Rev. John Wing Sr.          was born
on 12 Jan 1583/84 in Banbury, co. Oxford,
England. He died
in 1630 in London, co. Middlesex,
England.
He signed a will.
Will of Rev. John Wing
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --
In the name of God Amen, the second daie of November one thousand sixe hundred
twenty nine And in the fifth yeare of the reigne of our Soveraigne Lord Kinge
Charles etc. I John Winge late of the Hague in Holland, clarke, now living in
the pish (parish) of St. Mary Aldermary London and being sicke in bodie but of
good and perfect minde and memory praised bee Almightie God, Doe make and ordaine
this my last will and testament in manner and forme following First and principallie
I commend my soule into the hands of Almightie God my maker trusting and assuredly
believing to have full and free remission of all my sinnes by and through the
only marritte and righteousness of Jesus Christ my alone Savior and my bodie
I committ to the earth of which it came to bee decently buried where it shall
please the Lord to direct. And as touching my wordly estate and substance whereof
I am now possessed, I give and bequeath the same as followeth. First whereas
I am now possessed and interested of an in certayne lands being freehold with
appurtenances lying and beinge in the parish of Crickston and Stroud in the county
of Kent or elsewhere, I will and desire and my minde and meaning is that the
same be sold as soon as conveniently maye bee by my Executrix herein after named
to the best profitt and advantage, and that the money thereof arisinge shall
bee (with all and singular of, my other goods chattels and estate etc. whatsoever)
divided into two equal pts and porcons (parts and portions), the one moietty
whereof to be had received and enioyed unto and by my loving wife Deborah and
the other pte or moytie to bee equallie and indifferently had, parted, divided
and enioyed unto and amongst all my children share and share like, except unto
and by my daughter Deborah whom I have allready advanced in marriage. And therefore
I will that what I have allready given as her marriage porcon shall be accompted
as pte of her dividend and proporcon of my estate given amongst my children by
this will. And my will and meaning is, and I doe hereby appoint that ye said
legacies and porcons shalbe paid unto my sonnes at their severall ages of one
and twentie years and unto my daughters unmarried at their like several ages
of one and twentie years or severall daites of marriage wen of them shall first
happen. And if any of my child or children happen to die or depart this life
before the said legacies shall become due to be paid unto them or any of them
in and by this my will then I will that the survivor or survirors of him, her,
or them that shall soe happen to die in the mean tyme, shall have, receive and
enioye the legacie and bequest of him, her, or them soe dying as in aforesaid
equallie to and amongst all the said survivor or survivors. And I hereby will
that my said wife shall have and enioye the benefitt and profitt of my childrens
porcon herein by my will bequeathed towards thir educacon and maintenance until
their said porcon shall become due and payable to them severallie and respectively
according to this my present will. Item, I will that all such debts as I owe
in right or in conscience, together with my funeral charges shall be first paid,
deducted, and allowed out of all my estate. An . d I doe hereby name, nominate
and appoint my loving wife Deborah my Executrix of this my last will & testament
and my loving friends Edward Foorde of London mercht and Andrew Blake of Stroud
in the Countie of Kent, yeoman, Overseers of the same. in witness whereof I have
hereunto sett my hand and seale. Dated the daie and yeare first above written.
I doe affirme that this will above written was prononced according to the Testators
mind witness my hand by me Edward Foorde. I doe affirm the like witness my hand
by me Andrew Blake.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- --
Notes regarding the Will of Reverend John Wing:
Transcribed and annotated by James H. Stone. The original will is in the Public
Record Office, London (PROB 11/158), which kindly gave permission for transcription
and publication. An abstract of the will appears in George E. Wing's history
of the Wing Family, "The Owl," volume 60, December 1966, reprint, page
1313; it was copied from "Prerogative Court of Canterbury, Register "Scroope"
1630, Abstracts and Index, J. H. Morrison, ed., London, 1934, page 103. The will
was proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, London, on August 4, 1630.
Will and notes were posted to the WING-L rootsweb mailing list by MMihalcik@aol.com
(Feb/Mar 1998).
