Portsmouth Mariners Pearce, Havens, Hall and Gardner
Gen 1: Richard Pearce Jr. (1615–1678) (son of a Richard Sr. in England). He immigrated to Portsmouth, Rhode Island, by 1654, where he married Susannah Wright.
Gen 2: Mary Pierce (1635–1708) was the daughter of this immigrant, Richard Pearce Jr. of Portsmouth, Rhode Island.
The Architectural Lineup: The Havens & Hall Connection
By grounding the tree in the Portsmouth, Rhode Island records, the descendants lock into a highly documented, elite coastal lineage.
1. The Havens Maritime Expansion
- Mary Pierce married Sherman/William Havens. The Havens family were foundational settlers of Aquidneck Island and the Narragansett Country.
- William Havens (1659–1733) & Robert Havens (1690–1749): These generations moved across the bay to Dartmouth, Massachusetts and Little Compton, Rhode Island. They were heavily involved in the coastal shipping, whaling, and agricultural trade networks that connected Rhode Island to Long Island Sound.
2. Merabah Havens & The Revolutionary Hall Alliance
- The Migration to Exeter: Robert Havens (1721–1789) moved inland to Exeter, Washington County, Rhode Island—the exact same community where our Braman and Gardner ancestors were living and serving in the militia.
- Merabah Havens (1745–1811) married William Hall. Their daughter, Frances S. Hall (1771–1848), married John Gardner (our 5th great-grandfather, born 1753).
This marriage officially fused our Havens/Pearce line directly into the Gardner/Wingate lineage we reviewed earlier, explaining exactly how Waity Gardner (1787–1859) inherited both lines.
The Current of the Bay: The Maritime Tapestry of Portsmouth and Exeter
The history of early Rhode Island was not written by overland trailblazers, but by the mariners who viewed the churning waters of Narragansett Bay not as a barrier, but as a highway. Our Pearce and Havens ancestors were the literal helmsmen of this coastal world, carving out a multi-generational legacy where the rhythm of the tides dictated the growth of the colony.
The story truly ignites in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, where Richard Pearce Jr. established his homestead in the mid-seventeenth century. Standing on the shores of Aquidneck Island, the Pearces engineered a life defined by maritime commerce and local independence. When his daughter, Mary Pierce, married into the Havens family, it consolidated two of the most active seafaring names in the colony. For generations, the Havens men—from William down to the elder Roberts—were the shipwrights, traders, and coastal captains who operated the vital shipping lanes between Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and the outer islands. They built the sloops that carried local lumber and livestock, binding the isolated frontier settlements into a unified economic power.
As the coastal towns grew crowded, the family line adapted, tracing the shifting economic tides inland to Exeter in Washington County. It was here that Merabah Havens and her daughter, Frances S. Hall, anchored the family amidst the revolutionary fervor of the late 18th century. When Frances married the young militia veteran John Gardner, it represented the final piece of an incredible geographic puzzle.
This marriage united the seafaring grit of the Portsmouth Pearces with the battle-tested command of the New Hampshire Wingates. Their daughter, Waity Gardner, became the living inheritance of this entire regional tapestry—carrying the blood of the colonels who stormed French fortresses alongside the mariners who charted the stormy channels of Narragansett Bay. Through this line, our tree maps the complete story of Rhode Island’s rise: a lineage born on the decks of early Atlantic vessels, forged in the fires of frontier defense, and permanently etched into the foundational soil of New England.
Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy







