Individual Details
Jane Lothrop
(Sep 1614 - )
Events
Families
Spouse | Lt Samuel "Deacon" Fuller ( - ) |
Child | Hannah Fuller (1630 - 1685) |
Father | Reverend John Lathrop (Lothropp/Lothrop) (1584 - 1653) |
Mother | Hanna Howse (House) (1594 - 1633) |
Sibling | Anne Lathrop (Lothropp) (1616 - ) |
Sibling | John Lathrop (Lothropp) (1617 - ) |
Sibling | Barbara Lathrop (Lothropp) (1619 - ) |
Sibling | Thomas Lathrop (Lothropp) (1620 - ) |
Sibling | Samuel Lathrop (Lothropp) (1622 - ) |
Sibling | Benjamin Lathrop (Lothropp) (1626 - ) |
Sibling | Captain Joseph Lathrop (Lothropp) (1624 - ) |
Notes
Immigration
Jane Lothrop Fuller was baptised on September 29, 1614 in Edgerton, Kent County, England. Her parents were John Lothrop and Hannah Howse. .She came to America on the ship Griffin with her family.
The Griffin left England August 1, 1634 and arrived in Boston on September 18, 1634 with about one hundred passengers and cattle for the plantations. The passengers included the Bartholomew, Cotton, Hammond, Haines, Heaton, Hutchinson (including dissident Anne), Lothrop, Lynde, Magatt, and Symmes families
Marriage
They were married by Captain Miles Standish at the James Cudworth house.On November 7, 1636 Samuel joined the church in Scituate. In that year he built the fifteenth house in Scituate on Greenfield Street. He had twenty acres there on the east of Bellhouse Neck. Jane's father called the houses built by the early settlers “small plaine pallizadse Houses.” The walls were made of poles that were filled with stones and clay. They had thatched roofs. The lower part of chimneys were made of stone and above that they were built of logs. Windows were made of oiled paper and the floors of hand sawed planks.
They relocated to Barnstable. Samuel and his cousin, Matthew Fuller, bought the part Scorton or Sandy Neck that was in the town of Barnstable from the local Indians. The Fullers used the arable land and the rest became the town commons.
Genealogical and Family History of Western New York, Volume 2 edited by William Richard Cutter
In 1636 [Samuel] he built for himself the fifteenth house in Scituate, on Greenfield street, "a small plaine pallizadse House;'' the walls were made of poles filled between with stones and clay, the roof thatched, the chimney to the mantel of rough stones and above of cob-work, the windows of oiled paper, and the floors of hand sawed planks. The kind of house has been described as "meane,'' but all the houses in the village were alike.
He had about twenty acres of land, probably a grant from the town. In 1639 the Rev. Mr. Lathrop and many of the members of his church removed and founded the town of Barnstable, probably at the time the most easterly settlement on Cape Cod.
If Samuel Fuller and his young wife did not at once follow him thither, they did so in a few years. Captain Matthew Fuller, Samuel's cousin, appears to have removed from Plymouth at about the same time, and together they bought of Secunke, an Indian, that portion of Scorton or Sandy Neck which lies within the town of Barnstable. Samuel also bought other lands, and lived in the northwest angle of the town in a secluded spot, where few had occasion to pass. . .