Stephen BACHILER, REV.
CHRISTENING: MARRIAGE: BURIAL: PUBLISHED SOURCES: Joseph Foster, ALUMNI OXONIENSES: THE MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, 1500-1714: THEIR PARENTAGE, BIRTHPLACE, AND YEAR OF BIRTH , WITH A RECORD OF THEIR DEGREES, early ser., vol. 1 (Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint Limited, 1968), 53: "Bachiler, Stephen, St. John's Coll., matric circa 1581; B.A. 3 Feb 1585/6, rector of Wherwell, Hants, 1587. See Foster's Index Ecclesiasticus." Warren Brown, HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF HAMPTON FALLS, NEW HAMPSHIRE, FROM THE TIME OF THE FIRST SETTLEMENT WITHIN ITS BORDER, 1640 UNTIL 1900 (Manchester, N.H.: John B. Clark Co., 1900), 151-59: "REV. STEPHEN BACHILER. MR. BATCHILER was born in England in 1551 [b. 1560/1, d. 1660/1] and received orders in the Established Church. In the early part of his life he enjoyed a good reputation, but being displeased with some of the ceremonies of the church and refusing to continue his conformity, he was deprived of his permission to perform her services. On leaving England, Mr. Bachler went with his family to Holland, where he resided several years. He then returned to London, from which place he sailed on the 9th of March 1632, in the William & Francis, Mr. Thomas, master, with sixty passengers, including Mr. Bachiler and his family. They arrived at Boston on the 5th of June, after a tedious passage of eighty-eight days. He was 71 years of age when he arrived in this country, and removed with his family to Lynn, were his daughter, Theodate Hussey, wife of Christopher Hussey, resided. In his company were six persons who had belonged to a church with him in England, and of those he constituted a church at Lynn, to which he admitted such as were desirous of becoming members, and immediately commenced the exercies of the ministerial duties without installation. One of his first ministrations was to baptize four children, born before his arrival, two of whom, Thomas Newhall and Stephen Hussey, were born the same week. Thomas, being the older, was first presented. Mr. Bachiler put him aside, saying "I will baptized my own child first." Mr. Bachiler had been in the performance of his pastoral duties about four months when a complaint was made of some irregularites in this conduct. He was arraigned before the court in Boston, on the 3d of October, when the following order was passed: Mr. Bachiler is required to forbear exercising his gifts as a paster, or teacher publiquely in our patent unless it be to those he brought with him, for his contempt of authority, and till some scandals be removed. In the couse of a few months Mr. Bachiler so far succeeded in regaining the esteem of the people that the injunction that he should not preach in the colony was, on the 4th of March, removed, which left him at liberty to resume the performance of his public services. The dissension, which had commenced in Mr Bachiler's church at an early period, began again to assume a formidable appearance. Some of the members disliked the conduct of the pastor, and, withal, making question whether there were a church or not, withdrew from the communion. In consequence of this a council of minsters was held on the 15th of March. Being unable to produce a reconsiliation, they appointed another meeting and went to attend a lecture in Boston. Mr. Bachiler then requested the disaffected members to present their grievances in writing, but as they refused he resolved to excommunicate them, and wrote to the ministers at Boston, who immediately returned to Lynn. After a deliberation of three days, they decided that although the church had not been properly institued, yet the mutual exercise of their religious duties had supplied the defect. The difficulties in Mr. Bachiler's church did not cease with the decision of the council, but continued to increase till Mr Bachiler, perceiving no prospect of their termination, requested dismission for himself and first members, which was granted. Winthrop's history says he was convened before the magistrates. "The cause was for that coming out of England with a small body of six or seven persons, and having since received as many more at Saugus (Lynn) and contention growing between him and the greatest part of his church who had at first received him for their paster, he desired dismission for himself and his first members, which, being granted, upon suppositon that he would leave town (as he had given out), he, with the six or seven persons, presently renewed their old covenant, intending to raise another church in Saugus, where at the most and chief of the town being offended for that it would cross their intentions of calling Mr. Peters or some other minister, they complained to the magistrates, who, foreseeing the distraction which was like to come by this course, had forbidden him to proceed in any such church way until the cause were considered by the other ministers, etc. But he refused to desist, whereupon they sent for him and, upon his delay day after day, the marshall was sent to fetch him. Upon his appearance and submission and promise to move out of town within three months, he was discharged." He was admitted a freeman on the 6th of May 1635, and removed from Lynn to in February, 1636. He went to Ipswich, where he received a grant of fifty acres of land and had the prospect of a settlement but, some difficulties having arisen, he left the place. In the very cold winter of 