Aaron SMITH

Male Aft 1688 - 1746  (57 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Aaron SMITH was born after Aug 1688 (son of Job SMITH and Elizabeth THOMPSON); died in 1746.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Job SMITH was born about 1647 (son of Richard SMITH and Sarah UNKNOWN); died about 1719.

    Job married Elizabeth THOMPSON. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth THOMPSON (daughter of John THOMPSON and Hannah BREWSTER).
    Children:
    1. Job SMITH was born on 9 Mar 1679; died in 1740.
    2. Richard SMITH was born in 1684; died on 16 Jun 1759.
    3. Joseph SMITH was born in 1685; and died.
    4. Timothy SMITH was born in 1686; and died.
    5. James SMITH was born after 30 Aug 1688; and died.
    6. 1. Aaron SMITH was born after Aug 1688; died in 1746.
    7. Elizabeth SMITH died before 1726.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Richard SMITH was born about 1613; died on 7 Mar 1691.

    Notes:

    The following is a summary from "The Family of Richard Smith" by F. K. Smith

    Based on Richard Smith's academic and intellectual skills and other clues, Frederick K. Smith surmised that Richard was brought up in London, England and that he received a very good education that may have included legal training. He states that Richard likely sailed from England in the ship John of London 2 Oct 1635 bound for St. Christopher's, West Indies. Smith suggests he may have decided to stay in New England and also suggests he was in Boston or Cambridge for a few years before moving to Southampton, Long Island where he was considered an early settler. He was very involved in community business and held public offices there until 1656 when a critical event took place. Richard was returning from a ten-week trip he had taken to England. Smith says:

    "In August 1656 there landed on the shores of Massachusetts Bay the forty-one passengers of the ship Speedwell with Robert Lock as master which had sailed from Gravesend, England on the thirtieth day of May. Among them there were eight designated as Quakers and, of the others not so designated, one was Richard Smith, aged forty-three years. Quakers, not being viewed as desirable additions to the community, the eight who had been entered as such on the passenger list were arrested and held in prison for some weeks and then sent away from the colony. Richard Smith was accorded a similar reception as it appeared he had come to adopt the religious views of the Quakers."

    While in prison for three weeks, Richard received a letter from the Governor and Magistrates of Massachusetts before his release suggesting that he consult ministers of the church to understand the error of his ways. Smith goes on with the following excerpt from "Felt's Ecclesiastical History of New England:"

    "Smith was of Long Island. [Upon his release] he attended public worship and, after the minister was done, publicly requested that, as the Governor desired him to converse with some of the ministers so that they might convince him of his error, they would accordingly address him. When told that the proposed interview was intended to be private, he wanted it otherwise. After three weeks detention he was sent home by water."

    Smith goes on later to say, "It is likely that ...... Richard Smith did not devote much time to theological matters and it is not likely that he adopted the whole body of Quaker doctrine as a serious religious conviction." Although some of his descendants were definitely Quakers and he was known as "Quaker Smith," there is no evidence of any affiliation of Richard Smith with a Society of Friends Meeting. None-the-less, according to Frederick K. Smith, Richard can be counted in 1656 as the first Quaker convert of North America.

    Following the events of August and September 1656 in Boston, the drama continued back in Southampton. On 17 Sep 1656, Richard was given orders to leave town for "unreverend carriage towards the magistrates" (Topping and Ogden). He had one week to depart or be fined. On 6 Oct 1656 he was fined five pounds for still being in the town.

    During that Fall, Richard removed to Setauket on the North side of Long Island. He worked for about twelve years to put together a very large block of land and in 1677 he received a "Second Patent" from Governor Andross. It was here that he established Smithtown and it remains a municipality on Long Island today.




    Richard married Sarah UNKNOWN. Sarah died about 1707. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sarah UNKNOWN died about 1707.
    Children:
    1. Jonathan SMITH was born about 1641; and died.
    2. Elizabeth SMITH was born in 1643; died in 1712.
    3. Richard SMITH was born about 1645; died about 1720.
    4. 2. Job SMITH was born about 1647; died about 1719.
    5. Adam SMITH was born in 1649; died on 2 Jul 1726.
    6. Obadiah SMITH was born in Mar 1651; died on 20 Aug 1680.
    7. Samuel SMITH was born in 1654; died on 2 Apr 1717.
    8. Daniel SMITH was born about 1656; and died.
    9. Deborah SMITH was born about 1658; died on 28 Mar 1743.

  3. 6.  John THOMPSON was born on 3 Jun 1609; died on 14 Oct 1688.

    John married Hannah BREWSTER. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Hannah BREWSTER (daughter of Francis BREWSTER).
    Children:
    1. 3. Elizabeth THOMPSON


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Francis BREWSTER
    Children:
    1. 7. Hannah BREWSTER
    2. Rev. Nathaniel BREWSTER