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Jimmy frink
Jimmy frink





jimmy frink

New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2008.) Originally published as: New England Marriages Prior to 1700. ↑ Torrey’s New England Marriages Prior to 1700.John of Ipswich's will dated mentioned his wife and two sons John and George as well as his estate "where ever it bee eyther in old England or New" and was proved in Essex Co MA. John of Ipswich, his wife, probably Mary Wood, and two sons, John and George, settled in Kittery, Maine, and their descendants were in Maine and Massachusetts for several generations." "There was a John Frink in Ipswich, MA, in the 1630s, but no relationship between him and John of Stonington has been proved. John's birth date and father might be for a different John Frink. Research Notesīased on the following information, I have detached John Frink of Ipswich, Massachusetts, as his father, and removed the birth information related to the Ipswich man's son (20 August 1633 in Devon, England) from this profile: Johnson-18438 18:24, (UTC) See the Research Notes section for further information. His birth information is based on an incorrect assumption about his father. In the same year, in a Hartford, Connecticut court he was among persons nominated from Stonington to be “freemen.”Īccording to his Find A Grave memorial, John Frink was born Augin England, and died Februin Stonington, Connecticut. In 1670 John Frink represented the town of New London, Connecticut at the General Court.

jimmy frink

A marker there celebrates the origin of the town and mentions John Frink and Thomas Leffingwell, two of the volunteers. 2 on the list of all applicants for this land, in what was to become known as the town of Voluntown, Connecticut. After the war, in 1696, the Colony of Connecticut awarded tracts of “the conquered land” specifically to the “English Volunteers” who had served in the war. He served as a Sergeant in King Philip’s War. On Nov 14, 1666, John Frink was “received an inhabitant into the town” of Stonington, Connecticut along with Grace and their three daughters.ġ668 Stonington census included John Frink. The Yard is located on Stony Brook road behind what is believed to be John and Grace Frink’s homestead on Taugwonk Road.” Their early hand-carved fieldstones remain. John and Grace are buried in a private burial ground, the Frink/Williams Yard, Stonington. His father’s name, as shown in the Marlborough record, was also John Frink, but the mother’s name is not given Sarah Noyes.įrom the Frink Family in America: (Confirm with primary source material if available) Believed to be the John Frink who was born in 1633 in Malborough, Devon, England, and christened there. Birth - 1633 Death -, Stonington, CT Burial - Frink-Williams Yard, Stonington, CT Marriage - 1657, John Frinkes and Grace Stevens Children of John and Grace John Frink married Grace Stevens (of Taunton) in Stonington, Connecticut, by 1658.







Jimmy frink