John Hancock, Sr.

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John Hancock, Sr.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, England (United Kingdom)
Death: February 26, 1709 (41-42)
NJ?
Immediate Family:

Son of Edward Hancock and Isabella Howard
Husband of Mary Hancock
Father of Sarah Stretch; Edward Hancock; John Hancock, Sr.; Nathaniel Hancock; Grace Hancock and 6 others

Managed by: Erin Margaret Sharp-Newton
Last Updated:

About John Hancock, Sr.

quite possibly him https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Hancock-3027

The Hancock House sits on property that was purchased from John Fenwick in 1675 by William Hancock, an English shoemaker. Upon his death the property passed to his wife and then to his nephew, John Hancock. John’s inheritance of approximately 500 acres made him a major landholder in Fenwick’s Colony. He contributed to the development of the area by building a bridge across Alloways Creek in 1708. Now known as “Hancocks Bridge,” it permitted passage on an important highway between Salem and Greenwich and gave the settlement its name. When John Hancock died in 1709, he left his property to his son William. William became a Justice of the Peace for Salem County and served in the Colonial Assembly for 20 years In 1734, William and his wife Sarah built the Hancock House. Their initials [WHS] and the construction date [1734] can be seen in the brickwork on the house’s west elevation Upon his death in 1762, William left his house to his son William, who succeeded him in the Assembly and became His Majesty’s Judge of the County Court for the County of Salem. It was this William who figured in the massacre of March 1778. The Hancock House remained in the family until 1931, although the extent to which the house was used as a private residence and the property farmed is uncertain. There is evidence to suggest a section of the house was leased for a tavern during the 18th & 19th centuries. The State of New Jersey acquired the Hancock House for $4,000 in 1931 and opened it as a museum in 1932. The winter of 1777 found George Washington and his Army encamped at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. The British occupied Philadelphia. Both armies needed food and supplies. In February of 1778, General Washington ordered General “Mad” Anthony Wayne to forage for food, cattle and horses in South Jersey. A month later, Sir General William Howe dispatched 1500 British troops and loyalists under General Charles Mawhood to do the same. Mawhood’s foraging activities met with considerable resistance from the Salem County militia and local patriots. Repulsed at the Battle of Quinton’s Bridge, a key transportation link to the fertile fields of Cumberland and Salem Counties, the British were frustrated and angry with the people of Salem County for their support of the Continental Army. On March 20, 1778, Mawhood issued the following mandate to his British troops: “Go - spare no one - put all to death - give no quarters.” At approximately five o’clock in the morning of March 21, 1778, these orders were carried out. Colonel John Graves Simcoe. Painted by George Theodore Berthon. Courtesy of Government of Ontario Art collection, Archives of Ontario, Toronto. With local Tories (British Loyalists) and their slaves acting as guides, Major John Graves Simcoe and approximately 300 troops attacked the Hancock House where they knew the local militia was stationed. Everyone inside was bayoneted; not a shot was fired. Among the 10 killed and five wounded, was Judge William Hancock. He died several days later.

The eastern side of the Hancock House was built in 1728 and the western side in 1734 by William and Sarah Hancock. This 280 year old house is owned by the State of New Jersey and is a New Jersey State Historical Site. The house is architecturally and historically significant, reflecting the building traditions of English Quaker Colonists. The Hancock House was the scene of massacred patriots by a 300 man force of British troops who broke in the house at night and bayoneted everyone inside. This was done in retaliation of a battle the British lost at Quinton’s Bridge.

William Hancock was one of the investors in the Fenwick Colony. Shortly after the Colony became established in New Salem (1675) Hancock arrived and received his share of the land, 968 acres in Alloways Creek, just 5 miles from Salem. John Hancock (Williams’s nephew) inherited approximately half of the original 968 acres and built a log cabin on the corner of the property where the Hancock House was later built by his son William and William's wife Sarah. John built the first drawbridge over Alloways Creek now known as Hancocks Bridge creating the turnpike between Salem and Greenwich, 1708. John lived in the small cabin he constructed, raised 11 children and left his estate to his son William who is said was a shrewd businessman and later became a Judge for Salem County and served in the Colonial Assembly for 20 years.

https://www.state.nj.us/dep/parksandforests/historic/hancockhouse/i...

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John Hancock, Sr.'s Timeline

1667
1667
London, England (United Kingdom)
1693
1693
England (United Kingdom)
1695
August 12, 1695
East Hampton, Lewis, New York, United States
1701
January 15, 1701
Salem, Salem County, New Jersey, United States
1703
January 20, 1703
Salem, New Jersey, United States
1709
February 26, 1709
Age 42
NJ?
1710
1710
Granville County, North Carolina, British Colonial America
1720
1720
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