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Edward Bangs

Male 1591 - 1678  (86 years)


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  • Name Edward Bangs  [1
    Birth 28 Oct 1591  Panfield, Essex, , England Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Arrival 1623  Plympton, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Death 1678  Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I8324  Master
    Last Modified 11 May 2012 

    Family Rebecca Hobart,   b. 29 Dec 1611, Wymondham, Norfolk, England Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 1679, Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 67 years) 
    Children 
    +1. Jonathan Bangs,   b. 1640, Plympton, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 9 Nov 1728, Brewster, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 88 years)
    Family ID F2453  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 28 Oct 1591 - Panfield, Essex, , England Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsArrival - 1623 - Plympton, Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 1678 - Eastham, Barnstable, Massachusetts, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • Edward Bangs probably was baptized at Panfield, Essex, on 28 October 1591, the son of John and Jane (Chavis) Bangs. He came to America on the Anne in 1623, and settled in Plymouth, MA. He was made a freeman in Plymouth 1 Jan. 1632. He removed to Eastman, and was one of the founding fathers there in 1639.

      Edward Bangs and his family moved to Cape Cod in the 1640's when the town of Nauset (later renamed Eastham) was being established. Edward Bangs was an innkeeper in Eastham and granted liberty to 'sell wine and strong waters'. He is listed in the records of Eastham many times for buying or selling or being granted land. Edward Bangs held the following offices at Eastham: Deputy to Plymouth Court for Eastham, 7 June 1652; was on the Plymouth grand jury 5 times from 1636-1652; was on the Plymouth petit jury 11 times from 1636-1643; on a committee to lay out land on 3 Jan. 1627 and 1 Feb. 1640; appointed to other committees 10 times from 1633-1652; on coroner's jury on 30 Oct 1667; highway surveyor 3 times from 1647-1651; Eastham treasurer from 1646-1665; and on the list in 1643 of men able to bear arms.

      Edward Bangs married Lydia Hicks sometime after 1627. Robert Hicks, Edward's father-in-law, had arrived in Plymouth in 1621 on the Fortune. The rest of the Hicks family - Robert's wife Margaret, and their three children, Samuel, Phoebe and Lydia, arrived on the Anne (as did Edward Bangs). Edward and Lydia Hicks Bangs had one son, John. Lydia died in the mid- 1630's. Edward remarried, to Rebecca Hobart. She joined her husband as grantor on a deed of 22 June 1651.

      Edward Bangs died at Eastham between the 19 October 1677 date of his will and the 5 March 1678 date of probate, at the age of 86. Rebecca Hobart Bangs died in 1679 at Eastham.

      The child of Edward and Lydia Hicks Bangs was:

      John, b. abt 1628; m. at Eastham 23 January 1660, Hannah Smalley.
      The children of Edward and Rebecca Hobart Bangs were:

      Rebecca, b. abt 1636; m. at Eastham 26 October 1654, Jonathan Sparrow.
      Sarah, b. abt 1638; m. abt. 1657 Thomas Howes.
      Jonathan, b. abt. 1640; m. (1) at Eastham 16 July 1664, Mary Mayo; m. (2) by 1719 Sarah _____; m. (3)at Eastham 23 July 1720 "Mrs. Ruth Young" (widow of John Young and daughter of Daniel Cole).
      Lydia, b. abt. 1642; m. at Eastham 24 December 1661, Benjamin Higgins.
      Hannah, b. abt. 1644; m. at Eastham 30 April 1662, John Doane. (Our ancestor.)
      Joshua, b. bt. 1646; m.at Eastham 1 December 1669, Hannah Scudder.
      Bethia, b. Eastham 28 May 1650; m. by 1669 Gershom Hall.
      Mercy (twin), b. at Eastham 15 October 1651; m. at Eastham 28 December 1670, Steven Merrick.
      Apphia (twin), b. at Eastham 15 October 1651; m. (1) at Eastham 28 December 1670, John Knowles; m. (2) by 6 March 1677 Stephen Wood Jr.
      Sources

      :"The Great Migration Begins; Sketches; PRESERVED PURITAN"." Plymouth Colony: Its History and People 1620-1691", Part Three: Biographical Sketches, Bangs, Edward." History and Genealogy of The Bangs Family in America, with Genealogical Tables and Notes"; by Dean Dudley; Montrose MA 1896.



