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John Tuttle

Also Known As: "John Tuttle", "Planter 1635 Passenger", "John Tuttell", "John Tootill"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Ringstead, Northampton, England (United Kingdom)
Death: December 13, 1656 (60)
Carrickfergus, Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of Lt. Simon Tuttle and Isabel Tuttle
Husband of Joan Tuttle
Father of Abigail Tuttle; Simon Tuttle, Sr.; John Tuttle; Hannah Tuttle and Sarah Martin
Brother of Thomas Tuttle; Dorothy Bill; Richard Tuttle, of Boston; Thomas Tuttle; Simon Tuttle and 6 others

Occupation: Mercer/Tailor, Came to America 1635 in "Planter"
Immigration: Came to America 1635 in "Planter"
Managed by: Carole (Erickson) Pomeroy,Vol. C...
Last Updated:

About John Tuttle

Biography

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Tuttle-266

John Tuttle, the son of Simon Tuttle and Isable Wells[1], was born on 04 JUN 1596 St Albans, Hertfordshire, England[2] He was baptized on 4 June 1596 at Holcot, Northamptonshire, England.

John Tuttle and Joanna Antrobus were married by 1628[3] at St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England. They had at least the following children:[3]

children of John Tuttle & Joane Antrobus:

  1. Abigail Tuttle3 b. 24 Nov 1628, d. a 1635.
  2. Simon Tootill3 b. 10 Jan 1630/31 died 11 January 1691/2; married Sarah Cogswell.
  3. Sarah Tuttle3 b. 4 Sep 1632, who married Richard Martin.
  4. John Tuttle3 b. 21 Mar 1633/34, d. a Apr 1657.
  5. Hannah Tuttle3 b. s 1636 died probably in Ireland; married before 20 March 1657 in Ireland.

John, of Carrickfergus, Ireland, made a Will dated 7 Dec 1656. (The Will was destroyed when the Dublin Registry was destroyed in 1922 during the Black and Tan War in Ireland.) [3] He died on 30 Dec 1656 at Carrickfergus, Ireland.[3]The Will was approved and allowed in Ireland. Administrators were appointed for his estate on 29 March 1659 in Essex County, Massachusetts, and it was stated on on 27 Sept 1659 that John had died two or three years ago.[34]


