Friday, March 21, 2014

Some Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem [Article Four]


Wests in Essex County, Massachusetts:
Some Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem

Compiled by Joy Ikelman, 2014. Disclaimers apply. Note: The use of double dating, such as 1630/1631, reflects the difference between the Julian and Gregorian Calendars.

Background: Judah West (b. 11 Sep 1765; d. 9 Apr 1825) was added to West DNA Family Group #5 in 2007. He is a descendant of Thomas West (b. 1630/1631; d. 23 Dec 1720). Thomas West had a brother, Henry West (b. 1629; d. Sep 1703). Therefore, Henry West is also part of FG#5. This is the fourth in a series of articles about this line of the FG#5 West families.

Currently (March 2014) Henry West (1629-1703) is the earliest documented member of Family Group #5.


Ten Generations
Dr. Harry Irwin West, Jr. (1925-2004) was the foremost genealogist for Henry West (1629-1703). In 1997, he published Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem, Massachusetts with some Collateral Lines of Interest (Anundsen Publishing Co., Decorah, Iowa, 256 pages). He traced his line back ten generations to Henry West.

Dr. West’s publication has great detail on the dates, marriages, migrations, and lives of this West family. The following summaries were compiled from his publication.

Saddlers
Six generations of this family lived in Salem before the first family members moved to “The West” (Indiana). The first three generations were mostly saddlers by trade. Saddlers made harness, bridles, saddles, and other leather goods. The saddler trade was taught from one generation to the next, or by apprenticeship. Henry West (1629-1703) was a saddler. Sons Samuel and Henry were taught the trade by their father. Grandsons Samuel, John, and Daniel were also saddlers.

Mariners
By the 1750s, the Wests of Salem were fishermen, ship owners, master mariners, merchant marines, privateers, and importers.

1760s: The Wests owned and managed shipping vessels for fishing, and also for foreign trade.

1770s: West-owned merchant ships travelled as far south as the West Indies and north to Newfoundland, carrying supplies for coastal businesses.

During the Revolutionary War, all six of William West’s (1728-1803) sons became privateers: William, Nathaniel, Ebenezer, Edward, Thomas, and John. They “played significant roles in furthering the cause of the Revolution through their exploits on the high seas as privateers,” and William West “played a significant role in backing such ventures.” (West, p. 32) Ebenezer and Edward West spent several years on a British prison ship.

1790s: Wests owned and captained voyages to Cuba, South America, and Europe. Ebenezer West (b. 1758) was the first captain from New England to sail to China.

1800s: Captain Thomas West (1777-1849) sailed his cargo vessel from Boston to Calcutta on a trade route that took eleven months to complete. Hamburg was added to the route later. He made 21 voyages. He was a privateer during the War of 1812.

1840s: George West (1810-1852) owned 28 vessels. Benjamin West (1820-1877), brother to George West, owned 22 vessels.


The Triangle Trade
Dr. West wrote: “William West [1728-1803] was a merchant, a distiller, and collector of the excise tax. At that time the distilling business in Salem was quite common. Molasses came from the West Indies by ship, in this case was landed at William West’s wharf, jutting out from the passage way over the North River, and was then made into rum. The rum saw ready local consumption, but most was used as export, replacing French brandy in many parts of the world.” (West, p. 31-32.)

The West family shipping business was part of the Triangle Trade. The rum was exported to ports abroad where resale brought profits to the buyers. The buyers used the profits to buy slaves from West Africa, who came through the Middle Passage to work the sugar cane plantations in the West Indies. The molasses was then shipped to New England to make rum. For more information on the Triangle Trade go to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangular_trade.

William West’s ships worked two sides of the Triangle Trade—import of molasses and export of rum. New England’s profit from the Triangle Trade was one reason that the anti-slavery clause was kept out of the Declaration of Independence.


Lt. Benjamin West (1755-1775)
Lieutenant Benjamin West of Salem, son of Samuel and Mary Massey West died at the Battle of Bunker Hill on 17 Jun 1775. A memorial stone is located at the Harmony Grove Cemetery in Salem.

Benjamin Franklin West (1818-1854)
Benjamin West, son of Thomas West and Elizabeth Mosely, was noted for his ship paintings. His work is found at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem: http://travelphotobase.com/v/USMAB/MALP233.HTM.
The more famous Benjamin West, artist of Pennsylvania, is part of West DNA FG#3.

Capt. Nathaniel West (1758-1851)
Nathaniel West, one of William West’s sons (mentioned in the “Mariners” section) was well-respected in Salem. A miniature portrait is at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. View it at:
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/captain-nathaniel-west-32797

Some of the furniture from Nathaniel and Elizabeth Derby West’s Oak Hill estate home is in the Art of Americas Wing at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. An example: http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/interior-finish-from-the-oak-hill-parlor-38200

In 1834, Captain West built a home on the site of the West estate in Salem. Today this home is part of Salem Inn. http://www.saleminnma.com/thewesthouse.html.

Nathaniel West, Jr. (1788-1843)
A portrait of this ancestor is at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. He was the son of Captain West, above. View it online at: http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/nathaniel-west-jr-34658. Nathaniel West and his wife Mary Bowles West moved to Indianapolis in 1836 to buy land. He was a lawyer, merchant, farmer and manufacturer. He owned a cotton mill and a grist mill. He was a State Senator from 1841-1843.

Nathaniel West, III (1814-1896)
Nathaniel West bought land in Kentland, Newton County, IN. This was the g-g-grandfather of genealogist Dr. Harry Irwin West. Descendants moved to AL, CA, CO, FL, ID, IL, ME, MN, ND, NH, NY, OH, SD, TX, WI, WY and also to England, France, Italy, and Jamaica.

Line of Henry West (1629-1703) to Dr. Harry Irwin West, Jr. (1925-2004)
Here is a very brief accounting of ten generations from Henry West to Harry Irwin West, Jr. A more complete lineage, with additional branches of this family tree, will be posted on the West Family DNA Project—Group #5 Web site in the future.
1. Henry West (1629-1703)
    2. Samuel West (1666/1667-1732)
        3. Samuel West (1691-1776)
            4. William West (1728-1803)
                5. Nathaniel West (1758-1851)
                    6. Nathaniel West (1788-1843)
                        7. Nathaniel West (1814-1896)
                            8. Charles H. West (1862-1937)
                                9. Harry Irwin West (1888-1977)
                                    10. Harry Irwin West, Jr. (1925-2004)


Next: More about Thomas West (1630/1631-1720) of Salem and Bradford

Sunday, March 9, 2014

More about Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem


Wests in Essex County, Massachusetts:
More about Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem


Compiled by Joy Ikelman, 2014. Disclaimers apply. Note: The use of double dating, such as 1630/1631, reflects the difference between the Julian and Gregorian Calendars.

Background: Judah West (b. 11 Sep 1765; d. 9 Apr 1825) was added to West DNA Family Group #5 in 2007.[1] He is a descendant of Thomas West (b. 1630/1631; d. 23 Dec 1720). Thomas West had a brother, Henry West (b. 1629; d. Sep 1703). Therefore, Henry West is also part of FG#5. This is the third in a series of articles about this line of the FG#5 West families.

