Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:

group 19; Wyman, 817, No. 3. 6. Thomas, s. of Thomas (4), m. Elizabeth Moor, 1 May, 1746. Had Ebenezer—s. of Thomas, Jr., of Lexington-bap. here 18 Nov. 1750. A dau., Elizabeth, m. Abraham Hill, Jr., 9 May, 1782. Thomas Robbins, of Lexington, was a sergeant in Capt. Thomas Adams's Co. in 1758. See Wyman, 817. 7. Thomas, prob. s. of Thomas (5), of Camb., m Sarah Gould, of Medford, 29 Oct. 1761, and had Nathaniel, bap. here 16 May, 1762; and twin children, stillborn, buried here 11 May, 1763. Thomas and wife Sarah o. c. Pct. ch.—she renewed, she being before baptized in adult years, 16 May, 1762. Thomas, perhaps he, d. 25 Sept. 1778. Prob. the Thomas Robbins, Jr., who was a private soldier in Capt. Adams's Co. in 1758 (John Cutter, master). 8. Stephen, of Lexington, and Sarah, wife of Stephen, o. C. here (she being baptized) 24 Nov. 1754. Stephen, of Lexington, had Rebecca, bap. 4 May, 1755, prob. the Rebecca who m. Caleb Hovey, 9 Dec. 1770; a son, b. 21 Apr. 1768, prob
ed to Fox. The Grenville Papers show that it was not. The name of Shelburne will occur so often in American history during the next twenty years, that I was unwilling to pass over the aspersions of Walpole. It is to be remembered also, that both whig and tory were very bitter against Shelburne; some of the Rockingham whigs most of all, particularly C. J. Fox and Edmund Burke. of 1763, as became a humane and liberal man; in other respects he was an admirer of CHAP. VI.} 1763. May. Pitt. While his report was waited for, Grenville, through Charles Jenkinson, C. Jenkinson to Sir Jeffery Amherst, 11 May, 1763. Treasury Letter Book, XXII. 392. began his system of saving, by an order to the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces in America, now that the peace was made, to withdraw the allowance for victualling the regiments Weyman's New-York Gazette, 3 October, 1763. No. 251, 2, 1. stationed in the cultivated parts of America. This expense was to be met in future by the colonies.