  • The descendants of William and Elizabeth Tuttle, who came from old to New England in 1635, and settled in New Haven in 1639, with numerous biographical notes and sketches : also, some account of the descendants of John Tuttle, of Ipswich; and Henry Tuthill, of Hingham, Mass. (1883)
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/descendantsofwil01tutt#page/n67/mode/2up
  • Passengers By The Planter.
  • April 24, 1635, These underwritten names are to be transported to New England in the Planter, Nicholas Travice, Master, bound thither, the parties having brought certificates from the minister at St. Albans, in Hertfordshire, and attestation from the justice of the peace, according to the Lords' order.
  • [Signed] Richard Fenn, Alderman.
  • .....................................................................Age.
  • 'JOHN TUTTELL, a mercer....................................39
  • Joan Tuttell....................................................42
  • John Lawrence.............................................17
  • William Lawrence......................................... 12
  • Maria Lawrence............................................. 9
  • Abigail Tuttell.................................................. 6
  • Symon Tuttell................................................. 4
  • Sara Tuttell..................................................... 2
  • John Tuttell..................................................... 1
  • Nathan Haford, servant to John Tuttell..........16
  • George Gidding, husbandman....................... 25
  • Jane Giddings................................................ 20
  • Thomas Carter, 25, Michael Williamson 30, servants to Geo. Giddings..
  • April 6, more for the Planter.
  • Richard Tuttell, husbandman..........................42
  • Ann Tuttell.......................................................41
  • Anna Tuttell.....................................................12
  • John Tuttell......................................................10
  • Rebecca Tuttell............................................... 6
  • Isabella tuttell, (supposed mother of Richard) 70
  • William Tuttell, husbandman............................26
  • Elizabeth Tuttell...............................................23
  • John Tuttell.......................................................3 1/2
  • Anna Tuttell......................................................2 1/4
  • Thomas Tuttell........................................... 3 months
  • Marin Bill..........................................................11
  • It appears from the above list that three distinct families of Tuttles came together in the Planter. Of these, 'John settled in Ipswitch, Mass.', Richard settled in Boston, and William in New Haven.
  • Another John Tuttle came with his family in the "Angel Gabriel." in the same year, 1635, and settled in Dover, N. H.
  • John Tuthill, came with his brother Henry about the same time, 1635. He was a widower in 1637. "After a few years," says Charles B. Moore, "he returned to England, where he m. a 2d wife." Settled at Weybread, Suffolk Co. and left descendants there. His brother Henry was of Hingham, Mass. and Southold, Long Island.
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/descendantsofwil01tutt#page/n85/mode/2up
  • 'JOHN TUTTLE of Ipswich.
  • 'Brother of Richard of Boston. The settlement at Ipswich, Mass., was begun in March, 1633, by John Winthrop, jr., (afterwards Gov. of Conn.) and twelve others; who were joined next year by Rev. Thomas Parker and one hundred others from Wiltshire, Eng. JOHN TUTTLE joined the settlement the same year that he arrived in the Planter, as appears by the town record in 1635; "a road four rods wide is reserved through JOHN TUTTLE's, 150 acres east of Mill river to the common." He was made a freeman March 13, 1639; Representative 1644. In 1651 he is called "Mr.," a way being reserved between "Mr. Tuttle's swamp and the ends of the lots."-- Felt's Hist. of Ipswich. March 13, 1650, JOHN TUTTELL of Ipswich, merchant, gave bond for (english pound)2000 to Daniel __ffaivax and Isaac Legay of London, merchants, to pay (english pound)1180 10s. in provisions and cattle before Nov., 1650. and he consigned to them goods, &c., value (english pound)812 3s. and a penny as per invoice signed by JOANNA his wife. The bond was discharged by payment in full in 1652 by Mrs. JOANNA TUTTLE. He went to Ireland about the time that the disheartened colonists at New Haven were negotiating for the purchase of the city of Galloway in Ireland for a future home. He established himself advantageously there and did not return. He d. at Carrickfergus, Dec. 30, 1656. His wife JOANNA followed him to Ireland in 1654. She was before m. to JOHN TUTTLE a widow Lawrence. The Dane pamphlet contains a facsimile of JOHN TUTTLE's autograph.
  • I. Abigail, b. 1629.
  • II. Symon, b. 1631.
  • III. Sarah, b. 1633; m. 1654 Richard Martin.
  • IV. John, b. 1634; m. Mary ___ and had; 1. Mary, b. April 23 1663.
  • V. Mary, b. 1635; m. Thomas Burnham.
  • VI. Simon, b. 1637; m. 1659 Joan Burnham; (2) 1663 Sarah Cogswell.
  • ---------------------------------------
  • Genealogical and personal memoirs relating to the families of ..., Volume 3 edited by William Richard Cutter