1637, he went on foot, with some of his friends, to Matakees, now Yarmouth (he then being 76 years of age), a distance of about one hundred miles. There he intended to plant a town and establish a church, but, finding the difficulties great and his company being all poor men, he relinquished the design. He then went to Newbury where, on the 6th of Jly, 1638, the town granted him and his son-in-law, Christopher Hussey, two portions of land, which had formerly been given to Edward Rawson, secretary of state, and Mr. Edward Woodman. On the 6th of September the General Court of Massachusetts granted him permission to commence a settlement at Winnecumett, now Hampton. In 1639 the inhabitants of Ipswich voted to give him sixty acres of land on Whortleberry hill and twenty acres of meadow if he could relinquish their previous grant of fifty acres and reside with them three years, but he did not accept their invitation. On the 5th of July he and Christopher Hussey sold their lands in Newbury to Mr. John Oliver for "Six score pounds," and went to Hampton, where a town was begun and a church gathered, of which Mr. Bachiler became the minister. His company consisted of himself as pastor; Mr. Timothy Dalton, teacher; Christopher Hussey, Mary Hussey, his mother, and twelve others. Mr. Bachiler had a grant of 10 acres for a house lot; 21 acres of fresh meadow by Taylor's river, and 17 acres between the beach and the East field; 15 acres of planting ground, part of it being near his house and the rest in the East field; 200 acres for a farm next to Salisbury line, 16 acres of which was fresh meadow, 120 acres upland, the residue in salt marsh. The residue of his 200 acres, given the 24th of October, 1639, is yet to be appointed. It appears from the town recods that he presented the first bell to the town early in 1640. That he was a man of good judgement and was considered upright, upon his first settling in Hampton, may be inferred from his having been selected umpire in an important controversy existing between George Cleaves and John Wreiter, involving the title of some real estate in Sperwink, and also defamation of character on the part of Cleaves. This dispute was referred to Mr. Bachiler and four others, and the parties were severally bounded in the sum of 1,000 pounds sterling to submit to their award. These referees reported on the same day at Saco, June 28, 1641, where Mr. Bachiler seems to have been at that time. Mr. Bachiler, the pastor of the church at Hampton, who had suffered much at the hands of bishops in England, being about 80 years of age, and having a lusty and comely woman to his wife, did solicit the chastity of his neighbor's wife, who acquainted her husband therewith, whereupon he was dealt with, but denied it, as he had told the woman he would do, and complained to the magistrates against the woman and her husband for slandering him. The church likewise dealing with thim, he stiffly denied it, but soon after, when the Lord's supper was to be administered, he did voluntarily confess the attempt and that he did intend to have defiled her if she would have consented. The church being moved with his free confession and tears, silently forgave him and communicated with him, but after finding how scandalous it was they took advice of other elders, and, after long debate and much pleading and standing upon the church's forgiving and becoming reconciled to him in communicating with him after he had confessed it, they proceeded to cast him out. After this he went on in a variable course, sometimes seeming very penitent, soon after excusing himself and casting blame upon others, especially his fellow elder, Mr. Dalton (who indeed had not carried himself in this case so well as became him, and was brought to see his failing and acknowledged it to the elders of the other churches, who had taken much pains about this matter). So he behaved himself to the elders when they dealt with him. He was off and on for a long time, and when he seemed most penitent, so as the church was ready to have received him in again, he would fall back again, and, as it were, repent of his repentance. In this time his house with nearly all his substance was consumed by fire. When he had continued excommunicated nearly two years, and much agitation had been about the matter, and the church was divided so he could not be received in, at length the matter was referred to some magistrates and elders, and by their mediation he was released of his excommunication, but not received to his pastor's office. Upon occasion of this meeting mediation, Mr. Wilson of Boston wrote a letter to him, which Governor Winthrop speaks very hightly of, but it is not now known to be in existence. The contentions in Hampton were grown to a great height, the whole town was divided into two factions, one with Mr. Bachiler, their late pastor, and the other with Mr. Dalton, their teacher. Both men were passionate and wanting in discretion and moderation. Their differences were not in matters of opinion, but of pracitice. Mr. Dalton's party being mostly of the church, and so freeman, had great advantage of the other, though a consideralbe party, and some of them of the church also. The former carried all affairs, both in church and town, according to their own minds, and not with that respenct to their brethren and neighbors which had been fit. Divers meetings had been held, both of magistrates and elders, and parties had been reconciled, but broke out