Lazell Family Line
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 2x Great-Grandmother:
My 4x Great Grandmother:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 5x Great-Grandmother:
Polly Lazell (1782 - 1850)
Polly Bates
Birthdate: 1782
Birthplace: [unknown]
Denomination: (probably) Baptist
Date of Marriage: September 12, 1803
Place of Marriage: Bridgewater, Massachusetts
Death: 1850 [place of death unknown]
Parents:
Major Isaac Lazell
1756-1810
Jane Byram
1761-1846
Family
Spouse:
William Randall Bates
Also known as: "Randall Bates"
Birthdate: November 9, 1784
Birthplace: Cummington, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Denomination: (probably) Baptist
Death: February 13, 1841 in Newton, Boone County, Kentucky
Immediate Family:
Son of Amasa Bates and Jemima Randall
See: Bates Family Line
Children:
1. George William Bates 1806 - 1866
2. Anne "Annie" Farrin Bates 1817 - 1911
3. William Henry Bates 1808 - 1879
4. Mehitable White Bates 1811 - 1896
5. Martin Lazell Bates 1804 - 1887
6. Horace Nelson Bates 1813 - 1885
7. Erastus Bates 1821 - 1821
8. Polly Bates 1815 - 1815
About Polly Lazell
Cannot find much info on her. Still searching.
Liberty Bell, signifying a person in an accepted NSSAR or NSDAR lineage.
The Liberty Bell displayed here simply acts as a means to easily identify a patriot recognized by the NSDAR or NSSAR who was a participant in the fight for American Independence or a person of direct, recognized lineal descent from a patriot appearing in one or more accepted applications to NSDAR or NSSAR. The image is a "marker" visible in certain tree views and serves no other purpose or meaning.
References:
https://www.geni.com/people/Polly-Lazell/6000000014211885768
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/271T-TRG/isaac-lazell-1756-1810
http://gillywoodfamily.blogspot.com/2016/06/descendant-register-of-william-lazelle.html
https://wc.rootsweb.com/trees/143451/I59204/polly-lazell/individual
https://brown.illinoisgenweb.org/One_Name/Bugless.html
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 3x Great-Grandfather:
My 5x Great Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 6x Great-Grandfather:
Isaac Lazell (1756-1810)
Major Isaac Lazell
Also known as: "Deacon Isaac Lazell", "Maj. Isaac Lazell", "Isacke"
Birthdate: September 29, 1756
Birthplace: Brockton, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Denomination: (probably) Puritan, Congregationalist or, Baptist
Death: June 20, 1810 in Brockton, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Burial: The Old Graveyard, Plot: Section A, grave 39, East Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Occupation: Merchant
Military Service: Revolutionary War Veteran
Parents:
Isaac Lazell
1725-1807
Bethiah Alger
1729-1798
Family
Spouse:
Jane Byram
1761-1846
Jane Lazell
Birthdate: January 7, 1761
Birthplace: East Bridgewater, Plymouth, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Denomination: (probably) Puritan, Congregationalist or, Baptist
Date of Marriage: June 10, 1779
Place of Marriage: East Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts
Death: March 14, 1846
Burial: The Old Graveyard, Plot: Section A, grave 36, East Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Benjamin Byram and Rachel Bailey
See: Byram Family Line
Children:
1. Anna D Lazell 1780-1845
2. Polly Lazell 1782-1850
3. Martin Lazell 1784-1799
4. Jane Lazell 1786-1868
5. Salome C Lazell 1788-1838 (m. Mitchell Keith (s. of Caleb Keith 41) in 1811, and had Thomas Mitchell 1811, James Drances 1815, d. 1834. After her death in 1838, and he m. widow Charlotte Tisdale (Lazell) sister of his first wife, in 1840.)
6. Rachel Lazell 1790-1866
7. Henrietta B. Lazell 1791-
8. Charlotte Lazell 1792-1860
9. Isaac Lazell 1795-1795
10. Lazell 1796-1796
11. Irene Fearing Lazell 1799-1847
About Isaac Lazell
Liberty Bell, signifying a person in an accepted NSSAR or NSDAR lineage.
