Sign up to explore more
Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.
Sign up to explore more
Create a free account to navigate family trees, view ancestors, and discover connections.
Simon Lovett 1663–1744 – Genealogical Records
Birth Date: 1663
Birth Location: Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Death Date: 02 Feb 1744
Death Location: Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Father: John II
Mother: Bethiah Rootes
Spouse(s): Agnes Sweetland
Children(s):
In 1663, Simon Lovett entered the world in Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America, born to John Lovett Ii And Bethiah Rootes. Simon Lovett married Agnes Sweetland. Simon Lovett passed away in 1744 in Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America.
Find more search results for Simon LovettReliability Score
This score reflects the reliability of the source family tree. A high rating indicates a trustworthy source with strong data consistency.
- A 3 criteria (Strong)
- B 2 criteria (Medium)
- C 1 criteria (Basic)
- N/A 0 criteria (Insufficient)
This tree's reliability score:
- Record available
- Descendant's record available
- Star tree owner
Biography
- In 1663, Simon Lovett entered the world in Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America, born to John Lovett Ii And Bethiah Rootes.
- Simon Lovett married Agnes Sweetland.
- Simon Lovett passed away in 1744 in Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America.
Immediate Family
Parents
Spouses(s)
Children(s)
Simon Lovett's Ancestors
Simon Lovett's Timeline
3 Records
Sources
Event Type: Birth
Event Date: 1663
Event Place: Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Genealogy Event 2
Event Type: Christening
Event Date: 31 May 1668
Event Place: Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
Genealogy Event 3
Event Type: Custom Event
Genealogy Event 4
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 02 Feb 1744
Event Place: Beverly, Essex, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America