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Benjamin Carrell

Male Abt 1697 - 1733  (~ 36 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Benjamin Carrell was born about 1697 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania (son of James* Carrell, Sr. (immigrant) and Sarah* Dungan); died in 1733.

    Notes:

    not married


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  James* Carrell, Sr. (immigrant) was born about 1666 in Rathmullan, Co Donegal, Ulster, Ireland; died before 16 Jan 1720 in Southhampton, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: Between 1690 and 1695, Ireland/Pennsylvania
    • Residence: 1707, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania

    Notes:

    Records indicate his name as "James," - Sr. and then James Jr. However the story related about the coat said his name was William. Could he have been William James or James Williams? However, the story does not seem to have credibility when comparing various facts. (See notes for James Jr.)
    ____
    (from John Reedy)
    residence: 16 Nov 1707 100 Acres, Bucks County, PA
    The colonial home built here by James Carrell Sr. is on the Bristol Road about midway between the villages of Ivyland and Richboro and is part of an elevated plateau of land which extends from the Schuylkill River to the Delaware.

    Residence 1709 Southampton Township, Bucks County, PA
    Residence 1722 Northampton Township, Bucks County, PA
    __________________
    Tradition seems to indcate that the Carrell family has traced their roots back to Biblical times.
    __________________

    James Carrell, Sr. (16xx - 1720) was one of thousands of Presbyterians in the north of Ireland who took part in the religious wars of the period. He was one of those imprisoned within the walls of Londonderry during the famed siege of 105 days. Family tradition tells us that James Carrell was a linen weaver and came to America sometime between 1690-95. Soon after his arrival he married Sarah Dungan, the youngest daughter of the Rev. Thomas Dungan, the first Baptist preacher in Pennsylvania, and his wife, and Elizabeth Weaver. No record of this marriage has been found and the date is not known but is believed to have been about 1697.

    The first public record of James Carrell is a deed dated 16 November 1707 when he purchased 100 acres in Warminster Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. The property was located on the Bristol Road about halfway between the villages of Ivyland and Richboro.

    The next record of James Carrell is a curious entry in the minutes of the Court of general Quarter Sessions held, June 13, 1710, at Bristol. James Karrell was held in 20 pds. bond on the condition, "that he should appear September 13, next ensuing to answer such matters and things as shall be then and there objected against him on the queen's Majesties behalfe." Clement Dungan and Jeremiah Dungan each contributed to the bond in the amount of 10 pounds each. We can only guess what "matters and things" were "objected against him".

    In 1711 James Carrell bought an additional 100 acres of land from his brother-in-law, Clement and Thomas Dungan. This land was located across the road from the property he bought four years earlier.

    The death of James Carrell, Sr. probably happened early in January in 1720. His wife, Sarah Dungan Carrell was granted letters of administration on 16 Jan 1720, with bond by her brother Clement Dungan and Bartholomew Longstreth. The inventory of the estate was filed on 17 December 1720 by John Hart and Cephas Child, showing an estate of 224 pounds, 17 shillings:

    Wearing apparel 5 pounds, 10 shillings
    Riding Horse, saddle and bridle 10 pounds
    Debts 6 pounds 4 sh. & 6 d.
    200 acres of land and improvements 145 pounds
    4 horses, 1 mare and 2 colts 26 pounds
    Cattle 28 pounds
    (http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=mabry&id=I1061)
    _________

    James* married Sarah* Dungan in 1697 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania (possibly). Sarah* (daughter of Thomas* Dungan, (immigrant) and Elizabeth* Weaver, (immigrant)) was born in 1678 in East Greenwich, Kent Co, Rhode Island; died on 20 May 1760 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah* Dungan was born in 1678 in East Greenwich, Kent Co, Rhode Island (daughter of Thomas* Dungan, (immigrant) and Elizabeth* Weaver, (immigrant)); died on 20 May 1760 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    Although Sarah Dungan is not in this blood lineage, she was the adoptive mother of our ancestor. The following information has been obtained about her family:
    (adoption claims are disputed and not consistent with known facts -- therefore, it is believed that Sarah Dungan is the birth mother of James Carrell, Jr. -- see notes of James Carrell, Jr.)
    _________________
    The Rev Thomas Dungan was born in London in abt 1632. His father William Dungan was a merchant of London and was of the cadet branch of the Dungans of Dublin, Ireland, enobled by Queen Elizabeth. William Dungan died in 1636 leaving four chien: Barbara, William, Frances and Thomas. Their mother was Frances Lathan, daughter of Lewis Lathan, sergeant falconer to Charles I. She married first Lord Weston and second William Dungan and soon after his death married Captain Jeremiah Clarke and emigrated with him and her children to settle in Newport, Rhode Island. Captain Clarke was prominent in the community, serving in various official positions. After his death in 1651 she married Rev. William Vaughan, pastor of the first Baptist church in America. She died in 1677.
    Thomas Dungan was reared and educated in Newport and probably received his education in a school established by Roger Williams. He followed in his stepfather's footsteps and became an eminent Baptist preacher. He married Elizabeth Weaver, dhter of Sergeant Clement and Mary (Freeborn) Weaver in Newport, Rhode Island. Clement Weaver was a member of the colonial assembly in 1678 and his father-in-law William Freeborn served in the same assembly in 1657.
    In 1862 Thomas Dungan moved with a group of Welsh Baptists from Rhode Island to Cold Springs Falls, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania. He died in 1688.
    ___________

    After the death of James Carrell, Sarah married Nicholas Fitroy, but had no children by him. Her will was dated 16 Sep 1759 and proved 29 May 1760.

