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Nehemiah Sherman

Male 1722 - 1722  (0 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Nehemiah Sherman was born on 13 Sep 1722 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts (son of David Sherman and Abigail Hathaway); died on 13 Sep 1722 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.

    Nehemiah married Experience Wing on 04 Dec 1745 in Rochester. Experience was born on 02 Apr 1725 in Rochester, Plymouth Co, Massachusetts; died after 1760 in Bellingham, Norfolk Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Seth Sherman was born on 29 Mar 1754 in Bellingham, Norfolk Co, Massachusetts; died on 01 Jan 1804 in Bellingham, Norfolk Co, Massachusetts.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  David Sherman was born in Jan 1680 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts (son of Edmund Sherman and Jane Dorcas Hicks); died in 1755 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Will: 28 Oct 1755, Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; probate

    Notes:

    Will:
    MA Probate Records for Bristol Co. --- Book 2, p. 176

    Rcpt. by Abigail Sherman for legacy from est. of her husb. DAVID SHERMAN of Dart., paid by Jacob Shearman, exec., dtd 28 Oct. 1755. Witns: Thomas Lapham & Peleg Smith [14:633].

    Rcpt. by Edmund Sherman, John Sherman & Nehemiah Sherman for legacies from est. of their father DAVID SHERMAN of Dart., paid by Jacob Sherman, exec., dtd. 28 Oct 1755 [14:634].

    Rcpt by Roger Bruley, Joshua Lapham, Hezekiah Gridley & Isaac Killey for legacies from est. "of our honoured father" DAVID SHERMAN of Dart. "Given to our wives," paid by Jacob Sherman, exec. dtd. 28 Oct. 1755. Witns: Thomas Lapham & Pelege Smith [14:634].
    ====================

    David married Abigail Hathaway on 27 Dec 1680 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts. Abigail (daughter of John Hathaway, Jr. and Hannah (Anna) Burt) was born about 1685 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 03 Apr 1761 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Abigail Hathaway was born about 1685 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts (daughter of John Hathaway, Jr. and Hannah (Anna) Burt); died on 03 Apr 1761 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    Children:
    1. John Sherman was born on 12 Apr 1720 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died in 1789 in Rochester, Plymouth Co, Massachusetts.
    2. 1. Nehemiah Sherman was born on 13 Sep 1722 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died on 13 Sep 1722 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    3. Hannah Sherman was born on 17 Jun 1727 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died on 17 Nov 1797 in Adams, Berkshire Co, Massachusetts.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Edmund Sherman was born in Apr 1641 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island (son of Hon. Philip Sherman (Shearman), (immigrant) and Sarah Odding, (immigrant)); died in 1719 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Will: 06 Jul 1719, Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; proved

    Notes:

    Will:
    Will of EDMUND SHERMAN of Dartmouth, MA

    To all people to whome these presents shall come, I Edmund Shearman of Dartmouth in the County of Bristol in the Province of the Massachusets Bay in New England: do hereby manifest & declare that I being at this time very sensible of the weakness of my body but my memory and understanding being yet good, do for the disposing & settleing of my wordly estate make this my last Will and Testament to be of force after my decease hereby revoking and declaring to be null & void all other Wills & Testaments by me formerly made & this to be my last will.

    Impress. I will and bequeath to my son Samuel Shearman five shillings to be payed by my Executor hereafter named with what is already given him by deeds.

    Item. I give and bequeath to my son David Shearman of my Homestead lot of land twenty rods wide on ye south side of my said lands to run the whole length from the foot to the head and to remaine unto my said son David Shearman and his heires and assigns for ever.

    Item. I give and bequeath to my son Nathan Shearman of said lott of land twenty rod wide on the north side of said lands & to run from the foot to the head & to remain unto him my said son Nathan Shearman, his heirs and assigns for ever.

    Item. I give and bequeath unto my son Natha'l Shearman twenty rods wide of my said lott of lands and to lye on the south side of the remains of my sd homestead lot of land and on the north side of my son David aforesd and to run and even bredth from the foot to the head and to remain unto my sd son Natha'l Shearman his heirs and assigns for ever.

