Hussey-Quaker-Ancestry

Hussey-Quaker-Ancestry


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First Generation  Next





1. Jediah Clark Hussey, son of Thomas Hussey and Aletha Benbow, was born on 25 Mar 1848 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana, died on 23 Mar 1924 in Vernon, Wilbarger, Texas at age 75, and was buried in Pioneer Cemetery, Hext, , Oklahoma.

General Notes: The source of Jediah's middle name cannot be traced back through either the Hussey or Benbow lines. However, two of his aunts (Nancy and Mary) married into the Clark family. In fact, according to the Back Creek MM, John and Nancy Clark with children Judiah, Daniel, Alfred, Anna, Martha, Ann, and Thomas, were granted certificates to White Lick MM, 1832, 7, 27, basically the same time that Thomas (1832, 5, 30) and Agatha (1832, 7, 25) Hussey were granted theirs. It is almost certain there was a very close tie between the Hussey and Clark families.

Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, 1868, 4, 1. Plainfield MM Jediah received in membership.

Not much is know about Jediah (or Judiah as his descendants call him). From the above record it is evident that he was raised in the Quaker environment. However, none of his grandchildren recall that he was a Quaker. Since his mother died when he was nine and his father when he was 10, someone else had to have raised at least him and his younger sister, Rebecca.

In the History of Hendricks County, Indiana, 1885, page 388, there is a J. C. Hussey who was mustered as a Corporal Aug. 15, 1862; promoted Second Lieutenant May 10, 1863; First Lieutenant Sept. 27, 1864. (Since our Jediah wasn't born until 1848, he would certainly have been a "boy soldier" if this is he.)

The 1870 federal census taken at Plainfield, Guilford Township, Hendricks County, Indiana on 30 July, 1870, Clark Hussey is listed as a single farmer, aged 22, born in Indiana with real estate worth $3,300.

Prior to 1880 Jediah married Louisa and over the next five years they had four children. Little is known about about this time in his life. However, from census records for the birth of his children, we can assume that he met and married Louisa about 1875 in her birth state of Illinois or in Missouri where their first three children were born. Letha was born in Gentry County, Missouri in Aug 1879 and Hardy Brown was born in Kansas in 1881 so the family must have removed between these times. By mid-1885 Louisa had died he had married Lucy in Wilbarger County, Texas.

The 1880 federal census taken in Miller, Gentry County, Missouri lists the following:

Clark HUSSY Self M Male W 31 IN Farmer --- ---
Louisa HUSSY Wife M Female W 25 IL Keeping House VA IL
Oscar C. HUSSY Son S Male W 4 MO IN IL
Effie A. HUSSY Dau S Female W 2 MO IN IL
Letha A. HUSSY Dau S Female W 10M MO IN IL

In his late thirties, he married Lucy Graham Capps, apparently in Wilbarger County, Texas, since they were there when Maggie Inez was born in 1886.

The 1900 Oklahoma census indicates that Elmer, Mabel, Bernice, Franzel and Naomi were born in Arkansas between March 1888 and September 1898. When the family moved to Oklahoma, Lucy's older sister, Maggie C. Hollis came with them.

It was by sheer chance that I found the family in the 1900 census. I was scanning through the 1900 Oklahoma SOUNDEX (sound index) for Capps and found Elizabeth listed as being enumerated with "Gediah" Hussey. Without that lead I would never have found the entry since it was not under Jediah or Judiah where it should have been. (The soundex for a given set of surnames matching that sound pattern is sorted by first names, not by surnames.)

Here is a summary of the 1900 federal census. They were enumerated in Oklahoma County in the Cass township on 5 June. (Microfilm T623 Roll 1340.)

Name Relation Month YearAgeBirth place
Father's birth place
Mother's birth place

Hussey, GediahHeadMar184858INNCNCFarmer, Rented farm
LucyWifeFeb186248AR SCMSMarried 15 years
InezDauMay188614TXINAR
ElmerSonMar188812ARINAR
MabelDauJan1890 10ARINAR
BerniceDauDec18918ARINAR
FranzlSonOct18945ARINAR
NaomiDauSep18981ARINAR
Capps, Elizabeth Mother- in-Law
Jul186363MSMSGA

1910 United States Federal Census Record about Clark Hussey
Name: Clark Hussey
Age in 1910: 62
Estimated birth year: abt 1848
Birthplace: Indiana
Home in 1910: Delhi Twp, Beckham, Oklahoma
Race: White
Gender: Male

The handwriting for the 1910 census is hardly readable. However, based on sex and ages, it appears to list Clark, Lucy, Bernice, Franzel, Naomi, and Gertrude.

Hussey Clark H M 62 M2 24 037A Delhi
Hussey Lucy W F 48 M1 24 5 5 037A Delhi
Hussey Bernice D F 18 S 037A Delhi
Hussey Franzl S M 15 S 037A Delhi
Hussey Neola D F 11 S 037A Delhi
Hussey Gertrude D F 8 S 037A Delhi

Here is a summary of the 1920 federal census.The family was enumerated in Beckham County in the Delhi township on 6 Jan.(Microfilm T625 Roll 1451.)

NameRelation AgeBirth place
Father's birth place
Mother's birth place

Hussey, Judiah C.Head 71INNCNCOwned mortgaged farm
Lucy G. Wife 69 ARALMS
Franzel T.Son25 ARINAR
Naomi E.Daughter21 ARINAR
Dorris, William Son-in-law35 TXMSMSRenter
AnnieGranddau 12 OKTXAR
Harvey C. Grandson 10 OKTXAR
Wilma Granddau 8 OKTXAR
Hollis, Maggie C. Sis-in-law66ARALMS

(Notice that both Lucy and Maggie thought their father was born in Alabama.
LDS records indicate he was born in South Carolina. He moved to Alabama as a young adult.)

A note of interest: Franzel T. Hussey was the ennumerator for the 1920 census for his district. This started a long series of involvement with the federal census. In 1930, Oscar Leggitt took census. In 1950 Clara and Jack Leggitt did. In 1990 Philip Leggitt, Jack's son, was a census taker.

Also, Maggie C. Hollis is very probably Margaret Catherine Capps who married John Howell Hollis in 1877 in Dorsey County, AR. Final observation - is Margaret the namesake of our Maggie Inez? (Yes, Naomi Hussey confirmed this in a letter to Patsy Meehan in 1968, shortly before Peggy Leggitt died. She said Inez was named for Aunt Maggie.)

Another little tidbit - at a family funeral in October, 1992, Jack Leggitt told me that family lore has it that Jediah died from accidentally eating rat poison. Apparently he awoke one night with indigestion and went to the kitchen to take some baking soda. Because of the shape of the box, he took rat poison instead. (Sarah confirmed this when I talked to her in 2002.)

In a letter to Patsy Meehan in 1968, Naomi Hussey indicated "My parents at one time owned lots in what is now the cetral part of Oklahoma City."

In that letter, Naomi also said "Franzel also told me for sure where my Father was born, and I think I wrote you that. I had been told that my Mother was born in Kansas, but he said positively that she was born in Texas. She spent most of her life prior to their move to Oklahoma in Arkansas. I know that she always spoke of that as her home, and loved it, except for the chills and fever. Her oldest sister, Maggie Hollis lived there until her death, and I am sure that some of her children or granchildren are there now. I had to look through the atlas to find the town whose name ran a bell with me, and I am sure it was Warren, some miles south of Pine Bluff. I just recall any of the Hollis children's names except one son, Buster, who came to Oklahoma and spend some time at our house. ... You know that I have been away from the family so long that about all I can recall are things that happened when I was quite young or that I heard spoken of then. I have to do some thinking to recall any of it. Inez was named for Aunt Maggie. Aunt Maggie also spent one winter at our house when I was a teenager. Gertrude recently got a death certificate for my father, but I don't know hwere she sent for it, and I don't get very definite answers to questions I ask her. ..."

The LDS Ancestral File indicates Jediah died in Vernon, Wilbarger County, Texas. However, Mae Leggitt assures me he is buried next to his wife in Hext, Oklahoma. Mae thinks that he died at Hext, Oklahoma. She said that times were hard then and she cannot believe that they would not have buried him in Texas if he had died there.

In 1996 I visited the Pioneer Cemetery in Hext, Oklahoma and there is a very well maintained Hussey tombstone which identifies both Judiah and Lucy Hussey.

While in Hext my mother pointed out the old Hussey farm house where both her grand parents lived. I took photographs of both locations.

Ancestry.com has the following data:

1900 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Gediah Hussey
Spouse:
Lucy Hussey
Children:
Inez Hussey
Birth:
Mar 1848 in Indiana
Marriage:
1885
Residence: 1900 in Cass & Pottawatomie Townships, Oklahoma, Oklahoma Territory

1920 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Juidiah C Hussey
Spouse:
Lucy G Hussey
Children:
Frank T Hussey
Birth:
abt 1849 in Indiana
Residence: 1920 in Delhi, Beckham, Oklahoma

1880 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Clark Hussy
Spouse:
Louisa Hussy
Children:
Oscar C. Hussy
Birth:
abt 1849 in Indiana
Residence: 1880 in Miller, Gentry, Missouri, United States

1870 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Clark Hussey
Birth:
abt 1848 in Indiana
Residence: 1870 in Guilford, Hendricks, Indiana, United States

1910 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Clark Hussey
Spouse:
Lucy Hussey
Children:
Reamer Hussey
Birth:
1848 in India
Residence: 1910 in Delhi, Beckham, Oklahoma

1850 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Judiah C Hussey
Birth:
abt 1847 in Indiana
Residence: 1850 in Liberty, Hendricks, Indiana

1860 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
J C Hussey
Birth:
abt 1848 in Indiana
Residence: 1860 in Ripley, Rush, Indiana, United States



Jediah married Louisa Brown about 1874 in Gentry, Gentry, Missouri. Louisa was born on 25 Feb 1854 in , , Illinois and died about 1884 in , , Texas about age 30.

General Notes: The following is available at Ancestry.com:

Family Records of Carol Crane Holmes
Entries: 779 Updated: Mon Jan 31 21:51:28 2000 Contact: Carol L. Holmes <[email protected]>

ID: I70 Name: Louisa BROWN Given Name: Louisa Surname: Brown Sex: F Birth: 1855 in Illinois Death: ABT 1884 in Texas Note: !Named as deceased in Mother's probate in 1908 (died about 20 years previous)

Father: Thomas Jefferson BROWN b: 23 SEP 1827 in ,Tazewell,Virginia
Mother: Rebecca Gilham A TUCKER b: 18 AUG 1831 in ,Wayne,Illinois

Marriage 1 Clark HUSSEY b: 1851 in of,Gentry,Missouri
Married: ABT 1875 in of,Gentry,Missouri

Sources:

Repository:
Name: Family History Library
Salt Lake City, Utah 84150
97423-1899

Title: 1880 Gentry County, Missouri Federal Census
Abbrev: 1880 Gentry County, Missouri Federal Census
Call Number: FHL film 1254687
Text: ED 281; Pg 11:Miller Township
Clark Hussy age 31 farmer
Louisa age 25 wife Kpg house
Oscar C age 4
Effie A age 2
Letha A age 10/12 Aug

Ancestry.com contains at least six databases which contain a detailed genealogy of Louisa Brown. E.g.,
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=carol-722&id=I70

To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Louisa Brown
From: "Holmes Carol" <clholmes%[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 2 Jan 2002 17:31:52 -0800

Dear Roy: I'm afraid I'm not in your league when it comes to computers. I will send my ahnentafel from Louisa Brown. I happened into Lyle Brown's web site by looking at his World Connect page on Oscar Hussey. He has done some fine and thorough research on the early Browns. It includes early wills, Revolutionary War papers, histories and photos. I am indebted to those who share their efforts. Let me know what else I can share. I am appreciative of knowing more about Jediah Clark Hussey. I will add the information and would like to include your name under source if that is OK. Please include your snail mail address if it is OK to include that as well. You mentioned being in Merced, California. We live just off highway 99 south of Sacramento in Elk Grove, CA. Best Wishes, Carol


Ahnentafel Chart for Louisa Brown (corrected and reformatted by RCL.)


First Generation

1. Louisa Brown1 was born in 1855 in Illinois. She died about 1884 in
Texas. Named as deceased in Mother's probate in 1908 (died about 20 years previous)

Louisa married Clark Hussey about 1875 probably in Gentry, Missouri. Clark was
born in 1851.

Sources

1. 1880 Gentry County, Missouri Federal Census, FHL film 1254687. "ED
281; Pg 11
Clark Hussy age 31 farmer
Louisa age 25 wife Kpg house
Oscar C age 4
Effie A age 2
Letha A age 10/12 Aug.

Second Generation

2. Thomas Jefferson Brown1,2,3 was born on 23 Sep 1827 in , Tazewell,
Virginia. He died 4 on 13 Apr 1908 in near Berlin, Gentry, Missouri and was
buried on 15 Apr 1908 in Miller Township, Gentry, Missouri. Thomas married
Rebecca Gilham A Tucker on 9 May 1849 in , Wayne, IL.

3. Rebecca Gilham A Tucker was born on 18 Aug 1831 in , Wayne, Illinois.
She died on 18 Mar 1904 in near Berlin, Gentry, Missouri and was buried on
19 Mar 1904 in Miller Township, Gentry, Missouri.

Sources

1. 1850 Wayne County, Illinois Federal Census, FHL film 0442919. "Pg 190B
or 378, District 115
Dwelling 85:
Hesakiah Brown
Dwelling 97:
T.J. Brown age 23 farmer Bp:Va
R.G. Brown age 21 Bp:Illn."

2. 1880 Gentry County, Missouri Federal Census. "ED 281; Miller Township;
Pg 11;
Dwelling 88:
Thos Brown age 52 farmer
Rebecca age 49
Ada age 14
Alice age 10
Eudora age 7
Orval age 5."

3. 1900 Gentry County, Missouri Federal Census, FHL film 1240855. "Miller
Township; ED 89; Sheet 6;
Dwelling 406:
Thomas J Brown Sep 1827 age 51 Bp:Va Fa:Va M:Va
Rebecca Aug 1830 age69 Bp:Ill Fa:Ken M:Ken
Orville Jun 1875 age24 Bp:Mo Fa:Va M:Ill."

4. Gentry Co Mo Death Notices From Area Newspapers, 1907-1909 (Northwest Missouri Genealogical Society), Sutro Library, 480 Winston Drive, San Francisco, California 94132, F 472 G4 G468 1994 v.6. Obituary of Susanna Butler Brown. "BROWN, Judge Thomas J.--died 13 April 1908, aged 80, at the home of his son Orville, north of Berlin, Mo., He was born in Wayne Co., Ill..He married Rebecca G.A. Rucker, 10 May 1849. After 4 years there, they moved to Gentry Co. (now Worth Co.) in 1853. They moved to Albany, Mo. & after 20 years, moved to 2 3/4 miles north of Berlin, Mo. & lived there for
33 years. He leaves 8 children, some are--Volney, Evona,Mo., Thomas, Ford
City, Mo.; Mrs Rebecca Butler, Gentryville, Mo.; Mrs Addie Sealey, King
City, Mo.; Mrs Alie Fore, near McFall, Mo.; Mrs Dora Clark, Ford City &
Orville. His wife died 4 years ago. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge.
Services at the Baptist Church and burial at Berlin, Mo."

Third Generation

4. Isaac Brown was born in 1783 in of Virginia. He died1 about Dec 1828.
Isaac married2 Mary (or Polly) Thompson in 1805 in , Tazewell, VA.

5. Mary (or Polly) Thompson was born in 1786 in , Tazewell, Virginia. She
died after 1862.

6. Tucker was born about 1800 in Kentucky. He married Elizabeth.

7. Elizabeth3 was born about 1803 in Kentucky.

Sources

1. Abstracts of Tazewell County Will Book #1-1800 to 1832, Pg 194. "Isaac
Brown (pg 267)Sale bill. Purchasers; Polly Brown, Willam Brown, James Peery,
Thomas Fowler, Ely Harman, Granger Harman, Henrty Carter, Daniel Day,
Franklin McGranahan, Howard Bane, Hentry Epperhart, Gideon Wright, Samuel
Carter, Buse Harman. Adm: William Brown & Erastus G. Harman."

2. Harman, Annals of Tazewell County Virginia, Pg 49, Sutro Library, 480
Winston Drive, San Francisco, California 94132.

3. 1850 Wayne County, Illinois Federal Census.
"Dwelling 96:
Edward Fountain age 72 Bp: Va farmer
Elizabeth age 47 Bp: Ky
Arminta age 13 Bp: Ill
Granville age 10 Bp: "
McDonnal age 4 Bp:

"Dwelling 97
T.J. Brown age 23 Bp: Va farmer
R.G. age 21 Bp: Ill."

Fourth Generation

8. Low or Lowe Brown Senior was born in 1756 in , of Tazewell, Virginia. He
died1 on 24 Jan 1841 in , Tazewell, Virginia. Low married Jane Davidson on 1
Mar 1782 in , Montgomery, VA.

WILL:Tazewell Co Wills;W.B.2 Pg 174
Harman:Annals of Tazewell;Pg 220,246

9. Jane Davidson was born about 1760 in of Tazewell County Virginia. She
died Between 1832&1841.

Sources

1. Harman, Annals of Tazewell County Virginia, Vol 1 Pg 246. Abstract of
will.

Fifth Generation

16. William Brown was born in 1728 in Scotland.

18. John Davidson was born in 1730 in , of Tazewell, VA. He died about
1806. John married Martha Draper.

Annals of Tazewell Co VA;Harman;Will of John Davidson;Pg 298

19. Martha Draper was born in 1734 in <of Tazewell County Virginia>.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Oscar Clark Hussey was born on 7 Sep 1875 in Probably, Gentry County, Missouri, died on 18 May 1958 at age 82, and was buried in SAYRE-DOXEY CEMETERY, Beckham, Oklahoma.

         ii.  Effie Agatha Hussey was born in Feb 1877 in Probably, Gentry County, Missouri.

        iii.  Letha Ann Hussey was born in Aug 1879 in Probably, Gentry County, Missouri.

         iv.  Hardy Brown Hussey was born on 17 Oct 1881 in , , Kansas and died on 1 Feb 1950 in , Stanislaus, California at age 68.



Jediah next married Lucy Graham Capps, daughter of William Erwin Capps and Elizabeth D. McCaskill, on 30 Jul 1885 in Harold, Wilbarger, Texas. Lucy was born on 6 Feb 1862 in , Bradley, Arkansas, died on 16 Apr 1947 at age 85, and was buried in Pioneer Cemetery, Hext, , Oklahoma.

General Notes: Source: Leggitt family records.

Birth: AFN:2J2J-48 indicates birth 1862 in Bradley, AK.

Birth: AF83-002949 indicates 1862 in Cleveland, AK. However, Cleveland County was formed from Bradley county in 1873.

In a letter to Mae Leggitt in 1963, Naomi Hussey said "Your own great-grandfather Capps was an accomplished violinist, called fiddler in the time and place in which he lived, and your grandmother Hussey played the organ by ear in her younger years. Both of them without musical education."

In 1992, Barbara Trammell provided many of the Leggitt family members a photograph of Lucy taken in the very early 1900s. I have a copy.

The 1911 obituary of her mother indicates her living in Oklahoma City.

Cheyenne Star, Cheyenne, OK 25-Apr-1947
Mrs. Lucy Husssey was born in Arkansas in 1862 and died April 16, 1947 in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Leggitt in Cheyenne. Mrs. Hussey was married to J.C. Hussey at Vernon, Texas. Later they moved to Oklahoma and homsteaded west of Sayre in 1900 where she resided up until the time of her death.
She leaves the following childen, Mrs. Inez Leggitt, Cheyenne, Oscar Leggitt, Sayre, F.T. Hussey, Sayre, Mrs. L.L. McAlpin of Silver City, New Mexico and Mrs. Gertrude Gridu of Amarillo, Texas.

On the 4th of July, 2010 Mae told me:

I don't' think I have ever told you this, but Mama once told me that Grandma Hussey would stand and put her hand over her heart when ever or where ever she was when the Star Spangled Banner was played. She also said that when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor Grandma Hussey took all the china she had that said made in Japan out to the woodpile and chopped it up with an ax.

She was very patriotic, because she had lost her son Earnest in World War I.

Ancestry.com has the following data on Lucy:

Name: Lucy Graham Capps
Birth: 6 Feb 1862 in Bradley, Arkansas, United States

1880 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Lucy Capps
Sibling:
Dora Capps
Father:
William E. Capps
Birth:
abt 1862 in Arkansas
Residence:
1880 in Lee, Dorsey, Arkansas, United States

1900 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Lucy Hussey
Spouse:
Gediah Hussey
Head of house:
Gediah Hussey
Birth:
Feb 1862 in Arkansas
Marriage:
1885
Residence:
1900 in Cass & Pottawatomie Townships, Oklahoma, Oklahoma Territory

1910 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Lucy Hussey
Spouse:
Clark Hussey
Children:
Reamer Hussey
Birth:
1862 in Arkansas
Residence:
1910 in Delhi, Beckham, Oklahoma

1920 United States Federal Census Record
Census & Voter Lists
Name:
Lucy G Hussey
Spouse:
Juidiah C Hussey
Children:
Frank T Hussey
Birth:
abt 1851 in Arkansas
Residence:
1920 in Delhi, Beckham, Oklahoma



Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Margaret Inez Hussey 1 was born on 24 May 1886 in Vernon, Wilbarger, Texas,1 died on 5 Feb 1980 in Sayre, Beckham, Oklahoma1 at age 93, and was buried on 8 Feb 1980 in Berlin Twp, Roger Mills, Oklahoma.1

         ii.  Wilma Hussey was born about 1887 and died before 1920.

        iii.  Elmer Stephen Hussey was born on 7 Mar 1888 in , , Arkansas, died on 3 Jun 1925 at age 37, and was buried in Pioneer Cemetery, Hext, , Oklahoma.

         iv.  Mabel Neva Hussey was born on 10 Jan 1890 in , , Arkansas, died on 17 Sep 1919 at age 29, and was buried in Lone Oak Cemetery, Beckham, Oklahoma.

          v.  Clara Bernice Hussey was born on 6 Dec 1891 in , , Arkansas and died on 17 Aug 1911 at age 19.

         vi.  Franzl Thomas Hussey was born on 26 Oct 1894 in , , Arkansas, died on 21 Jan 1967 at age 72, and was buried in Pioneer Cemetery, Hext, , Oklahoma.

        vii.  Naomi Elizabeth Capps Hussey was born on 19 Sep 1898 in , , Arkansas, died on 21 Aug 1972 at age 73, and was buried on 23 Aug 1972 in Fort Bliss National Cemetery, El Paso, Texas.

       viii.  Gertrude Lydia Hussey was born on 19 Jul 1901 in Erick, Beckham, Oklahoma, died on 17 May 1986 in New Boston, , Texas at age 84, and was buried on 21 May 1986 in Colonial Garden, Memorial Park Cm, Amarillo, Texas.


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2. Thomas Hussey, son of Jediah Hussey and Agatha Henley, was born on 11 Feb 1810 of Back Creek Mm, Randolph, North Carolina, died on 29 Aug 1858 at age 48, and was buried in White Lick Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

General Notes: According to The History of Guilford County, North Carolina by Sallie W. Stockard in 1902, the Quakers as early as 1772 were discussing slavery and the sin of it; and in 1774 they freed their slaves. They chartered a ship, The Sally Ann, to transport their slaves to Hayti, where they might be free.

Early in the nineteenth century the Quakers participated in organized efforts to protect and restore the freedom of those negroes kidnapped and sold into slavery. Some also participated in the underground railroad that helped slaves escape to the north.

Needless to say, slaveholders themselves indulged in heavy threats which intimidated many non-slaveholders, including many who had no knowledge of the underground railroad. Though these were innocent, they could not endure the sentiment. They started a migration to the Northwest. Whole counties in Indiana and Ohio were peopled by Guilford County stock and their homes were left vacant. The first emigrants went west by horseback, with pack horses, following the buffalo trails. These animals had come to Guilford to feed on the great peavine pastures in the winter. In the spring they went again to the northward, fording the Buffalo Creek, the Haw River, the Dan River, at the best fords. Buffalo trails and buffalo fords were an advantage to those seeking outlet westward.

About 1830, four hundred families went west from Guilford County. The efficient cause was slavery, the old, old story of the time. It was probably with this group that the young Thomas Hussey, his widowed mother, and two sisters began their migration from North Carolina to the White Lick Monthly Meeting in Morgan County, Indiana.

Whole families and monthly meetings went west from Guilford. Deep River Monthly Meeting, Dover Monthly Meeting, Springfield Monthly Meeting, New Garden Monthly Meeting were impoverished by the constant drain of migration.

The census of 1850 brought out the fact that nearly one-third of the population of Indiana was from North Carolina, while Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Kansas each had a large number of Carolinians.

Birth date: Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Mill Creek Monthly Meetings, Hendrix County, Indiana.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I.
1832, 5, 30. Back Creek MM - Thomas granted certificate to White Lick MM, Morgan Co., Ind.

1832, 12, 12. White Lick MM - Thomas received on certificate from Back Creen MM, NC.

CD#2, Marriages of ... Indiana, indicates Thomas Hussey married Aletha Benbow in Hendricks County, Indiana on 02-Oct-1834.

1835, 4, 15. White Lick MM - Thomas marriage out of unity. Condemned on his misconduct.
1835, 6, 17. White Lick MM - Aletha (form Benbow) marrige out of unity. Condemned on her misconduct.

Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Mill Creek Monthly Meetings, Hendrix County, Indiana.

1849, 7,18. White Lick MM - Thomas & family granted certificate to Mill Creek MM.
1849, 8, 11. Thomas and wife Aletha and children Stephen, William, Jesse, John, Lydia, and Jediah received on certificate from White Lick MM.
1850, 7, 13. Thomas and wife Aletha and children Stephen, William, Jesse, John, Lydia and Jediah granted certificate to White Lick MM.
1850, 7, 17. Thomas and wife Aletha and children Stephen, William, Jesse, John, Lydia, and Judiah received on certificate from Mill Creek MM.

1850 Hendricks County, IN census, page 087, family 76, indicates name as Thussey Hussey, age 40, farmer with real estate valued at $3150, born in North Carolina. Aletha and all children except Ann and Rebecca are indicated in the census.

Death: Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Mill Creek Monthly Meetings, Hendrix County, Indiana.

This reference also contains a complete reference to the births of Thomas, Aleatha, and their eight children.

Since both Thomas and Aletha died in 1857-8 while still quite young, it is of interest that in 1857-59 there was a worldwide influenza epidemics (one of disease's greatest).

Thomas married Aletha Benbow on 2 Oct 1834 in , Hendricks, Indiana. Aletha was born on 17 Feb 1815 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina, died on 7 Jul 1857 at age 42, and was buried in Mill Creek Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Stephen Hussey was born on 4 Aug 1835 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana.

         ii.  Ann Hussey was born in 1837 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana, died in 1841 at age 4, and was buried on 3 Feb 1841 in White Lick Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

        iii.  William Hussey was born on 18 Aug 1839 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana.

         iv.  Jesse Hussey was born on 15 Jul 1841 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana, died on 19 Jan 1860 at age 18, and was buried in White Lick Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

          v.  John Hussey was born on 30 Mar 1843 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana, died on 22 May 1862 at age 19, and was buried in Philadelphia, , Pennsylvania, Army Service.

         vi.  Lydia Hussey was born on 30 May 1845 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana.

1       vii.  Jediah Clark Hussey (born on 25 Mar 1848 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana - died on 23 Mar 1924 in Vernon, Wilbarger, Texas)

       viii.  Rebecca J. Hussey was born on 26 Jun 1855 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana.


3. Aletha Benbow, daughter of William Benbow and Catharine Hunt, was born on 17 Feb 1815 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina, died on 7 Jul 1857 at age 42, and was buried in Mill Creek Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

General Notes: Batch #: 7816509, Sheet #: 85, Source Call #: 1126329

Birth: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I, NC.

Death: Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Mill Creek Monthly Meetings, Hendrix County, Indiana.

There is a web site at http://www.benbowfamily.com/getperson.php?personID=I65&tree=B1 entitled History of the Benbow Family of the United Kingdom, and Selected Allied Families that has additional information on Aletha's Benbow line.

Aletha married Thomas Hussey on 2 Oct 1834 in , Hendricks, Indiana. Thomas was born on 11 Feb 1810 of Back Creek Mm, Randolph, North Carolina, died on 29 Aug 1858 at age 48, and was buried in White Lick Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.
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4. Jediah Hussey, son of John Hussey and Mary Jessop, was born in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died before 1821.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina 1784, 08, 28 New Garden MM granted certificate to Warrenton MM, Pa.
1793, 09, 28 New Garden MM received on certificate from York MM, Pa.
1794, 6, 28 New Garden MM granted certificate to Back Creek MM to marry.
1794, 7, 28 Back Creek MM granted certificate to marry Agatha Henley.
1796, 3, 26 New Garden MM granted certificate to Back Creek MM.
1796, 6, 25 Back Creek MM Received on certificate from New Garden MM, dated
1796,3,26.
1821, 10, 31 Back Creek MM Jediah was deceased at marriage of daughter Nancy.
Minutes indicated Agatha was from Randolph County.

Source of all children's birth and death years - Teri Studham - Bellevue, WA 10/22/92

Note: The lineage from this Judiah back to the immigrant Christopher is confirmed by Descendants of Hunt, Woolman, Borton, Beals, Mills, Hussey, Jessup, Small, Chipman, Shields which is located in the Lilly Library, Earlham College, Richmond, IN, and is contained on LDS microfilm 1561672.

The Genealogical Journal of the Randolph County Historical Society, Vol I, 2, 1977 indicates the 1799 List of Taxables included:

Judiah Hussey, 800 acres.

Jediah married Agatha Henley on 28 Jul 1794 in Back Creek Mm, , North Carolina. Agatha was born on 8 May 1774 in Of, Randolph, North Carolina and died in 1848 at age 74.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Nancy Hussey was born in 1797 of Back Creek Mm, Randolph, North Carolina and died in 1864 at age 67.

         ii.  Jesse Hussey was born in 1799 of Back Creek, Randolph, North Carolina and died in 1869 at age 70.

        iii.  Mary Hussey was born in 1801 of Back Creek Mm, Randolph, North Carolina and died in 1844 at age 43.

         iv.  John Hussey was born in 1803 of Back Creek, Randolph, North Carolina and died in 1887 at age 84.

          v.  Rebecca Hussey was born in 1805 of Back Creek, Randolph, North Carolina.

         vi.  Judiah Hussey was born on 14 Oct 1807 of Back Creek, Randolph, North Carolina, died on 15 Oct 1870 at age 63, and was buried in Sugar Grove.

2       vii.  Thomas Hussey (born on 11 Feb 1810 of Back Creek Mm, Randolph, North Carolina - died on 29 Aug 1858, buried in White Lick Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana)

       viii.  Lydia Hussey was born on 7 Apr 1813 and was buried on 13 Aug 1840 in White Lick, Hendricks, Indiana.

         ix.  Agatha Hussey was born about 1823 in Of, Rush, Indiana and died in 1872 about age 49.


5. Agatha Henley, daughter of Jesse Henley and Ann Pretow Crew, was born on 8 May 1774 in Of, Randolph, North Carolina and died in 1848 at age 74.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina.

1794, 7, 28. Back Creek MM - Agatha, daughter of Jesse and Ann, Randolph co., married Judiah Hussey.

1832, 7, 25. Agatha and family requested certificate from Back Creek MM to White Lick MM, Morgan County, IN.

Source: Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana.

1832, 11, 14. White Lick MM - Agatha and daughters Agatha and Lydia received on certificate from Back Creek MM, NC.
1841, 3, 17. White Lick MM - Agatha and Agatha Jr granted certificate to Walnut Ridge MM.
1841, 3, 20. Walnut Ridge MM - Agatha and daughter Agatha received on certificate from White Lick MM, Ind.

Agatha married Jediah Hussey on 28 Jul 1794 in Back Creek Mm, , North Carolina. Jediah was born in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died before 1821.

6. William Benbow, son of Thomas Benbow and Hannah Stanley, was born on 10 Dec 1789 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

General Notes: Source of all children and birth dates: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I, NC, New Garden MM.

1813, 12, 29. William, son of Thomas and Hannah, Guilford County, married Catharine Hunt.
1830, 8, 28. William and family granted certificate to White Lick MM, Indiana.

William married Catharine Hunt on 29 Dec 1813 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina. Catharine was born on 23 Jul 1791 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina, died on 19 Jun 1839 at age 47, and was buried in Mill Creek Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

Children from this marriage were:

3         i.  Aletha Benbow (born on 17 Feb 1815 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina - died on 7 Jul 1857, buried in Mill Creek Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana)

         ii.  Admiral Benbow was born on 18 Jul 1816 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

        iii.  Elam Benbow was born on 16 Mar 1818 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 18 Dec 1896 in Amo, , Indiana at age 78.

         iv.  Abel Benbow was born on 8 Oct 1819 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 16 Jan 1892 in , , Indiana at age 72.

          v.  Therza Benbow was born on 25 Apr 1822 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina, died on 6 Mar 1850 at age 27, and was buried in Spring Mh, , Indiana.

         vi.  William Stanley Benbow was born on 25 Dec 1824 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina, died on 2 May 1866 at age 41, and was buried in Springs Mtg Hous, Hendricks, Indiana.

        vii.  Caty Ann Benbow was born on 13 May 1827 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.


7. Catharine Hunt, daughter of Eleazar Hunt and Nancy Ann Newby, was born on 23 Jul 1791 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina, died on 19 Jun 1839 at age 47, and was buried in Mill Creek Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana.

General Notes: Death: Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Mill Creek Monthly Meetings, Hendrix County, Indiana.

Catharine married William Benbow on 29 Dec 1813 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina. William was born on 10 Dec 1789 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.
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8. John Hussey, son of John Hussey and Margaret Record, was born about 1725 of Kennet, Chester, Pennsylvania and died on 7 Feb 1781 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina about age 56.

General Notes: In Ancestors and Descendants of of Jehu Cox, by Wayne D. Stout, Stout explains in 1745 in Warrington, York County, Pennsylvania, a live Quaker community, was the home of the Cox, Hussey, and Garretson families. These clans had stuck together for generations. Many inter-marriages had cemented the tribe into a solid unit. In about 1755 the three families moved to Cane Creek, Orange County, North Carolina, a distance of 300 miles. Cane Creek was a real Mecca for the Society of Friends. These Quakers hoped to establish a new Zion amongst the slave holders of the South. A Quaker Meeting was organized and a progressive community sprang into existence. Like the Mormons in Jackson County, the Quakers soon found themselves surrounded by intolerant neighbors. The slaveholders looked with suspicion on these strange people whose religion opposed slavery. Suspicion led to antagonism and conflicts. Finally, persecution became so violent the Quakers abandoned Cane Creek and settled in eastern Tennessee, Kentucky, and western Virginia.

However, from the Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, we know our line moved from the Cane Creek MM to the New Garden MM in 1772 where John died in 1781. His son Jediah moved the line to Back Creek MM, Randolph County, in 1796 It was his grandson Thomas (son of Jediah) who took our line from Randolph County, North Carolina, to the White Lick MM in Morgan County, Indiana, in 1832

Source of marriage: NC IGI 1988.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I, North Carolina 10-20-1759 Warrington MM, PA John requested certificate to New Garden (?), NC 05-03-1760 Cane Creek MM John Jr. received on certificate.
Warrington MM John produced certificate from Cane Creek. 11-10-1764 Warrington MM John Jr. granted certificate to Cane Creek. 05-09-1766 Cane Creek MM John, Orange Co., son of John, Pa., m Mary Jessop 10-03-1772 Cane Creek MM John & family granted certificate to New Garden MM 10-31-1772 New Garden MM John & family received on certificate from Cane Cree 02-07-1781 New Garden MM John died.

LDS Microfilm 1561672 confirms the lineage from John HUSSEY of Dorking, England to the children of this union. This film is also the source of the spouses of most of these children.

The text contained on the microfilm is an oasis of information. The title is: Descendants of HUNT WOOLMAN BORTON BEALS MILLS HUSSEY JESSUP SMALL CHIPMAN SHIELDS by Edna Harvey Jospeh et al.

In July 1993 I found something very interesting about this John Hussey. He served as a private in the Revolutionary War. This seems totally inconsistent with his obvious status as a Quaker. This information is contained in The Roster of Texas Daughters Revolutionary Ancestors, 1976. I will quote the complete entry since I will use this information as the source for his birth and other information pertaining to the family.

Page 1125

HUSSEY, JOHN, born 1737, Nantucket, Mass. died February 7, 1781, in Guilford County, N.C., married May 9, 1766, Mary Jessup, born December 5, 1740, died November 10, 1821.
SERVICE: Private, Evans' Company 1776, 3 year Muster August, 1779, Colonel
Abraham Shepherd's 10th N.C. Regiment; from Guilford County, N.C. CHILDREN: 1. Thomas, born May 21, 1767, married (1) Hannah McPherson, (2)
Kate Stanley.
2. John, born May 21, 1767, married Mary Thornburgh.
3. Sarah, born September 21, 1769, married Aron Coffin.
4. Jediah, born September 21, 1769, married Maggie Henley.
5. Lydia, born July 29, 1771, married _____ Cook.
6. Mary, born March 19, 1773, married Wiley Babb.
7. Christopher, born December 4, 1774, married J. Brown.
8. Stephen, born June 6, 1776, married Rebecca _____.
9. Rebecca, born September 9, 1778, married Henry Thornburgh.
10. Ann, born June 14, 1781, married _____ Starbuck.
11. Joseph, born June 14, 1781, married Sallie Mock.
MEMBERS: Rebecca Sue Earl, No. 565560.
Bonnie Earl Barnes, No. 565559.
Ruth Harmeier Earl, No. 439810.

The MEMBERS: entry indicates these three individuals have used this John Hussey as their patiot, justifying their acceptance into the Daughters of the American Revolution.

I personally am not comfortable with the location of John Hussey's birth indicated here. His parents were married at the Warrington MM in York County, Pennsylvania. Also, the Warrington Quakers arrived in Guilford County beginning in 1750. The Nantucket Quakers did not arrive until about 1771.

John married Mary Jessop on 7 May 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina. Mary was born on 5 Dec 1740 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died in 1821 at age 81.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Thomas Hussey was born on 21 May 1767 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

         ii.  John Hussey was born on 21 May 1767 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 17 May 1816 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 48.

4       iii.  Jediah Hussey (christened on 2 Sep 1769, born in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina - died before 1821)

         iv.  Sarah Hussey was born on 2 Sep 1769 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

          v.  Lydia Hussey was born on 29 Jul 1771 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         vi.  Mary Hussey was born on 19 Mar 1773 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

        vii.  Christopher Hussey was born on 4 Dec 1774 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 17 Jun 1775.

       viii.  Stephen Hussey was born on 16 Jun 1776 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 23 Jul 1843 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 67.

         ix.  Rebecca Hussey was born on 29 Sep 1778 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

          x.  Amos Hussey was born on 4 Jun 1781 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

         xi.  Ann Hussey was born on 4 Jun 1781 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

        xii.  Jesse Hussey was born on 4 Jun 1781 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

       xiii.  Joseph Hussey was born on 4 Jun 1781 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 5 Oct 1814 at age 33.


9. Mary Jessop, daughter of Thomas Jessop and Sarah Small, was born on 5 Dec 1740 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died in 1821 at age 81.

General Notes: Source: The NC IGI list Mary Jessop and John Hussey as the parents of many of the same children that the New Garden (NC) Monthly Meeting list with parents of John and Mary Hussey. Therefore the name of Mary Jessop is confirmed.

Source: Vena Wilson (MF#0854151).

Mrs. Wilson uses Mary Jessop Hussey as the basis for DAR membership for Cynthia Ann Hunt Wilson. "The said Mary Jessup Hussey is the ancestor who assisted in establishing American independence, by furnishing supplies to the malitia of South Carolina, Virginia, and North Carolina. Reference: Military record Vol. A, p.282. Accounts of the U.S. with North Carolina War of the Revolution.
This Vol. is in N. Car. Historical Commission, Raleigh, N.C."

Mrs. Wilson indicates this is a "supplimental line". She said you have the same Number that you received with your first D.A.R papers. Any other lines you may have are called supplimental. Apparently Cynthia Ann Hunt Willson's DAR Lineage papers trace through her father's family the Hunts. Her National Number D.A.R. number 270702.

Mary married John Hussey on 7 May 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina. John was born about 1725 of Kennet, Chester, Pennsylvania and died on 7 Feb 1781 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina about age 56.

10. Jesse Henley, son of John Henley and Isabell Newby, was born in 1725 in Of, Randolph, North Carolina and died on 12 Jul 1801 at age 76.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volumen I North Carolina.

Jesse and Ann Henley with their six children are listed in the Center MM, NC.

Source: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, 1976. Jesse Henley (b. ca 1727/28; d. July 12, 1801). W/1, Oct. 5, 1750, Mary Jones (b. Apr. 24, 1729), dtr of Peter Jones and Mary Pierce; w/2, Jan 15, 1763, Ann (Crew) Pretlow, dtr of John Crew, relick of Joshua Pretlow. Children by 2nd marriage: Isabel; John (w Keziah Nixon, dtr of Phineas Nixon); Milicent (w Phineas Nixon, son of Phineas Nixon); Jesse: Gabriel; Agatha Henley.

1750, 7, 6. Pasquotank MM - Jesse requested certificate to Perquimans MM to marry.

1750, 10, 5. Perquimans MM - Jesse (Henly) produced certificate from Pasquotank Co., to marry.

1750, 10, 5. Jesse (Henly) reported married to Mary Jones.

1752, 12, 7. Pasquotank MM - Jesse requested approval of the meeting to have an orphan child bound to him by request of its mother.

1757, 4, 7. Pasquotank MM - Jesse chosen overseer.

1761, 10, 9. Mary Rattliff, widow of Joseph Henley complained of Jesse Henley in behalf of their children.

1763, 1, 6. Pasquotank MM - Jesse requested certificate to Surry Co. MM, Va.
, to marry.

1765, 4, 4. Pasquotank MM - Jesse and his wife reported removed to New Garden MM, without certificate and with complaint against them outstanding.

1765, 12, 5. Pasquotank MM - Jesse and wife condemned their differences and requested certificate to New Garden MM.

1766, 11, 29. New Garden MM - Jesse received on certificate from Pasquotank MM, NC, dated 1765, 12, 5.

Jesse married Ann Pretow Crew on 15 Jan 1763 in Surry Mm, Surry, Virginia. Ann was born about 1727 of Surry Mm, Surry, Virginia and died on 7 Jun 1798 in , Randolph, North Carolina about age 71.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Isabell Henley was born on 12 Sep 1763 in Center Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         ii.  John Henley was born on 27 Dec 1766 in Center Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 2 Jun 1834 in Back Creek Mm, Randolph, North Carolina at age 67.

        iii.  Milicent Henley was born on 12 Feb 1769 in Center Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         iv.  Jesse Henley was born on 16 Aug 1770 in Center Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

          v.  Gabriel Henley was born on 11 Jun 1772 in Center Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

5        vi.  Agatha Henley (born on 8 May 1774 in Of, Randolph, North Carolina - died in 1848)


11. Ann Pretow Crew, daughter of John Crews and Agatha Ellyson, was born about 1727 of Surry Mm, Surry, Virginia and died on 7 Jun 1798 in , Randolph, North Carolina about age 71.

General Notes: 1753, 6, 2. Henrico MM. Joshua Pretlo produced certificate from Black Water MM to marry Ann Crew.
1753, 7, 7. Henrico MM. Ann Crew reported married to Joshua Pretlo.
1763, 1, 15. Black Water MM. Ann Pretlow liberated to marry Jesse Henley.

Here is an interesting message I received from a cousin on the Internet in 1995.

From: Grand Wazoo <[email protected]>
X-Sender: fugazi@netcom8
To: Roy Leggitt <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Richard M. NIXON genealogy?
X-UIDL: 809455318.006

On Wed, 16 Aug 1995, Roy Leggitt wrote:

Buster,

By chance I have Hussey and Henley lines myself, in fact, my grandmother is a Hussey. I have that line from her back to the 1400s.

I am attaching an ahnentafel chart of my Henley line. I started it with Nixon Henley so it would cover a lot of what I have. Jesse Henley and Ann > Pretlow Crew are my ancestors.

I have quite a bit more information on the Henley line. Can your program import a GEDCOM file? If so, I can send you my Henley information that way. >
Roy

Hey cousin

Nixon Henley was my great great great grandfather. I'm descended through his son Thomas Bogue Henley (m Ruth (Fairfax) Montgomery), to their son Lindley Hoag Henley (m. Unity Ursula Shirley), to their son Murray Jay Henley (m. Louisa Battle Winston), to their daughter Marion Winston Henley (my mom).

I assume that you are aware of "The Saga of the Family and Descendants of David Vestal Henley and Eleanor Lassiter of Randolph County, North Carolina" by Eleanor Parker Bell. That is where I learned most of my Henley line (augmented by some deductions based upon Hinshaw). It is out of print, and the author passed away last year, so I have not been able to locate a copy for myself, but there must be a few out there. Until I began this research this year, my family knew nothing of its heritage beyond my great grandfather Lindley Henley (the Quaker roots were a seldom-heard and little-acknowledged rumor), so it was a revelation to stumble upon a copy of Ms. Bell's book in the Library of Congress. I wish I could see her notes, as my great grandmother's (Ruth Fairfax Montgomery) life and death have remained an enduring mystery.

You have added several heretofore unknown links to the Crew line, and I thank you. This is the mythical "Cherokee Princess" part of the family line. John Crew undertook missionary exploration in the Appalachian Mountain region with another man named (as I recall) John Elmore. That man married an Indian woman named (again, as I recall) An-Nah Wah-kah, and they had several children that were accepted by the Quaker community upon their return. Family legend has it that Ann Crew was actually a daughter of John Elmore and his Indian bride, named Sarah Ann Elmore, and that she was adopted by John Crew upon the death of his friend. Ms. Bell states that she followed up on all known children of the Elmores, and that there is no basis for this story. I think all pioneer families from the southeast have a "Cherokee Princess" story tucked away somewhere - a genealogical version of an urban myth, I guess. A friend tells me that, in Oklahoma, it is not uncommon to see T-shirts that read "Congratulations on your Ancestor who was an Indian Princess", so I guess there's some basis in that classification.

Anyway, I've gotten long-winded. My program has no problem with Gedcom files, and I'd be delighted to see what you have. I'll see if I can isolate the relevant part of my database so that I can send it to you in gedcom. I have done a fair amount of reconstruction on the Nixon, Bogue, Mayo, and other lines from Hinshaw and from LDS IGI. I'd love to know how it was that two groups arrived independently in different parts of the U.S., with Nixons, Husseys, Milhouses, et. al. I'm confident that we can clear that up somehow. I have the N.C. Nixons back to England through Phineas to Zachariah b 1684 d 1739 (m Elizabeth Symons b~1690 d 1725) to Zachariah d 1691 (m Elizabeth Page) to Zachariah of Nottingham, England, all based upon Hinshaw's abstracts.

I'll send you what I have as soon as I can. I'm sure we'll find a connection to R.M. Nixon if we can take his Nixon line back to England/U.K.
as well.

Thanks for the followup, and in advance for the file. I've never met a cousin electronically before ;)

Buster Harvey
[email protected]

This Indian Princess story could possibly explain the story that my grandmother Inez Hussey Leggitt told about us having Indian blood. Her father, Jediah Clark Hussey was Ann Crew's great grandson and he could have easily told his granddaughter this story.

If Ann was in fact the daughter of John Elmore, the following Rootsweb ancestry applies: Contact: calvin kitchens <[email protected]>
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 1
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. SARAH ANN ELMORE was born 1735. She was the daughter of 2. JOHN ELMORE and 3. AN-NAH WAH-KAH. She married JOSHUA PRETLOW.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. JOHN ELMORE was born JULY 10, 1698 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA, and died 1757 in VIRGINIA. He was the son of 4. THOMAS ELMORE and 5. MARY UNKNOWN.

3. AN-NAH WAH-KAH.

Children of AN-NAH WAH-KAH and JOHN ELMORE are:
i. JOHN ELMORE.
1. ii. SARAH ANN ELMORE was born 1735. She married JOSHUA PRETLOW.
iii. MARTHA ELMORE was born SEPTEMBER 15, 1738, and died SEPTEMBER 8, 1817. She married HEZEKIAH SANDERS 1757 in HANOVER COUNTY, GEORGIA.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. THOMAS ELMORE was born 1669 in VIRGINIA, and died 1729. He was the son of 8. THOMAS ELMORE and 9. REBECCA AUSTIN.

5. MARY UNKNOWN.

Children of MARY UNKNOWN and THOMAS ELMORE are:
i. DAVID ELMORE.
ii. JAMES ELMORE.
iii. ROBERT ELMORE.
iv. ELIZABETH ELMORE was born 1692 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA. She married THOMAS MOORE.
v. AUSTIN ELMORE was born 1694 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA.
2. vi. JOHN ELMORE was born JULY 10, 1698 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA, and died 1757 in VIRGINIA. He married AN-NAH WAH-KAH 1733.
vii. THOMAS ELMORE was born MARCH 29, 1700 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA, and died MARCH 19, 1749 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA. He married CECILIA "CECILY" ELLYSON JULY 9, 1729 in NORTH CAROLINA.
viii. MARY ELMORE was born AUGUST 20, 1703 in NEW KENT COUNTY, VIRGINIA.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. THOMAS ELMORE was born JULY 11, 1631 in GLATTON, ENGLAND, and died AFTER 1704 in NEW KENT, VIRGINIA.

9. REBECCA AUSTIN. She was the daughter of 18. JAMES AUSTIN.

Children of REBECCA AUSTIN and THOMAS ELMORE are:
i. PETER ELMORE was born 1678 in YORK, VIRGINIA, and died MARCH 26, 1730 in NEW KENT, VIRGINIA. He married REBECCA HARRIS 1696 in NEW KENT, VIRGINIA. She was born 1674 in YORK, VIRGINIA, and died JULY 1746 in HENRICO, VIRGINIA.
4. ii. THOMAS ELMORE was born 1669 in VIRGINIA, and died 1729. He married MARY UNKNOWN.
iii. REBECCA ELMORE.
iv. ELIZABETH ELMORE. She married THOMAS MOORE.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ahnentafel, Generation No. 5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
18. JAMES AUSTIN.

Child of JAMES AUSTIN is:
9. i. REBECCA AUSTIN. She married THOMAS ELMORE BEFORE 1668 in YORK, VIRGINIA. He was born JULY 11, 1631 in GLATTON, ENGLAND, and died AFTER 1704 in NEW KENT, VIRGINIA.

Ann married Jesse Henley on 15 Jan 1763 in Surry Mm, Surry, Virginia. Jesse was born in 1725 in Of, Randolph, North Carolina and died on 12 Jul 1801 at age 76.

Ann next married Joshua Pretlow on 2 Jun 1753 in Henrico, Virginia, Virginia.


12. Thomas Benbow, son of Charles Benbow and Mary Carver, was born on 2 Jan 1762 in , Bladen County, North Carolina and died on 2 Feb 1825 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 63.

General Notes: Source of marriage and first three children and birth dates: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I, NC, New Garden MM.

1778, 7, 4. Cane Creek MM. Thomas granted certificate to New Garden MM, NC. 1787, 3, 24. New Garden MM. Thomas, Guilford County, son of Charles and Mary married Hannah Stanley.

Thomas married Hannah Stanley on 24 Mar 1787. Hannah was born on 2 Jan 1762 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 25 Dec 1832 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 70.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Charles Benbow was born on 6 Dec 1787 in , Guilford, North Carolina, died on 24 Jul 1868 at age 80, and was buried in , Guilford, North Carolina, , Dover Friends Cemetery.

6        ii.  William Benbow (born on 10 Dec 1789 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina)

        iii.  Elizabeth Benbow was born on 17 Jan 1792 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died in 1850 at age 58.

         iv.  Thomas Benbow was born on 11 Sep 1797 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 28 Mar 1878 at age 80.

          v.  Sarah Ann Benbow was born on 2 May 1799 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 6 Apr 1865 at age 65.


13. Hannah Stanley, daughter of William Stanley and Elizabeth Walker, was born on 2 Jan 1762 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 25 Dec 1832 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 70.

Hannah married Thomas Benbow on 24 Mar 1787. Thomas was born on 2 Jan 1762 in , Bladen County, North Carolina and died on 2 Feb 1825 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 63.

14. Eleazar Hunt, son of Eleazer Hunt and Catharine Cox, was born on 30 Dec 1766 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 7 Oct 1846 in , Mill Creek, Indiana at age 79.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volumen I North Carolina.

Source: Vena Wilson (MF#0854151).

Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Part Six, by Willard Heiss, on page 161 lists Eleazer's two marriages, death, and children.

Eleazar married Nancy Ann Newby on 22 Feb 1789 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina. Nancy was born on 15 Jan 1771 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 5 May 1816 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 45.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  William Hunt was born on 5 Jan 1790 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

7        ii.  Catharine Hunt (born on 23 Jul 1791 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina - died on 19 Jun 1839, buried in Mill Creek Mtg, Hendricks, Indiana)

        iii.  Elizabeth Hunt was born on 1 Jul 1793 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         iv.  Newby Hunt was born on 23 May 1797 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

          v.  Abner Hunt was born on 27 Sep 1799 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         vi.  Eleazer Hunt was born on 24 Nov 1802 in Mill Creek Mm, Hendricks, Indiana and died on 23 Dec 1815 in , , North Carolina at age 13.

        vii.  Ann Hunt was born on 6 Feb 1804 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 28 Aug 1820 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 16.

       viii.  Cyrus Hunt was born on 10 Nov 1805 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         ix.  Alfred Hunt was born on 5 Jan 1808 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

          x.  Amiel Hunt was born on 21 Jun 1810 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

         xi.  Eber Hunt was born on 20 Jun 1812 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

Eleazar next married Susanna Clemmons on 13 Aug 1817 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina. Susanna was born on 15 Nov 1775, died on 9 Aug 1848 at age 72, and was buried in Milford Meeting.

General Notes: Widow and daughter of Peter and Comfort Clemmons.


15. Nancy Ann Newby, daughter of William Newby and Elizabeth Ratcliff, was born on 15 Jan 1771 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 5 May 1816 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 45.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volume I North Carolina.

Vena Wilson refers to her as "Anna".

Nancy married Eleazar Hunt on 22 Feb 1789 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina. Eleazar was born on 30 Dec 1766 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 7 Oct 1846 in , Mill Creek, Indiana at age 79.
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16. John Hussey, son of John Hussey II and Ann Inskeep, was born on 30 Oct 1703 and died in 1770 in Newberry Twp, York, Pennsylvania at age 67.

General Notes: Source: The Epistle Vol I #8, Feb 1975. Marriage date is from IGI. However, the IGI also has a John Hussey and Margaret Riccord married in 1773 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

Marriage: IGI indicates 1773, which is unrealistic. Several references including the Epistle and The Batchelor Family News-Journal indicate 1733.

Richard Milhous Nixon descends from the 1733 union.

1749, 6, 5. Kennett MM, PA John chm for marrying out of unity.
1749, 7, 2. Kennett MM, PA John granted certificate to Warrington MM.
1764, 2, 4. Cane Creek MM, NC John granted certificate.

It appears that John Hussey and Margaret Riccord remained in the Chester County, PA until Margaret died sometime prior to 1749. The source of John's an Margaret's children is the IGI.

In 1749 John married Elizabeth, not within the church, and moved to Warrington in York County. The information about thier children is circumstantial. The text 100 Years at Warrington indicate five children born to John and Betty Hussey between the years of 1751 and 1759. Since this is the decade they spent in Warrington and Betty is a common derivitive of Elizabeth, I feel it is a valid assumption. Ms. Marie Mimbs, of Pompano Beach, FL, substantiates this when she confirmed that John's and Elizabeth's last child is Betty, born 3 Nov 1759, the same as listed in 100 Years at Warrington.

John and Elizabeth, along with John's sons John and Stephen, and brother Christopher and his family, probably migrated to Orange County, NC, by 1760

According to Marie Mimbs, John Jr. produced a certificate from Newark 4-15-1749 dated 7-2-1749; also an acknowledgement for marriage by a priest to one not a member. Elizabeth Hussey, his wife, requested to be received into membership which was granted after consideration on 10-21-1757. John Hussey was appointed overseer by Newberry MM 8-20-1757. They requested a certificate to North Carolina 10-20-1759 also Robert Hodgen and his wife which was John's Aunt Theodate Hussey Hodgen and Uncle. John Jr. died by 1783 so it was stated on the marriage records of thier daughter Betty 12-1783. Marie Mimbs confirms the names and birth dates of John's and Elizabeth's four children and Betty's marriage to Daniel Price.

John returned to York County, PA, probably in 1764, and died there in 1770.

According to Marie Mimbs, John Hussey's will is as follows:

I, John Husey of Newberry Township in the County of York and the Province of Pennsylvania being sick and weak in body but through mercy of sound and well disposing mind and memory and calling to mind the undertainty of time and the moralitiy of this frail body, do therefore make this my Last Will and Testament in manner and form following, that is to say I commend my soul to God who gave hoping for redemption through Jesus Christ Our Lord, and my body to be buried in a Christian like manner by my Executors and as touching my worldly Goods, I give and bequeath them in the following manner, That is to say, That first of all my will and desire is that all my just debts and funeral Expenses be honestly and paid as soon as possible after my decease-- Item I give and bequeath unto my Daughter Mary Updegraff Wife of Samuel Updegraff of York town, twenty shillings Pennsylvania Currency.
Item I give and bequeath to my son Ricord Husey the following plantation and track of land to wit part in Manor Township and part in Newberry Township aforesaid Beginning ...
Item I give and bequeath unto my son John Husey of North Carolina the sum of one hundred pounds lawful money of Pennsylvania to be payed by my Executors as soon after my death as the money can be payed by the Sale of the place I now live on.
Item I give and bequeath unto my Daughter Margaret Husey the sum of twenty pounds lawful money of Pennsylvania to be paid her by my Executors.
Item I give and bequeath unto my Daughtor Elizabeth Husey the sum of Thirty pounds of lawful money to be paid by my Executors.
Item my will and desire is and I hereby order that all the residue and Remainder of my Estate after my just debts funeral charges and Legacies aforesaid by paid be equally divided between my two sons Nathan Husey and George Husey share and share alike but if they or either of them should die before they arrive at the ages of twenty one years that then the sale of the deceased be equally dividied between my two sons Riccord Husey and Jedaiah Husey and their heirs.
...
And lastly I hereby Appoint, Nominate Constitute and appoint my son Riccord Hussey my just and loving friend William Matthew as my Executors of this my Last Will and Testament hereby revoking all former Will and Wills by me heretofore made.
In Witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and Seal this day of the month in the year One Thousand Seven Hunddred and Sixty-Seven 1767.
John Hussey
Signed Sealed Published and declared by the above mentioned John Husey as and for his Last Will and Testament in the presence of us who hereunto subscribed our names as Witnesses.
John Garretson
John Garretson Jr
Samuel Miller

Probated and proved 29 day of January 1770.

John married Margaret Record in 1733 in Hampton, York, Pennsylvania.

Children from this marriage were:

8         i.  John Hussey (born about 1725 of Kennet, Chester, Pennsylvania - died on 7 Feb 1781 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina)

         ii.  Mary Hussey was born about 1726.

        iii.  Jedediah Hussey was born in 1740 in New Castle, , Delaware and died on 13 Dec 1828 in , York, Pennsylvania at age 88.

         iv.  Riccord Hussey was born after 1733 and died on 5 Apr 1784 in Warrington Twp, York, Pennsylvania.

          v.  Stephen Hussey

         vi.  Christopher Hussey

John next married Elizabeth in 1749 in Kennett, Chester, Pennsylvania.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Margaret Hussey was born on 7 Jan 1750/51 in Warrington Mm, York, Pennsylvania.

         ii.  Nathan Hussey was born on 16 Jul 1755 in Warrington Mm, York, Pennsylvania.

        iii.  George Hussey was born on 9 Mar 1758 in Warrington Mm, York, Pennsylvania.

         iv.  Elizabeth (Betty) Hussey was born on 3 Nov 1759 in Warrington Mm, York, Pennsylvania and died on 25 Mar 1847 at age 87.


17. Margaret Record, daughter of Record and Unknown,.

General Notes: The Epistle, Vol 1 # 18 spells the name RECORD, the IGI spells it RICCORD. However, the IGI does have a Record HUSSEY listed.

Margaret married John Hussey in 1733 in Hampton, York, Pennsylvania. John was born on 30 Oct 1703 and died in 1770 in Newberry Twp, York, Pennsylvania at age 67.

