Aaron HUNTLEY

Male 1680 - 1748  (67 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Aaron HUNTLEY was born on 1 Dec 1680 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A. (son of Aaron HUNTLEY and Mary (Marah) CHAMPION (CHAMBERLAIN)); died on 26 Sep 1748 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..

    Aaron married Deborah DE WOLF on 27 Jul 1707 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.. Deborah (daughter of Stephen DE WOLF and Hannah JONES) was born on 25 Jul 1690 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.; died after 26 Sep 1748 in New London, CT, U.S.A.. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Jemima HUNTLEY was born on 30 Aug 1728 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.; and died.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Aaron HUNTLEY was born on 15 Apr 1654 in Boston, Suffolk, MA, U.S.A.; was christened on 27 Oct 1657 in Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts (son of John HUNTLEY and Jane CURTIS); died on 24 May 1744 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..

    Notes:

    Served as soldier against the Indians in King Phillips War.

    Aaron married Mary (Marah) CHAMPION (CHAMBERLAIN) on 22 Feb 1675 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.. Mary (daughter of Henry CHAMPION and Sarah UNKNOWN) was born in 1651 in Saybrook, Middlesex, CT, U.S.A.; died on 10 Dec 1732 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary (Marah) CHAMPION (CHAMBERLAIN) was born in 1651 in Saybrook, Middlesex, CT, U.S.A. (daughter of Henry CHAMPION and Sarah UNKNOWN); died on 10 Dec 1732 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..

    Notes:

    Also referred to as Marah Chamberlain

    Children:
    1. 1. Aaron HUNTLEY was born on 1 Dec 1680 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.; died on 26 Sep 1748 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John HUNTLEY was born in 1625 in Aberdeen, Scotland; died on 16 Nov 1676 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..

    Notes:

    John Huntley was born Abt. 1624 possibly in Aberdeen, Scotland, and diedNovember 16, 1676 in Lyme Colony, Connecticut. His parentage is unknown.

    John was in Boston by July 12, 1647, when he signed as witness for aPower-of-Attorney for Thomas Bayes. On May 1, 1648, he and John Peasewere associated in connection with a cargo of fish, shipped to Barbadosin the Welcome. John apparently had a brother or other close relative,perhaps William Huntley of St. Phillips Parish, Barbados, who owned acotton plantation there and owned two slaves. Barbados was an EnglishIsland from 1605 until the middle 1900s. John has not been connected withany Huntley family in England.

    John Huntley was married at this time. The evidence is a deposition madeby John Pease at Boston on July 1, 1679, when Pease was 69 years old. "29or 30 years ago, Mr. Hanniford, Mariner, lived in Boston. . .and JohnHuntley... paid the said Hanniford rent for the same and said Huntley'swife died there of small-pox."

    The only clue to that first wife's name seems to be a petition signed in1649 by "diverse women of Boston." One of the women who signed was a Sarah Huntley. John married second Jane, surname unknown, (sic: Curtis)about 1651. She died before June 30, 1669 when John Huntley married (3)Mary (Hand) Barnes, divorced wife of Charles Barnes, who had abandonedhis wife and returned to England, on June 3, 1669 in New London,Connecticut. Mary was the Daughter of John and Alice (Gransden) Hand ofLong Island. She died July 5, 1687. Commissioner Thomas Minor ofStonington noted in his diary "The fouerth moneth is June and hath 30day. Tuesday the first the day the Court (at New London) began, thatcourt married Huntley and Marie Barons."

    John Huntley was one of the original settlers at Lyme. He was chosen oneof the surveyors at town meetings in 1671, 1672 and 1673. He was Townsmanat a town-meeting on February 9, 1674. He took part in the NewLondon-Lyme riot of March 12, 1671/2 when the two towns, forgetting their"Loving Parting" of February 13, 1665, fought over their boundaries withsticks.

    It had cost John Huntley 100 Pounds to become a settler at Lyme. Duringhis lifetime, he received about 140 acres worth 127 Pounds, according tothe inventory of his estate made by William Mesuer and Joseph Peck.Additional land, about 130 acres, was granted his estate by the Town.

    John Huntley made his will in Lyme on November 16, 1676 and may have diedthe same day. Aaron Huntley and John's "dear and beloved wife" wereexecutors. The widow received the dwelling and one third of the estateduring her life. At her death, Aaron received "all the lands and meadowof mine in the Town of Lyme (he) paying unto each of my children on hispossessing of the lands, Tenn pounds apeece. ." Each child, except Aaron,also received ten pounds from the estate and Aaron received five "towardthe building of his house." It seems that Aaron was to look after thewidow, his stepmother, and receive the bulk of the estate in return.

