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Richard More (Mayflower passenger)

Richard More (1614 – c. 1694/1696) was born in Corvedale, Shropshire, England, and was baptised at St James parish church in Shipton, Shropshire, on 13 November 1614.[1] Richard and his three siblings were at the centre of a mystery in early-17th-century England that caused early genealogists to wonder why the More children's father, believed to be Samuel More, would send his very young children away to the New World on the Mayflower in the care of others. It was in 1959 that the mystery was explained. Jasper More, a descendant of Samuel More, prompted by his genealogist friend, Sir Anthony Wagner, searched and found in his attic a 1622 document that detailed the legal disputes between Katherine More and Samuel More and what actually happened to the More children. It is clear from these events that Samuel did not believe the children to be his offspring.[2] To rid himself of the children, he arranged for them to be sent to the Colony of Virginia.[3] Due to bad weather, the Mayflower finally anchored in Cape Cod Harbor in November 1620, where one of the More children died soon after; another died in early December and yet another died later in the first winter. Only Richard survived, and even thrived, in the perilous environment of early colonial America, going on to lead a very full life.[4]

Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor by William Halsall (1882)

Richard became a well-known sea captain who helped to deliver to various colonies the supplies that were vital to their survival, travelled over Atlantic and West Indies trade routes and fought in various early naval sea battles. He and other Mayflower survivors were referred to in their time as "First Comers", who lived in the perilous times of what was called "The Ancient Beginnings" of the New World adventure.[5]

The More family edit

Much of what is known about Richard's early childhood is through legal documents, more specifically the aforementioned document written in 1622, in response to a petition of Richard More's mother Katherine More (sometimes spelled Katharine, hereafter spelled Katherine) to Lord Chief Justice Sir James Ley, at which time she demands to know what has become of her children.[2] Katherine's father, Jasper More, was master of Larden, a 1000-acre estate between Much Wenlock and Ludlow in Shropshire. Samuel's father, Richard More, was master of Linley, an estate near Bishop's Castle, close to the Welsh border.[2][6] Both estates are in Shropshire, England.

Jasper's sons died leaving no male heir.[7] The estates were held in an entail whereby inheritance was restricted to male heirs and Samuel's father, but Richard, in the marriage settlement, paid £600 to Jasper More, so there must have been clear title.[8] It was arranged that Katherine would marry her cousin and indeed, on 4 February 1610, (old date style) Katherine, 25, married her cousin, seventeen-year-old Samuel More.[9][10]

At some point, Samuel began working in London as secretary to Edward, Lord Zouche, privy councillor, diplomat and courtier.[11] Over the next four years, Katherine bore four children: Elinor, Jasper, Richard, Mary. All were baptised at St James parish church in Shipton, Shropshire, with Samuel More as their father.[12]

The plan, court action, and removal of the children edit

In 1616, Samuel More accused his wife of adultery and, at the direction of his father, Richard, devised a plan to rid himself of Katherine and the children. The adultery was supposedly committed with Jacob Blakeway, a young man near in age to Katherine who lived close by and whose family had been More tenants for several generations. In 1608, Jacob Blakeway and his father Edward, a yeoman, had renewed a lease on a parcel of land owned by Katherine More's father, Jasper More of Larden Hall. The manor of Larden Hall was about half a mile from Brockton where the Blakeway family lived.[2] By a deed dated 20 April 1616, Samuel cut the entail on the Larden estate to prevent any of the children from inheriting. During the long court battle, Samuel would deny that he was the father of the children borne by his wife, Katherine, and stated them to be children of the adulterous relationship.[13] Katherine did not deny her relationship with Jacob Blakeway, stating there was a former betrothal contract with him, and therefore he was her true husband. This would have made her marriage to Samuel invalid. Samuel quotes her words in his declaration, "though she could not sufficiently prove by witnesses yet it was all one before god as she sayed". At that time any of the usual witnesses would likely have been dead.[14]

In that same year, by his own account, Samuel went to his employer and a More family friend, Lord Zouche, Lord President of the Council of Wales, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Privy Counselor, to draw up a plan for the disposition of the children.[15] Zouche had been a member of the Virginia Company and in 1617 he invested £100 in an expedition to the Colony of Virginia, which is where the Mayflower was supposed to have landed. It was his actions that were instrumental in putting the More children on the Mayflower.[16][17][18] At that time, children were routinely rounded up from the streets of London or taken from poor families receiving church relief to be used as labourers in the colonies. Any legal objections to the involuntary transportation of the children were over-ridden by the Privy Council, namely, Lord Zouche. Most people thought it a death sentence and, indeed, many did not survive either the voyage or the harsh climate, disease, and scarcity of fresh food for which they were ill-prepared.[19][20]

Additionally, in 1616, Samuel More, under his father Richard's direction, removed all four children from Larden and placed them in the care of some of his father's tenants near Linley.[2][21] The removal was shortly after the youngest child had been baptised, which was on 16 April. According to Samuel's statement,[22] the reason he sent the children away was "as the apparent likeness & resemblance … to Jacob Blakeway", quoting from: "A true declaracon of the disposing of the fower children of Katherine More sett downe by Samuell More her husband" together with the "reasons movinge him thereunto accasioned by a peticon" of hers to the Lord Chief Justice of England and it is endorsed, "Katherine Mores Petition to the Lord Chief Justice ...the disposing of her children to Virginia dated 1622".[23] Samuel goes on to state that, during the time the children were with the tenants, Katherine went there and engaged in a struggle to take her children back:[24] "Katharine went to the tenants dwelling where her children had been sequestered, and in a hail of murderous oaths, did teare the cloathes from their backes". There were at least twelve actions recorded between December 1619 and 8 July 1620, when it was finally dismissed.[25][26]

The statement details that, soon after the denial of the appeal on 8 July 1620, the children were transported from Shipton to London by a cousin of Samuel More and given into the care of Thomas Weston, "…and delivered to Philemon Powell who was intreated to deliver them to John Carver and Robert Cushman undertakers for the associats [sic] of John Peers [Pierce][21][27] for the plantacon [sic] of Virginia"[28] in whose home they would be staying while awaiting ship boarding.[29][30] Thomas Weston and Philemon Powell were both poor choices, and Thomas Weston especially was quite disreputable. Soon thereafter, Powell would become a convicted smuggler and Weston an enemy of the Crown.[31] As the agent of the Merchant Adventurer investment group that was funding the Puritan voyage, Bradford states that Weston caused them many financial and agreement contract problems, both before and after the Mayflower sailed. Weston's Puritan contacts for the voyage were John Carver and Robert Cushman who jointly agreed to find the children guardians among the Mayflower passengers. Carver and Cushman were agents from the Puritans to oversee preparations for the voyage[32] with Robert Cushman's title being Chief Agent, from 1617 until his death in 1625.[33] Within several weeks of the More children's arrival in London, and without their mother Katherine More's knowledge or approval, they were placed in the care of others on the Mayflower, bound for New England.[23]

After the Mayflower sailed, Katherine made another attempt to challenge the decision through the courts. It was this legal action in early 1622 before Chief Justice James Ley which led to the statement from Samuel explaining where he sent the children and why, the historical evidence for Richard More's early history.[34]

Samuel in the aftermath edit

Samuel More continued to act as secretary to Edward la Zouche and on 11 June 1625, he married Elizabeth Worsley, daughter of Richard Worsley, Esq. of Deeping Gate (in Maxey) in Northamptonshire and cousin to Lord Zouche's second wife,[35] although he was only separated not divorced from Katherine More and neither party was allowed to remarry during the lifetime of the other.[36] In February 1626, Samuel More obtained a royal pardon, possibly to protect himself against accusations of adultery. It is not known if Katherine was still alive at the time of his second marriage.[37]