The Liberty Bell displayed here simply acts as a means to easily identify a patriot recognized by the NSDAR or NSSAR who was a participant in the fight for American Independence or a person of direct, recognized lineal descent from a patriot appearing in one or more accepted applications to NSDAR or NSSAR. The image is a "marker" visible in certain tree views and serves no other purpose or meaning.
Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files Massachusetts L Lazell
https://www.fold3.com/document/24768372/
About this image
Publication Number:M804
Publication Title:Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files
Publisher:NARA
National Archives Catalog ID:300022
National Archives Catalog Title:Case Files of Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Applications Based on Revolutionary War Service, compiled ca. 1800 - ca. 1912, documenting the period ca. 1775 - ca. 1900
Record Group:15
Short Description:NARA M804. Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files.
Roll:1535
State:Massachusetts
Veteran:Lazell, Isaac
Pensioner:Lazell, Jane
Service:Continental (Mass.)
Pension Number:W. 20416
Conflict Period:US Revolutionary War
Served For:United States of America
Major Isaac Lazell was born on 29 Sep 1756 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA and died on 23 Sep 1810 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA. aged 53.
Isaac married Jane Byram, daughter of Benjamin Byram and Rachel Bailey. Jane was born on 7 Jan 1761 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA and died on 14 Mar 1846 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA. aged 85.
The child from this marriage was:
+ 79 F i. Polly Lazell was born on 3 Sep 1782 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA and died on 17 Sep 1850 in Mt. Sterling, Brown County, IL aged 68.
The following is an excerpt from...
Law and Order in Bridgewater, Massachusetts,
1774-1821, with Emphasis on the South Parish/
Precinct
by Benjamin A. Spence
Pages 25, 27, 28
Between 1790 and 1820, a sizable majority of the South Parish, Bridgewater’s most heavily
populated area with about 1200 inhabitants in 1810, continued to be engaged in agriculture pursuits. But
the days of relying simply on subsistence farming were already a thing of the past. Many of those tilling the
soil had learned the benefits of selling the “fruits” of their labor and, in turn, buying products they once
made themselves. One sign that commercial farming had become part of Bridgewater’s economy was the
creation of the Plymouth County Agricultural Society on June 11, 1819. Old Bridgewater’s prominent role
in the organization’s early days is evidenced by the selection of Daniel Howard of the West Parish as the
society’s first president. (Five years later, the society’s “permanent exhibitions” were located in the “new”
Bridgewater and in the 1850’s the organization moved into its new home on a “beautiful site” off Broad
Street.) Even before Central Square and its Common began to take shape, two general country stores were
serving the needs of the parish’s farmers and also providing employment for at least a small number of
men. The older of these retail outfits had been operated by Col. Josiah Edson, until, remaining a Loyalist,
he fled to Boston in the fall of 1774. Subsequently, Isaac and Nathan Lazell (mentioned below) took over
this retail business, erecting a “new” building in 1798. Located on what became the northwest corner of
Central Square, this store, despite several changes in ownership, would remain a leading retail outfit into
the twentieth century. The other general country store, located diagonally across from Lazell’s on what is
now the corner of Summer and Broad Streets, was built by Edward Mitchell in the very early 1800’s.
Despite several changes in proprietorship, this business, like its competitor, would also become a town
institution during the following century.
