Abt 1595 - 1676 (~ 81 years)
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Name |
Richard Sares [3] |
Birth |
Abt May 1595 |
Probably England [3, 4] |
Gender |
Male |
Death |
5 Sep 1676 |
Yarmouth, New Plymouth Colony [1, 5] |
Burial |
Sears Cemetery, W Brewster, Barnstable Co, Massachusetts [6, 7, 8] |
Person ID |
I484 |
Cooley Miller Sears Barnhouse |
Last Modified |
14 May 2020 |
Family |
Dorothy Jones, b. Abt 1603, Dinder, Somersetshire, England bur. 19 Mar 1678/79, Yarmouth, New Plymouth Colony (Age ~ 76 years) |
Marriage |
Bef 1637 |
Yarmouth, New Plymouth Colony [9] |
Children |
| 1. Paul Sares, b. Abt 1637, Massebequash (Marblehead) d. 20 Feb 1707/08, Yarmouth, Barnstable Co, Massachusetts (Age ~ 71 years) |
| 2. Deborah Sears, b. Abt Sep 1639, Yarmouth, New Plymouth Colony d. 17 Aug 1732, Yarmouth, Barnstable Co, Massachusetts (Age ~ 92 years) |
| 3. Silas Sears, b. Abt 1641, Yarmouth, New Plymouth Colony d. 13 Jan 1696/97, Yarmouth, Barnstable Co, Massachusetts (Age ~ 56 years) |
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Family ID |
F176 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
30 Mar 2020 |
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Notes |
- Migration: 1633
Born: England
First Residence: Plymouth.
Removes: Marblehead by 1637, Yarmouth by 1639.
He is found at Plymouth in 1633 but soon removed to Marblehead being taxed there 1637 and was granted four acres of land in 1638. Many of the settlers at Marblehead were from Guernsey and Jersey in England. He appears in Yarmouth 1643 where he served on the Grand Jury and as constable also was a deputy to the General Court at Plymouth in 1662. His occupation was farming.
Took the oath of fidelity at Yarmouth in 1639; propounded for freemanship 3 Jun 1652; admitted a freeman 7 Jun 1653; Appears on Yarmouth lists of freemen, 1658 and 1670.
Offices: Deputy from Yarmouth, 3 Jun 1662; Grand Jury, 7 Jun 1652; Tax Collector, 1 Mar 1658/9; Yarmouth constable 6 Jun 1660.
Assessed 9s in Plymouth tax list of 25 Mar 1633.
On 1 Jan 1637/8 Richard Seeres was included in a Salem rate list for the "inhabitants of Marblehead". On 14 Nov1638 Richard Sears was granted four acres at Marblehead "where he as planted formerly".
On 23 Nov 1664 Allis Bradford, w. of Wm Bradford sold to Richard Sares of Yarmouth two tracts of 20 acres each "at a place commonly called Sasuet" (now Dennis, Barnstable County, Massachusetts).
