Are you a Descendant???

Are you a descendant of the Coile's, Rowsley's, Fuller's or Myers's? If so I would like to hear from you. You never know what kind of information you may have or I may have to help each other out. Pictures are so important, I just recently got an email from a Myers descendant that had pictures that I had never seen, I had information and pictures she had never seen. It was fun to exchange what we had. If you can on the bottom of each post there is a place you can post a comment. I will reply to you.

The Life and Times of the Coile's, Rowley's, Fuller's and Myers's

This hopefully will be an attempt to tell the story as far as I know it from the information I have gotten from people and information I have found in books and on the computer about the families and their ancestors. A special thanks to Phillip Robbins who did most of the research on the Coile's and Myer's families. I wish Phillip was alive to see what I am doing with the information he has passed on to me. Also to Larry Coile who has helped with the research of all the families, I hope you enjoy this.

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Pictures and Census Records

If you click on any of the pictures or census records they will enlarge so you can see them better

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Start at the beginning

I was wondering where to start and of course you should always start at the beginning. So we will start at the Mayflower and Plymouth rock. I have heard members of the family ask the question about one of the Rowley's coming over on the Mayflower, that isn't true. What did happen is that one of the wife's of the Rowleys was a direct descendant of one of the Mayflower passengers. Moses Rowley married Elizabeth Fuller who is the daughter of Matthew Fuller. Matthew's father Edward Fuller, wife and son Samuel came over on the Mayflower. Edward and his wife died the first winter in Plymouth. Samuel was raised by his uncle, Edward's brother Samuel who was Plymouth's Doctor.

Edward Fuller has been generally identified as the son of Robert and Sara (Dunkhorn) Fuller, baptized on 4 September 1575 at Redenhall, Norfolk. However, a number of genealogical scholars and Mayflower researchers, including Robert S. Wakefield, Robert Sherman, Robert Leigh Ward, Robert C. Anderson, Eugene Stratton, Leslie Mahler, and others, have all questioned the identification over the past couple of decades. The current identification is based upon circumstantial evidence only: the fact that the names Samuel, Edward, and Ann occur within the same family; and the fact the father is identified as a butcher. Thomas Morton, writing in 1637, says that Samuel Fuller was the son of a butcher. The name Matthew also occurs in this Redenhall Fuller family. The counter-evidence is primarily that the ages for the Fullers appear to be too old, when compared to their marriage dates, the ages of their spouses, and with the births of their children.

The name of Edward Fuller's wife has not been discovered. In James Savage's Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England (1860-1862), Edward Fuller's wife was given as "Ann". However, there are no American or English records which give her name. I suspect James Savage may have made a simple typographical error: Mayflower passenger Edward Tilley had a wife Ann; or perhaps he was thinking of their sister Ann Fuller. None-the-less, numerous sources published after 1860 have utilized Savage's Genealogical Dictionary, and so the identification of Ann can be found in numerous other books and online resources.

So, in truth, very little is known about Edward Fuller. His English origins and the name of his wife are widely disputed. What is known is that he, his wife, and his son Samuel came on the Mayflower in 1620 to Plymouth. A single Leiden judicial document mentions Edward Fuller, and proves that he, like brother Samuel Fuller, were living in Leiden. Both Edward and his wife died the first winter, but son Samuel (who would have been about 12), survived. An older brother, Matthew, had stayed behind, and came to America later.

Baptism: 4 September 1575, Redenhall, Norfolk.

Marriage: Married, but name of wife unknown.

Death: Sometime the first winter at Plymouth.

Children: Matthew, Samuel

Imagine if you would what it would be like to have come to America with your parents, and then have them die not 6 months after arriving here.

Here are some links to information about the Mayflower
http://www.mayflowerhistory.com/

http://www.mayflowerfamilies.com/mayflower/mayflower_passenger_list.htm

http://www.themayflowersociety.com/member.htm

Here is a map of the Plymouth area giving you an idea of where they were.

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