18. Thomas Jessop, son of Thomas Jessop and Rachel Pease, was born on 10 Jul 1715 in , , , England, died on 13 Dec 1783 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 68, and was buried in New Garden Cem., , Guilford Co., North Carolina.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

Exactly when Thomas Jessup moved from Perquimans County to Orange County (which later included Guilford County) is not certain. Records show real estate sales that total some one thousand five hundred eighty acres from the years 1742 through 1753 in Perquimans County. The "Jessup Schoolhouse" in Perquimans County is said to have once been a house of Thomas. It was used as a Quaker meeting place for a time then became a place for "children to study the Blue Back Speller." Thomas is recorded in Perquimans County in 1760 and in Orange County in 1766. His Friends membership between 1765 and 1767 moved back and forth from Cove Creek to New Garden. In Guilford County he settled his children on farms around his. His farm still known as "Jessup's Farm" is near the site of Guilford College and the New Garden Meeting.

Source: LDS microfilm 1561672.

Will of Thomas Jessup.

I, Thomas Jessup, of Guilford County in North Carolina, planter, being of sound mind and memory, do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following:

Imprimus: My will is that all my just debts and funeral charges be paid and discharged in due time.

Item. I give to my beloved wife, Ann Jessop, the use and profits of the plantation I now live upon (except the part of it which I give to my son Jacob, which was run off by Jesse Williams), with all the cattle and sheep that are thereon, and what cattle I have at Tom's Creek now in possession of my son Joseph Jessop; also all my household furniture which remains unmentioned in this will, and ploughing gears, and all other utensils that are now on my plantation for tilling the ground, during her widowhood or till my son Jonathan Jessop comes of age; then only one-half the profits during her widowhood; also I give unto her the horse Dick, one feather bed and furniture and the lawful interest on thirty pounds during her life.

Item. I give unto my son Joseph Jessop my bald eagle mare, shoemaker's tools, beaver hat, curry knife, a pair of new boots, razor and strap and a piece of cloth sent for by William Wilson.

Item. I give unto my son Thomas Jessop seventy pounds specie.

Item. I give unto my sons Timothy Jessop, Caleb Jessop, and William Jessop, and my daughter Mary Hussey, each of them five shillings.

Item. I give unto my son Jacob Jessop, that end of my land which he now lives on to the line which was run by Jesse Williams, to him, his heirs, and assigns forever.

Item. I give unto my son Jonathan Jessop all the remaining part of my plantation and land whereon I now live, with all thereunto belonging, except one-half the profits which I have reserved for my wife during her widowhood, to him, his heirs and assigns forever.

Item. I give unto my daughter Sarah Jessop five shillings.

Item. I give unto my daughters Hannah and Ann Jessop each of them a feather bed, and furniture, and at the age of eighteen or marriage twenty five pounds each.

Item. I give unto my sons Timothy and William all my caprenter's and cooper's tools.

Item. I give unto my son Jonathan Jessop my blazed-faced mare, with all the remaining part of my stock.

Item. I give unto my sons Joseph, Thomas, Timothy, Caleb, William and Jacob all the remaining part of my wearing apparel, to be equally divided amongst them.

Item. I give all the remaining part of my estate, of whatever name or nature unto my seven sons and one daughter, namely: Joseph, Thomas, Timothy, Caleb, William, Jacob, and Jonathan and my daughter Mary Hussey, to be equally divided amongst them. And it is my will that if either of my youngest daughters, Hannah or Ann Jessop, dies without heirs, that my son Jonathan have their legacies; and if my son Jonathan die in his minority or without heirs, that my son Joseph's oldest son Jacob have the land which I have willed to my son Jonathan, and the remaining part of his legacy to be divided amongst all my children before named, except Sarah. And if my grandson Jacob Jessop above named should die in his minority or without heirs, that the land herein directed be divided amongst all my children before named, except Sarah.

I have made my friend William Wilson my attorney to sell my lands in Chowan and Perquimans counties. And it is my will that at the death of my wife the household stuff then remaining be equally divided between my two daughters, Hannah and Ann.

Lastly, I do make and constitute my beloved son Joseph Jessop, and my friend William Coffin, Jr., joint executors of this my last will and testament.

In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this 20th day of the eleventh month, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty-three.
Thomas Jessop

Signed, sealed, published and pronounced by the said Thomas Jessop as his last will and testament, in the presence of us, who in his presence, and in the presence of each other, have hereunto subscribed our names;

Christopher Hiatt A true copy, per
William Baldwin Jacob Marshall
Joshua Dix Enoch Macy

Pg. 42 of the Jessup History:
Sarah Jessup, dau. of Thomas, Jr., and Sarah Small Jessop displeased her father by marrying a British officer and in his will was cut off with only a few shillings. On the voyage to England her husband died. She subsequently married a Scotchman and was visited by her stepmother Ann Matthews Floyd Jessup in Glasgow, Scotland.

Thomas married Sarah Small on 11 May 1760 in , Hartford, Meiers. Sarah was born about 1717, died on 6 Jan 1757 in , Guilford, North Carolina about age 40, and was buried in , , North Carolina.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Joseph Jessop was born on 7 Sep 1738 in , , North Carolina.

9        ii.  Mary Jessop (born on 5 Dec 1740 in , Guilford, North Carolina - died in 1821)

        iii.  Timothy Jessop was born on 7 Mar 1741/42 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

         iv.  Alice Jessop was born on 8 Jan 1743/44 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

          v.  Thomas Jessop III was born on 10 Jan 1745/46 in , Guilford, North Carolina and died on 11 Aug 1819 at age 73.

         vi.  Rachel Jessop was born on 12 Aug 1748 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

        vii.  Caleb Jessop was born on 14 Nov 1750 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

       viii.  William Jessop was born on 23 Jun 1752 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

         ix.  Jacob Jessop was born on 14 Feb 1754 in , Guilford, North Carolina, died in , Wayne, Indiana, and was buried in , Wayne, Indiana.

          x.  Sarah Jessop was born on 8 Nov 1756 in , Guilford, North Carolina.

Thomas next married Hannah Bishop.

Thomas next married Ann Mathews.


19. Sarah Small, daughter of Benjamin Small and Mary Knight, was born about 1717, died on 6 Jan 1757 in , Guilford, North Carolina about age 40, and was buried in , , North Carolina.

Sarah married Thomas Jessop on 11 May 1760 in , Hartford, Meiers. Thomas was born on 10 Jul 1715 in , , , England, died on 13 Dec 1783 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 68, and was buried in New Garden Cem., , Guilford Co., North Carolina.

20. John Henley, son of Patrick Henley and Sarah Culpepper Mayo, was born in 1690 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 30 Apr 1728 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 38.

General Notes: Source: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, 1976.

According to Williams, JOHN HENLEY (b. ca 1696; d. Apr. 30, 1728, Pasquotank Co., NC) Wed, Nov 9 1716, Isabel Newby (b. Oct. 28, 1697; d. Aug. 3, 1758), daughter of Gabriel Newby and Mary Toms. (Isabel w/2, 1729, Benjamin Prichard (d. 1739); w/3 1744, Thomas Pierce. (Isabel, by her 2nd husband, Benjamin Pritchard, had a son, Matthew Pritchard (b. Feb. 7, 1732; d. Nov. 2, 1778), who w/1, Roseannah Benson; w/2, Sarah, relick of Thomas Low).

1716, 10, 20. Pasquotank MM - John granted certificate to marry.

1716, 11, 9. Perquimans MM - John, of Pasquotank, in the Co. of Albemarl, married Zibell (Isabel) Newby, at dwelling house of Gabriel Newby.

1720, 10, 15. Pasquotank MM - John mentioned in list of sufferings on account of church rates or priest's dues.

John married Isabell Newby in 1716. Isabell was born on 28 Oct 1697 in , Albemarle, North Carolina and died on 8 Mar 1758 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 60.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Henly was born on 7 Dec 1717 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 10 Jul 1753 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 35.

         ii.  Mary Henley was born on 21 Nov 1719 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

        iii.  Miriam Henley was born on 18 Dec 1721 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina and died in Dec 1734 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 13.

         iv.  Elizabeth Henley was born on 12 Jun 1724 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 5 Jul 1728 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 4.

10        v.  Jesse Henley (born in 1725 in Of, Randolph, North Carolina - died on 12 Jul 1801)


21. Isabell Newby, daughter of Gabriel Newby and Mary Tomes, was born on 28 Oct 1697 in , Albemarle, North Carolina and died on 8 Mar 1758 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 60.

General Notes: Source: See reference under William NEWBY, b 1630.

1729, 6, 7. Pasquotank MM - Isabel liberated to marry Benjamin Pritchard.

Isabell married John Henley in 1716. John was born in 1690 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 30 Apr 1728 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 38.

Isabell next married Benjamin Pritchard in 1729.

Isabell next married Thomas Pierce in 1744.


22. John Crews, son of John Crews and Sarah Gattley, was born about 1696 in Of, , Virginia and died on 11 Apr 1762 in , Chrles City, Virginia about age 66.

General Notes: Source of marriage and child Judith: Barbara Petty (Prodigy GRTF63A) 3/14/92.

1717, 3, 10. Henrico MM. John Jr. Crew letter to marry Agatha Elyson.
1717, 3, 14. John, son of John, Charles City Co., married at Frs MH, Charles City Co., Agatha Elyson, daughter G. Robert, New Kent Co. Child Ellyson born 1718, 2, 17, died 1772, 12, 15.
1735, 7, 6. Henrico MM. John Jr. member Waineoke Mtg, reported he had taken this year for fines 79 lbs of tobacco.
1745, 10, 7. Henrico MM. John Jr. contributed toward the building or repairing of MM house.
1747, 2, 4. Henrico MM. John Jr. appointed treasurer of this MM.
1749/50, 12, 16. Henrico MM. John Jr., Charles City Co., gave bond in a dispute concerning the division of the estate of Gerbard Robert Ellyson.
1752, 11, 4. Henrico MM. John Jr. granted certificate to Western Branch MM, Va., to marry.
1758, 6, 3. Henrico MM. John Jr., member of Wainoak, had tobacco seized by Charles royster, sheriff of Charles City Co., in lieu of "priests wages & muster fines."
1758, 9, 2. Henrico MM. John Jr. provided a home for the orphan of Thomas ellyson; child bound to him by Court.
1759, 4, 7. Henrico MM. John recorded as an elder.
1760, 11, 1. John Sr. resigned as Treasurer of this MM on account of ill health.

From: "PATRICIA RAY" <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 6 Jan 1999 14:01:53 -0800

from "Thomas Bell: Ulster Scot to South Carolina And Allied Families" compiled by Rufie Lee Williams, Allmond Printing company - Aberdeen, Mississippi, copyright 1984, Library of Congress, p. 395

John2 CREW, Jr. (John1) b. in Charles City, Co. m. 3/4/1717, Agatha ELLYSON, sister of Robert and dt.. of Gerard Robert of New Kent. They were m. in Friends MH. C.C. Co. John Jr. contributed toward the building or repairing of Henrico MM house in 1745, he was appointed it's treasurer and served until 1 Nov. 1760 when he resigned because of ill health. He was recommended as an elder 7 Apr 1759. On the list of 'sufferings' in 1735, John Jr., a member of Waineoke Mtg. reported he had 79 pounds of tobacco taken this year for fines. John must have died before his wife as it was reported to Henrico MM that Agatha had "bedding seized for priests wages by the sheriff, on 1 May 1762". the Virginia Yearly Meeting on the 29 of May 1762 reported they both were deceased. Agatha was an elder and John a minister. Memorials were read concerning each one and ordered recorded.

They had spent 45 years together in developing the settlement and rearing their family of which we find records for eight children.

In January 1999 Patricia Ray provided me the following:

Name: John CREWS [Jr.]
Birth Date: Abt 1696
Place: Charles City Co, VA,(abt 1689?), (abt 1692?)

Of Chas. City Co VA (or b. 1689?) Have seen *P postings of 8/14/1717, and previously had 3/14/1716/1717.
8/14/1717 was in from A Genealogy of the Crew & Ellyson Families From Charles City Co VA 1737-1774: pg. 295 will of John Crew presented by John Crew and Ellyson Crew, Exe., and proved by Andrew Crew, James Crew, and Jesse Ladd (being some of the people called Quakers). Liberty is reserved to Agathy Crew, the Executrix, to join in probate. Benj. Harrison, Gent. security.

10/95 *P: b. Chas. City Co VA per Carl Franks. His records also show another ch. Gateley Crews m. Elizabeth Magee. We show him as this John's brother.

d/place from Chas Demastus, Aug 1997

John married Agatha Ellyson on 14 Mar 1716/17 in , Charles City, Virginia. Agatha was born about 1696.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Ellyson Crew was born in 1718 in Henrico Mm, Charles City, Virginia and died in 1772 at age 54.

         ii.  Agathy Crew was born in Of, Charles City, Virginia.

        iii.  Elizabeth Crew was born in Of, Charles City, Virginia.

         iv.  John Crew was born in Of, , Virginia.

          v.  Gatley Crew was born in Of, New Kent, Virginia.

         vi.  David Crew was born in Of, New Kent, Virginia.

11      vii.  Ann Pretow Crew (born about 1727 of Surry Mm, Surry, Virginia - died on 7 Jun 1798 in , Randolph, North Carolina)

       viii.  Judith Crew


23. Agatha Ellyson, daughter of Gerard Robert Ellyson and Anne Myhill, was born about 1696.

General Notes: Source: Barbara Petty (Prodigy GRTF63A), 1992.

One good book (for Ellyson research) is Tidewater Virginia Families by Virginia Huchenson Davis, and another is Maryland Virginia Colonoials by Dolinite. However, another genealogy from SC "Mills-Smith A South Carolina Family" by Laurens Tenney Mills lists the Bible pages of Elizabeth Ellyson Erwin of SC where she listed her lineage in the latter part of the 1700s and it takes the Ellysons back to a John Ellyson and his wife Ellin Hamilton of Lanark Scotland. John came to Va. in 1610, and his wife followed about 1615/16 and they lived at Archer's Hope at Jamestown.

See the complete correspondence from Ms. Petty at John Ellyson, the immigrant.

1717, 3, 14. Henrico MM. Agatha [Elyson], daughter of G. Robert, New Kent Co.; married John CREW Jr.

Agatha married John Crews on 14 Mar 1716/17 in , Charles City, Virginia. John was born about 1696 in Of, , Virginia and died on 11 Apr 1762 in , Chrles City, Virginia about age 66.

24. Charles Benbow, son of Richard Benbow and Susanna Jones, was born on 20 Feb 1703/04 in Montgomery, , Wales and died from 1774 to 1775 in , Bladen County, North Carolina at age 70.

General Notes: Source: The History of Guilford County, North Carolina by Sallie W. Stockard 1902.

In 1718 three Benbow brothers came from Wales to America in a sailing vessel. As they had no money they were, according to custom, sold in Philadelphia to the highest bidder for the shortest length of time, to meet the expenses of the passages on the ship. Charles, then fourteen years old, was bid off by a man by the name of Carver, who resided in Pennsylvania. He afterwards came with the family to Bladen County, North Carolina, and later married one of Carver's daughters. His brother Gresham was taken by a New Jersey man. Later, he and his family went to Bush River, South Carolina, and several of the family moved to Indiana. Gresham and his sons, Powell and Richard, were noted for their fondness for fine horses and racing. During the Revolutionary War Mr. Carver and Charles Benbow were engaged in the culture of the indigo plant, and later moved to Guilford County, and being Friends, settled at Centre Meeting House, ten miles south of Greensboro. The third brother was sold, but never has been traced.

The Benbows are a long-lived people. Charles had five daughters and two sons, Thomas being the ancestor of the family now living in Guilford County and several of the Western States.

Thomas married Hannah Stanley, March 24, 1787. They had two daughters and three sons. They settled near the Guilford Battleground and Mr. Benbow owned and operated a tanyard there. He must have owned a blacksmith shop as well, for he made the nails and door-latches for the New Garden Meeting House in 1792.

Charles married Mary Carver. Mary was born on 15 Jun 1719 in , , Maryland.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Benbow was born about 1742 in , Bladen County, North Carolina.

         ii.  Ann Benbow (Twin) was born on 19 Oct 1746 in , Bladen County, North Carolina and died on 10 Nov 1832 at age 86.

        iii.  Sophia Benbow (Twin) was born on 19 Oct 1746 in , Bladen County, North Carolina.

         iv.  Mary Benbow was born on 30 Jan 1756 in , Bladen County, North Carolina and died on 10 Aug 1823 at age 67.

          v.  Sarah Benbow was born about 1757 in , Bladen County, North Carolina.

         vi.  Benjamin Benbow 2 was born about 1759 in , Bladen County, North Carolina and died on 8 Feb 1829 about age 70.

12      vii.  Thomas Benbow (born on 2 Jan 1762 in , Bladen County, North Carolina - died on 2 Feb 1825 in , Guilford, North Carolina)


25. Mary Carver, daughter of James Carver and Elizabeth Halloway, was born on 15 Jun 1719 in , , Maryland.

Mary married Charles Benbow. Charles was born on 20 Feb 1703/04 in Montgomery, , Wales and died from 1774 to 1775 in , Bladen County, North Carolina at age 70.

26. William Stanley, son of James Stanley and Catherine Hutchins, was born on 6 Jun 1729 in , Hanover, Virginia and died on 11 Nov 1807 in New Garden Mm, Guilford Co., North Carolina at age 78.

General Notes: Source of marriage and birth of children: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, NC.

1758, 11, 28. New Garden MM - William, Hanover Co., Va., married Elizabeth Walker. [ Married in Va.]

1764, 12, 24. New Garden MM - William and wife and children, Samuel, Hannah and Phobe, received on certificate from Cedar Creek MM, Va., dated 1764, 10, 24.

William married Elizabeth Walker on 28 Nov 1758 in , Hanover, Virginia. Elizabeth was born on 26 Oct 1732 in , Hanover, Virginia and died on 9 Nov 1807 in New Garden Mm, Guilford Co., North Carolina at age 75.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Samuel Stanley was born on 21 Sep 1759 of Cedar Creek M, Hanover, Virginia.

13       ii.  Hannah Stanley (born on 2 Jan 1762 in , Guilford, North Carolina - died on 25 Dec 1832 in , Guilford, North Carolina)

        iii.  Phebe Stanley was born on 2 Jan 1762 of Cedar Creek M, Hanover, Virginia.

         iv.  Sarah Stanley was born on 13 Jun 1763 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

          v.  William Stanley was born on 6 Apr 1767 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 17 Aug 1830 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 63.

         vi.  Rebeckah Stanley was born on 2 Apr 1771 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

        vii.  Abel Stanley was born on 18 Oct 1776 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.


27. Elizabeth Walker, daughter of William Walker and Sarah, was born on 26 Oct 1732 in , Hanover, Virginia and died on 9 Nov 1807 in New Garden Mm, Guilford Co., North Carolina at age 75.

General Notes: In 1997, "Stan Prentice" <[email protected]> told me: William & Elizabeth (Walker) Stanley died in a buggy accident. Have you noticed that their deaths are just two days apart? I believe Elizabeth was killed outright, and William lingered for two days.

Elizabeth married William Stanley on 28 Nov 1758 in , Hanover, Virginia. William was born on 6 Jun 1729 in , Hanover, Virginia and died on 11 Nov 1807 in New Garden Mm, Guilford Co., North Carolina at age 78.

28. Eleazer Hunt, son of William Hunt and Mary Woolman, was born on 21 Aug 1725 in Falls Mountain, Bucks, Pennsylvania,3 died on 21 Jan 1781 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 55, and was buried in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Virginia.

Eleazer, son of William and Mary (WOOLMAN) Hunt, both deceased, received by request 28-1-1747; removed and settled in N. C.; granted certificate to Cane Creek MM. N.C. 26-8-1751.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina.

1752, 3, 7. Cane Creek MM received on certificate from Fairfax MM, Va, dated 1751, 8, 26.

1753, 1, 6. Cane Creek MM reported married to Catharine Cox (cert recorded at New Garden.) Among the witnesses were Thomas Hunt, Zebulon Grant, John Wright, Charles Davis, Henry Mayner, William Piggott, Mary Jackson, Mary Matthews. Hannah Davis, Mary Wright, and Rachel Mayner.

According to Hinshaw's narrative about the New Garden Monthly Meeting, Eleazer and William Hunt were some of the names of the men embraced in the origninal membership of the New Garden MM.

The following account of the early history of New Garden MM is abstracted from "Southern Quakers and Slavery", pages 104-108. Of the settlers who formed the New Garden meetings the first to arrive were doubtless the immigrants from Pennyslvania by way of Maryland. They brought the name with them from Pennsylvania. It has always been a characteristic of Quakers to reproduce the names of the sections with which they have been associated in former years. Many English Quaker names are reproduced in America. There is a new Garden and a Springfield in Pennsylvania. They are carried thence to North Carolina, and from there, in turn, to Indiana.

"Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania", says that New Garden Meeing in Pennsylvania was named in remembrance of New Garden Meeting in County Carlow, Ireland.

Source of Submission: AF89-100795

David Michael BURT
58 Clifton Beach Road
Gouldsboro , Pennsylvania
18424

The following notes were provided to me by J. A. Tolliver, [email protected] on 8/4/1999.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Va. Eleazer, son of William and Mary (Woolman) Hunt, both deceased, received by request 1-28-1747; removed and settled in N.C.; granted certificate to Cane Creek MM. N. C. 8-26-1751. Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol. 1, N.C. 3-7-1752 Cane Creek MM received on certificate from Fairfax MM, Va. Dated 8-26-1751.
1-6-1753 Cane Creek MM reported married to Catharine Cox (cert recorded at New Garden.) Among the witnesses where Thomas Hunt , Zebulon Grant, John Wright, Charles Davis, Henry Mayner, William Piggott, Mary Jackson, Mary Matthews. Hannah Davis, Mark Wright, and Rachel Mayner. According to Hinshaw’s narrative about the New Garden MM, Eleazer and William Hunt were some of the names of the men embraced in the original membership of the New Garden MM. The following account of the early history of New Garden MM is abstracted from “Southern Quakers and Slavery,” pages 104-108. Of the settlers who formed the New Garden meetings the first to arrive were doubtless the immigrants from Pennsylvania by way of Maryland. They brought the name with them from Pennsylvania. It has always been a characteristic of Quakers to reproduce the names of the sectiosn with which they have been associated in former years. Many English Quaker names are reproduced in America. There is a New Garden and a Springfield in Pennsylvania. They are carried thence to North Carolina, and from there, in turn, to Indiana. “Immigration fo the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania,” says that New Garden Meeting in Pennsylvania was named in remembrance of New Garden Meeting in County Carlow, Ireland. Source of Submission: AF89-100795, David Michael Burt, 58 Clifton Beach Road, Gouldsboro, Pennsylvania 18424. (WWW.genweb.net/~hunt/william/nti02642.htm) Catherine Cox Notes. Source Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Vol. 1 North Carolina. According to Cane Creek Monthly Meeting: 8-1-1752 Catharine received on certificate from Newark MM, Chester Co., Pa. 1-6-1753 Catharine reported married to Eleazer Hunt. (cert recorded at New Garden.) Merged with AFN:35BW-PS, which provides her ancestry. That record indicated her birth as abt 1732. (same site as above)

Eleazer married Catharine Cox on 4 Dec 1752 in Cane Creek, Orange, North Carolina. Catharine was born in 1732 in , New Castle, Delaware and died on 24 Feb 1785 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 53.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Mary Hunt was born on 25 Mar 1754 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

         ii.  Esther Hunt was born on 21 Sep 1755 in New Garden, Guliford, North Carolina and died on 21 Oct 1787 in Nantucket Island, Nantucket, Massachusetts at age 32.

        iii.  Rebecca Hunt was born on 29 Aug 1757 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

         iv.  Asa Hunt was born on 1 May 1759 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

          v.  William Hunt was born on 1 Apr 1761 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

         vi.  Phinehas Hunt was born on 26 Mar 1763 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

        vii.  Hannah Hunt was born on 19 Apr 1765 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

14     viii.  Eleazar Hunt (born on 30 Dec 1766 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina - died on 7 Oct 1846 in , Mill Creek, Indiana)

         ix.  Abner Hunt was born on 3 Nov 1769 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

          x.  Libni (Lavina) Hunt was born on 10 Sep 1771 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 26 Jan 1781 at age 9.

         xi.  Catharine Hunt was born on 3 Jul 1773 in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.


29. Catharine Cox, daughter of William Cox and Catherine Kankey, was born in 1732 in , New Castle, Delaware and died on 24 Feb 1785 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 53.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volume I North Carolina. According to Cane Creek Monthly Meeting:
1752, 8, 1. Catharine received on certificate from Newark MM, Chester Co., Pa.
1753, 1, 6. Catharine reported married to Eleazar Hunt. (cert recorded at New Garden.)

Merged with AFN:35BW-PS, which provides her ancestry. That record indicated her birth as abt 1732.

See note for Catherine KANKEY. Birth is 1732.

Catharine married Eleazer Hunt on 4 Dec 1752 in Cane Creek, Orange, North Carolina. Eleazer was born on 21 Aug 1725 in Falls Mountain, Bucks, Pennsylvania,3 died on 21 Jan 1781 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina at age 55, and was buried in New Garden, Guilford, North Carolina.

30. William Newby, son of Samuel Newby and Elizabeth Albertson, was born on 22 Jul 1727 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volumen I North Carolina.

1749, 4, 1. Pasquotank MM, William, son of Samuel, requested certificate to settle in Perquimans Co.

1749, 4, 7. Perquimans MM, produced certificate from Little River MM in Pasquotank Co.

1749, 7, 6. Perquimans MM, reported married to Jemima NEWBY.

1766,11, 5. Perquimans MM, reported married to Elizabeth RATLIFF.

Another account, Batchelder & Williams, Chapter 51, the RATLIFF Family, indicates William NEWBY (b. Dec. 30, 1743; d. May 30, 1831), is the son of Samuel NEWBY and Elizabeth SANDERS. Marriage to Elizabeth RATLIFF is the same date.

William married Elizabeth Ratcliff on 8 Oct 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina. Elizabeth was born about 1746 in Of, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 25 Aug 1803 in Blackcreek, , North Carolina about age 57.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Joshua Newby was born on 15 Mar 1767 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         ii.  Frederick Newby was born on 25 Oct 1768 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        iii.  Joseph Newby was born about 1770 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina.

15       iv.  Nancy Ann Newby (born on 15 Jan 1771 in , Perquimans, North Carolina - died on 5 May 1816 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina)

          v.  Gabriel Newby was born on 14 Feb 1773 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         vi.  Samuel Newby was born on 29 Mar 1775 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        vii.  Sarah Newby was born on 7 May 1777 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

       viii.  Elizabeth Newby was born on 21 May 1779 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         ix.  Miriam Newby was born on 14 Jun 1781 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

          x.  William Newby was born on 17 Aug 1783 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         xi.  Josiah Newby was born on 16 Mar 1786 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        xii.  Mary Newby was born on 17 Jun 1788 in Springfield Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.

       xiii.  Jamima Newby was born on 21 Sep 1791 in Springfield Mm, Guilford, North Carolina.


31. Elizabeth Ratcliff, daughter of Joseph Ratliff and Mary Fletcher, was born about 1746 in Of, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 25 Aug 1803 in Blackcreek, , North Carolina about age 57.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volume I North Carolina.

Elizabeth married William Newby on 8 Oct 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina. William was born on 22 Jul 1727 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.
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32. John Hussey II, son of John Hussey and Rebecca Perkins, was born on 18 Jan 1675/76 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died in 1733 in Christina Hundrd, Newcastle, Delaware at age 57.

General Notes: According to Plumstead to Clear Creek, in 1684 John with John Richardson, Edward Blake, and Benjamin Swett and other Friends settled near New Castle, Delaware. In 1705 he purchased a lot of land for the meeting house.

Kennett (PA) Monthly Meeting:
2- 3-1703 John Hussey and Ann Inskeep announce marriage intentions 2nd time.

Here is a message I copied from Linda Koehler on Prodigy on 9/27/94: Suzanne, This won't help you with Betty, but I do have an extract of the deed in which your John Hussey (son of John & Ann (Inskeep) Hussey) sold the land he had inherited from his father in 1733. I don't know if you have this already, but I will give the details in case you don't: New Castle County, Del. Deed Book K:353-354, dated 8 May 1735. John Hussey, yeoman of New Castle County and Margaret his wife sell to Stephen Lewis, tanner of the town of New Castle 110 acres of land and marsh, part of a larger tract commonly called John Hussey's Plantation in New Castle Hundred for 80 pounds. The deed gives the bounds which include the line of neighbor John Morton, John McComb, an old Dyke, along Nonesuch Creek, "Miln" Island in a marsh, and along Christiana Creek. John and Margaret Hussey appoint Benjamin Swett, tanner of the town of New Castle to acknowledge the deed in open court, which was done in the May term 1735. Witnesses were Sylvanus Hussey and Hannah Cox, John and Margaret both signed the deed with signatures. I believe that the Stephen Lewis who is buying the land is married to Rebeccah Hussey, daughter of Jedediah & Esther (Cooper) Hussey, and thus a cousin to John Hussey. Stephen Lewis had already acquired, 6 months earlier, the estate of his deceased father-in-law Jedediah Hussey [his brother-in-law Sylvanus Hussey who had inherited the land sold it to Stephen Lewis, and that deed gives a glimpse of another interesting story].
So by 1735, Stephen Lewis owns about 300 acres of the original 640 acre plantation that John & Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey had bought when they came to New Castle County in 1695. I don't know what or where John & Margaret Hussey went after 1735, do you? I had heard that they lived in Chester County for a time before they moved out to York County where most of John's brothers and sisters had gone. But I find it suggestive that John & Margeret are selling their land in New Castle County in 1735, when John's brother Nathan Hussey was also selling off many of his land holdings to move out beyond the Susquehanna River to what became York county. Just to follow that 110 acre tract of land that John & Margaret Hussey sold to Stephen Lewis, it was sold in 1748 by the administrators of Stephen Lewis's estate. Now, the administrators were Josiah Lewis and Rebecca, widow of Stephen Lewis who had by now remarried - to Benjamin Swett. I find this intriguing - this Benjamin Swett could be a grandson of the Benjamin Swett who married Theodate Hussey; in which case, it looks like Rebecca has married a first cousin once removed - although the ages probably work since Theodate Hussey was 18 years older than her brother Jedediah Hussey. This family likes to keep things complicated, don't they.
Linda in NY

Source: PA IGI and The Epistle, Vol I No 8, Feb 1975.
According to The Epistle, the 1729 will (probated in 1733) of John Hussey of Christian's Creek, New Castle Co., Delaware naming his wife, Ann (Inskeep) Hussey; sons John, Stephen, Nathan, and Christopher; and daughters Mary Houstown, Anna Hussey, Theodate Hussey, and Content Hussey. Will mentions land adjoining that of Christopher Hussey, deceased. Wife Ann & son John executrix & executor of will; witnesses were Eliakim Garretson, Margaret Willey & Benj. Swett.

The source of much of the specific birth dates and marriage information of John II's children is Marie Mimbs, 2219 SE 9 St, Pompano Beach, FL 33062, 23 September 1991.

According to Marie Mimbs, the will of John Hussey is as follows:

... a crop my woodland and clear fields from Christopher Hussey dec'd land or line to Sam Silvers land containing within those bounds eighty acres as aforesaid and that my son Nathan nor his heirs shall not lay any claim to any part or parcel of my estate real or personal but what is here expressed. I do give and bequeath unto my son Nathan five shillings and do hereby exclude and debar him and his heirs from all and every or part of the residue of my estate forever,
Item I give and bequeath unto my daughter Anna Hussey the sume of two pounds like money above to be paid when she shall arrive at the age of twenty one years.
Item I give and bequeath to my daughter Content Hussey the sum of five pounds like money above to be paid when she arrives at the age of twenty one years. Item All the residue of my estate both real and personal of what kind quantity or quality whatsoever after paying my debts, legacies and funeral charges I give and bequeath unto my son John Hussey and to his heirs forever.
Item I confirm and appoint and make and ordain my beloved wife Anne Hussey and my son John Hussey Executrix and Executor of this my last Will and Testament, to defray my funeral charges and just debts and dispose of the rest of my worldly estate as is herein decreed and I make and appoint my beloved Friend John Richardson of Christiana in the County of New Castle aforesaid merchant and my beloved brother Garret Garretson my trustees to see this my last Will and Testament performed according to the true intent and meaning hereof and I do hereby utterly annul revoke and make void all and every other former Will and Testament, Legacies and Bequeaths and Executes by me made, ratifying and confirming this and no other to be my last Will and Testament. In Witness thereof I have here unto set my hand and seal this twenty eighth day of the sixth month called August in the year of our Lord Anno Domini 1729.
JOHN HUSSEY
Signed Sealed published and declared in the presence of Eliakim Garretson,
Margaret Wiley, Benjamin Swett

New Castle April 12, 1733, attested
Eliakim Garretson
Margaret Wiley
Benjamin Swett

John married Grace about 1696. Grace died on 24 Aug 1700.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Rebecca Hussey was born on 19 Apr 1697 and died on 24 Aug 1700 at age 3.

         ii.  Stephen Hussey was born on 8 Mar 1698/99 and died in 1700 at age 1.

John next married Ann Inskeep on 6 Mar 1702/03. Ann was born about 1680 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died in 1733 in Christiana 100 about age 53.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Stephen Hussey was born from 1700 to 1730 in O/Christian's Ck, New Castle, Deleware.

         ii.  Anna Hussey was born on 30 Dec 1703 in O/Christian's Ck, New Castle, Deleware.

16      iii.  John Hussey (born on 30 Oct 1703 - died in 1770 in Newberry Twp, York, Pennsylvania)

         iv.  Nathan Hussey was born in 1704 in Christiani Creek, New Castle, Deleware.

          v.  Christopher Hussey was born on 10 Feb 1705/06 in O/Christian's Ck, New Castle, Deleware and died in 1773 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 67.

         vi.  Mary Hussey was born about 1706 in O/Christian's Ck, New Castle, Deleware.

        vii.  Theodate Hussey was born in 1707 in O/Christian's Ck, New Castle, Deleware.

       viii.  Content Hussey was born about 1715 of Warrington, York, Pennsylvania and died on 28 Jan 1797 about age 82.


33. Ann Inskeep, daughter of John Inskeep and Sarah Ward, was born about 1680 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died in 1733 in Christiana 100 about age 53.

General Notes: Roy,
I have a little information on the Hussey's, Inskeeps and Richard Nixon.
I descend from the Inskeep family and through them I'm a distant cousin of Richard Nixon. John Inskeep came with his wife Mary and children to America in 1702, also John's sister Ann came at that time as well. Ann married John Hussey, they announced their intent to marry on March 6, 1703 at Newwark Monthly Meeting. There was an article that appeared in the Moorefield (West Viriginia) Examiner sometime in the early part of this century which included a letter from John and Ann Inskeeps sister, Isabell Jones, in London.

William Stokes
7236 River Road
Conestoga, PA 17516
November, 1991

" London
March 12th, 1755

To my nephews, James and John Inskeep:
I have had a great desire to write to you a long time, but never had an opportunity till lately, not knowing where to direct to you, or who of the family was living, for being at variance with my brother James Inskeep. I never had an opportunity of seeing the letters which was sent to him by your aunt and your father, who I understand has been dead ever since the year 1729.
I am the daughter of John Inskeep of Fooford in Straffordshire, and sister of your deceased father, and have living, one brother and two sisters; my brother James Inskeep who corresponded with your father and you, and has let me have several letters which he received from you in order that I might write to you-his wife is dead and he has only one son whose name is a James-my sisters are Catherine and Margaret which are married and have children- Cathrine lives in Staffordshire, and Margaret in London; and I have four children and live in London. I have a brother deceased in Staffordshire whos name was Jonothan Inskeep, who has left a wife and four children, the oldest of which his name is John Inskeep.
I would be very glad to hear from you, to hear if my sister Ann, your aunt is living, and where she lives.
This is the whole act of our family in England who are in good health at present, some of my children are grown to maturity and have a great inclination to see their relations in that part of the world if they could have the pleasure of hearing form them, thefore it would be a great satisfaction to recieve an answer from some of you, you signified in your letter to my brother James Inskeep your desire of corresponding with the family, which I hope you will take hold of all opportunity to do-me and my husband and children and all our relations joins in love to you-from your affectionate and loving Aunt.
Isabell Jones
P.S. My eldest son is a pretty good scholar and has a great mind to come abroad if he could meet with any encouragement. Prey let me know w't commodity is best to bring from London.

Please to direct as this to Mr. Jones at No. 6 in Bloomsberry Market London.

To John or James Inskeep living in Burlington county in the township of Evesham in New Jersey, or else in Gloucester County West Jersey near Philadelphia."

(The original is in the possession of Mrs. A. W. Stubblefield, of Cumberland, Md. (when this letter was written)).

Provided by Jim Stokes (JLSTOKES) on the GEnie Genealogy Round Table on 23 Nov 1991.

The following was provided to me by Jeri Norvel (Prodigy EVHT24B, 1995):

Ann Inskeep

This must be the Ann Inskeep who came over from Enland ca 1708 with her brother John Inskeep and family.

The 'intention of marriage' of John Hussey and Ann Inskeep appears in the Kennet MM records. Prior to 1754 Kennet Meeting was know as Newark, and originally as New Castle.

The will of John Hussey, dated 1729 and probated in 1733, says that he was of Christian's Creek, New Castle County, Delaware. In the will he named his wife Ann and sons and daughter: John Hussey, Stephen Hussey, Nathan Hussey, Christopher Hussey, Mary Houstown, Anna Hussey, Theodate Hussey, and Content Hussey
His will mentions land adjoining that of a Christopher Hussey, deceased. His wife ann and son John were named executrix and executor.

Ref: Data sent by Roberta (Holland) Richmond from 'The Epistle.')

Ann married John Hussey II on 6 Mar 1702/03. John was born on 18 Jan 1675/76 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died in 1733 in Christina Hundrd, Newcastle, Delaware at age 57.

34. Record .

General Notes: Source: The American Descendants of Joseph Henry Records, by William N. Records, Hemet, California June 1988.

It is known that the family name Record originated in England sometime before the year 1500. One authority maintains that it is a derivative of the name Richard. The English people have long been noted for altering the pronunciation of names, so it is conceivable that some families did alter their names from "Rich-ard"" to Reck-ard" and finally to "Reck-ord". Old Parish Chburch records substantiate this concept. During the period 1540-1649, the name Record was usually spelled Rickard, Reckard, Recard, or Reacard (except in Kent where it was usually spelled Record). In later years, it was usually spelled Record or Reacord throughout England. The change in spelling presumably reflects a change in pronunciation from "Reck-ard" to "Reck-ord".

It is also possible that some families in England adopted the name Record (pronounced "Reck-ord") because their ancestors were keepers of records. This concept may account for the name being spelled Record in Kent during the period 1540-1649.

The precise origin of the family name Record may never be known. Nevertheless, it is knowwn that persons using that name were being christened, married, and buried in England during the 1500's. Most of them lived in Cornwall, Devon, Kent, or London, and a majority were on the lower rungs of the socio-economic ladder. The lower classes were not very mobile during years prior to 1650, so it's unlikely that Record families in one are were related to those in other areas.

Source: The Genealogy and History of the Record Family with over One Hundred Immigrant Ancestors Who Arrived in Plymouth Before 1650 Including Two Mayflower Passengers, by John Alden and Francis Cooke, 1986.

The RECORDS are from the very early Plymouth, Massachusetts family. Since the compilers have been unable to prove conclusively that their immigran ancestor was Giles RICKARD, it will be left for others to prove or disprove this connection to John RECORD of Weymouth, Mass.

" John Record was in Weymouth, Mass. in 1676, as a sloldier on the
Connecticut River in Philip's War of 1676." (Hist of Hingham v.3:124.)

This line can be proved, but in the absence of positive proof, Giles Rickard is being presented here as a possible solution of John Record.

Giles Ricard was born either in Wales or England in 1597 and married Judith Cogan in 1622. Judith was the daughter of Henry and Joan (Boridge) Cogan and was bapt at the Church of St. Magdalene, at Tounton, Co. Somerset on 13 June 1594. Judith married (1) William Kinge on 13 April 1618 in a double ring wedding with her sister. Kinge died in 1618 in Taunton, and the widow Judith (Cogan) Kinge married (2) Giles Ricard on 7 Jan 1623 in West Hatch Somerset, England. (Mayflower Desc v.11:115). Judith and Giles sailed to Plymouth in 1638 and she died at Ply. 6 Feb 1661/1662. She was the mother of all his childrend. Giles married (2) Joan Tilson and (3) Hannah Churchill, a widow. (Torry's Marriages.) Giles was a freeman, constable and surveyor and a large land owner. (Early Hist. of Ply. Co. Mass.) He died at the age of 87 in Feb., 1684, probably at Plymouth.

Children of Giles and Judith were Giles, John and Sarah and prehaps others.

While there is no evidence that Margaret Record desends from either of these lines, the above sources provides some insight on the Record family in general.

Record married someone.

His child was:

17        i.  Margaret Record


36. Thomas Jessop, son of Timothy Jessop and Mary Parrat, was born on 14 Jun 1688 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England and died on 15 Feb 1744/45 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 56.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

Thomas Jessup, son of Timothy and Mary, of Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England, was born 14, 3rd month, 1688 at Rawcliffe. He died in Perquimans County, North Carolina 10th month 15, 1744. He, a linen weaver, married, first, 5 month 13, 1710 in Braithwaite in Yorkshire, Rachel Pease, the daughter of William and Ann (Carnally) Pearson Pease of Fishlake and Rawcliffe Meetings of the Dalby Monthly Meeting of Yorkshire. Ann was the daughter of William and Ann Carnally and the widow of Nicholas Pearson who she married at Warth on Dearne in Yorkshire 14 January 1674. Rachel was born 9 month 11, 1690 and died 4 month 18, 1720 and is buried in Yorkshire. Thomas remarried in Perquimans County, North Carolina Jane (Clare) Robinson, the widow of Joseph Robinson and the daughter of Timoth Clare and his first wife Mary (Bundy) Clare. The Perquimans Monthly Meeting recoreded the marriage 12 month 6, 1722/3 with Thoma producing a "certificate of clearness from Old England." after Jane's death 5th month 17, 1737, Thomas married, third Mary Ann (Martin) Lacy, daughter of John of Pasquotank County. She had married, first, --Lacy. She married third (and was disowned) Peter Pearson, son of Peter and Rachel Pearson, as his second wife.

Although most North Carolina Friends had migrated there through Virginia from Pennsylvania, Thomas' port of entry was apparently New Bern, North Carolina, in 1722, undoubtedly because his brother Joseph was alread settled in Perquimans County. There is evidence that this migration in Perquimans County as early as 1715.

Thomas and his son Thomas emigrated about 1722 when Thomas, Jr. was about seven years old. His first record in the Perquimans Monthly Meeting was 12 mo.
6, 1722/3 when he was "liberated to marry" Jane (Clare) Robinson, widow of Joseph. In 1723 along with Gabriel Newby, Thomas was appointed by the Meeting to receive the money that belonged to the Monthly Meeting and send it to "ould Ingland" in gold and silver by weight. And by 6 month 5, 1724 he had been chosen recorder for the Meeting. Another record shows him with Thomas Pierce and Robert Wilson appointed to "view the old book that belongs to this meeting & transcribe what is material out of it into a new book." These entries and the books which appear on his inventory at death show a literacy not usual in all emigrants. But he did have an occasional difference with the Meeting. On 2nd month 7, 1731 the Clerk of the Meeting was appointed to "draw up a Testamon against Thos. Jessup for his outgoings in taking too much Drink at Sundry times to ye great dishonour of our holy profession."

He immediately began to acquire land and ultimately acquired more than can be accounted for in the deeds recorded. Conveyances of land far exceed known acquisitions. Not all transactions, of cource, were made of record and records scatter. Conveyances of some four hundred fifty acres can be identified including those at his death. His purchase of one hundred acres from Ralph Bufkin for forty shillings money of England was in 1727 and in the same year, 7 month 31, 1727, a petition to the Council at Edenton got him one hundred eighty-five acres of land upon which a patent had lapsed. He also inherited a plantation from his father-in-law Timothy Clare.

Thomas married Janne (Cleare) Robinso from 1722 to 1723 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Janne was born about 1709.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Mary Jessop was born about 1729 in , Perqu., North Carolina.

         ii.  Elizabeth Jessop was born about 1731 in , Perqu., North Carolina.

        iii.  Jonathan Jessop was born on 27 Jun 1733 in , Perqu., North Carolina.

         iv.  Jane Jessop was born on 17 Mar 1736/37 in , Perqu., North Carolina.

Thomas next married Rachel Pease on 13 May 1710 in Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England. Rachel was born on 11 Sep 1690 in , , Waterloo and died on 18 Apr 1720 in Thella, Little Rock, Waterloo at age 29.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Timothy Jessop was born on 16 Sep 1711 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England.

18       ii.  Thomas Jessop (born on 10 Jul 1715 in , , , England - died on 13 Dec 1783 in , Guilford, North Carolina)

        iii.  Joseph Jessop was born about 1717.

         iv.  William Jessop was born on 2 Aug 1718 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England.

Thomas next married Mary Ann Martin.

Thomas next married Janne Cleare.


37. Rachel Pease, daughter of William Pease and Ann (Pearson) Carnally, was born on 11 Sep 1690 in , , Waterloo and died on 18 Apr 1720 in Thella, Little Rock, Waterloo at age 29.

Rachel married Thomas Jessop on 13 May 1710 in Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England. Thomas was born on 14 Jun 1688 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England and died on 15 Feb 1744/45 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 56.

38. Benjamin Small, son of John Small and Alice Hollowell, was born about 1691 in , , Virginia and died about 1752 in , Carteret, North Carolina about age 61.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volume I North Carolina and Volume IV Virginia.
According to Virginia Yearly Meeting:
1702,7,-. John & Benjamin representatives at first recorded meeting of Va. YM.
According to Core Sound Monthly Meeting:
1737,5,-. Benjamin & fam. received on letter from Joseph Newby.
1748,5,5. Benjamin & wife requested certificate to remove elsewhere.

Source of birth and death: The Ancestry of Allen Grinnell Cleaver and Marth Irene Jessup, and 172 Allied Families, compiled by William Jessup Cleaver.

"Benjamin Small born about 1691 or 1692 in Virginia. He died in Carteret County, North Carolina in 1751 or 1752, leaving a will dated 11 month 30, 1751/2 which was probated in the Carteret County, March 1752 Court. He married, first, Mary who probably was Mary Knight. Mary died in 1743 and Benjamin remarried in 1750, reported by Core Sound Monthly Meeting, Miriam Albertson. She remarried at Carteret Meeting House 5 month 11, 1755, Joseph Stanton.

Benjamin Small and his family moved to North Carolina in 1737 presenting a letter to Core sound Monthly Meeting in Carteret county from Joseph Newby. He was appointed in 1742 to fence in the graveyard. His brother John was to 'fitt seats and windows for the women's meetings." He had been granted 100 acres in Carteret County located on the west side of Deep Creek Swamp by the Council that met at Wilmington 25 September 1741. Another 200 acres was granted 23 September 1742 with a second 200 acres on the north side of Newport river granted 25 September 1742. At the time the Spanish threatened Beauford harbour in 1747/8 Benjamin and his son appeared on the list of men who appeared to defend the town and the harbor. They served four days."

His book gives a little history on Benjamin Small, including his will. His will also reports, "I give to my son John Knite Small one feather bed furneture, 2 cows...." This would support the suggestion that Benjamin's first wife was indeed a Knight, and her father probably John Knight, found in Quaker records.

The book further mentions the children of Benjamin Small and Mary as Sarah, died 1 month 6, 1757, Benjamin, Jonas, John Knight, and Amos. Sarah Small married at Carteret Meetinghouse about 1737 Thomas Jessup, Jr. son of Thomas and Rachel (Pease) Jessup. She was the mother of ten children and died in Guilford County 1 month 6, 1757 as recorded in the New Garden Monthly Meeting records.

Also, in Abstract of Wills, 1690-1760, North Carolina, J. Byran Grimes, "Benjamin Small, Carteret County, January 11, 1751, March Court, 1752, sons Benjamin (plantation bought of David Baly) Jonas (land adjoining Benjamin) Amos (100 acres of land adjoining Thomas Jessop) John Knite Small (My manna plantation) Daughter, Sarah Jessop, Wife and Executrix: Miriam (would be 2nd wife) Witnesses, Henry Stanton and Patience Bull."

Another source, One Ladd's Family, including Cousins, located in the D.A.R Library, Washington, D.C. basically repeated the same information.

Provided to me by Paul M. Terrill, 1719 North Washington Street, Danville, Indiana 46122, on November 8, 1991 as a result of a query I place in the Guilford Genealogist, Fall 1991.

Source: LDS microfilm 1561672.

WILL OF BENJAMIN SMALL (N.C. WILLS VOL, XXIX 1663-1789)

Ye 30 of ye Eleventh mo. called January 1751, I, Benjamin Small of carteret, in the Province of North Carolina, being sick, but of perfect memory Thanks be to God and calling to mind the mortality of my Body do make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following.
Principally and first of all I recommend my Soul to God and my body to be decently buried at the descretion of Executors hereafter named: As to my temperal and worldly estate that it has pleased God to Bless me with: My will and desire is that first of allll my just debts and funeral charges be paid. Item - I give to my loving wife Meriam Small the house of my plantation and all the improvements belonging thereunto with one hundred acres of land (& twenty) joining to the same, during her naturall life I likewise give to her all that part of my Estate that was her property before I marryed her and that given her by her Father since. I also give her two cows and calves, 1 bed and furneture, 1 tee cettle, 1 great putter dish 1 small still, 1 hand mill, 1 grate 1 brass cettle, all the earthen with the corn and meat.
Item - I give to my son Benjamin Small one bed tick that he filled himself and furniture I gave him, my desire to make up the feathers. I likewise give to my son Benjamin that plantation I bought of David Baly and is conveyed to him by a deed baring date 1751, and 1 pott and two putter dishes, to him and his heirs forever.
Item . I give to my son Jonas Small one feather boad and furneture, two cows and calves, 1 grate chest one iron pott, tow? Vews? I likewise give to my son Jonas one Hundred Acres of Land joining to my son Benjamin, to be the same more or less, convaid to him by Deed dated 1751, to him and his heirs forever. Item. I give to my son Amos Small one feather bed and furniture. 1 cow and calf, 1 ewe and lamb, and the ----. Likewise I give to my son Amos one hundred acres of land joining to Thomas Jessops land, to be laid cut by a line from apon by the side of the grate-mash, and so up to the head line of my own land, to him and his heirs forever.
Item. I give to my son John Knite Small one feather bed and furneture, 2 cows and calves. I likewise give to my son John Knite my manna plantation after my afforesaid wifes decease, to him and his heirs forever.
Item. I give to my Dafter Sarah Jessop one sile skin trunk, besides that I gave her at her marrage, which was one feather bed, two puter dishes and 3 plates, and since she moved to Core Sound I gave her fore cows and calves two ewes and lambs.
Item. I give the use of my water mill to my wife and fore sons, equally between them if they stay near, this place, but if they or any of them removes out to have no right in her.
Item. I give all the rest of my Estate both real and Personal not yet devided to be equally devided to my wife and fore sons, Benjamin, Jonas, Amos and John Knight Small. I further nominate, appoint and constitute my wife to be my executrix and my son Benjamin to be my executor of this my last will and testament, to see the same lawfully executed.

In witness whereof I have set my hand and fixed my seal in the presence of: Henry Stanton
Patience Bull Benjamin Small (SEAL)

Clerk of Court George Read
Probated March Court 1752.

Benjamin married Mary Knight. Mary was born about 1695 and died in 1743 about age 48.

Children from this marriage were:

19        i.  Sarah Small (born about 1717, christened Carteret, North Carolina - died on 6 Jan 1757 in , Guilford, North Carolina)

         ii.  Benjamin Small was born before 1737 of Core Sound Mm, Carteret, North Carolina.

        iii.  Jonas Small

         iv.  John Knight Small

          v.  Amos Small

Benjamin next married Miriam Albertson.


39. Mary Knight, daughter of John Knight and Unknown, was born about 1695 and died in 1743 about age 48.

Mary married Benjamin Small. Benjamin was born about 1691 in , , Virginia and died about 1752 in , Carteret, North Carolina about age 61.

40. Patrick Henley, son of Henley and Unknown, was born about 1650 in , Probably, England, died on 28 Feb 1697/98 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania about age 48, and was buried in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

General Notes: Source: Detailed HENLEY genealogy is contained in The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, Fort Worth, Texas, 1976.

According to Williams, PATRICK HENLEY (b. ca 1650, probably England; d. Feb. 28, 1698, Philadelphia, PA, and bur there). W/1, Mary Fulmer (d. Sept. 4, 1691), a widow with a dtr, Sarah Fulmer (b. Sept., 1689); w/2, 1693, Sarah (Mayo) Culpepper, dtr of Edward Mayo and relick of John Culpepper. (Sarah w/3, Mar. 9, 1699, Matthew Pritchard). Her dtr, Sarah Culpepper, wed Feb. 9, 1704, Benjamin Pritchard, brother of her 3rd husband.

Patrick married Sarah Culpepper Mayo in 1693. Sarah was born on 19 Dec 1719 in Of, , North Carolina.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Henley was born after 1693 and died on 3 Oct 1720.

         ii.  Ann Henley was born on 1 Jan 1697/98 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died in 1726 in , , Virginia at age 28.

20      iii.  John Henley (born in 1690 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina - died on 30 Apr 1728 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina)


41. Sarah Culpepper Mayo, daughter of Edward Mayo and Mary Clare, was born on 19 Dec 1719 in Of, , North Carolina.

Sarah married Patrick Henley in 1693. Patrick was born about 1650 in , Probably, England, died on 28 Feb 1697/98 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania about age 48, and was buried in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

42. Gabriel Newby, son of William Newby and Isabell Turner, was born about 1665 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died on 25 Dec 1735 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 70.

General Notes: Source: See reference under William NEWBY, b 1630.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina.

1689, 4, 1. Perquimans MM - Gabriel, son of William, Nancemond in Va., married Mary Tomes, at a QM at house of Ann Nicholson.

According to the Hineman text, the abstract of the will of Gabriel Newby (taken from the originial will):

To son Joseph - ye plantation he now lives on containing three hundred acres of land.
To son Francis - the plantation he now lives on.
To son Jesse - the plantation he now lives on containing three hundred acres. To grandson William Newby - three hundred acres of land at Voses creek that I had of Francis Newby, also two cows and calves.
To son Samuel - my manner (?) plantation with all my other land whereever to be found belonging to me.
Two negro men called Coffe (?) and James (?) and one negro woman named Naiger (?).
All my plantation tools (?) of what kind or sort so ever with half my carpenters tools (?) the other part to Jesse Newby.
My water mill and will only Francis and Jesse the use of them sometimes (?) they helping to keep ye mill in repair and if not to loose that previledge.
Wife Mary - the use and prophit of all my negroes with all the rest of my estate real and personall during her widow hood.
To son Joseph - my negro, Jack.
To son Jesse - my negro Robin.
I give all the rest of my personall estate to my six children namely Joseph, Francis, Jesse and Samuel Newby, Isabel Prichard and Mary Nixon.

Exucutors: wife, Mary, and Francis & Samuel Newby.
Will dated 26 of 1st month, called March 1, 1733.
Will signed by name.
Witnesses: William Hill, Thomas White, Thomas Nicholson.
Probated 1 March 1735 - Proved by the affirmation of Will: Hill and Thomas Nicholson (being of the people called Quaquers) in due form of law.

Gabriel Newby was called "Wheelwright" in a deed, 1698/9 (Winslow's History of Perquimans County, page 49, Deed book A., No. 137).

Here is a narrative sent to me by Jean Leeper ([email protected]) in May 1997:

NEWBY'S MARRY TRUEBLOOD'S, BOGUE'S, DRAPER'S & ALBERTSON'S

Gabriel Newby resided on the southwest side of the Perquiman's River, where the principal river bridge was located called the G. Newby Bridge, near Belvidere, N.C., see p 84b. Gabriel had a known brother Nathan and they were the children of William and Isabel Newby of Nancemond, VA. ANNO 1698 Picquimon's Creek in Carolina. There we ate some bread which Nathan Newby carried in his wallet & drank from the brook...We held forth towards Gabriel Newby's, brother of Nathan, at the head of Picquimon's Creek....(Quoted by Walter Pool Wood, "The Albermarle in 1682-1705." (Perq. Hist. Soc., Year Book, Vol. II, p 19.) This quote shows the relationship of Gabriel and Nathan. A Nathan Newby m.
1720 6,3 Mary Tom(e)s who was born 1696(97) d/o Francis Jr & Margaret (Bogue) Toms. Is this the above mentioned brother of Gabriel or a son of that brother? No records are found to prove. Gabriel s/o William, Nancemond Co. VA, m. Mary Tomes 1689 4,1 d/o Francis & Priscilla at the home of Ann Nicholson about three miles n. of Hertford N.C
.
Gabriel d. 12-25-1735 at age 70 and his wife Mary d. 11-26-1738 at age 70.
In the Perquimans M. M. N.C. records p 13 are listed their children.
1. William b. 01-13-1689? m Ann Henley d/o Patrick H.
2. Edward b. 10-12-1691 m Mary Hogue
3. Joseph b. 09-27-1693 m 1716 Elizabeth Nixon
4. Francis b. 11-03-1695 m ? son Mark
5. Isabel b. 10-28-1697
6. Mary b. 11-03-1699 m William Trotter and
7. Meriam m Phineas Nixon
8. Jesse
9. Elizabeth m John Nixon
10. ??No SAMUEL on that list but is listed in The Trueblood Family in America book, p 232
NOTE: p 107 Pasquotank MM, N.C. Hinshaw church records Jeams Newby and wife Sarah with the following children. She died 3-13-1718.
1. SAMUEL b. 08-23-1704
2. Benjamin b. 06-25-1707
3. Ann b. 11-01-1708 (is Gabriel or Jeams this
4. Jeams b. 07-14-1710 Samuel's father?)
5. Hannah b. 01-31-1713
Samuel m1 Elizabeth Albertson on 1725 8,6 as found in Perquimans Monthly Meeting records p. 90e and their children are listed on p. 108 Pasquotank MM records.
1. Miryam b. 06---1726 at later end of month
2. William b. 07-22(23)-1727 believed he married Jemima Newby 1749,7,6 and father of Sarah who married JOSIAH ALBERTSON, on 1775,4,5.
3. Hulda(h) b. 04-16-1729 m. 1752 Joshua Morris
4. Darcus b. 10-04-1730 m. 1751 John Sanders
5. Mary b. 07-28-1732 m. 1755 Joseph Morris
6. Joseph b. 09-02-1734 d. 08-02-1739
7. Demcy b. 12-20-1736 m. 1760 Mary Ross
8. Elizabeth b. 10-30-1738 m2. 1778 Abel Trueblood 9. Pleasant b. 03-02-1740
10. Ruth b. 03-20-1743 d. 03-2-1752
11. Samuel b. 06-08-1746
NOTE: ages of last two children overlap with date of marriage of wife #2. Samuel married second Elizabeth Sanders d/o Benjamin and Ann Sanders on 1740 9,5 as stated in Perquimans MM, N.C. Quaker records, p 62. No list of their children is found is Quaker records. Their children are listed as found in The Trueblood Family in America.
1. Samuel?
2. Joseph d. 09-27-1814
3. Anna b. 02-05-1745 M2 CALEB TRUEBLOOD
4. Mary b. 10-16-1749 m JOSEPH BOGUE 10-4-1769
d. Preble Co. Ohio 1822-1831
5. Gabriel m Pleasant White
6. Gideon m 1788 Mary Arnold, Gideon d. 1-29-1816
7. Elizabeth m 1777 Thomas Wilson
8. Miriam m Mr. Harrell
9. Jesse
Quaker records say that Samuel Newby Sr. was a worthy minister many years and died 12-16-1770.
Gabriel and Mary Tomes' son Francis b. 1695 had a son called Mark. Mark married Mourning Phelps 1750 2,4 at Zach. Nixons in Perquimans M M records. Mark did at age 59 yrs. on 12-20-1784. Their children are: Margaret
Arvington
Miriam
Mourning
Elizabeth
Zachariah
JONATHAN
Jonathan Newby, Perquimans Co., m. 1785 9,7 Mary Jones and their daughter, Elizabeth Newby m. at Suttons Creek Meetinghouse on 4-14-1808, WILLIAM TRUEBLOOD. Elizabeth Newby was born 2- 23-1788 and died 11-16-1823 at age 36. She is buried in Old Blue River Cem. in Indiana.
Unrelated Newby, as far as we can prove that married into the Drapers. Pasquotank M. M. , Hinshaw records p 107.
Benjamin Newby s Benjamin b. 1-18-1737 married 10-13-1765 to Ruth (Wilson) Their children are:
MARY b. 09-07-1768 m. THOMAS DRAPER
Sarah b. 01-22-1771
Ruth (Wilson) Newby w. Benjamin d. 12-16-1771
Sarah Newby w. Benjamin d/o Elihu Albertson m 2-21-1773 1788 2,16 Mary, dt Benjamin, get Perquimans MM (rem) Pasquotank MM records, p153*
1788 5,7 Mary rocf Symons Creek MM. Perquimans MM records, p 63 1790 3,3 Mary rmt Thomas Draper Perquimans MM records * About 1770 the name Symons Creek Monthly Meeting began being used for Pasquotank M. M.. By1800 the Pasquotank name is rarely found Thomas and Mary's children are listed in both Sutton's Creek N.C. and Blue River IN records. Thomas died 3-12-1821, age 65 y 6m 21d and is buried in Old Blue River Cem. Mary (Newby) Draper d. 11-12-1838 or age 70y 7m 21d and is buried in the same cem. Their son was WILLIAM DRAPER, father of Martha, who was the mother of William Draper Trueblood (see p 33)

Gabriel married Mary Tomes on 1 Apr 1689. Mary was born on 7 Apr 1670 in , , North Carolina and died on 26 Nov 1730 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 60.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  William Newby was born on 13 Jan 1688/89 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died from 1719 to 1720 at age 30.

         ii.  Edward Newby was born on 12 Oct 1691 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died from 1720 to 1721 at age 29.

        iii.  Joseph Newby was born on 7 Sep 1693 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died in 1766 at age 73.

         iv.  Francis Newby was born on 3 Jan 1694/95 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died from 1743 to 1744 at age 48.