      There is a tradtion that Eward Bangs was a native of Chichester Co. Sussex England which is not far from Essex. Another tradition states that although Edward Bangs may have been born in Chichester, he or his immediate family was later on the Isle of Man.

      Edward Bangs came to Plymouth in the ship Ann in June 1623. That year he acquired a garden plot of four acres on the El River. He was on of the surveyors who was appointed to assist Wm. Bradford, Ed. Winslow and John Howland and others in laying out lots in Plymouth. In 1633 he was made a freeman and taxed twelve shillings. He was active in civic affairs and held many public offices. From 1634-36 he was assessor and in 11-1636 he was one of the GReat Inquest or Grand Jury sworn to "enquire of all abuses within the body Government." In 1637 he was on a committee to divide meadow grandowns, in 1638 on the Great Inquest and in 1639 served as arbitrator between Samuel Gorton and Thomas Clark.

      Edward Bangs was granted eighty acres of land by the Plymouth Court provided he contribute one sixteenth part toward the building of a forty or fifty ton barque. He was a shipwright by trade, and in a list of Plymouth citizens in 1643, he was listed as able to bear arms. In 1645 Edward Bangs became a freeman of Nawsett or Eastham, the oldest town in Cape Cod, and about 1650 served as a Deputy tothe Old Colony Court. In 1651 Edward Bangs and his wife Rebeccagave a deed to M. Kempton which is recorded at Plymouth Registry. He was a town treasurer of Eastham from 1646 to 1665 and served as a selectman for two years about 1665. His will dated 10-19-1677 bequested land to his sons John and Jonathan, to Joshua he gave hsi house with some land , and to each daughter,four pounds. He named Jonathan his executor.

      While in Eastham, Edward Bangs served as a Deputy to Colony Court from 1674, 76, 79,83; was Capt of Guard against Indians was ensign of the Eastham Co.1759 and Captain of Eastham Co. 1660. He was Rep. to Mass. General Court 1672 and was town treasurer 1646-65.

      references: American Ancestry Hughes vol 3 pp100; American Ancestry Hughes Vol 4 pp129; The compedium of American Geneology -- Immigrant Ancestors pp 752; The Mayflower Planters at Plymouth Mass 1620 and other newcomers to Ye Old Colonie--Leon Clark Hills pp 55; The abridged compendium of american ancestry pp 967; Americana Vol 36 pp 518-19




      The Great Migration Begins Sketches PRESERVED PURITAN Edward Bangs
      EDWARD BANGS
      ORIGIN: Unknown (but see COMMENTS)
      MIGRATION: 1623 on the Anne
      FIRST RESIDENCE: Plymouth
      REMOVES: Eastham by 1645

      OCCUPATION: Innkeeper ("Liberty is granted unto Edward Bangs to draw and sell wine and strong waters at Eastham, provided it be for the refreshment of the English, and not to be sold to the Indians," 6 October 1657 [PCR 3:123]; an account of liquor brought into Eastham dated 28 November 1664 included "Edward Bangs, six gallons of liquor" [PCR4:100]).

      FREEMAN: In "1633" Plymouth list of freemen in proximity to those admitted on 1 January 1632/3 [PCR 1:4]. In list of 7 March 1636/7 [PCR 1:52]. In Plymouth section of list of 1639, annotated as gone and added to list for Eastham [PCR 8:174, 177]. In Eastham portion of list possibly dated to 1658 [PCR 8:201]. In Eastham list of 29 May 1670 [PCR5:278].