  • http://books.google.com/books?id=qaK9Vz1UdDcC&pg=PA1292&lpg=PA1292&...
  • Pg. 1292
  • Lieutenant Ebenezer Ayer was son of Lieutenant Samuel Ayer, born September 28, 1669, died January 2, 1743-4; married November 21, 1693, Elizabeth Tuttle, born November 24, 1670, died November 29, 1752, daughter of Simon and Sarah (Cogswell) Tuttle. Simon Tuttle, of Ipswich, born 1631, was son of 'JOHN TUTTLE, born 1596, died 1656; came in ship "Planter, " 1635; married Joan __, born 1593'. Sarah Cogswell, wife of Simon Tuttle, was born 1647, died 1732, daughter of John Cogswell, who came in ship "Angel Gabriel."
  • ---------------------------
  • Full text of "Notes upon the ancestry of Ebenezer Greenough, and of his wife, Abigail Israel, and also, a list of their descendants"
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/notesuponancestr00plat/notesuponances...
  • 1. 'JOHN TUTTLE.
  • 'b. in England, 1596.
  • 'd. at Carrickfergus, Ireland, 1656.
  • 'JOHN TUTTLE appears to have been a man of means, for, with his brother, they chartered the Ship Planter, and with their families and servants sailed for America, April 2, 1635. On arriving in Massachusetts, they settled in Ipswich. He went to Ireland and died there in 1656. He married the widow Joanna Lawrence (who had three sons by first husband) and had six children, of whom the fifth was Mary.
  • 'In the Tuttle genealogy will be found not only full lists of descendants of JOHN TUTTLE, but also his English ancestry back on the paternal line through Richard Tuttle, of London, to William Tuttle, High Sheriff of Devon in 1549, and Lord Mayor of Exeter in 1552, and, on the maternal side, through his mother Joan Grafton to Richard Grafton, Esq.
  • 2. Mary Tuttle.
  • b. in Ipswich, 1G35.
  • m. Thomas Burnham, of Ipswich.
  • ---------------------------
  • Full text of "Americana"
  • http://www.archive.org/stream/americana_19192amer/americana_19192am...
  • Ranking among the foremost of New England families, but belonging inseparably to the history and development of Connecticut s the" Tuttle family. Branches of the ancient English family, however, were established throughout the New England Colonies in the early part of the seventeenth century. None of these have attained the distinction and note of the Connecticut Tuttles. Scions of the house have wielded large power in the industrial and commercial growth of Connecticut, and have achieved notable ]ilaees in the jn-ofessions and in the divine calling. The early Tuttle family played a prominent part in the public life of the Connecticut Colony, and the name is found with great frequency in important places in early Colonial registers. The early Tuttles were leaders of men. and later generations have not relinguished the prestige of the early family. The Tuttles of today are an honored and notable race.
  • The surname Tuttle is of most remote antiquity, and its origin has been traced to the god Thoth or Toth on the Lower Nile in Egypt, vestiges of whose worship some antiquarians believe to have existed in early p]ngland. This would naturally give rise to numerous places dedicated to the worship of the god. At all events, we find throughout England "Totehills," which at the date of authentic history were hills with a good lookout against the enemy's approach. The eminent authority. Charles Wareing Bardsley. in his "Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames." states the origin of the surname to have been in the ancient Totehill, and makes no mention of an earlier origin in the worship of Thoth. In support of this, he draws attention to the fact that we still use the verb "tout" or "toat" in the sense of spying about.
  • When the adoption of surnames spread over England. Toathill. Tootle, Tothill, Tootol, Tottle, Tootehill, Tuthill, Toutill and Tuttle appeared as surnames which had their origin in the place name "Totehill" and we find instances of the name in the very early registers. The first appearance of the name in Colonial America is in the year 16.35. Numerous immigrants left the mother country and were" the founders of large families. On the good ship "Planter," in lGo5. came John, Richard and William Tuttle. from the parish of St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England, bringing with them their families. 'JOHN TUTTLE, who is recorded as a mercer, aged thirty-nine years, according to the passenger list of the "Planter," settled in Ipswich; he was in Ireland in 1(354, and probably died there, for his wife went to Carrickfergus, and wrote on April G, 1G57, that h.; died on December 30, 1656.
  • ---------------------------
  • Tuthill family of Tharston, Norfolk County, England and Southold, Suffolk County, New York; also written Totyl, Totehill, Tothill, Tuttle, etc (1898)
  • http://www.archive.org/details/tuthillfamilyoft00aker
  • ------------------------------------
  • http://home.earthlink.net/~herblst/tuttle_family.htm