Like his father-in-law, Stephen Bachiler, John Wing was an English minister
who moved to Holland and became a Puritan pastor there, most likely for similar
reasons. He had been residing at Sandwich, County Kent, England on the Strait
of Dover and then at Hanbury before migrating to Holland. There he became pastor
of an English Puritan Congregation in Flushing, Province of Zealand. It is likely
that he was associated in some way in Holland with Stephen Bachiler, as he married
Stephen's daughter. Pope, in PIONEERS OF MASSACHUSETTS, states that John Wing
died in the Hague, Holland in 1629. Lovell, in SANDWICH: A CAPE COD TOWN, states
that he died in England in 1630. An early Wing family genealogist, writing in
1881, stated that John came to America and settled in Sandwich. But more recent
research proves that the writer must have confused John Wing with John Wing,
Jr., his son, who did accompany his widowed mother, brothers, and Stephen Bachiler
to America in 1632, and settled first in Lynn, and later in Sandwich.
Condensed from a biographical sketch compiled about 1914 by Col. George W. Wing
(1856-1924), first president of the Wing Family of America.
John Wing, third son and sixth child of Matthew and Mary, was born at Banbury,
England, and christened in the ancient Church of St. Mary's., January 12, 1584,
in the 26th year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth.
Elizabeth ruled England with an iron hand. The Puritans were in a majority in
the House of Commons, but the severe reprimands they had met with from the throne
deterred them from enacting any religious laws. The prelates of the Church of
England were still in the haughty exercise of all religious prerogatives. So
that when Matthew, or perchance Mary, carried the infant John in their arms up
the stately aisles of old St. Mary's to the Saxon baptismal font, he was baptized
with the parents and attendants kneeling at the sacrament, which was sealed by
the sign of the cross. Every question of ceremony was regulated by Queen Elizabeth.
Even the size and height of the ruff about Matthew's neck was determined by the
Queen's edict.
The very year of John's birth, Elizabeth consigned the religious life of England
into the keeping of forty-four commissioners, who were enpowered by all means
and ways they could devise, by juries, by the rack, by torture, by inquisition,
by imprisonment, to reform all heresies and schism, and to punish all breaches
of uniformity of worship. so we may well imagine that John was christened by
his parents with strict regard to the country's laws.
Matthew and Mary were not permitted to invite their neighbors to read and discuss
the scriptures. all such gatherings, without the Queen's special permission,
were unlawful. And if, perchance, Matthew (who was a tailor) in his business
sold a suit of clothes to a nobleman, he was obliged to wait that gentlman's
knightly pleasure for payment. If he sued to recover the price, he was liable
to imprisoment himself. It was only during the succeeding generations that the
noble principles of liberty took root. Executions took place for robbery, theft
and felonies; whippings and burnings in the hand hand were legal modes of punishment
for lesser crimes. In fact, the "Merrie England" of the days of Matthew
and the boyhood of John affords us no reason to be in love with the picture of
the absolute monarchy or with the government of "good Queen Bess."
The boyhood of John was spent in banbury. The square about the old Banbury cross
was undobtedly a playground, and time and again he must have passed and entered
the old Reindeer Inn. The schools of the day were known as grammar schools, and
undoubtedly Joyn made good use of them, for he was able to matriculate at Oxford
when but fifteen years of age. We cannot doubt that he was a regular Sunday attendant
at St. Mary's. His deeply spiritual nature was a surety of that. The sermons
in the English churches at that time were merely homilies prepared by the prelates
and given the vicars to read, exhorting their congregations to obey the Queen
and extolling her goodness.
In John's fourteenth year, all England was aflame with the approach of the great
Spanish Armada. His father at that time was forty-eight years of age, and his
brothers, Fulk and Thomas, twenty-four and twenty-two respectively. Unquestionably
they were enrolled among the nation's defenders. The year following the excitement
attending the Armada, John Wing entered Oxford University. The school was only
twenty-three miles from his home. The matriculation entry is as follows:
"John Wynge of Oxon, pleb. St. Alban's Hall, 15 October, 1599, aged 14."
On 12 February, 1603, Queen's College invested him with the degree of Bachelor
of Arts. During the days of John's schooling there, Oxford was particularly active
in the literary movement of that day, and undoubtedly the youth became acquainted
there with many of the great lights who dazzled the world with their writings
in the generation following.
That we may better appreciate the scholarly attainments of young John Wing, B.A.,
nineteen years of age, when he left the shadows of Queen's College in 1603, a
review of the times may prove interesting. Of the peers of the realm during Elizabeth's
reign only about sixty knew their letters. In the rual districts, to read and
write were considered rare accomplishments, and even among the gentry below the
first degree there was little difference in literary accomplishments between
master and the boorish attendants. As we sescend a step lower we reach a class
wholly illiterate. Shakespeare's father was High Bailiff of Stratford, but he
could neither read nor write. Of nineteen aldermen of Stratford only six could
write their names. Nor was the ignorance confined to the laymen. In1578, according
to Neal, of one hundred and forty clergymen in Cornwall belonging to the established
church, not one was capable of preaching, and throughout the kingdom, those who
could preach were in the proportion of one to four.
