M, b. before 6 June 1602, d. 30 January 1675
John was born before 6 June 1602 in Stepney [Greater London], County Middlesex, England. On 6 June 1602, he was christened in Stepney Greater London, County Middlesex, England, at St. Dunstan's Parish.
2 John married
Mary in England. On 28 June 1635, John left London aboard the ship, "Defence", mastered by Thomas Bostock, bound for New England. Listed among the passengers was John Jackson aged 30 years, a wholesale man in Burchenlane, London. They arrived at Boston the 8th of October..
3,4 He was a first settler in 1639 in that portion of the village of Cambridge south of the Charles River, called New Town, and later Newton. He brought a good estate with him, from England. In 1639, he bougtht a dwelling house and eighteen acres of land, of Miles Ives, of Watertown, Massachusetts. This estate was situated on the Roxbury road, very near the line which now divides Newton from Brighton. In 1641, he took the Freeman's oath, He was one of the first Deacons of the Church, - gave one acre of land for the Church and burial place, upon which the first meeting house was erected, in 1660, and which is now the oldest part of the Centre Cemetery......There may have been, and probably were, some transient dwellers in the Village, before he came, but they were not known to the record, and left no descendants there. The coming of John Jackson, in 1639, may properly be considered the first settlement of Newton. He had labored long and earnestly, by petitioning the General Court, and otherwise, to have Cambridgee Village erected into an independent town, but did not live to see it accomplished." John's wife, Mary, died circa 1638 in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, leaving him a widower. John married
Abigail in 1640. John married 2nd
Katheryne before 1640 in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. John's wife, Katheryne, died in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, leaving him a widower. John married 3rd
Margaret Taft, daughter of
Nicholas Taft and
Margaret Milner, on 21 February 1640/41 in Stepney Greater London, County Middlesex, England, at St. Dunstan's Parish. John departed this life on Wednesday, 30 January 1675 in Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. The inventory of John's estate was taken and appraised by his brother Edward Jackson, Thomas Prentice, Isaac Williams, and Joseph Tayntor. [RFS:Estate] estate records are located. John left an estate, valued at £1,230. Since there was no will, his children settled his estate among themselves.