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English Origins of American Colonists, p. English Origins of
AMERICAN COLONISTS
[p.1] CLUES FROM ENGLISH ARCHIVES CONTRIBUTORY TO AMERICAN
GENEALOGY.
[p.35] CLUES FROM ENGLISH ARCHIVES CONTRIBUTORY TO AMERICAN
GENEALOGY. BY J. HENRY LEA AND J. R. HUTCHINSON.
page 41
The five and twientieth daye of June, 1659, I LUKE JOHNSON of
Virginia, Planter, being weake in bodie. My funerall charges
shall not exceed twentie markes. To my loving unckle John Turton
of West Bromwich, co. Stafford, gent, and to James Carie,
Citizen and Salter of London, 20s. each. Elizabeth, wife of said
James Carie, 20s. Friends Mr John Banester and Elizabeth [p.41]
his wife 40s. each for rings. I give and bequeath unto my godson
John Banester, son of John Banister of Yorke River in Virginia,
planter, one cowe. I give and bequeath unto my godson Robert
Bryen, son of Robert Bryen of Virginia, planter, one cowe.
Residuary legatee: Anne my wife. Executors: my uncle John
Turnton and my friend James Cary. Witnesses: Richard Morton, Pr:
Stedman, servant to Thomas Russel, scr. Proved 1 Aug., 1659, by
the executors named. (P.C.C. Pell, 450.)
It seems probable that the James Carie, citizen and salter,
named in the above will, was a cousin or other near relative of
Miles Cary, the well known founder of the family of that name in
Virginia, who was killed in the fight with the Dutch at Point
Comfort, 10 June, 1667. Miles Carey was descended from William
Cary, Mayor of Bristol in 1546, who left a prolific family of
merchants and adventurers, many of whom found their way to
America during the 17th century. A James Cary, first cousin of
Miles, was of New England at this period,Stow MS., 670, fo.
229-30, in Brit. Musuem.* but evidently not the James named in
the will.
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Mother: Sarah Cabell IRVINE |
_____________________ | _Robert DICKINSON ___| | (1767 - 1818) | | |_____________________ | _Asa Dupuy DICKINSON _| | (1816 - ....) m 1846 | | | _James DUPUY ________+ | | | (1758 - 1823) m 1782 | |_Mary Purnall DUPUY _| | (1786 - ....) | | |_Mary PURNALL _______+ | (1763 - 1828) m 1782 | |--Frances Jane DICKINSON | (1850 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Sarah Cabell IRVINE _| (1825 - ....) m 1846 | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Hannah Philippa Harrison LUDWELL |
_Richard LEE "the immigrant"_______+ | (1613 - 1664) m 1641 _Richard LEE _____________________| | (1647 - 1714) m 1674 | | |_Anne CONSTABLE OWEN? _____________+ | (1615 - 1706) m 1641 _Thomas LEE of Stratford___________| | (1690 - 1750) m 1722 | | | _Henry CORBIN "the Immigrant"______ | | | (1629 - 1675) m 1645 | |_Laetitia CORBIN _________________| | (1657 - 1706) m 1674 | | |_Alice ELTONHEAD __________________+ | (1627 - 1685) m 1645 | |--Hannah Ludwell LEE | (1728 - 1782) | _Philip LUDWELL of the Carolinas___ | | (1638 - 1704) m 1668 | _Philip LUDWELL II of Greenspring_| | | (1672 - 1726) m 1697 | | | |_Lucy Burwell HIGGINSON ___________+ | | (1632 - 1675) m 1668 |_Hannah Philippa Harrison LUDWELL _| (1701 - 1750) m 1722 | | _Benjamin HARRISON II of Wakefield_+ | | (1645 - 1712) |_Hannah HARRISON _________________| (1678 - 1731) m 1697 | |_Hannah CHURCHILL? ________________ (1651 - 1698)
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Mother: Alethian HINES |
_Bernard MARKHAM ____+ | (1737 - 1802) m 1767 _George MARKHAM ________| | (1783 - ....) m 1818 | | |_Mary HARRIS ________+ | (1740 - 1825) m 1767 _John Garland MARKHAM _| | (1819 - ....) m 1849 | | | _John GARLAND _______ | | | | |_Fannie Taylor GARLAND _| | (1791 - 1853) m 1818 | | |_____________________ | | |--Alice Garland MARKHAM | (1850 - ....) | _____________________ | | | ________________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Alethian HINES _______| (1820 - ....) m 1849 | | _____________________ | | |________________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Deliah BEARDEN |