The time of the induction of John iinto the holy order is conjectural. Oxford
at the time of his graduation was, under Elizabeth's reighn, the fountain head
of English church theology. His parents were members of the established church,
and it was quite likely with a view of taking the orders that he pursued his
studies at the University. It is most likely that the young Oxford graduate secured
a position in some country village as a curate or assistant to the vicar of some
parish and, while acting in that capacity, met Deborah Bachiler, daughter of
the Vicar of Wherwell in Hampton.
Stephen Bachiler, the Vicar of Wherwell, had gained considerable reputation among
his clerical brethren for learning and ability. A man of willful independent
and forceful character, he had refused conformity with the requirements of his
superiors in the chuch and in 1605 was deprived of his living at Wherwell. He
immediately secured another following in the vicinity of Wherwell and continued
to preach the gospel as a Presbyterian. It was an age of fierce religious controversy,
and it was during the period immediately following Bachiler's expulsion from
his living at Wherwell that the young Oxford graduate met and courted Deborah.
It will not for an instant be believed by those who have studied Bachiler's dominating
and forceful character that he would permit his daughter to marry a clergyman
of the Church of England. Tradition says that he refused to give his youngest
daughter, Theodate, in marriage to young Christopher Hussey until the latter
would promise to take her to New England, where he himself proposed to settle.
The influence of the courtship and the marriage of John and Deborah, and the
subsequent associations with the father of the latter, may have had much to do
with the breaking of the young man's relations with the mother church.
John Wing and Deborah Bachiler were married about the year 1609-10. It may be
conjectued that because John's brother named a daughter Deborah, born to him
in 1608, that the marriage occurred even earlier. At the time of his marriage,
John was about twenty-five years of age and Deborah barely eighteen. The oldest
child, Deborah was born in 1611. John, the second child, is said by some student
of family history to have been born at Yarmouth. He is mentioned in his grandfather's
will made in 1614, so that it is probably that his birth occurred in 1613.
In 1617, John Wing is found preaching to the famous society of Merchant Adventurers
of England in Hanover, Germany, and it is known definitely that he was in charge
of a congregation at the old Roman cinque port of Sandwich in Kent at some period
prior to 1620. The proof of this is contained in the dedication of his first
book, "The Crown Conjugall", printed in November, 1620. He thus inscribed
it:
"To The Right Worshipfull Master Matthew Peke Esquire, Mayor of the Towne
and Port of Sandwich, and to the Worshipfull, the Jurates of his brethren, the
Common Counsell and whole Corporation fo the same JOHN WING, doth with Grace
and Peace and all good form from the lving God through the love of our Lord Jesus
Christ, by the worke of the Holy Ghost, (our former favours, and the abundant
fruits of your love Right Worshipfull and welbeloved in the Lord) which I have
from time to time experienced ever since it pleased the Lord to cast affliction
upon mine external state, doe daily provoke and deeply challange from me, the
manifestation of a thankfull hart unto you all to whose kindnes I stand a Debtor
much engaged to this day."
Mr. Stevens, in his "History of Presbyterianism" thus makes mention
of our ancestor:
"Mr. Wing, a pious man, and edifying preacher, was first at Sandwich, but
had latterly been chaplain to the Merchants Adventurers of England rsiding at
Hamburg. He exerted himself much for the good of his people her (Flushing) until
he removed to the Hague in 1627."
On 19 June, 1620, he had been ordained as pastor of the churches of Flushing
and Middleburg (in Holland) under the direction of Mr. John Paget of Amsterdam,
assisted by two Dutch clergymen, and in the presence of the burgomaster and other
magistrates.
There are many theories as to the exact religious beliefs of the Rev. John Wing.
Robert Browne, the founder of English Congregationalism, as early as 1581, had
emigrated to Middleburg, in Zealand, with his followers, and it was from here
that he published his several works. His followers became distracted and divided
on matters of discipline and were finally disbanded. It may have been remnants
of Brown's old congregation at Middleburg that John Wing preached to in 1620.
The fact that the Dutch government recognized and materially aided the Rev. John
Wing in his ministrations at the Hague and in his induction into the Pastorate
at Middleburg, leads to the belief that he was a Presbyterian in his belief and
teachings. He was the first settled English pastor at the Hague, being admitted
11 May, 1627. The states of Holland allowed him a subsidy of 300 punds year,
which, by a decree of 1628, was augmented to 500 pounds. A subscription of 100
pounds was raised by the English, and expended in repairing and beautifying the
chapel. This church, or chapel, was much frequented by the royal family, and
especially by Elizabeth, daughter of King James, wife of the ex-King of Bohemia.
It was here that Mr. Wing preached 18 May, 1624, his sermon "The Saint's
Advantage, or the Wellfare of the Faithfull in the Worst Times" before Queen
Elizabeth. The sermon was given at the Hague while Mr. Wing was still in the
pastorate at Middleburg. It was printed in London, in 1624, by John dawson for
John Bellamie, and was sold at his shop the the Three Golden Lions, near the
Royal Exchange.
A number of the sermons of the Rev. John Wing were published. Samuel Austin Allibone,
in his "Dictionary of Authors" mentions some of the publications:
"1. The Crowne Conjugall, or the Spouse Royall, Middleburg, 1620
2. Jacob's Staffe to Beare up the Faithful and Beat Down the Profane, Flushing,
1621
3. The Best Merchandis, 1622"
To those should be added "Abel's Offering" and "The Saint's Advantage."
The former was printed in 1622 and is dedicated "To the Right Worshipfull
and worthy fellowship of Merchants Adventurers of England, residents of Delft,
in Holland." It had been preached in Middleburg, in Zealand. The book contains
138 pages. The latter sermon preached at Hamburg in November 1617, and was printed
at Flushing in October of 1621.
Five of the volumes of John Wing's publications are held by the British Museum
and have been seen and examined there by several members of the Wing Family of
America. At least one copy of each of the five publications is now in America.
a Copy of the "Crown Conjugall" was secured by the late Col. George
W. Wing, first president of the Wing Family of America, having been purchased
in a London bookstore in 1903. A copy of the book "The Saint's Advantage"
is part of the John Adams collection in the Boston Publich Library, carefully
guarded under lock and key. On the title page of this copy is the following notation
placed by Mr. Thomas Prince who owned the book at one time:
"This Wing was Pastor of ye English Puitan Chh. at Middleborough in Zeeland,
wh. wido bro't her children to Sandwich in New England who afterwards turned
Quaker and frm whm ye Wings at Sandwich, Wareham, Rochester and Dartmouth are
descended."
In Septmeber, 1908, Mr. George Wing Sisson, at that time Vice President of the
Wing Family of America, received from Miss Miriam H. L. wing, of Coventry, England,
a bound volume cotaining "Jacob's Staffe," "The Best Merchandise",
and "Abel's Offering", bound within the same covers. Miss Wing was
the daughter of an English Clergyman and stated that the volume had been purchased
by her father from a London bookseller merely because the author bore his surname.
The religious views and teachings of the Rev. John Wing are not conjectural to
his descendants. Over 800 pages of his writings or preachings are accessible
to those of his posterity living today. They reveal to us a man of strong spituality,
classic learning, masterful character, ready wit, fierce invective, a facile
pen and a ready tongue. He lived in an age of cant and long-winded sermons, and
at times his preachings take on the color of the age, but through them all gleams
the effort to be of sincere use to his fellowmen.
Fully fifteen years of the lives of John Wing and his wife Deborah were spent
in Germany and Holland as practical exiles from their native England. Hamburg
and The Hague were cities of note and cosmopolitian beyond their contemporaries
in Europe. Their associates, and the members of their congregations, were people
of note and keen enterprise. The salary of 500 pounds a year while at The Hague
afforded him the means of living in affluence. Reckoned for its purchasing power
at that time, it would equal the modern salary of $10,000 given to favored ministers
of the gospel, and speaks for itself of the value placed upon his services.
What changes of fortune brought him and his family to London before his death
we are unable to determine. Perhaps it was a fatal illness: possibly the growing
power of the Puritan movement: perhaps he too had caught the fever to emigrate
to America. He sickened and died in London in 1630, probably during the summer,
in his forty-sixth year, and his wife, Deborah, at thirty-eight was left a widow
with five children.
No picture comes down to us through the ages of the Rev. John Wing. The Puritan
and Presbyterian clergy of that period affected a small chin beard with mustaches,
hair rather long and flowing, high hats with rather broad trims, black clothes
and cloak, with knee breeches and silver- buckled shoes. The office of the clergy
carried with it a great dignity and sterness of bearing. The Rev. John at all
times felt the responsibilities of his mission.