  • Notes for 'JOHN TUTTLE: Listed as passenger on ship Planter, 1635, sailing from London April 10, 1635, and arrived at Boston on Sunday, June 7, 1635. John Tuttle, age 39, and family boarded ship at St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Ipswich England. With him was wife, Joan 42, children, Abigail 6, Simon 4, Sarah 2 and John 1. Also wife's mother, Mrs. Joan Antrobus 65. "John joined the settlement [Ipswich] the same year that he arrived in the "Planter", as appears by the town record in 1635...he was made a freeman 13 March, 1639...representative 1644... he went to Ireland about the time that the disheartened colonists at New Haven were negotiating for the purchase of the city of Galloway in Ireland for a future home...he established himself advantageously there and did not return..."
  • ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  • William Tuttle of New Haven : an address delivered at the Tuttle gathering, New Haven, Conn., September 3d, 1873 / /c by Joseph F. Tuttle (1873)
  • http://www.archive.org/details/williamtuttleofn00tutt
  • -----------------------------
  • + John Tuttle
  • # 4 Jun 1596
  • # in Holcot, Northamptonshire, , England
  • + Death
  • # 30 Dec 1656
  • # in Fergus, , Cork, Ireland
  • Parents & Siblings
  • Symon TUTTLE (1560-1630)
  • Isabel WELLS (1565-1635)
  • 1596
  • 4 Jun
  • Birth
  • Holcot, Northamptonshire, , England
  • 1656
  • 30 Dec
  • Age: 60
  • Death
  • Fergus, , Cork, Ireland
  • Family Members
  • Parents
  • Symon TUTTLE
  • 1560 – 1630
  • Isabel WELLS
  • 1565 – 1635
  • siblings.....
  • Henry TUTHILL
  • 1580 – 1618
  • Dorothy TUTTLE
  • 1592 – 1638
  • Richard TOOTILL
  • 1593 – 1640
  • Thomas TOOTILL
  • 1594 – 1626
  • Simon TOOTILL
  • 1597 – 1630
  • William TUTTLE
  • 1607 – 1673
  • Simon TUTTLE
  • 1613 –
  • Abigail TUTTLE
  • 1628 –
  • * Half siblings
  • Alice TUTTLE
  • 1614 –
  • --------------------
  • John & Joan were on the ship the 'Planter' leaving London, England on April 2, 1635 & arrived in Boston, MA. on Sunday, June 7, 1635. Shipped to Barbados 1650 & to Ireland in 1654. John's first wife was Elizabeth Wolman (Wolmen).
  • --------------------------
  • http://www.oocities.com/tiggernut24/Readyhough/tuttle.html
  • The Tuttle story is one of my qualifying stories for Rootsweb's International Black Sheep Society
  • After checking out the citations that people sent me, as much as I could get ahold of them, mostly TAG, and a couple of citations, I never did get ahold of the Prindle book, I found that documents such as wills establish that the Tuttles were of Northampton. My sources, as well as a summary of the disproven roots cited in older Tuttle genealogies in the United States, are below.
  • Ringstead Tuttles
  • This is the true Tuttle lineage. The material is a little confusing.
  • Here is the version I put together;
  • Richard Tootill, of Woodford, co Northampton, born abat 1530, m Elizabeth _____. Wayne Barnes identifies her as Elizabeth Lyncoln. Source? Price has he d 1587/88 Woodford. Sam has he d 1589/90 in Peterborough. Jacobus cited his will for March 1589 as the date of his death. I infer there might have been more than one Richard Tootill. Jacobus has him supervised will of Richard Beare of Woodford, 3 Nov 1579, witness will of Elizabeth Lyncoln, 1556. Atleast we know there were Lyncolns around, and again, they were probably closely related to the Tuttle family.
  • Third Generation
    • Thomas Tootill, d abt 1640 will dated 14 Jun 1639, proved 12 Dec 1640, he lived in Holcott and then in Woodford, both in County Northampton. He married Anne ____. The stuff I put about him on this page yesterday was a mistake; the people I named as his wife and children were Richard's (the father of Simon). His will names 3 sons and makes his second son, Robert, executor with his wife, Jacobus thinks because his son John was the John Tuttle of the Planter who was married to Joan Antrobus Lawrence and died in Carrickfergus, Ireland. Jacobus bases that on the fact that this John was teh right age to have been the John Tuttle, and on the mistaken belief, based on White's papers, that Simon had no son named John.
      • Symon b Engl D Engl
      • 'John bapt Holcot 4 Jun 1596
      • Robert b abt 1598 or bef 18 Mar 1598/99, Holcott, Northampton, bapt 18 Mar 1598/99 in HOlcott, d Engl
      • Abigail bapt 24 Nov 1628 d young abt 1631
  • These baptisms and their place and dates all from Jacobus, who says that Thomas lived first in Holcott and then in Woodford, which would explain why his children were born in Holcott, though I don't have a source on how he knows this, and he appears to cite Dawes-Gates as his source on the children's baptisms.
  • I don't know if these dates and the place are based on confusion with John who is actually the son of Simon, who was really baptized in Holcott, on 4 June 1596, according to Greene! That John also had no brother named Robert, who, it appears, was bapt in Holcot, too! Atleast, not named in Simon's will. One would think the baptismal record identified the parents. But I gather that neither Jacobus nor Greene have seen the baptismal record of this John christened in Holcot. Since it appears not many of the Tuttle family lived in Holcot, this supports John of the Planter was Thomas's son. Unless the confusion comes in at the point of which John Tuttle went to Hertfordshire and married Joan Antrobus Lawrence!
  • ------------------------

