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Richard Lippincott came to the new world from Stone House, a parish in Devonshire, England and was among settlers of the Massachusetts Bay colony where he was made a "freeman" in 1640.
1782---George Washington “I demand the guilty—Cap Lippicott” “that villain Moody” The American Revolution is America’s first Civil War. “Loyalists’—those in the American colonies loyal to the British Crown and the colonial governments—see the self-styled “Patriots” as traitorous Rebels. Communities, even families, are split into two hostile warring camps. “The Monmouth Manifesto” takes you into this seldom-seen Loyalist world in a novel based on true historical characters and events. Two New Jersey farmers—Richard Lippincott, a modest Quaker, and James Moody, an alpha Anglican—become unlikely friends in a Loyalist regiment in the British Army and see all kinds...
Richard Lippincott (d.1683) immigrated about 1639/1640 from England to Boston, Massachusetts and after several moves in Massachusetts, went to Providence, Rhode Island, and later to Salem County, New Jersey. Descendants lived in New England, New Jersey, New York, Maryland and elsewhere.
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