Sarah (Bagley) Warman
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Sarah (Bagley) Warman (1663 - 1742)

Sarah Warman formerly Bagley aka Mack
Born in Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colonymap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married 5 Apr 1681 in Salisbury, Essex, Massachusetts Bay Colonymap
Wife of — married before 8 Apr 1728 in Lyme, New London, Connecticut Colonymap
Descendants descendants
Died at age 79 in Lyme, New London, Connecticut Colonymap
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Profile last modified | Created 18 Feb 2011
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Contents

Biography

Sarah was born 2 March 1662 (Juliane Calendar), the daughter of Orlando Bagley and Sarah Colby.[1][2] Sarah had a younger sister, also named Sarah, that was born in 1660 and died September 30, 1661.

Sarah married John Mack in Salisbury, where her family lived. Their first child was born there and several more are recorded in Concord, before they settled in Lyme, New London County, Colony of Connecticut.

Early Map of Lyme Connecticut showing Mack homestead.

John wrote his will January 5, 1721 and named Sarah and Ebenezer as executors. Sarah took an oath as to the accuracy of the estate on April 4 of that year, the total value being claimed as 305 lb 13 s 11 p[3]

Name

Name: Sarah /Bagley/[4]

Marriage

Marriage: John Mack
Date: 5 April 1681
Place: Salisbury, Mass.[5][6][7]

Second Marriage

C.D. Parkhurst stated that after the death of Abigail Lay Warman and John Mack, that William Warman and Sarah Bagley Mack married.[8]

Transfer of Deed

“Her [Sarah Bagley Mack] marriage to William Warman occurred before 8 April 1728 when she joined him in a deed to Lewis DeWolfe of Lyme (LLR 4:366); this was signed by her using a very distinctive mark, which may serve to identify her, and may be the source of Parkhurst’s statement [that Sarah Mack was the 2nd wife of William Warman].”[9]

“William Warman’s will was dated 19 October 1738 and proved 23 September 1741. In it he gives his wife Sarah £50, along with the use and improvement of his house and adjoining land until his grandson William Daves reaches age 21; he provides that if his daughter Abigill be left a widow before that time, she should share equally in the use of the same house and land. He bequeaths £50 to his daughter Abigill to be paid after his grandson comes of age. He wills £50 to each of his granddaughters, namely Johanna Daves, Abigill Mack, Phebe Daves, Elesebeth Daves, Mary Daves, Jane Daves and Elizabeth Mack, to be paid one year after grandson William Daves reaches twenty-one. He gives to his great grandson William Warman Mack £10 to be paid to him at age 21. He appoints his grandson William Daves executor, together with Deacon Richard Ely, and wills him all his lands in Lyme and in the Province of New York, provided he accept the executorship, otherwise the land to be sold and the money payed 'as before devised,” and gives to him his carpenter’s tools. The rest of his moveable estate is willed to his wife; dated 19 October 1738; witnessed by Henry Merow [?], Sarah Starlin, by mark, Samll Selden; proved 20 April 1741 by Capt. Samuell Selden, who swore that he saw Mr. Henery Merow and Mrs. Sarah Starland sign. William Warman had only one child, and by his first wife, Abigail, born 7 July 1692 at Lyme. (LLR 2:41).”[9]

William's great-grandson, William Warman Mack, was a son of Ebenezer Mack and Abigail (Warman) Davis. He married Ruth Gee.[10]

This interwoven descendancy unfolds as: William Warman married Abigail Lay and had a daughter Abigail who married first Daniel Davis and by whom there was a daughter named Abigail. The daughter Abigail Davis (d. 9 March 1788) became the wife of Ebenezer Mack and they then had their daughter Abigail Mack who married William Gee. It is further found that Abigail (Warman) Davis married second John Mack, Jr. (as his second wife), the father of Ebenezer Mack. Also, William Warman married second Sarah (Bagley) Mack, the widow of John Mack, Sr.

Gravestone of Sarah Bagley Mack Warman

Death

Sarah lived 80 years and died May 15, 1742 in Lyme, Connecticut. She is buried in Marvin Cemetery on Joshuatown Road in Lyme[11] Supporting this is Sarah's grave is the fact she was born in the Juliane year 1662, lived 80 years, as inscribed on the gravestone, and died in 1742 also Juliane calendar, which is 80 years after 1662.[12][13] Her daughter, Deborah Mack Lord is buried there also[14]