John Tuttle was born about 1596 (aged 39 on 2 April 1635), son of Simon Tuttle of Ringstead, Northamptonshire. He married by 1628 Joan (Antrobus) Lawrence, daughter of Walter and Joan (Arnold) Antrobus and widow of Thomas Lawrence. He was a mercer, yeoman & merchant, with business in Barbados, who brought his family from St. Albans, Hertfordshire to Massachusetts Bay in 1635 on the Planter (on 2 April 1635, "a mercer, Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 39, "Joan Tuttell," aged 42, "W[illia]m Lawrence," aged 12, "Marie Lawrence," aged 9, "Abigall Tuttell," aged 6, "Symon Tuttell," aged 4, "Sara Tuttell," aged 2, "Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 1, and "Joan Antrobuss," aged 65, were enrolled at London as passengers for New England on the Planter). They first settled at Ipswich MA but moved to Boston between 1649 & 15 November 1650. John Tuttle left New England permanently in late 1650, sailing to Southampton and then settling at Carrickfergus, Ireland. His wife followed him to Carrickfergus in 1654. COMMENTS: On 16 February 1649[/50?], John Tuttle entered into a major business deal, apparently ill-advisedly, which within a few months led to a series of legal entanglements and his permanent departure from New England. The last record found for Tuttle in New England was on 28 December 1650, when William Aspinwall took notice of goods which Tuttle had placed on two ships at Boston. He must have sailed for England very soon after, for on 1 March 1650/1 we find him at Southampton in England, signing a lengthy document designed to get him out of his financial predicament. On 6 March 1650/1, while still at Southampton, John Tuttle wrote a letter to John Gore at Roxbury, presumably as a cover letter for the agreement which had recently been completed. By 22 May 1651, these documents had made their way back to Boston, and, a week later, on 29 May 1651, John Tuttle's wife is seen acting on his behalf at Boston. John Tuttle never returned to New England, and is found by 1656 at Carrickfergus, Ireland. He died in Carrickfergus, Ireland, 30 December 1656. John Tuttle was brother of RICHARD TUTTLE {1635, Boston} and of WILLIAM TUTTLE {1635, Charlestown}. Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=60380040




