From Chapter 2 of The History of Lynn

http://www.usigs.org/library/books/ma/Lynn1890/lynn02-122-144.html

 

DANIEL HOWE, Lieutenant was admitted a freeman in 1634.
    He was a representative in five General Courts, and a mem-
    ber of the Ancient Artillery Company in 1638. He removed
    to New Haven. His son Ephraim was master of a vessel which
    sailed from Boston. In Sept. 1676, his vessel, in which were
    two of his sons and three other persons, was disabled by a
    storm, off Cape Cod, and driven to sea for several weeks, until
    his two sons, lashed to the deck by ropes, perished. The vessel
    was then cast on a desolate island, vhere the three other per-
    sons died. Mr. Howe was thus left alone, and found means to
    subsist for nine months, lodging and praying in a cave, till he
    was taken off by a vessel, in June.

     EDWARD HOWE, was a farmer, and was admitted a freeman
    in 1636. He was several times chosen representative, and was
    a member of the Essex Court, in 1637. In April, 1639, after
    the Court was ended in Boston, having dined in his usual health,
    be went to the river side, to pass over to Charlestown, and
    while waiting for the ferry boat, fell dead on the shore. Gov.
    Winthrop says he was  a Godly-man." He had a son Edward.          
 
     Mr. Lewis has located him here at too early a date. He came
    in the Truelove, 1635. He was 64 years old at the time of his
    death. He and Daniel Howe, the preceding, were brothers.

-ANNALS OF LYNN - 1630.   page 125

Jeremy Howe. This was a son of Edward Howe, and came over with his father, in the Truelove, 1635. He removed to New Haven, where be reared a family. Jeremiah Howe, one of the first settlers of Wallingford, in 1670, was probably his son, though at that time but about 20 years old. He died in 1690. 

ANNALS OF LYNN- 1638  p 175 http://www.usigs.org/library/books/ma/Lynn1890/lynn02Ch2-1635.txt