Notes from findagrave memorial:
Samuel Dunscombe was born in 1632 in Pembroke Tribe, Bermuda, a son of Thomas Dunscombe and Hannah Jadwin.
He married Elizabeth Burgess circa 1650.
Planter and weaver.
On 5 January 1655/56, he was listed in the shipment accounts (3 shillings, 6 pence) of the Thomas and Elizabeth in Bermuda.
On 30 November 1656, he set sail from Bermuda as a passenger aboard the Elizabeth and Anne.
Juror in the Town of Saint George, Bermuda in November 1657.
In November 1659, he made an appearance at the Grand Inquest of John Morgan in the Town of Saint George, Bermuda.
On 4 February 1662/63, he occupied 24½ acres of land which was the property of Mrs. Anne Trimingham, situated in the northwestern part of Pembroke Tribe abutting the Atlantic Ocean near Abbott's Bay on the north and Mill Creek on the south.
On 23 January 1663/64, he occupied land in Pembroke Tribe which was the property of Colonel Owen Rowe (lot 8).
Juror at the Sessions House in the Town of Saint George, Bermuda on 11 December 1676.
He is supposed to have settled temporarily in Manhattan, but he is to be found in the records of Bermuda otherwise.
On 14 April 1688, he witnessed the will of his brother Thomas Dunscombe in Pembroke Tribe, Bermuda.
On 17 April 1696, Saumuel Dunscombe, Senior deposed before Bermuda Governor John Goddard that he was aged about 63 years.
On 29 September 1696, Samuel Dunscombe was listed on the Association Oath Roll in Pembroke Tribe, Bermuda.
On 4 November 1705, he deposed in Bermuda that he was aged "seventy three years or thereabouts".
By 1706, he owned a home on one acre of land in Pembroke Tribe, Bermuda, in addition to two acres of land in Hamilton Tribe, Bermuda.
He died in Pembroke Tribe, Bermuda between the writing of his will on 19 February 1705/06 and its probate on 1 November 1706.
The inventory of his estate included household items, a spinning wheel, 3 cattle, 2 sheep and a boat in need of repair, the latter valued at only 10 shillings.