Currently (March 2014) Henry West (1629-1703) is the earliest documented member of Family Group #5.


Dedicated to Dr. Harry Irwin West, Jr.
Dr. Harry Irwin West (1925-2004) was the foremost genealogist for Henry West (1629-1703). In 1997, he published Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem, Massachusetts with some Collateral Lines of Interest. He traced his line through Samuel West (b. 1666)—Henry West’s first son. [2] Dr. West earned his PhD in physics from Stanford University in 1955. He retired from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, in 1990, after 45 years of service. [3] He spent many years researching his ancestry.

I have verified all of Dr. West’s early Salem-related information against original records. In the “Reference and Additional Notes” section, I have cited the original source. Then I have referenced the page number from Dr. West’s publication, if he also used the information.


Henry West, Sexton
Henry West’s name first appeared in Salem records in March of 1661: [4]

            Agreed with Henry West to ringe the bell and make cleane the meetinge house for the years insuinge and to be pd for the yeare five pounds more he is to have 18d for each grave he shall Digge onely from the midell of 10th mo to the midell of the 12th mo he shall be allowed as he and the pties by whom he is imployed shall agree and if they cannot agree with him then they are at libertie to agree with any other
                also laide out to Henry West on the north side of Tho: Tucks frame a plott to build a house of 2 Rodd in lenth and 20 foote in bredth at one end and 18 foote the other end.

Henry West was paid 5 pounds a year for ringing the bell, caring for the meeting house (which was also the church), and digging graves between December (the tenth month, Julian calendar) and February (the twelfth month).

We do not know if the house lot was part of the agreement.  He kept his sexton job until 1670/1671: “Hennery West Desir’d to be Dismis’d from Ringing the bell, And the Towne Reffer’d it to the Select men to make choice of another . . . “ [5]

Henry West, Saddler
Henry West was born in 1629. [6] His earliest years are a mystery. There is no documentation that the Thomas West (b. ca 1600) living in Essex County, MA, was the father of brothers Henry and Thomas. [7] We do not know if Henry and his brother were born in England, in America, or if they lived elsewhere in Massachusetts before Salem.

Henry West was a saddler—making saddles, harnesses, and bridles. [8] He would have been apprenticed to someone to learn this trade before he started his own business in Salem. Was he apprenticed in England? Was Henry apprenticed in Massachusetts Colony? Was his father a saddler? We do not know.

Henry West taught his sons Samuel and Henry, Jr. the saddler trade. His grandsons Samuel, John, and Daniel were also saddlers. [9] A line in his Will (1703) mentions the Saddler tools [10]:

        Item. I give unto my Sonns Samuel & Henry all my Tools & all my Stock of Sadlery Wares to be Equaly Divided betwixt Them also ye remainder of my Cloths.

On 29:9:1675, Henry West and Hilliard Veren, Sr. inventoried the estate of Samuell Crompton (or Crumpton). [10] Crompton had been a saddler in Salem. Perhaps Henry was asked to inventory this estate because of expertise in his trade.

Henry West’s Salem Properties
The land that was originally given to Henry West in 1661 was a house lot in town, across from the town common area. This was located at Washington Street and Essex Street in today’s Salem. [12] In 1671 or 1680, he sold this land to John Marston [13], whose descendants would later marry into his brother’s (Thomas West’s) family.

On 2 Jun 1670, he bought “twenty rods of land” in Salem from Edmond Batter, adjacent to Batter’s house. On 17 Jun 1670 he bought twenty more rods of land from Batter. [14] These are lots in town. This land was eventually willed to son Henry. [15]

Henry West also bought land from in Salem from “John Hathorn Situated in Salem nigh Mr. Parkmans.” This was willed to son Samuel. [16] A map Part of Salem in 1700 shows two separate lots labeled “Henry West.” These are across the street from each other on what today is near the corner of Summer Street and Essex Street. [17] This may have been the location of Henry’s house and his saddler shop. The map shows Parkman’s lot next to West’s lot.

Dr. Harry West (1997) wrote that this property is part of the Salem Inn, at 7 Summer Street. Nathaniel West (1756-1851), g-g-grandson of Henry West, built a house there in 1834. “The land had originally been the site of the West Estate where he was born.” [18]

Henry West Marries Elizabeth Merriam
        Henry was married to Elizabeth Merriam 7 Sept. 1664 by her father, George Merriam of Concord. The Merriams were from Tunbridge, England. Elizabeth was the second child of this family born in the new world. There are good records of the family from as early as the 16th century. The children of Henry and Elizabeth were . . . Elizabeth (1665-before 1672); Samuel (1666,7-1732); Susannah (1668-    ); Henry (1670-1715); Elizabeth (1672-    ); and, Mary (1675-ca 1750,2). [19]

Henry West was 35 years old; Elizabeth Merriam was 23. Henry and Elizabeth West, and brother Thomas West joined First Church, Salem, and baptized their first children at the church on 25:1:1665. [20] Elizabeth West died on 26 Aug 1691, at the age of 50. She is buried at the Charter Street Cemetery in Salem. [21]

Henry West, Freeman and Tithingman
On 29 Apr 1668, Henry West (age 39) and Thomas West (age 37) took the oath of freemen, along with nine other men. [22] Freeman status meant they were given privileges such as the right to vote and serve on juries. Sometimes this status meant that a man was finally free of all paid service to others—such as apprenticeships, or paying for passage to the Massachusetts Colony.  

Tithingman status was given to Henry West and brother Thomas West on 11:4:1677. [23] A tithingman maintained order during church services, enforced the Sabbath laws, and monitored disorderly conduct. The tithingman worked under supervision of a constable.

Henry West seems to have had more than his share of tithingman duties. He and a fellow tithingman would walk in the Town of Salem, often in the evenings, looking for illegal activities. Tithingmen were supposed to be given respect. This didn’t work out very well.

In 1677, Richard West (not related) heard an outcry at John Mason’s house. He found people drunk and fighting. Then, Henry West showed up at the scene.

        Henry West testified that Mr. Samuel Gardner came looking for his man and they went in together, whereupon Goody Mason tried to strike him with an andiron, calling “thou West, thou Harry, thou Devil!” several times. Someone took the andiron away from her and she took up a chair. She was very much in drink, not being able to stand upon her legs, but fell down. Mackene and one Humphrey Williams were also observed to be much in drink. Urged by Mr. Gardner to do his duty as tithingman, deponent [Henry West] requested assistance of [Peeter] Joy as he appeared to be the soberest, but he refused.

The wife of John Mason was “fined to be whipped for drunkenness, and abusing by words and offering to strike Hen. West, a tithingman.” Peeter Joy, “the soberest” at the party, was fined for refusing to assist Henry West. [24] From this account, we learn that Henry was called “Harry.” And, at least once, he was called the Devil.

