S-D-12-David-3
THIRD GENERATION IN AMERICA |
It appears from the record given below that this David Dunham had two illegitimate children born before September of 1697, and before his marriage to Mary Ilsley in 1699. The following excerpt is taken from Ye Olde Middlesex Courts: The Establishment of an Early Court System in One of the Original Counties of New Jersey, by George J. Miller, originally published in 1932, p. 48. In the September 1697 term “David Dunham of Woodbridge was indicted for having an illegitimate child by a woman of the same place. The jury found him guilty and the court ordered him to pay five pounds, to be carried to the whipping post and to receive ten lashes on his bare back, and to pay two shillings every week for seven weeks for the support of the child.” “At the same court the same man was found guilty of the same offence and the court ordered the same punishment in the second case.” The record given above does not tell us who these children were, or even whether they were male or female. The record also does not give the names of the Woodbridge women who were the mothers of these children. While we do not know for certain, these two children were likely raised by their mothers, and they may have retained the Dunham surname. We do know for certain that there are Dunhams not currently proven to descend from Jonathan 2 Dunham, whose DNA matches the descendants of Jonathan 2 Dunham/ alias Singletary. Identifying these two illegitimate children could help to document the ancestry of the Dunhams who are so far not connected to Jonathan2 Dunham of Woodbridge, New Jersey.
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