    Moses Huntley, the oldest son, felt aggrieved, it seems, by his father'swill and gave Aaron considerable trouble. "This Court having heard thecomplaint of Aaron Huntley against his Brother, Moses Huntley and findshim guilty of challenging & Threatening his said Brother & threateninghis wife and also his sister, abusing them all with very abusive language& a great disturbance of the peace & render himself a very dangerous man& showed much profanes not having any fear of God, the Court doe seethemselves bound to beare witness against such enormities & that he dothdeserve a high & severe censure. . ." (New London County Court Records3196, September 18, 1677). Moses was fined fifty shillings and posted abond of ten pounds "for his keeping the peace and good behavior." It maynot have been entirely one-sided. Aaron also was fined and paid damagesat that court, And the trouble between the two was not over.

    "I, Moses Huntley, doe declare that I am hartyly sory that I shoulddishonor God and wrong my Brother Aaron Huntley and my Kinsman AaronHuntley in reporting that his son Aaron stole an axe from Francis Smithand brought it to the said Huntley and that the said Smith had it of himagain with some trouble all of which I due acknowledge to be utterlyfalse and untrue and that I never knew any such thing by my said kinsmanand brother and therefore due hertyley bege their forgiveness as witnessmy hand this 18th February 1700." (Lyme 2:48)
    (SOURCE: Effie Belle Randall of Bath, Ohio: Her Ancestors andDescendants"; by Theodore N. Woods; p. 35-6; published by T.N. Woods;Phoenix, Arizona; 1991)

    John married Jane CURTIS about 1651 in Boston, Suffolk, MA, U.S.A.. Jane was born about 1630 in Prob. England; died on 30 Jun 1669 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Jane CURTIS was born about 1630 in Prob. England; died on 30 Jun 1669 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..
    Children:
    1. 2. Aaron HUNTLEY was born on 15 Apr 1654 in Boston, Suffolk, MA, U.S.A.; was christened on 27 Oct 1657 in Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 24 May 1744 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..
    2. Elizabeth HUNTLEY was born on 27 Oct 1657 in Roxbury, Suffolk, MA, U.S.A.; was christened on 27 Oct 1657 in Roxbury, Suffolk, Massachusetts; died on 26 Dec 1741 in Groton, New London, CT, U.S.A..

  3. 6.  Henry CHAMPION was born on 17 Jul 1611 in Norwich, Norfolk, England; died on 17 Feb 1708 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.; was buried in Feb 1709 in Lyme, New London, Connecticut.

    Notes:

    Said to have been of Huguenot ancestry, Henry Champion was born in England in 1611. He emigrated from England to the American Colonies andsettled at Saybrook, Connecticut, where he is found as early as 1647, ashe married there in August of that year. Henry settled with his family tothe east side of the Connecticut River, in that part of Saybrook thatlater became Lyme. He was one of Lyme's first and most active founders.Henry was admitted Freeman at Lyme in 1670. He was one of thosecomplained of by John Prentis, of New London, to the county court atHartford, in March, 1671-2, in the great quarrel between the people ofNew London and Lyme, as to the eastern bounds of Lyme and western boundsof New London. He had lands beyond "Little Stoney Brook" in June, 1674,and other lands.

    The maiden name of Henry Champion's first wife, Sarah, is not known.Henry's second wife, Deborah Jones, was described as a "shrewd, schemingwoman, for she induced this old man to make a very advantageous marriagesettlement upon her, and finally involved him in a law suit with thewidow of his eldest son..." An agreement was reached on April 26, 1709and signed by Deborah Champion, Henry Champion, Jr., Henry Bennett, AaronHuntley, John Wade and Hannah Wade. Since Henry Champion died when he was98 years old and married Deborah Jones in 1697/98, he was about 88 yearsold when he married her. Henry died in February, 1709.

    Henry married Sarah UNKNOWN in Aug 1647 in Saybrook, Middlesex, CT, U.S.A.. Sarah was born about 1626 in Prob England; died before 21 Mar 1698 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A.. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Sarah UNKNOWN was born about 1626 in Prob England; died before 21 Mar 1698 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..
    Children:
    1. 3. Mary (Marah) CHAMPION (CHAMBERLAIN) was born in 1651 in Saybrook, Middlesex, CT, U.S.A.; died on 10 Dec 1732 in Lyme, New London, CT, U.S.A..




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