Joseph Farrar
b. 28 February 1692/93, d. before 1733
Joseph Farrar|b. 28 Feb 1692/93\nd. b 1733|p1292.htm|George Farrar|b. 16 Aug 1670\nd. 15 May 1760|p1294.htm|Mary Howe|d. 12 Apr 1761|p1295.htm|Jacob Farrer|b. 3 Sep 1641\nd. 22 Aug 1675|p1296.htm|Hannah Hayward|b. 20 Apr 1647|p1297.htm|||||||
4th great-grandfather of Louise Underwood.
6th great-grandfather of Laura Jane Munson.
- Family Background:
- Underwood and Allied Families
- Appears on charts:
- Pedigree for Louise Underwood
Joseph Farrar was born on 28 February 1692/93 in Concord, now Lincoln, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.2,3,4 He was the son of George Farrar and Mary Howe.1 He married Mary circa 1715.5 He died before 1733 in Chelmsford, Middlesex County, Massachusetts.6,7
Joseph Farrar enlisted from Concord in Captain John Lovewell's company, third expedition, in 1725, during the 1721-1725 conflict known as Dummer's War. He was one of only nine combatants who survived without wounds, Lovewell's Fight near Pequawket Town, now Freyburg, Maine, on 8 May 1725. His cousin Jacob Farrar was killed in the battle.7,8,9
Unlike earlier colonial wars, the French were not directly involved in Dummer's War. Also called Father Rasle's War and Lovewell's War, it was a conflict between the English colonists and the Wabanaki Indians in New England that culminated in a battle immortalized in song and in the writings of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Henry David Thoreau and Nathaniel Hawthorne as "Lovewell's Fight."
Inhabitants of the remote towns along the Merrimac in Old Dunstable, in particular, were under constant threat of an Indian attack such as happened at Thorntons Ferry in 1724. Indeed, the raids were so frequent that multiple families were forced for their own safety to live together in garrison houses. It was general knowledge that many of these raids on English settlements were planned and carried forth from Pequawket Town, home of a Wabanaki tribe called Pigwackets by the English. This territory now forms the towns of Freyburg, Maine, and Conway, New Hampshire.
Apparently unhappy with the way the war was going, and inspired by the Thorntons Ferry incident, a company was organized at Dunstable in the fall of 1724, with plans to go on the offensive against the Pigwackets. John Lovewell was Captain, Josiah Farwell, Lovewell's brother-in-law, was Lieutenant, and Jonathan Robbins, Ensign. These officers offered a petition to the Legislature in which they say —"That if said Company may be allowed five shillings per day in case they kill any enemy Indians and possess there Scalp they will imploy in Indian Hunting one whole year and if they do not within that time kill any, they are content to be allowed nothing for their wages, time and trouble." The petition was granted, but the terms were changed by the Legislature to a bounty of £100 for every scalp taken during one year.
Captain Lovewell immediately took his company to the field. In all, he led three expeditions. The first two were hailed as successes and celebrated by the populace. On the first, they killed one Indian and took a boy captive; on the second, ten Indians were killed and plunder taken included skins, blankets, mocassins, snowshoes and rifles. The company, with Lovewell wearing a wig made of Indian scalps, paraded through the streets of Boston showing off the scalps taken on the second expedition.
