Pane-Joyce Genealogy
4804. Jonathan Treadway. Born on 11 Nov 1640 in Sudbury, MA.30 Jonathan died in Sudbury, MA, on 28 May 1710; he was 69.30

Jonathan was mentally deranged in 1695.30
On 1 Mar 1666 when Jonathan was 25, he married Judith Thurston, daughter of John Thurston (ca 1601-1 Nov 1685) & Margaret (-9 May 1662), in Medfield, MA.30 Born 17 Mar 1647/8 in Dedham, MA. Judith was baptized in Dedham, MA, on 29 Mar 1648. Judith died in Framingham, MA on 12 Oct 1726.30

Judith was of Medfield when she married Jonathan.
Their children include:
13941i.
Lydia Treadway (Died unmarried) (8 Sep 1667-29 Mar 1702)
13942ii.
Nathaniel Treadway (Died soon) (2 Dec 1668-14 Dec 1668)
13943iii.
Jonathan Treadway (4 Jun 1670-)
13944iv.
James Treadway (26 Oct 1671-)
13946vi.
Hannah Treadway (14 Jun 1680-19 Sep 1714)
13947vii.
Ephraim Treadway (14 Nov 1681-)
13948viii.
Huldah Treadway (1 Nov 1687-)
4805. Mary Treadway. Born on 1 Aug 1642 in Sudbury, MA.30 Mary died in Watertown, MA, on 17 May 1677; she was 34.30

Mary first married John Fisher, second Timothy Hawkins. She died in childbed.
On 12 Sep 1665 when Mary was 23, she first married John Fisher in Sudbury, MA.30
Their children include:
13949i.
On 21 Jul 1675 when Mary was 32, she second married Timothy Hawkins, son of Timothy Hawkins (ca 1612-bef 27 Sep 1651) & Hannah Hammond (ca 1616-), in Watertown, MA.16 Born on 30 Dec 1639 in Watertown, MA.16
Their children include:
13950i.
Mary Hawkins (30 Apr 1677-23 Apr 1759)
4806. James Treadway. Born ca 1644 in Sudbury, MA.

James was mentioned in his father’s will.
4807. Elizabeth Treadway. Born on 3 Apr 1646 in Watertown, MA.371 Elizabeth died in Watertown, MA, on 18 Sep 1714; she was 68.

From The Hapgood Family, page 25:371
    Elizabeth (Treadway) Hapgood married second, Joseph Hayward of Concord, where her son Thomas is said to have been brought up. The records show that Hayward married Elizabeth Treadway, possibly he had her maiden name restored on the record to show her respectable origin, or the clerk committed an error in not knowing her previous marriage, or how to express both of her previous names. Joseph Hayward was born one year after her first husband, and having buried his first wife, December 15, 1675, four months after Shadrach Hapgood was slain, married, March 23, 1677, Elizabeth Treadway Hapgood. She buried her mother at Watertown, 1682, and her father, Nathaniel Treadway of Watertown, in 1687, who left legacies for the children of his “daughter Elizabeth Hayward by her first husband Habgood.”
On 21 Oct 1664 when Elizabeth was 18, she first married Shadrach Hapgood in Sudbury, MA.30 Born ca 1642 in England. Shadrach died in Brookfield, MA on 2 Aug 1675.30

