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John Ruscoe

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John Ruskoe
Born1623
DiedNovember 20, 1702
Occupation(s)farmer, carpenter
SpouseRebecca Beebe (m. January 2, 1649 or 1650, Hartford)
ChildrenThomas Ruscoe (b.1651 d.1739), Mary Ruscoe (b. ca. 1656), Rebecca Ruscoe Brown (b. ca. 1656), Ruth Ruscoe Abbott (b.ca. 1658), Sarah Ruscoe (b. ca. 1660), Mehitabel Ruscoe Lees (b.ca. 1662), John Ruscoe (b. ca. 1664)

John Ruscoe (also Ruskoe)[2](1623 – 1702) was a founding settler of Norwalk, Connecticut.

Early life

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He was born in 1623, in Billericay, Essex, England, son of William Ruscoe, and Rebecca.[3] His parents and their four youngest children departed from London aboard the ship Increase in 1635,[1] but his mother Rebecca died on the voyage.[3] John and his brother Nathaniel remained in England, presumably to manage a farm there and to earn money to send to their father until he had established himself in America.[3] This was a common practice at the time. William arrived in Boston in June 1635, and upon arrival soon married the only widow in the Newton settlement, Hester Mussey. In 1836, the family joined Thomas Hooker in settling Hartford.

Shortly after John arrived in Hartford he married Rebecca Beebe.[3]

John Ruscoe was one of the fourteen original signers of the Ludlow agreement to create a settlement at Norwalk.[4][3]

He was the owner of Half-Mile Island, the peninsula located east of Canfield Avenue on Shorehaven Road.[2]

He is listed on the Founders Stone bearing the names of the founding settlers of Norwalk in the East Norwalk Historical Cemetery.

References

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  1. ^ a b Nathaniel Bouton (1851). An Historical Discourse in Commemoration of the Two-hundredth Anniversary of the Settlement of Norwalk, Ct., in 1651: Delivered in the First Congregational Church in Norwalk, July 9, 1851. S.W. Benedict. pp. 72.
  2. ^ a b Norwalk Vol. 1
  3. ^ a b c d e George Dudley Seymour; Joseph Gardner Bartlett (1917). The English Home and Ancestry of Richard Seamer Or Semer of Hartford, Conn., Progenitor of the Seymours of Connecticut and New York: Communicated to the New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Stanhope Press, F.H. Gilson Company. p. 12.
  4. ^ The Ancient Historical Records of Norwalk, Connecticut: With a Plan of the Ancient Settlement, and of the Town in 1847. J. Mallory & Company. 1847. pp. 32, 38–39.

5. Connecticut Nutmegger, Vol 36, 2003, Robert W. Hull, CSG 12,200.