Pumped by fame and success, Lovewell organized a third expedition with plans to make a direct attack on Pequawket Town. Except for Lovewell, Farwell and Robbins, all members of the third expedition were new recruits. Among the forty-seven members of the company were Josiah's cousins, Thomas and Timothy Richardson and Captain Seth Wyman. Joseph and Jacob Farrar, who were first cousins, were also members of the third expedition. As far as has been determined, they were not related to the other four mentioned, though Joseph's son Joseph married a Richardson. On 7 May 1725, the company, thirty-four in number, some having been sent back or left at a fort for various reasons, reached the shores of Saco Pond, now Lovewell's Pond, about a mile from Pequawket Town. Early the next morning, the men left their packs so as to travel lightly and with less noise, and proceeded around the pond to where they had spotted a lone Indian. They succeeded in killing the Indian, but while they were gone, two returning war parties found the packs and waited in ambush. When the men returned, they were attacked from the front and rear by between forty and eighty braves. Lovewell and eight of his men were killed instantly; others were injured and one man deserted. The English fought back under the command of Seth Wyman and succeeded in gaining some cover. However, with their backs to the pond and Indians surrounding them elsewhere, there was no escape. The battle lasted ten hours with many casualties on both sides. Significant among the Pigwackets who were killed was the Indian leader Saugus. Of the English who engaged in the conflict, twelve were killed and buried on the field of battle; three were mortally wounded and died near the scene; nine were more or less seriously wounded; nine escaped injury. Of those who are of interest to this project, Josiah Farwell and Jacob Farrar were killed; Timothy Richardson was wounded and throughout the rest of his life partially incapacitated; Thomas Richardson, Seth Wyman and Joseph Farrar were among the fortunate who received no wounds.
Though the war did not officially end for seven more months with the signing of Dummer's Treaty in December 1725, the significance of "Lovewell's Fight" is that it effectively ended hostilities between the English and the Wabanakis in Maine and New Hampshire.
Joseph's children, Joseph, Isaac, Mary, Ruth and Benjamin, are mentioned in his father's will dated 17 March 1749, and proved 9 June 1760.1
Joseph Farrar enlisted from Concord in Captain John Lovewell's company, third expedition, in 1725, during the 1721-1725 conflict known as Dummer's War. He was one of only nine combatants who survived without wounds, Lovewell's Fight near Pequawket Town, now Freyburg, Maine, on 8 May 1725. His cousin Jacob Farrar was killed in the battle.7,8,9
Unlike earlier colonial wars, the French were not directly involved in Dummer's War. Also called Father Rasle's War and Lovewell's War, it was a conflict between the English colonists and the Wabanaki Indians in New England that culminated in a battle immortalized in song and in the writings of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Henry David Thoreau and Nathaniel Hawthorne as "Lovewell's Fight."
Inhabitants of the remote towns along the Merrimac in Old Dunstable, in particular, were under constant threat of an Indian attack such as happened at Thorntons Ferry in 1724. Indeed, the raids were so frequent that multiple families were forced for their own safety to live together in garrison houses. It was general knowledge that many of these raids on English settlements were planned and carried forth from Pequawket Town, home of a Wabanaki tribe called Pigwackets by the English. This territory now forms the towns of Freyburg, Maine, and Conway, New Hampshire.
Apparently unhappy with the way the war was going, and inspired by the Thorntons Ferry incident, a company was organized at Dunstable in the fall of 1724, with plans to go on the offensive against the Pigwackets. John Lovewell was Captain, Josiah Farwell, Lovewell's brother-in-law, was Lieutenant, and Jonathan Robbins, Ensign. These officers offered a petition to the Legislature in which they say —"That if said Company may be allowed five shillings per day in case they kill any enemy Indians and possess there Scalp they will imploy in Indian Hunting one whole year and if they do not within that time kill any, they are content to be allowed nothing for their wages, time and trouble." The petition was granted, but the terms were changed by the Legislature to a bounty of £100 for every scalp taken during one year.
Captain Lovewell immediately took his company to the field. In all, he led three expeditions. The first two were hailed as successes and celebrated by the populace. On the first, they killed one Indian and took a boy captive; on the second, ten Indians were killed and plunder taken included skins, blankets, mocassins, snowshoes and rifles. The company, with Lovewell wearing a wig made of Indian scalps, paraded through the streets of Boston showing off the scalps taken on the second expedition.
