Joseph WILLIAMS

Birth:
18 Apr 1647
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts
Death:
1719
Norwich, New London, Connecticut
Marriage:
18 Nov 1674
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts
Mother:
Notes:
                   Joseph took the Colonial Oath at Haverhill on 28 Nov 1677. His father conveyed to him property at Haverhill, recorded on 14 Jul 1673:
"To my sonne Joseph Williams, my new dwelling house, out housing, house lott, orchard and hopp yards, yt are ye sd lot, together with eight comonages which I have in ye towne of Haverhill, and also Yt pcell of ox common land which layd out to me beyond the fishing river towards the saw mill, and also my Duck meadow wchis bounded at Ye south and wth two oakes and at Ye north end with a swamp"  (This is the spelling used in the will)

This is evidently the same property which the father willed to him in 1670.
Many years later, "Joseph Williams" of Norwich, sold property in Haverhill inherited from his father.

After the birth of his youngest child in 1683, his name is found no more in the records of Haverhill. The next trace of him is gathered from the archives of Norwich, Conn. Here he settled on Poquetannock Cove, Brewster's Neck, on the extreme boundary line of the southern limits of Norwich, east of the Thames. This is just within what was comprehended in the original Indian Grant of the "nine milessquare tract".

We have no way of knowing his exact date of moving to Conn, but it was about 1697, because on 19 Nov 1697, mention is found on the town records of the conveyance to him of fifty acres of land on the Poquetannock Brook, by Josiah Gaylord of Poquetannock.

An incentive to move from Haverhill at this particular time was a political one.Governor Andros, who had just been put at the head of affairs int he Bay Colony,  began imposing fines and exacting from the freeman their hard earned money. Connecticut was out of the province, and there one was able to escape such annoyances. Last, but by no means least, was the fact that Haverhill was a frontier settlement, which was constantly menaced by the Indians. No town suffered more than Haverhill from these depredations and many of Joseph Williams' immediate relatives lost their lives in the Indian massacres.

The Norwich town records mention many real-estate transactions of Joseph Williams, which show that he was a man of prosperous circumstances and that his business interests were in partnership with his son John. He, as well as his son, received lands in return for contributions to the meeting house. A roll of landed proprietors is given in 1718, and he is mentioned. In 1719, there is a record of a deed bearing his name. In 1720, the year if his wife's death, he is referred to as deceased. He left but one son to carry down the Williams name.
He was a member of te Congregational Church of Norwich,
                  
Mary FULLER
Birth:
16 Jun 1644
Barnstable, Massachusetts
Chr:
16 Jun 1644
Barnstable, Massachusetts
Death:
11 Nov 1720
Norwich, New London, Connecticut
Sources:
Universal Genealogy, ALIAS: 5807-4117, GENDB
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
17 Nov 1675
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts
Death:
10 Sep 1702
Norwich, Connecticut
Marr:
6 Aug 1695
Norwich, New London, Connectic 
2
Mary WILLIAMS
Birth:
29 Nov 1677
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts
Death:
 
Marr:
 
3
Birth:
12 Apr 1680
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts
Death:
11 Jan 1741
Poquetanuck, Hartford, Connecticut
Marr:
26 Jan 1706
Norwich, New London, Connectic 
Notes:
                   Also have 17 Feb 1679/1680 (Ada Gardner's). I used Mary E. Williams account. Mayhave died in 1742. Mary Williams had him emmigrating from Wales to MA. She had him dying in Preston, formerly a part of Norwich, CONN, on the river Thames.

We don't know much about his early life. The earliest reference according to Adawas in a deed by Josiah Gaylord, on 2 Dec 1702, to transfer 15 acres of land. So, it appears that he did moved to Norwich about the same time as his father. Subsequent to this, in conjunction with his father, and also by himself, he purchased a number of tracts of land in the vicinity, totalling several hundred acres.He was also granted several tracts of land in consideration of money paid for the building of the meeting house. There is ample testimony to his prominence among his fellow townsmen through the two score years of his later life. In early years, when Poquetannock was wholly within the limits of Norwich, he was one of the select men from 1721 to 1728 and later, an office of responsibility and honor.

In 1735, there was a petition to the General Assembly of the State, that the Supreme Court in March and November, for the County of New London, be held in Norwich. The petition was granted. Of the committee on the part of the town, three men are named: John Williams is named first.
Two years later, in 1737, a bridge over the Shetucketwas demanded to connect the"Landing" (Chelsea or Norwich City), with the East Society (Preston). A public subscription was taken to defray the cost, and again he appears conspicously, asthe highest contributor on the list, the full number of names being 83.

His interest in military affairs is shown in the two commissionshe obtained fromthe State Assembly, in 1721 as Lientenant, in 1735 as Captain, in the 5th Company of the Eastern Society of Norwich. By these titles he is always referred to in town records and deeds thereafter. These titles were not as empty and complimentary as there are now, and were the highest grades known in the colonies in times of peace. He was active not only in local affairs and in the school of the soldier, but socially, religiously and as a public spirited citizen.

He was influential as few others have been in the reaching out for new fields
in the opening up of trade, and in the bringing of fresh business to the port ofNorwich. He engaged in the business of building ships and trading them to foreign ports. He owned two warehouses at the "Landing" besides the wharf. He developed the possibilities of water power at Poquetannock, where we learn of his having a sawmill, gristmill and a fulling mill. There was an abundance of sheep in the neighborhood, yielding wool in great quantities. The fulling mill provided themanufacture of cloth, which at that time was a necessity.

John Williams appears to have been a man of charitable impulses. The records of 1711 and 1715 make mention of his contributions to the building of the meeting house in Norwich, for which he was granted a piece of land in requital. He is credited with having made a gift of land at "Long Society" where he is buried alongwith his wife and others of his family. They are buried in the graveyard adjoining the church.

He was reported to be one of the most prosperous men in the colonies for his dayand generation. An entry in the daily newspaper of 12 Jan 1741/2 is as follows:Captain John Williams died at Poquetannock of pleurisy after many days of illness. He was a good commonwealth's man, traded much by sea and land, with good success for many years, and acquired wholly by his own industry and great estate. He was a very just dealer aged about 60 years.
He and his family are buried in the old buriel grounds at Long Society in the northwest corner of the meeting house
                  
4
Hannah WILLIAMS
Birth:
30 Sep 1682/83
Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts
Death:
 
Marr:
 
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Joseph Williams - Mary Fuller

Joseph Williams was born at Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts 18 Apr 1647. His parents were John Williams and Jane Gould.

He married Mary Fuller 18 Nov 1674 at Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts . Mary Fuller was born at Barnstable, Massachusetts 16 Jun 1644 daughter of Samuel Fuller and Jane Lathrop .

They were the parents of 4 children:
Sarah Williams born 17 Nov 1675.
Mary Williams born 29 Nov 1677.
John Williams born 12 Apr 1680.
Hannah Williams born 30 Sep 1682/83.

Joseph Williams died 1719 at Norwich, New London, Connecticut .

Mary Fuller died 11 Nov 1720 at Norwich, New London, Connecticut .