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About Bridget Giles
Her first husband was Philip [SIC - unknown] Very. She had three children with him in England.
Widow of Thomas Verry [SIC: unknown Very] whom she married c. 1621, He was buried at Strood, Kent, 29 Oct 1631. She died in Salem between 14 Jan 1668 and 30 Nov 1680.
From the Essex Historical Collections:
The original family name is Varennne (similiar to Warrenne) or Verren ( similiar to Warren).
The farm of Samuel Very was much larger than that of his mother, which it adjoined.It was purchased from Richard Way of Dorchester in 1656 and was over 170 acres. It is descrbed as ten acres belonging to Joshua Varenne and 160 acres on Cedar Pond, which Hilliard Verren, late husband of Dorcas Verren, gave unto his son HIlliard Verren, in his last will and testament. Also one acre of land where the house of Phillip Varren formerly stood.
Philip and Joshua Verren received from the town grants of this in 1634. The Verys, Varrens, and other families from Salisbury, England settled in this neighborhood. One of the bounds of Samuel Very's farm "on the east and to the south" was a rock called Wigwan Rock. The rock is also mentioned on Edmund Batter's deed is now the same called Ship Rock.
Samuel Very left the homestead to his son Benjamin, who left it to his eldest son Samuel, who in 1769 gave it to his wife Abigail (Pepper) and her children. In 1793, John, George, Amos and William Very sell to Nathaniel Nurse "all their right to the estate of their honored father, Samuel Very, deceased."
"Mary Giles was the last of that name who owned land in that vicinity.She had a claim on the farm where the Danvers Alms House now stands, which she sold to Mr. Nurse.She married John Oakes and lives in New Salem."
After 1700, some fo Bridget Very's descendants moved farther down on Goldthwaite's Brook, where they also owned about 70 acres of land.Of this, 30 acres were mostly level and called "Very's Plain"...........
The Village Burial ground, so called, was used before 1732, and doubtless some of the family were buried there. In 1736, 12 acres of the Plain was sold to Benjamin Ives, but not the Burial Ground. More information on the land transfers continues............
The following genealogy if from the Register of Deeds, and of Probate; the Church and town Records of Salem and Danvers, from which a full history of the family can be obtained:
Bridget Very was born abt. 1600 and made her will 1680;
Here children were:
Samuel b. 1619 d. 1683-84
Mary;
Thomas b. 1626 d. 1694
(She also mentions her two sons by her second husband:
Eleazar Giles bap. 1640 d. 1726
John Giles bap. 1645 d. 1709-15.
She also mentions 2 daughters by her second husband:
Mehetabel who married John Collens in 1658;
Remember who married Henry Moses in 1659;
(See a genealogy of the Giles family by John A. Vinton).
Source: https://books.google.com/books?id=kB0FAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=... p34
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https://books.google.com/books?id=kB0FAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=... pp33,34
From the Essex Historical Collections:
The original family name is Varennne (similiar to Warrenne) or Verren (Warren).
The farm of Samuel Very was much larger than that of his mother, which it adjoined.It was purchased from Richard Way of Dorchester in 1656 and was over 170 acres. It is descrbed as ten acres belonging to Joshua Varenne and 160 acres on Cedar Pond, which Hilliard Verren, late husband of Dorcas Verren, gave unto his son HIlliard Verren, in his last will and testament. Also one acre of land where the house of Phillip Varren formerly stood.
Philip and Joshua Verren received from the town grants of this in 1634. The Verys, Varrens, and other families from Salisbury, England settled in this neighborhood. One of the bounds of Samuel Very's farm "on the east and to the south" was a rock called Wigwan Rock. The rock is also mentioned on Edmund Batter's deed is now the same called Ship Rock.
Samuel Very left the homestead to his son Benjamin, who left it to his eldest son Samuel, who in 1769 gave it to his wife Abigail (Pepper) and her children. In 1793, John, George, Amos and William Very sell to Nathaniel Nurse "all their right to the estate of their honored father, Samuel Very, deceased."
"Mary Giles was the last of that name who owned land in that vicinity.She had a claim on the farm where the Danvers Alms House now stands, which she sold to Mr. Nurse.She married John Oakes and lives in New Salem."
After 1700, some fo Bridget Very's descendants moved farther down on Goldthwaite's Brook, where they also owned about 70 acres of land.Of this, 30 acres were mostly level and called "Very's Plain"...........
The Village Burial ground, so called, was used before 1732, and doubtless some of the family were buried there. In 1736, 12 acres of the Plain was sold to Benjamin Ives, but not the Burial Ground. More information on the land transfers continues............
The following genealogy if from the Register of Deeds, and of Probate; the Church and town Records of Salem and Danvers, from which a full history of the family can be obtained:
Bridget Very was born abt. 1600 and made her will 1680;
Here children were:
Samuel b. 1619 d. 1683-84
Mary;
Thomas b. 1626 d. 1694
(She also mentions her two sons by her second husband:
Eleazar Giles bap. 1640 d. 1726
John Giles bap. 1645 d. 1709-15.
She also mentions 2 daughters by her second husband:
Mehetabel who married John Collens in 1658;
Remember who married Henry Moses in 1659;
(See a genealogy of the Giles family by John A. Vinton).
Source: https://books.google.com/books?id=kB0FAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=... p34
From The Giles Memorial, Genealogical Memoirs, 1864
.... From this will it is evident that Edward Giles was the second husband of Bridget, and that she lived till the age of about eighty years. She must have been born about the year 1600.
Bridget had by her first husband, Very, born doubtless in England -
- Samuel (Very), b. 1619; m. Alice Woodis (Woods); had 12 children; d.1683-4.
- Mary (Very), b. ; m. 1659, Thomas Cutler of Reading. He was one of the earliest settlers of Reading. She seems to have m. 2, Matthew Smith, 1684.
- Thomas (Very), b. 1626 ; m. July 6, 1650, Hannah Gyles, dau. of Thomas Gyles, who lived near where Beverly Bridge now is, in Salem. They had 9 children. They lived in Gloucester. He d. March 28, 1694. She d. Aug. 23, 1683/4
- Reference: WikiTree Genealogy - SmartCopy: Jan 30 2017, 21:17:38 UTC
GEDCOM Note
Bridget was listed as a widow in Torrey's marriage record.
Bridget Giles's Timeline
1591 |
1591
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Salisbury, Wiltshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1622 |
October 6, 1622
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Salisbury, Wiltshire, England (United Kingdom)
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1626 |
July 6, 1626
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Prob, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
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1635 |
1635
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Salem, Essex, Massachusetts, USA
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1637 |
April 2, 1637
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Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts, Colonial America
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1639 |
June 23, 1639
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Salem, Essex Co., Massachusetts
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1640 |
November 27, 1640
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Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts
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1645 |
April 15, 1645
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Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America
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