“Got a storm brewing up.”
Author Archives: Nathan Tidd
The German Branch of the Tidd Family Tree
An account of the 1750s migration from the Rhineland to the Maine wilderness.
Colonel Samuel Tidd?
One of the more interesting new datasets available online today are FamilySearch’s war pension applications from the American Revolution and the War of 1812. Over the past few days, I’ve looked at references to any and all Tidds. Three documents might relate to Samuel Tidd, b1759 in Woburn, the direct ancestor of all Georgetown Tidds.Continue reading “Colonel Samuel Tidd?”
Who Was Samuel Charles Tidd? Part II
In 2022 I went on a hunt for a link between my direct ancestor Samuel Charles Tidd of Georgetown and his supposed parents from Woburn, Samuel and Ruhamah Richardson Tidd. That effort, which ended in absolute failure, is summarized here. I finally found what I was looking for thanks to Pliny Tidd, who died inContinue reading “Who Was Samuel Charles Tidd? Part II”
A Heroine in the House
Lydia Warren Spafford never met a man she couldn’t handle.
Prisoner of War
Joseph Bartlett of Newbury 1686-1754 In the fall of 1712, 25-year-old Joseph Bartlett journeyed east through the Massachusetts wilderness to his coastal hometown of Newbury, after more than four years in captivity at the hands of the French and their Indian allies. Here is what survives of his story. Queen Anne’s War For more thanContinue reading “Prisoner of War”
Who Was Samuel Charles Tidd?
The first Tidd in Essex County might have been Samuel Charles, who shows up in Western Rowley (later Georgetown) in 1807. Where did he come from? How did he end up there? Who was this man of mystery, anyhow?
A Cold Welcome
The Mayflower pilgrim’s first encounters with the natives don’t fall neatly into contemporary narratives.
The Smith and the Witch
In 1628 a handful of men left the fishing village of Salem and trekked twelve miles west along the Massachusetts Bay to the point of land where the Mystic and Charles Rivers met. There they found “land full of Indians called Aberginians” and “an uncooth Wilderness full of timber” and, perhaps most surprising, “a singleContinue reading “The Smith and the Witch”
The Forlorn Hope of Sixty Men
“Wessagussett Colony: Ill-conceived. Ill-executed. Ill-fated.” – Charles Francis Adams Jr., Massachusetts Historical Society In their second spring in the New World, when most crops in Plymouth Colony had barely sprouted from in the rocky soil, a small shallop arrived carrying ten men and some letters but “no victuals nor any hope of any”. The PlymouthContinue reading “The Forlorn Hope of Sixty Men”
The Billingtons
The Mayflower carried many people we have chosen to remember well. Even admire. Brewster and Bradford. Standish and Alden. Howland and Hopkins.
But the Billingtons? Not so much. They were the colony’s outspoken rebels. The scoundrels. The fringe. Who would want to claim them as their ancestors?
Okay, I admit its tempting.
William Brewster
We know more about William Brewster than most who stepped off the Mayflower. Few were less prepared for life in the wilderness. Fewer still did more to bring them there.
Mourt’s Relation
Write what should not be forgotten. Isabel Allende Much of what is known about the founding of Plymouth Colony comes from Mourt’s Relation, a collection of documents published in London in 1622 by George “Mourt” Morton, a Leiden Separatist. Sadly, little is known about George. But Mourt’s Relation has a decent story of its own.Continue reading “Mourt’s Relation”
The First New England Love Story
“I would not wish any companion in the world but you.” – William Shakespeare’s The Tempest Sometime during the summer of 1620, while the Mayflower lay at anchor in Southampton harbor awaiting the repairs for its sister ship the Speedwell, the ship’s captain Christopher Jones hired an additional crewmember: John Alden. He was twenty-one yearsContinue reading “The First New England Love Story”
The Adventures of Stephen Hopkins
In 1609 Stephen Hopkins left his wife Mary and their three small children near her family in the small English village of Hursley. He had just signed a seven-year contract to serve as a minister’s clerk in the fledgling Jamestown Colony of Virginia.
Almost a Pilgrim
Elizabeth Ring sailed from Delfshaven, in the Netherlands, aboard the Speedwell in the summer of 1620. She was traveling with her parents, William and Mary Ring, and also her two younger siblings, Susannah and infant Andrew. Elizabeth is believed to have been about eleven years old.
1607: David Thomson and the Popham Colony
The first settlers in New England were not Puritans. In May of 1607, some thirteen years before the Mayflower landed in Massachusetts, about 120 colonists sailed from Plymouth (England) aboard two ships, the Gift of God and the Mary & John, en route to the New World.
Do The Math
This year I spent an embarrassing amount of time building a family tree back to the first generation of New England settlers. Took me months. I wanted the full picture, not just the parental line but everyone in my gene pool. I have that now. I just wish I had done the math first. IContinue reading “Do The Math”