    Item. I give and bequeath unto my loving wife Dorcas Shearman all the rest of my said lot or farm of lands with all the housing orchards & fences priviledges and commodities in upon or to the sd lands, dureing all the time of her natural life and allso for her more comfortable support: I give to said loving wife all my personal or movable estate either to make use of for need or to dispose of amongst our children as she shall see cause; but after the death of my said wife: Item. I give & bequeath all that my lands given to said wife with the housing orchards and fencing as abovesd unto my two sons Elkanah Shearman & Joseph Shearman and is to be equally divided beginning exactly in the middle at the foot and so to extend to the head with a straight line; and my will is that my son Joseph Shearman shall have the north side with the housing that is on it, and shal be and remain to my two sons Elkanah Shearman & Joseph Shearman and to their heirs and assigns forever.

    Item. I give and bequeath to my son Elnathan Shearman, twelve acres and a halfe of the land which was bought of Thomas Hicks, Scituate, lying and being in Dartmouth all the allowance layd out and surveyed by Benjamin Grant and is bounded as the return of sd survey makes mention and is to be and remain unto said son Elnathan Shearman his heirs and assigns forever.

    Item. I give and bequeath unto my daughter Lidia Maxfield seven acres of land in the next division of lands in Dartmouth after eight hundred acres is compleated to the one whole share to be and remain unto her and her heirs and assigns for ever.

    Item. I give and bequeath unto my five sons, David Shearman, Nathan Shearman, Natha'l Shearman, Elkanah Shearman & Joseph Shearman all my land lyeing between my said son David __ land and Jonathan Russel's to be equally divided among them my said son David to have the east and my son Nathan next and my son Natha'l next to Nathan and Elkanah next to Nathaniel and Joseph to have the west end, and all to run across the sd land.

    Item. I give and bequeath all my salt marsh meadow to my seven sons Samuel Shearman, David Shearman, Nathan Shearman, Natha'l Shearman, Elkanah Shearman, Joseph Shearman & Elnathan Shearman and to be equally divided among them and to remain unto them my sons their heires & assigns for ever.

    Item. I give & bequeath all the rest of my undivided lands in the Township of Dartmouth to my six sons David Shearman Nathan Shearman, Natha'l Shearman Elkanah Shearman Joseph Shearman and Elnathan Shearman and to remain unto them their heirs and assigns for ever. And for the performing and executing this my last will and Testament, I make my loving wife my whole and sole Executrix and so for her my said wife Dorcas Shearman to act and perform according to law: In witness whereof I the said Edmund Shearman have hereunto sett my hand and seal thiss Twentyeth day of October, one thousand seven hundred and twelve: 1712.

    Seal

    EDMUND (the mark of) SHEARMAN
    Signed, Sealed, Published and Declared
    by the above Edmund Shearman
    as his last will and Testament in
    presence of us the subscribers
    George Codman
    James Tripp
    John Tripp

    Proved July 6, 1719. Tauton, Mass.
    Bristol County Probate Records. Vol. 3; page 565

    Edmund married Jane Dorcas Hicks before 1674 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts. Jane was born on 14 Feb 1651 in Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts; died after 1698 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Jane Dorcas Hicks was born on 14 Feb 1651 in Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts; died after 1698 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    Children:
    1. Elkanah Sherman was born on 07 May 1674 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died about 1778 in of, Coventry, Kent Co, Rhode Island.
    2. Nathan Sherman was born on 08 Feb 1678 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died in 1764 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    3. 2. David Sherman was born in Jan 1680 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts; died in 1755 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.

  3. 6.  John Hathaway, Jr. was born on 16 Aug 1650 in Taunton, Massachusetts; died in Jun 1730.

    John married Hannah (Anna) Burt in 1668 in Bristol Co, Massachusetts. Hannah was born about 1650 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 28 Jun 1705. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Hannah (Anna) Burt was born about 1650 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died after 28 Jun 1705.
    Children:
    1. 3. Abigail Hathaway was born about 1685 in Freetown, Bristol Co, Massachuetts; died on 03 Apr 1761 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Hon. Philip Sherman (Shearman), (immigrant) was born before 5 Feb 1610/11 in Dedham, Essex, England; was christened on 5 Feb 1610/11 in Dedham, Essex, England (son of Samuel Sherman and Philippa Ward); died before 19 Mar 1689 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Other-Begin: 7 Mar 1638, Portsmouth Compact, Portsmouth, Rhode Island
    • Will: 01 Jul 1681, Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island

    Notes:

    ASSOCIATIONS: Thomas Townsend Sherman has elaborated the large Sherman family of Dedham, Essex, and vicinity [Sherman Genealogy (New York 1920)], cited above as Sherman Gen]. Philip Sherman was followed to New England by his brother Samuel Sherman of Boston, his first cousin John Sherman of Watertown, and his first cousins once-removed Edmund Sherman and Richard Sherman.

