Putnam family

Family
Putnam family
Earlier spellingsPuttenham, Putenham
Place of originEngland
TraditionsPuritan
Coat of Arms of John Putnam

The Putnam family of prominent old colonial Americans was founded by Puritans John and Priscilla (Gould) Putnam in the 17th century, in Salem, Massachusetts. Many notable individuals are descendants of this family, including those listed below.

John Putnam was born about 1580 and came from Aston Abbotts, Buckinghamshire, England. He was married to Priscilla Gould and they settled in Salem. They were the parents of seven children: Elizabeth, Thomas, John, Nathaniel, Sara, Phoebe, and John. Their eldest son, Thomas, was the father of Thomas Putnam and Deacon Edward Putnam, who were involved in the Salem witch trials and were partially responsible for the executions of those convicted of witchcraft.[1]

Notable members

  • Albigence Waldo Putnam (1799–1869), historian
  • Ann Putnam, Jr. (1679–1716), accuser at Salem Witchcraft trials
  • Brenda Putnam (1890–1975), sculptor
  • Carleton Putnam (1901–1998), aviator, activist & author
  • David Putnam (1898–1918), World War I air ace
  • Frederic Ward Putnam (1839–1915), American anthropologist, Harvard University
  • George Putnam (1807–1878), Unitarian minister
  • George Putnam (1889–1960), great-great-grandson of Judge Samuel Putnam, founder of Putnam Investments; his son George Putnam, retired chairman Putnam Investments; and grandson George Putnam III, Chairman, Putnam Investments
  • George D. Putnam (born 1948), screenwriter
  • George Haven Putnam (1844–1930), book entrepreneur & publishing-family member
  • George Palmer Putnam (1814–1872), book entrepreneur
  • George P. Putnam (1887–1950), publisher, author, explorer, & publishing-family member; husband of aviator Amelia Earhart
  • Gideon Putnam (1763–1812), entrepreneur
  • Harriet Putnam Fowler (1842–1901), author & poet
  • Herbert Putnam (1861–1955), American library administrator & publishing-family member
  • Israel Putnam (1718–1790), American Revolution General
  • Jake Putnam (born 1956), Emmy award winning journalist, author, US Osuna Cup Team, Senior Olympic tennis player
  • James Jackson Putnam (1846–1918), neurologist
  • Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi (1842–1906), American physician
  • Palmer Cosslett Putnam (1900–1984), Wind power pioneer and author, builder of the Smith–Putnam wind turbine
  • Paul A. Putnam (1903–1982), American Brigadier General United States Marine Corps, Commander during the defense of wake Island during World War II
  • Samuel Putnam (1768–1853), Massachusetts Supreme Court justice, who wrote the opinion in Harvard College v. Amory, which established the Prudent man rule in US Law
  • Robert Putnam (born 1941), American political scientist, Harvard University
  • Rufus Putnam (1738–1824), American Revolution officer, later brigadier general
  • Seth Putnam (1968–2011), American musician, from Newton, Massachusetts
  • Thomas Putnam (1651–1699), landowner in Salem during the Salem witch trials
  • William Lowell Putnam (1861–1923), American jurist & banker
  • George Putnam (newsman) (1914–2008), Emmy award winning investigative journalist & news broadcaster

Family tree

Putnam family members
  • John Putnam (c 1580–1666) m. Priscilla Gould
    • Thomas Putnam (1614–1686)
      • Thomas Putnam (1652–1699), Salem witch trials accuser
      • Deacon Edward Putnam (1654–1747), Salem witch trials accuser
        • Edward Putnam (1682-1755)
          • Edward Putnam (1711-1800)
            • David Putnam (1752-1840)
              • David Putnam Jr. (1790-1879)
                • Alonzo W. Putnam (1828-1881)
                  • Hiram M. Putnam (1856-1935)
                    • George F. Putnam (1891-1946)
                      • George Putnam (newsman) (1914-2008)
        • Elisha Putnam (1685–1745)
      • Joseph Putnam (1669–1722) m. Elizabeth Porter (1673–1746)
        • David Putnam (1707–1768)
          • Israel Putnam (b. 1742)
            • Daniel Putnam
              • Benjamin Putnam
                • Frederick Putnam
          • William Putnam (b. 1749)
        • Israel Putnam (1718–1790), General
    • Nathaniel Putnam (1619–1700)
      • Benjamin Putnam (1664–1715) m. Sarah Tarrant
        • Nathaniel Putnam (1686–1754)
          • Archelaus Putnam Sr. (b. 1718)
            • Nathaniel Putnam (1746–1800)
              • Nathaniel Putnam (1774–1849)
                • Nathaniel Putnam (1802–1886)
                  • Abby Putnam Morrison (1848–)
                    • Lillian Morrison Tingue (1885–)
                      • Grace Tingue Curran (1907–1988)
            • Archelaus Putnam Jr. (1740–1800)
              • Caleb Putnam (1763–1826)
                • James Russell Putnam (1781–1841)
                  • James Mercier Putnam (1823–1887), instrumental in colonizing British Honduras
                    • James Henry Putnam (b. 1848), sugar plantation and railroad owner
                      • Robert Emmet Putnam (1883–1959)
                        • Richard Johnson Putnam (1913–2002), federal judge
                        • "Bobby" Emmet Putnam (1919–2009)
                          • Dr. Kimball Putnam Marshall (b. 1947), nationally recognized professor of business
        • Tarrant Putnam (1688–1732)
          • Gideon Putnam (1726–1811)
            • Samuel Putnam (1768–1853), Massachusetts Supreme Court justice
        • Daniel Putnam (b. 1696)
    • John Putnam (1627–1710)
      • James Putnam Sr. (1661–1727), bricklayer
        • James Putnam Jr. (b. 1689), bricklayer
          • Ebenezer Putnam
            • Ebenezer Putnam II
              • Ebenezer Putnam III

References

  • Eben Putnam, A history of the Putnam family in England and America, 1908
  • G. Andrews Moriarty Jr., A.M., LL.B., F.S.A., The English Ancestry of John Putnam Of Salem, Massachusetts
  1. ^ Putnam, Eben (1891), A History of the Putnam Family in England and America. Recording the Ancestry and Descendants of John Putnam of Danvers, Mass., Jan Poutman of Albany, N. Y., Thomas Putnam of Hartford, Conn, Volume 1, Salem Press Publishing and Printing Company, retrieved October 4, 2007