In an incident in 1678, Henry West and William Dounston, tithingmen, were going on their rounds and found constables smoking and drinking. [25] They believed this set a bad example and said so. One of the constables left with them. They passed a drunk on the street. The drunk constable ignored him, “but goodman west spak to him and asked from wenc he came.” Dounston asked the constable for help:

      . . . but he Replyed that wee Could not Requir him but said it was an abus atorrity and said that he must bear testimony because he was in drink but he was willing to goe thence and wee broft him away and by the way he said I have ben a Captain for the kontry and fout against the Ingans and now to be handled by such pitiful fellows a pox tack you al with many other unkoomly words till we cam to mister gidnes hous.

Henry West usually kept his cool around “unkoomly words,” but not always. In 1678, he was accused of swearing. The witnesses against him were long-time irritants who had been previously hauled to court by West. [26]

Petitions Signed by Henry West
Petition to Repair Reverend Higginson’s Property. A petition of 30 Jun 1668 requests attention to the property of Reverend John Higginson. [27] This petition states that the issue had been brought up in two Salem town meetings but was not given the proper attention. The petitioners asked the court to take care of this, as “any sad in convenyencies may follow to the dishonor of God, the discouragement of the ministry & dishonor of ye people heare.” The elder Thomas West (b. ca 1600s) made his mark; Henry West signed his name after him. This does not confirm that the two men were related, but that they knew each other. Henry West was a member of First Church, Salem, and Thomas West was a long-time friend of Reverend John Higginson.

Petitions Against Imposts. In October 1668, the General Court (in Boston) declared increased imposts—equivalent to taxes—upon imports, exports, cattle, and grain. [28] There were individual town responses from Salem, Marblehead, Springfield, Northhampton, and Hadleigh (Hadley) signed by more than 500 men. Their petitions stated that merchants were unfairly targeted. Henry West and his brother Thomas West signed the petition for Salem. The pleas of the various towns did not stop the imposts, but there were a few compromises to the plan.

Petition Against Ashby’s Ordinary. In 1670, Henry West signed with other men of Salem requesting that Anthony Ashby be kept from having an “ordinary.” [29] An ordinary was a public place for drinking—a pub. Ashby was apparently a menace and unfit for such an endeavor; he’d already been selling beer without a license.

Petition Against the New Meeting House. In July 1680, there was a petition by some selectmen to build a new meeting house (which was also First Church) in Salem. Only 2/3 of the townspeople could fit in at once for the “publike worshipe of god upon the Lords day.” [30] The freemen responded that they had witnessed:

      . . . great Indeavours in a private way to draw many of the free men of this place to signe a writeing for the Aproveing of the building of a new meeting house we conceaiving such a practice to be illegall and tending to devition & disturbance their being noe apparent nessesite of itt doe by subscribing hereunto declare against the thing and maner of proceeding at this time desireing that when there shall be need It may be done in a faire Legall way by mutall Concurenc with out disturbance to the peace of the church and towne.

In other words, some of the freemen (including Henry West) knew there was some illegal maneuvering going on. Their counter-petition worked. No new meeting house was built in 1680. Records show that it was enlarged in the early 1700s. [31]

During the Salem Witch Trials . . .
        Henry West, sen., and John Mascoll, jr. were empowered, 1693, to inspect “the families of Salem and take an account of all inmates or strangers, that are now in or may hereafter come into towne and returne their names to the selectmen every moneth, and if used be, to warne them to depart.” [32]

Twenty years before, in 1673, the General Court had declared that inhabitants of Salem, Boston, Charlestown, and Portsmouth should “not entertain strangers except by leave of the Government or his Deputy, or two magistrates.” Violation was punishable by a fine. It is doubtful that there was much crowd control during the time of the “Salem Delusions” (February 1692 to May 1693). It is very likely that Henry West witnessed most of the events, including the hangings.

Henry West’s Will and Inventory
The title of the Will is “The Last Will and Testament of Henry West of Salem, Massachusetts, 1703 October 4.” Dr. West says this was the cover sheet of the Will, but the estate inventory is dated 25 Sep 1703. The Will was proved 30 Sep 1703 according to the Probate List for Essex County. Dr. West concluded that Henry West probably died earlier in September. He was 74 years old. [33] His final resting place is unknown.

