Francis Nurse

b 18 Jan 1618, Yarmouth, Bristol, , England
d 22 Nov 1695, Salem Village, Essex, Massachusetts
16 14 Mar 1922,
24 22 Mar 1922,  
33 09 Sep 1948, !&    
   
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Francis Nurse  
|Rebecca Town    
|m 24 Aug 1644    
|, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England |    
   
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Children

1 < John Nurse
2 < Rebecca Nurse
3 < Sarah Nourse
4 < Samuel Nurse
5 Michael Nurse
6 < Elizabeth Nourse(Nurse)
7 < Mary Nurse
8 < Francis Nurse
9 < Benjamin Nurse
10 Nurse

Notes

Francis Nurse was an early settler, and had lived for some forty years, 'near Skerry's,' on the North River, between the main part of the settlement in the town of Salem and the ferry to Beverly. He is described as a 'tray-maker.' The making of these articles and similar objects of domestic use was an important employment in a new country remote from foreign supply. He appears to have been a very respectable person, of great stability and energy of character; whose judgment was much relied on by his neighbors. No one is mentioned more frequently as umpire to settle disputes, or arbitrator to adjust conflicting claims. He was often on committees to determine boundaries or estimate valuations, or on local juries to lay out highways and assess damages.

On 29 April, 1678 Francis Nurse became at one stroke a major Salem Village landowner by purchasing, on credit, a rich 300-acre farm located near Salem. Francis Nurse paid off his mortgage right on schedule. His economic rise after 1678 is documented in the Village tax lists; his 1690 tax went up 39 percent from that of 1681, and in 1695 it rose by another 16 percent.

The house on this land had an interesting history. Before his purchase the 'mansion' or 'cottage' was the scene of social intercourse among the choicest spirits of the earliest age of New England. Here the first owner Allen Bishop and, after him, Chickering, entertained their friends. Here the fine family of Richard Ingersoll was brought up. Here Governor Endicott projected plans for opening the country, and the road that passes its entrance gate was laid out by him. To this same house young John Endicott brought his youthful Boston bride. Here she came again, fifteen years afterwards, as the bride of the learned and distinguished James Allen, to show him the farm which, received as a 'marriage gift' from her former husband, she had brought as a 'marriage gift' to him. Here the same Allen, in less than six years afterwards, brought still another bride. In all these various and some of them rather rapid changes, it was, no doubt, often the resort of distinguished guests and the place of meeting of many pleasant companies. During the protracted years of litigation for its possession, frequent consultations were held within it; and in 1692, for twelve years, it had been the home of a happy harmonious and prosperous family, exemplifying the industry, energy and enterprise of a New England household.

Francis Nurse had been involved during the 1670's in a protracted timber dispute with Nathanial Putnam over some mutually bounded acreage. He was elected to a Village Committee which took power at the end of 1691. These were factors that contributed to Ann Putnam's accusation of Francis' wife of witchcraft.

Source: 'Salem Possessed, The Social Origins of Witchcraft', 1974, Paul Boyer & Stephen Nissenbaum, p 149, 200. 'A Genealogy of the Nurse Family for Five Generations', 1892, John D. Ames, p 96-100.


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© Copyright 1995, 1996 David L. Beckwith