Historical Excerpts of the LOCKE Family   September 4th, 2009

From: The Book of the Lockes, by John Goodwin Locke

 

Origins

 

Tradition considers the name of Locke to be of Scotch extraction, originally spelled Loch; but, if so, it must have been in very early time. When Alfred was king of the West Saxons in England (871-899), he saved his country from Danish conquest, laid the basis for the unification of England under the West Saxon monarchy, and led a revival of learning and literature. During this time, Alfred divided this kingdom into parishes, and there was known of the dwelling of a great man named Locke, and the town Lockestown which was named after him. It adjoins East Brent, and is between Weston and Axbridge (A38) in Somerset. At one time the family became numerous, but apparently misfortunes fell upon his descendants and the land was divided and sold. To this day there remains the town of Lockston, the Parish of Locking just 2 miles from the town, and a large farm called Lockinghead now belonging to the merchants of Bristol.The Locke family in this area consider themselves as descended from a very ancient house, arguing that they gave names to the parishes where they lived, before the Conquest (1066), and do not derive their name with a De from the parishes, as is very commonly the case.Very little else can be found about members of the Locke family who distinguished themselves until 1350 when Robert Locke became Vicecomes of Wiltshire under Thomas de Saint Maur, and John Locke who was the Sheriff of London in 1460.

Sir William Locke, Knight

When Henry VIII had parliament pass two acts in 1534 that 1) declared that the Pope had no authority in England, and 2) declared that Henry was the head of the Church of England, Pope Clement VII reacted by issuing a Bull (proclamation) that a curse be upon Henry VIII and the whole country. This Bull was posted at Dunkirk, France, and William Locke succeeded in the dangerous mission of pulling it down. For this exploit, the King granted him a freehold of 100 pounds per year, dubbed him a Knight, and made him one of the gentlemen of his privy chamber. Sir William lived to be an alderman of London, and was Sheriff of the city in 1548. He died in 1550.Of the descendants of Sir William in England, the information is imperfect, but the list includes: George Locke of Tiverton buried at St. Sidwell’s in Essex 1586, Thomas Locke of Little Horsely, Essex, Rev. John Locke, Rector of Askerwell, Dorset, father to the Rev. William Locke (d.1686), Sir John Locke, Knight, an East India director (d.1746), and James Locke, his brother, husband to the Turkey Company. And yet perhaps none of these can compare to the contributions of John Locke, the great metaphysician and philosopher (1632- 1704), the Gr. Gr. Gr. grandson of Sir William.


This chart shows how John Locke and William Locke were 1st cousins !

                        Sir William Locke ( -1550)
                                     |
                                     |
                               Michael Locke
                                     |
                                     |
                               Matthew Locke
                                     |
                                     |
                             Christopher Locke
                                     |
   -------------------------------------------------------------------
   |           |          |          |          |         |          |
 Sarah    Christopher    John      Honour   Christian   Lewis     William
(1587- )  (1593-    ) (1595-1645) (1597- )  (1601- )   (1606- )  (    -    )
m.Nicholas                |                                          |
  Davies                  |                                          |
 (1595- )            John Locke                                   William
                     (1632-1704)                               (1628-1720)
                  (the philosopher)                            (of Woburn)

  

The Battle of Lexington and Concord (April 19, 1775)

 

The following members of the Locke family were present on Lexington green. None of them were injured or killed. 

     Walker's Company from Woburn           (Age in 1775)
         William Locke bapt. Feb 7, 1720         (54)
         Thomas Locke     b.Aug 29, 1756         (18)

     Capt. Parker's Company from Lexington
         Amos Locke       b.Dec 24, 1742         (33)
         Benjamin Locke   b.May  7, 1756         (19)

     With Sylvanus Wood
         Ebenezer Locke   b.Nov  3, 1732         (42)

    From "History of Deering", Deering, NH
         Ebenezer Locke   b.MAr 2 1735           (40)

                                William
                                   |
                 ------------------+---------------------|
                 |                                       |
             William                                   Joseph
                 |                                       |
        |-------------|                         |--------+----------|
        |             |                         |                   |
    Ebenezer       William                    Joseph              Stephen
        |             |                         |                   |
        |        |----+---+-------|          |--+---|           |---+-----|
        |        |        |       |          |      |           |         |
    Ebenezer  Thomas  Ebenezer  William   Joseph   Amos       Reuben   Benjamin
       (40)      |      (42)     (54)              (33)                  (19)
                 |
                 |
              Thomas
               (18)

In the "History of Deering", Deering, NH it is said that Ebenezer Locke
fired the first shot "that was heard 'round the world."

Last edited 05/15/01
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5 Responses

March 15th, 2010 at 2:14 am
karl king Says:

I was excited to find this, then disappointed to find no connection to Capt. John Locke, b. 1627, who married Elizabeth Berry of Portsmouth, NH.

Is this Locke family totally different from the Nicholas Locke, b. 1574 in Brockhampton, Eng, and son Thomas Locke family of Kingston, England?

March 15th, 2010 at 9:15 pm
JoeJoe Says:

We have been trying to find the link back to England, but so far it has eluded several of us who have been searching. There is a complete listing of what we have found so far in the following link on this site. Also, click on the other Locke Links from the main page on this blog for some other sites you can checkout.

June 2nd, 2010 at 9:03 pm
Mary Lou Klemm Says:

I found “The Next Book of the Locke’s”, by Jerry Harrison to be an
excellent place to search. It is published by Heritage Books.
We finally have our family place back to William Locke of Woburn
and only with the help of Jerry Harrison… I wish you all luck
as it is so great to have finally , after 20 some years, have
the connection. The book is concise and easy to follow and traces
most of Wm Locke of Woburn’s descendants.

July 12th, 2010 at 9:49 pm
John Locke Says:

Hello,
I am another Locke from Halifax County, NC and my branch is just off the tree of decendents of Philip Locke that you have on your website. I have only recently began my search into my past relatives and your site has been a great help.

I am trying to connect Philip Locke to any of the Locke’s on the tree above. Have you confirmed one way or another if there is a connection?

My research has shown something slightly different and I would appreciate any comment that you could provide as to how you determined a few branches of the Philip Locke tree.

I have found that Thomas John Locke b.1764 married to (Nancy Ann Nichols) was the son of James Locke b. 1714 married to Susanna Greene. You have the same people in your tree but show them as the son of James Hulse Locke. The birthdays don’t appear to work.

Do you have any source documents as to your arrangement?

My missing branch that I referred to on your chart is from Harriett Butts. She had 3 children and your tree lists one. Nancy Virgina Locke, Endorva V Locke and Lucian Sydney Locke.

Thanks so much,

July 24th, 2010 at 8:13 am
JoeJoe Says:

John, I have seen both versions. Please look at Vann’s newsletter from February 2006 (to get there, click on Newletter category on the top right of this page). It has a lot of detail on Susanna and James. My info came from this – I will go back and check the dates and talk with Vann to see if he has additional source material that we can publish here.

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