Christopher Hussey (died 1686)
Captain Christopher Hussey was an English colonial official and initial settler in New England.
Career and family
Christopher Hussey was born in Dorking, Surrey, England, in 1599 to John and Mary Hussey. In 1629, he married Theodate Bachiler, daughter of the Puritan minister Stephen Bachiler. At the latter’s encouragement, Hussey, his wife, and his widowed mother travelled to New England, arriving at Charlestown, Massachusetts in 1630, and settling in Saugus. By 1633, Hussey had relocated to New Hampshire, where he purchased land.Hussey was one of the original proprietors of Nantucket, Massachusetts, becoming a landowner there by the 1660s. Hussey became a lieutenant in 1653 and a captain in 1664. In 1679, he was an Officer of the Crown having been commissioned by King Charles II of England to "govern the Royal Province of New Hampshire". He was the first person in Hampton, Rockingham County, to swear allegiance to King Charles II. He died in 1686.
Christopher Hussey's father was reportedly descended from John Hussey, 1st Baron Hussey of Sleaford, by first wife Margaret Blount. Lord Hussey was beheaded by King Henry VIII in 1537 for treason. The New England Historic Genealogical Society, however, say that his descent from noble houses "seems highly unlikely".
Christopher Hussey's direct descendant is Thomas Markle, father of Meghan, Duchess of Sussex.