    Children:
    1. James* Carrell, Jr. (eldest) (immigrant) was born about 1697 in Rathmullan, Co Donegal, Ulster, Ireland; died on 17 May 1749 in Northampton Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    2. 1. Benjamin Carrell was born about 1697 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1733.
    3. Elizabeth Carrell was born in 1698 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died after 1717 in of, Pennsylvania.
    4. Sarah Carrell was born about 1700 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died after 1745 in of, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    5. Lydia Carrell was born about 1702 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died after 1724.
    6. (dau) Carrell was born about 1703; was christened after 1703.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Thomas* Dungan, (immigrant) was born on 13 Feb 1632 in St. Martin, Westminster, London, England (son of William* Dungan, (son?) and Frances* Latham, (immigrant)); died on 1 Feb 1688 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: Thomas (Dunkin) Dungan was born 13 Feb 1634/35 in St. Martin, Westminster, London, England, and died 1 Feb 1687/88 in Cold Springs, Bucks, Pennsylvania, USA. He married Elizabeth Weaver 1663 in Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, daughter of Clement Weaver and Mary Freeborn. She was born 1647 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England, England, and died 1690 in Cold Springs, Bristol Township Bu cks, Pennsylvania.
    ____
    Name: Rev. Thomas Dungan Sex: M Birth: 1632 in London, England Death: 1687 in Cold Springs, Pennsylvania Note:
    The Rev. Thomas Dungan (1632/4 - 1687) was born about 1632 in London, England, the son of William Dungan, perfumer, and Frances Latham. After the death of his father in 1636, his mother married Jeremiah Clarke with whom she and her four children came to America. Little is known of the early years of Rev. Thomas Dungan except that he likely received his education under Roger Williams or his brother Robert Williams, who was a schoolmaster at Newport.

    Numerous records have been found which give us a picture of Thomas Dungan in Rhode Island and Pennsylvania. He was elected a Freeman at the Court of Election held on 20 May 1656 at Portsmouth. About 1663 he married Elizabeth Weaver, daughter of Clement Weaver, Jr. and Mary Freeborn. Their children, all born in Rhode Island, were: William, Eliza-beth, John, Clement, Rebecca, Thomas, Jeremiah, Mary and Sarah.

    About 1670 he acquired 240 acres in Shrewsbury, New Jersey. His half brother, Gov. Walter Clarke, also purchased land in Monmouth New Jersey. Thomas' land in New Jersey was sold in 1674 to Mrs. Sarah Reape.

    On 7 Jun 1671 Thomas Dungan was a member of a special court to try two Indians, as a juror from Newport. On 31 October 1677 he was named one of the Patentees in the charter of the town of East Greenwich, Rhode Island. In April 1678 he was elected one of the two Representatives from East Greenwich to the Rhode Island Assembly. The other Representative was his brother-in-law, Clement Weaver. In 1681, the year in which Wil-liam Penn's charter was granted, Thomas was re-elected to the Assem-bly. During the time he was in the Assembly he probably studied for the ministry under his step-father, the Rev. William Vaughan.

    Although the majority of the colonists of Penn's settlement were Quakers, there were also many Baptists, and Mr. Dungan decided to move to Pennsylvania. He conveyed his estate of 100 acres in East Greenwich by deed of gift dated June 28, 1682, to his nephew, Thomas Weaver. Three months later he sold his 50 acre homestead in Newport to John Bailey. Shortly thereafter his moved his family to Pennsylvania, settling in Cold Springs in Bucks County, where he founded the first Baptist Church in Pennsylvania. He continued as the pastor of this church until his death in late 1687 or early 1688. The church is no longer there except for the graveyard where Thomas Dungan is buried.

    Rev. Thomas Dungan's will dated March 3, 1687, was proved February 29, 1688. On April 2, 1689, his four sons sold two hundred acres of the four hundred acres "granted by William Penn to Thomas Dungan, Sr. and his son, Clement Dungan." Elizabeth Weaver Dungan probably died about 1690. Thomas and Elizabeth Dungan had nine children.

    ----
    references:
    "Richard Dungan Master Plasterer of London in Shakespeare's Time (A Continuing Quest for Origins)" by Thomas P. Dungan (2003)

    "A Quest for Origins The Search for the Parentage of William Dungan, Perfumer of St. Martin-in-the-Fields," by Thomas P. Dungan (1997)

    "John Dongan of Dublin An Elizabethan Gentleman and his Family" by Thomas P. Duncan (1996)

    -----
    e: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    DDowell1029 (View posts) Posted: 26 Sep 2004 9:31PM
    Classification: Biography
    Edited: 2 Jan 2006 12:11PM
    Surnames: Dungan
    Although this old bio got the place of birth wrong, it still has interesting information:

    "Dungan, Rev. Thomas, was born in Ireland, and for some time he was a resident of Rhode Island, but in 1684, when advanced in years, he came into Pennsylvania. He settled three miles north of Bristol, at Cold Spring, and there he constituted the first Baptist church in Pennsylvania, built a meeting-house, and secured a burial-place for the dead. In 1688, Mr. Dungan was enabled to guide Elias Keach, when distressed in guilt, to the Savior. He baptized him, and he was sent forth a minister of Jesus from the Cold Spring church. This was the most important event in the history of Mr. Dungan, or of his church, as will be seen by a reference to the memoir of Mr. Keach. He entered the heavenly rest in the year 1688; and before 1692 it is nearly certain that the church had ceased to exist. In 1770 'nothing remained of the Cold Spring church' but a grave-yard and the names of the families that belonged to it: the Dungans, Gardeners, Woods, Doyles. He had five sons and four daughters, whose descendants in 1770 numbered between six and seven hundred persons. Mr. Dungan was the first Baptist minister in Pennsylvania. He was buried in the grave-yard surrounding the church. Nothing belonging to his church edifice or cemetery now remains to mark a spot so full of interest to Pennsylvania Baptist, except some foundations which can be distinctly traced across and on one side of a road which passes by the celebrated Cold Spring. The church site is two miles from Tullytown, Bucks County, and about two rods from the pike leading to it, and the same distance from the toll-gate on the Tullytown road. Some of the stones employed to mark graves in the burying-ground are in possession of persons in the neighborhood. The father of the celebrated Dr. Benjamin Rush is said to have been interred in this beautiful ground. Elias Keach, whom Mr. Dungan baptised, established the Lower Dublin church, now the oldest Baptist community in Pennsylvania."

