In the March 2012
Mayflower Quarterly, noted Mayflower researcher and biographer, Caleb Johnson, presented a hypothesis that William Mullins first married Elizabeth Wood who gave birth to his first four children, and died sometime prior to 1604; whereupon, he married Alice_____ who gave birth to his youngest child, Joseph. In that article, he stated, “I here put together this very speculative hypothesis, and leave it up to future research to determine if there is any further evidence to support, or disprove, this possibility. It should be emphasized that this is a speculative hypothesis based on limited concrete data....” Unfortunately, some have interpreted his hypothesis as factual rather than speculative. It has been nearly ten years since Mr. Johnson wrote that article in the
Mayflower Quarterly and in his own words “no additional evidence, supporting or disproving that hypothesis, has been published since that time.” In October 2021, Mr. Johnson added a second paragraph to the profile of Alice Mullins in his website, Mayflowerhistory.com. The profile of Alice Mullins, as it is currently written follows in its entirety: “Little is known about Alice, the wife of William Mullins. She is named only once: in the 1621 will of her husband William Mullins. It is not known if she is the mother of all his children, some of his children, or none of them. There is no evidence she had the Atwood or Poretiers surnames claimed by some 19th and early 20th century authors. “Recent research into her origins, undertaken by Caleb Johnson and Simon Neal, has focused on the Browne, Dendy, Gardinar, Hammon, and Wood families of Dorking and Holy Trinity, Guildford. In 2012 (
Mayflower Quarterly, 78:44-57), Caleb Johnson published a speculative hypothesis that William Mullins may have married twice, first Elizabeth Wood, and second Alice, perhaps widow of either William or Thomas Browne (possibly making Alice the mother or aunt of
Mayflower passenger Peter Browne). While the speculative hypothesis matches all the known facts, it is by no means proven. No additional evidence, supporting or disproving that hypothesis, has been published since that time.” As previously stated above, on 29 April 1616, William Mullins was called before the Lordships of the Privy Council and held for an unknown reason for a period of time. “While the reason for his arrest is not given, it was most probably associated with the religious controversies of that time. The fact that he was a Dissenter may explain why William Mullins’ marriage record is not found in the Parish Register for Dorking, nor are the baptisms of his children.” William Mullins was the first of three children born to John Mullins and Joane Bridger, who married 8 July 1571. Their children: • William, born about 1572; married Alice _____; died 21 February 1621 in Plymouth, New England. • John, born 1577; married first, _____ _____; second, 1 May 1637, Sara Rining, died 1639; third, 23 September 1639, Joane Gammon. John Mullins had no children by any of his three wives. • Edward, baptized 23 September 1582. “Because we have no marriage date for William and Alice and no baptismal dates for the children, we cannot prove that Alice was the mother of his children, but in the absence of other evidence, we are assuming that she was the mother of all the children.” • William, born probably at Dorking, co. Surrey, England; died at Braintree, Massachusetts, probably at the house of his daughter Sarah, 12 February 1672. He married in England, by 1618 (baptism of child), _____ _____, who died 1622 or after (baptism of child). He may have married second, as William Mullings, at Boston, Massachusetts, 7 May 1656, Ann _____ Bell, widow of Thomas Bell of Boston. He had three children with _____ _____. All baptized at Dorking, co. Surrey, England: • Elizabeth, baptized 26 March 1618. • Ruth, baptized 31 October 1619. • Sara/Sarah, baptized 5 May 1622; died at Braintree, Massachusetts, between 13 August 1694 and 25 November 1697 (will and probate). She married first, Thomas Gannett; second, at Braintree, August 1655, William Savill, who died at Braintree, 6 April 1669; third, at Braintree, 5 September 1670, Thomas Faxon, who died at Braintree, 23 November 1680. In her will, dated 13 August 1694 and proved 25 November 1697, Sarah made bequests to her cousin Ruth Webb, wife of Peter Webb of Braintree; daughter-in-law Lydia Savill, wife of Benjamin Savill of Braintree, and her daughter Sarah Savill, and then directed that the remainder be divided among “my nearest relations.” From this it is presumed that Sarah had no other surviving children. • Sara, married _____ Blunden, named in father's 1621 will. •
Priscilla, a Mayflower passenger, born say 1600–1605, at Dorking, co. Surrey, England. No birth or baptismal record exists and no recorded age has been found for Priscilla. She married
John Alden, the cooper of the Mayflower, at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1623. Children of John and Priscila (Mullins) Alden, order uncertain, no birth nor baptismal records survive, the earliest born at Plymouth, others at Duxbury; all born before Bradford's 1650 list (proof for children from probate and land records): • Elizabeth, born about 1624–1625; married William Pabodie. • John, born about 1626, married Elizabeth (Phillips) Everill. • Joseph, born after 22 May 1627, probably about 1627; married Mary Simmons. • Sarah, born say between 1630 and 1640; married Alexander Standish. • Jonathan, born about 1633; married Abigail Hallett. • Ruth, born say about 1637; married John Bass. • Rebecca, born before 1649; married Thomas Delano. • Mary, died after 13 June 1688; unmarried. • Priscilla, died after 13 June 1688; unmarried. • David, born say about 1649–1650; married Mary Southworth. • Joseph, a Mayflower passenger, died at Plymouth, Massachusetts, after 2 April 1621 (when his father's will was copied.) == Will of William Mullins ==