Made a freeman of Massachusetts Bay Colony on 13 May 1640. Petitioned the General Court in 1656 for a new plantation west of Sudbury, which was granted and incorporated as Marlborough in 1660. He received a 50-acre house lot at Marlborough and became a town leader there. Buried at North Cemetery, Wayland, Massachusetts. The grave is marked by a slate stele monument with weeping willow carving designed by Arthur Wallace Rice of Boston, dedicated by the Edmund Rice Association on August 29, 1914. Inscription reads: 'In Memory of DEACON EDMUND RICE / Born in Buckinghamshire England 1594 / Died in Marlborough Mass May 3 1663 / The Righteous Shall be in Everlasting Remembrance / Erected by the Edmund Rice Association 1914.' Y-DNA haplogroup I1 per testing by the Edmund Rice (1638) Association.
Occupations
- Sudbury selectman (1644)
- judge of small causes
- Massachusetts legislature, 5 years
- surveyor
- deacon of the church (1648)
Immigration
From England to Watertown then Sudbury, Massachusetts, United States, around 1638-1639.
Family tree says settled Sudbury 1638; WikiTree and the Ward 1858 genealogy say arrived 1638 to Watertown briefly, then Sudbury 1639.