    [Cathcart, William, The Baptist Encyclopaedia, a Dictionary: the doctrines, ordinances, usages, confessions of faith, sufferings, labors, and successes, and of the general history of Baptist Denominations in all lands. (Philadelphia: Louis H. Evert..., 1881)]




    Re: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    ROBINGARRAWAY (View posts) Posted: 9 Sep 2006 4:22PM
    Classification: Query
    Surnames: Dungan

    04-30-1678 Elected as one of the representatives of the town or East Greenwich to Rhode Island Assembly the other representative was his his brother in law Clement Weaver.. Re-elected in 1681the year in which William Penn's charter was granted. He studied for the ministry under his step father the Rev. William Vaughan.
    1656 Freeman of the court of Election.
    10-31- Named one of the patentees in the charter of
    east Greenwich RI
    1670 Bought 240 acres in Shrewsbury NJ his step brother Gov. Walter Clarke also purchased land in Monmouth NJ. his land was sold in 1674 to Mrs. Sarah Reape.
    Moved 1684 to Cold Springs Bucks County PA
    Established first First Baptist Church of Pennsylvania and was first Pastor. The church is no longer there except for the graveyard where he is buried.
    After the death of his father his mother married Jeremiah Clarke. He likely received his education under Roger Williams or his brother Robert Williams who was a school master in Newport.

    From Bucks County History:
    On 6-7-1671 he was a member of a special court to try two Indians as a juror from Newport. 10-31-1677 he was named one of the Patentees in the charter of the town of East Greenwich RI.
    His will dated 03-03-1687 was proved 02-29-1688. On 04-02-1689 his four sons sold 200 acres of the 400 acres "granted by William Penn to Thomas Dungan Sr. and his son. Clement Dungan"

    One incident of 1686 regarding Rev. Dungan appears in several publications. A young man named Elias Keach, son of a famous English minister, came to the Philadelphia area and passed himself off as a minister. He dressed in black, wore a band, and started preaching. At one time while a large group of people were listening he "went on for a time in his sermon, but all at once stopping short, and looking astonished, he was supposed to have been suddenly disordered; and upon being questioned, he frankly confessed, with tears and much trembling, that he was practising deception in holy things! In his distress, hearing that there was a Baptist minister from Rhode Island, Thomas Dungan, at Coldspring, Bucks county, he repaired to him, was baptized and ordained."

    Bucks County PA History
    Names and Page # Index


    DUNGAN FAMILY

    DUNGAN FAMILY. Reverend Thomas DUNGAN, was born in London, England, about the year 1632. His father, William DUNGAN, was a merchant of London, and was of a cadet branch of the DUNGANS of Dublin, Ireland, ennobled by Queen Elizabeth. The senior branch ended under the following circumstances: William DUNGAN, Earl of Limerick, died in 1698, without leaving issue, in consequence of the death of his son, Lord Walter DUNGAN, colonel of dragoons at the Boyne, in 1690. The title of Earl of Limerick, then came to Colonel Thomas DUNGAN, brother of the Earl of Limerick. Thomas, under the will of his father, Sir John DUNGAN, baronet, inherited an estate in the Queenâ??s county, and served in the army of Louis XIV till 1678 as colonel of an Irish regiment, worth to him about 5,000 pounds per annum. He had from Charles II a life pension of 500 pounds a year: was made lieutenant governor of Tangier, in Morocco, and subsequently governor of New York in America. The title of Earl of Limerick ceased in the DUNGAN family on the death of Colonel Thomas DUNGAN in December 1715, he leaving no heirs. William DUNGAN died in London in 1636, leaving four children, Barbara, William, Frances, and Thomas. The mother of Rev. Thomas DUNGAN was Frances LATHAM, daughter of Lewis LATHAM, sergeant falconer to Charles I. She had married (first) Lord WESTON and (second) William DUNGAN, and soon after the latterâ??s death married Captain Jeremiah CLARKE, and with him and her children emigrated to New England and settled in Newport, Rhode Island, where Captain Clarke became prominent, serving in the provincial assembly and filling other official positions. He died in 1651, and his widow married (fourth) Rev. William VAUGHAN, paster of the first Baptist church in America. Mrs. VAUGHAN died in September 1677, at the age of sixty-seven years.


    Thomas DUNGAN came to Newport, Rhode Island, in 1637, with his mother and stepfather, Captain CLARKE, and was reared and educated in that colony, probably receiving his education in a school established there by Roger WILLIAMS. His second stepfather being a Baptist clergyman he imbibed that faith and became an eminent Baptist preacher. He was a representative in the colonial assembly of Rhode Island, 1678-81, and a sergeant in the Newport militia. He became one of the patentees of East Greenwich, Rhode Island, but sold his real estate there in 1682 and removed with a colony of Welsh Baptists from Rhode Island to Cold Spring, Falls township, Bucks county, and established the first Baptist church in Pennsylvania. He died in 1688. He married in Newport, Rhode Island, Elizabeth Weaver, daughter of Sergeant CLEMENT and Mary (FREEBORN) WEAVER, Clement WEAVER was a member of colonial assembly in 1678, and his father-in-law, William FREEBORN served in the same body in 1657. Elizabeth (WEAVER) DUNGAN died at Cold Spring, Bucks county, in 1690. The children of Rev. Thomas and Elizabeth (WEAVER) DUNGAN were as follows:

    William, born 1658, preceded his father to Bucks county, died there 1713; married Deborah WING of Newport and left five children.
    Clement died in Northampton township, Bucks county, in 1732, without issue.
    Elizabeth married Nathaniel WEST and had four children, one of whom, Elizabeth, married Joseph HOUGH of Warwick, and has numerous descendants in Bucks.
    Thomas, born about 1670, died June 23, 1759, married Mary DRAKE and had nine children, Thomas, Joseph, James, John, Jonathan, Elizabeth, who married John HELLINGS: Mary, married Thomas BARTON; and Sarah married -------- Stevens.
    Rebecca married Edward DOYLE, who died in 1703, leaving sons Edward and Clement, who were the ancestors of the DOYLES for whom Doylestown is named.
    Jeremiah, born about 1673, died in Bucks county, April 6, 1766, married Deborah DRAKE and had eight children.
    Mary married a RICHARDS and had three children.
    John, who died without issue.
    Sarah, who married James CARREL, and had six children.
    The sons and sons-in-law of Thomas and Elizabeth DUNGAN became large landowners in Bucks county, and they and their descendants were prominent in the affairs of the county, province and state.

    James DUNGAN, son of Thomas and Mary (DRAKE) DUNGAN, of Northampton township, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, was the great-great-grandfather of Howard O. FOLKER, the historian of the family, and a full account of his is given in his "Levi DUNGAN, the Pioneer," among the archives of the Bucks County Historical Society. He married Rebecca WELLS, daughter of Samuel WELLS, a farmer in Lower Dublin township, near the present site of Bustleton, Philadelphia county, and lived and died on a farm in Lower Dublin township.
    Rev. Thomas Dungan, soldier, legislator, pioneer, became the first Baptist minister in the Province of Pennsylvania, having been born probably in London about 1634, and came to New England with his mother about 1637.
    As early as 1655 he was living at Newport, R. I., where he was Sergeant of the Newport Militia in 1676. He acquired 240 acres at Shrewsbury, New Jersey, about the year 1670. In 1678 and again in 1681 he was elected to the Rhode Island Assembly. His half brother Walter Clarke was then Deputy Governor of Rhode Island.
    In 1682 he sold his estate of 100 acres in East Greenwich, R. I., and his Newport homestead of 50 acres and, having completed his education for the ministry, he shortly thereafter removed to Pennsylvania and settled at Cold Spring, Bucks County, where he founded a Baptist Church in 1684, the first of its denomination in Pennsylvania, and continued as its pastor until his death in 1687.
    He married at Newport about 1663 Elizabeth, daughter of Sgt. Clement Weaver, She was born in 1647 and died at Cold Spring in 1697. His Will, probated 29 February 1688, is one of the earliest on record in Bucks County.
    Rev. Thomas Dungan and Elizabeth Weaver are buried in the graveyard of the Cold Spring Church. They were the parents of five sons and four daughters, all born in Rhode Island:

    William Dungan, married Deborah Wing.
    Elizabeth Dungan, married to Nathaniel West, Jr.
    John Dungan, died without issue.
    Clement Dungan, died without issue.
    Rebecca Dungan, married to Edward Doyle.
    Thomas Dungan, Jr., married Mary Drake
    Jeremiah Dungan, married Deborah Drake.
    Mary Dungan, married to Abraham Richards.
    Sarah Dungan, married to James Carrell.

    In regard to his son Thomas, the records give some light. He was Freeman, Newport, R. I., 1656. On a jury at Newport, 1671. Named with forty-seven others who took grant of 5,000 acres to be called East Greenwich, 1677. He was Sergeant at East Greenwich, 1678, and Deputy from that town 1678, and also 1681. He was at Newport again, 1681, when he was Constable there, and three years later he went to Cold Spring, Penn., and established a Baptist church, of which be was the first pastor1 and he died at that place four years later, in 1688.

    Print

    Re: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    ROBINGARRAWAY (View posts) Posted: 9 Sep 2006 4:25PM
    Classification: Query
    Surnames: dungan
    Marriage by the Rev. Thomas Mountford D.D. Vicar of St. Martin in the Fields. listed as Guiliemus Dungan and Francisca Ladham.
    His will "William Dunghen of ye Parrish od St. Martin in ye fields in ye Countie of Middx. perfumer" mentions his wife and children.
    Will located at Somerset House, London. "William Dunghen of ye Parrish od St. Martin-in-the-fields in ye Countie of Middx. Perfumer" dated 16 Sep. 1636 probated 10-25-1636 (Prerogative court of Canterbury:103 pile) Mentions wife and children: Babara, William, Francis, and Thomas. Contrary to a statement by A.R. Justice (p.109) "referring to the parish register of St. Martin in the Fields, there is no mention of William or Francis or of their Children." from Dungan Family.org

    The Dungan name is seen in both English and Irish people. This line which came to the Colonies in the 1600's was an English family, one branch of which had a Title in Ireland.
    William Dungan, Gentleman, who was born about 1606, a London Merchant and Perfumer. His wares were in great demand and quite necessary to offset the obnoxious odors arising from the gutters in a thickly settled district subject to heavy fog and having surface drainage.
    By his Will dated 13 September 1636 he gave all his property to his wife Frances, after bequeathing £70 to each of his four children whom he mentions by name. They made their home at St. Martins-in-the-Fields where later he died and was buried 20 September 1636, leaving her a widow at age 26 with four little children between the ages of 2 and 8 years.

    From the parish Registers of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, London, 1619-1636
    published 1936, volume 2, pages 143, 72, 89, 99, 112, 313 we see:

    Marriages:
    27 Aug. 1629: Guillielmus Dungan & Francisca Ladham, with license.