Several other additions to the developing village of the South Parish are worth noting since each
of them would remain a part of Bridgewater’s Central Square and its immediate environs after the early
1820’s. Realizing the need to provide what we now call secondary education for young people, the
Massachusetts legislature encouraged the counties to establish academies of learning. Led by a group of
leading citizens, including Reverend Zedekiah Sanger, minister of the parish’s Congregational church, and
Isaac and Nathan Lazell petitioned the General Court for the right to establish such a school in the center of
the South Parish. Responding favorably, the legislature passed an act of incorporation on February 26,
1799, creating the Bridgewater Academy and providing it with an endowment of $5,000 to be derived from
the sale of land in Maine, at the time part of Massachusetts. The town meeting voted to raise $2,000 by
taxation for this endeavor. The first Academy building was erected on the northeastern part of what in two
decades would become Central Square. This structure was destroyed by fire late one night in February 1822
and was replaced by a new one at the southern end of the emerging Square.39
Sometime in 1805-1806, forty or so “scholars” attending the Academy at the time undoubtedly
joined other folks in viewing the construction of that part of the Boston and New Bedford Turnpike running
through the South Parish, along Broad and Bedford Streets. (These thoroughfares were officially
“accepted” by Bridgewater in 1851 and are now part of Route 18.) That a link of this “ambitious” Toll Road, which was approved by county courts and the state government, but privately financed, passed
through the precincts of East and South Bridgewater was mainly due to the influence of General Sylvanus
Lazell of the East Parish. Supporting him in this endeavor was his brother Isaac of the South Parish whose
iron works, store, and “public house for travelers” (now known as the Tory House) would most likely see
an increase in business when this road connected the state’s two most important seaports.
This turnpike, which followed “a perfectly straight line from Quincy to New Bedford,” also helped
create better postal service for the many communities along its way. Before the first train passed through
Bridgewater in 1846, much of its outgoing and incoming mail was carried by stagecoaches traversing this
turnpike. Bridgewater’s first Federal Post Office was established in the East Precinct in 1799, a decade
after the new Federal Constitution made provisions for a postal system. Nahum Mitchell, who had begun a
long legal and public-service career, served at its first postmaster. In 1816, branches of this post office were
created in the South and North Precincts. The one in the South Parish was in a small attachment to a
wooden house owned by Mitchell Keith, situated a short walk south of the present-day Bank Building on
the western side of Central Square. He and subsequent members of the Keith family were frequently in
charge of this office during the nineteenth century. As to the turnpike’s impact on criminal justice in the
South Parish, which would not have a lock-up until the early years of the Civil War and no regular system
of patrolmen until the 1870’s, one conjecture might be made at this point. While not the only road
connecting the parish to surrounding towns, law enforcers of Old Bridgewater, Plymouth County, and the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts must have appreciated how this turnpike facilitated their travel by
horseback as they sought to maintain law and order.
https://vc.bridgew.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1008&context=spence
The following is an excerpt from...
Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts, Volume 2. by William Richard Cutter
Page 784
The following is an excerpt from...
Epitaphs in Old Bridgewater, Massachusetts
By Williams Latham
Page 65
References:
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/271T-TRG/isaac-lazell-1756-1810
http://gillywoodfamily.blogspot.com/2016/06/descendant-register-of-william-lazelle.html
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/21970019/isaac-lazell
https://www.geni.com/people/Isaac-Lazell/6000000014212143615
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 4x Great-Grandfather:
My 6x Great Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 7x Great-Grandfather:
Isaac Lazell (1725 - 1807)
Also known as: "Isacke"
Birthdate: December 12, 1725
Birthplace: Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Baptism: January 15, 1727 at the church in the East Parish of Bridgewater
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Death: September 23, 1807 in Cummington, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Burial: Streeter Cemetery, Plot: Section A, grave 39, Cummington, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Parents:
Isaac Lazell
1690-1766
Mary Hudson
1701-1786
Family 1
Spouse:
Bethiah Alger
1729-1798
Bethia Lazell
Birthdate: June 11, 1729
Birthplace: Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Date of Marriage: March 10, 1747/48
Place of Marriage: Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Death: July 28, 1798
Burial: Streeter Cemetery, Cummington, Hampshire County, Massachusetts
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Joseph Alger and Mary Ames
See: Alger Family Line
Children:
1. Joseph Lazell 1748-1767
2. Captain Edmund Lazell 1750-1842
3. Gen. Sylvanus Lazell 1752-1827
4. Mary Lazell 1754-
5. Isaac Lazell 1756-1810
6. Nathan Lazell 1759-1832
7. Joseph Lazell 1767-1799
8. Ebenezer Lazell 1767-1828
Family 2
Spouse:
Abigail Bailey
Abigail "Nabby" Lazell formerly Bailey aka Allen
Born: 2 May 1738 in Scituate, Plymouth, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Died: 27 Sep 1818 in Bridgewater, Plymouth, Massachusetts
Wife of Jacob Allen — married 7 Dec 1762 in Bridgewater, Plymouth, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Wife of Isaac Lazell — married after 14 Jul 1799 in Plainfield, Hampshire, Massachusetts
[no children]
About Isaac Lazell
Isaac Lazell was born on 12 Dec 1725 in Bridgewater, Plmouth County, Mass and died on 23 Sep 1807 in Cummington, Hampshire County, Mass aged 81.
