[43] Katharine Scott, wife of Richard Scott, was the daughter of (Rev.) Francis Marbury, of London, and her mother was of the family of John Dryden, the poet. Her daughter, Mary, married Christopher Holder, and another daughter, Hannah, married Walter Clarke, once Governor of Rhode Island. Her daughter, Patience (1648-????), was specially noted for her early suffering for conscience sake. Rogers, Mary Dyer; Scull, Dorothea Scott, 1882; Holders of Holderness, 1902.
[44] Bishop, New England Judged, 1703, p. 94.
[45] Ibid. p. 95.
[46] Of Anne Austin (d. 1665, in London) little is known. She was advanced in years at the time of her American visit. See Bowden, Hist. i. 30-37, etc.
[47] Upsall endeavoured to supply Quaker prisoners with food, but only succeeded by a weekly payment to the gaoler of five shillings (Bishop, op. cit. p. 8). Bishop tells us that he was “a long-liver in Boston, an Ancient Man, and full of Years.”
[48] Bishop, op. cit. p. 54.
[49] The Southwicks lived at Salem. Other children were Daniel and Provided. Bishop has many notices of the family.
[50] Bishop, op. cit. p. 55.
[51] Bishop, op. cit. p. 60, in the case of Horred Gardner, of Newport.
[52] Nicholas Davis was of Plymouth Colony.