    Baptisms:
    28 Sep 1630: Barbarea Dunken filia Guillelmi et Franciscae
    12 Nov 1632: Frances Dungan filia Willimi et Frannciscae
    13 Dec 1663: Elizabetha Dungan filia Guillelmi et Francesscae
    13 Feb 1634/5: Thomas Dunkin fillius Guillelmi et Franscescae

    Burials:
    20 Sep 1636: W'mus Dungham, vir.

    Print

    Re: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    ROBINGARRAWAY (View posts) Posted: 9 Sep 2006 4:30PM
    Classification: Query
    Surnames: dungan
    You can go to my web page for more info on this line

    http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/a/r/Robin-Garra...

    Re: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    kwolfgen (View posts) Posted: 19 Jun 2007 3:58PM
    Classification: Query
    Surnames: Carrell, Dungan, Latham
    The only information that I can add is:
    Thomas Dungan
    B/date: Aft 1575 - Ireland
    D/date: Aft 1600
    Married to: (Abt 1605/Ireland?)
    Mary Lnu
    B/date: Abt 1580
    D/date: Aft 1600

    Son: William Dungan
    B/date: abt 1600 - Celbridge, Kildare, Ireland
    D/date: Sept 18, 1636 - St. Martin, Westminster, London
    Married to: (Aug 27, 1629/Middlesex, London)
    Frances Latham
    B/date: Feb 15, 1608/09 - Kempston, Bedfordshire, England
    D/date: Sept 1677 - Newport, Rhode Island

    Son: Thomas Dungan
    B/date: Feb 13, 1634/35 - St. Martin, Westminster, London
    D/date: 1687-1688 - Cold Springs, Pennsylvania
    Married to: (1663 /Rhode Island)
    Elizabeth Weaver
    B/date: 1645 Newport, Rhode Island
    D/date: 1697 Bucks County, Pennsylvania

    Daughter: Sarah Dungan (My Relative)
    B/date: Abt 1678 - Rhode Island
    D/date: bef. May 29, 1760 Bucks Co., Pennsylvania
    Married to: (1697/ Bucks Co., Pennsylvania
    James Carrell
    B/date: 1666 Ireland
    D/date: 1730 Bucks Co., Pennsylvania

    I take you for the additional information that I did not have.



    Re: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    jldungan67 (View posts) Posted: 18 Jul 2009 3:13AM
    Classification: Query
    All this information is wrong. It comes from a biopic in which the author simply guessed. Don't believe anything you find on Ancestry.com its all unproven crap. This website is designed to take your money. Read the terms of service the information is for entertainment purposes and is not proof of anything. It can be helpful if you know what you are doing and know how to sort the truth from the lies otherwise its pure crap.

    Thomas Dungan
    B/date: Aft 1575 - Ireland
    D/date: Aft 1600
    Married to: (Abt 1605/Ireland?)
    Mary Lnu
    B/date: Abt 1580
    D/date: Aft 1600

    Son: William Dungan
    B/date: abt 1600 - Celbridge, Kildare, Ireland
    D/date: Sept 18, 1636 - St. Martin, Westminster, London
    Married to: (Aug 27, 1629/Middlesex, London)
    Frances Latham
    B/date: Feb 15, 1608/09 - Kempston, Bedfordshire, England
    D/date: Sept 1677 - Newport, Rhode Island


    Re: Thomas DUNGAN, Newport, RI, d. 1688
    jldungan67 (View posts) Posted: 18 Jul 2009 3:43AM
    Classification: Query
    William Dungan Perfumer of St Martin in the Fields is the father of Rev. Thomas Dungan.

    The parentage of William Dungan Perfumer of St Martin in the Fields is unknown but his father is believed to be Richard Dungan Master Plasterer of London. The myth that Thomas Dongan was Williams father has been dispelled since the 1970s.

    If you are researching the Dungan surname there are three texts you'll need.

    "Ancestry of Jeremy Clark of Rhode Island and Dungan Genealogy" by Alfred Rudolf Justice

    "A Quest for Origins - The Search for the Parentage of William Dungan, Perfumer of St. Martin-in-the-Fields" by Thomas P. Dungan

    There are a few mistakes in the Justice book but if you can find a second edition of which only 176 copies exist most have been corrected. I will not disclose those which have not as this is will be part of my publication. Thomas P. Dungans book "Quest for Origins" dispels the erroneous parentage of William Dungan which has resulted in the grandaddy of all myths "the royal lineage" and points researchers in the right direction.

    I'll tell you what the third is when I finish my book!


    http://boards.ancestrylibrary.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=233&p=surnames.dungan

    -------

    Thomas* married Elizabeth* Weaver, (immigrant) in 1663 in Newport Co, Rhode Island. Elizabeth* (daughter of Sergeant Clement* Weaver and Mary* Freeborn, (immigrant)) was born in 1647 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England; died in 1697 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania (possibly); was buried in Cold Spring, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Elizabeth* Weaver, (immigrant) was born in 1647 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England (daughter of Sergeant Clement* Weaver and Mary* Freeborn, (immigrant)); died in 1697 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania (possibly); was buried in Cold Spring, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    BIOGRAPHY: i. Elizabeth Weaver was born 1647 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England, England, and died 1690 in Cold Springs, Bristol Township Bucks, Pennsylvania. She married Thomas (Dunkin) Dungan 1663 in Newport, Newport, Rhode Island, son of William (The Perfumer) Dungan and Frances Latham. He was born 13 Feb 1634/35 in St. Martin, Westminster, London, England, and died 1 Feb 1687/88 in Cold Sp rings, Bucks, Pennsylvania, USA

