Individual Details

Jonathan Hatch

(1625 - 10 Dec 1710)

Jonathan 2
=======================
Jonathan lived in West Barnstable, Barnstable MA. Came to Mass Bay Colony from England in 1634. He lived to be 84 years old. Sarah married him when she was 13 years old - he was 21.
==================
Jonathan Hatch, Sr. was the first to settle Falmouth, Massachusetts, along with Isaac Robinson in 1661.
==============================
Captain
=================
Jonathan Hatch, Sr
==================
Check out Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #2448, Date of Import: Apr 5, 1997
Genealogy & History of the Hatch Family -

================================

461 GENEALOGICAL NOTES OP BARNSTABLE FAMILIES
THOMAS HATCH. Many of the name Hatch came over early. Elder William of Scituate, who came from Sandwich in England in 1635, with wife Jane and five children, was a noted man in the early history of the Colony. Two of the name of Thomas came over, and settled in Massachusetts, and afterwards removed to the Plym- outh Colony. One of them was made a freeman of Massachu- setts May 14, 1634, the same day that three others were, who were afterwards among the first settlers of Yarmouth. Thomas whom Mr. Deane calls an elder brother of William, settled in Scituate, and died there about the year 1646, leaving a family. Mr. Savage calls this man the freeman ; but circumstances incline me to the opinion that it was the other Thomas who was made free May 14, 1634. Thomas Hatch, the ancestor of the family in this country, was one of the nine who proposed, Jan. 7, 1638, O. S., "to take up their freedome at Yarmouth." On the 5th of March follow- ing his name is entered on the record with those who proposed to become freemen at the next court, but there is no mark against it indicating that he then took the required oath. In 1641 he had removed to Barnstable, and at the court held the first of June that year, he with others of that town, was again "propounded to be admitted a freeman at the next court." His name does not ap- pear on any list of freemen of the town of Barnstable. He had taken the "oath of fidelity" before his removal from Yarmouth,

462 GENEALOGICAL NOTES OP BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. and in some instances this seems to have been considered as the equivalent of the freeman's oath. In August 1643, his name ap- pears on the roll of those "able to bear arms in Barnstable," and in the following January on the list of approved inhabitants of Barnstable. Very little is certainly known respecting him. He does not appear to have been employed at any time, in any public busi- ness. He was not a man of wealth, and no record of his lands has been preserved. In 1648 Mr. Anthony Thacher claimed eight acres in. the "West Field"* in Yarmouth that had been bought of Thomas Hatch. This was the usual allotment, and the probability is that he had an equal proportion of the lands both in Yarmouth and in Barnstable assigned to him. I am inclined to the opinion that his houselot in Barnstable was near the Crocker farm at West Barnstable. Lands in that vicinity were after- wards owned by his son Jonathan, and by him sold to Capt. Thomas Dimmock. He died in 1661, leaving a widow Grace and son Jonathan and daughter Lydia, wife of Henry Taylor. Mr. Savage calls him "a young man." He was a grandfather and in my judgment had ceased to be young. A pleasant story is told respecting his courtship. It is said that he was son of a farmer and served his father before learning the trade of a tailor. His wife was also a farmer's daughter, and in time of harvest assisted him in the fields, and was very expert in the use of the sickle. Two young men asked her hand in mar- riage and it was agreed that the one who should reap the larger piece in a given time should win the prize. The land was marked off and an equal proportion assigned to Miss Grace. She was the best reaper, and having decided that she would marry Thomas Hatch, she slyly cut over on the part set off to him, and in conse- quence Thomas came out ahead, claimed and received her hand in marriage. This story was related by a grandson of Thomas, and has been preserved as a family tradition, and whether true or false is immaterial. I doubt whether Grace, the widow of Thomas Hatch, was the heroine of the story ; if so, she was different from other mothers — she must have been a second wife — for if Jonathan and Lydia had been her children, she would not have al- lowed them in youth to have been aliens from their father's house and exposed to all the temptations of a wicked world. I have no other evidence that she was a second wife. I want no other. Thomas Hatch was a church member, and a freeman, a man whose life was a living testimony of his fidelity to the principles *"The WeBt Field" was an open tract, cultivated by the Indians, bounded southerly by Dennis Pond, westerly by the bounds of Barnstable, northerly it extended nearly to the present County road, and easterly to Hawes' Lane. Xhe lot of Thomas Hatch was in the immediate Ticmity of the homestead of the writer.

GENEAIiOGIOAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. 463 which he professed. He was not a man of note, yet he was an honest man and a good neighbor. It is unnatuial to suppose that a man who sustained the character that Thomas Hatch did, would have allowed his only son, and only daughter, to have been exposed to temptations, as they were, if there had not been some superior controling influence at home. Of the family of Thomas Hatch little is known beside what has been already stated. His childrenf were both probably born in England. At his death in 1661 he was probably aged, not "a young man." Of the time of the death of his widow Grace, I find no record. 2. Jonathan, born about the year 1624. 3. Lydia, born about the year 1626, married Henry Taylor Dec. 19, 1650, and had a family. He probably had other children, but none are named as sur- viving in 1661.


Jonathan Hatch was a man of indomitable energy of charac- ter — no difficulties discouraged him — no misfortunes swayed him from his onward and determined course of life. He was a pio- neer in the march of civilization, and the history of his life, if faithfully written, would present many points of romantic inter- est. "The boy was the father of the man." At the early age of fourteen, it appears that Jonathan was bound as an apprentice to Lieut. Richard Davenport, of Salem. His father and mother and sister removed to Yarmouth, leaving him among strangers, in a strange land. Davenport was a soldier, — a man of impetuous spirit, and Jonathan, after remaining with him two years, deserted from his service and came to Boston, probably with the intention of obtaining a passage by water to Yarmouth. Sept. 2, 1640, he was arrested in Boston as a fugitive from service, and "was cen- sured to bee severely whiped, and for the present is committed for a slave to Lieut. Davenport." [Mass. Rec] Whether ■Jonathan escaped "the severe whipping," does not appear; however that may be, it is certain that twenty severe whippings would not have compelled a boy of bis spirit to have returned to the servitude of Lieut. Davenport. He had legs and he made a legitimate use of them, and they brought him safely to his father's house in Yarmouth. His troubles did not cease on his arrival at the Cape. Dec. 1, 1640, Capt. Nicholas Sympkins charged him with slandering him. The result was, the Captain had a fine of forty shillings tThe eTidence that Jonathan and Lydia were children of Thomas Hatch is not entirely satisfactory. It rests on these facts : May 27, 1661, his widow Grace presented an inrentory of his estate. March 3, 1662-3, Jonathan Hatch and Lydia, wife of Henry Taylor, were ap- pointed administrators on the estate of Thomas Hatch, deceased. They are not called his children, but the presumption is that they were. It will be noticed that nearly three years elapsed after the death of Thomas, before administrators were appointed. If Thomas had been a brother of Jonathan and Lydia, they would have had a right to claim letters of ad- ministration after the death of Grace. 1 name this as possible, not as probable.

