William Munroe

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William Munroe was a 17th century Scottish soldier.

He is one of four men by the surname of Munroe recorded as being captured at the Battle of Worcester in 1651 and transported to America during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. He is likely to have been fighting alongside other men from the Clan Munro such as Sir Alexander Munro who was fortunate enough to escape. William's father is believed to have been a Robert Munro.

William is almost certainly one of four men transported on the ship called the John and Sarah, though the record of this has been damaged so that his first name is obscured. The names of the other three men are still fully visible on the ship's record. [1]

William Munroe is known to be the ancestor of a vast family of Munroes in New England, United States. William married three times. He remained single for the first thirteen years after his arrival in Massachusetts, finally marrying about 1665. His first bride was Martha George, whose father once worked for Massachusetts governor John Winthrop. At the time of Martha's marriage, her father faced trouble with Puritan authorities for founding an illegal Baptist church in Charlestown. Martha died a few years after the marriage, leaving William to raise four young children.

William then married twenty-year-old Mary Ball of Watertown, a woman with a troubled past. Her parents were in and out of court on charges of beatings and neglect, amid hints that the mother was insane, and Mary herself had suffered judicial sanctions for an out-of-wedlock child. William brought stability to Mary's life, and they had ten children together during their twenty years of marriage.

His third wife was Elizabeth Johnson Wyer, a widow of a Scots tailor from Charlestown.

William began acquiring small pieces of land in Cambridge Farms, which is present-day Lexington, and he and his sons and a son-in-law purchased one hundred acres in 1695. With increased landholdings came greater status in the community, and he was made a freeman, chosen as one of the town Selectmen, and admitted as a member of the church. He was also the proprietor of the Munroe Tavern (Lexington, Massachusetts). William died in 1719.

In the 18th century a descendant of his claimed to fire the first shot in the American Revolutionary War at the Battles of Lexington and Concord on 19th April 1775. Of the seventy-seven American Minutemen involved in the battle, sixteen were Munroes. The "Minutemen" were based at Munroe Tavern (Lexington, Massachusetts).

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