      OFFICES: Deputy to Plymouth Court for Eastham, 7 June 1652 [PCR 3:9]; Plymouth grand jury, 7 March 1636/7, 5 June 1638, 2 June 1640, 1 March 1641/2, 7 June 1652 [PCR 1:54, 87, 155; 2:34; 3:9]; Plymouth petit jury, 4 October 1636, 3 January 1636/7, 3 September 1639, 3 December 1639, 3 March 1639/40, 3 August 1641, 6 September 1641, 7 December 1641, 1 March 1641/2, 6 June 1643, 7 November 1643 [PCR 1:44, 7:4, 13, 14, 16, 22, 23, 25, 28, 35, 36]; committee to lay out land, 3 January 1627/8, 1 February 1640/1 [PCR 12:14, 2:7]; committee to divide meadow, 1 July 1633 [PCR 1:14]; committee to assess taxes, 5 January 1634/5, 1 March 1635/6 [PCR 1:33, 38]; Plymouth representative to committee to reunite Plymouth and Duxbury (but he did not serve), 14 March 1635/6 [PCR 1:41]; committee to allocate hay ground, 20 March 1636/7, 2 October 1637, 1 June 1640 [PCR 1:55, 67, 153]; committee to lay out highway, 1 February 1640/1, 24 February 1652 [PCR 2:7, 3:61]; coroner's jury, 30 October 1667 [PCR 4:169]; Eastham highway surveyor, 1 June 1647, 4 June 1650, 3 June 1651 [PCR 2:115, 155, 168]; Eastham treasurer, 1646-1665 [Bangs Gen 11]. In Plymouth section of 1643 list of men able to bear arms [PCR 8:189].

      ESTATE: In the 1623 Plymouth division of land "Bangs" [no first name] received four acres as a passenger on the Anne in 1623 [PCR 12:6]. In the 1627 Plymouth division of cattle "Edward Banges" was the thirteenth person in the twelfth company [PCR 12:1].

      In the Plymouth tax lists of 25 March 1633 and 27 March 1634 Edward Bangs was assessed 12s. [PCR 1:10, 27]. Included in the undated list of Purchasers [PCR 2:177].

      On 20 March 1636/7 "John Banges" was assigned hay ground at Saggaquash (jointly with Edward Doty) [PCR 1:56, presumably a simple scribal error]. On 2 November 1640 granted ten acres of meadow in the South Meadows [PCR 1:166]. On 7 September 1 "Edward Banges is granted a parcel of fourscore acres of upland about Warren's Wells" [PCR 2:25]. On 17 October 1642 "Whereas fourscore acres of upland are formerly granted to Edward Banges at Warren's Wells, he now desiring to have some land near his house, it is granted that he shall look out a parcel of land, which upon view shall be laid forth for him, and to be deducted out of the 80 acres he should have at Warren's Wells" [PCR2:48].

      On 7 September 1643 Joyce Wallen, widow, sold to Edward Bangs of Plymouth for £8 "all that her house and messuage situate and being at Hobs Hole or Wellingsly with the garden place and uplands thereunto adjoining" [PCR 12:95]. On 22 June 1651wardBangs of Eastham sold to Samuel Hicks of Plymouth for £3 10s. "a parcel of marsh meadow lying at the high pines on the Salthouse Beach" [PCR 12:208-09]. On 22 June 1651 "Edward Banges of the town of Nawsett alias Eastham ... yeoman" sold to "Mannasses Kemton" of Plymouth, yeoman, for £13 forty acres of upland in Plymouth near Browne's Rock, as well as "all the meadow or marsh that is on the island or spot of land commonly called and known by the name of Sagaquas"; "Rebeckah the wife of the said Edward Banges" consented to this deed [PCR 12:209].

      On 12 November 1666 "Edward Banges and Daniel Cole Sen[io]r of Eastham, yeomen," sold to James Mathews of Yarmouth, yeoman, for £10 "all the purchase lands that belonged unto and were the lands of Edward Banges and Daniell Cole ... between thwo brooks commonly called Bound Brook and Stony Brook ... in Yarmouth" [PCLR 3:91-92].

      On 23 February 1676 Edward Bangs of Eastham for "my tender love and fatherly love unto my natural son Joshua Bangs" deeded him "all that my messuage, dwelling house and housing and lands, both upland and meadowing, lying and being in the townp of Eastham," viz: five acres of upland "granted to me by the town for a houselot," with the dwelling house on it; four acres granted to Daniel Cole Sr. for a houselot; three acres granted to George Crispe for a houselot; four acres and half granted to John Jenkins for a houselot; two acres granted to Job Cole; fourteen acres granted to Ralph Smith; three acres "of meadow granted me by the town"; four acres of meadow at Great Blackfish River; one acre of meadow granted to John Jenkins; all of which parcels "appear more at length in the town book of records" [PCLR 4:134-36].