Mayflower voyage edit

Richard More and his siblings departed Plymouth, England on the Mayflower 6 September 1620 (Old Style), dangerously late in the season. They endured a rough three months at sea in cramped and unsanitary conditions, eventually landing at Cape Cod Hook (Provincetown Harbor) on 11 November 1620 (Old Style). A number of colonists travelled as indentured servants on the Mayflower. Exactly what explanation was given for the More children's presence is not known, but many homeless waifs from the streets of London were sent to the New World as labourers.[38] The More children were assigned as servants and wards of three adult passengers, as follows:

  • Elinor More, Ellen More, age 8, assigned as a servant of Edward Winslow. She died in November 1620 soon after the arrival of the Mayflower at Cape Cod Harbor. Her burial place is unknown and may have been ashore on Cape Cod similarly to her brother Jasper several weeks later. With many others who died that winter, her name appears on the Pilgrim Memorial Tomb, Cole's Hill, Plymouth, Massachusetts.[39]
  • Jasper More, age 7, servant of John Carver. He died of a 'common infection' in Dec. 1620 while the Mayflower was in Cape Cod Harbor. He was buried ashore in what is now the Provincetown area. Provincetown has a memorial plaque with his name and that of four others 'who died at sea while the ship lay at Cape Cod Harbor' in Nov./Dec. 1620.[39]
  • Mary More, age 4, assigned as a servant of William Brewster. She died sometime in the winter of 1620/1621. Her burial place is unknown, but may have been on Cole's Hill in Plymouth in an unmarked grave as with many others buried there that winter. She is mentioned on the Pilgrim Memorial Tomb in Plymouth, misidentified after Ellen's name as "and a brother (children)" – the statement coming from William Bradford's failing memory years after the event of her death.
  • Richard More, age 6, servant of William Brewster. He resided with the Brewster family until about mid-1627 when his term of indentureship expired.[40] This is about the time that his name appears, at age 14, in a census as a member of the Brewster family, in what was called then 'New Plimouth'. By 1628, Richard was in the employ of Pilgrim Isaac Allerton, who was engaged in trans-Atlantic trading.[41][42]

Richard's life in the New World edit

Richard was six years old when the Mayflower landed at Plymouth Colony. Immediately upon setting foot on land, he would have worked with all of the others to help gather supplies for food and shelter as well as to bury the dead after the epidemic, which would ultimately leave half of the original passengers dead.[43] In the spring of 1621, he would have attended what has now become known as the first Thanksgiving.[44] In 1627, at the age of 14, Richard is recorded as living at Plymouth Colony.[45]

Nothing is known of Richard during his years living with the Brewster family from 1620 to 1627, except that his name is on a document concerning the division of cattle and other livestock, and that he lived in Salem.[46] In 1635 he is listed as arriving from England on the Blessing, which had sailed from London to Massachusetts Bay. The purpose of this journey to London is unknown.[47] At some point, Richard went to work for Allerton as an apprentice. Under Allerton's apprenticeship, he fished in various locations around Plymouth and Maine, working as crew, and at some point he would become captain of the ships that supplied the new American colonies.[48] On 20 April 1636 Richard More married Christian Hunter who had been a passenger with him on the Blessing[49] They lived at Duxbury for a time before moving to Salem.[50] Richard worked as a retainer and a labourer for Richard Hollingsworth, another passenger from the Blessing who was Christian's guardian and step-father.[51]

By early 1642, Richard joined the Salem church. As a member, he would be allowed a voice and a vote in Salem affairs. Richard had his first two sons, Samuel and Thomas More, baptised.[52]

By about 1640s, and by the age of twenty-four, Richard would have been addressed as Captain of his own ketch and is known to have traded with the colonies, the West Indies, and England.[48] He had sold his twenty acres in Duxbury and moved himself and his family to Salem Neck.[53] He applied for a permit and set up his own fishing stand. Since drinking water was scarce, Richard dug a well on common ground for himself and others to use. He traded tobacco and other merchandise and supplies with Virginia and the West Indies, and made voyages to England.[54] In 1653, he served with his ship in an unsuccessful expedition against the Dutch settlement on the Hudson (later to become New York). In 1653, Captain More was paid for ye Dutch expedition.[55]

Beginning in 1654, for two consecutive years, he took part in two attacks by sea against the French, who were threatening New England's fishing and maritime trade in the lower Hudson River region. In 1654, Richard More served in a successful combined English and New England expedition against the French at Port Royal, the principal settlement of the French colony of Acadia, now Nova Scotia. Captain More was at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, when the French fort was reduced to English Obedience in 1654, and from thence a bell was later brought to Salem in Capt. Moor's Ketch. Thus Richard More contributed to the foundations of New England's maritime greatness.[56]

During this time, Richard received land at Plymouth as an "Ancient Freemen". The land was granted by the General Court and purchased from the Indians. He obtained lots near the Fall River and was one of the purchasers of lots in Swansea. In 1673, he sold land at Mattapoisett (he is referred to as) he of Massachusetts Colony on 1 March 1667/8; and formerly of Plymouth and now of Salem sold lots in Swansea and Sepecan on 30 August 1673.[56]

The Staple Act 1663, which stated, among other things, that the shipping of European goods to the colonies except through England or Wales was forbidden, forced hard times upon both colonial ship captains and the colonists. The restrictions threatened the very survival of the colonists and, to survive, the captains had to be extremely creative in their shipping manifests.[57] The Navigation Acts, along with the continued taxation of the colonies into the next century, brought about the growth of isolationism, which eventually resulted in the American Revolution.[58]

In 1665, Richard rescued the colonists at the newly established colony at Cape Fear. The ship that was supposed to bring supplies failed to arrive and, consequently, the people were dying of starvation and the lack of adequate protection against the weather. It was an extremely hazardous area for ships but, upon learning of the situation, Richard brought a shipment of food and supplies to aid the desperate colonists.[59] When Richard's old sailing friend, Richard Starr, was murdered, he took on the responsibility of Starr's three children. In his fifty years as a mariner Richard had never lost a vessel, nor had any sailor brought charges against him.[60]

 
Capt. Richard More memorial near his grave in Salem, Massachusetts

Richard served alongside Joseph Dudley during the Great Swamp Fight in December 1675, a massacre of the Narragansett people living around Narragansett Bay.

