Some is circumstantial, however the names of Simon and the places of others involved in the John Ingersoll family share a connection with Saint Mary, Aylesbury, Buckingham, England.
Here are the research notes that I have:
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John Ingersoll married Jane (Ireland) Whitehead not Skidmore.
Source: NY-LONGISLAND-L@rootsweb.com
Subject: [NY-LongIsland]
Important New Daniel^1 Whitehead Article
Dear NY LongIsland-Listers,
Descendants of colonial Long Island Whiteheads and students of Long Island history and genealogy in general will want to be certain to read the article in the October 2000 issue of the New York Genealogical & Biographical Record entitled "The Family of Daniel Whitehead: A Century and a Half of Fact and Fiction," by Harry Macy, Jr., FGBS, FASG.
This article not only builds upon the recently rediscovered Daniel^1 will and previously misapprehended primary evidences, neatly brought together and re-examined to establish that there were two spouses and children by each, but offers as well significant insights on when and how some of the biggest names in Long Island and New England genealogy were led astray in their respective analyses of the family.
An excerpt:
"Rev. John Cornell's Genealogy of the Cornell Family...presented Daniel^1 with quite a different family structure than that given by Curtis. Cornell correctly named Daniel^1 as the father of both the children listed by Riker and those in Adam's estate settlement. However, he also made 'Jeanne Skidmore' the mother of all these children.... .
...Other early 20th century genealogists did notice that there was a problem with Cornell's version of the family.Like Curtis, they concluded that Jane and her children were a separate Whitehead family, and they looked for a Whitehead other than Daniel^1 who could have been her husband."
This is followed by a discussion of versions proposed by Jacobus, Colket, Wardell and Seversmith, each laboring without the benefit of the lost will but apparently overlooking resources that might have better directed their decisions. Also included is the 1985-published decision by Warren Skidmore that Whitehead had not married a daughter of Thomas Skidmore--now proven and underscored by Mr. Macy's research.
That is, from among these 12 pages of astute and well-documented Macy analysis, we learn that Jeanne Skidmore was not a wife of Daniel^1 Whitehead. Rather his widow, and the mother of his four youngest children, was Jane Ireland, daughter of Thomas^1 Ireland, and subsequently the wife of John Ingersoll.
Richard
*With a note that there might have been a first wife espoused by Daniel^1 before he married the daughter of Thomas Armitage.
(Cross-posted from LIGenExchange, with minor re-wording by the correspondent)
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Jane (Ireland) married Daniel Whitehead first.
Adam is one of the children from that Union. Please note the use of Father-in-law as John Inckison (Ingersoll) 's relation to him. The term Step-father was not used then, it was father-in-law.
Huntington Town Records
Settlement of the Estate of Adam Whitehead
[1681, July 12]
(Typed exactly as written)
Whare as Adam Whitehead late of huntington desceased, ye last end of augost 1681 and left some small estate behind him. The then present Constable as law did direct take an Inventory there of and an Apprisement also which did amount to L12: 07s: 0d: And did with all set up proclemation that whosoever ye deceased were in debted to should bring their just debt to ye Constable the which being don his debts appers to be L2 10s 1d.: and that his just debts may be payed and ye Remainder Rightly disposed of to the next In Relation: The present Conste.&overseeers doe order, as followeth that John Inckison father-in-law to ye dessesed shall administer of ye Estate, and pay to Thomas whithead 3L: and to ye 2 sisters L2 15s. each sister and ye Remainder being L1 6s. 11d.: The said John Inckison to have for his pains and trouble provided that ye said John Inckison give his bond to ye Constable and over seers for the true parformance here according to the true Intendment of ye Conste.& over seers And that the sd John Inckison shall pay the sums to Thos. whithead brother to the deseassed and Jemima and Elizabeth Whithead sisters to the deceased, when he coms to the eage of 21 years and to the sisters at eighteen years or at the day of their marriage.
Constable Jonathan Rogers
Thos. Wicks
Overseers Thos. Whitson
Thos. Powell
Huntington
July 12th 1681
this is a true Copie of the originall Compared by me
John Corey,Clerk
(Court Rec., p 256.)
Bee it known to all whome it may conserne that I Jonathan Lewis of huntington doe acknowledg to have Received full satisfaction for that part of ye estate which Adam whithead deceased left to Jemimah whithead his sd. sister who now being ye wife of me Jonathan Lewis I doe owne ye above sd. as witnesse my hand.
