Ancestry and transport The origins of Thomas Willett are not known for certain and are subject to some debate. The most commonly encountered description of his early life from the
Dictionary of National Biography describes him as the fourth son of the English clergyman
Andrew Willet. The germ of this description may have come from the pedigree of Willett's descendants published in 1848, which offered the theory that this Thomas may have descended from Andrew Willet because the Willett name is rare. A differing opinion exists in Dexter's compilation of the Leyden congregation in the appendix of his work,
England and Holland of the Pilgrims. This indicates that Willett was the son of Thomas and Alice Willet of the Leyden congregation. The respective merits of these opinions are discussed by Burgess. There is general agreement that Willett came over to the Plymouth Colony with the second wave of the Leyden congregation in 1629. There is disagreement however over whether or not he went back to England shortly thereafter for the trial of Edward Ashley who was accused of trading weapons and ammunition to Native Americans. The evidence that this might have been the case is based upon a listing of passengers on the ship Lyon which sailed from London on June 22, 1632, with William Pierce as Master as given by Charles Edward Banks in his
Planters of the Commonwealth. This list includes Thomas Willett along with the family of his future father-in-law, John Browne, including Willett's future wife, Mary. However, an examination of the original source material by
Samuel Gardner Drake, published in 1860, indicates that the original record for the ship sailing to England on that date listed only a few names of the passengers, including only a "Tobie" Willet and a "Jo:" Browne (but no other Brownes). This and the indication that only the depositions of Willett and others accompanied Ashley back to England for his trial are contrary to Banks' passenger list.
Family in the Plymouth Colony and descendants Willett's parents and siblings were evidently left behind when he emigrated to Plymouth in 1629. His family life thereafter centered around that of his wife's family. Willett married Mary, daughter of John Browne (Sr.), a leading citizen of the Plymouth Colony, and Browne's wife, Dorothy, in 1636. He moved with the Brown(e) family from Plymouth westward, originally to the Taunton area by the 1650s, and later to the eastern shores of
Narragansett Bay to Wannamoisett, near present-day Barrington, Rhode Island. Willett had substantial business dealings with Browne (Sr.) and later increasingly, especially between 1656 and 1660 when Browne (Sr.) is believed to have been in England, with Browne's two sons, John (Jr.) and James. Another family connection was with Willett's early co-worker in the fur trade,
John Howland. Howland's daughter, Lydia, married James Browne and Howland's widow,
Elizabeth, was living with James and Lydia Broowne's family when she died. Both John Browne (Sr.) and John Browne (Jr.) died in 1662, the son ten days before the father. The children of Thomas and Mary Willet, as compiled from several sources, were: • Mary, b. November 10, 1637, d. June 24, 1712, married Rev. Samuel Hooker (son of
Rev. Thomas Hooker) in 1658, remarried Rev. Thomas Buckingham in 1703. • Martha, b. August 6, 1639, d. 1678, married
John Saffin in 1658. • John, b. August 21, 1641, d. February 2, 1663/4, married Abigail Collins in 1663. • Sarah, b. May 4, 1643, d. June 13, 1665, married Rev. John Eliot (son of
Rev. John Eliot). • Rebecca, b. December 2, 1644, d. April 2, 1652. • Thomas, b. October 1, 1646, d. before 1671(?). • Hester, b. July 6, 1648, d. July 26, 1737, married Rev. Josiah Flint. • James, b. November 24, 1649, married Elizabeth Hunt (daughter of Peter Hunt) in 1673, remarried Grace Frinck in 1677. • Hezekiah, b. June 20, 1651, d. July 26, 1651. • Hezekiah, b. November 16, 1653, d. July 1, 1676, married Ann (or Hannah) Browne (daughter of John Brown (Jr.)) in 1675. • David, b. November 1, 1654, d. before 1671(?). • Andrew, b. October 5, 1656, d. April 6, 1712, married Ann Coddington in 1682 (daughter of
William and Ann Coddington). • Samuel, b. October 27, 1658. (?) Sons John, Thomas, and David are not mentioned in Willett's will which calls James the "eldest son". There is disagreement over Thomas Willett's date and place of birth. The
