Dr. Moses Robinson

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Dr. Moses Robinson

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Scotland (north of Ireland)
Death: March 04, 1764 (60-69)
Warren, Knox County, Maine, United States
Place of Burial: Warren, Lincoln County, Maine, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Munster Robinson and Catherine Mary Robinson
Husband of Mary Robinson (Fitzgerald)
Father of Major Hanse Robinson; Sergeant William Robinson; Mary Margaret Kelloch (Robinson); Margaret Rivers; Joseph Robinson and 4 others
Brother of Gain Gaius Robinson, Sr. and Andrew Robinson

Occupation: Physician
Managed by: Steven Anthony Sabens
Last Updated:

About Dr. Moses Robinson

Early settler of Warren, Maine. Maine became a state March 15 1820


Local Historians give Dr. Moses Robinson the distinction of starting the first Sunday School in the St. Georges, and possibly, in the Maine area.

Note from Find A Grave:

Husband of Mary (Fitzgerald) Robinson.

Dr. Moses of the Scottish/Irish emigration came first to what is now Cushing about 1740 taking up a lot on the western bank below the narrows which his son Archibald later inherited. He had much knowledge of the use of roots, herbs, and the use of lancet, and hence called doctor. He also took up at lot, number 22, further up the river in what is now Warren where he moved to with the first settlers. Dr. Moses was the physician at the old fort and was one of thirty-two witnesses to the ratification of Dummer's treaty between the English and the Indians. He was buried there in the 1st graveyard by the old Presbyterian meeting house(now known as the Old Settlers Cemetery). Capt. Andrew Robinson, probably a brother died and was buried at the old fort in 1742.

(Source: Annals of the town of Warren by Cyrus Eaton)

Find A Grave Memorial# 55450628 http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=55450628


"Moses came to America from Ireland in 1725 on a British ship called the Brig Mary. Before he came to America he earned his degree from Trinity College in Dublin. He arrived in Boston, then moved to Cushing, Warren, Maine. He came with other settlers from Ireland. In the summer of 1736 he settled on Lot 22 of the Waldo survey. In 1747 the indians drove the settlers out from their land, but in 1749 Moses Robinson returned to his land once more. He was a builder and contracted with Waldo to build a house for the Scotch immigrants who arrived in September of 1753. He also acted as a doctor for the little colony and raised medicinal herbs on his farm. During the Indian Wars he and his family lived at the Block house under the command of Captain Kilpatrick, and he acted as the schoolmaster for the children. He is buried near the old Presbyterian Church on the banks of the Georges River."


"Family History and genealogical information about the descendants of Dr. Moses Robinson who was likely born in Ireland ca. 1704. He immigrated to America with the Scotch-Irish emigrants under the sponsorship of one Samuel Waldo sometime prior to the year 1730. Moses married Mary (surname unknown) sometime prior to the year 1736. They lived in Cushing (and then Warren), Lincoln County, Maine and were the parents of nine children."

-Dr. Moses Robinson and some of his Descendants


https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Robinson-12401

Robinson-12401 created 12 Jan 2015 | Last modified 2 Aug 2023

Moses Robinson (abt. 1690 - 1764)

Dr. Moses Robinson

Born about 1690 in Ireland [uncertain]

Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]

[sibling%28s%29 unknown]

Husband of Mary (Fitzgerald) Robinson — married [date unknown] [location unknown]

Father of Joseph Robinson, Moses Robinson, Margaret (Robinson) Rivers, John Robinson, Hanse Robinson, Archibald Robinson, Mary (Robinson) Kelloch and William Robinson

Died 4 Mar 1764 at about age 74 in Warren, Lincoln, Maine

Biography

Husband of Mary (Fitzgerald) Robinson. This statement is made because Dr Robinson inherited a lot from Daniel Fitzgerald in Cushing, which he then willed to Archibald, one of his sons (see Dr Robinson's last will and testament.). Therefore, it is reasonable, but not certain, that his wife's maiden name was Fitzgerald. This lot in Cushing should not be confused with his other lot in Warren (lot 22), which he willed to William, another of his other sons.