464 GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. imposed on him, and Jonathan escaped without punishment. March 1, 1641-2, he "was taken as a vagabond, and for his mis- demeanors was censured to be whipt and sent from constable to constable to Lieut. Davenport at Salem." At the Court held April 5, 1642, this sentence was re-considered. The court had no authority to order the arrest of a party as a vagabond, because he had escaped from the service of a master residing in another ju- risdiction. He was "appointed to dwell with Mr. Stephen Hop- kins," who was enjoyend to have a special care of him. Mr. Hopkins died in 1644. Jonathan did not probably reside long with him, for soon afterwards he appears to have been a resident in Barnstable. Aug. 23, 1645, he was one of the four men forming the quota of the town of Barnstable in the expedi- tion against the Narragansets and their confederates. The foregoing records of the early life of Jonathan do not present his character in an amiable point of view. His parents appear to have taken no interest in his welfare, and this can be ac- counted for only on the supposition that Grace was a second wife. I am not a writer of eulogy. I must present such facts as I find on record ; and my inferences must be logical or they are worth- less. The boy was exposed to temptation on every hand — he had no friends on whom he could rely— he was a bond servant — "a slave" — and that servitude his proud spirit could not brook — he resisted — he escaped from servitude ; that, in the eye of the law, was criminal — and for that he was imprisoned, and for that en- dured cruel stripes. Though his conduct is not legally justifiable, we cannot but admire his bold and manly resistance of the intol- erant spirit of the age, and of the law which banished him from the home of his father, and which deprived him of the liberty which he claimed as a free born citizen of the British realm. Jonathan Hatch married April 11, 1646, Sarah Rowley, daughter of Henry Rowley, by his first wife — a daughter of Wil- liam Palmer, Sen. From the latter's will dated in 1637, I infer that Sarah's mother-in-law, though a church member, was not a kind-hearted woman. She was a step-mother to Sarah as I have presumed Grace had been to Jonathan. Their experience in early life coincided — they lived long in married life, and were blessed with a family of eleven children, nine of whom had famil- ies of their own. After his marriage he probably resided several years at "West Barnstable before removing to South Sea. Oct. 7, 1651, he and Samuel Hinckley were prosecuted by the grand jury for hiring land of the Indians, and March 2, 1651-2, he was again prosecu- ted for furnishing an Indian with a gun, powder and shot. Feb. 1652-3, he was on the jury that laid out the road from Sandwich to Plymouth, and in 1657 took the oath of fidelity. The grant of his lands was recorded Feb. 14, 1655, but it is

GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. 465 probable that the grant was made and that he removed to South Sea at an earlier date. His lands are thus described: '"Fifty acres more or less of upland, with a little parcel of marsh ad- joining, at a place commonly called Sepnisset on ye South Sea," also eight acres of meadow, four at Oyster Island, which is very particularly described. One-half of this farm he subsequently sold to Thomas Shaw, and they sold the same May 27, 1661, to Mr. John Thompson, who re-sold to John Lovell about the year 1674, and the latter's descendants yet hold most of the ancient Hatch farm and meadows under the title derived from Thomp- son. In the deed of Hatch and Shaw to Thompson the upland is described as being at a creek commonly called Se-paw-ess-is-set alias Se-pau-is-set,* and is thus described : "Fifteen acres lying on ye south side of ye said creek, bounded southerly and westerly by ye commons, easterly by a little swamp, northerly partly by ye said creek and partly by ye harbour ; and thirty acres bounded southerly by ye said creek, lying 140 rod long by ye sea side and 40 rod into ye woods." At this time there were very few whites settled at South Sea. Roger Goodspeed who resided at Mystic, was probably his near- est neighbor for several years. At that time oysters were very abundant in the waters in the vicinity of his residence, and many barrels were annually pickled and sent to market. For many years after the settlement of the town, all the lime used for build- ing purposes was manufactured in the vicinity of Sep-nis-set from the shells of the oysters. Dry wood cut into small pieces was procured, and a kiln built of alternate layers of shells and wood, the whole was covered with turf, excepting a small opening at the top and another at the bottom where the fire was set, and the shells converted by the heat into quick-lime, of a superior qual- ity- Many Indians dwelt near the residence of Goodman Hatch. The wigwam of Paup-mun-nueke, the sachem of the Massapees, was about a mile distant. He traded with them, visited them, and at times was perhaps too familiar with them. It was policy for him to be on good terms with them — they were his neighbors, and if by his conduct he had excited them to hostility, they had it in their power to do him much injury. In June, 1658, it was proved in court that an Indian named Repent had threatened to shoot Gov. Prence on his return from Plymouth. Mr. Hatch was charged with having justified Repent, but there was no proof, and *This name, which occurs in the last Number, is called in the records a place and a creek. Its termination, however written, indicates that it was a place or Tillage by the water. The Indians probably dropped the final syllable when they referred to the creek, calling it Sipanesse, which perhaps means a little stream where coarse gi-ass grows. It ap- pears to have been the name of the creek, or lagoon, on the south of the residence of Mr. Seth Goodspeed. After the Hatch farm came into possession of the Lovell family large ad- ditions were made.

466 GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BAfiNSTABLE FAMILIES. he was by the court admonished and released. May 27, 1661. Goodman Hatch sold his farm at Sipnesset and removed to SHConecet, Suconnesset, or Suckinesset,* the In- dian name of the town of Falmouth. He is not named in the colony records till 1685 as one of the original proprietors, but their records and deeds and other papers preserved in the family prove that he was. At a meeting of the proprietors held Nov. 29, 1661, it was voted, "That Jonathan Hatch and Isaac Robinson, because they have built their houses, f shall have lots by their houses, — that is to say, Jonathan Hatch to have ten acres by his house lying against the neck, [lying by the Herring Brook.] And Isaac Rob- inson to have four acres by his house, and eight acres next ad- joining to Jonathan Hatch towards Pease's land. Also because they think themselves wronged, to be put out of the Neck, we have considered that they shall have an acre and a half of meadow within the Great Neck, towards Pease's land." Goodman Hatch's farm at Falmouth contained eighty acres, and for several years he was the ageul of the proprietors, and was employed at times in running out the bounds of lots, and attend- ing to sales and transfers of rights. He could not give up his old habit of trading with the Indians, and June 7, 1670, was fined £3 for selling them liquor. He bought three Indians of Capt. Church — a man and his wife and a child — June 3, 1679, the brothers of the woman ap- peared in court with Goodman Hatch, and it was agreed that the man and his wife should be released for £6, and that the child should remain with Goodman Hatch till 24 years of age and then be released forever. He claimed his pound of flesh ; he forgot that when a boy he had been bound to Lieut. Davenport — that he had repudiated his service. Had not the Indian boy the same right — or did the difference in color abrogate the right of the one, and establish that of the other. June 24, 1690, he took the freeman's oath at the County Court in Barnstable. He was then about sixty-four years of age. Time had tempered the fire and impetuosity of his youth, and he had become a sober, religious man — the venerable patriarch of a *Tliis name is a compound of Sucki, black; po quauhork, the round clam or quohoff ; and et or set, place ; means the place where Suck-au-hock or black wampan was made. The Indians had two kinds of money, beads of wampajn, the black of which three was con- sidered equal to apenny English, and the white of half the value of the black. The white was called wampam, [white] and the black Sack-au-hock by the Indians, but the English called it all wampam, or wampam-peage. The white was made from the stem of the peri- winckle ; the black from the dark colored portion of the shell of the quohog. Some Eng- lish attempted to counterfeit it; but not finding it a paying business gave it up. The coun- terfeits were readily detected by the Indians. tThis record conflicts with the family tradition that Moses, son of Jonathan, was the first white child bom in Falmouth, and that he was called Moses because he was born un- der the shelter of a whale-boat, and on a bed of rushes. Unfortunately for the romance of the story, Jonathan Hatch built a house in Falmouth two years before the birth of his son Moses.

GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. 467 large and esteemed family of children and grand-children. After that date, his name seldom appears on the public records. He had acquired a large landed estate, and was ranked among the wealthy of those times. His papers show that he continued to do business till the close of his long life. As one of the agents of the proprietors of Falmouth, he was often called upon to take the care of their interests, and they could not have been committed to a more careful hand. He died Dec. 1710, aged about 84 years. His will is dated Sept. 15, 1705, and was proved Jan. 4, 1710-11. He says he is aged, names his six sons, Thomas, Jonathan, Joseph, Benjamin, Samuel and Moses, and his daughters Mary Weeks, Sarah Wing and Mercy Rowley, and appoints the latter his sole executrix. Children of Jonathan Hatch and Sarah Rowley, bis wife. Born in Barnstable. (The discrepancies between the Barnstable and Falmouth records are noted.) 4. L Mary, July 16, 1647. Thomas, Jan. 1, 1649. Jonathan, May 17, 1652, May 16, 1652. Joseph, May 7, 1654, June 10, 1654. Benjamin, Sept. 7, 1655, June 6, 1656. Nathaniel, June 6, 1657, Sept. 3, 1658. . Samuel, Oct. 11, 1659, Oct. 4, 1660. '

Born in Falmouth. I. Moses, March 4, 1662, March 4, 1663. Sarah, March 21, 1664, March 23, 1665. Mercv, April 27, 1667. Lydia, May 16, 1669. (4-1.) Mary, the eldest daughter of Jonathan Hatch, mar- ried a Mr. Weeks, as we learn from the will of the father. Wil- liam Weeks of Falmouth, married March 16, 1669, Mercy, daughter of Mr. Isaac Robinson. I am inclined to the opinion that she died early and that he married for his second wife Mary Hatch. The names of the children of William Weeks were Mer- cy, Mehitable, Sarah, Experience, Mercy again, Jonathan, Benja- min and Lydia. These names are common in the Hatch, not in the Robinson family. In these times the mother usually adopted the names of her brothers and sisters, and I feel confident that Mary Hatch married William Weeks of Falmouth. Sarah married Nathaniel Wing, and Mercy married Nathan Rowley. (5-2.) Thomas Hatch, named in honor of his grand-father, was a farmer and resided in Falmouth, where he died. He mar- ried Abigail Codman, Feb. 22, 1679, called of Falmouth — perhaps daughter of Robert of Edgartown. Children born in Falmouth. 15. I. Hepsibah, 9 Jan., 1681.

468 GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES.
Thomas, 25 April, 1685. Sarah,' 16 Sept., 1687. Stephen, 19 Jan., 1689. Nathaniel, 16 Blarch, 1693. Mary, 16 March, 1693. . Aiareth, 16 Jan., 1695. I. Jonathan, 9 April, 1697. Peter, 25 July, 1700. (6-3.) Capt. Jonathan Hatch, son of Jonathan, was a farmer and resided in Falmouth, where he died. Oct. 2, 1689, he was chosen ensign of the military company. June 24, 1690, at the County Court, he took the freeman's oath. There are three entries of his marriage on the records, all probably intended for the same ; but apparently not the same. I presume he married Dec. 4, 1676, Elizabeth Weeks of Falmouth, another entry may be read Bethia Weeks another Elizabeth Walker.* Children horn in Falmovth. Jonathan, 5 June, 1678. Sarah, 17 Sept., 1682. . Mehitabel, 19 March, 1684. Mar.y, 24 June, 1689. Nathaniel, 30 July, 1693. Ebenezer, 29 Nov., 1696. .Jonathan of this family married Bethia Nye Dec. 22, 1703 ; and had Solomon 1704 ; Thankful 1706 ; Ebenezer 1709 ; Nathan 1710; Moses 1712; Benjamin 1715; Timothy 1732? Ebenezer married Oct. 25, 1720, Lydia Hatch. 7-4j.) Capt. Joseph Hatch, perhaps excepting Moses, was the most distinguished of Jonathan's sons. He was a soldier in *Mr. Freeman in his history, Vol. 2, page 474, giTes a genealogy of this family fiill of mistakes, and full of positive assertions. He says "Thomas came from Kent 1634, boni in Saudwich." Thi?! may be so, and it may be, from "Wales, but there is no record. His name is not on the list of those who embarked at Sandwich in 1634-5 ; and the Massachusetts records prove that he came over earlier, for he was made a freeman of that Colony May 13, 1634, N. S., nearly a year prior to the embarkation from Sandwich. Mr. Savage says Jona- than was perhaps a son of Thomas, and bom at Sandwich, Eng. On this shppery founda- tion Mr. Freeman positively asserts, that Thomas came over from Kent in 1634, He also asserts that Thomas was a member of the church in Barnstable -June 1, 1641. This may be so— it is hard to prove a negative — especially when there is a hiatus in the list of the admissions to the church from 1638 to 1643. Perhaps some claii-voiyant filled up the gap for his special accommodation. He says Jonathan bad lands in Falmouth in 1660. It is surprising that this fact is not named either iu the proprietor's, the town or the Colonial records. I haye yet to learn that there were any whites settled in Falmouth at that date — and if there was, Jonathan Hatch was not of the number, for he did not probably remove from Barnstable till after May 27, 1661. He calls the 8th child of Capt. Joseph Hatch, Bethia ; her name is plainly wiitten on the town and on the church records Rebecca. He states that Benjamin, bom 1655, married Mary Hamblin (so Ba rec. but F. says Lumbee) June 17, 1678." The Falmouth records say Benjamin Hatch married Mary Hamblin; the Barnstable records say George Lewis, Jr., married Mary Lumber. He says that the second wife of Benjamin was named "Alice, the record has it Ellis." Ihe Barnstable church record has it Ellis, a contraction for Elizabeth. On the Falmouth Church record it is plainly written Elizabeth. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Eddy, bom at Martha's Vineyard May 3, 1659. In his list of her chil- drenhe omits her son Eddy bom Aug. 2, 1700.

GENKAIiOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. 469
King Philip's war, 1675 and G. He was lieutenant of the militia company in 1702, and afterwards captain. He inherited the home- stead of his father, acquired a large estate, and exercised a wide influence. He married Dee. 7, 1683, Amy Allen of Chilmark. She joined the church in Barnstable, and was baptized Aug. 3, 1701. On the church records her name is uniformly written Amie. On the formation of the Falmouth church, Oct. 10, 1708, she with others was dismissed to that church. Capt. Joseph Hatch died Feb. 16, 1735, aged 83. (Grave Stones). Children of Capt. Joseph Hatch born in Falmouth : 30. I. Lydia, 13th July, 1685. 31. II. Amy, 10th July, 1687. 32. III. Joseph, 3d Aug. 1689. 83. IV. Ichabod, 28th Oct. 1691. 34. V. Ruth, 9th Nov. 1693. 36. VI. Joanna, 2d June, 1696. 36. VII. Elizabeth, 1st Nov. 1697. 37. VIII. Rebecca, 25th Jan. 1700. 38. IX. Ebenezer, 26th March, 1702. 39. X. Barnabas, 29th Nov. 1703. Lydia married a Mr. Gifford, a Quaker ; Amy married Jona- than Delano of Tolland, Conn. ; Joseph, Jr., married in 1713, and May 1, 1736, Rebecca, a second wife. He removed to Tol- land, died in Falmouth 1751 ; Ichabod married Abigail Weeks Dec. 2, 1714 ; Ruth married Dea. Solomon Swift of Tolland and Kent, Conn. ; Elizabeth married Aug. 1, 1722, Stephen Skiffe of Tolland ; Rebecca married a Mr. Berry, and settled in Kent about 1740 ; Ebenezer married in 1741, Sarah, aged 24 ; Barnabas mar- ried Abigail Lasrell of Duxbury, Mass., in 1728. 8-7.
Benjamin Hatch was a farmer. In 1729 he removed to Mansfield, Conn., and died there or in Tolland before the year 1736. He married three wives: 1st, Mary Hamblin, Jan. 17, 1678, a daughter of James, Jr., of Barnstable. At the time of her marriage she had not completed her sixteenth year. She died early, and he married March 16, 1682, Elizabeth Eddy, who was born at Martha's Vineyard May 3, 1669. In another record her name is written Eliza. She was admitted to the Barnstable church July 14, 1710, and was dismissed to the church in Fal- mouth the following October, and died soon after. For his third wife he married Feb. 13, 1711-12, Experience, widow of Jabez Davis, of Barnstable. She was a daughter of David Linnell, and died a widow Dec. 1736, aged about 72. Children of Benjamin Hatch born in Falmouth : 40. I. Abigail, Aug. 4, 1679. Note. — Mr. Freeman says Jonathan Hatch married Abigail Weelcs of Barnstable, thus adding another alias to the name of his wife Elizabeth. If the readers of the records are re- liable, Capt. Jonathan was a valiant man, taking to himself four wives in the mouth of Dec. 1678 — another "Blue Beard." I do not however find that he was indicted for polygamy.


470 GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. Mary, March 3, 1681. Nathaniel, Feb. 7, 1684. Benjamin, Oct. 17, 1686. John, Feb. 16, 1689. Elizabeth, March 25, 1692. . Melatiah, Oct. 4, 1693. I. Timothy, Oct. 19, 1695. Hannah, May 7, 1698. Eddy, Aug. 2, 1700. Solomon, May 7, 1704. Benjamin Hatch of this family removed to Brewster, then Harwich, and married Aug. 11, 1715, Mary Bangs, and had James, May 1, 1716; Mary, April 21, 1720; Benjamin, May 11, 1724 ; Ruth, June 20, 1733. He died in Brewster Feb. 14, 1769, aged 83. (Grave Stones). Timothy Hatch had a family. His son Major Jethro, born Sept. 17, 1722, who removed to Kent, Conn., seems to have pre- served all the traditions of the family. In April and May, 1816, Moses Hatch, Esq., of Danbury, Conn., a graduate of Yale Col- lege, carefully wrote down the statements of Major Hatch, then 94 years of age. He states that his ancestor was a tailor by trade, and that his wife was the daughter of a farmer born in Wales. He relates the story about the reapers which has been told. He states that his ancestor married only one wife. Melatiah also married and had a family. J. M. Hatch, Esq., of Rochester, N. Y., is a descendant, and to him I am largelv in- debted for information respecting the family. 9-6. Nathaniel Hatch, son of Jonathan, born in 1657 or 1658, is not named in his father's will, and he has no family rec- ord, these facts make it probable that he died young. 10-7. Samuel Hatch was a "cordwainer," resided in Fal- mouth where he died in 1718. His wife Lydia was admitted to the Barnstable Church Oct. 5, 1701, and his daughters Kerziah and Lydia were baptized on the 9th of Nov. following ; Samuel, James and Zaccheus, June 7, 1702 ; Edward July 2, 1704 ; Anne, Sept. 1, 1706. His other children were probably baptized in Fal- mouth. The town record is imperfect. He probably resided some time at Chilmark, to which place several of his family removed. The name of his eldest child on the family record appears to be Eleazer, perhaps Ebenezer ; on the church records the name is writ- ten Kerziah. 51. I. Eleazer, (Kerziah, ch. ree.) Sept. 23, 1694. "' ~ Samuel, Feb. 28, 1694. James, Aug. 23, 1696. Lydia, Mav 30, 1699. Zaccheus, Feb. 10, 1701. Edward, bap. July 2, 1702.

GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. 471 57. VII. Anne, bap. Sept. 1, 1706. 68. VIII. James, and probably married Abigail Knight, of Tis- bury, July 24, 1718. 59. IX. Martha, married David Cottle of Chilmark, Dec. 9, 1728. Samuel Hatch, son of Sa^uuel, married Dec. 1, 1724, Mary Clifford, of Chilmark ; James married March 22, 1720, Judith Cottle, of Chilmark, second wife ; Edward married Rebecca "Weeks at Falmouth Aug. 17, 1727, and died at Falmouth 1760. Matthew Rowley was appointed Feb. 1750, guardian of Wait, minor son of Edward. Anne married David Butler of Chilmark, Dee. 2, 1726 ; Joseph married Lydia Cottle of Chilmark, Dec. 30, 1726 ; Lydia married Ebenezer Hatch (son of Jonathan and Elizabeth), Oct. 25, 1720. 11-8. Dea. Moses Hatch, youngest son of Jonathan, repu- ted to be the first white child born in Falmouth, was a man of note in his day. He was admitted to the Barnstable church June 19, 1698, and his wife Elizabeth Aug. 2, 1702. Oct. 10, 1708, both were dismissed to the Falmouth church, of which he became a leading member and "the first deacon." He was a wealthy farmer, a man of good business capacity, and a good citizen. For one act he will ever be remembered. He gave to the town the land on which the first church was built, now a public square, ornamented with trees — a beautiful place of which the citizens are justly proud. He died "20th of May, 1747, in the 85th year of his age," and is buried in the ancient burying grounds in Fal- mouth. Dea. Moses Hatch married May 9, 1686, Hepsiba Eddy of Tisbury, said to be a younger sister of Elizabeth, wife of Benja- min Hatch. For his second wife he married Elizabeth, daughter of Col. John Thacher of Yarmouth, Oct. 18, 1699. She died May 18, 1710. A Moses Hatch married about this time Hannah, widow of Joshua Bangs, and a daughter of John Scudder of Barn- stable. She was baptized 5th Oct. 1651, consequently was twelve years older than Dea. Moses, and as Mr. Savage suggests, the disparity of their ages renders it doubtful whether Dea. Moses married the widow Hannah Bangs. On the Falmouth records is this entry, "Hannah, wife of Capt. Moses Hatch, died May 13, 1739." Capt. Moses was a son of the Deacon, and if he married the widow the disparity was still greater. The last wife of Dea. Moses was named Patience. The early records of Falmouth are dilHcult to decipher, and are not always reliable. There is no full record of the family of Dea. Moses Hatch. The following is obtained from various sources, and is an approximation to accu- racy : 60. I. Abiah, born Feb. 1, 1686-7, died on the 13th, and was buried on the 14th of same month. 472 GENEALOGICAL, NOTES OF BARNSTABLE FAMILIES. 61. 11. M * * *, a son, twin child with Abiah, died same day, buried 2d. 62. III. Moses, Oct. 6, 1688, died Oct. 23, 1688. 63. IV. Hepsiba, Feb. 16, 1690, married Benj. Nye of Fal- mouth, who died in 1716 insolvent. 64. V. Elizabeth. She married Timothy Hallett of Yarmouth, died Oct. 24, 1744, aged 44. 65. VI. Rebecca, bap. June 18, 1704, married in 1733 James Lewis, of B., died July 5, 1740, aged 36. 66. VII. Hannah, bap. Oct. 14, 1705. 67. VIII. Moaes, probably born before the year 1700. 68. IX- Sylvanus. I have it noted that he had a son Sylva- nus, but I cannot quote my authority. Capt. Moses Hatch of Falmouth, probably a son of Dea. Moses, married April, 1724, Mary, daughter of Rev. Joseph Lord of Chatham. Her birth is thus recorded by the father : "Mary Lord born 19-20 (2) 1701," that is, on the night of the the 19th of April, 1701, 0. S. Their children were: Sylvanus, Jan. 24, 1725; Moses, May 28, 1732, (married Pru- dence Gorham Sept. 1766) ; Joseph, March 8, 1735; Hepsibah, Feb. 12, 1737. It is also stated that she had another child, and died during her confinement, Jan. 27, 1742-3. The latter date is doubtful, and taking all the circumstances into consideration, I am inclined to the opinion that the Hannah, wife of Capt. Moses, recorded as having died May 13, 1739, was a blunder of the clerk. He should have written Mary, wife of Capt. Moses Hatch, died May 13, 1739. If I am right in this supposition, the difficulties are ex- plained. That this is right, his subsequent or second marriage seems to favor. If his first wife died Jan. 27, 1743, N. S., then he married the second very soon after the death of the first, for his son Jonathan was born Dec. 17, 1743, and Benjamia Sept. 10, 1745. The Rev. Charles Gorham Hatch, to whom I am under obliga- tions for materials for this article, is a descendant of Capt. Moses. Sylvanus Hatch, probably son of Capt. Moses, had Sylva- nus, who resided some time at Great Bend, Penn., and finally set- tled in Illinois ; Samuel, who settled in Rome, N. Y. ; John, in Pompey, Onandago Co., N. Y. ; Solomon, in Manluis, N. Y. ; Charles — Orias, who was a tory and served in the British arm^' ; and Jethoe, who was killed at the massacre at Wyoming. I intended to have extended this genealogy one generation further ; but on comparing my copies of records I find so many discrepancies, that it is unsafe to trust them. Every one com- plains of the difficulty of deciphering the early town records of Falmouth, and I judge not without reason, for no two transcribe GENEALOGICAL NOTES OF BAKNSTABLE FAMILIES. 473 them alike. The proprietor's and church records were better kept. I would like to give a particular account of the "Little Hatches" of Falmouth ; but am unable. They were children of Barnabas Hatch, who married in 1776, his relative Abigail Hatch, and had two sons and seven daughters. Six of the daughters were less than four feet in height, and could stand upright under the old fashioned "lift latch" on the front door of their father's house. Neither of the six married, but lived and died in their father's house. The other daughter, Rebecca, was of common size, and married Robert Hammond. The two sons were Barnabas, born June 15, 1788, and Rob- inson, born Nov. 9, 1790. Both of these were of low stature. The one whom I knew was scarce four feet in height — a portly gentleman, almost as broad as he was long. The desendants of Jonathan Hatch are very numerous. Many are in Connecticut, and in New York, and in the Western States. Among them are many distinguished men, and most of them inherit that energy of character for which their ancestor was noted. They claim to be of Welch descent, and that the "honest blood" of their maternal ancestor yet flows in their veins.

From "Genealogical Notes if Barnstable Families, being a Reprint of the Amos Otis Papers originally published in The Barnstable Patriot". Revised and Compiled by C.F. Swift, largely from notes made by the author. Vol II. Barnstable, Mass.: F/B. & F.P. Goss, Publishers and Printers. [The "Patriot" Press.] 1890.
==========
From Geneology and History of the Hatch Family by Hatch Geneological Society - Ruth Hatch Hale

Jonathan Hatch
" Thomas and Grace had two children, Jonathan and Lydia. Jonathan was saud to be a "lad of spirit". In 1637 he was apprenticed to Lt Davenport of Salem, Massachusettes. Evidently he was either unhappy or bored with his work and in 1639 he ran away to Boston. In 1640, he was arrested as a fugative from service. He then laft Boston and returned to home at Yarmouth. In 1640 he was arrested in Yarmouth for slandering Capt Nacholas Simpkins. The court found no grounds and in fact Capt Simpkins was fined 40 shillings and Jonathan was set free. In March, 1642 Jonathan was charged with vagrancy and censored to be whipped and returned to Lt Davenport.[ His father had moved to Barnstable in 1641 but Jonathan apparently stayed behind in Yarmouth.] He was, instead, sent to Stephen Hopkins, in Plymouth, for special care. Mr. Hoplins died in 1644, so Jonathan returned to Barnstable. IN 1645, Jonathan was one of four Barnstable men who formed an expedition against the Narragansett Indians. In trouble again, in 1652, he was brought before a Grand Jury with Samuel Hinkley (father of Gov Hinkley) on charge of hiring land from the Indians. Jonathan seemed to settle down, a bit, in 1652, and was appointed one of a commission to "choose and lay out common highway between Plymouth and Sandwich". However, in 1652, the Grand Jury charged him with "furnishing an Indian with gun. powder and shot." It seems he made friends with the Indians, which was 'against the law'. Then in 1653, he was given land on Sepneset Bay (now Lewis Bay) where he built a log house and moved there with his family, in 1654."