    COMMENTS: One of the Wheelwright supporters ordered disarmed [MBCR 1:212]. He signed the Portsmouth Covenant 7 March 1637/8 [RICR 52].
    Accounts of this family in secondary sources, beginning with Austin, supply incomplete dates of birth for all the children, including a son William and an earlier daughter Mary [Austin 178-79]. None of these dates is found in any contemporary records, and so all these dates and the two additional children are omitted in the arrangement given above. If there is any basis for these data, it would probably be a surviving family record, but no mention of such a document is made.

    ============================================================

    This following letter, from the Society of Friends, regarding the placement of a Tombstone for Philip - a project in the works by Alonzo Sherman of Michigan:

    From: PORTFRNDS@aol.com
    To: shermanaj@hotmail.com
    Subject: Re: Tombstone for Phillip Shearman (1610-1887)
    Date: Tue, 29 May 2001

    Dear Mr. Sherman:

    Please forgive my not responding to your e-mail sooner. I have been out of town at a Pastor's Conference in South Carolina, then we had some bad news concerning a family member in Fla. who has just been diagnosed with cancer.

    This is the first opportunity I have had to catch up on my correspondence since returning.

    With respect to your inquiry regarding a monument to you ancestor. Several months ago a letter was drafted and I was under the impression that it had been sent to you regarding your request.

    However, there seems to be some question as to if you received this letter at all. Let me therefore, try to bring you up to date with where we are on the issue of the monument.

    The Administrative Council of the Church, met and discussed in detail you family's request. Additionally, several different thoughts were taken into consideration concerning placing a monument in the Cemetery.

    After long and careful discussion and deliberation the following was the result:

    The "Friends or Quakers" of the time your ancestor was associated with the Church, were very much out of favor with the thought of marking graves. They were, as you have come to understand, a simple plain people who were not given to what some of the early "Friends" might have called "pretense."

    As a result they did not mark their graves with tomb stones, monuments, markers and such. The "Friends" held to the scripture that, "to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord," and with that belief firmly in their hearts and minds, they placed little care or concern about marking graves. They believed that the person was no longer there, but rather was in heaven with the Lord.

    Over time, we have indeed allowed for the marking of the grave sites of later "Friends" who have died, but even at that it has been relatively simple.

    The final decision of the Administrative Council with respect to your request was that out of respect to the memory and the belief and trust that the " Friends" of the time period your family member was a part of, and in keeping with the "Friends" history and practice of that era, we would respectfully decline your request to place a monument in the cemetery.

    We appreciate your concern and we also appreciate the contribution your ancestor made not only to the "Friends Meeting" here, but also to the Community and the state of Rhode Island.

    It may be that the Rhode Island State Historical Society, would be interested in allowing a monument of some type to be placed in one of the parks near or around the capital since your ancestor played such an important role in our early state development.

    We hope you appreciate the Church's position, and that our declining your offer in no way is meant to diminish or minimize the contribution your ancestor made to our Church, the community and the state in which he lived.

    Please accept our sincere appreciation for your consideration toward us in this matter.

