Nathaniel Bassett was born circa 1628, likely
in Plymouth, Mass., the son of William and Elizabeth (maiden name unknown)
Bassett. I wrote about that couple here.
He is my 10th great-grandfather on my grandmother Milly (Booth)
Rollins’ side.
My line of descent from Nathaniel and
Dorcas:
Nathaniel Bassett
1628 - 1709/10
.+Dorcas Joyce
.3 Hannah
Bassett
+Joseph Covell
1675 -
4 Sarah
Covell Unknown - 1790
+William Nickerson
1701 - 1763
5
Deliverance Nickerson 1728 - 1808
+Ebenezer Eldredge
1706/07 - 1797
6
Elnathan Eldredge 1746/47 - 1837
+Dorothy Freeman
1752 - 1825
7
Nehemiah Eldredge 1775 - 1839
Ruth Harding
8 James
Harding Eldredge 1797 - 1873
+Rosanna Wixon
1789 – 1868
9 Rosana
S. Eldredge 1826 - 1911
+Valentine Kelley
1828 - 1882
10
Mary Ann Kelley 1855 - 1941
+David Howes Kelley
1842 - 1925
11
Ethel Florence Kelley 1890 - 1981
+Wallace Cedric Booth
1887 - 1970
12
Mildred Louise Booth 1917 - 1999
+Arthur Elmer Washburn
Davis 1913 - 1976
13 my parents
14 me
From the History of Duxbury
church records: In 1651 Nathaniel Bassett and Joseph Prior were fined twenty
shillings each for disturbing the church and at the next town meeting or
training day each to be bound to a post for two hours in some public place, with
a paper on their heads with their crime written thereon in capital letters.
Whether they paid the fines or suffered the punishment is not noted.
On 16 June 1656, William Bassett
formerly of Duxbury, now of Bridgewater, deeded land at Duxbury to his sons
Peregrine White and Nathaniel Bassett. Peregrine was his son-in-law, married to
daughter Sarah.
About 1661 Nathaniel married Dorcas
Joyce, the daughter of John Joyce.* They lived in Marshfield, Duxbury, possibly
Sandwich, and later settled in Yarmouth. They had eight children that lived to
adulthood, according to Nathaniel’s will. They are listed below in no particular
order.
Nathaniel, married Johanna Borden, m.
2nd widow Elizabeth Merrick, removed to Connecticut
Mary who m. Thomas Mulford
Hannah who m. Joseph Covell and Asa
Mayo
William who m. Martha Godfrey and
Sarah Jenkins
Samuel who m. Susannah Howes and
Thankful Hallet
Joseph
Ruth
Sarah m. John Nickerson
Sarah m. John Nickerson
My research on Nathaniel and Dorcas’
children is a work in progress--I welcome anyone’s input on better sources or
additional information. I have seen that a son Nathan was also listed in the will, but I don’t see that
in the transcription I have read so need to look at the original.
I descend from Hannah and her husband
Joseph Covell.
Some sources say Nathaniel married,
2nd, a woman named Hannah, but I am not certain of this. It seems
unlikely if Dorcas predeceased him by only seven months. Unless Dorcas Bassett
that died in 1709 is a daughter rather than his wife. It’s difficult to
determine because of the lack of surviving vital records in Yarmouth. Also,
there was a Nathaniel Bassett married to a woman named Hannah in Sandwich, so
perhaps there is some confusion between the two couples.
List of pounds of gunpowder given to
military company members from Sandwich Town Records, 25 June 1660: Nathanell
Bassett "fore pounds" and Nathanll Basset "one pound." I’m not sure if one of
these is “my” Nathaniel.
In 1676, Nathaniel Bassett was taxed
toward King Philip’s War: 2:14:09. This was his first appearance on the tax list
in Yarmouth. Nancy Thacher Reid writes he came to Yarmouth (a part that is now
Dennis) from Plymouth by way of Sandwich.
In 1888 Amos Otis wrote that Nathaniel
resided near the first meeting-house in Yarmouth and his descendants still enjoy
his lands. After his one lapse of conduct as a young man, he was a very worthy
and respectable citizen, and had a large family, ten of whom lived to mature
age.
The first meeting house in Yarmouth is near the Ancient Cemetery which is located on Centre street.
Plaque on boulder commemorating the original location of the First Congregational Church |
Dorcas died Yarmouth on 9 June 1707.
Nathaniel died at Yarmouth on 16
January 1709/10, age 82.
His will was written just six days
before his death, 10 January1709/10, and mentions eight children: William,
Joseph, Nathaniel, Mary Mulford, Ruth Bassett, Samuel, Hannah Covell, Sarah
Nickerson. He also mentions son-in-law Thomas Mulford of Truro, his
daughter-in-law Joannah, and grandchildren, although not by name. It was
witnessed by Rev. Daniel Greenleaf, Experience Rider and his nephew Col Wm
Basset. He mentions no wife as she predeceased him. He writes he is "aged and
under much decay of body," being then 82 years old. He gave property to
Nathaniel that was his Grandmother Joyce's. Mr. Thomas Mulford of
Truro and his son Joseph Bassett of Yarmouth named executors. He names items
such as a loom, a musket, two pairs of spectacles with cases, a chest that was
his wife’s, his great Bible and great book, sheep two canoes, a drying yard, his
house, barn, orchard, shop and meadow at Yarmouth, land near the dock, land at
Middleborough, an island near Cross Creek. He left his son Nathaniel money to
buy each of his children a pocket Bible.
An inventory of his estate is dated 25
January 1710/11. It includes items such as cows, oxen, a horse, sheep, books,
fire tongs, pewter, earthenware, ironware, iron tools, land to be sold, housing
land and meadow land. His estate was appraised at 228 pounds, 11
shillings.
*Savage's Genealogy Dictionary of
New England states that Nathaniel
married a daughter of John Joyce, no first name given. Her name is given as
Dorcas by multiple sources, including Robert Charles Anderson’s The Great
Migration Begins. A 1966 article on John Joyce in TAG 43:3 gives proof
Nathaniel married Dorcas Joyce.
Sources Not Listed Above:
CW Swift, Pamphlet No. 85 of the
Library of Cape Cod History and Genealogy, The Bassett Family of
Yarmouth, 1912
Nancy Thacher. Reid, Dennis, Cape
Cod from Firstcomers to Newcomers, 1639 – 1993, 1996
Amos Otis, Genealogical Notes of
Barnstable Families, being a reprint of the Amos Otis Papers, originally
published in the Barnstable Patriot, 1888
Robert Ray King, NEHGR, 125:7), The
Family of Nathan Bassett of Chatham
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