The English recods contain this synopsis of his will:
"John Winge, late of the Hague in Holland, clerk, now living in St. Mary
Aldermary, London, 2 November, 1629, proved Aug. 4, 1630. Certain lands (freehold)
in Crickston and Stroud, Kent, shall be sold as conveniently may be and the money
thereof arising shall be with all other goods, etc, divided into equal parts,
the one to be had, received and enjoyed unto by my loving wife, Debora, and the
other part or moiety to be equally and indifferently had, parted, divided and
enjoyed unto amongst all my children, sahre and share alike, except unto and
by my daughter Debora whom I have already advanced in marriage. Wife Debora to
be executrix and Edward Foord of London, merchant, and Andrew Blake of Stroud,
in Kent, yeomen, overseers."
It is not unusual circumstance for the Rev. John Wing to be styled a "clerk"
in his will. His father-in-law, also a minister, was so designated in at least
three conveyances made by him about the same time. The term evidently had a broader
meaning than is now ascribed to it, and was used to designate a scholarly gentleman.
A brief review of the family and surroundings of the widow Deborah Wing and her
children at this period may bring the situation nearer home to us. Deborah herself
was still a young woman of thirty-eight. Her only daughter, Deborah, aged about
nineteen, had but recently married. Her eldest son, John, was but seventeen,
her son Daniel a year or two younger than John, Stephen but nine and Matthew
still younger. Her younger sister, Ann Sanborn, also widowed with a family ,
was living on the strand in London and her brothers, Samuel and Nathaniel, probably
living in Holland. The freehold estate mentioned by Rev. John Wing in his will
was located at Crickston and Stroud in Kent, a few miles distant from Sandwich.
There is a tradition among the New England members of the family that Matthew
Wing, Deborah's youngest son, "went back to England to look after some property
left behind." We have positive knowledge that Matthew Wing returned to Stroud,
married, lived and died there. The size, importance and value of the estate left
by John to his wife and sons is not known; but it appears probble that they were
provided with some means when they set out for America in the spring of 1632.
He was married to Deborah Batchiler in 1610 in England.           Jeff White says 1609.
Deborah Batchiler           was born
in 1592 in Wherwell, co. Hants,
England.     Jeff White says 1590. She died on 31 Jan 1692 in Brewster,
Barnstable Co., Massachusetts.  She was also known as Deborah Bachelor. Sandwich, Mass was settled in 1637, and incorporated in 1639,
the Wings among the first there. Although her name does not appear on the list
of founding fathers of Sandwich, it having been a man's world, she was and is
still considered the "Matriarch of Sandwich". During her September
years, she was known as "Olde Goody Wing". John and Deborah Bachiler
Wing had at least four sons.
Deborah Bachiler was born about 1592 probably in Wherwell, Hampshire, England;
died Jan. 31, 1691/92 at Brewster, Mass. She married John Wing about 1610 probably
in Holland.
It can be deduced that Deborah was probably the eldest daughter (of three daughters)
of Stephen Bachiler. She was widowed in her thirties. Shortly after the death
of her husband, John Wing, she emigrated from England to New England with her
father, Stephen Bachiler, in 1632. One account states that she emigrated with
her four sons and that one of them later returned to England. Another account
states that only three of her sons accompanied her to America and that one remained
behind. She remained in Lynn, Mass where her father ws pastor until 1637. That
year was the year he removed to mid-Cape Cod (Yarmouth). She removed with her
sons to upper, or western Cape Cod and there she became a founder of Sandwich.
In Sandwich history, she is referred to as "the Matriarch". Her husband,
John Wing, had lived in Sandwich, England; a connection, if any, is not known.
In 1657, then about 65, she moved again, with her son John Wing Jr., to Brewster.
Records there referred to her as "Olde Goody Wing" on her death. She
lived to be nearly 100 years old, her longevity seeming to have been inherited
from her father.
Children were:
i.
Deborah Wing was born in
1611.
ii.
John Wing Jr..
iii.
Daniel Wing.
iv.
Stephen Wing        was born
about 1621 in Holland. He
was a town clerk in 1669 in Sandwich, Barnstable Co.,
Massachusetts.
He signed a will on 2 Dec 1700.
He died after 2 Dec 1700 in Sandwich, Barnstable Co.,
Massachusetts.
His estate was probated on 13 Jul 1710.
He was buried in Springhill Burial
Ground. He was a Quaker.
He was married to Oseth Dillingham about
1646.   
v.
Matthew Wing was born in
1627. |