Deen, Fordice, Hallett, Hodges and Van Horn Families - Person Sheet
Deen, Fordice, Hallett, Hodges and Van Horn Families - Person Sheet
NameDavid Thomas
Birthabt 21 Sep 1620, Powys, Gwlad, Wales
Death22 May 1689, Middleboro, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts
FatherDavid Thomas (~1594-~1689)
MotherAnna Ison (~1597-~1689)
Spouses
Birthabt 1630, England
Deathabt 1690, Middleboro, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts
ChildrenDavid (1649-1733)
Notes for David Thomas
14

Six children born to this marriage:
Deborah Soule; David Thomas, ll; Sarah Holmes; Joanna Vaughn ; Jeremiah Thomas; and William Thomas

About David Thomas, of Middleboro
From Genealogies of the Teel Family of New England and of the Family of David Thomas of Middleboro, Massachusetts; together with the Ancestry of Frank Herbert Teel and of his wife Grace Carroll Thomas and a Register of descendants of Gershom Teel, Benjamin Swan, Horation Nelson Thomas and Prentice Howes Compiled by John Marshall Raymond. Westons' History of The Town of Middleboro And from the vital Statistics of Mass and RI"

We find that : 'David Thomas of Middleboro, the founder of the family covered in the following genealogy, is thought to have been born in Wales about 1620. it is believed that he came to America in 1640 in the Sampson , It certainly is a fact that at a session of the Quarterly Courts in Salem on 8 July 1649 David Thomas was a witness in a suit for defamation brought by John Bartoll against Alice, wife of John Peach, Jr. for having said that the plaintiff's wife, Parnell Bartoll, had committed adultery with the boatswain of the ship Sampson in the cabin of Parnell about 4 years ago . It is barely possible, although quite unlikely, that one of these was David, later of Middboro, and that he came to America by way of the Barbadoes.

In any event the first record of David Thomas in America is the entry of his being a witness in court in Salem in 1645 mentioned above. He apparently lived in that part of Salem which was about to become the Town of Marblehead, for he is named in the record of a meeting of people of that area held 22 Dec. 1648, at which the division of commonlands was settled. The apportionment reads: finding the comons but littell as we conceive to pasture not more than fifty head of cattell, or cows, accounting a horse or maire as two cows, two yearling cattell for one cowe, four goats or sheep to a cowe, a steer or bulock of two years ould as a cowe, the number of families in the plantation being 44, thus limited:-....David Thomas, 1/2 cow...

David Thomas left Marblehead sometime after 2 May 1649, when it became a separate town, probably shortly prior to June 1661, and removed to that part of Salem which later became Beverly. This appears from a determination of William Hathorne who was arbitrator in an action brought by William Dodge against Roger Haskell. The determination was filed with the court on 29 Jun 1661 and the significant part states that Dodge should run a fence toward the rock, which is against the land now in the occupation of Daved Thomas . The precise location of the property of David is shown on a map of Beverly that was used in connectioon with its becoming a separate town in 1688 . It was along the road which paralleled the Bass River on its north side, adjoining the property of William Dodge, and across the street from the lots of Henry Harrick and Andrew Elliot.

After he had moved to the Bass River area, David started to dispose of his Marblehead intetrests. By bill of sale dated 30 May 1664 for Bass River, sold to Richard Norman of Marblehead. David Thomas is recorded as one of the 114 householders in Marblehead in 1674

Meanwhile he had become interested in Middleboro, and may have actually lived in Middleboro as early as 1668-70, for the birth of his son Edward on 5 Feb 1669 is the first entry in the town records of Middleboro. However, it is possible that the entry was made at a later date, in view of the Marblehead record showing him as having a house there in 1674. In any event, it is clear that by 1675 he had moved to Middleboro where he was a farmer . He settled southeast of the town proper, at the end of what is now Thomas Street, in an area that became known at Thomastown, and where a number of his descendants still live

Middleboro was purchased from the Indians at various times, the original purchase being the twenty-six Men's Purchase in 1662. While David was not an original purchaser at that time, he later bought into that purchase . He was, howerver, an original purchaser of the Sixteen Shilling Purchase of 1675, which was apportioned to the purchasers on 21 Nov 1679 . His son David was an original purchaser of the Eight Men's Purchase of 3 Jun 1696 .

Because of the disruption of the Indian Wars in 1675 a readjustment of the property holdings had to be undertaken On 28 Jun 1677 those who had formerly lived in the town and those who owned kland there, numberin 68 persons, met and agreed to resettle the town. They called themselves proprietors of the town of Middleberry. The list shows David Thomas given 1 propriation.

The foregoing account gives all the significant facts about the life of David Thomas that could be ascertained. On 3 Oct 1689 administration on his estate was granted to his widow Joanna .

One further point should, perhaps, be noted. The Salem vital records disclose that on 28 Dec 1667 George Thomas married Mary Graves, bp 16 Apr 1648, dau of Richard . George was born c. 1640 . George and Mary had the following children born in Salem:

Richard, b. 6 Dec 1668

George, b 14, May 1670

Mary, b. 3 Dec 1671, m. 2 Dec 1697 Samuell Golthrite

Elizabeth, b. 4 Jan 1672, M 20 Apr 1697 Isac Pease

Hana, b. 6 Jun 1674

Ruth, b. 8 Feb 1675

George was the right age to have been a son of David, although no connection between them is mentioned by any authority. George does not seem to be ascribed to any other Thomas family, however, so the possibility cannot be discarded, even though proof is lacking.

David Thomas is thought to have been born in Wales about 1620, David probably arrived in
America about 1640-1 on the ship "Sampson". It certainly is a fact that a session of the
Quarterly Courts at Salem on 8th July 1645 "David Thomas" is a witness in a suit for
defamation of character brought by John Bartoll against Alice, wife of John Peach, Jr, for
having said that the plaintiffs wife, Parnell Bartoll, had "committed adultery with the
boatswain of the ship "Sampson" in the cabin of Parnell about four years ago." This is the first
record that we know of for David Thomas in America.

David lived in that part of Salem which is about to become the Town of Marblehead. David
left Marblehead probably early 1661, and removed to the part of Salem which later became
Beverly. Two known maps showed the location of the Salem property of David Thomas agree
that David owns Lot 16, which seems to have had no dwellings on it while David owned it.

It is significant that his wife Joanna executed her consent to the sale of the Beverly property
by an instrument dated at Plymouth 14th July 1669. . It seems this must have been the year David and Joanna Thomas moved to
Middleborough. The birth of his son Edward Thomas on 6th February 1669 is the first entry
in the Town Records of Middleborough, even though that entry may have been made at a
later date, since the Town Records are said to have been destroyed by the Indians during King
Philip's War of 1675.

David is a Farmer at "Middlebury" and his family is one of the 16 families that constituted
this Town in 1675. During this year when Indians attacked "Middlebury's" new white
inhabitants, forcing these settlers back into the Old Plymouth Colony Village. After this war
ended these early settlers returned and 28th June 1677 those who had owned lands there,
numbering 68 persons, met and agreed to re-settle "Middlebury" presently what is now called
Middleborough.

David Thomas's house at Middleborough is a little distance southeast
of the town proper at the end of what is now Thomas Street at the area that became well
known as "THOMASTOWN".
Last Modified 4 Nov 2018Created 28 Sep 2020 Anthony Deen