21        v.  Isabell Newby (born on 28 Oct 1697 in , Albemarle, North Carolina - died on 8 Mar 1758 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

         vi.  Mary Newby was born on 28 Dec 1699 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died about 1737 about age 38.

        vii.  Miriam Newby was born on 2 Dec 1701 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia.

       viii.  Jesse Newby was born on 30 Mar 1704 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died in 1765 at age 61.

         ix.  Elizabeth Newby was born from about 1706 to 1707 of Isle Of Wigh, And Nansemond, Virginia and died on 10 Jul 1730 about age 24.

          x.  Samuel Newby was born about 1708 of Isle Of Wight, Nansemond, Virginia and died from 1776 to 1777 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 68.


43. Mary Tomes, daughter of Francis Toms and Priscilla Nicholson, was born on 7 Apr 1670 in , , North Carolina and died on 26 Nov 1730 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 60.

General Notes: Hinshaw, Vol I.

1710, 6, 2. Perquimans MM - Mary ordered not to appear in publick meeting until after she makes satisfaction for abusing Gabriel Newby, Jr. At a meeting held on 7mo 5, she gave in a paper dated 6 mo 28 which was accepted; but in the 9th mo next, she gave in another paper condemned the same act, dated 9th day of ye 8th mo 1710.

1720, 8, 1. Perquimans MM - Nathan Newby, late of Nansemond, Va., married Mary Tomes, at the MH.

Mary married Gabriel Newby on 1 Apr 1689. Gabriel was born about 1665 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died on 25 Dec 1735 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 70.

44. John Crews, son of John Crew and Elyzabeth, was born in 1669 in , Charles City, Virginia, died in , New Kent, Virginia, and was buried in , New Kent, Virginia.

General Notes: Source of birth and parents: IGI.

Note: JANET KAY LEHNHOF, 5836 KERRY CIRCLE, MURRAY, UTAH 84107, Submission: AF90-100309 contains a genealogy of John Crew and Sarah Osborne with 11 children. Carl Hemmingsen provided a genealogy of John Crew and Sarah Gattley with four (of the same) children. While there is no proof that either is correct, I am assuming Ms. Lehnhof's as correct. This is substantiated a little by the fact that there are no GATLEY/GATTLEY family entries in the Hinshaw Virginia Quaker Genealogies.

Source: Charles City County Records. In a will recorded 6 April 1726, Joseph Renshall of Charles City Co. willed his land and plantation at Winsor, as far as Welchmans Field bottom to grandson James Renshall and the rest of his land to granddaughter Mary Scoles. If above two die under age, then lands to my son in law John Crew.

Same source: Will of John Crew presented by John Crew and Ellyson Crew, Executors and proved by Andrew Crew, James Crew and Jesse Ladd (being some of the people called Quakers). Liberty is reserved to Agathy Crew, the Executrix, to join in probate. This was in the July Court 1761.

Source of marriage and children Andrew, John, David, and Elizabeth: Carl Hemmingsen (Prodigy PJCV99A) 3/12/92.

Note for future research: Susy Cameron (Prodigy PHKR05C) 3/15/92 said: Hey all, don't forget Randall Crew, Va. ship Charles in 1621 and servant of Mrs. Katherine Bennett. Also that Dorothy Beheathland, sister to my Mary, m. Randall as his first wife.

1699/1700, 12, 9. Henrico MM. John Crew contributed 400 lbs of tobacco toward building of a new MM at Curles.

1706, 3, 18. Henrico MM. John, Robert Crew and William Lead requested a weekly meeting at John Crew's house; granted by the MM.

1706, 8, 19. Henrico MM. John appointed to represent Old Man's Creek Meeging (alias James Howard's Meeting), Charles City Co., at all MM, showing he was a member of this meeting.

1706, from Henrico MM text, a meeting is set up at John Crew's in Charles City County and two years later it is removed to William Lead's (Ladd) "at the request . . . (of) Friends in the woods about Hering Creek".

1708/9, 12, 12. Henrico MM. John mentioned as removed from his house where meeting was kept and William Lead, Robert Crew and other Friends "in the woods about Hering Creek" requested that said meeting be moved to Lead's; granted.

1711, 4, 8. Henrico MM. John appointed clerk of this MM; resigned 1714, 7, 10.

1717, 2, 11. Henrico MM. John mentioned as being a member of Weyanoke Meeting, Charles City Co.

1726, 7, 3. Henrico MM. John Sr. had taken from him 1 mare for fines for refusing to bear arms & paying thithes; also 76 lbs of tobacco, a gun & 5 pewter dishes.

1727, 7, 2. Henrico MM. John Sr. reported imprisoned and fined for refusing to bear arms.

1736, 7, 4. Henrico MM. John appointed to sit in "the select meeting."

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Henrico MM, VA.

The following is a message from Barbara Petty (GRTF63A) to Donna Hechler

Donna,
I'll try to answer your question about John Crew and Sarah Gatley. This is from Tidewater Virginia Families: A Social History by Virginia Lee Hutcheson Davis of Urbanna Va. in 1989 (by the way she now has a newsletter called Tidewater Va. Families and is researching primary sources in Va.) In her original book (it's been repub. by Gen. Pub. Co) on pg. 442, she discusses John Crew:

The John Crew family of Charles City County was also active in the society (of Friends) and Robert (Ellyson) and Sarah Crew, the daughter of John must have attended many meeetings together as they were growing up. Robert and Sarah were married to each other on 8th day 1st month 1714 at the home of William Ladd. The particular meeting in Charle City County was held at the home of members until they could build their meeting house. It had been held for a number of years in the home of Sarah's father, and then had been moved to the home of William Ladd, for the convenience of those Friends living in the woods above Herring Creek.

The given name of Sarah's mother was SARAH, and she was very likely the daughter of NICHOLAS GATLEY of Charles City County. JOHN CREW and his wife, SARAH, sued Sarah's mother for her share of her father, Nicholas' estate in February 1689. The case continued in court, with Sarah and John both under age and Sarah's mother having married twice after the death of Nicholas Gatley (before 1685).

SARAH GATLEY (the elder) married John Smith, who held Nicholas' estate for his daughter. He had died and Sarah Smith married William Morris, who had also died. The court finally awarded Sarah and John Crew 4605 pounds of tobacco on March 3, 1690 and warned Sarah, the mother that her securities would have to pay it if she didn't. Sarah Crew had come of age by this date.

Hope that is a help? I'd be interested to know where you "heard" that Sarah was an Osborn or a Crispe? I have also seen the above information in abstract books of Va. records.

I didn't have your David listed as a child either? Not to say that he was not, but it doesn't seem to be in Hinshaw.

Can you cite your source for him? Thanks. Barb

Here is the complete comment Patricia A. Ray posted in April 1998:

I found the data posted by Roy Leggett fascinating and good to read again to check my impressions of it. I have a couple of comments. I want to emphasize that the John CREW who was b. 1 Mar 1660 in Northampton Co, VA is NOT the same John CREW who m. Sarah GATLEY since those court records show that the 2nd John CREW was not of age in 1689 so he couldn't have been born in 1660.

The court records are still a little confusing to me. In the part posted by Karmen Hatchett last year it says, "Jono. Crew is in his nonage" and the opposing lawyers request that no judgt. may pass until Crew is capbably(sic) by law, etc. (I can't figure out the date that was happening but I thought that was in 1689.)

So John and Sarah choose Maj. Jno. Stith as their guardian on 4 Aug 1690. (Why would they wait so long?) Or did they choose him in 1689 and the 4 Aug 1690 date is action against those holding estate? Then 15 Sep 1690 the court "Summond Ja. Woodhouse & Jonah Liscombe (sur.) out of estate of John Smith dec'd? Etc, etc, etc. What was the purpose of choosing a guardian? He didn't take any action in Sarahs' behalf that I can see. She has come of age before she got her share of the estate.

Maybe these records work better if I take the date and everything after it until the next date as one record?

CHARLES CITY COUNTY, Va. COURT ORDERS 1687-1695 - notes 3 June 1678 pg 303 The suit of Mrs. Sarah Gattley plt. agst. Maj.Wm. White deft., he not appearing Mrs. Gattley had judgmt. agst. Lt. Coll. Dan. Clark, high sherr..The deft. not now appearing, judgmt. confirmed. The suit of Mrs. Sarah Gattley admx of Capt. Nich. Gattley, dec'd plt. agst Maj. Wm.White adm. of Capt. Hubt.Farrell, dec'd deft..At the last court the plt. obtained judgmt agst. the then dherr. for L 20 sterl. due by bond to Nich. Gattley as adm. of Rich Meers. Sd. sherr. still not appearing, judgmt. confimed agnst. sd. sher..Lt. Coll. Dan. Clark. Maj. Jno Stith asks Lt. Coll. Clark argue same at next court, granted 5 Aug 1678 judgement stands - mentioned widow married before judgement

4 Dec 1677 - Judmnet awarded Sarah Gatly agst Jonas Luscomb

15 Aug 1678 Jno Smith having md the relict ....if /gatket dec'd - drops suit

3 Oct 1690 Jno. Crew, who married Sarah, orphan of Nicholas Gattley, dec'd having summoned to court James Woodhouse and Jonah Liscombe, declares that Woodhouse and Liscombe and Sarah, the mother of the said Sarah, being bound jointly for delivery of the estate of Jno. Smith to the orphans of sd. Gattley, and showsthat his part, in right of his wife, is 4604 lbs tobo. Woodhouse and Liscombe appear by their attornesy Mr. Edwd. Chilton and Mr. Kno. Everitt and say (in effect) that Jono. Crew is in his nonage and request that no judgt. may pass until Crew is capbable by law to discharge them or the court from the orphans's estate, unless it be transacted by a guardian; whereupon Jon. Crew and Sarah his wife choose Maj. Jno. Stith their guardian 4 Aug 1690 original pet. - action to be against those holding estate 15 Sep 1690 Summond Ja. Woodhouse & Jonah Liscombe (sur.) out of estate of John Smith dec'd

5 Jan 1690 judgment against Woodhouse and Liscombe, against estate of Wm Morris in hand of Sarah his relice, belonging to orphans of Nic. Gatley. .Maj Jono Stith guardian of Jno. Crew & Sarah his wife 3 Mar 1690 Jno Crew, who marryed Sarah, orphan of Nicho. Gatley, dec'd by Maj. Jno Stith, their guardian, set forth that on 3 April 1685, by court order, the estate of John Smith, dec'd who, marrying said Sarah's mother, (and Adm'x of Nicho. Gatley, decd'e) was brought in and delivered to this court for part payment of Gatley's orphans estates, and court did deposit Smith's estate in hands of said Sarah her mother , who gave bond. Sarah, the orphan, being now of age, prays from Sarah her mother 4605 lbs tobacco, being her part in Smith's estate. Court advises tat Sarah the mother is to pay the daughter, or her security Ja. Woodhouse and Jonah Liscombe will be liable for it.

Well, even though it duplicates the record of 3 Mar 1690 each records seems to give different data. It looks to me now that John & Sarah were married by that date. On that date they cite the date of 3 Apr 1685 when Sarah, the mother, was told to make part payment of the estate of Nicholas Gatley to his heirs and she posted bond. It says Sarah, the orphan, was of age by 3 Mar 1690 according to the 2nd record of 3 Mar 1690. The first record says that John CREW was NOT of age. Do you think that means that Sarah was 18 by that date but John was not yet 21?

Thereupon John & Sarah choose Jono. Stith as "their" guardian even though Sarah was of age? Does that mean Stith was actually representing John but Sarah could act for herself?

We move on to 4 Aug 1690 and 15 Sep 1690 when the court evidently acts against James Woodhouse & Jonah Liscomb because Sarah, the mother, has not given her dau. her share?

Then the records jumps back to 5 Jan 1690. Why? Should that be 5 Jan 1691? Hopefully you can see why these records confuse me. Can anyone give me some clarity on this?

Pat

p.s. Note the date 15 Aug 1678. We have that Nicholas GATELY was deceased by 1685. According to this he was deceased before 15 Aug 1678 as Sarah, his widow, was married to John SMITH by that date.

Date: Wed, 6 Jan 1999 14:01:53 -0800From: "PATRICIA RAY" <[email protected]> Subject: [CREWS-L] John2 CREW Jr. (John1)
from "Thomas Bell: Ulster Scot to South Carolina And Allied Families" compiled by Rufie Lee Williams, Allmond Printing company - Aberdeen, Mississippi, copyright 1984, Library of Congress, p. 395

John2 CREW, Jr. (John1) b. in Charles City, Co. m. 3/4/1717, Agatha ELLYSON, sister of Robert and dt.. of Gerard Robert of New Kent. They were m. in Friends MH. C.C. Co. John Jr. contributed toward the building or repairing of Henrico MM house in 1745, he was appointed it's treasurer and served until 1 Nov. 1760 when he resigned because of ill health. He was recommended as an elder 7 Apr 1759. On the list of 'sufferings' in 1735, John Jr., a member of Waineoke Mtg. reported he had 79 pounds of tobacco taken this year for fines. John must have died before his wife as it was reported to Henrico MM that Agatha had "bedding seized for priests wages by the sheriff, on 1 May 1762". the Virginia Yearly Meeting on the 29 of May 1762 reported they both were deceased. Agatha was an elder and John a minister. Memorials were read concerning each one and ordered recorded.

They had spent 45 years together in developing the settlement and rearing their family of which we find records for eight children.

In January 1999 Patricia Ray provided me the following notes for John Crew:

Name: John CREWS
Birth Date: Abt 1669
Place: ,Charles City Co, VA

see CREWS-L vol. 97 #5, message 7, pg. 6 for a desc. chart see file CREWS/GATLEY for a desc. chart

He is only possibly the John who was the s/o John b abt 1630 & Elyzabeth.

John Crew & Sarah Gatley had 10 children. Per *P note "Andrew named his dau. Hannah". This family was Quaker.

May be the one who married Sarah Gatley.

He had a mare, 76 lb. tobacco, a gun, and 5 pewter dishes confiscated for his refusal to bear arms and pay tithes in 1726: Hinshaw pg. 166.

There is strong possibility John m. Sarah Osborne and they had all the ch. except Gatley, then he m. Sarah Gatley and Gatley was their only ch., and also the possibility that he m. a Catherine before Sarah Osborne.

12/94 Barb Petty on internet repost *P: this John poss. s/o Andrew Crew, who d. in VA and Joseph Renshaw was his adm. Renshaw may have m. Andrew's widow as John was mentioned in his will along with Andrew Crew, Robert and Ann Crew.

Came to Northampton VA in 1694, belonged to Curles Meeting, Henrico Co.

8/95 *P: C.Palmer has dd of 1714.
10/95 *P: shows 10 ch, doesn't have Gatley.
10/95 *P: came to Charles City Co VA by 1674 w/Thomas Stanley.

I believe the John who m. Sarah Gatley was b. in 1669, not 1660. There are court records showing that when John & Sarah sued her mother (1689)for her inheritance from her father, both she & John were underage. The case was continued until 1690 and they were both of age then.

It's poss that the John who was b. in 1660 was the one who m. Catherine Osborne.

None of these children are b. before 1690 and I think the children of John & Catherine would prob have been older, if they existed. [Pat]

(from Charles Demastus) He has John Crews b. in Devonshire, England. Check with him on where he got that info. This is the father of John Crew b. c1669 in Charles City Co, Va, d. c1752 same place. I agree with the date 1669.

(see above theory)

"As for JOHN CREW and Catherine, this is what I can tell you; John was a Quaker in the Curles Neck Meeting house in Charles City County, VA. He married Catherine and Sarah. John's death date of 5/4/1765 is as qouted from the book Crew Family History, by this date John is presumed deceased. His son John was fined and a demand for the fine of his father to be paid from his estate. The date of John's birth, marriage and death have not been found to date since there were several JOHN CREWS".

"The above quotation comes from a copy of the book printed by Woodrow Wilson CREW, a first cousin to my grandfather Phillip Thomas CREW. Woodrow passed on last year and I have no futher info on how he obtained his Info, but I believe he got most from early Quaker records, the News and Observer article of 2/16/69 by J C Downing (which I have not read) and the CREW and Ellyson genealogy.

"Andrew Crew the grandson of John was the one that moved to NC in Northhampton County, in the JACKS SWAMP MEETING HOUSE that my family follows. I do not know about a GADSON CREW. Woodrow lived in Roaenaoke Rapids,NC"

John married Sarah Gattley on 3 Oct 1690 in Henrico Mm, Henrico, Virginia. Sarah was born about 1670 in Of, , Virginia.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Gatley Crews was born about 1692.

         ii.  Sarah Crews was born about 1694 in Of, , Virginia.

22      iii.  John Crews (born about 1696 in Of, , Virginia - died on 11 Apr 1762 in , Chrles City, Virginia)

         iv.  Andrew Crew was born about 1698 in Of, , Virginia.

          v.  Joseph Crews was born about 1702 and died in 1759 about age 57.

         vi.  Mary Margaret Crews was born about 1704.

        vii.  David Crews was born in 1706 in Of, Henrico, Virginia.

       viii.  Jane Crews was born about 1708 in Of, , Virginia.

         ix.  William W. Crews was born about 1710 in Of, Henrico, Virginia.

          x.  Anne Crews was born about 1713.

         xi.  Elizabeth Crew was born on 2 Apr 1712 in Of, Charles City, Virginia.


45. Sarah Gattley, daughter of Nicholas Gattley and Sarah, was born about 1670 in Of, , Virginia.

General Notes: The LDS Ancestral File AFN:FNVG-KC lists John CREW's wife as Sarah OSBORNE, born about 1670 and married about 1691. However, the concensus of most everyone else is that the wife is Sarah Gat(t)ley, daughter of Nicholas and Sarah. I tend to agree with the concensus in that there is no other mention of an Osborne family in the Henrico area at this time.

In August 1997, [email protected] posted the following on the Internet:

!CHARLES CITY COUNTY, Va. COURT ORDERS 1687-1695 - notes 3 June 1678 pg 303 The suit of Mrs. Sarah Gattley plt. agst. Maj.Wm. White deft., he not appearing Mrs. Gattley had judgmt. agst. Lt. Coll. Dan. Clark, high sherr..
The deft. not now appearing, judgmt. confirmed. The suit of Mrs. Sarah Gattley admx of Capt. Nich. Gattley, dec'd plt. agst Maj. Wm. White adm. of Capt. Hubt.Farrell, dec'd deft..At the last court the plt. obtained judgmt agst. the then dherr. for L 20 sterl. due by bond to Nich. Gattley as adm. of Rich Meers. Sd. sherr. still not appearing, judgmt. confimed agnst. sd. sher..Lt. Coll. Dan. Clark. Maj. Jno Stith asks Lt. Coll. Clark argue same at next court, granted 5 Aug 1678 judgement stands - mentioned widow married before judgement 4 Dec 1677 - Judmnet awarded Sarah Gatly agst Jonas Luscomb 15 Aug 1678 Jno Smith having md the relict ....if /gatket dec'd - drops suit 3 Oct 1690 Jno. Crew, who married Sarah, orphan of Nicholas Gattley, dec'd having summoned to court James Woodhouse and Jonah Liscombe, declares that Woodhouse and Liscombe and Sarah, the mother of the said Sarah, being bound jointly for delivery of the estate of Jno. Smith to the orphans of sd. Gattley, and shows that his part, in right of his wife, is 4604 lbs tobo. Woodhouse and Liscombe appear by their attornesy Mr. Edwd. Chilton and Mr. Kno. Everitt and say (in effect) that Jono. Crew is in his nonage and request that no judgt. may pass until Crew is capbable by law to discharge them or the court from the orphans's estate, uless it be transacted by a guardian; whereupon Jon. Crew and Sarah his wife choose Maj. Jno. Stith their guardian 4 Aug 1690 original pet. - action to be against those holding estate 15 Sep 1690 Summond Ja. Woodhouse & Jonah Liscombe (sur.) out of estate of John Smith dec'd 5 Jan 1690 judgment against Woodhouse and Liscombe, against estate of Wm Morris in hand of Sarah his relice, belonging to orphans of Nic. Gatley..Maj Jono Stith guardian of Jno. Crew & Sarah his wife 3 Mar 1690 Jno Crew, who marryed Sarah, orphan of Nicho. Gatley, dec'd by Maj. Jno Stith, their guardian, set forth that on 3 April 1685, by court order, the estate of John Smith, dec'd who, marrying said Sarah's mother, (and Adm'x of Nicho. Gatley, decd'e) was brought in and delivered to this court for part payment of Gatley's orphans estates, and court did deposit Smith's estate in hands of said Sarah her mother, who gave bond. Sarah, the orphan, being now of age, prays from Sarah her mother 4605 lbs tobacco, being her part in Smith's estate. Court advises that Sarah the mother is to pay the daughter, or her security Ja. Woodhouse and Jonah Liscombe will be liable for it.

Sarah married John Crews on 3 Oct 1690 in Henrico Mm, Henrico, Virginia. John was born in 1669 in , Charles City, Virginia, died in , New Kent, Virginia, and was buried in , New Kent, Virginia.

46. Gerard Robert Ellyson, son of Robert Ellyson Captain and Susannah (Hannah) Gerard, was born in 1671 in , , Virginia and died in 1756 in , New Kent, Virginia at age 85.

General Notes: Also in the Ancestral File as Gerrard Robert, FNVH-CG.

Early Virginia Families Along the James River indicates that the Rent Roll of the Lands held by her Majistie in the Parish of St. Peters and St. Paulls, anno 1704, Garratt Robt Ellicon had 520 acres.

Source of all monthly meeting notes is Hinshaw's Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume II, Henrico Monthly Meeting.

The date of birth of all children is based on age at marriage - 20 for female and 22 for male.

1704, 9, 18. G. R. [Elyson] reported paid by MM for acting as a guide for Richard Gore, a travelling Friend.

1705, 9, 14. G. R. [Eylson] appointed overseer of poor in this MM and also to car for travelling Friends.

1706, 8, 19. G. R. [Eylson] mentioned as member of New Kent PM; again in 1717, 2, 11.

1720/21, 1, 1. Garerd Robert [Elyson] chosen Treasurer of this MM.

1723, 7, 7. Gerard Robert [Elyson] reported in 1718 he suffered the seizure of a gun and a pare of stialiards for refusing to pay priest's wages.

1734, --, --. Gerard Robert was the pillar of the church at Black Creek during this period.

1735, --, --. G. R., Black Creek Meeting, suffered the seizure of a horse for refusing to pay tithes.

1736, 7, 4. G. Robert appointed to sit in the select meeting.

1738, 3, 6. Gerard Robert resigned as Treasurer of this MM, in a declining state of health; Robert Ellyson chosen in his place.

1749, 10, 2. Gerard Robert mentioned as deceased when Wm. Ladd, Jr. and Robert Ellyson quarrel concerning some negroes which ye said Ladd had commenced a slae against ye said Ellyson; the negroes were part of Gerard Ellyson's estate.

1749/50, 12, 16. Gerard Robert, the papers concerning the quarrel over the negroes belonging to his estate found here; including the bond of William Lead Jr., Charles City Co. and Robert Ellyson, New Kent Co. Others involved in this misunderstanding were John Crew Jr., James Lead and Andrew Crew, of Charles City Co.; William Ellyson, New Kent Co., and John Johnson, Jr., Amelia Co. All parties bound themselves to accept the judgement of this MM.

1749/50, 1, 31. Gerard Robert, deceased, the negroes Tamar and daughter, Lucy, left as part of his personal estate judged by the commission appointed by this MM as belonging legally to Sarah Ellyson, wife and widow of said Ellyson and she did by a deed of gift give them to her son, Robert Ellyson, in whom the whole right now is.

Note: All of the dates of birth for the children of Gerald Robert Ellyson in the LDS Ancestral File appear to be approximately 20-30 years too early. Some are indicated prior to Gerald Robert's birth.

In March 1997 I received a serious critique about my genealogy of this family from Heather Olsen <[email protected]>. Readers should consider this along with what I have entered:

On Gerard Robert Ellyson: You have him marrying Anne Myhill in 1700 and list her as the mother of his children, yet the older children were surely born before this date. In the Quaker records G.R.'s widow is referred to as Sarah, and there was a Sarah Ellyson who appears as early as 1704. I'm inclined to believe this Sarah is G.R.'s wife and the mother of his children. Some researchers think she was born a Crew, but I haven't seen any hard evidence to support this.

I rather doubt that this particular Anne Myhill ever married OUR Gerrard Robert. First, if I remember correctly, her will doesn't mention her husband-- this would tend to suggest she was a widow. Yet, our G.R. didn't die until the 1740's. Second, none of the sons she names appear in the Quaker records as sons of G.R. You include a John as son of G.R. and Anne, but you have this individual married in 1691, which means he would have to have been born no later than 1675. This seems a bit early for him to have been G.R,'s son. There was a Thomas Ellyson who married Elizabeth Crew in 1731, not 1729, as you state, but I rather doubt he was the son of G.R., as he is listed as being from Prince George's county. Third, Anne's brother Joshua names his nieces Judith Collier and Lucy Dowling in his will. G.R. had a dau. Judith, who married someone else, and no known daughter Lucy.

My guess would be that Anne married an Ellyson of G.R.'s father's generation-- perhaps his father's brother.

On Susanna or Elizabeth Gerrard as as G.R.'s mother. I wouldn't assume that any convention about naming first sons was as hard and fast as you seem to suggest. Though some such conventions existed, there was a lot of variation from family to family. Also, I definite would not assume that G.R. was the oldest son. There might well have been older sons who we find no record of.

What evidence do you have to support the further back Ellyson lines-- I have never seen anything going back farther than Robert, father of G.R.

Heather Olsen impresses me as a serious researcher. Consider her comments seriously.

In Jan 1998, Dan Treadway <[email protected]>, wrote:

Sharon Doliante's account of the family in _Maryland and Virginia olonials..._ is, I think, thorough and careful, and it includes quotes of source material.

Many genealogists, including Doliante, have concluded that there must have been some familly connection to the Gerrards, since Dr. Robert named a son Gerrard Robert Ellyson. But there is another explanation which seems to me to fit the facts better. _Early Quaker Writings_ by Hugh Barbour and Arthur Roberts says, page 607, gives a short biography of one Gerrard Roberts, a prominent early Quaker. I believe this Gerard Roberts was involved in early Quaker evangelical work in Maryland, either by traveling there personally, or by providing fledgling congregations with Quaker books. It may be that this Gerrard Roberts or books he gave were instrumental in convincing Robert Ellyson to Quakerism.

Gerard married Anne Myhill in 1700 in Henrico Mm, , Virginia. Anne was born about 1673 and died after 1727.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Ellyson was born in 1668 in , New Kent, Virginia.

         ii.  Gerrard Ellyson was born about 1670.

        iii.  Thomas Ellyson was born about 1674 and died about 1761 about age 87.

         iv.  Hannah Ellyson was born about 1676 in Of, New Kent, Virginia.

          v.  William Ellyson was born about 1678 in Of, New Kent, Virginia and died on 22 May 1779 about age 101.

         vi.  Judith Ellyson was born about 1680 in Of, New Kent, Virginia.

        vii.  Cecilia Ellyson was born about 1682 in Of, New Kent, Virginia.

       viii.  Ursulla Ellyson was born about 1684 in Of, New Kent, Virginia.

         ix.  Robert Ellyson was born from 1690 to 1695 in Of, New Kent, Virginia and died in 1772 at age 82.

23        x.  Agatha Ellyson (born about 1696)

         xi.  Elizabeth Ellyson was born about 1706 in Of, New Kent, Virginia.


47. Anne Myhill, daughter of John Myhill and Mary Lockey, was born about 1673 and died after 1727.

General Notes: Source: Maryland and Virginia Colonials: Genealogies of Some Colonial Families, Sharon J. Doliante.

WILL OF ANN (MYHILL) ELLYSON

In the name of God amen. I Anne Ellyson being sick and weak but in Sound Sense and Memory doe make and ordain this my Last Will and Testament, making void and revoking all other wills by me made heretofore, after my debts and funeral expenses are paid.
ITEM I give all my goods and Chattles I have in Nansemond to my Son John Ellyson (except my bed & furnature and Trunk)-
ITEM I give my Son Gerrard Ellyson my Maiden Bible.
ITEM [I] Give my Son Thomas Ellyson my abovesaid bed.
ITEM I Give my Loving Sister Myhill all my wearing Cloathes.
ITEM I give to my Loving Brother Lockey Myhill my Ring and also all the rest of my Estate being in What kindsoever or wheresoever and I do also constitute and appoint my Said Brother Exr. of this my Last Will and Testament as Witness my hand and Seal this (?) day of June in the year of our Lord 1727. (the word furniture interlined before Sin'd.) /s/ Anne Ellyson Wit: John Young, Samuel Young, Anne Paris, Nehimiah Nicho[l]s.
Proved: July 19, 1727.

Anne married Gerard Robert Ellyson in 1700 in Henrico Mm, , Virginia. Gerard was born in 1671 in , , Virginia and died in 1756 in , New Kent, Virginia at age 85.

48. Richard Benbow, son of Edward Bembowe (Bembow) and Anna John, was born in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales and was buried from 1712 to 1713.

General Notes: On 1/27/2003 [email protected] wrote:
I'm a descendant of John Benbow from Trefeglwys Montgomery. I have just discovered your site, I have been searching my family history and wondering if your interested in knowing about the brothers who staid behind in South Wales way back in 1718.
John Benbow was baptised 1st August 1697. married Margaret Richards in 1731 and died 12th May 1767.
Richard Benbow married Susanna Johns (parish records of Trefeglwys) buried in the quaker burial ground, Staylittle Trefeglwys Montgomery, 13th August 1754.

Richard married Susanna Jones on 23 Aug 1690 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales. Susanna was born on 1 Jun 1664 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales and died in 1754 at age 90.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Thomas Benbow was born on 7 Oct 1692 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

         ii.  Susanna Benbow was born about 1695 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

        iii.  John Benbow was born on 11 Jun 1699 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

         iv.  Gershon Benbow was born on 21 Apr 1700 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

          v.  Benjamin Benbow was born in 1702 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

24       vi.  Charles Benbow (born on 20 Feb 1703/04 in Montgomery, , Wales - died in 1774-1775 in , Bladen County, North Carolina)


49. Susanna Jones, daughter of John Jenkin and Unknown, was born on 1 Jun 1664 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales and died in 1754 at age 90.

Susanna married Richard Benbow on 23 Aug 1690 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales. Richard was born in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales and was buried from 1712 to 1713.

50. James Carver, son of John Carver and Mary Lane, was born on 20 Dec 1691 in Byberry Township, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died on 7 Jun 1739 in , Bladen County, North Carolina at age 47.

James married Elizabeth Halloway in 1711. Elizabeth was born about 1693.

The child from this marriage was:

25        i.  Mary Carver (born on 15 Jun 1719 in , , Maryland)


51. Elizabeth Halloway was born about 1693.

Elizabeth married James Carver in 1711. James was born on 20 Dec 1691 in Byberry Township, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died on 7 Jun 1739 in , Bladen County, North Carolina at age 47.

52. James Stanley, son of Thomas Stanley and Mary Holme, was born on 15 Apr 1688 in , , Virginia and died before 1766.

General Notes: Source: See John Stanley notes.

Family settled in New Garden and Deep River Quaker communities, Gilford Co., North Carolina.

1724, 2, 4. Henrico MM. James, Cedar Creek Mtg, Hanover, reported imprisoned for refusing to pay tithes or priest's wages; the next month he was reported freed his fine paid by one who was not a Quaker.

1726, 3, 5. Henrico MM. James, son of Thomas, Hanover Co.; married in Friends MH, Henrico Co., Catherine HUTCHINS, daughter of Nicolas, Henrico Co.

1728, 4, 1. Henrico MM. James reported married to Catherine Hutchins.

1733, . Henrico MM. James, Cedar Creek Meeting, suffered the seizure of 8 sheep for refusing to pay tithes or bear arms; 1735 he had a rug seized for same reason.

1736, 8, 2. Henrico MM. James aideded "he being at great charge in keeping his wife's mother, Mary Holme who had been helpless for some tine .

James married Catherine Hutchins on 5 Mar 1727/28 in , Henrico, Virginia. Catherine was born in 1703 in Henrico, Virginia and died on 20 Dec 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 63.

Children from this marriage were:

26        i.  William Stanley (born on 6 Jun 1729 in , Hanover, Virginia - died on 11 Nov 1807 in New Garden Mm, Guilford Co., North Carolina)

         ii.  James Stanley Jr. died before 1765.

        iii.  Mary Stanley was born about 1710 in Of, , Virginia.

         iv.  Martha Stanley

          v.  Micajah Stanley

         vi.  Agnes Stanley

        vii.  Strangeman Stanley

       viii.  Elijah Stanley


53. Catherine Hutchins, daughter of Nicholas Hutchins and Mary Watkins, was born in 1703 in Henrico, Virginia and died on 20 Dec 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina at age 63.

General Notes: I received the following message from Sarah Payne (Prodigy - KWBD64A) in 1995:

Roy: The information I have on Catherine Hutchins, daughter of Nicholas Hutchins & Mary Watkins is this:
Catherine Hutchins: b. @ 1708 (?) Henrico Co. VA.
d. 12 mo - 20 da - Guilford Co., NC
m. 1728 -3mo - 5 da. James Stanley
James was baptized 1688
St. Peter's Parish, VA.
James' father was Thomas Stanley of Hanover Co., VA.

Children:
1. William Stanley b. 6 Jun 1729, Hanover Co. VA
Sp. Elizabeth Walker b. 26 Oct 1732, Hanover Co., VA 2. James Stanley b. Hanover Co., VA
3. Mary Stanley b. 27 Jun 1733 Hanover Co., VA
Sp. Anthony Hockett b. 8 Dec 1730 Hanover Co., VA 4. Martha Stanley b. 21 Mar 1736 New Kent, VA
Sp.Thomas Thornburgh
5. Micajah Stanley b. Hanover Co., VA
SP. Barbara Walker
6. Agnes Stanley b. Hanover Co., VA
Sp. Caleb Jessop
7. Strangeman Stanley b. Hanover Co., VA
Sp Jennie Jones Mills
8. Elijah Stanley b. Hanover Co., VA
Sp. Hannah Mills

To the best of my knowledge the names of the children are correct. I'm not sure of the spouses.

My conncection to the Hutchins family is through Strangeman Hutchins through families of two of his children, John and Thomas Hutchins.

Have you checked the Quaker records for Catherine's family? If not, try Henrico Co., VA and also Guilford Co., NC since I understand the family moved there later.

Hope this provides you with some information. Happy hunting!

Sarah

Catherine married James Stanley on 5 Mar 1727/28 in , Henrico, Virginia. James was born on 15 Apr 1688 in , , Virginia and died before 1766.

54. William Walker .

William married Sarah.

The child from this marriage was:

27        i.  Elizabeth Walker (born on 26 Oct 1732 in , Hanover, Virginia - died on 9 Nov 1807 in New Garden Mm, Guilford Co., North Carolina)


55. Sarah .

Sarah married William Walker.

56. William Hunt, son of William Hunt and Margaret Person, was born in 1690 in Of, Randor, England and died about 1745 in Probably, Frederick, Maryland about age 55.

General Notes: Source: Everett Hunt, Prodigy RHDX48A, quotes "William Hunt and Sarah Mills: their ancestors and ours: Essays and Genealogies.", 1981.

According to a reference by Martha Wallenhorst, William Hunt came to America from England in 1719. Nathan came to America in 1725. There seems to have been a Tobert Hunt who came from England at the same time that Wm Sr. came, apparently they were not related. [This is not true they are brothers and married sisters.]

Everett also says this line is also detailed by Elaine Rowland in a manuscript published several years ago.

from page 89: "...William had some trouble accomodating to the "New World thoughts". He was called before the meetings several times, beginning on December 2, 1725, for his disorderly practice of imbibing in some rather strong spirits on occasion which was as traditional as drinking tea in Merrie Old England and Wales."

Source: LDS microfilm 0854151, item 2.

The following is the first page of Mrs. Vena Wilson's research.

ONE BRANCH OF THE QUAKER HUNTS

William Hunt produced a certificate an Abingdon Meeting, Pa., (Quaker) 1 month, 30 day, in 1719, from Radnor, a border country West of Warwickshire, England.

Abingdon minutes refer to him "late of Bayberry" a Philadelphia county, Pa. settlement made in 1635, Nathaniel, Daniel, Thomas and Wm. Walton, all from Bayberry, Glouchestershire, England.

William Hunt born 1690 in England and died 1781. Married 2-14-1700, Mary Woolman, born 1692, died 1785. Mary, the daughter of John, 1655-1718, of Burlington Co., N.J. and Elizabeth (Bourton) Woolman. Also the granddaughter of William Woolman who died 1692 of Glouchester, England. Mary Woolman's father John Woolman and her grandfather William Woolman came to America on the ship Shield, ship Captain Daniel Travis, in December 1677. The ship docked and waited until morning. In the morning the ice had frozen so thick and hard that Old William and John Woolman, the Captain Daniel Travis, and John Borton walked on the ice to the shore. This was at the head of the Rancocis River.

NOTE William Hunt born 1690 in England and died 1781. Married 2-14-1700, Mary CONT -flowing into the Delaware on the left bank. John Woolman was 23 years old at this time. Five years later John married Elizabeth Borton who was 8 years his junior, daughter of John borton who had walked on the ice from their ship.

John Woolman as well as his son Samuel were weavers by trade. John also was a good business man and was a very exacting man. He held important offices in the Quaker church and was a great exponent of his faith. (This information from "John Woolman, American Quaker" by Janet Whitney. Wichita Library.)

William and Mary (Woolman) Hunt were at Abingdon Pa. They went to New Jersey to Monocacy, Md. to N. Carolina. William Hunt was a strict follower of the Quaker faith and preached and helped raised money for the cause.

Willam Hunt and Mary Woolman had many descendants, most of whom eventually lived in North Carolina."

The above references to this William Hunt dying in 1781 is obviously wrong after reviewing the history of his son, Reverend William Hunt. The following message from Don Hunt, [email protected], in 1998 clarifies this point:

"Your info on William Hunt the husband of Mary Woolman is inaccurate. He died about 1745 after his wife. They most likely died in what is now Frederick County Maryland. his son William died 1772 in England."

I'll include the following for the reader's consideration:

Subject: Re: Quakers in Burlington Co., NJ ?
From: Thomas Hamm <[email protected]> Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998

... Incidentally, William Hunt who married Mary Woolman was almost surely not the son of William Hunt and Margaret Pearson/Person. Our William came to Pennsylvania from "Radnor in Great Britain" in 1718, while this couple were married in New Jersey. Anyway, they were already on this side of the Atlantic. And it was William and Mary (Woolman) Hunt's son William who died in England in 1772.

The following notes were provided to me by J.A. Tolliver on 8/4/1999:

Most Hunt genealogies indicate that Jacob Hunt is the immigrant. However, this is a note I copied from Martha Wallenhorst of Prodigy (RFBR55A) on 5-9-92. Jacob Hunt is not William’s father. That is a mistake that most every Hunt book in our line has made. Everyone knows that his father came from Abington MM. But everyone assumes that it is either Abiington MM in Lancanshire, Eng. or from Abington Grove farm outside of Boston. This was a prosperous farm but never owned by a Hunt. It was part of the Quincy Estates. The Abington that William’s father came from still exists. It is the Abington MM in Abington, Pa, a suburb of Phila. He came to that meeting from Chester Co., Eng. Possibly with his bride to be. His name is William Hunt, he married April 6, 1687 to Margaret Person (Pearson) dau. Of Lawrence and Elizabeth Person. Margaret caem to the new world with her brother Thomas on the ship Endevor in 1683. She was born in Pownell Fee twp., Chester Co., England came to this country as a Quaker. They married in Burlington MM, Burlington Co., N. J. William died Spet. 6, 1694 in Phila. He is buried in the Friends yard in “Historic” Phila. The misconception that Jacob was his father started over 125 years ago when Mrs. Hunt published her husbands genealogy and stated that the only know Hunt to come to these shores was a Knight of England who was disgraced on the field and fled to the new world. He changed his name to Ephraim Hunt and married. “From this issue came a son Jacob who had a son Jacob who was the personal artist to General George Washington during the French and Indian War”. This Jacob had issue and his son had issue, Jacob. This Jacob had issue of 14 children. Yes, this Jacob had a William but this William married a Coffin from Nanctucket and had no Will in his issue. All of his children have been traced by other sources with the majority of them staying in Mass and upper NY. There is no firm connection between the two families. (Source WWW.genweb.net/~hunt/william/fam00949.htm)

William married Mary Woolman on 14 Apr 1720 in Burlington Mm, Burlington, New Jersey. Mary was born on 7 Mar 1691/92 in , Burlington, New Jersey and died in 1745 in , , Maryland at age 53.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Margaret Hunt was born in 1727 in , , Pennsylvania and died in 1796 at age 69.

28       ii.  Eleazer Hunt (born on 21 Aug 1725 in Falls Mountain, Bucks, Pennsylvania - died on 21 Jan 1781 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina)

        iii.  Hannah Hunt was born on 20 Dec 1730 in , , Pennsylvania and died on 20 Nov 1764 at age 33.

         iv.  William Hunt Reverend was born in 1733 in , , Pennsylvania and died on 9 Sep 1772 in New Castle, On Tyne, England at age 39.

          v.  Thomas Hunt was born in 1723 in , , Pennsylvania and died on 17 Sep 1763 at age 40.

         vi.  Rachel Hunt was born about 1737 in , Guilford, North Carolina.


57. Mary Woolman, daughter of John Woolman and Elizabeth Borton, was born on 7 Mar 1691/92 in , Burlington, New Jersey and died in 1745 in , , Maryland at age 53.

Mary married William Hunt on 14 Apr 1720 in Burlington Mm, Burlington, New Jersey. William was born in 1690 in Of, Randor, England and died about 1745 in Probably, Frederick, Maryland about age 55.

58. William Cox, son of John Cox and Rachel Embree Carr, was born about 1694 in , , , England.

General Notes: According to Descendants of Solomon Cox of Cole Creek, VA, (W.E. Cox, 1955), William was born about 1692 in New Castle Co. DE. About 1716 he married Catherine ____. He moved to Orange Co., NC in the 1750s and died there in 1767.
William was a Quaker and one of the "Regulators" prior to the Revolution.

This text is the source of their children.

1753, 2, 3. Cane Creek MM - William received on certificate from Newark MM, Kennett Co., Pa., dated 1752, 7, 4.

William married Catherine Kankey. Catherine was born in 1696 in New Castle, , Delaware.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Rebecca Cox was born about 1717 in Hockessin, New Castle, Delaware.

         ii.  Mary Cox was born about 1719 in Hockessin, New Castle, Delaware.

        iii.  Martha Cox was born about 1721 in Hockessin, New Castle, Delaware.

         iv.  Harmon Cox was born about 1723 in Hockessin, New Castle, Delaware.

          v.  Margery Cox was born about 1724 in Hockessin, New Castle, Delaware and died on 26 Mar 1742 about age 18.

         vi.  William Cox was born in 1726 in Hockessin, New Castle, Delaware and died on 6 Sep 1753 at age 27.

        vii.  John Cox was born on 25 Apr 1728 in , New Castle, Delaware and died on 22 May 1755 at age 27.

       viii.  Solomon Cox was born about 1730 in New Castle, New Castle, Delaware and died in 1812 in Ross Co., Ohio about age 82.

29       ix.  Catharine Cox (born in 1732 in , New Castle, Delaware - died on 24 Feb 1785 in New Garden Mm, Guilford, North Carolina)

          x.  Thomas "The Miller" Cox was born in 1736 in Hockessin, New Castle, Deleware and died in 1809 at age 73.


59. Catherine Kankey, daughter of Harmon Kankey and Marjorie Herman, was born in 1696 in New Castle, , Delaware.

General Notes: Source: According to records from Solomon COX of Cole Creek, VA. Information supplied by Jim Maniccia from the GEnie Genealogy BBS on 5 May 1991.

Note: William COX's wife is listed as Catherine with no last name on AFN1T6S-H8 submitted by John Lindley GIBSON Microfilm: 1394076
920 S. Forrest Drive Submission: AF83-015267
Homewood, AL USA 35209

Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendants by Stanley M. Cox, 1955, indicates the name as Katherine Kinkey.

Catherine married William Cox. William was born about 1694 in , , , England.

60. Samuel Newby, son of James Newby and Sarah Nicholson, was born on 23 Aug 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 16 Dec 1770 at age 66.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volumen I North Carolina.

1725, 9, 11. Perquimans MM - Samuel, Little River married Elizabeth Albertson, at ye Lower MH.

Pasquotank MM says Samuel Newby, Sr., a worthe minister many years ...

Source:1988 IGI CD-ROM search on NEWBY.

Samuel married Elizabeth Albertson on 6 Aug 1725 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Elizabeth was born on 10 Sep 1708 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Miryam Newby was born in Jun 1726 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

30       ii.  William Newby (born on 22 Jul 1727 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina)

        iii.  Hulde Newby was born on 16 Apr 1729 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina and died in 1754 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 25.

         iv.  Darcas Newby was born on 4 Oct 1730 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

          v.  Mary Newby was born on 28 Jul 1732 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 9 Jul 1754 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 21.

         vi.  Joseph Newby was born on 2 Sep 1734 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 27 Sep 1814 in Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina at age 80.

        vii.  Demcy Newby was born on 20 Dec 1736 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

       viii.  Elizabeth Newby was born on 30 Oct 1738 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

         ix.  Pleasant Newby was born on 2 Mar 1739/40 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

          x.  Ruth Newby was born on 20 Mar 1742/43 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina and died on 2 Mar 1751/52 at age 8.

         xi.  Samuel Newby was born on 8 Jun 1746 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina.

        xii.  Mordicai Newby was born on 10 Oct 1748 and died about 1784 about age 36.


61. Elizabeth Albertson, daughter of Nathaniel Albertson and Abigall Nicholson, was born on 10 Sep 1708 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.

Elizabeth married Samuel Newby on 6 Aug 1725 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Samuel was born on 23 Aug 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 16 Dec 1770 at age 66.

62. Joseph Ratliff, son of Richard Ratliff and Elizabeth Hollowell, was born on 26 Mar 1719 in Of, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 4 Feb 1760 at age 40.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy Volume I North Carolina.

1747, 3,13. Perquimans MM, Joseph, Perquimans Co., married Mary Fletcher, at Old Neck MH.

1752, 7, 7. Perquimans MM, appointed clerk of MM.

1755, 6, 4. Perquimans MM, recommended to meeting of ministers & elders.

1755,12, 3. Perquimans MM, chosen overseer.

Source of birth, children, and ancestors: Batchelder and Williams, Chapter 51, RATLIFF Family.

Joseph married Mary Fletcher on 13 Mar 1746/47 in Old Neck MN, Perquimans, North Carolina. Mary was born about 1730 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 8 Dec 1801 about age 71.

Children from this marriage were:

31        i.  Elizabeth Ratcliff (born about 1746 in Of, Guilford, North Carolina - died on 25 Aug 1803 in Blackcreek, , North Carolina)

         ii.  Joseph Ratliff was born about 1750 and died in 1787 about age 37.

        iii.  Thomas Ratliff was born about 1753.

         iv.  Cornelius Ratliff was born on 10 Feb 1756 and died on 6 Apr 1828 in , , Indiana at age 72.

          v.  Richard Ratliff was born on 4 Nov 1759 and died on 11 Feb 1826 in , Lenoir, North Carolina at age 66.

         vi.  Joshua Ratliff


63. Mary Fletcher, daughter of Ralph Fletcher III and Mary Guyer, was born about 1730 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 8 Dec 1801 about age 71.

General Notes: Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina.

1747, 3,13. Mary, daughter of Ralph, Perquimans Co., married Joseph Ratliff, at Old Neck MH.

Source of all ancestors: J. Theron & SMITH
1545 So. Carterville Rd. Submission: AF89-101735
Orem, Utah 84058

I recently (1998) corresponded with Horrace Peele who also descends from this same line. He provided me a slightly different genealogy for Mary Fletcher. I will leave the above data in the database, however, I am including the following so the reader can benefit from both sets of data:

From: "Horace B. Peele" <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 19 Feb 1998 08:57:11 -0600

=========================================

Ancestors of Mary Fletcher

Generation No. 1

1. Mary Fletcher, born Abt 1731 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Dec 08, 1801. She was the daughter of 2. Ralph Fletcher III and 3. Mary Guyer.
She married (1) Joseph Ratcliff Mar 13, 1747 in Old Neck MH, Perquimans Co., NC. He was the son of Richard Ratcliff and Elizabeth Hollowell.

Children of Mary Fletcher and Joseph Ratcliff are:
i.Elizabeth Ratcliff, born Abt 1748; died 1803.
ii.Joseph Ratcliff, born Abt 1750.
iii.Thomas Ratcliff, born Abt 1753.
iv.Cornelius Ratcliff, born 1756.
v.Richard Ratcliff, born 1759.
vi.Joshua Ratcliff, born 1753-1760.

Generation No. 2

2. Ralph Fletcher III, born Apr 22, 1703 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Jul 01, 1785. He was the son of 4. Ralph Fletcher II and 5. Jane Morgan. He married 3. Mary Guyer Dec 23, 1728.
3. Mary Guyer, born Abt 1702 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Dec 08, 1801 in Wayne Co., NC. She was the daughter of 6. John Guyer.

Children of Ralph Fletcher and Mary Guyer are:
i.Ralph Fletcher IV, born Feb 1730 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Dec 09, 1784 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Sarah Newby Aug 01, 1753 in NC.
1ii.Mary Fletcher, born Abt 1731 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Dec 08, 1801; married Joseph Ratcliff Mar 13, 1747 in Old Neck MH, Perquimans Co., NC.
iii.Jane Fletcher, born Abt 1732 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Joseph Smith , Jr. Dec 05, 1759 in Perquimans Co., NC.
iv.Joshua Fletcher, born Jul 23, 1734 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Dec 08, 1801; married Sarah "Sally" [Fletcher] Abt 1760.
v.Miriam Fletcher, born Abt 1735 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Joseph Pierce Nov 04, 1767 in Perquimans Co., NC.
vi.Ruth Fletcher, born Abt 1738 in Perquimans Co., NC; married (1) Samuel Winslow Mar 13, 1771 in Pasquotank Co., NC; married (2) John Morris Sep 29, 1774.

Generation No. 3

4. Ralph Fletcher II, born Dec 24, 1676 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Jan 21, 1727 in Perquimans Co., NC. He was the son of 8. Ralph Fletcher , Capt. and 9. Elizabeth Sutton. He married 5. Jane Morgan Mar 02, 1699 in Perquimans Co., NC.
5. Jane Morgan, born 1676-1680 in Perquimans Co., NC. She was the daughter of 10. James Morgan and 11. Jane Knea.

Children of Ralph Fletcher and Jane Morgan are:
2i.Ralph Fletcher III, born Apr 22, 1703 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Jul 01, 1785; married Mary Guyer Dec 23, 1728.
ii.George Fletcher, born Jun 15, 1705 in Perquimans Co., NC.
iii.Joshua Fletcher, born Nov 05, 1708 in Perquimans Co., NC.
iv.James Fletcher, born Abt 1709 in Perquimans Co., NC.
v.Jane Fletcher, born Abt 1710 in Perquimans Co., NC.
vi.Elizabeth Fletcher, born Abt 1711 in Perquimans Co., NC.

6. John Guyer, born Abt 1675.

Child of John Guyer is:
3i.Mary Guyer, born Abt 1702 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Dec 08, 1801 in Wayne Co., NC; married Ralph Fletcher III Dec 23, 1728.

Generation No. 4

8. Ralph Fletcher , Capt., born 1632 in Surry Co., VA; died Sep 21, 1728 in Perquimans Co., NC. He married 9. Elizabeth Sutton Mar 11, 1674.
9. Elizabeth Sutton, born Aug 28, 1653 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA; died Jan 02, 1690 in Perquimans Co., NC. She was the daughter of 18.
George Sutton and 19. Sarah Tilden.

Children of Ralph Fletcher and Elizabeth Sutton are:
i.Elizabeth Fletcher, born Feb 22, 1675; died Unknown.
4ii.Ralph Fletcher II, born Dec 24, 1676 in Perquimans Co., NC; died Jan 21, 1727 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Jane Morgan Mar 02, 1699 in Perquimans Co., NC.
iii.George Fletcher, born Apr 04, 1679 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Susanna Burton Feb 17, 1701 in Perquimans Co., NC.
iv.Sarah Fletcher, born 1681.
v.Margaret Fletcher, born Abt 1683; married William Morgan.
vi.Joshua Fletcher, born Abt 1685.
vii.William Fletcher, born May 10, 1687.
viii.John Fletcher, born Jan 21, 1689; died Unknown.
ix.Jane Fletcher, born Abt 1691.
x.James Fletcher, born 1693; died Unknown.

10. James Morgan, born Mar 03, 1644 in Groton, New London, CT; died Dec 08, 1711. He was the son of 20. James Morgan and 21. Margery Hill. He married 11. Jane Knea Oct 12, 1673 in MD.
11. Jane Knea, born Abt 1652 in MD.

Children of James Morgan and Mary Vine are:
i.James Morgan, born Feb 06, 1667 in Groton, New London, CT; died May 04, 1748.
ii.William Morgan, born Mar 04, 1669 in Groton, New London, CT; died Dec 25, 1750; married Margaret Avery Jul 17, 1696.
iii.Mary Morgan, born Mar 20, 1670 in Groton, New London, CT; died Sep 14, 1765; married Thomas Starr Jan 01, 1694.
iv.Hannah Morgan, born Jun 08, 1674 in Groton, New London, CT; married William Latham Jun 30, 1698.
v.Elizabeth Morgan, born Sep 09, 1678 in Groton, New London, CT; died 1763; married Jonathan Starr Jan 12, 1698.
vi.Jerusha Morgan, born 1683 in Wallingford, New Haven, CT; died Jun 02, 1726 in Wallingford, New Haven, CT; married Nicholas Street Apr 22, 1944.

Children of James Morgan and Jane Knea are:
5i.Jane Morgan, born 1676-1680 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Ralph Fletcher II Mar 02, 1699 in Perquimans Co., NC.
ii.James Morgan, born Feb 02, 1675.
iii.John Morgan, born Mar 26, 1678.
iv.William Morgan, born Aug 27, 1679; married Margaret Fletcher.

Generation No. 5

18. George Sutton, born Dec 04, 1613 in Sandwich, Kent County, England; died Apr 12, 1669 in Perquimans Co., NC. He married 19. Sarah Tilden Mar 13, 1636 in Scituate, Plymouth Colony, MA.
19. Sarah Tilden, born Jun 13, 1613 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Mar 20, 1677 in Perquimans Co., NC. She was the daughter of 38. Nathaniel Tilden and 39. Lydia Hucstepe.

Notes for George Sutton:
George Sutton immigrated to this country on the ship Hercules and was a servant to Nathaniel Tilden, later marrying Nathaniel's daughter, Sarah.
He was a planter in Scituate from 1638 to about 1643, and was a town officer. In 1650, George was said to have changed his faith from Church of England to Quaker. By 1668, he had relocated his family (except for sons Daniel and William who moved elsewhere) to Perquimans County, NC because of Quaker persecution in Massachusetts.

Children of George Sutton and Sarah Tilden are:
i.Daniel Sutton, born 1639 in Scituate, Plymouth, MA; married Mary Cole 1667.
ii.William Sutton, born Jan 01, 1640 in Scituate, Plymouth, MA; died Apr 28, 1718; married Damaris Bishop Jul 11, 1666 in Eastham, MA.
iii.Lydia Sutton, born Abt 1643 in Scituate, Plymouth, MA.
iv.Nathaniel Sutton, born 1646 in Nansemond Co., VA; died Dec 29, 1682; married Deborah Astine Aug 12, 1668.
v.Sarah Sutton, born Abt 1648 in Scituate, Plymouth, MA; died Abt Dec 03, 1648 in Scituate, Plymouth, MA.
vi.Sarah Sutton, born Abt 1649 in Nansemond Co., VA; married John Barrow Feb 01, 1668.
9vii.Elizabeth Sutton, born Aug 28, 1653 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA; died Jan 02, 1690 in Perquimans Co., NC; married Ralph Fletcher , Capt. Mar 11, 1674.
viii.Joseph Sutton, born Abt 1658 in Nansemond Co., VA; died Bef. Apr 08, 1696; married Deliverance Nicholson Mar 01, 1684 in Perquimans Precinct, NC.

20. James Morgan, born 1607 in Landaff, Glamorgan, Wales; died Abt 1685 in New London, CT. He was the son of 40. William Morgan , Sir and 41. Elizabeth Morgan. He met 21. Margery Hill Aug 06, 1640 in Roxbury, MA.
21. Margery Hill, born Abt 1610 in Roxbury, Suffolk, MA. She was the daughter of 42. George Hills and 43. Mary Symonds.

Children of James Morgan and Margery Hill are:
i.Hannah Morgan, born Jul 18, 1642 in Roxbury, MA; died Dec 12, 1706 in Wallingford, New Haven, CT; married Nehemiah Royce Nov 20, 1660 in New London, New London, CT.
10ii.James Morgan, born Mar 03, 1644 in Groton, New London, CT; died Dec 08, 1711; married (1) Mary Vine Nov 1666; married (2) Jane Knea Oct 12, 1673 in MD.
iii.John Morgan, born Mar 30, 1645 in Roxbury, MA; died Abt 1712; married Rachel Dymond/Deming Nov 16, 1665.
iv.Joseph Morgan, born Nov 29, 1646 in New London, CT; died Apr 05, 1704; married Dorothy Parke Apr 26, 1670.
v.Abraham Morgan, born Sep 03, 1648 in New London, New London, CT; died Aug 1649 in New London, New London, CT.
vi.Infant Baby Morgan, born Nov 17, 1650 in New London, New London, CT; died Nov 17, 1650 in New London, New London, CT.

Generation No. 6

38. Nathaniel Tilden, born Jul 28, 1583 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died May 25, 1641 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA. He was the son of 76.
Thomas Tilden and 77. Alice "Alyce" Biggs. He married 39. Lydia Hucstepe 1606 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
39. Lydia Hucstepe, born Feb 11, 1587 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died 1672 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA. She was the daughter of 78. Stephen Hucstepe and 79. Winnifred Hatch.

Children of Nathaniel Tilden and Lydia Hucstepe are:
i.Thomas Tilden, born Oct 23, 1608 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Bef. Jan 19, 1618 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
ii.Mary Tilden, born May 20, 1610 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Mar 28, 1690 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA; married Thomas Lapham Mar 13, 1637 in Scituate, Plymouth Colony, MA.
iii.Joseph Tilden, born Jan 12, 1611 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died May 15, 1612 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
19iv.Sarah Tilden, born Jun 13, 1613 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Mar 20, 1677 in Perquimans Co., NC; married George Sutton Mar 13, 1636 in Scituate, Plymouth Colony, MA.
v.Joseph Tilden, born Apr 20, 1615 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Jun 03, 1670 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA; married Elizabeth Alice Twisden Nov 20, 1649 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA.
vi.Stephen Tilden, born Mar 13, 1617 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Oct 21, 1619.
vii.Thomas Tilden, born Jan 19, 1618 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Feb 01, 1704 in Marshfield (Scituate), Plymouth Co., MA; married Elizzabeth Bourne 1653 in Marshfield (Scituate), Plymouth Co., MA.
viii.Judith Tilden, born Oct 22, 1620 in Tenterden, Kent, England; married Abraham Preble Jan 03, 1640 in Marshfield (Scituate), Plymouth Co., MA.
ix.Winifred Tilden, born Oct 20, 1622 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Sep 14, 1627 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
x.Lydia Tilden, born May 30, 1624 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Sep 15, 1624 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
xi.Lydie Tilden, born Sep 28, 1625 in Tenterden, Kent, England; married Richard Garrett 1646-1647 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA.
xii.Stephen Tilden, born Oct 11, 1629 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Aug 22, 1711 in Marshfield (Scituate), Plymouth Co., MA; married Hannah Little Jan 25, 1661 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA.

