Family
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Joseph and Susanna Guill Stennett had a large family. It was one that was hard hit by deaths. The oldest daughter died in 1700
or perhaps a little later at the age of twelve. Her "great virtues and understanding had much endeared her to" her father and
her death was a severe blow to him.
256
I surmise that the next child was George, for he is listed just ahead of Joseph Jr. on the membership list in the Pinners' Hall Record Book, and Joseph Jr. was born in 1692. George was converted when quite young and was a sincere Christian. He died in 1709 at the age of about nineteen. His funeral sermon was preached on September 17 of that year by John Piggott, a neighboring Baptist minister. 257 Joseph, Junior was born on November 6, 1692. As he is to become the leading member of the family in his generation, the next chapter of this thesis is devoted to him. If I make the right historical reconstruction from some inferences, there is a son Edward. A member of the Pinners' Hall Church was Martha Batt who married a Stennett then a Fowle. In the Will of Mary Hall who died October 27, 1714, there is a five pound bequest "To Mr. Batt for Edward Stennett youse." This is to late for the first Edward Stennett, so I suggest the bequest was to Batt, to give his son-in-law, a Stennett. As the woman had a second husband and we have no other reference to that Stennett, I suggest that he died before he was mentioned on any other historical material now extant. Death rates were very high in that time. 258 Another child is the boy for whom Joseph wrote the poem, on "the death of my little Benj. An infant." 259 In would seem that Joseph saw fit to name another son for this one that died. Benjamin Stennett appears as pastor of the Seventh Day Baptist Church at Ingham in Norfolk, having succeeded John Rudd who left that pastorate about 1736. About 1747 a dispute arose as to which day, Saturday or Sunday was the Sabbath. As a consequence, Stennett gave the meeting-house, the minister's dwelling-house and about three acres of land, including the burial ground to the use of the Baptist church meeting there. Stennett left in 1748. I have been unable to locate any other information about this man. 260 There is supposed to have been a son of Joseph by the name of Samuel. However, the only reference to him come from the twentieth century. 261 Lacking any early reference, the only historical judgment possible is that he appears to have been born two centuries too late to have been a reality. As there is no systematic listing of the children of Joseph and Susanna, it is possible there are children about whom no historical references have survived. From what we do know of the family, at least three children died during the lifetime of the father, who in turn died in his "forty-ninth year." Infant mortality was high in the eighteenth century, but in his family, premature death did not stop with the infants. New information since the Thesis Their known children: "His ... eldest daughter [died] at the age of twelve years" about the time that Mordecai Abbott died (1700). N3 George. Died 1709. Funeral sermon for him was preached on Sept. 17, 1709 by John Piggott, The extravagant mirth of youth expos'd ... (London, 1709). George is in the Pinner's Hall Church book as no. 63 in the men's list (p. 268) right before Joseph Stennett, Jr. He appears to have been reared in that congregation for Piggott said of George that he "was well known to you in this Assembly. "George "consecrated himself very early to the Service of the Sacred Trinity in Holy Baptism." Just before he died he spoke to "one of his Brothers with more than ordinary earnestness, exhorting him more than once to forsake his Sins." N4 The circumstances indicate he was a son of Joseph and Susanna, not of Edward and Mary. Joseph, Jr., was born Nov. 6, 1692. He is no. 64 in the Pinner's Hall men's list. Died 1758. The next chapter. "A Male Childe of Joseph Stennett Liueing at ye signe of ye Indian Queen in goldsmith Row in [St. Vedast, London] parish was Borne yed day of March 1703 (i. e., 1704) ." N5 "Asher Stennett ye son of Mr Joseph Stennett, Liueing at ye signe of ye Indian Queen in Goldsmiths Row in [St. Vedast, London] parish, was Buried in ye New ground ye 12th day of May 1704." N6 Benj. Joseph Stennett wrote