Richard Sares Will
Dated 10 May 1667
Codicil 3 Feb 1675/6
Proved 5 Mar 1675/6
Inventory taken 8 Oct 1676Presented to court 15 Nov 1676 by Dorethy Sares the relict of Richard Sares and Paul Sares his eldest son. Value: [1, 10]
- (Research):The H.G. Somerby Controversy Looking at the genesis of the genealogies of this individual points up some interesting facts. The first genealogy work appears to be "Memoranda of the Sears, from Minutes collected by J. Hawes and William Colman to 1800,-- and continued by Richard Sears of Chatham to 1840." There are evidently some errors in this work. "About the year 1845, the late Mr. H. G. Somerby was employed to collect data regarding the Sears family in England, and a pamphlet was issued, entitled 'Notices of the Sears Family, from Sir Bernard Burke's Works, and Somersby's Collections in England, etc.' The manuscript of his collection is in the library of the Mass. Hist. So., Boston." "In 1852, Sir Bernard Burke published the first volume of 'Visitations of Seats and Arms,' which contains at p. 52 of Part II. an account of the family, claiming that by right of primogeniture the Chatham branch is the 'Head of the American Sears Family.' This was followed in 1863, in the 3rd series of 'Vicissitudes of Families,' by a sketch entitled 'A Pilgrim Father.' "Sir Bernard Burke now repudiates the articles, and [informed me (S P May) that they would be] left out of later editions. In 1884, he wrote me [S.P. May] that he received the material from Mr. Somerby, but had since made investigation, and found 'that the details were not only not proven, but also incapable of proof, if not altogether wrong, and opposed to fact.' "In 1857, Rev. E. H. Sears published 'Pictures of the Olden Time,' to which was added in a later edition for private distribution, a Genealogy of the family. [p. 20] In his preface he states that he derived his facts mainly from Burke's 'Visitation of Seats and Arms,' and from 'family papers,' etc. Jul 1886, Samuel P. May published "Some Doubts Concerning the Sears Pedigree" in the N.E. Hist. Gen. Soc Register. About 1889, Samuel P. May was commissioned by the family to update the genealogy of the Sears family. In 1890, Samuel P. May, published his book "The Descendants of Richard Sares (Sears) of Yarmouth, Mass 1638-1888 with an appendix containing some notices of other families by the name of Sears" which included an updated and expanded view of the mistakes made by H.G. Somerby. About 1913, Samuel P. May created a typescript of what I believe to be the precursor to a second edition of "The Descendants of Richard Sares [11]
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Sources |
- [S669] Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, (Great Migration Study Project, New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston Massachusetts; LOC: 95-219457; Copyright 1995; Yurchak Printing, Landisville PA ), Vol III, pp1642-1644 (Reliability: 3).
- [S676] Leon Clark Hills, Cape Cod Mayflower Planters, (Cape Cod Series, Hills Publishing Co, 714 Insurance Bldg, Washington DC ), Vol 1, p66-67 (Reliability: 3).
- [S320] Samuel P. May, Sares main, (Joel Munsell's Sons, Publishers, Albany NY, 1890), p32-40 (Reliability: 3).
- [S669] Robert Charles Anderson, Great Migration Begins, (Great Migration Study Project, New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston Massachusetts; LOC: 95-219457; Copyright 1995; Yurchak Printing, Landisville PA ), p1643. Birth month and year calculated from age 81y 4m 0w 0d at death (Reliability: 3).
The birthdate calculation did not include weeks and days. If 4 weeks and 30 days are added to make his age maximum given only years and months, the earliest date of birth would be March 2nd 1595. I used https://www.timeanddate.com which takes into account the shift from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar in 1752.
- [S671] Sherman & Wildee, YarVR, (Source obtained from The Great Migration Begins Vol 1), p126 "Yarmouth 5 September [1676] age 81y 4m" (Reliability: 2).
- [S671] Sherman & Wildee, YarVR, (Source obtained from The Great Migration Begins Vol 1), Date of burial in Sares (26 Aug 1676) contradicted by these records which are probably more reliable. (Reliability: 2).
- [S320] Samuel P. May, Sares main, (Joel Munsell's Sons, Publishers, Albany NY, 1890), p32-40, date superceded by Yarmouth vital records (Reliability: 3).
- [S549] Ancestry submitters, Apocryphal, Sears Cemetery just 200 meters away from the ancient Sares home. There is no proof Richard Sares or his wife Dorothy was buried here (Reliability: 3).
- [S670] AmGenealogist, (Held by NEHGS), Jones surname found here (Reliability: 3).
- [S676] Leon Clark Hills, Cape Cod Mayflower Planters, (Cape Cod Series, Hills Publishing Co, 714 Insurance Bldg, Washington DC ), p66 (Reliability: 3).
- [S534] Website, http://publications.newberry.org/ahcbp/documents/MA_Individual_County_Chronologies.htm#Individual_County_Chronologies (Reliability: 3).
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