John Fiske, Jr.

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John Fiske, Jr.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Holliston, Middlesex, Massachusetts
Death: March 12, 1754 (44)
Sherborn, Middlesex, Massachusetts
Place of Burial: Worcester, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Immediate Family:

Son of John Fiske and Lydia (Adams) Fisk(e)
Husband of Abigail Fiske
Father of David Fiske; Amos Fiske; John Fiske, III; Martha Fiske; Hannah Hill and 2 others
Brother of Grace Fiske; Lydia Fiske; Isaac Fiske, Jr; Daniel Fisk; Peter Fiske, Sr. and 2 others

Managed by: Thomas Allen Barker
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About John Fiske, Jr.

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John Fiske
Born 8 May 1709 in Sherborn, Middlesex, Province of Massachusetts Baymap
ANCESTORS ancestors
Son of John Fiske and Lydia (Adams) Fiske
Brother of Isaac Fiske, Daniel Fisk, Lydia (Fiske) Twitchell and Peter Fisk
Husband of Abigail (Leland) Fisk — married 21 Sep 1731 in Holliston, Middlesex, Province of Massachusetts Baymap
DESCENDANTS descendants
Father of Hannah Fisk, Amos Fisk and John Fiske
Died 1754 at about age 44 in Sherborn, Middlesex, Province of Massachusetts Baymap
PROBLEMS/QUESTIONSProfile manager: M Cole Find Relationship private message [send private message]
Fiske-1255 created 22 Sep 2018 | Last modified 13 Aug 2022
This page has been accessed 267 times.
Biography

John was born in 1709. He was the son of John Fiske and Lydia Adams. He passed away in 1754.

Sources

"Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCSH-R62 : 3 November 2017), John Fisk and Abigail Badcock, 21 Sep 1731; citing Marriage, Holliston, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States, , town clerk offices, Massachusetts; FHL microfilm 892,249.
Pierce, Frederick C. Fiske and Fisk Family: Being the Record of the Descendants of Symond Fiske, Lord of the Manor of Stadhaugh, Suffolk County, England, from the Time of Henry Iv to Date, Including All the American Members of the Family. Chicago, Ill: The author, 1896. Page 160.
"Family Tree," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org : modified 22 September 2018, 17:46), entry for John Fisk(PID https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/4:1:MBZJ-KJD); contributed by various users.



https://www.anamericanfamilyhistory.com/Fiske%20Family/FiskeJohnRev...
from The Fiske Family by Albert Augustus Fiske
Rev. John Fiske, oldest son of John Fiske, (who died in 1683), and a great grandson of Robert and Sybil (Gold) Fiske, of England, was born about the year 1601, and was in early life devoted to God by his pious parents.

After being educated at Immanuel college, Cambridge, and studying theology, he was for several years employed in the Gospel ministry; but on account of the restrictions and disabilities imposed upon Non-conformists, of whom he was one, he turned his attention to the study of medicine, and became a licensed practitioner.

At the age of 28, he married Anne Gipps, of Frinshall, a lady of high rank and uncommon worth, and the road to prosperity and distinction lay temptingly open before him. But so anxiously desirous was he to resume the labors of the ministry, that he resolved to emigrate for that purpose to America, whatever the sacrifices he might be called to make. This enterprise was so distasteful to his wife's parents that they resolved upon disinheriting them of her share in the family estate, (several hundred pounds), but this did not deter him. At the call of duty, as he regarded it, he resolutely turned aside from the blandishments of wealth, abandoned property, home and kindred, and fled from his native land in disguise to escape the fury of his persecutors.

Embarking with his mother, his wife, two sisters, and his younger brother (the elder William Fiske, of Wenham), in the company of Rev. John Allen, his zealous colleague, and a goodly ship-load of pious emigrants, Rev. John Fiske and family arrived at Cambridge, Mass., in 1687.

There he engaged awhile in teaching school, and afterwards, in Salem, where he taught the first grammar-school with remarkable success (his pupils being able, it is said, to compose readily, in Latin, verse or prose), and occasionally he assisted the celebrated Hugh Peters in preaching.

In 1648 he removed to Wenham, (adjoining Salem), gathered a church and became its first pastor, in 1644, and continued such for more than twelve years. In, 1655, he removed to the pastorate of the church in Chelmsford, in which he continued till 1677, when he died, at the age of 76, leaving a family.

Rev. John Fiske was twice married. His first wife, after living with him about thirty-seven years, died in 1771. Such was her remarkable knowledge of Scripture that she was called her husband's best Concordance. She was the mother of the following children: John, born Sept. 29, 1688.
Moses, born April 22, 1642.
Sarah, Aug. 24, 1640.
Anna, Jan. 1.5, 1644.
Eliezer, born Feb.,8, ,1646.

In 1672, Rev. John Fiske married Mrs. Elizabeth Hinckman, at Chelmsford. She survived him several years, and died at same place.

Of his children only the first four, two sons and two daughters, lived to maturity. John, the eldest son, resided at Chelmsford, was married, but left no issue. Rev. John Fiske, therefore, has no living descendants of his name, except in the line of his son Moses.

Rev. W. Allen, in his history of Chelmsford, gives high testimony" to the value of Mr. Fiske's labors in that town, and by the concurrent testimony of the most learned and honored of his day, he held a high rank in the list of able, useful and devoted ministers of the Gospel.

It was often his practice, during the earlier years of his ministry, to gratuitously mingle the skill and labors of the physician with those of the clergyman, thus ministering to the cure of both body and soul, among the straitened members of his flock.

Cotton Mather, in his memoirs of the early New England clergy, pays the following fine tribute to his worth:

Among the most famous preachers and writers of the Gospel, with whom the primitive church was blessed, there was Luke, the beloved physician, the blessed scholar and colleague of the Apostle Paul. And among the first preachers and writers which rendered the primitive times of New England happy, there was one who might be called the beloved physician; one to whom there might also be given the eulogy which the ancients think was given to Luke — a brother whose praise was in the gospel, throughout all the churches. This was Mr. John Fiske. For twenty years did he shine in the golden candlestick of Chelmsford, a plain but able, powerful and useful preacher of the Gospel, rarely, if ever, by sickness hindered from the exercise of his ministry.

The epitaph, in Latin, of the Rev. John Fiske is as follows:

Vixi et quern dederas cursum mihi, Christe, peregi, pertaesus vitae, suaviter opto mori.

(Translated,) "I have lived and finished the work which thou, Saviour, didst give me; weary of life, I long to depart in peace."

Reference: [https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-1-745320771-1-2807/john-... MyHeritage Family Trees] - [https://www.geni.com/projects/SmartCopy/18783 SmartCopy]: ''Oct 2 2020, 22:43:03 UTC''
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John Fiske, Jr.'s Timeline

1709
May 8, 1709
Holliston, Middlesex, Massachusetts
1733
January 24, 1733
Sherborn, Middlesex, Massachusetts, BCA
1734
June 16, 1734
Waltham, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
1735
March 5, 1735
1738
March 16, 1738
Sherborn, Middlesex, Massachusetts, United States
1748
January 5, 1748
1754
March 12, 1754
Age 44
Sherborn, Middlesex, Massachusetts