Dictionary of National Biography states that he was born in England in 1605. Willett's will, dated April 26, 1671, says he was then "being going in the sixty-fourth year of my age" (i.e., he was 63 years old, born between April 27, 1607, and April 27, 1608, prior to the migration to the Netherlands later in 1608 which included those who later became the Leyden congregation). His original gravestone also stated that he died "in the 64th year of his age" in 1674 (i.e., he was born in 1610 or 1611) and this is in agreement with the range given in Dexter's listing for the Willet family in Holland. The respective merits of these opinions are discussed by Burgess. Willet died August 4, 1674, and was buried in the
Little Neck Cemetery at Bullock's Cove, Riverside area of East Providence, Rhode Island. Mary Willett, the first wife of Thomas, died on January 8, 1669, at about 55 years old making her birthdate about 1614, almost certainly in England. Her grave is next to that of Thomas Willett. Little mention is found of her in the records; what is there includes her marriage to Thomas on July 6, 1636, and she is also mentioned in connection with her father's will which was hastily written while he was ill in the short period between his son's death and his own. The will of John Browne (Sr.) made scant reference to his daughter, Mary, no significant bequest to her, and none at all to her offspring. Browne's objective may have been to leave his property to the relatively more needy members of his family rather than to those of Mary's branch, as she was married to one of the wealthiest men in the colony. However this might have been, Browne's intent could have been better expressed and the result was an unusual mention in the colony's records regarding Mary Willett's good relationship with her father. Joanna Prudden, widow of Rev.
Peter Prudden and second wife of Thomas Willett, married Willett in Milford, Connecticut, on September 20, 1671. After Willett's death in 1674, she soon returned to Milford and remarried again, this time to Rev. John Bishop. She was born in Halifax, Yorkshire, England, in 1616 and died on November 8, 1681, in Stamford, Connecticut. Mary Willett, eldest daughter of Capt. Thomas Willett and his wife Mary, married in 1658 Rev. Samuel Hooker, son of Rev.
Thomas Hooker, Puritan divine and founder of
Hartford, Connecticut. There is some thought that Willett's son, Thomas Willett (Jr.), was the major in the militia of
Queens County who was a councilor under Governors
Sir Edmund Andros and
Henry Sloughter. According to Hillman it is probable that this Major Thomas Willett was actually a member of another Willett family which had settled on Long Island. They were possibly cousins of the Thomas Willett who is the subject of this article. Hezekiah Willett was killed during King Philip's War in spite of the special consideration which was supposed to be extended to the Browne/Willett family by Philip's followers. This was a source of great sorrow to Philip as reported by the servant captured when Hezekiah was killed (this probably was the slave later ordered freed by the colony's court). This incident also exasperated the Plymouth colonists; special punishments were eventually meted out to Hezekiah's killers. Andrew Willett spent most of his adult life near what is now Kingston, Rhode Island. He married Ann Coddington, daughter of William Coddington, a governor of Rhode Island. Thomas Willett's interests in the Atherton Company led to ownership of land in this area of Rhode Island, then known as the "Boston Neck", along with other company shareholders who over time banded together as merchants, which included Thomas Willett's son, Andrew. Some confusion exists in the records distinguishing between the Boston Neck area of Rhode Island and Boston, Massachusetts. Some have claimed that one of Willett's great-grandsons was
Marinus Willett, who also served as Mayor of New York from 1807 to 1808, assuming that Willett's son, Samuel, settled on Long Island where he became Sheriff of Queens County and Marinus' grandfather. This claim has been refuted by E. Haviland Hillman in an article published in
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Volume 47 at 119, published in April 1916. The descendants of Thomas Willett were numerous. The 'Dorothy Q.' of the poem of
Oliver Wendell Holmes was Thomas Willett's great-granddaughter, and the great-grandmother of Holmes. Another of Thomas Willett's descendants is American musician Parthenon Willett Miller Huxley. The
Fire Department of New York operated a
fireboat named
Thomas Willett from 1908 to 1959. ==Notes==