1683 - 1725 (42 years)
Generation: 1
1. | John Mulford was born in 1683 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York (son of John Mulford and Unknown); died in 1725 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York; was buried in 1707 in Mary 4, Died As Infant.. Other Events:
- Confirmation: remaining children died except for John 4
- First Communion: and Phebe 4.
- BAPM: 1726; The year following their fathers death, all the
Notes:
Birth:
Baptism Dates Used For Children Births.
Family/Spouse: . Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- Josiah 4 Mulford died in 1726.
- Nathaniel 4 Mulford was born in 1724; died in 1726.
- Mary 4 Mulford was born in 1715; died in 1726.
- Hannah 4 Mulford was born in 1719; died in 1726.
- Phebe 4 Mulford was born in 1721; and died.
- Mary Mulford was born in 1707; died in 1707.
- John Mulford was born on 29 Jul 1711 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York; died on 20 Apr 1784 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York.
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Generation: 2
2. | John Mulford was born in 1650 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York (son of John Mulford and . Unknown); died in 1734 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York. Notes:
John's first wife's name is unknown. His second wife's name was Martha,
widow of Ananias Conkling Jr. Children by first marriage only.
John married Unknown in East Hampton, Long Island, New York. died in 1705. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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3. | Unknown died in 1705. Children:
- 1. John Mulford was born in 1683 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York; died in 1725 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York; was buried in 1707 in Mary 4, Died As Infant..
- Isaac 3 Mulford was born in 1684; and died.
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Generation: 3
4. | John Mulford was born in 1606 in England (son of Thomas Mulford and Sarah Southcott); died in 1686 in East Hampton, Long Island, New York. Notes:
"According to some authorities, the Mulford family of East Hampton
originated in the village of South Molton, Devonshire, England, where the
name is also spelled Molford. Others are equally positive that the two
brothers John and William Mulford who were among the first settlers here,
were the sons of Thomas and Sarah Southcott Mulford of Maidstone in Kent.
At a recent date there were Mulfords still living in both localities. The
name of Mulford is found in every State in the Union. Probably not all of
these are descended from the first settlers of East Hampton, though many
young Mulfords left East Hampton in the 18th century and settled in
different parts of New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania and Connecticut,
and their descendants scattered from there.
The two brothers came to Southampton, Long Island in 1643 from Salem
Mass. According to p. 29, Vol. 1 of the Southampton Town Records, John
Mulford was granted two acres of land there on May 28, 1643 and on p. 55
it is recorded he sold his house in Southampton on Feb. 8, 1648, and in
that or the following year was one of the nine persons who settled East
Hampton; his younger brother William soon following him there. The name
of John Mulford appears many times in the council minutes of Connecticut,
of which Colony eastern Long Island became a part. He was commissioned a
Judge in 1674. In Town affairs, keeping peace with the Indians, and
representing the eastern towns in Hartford, and afterward in New York, he
was prominent until his death in 1686.
When the eastern end of Long Island was first settled, a patent on
certain lands was issued to the colonists direct by the reigning King of
England; and under that charter the colonists instituted a government;
the first Republic on American soil, it might be called. The chief
magistrate was constituted the common court. A second court was
constituted by a jury of twelve freeholders, and a third, the highest
judiciary, was a general court, presided over by the magistrate, but in
which the whole body of freeholders was constituted a jury. From 1650 to
1654, the name of John Mulford, and his only, appears as chief magistrate
of this little republic, which had full treaty power with the Indians.
A small book of great charm and humor has been written by a Mulford,
and largely about the Mulfords: "An East Hampton Childhood," told by Mary
Esther Mulford Miller [ E.H. Star Press, 1938; 44 pages; illustrated ].
It has for a cover Childe Hassam's etching: "The Heart of East Hampton"
showing the John Henry Mulford house [ now owned by the E. H. Historical
Society ], the roof of "Home, Sweet Home," the old mill, and the tower of
St. Luke's Episcopal Church in the background. Commenting on the
character family, Mrs. Miller said: "Once a Mulford, always a Mulford,
the family saying goes. the women may marry but they stay Mulfords to the
third and fourth generation, and the wives of the Mulford men, whatever
their background, are soon absorbed by the Mulford clan---although my
mother always said it was rather difficult to change a Hedges"."
" EAST HAMPTON HISTORY "
by
JEANNETTE EDWARDS RATTRAY 1953
[ Several people in East Hampton came from Maidstone in Kent! ]
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Judge John Mulford's first wife's name is unknown. His second wife was
Mrs. Friedeswiede Osborn, widow of William Osborn of Salem, Mass. Sons,
both by 1st wife
Birth:
- Probably Maidstone In Kent
John married . Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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Generation: 4
8. | Thomas Mulford died in in Maidstone In Kent, England. Notes:
Thomas and Sarah came from Maidstone in Kent, England about
1620 or 1621, while William was an infant, probably ending up in Salem,
Mass.
Thomas married Sarah Southcott. Sarah died in in Maidstone In Kent, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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