Individual Details
Mary Warren
( - 19 Oct 1691)
Shown in the "Register Report - Bigelow" by Sam Behling at RootsWeb baptized 12 Sept 1624 and death in Watertown on 19 Oct 1691. Marriage to John Bigelow on 30 Aug. 1642. All the children of this marriage shown.
Death and marriage info from "Genealogy of the Wells Family" by Gertrude W. Wells-Cushing.
Ancestry.com shows birth and death years.
From LDS Family Search:
Mary emigrated to Massachusetts with her parents. Through their son Samuel, they were ancestors of U.S. President James A. Garfield and Bigelow Carpet Company founder Erastus B. Bigelow. Through son Joshua, they were ancestors of Mary Jane and Lucy Bigelow, both of whom married Mormon leader Brigham Young, and David Eustace Bigelow, whose wife Ruth Campbell Bigelow, founder of the Bigelow Tea Company. Through daughter Sarah, they were ancestors of Red Cross founder Clara Barton. Mary emigrated to Massachusetts with her parents, John Warren III and Margaret (------). These families embraced the religious reform movement known as Puritanism, the movement which in the late 16th and 17th centuries sought to "purify" the Church of England from remnants of Roman Catholicism that the Puritans claimed had been retained after the religious settlement reached early in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. They emigrated to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630, arriving in the fleet with Sir Richard Saltonstall. The year of their arrival marked the beginning of the so-called Great Migration from East Anglia to New England. Through their son Samuel, John Bigelow and Mary Warren were ancestors of U.S. President James A. Garfield and Bigelow Carpet Company founder Erastus B. Bigelow. Through son Joshua, they were ancestors of Mary Jane and Lucy Bigelow, both of whom married Mormon leader Brigham Young, and David E. Bigelow, whose wife Ruth (Campbell) Bigelow founded the Bigelow Tea Company. Through daughter Sarah, they were ancestors of Red Cross founder Clara Barton.
Events
Families
| Spouse | John "Biglo" Bigelow (1617 - 1703) |
| Child | John Bigelow (1643 - 1721) |
| Child | Jonathan Bigelow (1646 - 1712) |
| Child | Mary Bigelow (1648 - 1704) |
| Child | Daniel Bigelow (1650 - 1715) |
| Child | Samuel Bigelow (1653 - 1733) |
| Child | Joshua Bigelow (1655 - 1745) |
| Child | Elizabeth Bigelow (1657 - 1694) |
| Child | Sarah "Sary" Bigelow (1659 - 1694) |
| Child | James Bigelow (1660 - 1728) |
| Child | Martha Bigelow (1662 - ) |
| Child | Abigail Bigelow (1664 - 1754) |
| Child | Hannah Bigelow (1666 - 1666) |
| Father | John Warren III (1585 - 1667) |
| Mother | Margaret Bayley (1587 - 1662) |
| Sibling | Mary Warren ( - ) |
| Sibling | Elizabeth Warren ( - ) |
| Sibling | Sarah Warren ( - ) |
| Sibling | John Warren ( - ) |
| Sibling | Daniel Warren ( - 1716) |
| Sibling | Elizabeth Warren ( - 1716) |
Notes
Christen
See "The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England 1620-1633" by Robert Charles Anderson, dated 1995, Vol III page 1934. Mary, daughter of John Warren and Margaret ?, was baptized on 12 Sept. 1624, married at Watertown 10 Dec. 1650, John Bigelow.Migration
From Family Search:Mary was the daughter of John Warren and Margaret Bayly Fowle, she was born in Nayland, Suffolk, England and baptised there on September 12, 1624. In the year 1630, John, Margaret and four of their children, including Mary who was only six years old, joined the Winthrop Fleet and sailed for America on the ship "Arabella", arriving at Salem on June 12. After stopping in Salem and Charlestown, they settled in Watertown.
Marriage
See "The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England 1620-1633" by Robert Charles Anderson, dated 1995, Vol III page 1934. Mary, daughter of John Warren and Margaret ?, was baptized on 12 Sept. 1624, married at Watertown 10 Dec. 1650, to John Bigelow.Per the "Titus family in America" by Dorothy M. Titus, their marriage was the first to appear on the town records.
Endnotes
1. Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, 3 volumes (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995), Vol. III page 1934.
2. Dorothy M. Titus, Titus Family in America: Eleven generations of the direct line from Robert Titus I to Dorothy Madalene Tittus and Bursley Howland Titus XI (Weston, Mass.: Published by the editor Percy Hobart Titus, July 1943), page IV; my ebook, Heritage Quest Online, Los Angeles Public Library online ( : viewed 15 February 2012.
3. Henry Bond, MD, Genealogies of the families and descendants of the early settlers of Watertown, MA including Waltham and Weston (Boston: N. E. Historic-Genealogical Society [Heritage Quest Online], 1860), page 29.
4. , Massachusetts Vital Records to the end of the year 1949 (Salem, MA: The Essex Institute Salem, MA, 1934), Vol. Watertown-V1 page 9; digital image, AmericanAncestors.org online data base, (http://www.americanancestors.org/home.html : accessed .
5. Gilman Bigelow Howe, Genealogy of the Bigelow Family of America: from the marriage in 1642 of John Biglo and Mary Warren to the year 1890 (Worcester, Mass.: Charles Hamilton, 1890), page 18; my e-book, Google Books, ( : accessed .
6. Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England 1620-1633, 3 volumes (Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995), Vol 3 page 1934.
7. Dorothy M. Titus, Titus Family in America: Eleven generations of the direct line from Robert Titus I to Dorothy Madalene Tittus and Bursley Howland Titus XI (Weston, Mass.: Published by the editor Percy Hobart Titus, July 1943), page IV; my ebook, Heritage Quest Online, Los Angeles Public Library online ( : viewed 15 February 2012.
8. Henry Bond, MD, Genealogies of the families and descendants of the early settlers of Watertown, MA including Waltham and Weston (Boston: N. E. Historic-Genealogical Society [Heritage Quest Online], 1860), page 29.
9. Gilman Bigelow Howe, Genealogy of the Bigelow Family of America: from the marriage in 1642 of John Biglo and Mary Warren to the year 1890 (Worcester, Mass.: Charles Hamilton, 1890), page 18; my e-book, Google Books, ( : accessed .

