From Web site of Billy Westcott - #3 in details of sources
 
STUKELY WESTCOTT - FIRST GENERATION
IN AMERICA
 
Talk by Eleanor Wescott Trismen, read at
the 15th Biennial Meeting in Vermont, August 8, 1964
 
First, in retrospect: We, the members of this family Society, must remember with reverence that
we shall be forever grateful to our late National Society Founder, Roscoe Leighton Whitman. He
spent many long hours during his life in compiling the two Westcott Genealogies so that future
cousins would be able to enjoy their contents. His efforts have made it so much easier for Westcott
descendants to join Patriotic organizations.
 
This year (1964) celebrates the 30th year since the National Society was founded by Mr. Whitman
and a group of cousins at the Lexington Hotel in New York City in 1934.
 
I shall begin by quoting from an address given by Mr. Whitman at the 4th biennial meeting at
Alexandria Bay on August 9, 1941. "There are four out standing epochs or memorable periods in
the history of the West-cott family, as they have been revealed by the ancient records."
 
"First, the origin of the family in England exists undoubtedly with the Teutonic tribesmen - the
Saxons, Angles and Jutes, all members of a Saxon confederation effected in the 4th century for
mutual advancement and protection. They descended from a warlike people who first appear in the
history of the Romans in the year 113 B.C."
 
Hordes of these tribesmen, who were celebrated for naval prowess, passed over from what is now
Jutland peninsula of Denmark to the island of Britain in the 5th and 6th centuries and completely
subjugated the native Romans and over spread the south and southwest of the country. New
detachments of the invaders followed with their chiefs. They founded eight kingdoms; among them
was West Saxony or Wessex. About the year 827 they were united into one kingdom, called Anglia
or England.
 
Among these erstwhile tribesmen was probably a man whose bloodstain was to run through the
veins of Westcott men and women for all time. This statement is predicated on the fact that the
family name is derived from that of one of the eight kingdoms they founded - Wessex. This
appears unquestionable. The name was originally spelled Wescote and Westcote - the first syllable
Wes as in Wessex; the second syllable, cote, indicating a place of residence - cottage, house, or
enclosure.
 
As further verification of this nativity, history points out that the present shires of Devon and
Somerset in southwest England comprise in part the old kingdom of Wessex or West Saxony. The
first definite record of a person of the Wescote name is found in Devonshire in the 12th century;
therefore these original bearers of the name had remained in the territory their ancestors had
conquered six or seven centuries before Though secluded in the dim mystic past, records seem
supportable of the beginning of the clan and the name appropriated to be known down through the
generations. - - -
 
"The second epoch embraces a period with definite and positive records to substantiate them.
These records are found in the London Museum. It is a period of nearly a century which every
Westcott descend-ant may recall with justifiable pride."
 
From the years 1216 to 1307 - ninety-one years - John de Wescote and his son and namesake were
Canons of the Church of England at the Cathedral of St. Peter's in Exeter, Devonshire. They were
the son and grandson of Furbert de Wescote, who was born in Exeter in 1164. The father is the
first of the Wescote name of whom definite information has been found. As there are no detailed
records of the family prior to these great disciples of God and benefactors of humanity, members
of the Westcott family today may be content to date the beginning of the family from them. Surely
no more worthy founders of any family can be desired no greater inspiration to follow Christ's
teachings. - - -
 
"The third epoch finds Wescotes really battling to retain and perpetuate the family name. Thomas
de Wescote about 1414 married Elizabeth Littleton, sole heir of an old, rich, aristocratic royal
family of Frankly in Worcestershire. Thomas de Wescote was a Knight in his own right and so
two distinguished, titled families were united. Before the marriage, Elizabeth Littleton exacted an
agreement from Sir Thomas that their first son should be baptized in her own family name. The
first child of the union was a son and he was baptized Thomas de Littleton. The birth of other sons
(Nicholas, Edmund, Guido) followed."
 
Finally it became the desire of the mother that all their four sons should bear her family name. To
this Guido furiously dissented. It appears that a family quarrel followed which was finally settled
by the father deeding the old Manor estate to Guido. Guido's father, Thomas, removed with his
wife Elizabeth to her ancestral estate at Frankly.
 
