Monday, July 5, 2021

FUTURE AND PAST

 I know I'm growing old.

After all, I was born in 1940.

But apparently that word has gotten out.

I received what I would call a "spam" email this morning from an entity inviting me to take a virtual tour of what they call "11 Beautiful Cemeteries" around the world.

Now I have no fear of my onrushing demise but I'm not encouraging it either.

So I declined the invitation to visit famous resting places.

I have been to the gravesites of my parents and my grandparents and I have seen a photograph of my great-grandparents tombstone.

But there's one place I probably will never visit but would like to.

It's now called the Taylor-Bray Farm and it's on the original site in what is now Yarmouth Port, Massachusetts where my 7th great-grandfather, Richard Taylor, settled after arriving from England in 1639.

He built his home near a large rock and became known as Richard "Rock" Taylor to distinguish himself from another Richard Taylor who had come over the pond at the same time.

The farm stayed in the Taylor family until the late 1800's when it was sold to George and William Bray, who farmed there for another 50 years.

They had a stone plaque installed commemorating the first Taylor's founding of the site.



I know, I can't read much of it either.

Now, in the way of the Bible, Richard begat Richard Jr, who begat Jasher, who begat Isaac, who begat Stephen, who begat Ansel, who begat Emmons, who begat Berthold, who begat Franklin, who was my father.

Of course there were many other children "begatted" through the centuries.

I remember once coming into a genealogy of our family and was being pretty impressed with myself until I read that Taylor was about the sixth most common name in the country.

But back to the Taylor-Bray Farm.

It's a National Historic Site now and a preservation website claims it was inhabited by Native Americans for some 10,000 years!

So there's a lot of history there.

But I bet Richard "Rock" Taylor would never have imagined that a very distant relative of his would someday make his living for a time as a "rock and roll" disc jockey.

22 comments:

  1. Now...that's interesting. And you didn't even mention Plymouth Rock!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Go visit Rock's farm for god sakes, https://www.tripadvisor.com/Tourism-g41955-Yarmouth_Port_Yarmouth_Cape_Cod_Massachusetts-Vacations.html

    ReplyDelete
  3. i too have taylor in my family geneology. also sherman, a very common name. and a sherman family geneology going back to a father and son emigrating to america in 1620, and back to england before that. don't know of any graves.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Could be we're related, Roger, though there were and are a lot of Taylors.

      Delete
  4. You've done a good job tracing the family back all those years and years. My sister Judy has done a good job of tracing our family back to the 16th century with the help of Ancestry.com. However, they are just names on a paper to me. I want to know more. I wish I had the resources that Henry Louis Gates has.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ah, so do I. I enjoy his programs but wish I could be one of his subjects.

      Delete
  5. My family came from the old world more recently. No Taylors in it.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I think I will now refer to you as Taylor the Rock of Prescott Valley.
    You've left Bruce on the Loose in the dust of the Dakota plains.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Or as Wacky Wally emailed me this morning: Rock on!

      Delete
  7. That's a lot of begatting.
    I went to school with a Ken Bray who was from Massachusetts.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I'll have to check my family tree for Taylors. They would definitely be on my dad's side. I get stuff from the Neptune Society and cremation services, even for my late husband who was cremated nearly 9 years ago. Too late.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Margaret, I've lost your website. Give it to me again, please.

      Delete
  9. I told your "Rock" Taylor story to a friend of mine, a swamp Yankee who lives in an ancient house, just up the road from Yarmouth. He said, "Ayuup, an example of early Yankee ingenuity."

    ReplyDelete
  10. Very interesting! Mike knows when and where his folks jumped the pond, but I don't really know that about my family.

    ReplyDelete