Birth 1596 England Death 30 Dec 1656 (aged 59–60) Carrickfergus, County Antrim, Northern Ireland Burial Unknown Memorial ID 60380040 · View Source John Tuttle was born about 1596 (aged 39 on 2 April 1635), son of Simon Tuttle of Ringstead, Northamptonshire. He married by 1628 Joan (Antrobus) Lawrence, daughter of Walter and Joan (Arnold) Antrobus and widow of Thomas Lawrence. He was a mercer, yeoman & merchant, with business in Barbados, who brought his family from St. Albans, Hertfordshire to Massachusetts Bay in 1635 on the Planter (on 2 April 1635, "a mercer, Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 39, "Joan Tuttell," aged 42, "W[illia]m Lawrence," aged 12, "Marie Lawrence," aged 9, "Abigall Tuttell," aged 6, "Symon Tuttell," aged 4, "Sara Tuttell," aged 2, "Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 1, and "Joan Antrobuss," aged 65, were enrolled at London as passengers for New England on the Planter). They first settled at Ipswich MA but moved to Boston between 1649 & 15 November 1650. John Tuttle left New England permanently in late 1650, sailing to Southampton and then settling at Carrickfergus, Ireland. His wife followed him to Carrickfergus in 1654. COMMENTS: On 16 February 1649[/50?], John Tuttle entered into a major business deal, apparently ill-advisedly, which within a few months led to a series of legal entanglements and his permanent departure from New England. The last record found for Tuttle in New England was on 28 December 1650, when William Aspinwall took notice of goods which Tuttle had placed on two ships at Boston. He must have sailed for England very soon after, for on 1 March 1650/1 we find him at Southampton in England, signing a lengthy document designed to get him out of his financial predicament. On 6 March 1650/1, while still at Southampton, John Tuttle wrote a letter to John Gore at Roxbury, presumably as a cover letter for the agreement which had recently been completed. By 22 May 1651, these documents had made their way back to Boston, and, a week later, on 29 May 1651, John Tuttle's wife is seen acting on his behalf at Boston. John Tuttle never returned to New England, and is found by 1656 at Carrickfergus, Ireland. He died in Carrickfergus, Ireland, 30 December 1656. John Tuttle was brother of RICHARD TUTTLE {1635, Boston} and of WILLIAM TUTTLE {1635, Charlestown}. Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project


