
  • http://www.archive.org/details/greenefamilyitsb01lama
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/greenefamilyitsb01lama#page/161/mode/1up
  • In the Appendix it is told that a young woman of this Welsh Pierce family, prior to 1500, married an Ithell. Their son, Pierce Ithell, had a daughter Mary who married an Englishman, Richard Wardwell. One of the Wardwells' sons married a Huguenot refugee's daughter, Meribe Lascelle.
  • ' The heads of this Huguenot family, Gershom and Meribe Lascelle, had another daughter whose name, as near as we can get at the original form, was Anteres, which would be pronounced An-te-rees, or An-te-race, with the accent on the last syllable. The name was handed down in the Pierce family for several generations, under the forms of Antrace, Antires, Anterace, or Ansutrass, and particularly as Antress and Anstress. This daughter with the odd name married a Pierce, whose baptismal name is unknown to us. We do know that he belonged to the same branch whose blood was in the Wardwell line into which Meribe (Maribah,) the sister of Anteres, married.
  • ' Anteres Pierce had quite a family. Almost certainly she had an Ebenezer, Thomas, Michael and Azrikam, and probably an Edward and a Stephen. One of her younger children was a daughter who married King. This daughter's descendants continued the names of Thomas, Michael, Ebenezer and Edward for several generations. Her sons Thomas, William, John and Michael King came to America in 1635, and a great-grand-son, John King the Buccaneer, came to R. I. in 1665, a child of 11 years. Buccaneer John was the great-grandfather of Mary King-Pierce herself. So that by her and Sanford Pierce's marriage were united her remote Pierce-
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/greenefamilyitsb01lama#page/162/mode/1up
  • 'Ithell and Lascelle-Wardwell blood, and his Pierce and equally remote infusion of Lascelle blood. Each was of course of Greene blood also. So these several small trickles from the parent streams, re-united, became something of a current itself.
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/greenefamilyitsb01lama#page/276/mode/1up
  • About A. D. 1480, one ___ Ithell, of North Wales, married a Miss Pierce. They had a son, Pierce Ithell, whose daughter Mary was m. about 1540, to Richard Woodall, Udall, Woddall, Worrell, or Wardwell, of Warwick, England. One of their sons. Dr. John Wardell, and a grandson, who crossed the ocean in 1594, had much to do with early Virginia settlements. An older son, William, was married by 1565 to Meribe Lascelle, the daughter of a French couple, Gershom and Meribe Lascelle.
  • Reading between the lines of the records, it is evident that the Frenchman came to England with his wife and family of grown children about 1560 at the first muttering of the storm that finally broke into bloody wrath against the Huguenots, or French Protestants. Gershom had many namesakes for more than a century, and Meribe, her name anglicized into Meriba or Meribah and Meribeth, still has her namesakes scattered over New England. The next two generations of the family intermarried with the Slocums, Kings, Waites and Hills. Their names were so peculiarly odd and Frenchy, that they can almost be traced by that alone. 'Anteres, another daughter of these Huguenot refugees, married a Pierce. There is more about her line in Chapter XXIV.'
  • There was a good deal of restlessness in the blood of these allied families. Before the New England settlement some of the Pierces and Wardwells went to Virginia, where the older generation of the Wardwell's had investments. Some of these then drifted to the Barbadoes, where later we read of one of the Pierces owning many acres of land and 80 slaves. All of the Lascelle-Wardwell line seem to have been Independents in religious matters, and under religious oppression quite ready to cross the sea for conscience's sake. Some of the Pierces were in Plymouth in 1623. And rebelling against Laud's tyranny about a score of the allied families of this line came to Mass. in 1633-5.
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