Thomas HANKINSON

Thomas HANKINSON

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Thomas HANKINSON

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt 1672 (Ireland) nach diesem Ort suchen [1]
Bestattung Topanemus Burial Ground, Marlboro, NJ. nach diesem Ort suchen
Tod 1738 New Jersey nach diesem Ort suchen [2]
Wohnen 1682 Ireland nach diesem Ort suchen [3]
Heirat vor 1700
Heirat etwa 1724 New Jersey nach diesem Ort suchen

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder
vor 1700
NN
Heirat Ehepartner Kinder
etwa 1724
New Jersey
Alice (VAN KIRK)

Notizen zu dieser Person

2. Thomas HANKINSON, b. c. 1672/83/4, ENG, d. 1738, buried: Topanemus Burial Ground, Marlboro, NJ.

He married (1) unknown, c. 1695. unknown: Her name is given as Mary CLEMINGER or else Lydia BOURNE and Elizabeth MANSON (1689-1725). A Frances (widow BEBBY) is also given as wife of Thomas (see Genforum - HANKINSON forum, msg. #312).

Children:
3. i William b. c. 1700/1/4.
4. ii Thomas John b. c. 1705/7.
5. iii Robert b. 1708.
iv Ann HANKINSON, b. 5Mar/6Dec 1709, Monmouth Co., NJ, d. 30 Jan/Jun 1761, Hunterdon Co., NJ, buried: Old Amwell, NJ.

She married Jacob MATTISON, 13 Jan 1731, in Freehold, Monmouth, Co., NJ, b. 16 Nov 1709, Freehold, Monmouth, Co., NJ, (son of Aaron MATTISON and Elizabeth _____) d. 7 Dec 1804, Hunterdon Co., NJ, buried: Old Amwell, NJ. Jacob: Had 10 children.

6. v Joseph b. 27 Mar 1712.
vi Daniel HANKINSON, b. 1714/9, Monmouth Co., NJ, d. 1748.
vii Hester HANKINSON, b. c. 1715/25, NJ.

She married William VanKERK/KIRK, (son of John Aertsz VanKERK and Alice _____) baptized 5 Feb 1710, Marlboro Dutch Ch., Monmouth Co., NJ.

viii Sarah HANKINSON, b. 1716/21.

She married Peter WILSON/WILLSON. Peter: (? d. c. 1731, poss. s/o Peter WILLSON & Mary _____.)

ix Hannah HANKINSON, b. 1719, d. 15 Aug 1762, buried: Topanemus Burial Ground, Marlboro, NJ. She ?2m. by 1744 to Kenneth ANDERSON, b. 1710, d. 1806, s/o John ANDERSON & Anna REID.

She married John SHAW, c. 1735.

He married (2) Alice/Alsey ASHTON, c. 1724. Alice/Alsey: Widow of John VanKIRK.

Children:
x John HANKINSON, b. c. 1723?, Monmouth Co., NJ, d. c. 1747.
xi Lidia HANKINSON, b. c. 1727, Monmouth Co., NJ.

She married Thomas COX, (son of James COX and Ann _____) d. bef 1747.
(rootsweb.com, Hankinson message board, by James P LaLone, 12 May 2003)
..........

"The names of such persons as were imported in this province
and brought to bee Registred in the Bookes of Records vpon the
Account of Stephen Warne and Thomas Warne are as followes,
dated this xxviyth day of february Anno dm. 1684.
William Eelson Tanner by Indenture for three yeares.
John Kigbin by Indenture of Apprenticeship four yeares.
Anthony Ashmore by Indenture of Apprenticeship to Stephen Warne
for the space of seven yeares.
Walter Newman by Indenture of Apprenticeship to Stephen Warne for seven years.
Patrick Kemane by Indenture of Apprenticeship for five years to Thomas Warne.
Abraham Smith by Indenture for four years.
Jane Hankinson for the Custon of the Country and her three children
vizt. Thomas, Peter & Richard Hankinson.
All these servants were imported in this province on or about the Last of March in the yeare 1683." (Lib. A. of Deeds, p. 171, Tenton, N. J. New Jersey Archives, 1683. William Nelson (Ed). NEW JERSEY COLONIAL DOCUMENTS. page 62. Genealogical Pub. Co.)
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=capenoch&id=I649
............