Reverend Nicholas Noyes was a man whom Richard knew well and would become directly involved with in his later life. Noyes was the same man who would lead the campaign against the so-called witches of Salem.[61] In later life, Richard suffered from financial hardship. On 1 July 1688, he was brought before the Salem church elders for 'gross unchastity with another man's wife'.[62] The elders had spoken to him privately on several occasions as Richard represented a member of the Ancient Days and they wanted to maintain a special place in their history. He was publicly sanctioned and excommunicated from the church. Richard accepted the judgment and made a public repentance and, according to documents, was restored to the church in 1691. According to David Lindsay, historian and author, the pastor who punished him was Reverend Nicholas Noyes.[63][64]

Richard More is buried in Salem. There is documentary evidence that he was alive in 1694 and dead in 1696.[65] His gravestone gives an age of 84, but he deposed in 1684 that he was aged seaventy yeares or thereabouts indicating he was unsure of his birth date. The gravestone in the old Salem burial ground gives a date of 1692.[29]

Marriages edit

Richard More married three times:

  • Christian Hunter on 20 October 1636 in Plymouth Colony. She was born ca. 1615 in possibly Southwold, Suffolk, England, and was baptised there on 13 August 1615 at (possibly) St Edmund's Church. She died on 18 March 1676 in Salem, Massachusetts. Her parents were Thomas Hunter (d.1623/7) and Susan Gentleman. She came to America in 1635 on the ship Blessing with her mother and step-father Richard Hollingsworth.[66]
  • Elizabeth Woolnough on 23 October 1645 in St Dunstan's, Stepney, London. The record of that event notes that "Richard Moore of Salem, Mariner" married Elizabeth Woolnough of Limehouse district, London. The Stepney parish register states that Elizabeth was the daughter of Benjamin Woolnough, having been baptised in St Dunstan's on 21 December 1623. Benjamin Woolnough was a trans-Atlantic ship captain, sailing to Virginia. The last time that Elizabeth's name appears on documents is on 7 April 1646, the day after Richard More failed to appear at the Kings Session for Peace, when she identified herself to the High Court of Admiralty as "Elizabeth, wife of Richard Moore of Stepney." Her appearance in court was to answer a charge against More, who had probably fled the country, for being intoxicated in the company of a woman of easy virtue as well as a child of about eight years, thought to have been his daughter Elizabeth. There is no evidence that Elizabeth Woolnough ever came to America. No further record.[67]
  • Jane Hollingsworth Crumpton. Born c. 1631. Died 5/8 October 1686 in Salem, Massachusetts. Married before 23 May 1678 in Salem, Massachusetts. Daughter of Richard L. Hollingsworth, Sr. and Susan Gentleman Woodbury Hunter Hollingsworth. She was the widow of Samuel Crumpton, who was killed by Indians in 1675.[68]

Children edit

Richard More and Christian Hunter had seven children:

  • Samuel More, baptised 6 March 1642 in Salem, Mass. Died after March 1677. Married Sarah ____.
  • Thomas More, baptised 6 March 1642 in Salem, Mass. Died after 25 November 1692.
  • Caleb More, baptised 31 March 1643/4 in Salem, Mass. Died 4 January 1678/9 in Salem, Mass.
  • Richard More (jr.), baptised 2 January 1647/8 in Salem, Mass. Died 1 May 1696. Married Sarah ______. 6 children – 3 sons, 2 daughters and 1 unknown.
  • Joshua More, baptised 3 March 1646 in Salem, Mass. Died between 1660–1675.
  • Susanna More, baptised 12 May 1650 in Salem, Mass. Died after 30 October 1728 in Salem, Mass. Married (1) c.1675 Samuel Dutch, (2) c.1694 Richard Hutton (3) 1714 John Knowlton. She had 4 daughters with Samuel Dutch.[69]
  • Christian More, baptised 5 September 1652 in Salem, Mass. Died 30 May 1680 in Salem, Mass. Married 31 Aug 1676 Joshua Conant. 1 son.

Richard More and Elizabeth Woolnough had one daughter:

  • Elizabeth More, born ca. 1638 in probably London, about 7–8 years prior to her parents' marriage in 1645. She was baptised at St Dunstan's Church, Stepney, London on 2 March 1646, five months after her parents' marriage in 1645. Nothing more is known about her other than a record of an "Elizabeth More", of about her age, appearing briefly in Salem about 1660, and marrying a local shipwright named Richard Clarke. They soon after moved to Long Island where they appeared at Southampton, Long Island in 1661, as husband and wife.[70]

A recently discovered document suggests that Elizabeth left posterity a trail of breadcrumbs for her identity in the names of her children. The “Pennsylvania and New Jersey, U.S., Church and Town Records, 1669-2013” for Elizabeth Clark reads “RICHARD CLARK, shipwright, living in Southold LI in 1675; removed with wife and children to ET ca 1678; d 1697 m. Elizabeth letters of adm Feb 16 1725 Essex Liber A/238 issues: Elizabeth, Richard, John, Joshua, Samuel, Ephraim, Thomas and Benjamin.

This group of names in fact, reflects the most important people in the lives of Richard and Elizabeth (More) Clark. • Elizabeth Woolnough, Elizabeth’s mother • Richard More, Elizabeth’s father • Joshua Woolnough, probably Elizabeth’s uncle and close friend of Richard More • Samuel More, Richard More’s ‘legal’ father • Thomas Clark, most genealogists consider this to be the name of Richard Clark’s father • Benjamin Woolnough, Elizbeth’s maternal grandfather

Death and burial edit

 
The original gravestone of Mayflower passenger Captain Richard More.
 
Gravestone of Christian Hunter More, wife of Richard More, Salem MA.

According to the Mayflower Society records, he died in Salem after 19 March 1693/4, but before 20 April 1696.[69] There is documentary evidence that he was alive in 1694 and dead in 1696. His gravestone gives an age of 84, but it is more likely that Richard was unsure of his birth date. The gravestone in the old Salem burial ground gives a date of 1692. But the date, and additional words 'a Mayflower pilgrim', were added at some point between 1901 and 1919, and provoked some outraged reaction in the local press.[71]

Richard More is buried in what was known as the Charter Street Burial Ground but is now the Burying Point/Charter Street Cemetery in Salem, Massachusetts. He is the only Mayflower passenger to have his gravestone still where it was originally placed sometime in the mid-1690s. Also buried nearby in the same cemetery were his two wives, Christian Hunter More and Jane (Crumpton) More.[72]

If the 1696 date is correct, Richard More was the last surviving male passenger of the Mayflower, which would have left Mary Allerton, daughter of Pilgrim Isaac Allerton, as the last survivor altogether. She died 28 November 1699.[73]

Ancestry of Richard More

Richard More and his siblings are the only Mayflower passengers with proven, extensive and well-documented royal ancestry from ancient Britain.[74][75][76][77]

The More family in history edit

 
Mayflower plaque in St James Church in Shipton, Shropshire commemorating the More children baptism. courtesy of Phil Revell

It was only in 1959 that Sir Jasper More discovered a trunk in his attic, which contained a document dated 1622 that gave, first, an explanation of an episode in the More family history, and secondly, explained a mystery that had long intrigued genealogists of Mayflower history. The document was a sworn submission by Samuel More to the Lord Chief Justice in which he explained his disposition of the four More children. Previously, those four children were assumed to have been orphans, plucked from the streets of London: "homeless waifs from the streets of London taken out to the New World to be used as labor".[17][78]

This document revealed the tragic family circumstances that caused Samuel More to take the children from their home at Larden Hall in Shipton, and send them away to America on the Mayflower without their mother's knowledge or consent.[79]

Richard's daughter, Susanna (More), first married Samuel Dutch in about 1675. It is only through their one surviving child (Susanna Dutch) that descendants of Richard More of the Mayflower can be traced to the present.[80]

Centuries later, while excavating just outside a place where the Plymouth barricades stood, a metal spoon was found with Richard's initials carved into it.[81]

Richard More descendants recognised by the Mayflower Society are estimated presently to be only about 100 members.[82]