40. William Morgan , Sir, born 1571 in Oderw, England; died 1648 in Bristol, England. He married 41. Elizabeth Morgan Unknown.
41. Elizabeth Morgan, born Aft. 1598 in Tredegar, England; died Abt 1638 in Bristol, England. She was the daughter of 82. William Morgan and 83. Elizabeth Winter.

Child of William Morgan and Elizabeth Morgan is:
20i.James Morgan, born 1607 in Landaff, Glamorgan, Wales; died Abt 1685 in New London, CT; met Margery Hill Aug 06, 1640 in Roxbury, MA.

42. George Hills, born Nov 20, 1578 in Great Bursted, Essex, England.
He was the son of 84. Joseph Hills and 85. Sarah Smith. He married 43.
Mary Symonds Oct 13, 1586 in Great Bursted, Essex, England.
43. Mary Symonds, born Abt 1578.

Children of George Hills and Mary Symonds are:
i.Joseph Hills.
ii.John Hills.
iii.Rebecca Hills.
iv.Abraham Hills.
21v.Margery Hill, born Abt 1610 in Roxbury, Suffolk, MA; met James Morgan Aug 06, 1640 in Roxbury, MA.

Generation No. 7

76. Thomas Tilden, born 1551 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Jun 06, 1617 in Wye, Kent, England. He was the son of 152. Richard Tilden and 153. Elizabeth Glover. He married 77. Alice "Alyce" Biggs Mar 10, 1576 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
77. Alice "Alyce" Biggs, born 1546 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died May 13, 1593 in Tenterden, Kent, England. She was the daughter of 154. Robert Bigge and 155. Elizabeth [Bigge].

Children of Thomas Tilden and Alice Biggs are:
i.Sarah Tilden, born 1579 in England.
ii.Abigail Tilden, born 1581 in England.
38iii.Nathaniel Tilden, born Jul 28, 1583 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died May 25, 1641 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA; married Lydia Hucstepe 1606 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
iv.Joseph Tilden, born 1585 in England.
v.Hopestill Tilden, born 1588 in England.
vi.Theophilus Tilden, born 1590 in England.
vii.Thomas Tilden, born 1593 in England.
viii.Freegift Tilden, born 1604 in England.

78. Stephen Hucstepe, born 1555 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Jun 20, 1633 in Tenterden, Kent, England. He was the son of 156. Lawrence Hucsteppe and 157. Jone Pope. He married 79. Winnifred Hatch Feb 14, 1583 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
79. Winnifred Hatch, born 1552 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Oct 06, 1592 in Kent, England. She was the daughter of 158. Thomas Hatch and 159. Joanne [Hatch].

Children of Stephen Hucstepe and Winnifred Hatch are:
i.Thomas Hucstepe, born 1584 in England.
ii.John Hucstepe, born 1586 in England.
39iii.Lydia Hucstepe, born Feb 11, 1587 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died 1672 in Scituate, Plymouth Co., MA; married Nathaniel Tilden 1606 in Tenterden, Kent, England.
iv.Joan Hucstepe, born 1590 in England.
v.Ann Hucstepe, born 1592 in England.
vi.Mary Hucstepe, born 1592 in England.
vii.Susan Hucstepe, born 1594 in England.

82. William Morgan, born Abt 1560 in Tredegar, Wales, England; died Abt 1653. He was the son of 164. Thomas Morgan and 165. Elizabeth Bodenham.
He married 83. Elizabeth Winter 1598.
83. Elizabeth Winter, born Abt 1564 in Tredegar, Wales, England. She was the daughter of 166. William Winter , Sir and 167. Maria Langton.

Child of William Morgan and Elizabeth Winter is:
41i.Elizabeth Morgan, born Aft. 1598 in Tredegar, England; died Abt 1638 in Bristol, England; married William Morgan , Sir Unknown.

84. Joseph Hills, born Abt 1555. He married 85. Sarah Smith.
85. Sarah Smith, born Abt 1555.

Child of Joseph Hills and Sarah Smith is:
42i.George Hills, born Nov 20, 1578 in Great Bursted, Essex, England; married Mary Symonds Oct 13, 1586 in Great Bursted, Essex, England.

Generation No. 8

152. Richard Tilden, born Oct 15, 1520 in Benenden, Kent, England; died May 15, 1566 in Tenterden, Kent, England. He was the son of 304.
Richard/John Tylden and 305. Joan [Tylden]. He married 153. Elizabeth Glover 1540.
153. Elizabeth Glover, born 1515 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Dec 30, 1585 in Tenterden, Kent, England. She was the daughter of 306. Thomas Glover and 307. Thomasine Hand.

Child of Richard Tilden and Elizabeth Glover is:
76i.Thomas Tilden, born 1551 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Jun 06, 1617 in Wye, Kent, England; married Alice "Alyce" Biggs Mar 10, 1576 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

154. Robert Bigge, born Jan 1505 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Jan 02, 1548 in Benenden, Kent, England. He was the son of 308. Edward Bigge and 309. Alice [Bigge]. He married 155. Elizabeth [Bigge] 1528 in Kent, England.
155. Elizabeth [Bigge], born 1508 in Kent, England; died Aft. 1548 in Prob Benenden, Kent, England.

Child of Robert Bigge and Elizabeth [Bigge] is:
77i.Alice "Alyce" Biggs, born 1546 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died May 13, 1593 in Tenterden, Kent, England; married Thomas Tilden Mar 10, 1576 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

156. Lawrence Hucsteppe, born Abt 1521 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Bef. 1559. He married 157. Jone Pope 1546.
157. Jone Pope, born Abt 1525 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

Child of Lawrence Hucsteppe and Jone Pope is:
78i.Stephen Hucstepe, born 1555 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Jun 20, 1633 in Tenterden, Kent, England; married Winnifred Hatch Feb 14, 1583 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

158. Thomas Hatch, born Abt 1525 in Selling, Kent, England; died Oct 13, 1568 in Kent, England. He was the son of 316. John Hatch. He married 159. Joanne [Hatch].
159. Joanne [Hatch], born Abt 1531 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

Child of Thomas Hatch and Joanne [Hatch] is:
79i.Winnifred Hatch, born 1552 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Oct 06, 1592 in Kent, England; married Stephen Hucstepe Feb 14, 1583 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

164. Thomas Morgan, born Abt 1530. He married 165. Elizabeth Bodenham. 165. Elizabeth Bodenham, born Abt 1530. She was the daughter of 330.
Roger Bodenham.

Child of Thomas Morgan and Elizabeth Bodenham is:
82i.William Morgan, born Abt 1560 in Tredegar, Wales, England; died Abt 1653; married Elizabeth Winter 1598.

166. William Winter , Sir, born Abt 1532 in Llandorff, Glam, Wales; died in Lindney?. He was the son of 332. John Winter and 333. Alice Tirry. He married 167. Maria Langton.
167. Maria Langton, born Abt 1532.

Child of William Winter and Maria Langton is:
83i.Elizabeth Winter, born Abt 1564 in Tredegar, Wales, England; married William Morgan 1598.

Generation No. 9

304. Richard/John Tylden, born Abt 1475 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Aft. 1552. He was the son of 608. Robert Tylden and 609. Alice [Tylden].
He married 305. Joan [Tylden].
305. Joan [Tylden], born Abt 1475 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Aft.
1557.

Child of Richard/John Tylden and Joan [Tylden] is:
152i.Richard Tilden, born Oct 15, 1520 in Benenden, Kent, England; died May 15, 1566 in Tenterden, Kent, England; married Elizabeth Glover 1540.

306. Thomas Glover, born Abt 1490 in Wilmington, Kent, England. He married 307. Thomasine Hand.
307. Thomasine Hand, born Abt 1490 in Wilmington, Kent, England.

Child of Thomas Glover and Thomasine Hand is:
153i.Elizabeth Glover, born 1515 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Dec 30, 1585 in Tenterden, Kent, England; married Richard Tilden 1540.

308. Edward Bigge, born Abt 1480 in Benenden, Kent, England. He was the son of 616. Robert Bigge and 617. Agnes [Bigge]. He married 309. Alice [Bigge] Abt 1502 in Kent, England.
309. Alice [Bigge], born Abt 1484.

Child of Edward Bigge and Alice [Bigge] is:
154i.Robert Bigge, born Jan 1505 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Jan 02, 1548 in Benenden, Kent, England; married Elizabeth [Bigge] 1528 in Kent, England.

316. John Hatch, born Abt 1495 in Selling, Kent, England; died Bef.
1537. He was the son of 632. Thomas Hatch.

Child of John Hatch is:
158i.Thomas Hatch, born Abt 1525 in Selling, Kent, England; died Oct 13, 1568 in Kent, England; married Joanne [Hatch].

330. Roger Bodenham, born Abt 1500.

Child of Roger Bodenham is:
165i.Elizabeth Bodenham, born Abt 1530; married Thomas Morgan.

332. John Winter, born Abt 1500 in Gloucester, England. He was the son of 664. Robert Winter and 665. Elizabeth Wyrrall. He married 333. Alice Tirry.
333. Alice Tirry, born Abt 1502 in Gloucester, England. She was the daughter of 666. William Tirry and 667. Jana Gamage.

Child of John Winter and Alice Tirry is:
166i.William Winter , Sir, born Abt 1532 in Llandorff, Glam, Wales; died in Lindney?; married Maria Langton.

Generation No. 10

608. Robert Tylden, born Abt 1440 in England. He married 609. Alice [Tylden].
609. Alice [Tylden], born Abt 1444 in England.

Child of Robert Tylden and Alice [Tylden] is:
304i.Richard/John Tylden, born Abt 1475 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Aft. 1552; married Joan [Tylden].

616. Robert Bigge, born Abt 1449 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Jul 17, 1500. He was the son of 1232. Richard Bigge and 1233. Agnes [Bigge].
He married 617. Agnes [Bigge].
617. Agnes [Bigge], born Abt 1451 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Child of Robert Bigge and Agnes [Bigge] is:
308i.Edward Bigge, born Abt 1480 in Benenden, Kent, England; married Alice [Bigge] Abt 1502 in Kent, England.

632. Thomas Hatch, born Abt 1465 in Selling, Kent, England; died Bef.
1535. He was the son of 1264. Thomas Hatch.

Child of Thomas Hatch is:
316i.John Hatch, born Abt 1495 in Selling, Kent, England; died Bef. 1537.

664. Robert Winter, born Abt 1475. He married 665. Elizabeth Wyrrall.
665. Elizabeth Wyrrall, born Abt 1475.

Child of Robert Winter and Elizabeth Wyrrall is:
332i.John Winter, born Abt 1500 in Gloucester, England; married Alice Tirry.

666. William Tirry, born Abt 1470. He was the son of 1332. William Tirry and 1333. Desmond [Tirry]. He married 667. Jana Gamage.
667. Jana Gamage, born Abt 1470.

Child of William Tirry and Jana Gamage is:
333i.Alice Tirry, born Abt 1502 in Gloucester, England; married John Winter.

Generation No. 11

1232. Richard Bigge, born Abt 1424 in Benenden, Kent, England. He married 1233. Agnes [Bigge].
1233. Agnes [Bigge], born Abt 1426 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Child of Richard Bigge and Agnes [Bigge] is:
616i.Robert Bigge, born Abt 1449 in Benenden, Kent, England; died Jul 17, 1500; married Agnes [Bigge].

1264. Thomas Hatch, born Abt 1442 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Aft. 1464 in Selling, Kent, England. He was the son of 2528. John Hatch and 2529. Agnes [Hatch].

Child of Thomas Hatch is:
632i.Thomas Hatch, born Abt 1465 in Selling, Kent, England; died Bef.
1535.

1332. William Tirry, born Abt 1442 in Gloucester, England. He married 1333. Desmond [Tirry].
1333. Desmond [Tirry], born Abt 1442. She was the daughter of 2666. John Desmond.

Child of William Tirry and Desmond [Tirry] is:
666i.William Tirry, born Abt 1470; married Jana Gamage.

Generation No. 12

2528. John Hatch, born Abt 1415 in Selling, Kent, England; died Aft.
1463 in Selling, Kent, England. He married 2529. Agnes [Hatch].
2529. Agnes [Hatch], born Abt 1419 in Tenterden, Kent, England.

Child of John Hatch and Agnes [Hatch] is:
1264i.Thomas Hatch, born Abt 1442 in Tenterden, Kent, England; died Aft. 1464 in Selling, Kent, England.

2666. John Desmond, born Abt 1412.

Child of John Desmond is:
1333i.Desmond [Tirry], born Abt 1442; married William Tirry.

Mary married Joseph Ratliff on 13 Mar 1746/47 in Old Neck MN, Perquimans, North Carolina. Joseph was born on 26 Mar 1719 in Of, Guilford, North Carolina and died on 4 Feb 1760 at age 40.
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64. John Hussey, son of Christopher Hussey and Theodate Batchelder, was born in 1635 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts and died from 1707 to 1711 in New Castle, New Castle, Deleware at age 72.

General Notes: According to Marie Mimbs, John sold his interest in the Island of Nantucket to his brother Stephen.

Source: Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, John was of Hamton, now Seabrook. They were Quakers in 1662.

Source: Genealogies of Pennsylvania Families, Vol II.

He moved to New Castle, Delaware in 1692.

By deed of 1 Jul 1695, purchased three hundred and forty acres of land near New Castle, Deleware, being then described as "late of Hamp Town in New Hampshire, near Piscatoway in New England." His will was probated 18 Feb 1707.

He had a large family, several of his grandchildred were members of the Sadsbury Meeting of Friends in Lancaster Co., Penna., in 1737 and of the Warrington Meeting in York Co., in 1745.

According to Marie Mimbs, John was a representative to the Colonial Provincial Assembly in 1696.

Source: Calendar of Delaware Wills, New Castle County.

John Hussy. May 8, 1707. Feb 1707. B. 137. Son Christopher; son Jededeah; dau. Rebecca, wife of Samuel Collins; dau. Mary, wife of Moses Swett; dau.
Ann, wife of James Stanyon; dau. Susannah, widow of Richard Otis; dau. Bathshabo, wife of Thomas Babb; dau. Charity, wife of Garit Garitson; dau. Content, wife of Henry Land; son, John Hussy. Exc. son, John Hussy.

From Borden's Hisdtory of the Society of Friends, page 54:

John Hussey second son of Christopher was appointed member of the Assembly before he removed from Hampton, N.H., to Delaware in 1688, but being unwilling to take oath he did not serve. After his removal to Delaware he was appointed Member of the Pernnsylvania Assembly and as Pa. Quakers were permitted to enter office wwithout oath, he was enrolled in 1696.

Another source, Plumstead to Clear Creek, A History of the Family of Samuel Carey, compiled by Ruth (Carey) Haines in 1969, includes the text of the will:

The last will and testament of John Hussey, of the County of Newcastle on Delaware, altho wake in body, yet competent and rasonable in memorie and understanding. I do give and bequeath to my respective children hereafter mentioned, viz.: I do give to my son, Christopher £00.s10.d00. I do give to my son Jedidiah, 0L.10s.0d. I do give to my daughter Rebekah, wife of Samuel Collins, 5L.0s.0d. I do give to my daughter, Mary, wife of Moses Swett, 5L.0s.
0d. I do give to my daughter, Susanah, relict of Richard Otis, £5.s0.d0. Daughter, Bathesba, wife of Thomas Babb, 5L.0s.0d. Daughter Charity, wife of Samuel Garetson, 10L.0s.0d. Daughter, Content, wife of Henry Laud, £10.s0.d. To be paid at the town of Newcastle by my executory to this my will in curant money of the aforesaid county to my aforesaid children, being demanded to them or their order within three years after my death (deces). All the residue and remainder of my estate I do give to my son, John Hussey, and him do I make full and sole executor to this my last will and testament. And for the full configrmation of all the above mentioned I do hereunto set my hand and affix my seal, this 8th day of the month called May, in the year 1707.

Signed, sealed and declared in the presence of:
Henry Swett, William Dowgeres, Sarah Swett.

Newcastle, February 18, 1707, is the date of Register's certificate, at which time the will is supposed to be proven or probated. Either this date or the date of the will is evidently wrong. (According to the Pettit Family, p 122.)

Robert A. Hussey, 1993, indicates John Sr. died 1707.

Subject: Delaware Husseys
From: [email protected] (MRS LINDA C KOEHLER)
Date: Sun, 26 Jul 1998 09:43:36, -0500

-- [ From: Linda * EMC.Ver #3.1a PRODIGY ] --

Hi All,

Mention of Christopher Hussey farming in New Castle County, DE has inspired me to post some of the deed information I have about the Husseys there. Although there are few direct land transactions by Christopher Hussey (son of John & Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey), there is never any mention of a title of "Captain" for him or any implication that he followed whaling as an occupation. Linda

NCC = New Castle County. "Cripple" = a swampy, densely overgrown tract of land.

Abstracts from New Castle County land records in Books A-N (1660's to about 1743) on microfilm. Deed Book and page number are found at end of abstract entry. These are bare-bones abstracts tracing the division of one particular tract of land owned by John Hussey Sr. There are many other land transactions involving Husseys in the NCC deeds. The will abstracts, also very condensed to focus on land isues, come from photocopies of the original record or "Calendar of Delaware Wills".

DEEDS AND WILLS - Dividing up the 640 Acre "Nonesuch Plantation" of John Hussey Sr.

[A 640 acre plantation called "Nonsuch" is divided into 2 parcels of 300 and 340 acres]

19 Apr 1687 RUMSEY/RICHARDSON - Charles Rumsey of NCC sells to John Richardson 300 acres, it being part of a 640-acre-tract called Nonsuch on the south side of Christiana Creek below Swart Nuton Island. Metes & bounds of 640 acres: lines of marked trees, run called Bessie, Nonsuch Creek. Metes & bounds of 300 acres: Beginning at stake with the S SW line running to corner, line of marked trees, run called Bessie. B:31- 33

[John Hussey Sr. reunites the tract by buying both sections.]

1 July 1695 RUMSEY/HUSSEY - Charles Rumsey of Christina Creek sells to John Hussey, yeoman late of Hamp Town in New Hampshire near Piscotaway in New England a 340-acre tract of land called Nonesuch bounded on N by Christina Creek, on W by Swart Nutton Island, on S by Bessie spring & on E by the ffyronhook [Fernhook]. B:89-91

6 Aug 1695 RICHARDSON/HUSSEY - John Richardson yeoman of Christina Creek sells to John Hussey yeoman, late of Hamp Town province of New Hamshire in New England 300 acres, the "within mentioned piece of land" (no metes and bounds given). B:91

[John Hussey Sr. divides his 640 acre tract among his 3 sons by deed of gift]

22 May 1706 HUSSEY/HUSSEY - John Hussey Sr., farmer of NCC gives to his sons John & Jedediah Hussey for love and good will all of his plantation on which he now lives except 150 acres. Bounds: Beginning at the creek which makes Black Walnut Island and extending southerly until within 80 perches of the head line of my said plantation which joins to the town common; also all the cripple grounds at the end of the said land. Also, "I reserve to my own disposal my beds, bedding and clothes, .... All other residue to my sons John & Jedidiah as a certain and sure inheritance; provided my sons allow me whatever I require for my comfortable subsistence during my natural life." B:341-2

22 Aug 1706 HUSSEY/HUSSEY - John Hussey Sr., farmer of NCC, gives to his son Christopher Hussey for love & good will a tract of land (no acreage given) as his right of inheritance. The land is on westerly side of his father's plantation. Bounds: beginning at 80 perches of the head line of my plantation next to the Town Common, extending to the cripple ground adjoining the creek which makes Black Walnut Island, with all the cripple ground between the said land and creek. B:401-2.

27 Jan 1707/8 HUSSEY/HUSSEY - John & Jedediah Hussey quit claim to their brother Christopher Hussey, yeoman, all the "within mentioned tract of land with marsh & cripple as it now stands". X:178-79

Abstract of will of John Hussey of county of New Castle on Delaware [from photocopy of original]
Dated 18 May 1707. Proved 18 Feb 1707/8.
To 7 daughters - 5 or 10 pounds each.
To sons Christopher & Jedediah 10 shillings; all remainder of estate to son John Hussey.

18 Mar 1707/8 HUSSEY/HUSSEY - Agreement - John Hussey, planter of NCC and his brother Jedidiah Hussey divide up a plantation given to them jointly by their father by deed dated 22 May 1706; no total acreage given - Jedidiah's share described by metes and bounds; residue (undescribed) belongs to John Hussey "being the better part of the plantation" in consideration of maintaining their father. Jedidiah's bounds: Beginning at old white Oak standing by the Common, metes & bounds with no named features. Also, half the mill, half the marsh and half the cripple ground, with John having right to pass through to go to town and Jedidiah having right to pass through to "the Sound through Gales or Barrs".

[Christopher Hussey's 1/3 share of the original tract is divided when his son Eliacum sells half to brother-in-law John Stoops, husband of Eliakim's sister Judith]

14 Feb 1729 HUSSEY/STOOP - Eliacum Hussey, cooper of NCC, sells a parcel of land (76 + 25 acres) on the south side of Christiana Creek to John Stoop, cordwainer of NCC. Bounds of 76 acre tract - Beginning at old corner black oak on Jediah Hussey's line, marked trees, corner near Besshys run, new corner of said Eliacum Hussey's land, new line of marked trees dividing Eliacum Hussey land from John Hussey's. Together with half of 50 acres of marsh & cripple adjoining to Besshy's Run. This includes liberty of a cart road through the land adjoining to the above. I:163-164

[John Hussey Jr. divides his 1/3 third share of the original tract into 2 almost equal parts for 2 of his sons, Nathan & John.]

Will Abstract of John Hussey of Christiana Creek in county of New Castle upon Delaware, yeoman [from photocopy of original] Dated: 28 August 1729, probate 12 April 1733.
To son Stephen 5 shillings and he is cut off from all other residue of estate.
To son Nathan, confirm to him an 80 acre parcel + 20 acres of marsh I now live on, adjoining the land formerly belonging to Christopher Hussey deceased; nothing else except 5 shillings.
To son Christopher Hussey 40 pounds; and to 4 daughters 5 pounds each.
To wife Anne Hussey, 1/3 life estate in the land; and after her death, her share to son John Hussey.
All residue of estate to son John Hussey.

[Jedidiah's entire 1/3 share of the original tract was sold by his son Silvanus to brother-in-law Stephen Lewis, husband of Silvanus' sister Rebecca]

Will Abstract for Jedidiah Hussey [as given in "Calendar of Delaware Wills, New Castle County 1682-1800"].
Dated 9 Dec 1734. Probated 29 Dec 1734. New Castle.
Mentions: wife Esther, children - Rebeccah wife of Stephen Lewis, Sylvanus, Jedediah, Esther; and James Cooper, relationship unknown.
Executors: son-in-law Stephen Lewis, friend Cornelius Garretson, son Sylvanus.

26 Dec 1734 HUSSEY/LEWIS - Silvanus Hussey, currier of the town of New Castle, NCC, sells to Stephen Lewis of Town of New Castle all right in his father's estate - land in New Castle Hundred commonly known as Jedediah Hussey's plantation which "Jedediah Hussey, my father late deceased bequeathed to me" by last will & testament - includes all of this estate here or in Philadelphia or elsewhere. This includes all horses, cattle & sheep, 2 mulatto girls, etc. Provided Stephen Lewis agrees to comply with my father Jedediah Hussey's will in respect of paying his debts & providing for and taking due care of "his poor afflicted son (my brother)" Jedediah Hussey. L:52

[John Hussey [the third in this line] sells his share of his father John Hussey Jr.'s plantation (approximately 1/6 of the original) to Stephen Lewis, who has already acquired all of Jedidiah Hussey's 1/3 share]

8 May 1735 HUSSEY/LEWIS - John Hussey, yeoman of New Castle County and Margaret his wife sell to Stephen Lewis, tanner of the town of New Castle 110 acres of land and marsh, part of a larger tract commonly called John Hussey's Plantation in New Castle Hundred. Bounds: Morton's line, John McComb's line, the side of the marsh, over the marsh nigh an old Dyke to a branch of Nonesuch Creek, Miln Island, Christiana Creek. K:353-354

[Nathan Hussey sells his approximately 1/6 share of the original estate, acquired through his father John Hussey Jr. For the first time part of the original 640 acre tract is - temporarily - owned outside the family.
John Stoops reunites Nathan's 1/6 share with another 1/6 share that he had already acquired (from Eliakim) so that all of the original tract is back in the family again.]

12 May 1735 HUSSEY/MCCOMB - Nathan Hussey of Christiana Hundred and Ann his wife sell to David McComb, yeoman 80 acres of land and 20 acres of marsh in New Castle Hundred. Bounds of 80 acres: beginning at corner black oak thence by metes & bounds, marsh. Bounds of 20 acres of marsh: begins at corner stake of said land, Stephen Lewis' marsh, Nonesuch Creek. K:338-339

16 Feb 1736 MCCOMB/STOOPS - David McComb, yeoman, of New Castle Hundred, NCC and Agnes his wife sell to John Stoops, cordwainer, of the same hundred, 80 acres of land and 20 acres of marsh. John Hussey late of the same place, yeoman, at the time of his death was seized in fee simple of a certain tract of land; he did on 28 Aug 1729 make his last will and bequeathed to his son Nathan Hussey with these bounds: 20 acres of Marsh or meadow ground - adjoins to land formerly belonging to Christopher Hussey dec'd, Nonsuch Creek which divides the marsh or meadow ground from Black Walnut; 80 acres - beginning at said marsh extending from said Christopher Hussey dec'd end line, Samuel Silsbee's land. L:58-60

[John Stoops reunites another 1/6 share (Eliakim's) to the 2/6 shares he had already acquired. Notice that this next deed specifies that this is part of the land Christopher Hussey inherited from his father, whereas the 1729 deed in which the first half was sold never mentions that this was Christopher Hussey's 1/3 share of John Hussey Sr.'s estate.]

20 May 1741 HUSSEY/STOOP - Eliakim Hussey, cooper of Town of New Castle and Elizabeth his wife sell to John Stoop, yeoman of New Castle Hundred half of 150 acres of fast land & 51 acres of marsh & cripple; by indenture dated 14 Feb 1730 they had sold 1/2 of the described land to Stoop and now they are selling the remaining half. By virtue of deed of gift from John Hussey the elder late of NCC to his son Christopher Hussey likewise deceased and also by virtue of a survey dated 22 Jan 1707/08 under hand of George Dakeyne then surveyor & a release annexed under hand & seal of John & Jedediah Hussey now likewise deceased, "brethren" of aforesaid Christopher. Christopher, father to Eliakim Hussey & to Judith, wife of John Stoop, was in his lifetime & at his death seized of a certain tract of land & marsh in New Castle Hundred. Bounds: Beginning at corner black oak on back line of late Jedediah Hussey, several courses of Bessey, Switzers path, Nonesuch creek, through the Cripple. N:97-100

[So, as of 1748, all of the original 640-acre Nonsuch Plantation of John Hussey Sr. purchased in 1695 still remains in "the family", with half owned by Stephen Lewis, husband of Rebecca Hussey, a granddaughter of John Hussey Sr.; and half owned by John Stoops, husband of Judith Hussey , also a granddaughter of John Hussey Sr. However, part of that land now goes out of the Hussey family - a 1/6 share of the original tract owned by Stephen Lewis is sold, so he (actually, his estate) is down to a 1/3 share of the original]

19 May 1748 SWETT & LEWIS/HYLAND - Benjamin Swett & Rebecca his wife (widow of Stephen Lewis) & Josiah Lewis, administrators of the estate of Stephen Lewis late of NCC, deceased tanner, are executing a deed for land sold by Stephen Lewis to John Hyland, late of NCC, weaver now deceased; administrators for John Hyland are John Garretson and Joseph Abraham. They are selling 110 acres of land & marsh commonly called John Hussey's Plantation lying in New Castle Hundred (excepting the right to maintain a road to and from the marsh formerly belonging to Jedediah Hussey deceased and then belonging to Stephen Lewis). Bounds: beginning at corner stake of land of John Morton standing by Christiana Creek, Morton's line, MCoomb's line, side of marsh, over the marsh nigh an old Dyke to a branch of Nonesuch Creek, Miln Island, Christiana Creek . Q:3-4

20 May 1748 HYLAND (GARRETSON & ABRAHAM)/MORTON - John Garretson and Joseph Abraham, administrators of John Hyland, late weaver, deceased, of New Castle County sell at auction 110 acres of land in New Castle Hundred commonly called John Hussey's Plantation to Matthias Morton yeoman of New Castle county. [Deed gives the exact same bounds for the plantation as given in deed of 19 May 1748.] Hyland had died "seized of the plantation", but Hyland's administrators had petitioned the Orphan's Court to sell the land because Hyland, who died intestate, was "under encumbrance of £100 due the estate of Stephen Lewis" for that land. Q: 59-60

[I have not examined deeds after this date to see how John Stoops & Stephen Lewis' widow eventually disposed of the other Nonsuch plantation tracts.]

==========================================
[Below is the only other land that I have a record of for Christopher Hussey, son of John & Rebecca (Perkins) Hussey Sr. I find no evidence in the deeds that Christopher Hussey, son of John & Ann (Inskeep) Hussey ever owned land himself in New Castle County.]

24 Jan 1697 GODIN/HUSSEY - Christopher Hussey of New Castle County buys a house & lot in the town of New Castle from Peter Godin of New Castle County (heir of John fforatt). Lot towards SW end of town, bounded by river, Wm. Peter Urich, Edward Blake dec'd, and Jacobus Urich (part of a lot of John Moll sold to John fforatt in 1688). B:154-5

17 Feb 1743 HUSSEY/DYER - Eliacum Husey and wife Elizabeth of town of New Castle, son & heir of Christopher Hussey of same town deceased are selling rights to some land to Robert Dyer. History of lot included, but no metes & bounds or more specific info given: Gov. Lovelace in 1669 sold lot by Patent to William Tom, .... John Moll sold to John Farratas in 1688, whose heir Peter Godine "son-in-law" sold the lot to Christopher Hussey on 24 January 1697. Now for £20 Eliacum & Elizabeth Hussey are making over all their right and title in that land together with a "Bank Lott" fronting the aforesaid ground with bounds as appear by Gov. William Penn's patent to Christopher Hussey on 2 Sep 1708 (recorded in Patent Book A vol.4 p.92).
N:460 -461

John married Rebecca Perkins on 2 Sep 1659 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire. Rebecca was born in 1637 in , , , England and died about 1711 in , New Castle, Delaware about age 74.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Theodate Hussey was born on 12 Jun 1660 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

         ii.  Rebecca Hussey was born on 10 Mar 1661/62 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

        iii.  Mary Hussey was born on 8 Nov 1665 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

         iv.  Susannah Hussey was born on 7 Sep 1667 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

          v.  Ann Hussey was born on 14 May 1669 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

         vi.  Huldah Hussey was born on 16 Jul 1670 of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died on 2 May 1701 at age 30.

        vii.  Bathsheba Hussey was born on 21 Sep 1671 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died in 1713 at age 42.

       viii.  Christopher Hussey was born on 17 Oct 1672 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died in 1715 in Probably, , Delaware at age 43.

         ix.  Hope Hussey was born on 19 Mar 1673/74 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died on 28 Mar 1674.

32        x.  John Hussey II (born on 18 Jan 1675/76 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire - died in 1733 in Christina Hundrd, Newcastle, Delaware)

         xi.  Hope, II Hussey was born on 22 Feb 1676/77 of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died before 1707.

        xii.  Jedidiah Hussey was born on 6 Feb 1677/78 in Hampton Twp, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

       xiii.  Patience Hussey was born on 4 Apr 1679 of Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died before 1707.

        xiv.  Charity Hussey was born on 4 Aug 1681 of Hampton, , New Hampshire.

         xv.  Hussey was born on 23 Nov 1682 and died on 25 Jun 1683.

        xvi.  John Hussey was born on 30 May 1684 of Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died on 25 Jun 1684.

       xvii.  Content Hussey was born on 29 Oct 1685 of Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.


65. Rebecca Perkins, daughter of Isaac Perkins and Susanna Wise, was born in 1637 in , , , England and died about 1711 in , New Castle, Delaware about age 74.

General Notes: Other sources indicate birthyear as 1642.

Genealogies of Pennsylvania Families indicates Rebecca, married 21 Sept., 1659, John Hussey, who, by deed of 1 July 1695, purchased three hundred and forty acres of land near New Castle, Delaware, being then described as "late of Hamp Town in New Hampshire, near Piscatoway in New England." His will was probated 18 Feb. 1707. He had a large family; several of his grandchildren were members of the Sadsbury Meeting of Friends in Lancaster Co., Penna., in 1737 and of the Warrington Meeting in York Co., in 1745.

Robert A. Hussey, 1993, indicates Rebecca was born Feb 29, 1635/36 in Lynn, Massachusetts.

Rebecca married John Hussey on 2 Sep 1659 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire. John was born in 1635 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts and died from 1707 to 1711 in New Castle, New Castle, Deleware at age 72.

66. John Inskeep, son of Thomas Inskeep and Unknown, was born about 1650 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died on 15 Dec 1729 about age 79.

General Notes: A source available is "Meet the Families of Garwood and Inskeep" by Ruth Inskeep, 1975. It indicates John was born about 1677 in Sadley Green, Staffordshire, England. Received from Pat Winterberg (Prodigy PNXB37B) whose father is a first cousin of Ruth Inskeep. (Apr 1992)

Page 9 of that text contains a section entitled The Family of Inskeep

It was not until the 13th century or later that surnames were generally adopted. Most often English surnames came about by a man being designated as from a certain locale or by his occupation.

It is believed this family of Inskip - Inskipp - Inskeep can first be found in North Lancashire where the village of Inskip is located. This village is seven or eight miles north-northwest of Preston.

In Charlews W. Bardsley's Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames, p. 418, he gives "Local, 'of Inskip', a manor in the parish of St. Michael le Wyre, Co. Lanc." In The Origin of English Surnames, p. 324, Reaney notes that "Many of them had strayed far from their original home, .... from Lancashire the Inskips of Bedfordshire ....." But it seems our branch of the family did not stray quite so far for they located in Staffordshire.

Was it the Staffordshire branch that changed the spelling of the name to Inskeep? Why? Why was the name changed to the spelling of Inskeep, but the pronunciation of Inskip retained?

John Inskeep, our ancestor who came to America, according to the inscription on his tombstone was born in Sadely Green, Staffordshire. His sister Isabell Jones, in her letter of 1755 stated she was the daughter of John Inskeep of Fooford in Staffordshire.

A detailed present-day map of Staffordshire does not show either of these places, Fooford or Sadely Green. However, southeast of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire there is Fulford and near by is Saverley Green. In Fulford the old church where the family attended still stands. There are Inskeeps living there today.

An LDS Family Group Sheet at http ://209.140.72.162/cgi-bin/genealo gy/dcsreslt?59773+935667812+0+in000024.gif is the source of the dates of birth for the children.

To: [email protected]
Subject: New to the List
From: "James L. Stokes" <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 30 Nov 1999 19:28:25 -0400

Hi,

Inskeep is a somewhat unusual name so I don't know if there are many Inskeep families or just the John of Marlton, New Jersey.

I descend from John b. (1677-12/15/1729) through his son Abraham (4/18/1712-1/16/1780) who married Sarah Ward (b.1722 d. 3/29/1817), their daughter Sarah ( 7/23/1747-4/1/1820)married Thomas Stokes on 10/25/1764 at Haddonfield Meeting. Thomas and Sarah lived in what is now Cherry Hill Township until 1798 when they moved to Philadelphia. My guess is that the land where they lived was played out (no fertilizers in those days). Their son Benjamin ran the farm but eventually he gave it up and moved to Indiana.

I descend from Sarah and Thomas' son William who married Sarah Laskey, their son William married Rebecca Redman, their son Elwood married Ella Roberts, their son Walter married Margaret Kelly and their son Joseph married Anna Dougherty, Joseph and Anna are my parents.

Below is an article I found at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, on the Inskeeps from the Moorfield Examiner. I believe it was published in 1906 but my photocopy isn't very good and I can't read the date. It was placed there by Raymond Bell who was doing genealogical research on President Nixon. John the immigrant's sister is an ancestoress of former President Nixon.

The most interesting portion of the article is a letter written by John Inskeeps sister from England to her nephews in America. She provides addtional information on the family.

This isn't the complete text of the article, if there is some interest I'll type it in.

Jim




From the Moorefield Examiner
THE INSKEEPS
by H. E. Wallace Jr.


A FOREWORD

The author wishes to insert here a word of thanks and explanations. The first to the many South Branch Inskeep descendants who have aided him in this compilation and especially to Mrs. Ida Wood, through whom the work was encouraged and brought to its successful termination. It might be well to also state that the folowing genealogy is but a very small portion of the entire which is hoped may some day be published in book form. The word of explanation is concering the numbers attached to each name. The first generation is numbered one as Judge John Inskeep 1: his children: the second generation 200 to 299; the third generation 300 to 399: the fourth, 400 to 499: the fifth 5000 to 5999: the sixth 6000 to 6999: and the seventh, 7000 to 7999.

___________________________

In the southeastern part of Delaware Township, Camden Co., N. J., and about one mile west from Marlton, Burlington county, is situated the original homestead of John Inskeep, the pioneer of the Inskeep Family in America. The county of Staffordshire, England, was the cradle of the race and the name according to Gentry's Family Names, signifies "An nskeeper, a landlord, and is derived from an inn, a dwelling: scipe, denoting form, condition, state, office or dignity."

History and tradion are both silent as to the why and wherefor of John Inskeep's emigration but his purchases of land upon his arrival and his immediate prominent position in the affairs of the colony proclaim beyond doubt his was a family of means, education and refinement. Religious persecution could have had no influence on this move of the pioneer, as he and the majority of his descendants were of the Church of England. It was not until the third and fourth generation that they yielded to the influence of the community in which they dwelt and embraced the tenets of Friends. But even this was only in isolated instances and with the antagonistic influences to this faith of the revolution, they rejoined the church of their fathers or its kindred faiths.

Burlington and Gloucester counties, the cradle of the family in New Jersey, hold to this day places known as Inskeep's". Such as the old mills, near Winslow, the marl beds and the graveyard near Marlton, but save in four cases,
the name has become extinct in the male line in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, though through grandsons of the pioneer who emigrated to Virginia, the family name lives throughout the south, middlewest and beyond the Mississippi.

Never at any one time since its establishment in America has the family assumed large numbers in the male line. This doubtless accounts for the small number of distinguished men; yet among them are found two judges of the Gloucester County Courts, one Mayor of Philadelpia, two officers of the revolution and subsequent to that time, many distinguished in the lesser walks of life, hardy, honest, kindly, God fearing men and women, the bone and sinew of the nation.

What little is known of the ancestry of the pioneer is derived from a letter written by his sister to her nephews John and James, sons of the pioneer and here follows.

London March 12, 1755

To my nephews, James or John Inskeep;

I have had a great desire to write to you a long time but never had an opportunity till lately, not knowing where to direct to you, or who of the family was living, for being at variance with my brother James Inskeep, I never had an oppportunity of seeing the letters which was sent to him by you and your father, who I understand has been dead ever since the year 1729.

I am the daughter of John Inskeep of Fooford in Staffordshire, and sister of your deceased father, and have living, one brother and two sisters; my brother James Inskeep who corresponded with your father and you, and has let me have several letters which he received from you in order that I might write to you - his wife is dead and he has only one son whose name is James - my sisters are Cathrine and Margaret which are married and have children - Cathrine lives in Staffordsire, and Margaret in London: and I have four children and live in London. I have a brother deceased in Staffordshire who's name was Jonathan Inskeep, who has left a wife and four children, the oldest of which his name is
John Inskeep.

I would be very glad to hear from you, to hear of my sister Ann, your aunt is living and where she lives.

This is the whole act of our family in England who are in good health at present, some of my children are grown to maturity and have a great inclination to see their relations in that part of the workd if they could have the pleasure
of hearing from them, therfore it would be a great satisfaction to receive an answer from some of you, you signified in your letter to my brother James Inskeep your desire of corresponding with the family, which I hope you will tak
hold of all opportunity to do - me and my husband and children and all our relations joins in love to you - from your affectionate and loving Aunt.

Isabell Jones

P.S. My eldest son is a pretty good scholar and has a great mind to come abroad if he could meet with any encouragement. Pray let me know what commodity is best to bring from London.

Please do direct as this To Mr. Jones at No. 6 in Bloomsberry Market, London.

To John or James Inskeep linving in Burlington county in the township of Evesham in New Jersey, or else in Gloucester County West Jersey near Philadelphia. (The original is in the possession of Mrs. A. W. Stubblefield, of Cumberland, Md.)



This establishes without doubt or cavil the father, brothers and sisters of John Inskeep, the pioneer, whos body lies interred in the old Inskeep graveyard at Marlton, isolated, neglected and forgotten by his descendants. There are only eleven stones in the graveyard, a small plot fifty feet square and the are as follows:

1st generation. John Inskeep, died December 15, 1729. Aged 52 years.
His tombstone also reads "He was born at Sadeley Green Staffordshire, Old England. ("Research of the gazetters has failed to disclose a Sadeley Green in Staffordshire. Litchfield however possesses a Sadler Stree, at this time of writing, also the birthplace of Dr. Samuel Johnson, the lexicographer, which at the time of John Inskeep's birth fronted on a green. A neighboring estate is also kown as Fulford, and one as Freeford).

Mary Inskeep, died September 10-1758, aged 83 years.

2nd generation. John Inskeep, died October 30, 1756, aged 55 years.
Joseph Inskeep died April 1732, aged 27 years.

3rd generation.
Mary Inskeep daughter of John Inskeep, died Novenmber 13-1756, aged 26 years.
Sarah, wife of Titian Leeds and daughter of John Inskeep, died November 3, 1756, aged 18 years.
William Inskeep, died November 15, 1756 in 27 years of his age.
Elizabeth, wife of Samuel Tonkins died September 19-1755, aged 30 years.

5th generation
Sarah I. Rogers, died January 22, 1855, aged 81 years, 4 months.

Besides the above there is another marked grave, the stone however only bearing the initials M.S.I.

John Inskeep, the pioneer emigrated before 1708 with his wife Mary, his sons John, James, Joseph and daughter Mary. Another son Abraham was born in New Jersey.

1. John Inskeep, b. in Staffordshire 1677, died in New Jersey 12-15-1728, m. Mary b. 1675 d. 9-10-1758.
Their issue:-
201-1 John Inskeep, b. 1701 d. 10-301756 m. 1-13-1724, 10 children
202-2 James Inskeep m. 10-22-1725 Mary Miller, 5 children.
203-3 Jospeh Inskeep, b. 1793, d. April 1732, m. (license) 12-19-1728 Mary Matlack, no issue
204-4 Mary Inskeep, b. 3-28-1707, d. 6-2-1784, m. William Hawling, 3 children survived the husband.
205-5 Abraham Inskeep, b. 4-18-1712, d. 1-16-1780 m. license 12-10) 1740, Sarah, d. of George Ward, 11 children.

Authorities:
N.J. Wills
N.J.Deeds N.J.
Marriage Licenses
Inskeep Graveyard, Marlton, N.J.
St. Mary's Graveyard, Burlington, N.J.
First Presbyterian church records, (He's talking about the 1st Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia) Pub.GEn. Soc. Vol. 2

____________________________

Other Resources

The Pa. Magazine of History and Biography (published by the Historical Society of Pa.) has an article on John Inskeep, Mayor of Philadelphia in Vol. 28, #2, 1904, it includes genealogical material on his family.

The Philadelpia Inquirer, in its issue of Sunday, May 8th, 1988, in the real estate section, shows a picture of the original homestead of the Inskeep family near Marlton. The family that owned it were restoring it.

The Ann Inskeep mentioned in the letter, above, was an ancestor of the late President, Richard M. Nixon. She married John Hussey in Christiana Hundred (New Castle, Delaware) about 1703.

(A more detailed copy of this article is offline at C: Documents_1.)

In March 2009 Jim Stokes posted this to the Inskeep mailing list on Rootsweb.com:

Hi Folks,
I just wanted to let everyone know there is an interesting web page with information on John Iskeep of Marlton, New Jersey. John was born in Fulford, Straffordshire, England and the web page is sponsored by the Fulford Parish Council. In addition to information on John Inskeep it includes information on his ancestors as well as some of his descendants.
<http://www.fulford-parish-council.org/history-chapter10.html>

For those who haven't seen it there is a great article on the Burlington County Genweb page concerning the Inskeeps. Part of the information on the Fulford page came from the material at the Burlington County Genweb page, both contain information on the descendants of John Inskeep who moved to West Virginia.


John married Sarah Ward.4 Sarah was born in 1651 in , Staffordshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Inskeep was born in 1677 in Stadeley Green, Staffordshire, England, died on 15 Dec 1729 at age 52, and was buried in Marlton, , New Jersey.

33       ii.  Ann Inskeep (born about 1680 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England - died in 1733 in Christiana 100)

        iii.  Jonothan Inskeep was born about 1683 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died before 1755.

         iv.  James Inskeep was born about 1689 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died after 1755.

          v.  Isabell Jones Inskeep was born about 1681 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died after 1755.

         vi.  Margaret Inskeep was born about 1687 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died after 1755.

        vii.  Cathrine Inskeep was born about 1685 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died after 1755.


67. Sarah Ward 4 was born in 1651 in , Staffordshire, England.

Sarah married John Inskeep. John was born about 1650 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England and died on 15 Dec 1729 about age 79.

72. Timothy Jessop, son of Thomas Jessope and Mary Miklesthwaite, was born on 6 Nov 1651 in Fay, Little Rock, Waterloo, died on 20 Jun 1696 in Washington, Little Rock, Wetherbee at age 44, and was buried in Jun 1696 in , , Wetherbee.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

Timothy Jessop, known as "Timothy of Rawcliffe" was baptized at Penistone, Yorkshire, "filius nothus," illigitimate, child of Mary Micklesthwaite.
Friends records say he was born in Birdseye which is in the Penistone area. He died 6 month 20, 1696 and was buried two days later at Pollington, Yorkshire. He married at Pontefract Meeting, Braithwaite in Yorkshire 2 month 27, 1676 Mary whose surname cannot be proved. She has been called daughter of James Parrat of Fishlake and the daughter of John of Wales. Perusal of all Parrat records in Friends House, London, fails to reveal this Mary as a Parrat.
Mary was burried at Rawcliffe, Balby Monthly Meeting 6 month 30, 1719.

Timothy Jessop is first listed in Besse's "Sufferings" in Yorkshire in 1682 in a "List of Persons Long Imprisoned" in the County "For not paying Tithes" or the tax to support the Established church. He was imprisoned two years and nine months. Again in 1690 Timothy Jessup of Rawcliffe was fined 6 shillings for the same offense. Yorkshire Quarterly Meeting records show him in Peniston in 1694 where he was granted 5 pounds "for his travells to visit Friends Meetings." That same record lists him among the "Deceaced Ministers" showing hi date of death. His brother John is on the same list of Arthington, near Otley in 1718. It is interesting that these are the first records sepelled Jessup rather than Jessop.

An inventory of his good after his death indicates he was a linen weaver.

Timothy married Mary Parrat on 27 Feb 1675/76 in Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England. Mary was born about 1653 in Josie, Zella, Little Rock, Waterloo, died on 30 Jun 1719 in Washington, Little Rock, Wetherbee about age 66, and was buried on 30 Jun 1719 in , , Wetherbee.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Jessup was born on 16 Sep 1677 in Birdseye, Yorkshire, England.

         ii.  Timothy Jessup was born on 8 Jan 1678/79 in Birdseye, Yorkshire, England.

        iii.  Joseph Jessop was born on 25 Mar 1680 and died in Aug 1735 at age 55.

         iv.  Jonathan Jessup was born on 8 Nov 1682 in Birdseye, Yorkshire, England and died on 25 Feb 1708/09 in , Yorkshire, England at age 26.

          v.  Hannah Jessup was born on 13 Sep 1684 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England.

         vi.  Enoch Jessup was born on 3 Mar 1684/85 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England and died on 4 Jan 1686/87 in Pollington, Yorkshire, England at age 1.

        vii.  Sarah Jessup was born on 23 Mar 1686/87 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England.

36     viii.  Thomas Jessop (born on 14 Jun 1688 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England - died on 15 Feb 1744/45 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

         ix.  Mary Jessup was born on 16 Aug 1689 in Rawcliffe, Yorkshire, England.

          x.  Benjamin Jessup was born on 6 Oct 1690 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

         xi.  Ruth Jessup was born on 8 Mar 1693/94 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England and was buried on 21 May 1694 in Pollington, Yorkshire, England.


73. Mary Parrat, daughter of James Parrat and Unknown, was born about 1653 in Josie, Zella, Little Rock, Waterloo, died on 30 Jun 1719 in Washington, Little Rock, Wetherbee about age 66, and was buried on 30 Jun 1719 in , , Wetherbee.

General Notes: Source: LDS microfilm 1561672.

Mary Jessupe Testimony concerning her Dear Husband Timothy Jessup, who departed this Life 20th of the 6th month 1696.

Something remains upon my Spirit in way of Testimony, concerning my dear Husband Timothy Jessup who was a Man that truly loved & fear'd the Lord, yea from the time of my very first near Acquaintance with him, I can truly say, it was many times as Meat & Drink unto him to do the Will of the Lord, & in the days of his Youth, when the concern of Marriage was betwixt us, his Advice was often to me, that we might live in that, in which we could freely give up each other, if the Lord required it of us, and many times we have met & parted and few Words past betwixt us, though several Hours together, but our Hearts were greatly tender'd by the Love of God, which was the Seral of our Unity, by which we were linked together in that Love which no Visible Thing cou'd break.

So dear Friends, ye that know the Truth,and are concerned in this weight matter have a Eye to the Lord and the guidance of his Spirit, and do not go on in anything that brings a vail over you but wait allways to know the Lord, betwixt you & all things; yea him to be your chiefest beloved, and when you can witness him to be so, if your
Friend be in the next place this is the Marriage Union the Lord will own for Justified from a living Experience, those that draw near the Lord he will draw near unto them and bear them up in the greatest of Trials; for though it was our Lot to meet with many Exercises in our Time, This dear companion did never murmer nor desire anything but the will of the Lord be done for he had so learned the Truth as in all conditions to be content and would always stgrengthen and encourage me, and wou'd often say if we were faithfull to our God, and did live in that, in which we were joined together, all wou'd be well, for never any People that trusted in the Lord, then came to be deceived, for all things work together for good to them that truly love and fear the Lord. And now although the sense of the great Loss and want that I have of so dear a Companion, many times makes my Heart fit to break, yet I am bound in duty to be contented, being well satisfied it is his Everlasting Gain, for though he was a Man very laborious, exceeding many others, alll outward concern was taken from him, and his Mind was taken up in Heavenly Meditations which made his sickness easy to him, so that he scarce complained at all, but in the time thereof many Heavenly words dropt from him, which are still a comfort to me, and above all that the Lord was pleased to honour him with his presence to the very last moment of his time, which was spend in Praising and Magnifyhing his Heavenly Father who had been his Support unto that very day. Oh my Soul in the sence of these things, is trully bowed before the Lord, and the memorial of this my dearest Friends, is trully precious to me and I believe will be to the Living, for surely his Labours of Love and unwearied Travels, cannot satisfy and be forgotten, for I am at wittness for him that it was as well in private as in publick Oh may the many prayers and Tears with which he had besought the Lord on the behalf of his People, and in the Night Season many times, I hope I never shall forget, but that it may be as an engagement upon me for ever to wallk humbly before the Lord, that as hitherto he hath been with us, I may still witness him to be helper; and by his Assistance I may be enabled to persevere to the end, and that when time shall be no more, I may lay down my Head in peace, as this my dear Companion hath done, wwho hath finish'd the Work appointed for him in faithfulness, and is gone to that Everlasting rest, that is prepared with God for the Rightsous, So being I was not easy in my mind untill I had writ these few Lines. I recommend them to my Friends, hopiong it may be of service to some, as an encouragement to serve the Lord faithfully.

(Signed) MARY JESSUP

Rawcliffe 12th mo: 12th, 1696.

Mary married Timothy Jessop on 27 Feb 1675/76 in Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England. Timothy was born on 6 Nov 1651 in Fay, Little Rock, Waterloo, died on 20 Jun 1696 in Washington, Little Rock, Wetherbee at age 44, and was buried in Jun 1696 in , , Wetherbee.

74. William Pease, son of William Pease and Unknown, was born about 1650 of Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England and was buried on 22 Mar 1692/93 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

William Pease of Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England was born about 1650. He was buried at Fishlake 12 mo. 22, 1692, a husbandman, leaving a will probated March 1692/93. He married, first, about 1670 or 1671 Mary--. This marriage is not recorded by either the parish or the Friends and may have been about the time William was becoming concerned with the Quaker movement. The first child of William and Mary is not recorded either, but is found in the Foster pedigree. Subsequent children are found in Quaker records. William Pease of Fishlake married second, recorded by Yorkshire Friends at Balby Meeting 2 month 22, 1686/7, Ann (Carnally) Pearson, daughter of William Carniley (Carnally, Carnulary) of Wath-on-Dearne, and widow of Nicholas Pearson. At the time of her marriage Ann was living in West Melton.

William married Ann (Pearson) Carnally. Ann was born of West Melton, , England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Lydia Pease was born on 25 Jul 1688 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

37       ii.  Rachel Pease (born on 11 Sep 1690 in , , Waterloo - died on 18 Apr 1720 in Thella, Little Rock, Waterloo)


75. Ann (Pearson) Carnally, daughter of William Carniley and Unknown, was born of West Melton, , England.

Ann married William Pease. William was born about 1650 of Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England and was buried on 22 Mar 1692/93 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

76. John Small, son of John Small and Ann Grove, was born in 1664 in , , , Wales and died on 25 Dec 1688 in Elizabeth River, Nansemond, Virginia at age 24.

General Notes: Batch #: 8809602, Sheet #: 26, Source Call #: Not Available

From the William Jessup Cleaver text, John Small married Alice Hollowell as the certificate attests: "John Small, sonn of John Small of Nanzemond and Alce Hollowell the daughter of Alce Hollowell of Elizabeth River County, did publish their marriage before a meeting on men and women frends in Mary Sanderses howse in Nanzemond on the 10th day of the 11 mo. last and coming before the meeting the 2nd time in Thomas Jordons howse in Chuckatuck, they did publish their marriage againe on the 14th of twelfe month and were married in hir mothers howse on the 25th day of ye 12th month in ye yeare 1688."

John Small was a representative at the first recorded meeting of the Virginia Yearly Meeting, July 1702.

Source for birth:

From: [email protected] (Annette Nixon)
Date: Sat, 5 Sep 1998 14:37:08 -0500 (CDT)

John SMALL was born 1664 in Wales . He died 12-25-1688 in Elizabeth River, Nansemond VA. His wife was Alice HOLLOWELL b 12-16-1664 died 11-19-1700. Her parents were THOMAS & MARY HOLLOWELL. Thomas came to Virginia in 1649 Children: Joseph, Benjamin, John & OBEDIAH OBEDIAH SR was married in 1730 to Sarah_____. He died 2-19-1789 in Pasquotank NC. Children: Joshua, Nathan, Jesse, Elizabeth, Issac, John, OBEDIAH JR

John married Alice Hollowell from 25 Dec 1688 to 1689 in Chuckatuck Mm, Nansemond, Virginia. Alice was born on 16 Dec 1664 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died on 19 Nov 1700 at age 35.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Joseph Small

38       ii.  Benjamin Small (born about 1691 in , , Virginia - died about 1752 in , Carteret, North Carolina)

        iii.  Obediah Small died in 1788 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina.


77. Alice Hollowell, daughter of Thomas Hollowell Sr. and Alce (Alice), was born on 16 Dec 1664 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died on 19 Nov 1700 at age 35.

Alice married John Small on 25 Dec 1688-1689 in Chuckatuck Mm, Nansemond, Virginia. John was born in 1664 in , , , Wales and died on 25 Dec 1688 in Elizabeth River, Nansemond, Virginia at age 24.

78. John Knight .

John married someone.

His child was:

39        i.  Mary Knight (born about 1695 - died in 1743)


80. Henley .

General Notes: From HISTORY OF CHICKASAW COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI. This is where some descendants moved.

"The Henley family stems from the immigrants known to have arrived in Virginia just prior to 1642 in York River County. Richard and Sarah Darby from England. The Henleys fought in the Revolution: Edmund, James Dunbar, William and Darby and against the Cherokee Indians in 1770/71. They are listed as members of the North Carolina Assembly in 1770/71.

The Henley men from Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi were all well educated, prosperous and saw to it that their children received a good education.

They were carpenters (builders), millers, merchants, tavern keepers, farmers, but the main thread that keeps running through this family was the love of the "due process of law". From Darby (1), the son of Richard and Sarah Darby Henley, who was a "Barrister" in Calvert Co., Maryland 1698 and prior to this the thread weaves in and out of each generation."

Henley married someone.

His child was:

40        i.  Patrick Henley (born about 1650 in , Probably, England - died on 28 Feb 1697/98 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)


82. Edward Mayo,5 son of Edward Mayo and Sarah Maggs, was born about 1676 in Barbados, West Indies and died on 30 Nov 1724 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 48.

General Notes: From Roger Smith:
BIOGRAPHY: From Jack Butler Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, BIRTH AND DEATH RECORDS, page 102
Edward Mayo (d. 8-16-1724, aged about 47 or 48 yrs., p. 144.)
The Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy is a collection of records from the Quaker Meeting minutes. Notice that it says that Edward was 47 or 48 years old when he died in 1724, meaning that he was born about 1676-1677 - which means that this record is also for Edward Jr. Apparently, he died in August of 1724, and his will was proved on Oct 20 1724 in Pasquotank Co, NC. It showed that he was a Quaker. Will can be found in "Early Records of NC, Vol. V, Wills, 1723-1736"
Edward Jr. was married to Mary Clare when he died and had sons named Edward and Joseph, daughters Mary, Ann, Elizabeth and Sarah according to will dated October, 1724.
A will of Jan 1733/34 is for Edward Jr's son Edward III. He married Mary Jessop and it names Jospeh Jessop, his wife's father, as executor.

From Denise Clark:

MAYO FAMILY TREE

MAYO is the name of an ancient English family, so ancient in fact that by 1600 they had scattered to many places in southern England. They were in Wiltshire, Dorset, London and Bristol to name a few. It was variously spelled Mayo, Maho, Maio, Mayoe, May, nad Mayroe. This was due in part to the inability of clerks to spell correctly, and in part to differences in speech dialects. It began to evolve into its final form, Mayo, about 1650. The word Mayos generally believed to mean "son of Matthew" and is of English origin. Many believe the Mayo family came from the County of Mayo in Ireland, But no evidence of this has been found. The word "mayo" in that area was an adjective meaning "rolling green hills." No doube there have been individuals who called themselves Mayos after leaning that area, but that does not apply to this family. A search of records in the Public Records Office in Dublin reveal only one Mayo prior to 1750. That was the record of an ensign departing from service. After that time there were Mayos in Ireland, but since this particular Mayo family was already in the New World, no further search was made.

The Mayo Coat of Arms is a shield, the background color being red representing fire. In military application it signifies fortitude. The three coronets are gold representing the finest metal and used to show value, purity, and fineness, the beareresurpassing all others in valor. The chevron is supposed to have been adapted from the bow of the war saddle which rose high in front. The design on the chevron is black and gold-the lack associated with might and repentance and gold with valor. In ancient times, coats of arms served as a means of identification in battle, tournament, or as a mark of position or status: and through the years has become an exact art.

FIRST GENERATION

Edward Mayo Sr. 1,2 was born about 1650 in Whiltshire, England. He immigrated about 1670 to VA. He was mentioned in will of father-in-law, George Maags on Jun 14, 1677 in Barbados. 3 He emigrated in 1684 to Perquimans Co, NC. He died late 1700's in Pasquotank Co. NC. He signed a will on Oct 12, 1724 in Pasquotank Co, NC.4 His Will (proved) on Oct 20 1724 in Pasquotank Co, NC that he was Quaker.

EDWARD MAYO, SR. (MARRIED SEPT. 2, 1666-CHRIST CHURCH PARRISH, BARBADOS. SP--SARAH MAAGS (DAUGHTER OF GEORGE, ANN MEGGS)
Sarah maags was mentioned in the will of her father, George Maage on Jun 14, 1677 in
Barbados.