Signature for Henry West, from his Will dated 1700/1701. He was

about 70 y.o. at the time. This was in the genealogy by Dr. Harry West

Next: Some Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem


References and Additional Notes
1. West Family Group #5 results at http://web.utk.edu/~corn/westdna/west5.htm#FG5
2. Harry Irwin West, Jr., 1997: Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem, Massachusetts with Some Collateral Lines of Interest. Anundsen Publishing Co., Decorah, Iowa, 256 pages.
3. Don Johnston, editor, 2004: “Harry Irwin West,” Newsline, Public Affairs Office, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, July 30, 2004, p. 2.
4. Essex Institute, 1913: Town Records of Salem, Massachusetts, Volume II, 1659-1680, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 24. West, p. 9-10. The date of the meeting was 6:1:1661—that is, March 6, 1661 according to the Julian calendar.
5. Sidney Perley, 1926: The History of Salem Massachusetts, 1638-1670, Volume II, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 64. The bell had been installed in 1638. Perley wrote: “After being in use more than a score of years, the old bell was removed, and a new one was bought for eighteen pounds in 1657, and it was raised and hung at an expense of five pounds.”
6. The birth year of Henry West is determined by several court records that mention his general age in years. For example:  “Henry West, aged about forty-nine years, and John Norton, aged about forty years, deposed. Sworn, 10:4:1678.” [EIQC:7:56] Also, “Henry West, aged about fifty-six years, and John Maskoal [Mascoll], aged thirty-four years, testified . . .” (25 Jun 1685). [EIQC:9:473] These court depositions point to 1629 as his year of birth. West, p. 5.
7. William Richard Cutter, 1908: Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts, Volume I, Lewis Historical Publishing Company, New York, p. 559. Cutter wrote that Thomas West (b. ca 1600) was the father of Henry and Thomas West. This cannot be documented or verified. I have found no wife, children, Will, or death date for this Thomas West (as of March 2014).
8. Robert Charles Anderson, 1996-2011: “Edmond Batter,” The Great Migration, New England Historical and Genealogical Society, Boston, p. 207. Essex Land Records:6:108 and Essex Land Records:3:86 refer to the transactions of Edmond Batter, merchant, and Henry West, saddler.
9. West (1997), various pages.
10. Essex Will Probate No. 29341. West, p. 17-19. The estate inventory mentioned “Sadles Ware & Sadlers Tools” worth 20 lbs.
11. George Francis Dow, editor, 1917: Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County, Volume 6. Essex Institute, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 103. Also referenced as “EIQC,” with volume number, and page number. EIQC: 6:103. The Quarterly Courts documents contain about 35 references to Henry West, from 1666 to 1685—estate inventories, juries, grand juries, witnessing in cases. He was very much involved in the Town of Salem.
12. William P. Upham, 1904: “Notes on the Report of the Authenticity of the First Meeting House in Salem,” The Essex Institute Historical Collections, Volume XL, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 25. A map on page 28 shows the location of the Fogg property, which was adjacent to Henry West’s.
13. There is confusion between two sources. Upham (p. 25) listed the date as 1671, and cites the original source as Essex Deeds Book 5, Folio 74. Dr. West (p. 11) gives a date of 2 Apr 1680 from Essex Deeds Book 5, Leaf 347. West quotes the sale: “Henry West sells to John Marston, Jr. (carpenter) land lately given to him by the town of Salem with a dwelling house two or three poles Bounded on the west by the land of Ralph Fogg, north by the common land or street and the south by land or property of Thomas Tuck (lately). Henry West sig. & sealed; Eliz. West, mark.” I did not have access to the Essex Deeds Books to verify either possible dates.
14. Anderson, p. 207.
15. West, p. 17. “Item. I give to my Sonne Henry Westt ye homsted where I now dwell viz the dwelling house out housing Shope & garden & yards & Land with the appertenanus there onto belonging to be to him said Henry West & ye hiers of his body. . .”
16. Ibid. “Item. I give unto my eldest Sonne Samuel Westt one des what I formerly gave him that piece of land which I lately bought of Coleo. John Hathorne Situated in Salem nigh Mr. Parkmans to be to ye said Samuel West his heirs & assigns for ever.”
17. William W.K. Freeman, compiler, 1933: Part of Salem in 1700, From the Researches of Sidney Perley. James Duncan Phillips, Salem, Massachusetts. http://www.salemin1700s.com/description.aspx
18. West, p. viii and p. 33. Pictures of the “Captain Nathaniel West House” at Salem Inn are at the Web site: http://www.saleminnma.com/thewesthouse.html. Dr. Harry Irwin West was a direct descendant of this Nathaniel West.
19. West, p. 10, page 4A. Dr. West cites EIHC:4:44 as one source for this information.
20. Dr. West cites EIHC:16:8 as the source for the church membership. I could not find this. However, this is also in Essex Institute, 1974: The Records of the First Church in Salem, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 108. Dr. West gives the date as 4:11:1665, which is a typographical error. The date of church membership is 4:1:1665 and the baptism occurred on 25:1:1665. Henry and Elizabeth West’s daughter Elizabeth, and also Thomas West’s sons Samuel, Joseph, and Benjamin, were baptized on this day according to the First Church records (p. 27).
21. Jane Devlin, transcriber, 1849: “Inscriptions from the Burying Grounds in Salem, Massachusetts,” New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. 3, April 1849, p. 128-132, and July, p. 276. Online at http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/salem_inscr.htm. This is also known as Burying Street Cemetery on Charter Street, Salem. “Here lyes ye Body of Elizabeth West, Wife to Henry West. Aged 50 yrs, d. 26 Aug 1691.”
22. EIQC:4:38. West, p. 11.
23. EIQC:6:290. Salem Town Records, Vol. II, p. 240. West, p. 11.
24. EIQC:7:3. West, p. 14.
25. EIQC:7:110-111. West, p. 14-15.
26. EIQC:7:81. He was admonished by the court but not fined.
27. EIQC:4:44-45. Reverend John Higginson came to Salem in 1659 and was pastor of First Church until his death in 1708.
28. Wm. B. Trask, compiler, 1855: “Petitions Against Imposts, 1668,” The New England Historical and Genealogical Register and Antiquarian Journal, Volume IX, New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts, p. 81-91.
29. EIQC:4:315 and 325.
30. EIQC:7:402-403.
31. Upham, p. 28 (map). The original meeting house was built in 1634 and enlarged in 1639. It was enlarged again in 1670, 10 years before the petition, and not again until 1718.
32. Joseph B. Felt, 1845: Annals of Salem, Volume I, Second edition, James Munroe & Co., Boston, p. 166 and 359. West, p. 15.

33. West, p. 17-19. Dr. Harry West obtained a copy of the Will of Henry West from the Courthouse in Salem. Other West Wills are also recorded there. The Will was signed by Henry West, and Dr. West included a copy of Henry West’s signature in his publication. The estate inventory was valued at about 292 lbs—a higher than average amount of wealth during that time in Salem.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

DNA Testing


FTDNA West Surname y-DNA Results
by John G. West (this article was previously published on the West, Fike and Affiliated Lines on the MyFamily.com web site and edited for this blog). 
I want to list some interesting facts about some of the results for the West Surname Project at FamilyTree DNA http://web.utk.edu/~corn/westdna/.   Our WEST surname ranks 115th in frequency in the U.S.  Because WEST is a geographic name, it was adopted by many unrelated individuals when surnames came into use.   In addition to the original adoption of surnames, new lines are created when a surname change occurs as a result of adoption, marriage, and other events.  Y-chromosome DNA gives us the ability to identify genetic relationships when the paper record has been lost.

357 males named West have their results posted in the FTDNA results with 117 unrelated lines (of these there are 38 groups with 2 or more individuals). There are 80 (if I counted correctly) of the 117 lines being individuals without any matches, yet!  A number of these 80 may not come from a West ancestor... meaning there was an adoption, name change or a "paternal mix-up." However, some will get matches and will become a group.

Our group is Group #5 (of the 38)... we currently have the most (slightly) with 20 participants matching. We are unique in that among most surnames, we have the value of 10 for marker #385a with few others having that value. Of the 38 groups in our West surname there are only 2 groups of the 38 and none of the unmatched that have a value of 10 for marker #385a. The other group is #27 with only 2 individuals that otherwise do not match our group. This means that there are only 22 of 357 that have that value of that marker in the West surname project!

Being the largest group with 20 participants, we are still only 5.6% of the total tested by the West name. This means that there is a 94.4% chance that if you meet someone by the name of West that they will not be related to you!  Of course, that is assuming that our DNA sampling is even remotely representative of all people named West. I will suggest that it is somewhat reliable to expect that most people you happen upon with the name West will not be related.

The fact that most people named WEST are not related to us, should encourage us to get as many people we meet with the WEST surname to take a y-DNA test. These results can become even more important since we can prove that they are not related and eliminate another line from our research. It will be a way to 'weed' out some of the Lord Delaware and other suspected, but un-related lines!

Hal Beumer and I corresponded for quite some time trying to connect his West family to mine… we finally decided that we could not find any documentation to prove a relationship and agreed to stop correspondence, at least to a time that we might find something new.  Several years later, Hal wanted me to take a y-DNA test to see if I matched with one of his West cousins.  I was really skeptical of the results and felt the cost was too much for me to speculate on this tool for genealogical research.  Hal talked me into taking the test to once and for all settle the question… were we related or not (we thought there might be a good chance that we were related). We were! His cousin and I matched.


As we can see, DNA testing can eliminate an unrelated West line or it can prove a relationship.  Then it is worth all of the time to document that relationship.  If you have not done a DNA test, please consider  taking a test to see who you match.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Henry West and Thomas West of West DNA Family Group #5


Wests in Essex County, Massachusetts:
Henry West and Thomas West of West DNA Family Group #5


Compiled by Joy Ikelman, 2014. Disclaimers apply. Note: The use of double dating, such as 1630/1631, reflects the difference between the Julian and Gregorian Calendars.

