Samuell Mylam
of Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts
 

January 30, 1667
Records of the Town of Plymouth 1636 to 1705: Volume I:

Att the Townemeeting held att the meeting house att Plymouth the one and thirtieth day of January annø dom 1667.
John Andrew & Saml Graunted unto John Andrew and Samuell Mylam to each of them thirty acrees of upland somwhere about Mannomett ponds if they can find it in any such lands as not graunted unto any others.
Abraham Jackson Thirty acrees of land is graunted unto Abraham Jackson where John Andrew
and Samuell Mylam shall have theires if it may be there had if not any wherelse wher hee can find it; not prejudiciall to others; within this townshipp.

June 16, 1668
Records of the Town of Plymouth 1636 to 1705: Volume I:

Att a Townmeeting held att the meeting house att Plymouth the sixteenth day of June 1668
The bounds of the land of
John Andrew and Samuell Mylam is as followeth viz; it is bounded with Mannomett Ponds brooke on the Northerly end; and on the Northerly Corner with great white oake tree standing by the brooke syde and soe Runeth by the said brooke four score and twelve pole; and then Runeth away south southeast or therabouts four score and twelve pole; and there bounded with a Red oake tree marked and soe Runeth east northeast or therabouts four score and twelve pole and there bounded with a smale Red oake bush which standeth on the southwest syde of an old Indian path;

1672-1673
Records of the Colony of New Plymouth in New England.  Vol.: Judicial Acts, 1636-1692" edited by Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, M.D.

"Joseph Dunham complaineth against Samuell Mylam, in an action of the case, to the damage of five pounds, for non performance of a bargaine about a psell of cedar bolts that the said Mylam should have procured for the said Joseph Dunham by the last of October last past before the date hereof, and to have bine delivered by the said Mylam att the said Dunham his house by the time prefixed, and with them three shillings in mony. The jury find for the pliantiffe his bolts according to bargaine, thirty shillings damage, and the cost of the suite."