a poem on "the death of my little Benj . an infant." N7 Benjamin. His parents after the death of "Benj. an infant" above evidently reused his name--a practice common at that time. He was Pastor of the Ingham Baptist Church which apparently included Seventh Day and First Day people. What one assumes is his first marriage was on June 2, 1714, to Judith Morton. N8 See various places in my narrative history of Seventh Day Baptists in England, and a separate listing for his marriage to Elizabeth Ridley and of their children: There is a separate biography of him. Since this Benjamin is an uncle of Dr. Samuel Stennett he must be a son of Joseph Stennett, Sr. In the National Library of Wales there is a letter of 29 July 1707 from Joseph Stennett to his wife who was at Wallingford with their son Joseph, Jr., and "Molly"--if I read the handwriting correctly. With Joseph, Sr., in London is "our little Betty [who] is now pretty Well." N9 [ Seventh Day Baptist in Europe and America , I (Plainfield, N. J., 1910), p. i01, lists a Samuel Stennett I as a son the first Joseph Stennett. In Charles H. Greene's notebooks at the Seventh Day Baptist Historical Society there is a sketch of Stennett genealogy this Samuel has been clearly added at a later time to the list. I suspect that Mr. Greene heard of Samuel Stennett (1780-1841) who wrote two books, put him in the wrong place in the list, and imagined a scenario for a brief life. Mr. Greene probably did not have the information available to put Samuel (1780-1741) in the right place. Both Dr. Corliss F. Randolph and Miss. Evalois St. John of the Seventh Day Baptist Historical Society warned me to always verify Greene's material. In my long acquaintance with Stennett historical material I have never verified "Samuel. I."] There were four surviving children when Joseph died in 1713. N10 Oscar Burdick, Nov. 22, 1999.
Joseph Stennett I (1663-1713), bibliography in more or less chronological order by first edition. Many of these are reprinted in his Works (London, 1731-2). 1695. The groans of a saint ... a sermon preached at the funeral of Mr. John Belcher,minister of the Gospel, 1685. Advice to the young . ...London, 1695. Second ed. corrected to which is added, a funeral discourse on 2 Cor. v. 4 1697. Hymns in commemoration of the sufferings of Our Blessed Saviour Jesus Christ. Compos'd 1697. A poem to the memory of M r . Timothy Cruso, late minister of the Gospel ... 1700. A version of Solomon's Song of Songs. Together with the XLV Psalm. 1702. A poem to the memory of Mr. Nathanael Taylor, late minister of the Gospel, by J. S. London, 1702. 1702. A poem to the memory of His Late Majesty William the Third . By J. S. London, 1702. 1704. An answer to Mr. David Russen?s Book, entitul'd Fundamentals without a Foundation . ... 1704. A sermon preach'd on ... the 7th of September 1704: ... Thanksgiving for ... the late glorious victory ... at Bleinheim 1706. A sermon preach'd on ... the 27th of June 1706 ... Thanksgiving ... for the late glorious progress 1707. A sermon preach'd on the first of May, 1707 ... Thanksgiving for the Happy Union 1709. A sermon preach'd ... February 17, 1708/9 ... for the many and great successes of the confederate 1712. Hymns compos'd for the celebration of the Holy Ordinance of Baptism . London: J. Darby, J. Baker, and J. Clark, 1713. The rest of the people of God. A funeral sermon ... [for] the Reverend Mr. John Piggott, 1731-2. Works . 4 v. London, 1731-2. A biography of Joseph Stennett written by Dr. [John] Ward of Gresham College, then in India (London, two printings in 1725), 3-4. Stennett and Joseph Collet (a Baptist) were both His sermons upon the Sabbatht1 were not yet published according to a 2 Sept. 1753 letter (Seventh-day Baptist memorial, 2.1 (Jan. 1853), 37-8); nothing further is known of them. The sermons in his Works are largely noncontroversial--the Sabbath is promoted briefly in a sermon on the moral law- -2.483-4. Translations by Joseph Stennett: Casas, Bartholomew de Ia, Bishop of Chaiapa. An account of the first voyages and discoveries made by the Spaniards in America. Plato. The works of Plato abridg'd ... by M. Dacier translated from the French, by several hands A possible publication: An elegy on ... Mr Francis Bampfield. The Second Part by J. S. (London, 1684). |
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