Isaac married Abigail Bradley.
Isaac next married Bethiah Alger, daughter of Joseph Alger and Mary Ames, on 10 Mar 1748 in Bridgewater, Plmouth County, Mass. Bethiah was born on 11 Jun 1729 in Bridgewater, Plmouth County, Mass and was buried in Streeter Cummington, Hampshire County, Mass.
The child from this marriage was:
+ 73 M i. Major Isaac Lazell was born on 29 Sep 1756 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA and died on 23 Sep 1810 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA. aged 53.
References:
http://gillywoodfamily.blogspot.com/2016/06/descendant-register-of-william-lazelle.html
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/55409866/isaac-lazell
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 5x Great-Grandfather:
My 7x Great Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 8x Great-Grandfather:
Isacke Lazell (1690 - 1766)
Isaac Lassell
Also known as: "Isaac"
Birthdate: July 10, 1660
Birthplace: Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Death: October 20, 1690 in Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Parents:
Isacke Lazell
1660-1690
Abigail Leavitt
1667-1748
Family
Spouse:
Mary Hudson
1701-1786
Mary Lazell
Birthdate: February 14, 1701
Birthplace: Bridgewater, Plymouth, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Date of Marriage: October 29, 1719
Place of Marriage: East Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Death: May 27, 1786 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Lt. Daniel Hudson and Mary Orcutt
See: Hudson Family Line
Children:
1. Isaac Lasell 1721-1721
2. Mary Lazell 1722-1726
3. Isaac Lazell 1725-1807
4. John Lazell 1727-1816
5. Hannah Lazell 1729-
6. Daniel Lazell 1734-1776
7. Joseph Lazell 1739-1740
About Isaac Lazell
Isaac Lazell was born on 6 Sep 1690 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA and died in 1766 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA aged 76.
Isaac married Mary Hudson, daughter of Daniel Hudson and Mary Orcutt, on 29 Oct 1719 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Mass. Mary was born on 14 Feb 1701 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Mass and died on 27 May 1786 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Mass. aged 85.
The child from this marriage was:
+ 57 M i. Isaac Lazell was born on 12 Dec 1725 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Mass and died on 23 Sep 1807 in Cummington, Hampshire County, Mass aged 81.
References:
http://gillywoodfamily.blogspot.com/2016/06/descendant-register-of-william-lazelle.html
https://gw.geneanet.org/tdowlinglang=en&pz=timothy+michael&nz=dowling&p=isaac&n=lazell&oc=2
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lazell-176
https://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Isaac_Lazell_%281%29
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 6x Great-Grandfather:
My 8x Great Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 9x Great-Grandfather:
Isacke Lazell (1660 - 1690)
Isaac Lazell
Birthdate: July 10, 1660
Birthplace: Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Death: October 20, 1690 in Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Parents:
John Lazelle
1620-1700
Elizabeth Gates
1630-1704
Family
Spouse:
Abigail Leavitt
1667-1748
Abigail Lazell
Also known as: "Abigail Abial Leaveitt", "Abiah", "Abigail Lazell", "Abigail Johnson"
Birthdate: December 9, 1667
Birthplace: Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Date of Marriage: January 25, 1684
Place of Marriage: Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Death: January 4, 1748 in West Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts Bay
Burial: Old Graveyard, Plot: Section E marker 250, West Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Immediate Family:
Daughter of John Leavitt and Sarah Gilman
See: Leavitt Family Line
Children:
1. Abial Lazell 1687-1749
2. Isacke Lazell 1690-1766
About Isacke Lazell
Isacke (Isaac) Lazell was born on 10 Jul 1660 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA and died on 20 Oct 1690 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA aged 30.
