Re: Those Thomasine Lumpkins, 1600's
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In reply to:
Those Thomasine Lumpkins, 1600's
10/30/98
Hi John,
Here's what I have:
1. Rev. John Mayo married Tamisen ( Tamsen ) Brike on March 21, 1618 at Leiden, Holland. Witnesses at the marriage were Tamisen's mother, Susannah Breyck ( Brike ) and her sister, Mary Duijck. Rev. John's friend, Thomas Smith, stood up for him as a witness to the marriage. They were married in the Reformed Church. Rev. John Mayo is believed to have been baptized in Farthinghoe, Northamptonshire, England on Oct. 16, 1597, the s/o John and Katherine Mayo, later of Thorpe Mandeville, Northamptonshire, England.
2. Rev. John Mayo's son, Captain Samuel Mayo, married Thomasine ( sometimes called Tamsen in records ) Lumpkin. She was the d/o William Lumpkin and his wife Thomasine ( Tamsen ) ...maiden name unknown. So poor Capt. Samuel Mayo had a mother, wife, and mother-in-law all with the same Christian or first name...or a derivative of it!
After Capt. Samuel Mayo died, his widow, who was b. 1626, married John Sunderland in March, 1664/65. She died on June 16, 1709 in Harwich, MA.
Rev. John Mayo's wife, Tamisen ( Tamsen ) ( Brike ) Mayo, died Feb. 26, 1682 in Yarmouth, MA. in the area of present day Dennis, MA. at the home of her daughter, Elizabeth ( Mayo ) Howes.
3. Sources for the above information include:
a. Leiden, Holland City Clerk.
b. University of Leiden Library.
c. Rector of church at Farthinghoe, Northamptonshire, England.
d. Nancy Long, town historian of Middleton-Cheney, Northamptonshire, England.
e. Northamptonshire County Records Office ( Rachel Watson, Archivist ).
f. " Rev. John Mayo and His Descendants " by Jean Mayo Rodwick, published in 2001.