_Peter QUIN Sr.___________________+ | (1750 - 1824) m 1776 _Peter QUIN Jr.__________| | (1787 - 1835) | | |_Judith ROBINSON _________________ | (1760 - 1840) m 1776 _Hugh Murray QUIN ___| | (1819 - 1900) m 1842| | | _ MOORE __________________________ | | | (1770 - ....) | |_Martha Catherine MOORE _| | (1794 - 1864) | | |_ MURRAY _________________________+ | (1770 - ....) | |--Emma Eoline QUIN | (1852 - ....) | __________________________________ | | | _Jeremiah BEARDEN _______| | | (1800 - ....) | | | |__________________________________ | | |_Deliah BEARDEN _____| (1828 - 1866) m 1842| | _(RESEARCH QUERY-MS-LA) HAMILTON _ | | |_Rachal HAMILTON ________| (1800 - ....) | |__________________________________
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Mother: Rebecca COCKE |
the father of soil chemistry in the United States, who showed
how to restore fertility to depleted Southeast plantations. He
was also a leading secessionist for decades prior to the U.S.
Civil War.
Edmund Ruffin's Famous Last Words
On June 18, 1865 Edmund Ruffin, a pre-eminent Southern
nationalist "fire-eater" who had been one of the leading
antebellum proponents of Southern secession, chose to commit
suicide rather than submit to the subjugation of Yankee bayonet
rule. Defiant to the bitter end, this fiery Southern patriot
penned these famous last words in his diary just minutes before
taking leave of the Yankee tyranny that had descended upon
Dixie...
"I here declare my unmitigated hatred to Yankee rule -- to all
political, social and business connection with the Yankees and
to the Yankee race. Would that I could impress these sentiments,
in their full force, on every living Southerner and bequeath
them to every one yet to be born! May such sentiments be held
universally in the outraged and down-trodden South, though in
silence and stillness, until the now far-distant day shall
arrive for just retribution for Yankee usurpation, oppression
and atrocious outrages, and for deliverance and vengeance for
the now ruined, subjugated and enslaved Southern States!
...And now with my latest writing and utterance, and with what
will be near my latest breath, I here repeat and would willingly
proclaim my unmitigated hatred to yankee rule--to all political,
social and business connections with Yankees, and the
perfidious, malignant and vile Yankee race."
--Edmund Ruffin
Children:
2 Edmund Ruffin b: 1814 d: 1876 + Mary Cocke Smith b: 1816 d:
1857 + Jane M. Ruffin b: 1829 d: 1893
2 Agnes Ruffin b: Abt 1817 + T S Beckwith b: Abt 1817
2 Julian C Ruffin b: Abt 1819 + Charlotte Meade b: Abt 1819
2 Mildred Ruffin b: Abt 1821 + B B Sayre b: Abt 1821
2 Charles Ruffin b: Abt 1823 + H. Harrison b: Abt 1823
2 Calx Ruffin b: Abt 1825
Helen Kay Yates "Family Graveyards in Hanover County, Virginia
1995", compiled & published by Helen Kay Yates
Americans of Royal Descent, by Charles H. Browning, Philadelphia
1883
Title: Americans of Royal Descent, by Charles H. Browning,
Philadelphia 1883
Edmund Ruffin, whose long white hair made him immediately
recognizable to contemporaries, was born in 1794 and educated in
Virginia, including a brief period at the College of William and
Mary. For most of his life, Ruffin was a farmer and a renowned
agricultural reformer. Experiments on his farm convinced him
that fertilizers, crop rotation, drainage, and good plowing
could revitalize the declining soil of his native state. From
the 1820s onward, Ruffin published his findings, edited an
agricultural journal, lectured, and organized agricultural
societies. In the 1850s, he became president and commissioner of
the Virginia State Agricultural Society.