    Children:
    1. William Dungan was born in 1665 in Newport Co, Rhode Island; died in 1713.
    2. Elizabeth Dungan was born in 1666 in Portsmouth, Newport, Rhode`; died in 1696 in Burlington Co, New Jersey; was buried in Cold Spring, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    3. John Dungan was born in 1667 in Portsmouth, Newport, RI; died after 1667.
    4. Clement Dungan was born in 1668 in Newport Co, Rhode Island; died in 1732 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    5. Rebecca Dungan was born in 1670 in Shrewbury, Monmouth, New Jersey; died in 1722.
    6. Thomas Dungan was born in 1671 in Newport, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 23 Jun 1759 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    7. Jeremiah Dungan was born in 1673 in Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 6 Apr 1761 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    8. Mary Dungan was born in 1675 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died after 1696.
    9. 3. Sarah* Dungan was born in 1678 in East Greenwich, Kent Co, Rhode Island; died on 20 May 1760 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  William* Dungan, (son?) was born in 1606 in Calbridge, Co Kildare, Ireland (son of Thomas* Dungan and Elizabeth* (..) Dungan, Mrs); died on 18 Sep 1636 in St. Martins, London, Middlesex, England; was buried on 20 Sep 1636 in St.Martins in the Fields, London.

    Notes:

    Known as the "Perfumer."

    1. WILLIAM1 DUNGAN was born about 1607[2], was christened on 15 June 1628[2], and died in Sept. 1636 in London, England, United Kingdom[2]. He married in London, Middlesex, England, on 27 Aug. 1629, (XX-4) FRANCES LATHAM[2], daughter of (XX-1) Lewis and Elizabeth (_____) LATHAM, who was christened on 15 Feb. 1609/10 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England[4, 2], died in Sept. 1677 in Newport, Newport Co., Rhode Island, United States[4, 2], and was buried in Newport[4]. [1, 3, 5, 7, 2, 5]

    According to NEGHR 141:106:
    "Mrs. Barbara Dungan Barker and Mrs. Frances Dungan Holden, both of R.I. (a 3rd sibling was Rev. Thomas Dungan of Penn.) - TG 4 (1983):187-202, an article by Thomas P. Dungan that completely dissociates William Dungan of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London, father of the immigrants and first husband of Mrs. Frances Latham Dungan Clarke Vaughan of Newport, R.I., from Judge Thomas Dungan of Lincoln's Inn, and thus disproves the noble ancestry for the Dungan siblings first proposed by Alfred Rudolph Justice in The Ancestry of Jeremy Clarke of Rhode Island and Dungan Genealogy, Philadelphia, 1922, and further developed and corrected by Robert Joseph Curfman in Forebears 15 (1972):103-106 and The Colonial Genealogist 8 (1977):200-212."[7]
    See also http://www.dunganfamily.org

    Children:
    2 i. JOHN2 DUNGAN, b. about 1627 in London, London, England.
    + 3 ii. BARBARA DUNGAN, bp. on 28 Sept. 1630 in St Martin, Westminster, London, England; m. in 1644 prob. Newport (DM-5) JAMES BARKER, b. in Essex, England in 1617, d. in Newport in 1702, son of (DM-2) James and Mrs James (BARKER) BARKER.
    4 iii. FRANCES DUNGAN, b. in 1630 in England; d. in 1697 in Warwick, Kent Co., Rhode Island; m. (1) in 1648 in Warwick ; m. (2) in 1643 in Warwick RANDALL HOLDEN, SR., b. in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England in 1612, d. in Warwick on 23 July 1692; m. (3) in 1648 in Warwick .
    5 iv. WILLIAM DUNGAN, b. about 1632 in London, Middlesex; m. (1) JANE _____, b. about 1634; m. (2) ELIZABETH WEAVER, b. about 1635.
    6 v. ELIZABETH DUNGAN, bp. on 13 Dec. 1633 in St Martin Field, London, England.
    7 vi. THOMAS DUNGAN, (REV.), b. on 13 Feb. 1635 in St. Martin In Th, London, England; d. in 1688; m. in 1663 ELIZABETH WEAVER, b. in Newport in 1647.


    Generation Two
    3. BARBARA2 DUNGAN (William1), daughter of (1) William1 and (XX-4) Frances (LATHAM) DUNGAN, was born in 1628 in St. Martin In Th, London, England[1], was christened on 28 Sept. 1630 in St Martin, Westminster, London, England, and died between 1662 and 1738 in Newport. She married prob. Newport, in 1644, (DM-5) JAMES BARKER[1], son of (DM-2) James and Mrs James (BARKER) BARKER, who was born in 1617 in Essex, and died in 1702 in Newport. [1, 8, 6]
    Children: See (DM-5) James BARKER


    1. Barker, Elizabeth Frye, Barker Genealogy (New York: Frye Publishing Co., 1927), 11; FHL microfiche 6016440-6016443.
    2. J. Orton Buck and Timothy Field Beard, Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants, Vol. III (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1978), 138.
    3. Ibid., 138, 141, 143.
    4. Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2004), 211.
    5. New England Historical and Genealogical Register 74 (1920): 132.
    6. Ibid.: 133.
    7. New England Historical and Genealogical Register 141 (1987): 106.
    8. Ancestral File, CD-ROM database (Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1998).

    http://armidalesoftware.com/issue/full/Thaler_355_main.html

    =======


    From: "Karl Kiser"
    To: "Sherry Sharp"
    Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2013 2:36 PM
    Subject: Dungan genealogy

    The book by Thomas P. Dungan suggests the following tree.

