Category: Paternal Family Lines

Parent for all Paternal Family lines

March 16, 2011 Dennis Ayers No comments exist

Before 1660, most of America’s immigrants came from England and, like most of those that would follow them, they brought their beliefs and traditions with them. They established the language, the laws, and the culture that would evolve into America. Our AYERS ancestors were among those that led the way.

 

John AYRE (or sometimes written AYER) was our first ancestor to arrive in America, and in genealogical terms he is called “The Immigrant” for this bloodline. Like many other immigrants of the time, John and his family most likely came primarily for religious freedom. It must have taken great courage to travel to the new world when he was already in his forties with a half grown family.  They arrived in the Massachusetts colony in 1635 just 15 years after the Mayflower in 1620, and when there were only about 1000 people in the colony.  Most Massachusetts colonists were Puritans who wished to reform the established church of England, and largely Congregationalists who believed in forming churches through voluntary compacts.

 

Thanks to books and records preserved about the early New England colonists, other researchers have pieced together some interesting facts about John Ayre’s life.  I have provided several summaries on the Family Tree website (see link or right).  However, the best summary I have found is on the website of Janson Ayer and I’ll repeat selected portions below.

 

The Story of John Ayer of Haverhill, Massachusetts

This is the story, to the best of my (Janson Ayer) knowledge, of John Ayer and his time in Haverhill, MA. I want to thank people like Willis Brown, Robert Ayers, and Warren Ayer for sharing so much of their research and knowledge. Clearly their input has helped my research significantly and made this website possible.

 

The immigrant John Ayer was said to have come from England, arriving on The James in 1635 with his wife Hannah and their first 4 children – Thomas, Rebecca, Robert, and Peter. There is no documentation found for his journey, but in John’s case he came with money, and perhaps was one of the people who were not allowed to leave without surrendering money and property to the Crown. Per Willis Brown’s research, we place him on the James because of his later close association with other listed passengers on that ship, such as the Pike family, and his kinsman, John Evered alias Webb.

 

The James itself is a part of history, surviving the Great Hurricane of 1635. The James, out of Bristol, England, met the hurricane off the Isles of Shoals, (near the New England coast) there losing three anchors and being forced to put to sea, for no canvas or rope would hold. The storm winds drove her to within feet of the Pascataquack rocks. “At this moment,” wrote Increase Mather (his father, mother, and four brothers being among the one hundred passengers), “their lives were given up for lost; but then, in an instant of time, God turned the wind about, which carried them from the rocks of death before their eyes.” On Aug 13, 1635, The James manages to make it to Boston Harbor proper with “…her sails rent in sunder, and split in pieces, as if they had been rotten ragges…”

So were the parents of’ a great American family delivered from death at the hands of the tempest. Of the one hundred plus aboard the James, none were lost.

Pilgrim House

 

A farmer, John Ayre and his family resided in Salisbury, Massachusetts  from 1640 – 1646, and then moved to Haverhill in 1647, where they were one of the first families to own land.  John and Hannah had 5 more children – Mary, John Jr., Nathanial, Hannah, and Obadiah.

 

According to the “New England Heritage” John was made a freeman, and was a well respected member of Haverhill.  A freeman in those days was not the opposite of a slave. A freeman was more of a citizen with benefits in the Puritan culture. The Church had to vote on who became a freeman, and the process and questions were excruciating.

 

To the best of our knowledge, our John was married once, to Hannah, whose maiden name is lost to history. She survived her husband, and was the mother of all of his children, easily proven by the land deeds of MA.

 

John passed away in Haverhill in 1657, his will was dated March 12, 1656.   His wife, Hannah, survived him, and died Oct. 8, 1688, having remained his widow. John AYER devised his homestead to his oldest son John Jr., a common practice for those times.

 

Note from Dennis:  The town of Ayer, Massachusetts, which in reality is a part of Haverhill, was named after the early AYER settlers.  No doubt it was because John AYER was one of the most prosperous land owners in the area. Below is a picture of the sign entering town which I took when Sheryl and I visited in Oct 2007.

 

March 16, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

Before 1660, most of America’s immigrants came from England and, like most of those that would follow them, they brought their beliefs and traditions with them. They established the language, the laws, and the culture that would evolve into America. Our AYERS ancestors were among those that led the way.

