Asylum

Bradford County, PA

John Bailey

Male 1653 - 1736  (83 years)


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  • Name John Bailey 
    Born 1653  Newport, Newport, RI Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 1736  Middletown, Newport, RI Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I24509  Lathrop
    Last Modified 14 Jun 2017 

    Father William Bailey,   b. 1628, Great Milton, South Oxfordshire, Oxfordshire, South East, England Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1670, Newport, RI Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 42 years) 
    Mother Grace Parsons,   b. 1628, Little Compton, RI Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 1671  (Age 43 years) 
    Married Newport, RI Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F11116  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Sutton,   b. 1655,   d. 1709  (Age 54 years) 
    Children 
     1. William Bailey,   b. 1684,   d. 1730  (Age 46 years)
    Last Modified 14 Jun 2017 
    Family ID F11115  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • John owned lands in Newport, Middletown and Tiverton. Remember Middleton is the middle of Aquidneck Island, with Portsmouth town in the north and Newport the south side of the island.  He moved to Middletown about 1682 when he purchased 50 acres and a building. His will indicates property that would be used on a dairy farm. John and wife Sutton had 12 children over a span of 20 years. He died at age 83, she at 69, and they are buried on his farm in the Old Bailey Cemetery, Berkeley Ave. in Middletown, RI.  
       
      John’s will in 1733 indicates he was considerably well-to-do with substantial agricultural land holdings in the Newport-Portsmouth area and Little Compton which he distributed to sons and grandsons, even those under age. His will left two 18 acres lots in Little Compton to each of his grandsons as well as his eldest son, William Sr. The remainder of the Little Compton lands went to his son Thomas who was already working the farms there, described as “uplands, salt meadows, and ledges.” The Newport farm went to the eldest son, John Jr. Son, Samuel, received half of his land in Portsmouth he had purchased from Thomas Cornell, another of our ancestor grandfathers. Reflective of the time, his two youngest daughters received only £5 each and some household goods.
       
      The opening of his will was beyond the usual “being of sound mind and body”:
       
       In The Name of God Amen, I John Bailey of Newport in ye Collony of Rhoad Island and Providence Plantations In New England yeoman Being in Good health of Body and of a Perfect Sound Diposing mind memory and understanding Praised Be the Lord Therefore ConsideringYe Uncertainty of this my Naturall Life and the Necessity of Settling this my Temporal Estate In Order to my Great Change when It shall please the Lord to Call me hence Do make and ordain this my Last Will and Testament (That is to Say) Principally and first of all I give and Recommend my Soul unto the Hands of My Creator hopeing for the Sake and upon the account of the Sole merits of Jesus Christ my only Saviour & Redeemer to Be Everlastingly Saved and my Body I Commit to the Earth therein to Be Decently Buried at the Discretion of My Executor Herein after nominated. And As to that Temporal Estate it Hath Pleased the Lord to Bless me with in this Life after all my Just Debts and funerall Expences are Honestly paid and Discharged I Give Devise and Dispose of the Same as followeth.
       
      The will also reached beyond the grave anticipating squabbles among the children over his estate:
       
      I Give all the Remaining Part of Personall Estate undisposed of unto my Son Thomas Bailey and for the Preventing all Differences which may happen to arise amongst my Children or Grand Children Concerning my Estate or ye Estate by my Daughter Ruth Late Deceased Do therefore further Declare my Mind and It Is my Will that If any of the Legatees Herein Before named, Children or Grand Children will not Conform to and Rest Satisfied with my manner of Disposeing, ordering or Giving the Same that then & In Such Case the Portion of Legacy of Him, Her or they that shall move any Suit In Law or Disturbance Shall Revert to my Executor to Enable Him the Better to Defend ye other Part of my Estate against Such Suit or Disturbance.