    "Richard Dungan Master Plasterer of London in Shakespeare's Time. A Continuing Quest for Origins" (2003)

    William Dungan d 1636

    of Thomas Dungan (Mary)

    of Richard Dungan (unknown) 1550-1609 Plasterer of London

    of Thomas Dungan (Agnes?) Gentleman born 1520s

    of Philip Dungan (Alson Walshe) bc 1485

    of John Dongan (Ann O'Moore) Bailiff of Dublin bc 1462--family ancient Irish

    William* married Frances* Latham, (immigrant) on 27 Aug 1629 in St. Martin in the Fields, London, Middlesex, England. Frances* (daughter of Sgt. Falconer to King Charles Lewis* Latham and Mrs. Elizabeth (..)* Latham) was born on 15 Feb 1608/09 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England; died on 2 Sep 1677 in Newport Co, Rhode Island; was buried in Common Burying Ground, Newport, Newport Co, Rhode Island. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Frances* Latham, (immigrant) was born on 15 Feb 1608/09 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England (daughter of Sgt. Falconer to King Charles Lewis* Latham and Mrs. Elizabeth (..)* Latham); died on 2 Sep 1677 in Newport Co, Rhode Island; was buried in Common Burying Ground, Newport, Newport Co, Rhode Island.

    Notes:

    Birth: Feb. 15, 1609
    Kempston
    Bedfordshire, England
    Death: Sep. 2, 1677
    Newport
    Newport County
    Rhode Island, USA

    Frances Latham (Dungan Clarke Vaughn) is known as the "Mother of Governors". Her third husband was the Reverent William Vaughn. She had four children by her first husband; from the descendants of these children are many distinquished statesmen.

    There are seven children born of her second marriage, and these too have given many governors to the country. Each one of Frances Latham Clarke's sons served his country, or church, with public service, and each daughter married men who did the same. "She was undoubtedly a very attractive woman, her three marriages would indicate. One can only imagine the gathering of distinquished men and women in the "Common Burial Ground" of Newport when Frances Vaughn, recently widowed for the third time was laid in her grave.

    There was her eldest Clarke son, then governor, her daughter Mary, with her husband, then Deputy-Governor John Cranston and later governor; and their son Samuel, who before the century closed would also be governor; her daughter Sarah, sometime the wife of Governor Caleb Carr; Barbara with her husband, James Baker, to be chosen the next year as deputy governor; Frances and her husband, Major Randall Holden, ancestors of several of Rhode Island's governors and one of Washington: Weston Clarke, then attorney-general; James, Latham, and Jeremiah Clarke, with their sons and daughters, and Rev. Thomas Dungan, who perhaps was the one to say the last sacred words over his mother's grave "Mother of Governors"

    Her father was Sargeant Falconer Lewis Latham to King Charles I.

    Children not listed below: John Dungan (died young), William Dungan, Frances Dungan Holden, Elizabeth Dungan (died young), Walter Clarke, Latham Clarke and Jeremiah Clarke
    Spouses: Married four times
    1st Lord Weston
    2nd William Dungan
    3rd Capt. Jerimah Clark
    4th Rev. William Vaughn
    --------------------
    Note:
    The marriage between Frances Latham and Lord Weston has been disproved.

    "Late 19th century genealogist John Osborne Austin proposed that Frances had first been married to a "Lord Weston" as a teenager, but strong evidence against this was presented by New Haven genealogist Louise Tracy in 1908

    Tracy, Louise (1908). "An Historic Strain of Blood in America: Frances Latham--Mother of Governors."

    Reprinted from the Journal of American History, New Haven, Connecticut, pp 8-9."
    (findagrave http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=20716199)

    Buried:
    Here Lyeth ye Body of Mrs. Frances Vaughn, Alias Clarke, ye mother of ye only children of Capt'n Jeremiah Clarke. She died ye 1 Week in Sept. 1677 in ye 67th year of her age."

    Children:
    1. John Dungan was born about 1627 in London, Middlesex, England; died after 1627 in died young.
    2. Barbara Dungan, (immigrant) was born in 1628 in London, Middlesex, England; died in Sep 1677 in Newport Co, Rhode Island.
    3. Frances Dungan, (immigrant) was born in 1630 in England; died in 1697 in Warwick, Kent Co, Rhode Island.
    4. William Dungan was born in 1632 in London, Middlesex, England; died after 1632.
    5. 6. Thomas* Dungan, (immigrant) was born on 13 Feb 1632 in St. Martin, Westminster, London, England; died on 1 Feb 1688 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    6. Elizabeth Dungan was born about 1633 in London, Middlesex, England; died after 1633 in died young.

  3. 14.  Sergeant Clement* Weaver was born on 11 Dec 1625 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England (son of Clement* Weaver, Sr. (immigrant) and Rebecca* Holbrook, (immigrant)); died in 1683 in Newport, Rhode Island.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: Bef Jul 1640, Massachusetts Bay Colony
    • Property: 1643, Weymouth, Massachusetts
    • Residence: 1679, Clement Weaver House, East Greenwich, Kent Co, Rhode Island

    Notes:

    Wilipedia
    Clement Weavier (c 1620-1683_ also known as Clement Weaver, Jr. and Sergeant Clement Weaver, was a member of the House of Deputies of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in 1678
    one of the founders of East Greenwich

    Clement Weaver and his ancestry and descendants are the subject of a 740-page volume, History and Genealogy of a Branch of the Weaver Family, published in 1928

    Early Life and Family
    Clement Weaver was born in Glastonbury, England around 1620. He was the son of Clement Weaver Sr. and Rebecca Holbrook, daughter of William Holbrook, a resident of that town. Clement Weaver Sr. was the son of Thomas Weaver and Margaret Adams. There is some indication that Thomas Weaver was the son of John Weaver of Presteigne/Stapleton and London, and cousin of Richard Weaver (MP).

