William Gray was born 5 October 1650 at Yarmouth, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, to John and Hannah (Lumpkin) Gray.
William married Rebecca Dillingham about 1690. They are my 8th great-grandparents on my grandmother Milly (Booth) Rollins’ side of the family. Rebecca was born about 1652, the daughter of John and Elizabeth (Feake) Dillingham of Sandwich, later Harwich (now Brewster), Massachusetts. William and Rebecca are my 8th great-grandparents on my grandmother Milly (Booth) Rollins’ side of the family. John Dillingham was a Quaker and one of the wealthiest men in the area. I wrote about John and Elizabeth here. Rebecca is mentioned in her father’s 15 Nov 1707 will as Rebecka Gray, who upon her mother’s death was to split two-thirds of the estate with her sister Hannah and the children of her sister Sarah. Rebecka was also to receive 40 pounds from the estate, a significant sum at the time. I find John Dillingham’s will so refreshing because frequently you see the male heir receiving most of the estate, with females receiving some household goods or a few shillings.
William and Rebecca raised their family in Harwich. They had six daughters and one son, order uncertain, likely born Harwich:
Rebecca
b. about 1691
William
who married Deborah Sears
Hannah
who married William Penney
Dorothy
who married Josiah Swift
Sarah
who married Eldad Atwood
Mehitable
who married Isaac Atwood
Thankful
who married John Atwood
I descend from Rebecca who married Samuel Berry. I wrote about that couple here.
William Gray had the unenviable job in 1706/7 of being the receiver of crows heads, as each homeowner was obliged to kill 6 blackbirds or 4 crows because they were damaging crops. The heads were handed in as proof they were meeting their individual quota.
William served in King Philip’s War under Captain Gorham. In 1675 he received 7 pounds, 13 shillings for her service. In the second expedition against the Narragansett, Sergeant William Gray was paid 6 pounds 12 shillings for his service. In 1676 at the end of the war, his taxable property was 13 shillings, 9 pence.
source: kpwar.org |
Sources:
Josiah Paine, History of Harwich, Barnstable,
Massachusetts, 1620-1800, 1937
CW Swift publisher, Dillingham Family, Library of Cape Cod History & Genealogy, No. 95, 1912
Charles Swift, History of Old Yarmouth, 1884
CW Swift publisher, The Yarmouth Family of Gray, Cape Cod Library of History and Genealogy, No 58
George Madison Bodge, Soldiers in King Philip's War, A Critical Accounting of That War with a Concise History of the Indian Wars of New England from 1620-1677, 1896
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