Isacke married Abigail Abial Leaveitt, daughter of John Leaveitt and Sarah Gilman, on 25 Jan 1684 in Hingham Suffolk County, Mass. Abigail was born on 9 Dec 1667 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA and was buried in Old Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Mass.
Children from this marriage were:
25 F i. Abigail Abial Lazell was born on 25 Jun 1688 in Hingham, Plymouth, Massachusetts.
+ 26 M ii. Isaac Lazell was born on 6 Sep 1690 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA and died in 1766 in Bridgewater, Plymouth County, MA aged 76.
Abigail re-married, to Isaac Johnson, about 1690. They had children:
David - 16 October 1692
Hannah - 19 January 1694/95
Solomon - 9 March 1696/97
Daniel - 20 April 1700
James
Sarah - 1 July 1702
John - 11 June 1705
Joseph - 17 December 1707
Benjamin - 6 March 1710/11
Mary - 18 June 1716
References:
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lassell-81
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 7x Great-Grandfather:
My 9x Great Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 10x Great-Grandfather:
John Lazelle (1620 - 1700)
John Lazell, Sr.
Also known as: "John Laselle"
Birthdate: ca. 1620
Birthplace: Castle Hedingham, Essex, England
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Death: October 21, 1700 in Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Parents:
John Lazill Sr
1590-
Mary Clark
1590-
Family
Spouse:
Elizabeth Gates
1630-1704
Elizabeth Lazell
Also known as: "Elizabeth Lazell"
Birthdate: bet. 1628-1630
Birthplace: Hingham, Norfolk, England
Denomination: (probably) Puritan or Congregationalist
Date of Marriage: November 29, 1649
Place of Marriage: Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Death: August 3, 1704 in Hingham, Suffolk County, Province of Massachusetts
Burial: Hingham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Stephen Gates and Anne Veare
See: Gates Family Line
Children:
1. John Lasell II 1650-1665
2. Thomas Lassell 1652-1725
3. Joshua Lazell I 1654-1688
4. Stephen Lazelle 1656-1717
5. Elizabeth Lazelle 1657-1676
6. Isacke Lazell 1660-1690
7. Hannah Lazelle 1662-1717
8. Mary Lazell 1664-1742
9. Sarah Lassell 1666-1736
10. John Jr Lazell III 1669-1755
11. Israel Lasell 1671-1755
About John Lazelle
John Lazelle (William1) was born about 1620 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England and died on 21 Oct 1700 aged about 80.
John married Elizabeth Gates, daughter of Stephen Gates and Ann Veare-Hill, on 29 Nov 1649 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA. Elizabeth was born in 1630 in Hingham, Norfolk, England and died on 3 Aug 1704 in Hingham Suffolk County, Mass aged 74.
Children from this marriage were:
+ 3 M i. Thomas Lazell was born on 15 Sep 1652 in Hingham, Plymouth Co, MA and died on 1 May 1725 in Windham, CT aged 72.
+ 4 M ii. Joshua Lazell was born on 17 Nov 1654 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA and died in 1689 aged 35.
5 M iii. Stephen Lazell was born on 6 Oct 1656 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA.
6 F iv. Elizabeth Lazell was born on 28 Feb 1657 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA and died on 7 Apr 1676 aged 19.
+ 7 M v. John \Lazell Lasell Lasell/ was born on 25 Apr 1660 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA, died on 2 Dec 1755 in Windham, Windham Co., CT aged 95, and was buried in Scotland, Windham Co., CT.
+ 8 M vi. Isacke (Isaac) Lazell was born on 10 Jul 1660 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA and died on 20 Oct 1690 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA aged 30.
9 F vii. Hannah Lazell was born on 31 Aug 1662 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA.
Hannah married Unknown Turner.
