Mother: ROTRUDE CAROLING of Italy |
_LAMBERT of Hornbach___________________________________+ | (0739 - 0783) _GUIDO On The Breton March_________________________________| | (0759 - 0814) | | |_______________________________________________________ | _LAMBERT of Nantes_________| | (0780 - 0836) | | | _______________________________________________________ | | | | |___________________________________________________________| | | | |_______________________________________________________ | | |--GUIDO I Marquis of Spoleto | (0810 - 0860) | _LOUIS I "The Pious" de AQUITAINE CAROLING of The West_+ | | (0778 - 0840) m 0794 | _LOTHAIRE I de AQUITAINE CAROLING of The Holy Roman Empire_| | | (0795 - 0855) m 0821 | | | |_IRMENGARDIS de HESBAYE of Hasbania____________________+ | | (0778 - 0818) m 0794 |_ROTRUDE CAROLING of Italy_| (0833 - ....) | | _HUGO II "le Mefiant " de TOURS Count of Tours_________+ | | (0765 - 0836) |_ERMENGARDE de TOURS of Italy______________________________| (0800 - 0851) m 0821 | |_AVA Bava (Aba) Countess of Upper Alsace_______________ (0779 - 0837)
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Father: William CLAIBORNE of Romancoke Mother: Elizabeth WHITEHEAD |
_William CLAIBORNE __________+ | (1636 - ....) _William CLAIBORNE ___| | (1671 - ....) | | |_Katherine Elizabeth WILKES _ | (1636 - ....) _William CLAIBORNE of Romancoke_| | (1690 - 1750) | | | _____________________________ | | | | |_Katherine DANDRIDGE _| | (1670 - ....) | | |_____________________________ | | |--Catherine CLAIBORNE | (1720 - 1788) | _(RESEARCH QUERY) WHITEHEAD _ | | | _Philip WHITEHEAD ____| | | (1680 - ....) | | | |_____________________________ | | |_Elizabeth WHITEHEAD ___________| (1700 - ....) | | _____________________________ | | |______________________| | |_____________________________
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_John CORLEY of Hanover_+ | (1695 - 1743) _Valentine CORLEY ___| | (1721 - 1803) | | |________________________ | _Caniel CORLEY ______| | (1747 - 1807) | | | ________________________ | | | | |_Sarah WALKER _______| | (1730 - ....) | | |________________________ | | |--Beverly CORLEY | (1780 - ....) | ________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |________________________ | | |_____________________| | | ________________________ | | |_____________________| | |________________________
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book " A Frontier Village " by A. D Chidsey, Jr. Chapter 4 is
the story of Johannes (John) LeFevre. I got my book from the
Northampton Co. Historical Society in Easton, Pennsylvania. John
was there before Easton. You can also get a map from them that
showes where his place was. If I can help let me know. LeFever
is spelled about 10 different ways. [email protected]
Three Isaacs:
Lefevre Isaac (Pennsylvania)
Lefevre Isaac (Manakin, VA)
In 1683 another LeFevre, Isaac by name, settled in New Jersey.
His son Myndert in 1731 advertised his father's farm for sale,
between Perth Amboy and New Brunswick. Isaac LeFevre b. 1660
France, d. 1731 Perth Amboy, Middlesex Co., NJ.
http://www.artglenn.com/family/Lefevre/LEFEVRE.html
"At the first settlement of the county, it was selected as the
preferred residence of sundry French families of the persecuted
Huguenots. They bore the names of Dubois, Boileau, Larroux,
Lefevre; and some of their descendants remain there to the
present day.
A large quarto Bible, which Isaac Lefevre brought with him from
France at that time, is now in the possession of John C.
Lefevre, Esq., and held as a prized relic.
The aforesaid names were also united with those of Charles De La
Noe, a minister, and Andrew Dore, and some other Frenchmen, who
had come out under the influence of William Penn, to form
vineyards, and to cultivate grapes "up the Schuylkill".
.
Isaac Lefevre, before named, had lost both his parents by the
massacre in France, and he arrived at Philadelphia, a youth of
seventeen in 1686; afterwards he became the husband of
Catharine, the daughter of Madame Feree, and their son by this
marriage, was the first born white child in Pequea. Philip Feree
married Leah, a daughter of Abraham Dubois. One of the Ferees
became a Friend. I have been indebted for sundry of these
facts, to R. Conyngham, Esq., who has made himself acquainted
with them by his residence in the town of Paradise.
My Isaac arrived in Manakintown in 1699/1700 from London on the
galley "Peter and Anthony". In 1700 he and his wife are named in
the List of Meals at Falling Creek Mill.
In the spring of 1700 (1701) over seven hundred Huguenots sailed
from Gravesend England for Virginia. The names of three of the
ships are known, the "Peter and Anthony", "Le Nasseau" and the
"Mary and Ann". The colony came under the leadership of the
Marquis Oliver de la Muce and his assistant Charles de Sailly.
Arriving in Virginia there arose dissension among the colonist
as to what lands they would settle on; so two hundred odd of
the number settled on the extinct Manacan Indian lands of
manakin, twenty miles West of Richmond where ten thousand acres
of land was given them by the King.
This land is located in Goochland and Powhatan Counties,
principally in Powhatan, on the south side of James River.
The colonist constructed a town with dwellings, church, school
and hospital. Their Minister, Benjamin de Joux and Clerk
Jacques Sublet, their physicians, Doctors Castogne and Paul
Micou. they named the town King William Town and the Parish
King William. the land was divided into tracts of one hundred
thirty-three acres.
Engllish settled with these Huguenots and intermarried. As they
prospered they acquired more land and slaves and built homes on
their farms and enjoyed entertaining their friends and
travelers.
These refugees were of the best blood of France, many of the
nobility and some had royal blood in their veins. These
refugees were frugal, industrious, and good loyal citizens, gave
their lives and means in the struggle for independence of the
Colonies. Their homes and crops, in many instances, were
destroyed by the British. They never complained, but continued
fighting until the end. Their names are found in the list of
soldiers in the Battles throughout the Revolutionary War. Their
descendants are found in every line of endeavor." Src:
ftp://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/pa/philadelphia/areahistory/w
atson0205.txt
[S1405]
[S884]
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Mother: Martha Hannah DAVIS |
From family records foote Gen. Vol II call A5E9. Ky. W3 b vol I
Marriage records of Warren County. Ancestry of William Clopton
A1c17 page 22 3 to 228.
Am. Pub. V Vol 6 page 175. B13c12 McCall Tidwell and Allied
Families.
_(RESEARCH QUERY) VENABLE _________ | _Abraham I VENABLE "the Immigrant"_| | (1673 - ....) m 1700 | | |___________________________________ | _Abraham VENABLE II___| | (1700 - 1768) m 1723 | | | _John LEWIS III____________________+ | | | (1635 - 1690) m 1660 | |_Mildred Elizabeth LEWIS __________| | (1676 - ....) m 1700 | | |_Isabella MILLER __________________+ | (1640 - 1703) m 1660 | |--James VENABLE | (1734 - 1814) | _Nathaniel DAVIS I "the Immigrant"_ | | (1645 - 1710) m 1675 | _Nathaniel Robert DAVIS I__________| | | (1676 - 1771) | | | |_Mary Elizabeth HUGHES ____________+ | | (1650 - ....) m 1675 |_Martha Hannah DAVIS _| (1702 - 1765) m 1723 | | _Hugh Ap LEWIS ____________________ | | (1660 - ....) |_Abadiah LEWIS ____________________| (1680 - ....) | |___________________________________
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