Parents of Dr. Moses Robinson are unknown. Some have stated that he is the son of a Munster Robinson who was a Lord Bishop of Cloyne, but there never was a Lord Bishop of Cloyne by the name of Munster Robinson. (This is easily verified by looking at the historical names of the bishops of Cloyne.) Additionally, Dr Robinson was most probably a Presbyterian. This statement is made for three compelling reasons: 1) he was an original founder of the town which is now Warren, and as the historian Cyrus Eaton states, these founders were Scots-Irish immigrants from Northern Ireland, and had a common language, religion (Presbyterian), etc. 2) he is buried in the old Presbyterian Cemetery, and 3) one of his sons was married in a Presbyterian Church in Boston. There is nothing to suggest he came from Cork or that he was part of the Church of Ireland. (Editorial note: I have seen a document that lists a Moses Robinson being born in Cork, but that birth date is in the 1730s, and he was already married and living in America by then. There are some who also suggest that Dr Robinson attended Trinity College in Dublin, but I have conducted a thorough search of records for Trinity College and no Moses Robinson is listed.).

The timeframe for the founding of Warren, when combined with the historical records which show a mass migration of Scots-Irish from Ulster starting in 1718, and continuing for more than 20 years, would indicate Dr Robinson was more than likely one of members of this mass migration. Since many of the other Warren initial immigrants came from Ulster, and in particular, Londonderry, it is highly likely that the young Dr Moses Robinson was also from that area, which had been at an earlier time a part of the King James Plantation of Ulster. The history of Ulster indicates that a vast majority of Ulster was inhabited by immigrants from lower Scotland in the early 1600s for this unofficial plantation effort.

"Dr. Moses Robinson of the Scottish/Irish emigration came first to what is now Cushing before 1735 taking up a lot on the western bank below the narrows which his son Archibald later inherited. He had much knowledge of the use of roots, herbs, and the use of lancet, and hence called doctor. He also took up at lot, number 22, further up the river in what is now Warren where he moved to with the first settlers. Dr. Moses was the physician at the old fort and was one of thirty-two witnesses to the ratification of Dummer's treaty between the English and the Indians. He was buried there in the 1st graveyard by the old Presbyterian meeting house (now known as the Old Settlers Cemetery). Capt. Andrew Robinson, probably a brother died and was buried at the old fort in 1742." (Source: Annals of the town of Warren by Cyrus Eaton)

Copied from FAG

Considerable history of Dr Moses Robinson has been written by Cyrus Eaton in two of his history books about Thomaston and Warren, which indicate he immigrated to Cushing in the early 1700s, bought lot #22 of the Waldo Patent, and settled in what is now Warren, Maine. This area was still part of Massachusetts while Dr Robinson was alive. His place of birth is currently unknown, but most likely was in Ulster, Northern Ireland. Moses was born about 1690. He passed away in 1764.

Sources

http://kalloch.org/gedpage/fam03639.htm
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/55450628/moses-robinson
Immigrants To New England 1700-1775, compiled by Ethel Stanwood Bolton, published by The Essex Institute, Salem, MA 1931; see pg 167
See the last will and testament dated 25 Apr 1763, for Moses Robinson, Sr, listed in Maine, US Wills and Probate Records, 1584-1999.

view all 13

Dr. Moses Robinson's Timeline

1699
1699
Scotland (north of Ireland)
1726
1726
Northern Ireland, UK
1729
1729
Of, Cushing, Knox County, Maine, United States
1735
1735
Cushing, Lincoln County, Maine, USA
1735
Cushing, Knox County, Maine, United States
1737
January 1737
Cushing, Knox County, Maine, United States
1738
1738
Warren, Knox County, Maine, Colonial America
1739
January 31, 1739
Cushing, Knox County, Maine, United States
1740
1740
Cushing, Knox County, Maine, United States