John AYRE (or sometimes written AYER) was our first ancestor to arrive in America, and in genealogical terms he is called “The Immigrant” for this bloodline. Like many other immigrants of the time, John and his family most likely came primarily for religious freedom. It must have taken great courage to travel to the new world when he was already in his forties with a half-grown family.  They arrived in the Massachusetts colony in 1635 just 15 years after the Mayflower in 1620, and when there were only about 1000 people in the colony.  Most Massachusetts colonists were Puritans who wished to reform the established church of England, and largely Congregationalists who believed in forming churches through voluntary compacts.

Thanks to books and records preserved about the early New England colonists, other researchers have pieced together some interesting facts about John Ayre’s life.  I have provided several summaries on the Family Tree website (see link or right).  However, the best summary I have found is on the website of Janson Ayer and I’ll repeat selected portions below.

The Story of John Ayer of Haverhill, Massachusetts

This is the story, to the best of my (Janson Ayer) knowledge, of John Ayer and his time in Haverhill, MA. I want to thank people like Willis Brown, Robert Ayers, and Warren Ayer for sharing so much of their research and knowledge. Clearly their input has helped my research significantly and made this website possible.

The immigrant John Ayer was said to have come from England, arriving on The James in 1635 with his wife Hannah and their first 4 children – Thomas, Rebecca, Robert, and Peter. There is no documentation found for his journey, but in John’s case he came with money, and perhaps was one of the people who were not allowed to leave without surrendering money and property to the Crown. Per Willis Brown’s research, we place him on the James because of his later close association with other listed passengers on that ship, such as the Pike family, and his kinsman, John Evered alias Webb.

The James itself is a part of history, surviving the Great Hurricane of 1635. The James, out of Bristol, England, met the hurricane off the Isles of Shoals, (near the New England coast) there losing three anchors and being forced to put to sea, for no canvas or rope would hold. The storm winds drove her to within feet of the Pascataquack rocks. “At this moment,” wrote Increase Mather (his father, mother, and four brothers being among the one hundred passengers), “their lives were given up for lost; but then, in an instant of time, God turned the wind about, which carried them from the rocks of death before their eyes.” On Aug 13, 1635, The James manages to make it to Boston Harbor proper with “…her sails rent in sunder, and split in pieces, as if they had been rotten ragges…”

So were the parents of’ a great American family delivered from death at the hands of the tempest. Of the one hundred plus aboard the James, none were lost.

Pilgrim House

A farmer, John Ayre and his family resided in Salisbury, Massachusetts  from 1640 – 1646, and then moved to Haverhill in 1647, where they were one of the first families to own land.  John and Hannah had 5 more children – Mary, John Jr., Nathanial, Hannah, and Obadiah.

According to the “New England Heritage” John was made a freeman, and was a well-respected member of Haverhill.  A freeman in those days was not the opposite of a slave. A freeman was more of a citizen with benefits in the Puritan culture. The Church had to vote on who became a freeman, and the process and questions were excruciating.

To the best of our knowledge, our John was married once, to Hannah, whose maiden name is lost to history. She survived her husband, and was the mother of all of his children, easily proven by the land deeds of MA.

John passed away in Haverhill in 1657, his will was dated March 12, 1656.   His wife, Hannah, survived him, and died Oct. 8, 1688, having remained his widow. John AYER devised his homestead to his oldest son John Jr., a common practice for those times.

Note from Dennis:  The town of Ayer, Massachusetts, which in reality is a part of Haverhill, was named after the early AYER settlers.  No doubt it was because John AYER was one of the most prosperous land owners in the area. Below is a picture of the sign entering town which I took when Sheryl and I visited in Oct 2007.

March 15, 2011 Dennis No comments exist

There are several dozen ways to spell the surname that our family knows as AYERS.  Some of these are just true variations of spelling like AYRES, AIRES, AERS, etc., mostly caused by illiteracy in early times.  Still other spelling variations are actually changes to different names like the German HERR.  Regardless, the prominent spelling where our ancestors came from in England was EYRE, but even that had changed over the centuries.

 

Our first AYERS ancestor who adventured to America in 1635 was John AYRE.  However, when he still lived in England, he spelled his name as EYRE.  Other researchers, from England and elsewhere, believe they have successfully traced John EYRE’s ancestry back 16 generations to about 1040 AD in France.  I have shown a common version of his lineage on the Family Tree website (see link on right column of this page).