Jonathan Hatch died on Dec 10, 1710 and was buried in the Old Burying Ground in Falmouth, Mass. There is a plaque at the entrance. After nearly 300 years, Jonathan Hatch's tombstone has become worn and lrft with no engravings. A memorial stone sits nearby, marking the site.
====================
From Geneology and History of the Hatch Family by Hatch Geneological Society - Ruth Hatch Hale

April 11, 1646, he married at Barnstable, Miss Sarah Rowley, daughter of Henry Rowley by his first wife Ann.. Who was the widow of Thomas Blossom and daughter of William Palmer, Sr and his wife Frances. William Palmer came to Plymouth in 1621. and in 1639 was one of the original settlers of Yarmouth. Both Blossom and Palmer were of the Pilgrim element. Ann Palmer married Thomas Blossom in England in 1615 and went with him to Leyden, Holland where they were a part of the Pilgrim settlement. In 1620 they came to Plymouth, England in the Speedwell intending to take passage on the Mayflower for America; but for some reason found it impractical to do so and erturned to Leyden, where they formed a part of the Pilgrim group.
In 1629, Blossom and his wife and son came to Plymouth, Mass. Blossom died soon afterward and Oct 17, 1633 his widow married Henry Rowley as his firat wife. Their first child, Sarah, who at age 13 married Jonathan Hatch. After his marriage, Jonathan lived for some years at West Barnstable.

In 1657 Jonathan took the oath of fidelity, which as the head of a family and a taxpayer entitled him to vote. He was made a freeman later.
=====================
wiki trees
Jonathan Hatch Sr. (1625 - 1710)
Captain
 Jonathan
 Hatch
 Sr.
Born 7 Sep 1625
 in Biddenden, Kent, England
Son of Thomas Hatch and Grace (UNKNOWN) HatchBrother of Lydia (Hatch) TaylorHusband of Sarah (Rowley) Hatch
 — married 11 Apr 1646 in Barnstable, Barnstable, MassachusettsDESCENDANTS Father of Mary (Hatch) Weeks, Thomas Hatch Sr, Jonathan Hatch Jr., Joseph Hatch I, Benjamin Hatch, Nathaniel Hatch, Samuel Hatch, Moses Hatch, Sarah (Hatch) Wing, Mercy (Hatch) Rowley and Lydia HatchDied 10 Dec 1710
 in Falmouth, Barnstable, Massachusetts
Profile managers: Puritan Great Migration Project WikiTree  [send private message], Anonymous Davis  [send private message], Laurence Houlgate  [send private message], David Hershey  [send private message], and Denia Pearson  [send private message]Profile last modified 4 Oct 2021 | Created 14 Apr 2010 | Last significant change:4 Oct 202112:09: Jeanie (Thornton) Roberts merged Thomas Hatch Sr (1625-1710) into Jonathan Hatch Sr. (1625-1710). (Clear duplicate.) [Thank Jeanie for this | 1 thank-you received]This page has been accessed 6,311 times.
Jonathan Hatch Sr. migrated to New England during the Puritan Great Migration (1620-1640).
Join: Puritan Great Migration Project
Discuss: PGM
Contents
[hide]
1 Biography
1.1 Marriage & Family
1.2 Will
1.3 Burial
2 Sources
Biography
Jonathan Hatch is the ancestor of NSSAR Patriot P-73952Jonathan Hatch
Birth: 07 Sep 1625, Biddenden, Kent, EnglandChristening: Barnstable, Barnstable, MassachusettsImmigration 1633Residence: 29 Nov 1661, Falmouth, MassachusettsDeath: 10 Dec 1710, Falmouth, Barnstable County, Massachusetts[1]Burial: Falmouth, Barnstable, Massachusetts[1]Residence: Massachusetts Bay Colony with father in 1634.Residence: Yarmouth with father in 1639 (One account states in 1639 they removed from Dorchester, Mass. to Barnstable, where Thomas died.)[2]“After marriage, Jonathan moved to South Sea, where he purchased fifty acres of upland with a small parcel of marsh adjoining, at a place called “Sepnisset by the Sea.” He also owned eight acres meadow at Oyster Island, half of which he sold. For many years he pickled and marketed many barrels of oysters, and the shells were burned in a kiln to make lime for building purposes.[3]“In 1661 he sold his farm at Sepnisset, and moved to Suconecet, the Indian name of Falmouth. There is a copy of the original Indian deed where Jonathan Hatch bought the town of Falmouth from the Indians in 1661. It consisted of eighty acres. His eighth son, born at Falmouth, was the first white child born there. All sons born before 1665.[4]“At age 64 he had acquired a large estate and was accounted wealthy.[5]On 15 Aug 1645 he served as a soldier under Captain Miles Standish in an expedition against the Narragansett Indians who had been raiding the area. According to The History of Cape Cod, Jonathan shows up in the an agreement for laying out the lands in Succonessett (later Falmouth) as already having a house there.[6] On 23 Feb 1662 he voted to appoint Nathaniel Bacon and Tristram Hull to purchase land from the Natives for the commons of Barnstable.[7] On 23 Apr 1679 he witnessed the sale of land by Jacob Perkins to Joseph Hull in Barnstable.[8]Marriage & Family
Jonathan Hatch married Sarah Rowley (at 13 years of age) on 11 April 1646 in Barnstable, Massachusetts.[1][9][10][11][12]Children born in Barnstable / Falmouth[13]:
Mary, b. July 16, 1647[14]; m. William Weeks, of Falmouth; his second wife, according to Otis, based upon the mention in Jonatban Hatch's will of his dau. Mary Weeks. William Weeks m. (1) March 16, 1669, 0. S. Mercy Robinson, bap. July 4, 1647, dau. of Isaac and Margaret (Hanford) Robinson. It is thought that she d. early, and some at least of William Weeks• children were by second wife, but which ones is not certainly known;[15]
Thomas[16], b. Jan. 1, 1649;[15][10]
Jonathan[17], b. May 17, 1652;[15][10]
Joseph[18], b. May 7, 1654;[15][10]
Benjamin[19], b. Sept. 7, 1655;[15][10]
Nathaniel[20], b. June 5, 1657;[15][10]
Samuel[21], b. Oct. 11, 1659;[15][10]
Moses[22], b. March 4, 1662;[15][10]
Sarah[23], b. March 21, 1664, m. Nathaniel Wing;[15][10]
Mercy[24], b. April 27, 1667, m. Nathan Rowley;[15]
Lydia[25], b. May 16, 1669.[15]These births are recorded in both Barnstable and Falmouth records, and the two records do not agree. (See Ottis Vol. I, p. 467).[15]Will
15 Sep 1705[26][27][28][1][29][30]Burial
Falmouth Old Burying Ground, Falmouth, Barnstable, Massachusetts, See Find A Grave: Memorial #5846925Sources

↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Find A Grave, database and images (findagrave.com : accessed 28 November 2018), memorial page for Jonathan Hatch, Sr (1627–Dec 1710), Find A Grave: Memorial #5846925, citing Falmouth Old Burying Ground, Falmouth, Barnstable County, Massachusetts, USA ; Maintained by Don Blauvelt (contributor 46932939) .
↑ Source: North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000 for Jonathan Hatch: T > Tracy, Winslow > The Tracy Family / The Winslow Family page 197-198
↑ Source: ibid.
↑ Source: ibid.
↑ Source: ibid.
↑ Freeman, Frederick. The history of Cape Cod: annals of thirteen towns of Barnstable County (Boston, Massachusetts: W. H. Piper & Co., 1858) p 176, 206
↑ "Barnstable, MA: Town Records, 1640 to 1793." Records of Barnstable, Massachusetts. CD-ROM. Boston, MA.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2002. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009.) Vol 1 p 6 link
↑ "Barnstable, MA: Town Records, 1640 to 1793." Records of Barnstable, Massachusetts. CD-ROM. Boston, MA.: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2002. (Online database. AmericanAncestors.org. New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2009.) Accessed 4/27/2016 link
↑ Source: ibid.
↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 Massachusetts Vital Records to 1850 (Online Database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2016) Accessed 4/27/2016, Barnstable, Vol 1 p 33 linkMarriage: "Jonathan Hatch & Sarah Rowley Married 11 April 1646:
his Daughter Mary born ye 14 of July 1648
his son Thomas Born ye 1 of January 1649
his Son Jonathan Born ye 17 of May 1652
his Son Joseph Born ye 7 of March 1654
his Son Benjamin 7 Septr 1655
his Son Nathaniel ye 5 of June 1657
his Son Samuel Born ye 11 of Octor 1659
his Son Moses ye 4 of March 1662
his Daughter Sarah 21 of March 1664"
↑ Savage, James. A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England: Showing Three Generations of Those Who Came Before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register. (Boston: Little, Brown, and Co, 1860-1862), 2:375."JONATHAN, Barnstable, only s. of Thomas, b. at Sandwich. Eng. may have been at Salem 1640, m. 11 Apr. 1646, Sarah Rowley, had Mary, b. 14 July 1648; Thomas, 1 Jan. 1650; Jonathan, 17 May 1652; Joseph, 7 Mar. 1654; Benjamin, 7 Sept. 1655; Nathaniel, 5 June 1657; Samuel, 11 Oct. 1659; Moses, 4 Mar. 1662, or 7 Mar. 1663; and Sarah, 21 or 23 Mar. 1665; Mark, 27 Apr. 1667; and Lydia, 16 May 1669, the last four at Yarmouth. He built, bef. 1666, it is said, ho. in what is now Falmouth where his eighth ch. Moses was b. by Falmouth, rec. 23 Mar. 1665."
↑ Clarance Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior to 1700 (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, April 2011) Vol 2 p 1717 link HATCH, Jonathan (-1710) & Sarah ROWLEY; 11 Apr 1646; Barnstable/Falmouth McIntire Anc. 328, 342; Holbrook Anc. (1942) 39; Swift (1955) 1; NYGBR 37:58; Barnstable Co. Prob. 4:159; TAG 32:40; Utah Gen. Mag. 30, 69; Baker (ms) 78; Bullard Anc. 240; Barlow A
↑ Note: All secondary sourcing on the children is from North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000 for Jonathan Hatch
↑ Note: Mary Hatch (1647–1713)
↑ 15.00 15.01 15.02 15.03 15.04 15.05 15.06 15.07 15.08 15.09 15.10 15.11 Homer W. Brainard; "Henry Rowley and Some of His Descendants" in The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Volume XXXVII (New York: New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 1906) p 57-58
↑ Note: Thomas Hatch (1649–1738)
↑ Note: Jonathan Hatch (1652–1689)
↑ Note: Joseph Hatch (1649–1688)
↑ Note: Benjamin Hatch (1654–1738); m. 1st Mercy Lombard; m. 2nd Ellis Eddy; m. 3rd Mrs. Experience Davis.
↑ Note: Nathaniel Hatch (1657–1703)
↑ Note: Samuel Hatch (1659–1718)
↑ Note: Moses Hatch (1663–1747)
↑ Note: Sarah Hatch (1664–1731); Husband, Nathaniel Wing.
↑ Note: Mercy Hatch (1667–1711); Husband, Nathan Rowley (cousin)
↑ Note: Lydia Hatch (1669–1681)
↑ Note: Date of death was 10 Dec 1710, Probate would have been after that date.
↑ Source: Family Data Collection - Deaths
↑ Source: Family Data Collection - Deaths
↑ Source: North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000
↑ Source: Web: Massachusetts, Find A Grave Index, 1620-2013
Source: Genealogy & history of the Hatch family : descendants of Thomas & Grace Hatch of Dorchester, Yarmouth, & Barnstable, Massachusetts] compiled by Hatch Genealogical Society, Ruth A. Hatch Hale Salt Lake City, Utah : , 1925[1]
Source: Ramsburgh, Edith Roberts. Genealogical Department, "Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine" (The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, March 1923) Vol. 57, No. 3, Whole No. 367, Page 172: #10746
Source: Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Cemetery: East End Cem; Location: Falmouth MA 46
Source: American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI): Name: Jonathan Hatch; Birth Date: 1625; Birthplace: Eng, Massachusetts, tavern keeper, land dealer, builder, one of first two houses Barnstable, inspector of whales; Volume: 74; Page number: 476; Reference: The Swift fam. Hist. Notes. By Katharine Whitin Swift et al. Whitinsville, Ms. 1955. (Viii, 170p.):11-14
Source: American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI): Name: Jonathan Hatch; ; Birth Date: 1625; Birthplace: Eng, Massachusetts; Volume: 74; Page number: 476; Reference: Gen. Column of the " Boston Transcript". 1906-1941.(The greatest single source of material for gen. Data for the N.E. area and for the period 1600-1800. Completely indexed in the Index.): 10 Apr 1933, 5596 The Swift fam. Hist. Notes. By Katharine Whitin Swift et al. Whitinsville, Ms. 1955. (Viii, 170p.):17
Source: Family Data Collection - Births: Name: Jonathan Hatch [User-submitted-comment]; Father: Thomas Hatch; Mother: Grace Lewis; Birth Date: 1624; City: Biddenden; County: Kent; Country: England
Source: Family Data Collection - Births: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Father: Thomas Hatch; Mother: Grace Lewis; Birth Date: 7 September 1625; City: Biddenden; County: Kent; Country: England
Source: Family Data Collection - Deaths: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Death Date: 10 December 1710; City: Falmouth; County: Barnstable; State: MA; Country: USA
Source: Family Data Collection - Deaths: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Death Date: 1710; City: Falmouth; State: MA; Country: USA
Source: Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Event Type: Marriage; Marriage Date: 11 Apr 1646; Marriage Place: Barnstable, Massachusetts; Spouse Name: Sarah Rowley; Household Members: Name: Sarah Rowley; Jonathan Hatch
Source: Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Event Type: Marriage; Marriage Date: 11 Apr 1646; Marriage Place: Barnstable, Massachusetts; Spouse Name: Sarah Rowley; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Rowley
Source: Massachusetts, Wills and Probate Records, 1635-1991: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Probate Date: 15 Sep 1705 Note: This death date does not match with the given death date of 10 Dec 1710; it also does not match the dates in the will itself. ; Probate Place: Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; Inferred Death Year: Abt 1705; Inferred Death Place: Massachusetts, USA; Item Description: Probate Records, Vol 1-3, 1686-1747; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch
Source: Millennium File: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Birth Date: 7 Sep 1625; Birth Place: Sandwich, Kent, England; Death Date: 10 Dec 1710; Death Place: Falmouth, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA; Marriage Date: 11 Apr 1646; Marriage Place: Barnstable, Barnstable, Massachusetts; Father: Thomas Hatch; Mother: Grace; Spouse: Sarah Rowley; Children: Benjamin Hatch; Spouse Father: Henry Rowley; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Rowley
Source: North America, Family Histories, 1500-2000: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Age: 85; Birth Date: 1625; Birth Place: England; First Marriage Date: 11 Apr 1646; First Marriage Place: Barnstable, Mass; Death Date: Dec 1710; Death Place: Falmouth, Mass; Father: Thomas Hatch; Mother: Grace; Spouse: Sarah Rowley; Child: Mary Hatch
Source: U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s: Name: Jonathan Hach; Arrival Year: 1633; Arrival Place: Dorchester, Massachusetts; Family Members: Wife: Grace; Daughter: Lydia; Son: Jonathan; Source Publication Code: 116.1; Primary Immigrant: Hach, Thomas; Annotation: Date and place of first residence in New England. Extracted from passenger lists, lists of freemen, colony and court records, notarial records, vital records, land records, church records, and journals and letters. Place of origin, occupation, and other genealogical and historical information may also be provided. Source Bibliography: ANDERSON, ROBERT CHARLES. The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. Three Volumes. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995. 2386p. Page: 875
Source: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Birth Place: EN; Birth Year: 1625; Spouse Name: Sarah Rowley; Spouse Birth Year: 1626; Marriage Year: 1646; Marriage State: MA; Number Pages: 1; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Rowley
Source: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Birth Place: En; Birth Year: 1625; Spouse Name: Sarah Rowley; Spouse Birth Place: MA; Spouse Birth Year: 1626; Marriage Year: 1647; Marriage State: MA; Number Pages: 1; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Rowley
Source: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Birth Year: 1625; Spouse Name: Sarah Rowley; Spouse Birth Year: 1633; Marriage Year: 1646; Marriage State: MA; Number Pages: 1; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Rowley
Source: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Birth Place: EN; Birth Year: 1625; Spouse Name: Sarah Rowley; Marriage Year: 1646; Marriage State: MA; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Rowley
Source: U.S., New England Marriages Prior to 1700: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Gender: Male; Marriage Date: 11 Apr 1646; Marriage Place: New England, USA; Death Year: 1710; Spouse: Sarah Hatch; Household Members: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Sarah Hatch
Source: U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Birth Date: 1625; Death Date: 1710; SAR Membership: 74624; Role: Ancestor; Application Date: 4 Oct 1951; Spouse: Sarah Rowley; Children: Benjamin Hatch; Household Members: Name: Robert Oral Hatch; Louisa Gregory; Hyrum Hatch; Catherine Karren; Lorenzo Hill Hatch; Aldura Sumner; Hezekiah Hatch; Elizabeth Haight; Jeremiah Hatch; Achsah Parmelee; Nathaniel Hatch; Mariah Fish; John Hatch; Mercy Lombard; Benjamin Hatch; Sarah Rowley; Jonathan Hatch
Source: U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970: Name: Jonathan Hatch; Birth Date: 1633; SAR Membership: 73952; Role: Ancestor; Application Date: 28 Mar 1951; Father: Thomas Hatch; Mother: Grace Hatch; Spouse: Sarah Rowley; Children: Thomas Hatch; Household Members: Name: Robert Powell Sweeny; Catherine Frances Friendly; Robert Hayne Sweeny; Ann Susanna Vaughn Hatch; Thomas J Sweeny; Mary Magdalene Roulain; Robert Hatch; Joanna Weeks; Robert Hatch; Mary Cathcart; Thomas Hatch; Abigail Codman; Thomas Hatch; Elizabeth Price; Sarah Rowley; Jonathan Hatch; Grace Hatch; Thomas Hatch
Find a grave and a personal visit to the grave yard
Image Barnstable County Probate & Wills, Vol 3? Page 422

Events

Birth1625England
Marriage11 Apr 1646Barnstable, Massachusetts, British America - Sarah Rowley
Death10 Dec 1710Falmouth, Barnstable, Mass.
BurialFalmouth Old Burying Ground, Falmouth, Barnstable, Massachusetts, British North America

Families

SpouseSarah Rowley (1626 - 1710)
ChildCapt Jonathan Hatch (1652 - 1698)
ChildMary Hatch (1647 - 1713)
ChildThomas Hatch (1648 - )
ChildCapt. Joseph Hatch (1654 - )
ChildBenjamin Hatch (1655 - 1736)
ChildNathaniel Hatch (1657 - 1705)
ChildSamuel Hatch (1659 - 1718)
ChildDeacon Moses Hatch (1661 - 1747)
ChildSarah Hatch (1663 - 1731)
ChildMercy Hatch (1667 - 1711)
ChildLydia Hatch (1669 - 1681)
FatherThomas Hatch (1603 - 1661)
MotherGrace Lewis (1602 - 1661)
SiblingLydia Hatch (1628 - 1670)

Notes