Increasingly, however, Ruffin turned his attention in the 1850s
to politics, especially the defense of slavery and secession.
Although he had earlier expressed some doubts about slavery and
opened the pages of his agricultural journal to arguments about
colonization, by the 1850s Ruffin had become a staunch proponent
of slavery and of the racial inferiority of blacks. He joined
the ranks of fire-eating southern radicals advocating a separate
southern nation to protect slavery and the southern way of life.
Secession became as great a reform cause as agricultural
improvement. Both would rejuvenate the South.
Ruffin's desire to push the secessionist movement towards a
confrontation with the North brought him to Charleston during
the Sumter crisis. He intended to take his stand with the
Confederacy, and he hoped events would drive his native state,
Virginia , out of the Union. His ardent southern nationalism
made him a hero of southern radicals. He was invited to attend
three secession conventions, and given the honor of firing one
of the first batteries against Fort Sumter.
As the Confederacy's fortunes ebbed during the war, however,
Ruffin grew distraught. Plagued by ill health, family
misfortunes, and the rapid collapse of Confederate forces in
1865, Ruffin proclaimed "unmitigated hatred to Yankee rule," and
on June 1 7, 1865, committed suicide. His act, sometimes
considered the "last shot" of the Civil War, become identified
with the Confederacy's defeat and a symbol of the lost cause.
His suicide was interpreted as an expression of the southern
code of honor, the refusal to accept a life in defeat.
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Bibliography: Allmendinger, Ruffin; Craven, Ruffin; J. G. deR.
Hamilton, "Edmund Ruffin," DAB, 16: 214-16.
http://www.tulane.edu/~latner/Ruffin.html
Edmund Ruffin - geologist, agricultural reformer
(and, he fired the first shot at Fort Sumter)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
---------------
Edmund Ruffin was an agricultural reformer, proslavery
ideologue, and Southern nationalist. Born into a prominent
Tidewater Virginia planter family, Ruffin earned wide acclaim
during the first half of the nineteenth century as the
preeminent agricultural reformer in the Old South.
When his inherited lands on the James River proved unresponsive
to traditional ameliorative practices, Ruffin, in 1818,
inaugurated a series of experiments with marl, a shell-like
deposit containing calcium carbonate which neutralized soil
acidity and enabled sterile soils to become once again
productive.
When the results proved highly effective, he published his
findings, first in An Essay on Calcareous Manures (1832) and
then in his celebrated agricultural journal, the Farmers'
Register. After conducting an agricultural survey of South
Carolina at the request of Governor James H. Hammond, Ruffin
acquired a new tract of land on the Pamunkey River, naming it
appropriately Marlbourne, and proceeded to transform it into a
model estate. Subsequently, he was instrumental in reviving the
Virginia State Agricultural Society and was four times elected
president of that body.
"The principles of agriculture are the same everywhere in all
countries, - but their application often require special
modifications. It is so in this State. The use of our native
fertilizers for example, in the various kinds of marls, call for
special rules of application. These are to be found out only by
close observation and much experience. An immense saving in
money depends upon their proper application, as to time, from
composition and the condition of the soil to which they are to
be applied."
The following is a selection from his work: Agricultural,
Geological, and Descriptive Sketches of Lower North Carolina,
and the Similar Adjacent Lands.Printed at the Institution for
the Deaf & Dumb & the Blind, Raleigh - 1861.
The Great Dismal Swamp
This great swamp, more than any other seen, has much the largest
proportion of "juniper land," or surface on which the juniper,
or white cedar, thrives best, and is, or has recently been, the
principal or exclusive, forest growth. The thrifty, and
extensive or general growth of juniper indicates the wettest and
most miry (or sponge,") soil, which is always the most peaty, or
most exclusively of vegetable formation.
These trees are the most valuable for timber, in shingles
especially, and such land is perfectly worthless for draining **
and cultivation, because of its almost entire vegetable
composition.
Such land, and such forest growth, before its last and complete
destruction by fire, made up the larger portion of the main body
of the swamp, and nearly all of its interior land. This soil is
deep, and is said to lie on a bottom of sand.