      In his will, dated 19 October 1677 and proved 5 March 1677/8, "Edward Banges, aged 86 years," made son Jonathan sole executor and bequeathed to him "all my purchased land at Namskekett," two acres and a half of meadow, "all my purchase land aocomett[?]," an acre and a half of meadow "at a place called the acars," one acre at the harbor's mouth, "a parcel of upland and meadow lying at Rock harbour which I had in exchange of John Done," and "all those things which I have at his house"; to son John "that twenty acres of upland at Pochett that he hath built upon," five acres adjoining to the twenty acres, "that land which I have at Pochett Island," two acres of meadow at Boat Meadow, and three-quarters of an acre at the head of Boat Meadow; to son Joshua "the house that I lived in and all the housing belonging to it," twenty-eight acres of land adjoining, three acres of meadow at Boat Meadow, one acre of meadow at Boat Meadow, four acres of meadow at the head of Blackfish Creek, and fourteen acres of upland at Pochett; to son Jonathan's eldest son Edward Bangs twenty-five acres of upland at Pochett Field, one acre of meadow at Rock Harbor, and "half an acre of meadow lying at Great Namscekett which I bought of Daniell Cole"; to "my daughter Howes, my daughter Higgens, my daughter Done, my daughter Hall, my daughter Merricke, and my daughter Attwood, four pounds apiece at my decease, and I give to my grandchildren, viz: the children of my daughter Rebecka deceased four pounds at my decease" [PCPR 3:2:106].

      BIRTH: About 1591 based on his stated age of eighty-six on 19 October 1677 [PCPR3:2:106] (although this may be exaggerated).

      DEATH: Eastham between 19 October 1677 (date of will) and 5 March 1677/8 (date of probate).

      MARRIAGE:
      (1) By about 1633 Lydia Hicks, baptized St. Mary Magdalen, Bermondsey, Surrey, 6 September 1612, daughter of ROBERT HICKS [TAG 51:58]; she apparently died within a year or two.

      (2) By about 1635 Rebecca ____; she joined her husband as grantor on a deed of 22 June 1651 [PCR 12:209].

      CHILDREN:
      With first wife

      i JOHN, b. say 1634; m. Eastham 23 January 1660[/1] Hannah Smalley [PCR8:28; MD 7:17]. (If his deed to George Partridge, recorded in 1657, is correctly dated 21 June 1652, then he was probably born as early as 1631, which would also pushk the date on which his father married Lydia Hicks [MD 12:83-84].)
      With second wife

      ii REBECCA, b. say 1636; m. Eastham 26 October 1654 Jonathan Sparrow [PCR 8:15].

      iii SARAH, b. say 1638; m. about 1657 Thomas Howes [MD 6:233].

      iv JONATHAN, b. say 1640; m. (1) Eastham 16 July 1664 Mary Mayo [PCR8:56]; m. (2) by 1719 Sarah _____; m. (3) Eastham (int.) 23 July 1720 "Mrs. Ruth Young" [MD 28:111] (widow of John Young and daughter of Daniel Cole).

      v LYDIA, b. say 1642; m. Eastham 24 December 1661 Benjamin Higgins [MD8:12].

      vi HANNAH, b. say 1644; m. Eastham 30 April 1662 John Doane [MD 8:89].

      vii JOSHUA, b. say 1646; m. Eastham 1 December 1669 Hannah Scudder [PCR 8:58].

      viii BETHIA, b. Eastham 28 May 1650 [PCR 8:15]; m. by 1669 Gershom Hall [Bangs Gen 27-28, reproducing original Barnstable deed of 1 April 1729 in which Samuel Hall, Jonathan Hall and Mary Chess sell land in Eastham "that descended to us be right & title of our honorable deceased mother Bethiah Hall wife of our honored father Gershom Hall which said right descended to her our said deceased mother from her honored father Edward Bangs deceased our honored grandfather"].

      ix MERCY (twin), b. Eastham 15 October 1651 [PCR 8:15]; m. Eastham 28 December 1670 Steven Merrick [PCR 8:57].

      x APPHIA (twin), b. Eastham 15 October 1651 [PCR 8:15]; m. (1) Eastham 28 December 1670 John Knowles [PCR 8:57; NEHGR 79:293-95]; m. (2) by 6 March 1677 Stephen Wood Jr. [PCR 5:220].