References edit

  1. ^ Shipton Parish Register, Shropshire Archive.
  2. ^ a b c d e Anthony R. Wagner. The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More, (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114, p. 163-168
  3. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part III, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 2 (July 1994), p. 20
  4. ^ William Bradford, History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford, the second Governor of Plymouth (Boston: 1856), pp. 450, 451, 447 (Mary was referred to as a boy)
  5. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 45, 151
  6. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part III, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 2 (July 1994), p. 12
  7. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 2
  8. ^ Donald F. Harris PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part I, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 43 no. 1, (July 1993), p. 130
  9. ^ Edwin A. Hill, PhD., The English Ancestry of Richard More of the Mayflower, The New York genealogical and biographical record, (July 1905), vol 36, p. 214
  10. ^ Shipton Parish Register Shropshire archive.
  11. ^ Acts of the Privy Council of England, APC Col. p. 38, show Samuel More in Zouche's service as a private secretary as noted in David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p.221.
  12. ^ Anthony R. Wagner, The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More, (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114, p. 164: Parish Record of the Shipton Shropshire Register Society.
  13. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part II, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 1 (January 1994), p. 14, 18
  14. ^ Anthony R. Wagner, The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More, (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114, p. 165
  15. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part III, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 2 (July 1994), p. 109
  16. ^ Liza Picard, Elizabeth's London (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2003), p. 196
  17. ^ a b Morison & Commager, The Growth of the American Republic ( 4th Ed., New York, 1950), vol. 1, p.40
  18. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part III, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 2 (January 1994), vol. 44, no. 1, p. 14. and (2 July 1994) vol. 44, no. 2, pp. 108–110
  19. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part III, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 2 (July 1994), pp. 110, 111
  20. ^ R.C. Johnson, The Transportation of Vagrant Children from London to Virginia, 1618–1622, in H.S. Reinmuth (Ed.), Early Stuart Studies: Essays in Honor of David Harris Willson, Minneapolis, 1970.
  21. ^ a b Anthony R. Wagner. The Children in the Mayflower (The London Times) 30 June 1959 p. 11
  22. ^ The More Archive – Shropshire Council
  23. ^ a b Anthony R. Wagner. The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More, (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114, pp. 165–167
  24. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 13
  25. ^ The Shropshire Records and Research Center 1037/10/8 and 9
  26. ^ Anthony R. Wagner, The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More, (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114, p. 166
  27. ^ William Bradford. History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford, the second Governor of Plymouth (Boston: 1856), p. 123
  28. ^ Nathaniel Philbrick, Mayflower: A story of Courage, Community and War (New York: Viking, 2006), p. 20
  29. ^ a b Charles Edward Banks. The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers (Grafton Press N.Y. 1929) p. 72
  30. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 53
  31. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp.27,28,54,55
  32. ^ Nathaniel Philbrick, Mayflower: A story of Courage, Community and War (Viking 2006) pp. 21. 26, 42, 135
  33. ^ Robert E. Cushman and Franklin P. Cole, Robert Cushman of Kent (1577–1625): Chief Agent of the Plymouth Pilgrims (1617–1625) (2nd Ed. Edited by Judith Swan Pub by General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 2005), p. 87
  34. ^ Anthony R. Wagner, The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More, (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114, p. 164-167
  35. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part III, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 2 (July 1994), p.110
  36. ^ Donald F. Harris, PhD., The Mayflower Descendant(Boston: Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants, January 1994), vol. 44, no. 1, p. 16
  37. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 65
  38. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part I, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 43, no. 2 (July 1993), vol. 43, no. 2, p.124
  39. ^ a b William Bradford. History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford, the second Governor of Plymouth (Boston: 1856), pp. 447, 451
  40. ^ William Bradford, History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford, the second Governor of Plymouth (Boston: 1856), p. 447
  41. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp 102–104 and pp. 25–27, 102–104, 150–152
  42. ^ Nathaniel Philbrick, Mayflower: A story of Courage, Community and War (New York: Viking 2006) p. 26
  43. ^ William Bradford, History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford, the second Governor of Plymouth (Boston: 1856), p. 91
  44. ^ Edward Winslow, "Primary Sources for The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth Mourt's Relation. Pilgrim Hall Museum. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  45. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 43–50.
  46. ^ Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony: Its History and People, 1620–1691, (Salt Lake City: Ancestry Publishing, 1986), p. 180
  47. ^ Manifest of the Blessing [1]
  48. ^ a b David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 73.
  49. ^ Marriage to Christian Hunter [2]
  50. ^ Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony: Its History and People, 1620–1691, (Salt Lake City: Ancestry Publishing, 1986), p. 179
  51. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 102, 109
  52. ^ Richard D. Pierce, The Records of the First Church in Salem Massachusetts, 1629–1736, p.171
  53. ^ Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620–1633 Great Migration Study Project. New England Historic Genealogical Society (Boston 1995), vol II., G-O, p. 1284
  54. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 106–109
  55. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 126–128
  56. ^ a b Robert Moody Sherman, CG, FASG, Robert S. Wakefield, FASG, Lydia Dow Finlay, CALS Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Family of Richard More (Pub. General Society of Mayflower Descendants 1997), v. 15. p. 152
  57. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims, (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 152–157
  58. ^ L. Carroll Judson, Sages and Heroes of the American Revolution (Philadelphis: Moss & Brother 1854), [3]
  59. ^ Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Immigrants to New England, 1634–1635(FASG Published 1995)
  60. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), Preface, pp. xxi, xx, 22, 154
  61. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p 205-206
  62. ^ Richard D. Pierce, The Records of the First Church in Salem Massachusetts, 1629–1736 , p.171
  63. ^ Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony: Its History and People, 1620–1691, (Salt Lake City: Ancestry Publishing, 1986), p. 329
  64. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), Introduction, also pp 190–192.
  65. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower Parts I–III vol. 43, July 1993, and vol. 44 (January & July 1994).
  66. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp 92, 229(n19) & TAG Vol. 78, No. 4, October 2003
  67. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 102, 104, 123, 124, 150
  68. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 104, 122, 150, 229
  69. ^ a b Robert Moody Sherman, CG, FASG, Robert S. Wakefield, FASG, Lydia Dow Finlay, CALS. Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Family of Richard More (General Society of Mayflower Descendants Published 1997,) vol. 15, p. 156
  70. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), pp. 104, 122, 150, 230, 229
  71. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part I, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 43, no. 2 (July 1993)(quoting from Mayflower Quarterly of Feb. 1972)
  72. ^ Richard More, (Mayflower passenger) [4]
  73. ^ Edwin A. Hill, PhD., The English Ancestry of Richard More of the Mayflower, The New York genealogical and biographical record, (July 1905), vol 36, p. 213
  74. ^ Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Richard More (2004) pgs 515–516
  75. ^ David J. Cade, The Search for a Royal Descent, Parts I and II, Mayflower Quarterly, The General Society for Mayflower Descendants, (Plymouth, MA.: 2001), vol. 67, pp. 127–134 and (2002) pp. 239 -241
  76. ^ Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial And Medieval Families (pub. 2005.) pp. 585, 586
  77. ^ Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony: Its History and People, 1620–1691, (Salt Lake City:Ancestry Publishing, 1986), p. 328
  78. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part I, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 43, no. 2 (July 1993), p. 124
  79. ^ Donald F Harris, PhD., The More Children of the Mayflower, Part II, The Mayflower Descendant, vol. 44, no. 1 (January 1994), p. 11
  80. ^ Robert Moody Sherman, CG, FASG, Robert S. Wakefield, FASG, Lydia Dow Finlay, CALS. Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Family of Richard More (General Society of Mayflower Descendants Published 1997), vol. 15, pp. 151–155
  81. ^ David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 83
  82. ^ The Mayflower Society

Sources edit

  • Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants
  • The Mayflower Society
  • Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims, by David Lindsay, (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002),
  • The Mayflower Descendant. Donald Harris, PhD., (Boston: Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants), published in vol. 43, (July 1993), and vol. 44, (January & July 1994).
  • "The Origin of the Mayflower Children: Jasper, Richard and Ellen More." Anthony R. Wagner. C.V.O., D. Litt. FASG, Richmond Herald, College of Arms, London, England. (Boston: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, July 1960), vol. 114
  • The London Times. 30 June 1959. pp. 163–168. Anthony R. Wagner. C.V.O., D. Litt. FASG, Richmond Herald, College of Arms, London, England.

Further reading edit

Fictional publications edit

  • A Spurious Brood by Phil Revell. Pub: Ascribe Publications; 2011 (www.philrevell.co.uk)
  • The Mayflower Children by Phil Revell. Pub: Ascribe Publications; 2011

External links edit

  • Shropshire's Mayflower Children

richard, more, mayflower, passenger, richard, more, 1614, 1694, 1696, born, corvedale, shropshire, england, baptised, james, parish, church, shipton, shropshire, november, 1614, richard, three, siblings, were, centre, mystery, early, 17th, century, england, th. Richard More 1614 c 1694 1696 was born in Corvedale Shropshire England and was baptised at St James parish church in Shipton Shropshire on 13 November 1614 1 Richard and his three siblings were at the centre of a mystery in early 17th century England that caused early genealogists to wonder why the More children s father believed to be Samuel More would send his very young children away to the New World on the Mayflower in the care of others It was in 1959 that the mystery was explained Jasper More a descendant of Samuel More prompted by his genealogist friend Sir Anthony Wagner searched and found in his attic a 1622 document that detailed the legal disputes between Katherine More and Samuel More and what actually happened to the More children It is clear from these events that Samuel did not believe the children to be his offspring 2 To rid himself of the children he arranged for them to be sent to the Colony of Virginia 3 Due to bad weather the Mayflower finally anchored in Cape Cod Harbor in November 1620 where one of the More children died soon after another died in early December and yet another died later in the first winter Only Richard survived and even thrived in the perilous environment of early colonial America going on to lead a very full life 4 Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor by William Halsall 1882 Richard became a well known sea captain who helped to deliver to various colonies the supplies that were vital to their survival travelled over Atlantic and West Indies trade routes and fought in various early naval sea battles He and other Mayflower survivors were referred to in their time as First Comers who lived in the perilous times of what was called The Ancient Beginnings of the New World adventure 5 Contents 1 The More family 2 The plan court action and removal of the children 3 Samuel in the aftermath 4 Mayflower voyage 5 Richard s life in the New World 6 Marriages 7 Children 8 Death and burial 9 The More family in history 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 12 1 Fictional publications 13 External linksThe More family editMuch of what is known about Richard s early childhood is through legal documents more specifically the aforementioned document written in 1622 in response to a petition of Richard More s mother Katherine More sometimes spelled Katharine hereafter spelled Katherine to Lord Chief Justice Sir James Ley at which time she demands to know what has become of her children 2 Katherine s father Jasper More was master of Larden a 1000 acre estate between Much Wenlock and Ludlow in Shropshire Samuel s father Richard More was master of Linley an estate near Bishop s Castle close to the Welsh border 2 6 Both estates are in Shropshire England Jasper s sons died leaving no male heir 7 The estates were held in an entail whereby inheritance was restricted to male heirs and Samuel s father but Richard in the marriage settlement paid 600 to Jasper More so there must have been clear title 8 It was arranged that Katherine would marry her cousin and indeed on 4 February 1610 old date style Katherine 25 married her cousin seventeen year old Samuel More 9 10 At some point Samuel began working in London as secretary to Edward Lord Zouche privy councillor diplomat and courtier 11 Over the next four years Katherine bore four children Elinor Jasper Richard Mary All were baptised at St James parish church in Shipton Shropshire with Samuel More as their father 12 The plan court action and removal of the children editIn 1616 Samuel More accused his wife of adultery and at the direction of his father Richard devised a plan to rid himself of Katherine and the children The adultery was supposedly committed with Jacob Blakeway a young man near in age to Katherine who lived close by and whose family had been More tenants for several generations In 1608 Jacob Blakeway and his father Edward a yeoman had renewed a lease on a parcel of land owned by Katherine More s father Jasper More of Larden Hall The manor of Larden Hall was about half a mile from Brockton where the Blakeway family lived 2 By a deed dated 20 April 1616 Samuel cut the entail on the Larden estate to prevent any of the children from inheriting During the long court battle Samuel would deny that he was the father of the children borne by his wife Katherine and stated them to be children of the adulterous relationship 13 Katherine did not deny her relationship with Jacob Blakeway stating there was a former betrothal contract with him and therefore he was her true husband This would have made her marriage to Samuel invalid Samuel quotes her words in his declaration though she could not sufficiently prove by witnesses yet it was all one before god as she sayed At that time any of the usual witnesses would likely have been dead 14 In that same year by his own account Samuel went to his employer and a More family friend Lord Zouche Lord President of the Council of Wales Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Privy Counselor to draw up a plan for the disposition of the children 15 Zouche had been a member of the Virginia Company and in 1617 he invested 100 in an expedition to the Colony of Virginia which is where the Mayflower was supposed to have landed It was his actions that were instrumental in putting the More children on the Mayflower 16 17 18 At that time children were routinely rounded up from the streets of London or taken from poor families receiving church relief to be used as labourers in the colonies Any legal objections to the involuntary transportation of the children were over ridden by the Privy Council namely Lord Zouche Most people thought it a death sentence and indeed many did not survive either the voyage or the harsh climate disease and scarcity of fresh food for which they were ill prepared 19 20 Additionally in 1616 Samuel More under his father Richard s direction removed all four children from Larden and placed them in the care of some of his father s tenants near Linley 2 21 The removal was shortly after the youngest child had been baptised which was on 16 April According to Samuel s statement 22 the reason he sent the children away was as the apparent likeness amp resemblance to Jacob Blakeway quoting from A true declaracon of the disposing of the fower children of Katherine More sett downe by Samuell More her husband together with the reasons movinge him thereunto accasioned by a peticon of hers to the Lord Chief Justice of England and it is endorsed Katherine Mores Petition to the Lord Chief Justice the disposing of her children to Virginia dated 1622 23 Samuel goes on to state that during the time the children were with the tenants Katherine went there and engaged in a struggle to take her children back 24 Katharine went to the tenants dwelling where her children had been sequestered and in a hail of murderous oaths did teare the cloathes from their backes There were at least twelve actions recorded between December 1619 and 8 July 1620 when it was finally dismissed 25 26 The statement details that soon after the denial of the appeal on 8 July 1620 the children were transported from Shipton to London by a cousin of Samuel More and given into the care of Thomas Weston and delivered to Philemon Powell who was intreated to deliver them to John Carver and Robert Cushman undertakers for the associats sic of John Peers Pierce 21 27 for the plantacon sic of Virginia 28 in whose home they would be staying while awaiting ship boarding 29 30 Thomas Weston and Philemon Powell were both poor choices and Thomas Weston especially was quite disreputable Soon thereafter Powell would become a convicted smuggler and Weston an enemy of the Crown 31 As the agent of the Merchant Adventurer investment group that was funding the Puritan voyage Bradford states that Weston caused them many financial and agreement contract problems both before and after the Mayflower sailed Weston s Puritan contacts for the voyage were John Carver and Robert Cushman who jointly agreed to find the children guardians among the Mayflower passengers Carver and Cushman were agents from the Puritans to oversee preparations for the voyage 32 with Robert Cushman s title being Chief Agent from 1617 until his death in 1625 33 Within several weeks of the More children s arrival in London and without their mother Katherine More s knowledge or approval they were placed in the care of others on the Mayflower bound for New England 23 After the Mayflower sailed Katherine made another attempt to challenge the decision through the courts It was this legal action in early 1622 before Chief Justice James Ley which led to the statement from Samuel explaining where he sent the children and why the historical evidence for Richard More s early history 34 Samuel in the aftermath editSamuel More continued to act as secretary to Edward la Zouche and on 11 June 1625 he married Elizabeth Worsley daughter of Richard Worsley Esq of Deeping Gate in Maxey in Northamptonshire and cousin to Lord Zouche s second wife 35 although he was only separated not divorced from Katherine More and neither party was allowed to remarry during the lifetime of the other 36 In February 1626 Samuel More obtained a royal pardon possibly to protect himself against accusations of adultery It is not known if Katherine was still alive at the time of his second marriage 37 Mayflower voyage editSee also Mayflower Voyage Richard More and his siblings departed Plymouth England on the Mayflower 6 September 1620 Old Style dangerously late in the season They endured a rough three months at sea in cramped and unsanitary conditions eventually landing at Cape Cod Hook Provincetown Harbor on 11 November 1620 Old Style A number of colonists travelled as indentured servants on the Mayflower Exactly what explanation was given for the More children s presence is not known but many homeless waifs from the streets of London were sent to the New World as labourers 38 The More children were assigned as servants and wards of three adult passengers as follows Elinor More Ellen More age 8 assigned as a servant of Edward Winslow She died in November 1620 soon after the arrival of the Mayflower at Cape Cod Harbor Her burial place is unknown and may have been ashore on Cape Cod similarly to her brother Jasper several weeks later With many others who died that winter her name appears on the Pilgrim Memorial Tomb Cole s Hill Plymouth Massachusetts 39 Jasper More age 7 servant of John Carver He died of a common infection in Dec 1620 while the Mayflower was in Cape Cod Harbor He was buried ashore in what is now the Provincetown area Provincetown has a memorial plaque with his name and that of four others who died at sea while the ship lay at Cape Cod Harbor in Nov Dec 1620 39 Mary More age 4 assigned as a servant of William Brewster She died sometime in the winter of 1620 1621 Her burial place is unknown but may have been on Cole s Hill in Plymouth in an unmarked grave as with many others buried there that winter She is mentioned on the Pilgrim Memorial Tomb in Plymouth misidentified after Ellen s name as and a brother children the statement coming from William Bradford s failing memory years after the event of her death Richard More age 6 servant of William Brewster He resided with the Brewster family until about mid 1627 when his term of indentureship expired 40 This is about the time that his name appears at age 14 in a census as a member of the Brewster family in what was called then New Plimouth By 1628 Richard was in the employ of Pilgrim Isaac Allerton who was engaged in trans Atlantic trading 41 42 Richard s life in the New World editRichard was six years old when the Mayflower landed at Plymouth Colony Immediately upon setting foot on land he would have worked with all of the others to help gather supplies for food and shelter as well as to bury the dead after the epidemic which would ultimately leave half of the original passengers dead 43 In the spring of 1621 he would have attended what has now become known as the first Thanksgiving 44 In 1627 at the age of 14 Richard is recorded as living at Plymouth Colony 45 Nothing is known of Richard during his years living with the Brewster family from 1620 to 1627 except that his name is on a document concerning the division of cattle and other livestock and that he lived in Salem 46 In 1635 he is listed as arriving from England on the Blessing which had sailed from London to Massachusetts Bay The purpose of this journey to London is unknown 47 At some point Richard went to work for Allerton as an apprentice Under Allerton s apprenticeship he fished in various locations around Plymouth and Maine working as crew and at some point he would become captain of the ships that supplied the new American colonies 48 On 20 April 1636 Richard More married Christian Hunter who had been a passenger with him on the Blessing 49 They lived at Duxbury for a time before moving to Salem 50 Richard worked as a retainer and a labourer for Richard Hollingsworth another passenger from the Blessing who was Christian s guardian and step father 51 By early 1642 Richard joined the Salem church As a member he would be allowed a voice and a vote in Salem affairs Richard had his first two sons Samuel and Thomas More baptised 52 By about 1640s and by the age of twenty four Richard would have been addressed as Captain of his own ketch and is known to have traded with the colonies the West Indies and England 48 He had sold his twenty acres in Duxbury and moved himself and his family to Salem Neck 53 He applied for a permit and set up his own fishing stand Since drinking water was scarce Richard dug a well on common ground for himself and others to use He traded tobacco and other merchandise and supplies with Virginia and the West Indies and made voyages to England 54 In 1653 he served with his ship in an unsuccessful expedition against the Dutch settlement on the Hudson later to become New York In 1653 Captain More was paid for ye Dutch expedition 55 Beginning in 1654 for two consecutive years he took part in two attacks by sea against the French who were threatening New England s fishing and maritime trade in the lower Hudson River region In 1654 Richard More served in a successful combined English and New England expedition against the French at Port Royal the principal settlement of the French colony of Acadia now Nova Scotia Captain More was at Port Royal Nova Scotia when the French fort was reduced to English Obedience in 1654 and from thence a bell was later brought to Salem in Capt Moor s Ketch Thus Richard More contributed to the foundations of New England s maritime greatness 56 During this time Richard received land at Plymouth as an Ancient Freemen The land was granted by the General Court and purchased from the Indians He obtained lots near the Fall River and was one of the purchasers of lots in Swansea In 1673 he sold land at Mattapoisett he is referred to as he of Massachusetts Colony on 1 March 1667 8 and formerly of Plymouth and now of Salem sold lots in Swansea and Sepecan on 30 August 1673 56 The Staple Act 1663 which stated among other things that the shipping of European goods to the colonies except through England or Wales was forbidden forced hard times upon both colonial ship captains and the colonists The restrictions threatened the very survival of the colonists and to survive the captains had to be extremely creative in their shipping manifests 57 The Navigation Acts along with the continued taxation of the colonies into the next century brought about the growth of isolationism which eventually resulted in the American Revolution 58 In 1665 Richard rescued the colonists at the newly established colony at Cape Fear The ship that was supposed to bring supplies failed to arrive and consequently the people were dying of starvation and the lack of adequate protection against the weather It was an extremely hazardous area for ships but upon learning of the situation Richard brought a shipment of food and supplies to aid the desperate colonists 59 When Richard s old sailing friend Richard Starr was murdered he took on the responsibility of Starr s three children In his fifty years as a mariner Richard had never lost a vessel nor had any sailor brought charges against him 60 nbsp Capt Richard More memorial near his grave in Salem MassachusettsRichard served alongside Joseph Dudley during the Great Swamp Fight in December 1675 a massacre of the Narragansett people living around Narragansett Bay Reverend Nicholas Noyes was a man whom Richard knew well and would become directly involved with in his later life Noyes was the same man who would lead the campaign against the so called witches of Salem 61 In later life Richard suffered from financial hardship On 1 July 1688 he was brought before the Salem church elders for gross unchastity with another man s wife 62 The elders had spoken to him privately on several occasions as Richard represented a member of the Ancient Days and they wanted to maintain a special place in their history He was publicly sanctioned and excommunicated from the church Richard accepted the judgment and made a public repentance and according to documents was restored to the church in 1691 According to David Lindsay historian and author the pastor who punished him was Reverend Nicholas Noyes 63 64 Richard More is buried in Salem There is documentary