Dyer, William

Birth Name Dyer, William
Gramps ID I2259
Gender male
Age at Death 62 years, 6 months, 29 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Birth [E2930] 1609-09-19 Kirby Lathrope, Lincolnshire, England  
 
Death [E2931] 1672-04-18 Newport, Newport, RI  
 

Relation to the center person (Strong, Living) : ninth great grandson

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Dyer, George [I2261]about 1579BET. 1591 - 1642
Mother Shirley, Dorothy [I16740]about 1581
         Dyer, William [I2259] 1609-09-19 1672-04-18

Families

    Family of Dyer, William and Barrett, Mary [F0920]
Married Wife Barrett, Mary [I2260] ( * about 1610 + 1660-06-01 )
   
Event Date Place Description Notes Sources
Marriage [E52824] 1633-10-27 St Martin-in-the-Field, London, Middlesex, England  
 
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Dyer, William [I2263]1634-10-241634-10-27
Dyer, Samuel [I2264]1635-12-00about 1678
Dyer, Mary [I2262]about 1639after 1678/9-01-26 (Julian)
Dyer, Mahershallallhasbaz [I2266]about 1643before 1670
Dyer, Henry [I2268]about 1647FEB 1689/90
Dyer, Charles [I1834]16501709-05-15
Dyer, William [I34720]about 16421688

Narrative

NEHGR, Vol 151, pages 408-416 "Walter Blackborne, London Milliner" by Johan Winsser; says (in part): About Midsummer's Day (June 24) 1624 Blackborne contracted fouteen year old William Dyer as an apprentice. Dyer, the son of an affluent Lincolnshire yeoman, was the future husband of Mary (Barrett) Dyer, the Quaker martyr. How the Dyer family came to select Blackborne is not certain, but it may have been through the Hutchinsons of Alford, Lincolnshire, or through the Carres of Sleaford, Lincolnshire, both families with known long standing associations with the Dyers and with close relatives in London. It may also be that the Dyers of Lincolnshire knew of Blackborne through one or more of the many Dyer families living in London, to whom they may have been related. In any case, William Dyer must have labored on a trial basis for the first year, because it was not until 20 August 1625 that his nine year indenture was enrolled with the Fishmongers, and it was made retroactive to the previous summer. In assuming responsibility for an apprentice, Blackborne obligated himself to serve as a surrogate father, teaching young Dyer his trade, providing him with bed, food, clothing, and behavioral supervision, and maintaining him in the religious life of the parish. In return, Dyer agreed to serve his master faithfully for the set term of years, to forgo marriage during his apprenticeship, to keep his master's secrets, and to adhere to strict behavorial standards both in his master's house and abroad in the town.
On 10 February 1632, William Dyer signed a lease to rent "The Globe" in the New Exchange, formerly occupied by Blackborne, for a term of two and a quarter years.
About a year later 1632/33 William Dyer also assumed the lease for Blackborne's tenement on Mr. Greene's Lane.
By the autumn of 1635 William Dyer had set sail for Boston and soon was prospering in his new home. He was one of fourteen owners of a wharf in Boston.
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[The Weaver Genealogy, Page 56,57
"William Coddington, who had been a crown magistrate at Salem, was chosen Governor of the Rhode Island colony. Thus, two flourishing settlements were planted, each having its own government. Absolute liberty of conscience prevailed, and the persecuted flocked thither from the other colonies. These people were so-called non-conformists and were Quakers, and they formed a plantation which, with Providence and Newport, obtained from England in March 1644, a charter under the title of 'The Incorporation of Providence Plantations in the Narragansett Bay in New England.'" Coddington and his party drew up and signed the following agreement: THE COMPACT "We, whose names are underwritten, do swear solemnly, in the presence of Jehovah, to incorporate ourselves into a body politic, and as He shall help us, will submit our persons, lives and estates, unto our Lord Jesus Christ, the King of Kings and Lord of Hosts and to His Holy Word of Truth, to be guided and judged thereby. Exod. XXIV. 3; 2 Kings XI, 17."
William Coddington
John Clark
William Dyer
William Freeborn
John Walker
Samuel Wilbur
Richard Garder
William Baulston
Edward Hutchinson
William Hutchinson
Henry Bull
John Coggeshall
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[e-mail from Aurie Morrison]
The 20th Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Vol. 3, p.366
Captain William and Mary Dyre, who came from England to Boston, Mass., and joined the First church there in December, 1635. Captain Dyre was disfranchised for "seditious writing" Nov. 15, 1637, removed to Rhode Island, and was one of the signers of the compact of government for that province, March 7, 1638. He was secretary the same year, general recorder, 1648; attorney-general, 1650-53; member of the general court, 1661-62, 1664-66; general solicitor, 1665-66, and 1668, and secretary to the council, 1669. He was commissioned commander-in-chief upon the sea in 1653, and headed an expedition fitted out in Rhode Island against the Dutch. His wife, Mary Dyre, was the only woman to suffer capital punishment in all the oppression of the Friends the world over. She accompanied her husband on his mission to England with Roger Williams and Dr. John Clarke to obtain the revocation of Governor Coddington's power in Rhode Island and while there became a convert to Quakerism and a preacher in the society. On arriving in Boston in 1657 she was imprisoned and on the petition of her husband was permitted to go with him to Rhode Island, but never to return to Massachusetts. She returned, however, and with William Robinson and Marmaduke Stevenson was tried and convicted for "their rebellion, sedition and presumptuous obtruding upon us notwithstanding their being sentenced to banishment on payne of death, as underminers of the government." Robinson and Stevenson were executed, but through the petition of her son, Mayor William Dyre, she was reprieved on the same conditions as before, but in May, 1660, again appeared on the public streets of Boston, and was brought before the court, May 31, and
condemned to death. She was executed June 1, 1660.

Pedigree

  1. Dyer, George [I2261]
    1. Shirley, Dorothy [I16740]
      1. Dyer, William
        1. Barrett, Mary [I2260]
          1. Dyer, William [I2263]
          2. Dyer, Samuel [I2264]
          3. Dyer, Mary [I2262]
          4. Dyer, Mahershallallhasbaz [I2266]
          5. Dyer, Henry [I2268]
          6. Dyer, Charles [I1834]
          7. Dyer, William [I34720]

Ancestors