THEIR CHILDREN:

SARAH MAYO B-1670 (TWIN TO ELIZ) IN BARBADOS D-ABT. 1720 PASQUOTANK CO. NC
MARRIED (1) JOHN HARLOW CULPEPPER, 8/23/1688, PERQUIMANS
2 CHILDREN: SARAH & ROBERT
(2) PATRICK HENLEY, 1693, PERQUIMANS CO.
3 CHILDREN: ELIZABETH, ANN & JOHN
(3) MATTHEW PRITCHARD, 3/9/1697/98, PERQUIMANS
1 CHILD: THOMAS

ANN MAYO B-ABT. 1675 BARBADOS, D-ABT 1719, PASQUOTANK CO. NC
MARRIED (1) RICHARD POPE, 1690, PASQUOTANK CO. NC
2 CHILDREN: EDWARD & MARY
(2) FRANCIS DELAMARE, 1702, PASQUOTANK CO. NC
3 CHILDREN: STEPHEN, ISACK & ANNE
(3) AUGUSTINE SCARBOROUGH, 1703/04
1 CHILD: MARY
(4)JOHN JENNINGS, 1715, PASQUOTANK CO.NC
3 CHILDREN: WILLIAM, MARY & ELIZABETH

ELIZABETH MAYO B-1670 (TWIN TO SARAH) BARBADOS D-6/1716 IN NC.
MARRIED (1)STEPHEN SCOTT, ABT 1698
7 CHILDREN: EDWARD JR, JOHN, STEPHEN, JOSUHA,
JOSEPH, SARAH & ELIZABETH
(2)HENRY KEATON, 4/19/1712 IN PASQUOTANK CO.NC
2 CHILDREN: JOSEPH & ELIZABETH



SECOND GENERATION

EDWARD MAYO, JR. B-ABT 1676 D-11/30/1724 IN PASQUOTANK CO, NC
MARRIED (1) MARY CLARE, 2/21/1685/86 (TWIN TO ELIZ. CLEARE) IN PERQUIMANS CO.NC
DAU OF TIMOTHY CLARE/MARY BUNDY
B-12/21/1685 IN PERQUIMANS CO.NC (TWINS IN CLAIRE'S FAM)
D-10/27/1739 IN PERQUIMANA CO.NC
6 CHILDREN: EDWARD III, MARY, ANN, ELIZABETH
SARAH & JOSEPH III



THIRD GENERATION

JOSEPH MAYO, III B-ABT 1721 IN PASQUOTANK CO.NC D-1813 IN WAYNE CO, NC
MARRIED (1)ELIZABETH NEWBY, 12/1/1743 IN PERQUIMANS CO
CHILD: ELIZABETH-PERQUIMANS CO.
(2)MARY SHEPPARD, 7/3/1746 IN PERQUIMANS CO.NC (TWINS IN NEWBY'S)
8 CHILDREN: JOSEPH, CYPRIAN, WILLIAM, SAMUEL
SARAH, JAMES, EDWARD III & JOHN



FOURTH GENERATION

EDWARD MAYO, III B-ABT 1754 IN PERQUIMANS CO. NC D-1/1833 IN WAYNE CO.NC
MARRIED (1)ELIZABETH BULLOCK, ABT 1800
DAU OF JOHN BULLOCK/SARAH MAYO
(2)MARY OVERMAN, 2/21/1801 IN WAYNE CO.NC
DAU OF JOHN OVERMAN/HANNAH SCOTT
4 CHILDREN: CHARITY ANN, JESSE , SARAH
& JOHN



FIFTH GENERATION

JESSE MAYO B-11/13/1805 IN TURNERS SWAMP, WAYNE CO. NC D-AFT 1851
MARRIED CELIA DAVIS, 3/19/1829 IN TURNERS SWAMP MEETING
HOUSE, WAYNE CO. NC
DAU OF JOHN DAVIS/CHARITY OUTLAND
8 CHILDREN: EZEKIEL THOMAS, ZACHARIAH, JOHN D.
SARAH, EDWARD, CELIA, JESSE L & LEONARD A.



SIXTH GENERATION

JESSE LEONARD MAYO B-1847 IN WAYNE CO.NC D-10/30/1901 IN WAYNE CO.NC
BURIED IN EUREKA, NC
MARRIED NANCY SMITH IN WAYNE CO.NC
DAU OF JAMES SMITH
8 CHILDREN: BERTIE, HUGH,CELIA D. & J SIDNEY(TWINS)
EITA, LENA, ALVIN & ALPHONSO


SEVENETH GENERATION

JESSE SIDNEY MAYO B-2/13/1877 IN WAYNE CO.NC D-4/14/1964 IN WAYNE CO.NC
BURIED IN WAYNE CO. ON PINKNEY RD, MAYO CEMETERY
FREMONT, NC
MARRIED ANNIE MAE HOOKS MAYO B 5-3-1884, D 9-17-1956,
DAU OF JESSE WOODARD HOOKS B 4/18/1852 D 8/11/1920
AND VIOLA SELECTOR BARDEN HOOKS B 9/30/1865 D 8/5/1934
11 CHILDREN:
ELEANOR CLYDE MAYO B-3/31/1904 LIVING
JESSE LELAND MAYO B-9/3/1905 D-4/3/1993
MILDRED MAYO B-12/21/1907 LIVING IN BOSTON, MASS W/SON
ANNIE MAE MAYO B-5/3/1907 D-8/16/1994
LAURA IRENE MAYO B-3/11/1910 LIVING
VIOLA ESTELLA MAYO B-5/13/1912
JAMES EUTICE MAYO B-1/24/1914 D-6/28/1986
SIDNEY LOUISE MAYO B-5/11/1917 LIVING
RACHEL ABIFE MAYO B-12/13/1918 LIVING
CHARLES WOODARD MAYO D-8/14/2000
CARL PERSON MAYO TWINS B-2/8/1921 D-1/23/1985
LEONARD ALPHONSO MAYO B-4/8/1923 D-8/30/1986


EIGHTH GENERATION

CHARLES WOODARD MAYO B-FEB. 8, 1921 D- AUG 14, 2000 IN WAYNE CO. NC
BURIED IN WAYNE CO. AT RAINES CROSSROADS CEMETERY
FREMONT, NC
MARRIED LILLIE PEARL WIGGS MAYO IN WAYNE CO.NC
DAU OF GEORGE NATHAN WIGGS & LILLIE CATHERINE WIGGS
4 CHILDREN:
CHARLES WAYNE MAYO B JAN 18, 1943, WAYNE CO.,CHILDREN: TAMMY LYNN MAYO LEE, RICKY WAYNE MAYO, DEBORAH VENISE MAYO MITCHELL
JUDY YVONNE MAYO WILKINS, B SEPT 13, 1945, WAYNE CO.,CHILDREN: LISA RENE WILKINS DUDLEY, STACY MARION WILKINS, KEITH ASHLEY WILKINS
GLORIA DENISE MAYO CLARK, B JULY 11, 1951, WAYNE CO.,CHILDREN:
B-12/11/75 MICHAEL THOMAS CLARK II, B-2/4/82 MATTHEW SHEA CLARK
KATRINA WIGGS MAYO PAINTER, B JUNE 19, 1953, WAYNE CO.CHILDREN: CHRISTOPHER LYALL PAINTER, B-2/6/76 NICOLE LEIGH PAINTER,









NINETH GENERATION

CHARLES WAYNE MAYO B-1/18/1943 IN WAYNE CO, GOLDSBORO, NC
MARRIED (1)FOSTEEN GARON JOHNSON IN WAYNE CO.
GOLDSBORO, NC
DAU OF
3 CHILDREN:
TAMMY LYNN MAYO LEE, B-APRIL 14, 1962, WAYNE CO. GOLDS., NC CHILDREN: REBECCA, HANNAH
RICKY WAYNE MAYO B-MAY 22, 1963, PAMAMA CITY, FLA CHILD: CHRISTOPHER WAYNE MAYO
DEBORAH VENISE MAYO MITCHELL, B-1/22/70 CHILDREN: JOSHUA,
(2) BRENDA MAYO IN WAKE CO, FUQUAY VARINA, NC
1 CHILD: DAWN MAYO B-5/16/1979, WAKE CO. RALEIGH, NC
(3) MARGARET JOHNSON MAYO IN FLORIDA



TENTH GENERATION

RICKY WAYNE MAYO B-MAY 22, 1963 IN PAMAMA CITY, FLA
MARRIED (1) SHERRY MAYO
1 CHILD: CHRISTOPHER WAYNE MAYO
(2) AMY MAYO, WAKE CO. FUQUAY VARINA, NC

TAMMY LYNN MAYO LEE B-APRIL 14, 1962 WAYNE CO., GOLDSBORO, NC
MARRIED GREG LEE-KINSTON, NC
CHILDREN: REBECCA, HANNAH

DEBORAH VENISE MAYO MITCHELL B-1-22-70, WAKE CO., RALEIGH, NC
MARRIED: JIMMY MITCHELL-ANGIER,NC
CHILDREN: JOSUHA, COURTNEY

DAWN MAYO B-5-16-79, WAKE CO, RALEIGH, NC




ELEVETH GENERATION

CHRISTOPHER WAYNE MAYO
PAF records, FHL, 6 Sep 1994
Name: Edward Mayo , Jr
Birth: 1676 in Barbados, W Indies
Death: 16 OCT 1724 in Pasquotank Co, North Carolina PROBATE:Edward Mayo Pasquotank County 27 Jan 1734-1735 14 Feb 1734 Will Wife and Executrix: Mary. Daughter: Mary. Executor: Joseph Jessop (wife's father). Witnesses: John Scott, Jean Bunday, Jno. Palin. Proven before Gab. Johnston.

Father: Edward Mayo b: 1650 in England
Mother: Sarah Maggs b: 1650 in North Carolina

Source: Roger Smith of WorldConnect Project at Rootsweb.com 2001 Name: Edward MAYO
Sex: M Death: 16 AUG 1724 in NC

Note:
BIOGRAPHY: From Jack Butler Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, BIRTH AND DEATH RECORDS, page 102 Edward Mayo (d. 8-16-1724, aged about 47 or 48 yrs., p. 144.) The Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy is a collection of records from the Quaker Meeting minutes. Notice that it says that Edward was 47 or 48 years old when he died in 1724, meaning that he was born about 1676-1677 - which means that this record is also for Edward Jr. Apparently, he died in August of 1724, and his will was proved on Oct 20 1724 in Pasquotank Co, NC. It showed that he was a Quaker. Will can be found in "Early Records of NC, Vol. V, Wills, 1723-1736"

Edward Jr. was married to Mary Clare when he died and had sons named Edward and Joseph, daughters Mary, Ann, Elizabeth and Sarah according to will dated October, 1724.

A will of Jan 1733/34 is for Edward Jr's son Edward III. He married Mary Jessop and it names Jospeh Jessop, his wife's father, as executor.

Father: Edward MAYO b: Abt 1650 in Wiltshire,England Mother: Sarah MAGGS b: Abt 1650

Name: "Descendants of Edward Mayo" by Joseph R. Baggett at [email protected], a descendant, also Billy R. Whaley at [email protected]. Joseph Richmond Baggett, 509 Saddle Ridge Dr., Bethlehem, GA 30620.

Edward married Mary Clare on 21 Feb 1685/86 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Mary was born on 21 Jun 1686 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 27 Dec 1739 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 53.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Edward Mayo III was born on 7 Jun 1703 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 3 Dec 1734 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 31.

41       ii.  Sarah Culpepper Mayo (born on 19 Dec 1719 in Of, , North Carolina)

        iii.  John Mayo was born on 27 Mar 1705 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         iv.  Ann Mayo was born on 28 Jan 1713/14 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died about 1738 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 24.

          v.  Elizabeth Mayo was born on 21 Aug 1717 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         vi.  Joseph Mayo was born on 31 Mar 1721 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina and died about 1813 about age 92.


83. Mary Clare, daughter of Timothy Clare and Mary Bundy, was born on 21 Jun 1686 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 27 Dec 1739 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 53.

General Notes: From Linda Harmon: Source: Sandy Taylor of WorldConnect Project at Rootsweb.com 2001 Name:
Mary CLARE
Birth: 21 DEC 1685 in Perquimans, NC
Death: 27 OCT 1739 in Perquimans, NC
Event: Twin to Elizabeth Clare
Abstract of will dated October 13, 1739 and probated January 1740 (Perquimans,
NC)Son: Joseph Mayo. Daughter: Elizabeth Willson. Grandchildren: John Willson,
Edward, Jemima and Isabell Newby. Niece: Elizabeth Winslow. Executors: John
Willson and Samuel Newby (sons-in-law). Witnesses: William Sitgreaves, Sarah
Ellit, Miriam Bogue. Clerk of the Court: James Craven.

North Carolina Will Abstracts, 1660-1790 (ancestry.com)

PAF records, FHL, 6 Sep 1994
NOTE: In the previous record entry, there is a Mary Clare (Cleare) listed as
Child 2 who is born 21 Feb 1686. Child 3 is also a Mary Clare who is born 21
June 1686. One of the entries is incorrect and I suspect they are the same
person and have so entered.

One Ladd's Family by Ruth Kline Ladd, pub. 1974.
encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I
Perquimans MM, Page 6

Mary married Edward Mayo 5 on 21 Feb 1685/86 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Edward was born about 1676 in Barbados, West Indies and died on 30 Nov 1724 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 48.

Mary next married Joseph Newby on 3 Jun 1726 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Joseph was born on 27 Sep 1693 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died in 1766 at age 73.

General Notes: Source: Roy Leggitt at WorldConnect Project on Rootsweb.com 2000
Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I


84. William Newby, son of Ralph Newby and Dorothy Hinchley, was born in Easington, Durham, England and died after 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

General Notes: According to Clifford Hardin's William Newby Family, William Newby, son of Ralph and Dorothy Newby was baptized 14 August 1637 at Easington, County Durham, England; William Johnston and John Newbie were witnesses. No record of this William Newby has been found in Dublin records. However, two sons, Nathan and Gabriel, and a daughter, Dorothy, are firmly identified in Virginia and North Carolina as children of William Newby. Both son Nathan and daughter Dorothy were associated with the Friends Monthly Meeting in Dublin before they removed to America. Nathan's certificate was issued 2nd of 10th Mo. 1684 from Dublin.

It is not known when William Newby went to Virginia, but he was there on 10th 5th Mo. 1683 when he signed as a witness to a wedding in Nansemond County.

Source: Detailed NEWBY genealogy is contained in The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, Fort Worth, Texas, 1976.

Moved to Perquimans Co., NC, ca 1687.

The earliest proven NC Newby ancestor is William Newby and his 1st wife Isabel. William and Isabel Newby were active in Chuckatuck MM in VA in the 1680's. Both signed marriage certificate there on 10-13-1684. William must have moved to NC after the death of his wife Isabel for "Perq. 25 Mar 1701 Gabriell Nuby proved his Rights to 200 acrs of Land by ye importaion of Wm. Nuby. Gilbert Smith, Ralph Buffkin, Gabriell Nuby." William and Isabel both sighned marriage certificate of son Nathan and Elizabeth Hollowell. In 1704 William Newby purchased an acre of land from William Boque for use of the Quakers--later known as Wells MM. William Newby m. 2nd 6-2-1701 Jane Byar at Perquimans MM as her 5th husband.

Some of the detailed information, second marriages of children, etc, comes from Some of the Ancestors and the Descendants of Joseph and Naoimi (Dicts) Newby of Spiceland, Indiana, edited by Nancy Ester Hineman.

William married Isabell Turner. Isabell was born in 1630 and died from 1687 to 1701 at age 57.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Newby was born about 1652 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died before 1692.

         ii.  Nathan Newby was born about 1662 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died on 1 Feb 1734/35 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 73.

42      iii.  Gabriel Newby (born about 1665 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia - died on 25 Dec 1735 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina)

         iv.  Edward Newby was born of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died about 1702 in , Surry, Virginia.

          v.  Dorothy Newby was born about 1668 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia.

         vi.  Thomas Newby

William next married Jane Byar on 7 Mar 1700/01 in Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.


85. Isabell Turner was born in 1630 and died from 1687 to 1701 at age 57.

General Notes: Source of last name: Esther Vawter, Prodigy MXSN08A, Feb 1993.

Since most other sources identify Isabel's last name as unknown, I am including a quote from the Clifford Hardin manuscript about Robert Turner, who could possibly be related to our Isabel, maybe brother and sister since they both died within just a few years of each other.

Robert Turner, at whose home both Ellinor and John Newby were married later removed to West Jersey where he died in 1700. Albert Cook Myres wrote about him in Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania as follows:

He seems first to have become interested in colonization in 1677, when he and other Irish Friends acquired one whole share of West Jersey, their land being laid out on Newton Creek, near the site of Camden, in 1681, and settled by Irish Friends. In 1681, he joined with the Earl of Perth, William Penn, Robert Barklay, the Apologist, and other eminent personages, in the purchase of West Jersey from the estate of Sir George Carteret. About the same time his friend Penn received the grant of Pennsylvania, and Turner became actively concerned in that project, purchasing 5,000 acres of land in the Province and subscribing 500 pounds of stock in the Free Society of Traders, ... he arrived at Philadelphia, 8 Mo. 14, (sic) 1683, in the Lion of Liverpoole ... took up residence and became involved in public affairs ... .

Isabell married William Newby. William was born in Easington, Durham, England and died after 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

86. Francis Toms was born in 1633 in , , , England and died on 3 Apr 1712 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 79.

General Notes: Source: Detailed TOMS genealogy is contained in The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, Fort Worth, Texas, 1976.

Francis Toms who "came into Virginia about 1649" and was "age 77 in 1710," lived about nine years in Martin's Brandon on the South Side of James River (Charles City County, now Prince George County), He then moved to the adjoining county of Surry about 1660, and in 1669 moved to North Carolina. He was among the earliest settlers of Albemarle Co., NC. He and his family were accepted in the Society of Friends in 1672.

Another text that has a five page TOMS appendix is "John White of Virginia and North Carolina and Some of His Descendants with Supplements on the Families Jordan, Toms, Henry, White, Woody, Thompson, Perry & Leman" by Helen White DeWaard assisted by Virgil B. White.

Another source, pages 2-4 of Vol 8 of Virginia Magazine of History and Biography for July, 1900, says Francis Toms (sometimes spelled Tomes) made a deposition September ye 27, 1710, as follows: "Francis Tomes, Gent., aged 77 years or thereabouts, declares that in or about 1649 he came to Virginia and dwelt 9 years in Martin's Brandon on the south side of James River (Charles City Co., now Prince George Co.) and thence removed to Wareneck in Surry Co.---about the year 1664 he came to live in N.C." William Perry Johnson, late editor of North Carolina Genealogy, said Francis Toms was probably born about 1633 in England. A Francis Gray purchased land from Francis Tomes in Charles City Co., Va., on 17 Feb., 1656. After he came to N.C., he was living "3 miles from Phelps' house" in 1672, when the Quaker minister, William Edmundson, came to N.C. and held a meeting at said Phelps' house. At this meeting, Francis Toms and his wife became Quakers.

Francis Tomes Sr. was very prominent in government affairs in Albemarle Precinct, N.C.; he was a Provincial Councillor under Gov. Archdale, a Justice of the Peace, a magistrate, a deputy collector of customs, and a member of the Higher Court as early as 1683 until at least 1706. His name appears (as a Deputy) on many land grants given by the Lords Proprietor in N.C. In 1683 he purchased 260 acres of land from Charles Prows of Pasquotank Precinct. In 1687 he received a grant of 478 acres on the west side of Perquimans River "due him for transportation of 11 persons into this country." His land was on the head of Vosses Creek and was about 2 miles from present-day Hertford, N.C.
In 1693 he received 510 acres for 10 rights: "Mary Tomes, Mary ffitsgarret a servant, Joseph Ashley, Charles, 2 Indians, 3 negroes, Elizabeth a servant, in all 10." He assigned these 510 acres to Timothy Clare. In 1705 he have an acre of land to be used for a church building for the Quakers. This is assumed to be Vosses Creek Preparatory Meeting.

Francis Toms Sr. was married three times, the first marriage to Persillah ___ probably taking place in Virginia ca. 1667. She died sometime between 1679 and 1683. His second wife, whom he married 1683-3-2, was Abigail Bailey Charles Lacy, daughter of William and Grace Bailey, born ca. 1640 and died 1687-3-17. She had been married first to William Charles about 1660, by whom she had about 8 or 9 children. She had married second, in 1678, to John Lacy, who died 1682, leaving one child. Francis Toms' third wife was May Nicholson, a daughter of John Nicholson, who died 1717/1718-11-15. Her will, dated 1 mo., 30 day, 1713, probated 1717/18-1-15, lists the following: "Vesty Lewis, Rachel Lawrence, and Elizabeth, daughter of my brother William Nicholson." Joseph Glaister, well-known Quaker minister, and his wife were executors.

Francis Toms died 1712-4-3, per Perquimans MM records. His will (published in North Carolina Genealogy, Spring 1966, issue in an article entitled "additions and Corrections to Grimes' wills") dated 6 of 10 mo., 1709, with no probate, reads as follows:

"Francis Tomes Sr., Perquimans in N.C.---to wife Mary, pers. prop. and manner house and orchards, etc.--feather beds to be kept in ye porch chamber for God's messengers and ministers to Lodge In--also horse mill, shoemakers tools, etc. To son Francis, a slave; son Joshua, a slave. To son Francis, 640 acres acres on Vose Creek. To son Joshua, 400 acres. Three children: Francis and Joshua Tomes, and Presolo Nickolson, (personal property). To dau. Mary Newby, 5 shillins,--" for she had her portion when she md. Gabriel". Grandson Francis Newby, 300 acres on the southwest of Vose Creek. Coopers tools to son Francis. Executorys: two sons, Francis and Joshua. Sighned by name. Witnesses: William (his x mark) Boges, Mathew (his x mark) Albertson, John Stepney."

A codicil (not dated) reads "Since it hat pleased almighty God to take out of this world my Father-in-law (should be son-in-law) Jno. Nicols (Nicholson), my will is that part of my estate I have given to my daughter Presilla, now wife of Jno. Kinsely, to be divided--"one half to her and the other half to the children of her by Jno. Kinsely deceased (should be Jno. Nicholson), "ye windmill now building on ye plantation I live on for ye free hold my wife and children having ye use thereof sole freely for grinding their familyes corn...Signed by name. Witnesses: Fred Jones and Joseph Carron."

Francis married Priscilla Nicholson in 1667 in , , Virginia. Priscilla was born about 1635 and died from 1679 to 1683 about age 44.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Penelope Tomes was born on 2 Oct 1668 in , Surry, Virginia and died in Died Young.

43       ii.  Mary Tomes (born on 7 Apr 1670 in , , North Carolina - died on 26 Nov 1730 in Pasquotank Mm, Pasquotank, North Carolina)

        iii.  Francis Toms was born on 19 Jul 1672 in , Berkely Pct, North Carolina and died on 12 Jul 1729 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 56.

         iv.  Priscilla Toms was born on 19 Jan 1765 in , , North Carolina and died in Died Young.

          v.  Joseph Toms was born on 16 Sep 1677 in , , North Carolina and died on 6 Jun 1679 at age 1.

         vi.  Caleb Toms was born on 25 Aug 1679 in , , North Carolina and died before 1709.

        vii.  Joshua Toms was born on 25 Aug 1679 in , , North Carolina and died about 1732 about age 53.

Francis next married Abigail Bailey on 2 Mar 1682/83. Abigail was born about 1640 and died on 17 Mar 1686/87 about age 47.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Abigail Toms was born on 10 Dec 1684 of Pasquotank, , North Carolina and died on 17 Mar 1686/87 at age 2.

         ii.  Priscilla Toms died before 1741.


87. Priscilla Nicholson was born about 1635 and died from 1679 to 1683 about age 44.

Priscilla married Francis Toms in 1667 in , , Virginia. Francis was born in 1633 in , , , England and died on 3 Apr 1712 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 79.

88. John Crew .

General Notes: Source of marriage and children: IGI.

John married Elyzabeth.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Anna Crew was born on 17 Aug 1655 in Northampton, , Virginia.

         ii.  Elizabeth Crew was born on 1 Nov 1657 in Northampton, , Virginia.

44      iii.  John Crews (born in 1669 in , Charles City, Virginia - died in , New Kent, Virginia)

         iv.  Robert Crew


89. Elyzabeth .

Elyzabeth married John Crew.

90. Nicholas Gattley .

Nicholas married Sarah.

The child from this marriage was:

45        i.  Sarah Gattley (born about 1670 in Of, , Virginia)


91. Sarah .

Sarah married Nicholas Gattley.

92. Robert Ellyson Captain, son of Robert Of Newcastle Ellyson and Elizabeth Gray, was born in 1615 of Maryland, And, Virginia, England and died before 28 Sep 1671.

General Notes: This individual has the following other parents in the Ancestral File:
Robert Of N /ELLYSON/ (AFN:8J6D-MW) and Sarah /SPENCE/ (AFN:9LH8-BW)

Source: Maryland and Virginia Colonials: Genealogies of Some Colonial Families, Sharon J. Doliante, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.

Dr. Robert Ellyson, born C1615-20, no doubt in England, died C1671, in James City Co.(?), Virginia; probably married in early 1650s, in Virginia, Elizabeth (____).

Dr. Ellyson first lived in Maryland for about four years, where he was a participaing member of the community, but it was only after he removed to Virginia, that he really became politically active and prominent. We suspect this was due, at least in part, to an advantageous marriage. He really was rather an amazing man, for he was all of the following, and sometimes simultaneously, physician (barber-surgeon), attorney, burgess, justice, twice high sherrif (in Md. and in Va.), sergeant at arms, militia officer, and member of a number of important legislative committees.

There is considerable confusion as to whom Robert Ellyson married.

The LDS Ancestral File indicates he married Susanna Gerrard. However, as explained in her notes, it is quite apparent that she married Robert Slye.

Tidewater Virginia Families, by Virginia Lee Hutchenson Davis further contributes to this confusion. That text says: There does not appear to be any conclusive evidence as to whom Robert Ellyson married. Most of the printed accounts state that it is generally assumed that he married elizabeth, the daughter of Dr. Thomas Gerrard. However, Dr. Thomas Gerrard did not mention a daughter, Elizabeth, in his will, nor did he name an Ellyson grandchild. Elizabeth Gerrard was named as a headright when Thomas took up land in Maryland, she was not named as a headright when he patented land in Virginia.

A printed account of the Gerrard family lists the names of Dr. Gerrard's children: Justinian (the oldest), Thomas, Susanna, Anne, Frances, Temperance, Elizabeth, Jane, John, and Mary (see Governor Garrard of Kentucky, 1962, pp. 184-185).

However, the William and Mary College Quarterly - Washington and his Neighbors does not include an Elizabeth.

Maryland and Virginia Colonials by Sharon J. Doliante, indicates the wife was Elizabeth ____ who until recently was thought to be Elizabeth Soanes, daughter of Henry (Speaker of the House of Burgesses, in 1660). However, this Elizabeth now appears to have married John Peterson, of Charles City Co.

For now, I will assume that either Susanna or Elizabeth Gerrard is the wife of Robert Ellyson. This is simply based on the fact that Robert's first male child is named Gerrard Ellyson and the naming convention of the time would indicate he was named after the maternal grandfather.

Robert married Susannah (Hannah) Gerard. Susannah was born about 1627 of Maryland, And, Virginia, England and died in 1716 about age 89.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Cecilia Ellyson

         ii.  Hannah Ellyson was born about 1641 and died on 19 Dec 1728 about age 87.

46      iii.  Gerard Robert Ellyson (born in 1671 in , , Virginia - died in 1756 in , New Kent, Virginia)

         iv.  (Son) Ellyson


93. Susannah (Hannah) Gerard, daughter of Thomas Gerard and Susannah Snowe, was born about 1627 of Maryland, And, Virginia, England and died in 1716 about age 89.

General Notes: There is some question as to whether this is the wife of Captain Robert Ellyson.
The Founders of the Maryland Legislature 1635-1789 indicates that this Susannah first married Robert Slye and second John Coode. The William and Mary College Quarterly - Washington and his Neighbors indicates she married Robert Slye, Esq., of the Maryland Council.

See the notes for Robert Ellyson for a more detailed discussion.

Here is a fairly authoritative discussion of the issue by Barbara Petty:

To: [email protected]
Subject: ELLYSON/GERRARD
From: Barbara Petty <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 06:55:24 -0800

Hello ELLYSON cousins.
Interesting conversation about Robert ELLYSON's wife being possibly a daughter of Thomas GERRARD. To add to the pot, I wrote to Sharon Doliante, compiler of Mary and Virginia Colonials about this and she sent me a copy of a letter from Br. Ambrose Carroll Moorman of St. Benedict, OR dated Jan.
31, 1992 to Ms. Doliante. In this letter he said the following:

"Dr. Lorand V. Johnson, M.D. now deceased of Cleveland, Ohio wrote several books on the Johnson family and in 1976 he assured me that Sue Terrel of Rockcastle Farm, Lynchburg, Virginia had the old family bible of the SLYE family. Elizabeth Gerrard's sister, Susannah GERRARD, married by 1683, Robert SLYE (ca. 1628-1670/1) by whom she had four children as her first husband. At any rate the original SLYE family bible reads:
Baptized on ye 1st day of December, 1666 A.D., Thomas, infant son of Robert and Susanna Slye. The sponsor's being his uncle Justinian GERRARD and aunt Elizabeth ELLYSON.'

"Now the only other
aunt Elizabeth' that this child could have had was his father's sister,
Elizabeth Russell of Lond, England.' It seems that this informaiton came from his will written on January 18 and entered for probate on March 13, 1670/1. This information comes from: A Biographical Dictionary of the Maryland Legislature, 1615-1789 Vol. II, p. 739, which was published using the documents of the MD Hall of Records.

(some omitted)

"The information from the SLYE bible was given to Dr. Johnson by Mrs. Wirt, who for about 50 years was a frequent contributor to genealogical magazines and he presumed that she had copied this out of Sue Terrel's bible. All three were mutual acquaintances. I have not checked it for the purpose of this letter, but Sue Terrel, like myself was part of the larger CLARK-MOORMAN-ELLYSON-JOHNSON connection and also had the family bible of Capt. Christopher CLARK. I have also an original document involving the GERRARD-WASHINGTON marriage, which was passed down to me. Without looking into my note I think Thomas GERRARD did have a sister Elizabeth in England. There was another GERRARD family in Virginia and I have checked into it to what possiblities it may have had and there are none. The family may have been either from a brother or 1st cousin of Thomas GERRARD. Among Thomas GERRARD's children there is also a JOHNSON connection as there is in the WASHINGTON family, but nothing is certain about it."

As a point of interest - an obscure genealogy: A South Carolina Family: Mills-Smith and Related Lines by Laurens Tenney Mills with addenda by Lilla Mills Hawes and Sarah Mills Norton (1960) gives the following (on p. 10) found in an old family Bible which was entered just after the American Revolution by Mrs. Elizabeth Allison (Ellyson) Erwin (Irvin). The record was copied in 1958 from a record obtained from Miss Julia Ervin, Rt. 3, Darlington, S.C. This genealogy states:

"This Bible (printed in London by Robt. Barker, 1613) has no section for births, marriages, deaths, but she used blank page to record the following:


My father, Robert Allison, passed 1772 (the name during long years has been/spelt, Allyson, Ellison, Elison, Allison, etc.) My mother was Mary Lide or Lloyd,/ (drt. to Robt. Lloyd from Wales to Penn. abt 1683.) My grparents were John Allison/and Elizabeth Matthews of Va. He being son of Robt and Ann Myhill. He being son of/Capt. Robt. Allison & Hannah Gerard of Maryland & Va. He being son of Robt Allison/& Sarah Spence of V. He Being son of - John Allison, Ellyson b. Windyedge county/Lanark, Scotland, who marr'd with Ellin Hamilton & came to Va. in early days bef./1625. The first ones of our family lived in Va. & Maryland/'

She then lists her immediate family (brothers and sisters and offspring) and at the end states that "Elizabeth, myself, M. 1744 John Ervin Sr. Our offspring - Elizabeth, Mary, Sarah,/James, Robert, John, Mary, Jeane, Hugh and two died young./ Both my husband and myself gave gratefully our time & services to our County at/beginning of Great Struggle for Independence. I nursed the Sick and John was Commissary/ Assembling Medicines & Equipments.
He never lived to see Victory, but I did./"

Ms. Doliante thought it "extraordinary that the person who wrote the Bible record, Should have Known So many generations of their family! I find today that most folks only know their father & possibly their grandfather! Especially males!"

However, if you check the early records of Va. you'll find for example in The Original Lists of Persons of Quality 1600-1700 by John Camden Hotten (repr. Genealogy Pub. Co. 1974) that on "A List of Names; of the Living in Virginia february the 16 1623," "At Archurs hoop (Archer's Hope)" there lived a John ELISON and ux ELISON and a Child (not named). Living "in James iland (James Island?)" lived William SPENCE and ux SPENCE, infans SPENCE and Sara SPENCE.

Since Doliante listed a daughter for Ellyson named Hannah, it might be that Mrs. Ervin's memory might indeed have failed her somewhat and perhaps she confused in her memory the name of the sister of Robert ELLYSON for the name of the mother? My husband's own Ulster Scot family in NC was able to give me good start on his lineage taking the line back several generations (at least three) from their own. I think that Mrs. Ervin realized that she had lived through a monumentally historic era in this country and wanted to record her family for all her posterity. The Bible surely still exists somewhere, but where it is isn't presently known. One cousin speculated that it might be in the possession of the Sen. Sam Irvin family. There is a collection of his records in the Southern Historical Collection at UNC-Chapel Hill. The Mills-Smith genealogy can be found at the South Caroliniana Lib. in Columbia, SC and a xeroxed copy has now been placed in the Library of Virginia.

Barb Petty
[email protected]

Here is another post from Barb Petty posted in Jan 1998:

Don't know if this helps, but Hinshaw shows in his data from Henrico (VA) MM that:

ELLYSON

1768, 8, 6. Susanna, dt Joseph, New Kent, mbr Black Creek Mtg, dis disorderly conduct

1770, 3, 3. Susanna con disorderly con & rst

1770, 9, 1. Susanna ltm Thomas JORDAN.

This appears on p. 174 of the VA vol. (Vol. VI?) of Hinshaw's Encyclopedia.

On p. 173:

1743/44, 12, 4. Joseph gc to m
1744, 4, 2. Joseph rmt Mary BINFORD

On p. 172:

1744, 3, 6. Joseph, s Robert, New Kent Co.; m in Frs MH, Wayenoak, Charles City Co., Mary BINFORD, dt John, Charles City Co.

1754, 8, 3. Susannah m John BINFORD in the house of her father, Robert, New Kent Co.

p. 174:
1758, 6, 3. Joseph, mbr Black Creek Mtg, suffered a seizure of cash in lieu of priest's
wages.

p. 173:

1764, 1, 11. Mary, dt Joseph & Mary, New Kent Co.; m. Robert JORDAN.
(p. 174 shows that on 1764, 3, 3. Mary rmt Robert JORDAN.)

1766, 1, 5. Agnes, dt Joseph, dec, & Mary, New Kent Co.; m Moore BELL.

1766, 6, 9. Joseph, Black Creek Mtg, d

1772, 5, 7. John, s Robert, New Kent Co.; m in CUrles MH, Henrico Co. Agnes WOODSON,
dt Charles, Henrico Co.
1772, 5, 23. Robert [ELLISON] & w Sarah, mbr Black Creek PM, rpd dec since last account

1791, 4, 11. Mary d (mbr Black Creek)

There may be a few more entries of interest to you in the Henrico MM records. The rest of your data would show up under JORDAN I suppose. This would be all that I could personally verify.

Tidewater Virginia Families by Virginia L.H. Davis, listed the following:

ELLYSON -

Robert ELLYSON I m. Elizabeth _____.
issue:
Gerrard Robert m. Anne MYHILL
Hannah m. Anthony ARMISTEAD

Gerrard Robert m. Anne MYHILL
issue:
Robert m. Sarah (surname unknown)
John
Thomas

Gerrard Robert m. Sarah (surname unknown)
issue:
Robert m. Sarah CREW
Agatha m. John CREW Jr <- my ancestors
Hannah m. Andrew CREW
William m. Agnes JOHNSON
Elizabeth m. John JOHNSON
Judith m. James LADD
Cecilia m. Thomas ELMORE, Jr.
Ursula m. William LADD, Jr.
Thomas m. Elizabeth CREW

NOTE: In Old New Kent County Some Account of The Planter, Plantations and Places in new Kent County, Vol. I by Malcolm Hart Harris MD, West Point Va 1977, p. 184 (I carelessly did not note if this was a reprint of an earlier published book) lists The Ellyson Family. I don't know how much credence we can give to this (probably not a lot), but he states that Gerrard Robert ELLYSON, son of Gerrard Robert ELLYSON who m. Anne, dau. of John MYHILL of Elizabeth City Co, moved to Chesterfield Co. where his will was proved in 1770. He named his three nephews, Gerrard, Robert and Thomas. It was his widow, who was the "sprightly old tit" aged 85 with three thousand pounds who m. Mr. William CARTER aged 23, son of Mr. John CARTER. It also states that Sarah was sister of Hon. John CLOPTON. Thomas ELLYSON, who lived in Chesterfield Co. was the father of the three nephews who were named in the will of their uncle, Gerrard ELLYSON in 1770. "The late Hon. J. Taylor ELLYSON, Lt. Governor of Virginia, descends from William ELLYSON, who had a son, Onana, who was father of Henry K. ELLYSON (1823 - ) who was the father of J. Taylor and William ELLYSON of Richmond." This looks a little confused.

Robert m. Sarah CREW
issue:
Matthew m. Elizabeth LADD
Joseph m. Mary BINFORD
Susanna m. John BINFORD
John m. Agnes WOODSON

Maryland and Virginia Colonials by Sharon J. Doliante, p. 254 shows:

Joseph, son of Robert and Sarah (CREW) ELLYSON, d. bef. Mar. 5, 1766; m.
May 6, 1744, Friends Meeting House, Wayenoak, Chas. City Co., Mary BINFORD, dau. of John BINFORD, of Chas. City Co. Their dau. Susanna m. Thomas JORDAN (that line not followed).

By the way, in the records of Henrico MM, on p. 177 under the name GARTRITE (also at times spelled GARHITE or GARITE or GARTRIGHT in the records), a Judith GARTHRIGHT testified on 1749/50, 12, 16 in the case arising from a dispute concenrning the estate of Gerard Robert ELLYSON. In 1699/1700, on 12, 9 Ephm [GARHITE] contributed 150 lbs of tobacco toward the building of a new MH at Curles. Same date a Samuel [GARITE] contributed 100 lbs of tobacco toward the building. In 1703/4 a Jane [GERTRITE] signed the mtg book as a token that she was in unity with this MM now being held.

Also in a note I saved from Robert Martin on Prodigy Service in 1992 he stated that a letter from Mr. R.E.F. Garret, Member, Society of Genealogists, London, 14 Dec 1961 shows Peter GERRARD, was transported to Charles City Co. Va. 25 Feb 1653 by Ferninando Austin. He also stated that Henry GERRARD of Charles City Co. had a will dated 20 Jul 1689, probated 11 Mar 1692/3, sons: Ferninando & Nicholas, and dau. Eliz. BAYLEY, sp. of Jacob BAYLEY. Nicholas WYATT of Charles City Co. and John TIRREY of Surry were appointed overseers and Mathew ADAM and Will JENNINGS were witnesses.
A note from Jan Babb on Prodigy to Robert Martin in '92 stated: from "Marriages of Richmond Co" Rebecca, wife of Gerrard Newton was dau. of Nehemiah BLAKISTONE (died intestate 1716 St. Mary's Co. [Md?]). Nehemiah and Elizabeth were married 6 May 1669. Elizabeth was dau. of Thoams GERRARD, Esq (1608-1673) and his first wife, nee Suanna SNOW(e); she m. 2) Ralph RYMER and 3) Joshua GUI{L)BERT. She added that that book said to check Flowering of the Maryland Palatinate and Heralderic Maylandiana for more info.

Susannah married Robert Ellyson Captain. Robert was born in 1615 of Maryland, And, Virginia, England and died before 28 Sep 1671.

Susannah next married Robert Slye. Robert was born about 1625.


94. John Myhill was born about 1648 and died after 1704.

General Notes: Source of wife and children: Tidewater Virginia Families by Virginia Lee Hutchenson Davis, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.

John married Mary Lockey in 1668. Mary was born in 1650 in , York, Virginia.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Joshua Myhill was born about 1672 and died in 1727 about age 55.

47       ii.  Anne Myhill (born about 1673 - died after 1727)

        iii.  Judith Myhill

         iv.  Lockey Myhill


95. Mary Lockey, daughter of Edward Lockey and Elizabeth (Reade) Hanford, was born in 1650 in , York, Virginia.

Mary married John Myhill in 1668. John was born about 1648 and died after 1704.

96. Edward Bembowe (Bembow), son of Thomas Bembow and Miss Brunt, was born on 3 Jul 1636 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales and was buried on 30 Dec 1665.

Edward married Anna John on 20 Jul 1662 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales. Anna was born about 1641 in Llanbrymmair, Montg., Wales.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Bembowe

48       ii.  Richard Benbow (christened on 29 Jul 1665, born in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales - buried in 1712-1713)


97. Anna John was born about 1641 in Llanbrymmair, Montg., Wales.

Anna married Edward Bembowe (Bembow) on 20 Jul 1662 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales. Edward was born on 3 Jul 1636 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales and was buried on 30 Dec 1665.

98. John Jenkin .

John married someone.

His child was:

49        i.  Susanna Jones (born on 1 Jun 1664 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales - died in 1754)


100. John Carver was born about 1657 in Hertfordshire, England.

John married Mary Lane in Priory St Albana, Hertfordshire, England. Mary was born about 1665 in , Bucho, Pennsylvania.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Mary Carver was born on 28 Oct 1682 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

         ii.  Richard Carver was born on 16 Jul 1686 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was buried on 13 Apr 1727 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

        iii.  John Carver was born on 21 Feb 1686/87 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and died on 14 May 1769 at age 82.

         iv.  Ann Carver was born on 12 Feb 1688/89 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

50        v.  James Carver (born on 20 Dec 1691 in Byberry Township, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania - died on 7 Jun 1739 in , Bladen County, North Carolina)


101. Mary Lane, daughter of William Lane and Cecilia Love, was born about 1665 in , Bucho, Pennsylvania.

Mary married John Carver in Priory St Albana, Hertfordshire, England. John was born about 1657 in Hertfordshire, England.

104. Thomas Stanley was born about 1660 in , , , England and died after 1691 in St. Paul's Parish, New Kent, Virginia.

General Notes: Source: Genealogy of the Gordon-Macy Hiddleston-Curtis and Allied Families published by Jessie Gordon Flack, Tulsa, OK 1967.

According to Early Virginia Familiies Along the James River, Volume I, Foley, 1974, Mrs. Frances Izord received 1036 acres in Henrico Co., Varina Parish, on 23 Apr 1681 for transporting 21 persons, including a Thomas Stanley.

Came to Hanover County, Virginia before 1686 when he had grants of land. St. Paul'l was later St. Peter's Parish.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina, and Volume VI, Virginia. All of the entries which make reference to "MM" indicate that entry is from this source and the information came from the Quaker Monthly Meeting records.

(Roy Leggitt has a personal copy of Volume I; however, only a single copy of one page is currently available for Volume VI. The reader should refer to a complete copy of Volume VI for more complete information pertaining to the history of the Stanley line while in Virginia.)

1700, 2, 28. Henrico MM. Thomas [Standley] name first appeared when he signed a certificate for a meeting held in New Kent MH.
1706, 5, 20. Henrico MM. Thos. disowned.
1706/7,11,18. Henrico MM. Thomas [Standley] condemned for misconduct and put on probation.
1708, 2, 20. Henrico MM. Thomas [Standley] disowned.
1721/22, 11,6. Henrico MM. Thomas and John Harris requested that the meeting latley set up at Cedar Creek by them and others be recongnized. Granted.
1726, 8, 1. Henrico MM. Thomas Sr. disowned for marrying out of unity.

There is some evidence that Thomas Stanley was born in England and traces back to King Henry III, King of England, born 1 Oct 1206, died 16 Nov 1272, and buried 20 Nov 1272 in Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England. This line is through Baron Strange. Several of Thomas' descendants have the first name of Strangeman, both in the Stanley and Hutchins lines. So, it would seem that the connection with King Henry III is possible.

The information to the link from Thomas back to Lord Strange is from David Lee, 2909 118th Place S.E., Everett, WA 98208 on 8 Mar 1991. (Prodigy ID: JSBN85A)

The dates of birth for Thomas' three male children were provided by "Stan Prentice" <[email protected]>

Here is an interesting message that sheds some light on the possible wife of this Thomas Stanley:

From: MaryaM5111 <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: Old Thomas Stanley
Date: Wednesday, December 31, 1997 12:37 PM

I continue to try and get a handle on the old Thomas Stanley (Thomas Sr) - who seems to be constantly associated with Mary Holme as his wife - BUT can never find proof of this. What I am finding is this - he baptizes a daughter Mary (who later marries I think John Harris in the 1700's) in Christ Church in 1686 located about 45 miles from James city. Mary is cited as the daughter of Thomas and Rebecca Stanley. James 1688, Thomas 1689 and John 1691 follow closely and are on the St. Peters registry as is the marriage of Thomas and Rebecca in 1687 (I guess Mary happened before they got married. Now for Thomas to have been married to Mary Holme and her be the mother of these children would be nearly impossible unless he buried Rebecca, courted Mary, Wed Mary and then had children in less than a few months. Now for the interesting part - and where I think Mary Holmes comes into the picture - I wrote up this summary in a word processing program so I could cut and paste it into this note.

Although the recorded family histories on WFT attach Mary Holmes to Thomas Stanley as his wife and mother of his children, a register of the baptism of Thomas' 1st child, Mary, at Christ Church suggests that she is the child of Thomas and Rebecca Stanley in 1886. The baptisms of James on the 15th of Arpil 1688, Thomas Nov 23, 1689, and John Oct 11, 1691 suggest that Rebecca was the mother of these children as well. No other baptisms were located for his later children - but Thomas did become a Quaker and they did not baptise the children.
The marriage to Mary Holme is curious. The Stanley children married into the Hutchins family. Nicholas Hutchins married Mary Watkins (who was nearly 40 years younger than he). After the death of Nicholas she married someone named Holmes and then was widowed again and appears referenced in the Quaker records when Thomas' son James appeals to the church for help in caring for his mother in law - Mary-Watkins-Hutchins-Holmes. About this time Thomas STanley is being kicked out of the Quaker church for wanting to marry outside of the faith and buys 250 acres of new farm land for 25S. I suspect that James pawned the mother in law off on Thomas Sr. Thus the marriage to Mary Holme.

I also suspect that Thomas Stanley was baptized as an adult just prior to his marriage to Rebecca. The birth dates estimated at aroung 1663-1666 can't be proven. I did, however a court record in 1773 where he is being sued by Gabriell Harison for work dismissed - whatever that means in the Charles City County Court Orders. Now I rather doubt that Thomas is in court when he is 10 years old.

I am also beginning to suspect early roots of Nicholas Hutchins and Thomas Stanley to originate in Maryland and possibly Connecticut - and then they migrated into Va and NC. There are two Nicholas Hutchins in Maryland in the early 1700's. A Sr. and a Jr. With Nicholas being an old man when he marrys Mary Watkins - I suspect a former family somewhere - and the Nicholas connection seems like a logical lead to follow.

Mary Anne (Stanley) Magnuson

Zeller/Ward/Kratzer/Dähler/Eckstein Family File
5350 total entries, last updated Thu Dec 14 18:08:37 2000
All questions, comments or suggestions regarding information on
this page should be addressed to: George Zeller <[email protected]>

Ahnentafel, Generation No. 1

1.Thomas Stanley was born 1670 in St. Peters Parish, New Kent County, Virginia, and died 7 MAY 1714 in New Kent County, Virginia. He was the son of 2. Edward Stanley and 3. Elizabeth Bosville. He married Mary Holmes ABT. 1687 in of St. Peters Parish, Nk, Virginia. She was born ABT. 1666 in St. Peters Parish , New Kent County, Virginia, and died in New Kent County, Virginia.

Children of Thomas Stanley and Mary Holmes are:
i.Joseph Stanley was born in Hanover, New Kent County, Virginia.
ii.James Stanley was born 15 APR 1688 in New Kent County, Virginia (St. Peter's Parish), and died 20 DEC 1766 in Hanover, New Kent County, Virginia. He married Catherine Hutchins 1728 in New Kent County, Virginia.
iii.Thomas Stanley was born 23 OCT 1689 in New Kent County, Virginia (St. Peter's Parish), and died 7 AUG 1754 in Hanover County, Virginia. He married Elizabeth Maddox ABT. 1714 in New Kent County, Virginia. He married Elizabeth Crew 8 SEP 1726 in Date may be October 3, 1726, daughter of John Crew and Sarah Gattley. She was born 1704 in Charles City County, Virginia.
iv.John Stanley was born 11 OCT 1691 in New Kent County, Virginia (St. Peter's Parish), and died 17 JUL 1783 in Cedar Creek, Hanover County, Virginia. He married Martha Hutchins 1743 in Cedar Creek, New Kent County, Virginia. She died 1789 in New Kent County, Virginia.
v.Benjamin Stanley was born 1697 in Virginia.
vi.Judith Stanley was born 1699 in Virginia.
vii.Jacob Stanley was born ABT. 1701 in Hanover, New Kent County, Virginia.
viii.Abigail Stanley was born 1701 in Virginia.

Ahnentafel, Generation No. 2

2.Edward Stanley was born 1643 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England, and died 16 OCT 1671 in Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He was the son of 4. Thomas Stanley and 5. Mary Egerton.

3.Elizabeth Bosville was born ABT. 1645 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England.

Children of Elizabeth Bosville and Edward Stanley are:
i.Mary Stanley was born 1665.
ii.Elizabeth Stanley was born 1666.
iii.Barbara Stanley was born 1668.
iv.Isabella Stanley was born 1669.
1.v.Thomas Stanley was born 1670 in St. Peters Parish, New Kent County, Virginia, and died 7 MAY 1714 in New Kent County, Virginia. He married Mary Holmes ABT. 1687 in of St. Peters Parish, Nk, Virginia. She was born ABT. 1666 in St. Peters Parish , New Kent County, Virginia, and died in New Kent County, Virginia.

Ahnentafel, Generation No. 3

4.Thomas Stanley was born 1616 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died MAY 1653. He was the son of 8. Edward Stanley and 9. Isabel Warburton.

5.Mary Egerton was born ABT. 1620 in Shaw, Lancashire, England. She was the daughter of 10. Peter Egerton and 11. Elizabeth Ashawe.

Children of Mary Egerton and Thomas Stanley are:
2.i.Edward Stanley was born 1643 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England, and died 16 OCT 1671 in Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He married Elizabeth Bosville 25 DEC 1663. She was born ABT. 1645 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England.
ii.Mary Stanley was born ABT. 1645 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England. She married John Bradshaw. He was born ABT. 1643 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England.
iii.Peter Stanley was born ABT. 1648 in Bickerstaffe, Lancashire, England, and died 27 JAN 1686 in Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He married Catherine Ribgy 19 APR 1683. She was born ABT. 1664 in Middleton in Goosnargh, Lancashire, England, and died 26 FEB 1732.

Ahnentafel, Generation No. 4

8.Edward Stanley was born 14 DEC 1576 in Bickerstaff, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 2 MAY 1640 in Bickerstaff, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He was the son of 16. Henry Stanley and 17. Margaret Stanley.

9.Isabel Warburton was born 1592 in Warburton, Cheshire, England.

Children of Isabel Warburton and Edward Stanley are:
4.i.Thomas Stanley was born 1616 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died MAY 1653. He married Mary Egerton, daughter of Peter Egerton and Elizabeth Ashawe. She was born ABT. 1620 in Shaw, Lancashire, England.
ii.Henry Stanley was born 1617 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 18 OCT 1658 in Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.
iii.James Stanley was born 1618 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 28 MAY 1619.
iv.Robert Stanley was born 1620.
v.John Stanley was born 1621 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.
vi.Francis Stanley was born 1622 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.
vii.Peter Stanley was born ABT. 1624 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.

10.Peter Egerton.

11.Elizabeth Ashawe.

Child of Elizabeth Ashawe and Peter Egerton is:
5.i.Mary Egerton was born ABT. 1620 in Shaw, Lancashire, England. She married Thomas Stanley, son of Edward Stanley and Isabel Warburton. He was born 1616 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died MAY 1653.

Ahnentafel, Generation No. 5

16.Henry Stanley was born 1515 in Cross Hall, Aughton, Lancaster, England, and died 23 JUL 1598 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He was the son of 32. James Stanley and 33. Anna Hart.

17.Margaret Stanley was born 1536 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 3 NOV 1613 in Ormskirk, Lancaster, England.

Children of Margaret Stanley and Henry Stanley are:
i.Alice Stanley was born 18 MAY 1565 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.
ii.William Stanley was born 18 MAY 1565 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.
iii.Jane Stanley was born 1572 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 17 NOV 1622.
8.iv.Edward Stanley was born 14 DEC 1576 in Bickerstaff, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 2 MAY 1640 in Bickerstaff, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He married Isabel Warburton in Ormskirk, England. She was born 1592 in Warburton, Cheshire, England.
v.James Stanley was born 1580 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.
vi.Dorothy Stanley was born ABT. 1584 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 11 JUL 1614.
vii.Anne Stanley was born 19 JAN 1585 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England.

Ahnentafel, Generation No. 6

32.James Stanley was born ABT. 1491 in Knockin, Shropshire, England. He was the son of 64. George Stanley and 65. Joan Le Strange.

33.Anna Hart was born 1491 in Lullingstone, Kent, England.

Children of Anna Hart and James Stanley are:
16.i.Henry Stanley was born 1515 in Cross Hall, Aughton, Lancaster, England, and died 23 JUL 1598 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England. He married Margaret Stanley 25 SEP 1563 in Ormskirk, Lancaster, England. She was born 1536 in Bickerstaffe, Ormskirk, Lancashire, England, and died 3 NOV 1613 in Ormskirk, Lancaster, England.
ii.George Stanley was born ABT. 1522 in Crosshall, Aughton, Lancaster, England.
iii.Edward Stanley was born ABT. 1526 in Crosshall, Aughton, Lancaster, England.
iv.Thomas Stanley was born ABT. 1528 in Crosshall, Aughton, Lancaster, England.
v.Jane Stanley was born ABT. 1530 in Crosshall, Aughton, Lancaster, England.
vi.Margaret Stanley was born ABT. 1532 in Crosshall, Aughton, Lancaster, England.
vii.Eleonor Helen Stanley was born ABT. 1536 in Crosshall, Aughton, Lancaster, England, and died 25 JAN 1578.

George Zeller's online database takes this line all the way back to:

William Stanley was born ABT. 1250 in Hooton, Cheshire, England, and died ABT. 1311.

Joan De Baumvile was born ABT. 1261 in Stourton, Staffordshire, England, and died ABT. 1326.

Thomas married Mary Holme in , New Kent, Virginia.

Children from this marriage were:

52        i.  James Stanley (born on 15 Apr 1688 in , , Virginia - died before 1766)

         ii.  Thomas Stanley Jr. was born on 23 Nov 1689 in , , Virginia.

        iii.  John Stanley was born on 11 Oct 1691 in St. Paul's Parish, New Kent, Virginia and died on 17 Jul 1783 at age 91.


105. Mary Holme .

General Notes: Mary Holme. Name came from Descendancy Chart on LDS Family Search Compact Disk. Mentions St. Peter's in New Kent, VA. Must be some kind of Entry in the Church Records. She was born circa 1666 at New Kent Co., Virginia.

Mary married Thomas Stanley in , New Kent, Virginia. Thomas was born about 1660 in , , , England and died after 1691 in St. Paul's Parish, New Kent, Virginia.

106. Nicholas Hutchins, son of Nicholas Hutchins and Unknown, was born in 1645 in Henrico Co., Virginia and died in 1729 in , , Virginia at age 84.

General Notes: Early Virginia Families Along the James River, Volume I, Foley, 1974, indicates Nicholas Hutchins, 230 acres, Hernico Co., on N. side of James Riv., on W. side of 4 Mi. Cr. adj. Henry Pew, and Mr. John Woodson, 25 Apr. 1702, p. 436 (of Patent book #9). Trans. of 5 pers.* Note: 5 rights paid for to Wm. Byrd, Esqr., Auditor.

The April 1705 Perfect Roll of all the Lands held of her Majisie in Henrico County indicated Nicholas Hutchins had 240 acres.

Nicholas married Mary Watkins on 8 Sep 1701. Mary was born in 1682 in Henrico Co., Virginia and died on 2 Aug 1736 in Henrico Co., Virginia at age 54.

Children from this marriage were:

53        i.  Catherine Hutchins (born in 1703 in Henrico, Virginia - died on 20 Dec 1766 in , Guilford, North Carolina)

         ii.  Mary Hutchins was born in 1705 in Henrico, Virginia.

        iii.  Strangeman Hutchins was born in 1707 in , , Virginia and died on 10 Feb 1792 in Yadkin Co., North Carolina at age 85.

         iv.  Martha Hutchins was born in 1709 in Henrico, Virginia and died on 28 May 1789 at age 80.


107. Mary Watkins, daughter of Henry Watkins Jr. and Mary Crisp, was born in 1682 in Henrico Co., Virginia and died on 2 Aug 1736 in Henrico Co., Virginia at age 54.

Mary married Mr. Holme.

Mary next married Nicholas Hutchins on 8 Sep 1701. Nicholas was born in 1645 in Henrico Co., Virginia and died in 1729 in , , Virginia at age 84.

112. William Hunt, son of Hunt and Unknown, was born about 1660 in Of, Chester, England, died on 6 Sep 1694 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania about age 34, and was buried in Friends Yard, Historic Phila., Pennsylvania.

General Notes: Most Hunt genealogies indicate that Jacob Hunt is the immigrant. However, this is a note I copied from Martha Wallenhorst of Prodigy (RFBR55A) on 5/9/92.

Jacob Hunt is not William's father. That is a mistake that most every Hunt book in our line has made. Everyone knows that his father came from Abington MM. But everyone assumes that it is either Abington MM in Lancanshire, Eng or from Abington Grove farm outside of Boston. This was a prosperous farm but never owned by a Hunt. It was part of the Quincy Estates. The Abington that William's father came from still exists. It is the Abington MM in Abington PA, a suburb of Phila. He came to that meeting from Chester Co.
Eng. Possibly with his bride to be. His name is William Hunt, he married 6-April-1687os Margaret Person (Pearson) dau. of Lawrence and Elizabeth Person.
Margaret came to the new world with her brother Thomas on the ship Endevor in 1683. She was born in Pownell Fee twp., Chester Co. England came to this country as a Quaker. They married in Burlington MM Burlington Co, NJ. William died 6-sept-1694os in Phila. he is buried in the Friends yard in "Historic" Phila. The misconception that Jacob was his father started over a 125 years ago when Mrs. Hunt published her husbands genealogy and stated that the only known Hunt to come to these shores was a Knight of England who was disgraced on the field and fled to the new world. He changed his name to Ephraim Hunt and married. "From this issue came a son Jacob who had a son Jacob who was the personal artist to General George Washington during the French and Indian War". This Jacob had issue and his son had issue Jacob. This Jacob had issue of 14 children. Yes, this Jacob had a William but this William married a Coffin from Nantucket and had no Will in his issue. All of his children have been traced by other sources with the majority of them staying in Mass and upper NY. There is no firm connection between the two families.
Your genealogy should read:
William Hunt m. Margaret Person (Pearson)
issue:
Robert m. 4th month 15 day 1708os to Elizabeth Woolman Payne Mary m 8th month 5 day 1713os Caleb Shreave
Elizabeth m 9th month 3 day 1718os John Harvey (John Hervy) Sarah m 2nd month 6 day 1719os John Gibson
William b. 1690 Bucks Co. PA d 1781 m 2nd month 14 day 1720o to Mary Woolman Hannah m 8th month 3rd day 1720os Jonathan Shreeve all married Burlington MM, Burlington Co. NJ (Henshaw Vo.1)

The research prepared by Mrs. Vena Wilson in 1964 confirms this. See the first page her research quoted in the notes of the next William Hunt.

ONE BRANCH OF THE QUAKER HUNTS

William Hunt produced a certificate an Abingdon Meeting, Pa., (Quaker) 1 month, 30 day, in 1719, from Radnor, a border country West of Warwickshire, England.

Abingdon minutes refer to him "late of Bayberry" a Philadelphia county, Pa. settlement made in 1635, Nathaniel, Daniel, Thomas and Wm. Walton, all from Bayberry, Glouchestershire, England.

William Hunt born 1690 in England and died 1781. Married 2-14-1700, Mary Woolman, born 1692, died 1785. Mary, the daughter of John, 1655-1718, of Burlington Co., N.J. and Elizabeth (Bourton) Woolman. Also the granddaughter of William Woolman who died 1692 of Glouchester, England. Mary Woolman's father John Woolman and her grandfather William Woolman came to America on the ship Shield, ship Captain Daniel Travis, in December 1677. The ship docked and waited until morning. In the morning the ice had frozen so thick and hard that Old William and John Woolman, the Captain Daniel Travis, and John Borton walked on the ice to the shore. This was at the head of the Rancocis River flowing into the Delaware on the left bank. John Woolman was 23 years old at this time. Five years later John married Elizabeth Borton who was 8 years his junior, daughter of John borton who had walked on the ice from their ship.