evidence that he was alive in 1694 and dead in 1696 65 His gravestone gives an age of 84 but he deposed in 1684 that he was aged seaventy yeares or thereabouts indicating he was unsure of his birth date The gravestone in the old Salem burial ground gives a date of 1692 29 Marriages editRichard More married three times Christian Hunter on 20 October 1636 in Plymouth Colony She was born ca 1615 in possibly Southwold Suffolk England and was baptised there on 13 August 1615 at possibly St Edmund s Church She died on 18 March 1676 in Salem Massachusetts Her parents were Thomas Hunter d 1623 7 and Susan Gentleman She came to America in 1635 on the ship Blessing with her mother and step father Richard Hollingsworth 66 Elizabeth Woolnough on 23 October 1645 in St Dunstan s Stepney London The record of that event notes that Richard Moore of Salem Mariner married Elizabeth Woolnough of Limehouse district London The Stepney parish register states that Elizabeth was the daughter of Benjamin Woolnough having been baptised in St Dunstan s on 21 December 1623 Benjamin Woolnough was a trans Atlantic ship captain sailing to Virginia The last time that Elizabeth s name appears on documents is on 7 April 1646 the day after Richard More failed to appear at the Kings Session for Peace when she identified herself to the High Court of Admiralty as Elizabeth wife of Richard Moore of Stepney Her appearance in court was to answer a charge against More who had probably fled the country for being intoxicated in the company of a woman of easy virtue as well as a child of about eight years thought to have been his daughter Elizabeth There is no evidence that Elizabeth Woolnough ever came to America No further record 67 Jane Hollingsworth Crumpton Born c 1631 Died 5 8 October 1686 in Salem Massachusetts Married before 23 May 1678 in Salem Massachusetts Daughter of Richard L Hollingsworth Sr and Susan Gentleman Woodbury Hunter Hollingsworth She was the widow of Samuel Crumpton who was killed by Indians in 1675 68 Children editRichard More and Christian Hunter had seven children Samuel More baptised 6 March 1642 in Salem Mass Died after March 1677 Married Sarah Thomas More baptised 6 March 1642 in Salem Mass Died after 25 November 1692 Caleb More baptised 31 March 1643 4 in Salem Mass Died 4 January 1678 9 in Salem Mass Richard More jr baptised 2 January 1647 8 in Salem Mass Died 1 May 1696 Married Sarah 6 children 3 sons 2 daughters and 1 unknown Joshua More baptised 3 March 1646 in Salem Mass Died between 1660 1675 Susanna More baptised 12 May 1650 in Salem Mass Died after 30 October 1728 in Salem Mass Married 1 c 1675 Samuel Dutch 2 c 1694 Richard Hutton 3 1714 John Knowlton She had 4 daughters with Samuel Dutch 69 Christian More baptised 5 September 1652 in Salem Mass Died 30 May 1680 in Salem Mass Married 31 Aug 1676 Joshua Conant 1 son Richard More and Elizabeth Woolnough had one daughter Elizabeth More born ca 1638 in probably London about 7 8 years prior to her parents marriage in 1645 She was baptised at St Dunstan s Church Stepney London on 2 March 1646 five months after her parents marriage in 1645 Nothing more is known about her other than a record of an Elizabeth More of about her age appearing briefly in Salem about 1660 and marrying a local shipwright named Richard Clarke They soon after moved to Long Island where they appeared at Southampton Long Island in 1661 as husband and wife 70 A recently discovered document suggests that Elizabeth left posterity a trail of breadcrumbs for her identity in the names of her children The Pennsylvania and New Jersey U S Church and Town Records 1669 2013 for Elizabeth Clark reads RICHARD CLARK shipwright living in Southold LI in 1675 removed with wife and children to ET ca 1678 d 1697 m Elizabeth letters of adm Feb 16 1725 Essex Liber A 238 issues Elizabeth Richard John Joshua Samuel Ephraim Thomas and Benjamin This group of names in fact reflects the most important people in the lives of Richard and Elizabeth More Clark Elizabeth Woolnough Elizabeth s mother Richard More Elizabeth s father Joshua Woolnough probably Elizabeth s uncle and close friend of Richard More Samuel More Richard More s legal father Thomas Clark most genealogists consider this to be the name of Richard Clark s father Benjamin Woolnough Elizbeth s maternal grandfatherDeath and burial edit nbsp The original gravestone of Mayflower passenger Captain Richard More nbsp Gravestone of Christian Hunter More wife of Richard More Salem MA According to the Mayflower Society records he died in Salem after 19 March 1693 4 but before 20 April 1696 69 There is documentary evidence that he was alive in 1694 and dead in 1696 His gravestone gives an age of 84 but it is more likely that Richard was unsure of his birth date The gravestone in the old Salem burial ground gives a date of 1692 But the date and additional words a Mayflower pilgrim were added at some point between 1901 and 1919 and provoked some outraged reaction in the local press 71 Richard More is buried in what was known as the Charter Street Burial Ground but is now the Burying Point Charter Street Cemetery in Salem Massachusetts He is the only Mayflower passenger to have his gravestone still where it was originally placed sometime in the mid 1690s Also buried nearby in the same cemetery were his two wives Christian Hunter More and Jane Crumpton More 72 If the 1696 date is correct Richard More was the last surviving male passenger of the Mayflower which would have left Mary Allerton daughter of Pilgrim Isaac Allerton as the last survivor altogether She died 28 November 1699 73 Ancestry of Richard MoreEdward III King of England married 1328 Philippa of Hainault Lionel of Antwerp 1st Duke of Clarence married 1342 Elizabeth de Burgh 4th Countess of Ulster Philippa Plantagenet of Clarence 5th Countess of Ulster married c 1338 Sir Edmund de Mortimer 3rd Earl of March Elizabeth de Mortimer married 1379 Sir Henry Hotspur Percy Elizabeth Percy married c 1404 Sir John Clifford 7th Lord Clifford Thomas Clifford 8th Lord Clifford married 1424 Joan Jane Dacre Sir Edmund Sutton married Maud Matilda Clifford after 1460 Sir Edmund Sutton Dorothy Sutton married c 1473 Richard Wrottesley Esq Jane Joan Wrottesley married c 1500 10 Richard Cressett Esq Margaret Cressett married c 1535 Thomas More Esq Jasper More Esq married 1572 Elizabeth Smale Small Katherine More married 1611 Samuel More Esq Richard More Richard More and his siblings are the only Mayflower passengers with proven extensive and well documented royal ancestry from ancient Britain 74 75 76 77 The More family in history edit nbsp Mayflower plaque in St James Church in Shipton Shropshire commemorating the More children baptism courtesy of Phil RevellIt was only in 1959 that Sir Jasper More discovered a trunk in his attic which contained a document dated 1622 that gave first an explanation of an episode in the More family history and secondly explained a mystery that had long intrigued genealogists of Mayflower history The document was a sworn submission by Samuel More to the Lord Chief Justice in which he explained his disposition of the four More children Previously those four children were assumed to have been orphans plucked from the streets of London homeless waifs from the streets of London taken out to the New World to be used as labor 17 78 This document revealed the tragic family circumstances that caused Samuel More to take the children from their home at Larden Hall in Shipton and send them away to America on the Mayflower without their mother s knowledge or consent 79 Richard s daughter Susanna More first married Samuel Dutch in about 1675 It is only through their one surviving child Susanna Dutch that descendants of Richard More of the Mayflower can be traced to the present 80 Centuries later while excavating just outside a place where the Plymouth barricades stood a metal spoon was found with Richard s initials carved into it 81 Richard More descendants recognised by the Mayflower Society are estimated presently to be only about 100 members 82 References edit Shipton Parish Register Shropshire Archive a b c d e Anthony R Wagner The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 p 163 168 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part III The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 2 July 1994 p 20 William Bradford History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford the second Governor of Plymouth Boston 1856 pp 450 451 447 Mary was referred to as a boy David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 45 151 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part III The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 2 July 1994 p 12 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 2 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part I The Mayflower Descendant vol 43 no 1 July 1993 p 130 Edwin A Hill PhD The English Ancestry of Richard More of the Mayflower The