GEDCOM Note

  • The descendants of William and Elizabeth Tuttle, who came from old to New England in 1635, and settled in New Haven in 1639, with numerous biographical notes and sketches : also, some account of the descendants of John Tuttle, of Ipswich; and Henry Tuthill, of Hingham, Mass. (1883)35, These underwritten names are to be transported to New England in the Planter, Nicholas Travice, Master, bound thither, the parties having brought certificates from the minister at St. Albans, in Hertfordshire, and attestation from the justice of the peace, according to the Lords' order.e..176...... 1 25, Michael Williamson 30, servants to Geo. Giddings...................41......................... 6.......23.................. 3 monthser. Of these, 'John settled in Ipswitch, Mass.', Richard settled in Boston, and William in New Haven.5, and settled in Dover, N. H.re he m. a 2d wife." Settled at Weybread, Suffolk Co. and left descendants there. His brother Henry was of Hingham, Mass. and Southold, Long Island.utt#page/n85/mode/2up) and twelve others; who were joined next year by Rev. Thomas Parker and one hundred others from Wiltshire, Eng. JOHN TUTTLE joined the settlement the same year that he arrived in the Planter, as appears by the town record in 1635; "a road four rods wide is reserved through JOHN TUTTLE's, 150 acres east of Mill river to the common." He was made a freeman March 13, 1639; Representative 1644. In 1651 he is called "Mr.," a way being reserved between "Mr. Tuttle's swamp and the ends of the lots."-- Felt's Hist. of Ipswich. March 13, 1650, JOHN TUTTELL of Ipswich, merchant, gave bond for (english pound)2000 to Daniel __ffaivax and Isaac Legay of London, merchants, to pay (english pound)1180 10s. in provisions and cattle before Nov., 1650. and he consigned to them goods, &c., value (english pound)812 3s. and a penny as per invoice signed by JOANNA his wife. The bond was discharged by payment in full in 1652 by Mrs. JOANNA TUTTLE. He went to Ireland about the time that the disheartened colonists at New Haven were negotiating for the purchase of the city of Galloway in Ireland for a future home. He established himself advantageously there and did not return. He d. at Carrickfergus, Dec. 30, 1656. His wife JOANNA followed him to Ireland in 1654. She was before m. to JOHN TUTTLE a widow Lawrence. The Dane pamphlet contains a facsimile of JOHN TUTTLE's autograph.II. Symon, b. 1631.1659 Joan Burnham; (2) 1663 Sarah Cogswell.Volume 3 edited by William Richard Cutteren&ei=1jTYTI7aM4fWtQPUmIWNCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBUQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=John%20Tuttle&f=falseember 28, 1669, died January 2, 1743-4; married November 21, 1693, Elizabeth Tuttle, born November 24, 1670, died November 29, 1752, daughter of Simon and Sarah (Cogswell) Tuttle. Simon Tuttle, of Ipswich, born 1631, was son of 'JOHN TUTTLE, born 1596, died 1656; came in ship "Planter, " 1635; married Joan __, born 1593'. Sarah Cogswell, wife of Simon Tuttle, was born 1647, died 1732, daughter of John Cogswell, who came in ship "Angel Gabriel." of his wife, Abigail Israel, and also, a list of their descendants" and, 1596. rvants sailed for America, April 2, 1635. On arriving in Massachusetts, they settled in Ipswich. He went to Ireland and died there in 1656. He married the widow Joanna Lawrence (who had three sons by first husband) and had six children, of whom the fifth was Mary. the paternal line through Richard Tuttle, of London, to William Tuttle, High Sheriff of Devon in 1549, and Lord Mayor of Exeter in 1552, and, on the maternal side, through his mother Joan Grafton to Richard Grafton, Esq. "necticut s the" Tuttle family. Branches of the ancient English family, however, were established throughout the New England Colonies in the early part of the seventeenth century. None of these have attained the distinction and note of the Connecticut Tuttles. Scions of the house have wielded large power in the industrial and commercial growth of Connecticut, and have achieved notable ]ilaees in the jn-ofessions and in the divine calling. The early Tuttle family played a prominent part in the public life of the Connecticut Colony, and the name is found with great frequency in important places in early Colonial registers. The early Tuttles were leaders of men. and later generations have not relinguished the prestige of the early family. The Tuttles of today are an honored and notable race. d in early p]ngland. This would naturally give rise to numerous places dedicated to the worship of the god. At all events, we find throughout England "Totehills," which at the date of authentic history were hills with a good lookout against the enemy's approach. The eminent authority. Charles Wareing Bardsley. in his "Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames." states the origin of the surname to have been in the ancient Totehill, and makes no mention of an earlier origin in the worship of Thoth. In support of this, he draws attention to the fact that we still use the verb "tout" or "toat" in the sense of spying about. rigin in the place name "Totehill" and we find instances of the name in the very early registers. The first appearance of the name in Colonial America is in the year 16.35. Numerous immigrants left the mother country and were" the founders of large families. On the good ship "Planter," in lGo5. came John, Richard and William Tuttle. from the parish of St. Albans, Hertfordshire, England, bringing with them their families. 'JOHN TUTTLE, who is recorded as a mercer, aged thirty-nine years, according to the passenger list of the "Planter," settled in Ipswich; he was in Ireland in 1(354, and probably died there, for his wife went to Carrickfergus, and wrote on April G, 1G57, that h.; died on December 30, 1656. thill family of Tharston, Norfolk County, England and Southold, Suffolk County, New York; also written Totyl, Totehill, Tothill, Tuttle, etc (1898)kerp Planter, 1635, sailing from London April 10, 1635, and arrived at Boston on Sunday, June 7, 1635. John Tuttle, age 39, and family boarded ship at St. Albans, Hertfordshire, Ipswich England. With him was wife, Joan 42, children, Abigail 6, Simon 4, Sarah 2 and John 1. Also wife's mother, Mrs. Joan Antrobus 65. "John joined the settlement [Ipswich] the same year that he arrived in the "Planter", as appears by the town record in 1635...he was made a freeman 13 March, 1639...representative 1644... he went to Ireland about the time that the disheartened colonists at New Haven were negotiating for the purchase of the city of Galloway in Ireland for a future home...he established himself advantageously there and did not