again, each side being apt to take fire upon any provaction; whereupon Mr. Bachiler was advised to remove and was called to Exeter, whither he intended to go, but they were divided and at great difference also. When one party had appointed a day of humiliation to gather a new church and call Mr. Bachiler, the court sent order to stop it, for they considered they were not in a fit condition for such a work, and Mr. Bachiler had been in other places before and through his means, as was supposed, the churches fell to such divisions as no peace could be had until he was removed. At this court there came petition against petition, both from Hampton and Exeter, whereupon the court ordered two of the magistrates to be sent to Hampton with full power to hear and determine all differences there. He probably contined in Hampton until 1647. He was living in Portsmouth on the 20th of April of that year, and resided there three years. In 1650 he married his third wife, being then nearly 90 years of age (89). In May he was fined by the court ten pounds for not publishing his marriage according to law, half of which fine was remitted in October. In the same year the court passed the following order in consequence of a matrimonial disagreement: As is ordered by the Court, that Mr. Bachiler and his wife shall live together as man and wife, as in the Court they have publiquely proffessed to do, and if either desert one another then hereby the Court doth order that ye Marshall shall apprehend both ye said Mr. Bachiler and Mary his wife and bring them forthwith to Boston. There to be kept till the next quarter Court of assistants, that further consideration may be made.--Both of them moving for a divorce, and this order shall be sufficient warrant to do so. Provided notwithstanding that if they put in 50 pounds, Each of them for their appearance with such sureties as the commissioners or any one of them for the County shall think good to accept of,--That then they shall be under their bail to appear at the next Court of assistants. An in case Mary Bachiler shall live out of the jurisdiction, without mutual consent for a time, that then the Clark shall give notice to the magistrate at Boston of her absence that further order may be taken theron. Soon after this order, Mr. Bachiler returned to England, where he married his fourth wife, his third wife, Mary, being still living. In October 1656, she petitioned the court, in the following words, to free her from her husband: To the Honored Gov. Deputy Governor, with the magistrates and Deputies at the General Court at Boston.--The humble petition of Mary Bachiler sheweth, Wheras your petitioner having formerly lived with Mr. Stephen Bachiler in this Colony as his lawful wife & not unknown to divers of you as I concieve, and the said Mr. Bachiler upon some pretended ends of his own has transported himself unto Old England, for many years since and betaken himself to another wife, as your petitioner hath often been credibly informed, and there continued. Whereby your petioner is left destitute not only of a quide to herself and her children, But also made incapable therby of disposing herself in the way of marriage to any other without a lawful permission, and now having two children upon her hands that are chargable to her in reguard to a disease God has been pleased to lay upon them both, which is not easily curable, and has so weakend her estate in prosecuting the means of cure That she is not able longer to subsist without utterly ruining her estate, or exposing herself to the common charity of others which your petitioner is loth to put herself upon, if it may be lawfully avoided as is well known to all or most part of her neighbors. And were she free from her engagement to Mr. Bachiler might probably so dispose of herself as that she might obtain a meet helper to assist her to procure such means for her livelihood and the recovery of her children's health as might keep them from perishing, which your petitioner to her great grief is much afraid of, it not timely prevented. --Your petitioner's humbly request therefore is that this Honored Court would be pleased seriously to consider her condition for matter of her relief in her freedom from the said Mr. Bachiler and that she may be at liberty ot dispose of hereself in resp
CHRISTENING: MARRIAGE: BURIAL: PUBLISHED SOURCES: Joseph Foster, ALUMNI OXONIENSES: THE MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, 1500-1714: THEIR PARENTAGE, BIRTHPLACE, AND YEAR OF BIRTH , WITH A RECORD OF THEIR DEGREES, early ser., vol. 1 (Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint Limited, 1968), 53: "Bachiler, Stephen, of co. Southampton, `cler. fil.' Magdalen Coll., matric, 18 Jun 1610, aged 16." Warren Brown, HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF HAMPTON FALLS, NEW HAMPSHIRE, FROM THE TIME OF THE FIRST SETTLEMENT WITHIN ITS BORDER, 1640 UNTIL 1900 (Manchester, N.H.: John B. Clark Co., 1900), 151-59. Mary J. Greene, ANCESTRY AND DESCENDANTS OF DEACON DAVID BATCHELDER OF HAMPTON FALLS, NEW HAMPSHIRE (Hampton Falls, N.H: The Batchelder Reunion Association, 1902), 7.
He married Ann Bate . Ann Bate was born at Abt 1565 .
They were the parents of 7
children:
Nathaniel Bachiler
born Abt 1590.
Deborah Bachiler
born Abt 1592.
Stephen Bachiler
born Abt 1594.
Samuel Bachiler
born Abt 1596.
Theodate Bachiler
born Abt 1598.
Anne Bachiler
born Abt 1600.
Blocked
Stephen Bachiler, Rev. died Abt 1660 at Hackney, England .