    Respectfully yours, Jordan S.C. Jacobson, Sr. Pastor, Portsmouth Evangelical Friends Church

    =======================================================

    from http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Fields/4791/encyclopediabios.html

    Hon. Philip Sherman, son of Samuel Sherman, and the immigrant ancestor of the branch of our subject's family, was born in Dedham, England, February 5, 1610. In 1633 he settled in Roxbury, Massachusetts, and on May 14, 1634, was made a freeman. In the Anne Hutchinson troubles he took the popular side, but as Governor Winthrop ultimately prevailed, Philip Sherman and others who held his views were warned on November 20, 1637, to deliver up all gems, pistols, swords, powder, shot, etc. He and eighteen others who were banished from Massachusetts signed a civil compact under date of March 7, 1638, for the occupation of Rhode Island. In Providence they met Roger Williams who advised them to purchase the Island of Aquetnet (now Rhode Island) from the Indians. The purchase was completed March 24, 1638. He was present at a general meeting held at Portsmouth on May 13, 1638. A regular government was established on July 1, 1639, and Philip Sherman was elected secretary. His records show him to have been an expert penman and an educated man. He was made freeman, March 16, 1641, was general recorder from 1648 to 1651, inclusive. In 1665-67 he was deputy to the General Court. Because of his intelligence, wealth and influence, he was often consulted by those in authority. In Rhode Island he left the Congregational church and became identified with the Society of Friends. His will shows him and his son Samuel to have been joint owners of four Indian slaves. His will was proved March 22, 1687. He was married to Sarah Odding, a daughter of Mrs. John Porter by a former marriage.
    =========================================================

    BIRTH: Baptized Dedham, Essex, 5 February 1610/1, son of Samuel Sherman [Sherman Gen 95].
    DEATH: Portsmouth before 19 March 1686/7 (date of inventory).
    MARRIAGE: Roxbury about 1633 Sarah Odding, daughter of Margaret (_____) (Odding) Porter [RChR 78-79; TAG 73:176-80].
    CHILDREN:
    i EBER, b. say 1634; m. Mary _____. (She has been called Mary Wilcox, daughter of Edward [Transatlantic Shermans 114; Philip Sherman 28], but there is no room for her in the family of Edward Wilcox [NEHGR 147:190-91].)

    ii SARAH, b. say 1636; m. by about 1656 Thomas Mumford [Austin 136].

    iii PELEG, b. say 1637; m. Portsmouth 26 July 1657 Elizabeth Lawton, daughter of Thomas Lawton [RIVR 4:Portsmouth:37].

    iv EDMUND, b. 1641; m. by 1674 Dorcas Hicks, daughter of Samuel Hicks and granddaughter of ROBERT HICKS [Harriet Woodbury Hodge, Hicks (Hix) Families of Rehoboth and Swansea, Massachusetts (Winnetka, Illinois, 1976), p. 59].

    v SAMSON, b. 1642; m. Portsmouth 4 March 1674/5 Isabel Tripp, daughter of John Tripp [RIVR 4:Portsmouth:37; TG 4:62].

    vi JOHN, b. 1644; by about 1674 Sarah Spooner, daughter of William Spooner (in his will of 8 March 1683[/4] William Spooner made a bequest to "my daughter Sarah Sherman" [PCPR 4:2:71]).

    vii MARY, b. 1645; living on 31 July 1681 (father's will). (Austin says she married Samuel Wilbore, son of Shadrach, but this Samuel was born in 1663 [Austin 228], so this identification seems highly unlikely.)

    viii HANNAH, b. 1647; m. by about 1678 William Chase, son of William Chase [NEHGR 87:51-52; Austin 178-79].

    ix SAMUEL, b. 1648; m. Portsmouth 23 February 1680/1 Martha Tripp [RIVR 4:Portsmouth:37; TG 4:62].

    x BENJAMIN, b. 1650; m. Portsmouth 3 December 1674 Hannah Mowry, daughter of ROGER MOWRY [Austin 179].
    xi PHILIP, b. 1652; m. by about 1674 Benjamin Chase, son of WILLIAM CHASE [PoLE 1:150; Austin 178-79; NEHGR 87:51].

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=artcohan&id=I00611

    -----------------

    Philip Sherman (1610-1687) was a prominent leader in early Rhode Island and one of its founders. His last name is sometimes spelled Shearman, which reveals the family's ancient involvement with shearing sheep and the wool industry.

    Sherman was born in 1610 in Dedham, Essex, England. He was the son of Samuel and Phillippa (Ward) Sherman.

    In 1633 Sherman came to America during the great Puritan migration. He settled in Roxbury, Massachusetts. There he married Sarah Odding, the daughter of George Odding and Margaret(Lang) Odding, in 1634.