Shadrach was shot by Indians at Quaboag (Brookfield), 2 Aug 1675.30

From The Hapgood Family, pages 18–23:371
    Shadrach Hapgood was the common ancestor of all the New England Hapgoods. He was nearly related to two of the early planters of Sudbury, viz., Peter Noyes, and Peter Noyes (or Haynes), Senior, both of whom were from Southampton, England, and were men of wealth and standing in the Colony. ([Footnote]: Peter Noyes was from Penton, Mewsey, only two and three-quarters miles from Andover, where, as I believe, the father of Shadrach Habgood was born, and only a quarter of a mile from Weyhill, from whence, according to family tradition, Mr. Noyes came.) He was brought over in his youth, and no doubt completed his minority with his distinguished uncle, Peter Noyes.
    Of his antecedents no information has been obtained beyond the record of his embarkation. Through the liberality of Warren Hapgood, Esq., of Boston, I have been enabled to procure an extensive examination of records in London and Southampton without finding his name. From returns, however, it appears that the name first occurred in that county about 1600, when six of the name in the central and west part of the county made their wills, 1603–1638, viz., John Hopgood of Andover, 1608 ; John Habgood the elder, yeoman, of Andover, 1615 ; Widow Joan Hapgood of Tangley, February 21, 1603, which was proved April 4, 1603 ; William Hopgood, tanner, son of William of North Stoneham, 1611 ; Thomas Hopgood, husbandman, of Mottisfont, 1617; and John Hopgood of Tangley (probably the son of Widow Joan Hapgood of Tangley), in 1638. These, judging from the names of their legatees, must have been all of one family. Widow Joan at the date of her will had a son Thomas, then the father of Joan and Christian. John Hopgood of Andover, whose will was proved 1608 but is not to be found, is supposed to have been the father of John Habgood of the same place, who in 1615 had a wife Alice and eight children, five of whom, viz., John, Katharine, Mary (wife of Henry Reade), Anne, and Alice, were of age; and Robert, Clare, and Thomas, then minors. This Thomas was probably the father of Shadrach, who named his first son Nathaniel, after his maternal grandfather, his second, Thomas, doubtless after his paternal grandfather, as was the uniform practice of his day, whenever the eldest son was not named for the latter. This conclusion has almost the force of a record, so uniformly was the second son, if not the first, called after his paternal grandfather. Nearly the only exceptions were when the latter had a non-scriptural name, or embarrassment would arise from making the identical name too common among grandchildren of equal ages in the same town or neighborhood. All relating to Shadrach Habgood that can be gleaned from our records is here given in the variable and defective orthography in which it occurs:–
    “Shadrach Hopgood aged fourteen years embarked at Gravesend May 30, 1656, in the Speadwell, Robert Lock, Master, bound for New England,” and in July arrived in Boston. Several other minors embarked at the same time, whose names soon after reappeared at Marlboro and Sudbury, where he had a cousin, Thomas Haynes, who had not improbably “been sent to bring him.”
    [...] The next notice of Shadrach Hopgood occurs in the following deposition in the records of the Court of Assistants.
    “June 26, 1666 ‘Sidrache Habgood’ aged about twenty-two yrs. witnesseth & saith that for this seven years past or more time while I lived with my cousin Peter Noyes & in the time when my uncle [Peter] Noyes lived, I then knew the bounds of my cousin’s land at Cedar Craught & the tree owned the last week by Lt. Goodenow, and also the stake in the meadow by the River side or towards the River side 5 or 6 rods to the Southward of the brooke to be where it ever was since I knew it & was in my sight renewed by neighbor Edward Rice & my cousin Peter Noyes together & further saith not.
    [Sworn] “Before mee Tho: Danforth, Assist.”
    Jan. 25, 1676, he served with Peter Noyes and Edmund Goodnow as an appraiser of the estate of Joseph Davis of Sudbury.
    In 1669, after Concord, Sudbury, Marlboro, Lancaster, Groton, and “Nashaby” had been granted, there was left a large and irregular tract between them, running in a northwesterly direction from Sudbury to Lunenburg, was then called “Pomposetticut”; and he, in 1678 or 1679, with eleven other men from Concord, Sudbury, and Chelmsford, then petitioned the General Court for a grant of the same. The records of the General Court are silent about it, yet from records of the proprietors of Stow, it appears that the Court entertained such petition, sent a committee to view the tract, and actually granted them the land for a new town, in 1670, requiring them to begin to improve it by May, 1673, and no doubt annexing other customary conditions, such as taking up 50 acres each, building a meeting-house, and settling an orthodox minister, &c., within a specified time, and procuring a certain number of additional settlers to become equal partners with themselves, after which they might proceed . to make further allotments of land. With all such conditions they did not probably comply. Yet they proceeded and “took up lots of 50 acres each” on both sides of Assabet River, from one to two miles above the site of Assabet Village, and located their meeting-house