+ 10 F viii. Mary \Lazell Lasell Lasell/ was born on 2 Sep 1664 in Hingham , Plymouth Co., MA.
11 F ix. Sarah Lazell was born on 29 Nov 1666 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA and died on 19 Sep 1736 in Hingham, Massachusetts, USA aged 69.
Sarah married Peter Ripley, son of John Ripley and Elizabeth Hobart, on 17 Apr 1693. Peter was born on 17 Apr 1693.
12 M x. Israel Lazell was born on 24 Sep 1671 in Hingham, Massachusetts
References:
http://gillywoodfamily.blogspot.com/2016/06/descendant-register-of-william-lazelle.html
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/M6MV-395/john-laselle-1620-1700
https://www.geni.com/people/John-Lazell-Sr/6000000005577305335
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Lazell-180
https://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:John_Lassell_%281%29
https://gw.geneanet.org/tdowling?lang=en&pz=timothy+michael&nz=dowling&p=john&n=lazell
________________________________________________________________________________
Nana's 8x Great-Grandfather:
My 10x Great Grandfather:
Laila Laemmel-Gordon's 11x Great-Grandfather:
John Lazill, Sr. (1590 - )
John J. Lazell
Birthdate: 1590
Birthplace: Castle Hedingham, Essex, England
Denomination: (possibly) Anglican, Puritan or Congregationalist
Death: [unknown]
Parents:
[unknown]
Family
Spouse:
Mary Clark
1590-
Mary Lazell
Birthdate: 1590
Birthplace: [unknown]
Denomination: (possibly) Anglican
Date of Marriage: [date unknown]
Place of Marriage: [place unknown]
Death: [date unknown] [place unknown]
Immediate Family:
Daughter of
Children:
1. John Laselle 1620-1700
About William Lazelle
William Lazelle was born in 1581 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England.
William married Joan. in 1605.
The child from this marriage was:
+ 2 M i. John Lazelle was born about 1620 in Castle Hedingham, Essex, England and died on 21 Oct 1700 aged about 80.
References:
http://gillywoodfamily.blogspot.com/2016/06/descendant-register-of-william-lazelle.html
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/M6MV-395/john-laselle-1620-1700
________________________________________________________________________________
Lazell Surname Origin, Meaning & Last Name History
This interesting surname, with variant spellings Lascelles, Lassells, Lascell and Lessels, is of French origin, and is locational from Lacelle, a place in Orne, Normandy, so called from the Old French "la", the, plus "celle", a hermit's cell (from the Latin "cella", small room). The name was introduced into England by follower of William the Conqueror after the Norman Conquest of 1066, and first appears on record in the mid 12th Century (see below). Early recordings of the surname include: Picot de Lasceles, noted in the 1185 Knights Templars Records of Yorkshire, who was vasal to the Count of Brittany, and Roger de Lascelles, who was a major land holder in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, circa 1130. In 1514, a Francis Lassells, of Richmond, was entered in the Oxford University Register. Recordings from London Church Registers include the marriage of Mary Lazell and Richard Frogley on August 26th 1727, at St. Benet's, Paul's Wharf. A later member of the family, Edward Lascelles, was created Earl of Harewood in 1812. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Peter de Laceles, which was dated circa 1150, in the "Chartulary of Rievaulx Abbey", Yorkshire, during the reign of King Stephen, known as "Count of Blois", 1135 - 1154. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling. Also, Layzell, Lasel, etc.
Massachusetts Bay Colony
1629–1686
1689–1691
Province of Massachusetts Bay
1691–1780
Hingham was a settlement in Massachusetts Bay Colony. The town was placed in Suffolk County when counties were formed in 1643. For a brief time, the town was part of the Dominion of New England from 1686 to 1689. When the new Norfolk County was formed in 1793, Hingham and Hull were cherry-picked to stay in Suffolk County while Norfolk County bordered it on the west and east. Hingham was annexed to Plymouth County on 18 June 1803, still leaving its west and east borders with Norfolk County. Hingham remains in Plymouth County.