An Account of Percival and Ellen Green
An Account OF Percival and Ellen Green AND OF SOME OF THEIR DESCENDANTS. BY SAMUEL ABBOTT GREEN. An Account OF Percival and Ellen Green AND OF SOME OF THEIR DESCENDANTS. BY / / SAMUEL ABBOTT <b*EEN. “©ite ©duration passetf) afoag, antj anotfjcr ffiuneratton rontctij.” PRIVATELY PRINTED. GROTON, MASSACHUSETTS. 1876. Cambridge: Press of John Wilson and Son. TO MY ONLY NIECE, CAROLINE SARGENT GREEN, AND TO MY ONLY NEPHEW, WILLIAM LAWRENCE GREEN, CHILDREN OF MY ONLY BROTHER, THIS ACCOUNT OF SOME OF THEIR ANCESTORS IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED BY THEIR “ UNC.” AN ACCOUNT OF PERCIVAL AND ELLEN GREEN, AND OF SOME OF THEIR DESCENDANTS. In a list of early emigrants, who were " to be transported [from London] to New-England imbarqued in the Suzan r ” & Ellin Edward Payne M : April 18, 1635, are the names of— A Husb:man Percivall Greene 32 uxor Ellin Greene 32 who came to this country with two servants. They were of Cambridge in 1636, and were both members of the church. He took the freeman’s oath, March 3, 1635-6, his name being spelled in the list Passevell Greene. In the town records, it is written Perceiveall, and in the church records, Persevill. He owned a house, situated near the north-east corner of the present Holmes Place, on the north side of the Common, where he died December 25, 1639, leaving two children. His widow afterwards — about 1650 — married Thomas Fox, said to be a descendant of the historian of the martyrs. She died May 27, 1682, aged 82, according to her tombstone. In the year 1691, there was a lawsuit between the grandchildren of Percival Green on the one side, and Thomas Fox on the other, to recover 6 the old homestead which had belonged to their grandfather, and which was then in the possession of Fox, who suc- ceeded in keeping it.
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