Puffer Genealogy
PUFFER, George[1, 2, 3, 4]
1600 - 1639 (39 years)-
Name PUFFER, George Birth 1600 Dorchester, Dorchestshire, England [3, 5] Gender Male Arrival 1639 MA [2] Ref# 1 _COLOR 3 Death 27 Sep 1639 Braintree, MA [6] Burial Braintree, MA Person ID I6050 Puffers Last Modified 19 Dec 2023
Family 1 Elizabeth, b. CA 1620, Weymouth, MA d. 18 Feb 1676, Braintree, MA (Age 56 years) Children 1. PUFFER, James, b. 1624, England d. 25 Jul 1692, Braintree, MA (Age 68 years) 2. PUFFER, Rachel, b. Bef 1634, England d. Bef 1734 (Age < 100 years) 3. PUFFER, Matthias, b. 1635, Braintree, MA d. 9 May 1717, Dorchester, MA (Age 82 years) 4. PUFFER, William Sr., b. Abt 1640, Wrentham, MA d. 1686, Braintree, MA (Age 46 years) Family ID F8161 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 21 Apr 2024
Children 1. PUFFER, James, b. 1624, England d. 25 Jul 1692, Braintree, MA (Age 68 years) 2. PUFFER, Rachel, b. Bef 1634, England d. Bef 1734 (Age < 100 years) 3. PUFFER, Matthias, b. 1635, Braintree, MA d. 9 May 1717, Dorchester, MA (Age 82 years) 4. PUFFER, William Sr., b. Abt 1640, Wrentham, MA d. 1686, Braintree, MA (Age 46 years) Family ID F33597 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 21 Apr 2024
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Photos Torrey'_s New England Marriages to 1700 - Puffer.jpg
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Notes - The first of the family in this country, and the pioneer ancestor, lived but a few years after coming to New England, and we know very little about him. He was one of the residents of Boston to whom land was granted at Mount Wollaston, which was afterwards the town of Braintree, now the city of Quincy. The record shows that he was granted twenty acres and that there were five in his family, indicating that he had three children. February 24, 1639. His homestead was located about two miles east of the railroad station of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad (formerly the Old Colony Railroad) at Quincy. It is the site of the present Fore River shipyards. In the early records the name is often spelled Poffer. The Widow Puffer died at Braintree, February 18, 1676. He was born as early as 1600, died at Braintree, Sept. 27, 1639, (See Pother in records.) (J.W. Porter, Bangor, Me., 1882.)
(ED NOTE: I can find no listing of him or his supposed wife (Elizabeth Sedley) or her family on any manifests of ships arriving in the general area of Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1620-1640. Since he was married in the Massachusetts Colony and his son Matthias was born in 1635 there, it is assumed he arrived before that time. One possibility is that he came over in the "Higginson Fleet" so called, ca 1629. Some 350 men, women and children arrived in that fleet, but I am unable to find lists of passengers at this date 5/6/13.)
(Ed. Note: A cousin has, supposedly, found the ship that George and his family came over on. "The Recovery" of London, 1633/34. It sailed from London and arrived in Dorchester, MA. Captain Gabriel Cornish. There is a "George Puffer" listed in the The Topographical Dictionary of 2885 English Emigrants to New England, 1620-1650 on page 233. However, there is no further information about him. 12/21/17 DMC)
There is no evidence whatsoever that George was married to Elizabeth Sedley. I include her here as a possibility, not a certainty.
He had sons James and Matthias. The records show that Matthias married Rachel Farnsworth. According to the Farnsworth genealogy and public records, Ruth Farnsworth, born June 3, 1642, married William Puffer. In his account of the Puffer family, Mr. Appleton, finds no further trace of William Puffer, and the compiler of this work has also failed. A Thomas Puttne of R.I. died in Wrentham, July 11, 1702. This name was printed "Puffer" in the Register, owning to an error in transcribing. Mary Puffer, who died at Braintree, July 22, 1700, was probably the widow of James. It may still be questioned whether George had a son William.
- The first of the family in this country, and the pioneer ancestor, lived but a few years after coming to New England, and we know very little about him. He was one of the residents of Boston to whom land was granted at Mount Wollaston, which was afterwards the town of Braintree, now the city of Quincy. The record shows that he was granted twenty acres and that there were five in his family, indicating that he had three children. February 24, 1639. His homestead was located about two miles east of the railroad station of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad (formerly the Old Colony Railroad) at Quincy. It is the site of the present Fore River shipyards. In the early records the name is often spelled Poffer. The Widow Puffer died at Braintree, February 18, 1676. He was born as early as 1600, died at Braintree, Sept. 27, 1639, (See Pother in records.) (J.W. Porter, Bangor, Me., 1882.)
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Sources - [S2] Descendants of George Puffer of Braintree, Massachusetts 1639-2020, Red Letter Edition, page 13.
- [S513] Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s, Place: Massachusetts; Year: 1639; Page Number: 232.
- [S499] _AGBI.
- [S638] Early Pleasant River Families of Washington County, Maine, page 476.
- [S2] Descendants of George Puffer of Braintree, Massachusetts 1639-2020, Red Letter Edition, 13.
- [S2] Descendants of George Puffer of Braintree, Massachusetts 1639-2020, Red Letter Edition.
- [S2] Descendants of George Puffer of Braintree, Massachusetts 1639-2020, Red Letter Edition, page 13.