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  1. 2 de feb. de 2024 · Welcome to the Winslow Heritage Society Website! Our purpose is to perpetuate the history and honor the memory of the Winslow brothers who first stepped foot in America during the “Great Pilgrimage” beginning with the voyage of the Mayflower in 1620: Edward, b 18 Oct 1595, d 8 May, 1655; John, b 16 April 1597, d 1674; Josiah, b 11 Feb 1605-6, d 17Dec 1674; Gilbert, b 26 Oct 1600, d (?);

  2. WINSLOW, Josiah was born 29 Jul 1741, Perquimans County, North Carolina. Josiah married Living [ Group Sheet ] This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding ©, v. 11.1.2, written by Darrin Lythgoe 2001-2024.

  3. Josiah - Winslow Heritage Society. The following photos have been shared by members who are descended from Josiah Winslow, brother of Pilgrim Edward Winslow.

  4. Josiah Winslow was the youngest child. His baptismal record states he was born on 11 Feb 1605/6 and baptized 16 Feb. He emigrated to Plymouth in 1631 and moved to Marshfield in 1643 along with his eldest brother, Edward. He had married at Plymouth (prior to removal) before Sep 1637 (child born) to Margaret Bourne.

  5. Josiah Winslow (kolem 1628, Plymouth – 18. prosince 1680, Plymouth) se narodil v kolonii Plymouth kolem roku 1628 a zemřel v roce 1680 v Marshfieldu v kolonii Plymouth. [1] V historických záznamech jej historici také nazývali Josias Winslow a moderní spisovatelé toto jméno dále používají.

  6. Josiah was the Harvard College-educated son of Mayflower passenger and Pilgrim leader Edward Winslow and was Governor from 1673 to 1680. The most significant event during his term in office was King Philip's War, which changed New England forever. Josiah was the first governor born in a New England colony.

  7. 4 de sept. de 2020 · The historic Winslow House. built c.1699, is the homesite of Mayflower passenger and Marshfield founder, Edward Winslow. Built by his grandson, Isaac, it was considered a high-style mansion of its time. Click here for a two-minute video tour. Judge Isaac Winslow, his wife Sarah, five children and servants lived in the house in the early 1700s.