John Woolman as well as his son Samuel were weavers by trade. John also was a good business man and was a very exacting man. He held important offices in the Quaker church and was a great exponent of his faith. (This information from "John Woolman, American Quaker" by Janet Whitney. Wichita Library.)

William and Mary (Woolman) Hunt were at Abingdon Pa. They went to New Jersey to Monocacy, Md. to N. Carolina. William Hunt was a strict follower of the Quaker faith and preached and helped raised money for the cause.

William married Margaret Person on 6 Apr 1687 in Burlington Mm, Burlington, New Jersey. Margaret was born about 1665 in Pownell Fee Twp, Chester, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Robert Hunt was born in Of, Burlington, New Jersey.

         ii.  Mary Hunt was born in Of, Burlington, New Jersey.

        iii.  Elizabeth Hunt was born in Of, Burlington, New Jersey.

         iv.  Sarah Hunt was born in Of, Burlington, New Jersey.

56        v.  William Hunt (born in 1690 in Of, Randor, England - died about 1745 in Probably, Frederick, Maryland)

         vi.  Hannah Hunt was born in Of, Burlington, New Jersey.


113. Margaret Person, daughter of Lawrence Person and Elizabeth, was born about 1665 in Pownell Fee Twp, Chester, England.

Margaret married William Hunt on 6 Apr 1687 in Burlington Mm, Burlington, New Jersey. William was born about 1660 in Of, Chester, England, died on 6 Sep 1694 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania about age 34, and was buried in Friends Yard, Historic Phila., Pennsylvania.

114. John Woolman, son of William Woolman and Unknown, was born in 1655 in , Painswick, Gloucester, England and died on 27 Feb 1717/18 in , Burlington, New Jersey at age 63.

General Notes: Source: LDS microfilm 1561667. WOOLMAN - BORTON Genealogy, Vol. I, compiled by Edna Harvey Joseph.

John Woolman, and English Gentleman (son of William), hearing reports of Fenwick colonizers in N.J. came over in 1681 and settled upon 8000 acres of land extending from the Burlington River southward to the North Branch of the Rancocas, a distance of 5 miles, including the present site of Mt. Holly. (See Lees Gen. History of N.J., Vol. III page 886).

This text is the source of the spouses of Samuel, Elizabeth, Ann, Hannah, and Esther.

Source: LDS microfilm 1561672.
From John Woolman's Journal by Amelia Mott Gummeree 1922.

In the year 1678 John Woolman I (b. 1665, d. 1718) arrived at Burlington West Jersey, from Gloucestershire, England. With him or very soon after him came his aged father William Woolman d. 3-30-1692. Pg. 2. The Burlington Friends monthly meeting records of 7 mo 1-1684 say: John Woolman & Elizabeth Bourton (Borton) p'posed their Intentions to Marriage, it being y first time & y meeting left y to their Liberty to Consummate it as they saw meet in y fear of y Lord at meeting on 6th of next month.

They were married 8-16-1684. Elizabeth Borton was the daughter of John and Ann Kinton Borton, who in 1679 had come from Aynhoe, in Northamptonshire, England, with a certificate of unity addressed to Burlington from the meeting at Burton.

The following is the marriage certificate of John Woolman I and Elizabeth Bourton:

Whereas, there has been an intention of marriage duly published at two monthly meetings of ye people called Quakers in Burlington upon ye river Delaware in ye Province of West New Jersey in America, Between John Woolman of Northampton River, Husbandman, and Elizabeth Bourton near ye same place also in Province aforesaid. Inquiry being made no obstruction appearing, also ye consent of parents being had, ye meeting gave their concent unto ye same.

Now these may certifie ye truth unto all conserne ye on ye day of ye datte hereoff in our sight and hearing and in an assembly of ye Lords People ye said John Woolman did take and declare ye said Elizabeth Bourton to be his wife, and ye said Ellizabeth Bourton did take and declare the said John Woolman to be her husband according to ye example of ye Lord's People recorded in ye Scriptures of truth, each of them consenting or promising to be loving, faithful and true in ye capacity as Husband and Wife ye tenure of their naturall lives together.

In witness whereof ye Parties, themselves have first of all subscribed their names and wee also as witnesses this eight of eight month 1664.

The certificate is signed by John Woolman and Elizabeth Woolman and witnessed by 25 others.

Woolman was a witness to the will of his fatherinlaw John Borton of Hillsdown on south side of the Northampton River. John Borton asked to be buried in "Friends Burying place in Burlington."

Page 3. John Borton was also a West Jersey Proprietor, and is named by Samuel Smith as a Constable for the "London Tenth" of the settlers on the Delaware. From Samuel Smith History of N.J. pg. 152.

The desceased (John Borton) owned a part of Burlington Island and a thirty second part of West Jersey. The will is dated 7-28-1687. New Jersey Archives Vol. 23, pg. 47.

John and Elizabeth Borton Woolman settled in Northampton Township, on land which ran down to the Rancocas River.

The fact that the emigrant ancestor's house was built of brick and not of timber which places him among the well-to-do. The old house saw two generations born here including the first John's famous grandson and namesake. For 34 years John Woolman and wife Elizabeth lived happily on the banks of the beautiful Rancocas River.

April 1718 he died at the age of 63 leaving in his will all his real and personal estate for the use of his wife.

Elizabeth Woolman died almost immediately after her husband, aged 55 years.
Her will was approved 5-30-1718.

(Both John and Elizabeth's wills are on the microfilm.)

According to Jerry Bickerdyke ([email protected]) in 1997, Their home was called Hillsdown, and Mount Laurel twp is now at that same spot.

Here is an aspect I did not realize. In 1997 there was a discussion on the Internet about Quakers and their objection to slavery. Here is an interesting exchance:

Just a few comments on Quaker opposition to slavery.

A previous commentator here stated " No one person wrote 'the Quaker mandate to free slaves.' Instead, the various yearly meetings of Friends began in the 1750s to make rules first saying that members should not buy or sell slaves, then moved on to rule that Friends could not own slaves and must free those they did own."

It is true that no one person was responsible for the Quaker position regarding the immorality of slavery. Indeed, all such positions come out of a decision made by the consensus of all members of a Monthly Meeting or by the chosen delegates to the Quarterly or Yearly Meeting.

However, no discussion of early Quaker opposition to slavery should neglect to mention John Woolman, who began his journeys to visit Friends around the colonies in 1746 to witness against slavery. John Woolman's Journal is an essential piece of Quaker literature. My point is not to say that he was the first to oppose slavery, but he was among the earliest Friends to do so. It would be a shame for us us to forget his early example of how much an individual can do to change the world.

Here is something Joan Myers Young <[email protected]> posted on Mon, 23 Feb 1998: Speaking of the Woolman family, there was a great article in this morning's Courier Post (a South Jersey Newspaper) on the John Woolman Memorial. It is located at 99 Branch St., Mount Holly, NJ and for information about visiting the Memorial the phone number to call is: 609-267-3226 in case anyone is planning to visit Burlington County and would like to see history first hand.

John married Elizabeth Borton in 1684. Elizabeth was born on 27 May 1664 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England and died on 2 Mar 1717/18 in , Burlington, New Jersey at age 53.

Children from this marriage were:

57        i.  Mary Woolman (born on 7 Mar 1691/92 in , Burlington, New Jersey - died in 1745 in , , Maryland)

         ii.  Elizabeth Woolman was born on 15 Mar 1684/85 in Northampton Twp, Burlington, New Jersey and died on 27 Mar 1755 in , Mansfield, Burlington, New Jersey at age 70.

        iii.  Samuel Woolman was born on 14 Mar 1689/90 in , Mansfield, Burlington, New Jersey and died on 27 Mar 1755 in , Mansfield Twp, Burlington, New Jersey at age 65.

         iv.  Anne Woolman was born on 23 Jun 1694 in , Burlington, New Jersey and died in 1750 at age 56.

          v.  John Woolman was born on 23 Mar 1693/94 in , Burlington, New Jersey.

         vi.  Hannah Woolman was born in 1703 in , Burlington, New Jersey and died in 1745 in , , Maryland at age 42.

        vii.  Esther Woolman was born on 7 Jul 1706 in , Burlington, New Jersey.


115. Elizabeth Borton, daughter of John Borton and Anne Kinton, was born on 27 May 1664 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England and died on 2 Mar 1717/18 in , Burlington, New Jersey at age 53.

General Notes: According to Jerry Bickerdyke ([email protected]) in 1997, Elizabeth Woolman is buried in the Quaker burial place at Rancocas.

Elizabeth married John Woolman in 1684. John was born in 1655 in , Painswick, Gloucester, England and died on 27 Feb 1717/18 in , Burlington, New Jersey at age 63.

116. John Cox, son of Thomas Cox and Unknown, was born about 1665 in Drayton, Berkshire, England and died in 1711 in Kennet, Chester, Pennsylvania about age 46.

General Notes: Source of birth, marriage, and children is Ancestors and Descendants of Jehu Cox by Wayne D. Stout.

The descendants of John and Rachel are also described in JOSEPH COX Ancestors and Descendants by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.

Robert A. Hussey, 1993, provided location of birth.

See notes for grandson Solomon Cox, son of John:

John Cox came to America with his parents in 1708. We do not know where they lived in England -- probably from some Quaker community. John was born about 1685 which means he was about 22 on arrival. It is believed the group landed at Newcastle, Delaware where they lived for a season. Later the family moved to Kennett, Chaster County, Pennsylvania, a Quaker center. This was their residence for about ten years. During that period John Cox Senior died, 1711. We have no idea when his wife Rachel passed away.
...
As indicated above, John was the son of John and Rachel Cox Senior. Nothing is known of Rachel's ancestry. John and Rachel were about 20 years of age when John Jr. joined the family. This means the parents were born about the year 1665. A tradition in the family says they were invited to Pennsylvania by William Penn. They should have known George Fox personally for the founder of the Society of Friends lived till 1691. The Cox family may have taken part in the first Quaker Meeting in 1761.

Note: The source of John and Rachel's children, their birth dates, and places is from Bill Cox, Eldora, KS, 6 Dec 1994.

Les Sutton, Houston, TX is in the process (1995) of publishing a book which contains a Cox section. In the draft text he indicates John Cox was born Sep 24, 1675 in Drayton, Berkshire, England and died 1711 in Newcastle Co. DE. He indicates the wife Rachel was born in England in 1665. He also identifies John's parents as Thomas Cox and Chrisian Matthews.

The following message that appeared on the COX discussion group on the Internet contains significant information about this line:

To: "COX family genealogy list" <[email protected]> Subject: Re: My COX Lines
From: "David Sally Warren or Janna" <[email protected]> Date: Sat, 12 Apr 1997 19:28:15 -0400

Sherri:

Many thanks for this info. In general it is consistent with the info I have. I would be very interested in whatever you have on the descendants of John Cox, son of John and Rachel. The best information I presently have suggests I descend from both John and his brother William, sons of John and Rachel As follows:

John Cox = Rachel Carr
John 2 Cox = Mary Harlan
Samuel 3 Cox = Hannah Wierman
John William 4 Cox = Lydia Littler
Joshua 5 Cox = Rachel 5 Cox (see below)

and

John Cox = Rachel Carr
William 2 Cox = Katherine Kinkey
Harmon 3 Cox = Jane Johns
Jacob 4 Cox = Hannah Moffitt
Rachel 5 Cox = Joshua 5 Cox (see above)

I am interested to see whether your information on the John, son of John and Rachel is consistent with my info.

I'd be happy to supply you with my Cox data if you'd like.

Best,

David

----------
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: My COX Lines
Date: Thursday, March 27, 1997 7:11 PM

Hi saw your letters re Cox John and John: My info seems to match dates internally a little better. See if these make sense to you?

John Cox b Gloucestershire Eng ca 1663
Wife Rachel Carr or Embree.
to New Castle Del 1708, settled next season Chester co, Pa land on Brandywine
250 acres purchased 8 June 1708. May have been son of Samuel of Eng and brother to William of Christina Creek, New Castle De. Certi at Kennett MM. John died 1711.
Children:
1.John b 1686
2.Richard m Margaret Potts 1712 ch: Anna, Sarah, Richard, Jonathon, Joseph, Benjamin, John
3.Sarah m 1712 Thomas Leach Warrington MM
4.Ann m 1713 Casparus Garretson
5.William m 1716 Catherine Kinkey moved from New Castle to Orange Co NC
ch: Rebecca m John Dixon,
Mary m James Lindley
Martha m William Fewrrell
Harmon m Jane John
Margery m Isaac Nichols
William m Juliatha Carr (my line)
John m Mary Scarlett
Solomon m Ruth Cox
Catherine m Elazor Hunt
Thomas m Sarah Davis
6. Joseph
7. Thomas m 2nd (doesn't give 1st mar) Elizabeth Fincher 2 Nov 1722 London Grove MM. marrried 3rd 1730 to Mary Cooke, moved to Warrington MM, Lancaster Co Pa. then to Orange co NC then to Bush River MM Craven co SC. Thomas died after 1774.
ch: (not divided by mothers in my source)
Rebecca m James Frazier
Issac m Olive Underwood
Elizabeth ma David Jenkins
Mary
Peter,
Thomas b 1740 m Tamar Davis
Ann
and possbly Richard
8. Amy m John Allen lived in Pa.

I can give similar info for John Cox son of John and Rachael if it will help.

Sherri

John married Rachel Embree Carr about 1684 in , , , England. Rachel was born about 1665 in , , , England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Cox Jr. was born in , , , England and died in 1760.

         ii.  Richard Cox was born about 1687 in , , , England and died about 1762 in Vincent, Chester, Pennsylvania about age 75.

        iii.  Sarah Cox was born about 1690 in , , , England.

         iv.  Joseph Cox was born about 1692 in , , , England.

58        v.  William Cox (born about 1694 in , , , England)

         vi.  Ann Garretson Cox was born in 1695 in , , , England.

        vii.  Thomas Cox was born about 1697 in , , , England.

       viii.  Amy Cox was born about 1699 in , , , England.

         ix.  Joseph Cox was born about 1688 in , , , England.


117. Rachel Embree Carr was born about 1665 in , , , England.

General Notes: I received the following from Claude R. Burton, a descendant of this union, on Dec 14, 1992. His GEDCOM file contained Rachel's full name.

SOURCE: York County Historical Society 250 Market St., York, Pa.
Pennsylvannia Quaker Records, Warrington, York Co. Pa. Page 11-12.
IGI, Ancestral File.
NOTE: Casparus was from Christiana Creek, New Castle Co. Del; & gr-s of John
Garrettson (van der Hoff) (d 1695/95) fr Gildersland, Holland, to New
Castle Co. Del, 1664, & Ann, his w.
Pennsylvannia Quaker Records, Warrington, York Co. Pa. Page 11-12.
Ms. Linda Harney of Huntington, In.

Rachel married John Cox about 1684 in , , , England. John was born about 1665 in Drayton, Berkshire, England and died in 1711 in Kennet, Chester, Pennsylvania about age 46.

118. Harmon Kankey .

Harmon married Marjorie Herman. Marjorie was born about 1674.

The child from this marriage was:

59        i.  Catherine Kankey (born in 1696 in New Castle, , Delaware)


119. Marjorie Herman, daughter of Ephraim Herman and Isabella, was born about 1674.

Marjorie married Harmon Kankey.

120. James Newby, son of John Newby and Magdalene, was born in 1672 in Norfolk, Virginia and died in 1718 at age 46.

General Notes: Source:1988 IGI CD-ROM search on NEWBY and Hinshaw, Vol I.

1699, 5, 5. Perquimans MM - James produced certificate from Little River showing his clearness and is liberated to marry Sarah Nicholson.

1719, 5, 18. Pasquotank MM - James, Pasquotank co., married Elisabeth Davis, at Little River Meeting House.

James married Sarah Nicholson on 5 May 1699 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina. Sarah was born on 15 Aug 1682 and died on 13 Mar 1717/18 at age 35.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Ann Newby was born on 1 Nov 1708 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         ii.  Benjamin Newby was born on 15 Jun 1707 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        iii.  Hannah Newby was born on 31 Jan 1712/13 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         iv.  James Newby was born on 4 Aug 1702 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina.

          v.  James Newby was born on 14 Jul 1710 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

60       vi.  Samuel Newby (born on 23 Aug 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina - died on 16 Dec 1770)


121. Sarah Nicholson, daughter of Christopher Nicholson and Ann Atwood, was born on 15 Aug 1682 and died on 13 Mar 1717/18 at age 35.

Sarah married James Newby on 5 May 1699 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina. James was born in 1672 in Norfolk, Virginia and died in 1718 at age 46.

122. Nathaniel Albertson, son of Albert Albertson and Mary Gosby, was born about 1679 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 13 Feb 1751/52 about age 73.

General Notes: Source of family information is American Encyclopedia of Quaker Genealogy, Volume I, North Carolina, Perquimans Monthly Meeting, page 90a.

Source of marriage and wife's family, The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, Fort Worth, Texas 1976.

Nathaniel married Abigall Nicholson in Jul 1705 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Abigall was born on 24 Sep 1689.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Sarah Albertson was born on 2 Nov 1706 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.

61       ii.  Elizabeth Albertson (born on 10 Sep 1708 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina)

        iii.  Aron Albertson was born on 13 Nov 1710 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina and died about 1782 about age 72.

         iv.  Jane Albertson was born on 18 Feb 1712/13 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.

          v.  Joshua Albertson was born on 1 Jul 1715 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 5 Aug 1753 at age 38.

         vi.  Hannah Albertson was born on 15 Apr 1719 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 18 Feb 1793 at age 73.

        vii.  Lidda Albertson was born on 20 Jan 1721/22 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.

       viii.  William Albertson was born on 23 Dec 1724 of Perquimans Mm, Perquimans, North Carolina.


123. Abigall Nicholson, daughter of Samuel Nicholson and Elizabeth Charles, was born on 24 Sep 1689.

Abigall married Nathaniel Albertson in Jul 1705 in , Perquimans, North Carolina. Nathaniel was born about 1679 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 13 Feb 1751/52 about age 73.

124. Richard Ratliff, son of Richard Ratcliff and Elizabeth, was born on 13 Jul 1672 in Of, , North Carolina and died on 17 Jun 1724 in , Albemarle, North Carolina at age 51.

General Notes: This branch of the family uses the spelling RATLIFF instead of RATCLIFF.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume VI, Virginia.

1700, 7, 18. Chuckatuck MM - Richard, son of Richard Sr., of Trasco Necks; married in his father's own house, Elizabeth Hollowell, daughter of Henry, deceased, Isl of Wight Co.
1702, 7, --. VA Yearly Meeting - Richard a representative at the first recorded meeting of Va. YM.

Richard married Elizabeth Hollowell before Nov 1707.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Ratliff was born on 4 Nov 1707 and died from 13 Dec 1727 to 1728 at age 20.

         ii.  Mary Ratliff was born on 22 May 1710.

        iii.  Sarah Ratliff was born on 3 Feb 1713/14.

62       iv.  Joseph Ratliff (born on 26 Mar 1719 in Of, Guilford, North Carolina - died on 4 Feb 1760)

          v.  Huldah Ratliff was born on 7 Jun 1722 and died about 1728 about age 6.

         vi.  Thomas Ratliff was born on 15 Mar 1727/28.


125. Elizabeth Hollowell, daughter of Henry Hollowell and Elizabeth Cotching,.

Elizabeth married Richard Ratliff before Nov 1707. Richard was born on 13 Jul 1672 in Of, , North Carolina and died on 17 Jun 1724 in , Albemarle, North Carolina at age 51.

126. Ralph Fletcher III, son of Ralph Fletcher II and Jane Morgan, was born on 22 Apr 1703 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 1 Jul 1785 at age 82.

Death Notes: (Will)

Ralph married Mary Guyer on 23 Dec 1728. Mary was born about 1702 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Ralph Fletcher IV was born in Feb 1729/30 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         ii.  Jane Fletcher was born about 1732 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        iii.  Miriam Fletcher was born about 1735 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         iv.  Ruth Fletcher was born about 1738 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

          v.  Joshua Fletcher was born about 1740 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 24 Oct 1784 in Wayne Co., North Carolina, (Will Proved) about age 44.

63       vi.  Mary Fletcher (born about 1730 in , Perquimans, North Carolina - died on 8 Dec 1801)


127. Mary Guyer was born about 1702 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina.

Mary married Ralph Fletcher III on 23 Dec 1728. Ralph was born on 22 Apr 1703 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 1 Jul 1785 at age 82.
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128. Christopher Hussey,7 son of John Hussey and Marie Wood, was born on 18 Feb 1598/99 in Dorking, Surrey, England, died on 6 Mar 1685/86 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire at age 87, and was buried on 8 Mar 1685/86 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

General Notes: Source: Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, 1988.

Hampton, original settler 6 Sep 1638 with his mother and father-in-law Rev Stephen Batchelder whose footsteps he followed after marriage to his daughter, Theodate, meeting her by family tradition in Holland; coming on the same William and Francis which arrived 5 Jun 1632; settled first at Saugus (Lynn, MA); freeman 14 May 1634; Newbury, proprietor 1637; Hampton Commissioner, t. e. s. c. 22 May 1639, the first of many times; lot layer 31 Oct; called present Deacon 30 Jun 1640; Moderator 1641 1663-4, 1672; Town Clerk 1650-3; Selectman 1650, 1658, 1664, 1669. Often tr. and Gr. j., and foreman. Confirmed Lieut. 14 Jun 1653, Captain 11 Oct 1664. Rep. 1658, 1659, 1660, 1672; Councillor 1679 until Cranfield came in. Nantucket proprietor Jul 1659, sold there to his sons in 1671 and 1681. In Apr 1674 he and son John were admonished for breach of the law called Quakers meeting. Colcord depos. that her father gave them all his cattle, goods and debts on going back to England, indicating his will liv. beyond that time.

LDS Microfilm 029,883 part 3 has a seven page Hussey genealogy based on Austin and 160 Allied Families by John Osborne Austin, 1893, History of Nantucket by Alexander Starbuck, 1924, and History of Lynn, Mass., by Alonzo Lewis and James R. Newhall, 1865.

It tells of Christopher Hussey, his wife, mother, and father-in-law first coming to New England. It tells of Christopher holding many offices and being a substantial land owner.

An interesting entry is that 1659, 7, 2, Christopher was one of the nine purchasers of Nantucket, Mass., from Thomas Mayhew, for 30 pounds sterling and two beaver hats; "one for myself and one for my wife", as the deed says. It is not known that he ever went to that island; he certainly never lived there for any considerable time.

1671, 10, 23. Captain Christopher Hussey of Hampton, deeded to his sons Stephen and John of same place, for 80 pounds, all his interest on the Island of Nantucket, "that is to say all my lands, arable land, pasture, meadows, woodland, all commonage, rights and privileges due unto me according to the purchase made by me; with all my cattle, neat cattle, goats or horses, all my stock that is on the island of Nantucket of what kind or quality or ever it be".

For the next fifteen years of his life, he held many important offices after the King determined to erect New Hampshire into a separate government, under jurisdiction of a President and Council to be appointed by himself.

Christopher held the office of Councillor, next to the president and deputy, for three years.

1684, 2, 8, will. Codicil, 1685, 10, 28. Proved 1686, 10, 7. Executors, son John Hussey and son-in-law John Smith. Witnesses Stephen Torry, Robert Pike, Martha Pike. He gives to his tow sons, Stephen and John, his farm of about 150 acres and also about 50 acres marsh land. To daughter Mary, wife of Thomas Page, 7 acres medow, 2 shares in Ox Common, 2 shares in Cow Commons, and 30 pounds to be paid her by Stephen and John Hussey. To daughter Huldah all the rest of land and housing in the town of Hampton, and goods and stock, also the planting lot, 3 acre meadow lot 2 shares Ox Commons, 2 shares Cow Commons, and 30 pounts to be paid her by John Smith, the husband of my daughter Huldah.

Inventory, upwards 600 pounds including the following items: House, orchard and land adjoining, 42 pounds. Upland on the farm, 200 pounds. Five acres meadow, 100 pounds. 40 acres marsh, 60 pounds. 15 acres marsh, 24 pounds. Planting land, 28 pounds. Spring medow, 30 pounds. 7 acre meadow, 14 pounds. Medow, 6 pounds. Spring medow, 30 pounds. 7 acres meadow, 14 pounds. Meadow, 6 pounds. Land at North Division, 6 pounds. 4 shares Ox Common, 24 pounds. 4 shares Cow Commons, 30 pounds. 12 acres pasture, 20 pounds. 3 cows, 1 ox and 1 year old beast, 12 pounds. Beds, boulsters, blankets, rugs, and curtains, 12 pounds. Table and linen, sheets, etc., 10 pounds.

1686, 3, 8. He was buried on this date at Hampton, so, the town record declare. (History of Lynn)

Christopher Hussey's will is copied from LDS microfilm 1561672:

WILL OF CHRISTOPHER HUSSEY OF HAMPTON, NEW HAMPSHIRE

The Last Will and Testament of Chrisopher Hussey was made the 28th day of February 1684.

I, Christopher Husy, being through the mercy of God in health of body and of a sound memory and disposing capacity for wch (which) I bles the Lord and God being strickn in years, not knowing the time of my departure desiring according to rulle to set my house in order before I dy, revoke alll former Wills by me made, to make and ordain this my last Will and Testament in wch I do first resigns my soule unto the hands of the Lord Jesus Christ my blessed Savior and Redeemer and my body to the dust from whence it was taken in hope of a blessed resurrection among the just when my soule and body being again reunited and clothed over with the righteonsness of Christ to remaine with the Lord forever and as for my outward estate that God hath graciously lent me my just debts being payd and funeral charges discharged, I dispose of as followeth.

Imprimis: I give my two sons Steeven Husy and John Husy my farm with all the privileges thereof namely the one hundred and fifty ackers of meadows upland as granted taken also fifty ackers more of marsh which I bought adjacent to it I say I give it by equal parts that is to say one full half to my son Steeven his heirs and assigns forever in fee simple and the other half to my son John in like manner only that paying to my dafter Mary as hereafter in my Will is expressed.

Item: I give to my dafter Mary Husy now wife of Thomas Page my 7 acres of medow lying near Bejamin Shaws and that peec of medow through which the highway lyeth and also 2 shares in the ox common and also too shars of cows common and also I do order that my son John Smith shall pay her thirty pounds and my two sons John and Steeven shall pay her forty pounds apiece in good pay.

Item: I give and bequeath to my dafter Huldah the like manner all the rest of my lands and housing and comon rights in the town of Hampton and all the houshold stuff and goods and stck then remaining that is to say my house with all in it or with it with all the land adjacent and the planting lots and 3 ackers medow lot toward the sprint, 2 shars in the ox coman and 2 shars in the cow coman and do order and appoint that he shall pay to my dafter Mary thirty pounds toward her porsion.

Item: My will is that the legases that I have bequethed to my dafter Mary that part of it wch is in land that shee shall enjoy it imediately after my deasease and the thirty pounds that shee shall have of my son John Smith the husband of my dafter Huldah i do will it to be payd her in two years after my desease that it to say the one half the first year and the other half the second year as good pay of country.

Item: My will is also that the forty pounds apeece that I have willed my two sons Steeven Husy and John Husy to pay her that it be payd her allso within or by the end of two years next after my desease in som good pay of the country.

Item: My will is also that the forty pounds and in case of fayler shee my sd. dafter shall have in low thereof thirty ackers of the farm part whereof shall be the old field lying on the other side of the way on end whearof buts upon my old house and the other end toward the mill River by the bridge the rest to be made up of the farms wch ad. lands shall be ingadged hearby and shall be responsible for the payment of the aforesayd som ten or twelve ackers whearof shall be medow.

Item: My will is that the sd. (said) som being payd my sayd sons Steven and John shall have the farm first bequeathed by evene and equal porsion (portion) only my son John shall not be molested or hindered of what he have built on nor his building ncrompltd(?) in the valving of the farm because they are his owne the land on wch. that stan be rakend or valued.

I do upon further consideration will and declare that it shall be in my sd dafter Mary 's choifc whether shee will bave the land foremensioned in the farme or the 80 pounds of my 2 sons Steeven and John Husy.

Lastly, I make and ordaine my son John Husy and my son John Smith to be joint Executors of this my will and in case they should both dy before as above sd. then I do appoint my dafter Mary and in case shee should also in like manor fayle then I apoint my son Steephen to be my Executor in their stead and my trusty friends Mr. Richard Waldron and Mr. Robert Pike to be overseers of this my will. In witness of all wch I have hearunto sett my hand and seal the day and year aforemensioned.

Christopher Hussey (SEAL) Signed, sealed and declared to be his last Will and Testament before us:

Moses Pike
Robert Pike
His
Steeven Tong
Mark

Salisbry October ye 28 - 1685 upon a considering of som dubiausness in the expression of some things in this my Will respecting coman rights or privaleges I do by these present for the avoyding of any contraversy or mistakes about it in time to come declare that by the privileges mensioned belonging to my farm by it I do plainly intent whatsoever woods, woodland or feeding rights or coman lands to be divided that do belong to ye sd. farm it shall remaine and be to ye sd. farme and so ---- porsionably to be divided to my two sons that have the farm and lands adjacent or lands not yet pofost (possessed) that ly in coman and in like manner the coman rights that do belong to the lands that is given to my two dafters Mary and Huldah in the Towne it shall belong to each of them attending to thayr severall portions of land I meane any coman rights thereto belonging devided or undevided and this I do declare to by my plane intent and meaning in that case as wwitness my hand and seale, day and year above written.

Christopher Hussey (SEAL)

Signed, sealed and declared in ye presence of us

Steeven Tong (his mark)
Robert Pike
Martha Pike

New Hampshire in New England Moses Pike, Robert Pike and steeven Tong appeared the 7th of 8th month 1686 before Richard Waldron, Jr. and made oath that they saw Christopher Hussey signe, seal and heard him declare this Instrumit contained in the two former pages as his last will and then saw him signe and seal the above menconed codicill being of a disposing mind.

Attests Elisa Stileman Clery

In September, 1993, at the Sutro Library, I found an original handwritten manuscript resulting from a computer search under the Hussey Family. It is Sutro F 72 N2 G36 1874 [Genealogy of several families who settled in the Nantucket region]. -- [1874?]. [92] p. ; 32 cm.

There is a section on the Hussey family. I will quote the beginning of that section. The manuscript was written in about 1874.

Capt. Christopher Hussey, the father of Stephen was born in the town of Dorking in the Co. of Surry England about six miles SSW from London. He made suit to a young woman by the name of Bachelor in Holland whos father had removed there sometime befor from England & was a clergyman and wwas then about removing with his family to America. He would not give his concent for the saidHussey to marry his dauter on any other terms than that he should remove with him to America, which he did and settled in the town of Lynn Co.
of Essex a Province of Massachusetts Bay N. England where the said Bachelor was minister of the town and in so early a time of the Settlement that the said Stephen Hussey was the second child born in the town, and the one that was born before him was born in the same week. When on the following Sabbath they were both carried to church to be christened the eldest was first presented to the Minister he put it by and reached for the other saying I will christen my own first. Hence arose that saying that has so offent been made use of.

The said Christopher Hussey the father of Stephen was cast away on the coast of Florida, and was devoured by Cannibals who were at that time inhabitants of that coast. He was a man that bore the name of a gentleman equal to any one that lived at that day. Christopher's wife's name was Theodate. Hence the name of Theodate Gardner wife of Ruben and several others in the Co of Barnstable, in Stephen Gorham's family.

... the manuscript goes on to describe each of Christopher's and Theodates children which includes the following about John:

John Hussey son of old Christopher married Mary Perkins of Hampton & move to Newcastle, Deleware and died in 1711 leaving fourteen daughers.

... Some of the handwritten notes in the folder are dated as early as 1824.
The latest one was a list of people weho celebrated the 85th birthday of E. F. Gard, December 21, 1874.

The following is available at Ancestry.com as of 8/14/2000:

Database: The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-33

CHRISTOPHER HUSSEY


ORIGIN: Dorking, Surrey
MIGRATION: 1633
FIRST RESIDENCE: Lynn
REMOVES: Newbury by 1638, Hampton 1639

CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Admission to Lynn church prior to 14 May 1634 implied by freemanship. He certainly remained a member of Bachiler's church as it moved about, and in Hampton became deacon [Hampton Hist 760].
FREEMAN: 14 May 1634 [MBCR 1:369].
EDUCATION: He signed his deeds and his will. His inventory included "one Bible" valued at 5s. and "one book" valued at 5s.
OFFICES: Deputy for Hampton to Massachusetts Bay General Court, 19 May 1658, 11 May 1659, 30 May 1660, 19 December 1660, 15 May 1672 [MBCR 4:1:321, 364, 416, 449, 4:2:507]. Empowered to marry at Hampton, 18 October 1659 [MBCR 4:1:382-83]. Magistrate, 7 September 1680, 7 June 1681, 6 December 1681, 5 September 1682 [NHPP 40:361, 374, 379, 389]. Empowered to end small causes for Hampton, 22 May 1639, 2 June 1641, 13 October 1663, 10 October 1665, 13 April 1669, 12 October 1669 [MBCR 1:259, 329; EQC 3:100, 280, 4:131, 186]. Highway committee, April 1665 [EQC 3:253]. As "Lt. Hussie," committee to lay out colony land, 12 November 1659, 16 October 1660 [MBCR 4:1:403, 440].
He was lieutenant and then captain of the train band in Hampton.
ESTATE: A copy of the book of abatements for Hampton was brought to court in November 1679, indicating that Christopher Hussey of Hampton had been granted one hundred and fifty acres of upland, meadow and marsh, for a farm [EQC 7:285].
On 2 April 1681 Christopher Hussey of Hampton granted to his son John Hussey of Hampton one half acre of land of "my farm in Hampton" in a place convenient for the setting up of a grist mill [NHPLR A:65; EIHC 49:34-35]. On 8 April 1673, Edward Colcord, aged about fifty-six and William Fifield deposed that "when Mr. Steven Batcheller of Hampton was upon his voyage to England they heard him say to his son-in-law Mr. Christopher Hussey that as Hussey had no dowry with Batcheller's daughter when he married her, and that he had given to said Hussey all his estate" [Essex Ant 5:173, citing Old Norfolk County Records].
He was one of the eight purchasers of Nantucket in 1659, and in 1671 sold his land to his sons John and Stephen [Nantucket Land 53, 69]. On 6 December 1681 Christopher Hussey confirmed a deed of 23 October 1671 in which he had sold all his lands and rights on the island of Nantucket to his sons Stephen Hussey and John Hussey [NHPLR 3:168a].
In his will, dated 28 February 1684/5 and proved 7 October 1686, "Christopher Husy ... in health of body ... & yet being stricken in years" bequeathed to "my two sons Steeven Husy & John Husy my farm ... the hundred & fifty acres of meadow & upland granted me by the town as also fifty acres more of marsh which I bought adjacent to it" in equal parts "only they paying to my daughter Mary" as follows: to "my daughter Mary Husy now wife of Thomas Page my seven acres of meadow ... & that piece of meadow through which the highway lieth, and also two shares in the ox common and also two shares of cows common ... also ... my son John Smith shall pay her £30 and my two sons John & Steeven shall pay her £40 apiece"; to "my daughter Hulda in the like manner all the rest of my lands and housing & common rights in the town of Hampton and all the household stuff ... remaining ... my house & all in it or with it with all the land adjacent and the planting lot & three acres meadow lot toward the spring, two shares in the ox common & two shares in the cow common & do order & appoint that he [John Smith] shall pay to my daughter Mary £30 toward her pension"; "my daughter Mary" to have her part of the land immediately after "my decease" and the £30 from "my son John Smith the husband of my daughter Hulda" to be paid two years after "my death" and the other two sons to pay her within the end of two years next; "in case of failure she my said daughter shall have in lieu thereof thirty acres of the farm"; "my said sons Steven and John" having paid Mary the said sum, to have the farm in equal portions, "only my son John shall not be ... hindered of what have built on nor his building accounted in the valuing of the farm"; "upon further consideration ... my said daughter Mary's choice whether she will have the land aforementioned in the farm or the £80 of my two sons Steeven & John Husy"; "my son John Husy & my son John Smith" joint executors, and if they die "my daughter Mary" and if she die, then "my son Steephen"; "my trusty friends Major Richard Waldron & Major Robt. Pike" overseers [NHPP 31:287-89]. In a codicil dated 28 October 1685 (at Salisbury) "upon a considering of some dubiousness in the expression of some things in this my will" the common rights to go proportionally to the inheritors with the inherited land [NHPP 31:289].
The inventory of the estate of Capt. Christopher Hussey, taken 25 March 1686, totalled £651 13s., including £589 in real estate: "house, orchard & land adjoining," £42; "12 acres of pasture land," £20; "planting land," £28; "Spring Meadows," £30; "7 acres of meadow," £14; "meadow towards Boulter's," £6; "4 shares at the ox commons," £24; "4 shares cow pasture," £30; "land at the new plantation," £15; "land in the north division," £6; "the upland in the farm," £200; "50 acres of meadow belonging to the farm," £100; "a lot of marsh, 40 acres," £60; and "a lot of marsh, 15 acres," £24 [NHPLR 1:318-19; NHPP 31:290].

BIRTH: Baptized Dorking, Surrey, 18 February 1598/9, son of John and Mary (Wood) Hussey [GDMNH 365].
DEATH: Hampton [7?] March 1685/6 "being about 90 years of age" [HampVR 9].
MARRIAGE: (1) By 1635 Theodate Bachiler, born say 1610, daughter of STEPHEN BACHILER; "Theodata Husse the wife of Christopher Husse died in the 8th mo[nth] 1649" at Hampton [HampVR 557].
(2) Hampton 9 December 1658 Ann (Capon) Mingay [HampVR 74, 556]. She had married first Denton, Norfolk, 30 September 1630 Jeffrey Mingay [NHGR 8:148]. She died at Hampton 24 June 1680 [HampVR 117].
CHILDREN:
With first wife
i JOHN, bp. Lynn 29 February 1635[/6?] [HampVR 3; "the last day of the last month" - the day of the month depends on the interpretation of the double-date, since 1636 was a leap year; note that the year chosen here would result in a two-year gap before the birth of the next child]; m. Hampton 21 September 1659 Rebecca Perkins [HampVR 74, 556].
ii MARY, bp. Newbury 2 April 1638 [HampVR 3]; m. (1) Hampton 21 January 1664[/5] Thomas Page [HampVR 75, 556]; m. (2) Hampton 10 March 1690/1 Henry Green [HampVR 1:78]; m. (3) Hampton 10 November 1704 Henry Dow [HampVR 1:58]. (On 23 April 1706 "Mary Dow of Hampton ... with the consent of my now husband Henry Dow of Hampton" sold to Hezekiah Jennings two shares of land in the north division, fifty acres, "given to me by my honored father Christopher Hussey of Hampton aforesaid late deceased" [NHPLR 5:197].)
iii THEODATA, bp. Hampton 23 August 1640 [HampVR 3]; d. Hampton 20 October 1649 "Theodata the daughter of Christopher Husse died the 20th of October 1649" [HampVR 557].
iv STEPHEN, b. say 1643; m. Nantucket 8 October 1676 Martha Bunker.
v HULDA, b. say 1646; m. Hampton 26 February 1666[/7] John Smith [HampVR 75, 556]. [GDMNH absentmindedly calls this child "Hannah."]

ASSOCIATIONS: The widow Mary Hussey who appears in early Hampton records is almost certainly mother of Christopher [GDMNH 364-65].

COMMENTS: In 1686 "Captain Henry Dow wrote in cipher in his diary for Monday, Mar. 8, that he was
at Captain Hussey's burial.' It is therefore certain that he died in Hampton and was not, as stated by Savage, cast away off the coast of Florida" [Hampton Hist 760].
All sources give Stephen as the eldest child of Christopher and Theodate (Bachiler) Hussey, and claim that this couple had married in England prior to 1632 and came to New England with Reverend STEPHEN BACHILER. There is no evidence, however, for placing Stephen as the eldest child, and his marriage date of 1676, and other records, argue for a date of birth in the 1640s, and so he has been placed here as the fourth of five children. Thus John becomes the eldest child, which is consistent with the page of baptisms, apparently kept by Stephen Bachiler as he travelled from Lynn to Newbury to Hampton, where John is the first child baptized, at Lynn in 1636. (This also puts the lie to the myth that in the first week he was at Lynn Bachiler had baptized his own grandson Stephen Hussey before the child of another couple.)
If John was the eldest child, then his parents need not have married earlier than 1635, and Hussey may not have met his wife until both were in New England. This would remove any evidence that Bachiler and Hussey would have been associated in England, and so any evidence that they might have sailed together in 1632. Since the earliest record of Hussey in New England is his admission to freemanship on 14 May 1634, we need not assume that he had arrived any earlier than 1633.
If Theodate Bachiler did not marry until about 1635, then she need not have been born until about 1615, although her birth could have been earlier (but certainly not so early as 1588, as claimed by GDMNH and others). Her given name is a Greek construct meaning "gift of God," which would be appropriate for a child born to a woman at the end of her child-bearing period, long after all her other children had been born. Aside from Theodate, the youngest known Bachiler child was Ann, who was born about 1601. We argue here that Theodate was born several years after Ann, and have chosen somewhat arbitrarily 1610 as her year of birth.
Savage and Dow have included a son Joseph, but this derives from an error in Dow's list of representatives from Hampton to the General Court, which gives a Joseph Hussey in 1672, a misreading for Christopher Hussey [Hampton Hist 566].
On 11 October 1664 "Mr." Christopher Hussey was bound to pay Jno. Mason, his apprentice, £4 at the end of his apprenticeship [EQC 3:202].

Christopher married Theodate Batchelder in 1629 in , , , Holland. Theodate was born in 1596 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died on 20 Oct 1649 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire at age 53.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Stephen Hussey was born on 8 Jun 1632 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts and died on 2 Apr 1718 in Nantuckett, , Massachusetts at age 85.

         ii.  Joseph Hussey Captain was born from 1632 to 1635 and died in 1672 at age 40.

64      iii.  John Hussey (born in 1635 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts - died in 1707-1711 in New Castle, New Castle, Deleware)

         iv.  Mary Hussey died on 21 Jan 1732/33 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

          v.  Theodate Hussey was born on 23 Aug 1640 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire and died in 1649 at age 9.

         vi.  Huldah Hussey was born about 1643 of Newbury, , New Hampshire and died on 16 Aug 1740 about age 97.

Christopher next married Ann Mingay on 9 Dec 1658. Ann died on 24 Jun 1680.


129. Theodate Batchelder, daughter of Stephen Batchelder Reverend and Ann Bate, was born in 1596 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died on 20 Oct 1649 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire at age 53.

Theodate married Christopher Hussey 7 in 1629 in , , , Holland. Christopher was born on 18 Feb 1598/99 in Dorking, Surrey, England, died on 6 Mar 1685/86 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire at age 87, and was buried on 8 Mar 1685/86 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

130. Isaac Perkins,7 son of Issache Perkyns and Alice, was born in Hillmorton, , England and died on 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton, , New Hampshire.

General Notes: Source: Genealogies of Pennsylvania Families, Vol II.

According to Donna J. Howard, he was a ship carpenter.

According to Immigrant Ancestors, he was brother of Abraham. Hampton 1639, bought a farm next Salisbury line, now Seabrook, from Rev. Mr. Dalton in June 1652 and probably soon moved there. Constable 1650, jury service often. In Jan. 1680 he deeded to son Ebenezer for support of self and wife Susanna, and died Nov 1685. Susannah was not a Wyeth. With her consent, son Ebeneazer sold the homestead in 1693 and she went with him and other children to Delaware, where her estate was administered in 1699 by son-in-law Hussey, principal cr.

Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, James Savage, 1884, indicates Isaac was of Hampton and a freeman 18 May 1642. This text also provideds the birthdates for his children.

James Savage indicated that twenty-four of this name (Perkins) had, in 1834, been graduated at Yale, fifteen at Harvard, and thirteen at other north eastern colleges.

NEHGS Vol 10, page 216 says that Isaac Perkins, probably brother of John (of Ipswich) and Abraham (of Hampton), was an early settler in that part of Hampton now called Seabrook, where he still has descendnats. He was admitted freeman in 1642, and died between 1683 and 1686.

Genealogies of Pennsylvania Families indicates Isaac Perkins, born circa 1612, was among the recognized founders of New Hampshire and was freeman, at Hampton, in 1642. Neither will or settlement of his estate have been found, but he and wife Susanna, possibly daughter of Humphrey Wise of Ipswich, are believed to have had twelve children, of whom five became constructive factors in the colonies of East and West Jersey, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. He died at Hampton, 13 November, 1685, and his widow accompanied her daughter, Rebecca Hussey, to New Castle County, Delaware, and there deceased in 1699, the administration of her estate being granted to John Hussey, 17 July, 1699.

The following is from http://www. hampton.lib.nh.us/genealog/d0003/g0000763.html#I10192

Isaac was reportedly a 9th and 10th generation ancestor of President Nixon. The very reliable Gary Boyd Roberts, of N.E.H.G.S., reports that the descendancy occurs through grandson, John HUSSEY, Jr. However, Noyes/Libby/ Davis, in their "Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire" (1939) reports (at pg. 364) that there were TWO John, Juniors, and that the SECOND one died before the age of 1 month. If the first Junior was still living (he would have then been 8 years old) and went on to adulthood to marry and raise a family, then how is it that a subsequent son was also named John? Scenario #1: Roberts (or his source) is in error. Scenario #2: GDMNH is in error. John, Jr., #1 died young, and John, Jr., #2 was the survivor who married and raised a family. Scenario #3: Roberts is right, and there's no explaining the choices of some parents when it comes to naming their children.

In the new book, "Schwartztrauber, Stewart and Related Families," (1995), at pgs. 601 and 609, Admiral S. Archie Schwartztrauber reports the same Perkins-Nixon connection, showing the descendancy through John HUSSEY, Jr., #1. He attributes correspondence with David C. Dearborn of N.E.H.G.S. for his authority.

Mr. Roberts also informs us that Isaac's grandfather, Thomas, was a common ancestor of Presidents Fillmore, Coolidge, and Franklin D. Roosevelt, through Isaac's uncle Henry.

Roberts, Gary Boyd, "Ancestors of American Presidents," (1995, N.E.H.G.S. & Boyer), pgs. 147-48, 167, 159-60, 161-62, and 241 (chart).

Isaac married Susanna Wise in 1635 in Ipswich, Hampton, New Hampshire. Susanna was born about 1614 in Hillmorton, , England and died in 1699 in , New Castle, Delaware about age 85.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Lydia Perkins was born about 1639 of Hampton, , New Hampshire.

         ii.  Isaac Perkins was born of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died on 30 Oct 1661.

        iii.  Jacob Perkins was born of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died in 1731 in Burlington, , West Jersey.

65       iv.  Rebecca Perkins (born in 1637 in , , , England - died about 1711 in , New Castle, Delaware)

          v.  Daniel Perkins was born of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died on 1 Aug 1662.

         vi.  Caleb Perkins was born of Hampton, , New Hampshire.

        vii.  Benjamin Perkins was born on 17 Feb 1649/50 of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died on 23 Nov 1670 at age 20.

       viii.  Susanna Perkins was born on 21 Dec 1652 of Hampton, , New Hampshire.

         ix.  Hannah Perkins was born on 24 Feb 1655/56 of Hampton, , New Hampshire.

          x.  Mary Perkins was born on 23 Jul 1658 of Hampton, , New Hampshire.

         xi.  Ebenezer Perkins was born on 9 Dec 1659 of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died in 1703 at age 44.

        xii.  Joseph Perkins was born on 9 Apr 1661 of Hampton, , New Hampshire and died on 19 Aug 1707 in , , Delaware at age 46.


131. Susanna Wise, daughter of Humphrey Wise and Susan Tidd, was born about 1614 in Hillmorton, , England and died in 1699 in , New Castle, Delaware about age 85.

General Notes: There is considerable doubt that Susanna is in fact the daughter of Humphrey Wise. The Hopkinson and Allied Families text indicates Humphrey's daughter Susanna married John Bursley.

Susanna married Isaac Perkins 7 in 1635 in Ipswich, Hampton, New Hampshire. Isaac was born in Hillmorton, , England and died on 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton, , New Hampshire.

132. Thomas Inskeep 8 was born in 1620 in of, Fulfoord, , Stafford, England.8

Thomas married someone.

His child was:

66        i.  John Inskeep (born about 1650 of Fooford, Staffordshire, England - died on 15 Dec 1729)


144. Thomas Jessope, son of William Alias Jessop Sonier and Dorothy Ireland, was born from 1602 to 1603.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

Thomas was born about 1602/3 and was baptized later, at Kirkburton 23 March 1616/17. He married there 27 September 1635 Alice Kay alias Wilson. No record of children specifically of this marriage has been found (children we have are listed filia or filius Thomas), nor is there a record of Alice's burial.
Thomas was undoubtedly the father of an illegitimate child of Mary Micklethwaite, Timothy, 6 November 1651. The record reads "Timothy filus nothu Mariae Micklethwaite, Bapt. 1651--Nov 6. This may be an indication that a Quaker marriage to Mary Micklethwaite was not recognized by the established church, or it might be, as recorded, an illegitimate birth. One Elias Mickethwaite was a witness th the will of Joseph Jessop, a son of Thomas and there was a John Micklethwaite, Churchwarden of Penistone in 1633. This shows some family connection.

Thomas married Mary Miklesthwaite. Mary was born about 1629.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Anna Jessop was born on 28 Sep 1645 in Penistone, Yorkshire, England.

         ii.  Joseph Jessop was buried on 18 Jul 1705.

        iii.  Thomas Jessop

         iv.  John Jessop

72        v.  Timothy Jessop (born on 6 Nov 1651 in Fay, Little Rock, Waterloo - died on 20 Jun 1696 in Washington, Little Rock, Wetherbee)


145. Mary Miklesthwaite was born about 1629.

Mary married Thomas Jessope. Thomas was born from 1602 to 1603.

146. James Parrat was born about 1627.

James married someone.

His child was:

73        i.  Mary Parrat (born about 1653 in Josie, Zella, Little Rock, Waterloo - died on 30 Jun 1719 in Washington, Little Rock, Wetherbee)


148. William Pease, son of Thomas Pease and Anna Beamond,.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

William Pease was baptized at Fishlake, Yorkshire, England 5 September 1619.
He was undoubtedly the father of William who was born about 1650 and married in 1686, since no other possible Pease can be found in the parish registers or Friends records.

William married someone.

His child was:

74        i.  William Pease (born about 1650 of Braithwaite, Yorkshire, England - buried on 22 Mar 1692/93 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England)


150. William Carniley was born of Wath-On-Dearn.

William married someone.

His child was:

75        i.  Ann (Pearson) Carnally (born of West Melton, , England)


152. John Small .

General Notes: According to the Cleaver text, John procured a certificate at Perquimans Monthly Meeting 9 mo. 3, 1736 to go to Virginia to marry Rebecca Moore, and on 9 mo. 20, 1737 they moved to Core Sound meeting in Carteret County, N.C. A child was Rachel who m. Joshua Perisho at Pasquotank Monthly Meeting, N.C. 5 mo. 14, 1755.

John married Rebecca Moore.

John next married Ann Grove.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Benjamin Small was born of Chuckatuck, , Virginia.

76       ii.  John Small (born in 1664 in , , , Wales - died on 25 Dec 1688 in Elizabeth River, Nansemond, Virginia)

        iii.  Matthew Small


153. Ann Grove .

General Notes: Cleaver is uncertain as to the name of Grove.

The book, "New England Marriages, Prior to 1700" by Clarence Almon Torrey, states: John Small (1716-) and Ann (Grove?), Salem.

Ann married John Small.

154. Thomas Hollowell Sr. son of William Hollowell and Unknown, was born about 1625 in , Lancashire, England and died in 1687 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia about age 62.

General Notes: The following information was received from Cousin Cheska Wheatley (she descends from Charity Hollowell) on 5 August 1993 which provides the ancestry of our Thomas Hollowell:

John Hollowell 1
Born about 1560 Northamptonshire, England. Died 15 Sept 1601 Ashby St., Ledger, Northamptonshire, England. Married Nov 1582 to Isabel Garfield Died about 9 Nov 1627
||
William Hollowell 2
Born 27 Jan 1592 Ashby St., Ledger, Northhampshire, England. Died 1645 Flore, Northampshire, England Married about 1622
||
Thomas Hollowell of Elizabeth River
Born 4 Feb 1625 Flore, Northamptonshire, England. 3 Transported to the Colony of VA on the ship Constant by Stephen Gill of York Co., VA in 1647. 1672, he was mentioned by George Fox in a letter written from the Elizabeth River Friends at "Nansemun" who were setting up a men's Quarterly Meeting at John Fowler's or Thomas Hollowell's. 1682- Thomas & Alic recorded their testimony at Chuckatuck against their children's unlawful behavior in being married by priests. (children not named.) Will dated 13 Mar 1686/7, probated 17 May 1687 Norfolk Co., VA. 4 died 16 1m1686/7 Married about 1646 to Alice ----- Named as member of "our womans meetting in the western branch of Nancimumt in Virginia" in a letter to London dated 11 4mo. 1679. 5 died 19 9m 1700 Chuckatuck MM, VA 6

7. Elizabeth Hollowell
Born 9 7m 1662 7 West Branch of Elizabeth River, VA
Married 13 10m 1687 Chuckatuck (Nansemond) MM, (at her mother's
house),to Nathan Newby, minister 8 son of William Newby of Nansemond
Co., VA

References:
1 Tanner, Ruby W., Correspondence, Oct. 1992. 2 Ibid. 3 Ibid. 4 McIntosh, Charles F., Abstract of Norfolk County Wills 1637-1710, 1914, p. 113. Names five sons and three daughters: Henry, Joseph, Benjamin, Edmond & John, & my daughter Sarah Hawood & Elizabeth & Alce., Exr. son Henry, wit. Robert Bowers, Henry Bowles, Thomas Hodgis. 5" Nansemond Quaker Women, 1679," The Virginia Genealogist, Vol. 17, p. 134. 6 Hinshaw's, Chuckatuck MM. 7 Hinshaw's, Chuckatuck MM. 8 White, Miles Jr., Early Quaker Records in Virginia, Gen.
Publ. Co., Inc. 1977., p. 12.

-=CHESKA=-

Source: The Ancestry of ALLEN GRINNELL CLEAVER and MARTHA IRENE JESSUP - 172 Allied Families - Compiled by WILLIAM JESSUP CLEAVER, 1989.

In April of 1649 Thomas and his family, Alce and two small children Sarah and Thomas were transported to the Virginia Colony by Stephen Gill. They settled on the west side of Western Branch of the Elizabeth River in what was called Lower Norfolk county. In order to encourage settlement in the colony, patents of fifty acres were made for each person "transported at his own cost". After Thomas and his family were so "transported", he apparently arranged for passage of friends or indentured servants totalling thirteen people, thus he was granted from 11 January 1652 through 27 September 1680, six hundred fifty acres.

The Society of Friends was introduced into Virginia in 1656 by the missionary Elizabeth Harris of London. She was followed by a number of others and George Fox made his memorable trip in 1672. Although there was no specific law against Quakers prior to 1660, the Colony generally followed England and New England in making life difficult and dangerous for Friends. In 1660 when the Royalist party returned, Sir William Berkeley, an inveterate foe of Quakerism, was appointed Governor of Virginia and the first act of the assembly was the infamous law directed against Quakers which began "Whereas, there is an unreasonable and turbulent sort of people commonly called Quakers who contrary to law, do daily gather unto them unlawful assemblies and congregations of people, teaching and publishing lies, miracles, false visions, prophecies and doctrines, which have influence upon the communities of men both ecclesiastical and civil ... leaving it arbitrarty to every vain and vicious person whether men shall be safe, laws established, offenders punished and governor's rule, therefore ... etc." Stiff penalties were set including fines for captains whose ships should bring Quakers to Virginia. Meetings were broken up, property confiscated, people imprisoned and whipped. Sometimes the legal authorities led these assaults, but often mobs of bigots started the difficulties. But Quakers continued to organize. George Fox's organizing letter names the house of Thomas Hollowell as a place of General Meeting and in 1678 Alice Hollowell's house of Elizabeth River was cited as a meeting place for Chuckatuck meetings. Thomas and Alice were original members of Chuckatuck meeting and both of them were named elders.

According to Vikki Highfield, who is doing very serious research in the Hollowell line in 1992, Lucy Elliot Hollowell, author of The Hollowells, and others believed that Thomas and Alice were married in England, as were their two oldest children. Vikki H. does not - she indicates that Thomas Hollowell was transported by Steven Gill in 1647, for which Steven Gill received land in Your county NC. The York county records are in very bad shape and a lot are missing, but if Thomas was transported it would mean tha his passage was paid for by Steven Gill, therefore he would be indebted to him for at least 7 years.

In Nell Nugent's book, "Cavaliers and Pioneers" she states that many of the land patents were recorded after the fact. In other words, later than the actual time of immigration, which, if true would mean that Thomas was here at an earlier date than 1647. Also, since they received 50 acres of land for each "headright", it is unlikely that Alice and 2 children would not have been listed as passengers. The first record I can find of Thomas in Norfolk Co., VA is in Oct. 1650. As I said in my earlier message, I am less concerned with who their parents are, at this point, than I am straightening out their descendants.

Once that has been established with proof, then I (Vikki H.) will work on their parentage.

Here is an interesting story posted on the GEnie Genealogy BBS by Harold Cave on 31 October 1992:

The following is taken from "Genealogy Sources" (by Riker) and is a compilation of articles from the Indiana Magazine of History.

The author of the article is or was Lester D Prewitt from Iowa.

THE HOLLOWELL FAMILY

There is a legend which relates that in the seventeenth century century three Hallowell brothers came to America from England.

Two of them settled in Pennsylvania, the other going farther south. The latter was a very loud and forceful preacher. The people insisted on writing his name HOLLOWELL instead of HALLOWELL and the descendants sill spell the name with an 'o' in the first syllable.

Thomas Hollowell, second of the name, son of John and Sarah Hollowell, of Norfolk County, Virginia, was born on December 4, 1739, and married Mary Peele (Pelle), daughter of Robert and Elizabeth Peele. The ceremony took place on December 7, 1760, in Quaker meeting in Northampton County, North Carolina. Thomas came to Orange County, Indiana, in 1812 and died prior to 1830.

John Hollowell, father of the second Thomas Hollowell, died in 1751 or 1752 in Norfolk County, Virginia; his will was proved April 16, 1752 (recorded in Will Book 1f, p.246). The will of John Hollowell, husband of Sarah Rountree, mentions a cousin Thomas, and a brother Thomas, and children (Rachel Copeland, Mary, Sarah, Rachel, John, and Thomas). In Will Book 5f of Norfolk County, Virginia, are recorded wills of two Thomas Hollowells--one of them dated June 16, 1793, probated September 15, 1693, mentions children (Thomas, John, William, Elizabeth, Katherine, and Luke). The other will dated March 15, 1686, probated May 17, 1687, mentions a wife Alice, and children: Edmond, Thomas, Henry, Joseph, Benjamin, John, Sarah, Elizabeth and Alice. Sarah, the wife of the first John Hollowell was the daughter of Moses and Sarah Rountree. Moses died in Perquimans County, North Carolina in 1755. His will, made on July 21, 1755, mentions his wife, Sarah, and children: Sarah, Hannah, Ledy and Ann. The will of his daughter Hannah, probated in 1759, mentions sisters Sarah and Ledy, and is witnessed by Joe and Abner Hollowell.

Mary Peele, wife of the second Thomas Hollowell was born on February 2, 1742 (o.s.) and died on Janjuary 11, 1813. She was the daughter of Robert Peele (or Peelle) who was born on June 29, 1709 and died on July 13, 1782, in Northampton Co, North Carolina. Robert married Elizabeth Edgerton and the moved from Nansemond County, VA to Northampton Co, NC in 1742. Elizabeth died April 26, 1749. Robert Peele Jr, was a son of Robert and Judith Peele.

Judith's will was probated in August 1756 in Northampton Co. A Robert Peele is listed as having contributed to the cause of American liberty during the Rev War.

The marriage of Thomas Hollowell and Mary Peele is recorded as follows: "1760, 12, 7. Thomas of Perquimans Co., s. John and Sarah - Colony of VA, Co of Norfolk, m. Mary Peele, in Rick (sic) Square NH (Northampton Co)".

In 1932 the family bible of Thomas Hollowell was found in an attic at Paoli, Orange Co, IN and is now in the possession of Joseph A Hall, a gggson. Nothing is recorded of John and Sarah Hollowell save that they lived in Norfolk Co, VA and were the parents of Thomas Hollowell who lived in NC. The Bible records the death of the wife of Thomas as follows: "Mary Hollowell, wife of Thomas Hollowell, late of North Carolina, but now of Indiana Territory, departed this life the 11th day of the first month, of 1813, at about 8 or 9 o'clock at night, aged 70 years and 9 months lacking 2 days."