Background: Judah West (b. 11 Sep 1765; d. 9 Apr 1825) was added to West DNA Family Group #5 in 2007.[1] He is a descendant of Thomas West (b. 1630/1631; d. 23 Dec 1720). Thomas West had a brother, Henry West (b. 1629; d. Sep 1703). Therefore Henry West is also part of FG#5. These two men lived in Essex County, Massachusetts during the 1600s. This is the second in a series of articles about this line of the FG#5 West families.

Currently (February 2014) Henry West and Thomas West, brothers, are the earliest documented members of Family Group #5. They lived in Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts during the 1600s to early 1700s.


Dedicated to Dr. Harry Irwin West, Jr.
Dr. Harry Irwin West (1925-2004) was the foremost genealogist for Henry West (1629-1703). In 1997, he published Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem, Massachusetts with some Collateral Lines of Interest. He traced his line through Samuel West (b. 1666)—Henry West’s first son. [2] Dr. West earned his PhD in physics from Stanford University in 1955. He retired from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, California, in 1990, after 45 years of service. [3] He spent many years researching his ancestry.

I have verified all of Dr. West’s early Salem-related information against original records. In the “Reference and Additional Notes” section, I have cited the original source. Then I have referenced the page number from Dr. West’s publication, if he also used the information.


Henry West and Thomas West, Brothers
Henry West mentioned his brother Thomas in his Will of September 1703 [4]:

Item, I give to my brother Thomas Westt if he survives me ye Three pounds Ten shillings which is due to me by obligation from his son Benjamin who lives at the Southward.

Thomas West survived his brother by 17 years; he died in 1720. [5] His son, Benjamin West, was living “at the Southward” in Enfield, Connecticut. [6] In the Will, Henry West cancelled his nephew’s debt to him.

Three “Thomas Wests” lived in Essex County, MA, in the mid- to late-1600s. Three “John Wests” were also alive at that time. [7] Fortunately for researchers, only one “Henry West” lived in Essex County during this time period. His presence in town and court records is useful in identifying the various “Thomases” and “Johns,” placing them with the correct families.

The birth year of Henry West is determined by several court records that mention his general age in years. For example:  “Henry West, aged about forty-nine years, and John Norton, aged about forty years, deposed. Sworn, 10:4:1678.” [8] Also, “Henry West, aged about fifty-six years, and John Maskoal, aged thirty-four years, testified . . .” (25 Jun 1685). [9] These court depositions and others point to 1629 as his likely year of birth.

The birth year of Thomas West is determined from his tombstone at Bradford Cemetery, Essex County, Massachusetts. He died in December of 1720 at the age of 89. We use 1630/1631 as his birth year, reflecting the difference between the Julian and Gregorian calendars. [10]

Parents of Henry and Thomas West
For more than 100 years, West family researchers have been trying to connect all of the Wests that lived in 17th Century Essex County, MA. In 1908, Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts was published. [11] William Richard Cutter wrote:

                Thomas West, immigrant ancestor, was born in England about 1600 and came to Massachusetts Bay colony in the ship Mary and John, sailing March 24, 1633-34. He settled at Salem where he had a grant of land in 1640. His descendants are numerous in Beverly, Massachusetts. He is the progenitor of the Chester, New Hampshire family. His sons Henry and Thomas, and Henry’s wife Elizabeth were admitted to the Salem church, January 4, 1665-66.
The information about Thomas West (the elder, b. ca. 1600) has been accepted as truth for many years. This is a mistake. Cutter (1908) has mixed up three separate West families within his opening paragraph. Thomas West (b. ca 1600) had no recorded wife or children.  No documentation proves that Henry and Thomas were his sons. 
Dr. West wrote: “. . . one would expect that the land that the first Thomas (b. ca 1600) had near the Great Pond [in Salem] would have passed to the brothers, and we find no evidence that it did.” [12] In fact, Thomas West (b. ca 1600) gave his land grant back to Salem, and it was re-granted to Thomas Robbins, who had land close by. [13] The practice of re-granting land was not unusual.

Cutter (1908) mentioned “numerous” descendants in Beverly, MA, and Chester, NH. These are actually descendants of John West (b. ca 1615). [14] John West is not known to be a part of West Family DNA FG#5 (as of February 2014). That leaves Henry and Thomas. Where did the brothers come from?

Looking at English Parish Records
There have been West researchers who believe that Henry and Thomas West came from Cuckfield Parish, Sussex, England. Dr. West had this commentary in 1997 [15; W1, W2, W3]:

            In searching English records we find a West family in Cuckfield [W1] that meets the age requirements (within a year), and they disappear from Cuckfield at the right time. However, at least two of the principals seem to have died in England in a nearby town. [W2] Also, these two brothers, Henry and Thomas, had two brothers, Walter and Bellingham (Bellingham was their mother’s maiden name) and these names should have been used in later generations in New England. It is with some reluctance that we do not accept this family because to have done so would have added five more generations. [W3]

I counted at least six separate “Thomas Wests” in the Cuckfield Parish records between 1608 and 1633, and seven “Henry Wests.” Dr. West is referring to a Thomas West that had four sons: Walter (b. 9 Jan 1624/1625), Henry (b. 10 May 1627), Thomas (b. 16 Oct 1629), and Bellingham (b. 10 Nov 1632). [16] The baptism dates are very close to the birth years of the New England brothers. Since this particular West line in Cuckfield Parish was an upper-class family associated with Woodmancote manor in Sussex, there is more information available.

In this particular line, Henry West died in 1674 in England. This is clearly not the Henry and Thomas we are seeking. See “References and Additional Notes,” below.

When I did a FamilySearch query on English parish records for any “Henry West” or “Thomas West,” limited to 1627-1632, there were many hits.  In Sussex there were records fitting the time frame in Patching Parish, Burwash Parish, and Eastergate Parish. There were multiple records in London. I also found records in Surrey, Gloucester, Westminster, Kent, Buckingham, and York. [17] There are many possibilities for further research.

The West Brothers in Early Essex County, Massachusetts, Records
Dr. West wrote, “Henry and Thomas could have lived in the Salem area many years, without leaving a trail through town or court records.” [18] In the Salem records, it is as if the brothers suddenly appeared.

The earliest record of Thomas West is his marriage to Phebe Waters in Oct 1658. [19] The first deed is that of a house and one acre of land (a “house lott”) that he bought in 1658/1659 from Thomas Hale in Salem. [20] In the deed, Thomas West is called a planter, implying that he was already farming. In 1658/1659 Thomas would have been about 28 years old.

The earliest record of Henry West is from Salem town records in 1661, when he was assigned to be the bell ringer and also given a town lot to build a house. He was 32 years old. [21] He married Elizabeth Merriam in 1664, at age 35. [22] The brothers and their wives were members of First Church, Salem, and baptized their first children on 25:1:1665 (Julian calendar). [23]

On 29 Apr 1668, Henry West (age 39) and Thomas West (age 37) took the oath of freemen, along with nine other men. [24] Freeman status meant they were given full civic rights, such as the right to vote and serve on juries. Sometimes this status meant that the men were free of all paid service to others, such as apprenticeships.