Pumped by fame and success, Lovewell organized a third expedition with plans to make a direct attack on Pequawket Town. Except for Lovewell, Farwell and Robbins, all members of the third expedition were new recruits. Among the forty-seven members of the company were Josiah's cousins, Thomas and Timothy Richardson and Captain Seth Wyman. Joseph and Jacob Farrar, who were first cousins, were also members of the third expedition. As far as has been determined, they were not related to the other four mentioned, though Joseph's son Joseph married a Richardson. On 7 May 1725, the company, thirty-four in number, some having been sent back or left at a fort for various reasons, reached the shores of Saco Pond, now Lovewell's Pond, about a mile from Pequawket Town. Early the next morning, the men left their packs so as to travel lightly and with less noise, and proceeded around the pond to where they had spotted a lone Indian. They succeeded in killing the Indian, but while they were gone, two returning war parties found the packs and waited in ambush. When the men returned, they were attacked from the front and rear by between forty and eighty braves. Lovewell and eight of his men were killed instantly; others were injured and one man deserted. The English fought back under the command of Seth Wyman and succeeded in gaining some cover. However, with their backs to the pond and Indians surrounding them elsewhere, there was no escape. The battle lasted ten hours with many casualties on both sides. Significant among the Pigwackets who were killed was the Indian leader Saugus. Of the English who engaged in the conflict, twelve were killed and buried on the field of battle; three were mortally wounded and died near the scene; nine were more or less seriously wounded; nine escaped injury. Of those who are of interest to this project, Josiah Farwell and Jacob Farrar were killed; Timothy Richardson was wounded and throughout the rest of his life partially incapacitated; Thomas Richardson, Seth Wyman and Joseph Farrar were among the fortunate who received no wounds.
Though the war did not officially end for seven more months with the signing of Dummer's Treaty in December 1725, the significance of "Lovewell's Fight" is that it effectively ended hostilities between the English and the Wabanakis in Maine and New Hampshire.
Joseph's children, Joseph, Isaac, Mary, Ruth and Benjamin, are mentioned in his father's will dated 17 March 1749, and proved 9 June 1760.1
Children of Joseph Farrar and Mary (—?—) (Farrar)
- Joseph Farrar+ b. 10 Oct 1716, d. 20 Apr 1797
- Isaac Farrar10 b. 10 Aug 1719
- Mary Farrar11 b. 7 Oct 1723
- Ruth Farrar8 b. 1726
- Benjamin Farrar8 b. 1730
Citations
- [S204] Member of NEHGS, "Memoir of the Farrar Family", The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 6 (October 1852): 322.
- [S204] Member of NEHGS, "Memoir of the Farrar Family", 322; gives year of birth as 1693/4 contrary to Concord vital record that gives 1692/3 as the year of his birth.
- [S203] Lilian K.P. Farrar, "The English Ancestry of Jacob Farrer of Lancaster, Mass.", The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 95 (January 1941): 13; gives year of birth as 1693/4 contrary to Concord vital record that gives 1692/3 as the year of his birth.
- [S161] Town of Concord, Concord Registers, Concord, Massachusetts, Births, Marriages, and Deaths 1635 - 1850 (Concord: Printed by the Town, 1891), p. 37; ("Joseph Farrar the Son of George Farrar & Mary his wife was Borne February ye 28th 1692 . 3").
- [S147] Sue Farrar Thorne, Descendants of Jacob Farrar Jr and Hannah Hayward of Lancaster, Massachusetts to 1825 (Baltimore: Gateway Press, Inc., 2001), 12.
- [S204] Member of NEHGS, "Memoir of the Farrar Family", 324.
- [S205] Ezra Scollay Stearnes, "Lovewell's Men", The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 63 (July 1909): 294.
- [S204] Member of NEHGS, "Memoir of the Farrar Family", 8.
- [S208] Frederic Kidder, "The Adventures of Capt. Lovewell", New England Historic and Genealogical Register (NEHGR) 7 (January 1853): 63.
- [S161] Concord VR (published), p. 112, ("Isaac Farrar son of Joseph Farrar and Mary his wife was born August ye 10 day 1719").
- [S161] Concord VR (published), p. 112, ("Mary Farrar ye Daughter of Joseph Farrar and Mary his wife was born October ye 7 : 1723").