Master Surname Index




Esther Warham

Ancestry of
Esther Warham

(1644–1736)


    Esther Warham

    View famous kin of Esther Warham

    • 1st Generation
    • Ahnentafel No:
    • Birth Date:
    •  
    • Birth Location:
    •  
    • Christening Date:
    • 8 Dec 1644 
    • Christening Location:
    • Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut 
    • Death Date:
    • 10 Feb 1736 
    • Death Location:
    • Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts 
    • Burial Date:
    •  
    • Burial Location:
    • Bridge Street Cemetery, Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts 
    • Notes: 
    • Gary Boyd Roberts's book Notable Kin, Vol. 1 gives John Warham's first wife Susanna Golloppe as the mother of Esther Warham. Robert Charles Anderson's The Great Migration Begins series gives John's second wife Jane as Esther's mother. The baptism of Esther supports the latter conclusion.

  • Marriages for Esther Warham


    • Spouse:
    • Eleazer Mather

    • Spouse:
    • Solomon Stoddard
    • Marriage Date:
    • 8 Mar 1669/1670
    • Marriage Location:
    • Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts

Scroll down to see sources.

  • Sources for Esther Warham

    • 2 NEHGS NEXUS: New England Across the United States, 1995, Vol. 12, p. 66.
    • 5 Cutter, William Richard, ed., New England Families, Genealogical and Memorial: A Record of the Achievements of . . . Volume 3, New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company (1913), 1282.
    • 6 Edwards, William H., Timothy and Rhoda Ogden Edwards of Stockbridge, Mass., and their Descendants: A Genealogy, Cincinnati: The Robert Clarke Company (1903), 3.
    • 7 Jacobus, Donald Lines and Edgar Francis Waterman, Hale, House and Related Families: Mainly of the Connecticut River Valley, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. (1978, reprinted from 1952), 741-746.
    • 8 Roberts, Gary Boyd, Notable Kin, Volume 1, Santa Clarita, California: Carl Boyer, 3rd (1998), 141, 222.
    • 10 Williams, Edward H., Jr., Robert Williams of Roxbury, Mass. and His Descendants, Newport, Rhode Island: Reprinted from The Magazine of New England History (1891), 21.