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Remember Allerton, a daughter, Mary Allerton, a daughter, John Hooke, "servant-boy." Dr. Samuel Fuller and William Butten, "servant"-assistant. Captain Myles Standish and Mrs. Rose Standish. Master William White and Mrs. Susanna (Fuller) White, Resolved White, a son, William Holbeck, "servant," Edward Thompson, "servant." Deacon Thomas Blossom and ----- Blossom, a son. Master Edward Tilley and Mrs. Ann Tilley. Master John Tilley and Mrs. Bridget (Van der Velde?) Tilley (2d wife), Elizabeth Tilley, a daughter of Mr. Tilley by a former wife(?) John Crackstone and John Crackstone (Jr.), a son. Francis Cooke and John Cooke, a son. John Turner and ---- Turner, a son, ---- Turner, a son. Degory Priest. Thomas Rogers and Joseph Rogers, a son. Moses Fletcher. Thomas Williams. Thomas Tinker and Mrs. ---- Tinker, ---- Tinker, a son. Edward Fuller and Mrs. ---- Fuller, Samuel Fuller, a son. John Rigdale and Mrs. Alice Rigdale. Francis Eaton and Mrs. ---- Eaton, Samuel Eaton, an infant son. Peter Browne. William Ring. Richard Clarke. John Goodman. Edward Margeson. Richard Britteridge. Mrs. Katherine Carver and her family, it is altogether probable, came over in charge of Howland, who was probably a kinsman, both he and Deacon Carver coming from Essex in England,--as they could hardly have been in England with Carver during the time of his exacting work of preparation. He, it is quite certain, was not a passenger on the Speedwell, for Pastor Robinson would hardly have sent him such a letter as that received by him at Southampton, previously mentioned (Bradford's "Historie," Deane's ed. p. 63), if he had been with him at Delfshaven at the "departure," a few days before. Nor if he had handed it to him at Delfshaven, would he have told him in it, "I have written a large letter to the whole company." John Howland was clearly a "secretary" or "steward," rather than a "servant," and a man of standing and influence from the outset. That he was in Leyden and hence a SPEEDWELL passenger appears altogether probable, but is not absolutely certain. Desire Minter (or Minther) was undoubtedly the daughter of Sarah, who, the "Troth Book" (or "marriage-in-tention" records) f
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