Near to the outer margin, and bordering on the surrounding firm
land, and between Suffolk and Elizabeth river, the swamp soil is
not more than from one foot deep (nearest the outside) to three
feet further in, with a more clayey bottom earth, and the forest
growth is of black gum, or cypress mixed with gum.
Lands of this kind only, and in small proportion, even of this
kind, have been drained, cultivated, and found of abiding
productiveness. It is through the outer edge of the swamp, and
of the portion the least swampy, that the Seaboard railroad
passes, for a few miles only, and in which, the hastily passing
traveller, if not informed, would not suspect that he was then
in the great Dismal Swamp.
The Norfolk and Petersburg railroad, in 1856, in the course of
construction, passes through another and larger line of the
swamp, and more towards its interior - but still mostly over the
outer and thinner deposit, of vegetable soil, and almost wholly
through gum forest. The former route I examined through, on foot
- and also the latter, so far as it was then accessible - and
for a distance said to present a fair sample of the ground of
the whole route through the swamp. The recent excavation and
embankment for this railroad has served to open the soil and its
foundation much better to examination. The soil (nearly all
covered by gum trees, and therefore of the most earthy and solid
constitution of all the swamp,) so far as seen is but two and
a-half to three feet deep before arriving at solid and real
earth below. Both these conditions, of soil and sub-soil, seem
to afford more desirable materials than would have been
available farther in the swamp. Still, I infer that much even of
this embankment must rot away, and that the level of the newly
raised surface for the road will sink in proportion.
The most important and interesting route, for examination, and
also for the facility and pleasure of the conveyance, is along
the Jericho canal, dug and used for transporting shingles from
the interior of the swamp, and the lake, to the landing, at a
tide-water creek, near Suffolk, empyting into Nansemond river,
where the large sea-vessels are loaded. The canal is closed at
the end near the creek, and its level is there more than twenty
feet above low tide water. The canal was dug twelve feet wide,
four deep, and is ten miles long to Lake Drummond, and perfectly
straight nearly throughout. A regulating lock at the junction
with the lake serves to keep the water in the canal at a uniform
height when long droughts may have sunk the water in the lake
two feet or more lower than usual. The canal water is level from
the lake to the landing, and the water being supplied from the
swamp has a gentle current from the central portion of the canal
towards both its extremities.
The firm land near the landing on both sides of the canal varies
from one to two, and for a little space is from three to four
feet higher than the swamp surface. The true swamp is soon
reached, and from the remaining eight miles or more, along the
canal, its margin, formerly a raised bank, is at most, but a few
inches higher than the water in the canal, and also the water
generally overspreading the neighboring swamp surface. The
tow-path for the men propelling the boat merely afforded better
footing by being trodden and consolidated, and by poles having
been laid along for the boatmen to tread upon, where the more
depressed surface was covered by water. The peaty earth thrown
out of the canal, when it was dug, must have made a broad and
high embankment, of which scarcely anything now remains, nearly
all having rotted away, and so disappeared. This sufficiently
indicates how worthless is, and how short would be the very
existence of, such soil, if drained and cultivated, and thus
made liable to go into complete decomposition.
After an early and abortive effort to drain and cultivate some
of the land, all the subsequent labors of the principal
proprietors of the swamp, The Dismal Swamp Land Company,* have
been directed exclusively to the very profitable work of getting
shingles, and other timber. The proprietorship and the objects
of this company both operate to oppose and obstruct any attempts
of other individual proprietors of other portions, for draining
the better margin lands. And still more is this obstructed by
the construction of the Dismal Swamp canal for navigation,
which, by its high level, operates to dam and raise the water
upon a large portion of the surface of the swamp.
The swamp forests, where preserving their original appearance,
or where they have not been deformed or utterly destroyed by
great fires present scenery of solemn grandeur and of rare and
peculiar beauty. The forests of gum and cypress have not been
much damaged by fires or by the labors or improvements of man,
and the trees usually remain of their proper great sizes, and
venerable appearance, closely shading the wet, black and level
soil.