New York genealogical and biographical record July 1905 vol 36 p 214 Shipton Parish Register Shropshire archive Acts of the Privy Council of England APC Col p 38 show Samuel More in Zouche s service as a private secretary as noted in David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 221 Anthony R Wagner The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 p 164 Parish Record of the Shipton Shropshire Register Society Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part II The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 1 January 1994 p 14 18 Anthony R Wagner The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 p 165 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part III The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 2 July 1994 p 109 Liza Picard Elizabeth s London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2003 p 196 a b Morison amp Commager The Growth of the American Republic 4th Ed New York 1950 vol 1 p 40 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part III The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 2 January 1994 vol 44 no 1 p 14 and 2 July 1994 vol 44 no 2 pp 108 110 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part III The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 2 July 1994 pp 110 111 R C Johnson The Transportation of Vagrant Children from London to Virginia 1618 1622 in H S Reinmuth Ed Early Stuart Studies Essays in Honor of David Harris Willson Minneapolis 1970 a b Anthony R Wagner The Children in the Mayflower The London Times 30 June 1959 p 11 The More Archive Shropshire Council a b Anthony R Wagner The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 pp 165 167 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 13 The Shropshire Records and Research Center 1037 10 8 and 9 Anthony R Wagner The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 p 166 William Bradford History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford the second Governor of Plymouth Boston 1856 p 123 Nathaniel Philbrick Mayflower A story of Courage Community and War New York Viking 2006 p 20 a b Charles Edward Banks The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers Grafton Press N Y 1929 p 72 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 53 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 27 28 54 55 Nathaniel Philbrick Mayflower A story of Courage Community and War Viking 2006 pp 21 26 42 135 Robert E Cushman and Franklin P Cole Robert Cushman of Kent 1577 1625 Chief Agent of the Plymouth Pilgrims 1617 1625 2nd Ed Edited by Judith Swan Pub by General Society of Mayflower Descendants 2005 p 87 Anthony R Wagner The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 p 164 167 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part III The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 2 July 1994 p 110 Donald F Harris PhD The Mayflower Descendant Boston Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants January 1994 vol 44 no 1 p 16 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 65 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part I The Mayflower Descendant vol 43 no 2 July 1993 vol 43 no 2 p 124 a b William Bradford History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford the second Governor of Plymouth Boston 1856 pp 447 451 William Bradford History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford the second Governor of Plymouth Boston 1856 p 447 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 102 104 and pp 25 27 102 104 150 152 Nathaniel Philbrick Mayflower A story of Courage Community and War New York Viking 2006 p 26 William Bradford History of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford the second Governor of Plymouth Boston 1856 p 91 Edward Winslow Primary Sources for The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth Mourt s Relation Pilgrim Hall Museum Retrieved 26 November 2009 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 43 50 Eugene Aubrey Stratton Plymouth Colony Its History and People 1620 1691 Salt Lake City Ancestry Publishing 1986 p 180 Manifest of the Blessing 1 a b David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 73 Marriage to Christian Hunter 2 Eugene Aubrey Stratton Plymouth Colony Its History and People 1620 1691 Salt Lake City Ancestry Publishing 1986 p 179 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 102 109 Richard D Pierce The Records of the First Church in Salem Massachusetts 1629 1736 p 171 Robert Charles Anderson The Great Migration Begins Immigrants to New England 1620 1633 Great Migration Study Project New England Historic Genealogical Society Boston 1995 vol II G O p 1284 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 106 109 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 126 128 a b Robert Moody Sherman CG FASG Robert S Wakefield FASG Lydia Dow Finlay CALS Mayflower Families Through Five Generations Family of Richard More Pub General Society of Mayflower Descendants 1997 v 15 p 152 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 152 157 L Carroll Judson Sages and Heroes of the American Revolution Philadelphis Moss amp Brother 1854 3 Robert Charles Anderson The Great Migration Immigrants to New England 1634 1635 FASG Published 1995 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 Preface pp xxi xx 22 154 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 205 206 Richard D Pierce The Records of the First Church in Salem Massachusetts 1629 1736 p 171 Eugene Aubrey Stratton Plymouth Colony Its History and People 1620 1691 Salt Lake City Ancestry Publishing 1986 p 329 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 Introduction also pp 190 192 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Parts I III vol 43 July 1993 and vol 44 January amp July 1994 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 92 229 n19 amp TAG Vol 78 No 4 October 2003 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 102 104 123 124 150 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 104 122 150 229 a b Robert Moody Sherman CG FASG Robert S Wakefield FASG Lydia Dow Finlay CALS Mayflower Families Through Five Generations Family of Richard More General Society of Mayflower Descendants Published 1997 vol 15 p 156 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 pp 104 122 150 230 229 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part I The Mayflower Descendant vol 43 no 2 July 1993 quoting from Mayflower Quarterly of Feb 1972 Richard More Mayflower passenger 4 Edwin A Hill PhD The English Ancestry of Richard More of the Mayflower The New York genealogical and biographical record July 1905 vol 36 p 213 Douglas Richardson Plantagenet Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Richard More 2004 pgs 515 516 David J Cade The Search for a Royal Descent Parts I and II Mayflower Quarterly The General Society for Mayflower Descendants Plymouth MA 2001 vol 67 pp 127 134 and 2002 pp 239 241 Douglas Richardson Magna Carta Ancestry A Study in Colonial And Medieval Families pub 2005 pp 585 586 Eugene Aubrey Stratton Plymouth Colony Its History and People 1620 1691 Salt Lake City Ancestry Publishing 1986 p 328 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part I The Mayflower Descendant vol 43 no 2 July 1993 p 124 Donald F Harris PhD The More Children of the Mayflower Part II The Mayflower Descendant vol 44 no 1 January 1994 p 11 Robert Moody Sherman CG FASG Robert S Wakefield FASG Lydia Dow Finlay CALS Mayflower Families Through Five Generations Family of Richard More General Society of Mayflower Descendants Published 1997 vol 15 pp 151 155 David Lindsay Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims New York St Martins Press 2002 p 83 The Mayflower SocietySources editMassachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants The Mayflower Society Mayflower Bastard A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims by David Lindsay New York St Martins Press 2002 The Mayflower Descendant Donald Harris PhD Boston Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants published in vol 43 July 1993 and vol 44 January amp July 1994 The Origin of the Mayflower Children Jasper Richard and Ellen More Anthony R Wagner C V O D Litt FASG Richmond Herald College of Arms London England Boston The New England Historical and Genealogical Register July 1960 vol 114 The London Times 30 June 1959 pp 163 168 Anthony R Wagner C V O D Litt FASG Richmond Herald College of Arms London England Further reading editFictional publications edit A Spurious Brood by Phil Revell Pub Ascribe Publications 2011 www philrevell co uk The Mayflower Children by Phil Revell Pub Ascribe Publications 2011External links editShropshire s Mayflower Children Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard More Mayflower passenger amp oldid 1185143379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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