Sources

  1. "Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:DCTH-QGZM : 10 November 2020), Sarah Bagley, 2 March 1662; citing Birth, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British Colonial America, Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth, Boston; FHL microfilm 004329324.
  2. "Massachusetts Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FCW2-7XD : 14 January 2020), Sarah Bagly, 1663.
  3. Fourth Book of Wills New London, Connecticut, Oath and inventory recorded April 12, 1721 by Lest C Christophus, Clerk.
  4. Source: #S-2055882673 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=amr-1699&h=402&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Marriage date: 5 April 1681; Marriage place: Salisbury, Massachusetts APID: 1,2081::402
  5. Boston marriage record: "Massachusetts, Town Clerk, Vital and Town Records, 1626-2001," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-8979-4H7Y?cc=2061550&wc=Q4DH-YWL%3A353350401%2C353366201%2C355517301 : 29 November 2018), Suffolk > Boston > Marriage Index 1646-1799 A-F > image 235 of 551; citing Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth, Boston.
  6. Source: #S-2055882673 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=amr-1699&h=402&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Marriage date: 5 April 1681Marriage place: Salisbury, Massachusetts APID: 1,2081::402
  7. "Massachusetts Marriages, 1695-1910, 1921-1924", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FH15-SQ6 : 27 April 2021), Sarah Bagly in entry for Jno. Mack, 1681.
  8. Parkhurst, Charles Dyer; Early Families of New London and Vicinity, (Manuscript) 1938 Connecticut State Library, Hartford.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Ward, Robert L., M.S. "William Warman of Lyme and His Daughter Abigail (Warman) (Davis) (Mack) (Kelsey) Lay". Original source: American Genealogist Vol. 48 (1972), Pgs 13-18, database online American Ancestors. New England Historic Genealogical Society, (NEHGS) 2009-. See familysearch.org person 9Z89-LZM, memories section for complete text.
  10. Descendants of Solomon Gee of Lyme, Connecticut; Benjamin, Charles E. 1981, Privately Published, Printed by Light and Life Press, Winona Lake, Indiana. Library of Congress Number 81-81764. Pages 92-96
  11. Find A Grave: Memorial #28549658
  12. "Connecticut, Charles R. Hale Collection, Vital Records, 1640-1955", database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F7F6-2ZQ : 16 September 2020), Sarah Worman, 1742.
  13. "Connecticut Deaths and Burials, 1772-1934", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F72R-FTT : 16 January 2020), Sarah Worman, .
  14. Find A Grave: Memorial #28540220
  • Birth Daughter Deborah: "Connecticut, Vital Records, Prior to 1850," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:78XK-YHT2 : 21 September 2019), Sarah in entry for Deborah Macke, ; citing Birth, , Compiled by Lucius A. and Lucius B. Barbour, housed at State Library, Hartford, Connecticut; FHL microfilm 008272239. Also "Connecticut Births and Christenings, 1649-1906", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F77G-WGW : 7 January 2020), Sarah in entry for Deborah Macke, 1706.
  • Source: S-2055882673 Repository: #R-2138127636 Title: American Marriages Before 1699 Author: Clemens, William Montgomery: Publication: Ancestry.com
  • Source: Wm Sterling of Haverhill, Massachusetts & of Lyme, Connecticut, and His Descendants Ancestry of Charles Stinson Pillsbury & John Sargent Pillsbury, by Mary Lovering Holman, 1938

Acknowledgements

  • Much gratitude to J Briller for obtaining the image of the land deed from Volume 4 of the Lyme Land Records, in Lyme, New London County, Connecticut.
  • This person was created through the import of Bishop Family Tree.ged on 18 February 2011.
  • WikiTree profile Bagley-403 created through the import of CJB001.ged on Jul 18, 2012 by Christopher Becker.
  • WikiTree profile Bagley-308 created through the import of Welder Family Tree.ged on Sep 10, 2011 by Deborah Anne Welder.




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Comments: 3

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William Warman 1650 of Lyme was called

“He is called William (Norman) in the Mack Genealogy•

posted by William Warman I
however, that it is through William Warman Mack that we can accurately place his mother, Abigail Davis, as coming from the Warman line. Some controversy has existed due to the fact that there were two persons sharing the name, Abigail Davis, and many reference sources have chosen the wrong, quite innocently I am sure, Abigail; their choice being the daughter of Abigail (Fox) (Hill) Davis with the erroneous assumption that the daughter Abigail, born of the mother's first marriage, had been known as Abigail Davis rather than Abigail Hill.

The correct Abigail Davis who married Ebenezer Mack was a daughter of Abigail Warman and Daniel Davis, hence the source of the middle name for their son, William Warman Mack. In addition, Abigail (Warman) Mack married as her second husband (and his second wife) John Mack, Jr. who was the father of Ebenezer Mack.
In his will, William Warman, bequeathed property to his great grandson, William Warman Mack.

Not to confuse the issue but rather to illustrate the close association of early families at Lyme, this same William Warman married as his second wife (and her second husband), Sarah (Bagley) Mack, whose first husband was John Mack, Sr. So elements of the Warman line are thus found in each of the first four generations of the Mack family in America.

Ebenezer, the father of William Warman Mack, was a Baptist minister at Lyme, Connecticut and for some years lived at Marlow, New Hampshire where it is believed that he contributed to the fact that the first church established there was of this faith, although there is no record that he was a minister of that church. Marlow was (founded by families from Lyme, Connecticut who reportedly were members of the Baptist church there. A brother of Ebenezer named Solomon was one of the very early settlers at Marlow, believed to have been there before 1764
posted by William Warman I
I should have DNA match with Sally. I am listed under Jean marie Bagley. I definitely come from Sarah Colby and Orlando Bagley. We lose our tree from Orlando to Samuel Bagley who says he was born in Cutler, ME in 1794 or 5. Ito looks like Samuel will be fathered by someone in Whiting, ME or New Brunswick, Canada or Jacob Bagley 1753, Amesbury, MA If you can help please call or write [email address removed] Thx Jeannie
posted by Jean Bagley

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