The remainder of the article is a list of their children and too numerous to type in now - but if anyone is interested I will try to enter the children and marriages (another six pages).
My interest in the Hollowells is that two of Thomas's sons married Phebe and Elizabeth COX (ancestors of my wife) namely John and Robert Hollowell. One of Robert's sons Nathan had a son Joseph Hollowell who m. Deborah Dixon, also an ancestor of my wife. Wish I could give more on the name but tuckered out now. I don't get on Genie too often - once a week but I will be glad to send any info along if someone is interested.

(Forgot to mention that my research on my wife's ancestors are 90% in INDIANA - The Hollowells above came to Indiana are at least the majority did).

From: "Vikki Highfield" <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 6 Sep 1998 08:09:32 -0700

Heare is registered the Nativittys of ffreinds Children, according as their parents did give in wrighting -
THOMAS HOLLOWELL of Elisabeth river and ALICE* his wife their Childrens Nativittys recorded as followeth:
SARAH HOLLOWELL, daughter of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* borne the first of 11 month 1647.
THOMAS HOLLOWELL, sonn of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* was borne the 22th of the first month 1649.
HENRY HOLLOWELL, sonn of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* was borne the 18th of the 8th month 1652.
JOHN HOLLOWELL, sonn of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* was borne the 22th of 4th month 1655, and departed this life, the 10th of the 3rd month 1671.
JOSEPH HOLLOWELL, sonn of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* was borne the 15th of the 6th month 1657.
BENJAMINE HOLLOWELL, sonn of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* was borne the 28th of 12 month 1659.
ELIZABETH HOLLOWELL daughter of the aforesd THO: & ALICE* was borne the 9th of the 7th month 1662.
ALISE HOLLOWELL, daughter of the aforesd THOMAS & ALICE* was borne the 16th of the 12 month 1664.
EDMOND HOLLOWELL sonn of the aforesd THO: & ALICE* was born the 15th of the 9th month 1667.
JOHN HOLLOWELL, sonn of the aforesd THO: & ALICE* was borne the 5th of the 9th month 1672.
* ELIZABETH has been erased and ALICE substituted. (Early Quaker Records in Virginia, Compiled by Miles White, Jr., Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD, 1977, pp. 36-37).

The last will and testament of THOMAS HOLLOWELL, Senior of Lower Norfolk Co. being sick and weak in body but in perfect mind and memory I do make this my last will and testament following: 1 stly I do bequeath both my Soul to God that gave it and my body to the Earth to be buried and my worldly goods as followeth: 2 ndly - I do give unto my sonne Henry HOLLOWELL all the Land hee now Liveth on and that hee has Cleared and builte upon and all along to the Weather Edge of the thickett next to his Cleared ground and called ye Great Thicket Great Thicket and soe along to the corner of the Swampe and soe along ye Swampe side to the head of the land taking in Chinckepin Ridge Chinckepin Ridge Chinckepin Ridge and the Thickett and all of which land I doo give unto my sonne HENRY HOLLOWELL and to his heirs of his body begotten forever and in defaulte of such heirs then the land to go to the next Brother. 3 rdly - I doo give unto my loving wife Alce HOLLOWELL, my plantation I now liveth on and all the rest of my land that I have not given away for my said wife to enjoy and make youse of dureing hurr naturall life and after hurr decease I doo give the said land unto my two Sonnes Edmond HOLLOWELL and John HOLLOWELL to them and to the heirs of their body begotten forever and to be equally divided between my two sonnes EDMOND and JOHN with all houses, orchards and fences that I have shall be ye said land and my sonne EDMOND to have ye furst choyce and in defaulte of such heirs then ye land to go to ye next brother of the youngest sonne. 4 thly - I doo give unto my sonn THOMAS one cow. 5 thly - All that is left of my estate of whatsoever nature I do give unto my loving wife Alce HOLLOWELL and after hurr decease of what is then left to be divided equally by two naibors among my five sonns and three daughters herein named to say: HENRY, , JOSEPH, BENJAMIN, EDMOND, and JOHN and my daughters SARAH HOWARD and ELIZABETH and ALCE and if aney do so decease befo!
re such division then to be divided among them that are heare named an d to be then living. Lastly I do appoint my wife Executrix and my sonne HENRY executor of this my last will in witness heareof I have set my hand and seale this 23rd day of March 1686. THOMAS HOLLOWELL and Seale. Witness: ROBERT BOWERS, HENRY BOWLES, THOS. HODGIS. (Proved in court 17th May 1687, Lower Norfolk Co., VA, Book 5 - File 22).

Thomas married Alce (Alice) about 1646 in , , , England. Alce was born about 1627 in , , , England and died on 19 Sep 1700 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia about age 73.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Sarah Hollowell was born on 11 Mar 1646/47 in , , , England.

         ii.  Thomas Hollowell Jr. was born on 22 Jan 1648/49 in , , , England and died on 15 Feb 1686/87 at age 38.

        iii.  Henry Hollowell was born on 18 Aug 1651 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died about 1698 about age 47.

         iv.  John Hollowell was born on 22 Apr 1655 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died on 10 Mar 1670/71 at age 15.

          v.  Joseph Hollowell was born on 15 Jun 1657 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia.

         vi.  Benjamin Hollowell was born on 28 Dec 1659 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died from Feb 1729/30 to 1740 at age 70.

        vii.  Elizabeth Hollowell was born on 9 Jul 1662 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia.

77     viii.  Alice Hollowell (born on 16 Dec 1664 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia - died on 19 Nov 1700)

         ix.  Edmond Hollowell was born on 15 Sep 1667 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia.

          x.  John Hollowell Sr. was born on 5 Sep 1672 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died in , Nansemond-Norfol, Virginia.


155. Alce (Alice) was born about 1627 in , , , England and died on 19 Sep 1700 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia about age 73.

Alce married Thomas Hollowell Sr. about 1646 in , , , England. Thomas was born about 1625 in , Lancashire, England and died in 1687 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia about age 62.

164. Edward Mayo was born about 1650 in Wilshire, England and died from 1700 to 1701 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 50.

General Notes: Source: Roger Smith at WorldConnect Project on Rootsweb.com 2001 BIOGRAPHY: In 1694 Edward Mayo received permission from Perquimans Co., NC Monthly Meeting.

BIOGRAPHY: From: Denise Mayo Clark
Edward Mayo Sr. 1,2 was born about 1650 in Whiltshire, England. He immigrated about 1670 to VA. He was mentioned in will of father-in-law, George Maags on Jun 14, 1677 in Barbados. 3 He emigrated in 1684 to Perquimans Co, NC.

Edward Mayo, Sr. married 2 Sep 1666 Sarah Maags (Daughter of George & Ann Meggs) in Christ Church Parish, Barbados (Barbados was/is divided into parrishes instead of counties).
Sarah and he are mentioned in the will of his father-in-law, George Maage, dated 14 Jun 1677 in Barbados.

BIOGRAPHY: Reference to V. Mayo Bundy's Book "The Descendants of William And Elizabeth Bundy of Rhode Island and North Carolina."

BIOGRAPHY: from Jack Butler
Edward Sr. definitely was a Quaker before his father-in-law George Maggs died in Barbados. In his will, George Maggs/Meggs asked that Edward be allowed to assume the duties of administrator of George's estate without swearing an oath before the court. It was against Quaker rules to make oaths. I agree that Edward was not born a Quaker - none of the other Mayos seem to have been Quakers in England. If he was not a Quaker born, he certainly became one in Barbados.

BIOGRAPHY: from Jack Butler I found no will or other record of Edward Sr's death, but the last record of any kind that I found for him was 1700/1701. I think it likely that he died shortly after that.

Marriage 1 Sarah MAGGS b: Abt 1650
Married: 2 SEP 1666 in Christ Church Parish,Barbados Note: Barbados was/is divided into parrishes instead of counties; being married in Christ Church Parrish has nothing to do with being married in a Church of England Church. Researchers assume they were married in the Quaker faith. Sarah's sister, Mary did marry outside the faith, and she was pretty much disowned by her father Geo. Maggs, according to Ollie K. Mayo.
Children:
Edward MAYO
Sarah MAYO b: 1670 in Barbados
Elizabeth MAYO b: 1670 in Barbados
Ann MAYO b: 1675 in Barbados

Marriage 2 Emma BLOUNT b: Abt 1650 in ENG
Married: Aft 1688 in NC

Sources:
Title: Margaret Symons
Author: Alan Barrett
Abbrev: Alan Barrett
Publication:
Abbrev: Margaret Symons

According to a file posted by Kevin Kelly <mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]> on Worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com: The following was taken from an article on the Mayo Family of North Carolina, compiled by Hugh B. Johnston, Jr., and William Perry Johnson, as found in the Spring/Summer 1971 issue of "North Carolina Genealogy," p.2617- 2622. See this article for additional details and sources. "Edward Mayo, Esquire, settled by 1684 in Perquimans County, NC, and was from the beginning an active and respected member both of the Colony and of the Quaker Meeting. His parentage and ancestry have not yet been proven, but he was probably the immigrant ancestor, and may well be a scion of the ancient and respectable Mayow family of Wiltshire, England. On the first Monday in February 1693/4, Edward Mayo proved thirteen head rights for the taking up of land (50 acres per person): Edward Mayo, Sr., Edward Mayo, Jr., Sarah Mayo, Ann Mayo, Elizabeth Mayo, John Nixon, Em Nixon, Ann Nixon, Samuel Pike, Africa Pike, and three slaves. Em Nixon and the two Pikes were natives of England, where the father of the latter had died in 1681. It is estimated that Edward Mayo, Sr., was born about 1650, married (first) about 1670, and died late in 1700 or shortly thereafter. The Rent Roll of Albemarle (actual title: "Rent Roll of land upon Record according to their Several Precincts in Albemarle County with ye Rent of 2 per 100 acres"), undated, but around 1696, listed: "Edward Mayo, Pascotank, 277 acres." The very last record located for Edward Mayo was dated 1700 and mentioned Edward Mayo as a juror. The foregoing list of head rights proven by Edward Mayo in 1693/4 would indicate that he was a widower at the time he came into North Carolina. A "Hephsibah Mayo" and a Sarah Mayo appear on record and one or both are wives/daughters of Edward. A torn page in the Berkelely Parish Register, which was omitted by Hathaway, showed that "Hephsibah Mayo y---- (torn) died middle or late 1680's." A Sarah Mayo was a witness to the 1689/90 deed from Thomas and Alice Long to Edward Mayo, and this was several months after Edward's daughter Sarah had married. However, this Sarah could scarcely be other than Edward's daughter; perhaps there is a discrepancy in dates somewhere, and it is interesting that Edward later married the Em Nixon who also witnessed the 1689/90 deed. About 1693 Edward Mayo, Sr., married Em Nixon, already twice widowed, but had no children by her. The four known children of Edward Mayo, Sr., appear to have all been by his first wife, whose identity is at present unknown. Em Mayo, last wife of Edward Mayo, Sr., died sometime between 1694 and 1702. From loose papers in the courthouse at Edenton: "Hugh McGregory and wife Africa, Administrator of Em Mayo, late wife of Edward Mayo deceased (no date). There is evidence that Edward held the office of Clerk of Court in Albemarle variously from August 2, 1688, until August 16, 1698. At a Court held in Perquimans Precinct on the first Monday in May, 1693, the following record appeared: "I will well and truly as Clarke of this Court enter all such orders as shall be directed to me, and will be truly faithful in all such records as shall be committed to me in charge, I will be secret in what shall be required of me by this Court to be kept and according to the best of my skill and knowledge execute the office aforesaid so help me God. Edward Mayo." On February 20, 1693/4, Edward Mayo was named executor of the will of ex-Governor Thomas Miller of Pasquotank Precinct. During the same Court he probated the will of ex-Governor Seth Sothell of Albemarle County. No will or administration has been found for Edward Mayo, Sr., probably due to the loss of so many North Carolina records in the 1600's and early 1700's."

Edward married Sarah Maggs 9 on 2 Sep 1666 in Christ Church Ch, Barbados. Sarah was born about 1650 in Gloucester, England and died on 16 Oct 1724 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 74.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Sarah Mayo was born in 1670 in Barbados and died about 1729 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 59.

         ii.  Elizabeth Mayo was born in 1670 in Barbados and died in Jun 1716 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 46.

        iii.  Ann Mayo was born in 1675 in Barbados and died about 1719 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 44.

82       iv.  Edward Mayo 5 (born about 1676 in Barbados, West Indies - died on 30 Nov 1724 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina)

Edward next married Emma Blount after 1688 in North Carolina. Emma was born about 1650 in Wilshire, England and died before 1694 in North Carolina.

General Notes: Source: Roger Smith of WorldConnect Project at Rootsweb.com 2001 Name: Emma
BLOUNT
Sex: F
Birth: Abt 1650 in ENG
Death: Bef 1694 in NC
Note: Emma was born about 1650 in England. She came to America sometime before
1688.
Marriage 1 Edward MAYO b: Abt 1650 in Wiltshire,England Married: Aft 1688 in NC


165. Sarah Maggs 9 was born about 1650 in Gloucester, England and died on 16 Oct 1724 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 74.

General Notes: Source: Roger Smith at WorldConnect Project on Rootsweb.com 2001
Daughter of George and Ann Maggs.

Biography from Denise Mayo Clark: "Edward Mayo, Sr. married 2 Sep 1666 Sarah Maags (Daughter of George and Ann Meggs) in Christ Church Parish, Barbados. Sarah and he are mentioned in the Will of his father-in-law, George Maage, dated 14 June 1677 in Barbados.

Barbados was/is divided into parrishes instead of counties; being married in Christ Church Parrish has nothing to do with being married in a Church of England Church. Researchers assume they were married in the Quaker faith. Sarah's sister, Mary did marry outside the faith, and she was pretty much disowned by her father Geo. Maggs, according to Ollie K. Mayo"

Sarah married Edward Mayo on 2 Sep 1666 in Christ Church Ch, Barbados. Edward was born about 1650 in Wilshire, England and died from 1700 to 1701 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina about age 50.

166. Timothy Clare, son of William Clare and William Clare Mrs., was born in 1642 in , , , Scotland and died on 10 Nov 1724 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 82.

General Notes: From Linda Harmon: "The White Family" in The Batchelor - Williams Families and Allied Lines by
Lyle Williams. See page 202.
DEATH RECORDS: PAF, Salt Lake City, 6 Sep 1994
Source: Sandy Taylor at WorldConnect Project at Rootsweb.com
Name: Timothy CLARE
Sex: M
Birth: ABT. 1660 in England
Death: 10 NOV 1724 in Perquimans, NC 1
Note:
Daughters: Mary Mayo, Elizabeth Winslowe, Jane Jessop, Sarah White,Hannah Cleare, Hepzibah Berry. Sons-in-law: Thos. Winslow (his sons, Timothy and Jesse), ThomasJessop. Grandson: John Robinson. Wife Hannah. Executors: Thos. Winslow and Thos. Jessop (sons-in-law).Witnesses: Thomas Bagley, Smith Colla, J. Jessop. Clerk of the Court: E. Moseley.
Will date: 10 Nov 1724
Will probated: 17 Nov 1724
County: Perquimans Co., NC

North Carolina Will Abstracts, 1660-1790 (ancestry.com)

Father: William CLARE

Marriage 1 Mary BUNDY b: 1665 in Perquimans, NC
Married: 7 JUN 1685 in Perquimans, NC
Children
Mary CLARE b: 21 DEC 1685 in Perquimans, NC
Elizabeth CLARE b: 21 DEC 1685 in Perquimans, NC
Ann CLARE b: 10 SEP 1687
Timothy CLARE b: 14 JUL 1689
Jane CLARE b: 22 NOV 1691 in Perquimans, NC
Sarah CLARE b: 24 DEC 1693

Marriage 2 ELIZABETH
Married: AFT. 30 DEC 1694
Children
Hepsabeth CLARE b: 14 FEB 1702

Marriage 3 Hannah LARANCE b: 1 DEC 1669 in NC
Married: 1 MAR 1703
Children
Hester CLARE
Hannah CLARE b: 12 MAY 1708

Sources:
Title: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Vol I

Timothy married Mary Bundy about 1690 in , , Virginia. Mary was born about 1665 in , , Virginia and died on 30 Dec 1694 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 29.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Clare was born on 21 Feb 1684/85 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 27 Oct 1739 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 54.

83       ii.  Mary Clare (born on 21 Jun 1686 in , Perquimans, North Carolina - died on 27 Dec 1739 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

        iii.  Ann Clare was born on 10 Sep 1687 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         iv.  Timothy Clare was born on 14 Jul 1689 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

          v.  Jane Clare was born on 22 Nov 1691 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 17 May 1737 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 45.

         vi.  Sarah Clare was born on 24 Dec 1693 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died after 1745 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

Timothy next married Hannah Lawrence before 1708. Hannah was born about 1645.

General Notes: !PAF, FHL, 6 September 1994


167. Mary Bundy, daughter of William Bundy and Elizabeth, was born about 1665 in , , Virginia and died on 30 Dec 1694 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 29.

General Notes: From Linda Harmon: !"The White Family" in The Batchelor - Williams Families and Allied Lines by Lyle Williams. See page 202.

DEATH: PAF, Salt Lake City, 6 Sep 1994

!This is a duplication name of the first and second child. I suspect they are the one and the same especially since the parents didn't marry until 1663.

Mary married Timothy Clare about 1690 in , , Virginia. Timothy was born in 1642 in , , , Scotland and died on 10 Nov 1724 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 82.

168. Ralph Newby, son of William Newby and Unknown, was born in , , , England, died in Mar 1681/82, and was buried on 18 Mar 1681/82 in Stephens Green, Near Dublin, Ireland.

General Notes: Source: Page 430, unidentified book, author WPJ.)

THE NEWBY EXCURSUS

The ancestors of the Quaker Newbys of Virginia and North Carolina lived in England prior to their removal to Ireland in the middle 1600's. In the early 1600's the Newbys lived in County Northcumberland, England (which county lay along the border between Scotland and England), and in County Durham, England, which adjoins North Cumberland on the south.)

Ralph Newby born probably very early 1600's in England died 3rd month 1682. "Ralph Newby, late of Dublin, that came from the Bishoprick of Durham," was buried at Friends' burial place in Stephens Green, 18th of 3rd month 1682 in or near Dublin, Ireland. Married probably middle 1630's in England and went to Ireland in 1662. Dorothy ---, b. about 1611, probably in England, d. 10th month 1711. "Dorothy Newby, mother-in-law of William Norris aforsaid this data followed the list of Norris children, being very aged--some avers one hundred years--deceased at the home of her son-in-law and was buried at Friends burial place near Stephens Green, 14 of 10 mo. 1711. She was a woman of good report and orderly conversation, read to serve Truth and friends, in her station, whilst of ability. But for may years before she died was very weak and infirm yet very sensible till near her departure, and we have cause to hope she died in peace with the Lord."

The source for all of Ralph's children and their spouses is The Newby Family, apparently from the database of Larry M. Bell.

Ralph married Dorothy Hinchley about 1635 in , , , England. Dorothy was born about 1611 in , , , England, died in Oct 1711 about age 100, and was buried on 14 Oct 1711 in Stephens Green, Dublin, Ireland.

Children from this marriage were:

84        i.  William Newby (christened on 14 Aug 1637, born in Easington, Durham, England - died after 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

         ii.  Edward Newby

        iii.  Rachel Newby

         iv.  Marke Newby was born on 25 Feb 1637/38 in Earsdon, Northumberland, England and died in 1683 in , , New Jersey at age 45.

          v.  John Newby was born in 1644 of Moorehouse, Durham, England and died on 29 Mar 1691 in Dublin, , Ireland at age 47.

         vi.  Ellinor Newby was born in Oct 1649 in Ramside, , England and died on 15 Sep 1732 in , Dublin, Ireland at age 82.

        vii.  Ralph Newby

       viii.  Joseph Newby was born in 1654 in Morehouse, Durham, England and died on 15 Nov 1696 in Wicklow, , Ireland at age 42.

         ix.  Isabella Newby was born from 1650 to 1659 and died from 1728 to 1729 in Dublin, , Ireland at age 78.


169. Dorothy Hinchley was born about 1611 in , , , England, died in Oct 1711 about age 100, and was buried on 14 Oct 1711 in Stephens Green, Dublin, Ireland.

General Notes: Nearly all sources indicate that Dorothy's maiden name is unknown. However, in The Newby Family from William to Emra 1637 - 1981, by Larry Bell in 1992, her her name in indicated as Dorothy Hinchley, b. abt 1611, England?

The Newbys of England and Ireland, compiled 1962 by William Perry Johnson, indicates the following data followed the list of Norris (her daughter Ellinor's) children: Dorothy Newby, mother-in-law of William Norris aforesaid, being very aged--some avers one hundred years--deceased at the home of her son-in-law and was buried at Friends burial place near Stephens Green, 14 of 10 Mo. 1711. She was a woman of good report and orderly conversation, ready to serve Truth and friends, in her station, whilst of ability. But for many years before she died was weak and infirm yet very sensibly till near her departure, and we have cause to hope she died in peace with the Lord.

I asked Larry Bell the source for Dorothy's maiden name and he indicated he had received it from Raymond Winslow who in turn had obtained it from Durham, England parish records.

Dorothy married Ralph Newby about 1635 in , , , England. Ralph was born in , , , England, died in Mar 1681/82, and was buried on 18 Mar 1681/82 in Stephens Green, Near Dublin, Ireland.

184. Robert Of Newcastle Ellyson, son of John Ellyson and Ellin Hamilton, was born about 1589 in Of, , Virginia and died in 1656 about age 67.

General Notes: Submitters for this ancestral file include:

Bruce D JOHNSON Microfilm: NONE 5110 131st Ct E Submission: AF89-100061 Tacoma, WA USA 98446

SHEILA DENNIS ROBERTS Microfilm: NONE 4615 SO. IDLEWILD ROAD Submission: AF89-101662 SALT LAKE CITY
UTAH 84124

I checked the LDS Ancestral File in July 2000 and found that there are many additional submitters for this Robert of Newcastle. The birthdate and location are now listed as follows:

Robert Of Newcastle ELLYSON (AFN: 8J6D-MW)
Sex: M

Event(s):
Birth: 7 Sep 1589
Newton Reigny, Cumberland, Eng
Death: 1656

Parents:
Father: Thomas ALLYSON (AFN: 1TH7-4ZX)

Marriage(s):
Spouse: Elizabeth GRAY (AFN: 8J6D-N3)
Marriage:
Spouse: Sarah SPENCE (AFN: 9LH8-BW)
Marriage:

Robert married Elizabeth Gray. Elizabeth was born about 1591.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Ellyson was born about 1605.

         ii.  Nathaniel Ellyson was born about 1607.

        iii.  Samuel Ellyson was born about 1609.

         iv.  Joseph Ellyson was born about 1611.

          v.  Cuthbert Ellyson was born about 1613.

92       vi.  Robert Ellyson Captain (born in 1615 of Maryland, And, Virginia, England - died before 28 Sep 1671)

Robert next married Sarah Spence. Sarah was born in 1621 in Of, , Virginia.


185. Elizabeth Gray was born about 1591.

Elizabeth married Robert Of Newcastle Ellyson. Robert was born about 1589 in Of, , Virginia and died in 1656 about age 67.

186. Thomas Gerard, son of John Gerard and Isabell, was born on 10 Dec 1608 in New Hall, Lancashire, England and died before Dec 1673 in , Westmoreland, Virginia.

General Notes: Source: The Founders of the Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, Vol 1, p348.

Gerard, Thomas (1608-1673). BORN: in 1608 at New Hall, Lancashire, England; oldest son. IMMIGRATED: in 1638 as a free adult; returned to England in 1640, but resettled in the colony with his family soon thereafter. RESIDED: on St. Clement's Manor, St. Mary's County; moved to Virginia, 1664. FAMILY BACKGROUND. FATHER: John Gerard, of New Hall, England, son of Thomas Gerard and wife Jane, of Garswood, England. MOTHER: Isabell. BROTHERS: Marmaduke; William; Francis; and Richard. MARRIED: first, Susannah, daughter of John Snowe, of Brookehouse, Chedulton, England. Her brothers were Abel; Justian; and Marmaduke. MARRIED second, Rose Tucker. CHILDREN. SONS: Thomas (?-1686), a justice of St. Mary's County from 1676 to 1679, who married Ann (?-1702/3). DAUGHTERS: Susannah, Frances. PRIVATE CAREER. EDUCATION: literate; probably well educated. RELIGIOUS AFFILIATION: Catholic, but his wife and children were Protestants. SOCIAL STATUS AND ACTIVITIES: Gent. with high status on arrival in the colony; brought five servants with him, and by 1648 he had imported over forty servants; became manor lord of St. Clement's in 1639; sold his English holdings and brought his family to Maryland in 1650; involved in a celebrated legal action against his brothers-in-law over control of extensive lands in Maryland. OCCUPATIONAL PROFILE: physician; planter. PUBLIC CAREER. LEGISLATIVE SERVICE: Assembly, St. Mary's County, 1638/39, special writ 1641, special writ 1641/42, special writ 1642A; Upper House, 1658, 1659/60. OTHER PROVINCIAL OFFICES: Council, 1643-1649, 1651-1660 (suspended from Octover 1658 to October 1659 for maligning other councilors); justice, Provincial Court, 1643-1649, 1650/51-1660. LOCAL OFFICE: conservator of the peace, St. Clement's Hundred, St. Mary's County, 1639/40. STANDS ON PUBLIC/PRIVATE ISSUES: a very controversial figure in provincial politics and frequently at odds with the propretor's spokesmen, Gerard supported Fendall's Rebellion in 1659/60, for which he was permanently barred from voting or holding office in the colony. WEALTH DURING LIFETIME. PERSONAL PROPERTY: valued at £299.11.3 in 1664. LAND AT FIRST ELECTION: 1,030 acres in 1639; 11,000 acres by 1642; 14,000 acres by 1651, plus 3,500 acres in Virginia. WEALTH AT DEATH. DIED: by October 19, 1673. LAND: ca. 16,000 acres.

Source: William and Mary College Quarterly - Washington and his Neighbors.
The Gerrard Family. - Among the neighbors of the Washingtons non were more conspicuous than Dr. Thomas Gerrard. His first wife, Susanna, was the daughter of Justinian Snow, one of the founders of Maryland and Lord Baltimore's factor in the Indian trade. Abel Snow, a clerk in the chancery office, London, and Marmaduke Snow were two other brothers. Dr. Gerrard was for a long time councillor, but was finally banished from Maryland for taking part in the resurrection of Josiah Fendall in 1659. before this he had provided a refuge in Virginia, having obtained on October 18, 1650, a patent for land, and naming among the headrights his wife Susanna Gerrard, and his children susanna, Temperance, Frances, Justinian, and John Gerrard. The same day Walter Brodhurst patented land next to William Hardwick, on the west side of "Poor Jack" Creek. As Walter Brodhurst had a son Gerrard, it raises the suspician that his wife, Anna, who afterwards married Col. Washington, was prehaps a daughter of Col. Thomas gerrard, as well as Washington's third wife Frances.

Dr. Gerrard's wife, Susannah, died before 1672-'73, whereupon he married Rose, the widow of John Tucker, whose children were John, Gerrard, Sarah and Rose, to which children Gerrard (then married to his second wife) made a gift. Dr. Garrard had five daughters and three sons: 1, Susanna (?) Gerrard married Robert Slye, Esq., of the Maryland Council; 2, ...

Gerard, Thomas, of St. Mary's Co., MD, & Westmoreland Co., VA is mentioned in Magna Carta Ancestry (2005) that treats all known descents for 17th-century colonists from the 25 barons who served as sureties for Magna Carta (the Great Charter), a charter of liberties granted by King John of England at Runnymede in 1215.


Thomas married Susannah Snowe. Susannah was born about 1610 and died in , , Maryland.

Children from this marriage were:

93        i.  Susannah (Hannah) Gerard (born about 1627 of Maryland, And, Virginia, England - died in 1716)

         ii.  Justinian Gerard was born about 1634 in , , , England.

        iii.  Temperance Gerard

         iv.  Elizabeth Gerard was born about 1636 in , , , England.

          v.  Thomas Gerard was born about 1638 and died in 1686 about age 48.

         vi.  Frances Gerard was born about 1640 in , , , England.

        vii.  Anne Gerard was born about 1642.

       viii.  John Gerard was born about 1644 and died in 1678 about age 34.

         ix.  Patience Gerard was born about 1646.

          x.  Janette Gerard was born about 1648.

         xi.  Judith Gerard was born about 1650.

        xii.  Mary Gerard was born about 1652.

       xiii.  Rebecca Gerard was born about 1654.

Thomas next married Rose Tucker. Rose was born about 1610.


187. Susannah Snowe, daughter of John Snowe and Unknown, was born about 1610 and died in , , Maryland.

Susannah married Thomas Gerard. Thomas was born on 10 Dec 1608 in New Hall, Lancashire, England and died before Dec 1673 in , Westmoreland, Virginia.

190. Edward Lockey was born about 1624.

Edward married Elizabeth (Reade) Hanford. Elizabeth was born about 1626.

The child from this marriage was:

95        i.  Mary Lockey (born in 1650 in , York, Virginia)


191. Elizabeth (Reade) Hanford was born about 1626.

Elizabeth married Edward Lockey. Edward was born about 1624.

192. Thomas Bembow was born about 1604 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

General Notes: (The source of the first four generations is from the LDS Ancestral File. You can trace them from that file starting with AFN:2968-6F.)

The following may help in future research:

From: "Julie Preston" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2000 09:51:04 -0800

I claim John Benbow, Innkeeper, Trefeglwys (abt.1600-1677) and his wife, Mary Beverly, through their son, Rev. John Benbow (1636-1669), Vicar of Trefeglwys. The innkeeper also had a son, Richard, but there are apparently no available dates on him. All of these BENBOW's are buried in the parish churchyard at Trefeglwys, although their monuments have not survived.

Thomas married Miss Brunt. Miss was born about 1608 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

The child from this marriage was:

96        i.  Edward Bembowe (Bembow) (born on 3 Jul 1636 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales - buried on 30 Dec 1665)


193. Miss Brunt was born about 1608 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

Miss married Thomas Bembow. Thomas was born about 1604 in Treyfeglwys, Montg., Wales.

202. William Lane 10 was born in 1635 in Bristol, , England and died about 1705 about age 70.

William married Cecilia Love on 23 Aug 1658 in , Hertfordshire, England. Cecilia was born about 1642 in Bristol, , England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Edward Lane was born about 1663 in Providence, Provience, Rhode Island and died in 1710 about age 47.

101      ii.  Mary Lane (born about 1665 in , Bucho, Pennsylvania)

        iii.  Bernard Lane was born on 2 Dec 1687 in Providence, Provience, Rhode Island and died in 1715 at age 28.


203. Cecilia Love was born about 1642 in Bristol, , England.

Cecilia married William Lane 10 on 23 Aug 1658 in , Hertfordshire, England. William was born in 1635 in Bristol, , England and died about 1705 about age 70.

212. Nicholas Hutchins was born about 1619 in , , , England.

Nicholas married someone.

His child was:

106       i.  Nicholas Hutchins (born in 1645 in Henrico Co., Virginia - died in 1729 in , , Virginia)


214. Henry Watkins Jr. son of Henry Watkins and Katherine Pride, was born in 1660 in Malvern Hills, Virginia and died from Nov 1714 to 1715 in Henrico Co., Virginia at age 54.

General Notes: Early Virginia Families Along the James River, Volume I, Foley, 1974, indicates Henry Wadkins, 60 acs. Henrico Co., in Varina Par., N. side of James Riv., 23 Oct. 1690, p. 122 (Patent book #8). Adj. his own, Tho. Wales, and land of Madam Bland, on run of Turkey Island Cr. Import of 2 pers: Robert. Fellows, Jno. Trotman.

Source: Henry Watkins of Henrico County, Jane Allen 1985. He was a sometime member of the House of Burgesses. His will "Wadkins" was proved 7 Feb 1715.

The order of children in this text is:John, Benjamin, Joseph, Henry, Stephen, and Mary. Only Mary had a birthdate (1682).

Henry married Mary Crisp about 1680. Mary was born about 1662.

Children from this marriage were:

107       i.  Mary Watkins (born in 1682 in Henrico Co., Virginia - died on 2 Aug 1736 in Henrico Co., Virginia)

         ii.  John Watkins was born about 1684 and died on 28 Jul 1743 in , Henrico, Virginia about age 59.

        iii.  Benjamin Watkins was born about 1686 in Jenitoe, Goochland, Virginia and died in 1753 in , Goochland, Virginia about age 67.

         iv.  Joseph Watkins was born about 1688.

          v.  Henry Watkins was born about 1690.

         vi.  Stephen Watkins was born about 1692 and died in 1758 in , Chesterfield, Virginia about age 66.


215. Mary Crisp was born about 1662.

General Notes: Source: See ID No:8J3F-91 for last name.

Source: Henry Watkins of Henrico County, Jane Allen 1985. Her second husband was Edward Mosby.

Mary married Henry Watkins Jr. about 1680. Henry was born in 1660 in Malvern Hills, Virginia and died from Nov 1714 to 1715 in Henrico Co., Virginia at age 54.

224. Hunt .

General Notes: Source: LDS microfilm 0854151, Hunt Family PA. & N.C., by Vena (Vena Mae Hamilton) Wilson, 1893 - .

The Hunt motto: VI ET VIRTUE (By strength and valor.) Arms: Per pale argent and sable, a saltire countercharged.
Crest: A lion's head erased argent, ringed or, and collared gules.

The ancient surname is probably of occupational origin and is to be found in many old English records including "The Hundred Rolls of 1273." The Hunts of Longner in Shropshire, were considered the main line of the family, but many branches attained prominence in other English counties which accounts for the differences observed in the design of their coat of arms, even the basic design is usual.

One Branch of the Family Tree
of William Hunt, Quaker Minster.
1690-1964

Research done by
Mrs. Harry W. (Vena) Wilson Sr.
121. N. Second St. Towanda, Kansas

This has been a most exacting yet pleasant project for me. I have met many new friends and relatives by way of letters. I have whole-hearted cooperation wherever I have needed information.

My only compensation is that the descendants will keep and treasure the lineage and history of their honored forebeares.

Some of the history information came from Hinshaw's Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Family Bibles, and Memoirs of Wm. and Nathan Hunt Publushed 1858 Philadelphia by Uriah Hunt and Sons 62 N. 4th St., Furnished to me by Mrs.
Chas. O. Yount of Richmond, Indiana. Donna Hunt of Osawatomie, Ks., assisted with information she had received from Stephen Couch, on the Stephen Hunt Family. The Worly Genealogy by Mrs. H. Noyes of Manhattan, Ks.

... Mrs. Wilson goes on to describe the genealogy from William Hunt up through the mid-twentieth century. Only the first four generations are in common with our ancestral line.

Hunt married someone.

His child was:

112       i.  William Hunt (born about 1660 in Of, Chester, England - died on 6 Sep 1694 in Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)


226. Lawrence Person .

Lawrence married Elizabeth.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Thomas Person

113      ii.  Margaret Person (born about 1665 in Pownell Fee Twp, Chester, England)


227. Elizabeth .

Elizabeth married Lawrence Person.

228. William Woolman was born about 1620 in , Painswick, Gloucester, England and died in 1678 in , , , America about age 58.

General Notes: Subject: Woolman Central has a new home!
From: "judyhynes" <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 17 Jun 2001 21:29:59 -0400

Due to the many difficulties at the MSN address for Woolman Central, it now has a new and permanent home at http://woolmancentral.com

I apologize for whatever inconvenience this might present.

Hope to see you there!

Judy R. Hynes

William married someone.

His child was:

114       i.  John Woolman (born in 1655 in , Painswick, Gloucester, England - died on 27 Feb 1717/18 in , Burlington, New Jersey)


230. John Borton, son of William Borton and Elizabeth, was born in 1634 in Aynhoe, Northamptonshire, England and died on 28 Jul 1687 in Hillsdown, Burlington, West Jersey at age 53.

General Notes: Merged with AFN:8XFS-M4 which indicated last name as BORTON (BOURTON) and birth as Bef 1647.

According to Joseph Besse's Collections of the Sufferings of the People Called Friends for the Testimony of a Good Conscience [2 vols., London, 1753], "In 1 mo., 1660, John Bett and John Borton, of Aino [Aynhoe] Northamptonshire, were taken out of their own houses by soldiers, and committed to prison for refusing the oaths. Also, in the year 1665, John Bett, John Borton, Edward Hardley and John Holcroft, (poor laborers) had their goods taken by distress for a fine of four shillings each, imposed for four weeks' absence from their parish church." In Oxfordshire in 1674 there was "taken by distress for meetings this year," £1.15s, from John Holcroft, John Borton and Thomas Mercer.

Bringing a certificate from the Friends' Monthly Meeting of Borton, Oxfordshire, dated 5 Third Month (May) 1679, the Borton family left for West Jersey on the Amity, Richard Diamond, Master, out of Downs, England, settling on what is now the Rancocas Creek on a site along the Rancocas and Burlington Road in Westhampton Township in Burlington County, N. J. The certificate was signed by Thomas Butcher, George Ason, Thomas Penn, Thomas Marcer, John Butcher, Peter Barrett, William Potter, William Tredwell, Simon Thompson, John Lange, Richard Parker, Christopher E. Barrett, Richard Maull, John Gardner, Thomas Olliffe, Richard Vivers, Timothy Burbro Jr., Richard Haines, James Treppes, Timothy Burbro Sr., Thomas Sherwell, John Hastings and Nathaniel Ball.
In the same company of settlers as John Borton's family were the progenitors of the families of Gardiner, Moore, Pickitt, Evans, Collins, Engle and Troth [Holt; Mason].

Mason cited Samuel Smith's History of the Colony of New Caesaria, or New Jersey [1765, pp. 151-152] as the source of a quote from "Transactions of the Assembly of West Jersey, Session 1682, 1st to 11th, 1 mo.," stating that John Borton was chosen with William Brightwen as constable of the London tenth, as the district was known. It was a 32,000 acre tract entitled to representation by ten in the legislature.

John Borton, Jr., and William Borton purchased 175 and 150 acres respectively on the Northampton River in Tenth Month (Dec.) 1681.

Source LDS microfilm 1561672.

From New Jersey State Library, Trendon, New Jersey:

According to Learming and Spicer's "Grants, Concessions, Etc." Second Edition, 1881 pages 469-490, John Boarton was a member of the West Jersey Assembly 1684.

John Borton was also a West Jersey Proprietor and is named by "Samuel Smith as a Constable for the "London Tenth" of the settlers of the Delaware.

From Samuel Smith's History of New Jersey John Borton owned a part of Burlington Island and a thirty second part of West Jersey and asked to be buried in the Friends Burying Place in Burlington.

The above Borton data is from Pg. 3 John Woolman's Journal, by Amelia Mott Cummereo (1922)

The New Jersey Legislative Manual reveals John Borton was listed of the West Jersey Assembly 1688-1702. (New Jersey State Library, Trenton.)

His will, dated 28 Fifth Month (July) 1687, was probated 14 Eleventh Month (Jan) 1687/8.

WILL OF JOHN BOURTON, 1ST, THE IMMIGRANT

From pages 18 and 19 of the History of the Borton and Mason Families as compiled by Freeman C. Mason (1908) It is also given in New Jersey Archives Vol. 23, page 47.

Ye 28th day of ye 5th month (July) 1687, I, John Borton, of Hillsdown, being weak in body but of perfect memory have made this my last will and Testament in manner as follows:

Imprimis: I commit my soul to Almighty God who gave it me. And my body to ye earth from whence it came to be laid in ye burial place of Friendsw at Burlington.

Item: I give to my son John that settlement called Hillsdown, lying on ye south side of Northampton River, being in quantity 300 acres and somewhat more, together with barn house and all other out houses, with garden, orchard and all manner of improvements whatsoever, except one third part therefore of which I give to my dear wife, Ann Borton, with Five Pounds a year, which she will have during her natural life and widowhood. I also give to my son John a two and thirtieth part of a propertie through ye county and one pair of oxen.

Item: I give to my son William the settlement fronting upon Northampton River northward, being in quantity one hundred acres and somwhat more, with house barn, garden, orchard, together with all manner of improvements thereunto belonging, which my three lots upon Burlington Island and also a two and theirtieth part of a propertie throughout ye county with one yoak of oxen.

Item: I give to my grand children ten shillings a piece. All ye rest of my cattle and goods I have given to my wife and six daughters, my debts and legacies being first paid, as follows: viz: One third part of my wife and ye other two parts to be divided equally among my six daughters.

John Borton
Signed in ye presence of us:
John Woolmand
Enoch Coors

Note: The Woolman - Borton Genealogy is the source for the exact birthdates and spouses of the children.

John married Anne Kinton in 1658. Anne was born about 1636 in , , , England and died on 8 Jan 1687/88 in Hillsdown, Evesham, Burlington, New Jersey about age 52.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Jane Borton died in Nov 1688.

         ii.  Anne Borton was born on 18 Oct 1660 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England and died on 10 Sep 1688 in Moorestown, Burlington, New Jersey at age 27.

115     iii.  Elizabeth Borton (born on 27 May 1664 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England - died on 2 Mar 1717/18 in , Burlington, New Jersey)

         iv.  Esther Borton (Bourton) was born on 25 May 1667 in Aynhoe, Northamptonshire, England and died in 1719 in Rancocas, Burlington, New Jersey at age 52.

          v.  John Borton was born on 27 Nov 1669 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England.

         vi.  William Borton was born on 2 Jun 1672 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England.

        vii.  Susanna Borton was born on 24 Oct 1675 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England.

       viii.  Mary Borton was born on 5 Oct 1678 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England and died in 1739 in , Burlington, New Jersey at age 61.


231. Anne Kinton, daughter of William Kinton and Elizabeth, was born about 1636 in , , , England and died on 8 Jan 1687/88 in Hillsdown, Evesham, Burlington, New Jersey about age 52.

General Notes: Merged with AFN:8XPK-CL which indicated her name as Ann.

Anne married John Borton in 1658. John was born in 1634 in Aynhoe, Northamptonshire, England and died on 28 Jul 1687 in Hillsdown, Burlington, West Jersey at age 53.

232. Thomas Cox was born in 1641 in London, Middlessex, England and died on 15 Jan 1710/11 in London, Middlessex, England at age 70.

General Notes: Source of this line is Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendants by Stanley M.
Cox, 1955.

This information is taken from a draft text being prepared (in 1995) by Les Sutton of Houston, TX.

I (RCL) have some concern about this Thomas being the ancestor of the John Cox that I have identified as being born about 1665 (see notes for Solomon Cox, born about 1745 in Warrington, Pennsylvania). Les Sutton has his birth date as Sep 24, 1675 in Drayton, Berkshire, England.

For those wishing more information, contact Les Sutton at 254 Old Spring Lane, Houston, TX 77015-2042 (713) 455-4531.

Here is an interesting quote from the [email protected] mailing list in September, 1997:

My Cox line generally follows the migration path England>Delaware>PA>NC>Indiana.

As a small taste, I'll give you the first two generations below.

Best,

David G. White
[email protected]

Descendants of Thomas Cox

Generation No. 1

1. THOMAS1 COX1 was born 1641 in London, England2, and died January 15, 1710/11 in London, England3. He married (1) CHRISTIAN MATHEWS April 10, 1672 in Devonshire, England4. He married (2) ANN HIND5,6 May 09, 1682 in London, England.

Notes for THOMAS COX:
Per Broderbund Vol. 7, #2077: Will admitted to probate 1711. Source Joseph Cox Ancestors and Decendants, by Stanley M. Cox, (1955). Will divides land between 3 sons, Thomas, Richard and John.

Per Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988) submitted by Betty L. Cox Baker, 46B Shadowood OTS, Granbury, TX 76048; also per Broderbund WFT Vol. 2, #588: Thomas b. abt 1641.

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 1, #2615: Source of this line is Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendants, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.

Other sources say born abt 1625.

Per Darrel J. Ayler <[email protected]>, April, 1997: Thomas was born in 1641 and married Christian Matthews in Devonshire, England on 10 April 1762. Taken from records of the Devonshire, England MM. His will was dated 24 March 1709 and probated on 3 March 1711 in which he names three sons, and Sarah Plumstead Cox, the wife of another, un-named son.

Per Bill Cox:

Thomas's second wife was Ann Hinde, m. 9 May 1682 in London. Thomas was described in 1655 as a "Citizen and Vinter of London". He was given a grant of land by William Penn in Pennsylvania, which he left to his sons in his will 20 May 1709. Two locations have been listed as his place of Christening, St Luke, Chelsa,London, and St Stephens, Coleman St., London.

>From "American Wills Proved in London", page 102

Thomas Cox, citizen and vinter of London, dated 20 May 1709, 80 Pounds Sterling to be paid to my son Thomas Cox for the benefit of the two daughters of my late daughter-in-law, Mary Test, late wife of Daniel Test. Forty Nobles to my daughter-in-law, Mary Frankling and 20 Nobles to her six children, Thomas, Jacob, Mary,Sarah, Ann, and Elizabeth Frankling. Forty Nobles to my daughter-in-law, Sarah Plumstead and 20 Nobles to her daughter Mary Plumstead. Other bequests to: my cousin Richard Cooper near Upton,Glos.; my cousin Anne Weekes in Trinty Lane; Mary Edward of Tiddington near Twekesbury, Glos.; the poor of Whitechapel, Mddx; my cousin Hannah Print, daughter of Thomas Clark of Cheltenham, Glos.; Mary Plumsterad, wife of Clemet Plumstead of Pescod Street. To my wife Anne Cox, alais Hinde, the interest of 400 Pound Sterling by bond from the Vinters Company and the rents from two tenements I lately built in the Quaker burial burial ground near Coverlid Fields. 100 Pounds Stering to my son Thomas Cox and Grace, his wife. To my said son in trust for his six children Grace, Thomas, John, Anne, Russell, and Mary Cox, 800 of my 920 acres in Philadelphia Co., Penna. The other 120 acres and 30 Pounds Sterling to my cousin, Mary Chandler now dwelling in Penna. To my son John Cox 100 Pounds Sterling and 400 acres on a branch of Cooper's creek, Gloucester \Co., West New Jersey. To my son-in-law Lassells Metcalfe and Christan his wife, my daughter. 100 Pounds Sterling and my shares to the Penna. Land Co. and the First Old Penna. Co., and in trust for their children 100 Pounds Sterling which I disbursed to assist William Penn in his composition with Fred Forde. Exccs: My Wife Anne and my brother-in-law John Antrim of Martin's Ic Grand, London. O'seers: Jacob Frankling, Samual Waldenfield, and John Field. Wits: John Craig next door to the George in Greek Street. Codicil of 13 Dec 1711. Pr. 14 Mar 1712 by affirmation of the relict. (PROB 11/526/46

Notes for ANN HIND:
aka Ann Hinde

Marriage Notes for THOMAS COX and ANN HIND:
Broderbund WFT Vol. 3, # 1242: m. May 9, 1682 in Devonshire, Devonshire, England

Children of THOMAS COX and CHRISTIAN MATHEWS are:
i.WILLIAM2 COX, m. NAOMI UNKNOWN.

Notes for WILLIAM COX:
Bill Cox <[email protected]>, 5/8/97: Bill Cox has one child of William and Naomi Cox, William C. Cox who married Catherine Kinkey in 1716. I don't recall seeing this connection anywhere else. Most have Willam h. of Catherine Kinkey as son of John Cox and Rachel Carr.

ii.CHRISTIAN COX, b. February 27, 1672/73, London, England7,8,9; m.
LASSELLS METCALF, November 10, 1691, Devonshire, England10,11,12.

2.iii.THOMAS COX, b. Abt. 1674, London, England.
3.iv.JOHN COX, b. September 24, 1675, Drayton, Berkshire, England; d.
1711, Kennett MM, Chester Co., PA.
v.MARY COX, b. Aft. 1676, Berkshire, England13,14; m. JOSIAH FRANKLIN.

vi.RICHARD COX, b. Aft. 167715.

Generation No. 2

2. THOMAS2 COX (THOMAS1) was born Abt. 1674 in London, England16,17. He married GRACE STAPLOE March 28, 1695 in Bull & Mouth MM, London, England18,19, daughter of JOHN STAPLOE and GRACE RUSSELL.

Children of THOMAS COX and GRACE STAPLOE are:
i.GRACE3 COX, b. November 02, 1696, Cripplegate20,21; m. ROBERT IZARD, June 03, 171822.

ii.THOMAS COX, b. February 20, 1697/98, Person St. Hendon, Middlesex, England23; m. SARAH BUZBY, March 26, 1716, Concord MM, Chester Co., PA24.

iii.JOHN COX, b. January 05, 1700/01, Buttolphs Aldersgate, England25.

Notes for JOHN COX:
Broderbund WFT Vol. 2, #588: says this John Cox was b. Jan 5, 1700/01 and m. Hannah Jenkins. Most other records show the John Cox who married Hannah Jenkins to be the son of John and Rachel Cox.

iv.ANNE COX, b. June 05, 1703, Buttolphs Aldersgate, England26,27.

v.RUSSELL COX, b. October 10, 1704, Buttolphs Aldersgate, England28,29.

vi.MARY COX, b. December 28, 1708, Buttolphs Aldersgate, England30,31.

vii.CHARLES COX, b. August 22, 1712, Buttolphs Aldersgate, England32,33.

3. JOHN2 COX (THOMAS1)34,35 was born September 24, 1675 in Drayton, Berkshire, England36, and died 1711 in Kennett MM, Chester Co., PA37. He married RACHEL EMBREE CARR.

Notes for JOHN COX:
Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 1, #2615: born abt 1665

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, # 2077: Cites The Cox Family in America, by Henry Miller Cox. born abt 1665

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 5, #1294: The certificate of John Cox from Becks Quarterly Meeting at Newbury, Becks, England was accepted from England on 4 Jul 1708 at Newark, DE Monthly Meeting of Friends.

Per Per email of Sherri ______ ([email protected]) 3/27/1997: John Cox b. Gloucestershire, England, born abt 1663 Wife Rachel Carr or Embree.
to New castle Del 1708, settled next season Chester Co., PA. Land on Brandywine.
250 acres purchased 8 June 1708.
May have been son of Samuel of England and brother to William of Christina Creek, New Castle, DE.
Certi at Kennett MM.
John Died 1711.

Per Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988) submitted by Betty L. Cox Baker, 46B Shadowood OTS, Granbury, TX 76048:
b. Sept 24, 1675, Drayton, Berkshire, England, d. July 4, 1708 in New Castle, DE.

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 2, #588: John Cox, Sr. b. Sept 24, 1675, England; d. aft 1755, Randolph Co., NC.

Are these two different John Cox's?

Notes for RACHEL EMBREE CARR:
sometimes referred to as Rachel Embree or Rachel Embree Carr.

Children of JOHN COX and RACHEL CARR are:
i.RICHARD3 COX, b. Abt. 1688, England38; d. 1762, Vincent Twp., Chester Co., PA39; m. (1) MARGARET POTTS, March 26, 1712, Gwynedd, PA40; m. (2) ELIZABETH SCARLETT, October 15, 172641; m. (3) MARY UNKNOWN, 1729, Warrington, Vincent Twsp, Bucks Co., PA42.

Notes for RICHARD COX:
Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647: d. 1762, Chester Co., PA; 1st wife shown as Mary Unknown, 2nd as Margaret Potts. Elizabeth Scarlett not listed as his wife. Notes: emigrated with his parents from England in 1708. Also shows two children by Mary: Elizabeth who m. William Page, and Mary, who m. Jonathan Potts.

d. 1725?

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 5, #1294: The will of Richard Cox was probated in Philadelphia, PA, 31 Mar 1763, having been written in 1757. It gave his 25 acre plantation in Vincent Township to his second wife, Mary, and after her death to his sons Benjamin and Joseph.

Richard Cox lived in that part of Kennet Township which is now Pennsbury Township, Chester County, PA. He was taxed there as late as 1726, in various other townships from 1749 to 1756. In 1733 he was complained of for marrying out of unity; this is probably the date of his second marriage, to Mary.[]

emigrated with his parents from England in 1708

Notes for MARGARET POTTS:
[]
a daughter of Jane Potts, a native of Wales, whose husband had died on the voyage from England.

ii.SARAH COX, b. Abt. 1690, England43; m. THOMAS LEACH, 171244.

Notes for THOMAS LEACH:
Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 2 #0588, Vol. 3, #3549: Richard Leech Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 3, #1242: Thomas Leach

Marriage Notes for SARAH COX and THOMAS LEACH:
Per Per email of Sherri ______ ([email protected]) 3/29/1997: m. Warrington MM

iii.JOSEPH COX, b. Abt. 1692, England45; m. MARIA VANDERVEER, 171646.

iv.WILLIAM COX, b. Abt. 1694, England47; d. January 20, 1767, Orange Co., North Carolina48,49; m. KATHERINE KINKEY, 171650.

Notes for WILLIAM COX:
Per email corrospondance of Karen Wohlwend 3/22/1997: He arrived in America c 1710 and settled in what is now New Castle Co., Delaware. He married c 1716 possibly in Cecil Co., Maryland, Catherine Kinkey, dt. of Harmon and Margery Kinkey. Katherine died between 1744 and 1749, and William relocated to Orange Co., NC. He died there in 1767. His will was dated 20-1mo-1767 and was proved in February Court, 1767. In that will, he stated: "I give to my son Harmon Cox, that whole tract of land on the east side of Deep River, whereon he now lives to him & his heirs forever."

Per Per email of Sherri ______ ([email protected]) 3/29/1997: moved from New Castle to Orange Co., NC

Bill Cox <[email protected]>, 5/8/97: Bill Cox has William C. Cox who married Catherine Kinkey in 1716 as son of William (son of Thomas and Christian (Mathews) Cox) and Naomi Cox. I don't recall seeing this connection anywhere else. Most have Willam h. of Catherine Kinkey as son of John Cox and Rachel Carr.

Notes for KATHERINE KINKEY:
sometimes her name is given as Kankey

v.ANNE COX, b. Abt. 1695, England51; d. Bef. 1762, New Castle County, Delaware52; m. (1) CASPARIUS GARRETSON, 171353; m. (2) NATHAN HUSSEY, March 16, 1727/28, Kennett MM, Chester Co., PA54.

Notes for CASPARIUS GARRETSON:
[]
The following passage appears to be the last will of Casparus Garretson written in his own handwriting on Dec. 3, 1726; Casparus Garretson is the great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather of Jacqueline Martineau Herzog, Pierre Martineau, Jr., and Cherrye Martineau; Casparus Garretson is the great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather of David Herzog, Linda Herzog Bachman, Heidi Herzog Rowe, Pierre Martineau, III, Susan Martineau. The following comes from the original handwriting of a photocopy of the original document. It contains the same spelling as was used and as some of the words are hard to make out it may contain a few guesses. Any guesses are followed by a (?)

"In the name of God amen the third day of the twelfth month in the yeare of our Lord 1726 I Casparus Garretson of Cristiana Creek in the County of New Castle yoaman being sick weak in body but of perfect mind and memory. thanks be given unto God therefore calling to mind the mortality of my body and knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die doe make and ordain this my last will and testament that is to say principally and (?) first of all I give and recommend my soul into the hands of God that gave it and for my body I recommend it to the earth to be buried in a Christian like and decent manner at the discretion of my executors nothing doubting but at the General Resurrection I that receive the same again by the mighty power of God and as touching (?) such worldly estate where will (?) it hath pleased God to bless me in this life I give devise and dispose of the same in the following manner and form.

Item: I give and bequeath to Ann my dearly beloved wife whom I likewise constitute make and ordain my onely and sole executor of this my last will and testament all and singular my estate boath real and personal untill such time as my sons come to the age of twenty and one yeares then my eldest son John shall have my home plantation and land belonging there unto and my other two sons that is william and Josep shall have that parsel or piece of land lying on the Lime kiln Road william shall have that half of the (?) Land which is now Improved and Josep the other half they onely paying unto my daughters the sum of thirty pounds Courent money when thy shall come to age then they to (?) the afore said Land (?) freely enjoy the same they their heirs and assigns for ever and it is my will also that John and william shall build an house for Joseph and cleare one acre of Land and plant one hundred aple trees there on and it is my will that my sons and daughters shall each of them have an equal share or (?) of my moveable estate and I doe hereby latterly (?) disalow revoke and disanul all and every other former testaments wills legacies and execute by me in any wise before this time named will and bequeathed ratifying & confirming this & no other to be my last will and testament in witness(?) where of I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day and year above written (signed) Casparus Garretson

Signed sealed published pronounced and declared by ye I Casparus Garretson as his last will and testament in the presence us the subscribers (signed) Garrett Garretson, unknown signature, Edward Blake, unknown signature

Casparus Garretson and his wife lived at Mill Creek Hundred, New Castle, De. He was appointed overseer of the New Castle (Quaker) Friends' Meeting May 2, 1726.

vi.JOHN COX, b. Abt. 1696, England55; d. Abt. 1745, Adams Co., Pennsylvania56; m. (1) JANE PHILLIPS, 171757; m. (2) HANNAH JENKINS, November 05, 1720, Chester County, PA58,59,60; m. (3) MARY HARLAN, October 09, 1735, London Grove MM, Chester County, PA61.

Notes for JOHN COX:
Per WFT Vol. 1, #2615: b. abt 1665 - states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955: "John Cox came to America with his parents in 1708. We do not know where they lived in England - probably some Quaker community. John was born about 1685 which means he was about 22 on arrival. It is believed the group landed at New Castle, Delaware where they lived for a season. Later the family moved to Kennett, Chester County, Pennsylvania, a Quaker center. This was their residence for about ten years. During that period John Cox Senior died, 1711. We have no idea when his wife Rachel passed away."

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647: b. abt. 1696

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647, also WFT Vol. 5, #793:

The Cox Family in America, by Henry Miller Cox, 1912, NY. "One of the early settlers of Warrington, now Huntington Twp., York Co., probably a brother of Thomas Cox, who removed from Chester Co., to the same neighborhood, 1733; present in 1740 at the marriage of Rebecca Cox, the daughter of Thomas, and John Frazier, at the house of William Garretson. Nothing is posatively known as to his parentage, but he is believed to have been a son of John and Rachel Cox of New Castle, Delaware."

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, # 1647 : May have two other spouses, Jane Phillips and Hannah Jenkins.

Per email of Barbara Cox, ([email protected]) 2/11/1997: John's son or grandson has Solomon who had twins Naomi (Amy) and Stephen, born in 1779 in NC.

Per Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988) submitted by Betty L. Cox Baker, 46B Shadowood OTS, Granbury, TX 76048: b. 1699?

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 1, #1013:
Moved to Menallen 1745.
Nearly all Friends m took place at his home.
Ref: THE COX FAMILY IN AMERICA, Henry Miller Cox, 1912, NY p 249 IMMIGRATION OF THE IRISH QUAKERS, Meyers, p 172

Broderbund WFT Vol. 3, #1242: says John Cox first wife was Sarah Oldham, 2nd was Hanna Jenkins, m. 11/5/1720, 3rd was Mary Harlan m. 10/9/1735. Also says he died in Craven County, South Carolina

Some sources, including Karen Wohlwend as well as some Broderbund WFT's, indicate this John Cox was married to Mary Garretson.[]

s. the Cox family in America. "one of the early settlers of Warrington, now in Huntington Twp., York Co., probably a brother of Thomas Cox, who removed from Chester Co., to the same neighborhood, 1733; present at the marraige of Rebecca Cox and John Frazier, at the house of willianm Garretson. Believed to have been a son of John and Rachel Cox of New Castle, De.
May have had 2 other spouses, Jane Phillips and Hannah Jenkins

Notes for JANE PHILLIPS:
Broderbund WFT Vol. 1, #2615

Broderbund WFT Vol. 2, #588: John Cox m. Jane (Jones) Phillips, 1717

Bill Cox <[email protected]>, 5/8/97

Marriage Notes for JOHN COX and HANNAH JENKINS:
Bill Cox <[email protected]>, 5/8/97: m. May 20, 1720, Chester Co., PA

Notes for MARY HARLAN:
Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #2077: Mary Garretson

Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647: Mary Harlan[]

s. Cox family in America "perhaps daughter of Moses and Margaret Harlan"

vii.THOMAS COX, b. Abt. 1695, New Castle Co, DE (?)62; d. Aft. 176063; m. (1) ELIZABETH FINCHER, September 02, 1722, London Grove MM, Chester County, PA64; m. (2) MARY COOKE, 1730, London Grove, Chester, PA65.

Notes for THOMAS COX:
born 1694? born 1674?

Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 4, #1236:

Reference: Cox Family 929.2 C8392, Page 31
Fincher in the USA, 1683-1900 920.273 F491b, film 1035619 item5, page 10 & 11
LDS Microfilm 1035619, item 5, page 10 & 11

birth date from Cheshire and Staffordshire Quarterly meeting notes, 1650-1720. Her parents from same source.

Per Per email of Sherri ______ ([email protected]) 3/29/1997: Moved to Warrington MM, Lancaster Co., PA, then to Orange Co., NC, then to Bush River MM, Craven Co., SC. Thomas died after 1774.