The junipers do not grow large, or they are so slightly fixed in
their soil of semi-fluid mire, that they are overturned by
storms before they reach large size. But when making the general
cover, and though none may exceed twelve inches in diameter, a
more beautiful forest growth cannot be conceived. These trees
are evergreen, very like the cedar in general appearance, but
taller, more slender, with long and straight and bare trunks,
supporting tops of tapering, flexible, and graceful horizontal
branches. Standing thick as they do naturally, the tops of the
trees unite to form one wide-spread canopy of green, supported
by thousands of visible slender and perfectly straight columns.
The silent gliding of the traveller's boat on the black and
still water of the canal, and for miles together in silence and
solitude through such forests as these, or of the gigantic gum
and cypresses, and thence entering upon the bosom of the broad
and beautiful central lake-all serve to present a combination of
the gloomy sublime and the beautiful of Nature, that is rarely
equalled elsewhere.
Agricultural, Geological, and Descriptive Sketches
of Lower North Carolina, and the Similar Adjacent Lands
by Edmund Ruffin, 1794-1865
http://www.beachonline.com/ruffin.htm
_Edmund RUFFIN ____________________+ | (1713 - 1790) _Edmund RUFFIN ______| | (1744 - 1807) | | |_Annie SIMMONS ____________________ | (1718 - 1749) _George RUFFIN ______| | (1765 - 1810) | | | _WILLIAM SKIPWITH Knt. 6th Baronet_+ | | | (1707 - 1764) | |_Jane SKIPWITH ______| | (1745 - ....) | | |_UNNAMED___________________________ | | |--Edmund RUFFIN C.S.A. | (1794 - 1865) | _(RESEARCH QUERY) COCKE ___________ | | | _John COCKE _________| | | (1740 - ....) | | | |___________________________________ | | |_Rebecca COCKE ______| (1770 - ....) | | ___________________________________ | | |_____________________| | |___________________________________
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[523265]
or 14 Dec 1804
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Mother: Frances WILLIS |
_Edward TINSLEY Sr.__+ | (1704 - 1782) m 1724 _Edward TINSLEY Jr.__| | (1730 - 1798) m 1760| | |_Margaret TAYLOR ____+ | (1705 - 1782) m 1724 _William TINSLEY ____| | (1768 - 1844) m 1795| | | _John BUFORD ________+ | | | (1707 - 1787) m 1735 | |_Elizabeth BUFORD ___| | (1740 - 1803) m 1760| | |_Judith EARLY _______+ | (1710 - 1781) m 1735 | |--Pleasant TINSLEY | (1800 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Frances WILLIS _____| (1772 - ....) m 1795| | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Elizabeth Jane GATEWOOD |
_____________________ | ___________________________| | | | |_____________________ | _James W. WARWICK ________| | (1813 - 1880) m 1844 | | | _____________________ | | | | |___________________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--Eliza Jane WARWICK | (1851 - ....) | _William GATEWOOD ___+ | | (1745 - 1825) m 1799 | _Francis Warwick GATEWOOD _| | | (1800 - 1863) m 1822 | | | |_Jane WARWICK _______+ | | (1779 - 1839) m 1799 |_Elizabeth Jane GATEWOOD _| (1823 - 1880) m 1844 | | _Charles BEALE ______ | | (1770 - ....) |_Margaret Skillern BEALE __| (1804 - 1894) m 1822 | |_____________________
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Mother: Mary Ardis BRADLEY |
_Samuel III WEAVER _____+ | (1690 - 1769) m 1737 _David WEAVER ________________________| | (1745 - 1813) m 1769 | | |_Françoise L'ORANGE ____+ | (1700 - 1769) m 1737 _Isham D. WEAVER ____| | (1791 - 1878) m 1820| | | ________________________ | | | | |_Masinbird SHOEMAKER _________________| | (1745 - 1825) m 1769 | | |________________________ | | |--Franklin D. WEAVER | (1821 - ....) | ________________________ | | | _John Ardis BRADLEY II________________| | | (1773 - 1828) m 1798 | | | |________________________ | | |_Mary Ardis BRADLEY _| (1799 - 1867) m 1820| | _Francis MERIWETHER ____+ | | (1737 - 1803) m 1760 |_Margaret Jameson "Peggy" MERIWETHER _| (1776 - 1819) m 1798 | |_Martha Gaines JAMESON _+ (1743 - 1818) m 1760
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