U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Jane Hankinson
Name: Jane Hankinson
Arrival Year: 1683-1684
Arrival Place: East New Jersey
Family Members: Child Thomas; Child Peter; Child Richard
Source Publication Code: 6097
Primary Immigrant: Hankinson, Jane
Annotation: Date and port of arrival or date and place of first mention of residence in the New World. This source is First series, vol. 21, of the Archives of the State of New Jersey; vol. 21 of Documents Relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey.
Source Bibliography: NELSON, WILLIAM, editor. Calendar of Records in the Office of the Secretary of State, 1664-1703. Patterson, NJ: The Press Printing and Publishing Co., 1899. 770p.
Page: 62
............

I found this in "Old Times in Old Monmouth":

"At a Court of Sessions held at Shrewsbury, March 25th 1690. The Court on examination, judged Thomas Hankinson to be 18, and should serve three years longer, and then six months for the costs and trouble he had put his master to.

Peter Hankinson is judged to be sixteen, and shall serve his master until twenty one, and for the costs and trouble, six months after he comes of age. If either transgress again, they shall be punished at the whipping post".
http://genforum.genealogy.com/hankinson/messages/157.html
...........

As early as 1688, Thomas and
Richard Hankinson received a patent for 120 acres of
land in Monmouth County from proprietors of West
Jersey. In 1700 Thomas Hankinson, of Freehold,
bought 610 acres from Benjamin Allen.
(Memoirs and reminiscences, together with sketches of the early history of Sussex county, New Jersey (1907)
..........

1700, June 18. Deed.
Thomas and Richard Hankinson to Capt. John Bowne,
all of Monmouth Co., for 120 acrres, the headland, due to
their mother Jean Hankinson and brother Peter, both dec'd.
Page 113
https://openlibrary.org/books/OL7021118M
...........

Hankinson
There seems to have been two Thomas Hankinsons
among first settlers of Monmouth. About 1688 Thomas and Richard
Hankinson received a patent from proprietors for 120 acres of land. In
1690 a Thomas Hankinson. a. about 18 yrs., and Peter Hankinson. a. about
16, were in the employ of Thos. Warne, carpenter, who was b. in Ply-
mouth. England, lived for a while in Dublin, Ireland, and came to Amer-
ica with his brother Stephen in 1683. This Thomas Hankinson, who was
with Warne, it may he presumed, learned Warne's trade of carpentering.
The Thomas Hankinson frequently named in early records of land sales,
was probably the one named with Richard. In 1710 Thomas Hankinson
bought 610 acres of land from Benjamin Allen, of Freehold. The same
year he is said to be of Freehold in a deed from him for 100 acres of land
to Cornelius Covenhoven, of Middletown. In 1717 he sold land to Marte
Salem.
(A history of Monmouth and Ocean counties : embracing a genealogical record of earliest settlers in Monmouth and Ocean Counties and their descendants, the Indians, their language, manners and customs, important historical events ... (1890), via archive.org)
..........

He acquired a tract of land to the southward of the present Freneau,
which was of 200 acres. This he sold to Mark Salem in 1717, at which
time he is thought to have moved into the middle of the country where
he is thought to have died in 1724. the tract on which he settled
first was at the head of the Gravel Brook, the feeder of Lake Matawan
and adjoined the Gordon tract and the Thomas Boels tract, which last
comprised what has been know in late years as the Whitlock and the
William H. Horner farms.

The story of Middletown The oldest Settlement in NJ by Earnest W.
Mandevill 1927 Transcribed by Harold J. Hankinson Jr. P. 118 had this
story of Thomas: In March 1690 Thomas Warne of Middletown did
complain to the court against his servants Thomas Hankinson and Peter
Hankinson that the said Servants had abasented themselves several
times from his service: which was greatly to ye Cost & Damages of hte
said Warne: the said servants pretending they were stod by thier
time, therefore, the said Warne did humbly desire the cour to be
judges of their age also what time they shoud serve. The Court caused
Thomas Hankinson to be called before them. After some consulting
together the court judged the said Thomas Hankinson to be 18 years old
and that he should serve his master3 years after that date. And for
the cost and charges his master has been at in looking after him when
he was running away for the loss of his time, the court judged and
ordered that ye said Thomas Hankinson shall serve 6 months over and if
the said servant trangress so again, he is ordered condign punishment
at ye whipping post. He and Richard both served till they were 21.
After so calamitious an end to his bold dash for freedom it is a real
pleasure to find ye said Thomas figuring as an independent citizen in
the minutes of his later years.