Norman Conquest

 

Before that time, surnames were not commonly in use, as people in small villages went by their given names with perhaps a description added like John the Baker. There is one belief that the EYRE surname originated from the old French term “(h)eir” which referred to a person who was well-known to be the heir to a title or land. There is also the amusing legend that is told concerning Truelove a follower of the Norman, William the Conqueror, who aided him during the Battle of Hastings in 1066 AD.  During the battle, William was unhorsed and his helmet beaten into his face.  Truelove, observing the incident, pulled the helmet off and horsed him again. The grateful King then said to his rescuer, “Thou shalt hereafter be called EYRE (or Air) for thou hast given me the air that I breathe.”  The legend ends with the new King after the battle granting extensive lands to the man as reward for his services.

 

Early records show the existence of a Truelove LeHEYR born about 1044 and the spelling suggests he may have indeed come over from France with the Normans.  One of Truelove’s descendants, Humphrey LeHEYR, was born about 1160, and it is known that a Humphredus LeEYR (or HEYR) accompanied King Richard on the Third Crusade to the Holy Lands. There is another legend that he rescued King Richard at the Battle of Acre in 1190.

 

The spelling LeHEYR lasted about 8 generations until it became LeEYRE and finally EYRE for the next 7 generations up to our John EYRE.  EYRE is still a common name in England today.  Note: The famous novel Jane Eyre authored by Charlotte Bronte was published in London in 1847.

 

So, where did our EYRE ancestors live in England?  The records indicate for the most part they lived in the county of Wiltshire which is located in the South Central part of the country about 100 miles west of London.  (see Map)  As a coincidence, I’ve been in Wiltshire before in 1978 when I visited the famous prehistoric Stonehenge monument on the Salisbury Plains. So, I once set foot in the general area where our Ayers ancestors lived without knowing it.

 

The Wiltshire area at that time was known for textile manufacturing.  John EYRE’s father Robert EYRE of Bromham was a fairly prosperous woolen manufacturer (clothier), however, he died in 1603 when John was still very young.  John’s mother, Cicely EYRE struggled to maintain the business especially as the textile industry waned during two economic depressions and she too died in 1619.

Besides the economic hard times, this period in history also brought religious and political strife to Wiltshire and other parts of England.  There was dissension and mistrust amongst all parties.  Caught in this upheaval, many Wiltshire citizens, including John EYRE, felt the new world might offer greater opportunities and security, so they loaded their families into ships and sailed to America.

March 13, 2011 Dennis Ayers No comments exist

Genetic DNA testing has become a useful tool for solving certain problems in family history research when a historical paper trail is elusive.  There are two kinds of DNA that follow a straight line through our ancestors.  Y-Chromosome DNA is passed from father to son on down the line and is very useful for determining paternal lineage.  Mitochrondrial DNA (mtDNA) tracks the maternal side by being passed mother to daughter.

In March 2009, I was tested for a Y-Chromosome genetic profile, called a Haplotype, which tracks my AYERS surname lineage.  In addition to my specific profile, the results showed that our AYERS line belonged to an ancient group of ancestors designated Haplogroup R1b.

Regardless of how one personally reconciles creation vs evolution theories, scientists have determined that human life on earth originated in Africa hundreds of thousands of years ago.  When some of those ancient peoples eventually migrated out of Africa, they first went to the Middle East, and from there split into groups which migrated to other places.  Each migrating group’s genes gradually became slightly different from the original African group allowing them to be traced with DNA.  Our R1b group of ancient ancestors migrated to Asia and then on to Europe about 35,000 to 40,000 years ago as shown in the migration map below.  Anthropologists call the R1b Haplogroup “The Artisans” who may have been responsible for the first cave paintings, and probably lived in present day England, France, Spain or Portugal.

R1b Ancient Ancestors Migration Pathways

About 70% of individuals currently residing in southern England are members of the R1b group.  The significance to us is that all this DNA information very strongly supports that our AYERS ancestors came from England before crossing the Atlantic to North America.  Although without DNA evidence, I also suspect that many of our other family surnames which originated in Europe may be R1b as well.

If anyone is interested in learning more about ancient populations and their evolutions, I highly recommend reading The Seven Daughters of Eve by Bryan Sykes which describes how MtDNA was used to discover that we are all descended from seven prehistoric women. I have a copy to lend to those interested.