|
a.
|
Note: Sources: Birth: (14) p629 & (124) p23 & (61) p345 & (45B) p127 & (132) p243 Death: (14) p629 & (124) p23-4 & (61) p345 & (45B) p127 Marriages: (14) p629 & (124) p16 & (61) p345 & (45B) p127 & (132) p243 (61) p344: "...one might expect that the son of the separatists' beloved pastor would have been given special privileges, but though he became a freeman by 7 March 1636/7, he was not on the original freeman list, nore was he made a Purchaser...became a resident of Scituate, joining the church there on 7 November 1636, having a dismissal from the Plymouth Church, and he had a new house in Scituate in 1637...moved with the Lothrop group to Barnstable in 1639 and he died there age ninety-four in 1704...held many public offices...was disfranchised by Gov. Pence in 1659 for being in sympathy with the Quakers, but was restored to civil rights by Gov. Winslow in 1673... was approved by the court to keep an ordinary at Saconesett..." (124) p16: "...frequently changed his residence. He first settled 1633 at Scituate; removed to Barnstable in 1639; to Succononeset, now Falmouth (where he built the first house in the town on the south side of Fresh Pond), in 1660; to Tisbury, now West Tisbury, Martha's Vineyard, in 1671, where he remained until 1701. By deeds dated 30 July 1686, 11 April 1699, and 30 August 1700, he conveyed property at Tisbury to his sons, Peter, Isaac and Jacob, and by a deed dated 1 November 1701, he conveyed his Falmouth homestead to his son, Isaac Robinson, Jr. He then went to spend his last days at Barnstable with his daughter Fear and her husband, Samuel Baker...a noteworthy event in the life of Isaac Robinson in America was his disfranchisement for thirteen years because he befriended the Quakers when they were persecuted during the administration of Thomas Prence as Governor of Plymouth colony..."
|