Elizabeth Doane

How are you related to Elizabeth Doane?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Elizabeth Doane (Osborne)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Sandwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
Death: May 24, 1798 (83)
Barrington, Shelburne County, Nova Scotia
Place of Burial: Barrington Head, Shelburne County, Nova Scotia, Canada
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Samuel Osborne and Jedidah Osborn
Wife of Capt. William Merrick; William Paine, Esq. and Edmund Doane
Mother of Private William Merrick; Gideon Merrick; Elizabeth Lewis; Simeon Paine; Susanna Paine and 9 others
Sister of John Osborne; Sarah Osborne; Mary Osborne and Abigail Homer

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Elizabeth Doane

Daughter of Samuel Osborne and Jedidah Smith. 1m to William Merrick on 23 Jan 1734 in Eastham, Barnstable Co, MA. 2m to William Paine on 15 Jan 1745 in Eastham, Barnstable Co, MA. 3m to Edmund Doane on 10 Nov 1749 in Eastham, Barnstable Co, MA.

DFA Volume I, p. 75:

"In the autumn of 1761, Edmund Doane with his wife and seven children sailed from Orleans, Mass., for the Cape Sable District. They embarked at what was then known as "Nathaniel Mayo's Landing," which was a landing, or cover, a little south of the present Congregational Church at East Orleans. Being driven off their course by unfavorable winds they arrived t Liverpool, where they spent the winter. The following spring they retuned to the Cape Sable District, and were among the earliest settlers of the township of Barrington.

The first people of English descent to fix their abodes at the head of coves and harbors, around the shores of southwestern Nova Scotia, were fishermen mostly from Cape /cod and Nantucket, in Massachusetts. They were not refugees for loyalty's sake, but simply "hard liners" and net men, who had found out by their fearless cruises in "pink stern" craft, that fish abounded in those waters. The first steps towards an English settlement there were taken immediately after the removal of the French in 1756. The Proclamation of the Nova Scotia Colonial governor, inviting settlers from New England and elsewhere to occupy the vacated lands, followed immediately, and as early as 1757 Governor Lawrence writes of having received "application from a number of Substantial persons in New England, for lands to settle at or near Cape Sable." A first company, for some reason or other, failed to make a settlement, but in 1761-1762 a large number, representing the best families of Cape Cod and Nantucket, removed to the Cape Sable District and formed a settlement at what is now the town of Barrington. They were, for the most part, a lot of intelligent and, so far s the times allowed, educated men...

Edmund Done was of that number of "Substantial persons" from Cape Cod, and doubtless was the first settler of the Doane name in Nova Scotia. Before his removal to Nova Scotia he lived in Eastham, that part set off in 1797 as Orleans. On Eastham records he is recorded as a juryman in 1750 and 1760. There are still in existence one or two of Edmund Doane's old account books, giving evidence that, during his first years in Barrington, he kept a store, the transactions ranging from 1762 to 1767--a general store, such as would be required by the circumstances of the beginning of a new settlement. The chief articles of trade were rum, flour by the pound, salt by the hogshead, molasses, sugar, medicine, dry goods, hardware, etc.

it is understood that he received his supplies from is brother-in-law, John Homer, a merchant of Boston, shipping him in return the alewives, herring and other fish found in Nova Scotia waters.

Tiring of the hard conditions of his life in the new settlement, and perhaps meeting with business reverses, Edmund Doane, on Oct. 17, 1776, sold his property at Barrington to his brother-in-law, John Homer for 132.6.5 3/4 pounds intending to return with his family to New England; but, on petition of a large number of the townspeople, a grant was made of town land, at Johnson's point to his wife Elizabeth, in consideration of her valuable medical services.

On this grant they settled and spent their remaining days. In the petition she is described as being "destitute of accommodation of land to set a house upon."

Mrs. Elizabeth Doane was a woman of considerable education, of more than ordinary personal attractions and natural ability. Having a good knowledge of medicine, and being skilled in the use of roots and herbs, she was the only nurse an doctor to all the sick of all the township. Her services were much sought after and appreciated. When advanced in years or when making long trips, she was carried in a basket suspended from a pole across the shoulders of two men. She returned several times to new England to visit her relatives and friends. In 176e she was one of the three passengers who came up from Barrington on the sloop "Sherburn," Capt. Jonathan Clarke, arriving in Boston, July 28. Again , in Sept., 1767, she came over to Boston on the sloop "Dove," Capt. Joseph Chapman.

The old pestle, with which she pounded her roots and herbs, is still in use and in possession of her great-granddaughter, as well as Edmund's old family bible, on the fly leaf of which is written: "Edmund Doane, his book, bought in New England whilst he lived there." They were buried in the old burial ground at Barrington Head.

Children: Israel Samuel Osborn Prence Jedidah Ruth Abigail Edmund

Inscription on plaque: Edmund Doane One of the grantees of this township Born at Eastham, Massachusetts 20 April 1718 Died at Barrington 20 November 1806

Elizabeth Osborn Myrick Paine, His Wife Grandmother of John Howard Payne The Author of "Home Sweet Home" Born in Massachusetts about 1715 Died at Barrington 24 May 1798

Erected 1912

additional source:

''An Unconscious Autobiography'' • ''William Osborn Payne's Diary and Letters • 1796-1804'' (1939) Privately Printed (New York) by Thatcher Payne Luquer

This 103 page work is replete with genealogical information



https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Osborne-3657

Elizabeth (Osborne) Paine (1716 - 1798)

Elizabeth Paine formerly Osborne aka Doane

Born Jan 1716 in Sandwich, Barnstable, Massachusetts

Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]

[sibling%28s%29 unknown]

Wife of William Paine Esq. — married [date unknown] [location unknown]

DESCENDANTS

Mother of William (Paine) Payne

Died 24 May 1798 in Nova Scotia, Canada

Profile last modified 19 May 2018 | Created 7 Sep 2015

Biography

She had a brother who was baptized in 1714; she was baptized in 1715. Birth date is approximate. Sources

Canada, Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current From behind the ancestry.com subscription wall:

Doane genealogy Mayflower Births and Deaths, Vol. 1 and 2 page 235 Massachusetts, Town Vital Collections, 1620-1988

view all 24

Elizabeth Doane's Timeline

1715
January 16, 1715
Sandwich, Barnstable County, Province of Massachusetts
1728
April 18, 1728
Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts Bay
1734
October 26, 1734
Eastham, Barnstable County, Massachusetts
1736
1736
Eastham, Barnstable, Province of Massachusetts Bay
1737
August 11, 1737
Eastham, Barnstable County, Massachusetts
1740
March 21, 1740
1742
1742
Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
1746
1746
Eastham, Barnstable County, Massachusetts