    Sherman sided with Anne Hutchinson against Governor John Winthrop. In 1637 he was among the followers of Hutchinson who were ordered to give up their arms. He then left with her and her other followers to see Roger Williams in Providence Plantations (now part of the state of Rhode Island). Williams advised them to buy land on Aquidneck Island. There they founded Pocasset, which is now called Portsmouth. Philip Sherman-along with William Coddington, Ann Hutchinson's husband, and sixteen other men--signed the Portsmouth Compact, a model of constitutional government.

    At first the colony we know as Rhode Island was in two separate parts-Providence Plantations and Rhode Island. Philip Sherman was the first Secretary (General Recorder) of the latter part.He held several other political offices during his life. At some point Sherman became a Quaker (member of the Religious Society of Friends).

    Sherman died in Portsmouth in 1687.

    He was a direct ancestor of James S. Sherman, Susan B. Anthony,George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Janis Joplin, Sir Winston Churchill, Lyndon LaRouche, Conrad Aiken, Alexander Stine, Nicholas Stine, Mamie Eisenhower, and possibly Marilyn Monroe

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=andwai&id=I26308

    Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Sherman


    Will:
    WILL of PHILIP SHEARMAN, of Portsmouth, RI

    In the name of God Amen, I, Philip Shearman, yeoman, aged seventy-one years, of the Town of Portsmouth in the colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations in New England, being in good memory, praise be therefor given to Almighty God, do make and ordain this my Last Will and Testament in the manner and form following: (that is to say); first and principally I commend my soul into the hands of Almighty God and my body to the earth to be decently buried by my executor hereafter named. And as for the disposition of my worldly estate, it is in manner and form following; first I give to Sarah my loving wife the use and her dwelling in the first room at the west end of my now dwelling house & bed and bedding with the furniture thereto belonging now standing in the aforenamed room. Also I do here by ordaine and appoint my son Samuel my sole Executor to this my last will and testament truely performed; and to b__ himself, heirs, Executors and Administrators for the true performance hereof; furthermore my will is that my executor shall sufficiently maintain my loving wife with food and raiment and all necessaries whatsoever during her natural life and at her decease decently to bury her; furthermore, I do give unto Sarah mywife ten good ewe sheep to be marked out of my flock for the sole use and dispose both of bodie and wool yearly, wch said number shall be kept by my said Executor during the natural life of Sarah my said wife free and without any charge to my wife.

    Item: I do give unto Eber my Eldest son that which I have already given him, ten acres of land in the bounds of Portsmouth aforesaid at a place called Briggs swamp joining to a parcel of land of his own to him and his heirs forever. And all my horse flesh in the Narragansett country except one mare, the scond best; such excepted mare, I give to Thomas Mumford and Peleg Mumford my Grandchildren.

    Item: I give unto my son Peleg five ewe sheep.

    Item: I give unto my son Edmund a quarter share of meadow and a sixteenth part of a share of upland lying in Ponagansett within the Township of Dartmouth in the colony of New Plymouth in New England with all the privileges th__ to belonging or any wards appertaining. And also my whole right in the purchase of Squamscutt now called Westerly by thecollony to the said Edmund and his heirs.

    Item: I give unto my son Samson after the decease of my said wife his half of the breadth of my farm wch I now dwell upon from the westward end to the sea and three Rood more in breadth of the whole length of the aforesaid land and bounded southward upon a straight line Eastward from the south west corner of that orchard now called Sampson's upon a straight line to a lande marke about a rood short of the cart way that goes from my dwelling house to my barn in Portsmouth aforesaid. And from the said land marke upon a sloap line five Rood westwardly of my barn until it comes to the lineof the aforesaid half-breadth of the aforesaid farm to him and his heires forever and to have the third part of any hay and grass yearly of the aforesaid farm. And my son Samson and my son Samuel to have equal privileges in the arible land of the aforesaid farm during the natural life of Sarah my wife.

    Item: I give unto my son Samuel all the remaining of my aforesaid farm with my now dwelling house and all the other buildings upon the said part of the land lying southward of the other part of my farm now given to my son Samson as aforesaid to him and his heirs forever after the decease of Sarah my wife and to have two parts of the grass and the hay during the natural life of Sarah my wife.

