By Charlotte Helen Abbott Andover Historical Society 8/18/1905
After examination of the early proprietor's books, and the deeds of those
who first parted with the land taken by Edward Phelps, I find that he
bought the lot of Job Tyler in North Parish, and the division lots that fall to
it after that date brought his outlying land north and east of Blanchard's
lots, and near Haggetts pond. But he bought more of Russe and
Chandler, which brought his holdings nearer the West meeting house.
Samuel Hutchinson and others took the North Parish lots, so that in the days of
Samuel and Francis Phelps, the surviving members of migrations were all located
around Haggetts pond and in the Merrimac woods, and having intermarried with
Danes and Chandlers and Mooar, we can guess that the last holdings of Chandler
Phelps; one fourth of a mile north of the church, and that of Joshua,
grandfather of the late residents of this estate near the pond and the Lowell
railroad, indicate the main holdings in West Parish. John Godfrey, of
lpswich, also sold 40 acres to old Edward in 1666, apparently held by
mortgage from Job Tyler, so when we, sometime in the future, proceed to locate
the Tyler lots, something more definite will be found of the North Parish home
of the first arrivals of the Phelps infants.
Samuel Phelps and his wife, Priscilla Chandler lost the eldest Samuel at
Lake George 1750. His brother, Joshua, born 1738, married Lois Ballard, a
daughter of old Deacon Hezekiah Ballard and Lydia Chandler, so related closely
to many allied families here - Dane, Holt, Deacon Nathan Abbot, and many
others, who may not know how it is they are cousins to Phelps blood.
Henry Phelps married Mary Ballard, a cousin of his sister-in-law, Hannah
married Benjamin Mooar of Lewiston, Me., and Priscilla married PhiIemon Dane
(called Daniel in the Phelps book). These are best known to us from continued
residence. The children of Joshua include Lois, wife of lsaac Blunt, Jr.,
represented still by Charles Blunt and the family of the late Samuel, Hannah
married Nathan Abbott, and one of her children was our faithful carpenter
Nathan, who was well known in my childhood on the list of Abotts and Clement's
men. The only son who survived, Joshua Phelps, born1774, died in 1801, and his
wife, Mary Gilson of Pepperell, of a family allied to other lines here, lived
to 1856. In the next generation we are all familiar with the quiet lives
at the old homestead still standing in the West Parish, a fine model of its
style, held by Joshua, wife Dorothy Watson, from Sandwich, N. H. He was the
third of the name to hold the estate, where he died in 1873 at 76, she passing
at 84 in 1880. After a life of journeying to and fro across the country.
Joshua died here from an accident, in 1886, a single man following his brother
Asa, who died in 1862, in California. Mrs. Gilman and her sister Dorothy
Phelps, were the last to hold the most ancient of the Phelps' estates in direct
line. Samuel Phelps, son of Joshua, was a blacksmith, latest at Syracuse,
N.Y. Mary married Levi Bean in 1819, Lydia married Jonathon Abbott, Jr.,
Henry, born 1807, and his wife Eliza, Merrill, well known by her remarkable
strength which sustained her through long years of sorrow and care, and who
recently died in North Andover with her daughter, represent the Joshua
line. Henry Phelps and Mary Ballard saved Mary who married Joseph
Chandler in 1806, in the line of Mrs. Peter Smith, and Chandler Phelps, who
died at 82 in 1868.
Most of Chandler Phelps' life was spent, I should judge, on what very
likely was the oldest holding in West Parish of the early Samuel, if I can
judge from legacies of heirs and sales to the neighbors, before his day.
