

Not the same as wife of Francis Griswold
After his death, there is a strong case made for Lt. Francis Griswold’s widow having married Governor William Bradford (as his second wife) about 1675, and died in a couple of years.[1]
Lainhart, Ann Smith and Wakefield, Robert S., FASG, Mayflower Families through Five Generations, Volume 22, William Bradford, General Society of Mayflower Descendants, Plymouth, MA., 2004 p.6, 27 Peirce, Ebenezer Weaver.
Indian History, Biography and Genealogy: Pertaining to the Good Sachem Massasoit of the Wampanoag Tribe (Z.G. Mitchell, North Abington, Mass., 1878) Page 115: Calls her "widow Wiswall" .
Major William Bradford, Jr (1624 - 1703), son of Gov. William Bradford & Alice Carpenter, married 2nd to an unnamed woman, her parents unknown, around 1673. He was Alice Richard's widower. She must have died before 1677, when he married 3rd to Mary Wood.
Their children were:
Seen as daughter of Thomas Fitch of Norwalk & Anne Fitch, 2555 without supporting evidence. Please open a discussion if you have records of her parentage.
Sarah, wife of Francis Griswold died 1675. She is longer accepted as the 2nd wife of William Bradford, see
Major William Bradford's second wife
Major William2 Bradford (1624-1704), of Plymouth and Kingston, Massachusetts, was the son of Plymouth Colony Governor William1 Bradford (1590-1657) and his second wife Alice (Carpenter) (Southworth) Bradford (1590-1670). Major Bradford was married three times. According to a long-standing tradition his second wife was “a widow Wiswall.” This has been repeated in many places. The earliest appearance of this tradition in writing, as far as I can tell, is in an 1830 manuscript by Lewis Bradford of Plympton, Massachusetts, entitled “A Genealogical Account of part of the family of Bradford, which descended from Gov. William Bradford.” A very legible photocopy is in the General Society of Mayflower Descendants Library in Plymouth. Lewis Bradford writes on page 11 of his genealogy that “The second wife of Maj. William Bradford was a widow Wiswall, by whom he had one son, viz. Joseph, who, it is said, moved to Connecticut, and also his half brother Thomas is said to [have] move[d] thither.”
Major Bradford’s first wife, Alice (Richards) Bradford, died at Plymouth on 12 December 1671. Joseph3, the only child of the second marriage, was born in 1675. The first child of Major Bradford’s third marriage, to Mary (Wood) Holmes, was born about 1677.[1] We can conclude, therefore, that Major William Bradford married the “widow Wiswall” sometime around 1673, and that she died at the time of Joseph’s birth in 1675 or very soon thereafter.
The July 2001 issue of the NEHGR gives her name as Sarah, based on a court record referring to the Widdow Sarah Griswell, and denies that she is the daughter of Thomas Tracey. The point of the article is to suggest that Sarah married second Major William Bradford, the son of Governor Bradford. William had three wives - first Alice Richards (d. Dec 1671), second traditionally "widow Wiswell" by whom he had a son in 1675 and third Mary Wood [Holmes], whose first child was born in 1677. The Massachusetts Wiswell family is quite small, and there is no one who could have been this missing widow.
Bradford's will refers to land that Joseph's mother had up in Norwich, which fits with land held by Francis Griswold. (The only others with holdings at that time who died before 1673 were William Backus and John Mason, neither of which had a widow who could have remarried.) In addition, two of Francis' daughters were married in Plymouth, which makes little sense for a family from Norwich, unless their mother had moved to Plymouth with her new husband.
How might they have met? William's brother John was settled in Norwich -- he could have played matchmaker for his newly widowed brother and lovely widowed neighbor.
---
2. Lt. Gov. William Bradford, son of Gov. William Bradford [1] and Alice Carpenter. Born on 17 June 1624 in Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Died on 20 Feb. 1703/4 in Plymouth, 79 years old. Buried in Burial Hill, Plymouth.
