Danvers Family Doctors

    family doctors

  • (family doctor) a general practitioner who treats all the family members
  • (Family doctor) Family medicine (FM) is a medical specialty devoted to comprehensive health care to people of all ages. It is a form of primary care that provides continuing, comprehensive health care for the individual and family across all ages, sexes, diseases, and parts of the body.

    danvers

  • A town in northeastern Massachusetts, northeast of Boston; pop. 24,174
  • Danvers is a town in Essex County, Massachusetts, United States. Located on the Danvers River near the northeastern coast of Massachusetts, Danvers is most widely known for its association with the 1692 Salem witch trials, and for its famous asylum, the Danvers State Hospital.
  • (Danver) Interstate 60 is a 2002 metaphysical comedy/drama road film starring James Marsden, Gary Oldman, and Amy Smart, with cameos by Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Chris Cooper, and Kurt Russell. The film was written and directed by Bob Gale.
  • carrots have a conical shape, having well-defined shoulders and tapering to a point at the tip. They are somewhat shorter than imperator cultivars, but more tolerant of heavy soil. Danvers cultivars are often pureed as baby food.

danvers family doctors

paul and dorothy darrell detail 3

paul and dorothy darrell detail 3
The Church in the Field, Lillingstone Dayrell, Buckinghamshire

In the centre of the chancel as a chest tomb with recumbant figures in prayer for Paul Dayrell, who died in 1556, and his third wife (widow of William Saunders) Dorothy, who died in 1571.

Whilst they appear in armour and a detailed indoor day dress the figures of their nine sons and six daughters appear on the side of the chest.

Inscription:
Heare Doretie dothe lie in grave with many children blest, who sure to husbands three a faithful will did rest that idleness and careless life did shunne and loved no waiste, whose liberall pursse the poore yet everywhere did taiste. Gode’s servante heare she lived of whom the world said well his soule and whence it came with God is gone to dwell. This epitaphe I Haddon wrote upon my mothers grave whose onli help did give by learning aa I have.
June the 22
Anno Domini 1571

Both Paul and Dorothy were in their third marraige by the time they married each other. Interestingly the monument was not erected to the memory of Paul but to dorothy by her son William Haddon from her second mariage. There family details are as followes:

Paul Dayrell
Born 1494 Died 1556
Parents: Thomas Dayrell and Dorothy Danvers
Marriage 1: Magsret Cheney b. 1497 in Drayton Beauchamp and daughter of John Cheney and Margaret Ingleston.
Their children were Anne 1525-1571+ , Paul 1531-1606 (married his step-sister Francis Saunders), Francis 1533-1601+, George 1539-1572
Marriage 2: Susan Crewe b.1520
Marriage 3: Dorothy Younge (see below)

Dorothy Dayrell nee Younge
Born 1510 in Crombe d’Abitot, Worcestershire
Daughter of John Younge and Anne Jennet.
Marraige 1: William Haddon , their son was Doctor Walter Haddon who erected the monument in question.
Marriage 2: William Saunders of Welford, Northamptonshire. They had a daughter Frances Saunders 1534-1606 who married Paul Dayrell.
Marriage 3: Paul Dayrell. They had a daughter Dorothy 1537-70.

There are several interesting points about the will of Dorothy. Firstly that George Saunders who was to benefit was murdered by 1573.
Secondly it allowes us to see the family links further. – she left goods to her daughters Anne, Mary and Francis – to son Paul Dayrell and my daughter his wife, to son Francis Saunders and my daughter his wife.
Also to son Quarel. I have found a vague hint that Dorothy may have married a John Quarles in 1555 only lasting a couple of years, so this would make Paul husband number four.

Reverend Samuel Parris of Salem Village

Reverend Samuel Parris of Salem Village
Samuel Parris (1653 – February 27, 1720) was the Puritan minister in Salem Village, Massachusetts during the Salem witch trials, as well as the father to one of the afflicted girls, and uncle of another.

He was born in London, England, the son of cloth merchant Thomas Parris. He emigrated to Boston in the early 1660s, where he attended Harvard University. When his father died in 1673, Samuel left Harvard to take up his inheritance in Barbados, where he maintained a sugar plantation and bought two Carib slaves to tend his household, one by the name of Tituba and the other John Indian.

In 1680 he returned to Boston, where he married Elizabeth Eldridge, and they had three children together; the slaves Tituba and John remained a part of his household. Although the plantation supported his merchant ventures, Parris was dissatisfied and began to preach at local churches. In July 1689, he became minister of Salem Village (now Danvers), Massachusetts.

He was not well liked; although his harsh preaching and rigid Puritan values may not have been unusual in the time and place, he was perceived as egotistical and greedy, especially when he demanded that he be given personal title to the Salem parsonage, in addition to his salary, as part of his compensation. This led to friction with the villagers, and some stopped contributing to his salary in October 1691.

The events that lead to the Salem witch trials began when his daughter, Betty Parris, and her cousin Abigail Williams accused the family’s slave Tituba of witchcraft. In February 1692, Betty Parris began having "fits" that the doctor could not explain. Parris beat Tituba and compelled her to confess that she was a witch. The hysteria lasted sixteen months, concluding with the Salem witch trials.

His church brought charges against him for his part in the trials, leading him to apologize for his error. However, despite the intense dislike of the villagers, Parris stayed on for another four years after the panic had run its course. In 1697, he accepted another preaching position in Stow, and eventually moved on to Concord and Dunstable before his death in the town of Sudbury on February 27, 1720.