near the old burying yard in Stow. How far they progressed is not ascertainable. Philip’s war came on soon, some lost their lives, and the settlement is supposed for a time to have been broken up. Still the grantees, if they did not fully comply with all the conditions of the grant, went so far as to obtain an extension, and certainly to secure to themselves and heirs large interests in the town, which, by a further Act of the General Court, May 16, 1683, was fully incorporated by the name of Stow. That portion of the narrow belt, known as “Stow Leg,” lying within their boundaries, fell to each of the towns, Harvard, Shirley, and Boxborough, as they were incorporated.
    Shadrach Habgood took up his lot of 50 acres on the south side of the river, where Mr. Nathaniel Hapgood resides [in 1898], about one and one half miles south or southwest of the site of the first meeting-house. Here he began improvements, and operated two or three years, it is supposed, preparatory to removing his family from Sudbury, if he did not actually do so ; but the Indian war came on, and he was summoned to the field.
    The Nipmuck Indians, whose original country embraced the upper basins of Concord, Charles, and Blackstone rivers, and extended west to the Connecticut, had engaged secretly with King Philip to make war upon the English, but the war having been brought on before they were fully prepared to take part, they dissembled, and assured the settlers of their friendship. Still they were suspected by the government. Captains Hutchinson and Wheeler were therefore ordered, with twenty mounted men, and three Indian interpreters, to proceed into their country to treat with them, to insure their loyalty. In this company was Shadrach Habgood. They proceeded to Brookfield. Here the Indians being made acquainted with the object of their visit, engaged to meet them, August 2, 1675, at a certain spot at Quaboag, about three miles from the village and garrison of Brookfield. They proceeded to the place, but finding no Indians, and imagining they had mistaken the locality, directed their course to Wikabaug Pond, in single file, between a swamp on the left and an abrupt high hill on the right. The place is supposed to be on the south side of the railroad, between the depot in Brookfield and West Brookfield. Here they fell into an ambush, and were suddenly surrounded with 200 or 300 warriors, who killed eight of their number and mortally wounded three others. Among the murdered was Shadrach Habgood. Captain Wheeler, whose letter describing this tragedy has been often before the public, spells his name Hapgood.
    Mrs. Habgood, with her five children, was probably at Sudbury, to receive the sorrowful tidings. But their griefs and losses were not yet ended. She was appointed to administer on her husband's estate, which, with his right and interest in the “New Plantation at Pomsetticutt,” now Stow, was appraised by Peter Noyes and Edmund Goodenow, September 2, 1675, at £145.2s. October 5 (8), 1675, she presented a new inventory of the estate, valued at £106.11s., praying for an abatement of the difference, in consequence of the burning of a house by the enemy. This, no doubt, refers to a house which her husband had built upon his lot at Pomposetticut, for Sudbury was not burnt until April 6, 1676, although his descendant, who occupies the spot, has no tradition of the event.
Their children include:
13951i.
Dea. Nathaniel Hapgood (21 Oct 1665-bef 1741)
13952ii.
Mary Hapgood (2 Nov 1667-13 Jan 1692[/3])
13953iii.
Thomas Hapgood (1 Oct 1669-4 Oct 1764)
13954iv.
Sarah Hapgood (ca 1670-bef 10 Oct 1746)
13955v.
Elizabeth Hapgood (Died unmarried) (ca 1674-20 Jul 1689)
23 Mar 1676/7 Elizabeth second married Joseph Heyward, son of George Heyward (-29 Mar 1671) & Mary (-12 May 1693), in Concord, MA. Born 26th 1m. 1643 [26 Mar 1643] in Concord, MA.77 Joseph died in Concord, MA on 13 Oct 1714.
Their children include:
13956i.
Ebenezer Heyward (22 May 1679-)
13957ii.
James Hayward (1 Mar 1681-5 Nov 1732)
13958iii.
Simeon Heyward (16 Jun 1683-18 May 1719)
13959iv.
Lydia Hayward (ca 1685-Jun 1777)
13960v.
Abiel Heyward (12 Sep 1691-)
4808. Lydia Treadway. Born on 1 Sep 1649 in Watertown, MA. Lydia died in Weston, MA, on 18 Sep 1743; she was 94.30