---
2. Lt. Gov. William Bradford, son of Gov. William Bradford [1] and Alice Carpenter. Born on 17 June 1624 in Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Died on 20 Feb. 1703/4 in Plymouth, 79 years old. Buried in Burial Hill, Plymouth.
Married first Alice Richards, dau. of Thomas Richards and Welthian Loring, after 23 April 1650 in Plymouth when at least 25 years old (Alice was at least 22 years old). Alice Richards
Issue of Lt. Gov. William Bradford and Alice Richards:
Married second Sarah _____ about 1674 probably in Norwich, New London County, Connecticut when about 50 years old. Sarah _____
Issue of Lt. Gov. William Bradford and Sarah _____:
Married third Mary Wood, dau. of John Wood and Mary Masterson, after March 1675/6 in Plymouth when at least 51 years old. Mary Wood
Issue of Lt. Gov. William Bradford and Mary Wood:
---
Notes on Lt. Gov. William Bradford:
William1 was born on 17 June 1624 in Plymouth and inherited a large estate from his father. He lived on the north side of the Jones river in a section known as Stony Brook by Kingston.
William married first Alice Richards shortly after 23 April 1650 in Plymouth. She was born on 16 June 1627 in Pitminster, Somerset, England, daughter of Thomas Richards and Welthian Loring, and baptized there on 7 Zpril 1629. She inherited property from both her parents.
Alice’ father Thomas2 was baptized on 15 April 1596 in Pitminster. He emigrated to Mattapan (Dorchester), Massachusetts, in 1630 aboard the Mary and John , the first ship to leave in Winthrop’s fleet3, embarking on 20 March 1630 from Plymouth and arriving on 30 May at Nantasket.4
The Massachusetts Bay Colony
John Winthrop (22 January 1588 Groton, England–26 March 1649 Boston, Massachusetts) led the mass migration of the first settlers of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630. Twelve ships left Southhampton and landed at Naumkeag (Salem). The ships were the Mary and John (the first to leave and arrive), Ambrose, Jewel, Talbot, Mayflower, Whale, William and Francis, Trial, Hopewell, Charles, Arbella (the flagship of Winthrop) and Success (the last to arrive). Many more ships followed. The Company moved its capitol from Salem to Charlestown in July.
The majority of the settlers (60%) came from East Anglia and neighboring counties: Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire and Lincolnshire, plus parts of Bedfordshire and Kent, as shown in the map below. Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex were the core of the Puritan migration.5 They brought with them the folkways6 of East Anglia which are still evident in New England today, as well as in other parts of America to which they migrated. By 1660 more than sixty percent of Massachusetts towns named after English communities were named from the eastern counties.
Compared to the rest of England, the Puritan influence was particularly strong in the east. The “Yankee Twang” derives directly from the seventeenth century “Norfolk Whine.” The “Salt Box” and “Cape Code” styles of architecture were taken from the eastern counties, as was the penchant for baked foods (including the famous baked beans and pies) and conservative dress. The strong orientation towards family and abhorrence of the single state had its roots in East Anglia, as did the attitudes towards religion, witchcraft, respect for elders, sex and the naming and raising of children. East Anglia also provided the predominant settlement pattern of nuclear villages, satellite hamlets and scattered farmsteads, as well as town government by Selectmen and the concept of “ordered liberty.”
The culture and mores of the eastern counties of England dominated New England life then and (to a great degree) now. Indeed, the past is alive and well in the present, wherever the descendants of the Puritans settled.
Thomas married Welthian about 1618 and had nine children.7 Thomas moved to Weymouth, Massachusetts, in 1636 where he was one of the owners of a mill in 1639 and where he was made a freeman on 13 May 1640. He died between 17 December 1650 when his will was dated and 28 January following when it was probated, in the house of his brother-in-law, Thomas Loring, in Weymouth. Welthian’s will was dated 3 July 1679 and probated the November following.
Alice Richards and Major William Bradford had ten children, all born in Plymouth.