JONATHAN LEWIS
p John Corey, Clark, december 31. 1683
(court Rec., p416)
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A Genealogy of the Ingersoll Family in America 1629-1925
Page 341
PART III
JOHN INGERSOLL
OF HUNTINGTON, LONG ISLAND
FIRST GENERATION
1. In 1652 the Puritan Colony which had been established at Sandwich, Massachusetts, detached eleven families from their number and dispatched them through the Connecticut Valley to Huntington, Long Island, under the leadership of the pastor, Rev. William Liverich. Among these colonists were John Skidmore and Daniel Whitehead, who were grantees and proprietors of the town of Huntington, Long Island, destined to be and afterwards included in the State of Connecticut.
In the family of John Skidmore there was a daughter Jane who subsequently married Daniel Whitehead, probably the son of the original founder and not the founder himself. About the same time John Ingersoll, then about thirteen years of age, b. 1640, first appeared in Huntington history (Mead), and in 1673 he married Jane Skidmore Whitehead, the widow of Daniel Whitehead. (Page 309, Huntington Town Records.)
John of Huntington is mentioned frequently in The Huntington Town Records; mentioned as owning the Meadow Farms; mentioned as having been warned by the committeemen for violation of the Innkeeper's law, which at that time prohibited anyone but an innkeeper from entertaining guests. In this instance John Ingersoll entertained a man, wife, and two children.
By various grants from 1680 to 1689 the bounds of John Ingersoll's land are as follows: Front 85 rods line runs N.N.E. and W.S.W. South side 100 rods, rear (probably E. side) 62 rods, line running S. and E. and N. by W. North side by Sound, West by Samuel Kecham, south by highway, also land on the south to the great creek.
In 1690 he sold the house and five acres he had bought in 1681 to Benjamin Joens. The next year, 1692, he purchased of Jonas Valentine houses, barn and farm at the lowest part of Crabmeadow; his previous holdings consisted of upland and meadow in the same locality.
The will of John Ingersoll of Huntington, dated 1694 (he died in 1695), bequeaths to his children John, Simon, Daniel, and Jane, some six hundred pounds in money and large land holdings in the township of Huntington; he also bequeaths the home and home farm to his wife Jane. (Early Long Island Wills--Pelletreau.)
July 29, 1695, Jeane Ingerson, widow, and John Ingerson, son, deed Thomas Whitehead, house, barn, orchard, and eight acres of land bounded on the south by "Simond Ingerson's land." (Huntington Town Records, Vol. II, p. 178.) In 1700 Simon buys back the property. Thomas Whitehead's wife Mary writes, "house and land formerly in the tenor of John Inkersole, Sr." As Simon Ingersoll died the next year his holding of the homestead was not of long duration.
Page 341/Page 342
According to the will of John Ingersoll and the Town Records of Huntington, his children were as follows:
2 i "John Ingersole, son of John Ingersole of Huntington on LI was borne ye eleventh of May 1674.
ii "Jane Ingersole, ye daughter of Jno. Ingersole, was borne ye 9th of June, 1676.
iii "Simon Ingersole, ye son of John Ingersole, was borne ye 3d of August, 1678.
3 iv "Daniel Ingersole, ye son of John Ingersole, was borne ye 13th of September, 1680.
"by me John Corey, Clerke,
"Court Records, p. 191."
(Genealogical data found printed in Records of Huntington, Long Island.)
Page 342
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"England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975,
Thomas Ingersole
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 31 May 1640 SAINT MARY, AYLESBURY, BUCKINGHAM, ENGLAND
parents: Simon Ingersole
William Ingersoul
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 13 April 1645 SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
parents: Symon Ingersoul
Joyce Ingersoul
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 13 April 1645 SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
parents: Symon Ingersoul
John Ingersole
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 21 October 1646 SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
parents: Symon Ingersole
---
John Whitehead
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 16 August 1647 SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
parents: John Whitehead
Jane Whitehead
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 29 June 1639 SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
parents: James Whitehead
Francis Whitehead
England Marriages, 1538\'961973
marriage: 7 October 1621 Saint Mary,Aylesbury,Buckingham,England
spouse: Katharine Saunders
John Whitehead
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
child: John Whitehead
James Whitehead
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
child: Jane Whitehead
---
Margarett Skinner
England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
christening: 9 September 1571 SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
parents: Peter Skinner
Name Margarett Skinner
Gender Female
Christening Date 09 Sep 1571
Christening Place SAINT MARY,AYLESBURY,BUCKINGHAM,ENGLAND
Birth Date
Birthplace
Death Date
Name Note
Race
Father's Name Peter Skinner
Father's Birthplace
Father's Age
Mother's Name
Mother's Birthplace
Mother's Age
Indexing Project (Batch) Number C07364-1
System Origin England-ODM
GS Film number 919220
Reference ID
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