Joshua Brewster (William 3, Love 2, William 1 Brewster) was born ca 1698 at Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, the son of William and Lydia (Partridge) Brewster and the great-grandson of Mayflower passenger William Brewster. I’ve also blogged about these earlier Brewster ancestors, which you can find by using the search function. Joshua and Deborah are my 7th great-grandparents on my grandfather Arthur Washburn Davis’ side of the family.
On 13 March 1721/22 Joshua married Deborah Jackson at Plympton, Massachusetts. Deborah was born 11 March 1703/04 at Plymouth, the daughter of Eleazer and Hannah (Ransom) Jackson.
Deborah and Joshua had four children whose births are recorded in Duxbury:
Job b. 11 Jan 1722/23, died 1727
Nathan b. 21 December 1724
Sarah
b. 11 Feb 1727
Job
b. 17 December 1729
In 1739 the town of Duxbury paid Joshua Brewster 26 pounds 15 shillings for entertainment of two councils for the dismissal of the minister Mr. Robinson.
In 1748 Joshua and Joseph Brewster were listed with one right in the second division of common lands belonging to Duxbury and Pembroke.
On 13 Dec 1753 Joshua Brewster of Duxbury sold to (his sons) Nathan and Job Brewster, coasters of Duxbury, all his lands, housings, buildings in Duxbury with all moveables or personal estate as well as pasture. (Plymouth Co. Deeds, 42:173)
Joshua deeded, on 20 December 1760 to Joshua Brewster and Joseph Wright (his son-in-law) of Plympton equal portions on behalf of their respective sons “the full one ninth part of all the iron ore…on a certain lot of land butting on Crane Brook, situate lying in the town of Plympton exclusive of the fee of said lot containing by estimation about seventy five acres…” (Plymouth Co. Deeds, 49:6) I haven’t researched who this Joshua Brewster is…perhaps a grandson?
Deborah (Jackson) Brewster was 65 when she died 1 September 1769 at Duxbury.
Joshua died 27 March 1776 at Duxbury, at about 78 years of age. No probate records are found for Joshua, but that would make sense since he had already deeded his land to family. No gravestone for Joshua or Deborah survive in Duxbury.
Side note: If you have ancestors from Duxbury, the Duxbury Rural & Historical Society is a wonderful resource. Even if you can’t visit because of distance or the pandemic, they have interesting online content at: https://duxburyhistory.org/.
Barbara Lambert Merrick, Mayflower
Families Through Five Generations, Volume 24, Part 1, Elder William Brewster,
GSMD, 2014
Henry A. Fish, Duxbury
Ancient & Modern, 2012, Duxbury 375th Anniversary Revised Edition,
based on 1925 edition
Lucy Hall
Greenlaw, Early Generations of the
Brewster Family, NEHGR, October 1899
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