Friday, January 12, 2018

Digging Deeper in Connecticut

Tracing the Clark line is difficult because of a lack of probate records, recorded deeds, and family papers. In looking more closely at allied families: Weed, Ambler, Westcott, Hoyt, and a few other known lines, my research leads me to believe our Clark line may have come to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 or 1631, then to the Wethersfield Colony in Connecticut, and finally to the colony in Stamford, CT before their migration to Bedford and Poundridge in Westchester county, New York. Early in our American ancestry most families clustered within a Parish or Church congregation around which a community grew. Factions would have spun off from these groups, and likely would have maintained a cohesiveness bound by friendship and family ties. My focus has been to follow the group and look for bits of information to help build a Clark history.

Monday, January 1, 2018

John Clark Website

I keep several websites on Rootsweb, including three GenWeb sites and one personal site dedicated to John Clark. Access to these sites are not currently available from December 2017 and for the next several weeks while they sort out what is apparently a hacking issue.

John Clark's Ancestry

I keep a tree on Ancestry (dot) com, but previously had never connected John Clark's (1740) father because I always had questions about continuity based on statements in Jotham Clark's journal about John's father and grandfather. Until and unless proven otherwise, I have placed John Clark's father b. ca 1715 and his grandfather, also John, b. [calculated] ca 1690. The Bedford census of 1710 shows a John Clark b. 1695 born to William Clark. Because there is no evidence to the contrary, and there is some circumstantial evidence in support, I have linked our line to William Clark of Bedford, b. 1670. William is the son of William Clark, b. 1645. This line came from Stamford. William Clark b. 1645 is of undetermined parentage. Following a lineage model I use to estimate generations, I assume William's father to have been born ca. 1620. Other progenitors allied with the Clark line came to Massachusetts and Connecticut between 1630 and 1840 within "The Great Migration" of which much study has been done and published. Likely candidates for additional research would be anyone named John or William who would be allied with surnames we are already familiar with. I have traced one group back to 1630 among arrivals to the Watertown Colony. It is probable to find our Clark line in that colony. Robert Charles Anderson published The Great Migration Study Project, pages of which are available online. Anderson briefly writes of one or more William Clark of whom he has no additional information. So, it is not possible to rule out one of these William Clarks as an ancestor. Likewise it is irresponsible to conclude, without evidence, that one of them IS our ancestor. Firstly, I would like to learn more about our family group in the early years of the Stamford colony to see if there are leads to an ancestor.