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Descendants and Ancestors of Lt. EdwardWoodman
April 4, 1998
by
Rob Roy
Copyrighted 1998
 
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Table of Contents
Introduction..........................................................................2Descendants of Lt. Edward Woodman.......................................................3Generation One...................................................................3Generation Two...................................................................7Generation Three.................................................................29Generation Four..................................................................41Generation Five..................................................................53Generation Six...................................................................81Generation Seven.................................................................90Generation Eight.................................................................95Generation Nine..................................................................99Generation Ten.................................................................103Bibliography...................................................................109Ancestors of Lt. Edward Woodman.......................................................116Generation One.................................................................116Generation Two.................................................................117Generation Three................................................................119Bibliography...................................................................120Ancestors of Joanna Salway.............................................................121Generation One.................................................................121Generation Two.................................................................122Generation Three................................................................123Bibliography...................................................................124Index..............................................................................125
 
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Introduction
This document was produced by reports generated from The Master Genealogist, a Genealogical Data Base programproduced by Wholly Genes, Inc. I cannot recommend this product more highly. It is, by far, the best Genealogical programon the market today. This report was exported as a WordPerfect 6.1 document, then imported into WordPerfect forWindows 8.0. It was then merged with a title page and this introduction, and then the final editing was done. Oncecompleted, the final was exported to Adobe Acrobat and made into the Acrobat document you are currently reading.Exporting it to Acrobat allows the shape and form of the document to remain intact, and allows anyone with Windows 3.1,Windows 95, or a MacIntosh to print without worrying about fonts or print drivers. They need only to download the latestAcrobat reader from the Internet.I have tried to document all sources used in my research. Each source has been evaluated and ranked as Primary,Secondary, Tertiary, or a guess. All primary and secondary sources are footnoted regardless of the number of such sources.Where there are three or more secondary sources or a primary source, then the tertiary sources are not footnoted. It is myhope that any Genealogist to follow, will be easily able to retrace my footsteps.Place names are always a problem in genealogy. Whenever possible I have tried to include the county along with the townor city for place names. The exceptions to this rule are in the New England states, where most records are kept at the townor city level and counties are a far less important designation. As the vast majority of my ancestors are New Englanders,this has also greatly reduced the size of the text. I have tried not to use abbreviations as they tend to change over the years,and even our official postal state abbreviations may not be familiar to someone from overseas. I have tried to tie a place toevery event, which while lengthening the text, provides clarity for trying to track a specific event. Given the shiftingboundaries and names, it is often difficult to give locations. By in large, I have opted for the modern name, so that peoplemay locate it on a map, and possibly plan a visit. In a few cases the original names have been preserved for the sake of historical accuracy. These choices are wholly based upon the whims of the author.The line which is followed is either mine or my wife’s. My prime concern in creating this document is for my family,However, I have tried to carry out the generations in a manner that will make it useful to distant cousins and otherresearchers as well. I therefore have researched and documented siblings and nieces and nephewsLastly, to put these events and occurrences into and understandable frame, I would recommend a cursory knowledge of English, Colonial, and US History. The fact that an entire family died in 1676 in an Indian attack, may not mean much untilyou know a bit about King Philip’s War. However the framework, that one gets in history books and classes, is fleshed outby genealogy. Real people, experiencing real events is the heart of genealogy.If there are questions are comments, my e-mail address is rroy@earthlink.net.
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