return..." ---------------------------------</nowiki>73) 1596nts & Siblings56� 1635 1594 – 1626 1628 – ndon, England on April 2, 1635 & arrived in Boston, MA. on Sunday, June 7, 1635. Shipped to Barbados 1650 & to Ireland in 1654. John's first wife was Elizabeth Wolman (Wolmen).;--------------------------</nowiki>International Black Sheep Society ndle book, I found that documents such as wills establish that the Tuttles were of Northampton. My sources, as well as a summary of the disproven roots cited in older Tuttle genealogies in the United States, are below.ton, born abat 1530, m Elizabeth _____. Wayne Barnes identifies her as Elizabeth Lyncoln. Source? Price has he d 1587/88 Woodford. Sam has he d 1589/90 in Peterborough. Jacobus cited his will for March 1589 as the date of his death. I infer there might have been more than one Richard Tootill. Jacobus has him supervised will of Richard Beare of Woodford, 3 Nov 1579, witness will of Elizabeth Lyncoln, 1556. Atleast we know there were Lyncolns around, and again, they were probably closely related to the Tuttle family. oved 12 Dec 1640, he lived in Holcott and then in Woodford, both in County Northampton. He married Anne ____. The stuff I put about him on this page yesterday was a mistake; the people I named as his wife and children were Richard's (the father of Simon). His will names 3 sons and makes his second son, Robert, executor with his wife, Jacobus thinks because his son John was the John Tuttle of the Planter who was married to Joan Antrobus Lawrence and died in Carrickfergus, Ireland. Jacobus bases that on the fact that this John was teh right age to have been the John Tuttle, and on the mistaken belief, based on White's papers, that Simon had no son named John. thampton, bapt 18 Mar 1598/99 in HOlcott, d Engltt and then in Woodford, which would explain why his children were born in Holcott, though I don't have a source on how he knows this, and he appears to cite Dawes-Gates as his source on the children's baptisms. at John also had no brother named Robert, who, it appears, was bapt in Holcot, too! Atleast, not named in Simon's will. One would think the baptismal record identified the parents. But I gather that neither Jacobus nor Greene have seen the baptismal record of this John christened in Holcot. Since it appears not many of the Tuttle family lived in Holcot, this supports John of the Planter was Thomas's son. Unless the confusion comes in at the point of which John Tuttle went to Hertfordshire and married Joan Antrobus Lawrence!gt;r and Joan (Arnold) Antrobus and widow of Thomas Lawrence. n 1635 on the Planter (on 2 April 1635, "a mercer, Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 39, "Joan Tuttell," aged 42, "W[illia]m Lawrence," aged 12, "Marie Lawrence," aged 9, "Abigall Tuttell," aged 6, "Symon Tuttell," aged 4, "Sara Tuttell," aged 2, "Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 1, and "Joan Antrobuss," aged 65, were enrolled at London as passengers for New England on the Planter). moved to Boston between 1649 & 15 November 1650.arrickfergus in 1654.nd his permanent departure from New England. The last record found for Tuttle in New England was on 28 December 1650, when William Aspinwall took notice of goods which Tuttle had placed on two ships at Boston. He must have sailed for England very soon after, for on 1 March 1650/1 we find him at Southampton in England, signing a lengthy document designed to get him out of his financial predicament. On 6 March 1650/1, while still at Southampton, John Tuttle wrote a letter to John Gore at Roxbury, presumably as a cover letter for the agreement which had recently been completed. By 22 May 1651, these documents had made their way back to Boston, and, a week later, on 29 May 1651, John Tuttle's wife is seen acting on his behalf at Boston. John Tuttle never returned to New England, and is found by 1656 at Carrickfergus, Ireland.erson's Great Migration Study Project rgus, County Antrim, Northern Irelandire. He married by 1628 Joan (Antrobus) Lawrence, daughter of Walter and Joan (Arnold) Antrobus and widow of Thomas Lawrence.t his family from St. Albans, Hertfordshire to Massachusetts Bay in 1635 on the Planter (on 2 April 1635, "a mercer, Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 39, "Joan Tuttell," aged 42, "W[illia]m Lawrence," aged 12, "Marie Lawrence," aged 9, "Abigall Tuttell," aged 6, "Symon Tuttell," aged 4, "Sara Tuttell," aged 2, "Jo[hn] Tuttell," aged 1, and "Joan Antrobuss," aged 65, were enrolled at London as passengers for New England on the Planter).hen settling at Carrickfergus, Ireland. His wife followed him to Carrickfergus in 1654.which within a few months led to a series of legal entanglements and his permanent departure from New England. The last record found for Tuttle in New England was on 28 December 1650, when William Aspinwall took notice of goods which Tuttle had placed on two ships at Boston. He must have sailed for England very soon after, for on 1 March 1650/1 we find him at Southampton in England, signing a lengthy document designed to get him out of his financial predicament. On 6 March 1650/1, while still at Southampton, John Tuttle wrote a letter to John Gore at Roxbury, presumably as a cover letter for the agreement which had recently been completed. By 22 May 1651, these documents had made their way back to Boston, and, a week later, on 29 May 1651, John Tuttle's wife is seen acting on his behalf at Boston. John Tuttle never returned to New England, and is found by 1656 at Carrickfergus, Ireland.5, Boston} and of WILLIAM TUTTLE {1635, Charlestown}.

GEDCOM Source

Age: 49

GEDCOM Source

Age: 16

GEDCOM Source

MH:S3 Ancestry Family Trees Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Ancestry Family Tree http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=110860350&pi...


GEDCOM Source

@R250813647@ Ancestry Family Trees Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.

GEDCOM Source

Ancestry Family Tree http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=46142935&pid...

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John Tuttle's Timeline

1596
April 2, 1596
Ringstead, Northampton, England (United Kingdom)
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer, Northampton, ENG
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire, , England
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire, England
June 4, 1596
Holcot, Northamptonshire, England
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire, England
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer,Northamptonshire,England
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire, , England
June 4, 1596
Burton Latimer, Northamptonshire, , England
June 4, 1596