English and Scotch immigrant ancestors of the Clapp-Cheney family. . g, Esq. epps^ epes* Mr. Daniel Epps, gentleman, resided in London in 1621^ when his wife received a be-quest from her mother^s father, Thomas Cooke, yeoman, of Pebmershe, Essex. [Reg-ister XLVII, 128.] He married Martha, daughter of Mr. Edmund Read, of Wickford,County Essex, Eng.; she survived him and married Deputy-Governor Samuel came at a very early age to Ipswich; was witness of a deed in J64J; proprietor;town officer. He acted as attorney for his cousin Joseph Cooke, of Cambridge, in a suitin 1658. [Essex Cour
English and Scotch immigrant ancestors of the Clapp-Cheney family. . g, Esq. epps^ epes* Mr. Daniel Epps, gentleman, resided in London in 1621^ when his wife received a be-quest from her mother^s father, Thomas Cooke, yeoman, of Pebmershe, Essex. [Reg-ister XLVII, 128.] He married Martha, daughter of Mr. Edmund Read, of Wickford,County Essex, Eng.; she survived him and married Deputy-Governor Samuel came at a very early age to Ipswich; was witness of a deed in J64J; proprietor;town officer. He acted as attorney for his cousin Joseph Cooke, of Cambridge, in a suitin 1658. [Essex Court Files IV, U4.] Children: Daniel who deposed in 1675, agedabout 50 years; Elizabeth, aged 13, came in the Abigail in July, 1635; was named inthe will of her grandfather Reade, in 1623; a daughter married Peter Duncan of Gloucester.[Essex Deeds, 1662.] ^ The connection with the Eppes family is through Elizabeth,daughter of Daniel, Senior, who married about the year 1647, James Chute, and whosedaughter, Mary Chute, was the wife of Deacon John Cheney, of Newbury. 34. farnbam, f^^ ^r. :...,1?5^ --ed 7, Thorn ad 01 thase sktlfyl men wbc ; t! .!.-and so on i * barber-S ^1^ to Andover. His :»h y-. is an. th Holt. WllCn the tath^l;^Sblis. ma isAoili! iil^vW^doi^ Vfldbnssaa^ Wo4.*^J^a^iliv ^ Whitmr) Clapp. - fessenden, fissendeti, fisbingt^-j „°.t, u to New Em t u^ ^ aua the Cambridee i. lan :, ? ^ t ^ a-ffT r. died i\) ? z. ^i Wii l-O CANTERBURY, center of Englands Christian life for fourteen centuries,with its ancient church of St. Martin, and its venerable cathedral, rising instately beauty, was the place where Judge Samuel Sewall records that hevisited Aunt Fessenden, probably the mother of Nicholas Fessenden, aworthy settler in our Cambridge, one of whose descendants, Elizabeth, lefther Lexington home in 1741 to be the bride of John Pierce, Jr. of Dor-chester. No city of all England is sweeter than Canterbury ; the county ofKent is a garden of delights in many
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