"The old Manor estate was at what was known in the year 1300 and is still known in Devonshire as
"Westcott". It may still be found on a map of that shire. The estate passed from the family
ownership about the year 1500. Guido de Wescote became a Baron, married Alice Granville, and
in the year 1450 was granted the Coat of Arms which is the cherished and deserved symbol of the
Society of Stukely Westcott Descendants. This explains the meaning of the motto on the arms: "the
name renewed". - - -
 
"The fourth epoch was the coming of the family founder, Stukely Westcott, to America in June,
1635."
 
Concerning the life of Stukely in America, I will continue. Stukely was born about 1592, probably
near Ilchester, England. He married Juliana Marchant at the Baptist Church in Yeovil, England on
Oct. 5, 1619, of which there is record. Note: In Mr. Whitman's first book, he recorded Stukely's
wife as Rosanna Hill. Laura La Mance, the recorder, was the source of that data, with no proof. If
Stukely did marry Rosanna, it was probably at a later date. There seems to be no record of that
marriage. There is baptismal record of most of Stukely's and Juliana's children at Yeovil. Among
Rhode Island Governor Arnold's papers was the following notation: "June 24, 1635 - arrived in
Mass. Bay. Sailed from Dartmouth of Devon May 1, 1635, all but one of the party (Wm.
Carpenter) coming from Winchester in southern Somerset or within five miles of that place. My
Father, William Arnold, and his family "sett sayle" from England and arrived (Thurs.) June 24
1635. On board was Stukely Westcott, 43, of Yeovil and his wife, with children: Robert, Damaris,
Samuel 13, Amos 4, Mercy, and Jeremiah."
 
As yet we have no definite proof of the names of the parents of Stukely. In 1935 a Mr. Russell
Westcott gave the following record to Mr. Whitman: "The parents of Stukely, Richard (Sr.), and
Rebecca were Guy (nickname for Guido) Westcott and wife Mary Stukely, daughter of Sir Lewis
and Margaret (Arscote) Stukely."
 
Our Society did some research in England a few years ago, but found that early Devon and
Somerset records are scarce. Because of religious strife, heavy tax burdens and controversies in
England, many vital statistics were carelessly kept or lost, so it is difficult to trace various family
lines. Our Society is thankful that it knows as much as it does about Stukely I and his whereabouts.
 
Stukely's children all lived to maturity except Samuel, who must have died shortly after his arrival
in Massachusetts. The rest of the children married and have living descendants.
 
1. Damaris married the first Governor (B. Arnold) of R.I. (Royal Charter).
2. Mercy married Samuel Stafford.
3. Robert married Katherine (surname unknown). Robert was killed in King Philip's War in R.I.
in 1675-6.
4. Amos married (1) Sarah Stafford, (2) Deborah Stafford (sisters).
5. Jeremiah married Eleanor England.
 
On March 16, 1676, at the age of 84, Stukely was driven from his home in Warwick, R.I. by the
Indians at the time of King Philip's War in R.I. He took refuge on a neighboring island, where he
died the following January 12, 1677, at his grandson's home in Portsmouth, R.I. - - -
 
Concerning Roger Williams, Founder of Providence
 
In order to appreciate fully the interesting life of our Stukely Westcott, it is quite necessary to tell
something of Roger Williams.
 
Roger Williams was born in 1606, the son of William Williams. He lived in Conwyl Cayo, a parish
near Lampeter in Wales. Roger's wife was Mary Barnard. Roger and Mary "sett Sayle" for
America on their honeymoon, and they landed in Boston Harbor on February 5, 1631.
 
In 1950 a Mr. Gilbert Rees published an interesting story about the life of Roger Williams. The
book is called I SEEK A CITY. On the book cover it says: "It was the unquenchable fire of the
religious zealot which enabled Roger Williams to carry out his beliefs in the face of some of the
most maddening opposition ever placed in the path of a man with true faith in an ideal."
 
In the cold gray dawn of a bitter morning in 1636, Roger had no choice but to flee the onslaught
of the City Fathers of Boston, who were determined that his non-conformist tongue should be
silenced. With a handful of followers he set out for he new not where, sustained by the faith that
somewhere, somehow he would be enabled to build the City of his dreams; a City where men
could live together in peace and harmony, give vent to their right of freedom of speech, religious
belief, and general way of life.
 
