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Not What You Meant?  There are 116 definitions for Lincoln.

Samuel Lincoln

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Samuel Lincoln (date of birth unknown; baptised in Hingham, Norfolk, England, August 24, 1622(?); died in Hingham, Massachusetts, May 26, 1690), was the progenitor of a number of notable United States political figures, including his great-great-great-great-grandson, President Abraham Lincoln, Maine governor Enoch Lincoln, and Levi Lincoln, Sr. and Levi Lincoln, Jr., each of whom would serve both as a Massachusetts Representatives, and as governor of that state. Because of his line of descent, and the availability of some information about his life, Samuel Lincoln is generally the starting point of accounts of the ancestry of that line.[1] Having grown up in poverty, Lincoln became an apprentice to a weaver named Francis Lawes. In 1637, Lincoln left England for the New World with Lawes' family, embarking on a ship named John & Dorothy. Although most accounts indicate that he was 15 years old at the time, it has been suggested that he misrepresented his age in order to permitted to make the voyage.[2] He sailed for the colony of Massachusetts, where his older brother Thomas had already settled, and where his brother assisted him by providing a parcel of land. Lincoln helped to build the Old Ship Church in Hingham. He married Martha Lyford of Ireland around 1649, and the couple had eleven children, three of whom died in their infancy, but another three of whom lived into their eighties. Lincoln's eldest son, born August 25, 1650, was also named Samuel. Genealogists have noted the common and repeated use of certain Biblical names in the Lincoln family, particularly Abraham, Samuel, Isaac, Jacob, and Mordecai.[3] There were, therefore, a number of other Samuel Lincolns descended from the original settler, in addition to his son. In 1937, the 300th anniversary of Lincoln's arrival in Massachusetts was commemorated with the dedication of a tablet at the Old Ship Church.

Sources

References

  1. ^ See Waldo Lincoln, History of the Lincoln Family : An Account of the Descendants of Samuel Lincoln of Hingham, Massachusetts, 1637-1920 (1923) ISBN 0788414895; John George Nicolay, John Hay, Abraham Lincoln: A History (1890) p. 2.
  2. ^ William Eleazar Barton, The Life of Abraham Lincoln (1935) p. 25.
  3. ^ Waldo Lincoln, History of the Lincoln Family : An Account of the Descendants of Samuel Lincoln of Hingham, Massachusetts, 1637-1920 (1923) p. 64.

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Samuel Lincoln from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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