Alice Richards died on 12 December 1671 in Plymouth, 44 years old, and Major William married second Sarah _____, widow of Francis Griswold, about 1674, probably in Norwich, Connecticut.8 Sarah and Francis had Sarah, Joseph, Mary, Hannah, Deborah, Lydia, Samuel, Margaret and Lydia. Sarah and William had a son born in Plymouth.
In 1675 William was Major and Commander-in-Chief of the Plymouth forces at the Great Swamp Fight during King Philip’s War, where he was severely wounded but recovered to live another 28 years.
Sarah (_____) Griswold Bradford died about 1675, probably following the birth of her only child, and William married third Mary Wood, widow of Reverend John Holmes, after Mar 1675/6 when she was noted as Mistress Mary Holmes. She was born about 1643 in Plymouth, daughter of John Wood (perhaps Atwood) and Mary Masterson. Mary and John had Joseph, Mary and Isaac. Mary and William had four sons.
William was Assistant and Treasurer of the Colony and Deputy Governor in the periods 1682–86 and again in 1689–91. In 1691 he was a member of the Council of Massachusetts and he was a Commissioner of the United Colonies for twelve years. In 1695–1702 he was Judge of Probate.
William died on 20 February 1703/4 in Plymouth, and was buried next to his father on Burial Hill. His will dated 29 June 1703 and proven 10 March 1703/4 mentions his wife Mary; sons David, Ephraim, Hezekiah, John, Thomas, Samuel and Israel; and daughters Mercy Steel, Hannah Riply [sic], Melatiah Steel, Mary Hunt, Alce [sic] Fitch and Sarah Baker. Wife Mary died on 6 January 1714/5 in Plymouth.
_______________
1 Roser, Mayflower Increasings, 23. Hall, Descendants of Governor William Bradford, 4. Collins, Ancestors of Rejoyce Ballance Collins and Constance Dorothy Van Etten Collins, 8. Lainhart and Wakefield, Mayflower Families through Five Generations, Vol. 22: William Bradford, 5–7.
2 Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of . . . New England, Vol. III, 532–535. Also see Spear, Search for the Passengers of the Mary and John, Vol. 17, Part I, 127–130, for a provisional ancestry of Thomas Richards.
3 The “Governor and the Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England” was chartered by King Charles I in March 1629. The original executive power was vested in a Governor, Deputy Governor and eighteen Assistants who were to be elected for a term of one year. The legislature consisted of the foregoing and all of the “freemen,” and was called the General Court. The judiciary consisted of the Governor and seven or more Assistants. The freemen evolved into Deputies/Representatives and in 1644 the General Court was split into two chambers which ultimately became the Senate and House of Representatives.
4 Banks, The Planters of the Commonwealth, 90. Banks notes that the passengers included Thomas of Pitminster, Somerset, Mrs. Welthian Richards and John, James, Mary, Anne and Alice Richards.
5 Michael Metcalf, who emigrated to Dedham seven years later in 1637, was born in Tatterford, married in Hingham and worked in Norwich, all in Norfolk.
6 Fisher, Albion’s Seed, Four British Folkways in America, 13–205.
7 Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of . . . New England, Vol. III, 532–535. According to Savage, the nine children were: Major John Richards (?–2 April 1694) married first Elizabeth Hawkins (?–1 November 1691) on 3 May 1654 and second Ann Winthrop (?–27 June 1704) on 1 September 1692. James Richards (?–11 July 1680) married Sarah Gibbons. Samuel Richards. Joseph Richards. Benjamin Richards married Hannah Hudson on 10 October 1661. Mary Richards (?–24 June 1659) married Thomas Hinckley of Barnstable on 7 December 1641, later Governor of the Colony. Ann Richards married Ephraim Hunt. Alice Richards (16 June 1627–12 December 1671) above. Hannah Richards (?–10 November 1651).
8 Webber, “Major William Bradford’s Second Wife: Was She the Widow of Francis Griswold?” 245–250.
1650 |
1650
|
of, Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America
|
|
1675 |
April 18, 1675
|
Plymouth, Plymouth Colony, Colonial America
|
|
1677 |
1677
Age 27
|
Plymouth, Plymouth, Plymouth Colony, British Colonial America
|