      COMMENTS: Mary Walton Ferris argues that the immigrant to Plymouth was the Edward Bangs baptized at Panfield, Essex, on 28 October 1591, but she does not present all the evidence, and the evidence which is printed is not sufficient to prove the origin [Dawes-Gates 2:61].

      How many wives did Edward Bangs have, and when? Since he was granted four acres in the 1623 land division, some have proposed that he brought with him a wife and at least one child, and that they must have died by 1627, when they do not appean the 1627 cattle division. However, this is not the only possible interpretation of this record: the other three persons with Edward Bangs may have been servants, or the record itself may be erroneous. Thus, pending discoveries in English records, no wife prior to Lydia Hicks is assumed here. (Although if Edward's claimed age is close to correct, he certainly would have been old enough to have a family in 1623.)

      Both ROBERT HICKS and his wife MARGARET name in their wills grandson John Bangs. John, the son of Edward Bangs, married in 1660, which would be consistent with a birthdate about 1635, thus making him the eldest child of Edward. On 1 May 1660 orge Watson requested the Court in the behalf of his son, John Watson, and his nephew, John Banges," that the records be altered to reflect Robert Hicks as purchaser at Dartmouth, rather than Samuel Hicks [PCR 3:186]; George Watson had married a daughter of Robert Hicks, which explains the relationship to John Bangs.

      In a deed of 22 June 1651, Edward Bangs is joined by his wife Rebecca in selling land in Plymouth. Thus, she was certainly mother of the twins born later in 1651, and almost certainly mother of all other children except John Bangs. Citing a sosed entry in theHobart diary, Mary Walton Ferris suggested that Rebecca was daughter of Edmund Hobartof Hingham, but this entry may not have existed, and the identity of Rebecca (_____)Bangs remains unknown [NEHGR 121:4, 56].

      On 8 November 1638 "Edward Banges, of [Plymouth], yeoman," posted bond of £20 as surety for John Smith of Plymouth, laborer [PCR 1:103]. On 5 March 1643/4 he was surety for John Smith of Eel River [PCR 2:69].

      BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE: The basic genealogy for this family is Dean Dudley's History and Genealogy of The Bangs Family in America, with Genealogical Tables and Notes (Montrose MA 1896, cited above as Bangs Gen). This volume is basically sound, with complete transcripts of many important documents, including some Barnstable deeds which are probably not otherwise accessible. But there are also the usual idiosyncrasies typical of this author. As an example we are told that "The court at Plymouth granted to EdwardBangs eighty acres of land on condition that he contribute one-sixteenth part toward building a barque of 40 or 50 tons. He is said to have superintended the building of the vessel, being a shipwright by trade" [p. 10]. The Plymouth records state merely that on 23 January 1641/2 Edward Bangs contributed one-sixteenth of the cost of building the bark, and say nothing about any award of land in connection with this contribution [PCR2:31]. The grant of land was made at court on 7 September 1641, five months before the contribution [PCR 2:25]. Beyond this, there is no evidence that he had anything to do with building the bark, or that he was a shipwright. As noted above, he was at times an innkeeper, and was otherwise called yeoman.

      Half a century later Mary Walton Ferris did her usual thorough job on Edward Bangs[Dawes-Gates 2:61-68].
      The Great Migration Begins
      Sketches
      PRESERVED PURITAN

  • Sources 
    1. [S137] Gale Research, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2009.), Place: Plymouth, Massachusetts; Year: 1623; Page Number: 243.
      Birth date: abt 1592Birth place: Arrival date: 1623Arrival place: Plymouth, Massachusetts
      http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pili354&h=3502273&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt