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  1. Samuel was born and raised in the village of Gorton, south-east Lancashire. His baptism is recorded in the registers of the parish church in Manchester, 12 February 1593.

  2. Samuel Gorton (1592–1677), the antinomian Puritan who preached during the English Civil War of the 1640’s among the radical Puritans, soon stirred up New England’s deepest fears that his mystical independence would transport political, social, and religious unrest to the new world.

  3. When Samuel Gorton Sr. was born on 12 February 1592, in Manchester, Lancashire, England, his father, Thomas Gorton, was 37 and his mother, Anne Johnson, was 29. He married Mary Maplett on 20 May 1628, in St Mary Magdalene Old Fish Street with St Gregory by St Paul, London, England, United Kingdom.

  4. Mar 28, 2008 · Gorton, Samuel, 1592-1677. [from old catalog], Gorton family (Samuel Gorton, 1592-1677) [from old catalog], Rhode Island -- History Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775, genealogy Publisher Philadelphia [G. S. Ferguson co., printers] Collection library_of_congress; americana Contributor The Library of Congress Language English Item Size 1554969162

  5. Jun 1, 2023 · Martha Stuart Helliggo, MA, CPS, "A Tale of Samuel Gorton Including One Line of Descent" Omaha, NE, p2. 07 Dec 1646 Named in her mother's Will as daughter, Mary GORTON, wife of Samuel Gorton, living in New England. Family links: Parents: John Maplett (1581 - 1630) Mary Maplett (1576 - 1646) Spouse: Samuel Gorton (1592 - 1677) Children:

  6. When Slade Gorton was born about 1757, in Warwick, Kent, Rhode Island, British Colonial America, his father, Samuel Gorton, was 42 and his mother, Ruth Slade, was 34. He married Mary Whitford on 11 December 1777, in Warwick, Kent, Rhode Island, United States. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 3 daughters.

  7. Samuel Gorton, c.1592–1677, Anglo-American religious leader, founder of Warwick, R.I., b. near Manchester, England. Seeking religious freedom, he emigrated to America (1637) but, because of his unorthodox religious teachings, was banished successively from Boston and Plymouth.