    Item: All my neat cattle, hors kind, sheep kind and swine I do give unto my son Samuel aforenamed Executor, (excepting two oxen and a fatting cow.) And also all my moveable goods (Excepting two great chests with lock and key to each of them, which said chests I give unto my wife Sarah) he my aforesaid executor paying the several legacies herein this my will specified both the aforementioned and what shall hereafter be exprest in this my will.

    Item: I givee unto my son Samson aforenamed one white faced mare with her foale and all those four Indians wch we jointly bought.

    Item: I give unto my son Samson and my son Samuel my draught horse and two draught steers equally betwixt them.

    Item: I give unto my son John my bay mare.

    Item: I give unto my son Benjamin all the remaining __art of of my land at Brigg's Swamp whereupon the said Benjamin's house now stands, being by estimation twentie acres be the same more or less to him and his heires forever.

    Item: I give unto my daughter Sarah ten ewe sheep to be paid her the year after my decease.

    Item: I give unto my daughter Mary ten ewe sheep to be paid her the year after my decease.

    Item: I give unto my daughter Hannah fivee pounds of New England silver money for the proper use of her selfe and children to be paid the year after my decease.

    Item: I give unto my daughter Hannah five ewe sheep to be paid to her the year after my decease.

    Item: I give unto my daughter Philip ten ewe sheep to be paid to her the year after my decease.

    Item: I give unto Benjamin Clarke to my son Edmund until he comes of age of one & twenty years, the said Edmund finding the said Benjamin with sufficient food and clothing duting the terme aforesaid.

    Item: I the above said Philip Shearman do ordain and appoint this to be my last will and testament, making void all former wills and testaments heretofore by me made.

    In witness whereof I have hereunto sett my hand and seal this one and thirtyeth day of the month comonly called July, Anno Domino on thousand six hundred and Eightie one.

    Philip Shearman (Seal)


    Before the signing and sealing of this my will and testament, I the aforesaid Philip Shearman do declare that wheras the word Assigns is omitted in the giving of the several parcels of land to my children:
    That it is my true intent and meaning that I do give the said several parcels of land specified in my above written will to my children to their heires and Assigns forever.

    Signed and sealed in the presence of:
    Job Almy
    Philip Phettiplace
    Elias Williams

    Proved March 22, 1686/7.
    Recorded on page 260 of "Land Evidence, 2nd Book, No. 1"
    Town of Portsmouth, R.I. H.E.S. & F.D.S. 48-50


    ----------------
    The inventory of the estate of Philip Sherman, dated 19 March 1686/7, totalled £100, with no real estate included [Portsmouth Scrapbook 17].

    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=artcohan&id=I00611

    Philip married Sarah Odding, (immigrant) in 1633 in Roxbury, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts. Sarah was born on 05 Feb 1608 in Madron, Cornwall, England; died on 05 Feb 1682 in Kingstown, Washington Co, Rhode Island. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Sarah Odding, (immigrant) was born on 05 Feb 1608 in Madron, Cornwall, England; died on 05 Feb 1682 in Kingstown, Washington Co, Rhode Island.
    Children:
    1. Eber Sherman, I was born on 12 Dec 1634 in Roxbury, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts; died after 13 Nov 1706 in North Kingstown, Washington Co, Rhode Island.
    2. Sarah Sherman (Shearman) was born on 26 Apr 1636 in Roxbury, Massachusetts; died between 1718 and 1719.
    3. Peleg (Shearman) Sherman, Sr. was born in May 1638 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died in 1719 in Kingstown, Washington Co, Rhode Island.
    4. 4. Edmund Sherman was born in Apr 1641 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died in 1719 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    5. Samson Sherman was born in Apr 1642 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 27 Jun 1718 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island.
    6. John Sherman was born in Aug 1644 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 16 Apr 1734 in Dartmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    7. Hannah Sherman (Shearman) was born on 11 Feb 1646 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 9 Oct 1717 in Dartsmouth, Bristol Co, Massachusetts.
    8. Benjamin Sherman was born in 1650 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 12 Sep 1719 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island.
    9. Samuel Sherman was born in 1648 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island; died on 09 Oct 1717 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island.
    10. Phillippe Sherman (Shearman) was born on 1 Oct 1652 in Portsmouth, Newport Co, Rhode Island.