Thomas obviously had little love for the Warnes nor for the
proprietorship system which was then in effect. Warne was one of the
24 propietors who governed the Colony of East NJ. There was a growing
opposition to their govering, led in a lagre part by Captain John
Browne (to whom Thomas and Richard had sold their land ) and the
Hartshorne brothers. There were riots and disturbances and in the
summer of 1700 Thomas and a number of others assaulted the high
sheriff, and agent of the proprietors and broke his sword.

NJ Archives 1st Series Vol. XIII Hunterdon Co. Library Transcribed by
Harold Hankinson: Tuesday the 2nd of Feb 1713 at a council held at
Burlington Presens of his Excellency Robert Hunter Esqr. Captain
General: Lewis Morris, George Deacon, Hugh Huddy Esqrs. Theo Gordon,
John Hamilton, John Anderson, Elisha Parker,John Reading Essqr, Thomas
Byerly:
The men, Thomas Hankinson, Thomas Jewell, John Gubertson,
Lubberston and John Vaughan Junr were this day brought before this
board according to a former order to examine touching the matters
laid to their charge and had their affidavitt of the witnesses read to
them and being heard what they had to say for themselves and they
offering nothing in their own defence but a denyall of the fact that
they were charged with . The law named Thomas Jewell and John
Vaughan Jr. to be bound over to appear at the next Supream court & in
the meantime to be of the good behavior towards her Majesty. And also
Thomas Hankinson and John Gurbertson be bound to their good behaior
and to their appearance at the next Supreame Court and that they be
delivered over to the sheriff of the county of Burlington who is
required and commanded to keep them in safe custody until the give
security of one hundred pounds each principle and 2a surety with 50
pound each for their good behavior and appearance at the next supreame
court and to answer to such things as shall be alledged against them.
He was brought to court again, but in the end the protesters were
successful and the Proprietorship came to an end.

Thomas may have had a 1st wife named Mary Cleminger. it is not know
how Thomas earned his livelihood, although it may have been farming.
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=pattyrnz&id=I2747
..........


Walter Newman the Immigrant
According to "Family Gleanings" by Belle Newman Allen and "Walter Newman" by Dr. Newman Arnold Hall, the first record of the Newman family in the U.S. is the arrival of Walter Newman to the colony of New Jersey from Dublin, Ireland with Thomas and Stephen Warne, East Jersey proprietors. Walter came by indenture of apprenticeship for seven years to Thomas Warne, a Dublin merchant. He and other servants were imported to New Jersey about the last of March 1683. This arrival is documented in Book A of deeds of East Jersey on file at Trenton and in the New Jersey State Archives. The arrival of Walter Newman from Dublin would suggest Irish origin but other evidence indicates an earlier home in Southern England. There were many Newmans in England and some may have migrated to Ireland during the religious turmoil of the 17th century. Following the termination of service to Mr. Warne, many references to Walter Newman and his family are found in the records of Monmouth Co., NJ, including land transaction records.

The servants were so prosperous for the Warnes, the full term of their apprecticeship was not required. According to the minutes of the Board of Proprietors of East Jersey at a meeting in the town of Amboy Perth, April 14, 1687, a petition of John Kaighin, William Ellison, Anthony Ashmore, and Walter Newman was granted which gave each of those petitioners head land in the County of Monmouth, NJ.
http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/12270320/person/1211461128/mediax/3?pgnum=1&pg=32814&pgpl=pid|pgNum
..........

Quellenangaben

1 Pioneer Families of Northwestern New Jersey, page 253
Angaben zur Veröffentlichung: ancestry.com
2 rootsweb.com - message board, Hankinson surname
3 Ye Olde Middlesex Courts (New Jersey), page 44
Angaben zur Veröffentlichung: ancestry.com

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Titel HELD-Hornikel-Rockey-Linn
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Hochgeladen 2019-04-27 14:52:34.0
Einsender user's avatar Karl Held
E-Mail karl.held1@btinternet.com
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