    Clement Weaver Sr. and Rebecca Holbrook had three known children: son Clement, and daughters Elner and Elizabeth

    Life in New England
    Clement Weaver and his family were part of the Great Migration to the Massachusetts Bay Colony, arriving some time before July 1640.[6] Clement Weaver Sr. is listed as a property owner in Weymouth in 1643, adjacent to his brother-in-law Thomas Holbrook who came to Weymouth with Rev. Joseph Hull's company in 1635.

    The Weaver family's religious views at the time of their migration are not known, but they had been affiliated with the Anglican churches of Glastonbury, and were associated by marriage to the Holbrook family who held views that were in conflict with the strict Puritans of Massachusetts. Some time after 1643, Clement Weaver and family moved to the more religiously tolerant Colony of Rhode Island

    Clement Weaver married Mary Freeborn, the daughter of William Freeborn of Essex, England, one of the signers of the Portsmouth Compact and an early member of the Society of Friends (Quakers). Clement Weaver and Mary Freeborn had four children between 1647 and 1661: Clement, William, John and Thomas.[4] They also became members of the Society of Friends, and some of their descendants maintained that tradition for many generations

    By 1651, Clement Weaver "Juneor of Nuport" [sic] owned multiple properties in Portsmouth.[4] His primary farm and residence, portions of which remained in the family for over two hundred years, was west of the West Main Road between Newport and Portsmouth in what is today called Middletown.[4] Clement is known to have owned land in Newport, Portsmouth, Westerly, Providence and East Greenwich.[2][4] He is thought to have been a "wall builder" by trade.[2][4] In 1655, "Clement Weaver Jr." and his father are included in a list of Freemen in the Newport settlement. Clement is referred to as Sergeant in later Newport town records - the origin and significance of the title is unknown.

    Clement Weaver is listed among the 48 founders of East Greenwich who were granted 100-acre tracts in 1677 "for the services rendered during King Philip's War".[2][3][4] In 1678 Sergeant Clement Weaver became a member of the House of Deputies of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, representing the new settlement of East Greenwich, under then Governor Benedict Arnold. He also served on the Grand Jury at various times from 1671 through 1683.[1][2]

    In 1680 Sergeant Clement Weaver is known to have deeded 90 acres of his grant in East Greenwich to his son Clement, also known as Captain Clement Weaver.[4] The Clement Weaver House built in East Greenwich in 1679 is still in existence. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and one of the oldest homes in Rhode Island.[7]

    Sergeant Clement Weaver died in Newport in 1683, as his will was probated in that year. According to Quaker death records, he and his wife are buried in the Friends Cemetery in Newport (unmarked).[8] Clement Weaver Sr. also died in Newport in 1683, "nearly a hundred years old".[4] Captain Clement Weaver continued to represent East Greenwich in the House of Deputies at various times from 1683 to 1690.[1][2]


    Clement Weaver
    Born c.1620
    Glastonbury, England

    Died 1683 Newport, Rhode Island

    Other names Clement Weaver Jr., Sergeant Clement Weaver

    Occupation Wall builder, Farm owner, Member of House of Deputies

    Spouse(s) Mary Freeborn

    Children Clement, William, John, Thomas

    Parent(s) Clement Weaver Sr. and Rebecca Holbrook
    wikipedia - Clement Weaver

    Property:
    Clement Weaver Sr. is listed as a property owner in Weymouth in 1643, adjacent to his brother-in-law Thomas Holbrook who came to Weymouth with Rev. Joseph Hull's company in 1635.

    Residence:
    In 1680 Sergeant Clement Weaver is known to have deeded 90 acres of his grant in East Greenwich to his son Clement, also known as Captain Clement Weaver.[4] The Clement Weaver House built in East Greenwich in 1679 is still in existence. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and one of the oldest homes in Rhode Island.[7]

    The Clement Weaver-Daniel Howland House is a historic stone-ender timber frame house built in 1679. This rare example of primitive 17th-century architecture is located at 125 Howland Road in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and the second oldest home in Rhode Island.

    Clement Weaver, a native of Newport, Rhode Island, built the house in 1679, after fighting in King Philip's War. His descendants sold the house to Daniel Howland in 1784. Daniel Howland was a grandchild of Henry Howland, who arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1624. Henry was the younger brother of John Howland, one of the original Mayflower Pilgrims of 1620. In the early 20th century, Norman Isham, a prominent architect, restored the house. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.[1] Larry Schneider, a general contractor specializing in historic restorations, restored the home in 1996.

    Died:
    Sergeant Clement Weaver died in Newport in 1683, as his will was probated in that year. According to Quaker death records, he and his wife are buried in the Friends Cemetery in Newport (unmarked).[8] Clement Weaver Sr. also died in Newport in 1683, "nearly a hundred years old".

    Clement* married Mary* Freeborn, (immigrant) in 1645 in Ipswich, Suffolk, England. Mary* (daughter of William* Freeborn, (immigrant) and Mary* Wilson, (immigrant)) was born in 1626 in Maldon, Essex, England; died on 6 Mar 1663/64 in Portsmouth, Rockingham Co, New Hampshire. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Mary* Freeborn, (immigrant) was born in 1626 in Maldon, Essex, England (daughter of William* Freeborn, (immigrant) and Mary* Wilson, (immigrant)); died on 6 Mar 1663/64 in Portsmouth, Rockingham Co, New Hampshire.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: 30 Apg 1634, The Francis, Ipswich, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts

    Children:
    1. 7. Elizabeth* Weaver, (immigrant) was born in 1647 in Glastonbury, Somerset, England; died in 1697 in Bucks Co, Pennsylvania (possibly); was buried in Cold Spring, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania.
    2. Captain Clement Weaver was born between 1647 and 1661.
    3. William Weaver was born between 1647 and 1661.
    4. John Weaver was born between 1647 and 1661.
    5. Thomas Weaver was born between 1647 and 1661.