He married twice, Lydia Parkhurst, a Chandler cousin, and mother of the
children, and again Hannah Frye Ballard, daughter of Hezekiah. Only two
children grew up, Herman, wife Esther Merrill, and Jacob, who died at 31,
leaving a widow, Rebecca (Chandler) who married John Russell of Wilton,
N.H. Herman is represented by Frank Chandler Phelps, wife Abbie T. Hardy,
and several in the tenth generation in his family, and a brother, Herman, and
wife AlIen Ward, I have with three children and not traced outside as
yet. Frank Phelps has our banner family in the line holding this name,
though there is plenty of the blood line. Samuel, Francis, and his wife Phebe
Holt, an aunt of Dane Holt on Prospect Hill farm, born 1722, had by their
alliance a chance for a large and long-lived family. The Phelps' book says he
lived awhile in Hollis, N. H. and died in Pepperell, Me.
So many errors cling to this line, that I hesitate to back up this
statement till verified. The date of his death l758, at 38, and the
widow's second marriage (by book) with Thomas Marshall, very likely determined
the home of the children who "pop up" unexpectedly in Tewksbury,
Mass., when they were old enough to marry. Timothy of Hollis and Hanover,
N. H., Phebe, born 1750 outside of Andover, so here in Andover at 16, in 1766
warned by authorities as to her lack of claims on pauper accommodation, in case
she came to grief, (a great benefit to genealogists was this sweeping warning
out of Essex County in 1766), and Joseph, born 1748, of whom the book and I
agree mainly in the two wives he annexed, Ruth French and Isabel Isabel Dutton,
and he lived in Tewksbury. His sister Phebe, the warned maiden, married
Jacob Foster of Andover, who owned the farm up on the North Andover line near
the Richardson stables, latest of the lucky descendants of Andrew Foster and
his witch wife Ann, whose cottage stood on the training field. No pauper
in her ranks.
Joseph Phelps, by his first wife, Ruth French, left Ruth, wife of Ephraim
Foster, Francis of Danvers, wife Hannah Dandee. Isaac, born 1778, died on
a voyage to the West Indies, Joseph, who married Rebecca Abbott, daughter of
Moses Abbott and Elizabeth Holt, Jonathan, who married Abigail Abbott, her
sister, lived on Salem street many years, dying at 88 in 1866, Samuel and wife
Sally Brooks, of Lexington, Elisha and Mary French of
Northfield, Mary, wife of Amos Sheldon of Danvers and
Shirley, Jacob and wife Rebecca Reed, of South Natick, these were children of
Ruth French, adding two infants who died. She saved the Phelps
name. By second wife, Isabel Dutton, Lydia, wife of a Jonathan Abbott not
placed by book, Timothy, who married Dorcas Chamberlain of Dedham, Theodore,
Joel, our veteran shoemaker, who lived on Central street so long, marrying
twice, but left only one heir James, Hannah, born 1801, not traced, Henry,
1806, married Lydia Foster and moved to Dedham. There, look at that
record and think that all but two of the seventeen matured and thirteen were
married. We all know the happy home the sisters had together so long on Salem
street, Elizabeth Holt Phelps, Belinda Jane, children of Joseph, and who kept a
very successful club dining-room for students, and cut gowns for the maidens
who graduated from abbott and Punchard. Hannah Holt Phelps, of this
happy, hospitable group of cousins, still survives, and resides with her eldest
son, Rev. George Gutterson, whose record as an olive tree almost equals his
great-grandfather's. Her sister, Priscilla, wife of Richard Moore, so
long resident, all these we have known in joy and sorrow, friends of our
fathers and of us the middle-aged Abbotts and Holts and Chandlers. These
Phelps from old Henry down always had things happen to them, and I cannot do
justice to the romance of the incidents kept for the family ear alone, that
might fill this bare outline of a virile, long-lived gifted race of Salem
Quakers.
“If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.” Rudyard Kipling.. From the Vault: Genealogy, Historical Photos, Newspaper Archives
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Phelps at the Finish (Andover Phelps Family)
Labels:
Abbott,
Andover MA,
Chandler,
Charles Blunt,
Edward Phelps,
Gilson,
Hezekiah Ballard,
Holt,
Jacob Foster,
Job Tyler,
John Godfrey,
Ma,
Mary Ballard,
Merrill,
Rev Dane,
Russe,
Ward
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