There is conflicting evidence regarding the parents of John Gifford who married Comfort Hart. John Gifford died in Little Compton, Rhode Island on 18 Dec 1802 “in his 95th year.” One line claims Christopher Gifford and Deborah Perry as his parents; the other, Jeremiah Gifford and Mary Wright. We find support for the parentage of Christopher and Deborah in the following sources:
- Little Compton Families by Benjamin Franklin Wilbour, Vol 1, pp 277-8
- Gifford family genealogies – such as Guiteras and Gifford
- and perhaps most significantly in James Arnold’s Vital Records of Rhode Island, Vol 4, part VI, p 116.
The claim for Jeremiah Gifford and Mary Wright can be found in a substantive work “William Gifford of Sandwich, Mass (d 1687) by Almon E Daniels and Maclean McLean published over several years in the New England Historical and Genealogical Register – volumes 128-138. Jeremiah (#25) is found at NEHGR 129:234-237 and John (#58) at NEHGR 131:52-54. As we evaluate the claim of Jeremiah and Mary as parents of this John, we find other vital records in the adjacent town of Westport, Massachusetts:
- “John, s Jeremiah and Mary, 7 th 3 mo, 1708 CR” p 49 Westport Births
- “John, s Jeremiah and Mary, 18 th 12th month, 1802 in 95th y(ear) CR” p 274 Westport Deaths
- Further support of this relationship can be found through the Mayflower connection of Mary Wright’s father, Adam Wright. See Francis Cooke of the Mayflower, the First Five Generations, by Wood, Ralph V, Jr., Picton Press, 1996, pp 483-4.
Francis Cooke of the Mayflower and several other sources include a summary of John Gifford’s will, written in 1788 and proved in 1803. It mentions grandson, Jonathan, son of Ephriam. We can confirm that we are looking at the same John Gifford by noting that Little Compton Families, which identifies John Gifford’s parents as Christopher and Deborah, cites the same will.
Discussion
Both the Little Compton Families and the compiled Gifford family genealogy are derivative sources. The same can be said of the Arnold’s Vital Records of Rhode Island citation. On September 9, 2013 I visited the Town Clerk’s office in Little Compton, Rhode Island and reviewed the available records. The record cited by Arnold is found in a compilation of family records transcribed by Otis Gifford in 1842, 40 years after the death of John Gifford. The records are grouped by family, in this case Christopher Gifford. The text in Arnold follows exactly the record in the Town Clerk’s office. I did not find any original source records.
Given that all of the sources found for the claim for Christopher and Deborah are derivative sources, and that the church record from the Friends Monthly Meeting in Westport is the most authoritative source, supported also by NEHGR and Mayflower Families, it is my conclusion that the parents of John Gifford were Jeremiah Gifford and Mary Wright.
Why would we find records of the Gifford’s in Westport, Massachusetts when they lived in Little Compton, Rhode Island? When we visited the Little Compton Historical Society in September 2013, the director told us that many of Gifford families lived in the vicinity of Adamsville in the very northwest portion of Little Compton, adjacent to Westport. In the early 1800’s Quaker families living in this area found it easier to travel to the Meeting in Westport than to travel to the meeting house in Little Compton. (see map of area)
Footnotes:
- Little Compton Families, Wilbour, Benjamin Franklin, Vol 1, pp 277-8, http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=49227 – accessed 5/17/2015
- Guiteras, Wardwell and Allied Families, pp 119-120, accessed on Ancestry.com, 02/25/2022.
- Arnold, James, Vital Records of Rhode Island, Vol 4, Part VI, p. 116; This is now available on Family Search books.
- New England Historical and Genealogical Register”, Vol. 131, pp 52-54; http://www.americanancestors.org/,accessed 6/16/2015
- Massachusetts: Vital Records, 1620-1850 (Online Database: AmericanAncestors.org, New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2001-2016). https://americanancestors.org/DB190/i/7829/49/0, accessed 2/25/2022
- Ibid, p 274
Excellent discussion of conflicting reports with sound conclusions. Now, for the rest of the story. In the early 1700s the NE corner of LIttle Compton was site of the Richard Hart homestead, with Tiverton bordering on the North and Dartmouth (now Westport) on the East. The John Wilcox homestead was next South of Richard Hart, and bordered East on Dartmouth and the homestead of “Elder” Phillip Taber (1676-1751). At that time there were two water-powered millsites in what’s now called Adamsville. The water source for these mills was an upper branch of the Westport River then known by its native Acoxet name, Capotoneset (various spellings). The “Wilcox mills” bordered on Tiverton, Dartmouth and Little Compton, and downstream the “Taber mills” were in Adamsville on the Dartmouth-Little Compton border. Phillip Taber sold a house lot next to his mill pond to Benjamin Swett, a blacksmith. Swett built a dwelling house there, on the North side of Adamsville Road where the Old Harbor Road now intersects. Swett’s house lot bordered on Little Compton. Swett took in John Gifford as an apprentice. Gifford married Comfort Hart, daughter of Richard Hart, literally the “girl” (young lady) next door. Gifford also bought a house lot from the heirs of John Wilcox and built a house and blacksmith shop right next to Benjamin Swett on the same side of the road. Thus, Swett and Gifford lived next to each other with the town line between them. Since they had their blacksmith shops on their home lots, each could hear the other at work every day. It must have made for a competitive market place, having two blacksmith shops and two millsites (each with a grist mill and a saw mill) in that NE corner of Little Compton called Adamsville today.
Thank you for this wonderful story about John Gifford and his neighbors in Adamsville.