FIRST GENERATION
[from our 1994 book]
1. WILLIAM1
CHADBOURNE (Robert A), baptized Church of St Editha,
Tamworth, Warwickshire, England 30 Mar 1582 (Tamworth parish register);
died after his last appearance in Maine 16 Nov 1652 (qv); married Tamworth
8 Oct 1609 (ibid) ELIZABETH SPARRY, born perhaps about 1589, died after
1 Jun 1623 (birth of her last known child, Tamworth parish register).
Her parentage has not been discovered; however, her surname is common
in Staffordshire. William was the son of Robert and Margery or Margaret
(Dooley) Chadbourne of Preston, Lancashire, and Tamworth, Warwickshire,
England.
William arrived in New England aboard the Pied Cow 8 Jul 1634 (vide
post) with James Wall and John Goddard. The three were under contract
with Capt John Mason of London's Laconia Company, a joint-stock company
seeking profits in the new world. The purpose of the contract, dated
16 Mar 1633/4, was to build mills in Berwick. William was referred to
as a housewright or master carpenter. The men began to build the first
water-powered saw mill and grist mill in New England on 22 Jul 1634.
James Wall, carpenter and millwright, deposed on 21 May 1652 that about
the year 1634 he and his partners William Chadbourne and John Goddard,
carpenters, came over to Mason's land on his account and their own,
that Mr [Henry] Joslyn, Mason's agent, brought them to certain lands
at Asbenbedick Falls, as the Indians called the place, later the Great
Works River in Berwick, where they carried on a sawmill and a stamping
mill for corn three or four years. Wall built a house there and Chadbourne
built another (Pope, The Pioneers of Maine and New Hampshire, 1623 to
1660, 218-19).
The house William built may be the one said by Stackpole in 1926 to
be the oldest house in Maine. Part of its foundation is under the present
house on the northwest corner of Brattle and Vine Streets on the road
from the Lower Landing (Hamilton House) to the original mill site at
Asbenbedick (later Great Works) Falls. William Chadbourne deeded the
home to his son-in-law, Thomas Spencer, and a nice picture of it appeared
in the Boston Evening Transcript of 25 Jun 1938. Other accounts suggest
that the property occupied by Spencer was actually a second, later house,
and that the early home stood in the northwesterly angle of the intersection
of Brattle Street leading to the mouth of the Great Works River and
the highway to Eliot.
The Asbenbedick Great Works was the site of a mill with nineteen saws
built by the Leader brothers in the 1650s. The river was called Chadbournes
River by many before and after, due to the Chadbourne dam and mill erected
downstream in the late 1630s.
A copy of the Mason contract referred to above survives in the MA Archives
3:437. It stipulates that they were to stay five years and receive three
fourths of the profits from the mills and own three fourths of the houses,
which Mason was to furnish. At the termination of the contract they
were to have fifty acres on lease for the term of "three lives"
at the annual rent of three bushels of corn.
The articles brought on the vessel, which were taken from the company's
store were: one great iron kettle, for which Thomas Spencer was responsible,
Irish blankets, one Kilkenny rug, one pair of sheets, one pentado coverlet,
one brass kettle and seven spoons.
It is not clear when other members of William's family arrived. His
daughter Patience may have preceded him, since her husband Thomas Spencer
came four years earlier and they may have had children between 1630
and 1634. Mason's list of stewards and workmen sent contains the names
"William Chadborn, William Chadborn, jun., and Humphry Chadborn,"
but also indicates twenty-two women who are unnamed. It is known that
the Pied Cow had made at least one crossing in 1631 and that the bark
Warwick had made several early crossings, all for Capt Mason, but it
is unlikely that William came on any of these trips, given the phrasing
of Wall's deposition which implies that he came in about 1634 (NEHGR
21:223-4).
Elizabeth is mentioned only in the couple's marriage record. It is not
known when or where she died. She may have come to Maine, for there
is no burial record for her in Tamworth; however, no account of her
has been found in the New World. Some have conjectured that William
may have returned to England after deeding his Berwick homestead to
son-in-law Thomas Spencer. No record of William's death has been located
in England or Maine.
In 1640, he and his sons were listed as NH residents (NHPP, Vol 1) before
purchasing land in Kittery in those regions now called S Berwick and
Eliot. Both William Sr and William Jr were in Boston in 1643 (LND, 134).
The Chadbournes, like the other people brought to ME by Mason, were
not dissenters from the Church of England, emigrating for religious
freedom, as was the case with most of the settlers in New England in
this period. William's father Robert, raised Catholic, professed to
fear God as his reason for not attending the Church of England; but
William's family were members of the Church of England who perhaps intended
to return to England after the terms of Mason's contract were fulfilled.
Indeed, that may be what William and Elizabeth Chadbourne did.
William Chadbourne, as a respected master carpenter and housewright,
may have been contracted to build the so-called Great House at Strawbery
Banke (now Portsmouth NH) used to house the Laconia Company's stores
and serve as a dwelling for the company workmen. The site of this building
has recently been found, near the present Stawbery Banke village historic
site. Claims have been made in published sources that the Great House
was built by William's son Humphrey circa 1631. Humphrey was said to
have come on the Warwick in 1631, and no evidence has been found of
William's arrival before 1634. An error could have occurred because
of a poorly-written paragraph in James Sullivan's book, The History
of the District of Maine , published in Boston MA in 1795, where William
1, who built the Great House, and Humprhey 2, who purchased land from
Mr Rowles, are rolled into one. If Humphrey was baptized as an infant
in 1615 he would have been sixteen at the time the Great House was built.
He may very well have worked on it, although it is more likely that
his father was given the contract for its building. The contract hasn't
survived and which of the Chadbournes was responsible for the building
remains conjecture.
One William Chadbourne was admitted an inhabitant to the town of Portsmouth
RI 25 February 1642[/3] (The Early Records of the Town of Portsmouth,
Providence RI: The RI Historical Society, 1901, 19). He was granted
land there in 1642 (ibid, 11), but the grant was not finalized, and
it is doubtful he ever resided there. He was certainly gone by 28 Sep
1647 (ibid, 36). This may have been another William Chadbourne who is
known to have come from Winchcombe (see discussion on this man in the
Appendix).
On 3 Mar 1650/1, William and his sons, with others, were accused by
Mrs Ann (Green) Mason, widow of Capt John Mason, of embezzling her husband's
estate. The claim was based on a contract which was not honored by either
party because of the death of Capt Mason, and also based on the first
recorded Indian deed in ME in 1643. The Chadbourne claim was upheld
by the selectmen of Kittery and the Government of the Massachusetts
Bay in New England.
On 4 May 1652, William Chadbourne was one of the chosen men assigned
to a Kittery committee to pick a lot and build a meeting house. He was
the first signer of the Kittery Act of Submission, 16 November 1652.
We have no certain record of William after this date.
Children (parish records, St Editha, Tamworth), surname CHADBOURNE:
- i. WILLIAM2,
bpt Tamworth, Warwickshire 30 Sept 1610; bur there 18 Apr 1616
- ii. PATIENCE,
bpt Tamworth 8 Nov 1612, mar. Thomas SPENCER
- iii. HUMPHREY,
bpt Tamworth 23 Apr 1615.
iv. SUSANNAH, bpt Tamworth 22 Feb 1617/8; bur Tamworth 26 Apr 1618.
- v. WILLIAM,
bpt Tamworth 15 Oct 1620.
vi. ROBERT, bpt Tamworth 1 June 1623; bur Tamworth 19 Jan 1626/7.
NOTE that the place "Winchcombe if erroneous for these Chadbournes,
and likely also for Thomas Spencer.}
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