Gravestone inscription:
    Mrs. Lydia Jones relict of
    Capt. Josiah Jones, who was
    ye first Deacon of
    ye Church in Town
    died Sept. 17 1743
    aged 95
On 2 Oct 1667 when Lydia was 18, she married Dea. Josiah Jones (2743) , son of Lewis Jones (1205) (-11 Apr 1684) & Anna (-1 May 1680), in Watertown, MA.30 Born ca 1643 in Roxbury, MA. Josiah died in Weston, MA on 9 Oct 1714.262

From Bond’s Watertown Genealogies:30
    Josiah Jones, of Watertown farms (Weston), was admitted freeman Ap. 18, 1690, was a captain, one of the original members, and one of the first deacons of Weston church, to which office he was elected Jan. 4, 1709-10, and he d. Oct. 9, 1714. About 1690 the three portions of Watertown (Watertown, Waltham, and Weston), were designated as the precincts of Capt. Bond’s Company, of Capt. Garfield’s Co., and of Lieut. Jones’s Co. He m., Oct. 2, 1667, Lydia Treadway. She d. Sept. 18, 1743, aged 94. Feb. 20, 1665-6, he purchased of John Stone and wife Sarah, of Watertown, a farm of 124 acres on the north side of the Sudbury highway, about two miles from Sudbury, which said Stone purchased May 18, 1657, of Richard Browne, late of Watertown, d. Ap. 21, 1684, he sold to John Bright, for £60, his share (1/4) of the mills on Stoney Brook, with 30 acres of land, bought of Nathaniel Treadway, Feb. 19, 1678-9, land bought of John Chadwick, with the house, &c., thereon. [Mid. Deeds, Vol. IX., p. 336.]

Gravestone inscription:
    Here Lyes buried
    The body of Capt.
    Josiah Jones,
    Who Deceased Octobr
    the 9th, 1714, in the
    74th year of his Age
Their children include:
7545i.
Lydia Jones (25 Aug 1668-21 May 1718)
7546ii.
Capt. Josiah Jones (20 Oct 1670-21 Dec 1734)
7547iii.
Mary Jones (10 Dec 1672-)
7548iv.
Capt. Nathaniel Jones (31 Dec 1674-Nov 1745)
7549v.
Ens. Samuel Jones (9 Jul 1677-6 Jan 1717/8)
7550vi.
Capt. James Jones (4 Sep 1679-14 Sep 1770)
7551vii.
Sarah Jones (6 Feb 1681-9 Jul 1705)
7552viii.
Ann Jones (28 Jun 1684-1736)
7553ix.
John Jones (19 Mar 1686/7-)
7554x.
Isaac Jones (ca 1690-)
4809. Josiah Treadway. Born on 7 May 1652 in Watertown, MA. Josiah died in Charlestown, MA, on 15 Jan 1732; he was 79.30 Occupation: Weaver.

From Bond’s Watertown Families:30
    Josiah Treadway, a weaver, of Watertown; admitted freeman 18 Arp 1690; was of Charlestown Oct 1699.

(What’s the source of Josiah’s birthdate of 7 May 1652?)
9 Jan 1673/4 Josiah first married Sarah Sweetman, daughter of Thomas Sweetman (ca 1610-8 Jan 1682/3) & Isabel [Sweetman], in Charlestown, MA.30 Born on 2 May 1654 in Cambridge, MA. Sarah died in Watertown, MA 5 Mar 1696/7.30
Their children include:
13961i.
Josiah Treadway (Died young) (28 Feb 1674/5-11 Dec 1683)
13962ii.
James Treadway (17 Oct 1676-28 May 1728)
13963iii.
Sarah Treadway (18 Dec 1679-27 Aug 1745)
13964iv.
Bethia Treadway (2 Dec 1681-19 May 1739)
13965v.
Abigail Treadway (24 Sep 1683-6 Apr 1713)
13966vi.
Josiah Treadway (16 Nov 1686-)
13967vii.
Susanna Treadway (6 Jan 1688/9-18 Aug 1739)
13968viii.
Tabitha Treadway (15 Dec 1690-13 May 1761)
13969ix.
Seferana Treadway (12 Aug 1692-18 Apr 1712)
3 Feb 1697/8 Josiah second married Dorothy in Charlestown, MA.30 Dorothy died in Boston, MA 19 Mar 1739/40.
Their children include:
13970i.
4810. Deborah Treadway. Born on 2 Aug 1657 in Watertown, MA.30 Deborah died in Brookline, MA, on 8 Jun 1714; she was 56.
On 25 Mar 1680 when Deborah was 22, she married Joseph Goddard, son of William Goddard (ca 1627-26 Oct 1691) & Elizabeth Miles (-8 Feb 1697/8), in Watertown, MA.30 Born ca 1655 in London, England. Joseph died in Brookline, MA on 25 Jul 1728.
Their children include:
13971i.
Elizabeth Goddard (8 Jan 1680-aft 1767)
13972ii.
Joseph Goddard (7 Nov 1683-)
13973iii.
James Goddard (say 1685-1734)
13974iv.
Deborah Goddard (19 Jun 1693-14 Jan 1761)
13975v.
Robert Goddard (1694-8 May 1785)
13976vi.
John Goddard (4 Oct 1698-26 Jun 1785)
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