Hannah Carpenter, 16401670 (aged 29 years)

Name
Hannah /Carpenter/
Married name
Hannah /Carpenter/
Family with parents
father
16051658/59 CE
Birth: May 23, 1605 29 25 of, Wherwell, Hants, England
Death: February 7, 1658/59 CERehoboth [now Attleboro], Mass.
mother
16061686/87 CE
Birth: 1606 56 England
Death: February 22, 1686/87 CEprob. Rehoboth [now Attleboro], Mass.
Marriage Marriageabout 1628England
3 years
elder brother
16301695
Birth: about 1630 24 24 England
Death: May 23, 1695Jamaica, Long Island, NY
2 years
elder brother
16311703/04 CE
Birth: 1631 25 25 England >Rehoboth
Death: January 26, 1703/04 CERehoboth (Bristol) MA (age 72)
3 years
elder brother
16331675
Birth: 1633 27 27 England
Death: May 6, 1675Swansea, MA
3 years
elder brother
16351682/83 CE
Birth: about 1635 29 29 England
Death: February 20, 1682/83 CERehoboth, MA
5 years
herself
16401670
Birth: April 3, 1640 34 34 Weymouth, MA
Death: about 1670Musketo Cove, Long Island, NY
3 years
younger brother
16431699
Birth: April 9, 1643 37 37 Weymouth, MA
Death: before 1699
younger sister
16431709/10 CE
Birth: April 9, 1643 37 37 Weymouth, MA
Death: March 5, 1709/10 CE
Family with Joseph Carpenter
husband
16401683
Birth: 1640 32 Providence, R.I.
Death: 1683Musketo Cove, Long Island, N.Y.
herself
16401670
Birth: April 3, 1640 34 34 Weymouth, MA
Death: about 1670Musketo Cove, Long Island, NY
Marriage MarriageAugust 21, 1659
Shared note

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married Joseph Carpenter, son of WIlliam Carpenter of Providence, RI; a kinsman
of her father. "... m her 2nd cousin Joseph, s/o William of Providence, on Apr
21, 1659. Joseph's lot at Pawtuxet was near or adjoining the one belonging to
William of Rehoboth, who gave his dau Hannah that adjoining land. Hann
accompanied her husband to Musketa Cove, where he played a prominent role in
the early affairs of Oyster Bay, Long Island. In 1668 he founded a community
which was called Carpenterville until the later 1800's when it became a
Methodist campground. It latere evolved into a popular summer resort named
W=Sea Cliff, with a lavish 300-room Victorian Hotel catering to well-heeled New
Yorkers who arrived via sidewheel steamboats." Raymond G. Carpenter's PART 4:
THE EARLY REHOBOTH MA BRANCH; THE FAMILY OF HEROES