Based on these earliest records, we know that Henry West and Thomas West arrived in Salem before 1658. Perhaps they arrived during the Great Migrations of the 1640s, and lived elsewhere in New England before coming to Essex County, MA.

The migrations within New England mirrored those within England—more than one-third of people at the time would move at least once from their original settlement (or parish), often more. Reasons for migrations within New England included scarcity of useable land, religious conflicts, and lack of opportunities to work in the trades that they had learned. [25]

Henry West was a saddler—making saddles, harnesses, and bridles. [26] He would have been apprenticed to learn this trade before he started his own business in Salem. Was this apprenticeship in England? Was Henry West apprenticed in the Massachusetts Bay Colony? Was his father a saddler?

Henry West and Thomas West both named their first sons “Samuel.” Is this a clue, or is it coincidence?

For some reason Henry and Thomas West eluded Salem court records and town records up until 1658. Fortunately, there is more information about the brothers, including the names of some of their descendants.


Next: More about Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem


References and Additional Notes
1. West Family Group #5 results are at http://web.utk.edu/~corn/westdna/west5.htm#FG5.
2. Harry Irwin West, Jr., 1997: Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem, Massachusetts with Some Collateral Lines of Interest. Anundsen Publishing Co., Decorah, Iowa, 256 pages. Available on digital loan from http://oclc.org/en-US/home.html.
3. Don Johnston, editor, 2004: “Harry Irwin West,” Newsline, Public Affairs Office, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, July 30, 2004, p. 2.
4. Essex Will Probate No. 29341; West, p. 18.
5. Thomas West died in 1720. His tombstone at Bradford Burial Ground, Bradford, Massachusetts reads: “Here lyes buried the body of Mr. Thomas West who died December ye 23 1720 & in the 90th Year of his age.” This means he was 89 years old, which is his 90th year since birth. Photograph at: http://bradfordburialground.com/thomas_west_site_584.htm.
6. James Savage, 1860, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692. Volume IV, Boston, Massachusetts, p. 488.
7. The three Thomas Wests in Essex County, MA, were: (1) Thomas West, b. circa 1600; (2) Thomas West, b. 1630/1631; and, (3) Thomas West (b. about 1740), son of John West. The three John Wests were: (1) John West, b. 1615; (2) John West, b. 1661, son of Twiford West; and (3) John West, b. 1667, son of Thomas West (b. 1630/1631). Only Thomas West (b. 1630/1631) and his son John West (b. 1667) are known to be part of West DNA Family Group #5.
8. George Francis Dow, editor, 1911: Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County, Volume 7. Essex Institute, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 56. Also referenced as “EIQC,” with volume number, and page number. EIQC:7:56. West, p. 5. The dating of 10:4:1678, most likely refers to the 10th day of the 4th month in 1678. The fourth month in the Julian calendar was June.
9. EIQC:9:473. West, p. 5.
10. According to the Julian calendar, the first month was March, and the tenth month was December. The eleventh and twelfth months of a year were January and February. We do not know the month of Thomas West’s birth. However, we know that it is later than December. He was 89 years old in December, and there are two months left in 1630 (Julian). Today, January and February would start a new year, so the date would be 1631 (Gregorian). His birth year is cited as 1630/1631. Some people of the time thought the calendar change from Julian to Gregorian was the work of the devil. Some genealogists, struggling with Julian v Gregorian calendar variations, would agree.
11. William Richard Cutter, 1908: Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts. Volume I. Lewis Historical Publishing Company, New York, p. 559.
12. West, p. 8.
13. The Essex Institute, 1868: Town Records of Salem, Massachusetts, Volume I, 1634-1659. Salem, Massachusetts, p. 200 and 220. The Salem town records note on 11:3:1657, “Granted to Thomas Robins the thirtie Acres formerlie graunted to his predesesor Thomas West.” [23] The thirty acres were the original 20 from the Phillips Company venture that Thomas West (b. ca 1600s) joined, plus the 10 acres granted in 1642—probably land nearby. The land was still described as Thomas West’s land in 1658 but in the possession of Thomas Robins. This Thomas West, b. ca 1600s, cannot be linked to FG#5 (as of February 2014).
14.  Topsfield Historical Society, 1906: Vital Records of Beverly, Massachusetts to the End of the Year, 1849, Topsfield, Massachusetts, p. 598 and various other pages.
15. West, p. 8. He cites the following references, which I verified              to determine if there was any FG#5 link to this Bellingham/West family. I concluded that at this time (February 2014) there is no probable connection.
                W1. W.C. Renshaw, editor, 1911: The Parish Registers of Cuckfield, Sussex, 1598-1699. Sussex Record Society, Volume XIII, London, various pages. Also referenced as “Cuckfield Parish Register.” Available free from https://archive.org/details/oldestregisterbo13hawkuoft.
                W2. Woodmancote Register, St. Peters Church. I could not find this specific reference. Cuckfield and Woodmancote are 10 miles apart from each other in Sussex County. West (1997) says “at least two of the principals seem to have died in a nearby town,” which is—by the reference—Woodmancote. I am guessing the principals that Dr. West noted were Bellingham West and Henry West, based on Elwes (1876), next.
                Dudley George Cary Elwes, 1876: A History of the Castles, Mansions, and Manors of Western Sussex. Longmans & Co., London, p. 170-171. The Woodmancote manor “seems to have passed into the hands of a family named West, early in the seventeenth century. This family is said to have come originally from Berkshire, and to have been a branch of Lord de la Warr’s line, but we find in the Parish Registers entries of the name as far back as 1592. In 1691 Walter West sold the property to Thomas Dennett, Esq, the representative of an old Sussex family. . .” A footnote gives a few names and dates of this West family, including Thomas West, gent, d. 18 Aug 1638, and his wife Cecilia Rolt, “mother of Mr. Henry West, [she] d. 18 Jan 1668.” According to Elwes (1876), Henry West died in 1674, Bellingham West in 1669, Walter West was alive in 1691, and Thomas West was unaccounted for.  
                Note: West DNA Family Group #5 does not include Lord de la Warr’s line.
                W3. William Berry, 1830: County Genealogies; Pedigrees of the Families of the County of Sussex, Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, London, p. 14. This is mainly a record of English peerage. The “five generations” Dr. West refers to are shown on a chart in this publication. “Thomas West, of Clifford’s Inn, gent.; living in 1634” and “Cecill, do. And sole heir of Richard Bellingham, 3d brother of Edward Bellingham, father to Sir Edward Bellingham, who was living in 1634.” Sons: Henry West, Walter West, Thomas West, and Bellingham West.
Note: There was a “Richard Bellingham” who came to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634 from Lincolnshire, England. He lived in Boston but held land in Salem that was later disputed. He was a governor of Massachusetts three times. The town of Bellingham, MA is named after him. (Information from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Bellingham, accessed February 2014.) Perhaps he was related to the Bellinghams listed above. But, as far as I can determine, there is no link from Bellingham to “our” FG#5 Henry and Thomas West of Salem.

