Ancestry of
Edna M. Weeks
(1909–1948)
-
- 7th Great-grandfather of Edna M. Weeks — 10th Generation
- Ahnentafel No:
- 516
- Father:
- Mother:
- Birth Date:
- ABT 1603
- Birth Location:
- Christening Date:
- Christening Location:
- Death Date:
- AFT 21 May 1684
- Death Location:
- Burial Date:
- Burial Location:
- Spouse Name:
- Eleanor Neate
- Marriage Date:
- 1 Apr 1638
- Marriage Location:
- Dilton, Wilshire, England
- Children:
Samuel Haines Jr. (Ahnentafel No:258 )
Matthias Haines
- Notes:
Samuel Haines's surname is also seen as Haynes.
Samuel Haines may have had an unknown daughter who married Leonard Weeks. He mentions Leonard as a son-in-law in his 1682 will. However, there is also the possibility that Leonard Weeks was a step-son and that Samuel Haines married his mother after the death of his wife Eleanor Neate. The problem is that Samuel's wife mentioned in his 1682 will is not named. If it is Eleanor still living, then the step-son theory would be false. There have been claims that Leonard Weeke's first wife was a daughter of Samuel Haines named Mary. But it has since been shown that Mary is actually Mary Redman, daughter of John Redman.
Samuel Haines
View famous kin of Samuel Haines
Scroll down to see sources.
Sources for Samuel Haines
- 1 New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1885, Vol. 39, p. 235.
- 2 New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 1869, Vol. 23, pp. 150-151.
- 3 Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration Directory: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1640, A Concise Compendium, Boston, Massachusetts: New England Historic Genealogical Society (2015), 146.
- 4 Anderson, Robert Charles, The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England 1634-1635, Vol. III, G-H, Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society (2003), 187-192.
- 5 Chapman, Rev. Jacob, Leonard Weeks of Greenland, N. H. and Descendants, 1639-1888, Albany, New York: Joel Munsell's Sons, Publishers (1889), 2.
- 6 Little, George Thomas, comp., Genealogical and Family History of the State of Maine, Volume 1, New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company (1909), 362.