Captain Thomas Bradbury

b. 28 February 1611, d. 16 March 1694/95
Captain Thomas Bradbury|b. 28 Feb 1611\nd. 16 Mar 1694/95|p1390.htm|Wymond Bradbury|b. 16 May 1574\nd. 1649|p4866.htm|Elizabeth Whitgift|b. Mar 1574\nd. 26 Jun 1612|p5034.htm|William Bradbury|b. 1544\nd. 30 Nov 1622|p5007.htm|Ann Edon|b. 1542|p4867.htm|William Whitgift|b. abt. 1544\nd. 2 Aug 1615|p5035.htm||||
Father*Wymond Bradbury1,2 b. 16 May 1574, d. 1649
Mother*Elizabeth Whitgift1 b. Mar 1574, d. 26 Jun 1612
ChartsAncestors of Harriet Hanson Robinson
King Edward I to Harriet Hanson (Robinson) Pierce
George Washington - Harriet Hanson (Robinson) Pierce
Franklin Delano Roosevelt - Harriet Hanson (Robinson) Pierce
Captain Thomas Bradbury was christened 28 February 1611 at Wicken Bonhunt, Essex, England.3,4 He married Mary Perkins, daughter of John Perkins and Judith Gater, about 1636.4,3 He died 16 March 1694/95 at Salisbury, Essex Co., Massachusetts.4,3

Early in 1634, Thomas Bradbury appeared at Agamenticus, (now York), Maine as the agent or steward of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, the proprietor of the Province of Maine. Thomas was one of the original proprietors of the ancient town of Salisbury, Massachusetts, one of the earliest settlers there, and was one of the foremost citizens there for a period of more than half a century. He was made a freeman in 1640, held at various times the offices of schoolmaster of the town, town clerk, justice of the peace, deputy to the general court, county recorder, associate judge and captain of the military company, and always filled these important positions with credit to himself and satisfaction of the public. He wrote an easy, graceful and legible hand, and had a clear and concise style of expression. His chirography may stiill be seen in numerous official documents on file in the archives of Essex Co. Massachusetts and also at Exeter, NH. In 1636, Thomas became a grantee of Salisbury, and married his wife.

Thomas was appointed first clerk of the writs in Salisbury in 1641. In 1651, he was chosen a deputy to the General Court, and again successively in 1652, 1656, 1657, 1660, 1661, and 1666. In 1654, 1656, 1658, and 1659, he was appointed on various committees to settle differences concerning lands, to fix boundaries, and locate grants. As agent for Gorges, he executed some of the earliest deeds recorded in the York Co. records. An indenture made 5 May 1636, reads: "Thomas Bradbury, Gent., now agent of Sir Ferdinando Georges, Knight, confirmed unto Edward Johnson for the proper use of John Treworgy of Dartmouth, merchant, the use of five hundred acres of land, conditioned to pay annually one hundred of merchantable cod dried and well conditioned, as an acknowledgement of the royalty of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Knight, to Sir Ferdinando Gorges or his assigns, at or upon the Feast of Saint Michaels, the Arch High Angel." This sufficiently establishes the fact that Mr. Bradbury was the recognized agent of the proprietor of the Province of Maine, granted together with New Hampshire, by royal patent in 1622, to Gorges and mason, and taken as his portion by Gorges, in 1629.

During the witchcraft trial of his wife, 28 Jul 1692, he testified: "Concerning my beloved wife, Mary Bradbury, this is what I have to say: We have been married fifty-five years, and she hath been a loving and faithful wife unto me unto this day. She hath been wonderful laborious, diligent and industrious in her place and employment about the bringing up of our family which have been eleven children of our own, and four gandchildren. She was both prudent and provident, of a cheerful spirit, liberal and charitable. She being now very aged and weak, and grieved under afflictions, may not be able to speak much for herself, not being so free of speech as some might be. I hope her life and conversation among her neighbors has been such as gives a better or more real testimony than can be expressed by words."3,5,6,7

Family

Mary Perkins b. 3 Sep 1615, d. 20 Dec 1700
Marriage*He married Mary Perkins, daughter of John Perkins and Judith Gater, about 1636.4,3 
Children

Citations

  1. [S95] John Brooks Threlfall, The Ancestry of Thomas Bradbury (1611 - 1695) and His Wife Mary (Perkins) Bradbury (1615 - 1700) of Salisbury, Massachusetts, Third Edition, (Madison, Wisconsin: p.p., 2006), 5-8. Hereafter cited as Bradbury Ancestry.
  2. [S89] Frederick Lewis Weis, Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and David Faris, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, Seventh Edition, (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1992), 246A-41. Hereafter cited as Weis, Sheppard, and Faris, Ancestral Roots, 7th Ed.
  3. [S95] Threlfall, Bradbury Ancestry, 1-4.
  4. [S470] Robert Charles Anderson, George F. Sanborn Jr. and Melinde Lutz Sanborn, The Great Migration: Immigrants To New England, 1634-1635, Volume I, A-B, (Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1999), 375-381. Hereafter cited as Anderson, Sanborn, and Sanborn, Great Migration Vol 1.
  5. [S94] Mary Lovering Holman, "The Bradbury Family," The American Genealogist 19 (Jul 1942): 36-39. Hereafter cited as "Bradbury."
  6. [S96] John M Bradbury, Some of the descendants of Thomas Bradbury of Agamenticus (York) in 1634 and of Salisbury, MA in 1638 with brief sketches of the Bradbury's of England (Portland, Maine: Brown Thurston & Co, 1890), 59-64. Hereafter cited as Bradbury Memorial.
  7. [S89] Weis, Sheppard, and Faris, Ancestral Roots, 7th Ed, 246A.
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