16. Cuckfield Parish Register, p. 30, 32, 35, 38. Information about this other Thomas West family is available at: http://histfam.familysearch.org/getperson.php?personID=I6997&tree=SussexGenealogies.
17. FamilySearch queries during January 2014. https://familysearch.org/
18. Sidney Perley, 1924: History of Salem, Massachusetts, Volume 2, 1638-1670, Essex Institute, Salem, p. 304.
19. West, p. 9.
20. Essex Deeds Book 1, Leaf 61 (10:Mar:1658/1659); cited in Sidney Perley, 1904: “Thomas Flint House,” The Essex Antiquarian, Volume 8, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 31. West, p. 9. The property was sold in 1666. By 1700, it was owned by Thomas Flint. The house was down the street from Henry West’s. (See map of William W.K. Freeman, compiler, 1933: Part of Salem in 1700, From the Researches of Sidney Perley. James Duncan Phillips, Salem, Massachusetts. On line at: http://www.salemin1700s.com/description.aspx.)
21. Essex Institute, 1913: Town Records of Salem, Massachusetts, Volume II, 1659-1680, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 24. West, p. 9-10.
22. Perley, p. 304. West, p. 4A.
23. Essex Institute, 1974: The Records of the First Church in Salem, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 108 (admission to church), and 27 (baptism of Thomas’ sons, and Henry’s daughter).
24. EIQC:4:38. Perley, p. 403. West, p. 11.
25. Alison Games, 1999: Migration and the Origins of the English Atlantic World, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, p. 170-171.

26. West, p. 18, from the Will of Henry West. His sons, Samuel and Henry Jr., as well as his grandsons, Samuel, John, and Daniel, were all saddlers. 

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Wests in Essex County, Massachusetts



Wests in Essex County, Massachusetts:
Introduction

Compiled by Joy Ikelman, 2014. Disclaimers apply. Note: The use of double dating, such as 1630/1631, reflects the difference between the Julian and Gregorian calendars.

Background: Judah West (b. 11 Sep 1765; d. 9 Apr 1825) was added to West DNA Family Group #5 in 2007. [1] He is a descendant of Thomas West (b. 1630/1631; d. 23 Dec 1720). Thomas West had a brother, Henry West (b. 1629; d. Sep 1703). Therefore Henry West is also part of FG#5. These two men lived in Essex County, Massachusetts in the 1600s. This is the first in a series of articles about this line of the FG#5 West families.

Currently (February 2014) Henry West and Thomas West are the earliest documented members of Family Group #5.


Essex County, Massachusetts in the 1600s
The Massachusetts Bay Colony included “much of present-day central New England, including portions of Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Connecticut.” [2] In the 1630s, more than 20,000 people migrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colony. This is sometimes called New England’s Great Migration. Only about a third of these people are documented by ship manifests or other lists.

In 1643, Essex County was created by the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. It was named after the county of Essex in England, and included the towns of Salem, Lynn, Wenham, Ipswich, Rowley, Newbury, Gloucester, and Andover. [3]

West researchers have worked diligently over the last 100 years (not kidding) hoping to prove that the Essex County Wests of the 1600s were related to each other. These researchers used old paper archives, and later, microfilm, to do this work. Today, most of the early court records of Essex County, MA, are in the public domain, free, and on-line. [4] There are many opportunities for research. The possibilities of West family DNA matches are also exciting.

An Abundance of Wests
Three “Thomas Wests” lived in Essex County in the late 1600s. Three “John Wests” were also alive at that time. [5] In order to follow the FG#5 Thomas West (b. 1630/1631), data needed to be sorted out. Past errors have occurred because of one publication.  In 1908, Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts was published. [6] The information about Thomas West has generally been accepted without question. This is a mistake. William Richard Cutter wrote:

                Thomas West, immigrant ancestor, was born in England about 1600 and came to Massachusetts Bay colony in the ship Mary and John, sailing March 24, 1633-34. He settled at Salem where he had a grant of land in 1640. His descendants are numerous in Beverly, Massachusetts. He is the progenitor of the Chester, New Hampshire family. His sons Henry and Thomas, and Henry’s wife Elizabeth were admitted to the Salem church, January 4, 1665-66.

Cutter (1908) has mixed up three separate West families within his opening paragraph. Here is some clarification:

      1. Thomas West (b. ca 1600) lived in Ipswich and Salem, MA. He came to the Massachusetts Colony on the ship Mary and John [7]. He received a land grant in 1640 as part of the Phillips Company. [8] I found no known wife or children.  This Thomas West is not known to be DNA related (as of February 2014).

      2. John West (b. ca 1615) lived in Ipswich and Beverly, MA. His son, Thomas West (b. ca 1640 to 1642) of Beverly was the first of many descendants in Beverly, MA and Chester, NH. [9] This John West is not known to be DNA-related (as of February 2014).

      3. Henry West (b. 1629) of Salem, and Thomas West (b. 1630/1631) of Salem and Bradford, MA, were brothers.  We do not know their parents or their place of origin, although there has been some research about this.  The brothers and their wives were members of First Church, Salem, and baptized their first children on 25:1:1665 (Julian calendar). Henry West’s descendants stayed in Salem for at least six generations. [10] Thomas West’s descendants moved to Connecticut and New York. [11] These two men are FG#5 DNA-related.


In sorting through the court records, I found a great deal of information about Thomas West (b. ca 1600) and John West (b. ca 1615). I will be sharing a bit about their histories. They are currently not known to be a part of FG#5.

Why should I include the stories of non-DNA Wests of Essex County, MA? Won’t this confuse West Family researchers? I hope not! I believe that it is important to review the history of these men in order to add to the record of the West name. The related Wests and the non-related Wests are often mixed up because they lived in Essex County at the same time. DNA project participation may eventually link some of these Wests together.

The West Record in the Salem Area
Salem town records and quarterly court records begin in 1636. The “West record” in Salem and surrounding areas begins in 1640.  NOTE: Thomas West (b. ca.1600), John West, Mathew West, Lanclet West and Twiford West do not have any documented evidence or DNA results connecting them to FG#5 as of February 2014.

Launslot or Lanclet West, is the first West in the court records (1640). He testified “in the matter of hogs in the corn” and spoke about suspicious turnips and cabbages. [12] This is all we know about this West.

Thomas West* (b. ca 1600) was granted 20 acres of land in 1639/1640. [13] The story of how he ended up with this land reflects the history of early Salem.

John West* had his cow appraised in 1641. [14] This was his first recorded interaction with the bureaucracy. Through the years, John West was very active in his community. The land boundaries and geographic names changed during his lifetime. Part of his land in Beverly, MA, became “West Beach”—a recreational area that is still in use. He has descendants living today.

*I will present John West’s and Thomas West's stories, even though their y-DNA has not been connected to Family Group #5 as of February 2014.

Mathew West was recorded as a juror in 1643. [15] He lived in Lynn, Essex County, Massachusetts from about 1636 to 1646. He moved to Newport, Rhode Island where he was a freeman in 1655. His oldest son was Nathaniel West, and his grandson was also Nathaniel West. [16] He has descendants living today. He is not DNA-related (as of February 2014).

