How are you related to Mary Lloyd?

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!

Mary Lloyd (Clark)

Also Known As: "Mary (Clarke) Pemberton Campbell"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts
Death: November 10, 1749 (68)
Lloyd Harbor, Suffolk, NY, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Captain John Clark, of Boston and Mary Clark Coney
Wife of Ebenezer Pemberton; John Campbell and Henry Lloyd
Mother of Benjamin Pemberton; Ebenezer Pemberton and Samuel Pemberton
Half sister of Mehitable Foxcroft; Anna Foxcroft and Abigail Bromfield

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Mary Lloyd

Mary Clark

  • Birth: 3 MAY 1681 in Boston Village (Essex) Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • Death: 10 NOV 1749
  • Father: John (a) Clark , Captain b: 3 DEC 1651 in Boston Village (Essex) Massachusetts Bay Colony
  • Mother: Mary Atwater b: 15 JAN 1659/60 in Boston Village (Essex) Massachusetts Bay Colony

family

Marriage 1 Ebenezer (1)(a) PEMBERTON , Reverend b: 3 FEB 1671/72 in Boston Village (Essex) Massachusetts Bay Colony
Married: 12 JUN 1701 in Boston Village (Suffolk) Massachusetts Colony

Note:

1700, June 10: Ebenezer Pemberton married Mary Clark at Boston Village (Suffolk) Massachusetts Colony. Children, born at Boston: 1) Ebenezer, Jr.; born April 12, 1702; died young; 2) Mary (see below); 3) Ebenezer, Jr.; born February 6, 1705; baptized February 11, 1705; married Catherine Harris; died September 9, 1777; 4) James; born November 15, 1706; died November 15, 1706; 5) John; born January 25, 1708; died 1759; 6) Samuel (see below) and 7) William; born November 16, 1710; died in infancy.

"Watkins, Pemberton Family" by Walter K. Watkins from the "NEHGS Register" 46:395; The New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; October, 1892 (974.0 NEa SCGS) (974.42 R68Ro LAPL) (974.48 S41 NYSL)

Additional Resources:

  • 1) "A Report of the Record Commissioners of Boston, Massachusetts, 1630-1699" compiled by William H. Whitmore; p, 5; Rockwell and Churchill; Boston, Massachusetts; 1883 (974.42 B74 BoR-1 LAPL)
  • 2) "Effie Belle Randall of Bath, Ohio: Her Ancestors and Descendants" by Theodore N. Woods; pp. 13-21 and 25; Published by T. N. Woods; Phoenix, Arizona; 1991 (CS71.R19 1991 LofC)
  • 3) "Atwater History and Genealogy" by Francis Atwater; p. 429; the Journal Publishing Company; Meridian, Connecticut; 1901 (HeritageQuest)
  • 4) "Notes on the Pemberton Family, Ancestors of Emilius Oviatt Randall" by Evelyn Rich from "The Old Northwest Quarterly" 1:113-118; The Old Northwest Genealogical Society; Columbus, Ohio; July, 1898 (Per SCGS) (977 OL152 ACPL)

Children

  • Has No Children Mary Pemberton b: 14 APR 1703 in Boston Village (Suffolk) Province of Massachusetts Bay
  • Has No Children Ebenezer (1-2) Pemberton , Jr., D.D. b: 6 FEB 1704/05 in Boston Village (Suffolk) Province of Massachusetts Bay
  • Has Children Samuel (a) PEMBERTON b: 3 MAY 1710 in Boston Village (Suffolk) Province of Massachusetts Bay

Marriage 2 Henry (c) Lloyd , Reverend b: 28 NOV 1685

Married: AFT. 1723 in Boston Village (Suffolk) Massachusetts Colony Note:

1723 (after): Mary (Clark) Pemberton married (3rd) Henry Lloyd of Long Island, New York. "Atwater History and Genealogy" by Francis Atwater; p. 429; The Journal Publishing Company; Meridian, Connecticut; 1901 (HeritageQuest)

Note: Mary, daughter of John and Mary (Atwater) Clark(e) married Ebenezer Pemberton.

"Effie Belle Randall of Bath, Ohio: Her Ancestors and Descendants" by Theodore N. Woods; pp. 13-21 and 25; Published by T. N. Woods; Phoenix, Arizona; 1991 (CS71.R19 1991 LofC)

Note: Mary Clark married Henry Lloyd, the father of Dr. Lloyd.

"The Pilgrims of Boston, Massachusetts and their Descendants" by Thomas Bridgeman Phillips; p. 203; Simpson & Company; New York City, New York; 1856 (F73.61.G7 B8 CSL)

Marriage 3 John (b) Campbell b: 1653 in Village of Perth (Perth) Scotland Married: 11 APR 1723 in Boston Village (Suffolk) Province of Massachusetts Bay

Note:

1723, April 11: John Campbell married Mary Clark as her (2nd) husband at Boston Village (Suffolk) Province of Massachusetts Bay.

"The Pemberton Family" by Walter K. Watkins from the "NEHGS Register" 46:395; The New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; October, 1892 (Per SCGS)


Biography

"Notes on the Pemberton Family, Ancestors of Emilius Oviatt Randall" by Evelyn from "The Old Northwest Quarterly" 1:113-118; The Old Northwest Genealogical Society; Columbus, Ohio; July, 1898 (Per SCGS) (977 OL152 ACPL)

  • Mary Clark, the only child of Captain John Clark, was an infant when her father died, and she grew up in the household of John Coney. It was a happy childhood, which she remembered fondly all her life. Her son, Ebenezer Pemberton, wrote "An Account of Her Life and Character" as an introduction to "Meditations on Divine Subjects". It contains 34 pages; some excerpts will illustrate her character as he perceived it.

"But, notwithstanding the happiness of an unblemished youth, she, in the early years of life, fell under a deep conviction of her guilt and misery} and was, for many months, anxiously solicitous for her immortal welfare. . . " "The beauty of her person, the sprightliness of her wit, the charms of her conversation, but above all, the unfeigned piety which crowned her other accomplishments, soon procured her many admirers. She had several advantageous offers, of a settlement in the married life. She fixed her choice upon the Reverend Mr. Ebenezer Pemberton, pastor of a flourishing church in Boston and one of the most celebrated preachers of his age. To this gentleman she was married in the year 1701. They lived together with mutual delight and satisfaction until the year 1717, when their marriage relation was dissolved by the death of Mr. Pemberton. "This loss must doubtless be very heavy to her, who for many years had been united with him, in the most delightful society and refined friendship. Her tender and affectionate nature was ready to sink under the severe trial. But she was enabled to glorify God in the height of her affliction and exhibit to all around an instructive example of Christian patience and profound submission to the will of her heavenly Father. "She continues a widow several years, employing her time in exercises of devotion, the necessary cares of her family, and the offices of friendship. Afterwards, she married John Campbell, Esquire, a gentleman of good character and in plentiful circumstances, who proved an affectionate husband to her and an indulgent father to her children. He lived but a few years after this marriage and died in a peaceful and honorable old age. "After a suitable interval, she married Henry Lloyd, Esquire, of the Manor of Queen's Village in the province of New York. With him, she lived in uninterrupted harmony and friendship upwards of twenty years. . . "In her, Mr. Lloyd found an agreeable companion; his children, an affectionate mother; his servants, an indulgent mistress; his tenants, a kind and beneficent friend who rejoiced in their prosperity, sympathized with them in their sorrows, relieved them in their wants, and was never easy but when performing some charitable and benevolent action. . . . " "Her aspect was lovely, serene and pleasant. She spoke in a graceful manner, in soft and flowing language. The politeness of her address, the vivacity of her conversation, joined to the benevolence of her disposition, captivated all companies and made persons of every rank fond of cultivating her acquaintance. "Her intellectual faculties were vastly beyond the common level. A penetrating understanding, a sprightly fancy, a tenacious memory, a clear and happy expression raised her above the greatest part of the sex. . . " "It was her most solicitous care to have her breast animated with the love and fear of God and her life governed by the precepts of religion. . . She began the day with God and rose early that she might have a calm uninterrupted opportunity for the offices of devotion. . . " "Her piety was not confined to the closet but directed, animated and supported her through all the business of the day . . . "She read much but had no taste for any thing but what had an evident tendency to make mankind wiser or better. Books of mere amusement, she seldom cared to meddle with, esteeming time too precious to be trifled away in vanity. Treatises of practical divinity she read with a peculiar relish. . . But above all, the Book of God was that in which she took the greatest delight . . . It has been objected to persons eminent in religion that they are apt to be severe in their censures and take an ill-natured pride in reflecting upon the conduct of others. (She) was remarkably distant from anything of this nature. She knew the Christian doctrine was designed, not only to enkindle in our breasts a sacred flame of love to God, but to inspire us with sentiments of universal benevolence to Mankind. (There is a great deal more but this sample conveys the sense of the whole.) "The day before she died, she was in good health and in the evening supped and conversed with her family and friends with her accustomed cheerfulness. . . " 1749, November 9: She went to bed, and soon fell into a calm sleep. 1749, November 10: About two o'clock, she awakened . . . and asked for a dose of elixir. . . She drank it down and that moment expired, without a groan or struggle." "Effie Belle Randall of Bath, Ohio: Her Ancestors and Descendants" by Theodore N. Woods; pp. 13-21 and 25; Published by T. N. Woods; Phoenix, Arizona; 1991 (CS71.R19 1991 LofC)

Additional Resources: 1) "Meditations on Divine Subjects: with an account of her life and character" by Ebenezer and Mary Clark (Lloyd) Pemberton; Boston, Massachusetts; 1802 (AC1.E22 no.2546 BrownUnLib) 2) "The Pemberton Family" by Walter Kendall Watkins from the "NEHGS Register" 95:392-7; the New England Historic Genealogical Society; Boston, Massachusetts; July 1892 1861 (974.0 NEa SCGS) (974.42 R68Ro LAPL) (974.48 S41 NYSL) 3) "Atwater History and Genealogy" by Francis Atwater; p. 429; Meriden, Connecticut; 1901 (HeritageQuest) 4) "Notes on the Pemberton Family, Ancestors of Emilius Oviatt Randall" by Evelyn Rich from "the Old Northwest Quarterly" 1:115; The Old Northwest Genealogical Society; Columbus, Ohio; July, 1898 (Per SCGS) (977 OL152 ACPL)

Additional Resources:

  • 1) "Effie Belle Randall of Bath, Ohio: Her Ancestors and Descendants" by Theodore N. Woods; pp. 13-21, 25; Published by T. N. Woods; Phoenix, Arizona; 1991 (CS71.R19 1991 LofC)
  • 2) "Atwater History and Genealogy" by Francis Atwater; p. 429; The Journal Publishing Company; Meridian, Connecticut; 1901 (HeritageQuest)
view all

Mary Lloyd's Timeline

1666
1666
1681
May 3, 1681
Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts
1705
1705
1710
May 2, 1710
1749
November 10, 1749
Age 68
Lloyd Harbor, Suffolk, NY, United States