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- Goves Rebellion - Wikipedia
Edward Gove was tried by a grand jury, and found guilty of high treason The presiding judge, Major Richard Waldron, sentenced him to be hanged, drawn and quartered Governor Cranfield, worried that Gove would escape and rouse further rebellion, sent him to Boston, and eventually to London
- Edward Gove and His One-Man Revolution of 1683
When the governor of New Hampshire tried to claim that he owned the entire state in 1683, Edward Gove disagreed In fact, he started Gove's rebellion
- Historically Speaking: Goves Rebellion of 1683 - Seacoastonline. com
Edward Gove, a well-respected if somewhat hot-headed assemblyman from Hampton, took issue with this miserable Governor and on Jan 26, 1683, raised a protest of the type most common in the
- Joseph Dow’s History of Hampton: EDWARD GOVE’S INSURRECTION
The witnesses being sworn and examined, the grand jury found a true bill against nine of them, viz : Edward Gove, John Gove, William Healey, of Hampton, John Wadleigh, Joseph Wadleigh, Robert Wadleigh, Thomas Rawlins, Mark Baker, and John Sleeper, of Exeter
- Edward Gove (1636–1691) - FamilySearch. org
Discover life events, stories and photos about Edward Gove (1636–1691) of London, England
- Edward Gove (1630-1691) - Find a Grave Memorial
American Colonist, Colonial Assemblyman, Revolutionary Born in England sometime between 1630 and 1637, Edward Gove arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony most probably in 1642 with his brother John, undoubtedly as a servant for a household in Salisbury (Massachusetts)
- Edward Gove (1630 - 1691) - Genealogy - Geni. com
Edward Gove was a rebel, a person who engaged in armed resistance against an established government, England He was rebellious and defiant in the Province of New Hampshire in New England at Hampton
- Edward Gove Sr (abt. 1637-1691) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree
Edward Gove Sr is currently protected by the Puritan Great Migration Project for reasons described in the narrative Edward Gove was born in England, about 1637, [1] [2] the son of John Gove and his wife, Mary Shard He died in Hampton, New Hampshire, 1691--either 26 or 29 March 1691, [3] 29 May 1691 [4] or 29 July 1691 [5]
- New Hampshire Historical Society - Edward Gove Papers, 1682-1686
The Edward Gove Papers, 1682-1686, contain a petition written by Edward Gove, who was imprisoned in Portsmouth, NH, dated January 29, 1682; a general pardon req
- Person:Edward Gove (3) - Genealogy - WeRelate
In 1683, Edward Gove led an ill-starred insurrection against the unpopular New Hampshire Governor Cranfield He was arrested, tried, and convicted of high treason, his extensive land holdings were all confiscated, and he was shipped to the Tower of London to be hung, drawn, and quartered
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