Twiford (Twyford) West (1616-1684) has a very visible presence in Essex County, MA, court records and local histories. He arrived at Plymouth Colony on the ship Hopewell in 1635, at the age of 19. [17] He was an indentured servant in Plymouth. [18] He married Mary Cross in about 1651, and lived in Ipswich and Rowley, MA. Their children were possibly Elizabeth, Mary, Hannah, John, and Nathaniel. He was a land owner and a cordwainer [19]—he created fine leather shoes and other luxury items. His son John West (b. 1661) married (1) Sarah Tenney in 1687 and (2) Elizabeth, widow of Thomas Atwood.  Sarah Tenney was the sister of Mary Tenney, the second wife of “our” FG#5 Thomas West (b. 1630/1631). [20] This is an interesting coincidence but does not mean this line of Wests is related to FG#5. There are descendants living today. Twiford West is not DNA-related (as of February 2014).

Isabel West was the first West cited in an estate settlement. The inventory of her estate was examined in 1644. It appears from the list of items that she was a widow. She lived in North Field, Salem. [21] We do not know her husband’s name. Other women appear in very early Salem records—they were usually in court for misdemeanors.

Neighbors and Parishioners
It is likely that many of the Wests knew each other from church, meetings, or business. As an example, the final record verified for the oldest Thomas West of the time (b. ca 1600) is a petition dated 30 Jun 1668. [22] The petition requests attention to the property of Reverend John Higginson, pastor of First Church, Salem. The petitioners ask the court to take care of repairs, as “any sad in convenyencies may follow to the dishonor of God, the discouragement of the ministry & dishonor of ye people heare.”

The petition was signed in this order:

            William Lord, Sr., Hillyard Veren, Benjamin Felton, Thomas (his mark) West, Henry West, John Rucke, Henery Skerry, Sr., John Massey, Samuell Williams, John Williames, John (his mark) Neal, and Francis Skerry.

The elder Thomas West (b. ca 1600) signed his mark, and then Henry West (b. 1629, the DNA FG#5 ancestor) signed his name. The two men may not be related, but they knew each other. Thomas West was a long-time friend to John Higginson, and Henry West was a member of First Church, Salem.


Next: Wests in Essex County, Massachusetts: Henry West and Thomas West of West DNA Family Group #5


References and Additional Notes
1. West Family Group #5 results at http://web.utk.edu/~corn/westdna/west5.htm#FG5
2. Wikipedia, Massachusetts Bay Colony. Accessed 3 February 2014. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massachusetts_Bay_Colony
3. Wikipedia, Essex County, Massachusetts. Accessed 4 February 2014. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_County,_Massachusetts
4. University of Virginia: http://salem.lib.virginia.edu/home.html
5. The three Thomas Wests were: (1) Thomas West, b. circa 1600; (2) Thomas West, b. 1630/1631; and, (3) Thomas West, b. about 1740, son of John West. The three John Wests were: (1) John West, b. ca 1615; (2) John West, b. 1661, son of Twiford West; and (3) John West, b. 1667, son of Thomas West (b. 1630/1631).
6. William Richard Cutter, 1908: Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts, Volume I. Lewis Historical Publishing Company, New York, p. 559.
7. Anne Stevens, 2012: Pilgrim Ship Lists Early 1600's; Over 7100 Families and 250 Ships. http://www.packrat-pro.com/ships/shiplist.htm. It is very likely that Thomas West (b. ca 1600) is the person listed on the ship Mary and John. My theory is in the article about Thomas West (b. ca 1600). This West is not DNA-related to FG#5 (as of February 2014).
8. Essex Institute, 1868: Town Records of Salem, Massachusetts, Volume I, 1634-1659, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 98. Referenced as “Salem Town Records, Vol. 1.” The original members of the Reverend John Phillips Company (sometimes called the Phillips-Yonges Company) were a group of travelers from Wrentham, England. They may have organized in their parish to come to New England and invested money in the venture. My research shows that Thomas West was not a part of the original Wrentham company. He arrived in New England several years prior to the others. He signed on with the project after the group arrived. Several others did this as well. I do not believe that Thomas West came from Wrentham, England. My analysis is in the article about Thomas West (b. ca 1600). This West is not DNA-related to FG#5 (as of February 2014).
9. Topsfield Historical Society, 1906: Vital Records of Beverly, Massachusetts to the End of the Year, 1849, Topsfield, Massachusetts, p. 598 and various other pages.
10. Harry Irwin West, Jr., 1997: Descendants of Henry West (1629-1703) of Salem, Massachusetts with Some Collateral Lines of Interest. Anundsen Publishing Co., Decorah, Iowa, p. 2A, 15A.
11. Benjamin West and Joseph West, sons of Thomas West (b.  1630/1631), were the first of this line to have land in Connecticut.
12.  George Francis Dow, editor, 1911: Records and Files of the Quarterly Courts of Essex County, Volume 1. Essex Institute, Salem, Massachusetts, p. 24. This is also referenced as EIQC:1:24. “Lanclet West” is not found in records after this.
13. Salem Town Records, Vol. 1, p. 98.
14. EIQC:1:38.
15: EIQC:1:42.
16. W.F. Donnelly, 1997: The Wests of Duck Creek. Gateway Press, Baltimore, MD., p. 262-263.
17. John Camden Hotten, 1874: The Original Lists of Persons of Quality; Emigrants; Religious Exiles; Political Rebels; Serving Men Sold for a Term of Years; Apprentices; Children Stolen; Maidens Pressed; and Others Who Went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600-1700. First edition, London. Reprinted by Empire State Book Co., New York, p. 130.
18. Alison Games, 1999: Migration and the Origins of the English Atlantic World, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, p. 91. She writes: “Particularly brave or dissatisfied servants could eschew legal action by negotiating directly with their masters. Twiford West traveled from London in 1635 and first appeared in the New England records as a servant in 1636. He was apprenticed to Edward Winslow for six years, but Winslow assigned West to Nicholas Snow. West “(after some trial) disliking to be with ye said Nicolas Snow,” implored Winslow to let him serve Winslow himself. In order to acquire this new position, however, West had to agree to serve one extra year in his indenture.”
19. Robert Charles Anderson, 1995: The Great Migration Begins, 1620-1635. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts, p. 156, 466.
20. M.J. Tenney, 1891: The Tenney Family, or the Descendants of Thomas Tenney, of Rowley, Massachusetts, 1638-1890, American Printing and Engraving Company, Boston, p. 337-338. Deacon William Tenney and his wife Katherine provided 67 acres of land to Mary Tenney (b. 1646) and Thomas West (b. 1630/1631) in 1677. Sarah Tenney (b. 1656) and John West (b. 1661; son of Twiford West) received land in 1688.
21. EIQC:1:76.
22. EIQC:4:44-45. Thomas West (b. ca 1600) could not sign his name. Thomas West (b. 1630/1631), Henry’s brother, could sign his name. The third Thomas West (b. about 1640) could also sign his name. This information helps to identify the various Thomas Wests in Essex County, MA, during the 1600s.