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John
Howland
BIRTH: About
1599 (see notes below), the son of Henry and Margaret Howland of Fenstanton,
Huntington..
MARRIAGE:
* Elizabeth Tilley, about 1624, Plymouth.
Death: 23
or 24 February 1672/3, Rocky Nook, Kingston.
Children:
Desire, John, Hope, Elizabeth, Lydia, Hannah, Joseph, Jabez, Ruth, and
Isaac.
John Howland
was born about 1599, probably in Fenstanton, Huntington. He came on the
Mayflower in 1620 as a manservant for Governor John Carver. During the
Mayflower's voyage, Howland fell overboard during a storm, and was almost
lost at sea--but luckily for his millions of descendants living today
(including Presidents George Bush and George W. Bush, and Mrs. Theodore
Roosevelt) he managed to grab ahold of the topsail halyards, giving the
crew enough time to rescue him with a boathook.
It has been
traditionally reported that John Howland was born about 1592, based on
his reported age at death in the Plymouth Church Records. However, ages
at death were often overstated, and that is clearly the case here. John
Howland came as a servant for John Carver, which means he was under 25
years old at the time (i.e. he was born after 1595). William Bradford,
in the falling-overboard incident, refers to Howland as a "lusty
young man", a term that would not likely have applied to a 28-year
old given that Bradford himself was only 30--Bradford did call 21-year
old John Alden a "young man" though. Howland's wife Elizabeth
was born in 1607: a 32-year old marrying a 17-year old is an unlikely
circumstance. Howland's last child was born in 1649: a 57-year old Howland
would be an unlikely father. All these taken together demonstrate that
Howland's age was likely overstated by at least 5 years. Since he signed
the Mayflower Compact, we can assume he was probably about 21 in 1620,
so the best estimate for his birth would be about 1599.
John Howland
had several brothers who also came to New England, namely Henry Howland
(an ancestor to both Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford) and Arthur
Howland (an ancestor to Winston Churchill).
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