Individual Details
Anthony Morse
(Abt 1607 - 12 Oct 1686)
Anthony Morse is included on the Newbury Settlers Monument. Anthony Morse Jr. settled in Newbury, Massachusetts in 1635, and registered as a shoemaker. He built a house about a half mile south of the old cemetery in what is now called Newbury old town. He was admitted as a Freeman May 25, 1636. On a slight eminence in a field which was later owned by Michael Little, and which is still called Morse’s field; traces of his house are still visible a few rods from the road.He and his wife were members of the Newbury, Mass, church in 1674. It states in one of the town records that Anthony Morse, Senior, is to keep the meeting house and ring the bell and “see that the house be cleane swept, and the glasse of the windows to be carefully look’t unto, if any should happen to be loosed with the wind, to be nailed close again.”
Events
Families
Spouse | Ann Cox (1608 - 1679) |
Child | Robert Morse (1629 - ) |
Child | Anthony Morse (1631 - ) |
Child | Peter Morse (1635 - ) |
Child | Anne Morse (1634 - ) |
Child | Joseph Morse (1637 - ) |
Child | Benjamin Morse (1639 - ) |
Child | Sarah Morse (1641 - 1711) |
Child | Hannah Morse (1643 - ) |
Child | Lydia Morse (1647 - 1648) |
Child | Mary Morse (1649 - 1662) |
Child | Hester Morse (1651 - ) |
Child | Joshua Morse (1653 - ) |
Father | Anthony Morse ( - ) |
Mother | Christian Morse mnu ( - ) |
Notes
Occupation
Both Anthony and his brother were shoemakers in Marlborough and came together to Newbury.Endnotes
1. , Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England 1634-1635 (Boston, MA: Great Migration Study Project, 2003–2011). (N.p.: n.p., n.d.), Volume 5 pp 159-167.