In referring to an account of Roger Williams by R. Elton, Roger Williams maintained that "the
people were the origin of all free powers in government," but that they were "not invested by
Jesus Christ with power to rule in his Church, that they could give no such power to the
magistrate, and that to "introduce the civil sword" into the Kingdom of Christ was to confound
heaven and earth, and "lay all upon heaps confusion." In other words, he advocated separation of
Church and State, which, thank the good Lord, holds true today in our country.
 
In referring to the DAR Magazine, an excerpt from an educational article by Mrs. Ralph W.
Wilkine, State Regent of Rhode Island: "Roger Williams, called "Netop" by the Indians, founded
Providence in 1636." The history and tradition of this great City still exert their influence, and its
charm and spirit can be felt not only in its people but in its monuments and in its beloved streets
and buildings.
 
Providence started on a small Rock, which is now called "Roger Williams Rock" and is located in a
small Park adjacent to a street bearing his name. When Williams came to R.I., he settled in what is
now East Providence, but finding that the land was under Mass. jurisdiction, be took a canoe and
paddled down the Seekonk River. An Indian is said to have been standing on a rock and called out
a welcome to him: "What cheer Netop." Williams landed there. Later he settled near the site of a
spring, which is now enclosed in a small Park on South Main Street. A Proprietor's Grant in 1721
reserved liberty for the inhabitants to fetch water at this spring forever.
 
Roger Williams often presided at the first town House during the years 1644-1647, and a tablet
marks the site.
 
"For a hundred years after the founding of the town, the citizens established themselves and their
families firmly at the headwaters of the Providence River and dedicated themselves to the task of
building a free and prosperous community." - - -
 
Concerning Stukely's life in Rhode Island
 
Stukely Westcott, the Founder of one branch of the family in America, became a staunch follower
of Roger Williams and his beliefs. Stuke-ly obtained a license from the General Court at Salem,
Mass. on March 12, 1638, to remove with his family out of the jurisdiction of the Mass. Bay
Colony. On August 8, 1638, Roger Williams "freely admitted twelve loving friends and
neighbors" into equal ownership with himself in Rhode Island. Stukely's name headed that list.
 
Through his friendship to the Indians, Roger Williams acquired great tracts of land. He distributed
parcels of land to his faithful followers. Stukely was one of the colony's largest land owners,
owning up to 20,000 acres in Rhode Island. Stukely was also a co-founder of the first Bap-tist
Church in America, called "The First Baptist Church of Providence." He was several times chosen
"assistant" (corresponding to our Lieutenant Governor) and frequently was elected deputy to the
Colonial Assembly. Stukely was truly a leader among the sturdy pioneers of Providence.
 
Based on old deeds of November 11, 1664, it is believed that Stukely Westcott's log cabin lot in
Providence was located upon the present block bounded by Waterman St. and College St. on the
south, and nearly in the center of that block extending from North Main St. eastwardly to Hope St.
That location is not far from the old First Baptist Church.
 
As we know, Stukely and his family later moved to old Warwick in 1647, some miles south of
Providence, where he owned land. At Warwick our Society placed and dedicated a marker in 1935
to his honor. The marker is located on a large boulder at the edge of his lot.
 
On May 12, 1682, Stukely sold his house, orchard, and lot in Providence to Samuel and Anna
Bennett, whose granddaughter Priscilla was later to become the wife of Stukely's grandson
Stukely.
 
Concerning Stukely's character, I will sum up with the following: Stukely Westcott must have been
a man of courage and a man dedicated to his convictions of right and wrong. Because of religious
strife and heavy tax burdens, he left his homeland to try a new life in the wilderness of America.
Just remember it took him and his family two months to cross the Atlantic Ocean. And because he
believed in separation of Church and State, he had the courage to leave Salem, Mass. to find a new
life in the wilds of Rhode Island, following his beloved friend, Roger Williams. Stukely was a
religious man and helped to found the First Baptist Church in America, at Providence. He was a
leader among his fellow men, having held various posts in the early history of the Colony. He was
a home-loving person, raising five children to maturity. And he must have been a fearless man,
living a long life of 84 years enduring the hardships of cold winters, disease, and Indian raids. - - -
 
I will conclude my address with the following poem, written by Miss Alice Wilson of Seal Beach,
California:
 
"Roll back the curtains of the years And let your eyes behold The distant times, the ancient ways,
The sturdy men of old. Across the stormy deep they came, The forest wilds they trod, To find a
home for Liberty, A Temple for their God." - - -
 
 
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