Marriage Notes for THOMAS COX and ELIZABETH FINCHER: Per Per email of Sherri ______ ([email protected]) 3/29/1997: m. Elizabeth Fincher Nov. 2, 1722, London Grove MM

Per Broderbund Vol 3, #1242: m. April 9, 1722 in Brush Creek, South Carolina

Notes for MARY COOKE:
Cooke?

viii.AMY COX, b. Abt. 1699, England66; d. September 13, 1778, London Grove, Chester, PA67; m. JOHN ALLEN, Abt. 171968.

Notes for AMY COX:
Per Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647: born 1700 in Newark, NJ

Endnotes

1. Brøderbund Software, Inc., World Family Tree Vol. 7, Ed. 1, (Release date: October 17, 1996), "CD-ROM," Tree #1647, Date of Import: Jul 26, 1997.
2. Brøderbund Software, Inc., World Family Tree Vol. 7, Ed. 1, (Release date: October 17, 1996), "CD-ROM," Tree #1647, Date of Import: Jul 26, 1997.
3. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #588; Vol. 7, #1647.
4. Ayler, Darrel J., e-mail, ([email protected]), "Electronic," April, 1997.
5. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 7, #1647.
6. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
7. Baker, Betty L. Cox, "Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988)." 8. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
9. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
10. Baker, Betty L. Cox, "Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988)." 11. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
12. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
13. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
14. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
15. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
16. Baker, Betty L. Cox, "Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988)." 17. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
18. Baker, Betty L. Cox, "Cox Heritage, Issue #4, (June 1988)." 19. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588; Vol. 3, #1242.
20. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
21. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #588.
22. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #588.
23. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #588.
24. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #588.
25. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
26. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
27. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
28. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
29. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
30. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
31. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588.
32. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
33. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #588.
34. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
35. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
36. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol.1, #2615; Vol. 3, #1242.
37. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
38. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
39. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 5, #1294.
40. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
41. 1) Per email of Kathy Mahmens ([email protected]), 3/24/1997.2) Broderbund WFT Vol. 3, #1242
42. 1) Per email of Kathy Mahmens ([email protected]), 3/24/1997.2) email of Darrel Ayler ([email protected]) 4/19/1997.
43. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
44. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
45. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
46. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588; Vol. 3, #1242.
47. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
48. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 2, #0588; Vol. 4, #0798.
49. Wholwend, Karen - 3/22/97 e-mail, ([email protected]).
50. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 7, #2077.
51. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 1, #2615, states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.
52. Bill Cox <[email protected]>, 5/8/97
53. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 1, #2615, states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.
54. From WFT Vol. 1, #2615: states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.
55. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 3, #1242.
56. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
57. Broderbund WFT Vol. 2, #588
58. Broderbund World Family Tree Vol. 1, #2615, (states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.), "CD-ROM."
59. Mahmens, Kathy, Mahmens, Kathy e-mail 3/24/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
60. Cox, Bill, Cox, Bill FTM File 5/8/1997, ([email protected]), "Electronic."
61. 1) Bill Cox <[email protected]>, 5/8/972) Broderbund WFT Vol. 1, #1013 62. Mahmens, Kathy, Fincher GEDCOM, (4/21/97 e-mail file attachment), "Electronic."
63. Mahmens, Kathy, Fincher GEDCOM, (4/21/97 e-mail file attachment), "Electronic."
64. Broderbund World Family Tree, "CD-ROM," Vol. 4, #1236.
65. WFT #2117;Per email of Kathy Mahmens ([email protected]), 3/24/1997.
66. From WFT Vol. 1, #2615: states that info is from: 1) _Ancestors and Descendent of Jehu Cox_, by Wayne D. Stout, and 2) _Joseph Cox Ancestors and Descendents_, by Stanley M. Cox, 1955.
67. Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647
68. Broderbund WFT Vol. 7, #1647

Thomas married someone.

His children were:

116       i.  John Cox (born about 1665 in Drayton, Berkshire, England - died in 1711 in Kennet, Chester, Pennsylvania)

         ii.  Thomas Cox was born in 1674 in , , , England and died on 28 Mar 1695 in Bull & Mouth Mm, London, England at age 21.

        iii.  Richard Cox

Thomas married Christian Matthews on 10 Apr 1672 in , , , England. Christian was born in 1649 and died on 30 Apr 1679 at age 30.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Mary Cox

         ii.  William Cox

        iii.  Christian Cox was born on 27 Feb 1672/73 in , , , England.


238. Ephraim Herman .

General Notes: Source: Barbara Lambert (Prodigy KPRV14D - 11/23/1992) received this information on a pedigree chart from a fellow researcher.

However, here is a later message from Linda Belle Roholt about a year later on GEnie that clouds this:

Message 503 Fri Oct 15, 1993
L.ROHOLT at 00:21 EDT

Barb Lambert;

I viewed the Cecil Co. MD film I ordered for COX and didn't find much to go on. There was a John & Margaret COX land deed dated 13 August 1678 and a Benjamin & Elizabeth COX land deed dated 10 August 1703. Too little info to make any connections. I did run across a deed for Harmon KANKEY dated 5 September 1717; land purchased from Ephraim Augustine HERMAN & wife Isabella. It offered a small bit of new info in that Harman KANKEY had been a resident of "New Castle upon Delaware in the territories of Pennsylvania" when he bought the land from E. A. HERMAN.
I know that Harman KANKEY's wife has been said to be a daughter of Ephraim & Isabella HERMAN, but I don't think this is a real possibility. I found much reference to the HERMAN families of Cecil Co. MD in that county's history (by Geo.Johnston, 1888) and Ephraim HERMAN was born about 1692, a grandson of Augustine HERMAN who was the owner of a large tract called "Little Bohemia".
At his death ca. 1686, the title & land went to his eldest son, Ephraim George HERMAN, who died before June 1690, when the tract passed to Augustine HERMAN's only other son, Casparus who died ca. 1697. Casparus HERMAN had just 1 son, the above mentioned Ephraim Augustine HERMAN. LindaBelle

Ephraim married Isabella.

The child from this marriage was:

119       i.  Marjorie Herman (born about 1674)


239. Isabella .

Isabella married Ephraim Herman.

240. John Newby, son of William Newby and Isabell Turner, was born about 1652 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died before 1692.

General Notes: Source:1988 IGI CD-ROM search on NEWBY.

John married Magdalene about 1670.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Gabriel Newby was born in 1674 and died in 1738 at age 64.

120      ii.  James Newby (born in 1672 in Norfolk, Virginia - died in 1718)

        iii.  Elizabeth Newby was born on 14 Nov 1676 and died on 23 Jan 1716/17 in Little River at age 40.

         iv.  Rebecca Newby was born in 1678.

          v.  John Newby was born about 1682 and died about 1723 about age 41.


241. Magdalene .

Magdalene married John Newby about 1670. John was born about 1652 of Isle Of Wight, And Nansemond, Virginia and died before 1692.

242. Christopher Nicholson, son of Edmund Nicholson and Elizabeth Simson, was born about 1638 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina, Born In England and died on 10 Sep 1688 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 50.

Christopher married Hannah Redknap, daughter of Joseph Rednap and Sarah Haughton, on 22 Oct 1662 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts. Hannah was born about 1641 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts and died on 2 Dec 1678 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 37.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Christopher Nicholson was born about 1662 in Probably, Massachusettes and died on 17 May 1723 about age 61.

         ii.  Deliverance Nicholson was born about 1663 in Probably, Massachusettes.

        iii.  Samuel Nicholson was born on 12 Mar 1664/65 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 29 Mar 1727 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 62.

         iv.  Hannah Nicholson

          v.  Joseph Nicholson was born on 26 Sep 1670 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 1 Jan 1697/98 in Will-6 Aug 1697, Albermarle, North Carolina at age 27.

         vi.  John Nicholson was born on 17 Dec 1671 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 19 Jun 1718 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 46.

        vii.  Nathaniel Nicholson was born on 9 Jan 1674/75 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died in Jul 1737 in (Will), Perquimans, North Carolina at age 62.

       viii.  Benjamin Nicholson was born on 26 Sep 1678 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died about 1712 about age 34.

Christopher next married Ann Atwood. Ann was born about 1640.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Nicholson was born on 13 Nov 1680 and died on 11 Sep 1682 at age 1.

121      ii.  Sarah Nicholson (born on 15 Aug 1682 - died on 13 Mar 1717/18)

        iii.  Elizabeth (2Nd) Nicholson was born on 11 Mar 1683/84 and died from about 1711 to 1712 about age 27.

         iv.  Christopher Nicholson was born on 2 Oct 1685 and died on 23 Mar 1722/23 at age 37.

          v.  Thomas Nicholson was born on 7 Feb 1687/88 and died on 10 Oct 1695 at age 7.

         vi.  Ann Nicholson was born on 8 Feb 1688/89 and died on 16 Nov 1743 at age 54.


243. Ann Atwood was born about 1640.

General Notes: Sharon Minton (S.MINTON) indicates Ann Atwood was born about 1660.

Ann married Christopher Nicholson. Christopher was born about 1638 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina, Born In England and died on 10 Sep 1688 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 50.

244. Albert Albertson, son of Nicholas Albertson and Mary Sutton, was born about 1645 and died on 28 Feb 1700/01 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 56.

General Notes: Source: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, Fort Worth, Texas 1976. Chapter 15 of this text has a genealogy of the Albertson family through the twentieth century.

Message 604 Sun Jan 16, 1994 GEnie
S.MINTON [Sharon in Ar] at 20:36 EST

RoyC,
Here's what I have on the ALBERTSON/GOSBEY. (I have been finally getting to go through mounds & piles and boxes of gene. stuff I've had for years. getting put in PAF now. But have found that sometime or another alot of stuff had been messed with and it seems like alot of my documentation pages are the ones that are gone or torn up and pieces gone. I know I didn't do that, but unless some pages got put in other boxes, all I have left is a page or so with the information on it or just a part of a page. So some stuff I don't know where I found it! But at least I do have some things any way)

John GOSBEY & Mary SUTTON
children:
1. John married Mary
2. Mary below

Albert ALBERTSON s/o Nicholas ALBERTSON
b. ca 1645
d. 28 Feb 1701 Perquimans Co. N.C.
m. 12,20,1668 Perquimans Co. N.C.
Mary GOSBEY
b. ca 1650 England
d. Jan 1720/1 Perquimans Co. N.C.
children: all born in Perquimans Co. N.C.
1. Albert
b.15 July 1669 d. aft. 1722
m. bef. 1693 Elizabeth MULLEN
2. Susanna
b. 19 Feb 1670 d. ca 1702
m. ca 1688 John HARRIS
3. Esau
b. 19 Aug 1672
m. 27 Jan 1700 Perquimans Co. N.C. Sarah SEXTON
4. Hannah
b. 11 Dec 1675 d. 2 Jan 1694 Perquimans Co. N.C.
m. 4,7,1693 Perquimans Co. N.C. Joseph NICHOLSON
5. Peter
b. 30 June 1677
m. 27 Aug 1701 Ann JONES
6. John
b. ca 1678
7. Ezekiel
b. ca 1680
m. ca 1701 Sarah
8. Nathaniel
b. ca 1682 d. 11 Dec 1751 or 13 Feb 1752 Perquimans Co. N.C.
m. 5m 1705 Perquimans Co. N.C. Abigail NICHOLSON

Sharon in Arkansas

Albert married Mary Gosby on 20 Dec 1668 in , Berkely Pct, North Carolina. Mary was born about 1650 in , , , England and died in 1720 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 70.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Albert Albertson was born on 15 Jul 1669.

         ii.  Susanna Albertson was born on 19 Feb 1669/70 and died before 1702.

        iii.  Esau Albertson was born on 19 Aug 1672 and died on 2 Jan 1694/95 at age 22.

         iv.  Hannah Albertson was born on 11 Dec 1675 and died on 2 Jan 1693/94 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 18.

          v.  Peter Albertson was born on 30 Jun 1677.

122      vi.  Nathaniel Albertson (born about 1679 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina - died on 13 Feb 1751/52)


245. Mary Gosby was born about 1650 in , , , England and died in 1720 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 70.

General Notes: Category 10, Topic 6 (GEnie)
Message 590 Thu Jan 13, 1994
S.MINTON [Sharon in Ar] at 19:16 EST

All,

Trying to find something on John GOSBEY. I have no dates or anything on him. He had son John who married Mary -- and daughter Mary born ca 1650 died Jan 1720 Perquimans Co. N.C. married 20 dec 1668 Perquimans Co. N.C. Albert ALBERTSON born ca 1645 died 1701 Perquimans Co. N.C.

Sharon in Arkansas

Mary married Albert Albertson on 20 Dec 1668 in , Berkely Pct, North Carolina. Albert was born about 1645 and died on 28 Feb 1700/01 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 56.

246. Samuel Nicholson, son of Christopher Nicholson and Hannah Redknap, was born on 12 Mar 1664/65 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 29 Mar 1727 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 62.

General Notes: Source of marriage and children: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, 1976.

Samuel married Elizabeth Charles on 16 Dec 1688 in House Of Phelps, Perquimans, North Carolina. Elizabeth was born on 8 Jan 1671/72 and died in Jan 1747/48 at age 76.

Children from this marriage were:

123       i.  Abigall Nicholson (born on 24 Sep 1689)

         ii.  Hannah Nicholson was born on 9 Apr 1692 and died on 20 Dec 1727 at age 35.

        iii.  Elizabeth Nicholson was born on 15 Jan 1696/97.

         iv.  Jane Nicholson was born on 10 Nov 1694 and died on 13 Jan 1728/29 at age 34.

          v.  Ida Nicholson was born on 10 Nov 1694 and died in Died Young.

         vi.  Mary Nicholson

        vii.  Sarah Nicholson was born from 5 Dec 1694 to 1706.

       viii.  Miley Nicholson

         ix.  Joseph Nicholson was born on 25 Jul 1707 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 10 Mar 1726/27 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 19.


247. Elizabeth Charles, daughter of William Charles and Abigail Bailey, was born on 8 Jan 1671/72 and died in Jan 1747/48 at age 76.

General Notes: Source of marriage and parents: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, 1976.

Elizabeth married Samuel Nicholson on 16 Dec 1688 in House Of Phelps, Perquimans, North Carolina. Samuel was born on 12 Mar 1664/65 in Of, Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 29 Mar 1727 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 62.

248. Richard Ratcliff, son of Ratcliff and Unknown, was born about 1642 and died in 1718 in , Isle Of Wight, Virginia about age 76.

General Notes: Source: Batchelder and Williams Families, Chapter 51, RATCLIFF Family.

Source: Encyclopedia of American Quaker Genealogy, Volume VI, Virginia.

1684, , . Chuckatuck MM - Richard mentioned that a meeting was held at his house.
1688, 10, 8. Chuckatuck MM - Richard [Ratlif] mentioned that a meeting was held in his house in ye Isle of Wight County.
1692, 10, 10. Chuckatuck MM - Richard [Ratlife] a meeting was held in his howse in Isle of Wight Co.
1702, 1, 6. Chuckatuck MM - Rich Senior of Isle of White Co. and Daniel Sanbourn also of Isle of Wight gave bond that they will abide by the decision of Jno Richardson and Edward Thomas arbitrators to determine and settle the line between their lands; matter peacefully settled.
1703, Jan. 20. Chuckatuck MM - Richard [Rattcliff] suffered the seizure of 1795 pounds of tobacco for the use of Thomas Pitt; taken by George Green, sub-sheriff.
1703, , . Chuckatuck MM - Richard [Rattliff] Senior suffered seizure of 180 pounds of tabacco for the Priest Andrew Monrod and other church rates; taken by Thomas Pitt high sheriff of the Ile of Wight Co.
1704, Feb. 24. Chuckatuck MM - Richard [Rattclift] suffered seizure of 179 pounds of tobacco for parrish levies; taken by John Watts.

Richard married Elizabeth. Elizabeth died from 13 Dec 1727 to 1728.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Ratcliff was born on 21 Jul 1668.

         ii.  Sarah Ratcliff was born on 19 Sep 1670 and died about 1718 about age 48.

124     iii.  Richard Ratliff (born on 13 Jul 1672 in Of, , North Carolina - died on 17 Jun 1724 in , Albemarle, North Carolina)

         iv.  Cornelius Ratcliff was born on 15 Jan 1673/74 and died about 1762 in , Isle Of Wight, Virginia about age 88.

          v.  Mary Ratcliff was born on 5 Feb 1678/79.

         vi.  John Ratcliff was born on 20 Feb 1680/81 and died in 1739 at age 58.

        vii.  Rebecca Ratcliff was born on 3 May 1684 in , Nansemond, Virginia.


249. Elizabeth died from 13 Dec 1727 to 1728.

Elizabeth married Richard Ratcliff. Richard was born about 1642 and died in 1718 in , Isle Of Wight, Virginia about age 76.

250. Henry Hollowell, son of Thomas Hollowell Sr. and Alce (Alice), was born on 18 Aug 1651 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died about 1698 about age 47.

Henry married Elizabeth Cotching on 7 Aug 1680.

The child from this marriage was:

125       i.  Elizabeth Hollowell

Henry next married Elizabeth Scott on 20 Apr 1693.


251. Elizabeth Cotching .

Elizabeth married Henry Hollowell on 7 Aug 1680. Henry was born on 18 Aug 1651 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia and died about 1698 about age 47.

252. Ralph Fletcher II, son of Ralph Fletcher and Elizabeth Sutton, was born on 24 Dec 1676 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

Ralph married Jane Morgan on 2 Mar 1698/99. Jane was born from about 1680 to 1686 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

Children from this marriage were:

126       i.  Ralph Fletcher III (born on 22 Apr 1703 in , Perquimans, North Carolina - died on 1 Jul 1785)

         ii.  George Fletcher was born on 15 Jun 1705 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        iii.  Joshua Fletcher was born on 5 Nov 1708 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.


253. Jane Morgan, daughter of James Morgan and Jane Knea, was born from about 1680 to 1686 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

Jane married Ralph Fletcher II on 2 Mar 1698/99. Ralph was born on 24 Dec 1676 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.
picture

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256. John Hussey, son of George Hussey and Unknown, was born in 1570 in Dorking, Surrey, England, died before 24 Jul 1632 in Dorking, Surrey, England, and was buried on 24 Jul 1632 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

General Notes: Source: The Genealogical and Family History of the State of Maine, 1907.

The first authentic account we have of the current family is the record of John Hussey and Mary Wood, December 5, 1593, when they both were of Dorking, Surrey, England, and were persons of good position and of moderate estate in lands. John Hussey died in England, leaving a widow and children. Of the latter the records are meagre, but there is known to have been a son John, who died young, a son Christopher and one or more daughters of whom we have no authentic account.

According to the Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire, it is not unlikely that John was the early voyager Hussey cast away upon Cape Florida and there devoured by the native cannibals, a fate attributed to Christopher by his gr. gr. son Joseph Marshall of Nantucket, in his signed 'Genealogy of the Husseys.'

Another source, a Hussey genealogy chart provided to me by a Hussey descendant, Dorothy Carter of Waynesville, OH, in 1992, John Hussey died in Dorking on 5 Feb 1630.

This information is quoted from the quarterly "Historic Nantucket", volume 27, Oct. 1979, No. 2

J. William Bardoe, Director of Research, English Genealogical Research, Guildford, Surrey, furnished the entries below, some of which he re-checked for accuracy, and stated that the registers of the adjacent parishes of Abinger and Sheir (Shera) do not contain Hussey entries prior to 5th 12. 1593. Neither do the Richmond Parish Registers reveal anything pertinent to the ancestry of Christopher Hussey.

DORKING PARISH REGISTERS, CO. SURREY, ENGLAND
1503-178_
MARRIAGES
25th 9. 1569. John Wood Joane Taylor
5th 12. 1593* John Hussey Marie Wood
BAPTISMS
28th 6. 1562. John Wood, son of John Wood (senior) and Audrey, his wife
5th 5. 1581 Sara Wood, daughter of John Wood (junior)
9th 7. 1581 Marie Wood, granddaughter of John Wood (senior)
30th 8. 1584 Elias Wood, son of John Wood (junior)
3rd 10. 1588 Martha Wood, daughter fo John Wood (junior)
29th 4. 1596 John Hussey, first child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
18th 2. 1598 Christopher Hussey, second child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
31st 1. 1601 Marie Hussey, third child of John Hussey and Marie Wood
BURIALS
1581 Marie Wood, daughter of John Wood (senior)
1586 Joane Wood, daughter fo John Wood (senior)
8th 11. 1597 John Hussey, son of John Hussey and Marie Wood
18th 2. 1603 Audrey, wife of John Wood (senior)
5th 4. 1612 John Wood (senior)
24th 5. 1632 John Hussey, aged 74

*Between 1582 and 1752, March was the first month of the year. The 12th month, therefore, was February, which brought about double dating. 5th 12. 1593, for example, should read 5th February 1593/4 or February 5, 1593/4.

------- Walter Weston Folger

John married Marie Wood on 5 Dec 1593. Marie died on 16 Jun 1660 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Hussey was buried on 8 Jan 1597/98 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

128      ii.  Christopher Hussey 7 (born on 18 Feb 1598/99 in Dorking, Surrey, England - died on 6 Mar 1685/86 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire)

        iii.  Marie Hussey was born in 1599 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

         iv.  Joseph Hussey was born in 1601 in Dorking, Surrey, England.


257. Marie Wood, daughter of Henry Wood and Marthey Bull, died on 16 Jun 1660 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

General Notes: The ancestry of Mary is taken from Ancestors and Descendants of Jehu Cox by Wayne D. Stout. Stout provided it without any references.

Mary Wood Hussey emigrated to the New england Colony 1630 according to one historical record, and in 1632 according to others.

Having been persecuted in England for their religious views in opposition the the Church of England, they, along with hundreds of other non-conformists or Puritans, had resided in Holland for a period before emigrating to America.

She was an 'Original Grantee' of Hampton, N.H. and a 'Proprietor" there 1638-1640. Her home was near but not with son, Christopher. Even though there was no official "Friends" or Quaker Meetings at that time, her family was of the faith that later became known as 'Friends'. She was a forceful individual.

Source: Historic Nantucket, Vol. 27, Oct 1979, No. 2, quotes Dorking Parish Register. This is a more authentic reference for Mary (Marie) Wood's birth and marriage.

According to the Hussey Manuscript at http://www.llano.net/gowen/hussey_millenium/husseyms_010.htm, John Hussey was married "5th, 12th 1593," according to a letter written by J. William Bardoe, Director of Research, English Genealogical Research, Guildford, Surrey. Walter Weston Folger, writing in "Historic Nantucket" states that "Between 1582 and 1752 March was the first month of the year. The "12th" month therefore was February, which brought about double-dating. Consequently, "5th, 12th 1593" could be written as February 5, 1593-94."
Thus in "new style" dating John Hussey, at about age 35, was married to Mary Wood, age about 18, February 5, 1594, as recorded in the Dorking Parish Register. She was the daughter of John Wood, Jr. and Joanne Taylor Wood and was baptized "5th 5. 1581" [July 5, 1581], according to Dorking parish register where she was identified as "granddaughter of John Wood, senior." She was the daughter of Henry Wood and Martha Bull Wood, according to "Genealogical History of New England" by Ezra Stearns. In the Dorking register her name was entered as "Marie Woode," and the German-appearance of the script has caused some researchers to transcribe her name as "Mary Moore."
...
Wood family footnote: Based on data found in the Dorking Parish Register it is apparent that John Wood Sr. and his wife Audrey Wood were the grandparents of Mary Wood. The Baptismal Register records, "9th, 7th 1581, Marie Wood, granddaughter of John Wood senior."

John Wood Sr. and Audrey Wood were residents of Dorking in 1562 when their son, John Wood, Jr., was baptized there according to the parish register. They were also living there in 1581 and 1586 when two of their daughters died, according to the burial register. Audrey Wood was buried "18th 2. 1603 [April 18, 1603], and John Wood, Sr. was buried "5th 4. 1612" [June 5, 1612], according to Dorking burial register.

The Hussey Manuscript mentioned above contains a very detailed story about Mary Wood's venture from England to America.

Marie married John Hussey on 5 Dec 1593. John was born in 1570 in Dorking, Surrey, England, died before 24 Jul 1632 in Dorking, Surrey, England, and was buried on 24 Jul 1632 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

258. Stephen Batchelder Reverend 7 was born from 1560 to 1561 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died in 1656 in London, Middlessex, England at age 96.

General Notes: LDS microfilm 1561672 has this colorful story about him:

Rev. Stephen Bachiler born in England 1561 was well educated (B.A. Oxford 1586), and had received orders in the established church but was not in sympathy with his rites and institutions. His unwillingness to conform to its requirements resulted in his being deprived of his ecclesiastical commissions. He spend a few yhears in Holland but returned to London. Came to Lynn, Mass. June 5, 1632 and here he established the first Episcopal Church of Lynn according to his own ideas. Differences occurred from time to time but finally when a council of ministers was called, it was decided that although the church had not been properly instituted, yet the mutual exercise of their religious duties had supplied the defect. His removal from Lynn was desired by those who differed from him, but where in that day did not religious differences lead to enmity.

_Alumni Oxonienses: The Members of the University of Oxford;, 1500-1714_ lists:

> Bachiler, Stephen. St. John's Coll., matric. circa > 1581; B.A. 3 Feb., 1585-6, rector of Wherwell,
> Hantgs, 1587. See Foster's _Index Ecclesiasticus_.

Rev. Stephen Bachelor removed from Lynn, Mass. to Ipwich, where he received a grant of fifty acres of land and a proposal to locate but he soon left Ipwich and with some friend, John King and others to Mathcheese on the Barnstable Bay, now Yarmouth, with a view of establishing a colony there. This proved impracticable and he went next to Newburyport and 7-6-1638 received a grant of land from the town. Later the general Court gave him permission to settle a town at Hampton a few miles from Newburyport. In 1639 Ipwich offered him ;£60 acres of land if he would live there but he declined.

On 7-5-1639 he sold his house and land in Newbury and removed to Hampton, settled the town and established a church of which he became pastor. In 1640 Hampton granted him 300 acres of land and he gave them a bell for the church called "meeting-house". In 1647 he was in Portsmouth wwwhere ;he remained three years.

At the age of eighty-nine he married unfortunately and lived with his third wife only one year. In 1651 he returned to England and died in his 100th year.

Here is a more detailed story I obtained from the Prodigy Genealogy Topic:

This was written by Rev. Stephen Bachiler, probably a descendant. This eccentric and learned divine has the honor of being the first white man who settled within the present limits of the town of Barstable. He lived a hundred years, and his long life was checkered with exciting incidents on which the imaginative pen of the novelist would delight to dwell.

He was born in England in 1561, graduated from Oxford, received orders in the established church, was settled in the ministry, and ejected by The bishops for non-conformity, at whose hands Gov. Winthrop says he had suffered much.
He married early in life, and four of his sons and three daughters are named:

John Wing, afterwards of Sandwich, married his daughter Deborah, probably before his removal at Holland, where he resided several years. During his residence in that country, Christopher Hussey, the ancestor of the Nantucket family of that name, became enamored with his daughter Theodate, and sought her hand in marriage; but Mr. Bachiler refused assent, without the bridegroom would agree to remove to New England. Hussey assented to the condition imposed, and took, probably in 1629, Theodate to wife.

Mr. Bachiler, intending to emigrate to New England, soon after returned to London. Mr. Lewis states that his church in Holland consisted of six members beside himself, and that these returned with him to London. No names are given; but it is uniformly stated that they were his friends, or members of his own family. If so, the seven probably were Mr. Bachiler and his wife, John Wing and his wife Deborah. John Sanborn and his wife, a daughter of Mr. Bachiler, and Theodate Hussey. Sanborn's wife died in England, and it does not appear that he came over. His sons John, William and Stephen came over with their grandfather and settled in Hampton. Christopher Hussey and his mother, the widow Mary Hussey, were afterwards members of his church, and followed their pastor in all his wanderings. Mr. Savage, whose authority is not to be rejected on light or inconclusive testimony, thinks the Husseys came over in the same ship with Mr. Bachiler.

The court records, and the decisions of the ecclesiastical councils favor his supposition, and it will be hard to show how the ubiquitous number of six members is made up,, if he is not right. On the 9th of March, 1632, Mr. Bachiler and his company embarked at London in the ship William and Francis, Capt. Thomas, and arrived in Boston Thursday, June 5, 1632, after a tedious passage of 88 days, and on the day next after his arrival went to Lynn.

Mr. Lewis states that "In Mr. Bachiler's church were six persons who had belonged to a church with him in England; and of these he constituted a church at Lynn, to which he admitted such as desired to become members, and commenced the exercise of his public ministrations on Sunday, the 8th of June, without installation." Four months after a complaint was made of some irregularities in his conduct. He was arraigned before the court at Boston, Oct. 3, when the following order was passed: "Mr. Bachiler is required to forbear exercising his gifts as a pastor or teacher publiqely in our Pattent, unless it be to those he brought with him, for his contempt of authority, and until some scndles be removed."

Mr. Bachiler, however, succeeded in regaining the esteem of the people, and the court on the 4th of March, 1633, removed their injunction against him.

In 1635, some of the members became dissatisfied with the conduct of their pastor, "and doubting whether they were regularly organized as a church," withdrew from the communion. A council of ministers was held on the 15th of March, and after deliberating three days, decided "that although the church had not been properly instituted, yet after-consent and practice of a church-state had supplied that defect. So all were reconciled," says the record. Mr. Bachiler, however, perceiving no prospect of terminating the difficulties, requested dismission for himself and the six who had accompanied him from England, which was granted, on the supposition that he intended to remove from Lynn. Instead of this, he remained and formed another church of his friends, that is of those who came over with him.
This conduct gave great offence to "the most and chief of the town" of Lynn and they entered a complaint against Mr. Bachiler to the assistants who forbade him to proceed in the organization of his church until the subject was considered by other ministers. Still he goes on. The magistrates require his attendance before them. He refused to obey; they send the marshall who brought him into their presence. He submits and agrees to leave the town in three months. Mr.Bachiler was admitted freeman May 6, 1635, and removed from Lynn to Ipswich in Feb. 1636, where he received a grant of fifty acres of land, and had the prospect of a settlement; but some difficulty arose and he left the place.

Gov. Withrop in the first volume of his history, under the date of March 30, 1638, has the following passage: "Another plantation was now in hand at Mattakeese ("now Yarmouth," is written on the margin) six miles beyond Sandwich. The undertaker of this was one Mr. Bachiler, late pastor at Saugus. (since called Lynn) being about 76 years of age; yet he walked thither on foot in a very hard season." "He and his company, being all poor men, finding the difficulty, gave it over and others undertook it." Mr. Bachiler settled in the easterly part of Mattakeese, at a place which is known to this day as "Old Town." The names of his associates are not given; probably the company consisted of persons who belonged to, or were connected by marriage, with the family of Mr. Bachiler, namely, sons, sons- in-law and grand-sons, with their families.

Mr. Bachiler probably obtained the consent of Mr. Collicut, to whom the lands at Matakeese had been granted, before he undertook to establish a plantation; for without such consent he would have been a trespasser and liable to ejectment. The terms of the grant cannot be quoted; but it does not thence follow that not permit was given or grant made. We know by the Old Colony records that in 1637 or 1638, certain lands in Barnstable were run out into house and other lots; that these lands were laid out by or under the authority of Mr. Richard Collicut of Dorchester. He was a surveyor, but there is not evidence that he was ever in Barstable. The Plymouth records tell us the thing was done; but they do not tell us who did it. The passage quoted from Gov. Winthrop clearly and distinctly states that at, or about the time, the Plymouth records say the lands were run out, Mr. Bachiler and his company undertook to form a plantation at Mattakeese.

The very first thing that he and his company did, undoubtedly, was to do what all such companies did in those times first do that is run out house lots for each of their party, and farming lands and meadows to be held by each in severalty. Not to presume this, is to presume that Mr. Bachiler and his company were not only wanting in common prudence, but wanting in common sense. The first settlers in new countries never failed to appropriate a sufficiency of land to themselves, and in order to make such appropriation, they must first run them out and put up boundaries. That there were some among his company that could survey lands, scarce admits of doubt. Mr. Bachiler, as Mr. Prince informs us, was a "man of learning and ingenuity, and wrote a fine and curious hand," and he could undoubtedly run lines and draw plans. His son John Wing, one of the company, was a man of skill and energy-and he probably had with him his sons Daniel, Stephen and John, three stout youths, if not all men grown-one of whom in after-times was a surveyor of lands. That Mr Bachiler's party were capable of doing all that the Colony records say was done, does not admit of doubt, and in the absence of all proof to the contrary, it is to be presumed that they did do it.

Sandwich was settled in 1637, mostly by people from Lynn-old neighbors and acquaintances of Mr. Bachiler's company-and it is probable, that being the nearest settlement to Mattakeese, that they left their women and little ones there till shelter could be procured for them in the new settlement.

The first house built within the present bounds of Yarmouth (of which there is a record) is that of Mr. Stephen Hopkins, afterwards, owned by his son Gyles, and by him sold to Andrew Hallet, jr. This was in the summer of 1638, and was built as a temporary residence for his servants who had the care of cattle sent from Plymouth to be wintered at Mattakeese. Whether or not cattle had been sent from Plymouth in previous years does not appear; if so, then Mr. Bachiler found whites within a mile of the place he selected for settlement.

It was also in the immediate vicinity of Lyanough's town," a place not inhabited by the Indians in the winter, and their deserted wigwams perhaps afforded them a temporary shelter. Mr. Bachiler and his company wee all poor men, illy provided with the means of establishing a plantation, even in the mild season of the year, and it is hardly possible that they could have sustained themselves during the intensely cold winter of 1637, without some kindly herdsmen, or some friendly Indians gave then shelter while they were preparing their rudehabitations.

Early in the spring of 1638, Mr. Bachiler, "finding the difficulties great," abandoned his plantation at Mattakeese. John Wingand his family stopped in Sandwich. Mr. Bachiler and Christopher Hussey went to Newbury, and on the 6th of September the Massachusetts Legislature gave them and others leave to begin a plantation at Hampton, of which he became the minister. The net year, according to Mr. Felt, he was excommunicated for unchastity, thought Gov. Winthrop says he was then "about eighty years of age, and had a lusty, comely woman to wife." In November 1641, he was restored to the church, but not to his office. About this time his house in Hampton took fire and was consumed with nearly all his property.

In 1644, the people of Exeter invited him to settle there; but the court forbid his settlement. In 1647, he was at Portsmouth, now Portland, where in 1650, he being then 89 years old, his second wife Helen(a) being dead, he married his third wife Mary, without publishing his intention of marriage according to law, for which he was fined ten pounds half of which was afterwards remitted. (interesting, I found that he had 4 wives, any one know?) With his third wife he lived only a few months. She went to Kittery, and, according to the York records, on the 15th of October, 1651, was presented for committing adultery with George rogers, and sentenced "to receive forty stripes save one, at the first town meeting held at Kittery six weeks after her delivery, and be branded with the letter A." In October, 1656, she petitioned for a divorce from Mr. Bachiler, because he had five years before "transported himself to Ould England, and betaken himself to another wife and because she desired "disposing herselfe in the way of marriage,"

Whether or not she obtained a divorce does not appear on record. Mr. Bachiler, after his return to England, married a fourth wife, this third being then living. At last he died in the year 1660, at Hackney, near London, inthe one hundredth year of his age.

No record of his family is preserved. Four sons and three daughters are named. Henry, settled at Reading; Nathaniel, born about 1611, "aa chip of the old block." settled at Hampton, and Francis and Stephen, both remained in London, the latter said to have been living in 1685. Of his daughters, one as before stated, married John Sanborn, and died before 1632. Theodate, married Christopher Hussey, and died in Hampton in 1649. Deborah married John Wing of Sandwich. On the Yarmouth town records I find the following entry: Old Goody Wing desesed the last of January, '91 and '92," that is Jan'y 31, 1692, N.S. This record probably refers to Deborah, widow of the first John Wing. Her son John resided at Sawtucket (now Brewster). then within thecorporate jurisdiction of Yarmouth, and his aged mother probably resided with him. There is no one beside to whom the record will apply. Her age is not given, but an approximation to it may be made. Her son Daniel of Sandwich, if he had then been living, would have been 70 years of age, consequently the mother must have been about 90 years of age at her death.

(In preparing this article, I have consulted Gov. Winthrops History, the Plymouth and Massachusetts Records, Felt's Ecclesiastical History, Savage's Genealogical Dictionary, and Lewis's History of Lynn; the latter gives the fullest sketch of the life of Mr. Bachiler yet published. The reading of the extracts from the records, given by Mr. Lewis, leave the impression of the mind that Mr. Bachiler was not such a man s a minister of the gospel should be.
A literary friend, who for several years has been collecting materials for a memoir of Mr. Bachiler, says he is not deserving of the odium which has been heaped on his character.

The NHSOG (NH Soc. Genealogists Record) Vol. 8, No 1 (Jan 1991) contained an article by George Freeman Sanborn Jr. (who is Editor, Pres of NHSOG, and Dir. of the NEHGS Library in Boston - impeccable credentials) ..... His article is just 4 pages long, and reveals research done which proves that the once-published data that Stephen BACHILER died in Hackney ENG in 1660 was the result of a hasty reading by someone long ago of "Collections of the Mass. Hist. Soc., Vol. VII - 4th Series, pp 583-584" which actually referred to - not Rev. Stephen, but a Rev. John BACHILER - no known relation, who actually died Hackney 1674! So much for one mistake perpetuated for decades <g>. Research originally commissioned for a Philip Simonds, and published in the "Batchelor Family News-Journal" 4:5 (April 1974), gave new clues. The Sanborn Family Assoc. continued the research (all N.E. SANBORNs are desc. from the 3 grandsons of Rev. Stephen BACHILER) - and in the Guildhall Library in London was found, in the burial register of Allhallows Staining: "Steeven Batchiller Minister that dyed att Robert Barbers was buryed in the new church yard Octob 31th 1656". Only 2 men named Stephen BACHILER were alumni of Oxford/Cambridge, and it has been concluded that this burial was that of our ancestor. He would have been about 90. He matriculated St. Johns College, Oxford 15 Nov 1581, and gave his age as 71 on arrival in N.E. in 1632. The church of Allhallows Staining (taken down in 1870) stood at west side of Mark Lane, south of Fenchurch St. in London. Thus, Rev. Stephen BACHILER was buried just 17 days after Mary (BAILEY) BEEDLE petitioned the courts in N.E. to divorce Stephen.

In June 1995 I noticed that Heritage Books was reprinting the 1898 Batcheller Genealogy: Descendants of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, of England, A Leading Non-Conformist who Settled the Town of Hampton, New Hampshire, and Joseph, Henry, Joshua and John Bacheller of Essex County, Massachusetts. 624 pp., illus., index, paper, $35.00 #P316.

The following is available at Ancestry.com as of 8/14/2000:

Search Results Search Terms: BACHILER (1), STEPHEN (9) Database: The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-33 Combined Matches: 1 STEPHEN BACHILER ORIGIN: South Stoneham, Hampshire MIGRATION: 1632 on William and Francis [WJ 1:93] FIRST RESIDENCE: Lynn REMOVES: Ipswich (supposedly) 1636, Yarmouth 1637/8, Newbury 1638, Hampton 1639, Portsmouth 1644 RETURN TRIPS: To England permanently by late 1650 or early 1651 OCCUPATION: Minister CHURCH MEMBERSHIP: Member of Lynn, Newbury and Hampton churches during his ministry in those places (but see COMMENTS for further discussion). FREEMAN: 6 May 1635 [MBCR 1:371]. EDUCATION: Matriculated about 1581 at Oxford from St. John's College, and received his B.A. 3 February 1585/6 [Foster 1:53]. OFFICES: On 28 June 1641 at Saco four men were chosen as arbitrators in a dispute between GEORGE CLEEVE and JOHN WINTER, and in case those four men could not agree, Stephen Bachiler was to be "an umpire for the final ending of the said controversies" [Trelawny Papers 269-72, 319]. ESTATE: Many secondary sources state that Bachiler was granted fifty acres at Ipswich in February 1636, but evidence of this has not been found in the town or colony records. On 6 July 1638 Bachiler was granted land at Newbury [Newbury Town Records]. "Steven Bachiler sometimes of Hampton" was granted seven parcels of land at Hampton: nine and a half acres of upland for a houselot; five acres of upland added to the houselot; four acres of swampy ground; eleven acres of meadow; four acres of meadow; two hundred acres of upland, meadow & marsh for a farm; and eight acres of upland in the East Field [NEHGR 46:160-61, citing Hampton town records]. On 20 April 1647 "Steven Bachiler late of Hampton in the County of Norfolk in New England & now of Strabery Bank for ... love and affection towards my four grandchildren John, Stephen & William Samborn & Nathaniell Batchiller all now or lately of Hampton" deeded to grandson John Samborne "all of my dwelling house & land or ground whether arable, meadow & pasture or other ground with their appurtenances together with all the buildings, commons, profits, privileges & immunities whatsoever to the same or any part thereof belonging or in any wise appertaining, the greater part thereof being now or lately in the tenure, possession or occupation of the said John Samborn & other part thereof not yet particularly appointed by the town &c. (excepting out of this grant the land with the appurtenances which I formerly sold to William Howard & Thomas Ward)," said John Samborne to pay £20 apiece to each of the other three grandchildren [NHPLR 13:221]. BIRTH: About 1561 (aged 70, 23 June 1631 [Waters 520]; aged 71, 5 June 1632 [WJ 1:93]; about 76, late March 1636/7 [WJ 1:313]). DEATH: Buried 31 October 1656 at All Hallows Staining, London [NHGR 8:14-17]. MARRIAGE: (1) By about 1590 [Anne?] _____, who was closely related in some way to Reverend John Bate, Bachiler's successor as vicar of Wherwell [see COMMENTS]; she died sometime between about 1610 and 1624. (Although this first wife's given name is stated to be "Anne" by many authorities, there is no record evidence to support this.) (2) Abbots Ann, Hampshire, 2 March 1623/4 Christian Weare, widow [GDMNH 81]; she died before 26 March 1627. (3) Abbots Ann, Hampshire, 26 March 1627 Helena Mason, widow (of Reverend Thomas Mason) [GDMNH 81]; she was aged 48 in 1631, so born about 1583 [Waters 520]; died by 3 May 1647 [WP 5:153]. (4) by 14 February 1648 Mary (_____) Beedle, widow of Robert Beedle [Kittery Hist 95-96]; she soon left her husband, and cohabited with George Rogers at Kittery (see below). CHILDREN: With first wife i NATHANIEL, b. say 1590; m. (1) Hester Mercer or LeMercier [Batchelder Gen 110-15; NEHGR 27:368, 47:510-15]; m. (2) by 1645 Margery _____ (on 9 April 1645 "Margerie Batchellor" the widow of Nathaniel Bacheler of Southampton, Hampshire, was granted administration on his estate [PCC Admon. Act Book 1645, f. 22]); he did not come to New England, but his son Nathaniel did, and resided at Hampton. ii DEBORAH, b. about 1592 (aged 32, 22 June 1624 [Waters 520]); m. by 1611 John Wing [Waters 519-20]; she and her children came to New England in the late 1630s and resided at Sandwich. iii STEPHEN, b. about 1594; matriculated at Oxford 18 June 1610 from Magdalen College, aged 16, son of a minister, from Southampton [i.e., Hampshire] [Foster 1:53]; "Stephen Bachiler of Edmund Hall" was ordained deacon at Oxford 19 September 1613 [Bishop's Register, Diocese of Oxford]; with his father, accused in 1614 of circulating slanderous verses [see COMMENTS]; no further record. iv SAMUEL, b. say 1597; lived at Gorcum in Holland, where he was a minister, and had a wife and children. v ANN, b. about 1601 (aged 30 in 1631 [Waters 520]); m. (1) by about 1620 _____ Samborne; m. (2) Strood, Kent, 20 January 1631/2 Henry Atkinson. vi THEODATE, b. say 1610; m. by about 1635 CHRISTOPHER HUSSEY. ASSOCIATIONS: RICHARD DUMMER of Roxbury and Newbury married first Jane Mason, a daughter of Reverend Thomas Mason, and resided late in his life at North Stoneham, Hampshire; Stephen Bachiler married as his third wife Helena Mason, widow of Reverend Thomas Mason, and resided just before his departure for New England at South Stoneham, Hampshire. These marriages made Bachiler the step-father-in-law of Dummer, and explains their close connection in the activities of the Plough Company. COMMENTS: Stephen Bachiler led a most interesting life, filled with unusual twists and turns far beyond the norm. In the ensuing paragraphs we take a chronological tour of his nine decades, attempting along the way to resolve certain problems of interpretation. As noted above, Stephen Bachiler entered college about 1581, and received his B.A. in 1586. On 17 July 1587 he was presented as vicar of Wherwell, Hampshire, and remained at that parish until he was ejected in 1605 [NEHGR 46:60-61, citing Winchester diocesan records]. Bachiler began his long career of contrariety as early as 1593, when he was cited in Star Chamber for having "uttered in a sermon at Newbury very lewd speeches tending seditiously to the derogation of her Majesty's government" [NEHGR 74:319-20]. Upon the accession of James I as King of England, nearly a hundred ministers were deprived of their benefices between the years 1604 and 1609, and among these, as noted above, was Stephen Bachiler [Kenneth Fincham, Prelate as Pastor: The Episcopate of James I (Oxford 1990), p. 326]. Bachiler was living at Wherwell late in 1606 when he was a legatee in the will of Henry Shipton [NEHGR 74:320]. A case in Star Chamber in 1614 still refers to Bachiler as of Wherwell, and adds much other useful information about the family. George Wighley, a minster and Oxford graduate, accused Stephen Bachiler of Wherwell, clerk, Stephen Bachiler, his son, John Bate of Wherwell, clerk, and others of libelling him, by means of verses ridiculing him. In the course of the complaint Wighley quotes John Bate as saying he would keep a copy of the poem "as a monument of his cousin's the said Stephen Bacheler the younger his wit, who is in truth his cousin" [Star Chamber Proc. James I 297/25, 1614]. Another suit, this time in the Court of Requests, although not entered until 1639, bears directly on many points in Stephen Bachiler's life in England, and will be treated here, out of chronological order. In 1639 Henry Atkinson of London, gent., complained that five or six years before John Bate, gent., living in Holland, had borrowed £4 from "Samuel Bachiler late of Gorcem [i.e., Gorcum] in Holland aforesaid Minister," after which Bate instructed Bachiler to collect the debt from Dorcas Bate, mother of John, and widow of Reverend John Bate, minister, deceased. Bachiler assigned the debt to Atkinson, who had married Bachiler's sister, and Atkinson was unable to collect the debt from Dorcas Bate. John Bate had also borrowed money from "Nathaniell Bachiler of Southampton Merchant (one other of the brothers of your subject's wife)" and this debt had also been assigned to Atkinson to collect from Dorcas Bate. The latter was abetted in avoiding payment of the debt by her son Gabriel Bate, and her son-in-law and daughter Robert and Anne Southwood. Atkinson noted that his wife's father [i.e., Reverend Stephen Bachiler] had obtained the living of Wherwell for John Bate the father, and that the latter had refused to pay to the former twenty marks a year out of the living or benefice, as had been agreed [PRO REQ2/678/64]. On 28 April 1614 Stephen Bachiler was a free suitor of Newton Stacey at the view of frankpledge of the Barton Stacey Manorial Court, and was a free suitor of Barton Stacey at the court of 2 October 1615. On 19 February 1615[/6?] Edmund Alleyn of Hatfield Peverell, Essex, bequeathed £5 to "Mr. Bachelour," and Stephen Bachiler was one of the witnesses [Waters 518-19]. On 11 June 1621 Adam Winthrop, father of Governor JOHN WINTHROP, reported that "Mr. Bachelour the preacher dined with us" at Groton, Suffolk [WP 1:235]. Although this might conceivably be the younger Stephen Bachiler, who had been ordained as a deacon late in 1613, the man referred to in these records is more likely the elder Stephen. Since he is well recorded as a resident of Newton Stacey both before and after this time, he must have made occasional visits to East Anglia. The Hampshire feet of fines show that "Stephen Bachiler, clerk," acquired land in Newton Stacey in 1622 and 1629, and sold it in 1630 and 1631 [Batchelder Gen 76-77]. While at Newton Stacey (a village within the parish of Barton Stacey) Bachiler had managed to incite the parishioners of Barton Stacey to acts that came to the attention of the sheriff, who petitioned for redress to the King in Council; the complaint described Bachiler as "a notorious inconformist" [NEHGR 46:62, citing Domestic Calendar of State Papers, 1635]. In summary, while there are gaps in the English career of Bachiler, it would appear that he lived at Wherwell for most of the years from his induction there in 1587 until 1614, and that he then resided in Newton Stacey from 1614 until 1631, shortly before his departure for New England. Bachiler apparently lived briefly at South Stoneham, Hampshire, after disposing of his land at Newton Stacey, for that is the residence he gave for himself and wife on 23 June 1631 when he was applying for permission to travel to Flushing in Holland "to visit their sons and daughters" [Waters 520]. At about this same time Stephen Bachiler allied himself with a group of London merchants to form the Plough Company, which had obtained a grant of land in the neighborhood of Saco. The Plough Company managed to send two groups of settlers to New England, in the Plough in 1631 and the William & Francis in 1632, but they were never able to occupy their patent, and the company soon failed. (For a full account of this ill-starred enterprise, see V.C. Sanborn, "Stephen Bachiler and the Plough Company of 1630," The Genealogist, New Series, 19 [1903]:270-84, and the sources cited there.) Shortly after his arrival in New England in 1632, Stephen Bachiler settled at Saugus (later to be called Lynn), where he immediately began to organize a church. Over the next four years Bachiler and a portion of his congregation were repeatedly at odds with the rest of the congregation and with the colony authorities, and by early 1636 Bachiler had ceased to minister at Lynn [GMN 1:20]. In addition to this ongoing conflict (which became a recurring feature of Bachiler's career in New England), two stories of dubious validity are associated with his stay at Lynn. First, a fictional diary describes at length Bachiler's physical appearance, to the extent of informing us that he had "an unseemly wen on the side of his nose which presses that member in an unshapely way"; this is just part of the imaginative invention of Obadiah Redpath (a pseudonym of James R. Newhall, whose non-fictional writings were not much more reliable) [Lin: or, Notable People and Notable Things in the Early History of Lynn ... (Lynn 1890, earlier editions of which carried the title Lin: or, Jewels of the Third Plantation), p. 65]. Second, this same source, and others, relate the following story: "On the first Sunday at Lynn, four children were baptized. Thomas Newhall, the first white child born in Lynn, was first presented. Mr. Bachiler put him aside, saying
I will baptize my own child first,' meaning Stephen Hussey, his daughter's child, born the same week as Thomas Newhall" [NEHGR 46:158]. There is, in the first place, no contemporary evidence for this event. Then, in the brief list of baptisms apparently performed by Bachiler at Lynn, Newbury, and in his early days at Hampton, the earliest entry is for John Hussey, son of Christopher and Theodate (Bachiler) Hussey, whereas if the above story were true we would expect Stephen Hussey to be at the head of this list. This story would seem to be a typical nineteenth-century creation. After his departure from Lynn, Bachiler is supposed to have resided in Ipswich, and to have received a grant of land there in 1636 or 1637, but no contemporary evidence for this has been found. Bachiler's next adventure occurred in the winter of 1637/8, for Winthrop tells us in his journal, in an entry made in late March of that year, that "Another plantation was now in hand at Mattakeese [Yarmouth], six miles beyond Sandwich. The undertaker of this was one Mr. Batchellor, late pastor of Sagus, (since called Lynn), being about seventy-six years of age; yet he walked thither on foot in a very hard season. He and his company, being all poor men, finding the difficulty, gave it over, and others undertook it" [WJ 1:313]. Bachiler then resided for about a year at Newbury, where he received a grant of land on 6 July 1638. Bachiler also seems to have been able to organize a church at Newbury (or to keep in existence the church that he had earlier organized at Lynn). In a letter dated 26 February 1643/4 the minister, recounting his various experiences in New England, told how "the Lord shoved me thence [i.e., after his arrival in 1632, and the failure of the Plough Company] by another calling to Sagust, then, from Sagust to Newbury, then from Newbury to Hampton" [WP 4:447]. Later in 1644 Winthrop pointed out that "Mr. Batchellor had been in three places before, and through his means, as was supposed, the churches fell to such divisions, as no peace could be till he was removed" [WJ 2:216-17]. These records indicate that Bachiler headed churches in three towns (Lynn, Newbury and Hampton), or possibly that the church organized in Lynn had a continuous existence as it moved to Newbury and then to Hampton [see GMN 4:20-21 for a more detailed discussion of these possibilities]. In the summer of 1639 Stephen Bachiler and some other families, many of them from Newbury, began the settlement of Hampton, and Bachiler was soon joined there by Reverend Timothy Dalton, who shared the pulpit with him. As had happened throughout his life, controversy soon arose. In 1641 Winthrop reported that Bachiler "being about 80 years of age, and having a lusty comely woman to his wife, did solicit the chastity of his neighbor's wife" [WJ 2:53], and this led to an attack on him by Dalton and a large portion of the Hampton congregation. These charges were apparently not resolved at the time, but in 1643-4, when the town of Exeter invited Bachiler to be their minister, the affair was raised again, and this was sufficient to prevent his removal to that church [GMN 4:21-22]. At about this time Bachiler's ministry at Hampton ceased, and he soon moved to Strawberry Bank [Portsmouth], where he remained until his return to England. On 9 April 1650 at a Quarterly Court held at Salisbury, "Mr. Steven Bacheller [was] fined for not publishing his marriage according to law." At the same court it was ordered "that Mr. Bacherler and Mary his wife shall live together, as they publicly agreed to do, and if either desert the other, the marshal to take them to Boston to be kept until next quarter Court of Assistants, to consider a divorce.... In case Mary Bacheller live out of this jurisdiction without mutual consent for a time, notice of her absence to be given the magistrates at Boston" [EQC 1:191]. On 15 October 1650 at a court at York "George Rodgers & Mrs. Batcheller [were] presented upon vehement suspicion of incontinency for living in one house together & lying in one room" [MPCR 1:146]. At a court at Piscataqua [i.e., Kittery] on 16 October 1651 the grand jury presented "George Rogers for, & Mary Batcheller the wife of Mr. Steven Bacheller minister for adultery"; George Rogers was to have forty strokes, and Mary Bachiler "for her adultery shall receive 40 strokes save one at the first town meeting held at Kittery six weeks after the delivery & be branded with the letter A" [MPCR 1:164]. This child born late in 1651 or early in 1652 was apparently the Mary Bachiler who later married William Richards, and even though the Dover Court on 26 March 1673 awarded him administration of the estate of Stephen Bachiler [NHPP 40:287], she would not have been his daughter. (See MA Arch 9:28 and NHGR 8:14 for more on Bachiler's fourth wife.) Stephen Bachiler returned to England after these events, and most secondary sources claim that he made that trip in 1654 when his grandson Stephen Samborne returned to England. On 2 October 1650 "Steven Bachiler" witnessed a deed between Christopher Hussey (grantor) and Steven Sanborn and Samuel Fogg (grantees) [NLR 1:19]; this is the last certain record of Bachiler in New England (unless the "Mr. Batchelder" who was presented at court on 28 June 1652 for being illegally at the house of John Webster is our man [NHPP 40:87-88]). Although a number of records in New England between 1651 and 1654 mentioned Stephen Bachiler, none of them necessarily implies that Bachiler was still in New England, and a few indicate that he was not in close proximity to the courts in question. In a court held at Hampton on 7 October 1651, Francis Pebodie sued Tho[mas] Bradbury for "issuing an illegal execution, for or in behalf of Mr. Batcheller, against the town of Hampton" [EQC 1:236]. On 14 October 1651 the Massachusetts Bay General Court ordered that "in answer to a petition preferred by several of the inhabitants of Hampton, for relief in respect of unjust molestation from some persons there pretending power for what they do from Mr. Batchelor, it is ordered, that whatsoever goods or lands have been taken away from any of the inhabitants of Hampton, aforesaid, by Edward Calcord or Joh[n] Sanbourne, upon pretence of being authorized by Mr. Batchelor, either with or without execution, shall be returned to them from whom it was taken, & the execution to be called in, & no more to be granted until there appear sufficient power from Mr. Batchelor to recover the same, to the County Courts, either of Salsbury or Hampton" [MBCR 3:253]. Apparently John Sanborn and others were pursuing the interests of Stephen Bachiler in his absence, but without a proper power of attorney. It might be argued that he was in Strawberry Bank [Portsmouth], but unable to come to Hampton, but there is no indication that he was ill or unable to travel at any time in his long life, and the more likely explanation is that he was already in England by October of 1651. At a court held at Hampton on 3 October 1654 "Mr. Batcheller's letter of attorney to Mr. Christopher Hussie [was] approved" [EQC 1:372]. Most secondary sources state that Bachiler died at Hackney in England in 1660, but more recent research has shown that Stephen Bachiler died in London and was buried on 31 October 1656 [NHGR 8:14-17]. Among many remarkable lives lived by early New Englanders, Bachiler's is the most remarkable. From 1593, when he was cited before Star Chamber, until 1654, when he last makes a mark on New England records, this man lived a completely independent and vigorous life, never acceding to any authority when he thought he was correct. Along with Nathaniel Ward of Ipswich, Stephen Bachiler was one of the few Puritan ministers active in Elizabethan times to survive to come to New England. As such he was a man out of his times, for Puritanism in Elizabethan times was different from what it became in the following century, and this disjunction may in part account for Bachiler's stormy career in New England [Simon P. Newman, "Nathaniel Ward, 1580-1652: An Elizabethan Puritan in a Jacobean World," EIHC 127:313-26]. But Nathaniel Ward did not have anything like as much trouble, and most of Bachiler's conflicts may be ascribed to his own unique character. Savage includes among the children of Stephen Bachiler sons Francis and Henry, for whom there is no evidence. These phantom sons derive in part from a misinterpretation of a 1685 letter from Stephen Bachiler to Nathaniel Bachiler [Batchelder Gen 110-11], which refers to "our brother Francis Bachlir." As the two correspondents are grandsons of the Reverend Stephen (sons of his son Nathaniel) and not sons, it follows that Francis Bachiler was also a grandson. Of the known children of Stephen Bachiler, only Theodate and Deborah came to New England. CHRISTOPHER HUSSEY is supposed to have married Theodate Bachiler in England and to have sailed to New England in 1632 with his father-in-law, but, as will be analyzed in more detail in the treatment of Hussey himself, there is no evidence that he was in New England before 1633, and it may be that his marriage to Theodate did not occur until 1635. Deborah Bachiler married John Wing, and after his death came to New England with her children, in the late 1630s. Ann Bachiler married a Samborne, and eventually her three Samborne sons joined their grandfather at Hampton, although the date of their arrival is not known. Stephen's son Nathaniel did not come to New England, but Nathaniel's son Nathaniel did. The Reverend Stephen's two other sons, Stephen and Samuel, did not come to New England, nor, apparently, did any of their children. BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE: In 1892 Charles E. Batchelder published a four-part study of Reverend Stephen Bachiler [NEHGR 46:58-64, 157-61, 246-51, 345-50]. For the most part this is a simple chronological presentation of the evidence available at that date. In the third installment, however, the author devotes much space to a spirited but unconvincing defense of Bachiler against the claim made by Winthrop that one of the grounds of the Hampton church's dispute with Bachiler was an attempt "to solicit the chastity of his neighbor's wife." In 1898 Frederick Clifton Pierce published Batchelder, Batcheller Genealogy. Descendants of Rev. Stephen Bachiler, of England, a Leading Non-conformist, Who Settled the Town of New Hampton, N.H. and Joseph, Henry, Joshua and John Batcheller of Essex Co., Massachusetts (Chicago 1898), cited in this sketch as Batchelder Gen. This volume includes a long sketch of Stephen Bachiler (pp. 75-115 [including the accounts of his children]), which, as is typical with this author, contains much information of dubious validity, very poorly organized. Embedded in the list of the immigrant's children, between the daughter Deborah and the son Stephen, are several accounts of Reverend Stephen Bachiler prepared by other authors, mostly published in various town histories [Batchelder Gen 95-109]. Since the three Samborne brothers of Hampton and all their descendants are also descendants of Reverend Stephen Bachiler, V.C. Sanborn, when he compiled the Sanborn genealogy, included an account of Bachiler's life [Genealogy of the Family of Samborne or Sanborn in England and America. 1194-1898 (n.p. 1899), pp. 59-66]. Like all of his work, Sanborn's writing on Bachiler is careful and accurate. A curious book published in London in 1661 included a supposed coat of arms for Stephen Bachiler, which included a punning reference to the Plough Company (Sylvanus Morgan, The Sphere of Gentry: Deduced from the Principles of Nature, An Historical and Genealogical Work, of Arms and Blazon ..., pp.102-03). This was certainly not a properly granted coat of arms, but something invented by the author for his own literary purposes.

Noted events in his life were:

• Hampton, New Hampshire: Monument in Founders Park. As full time RVers we spent the summer of 1997 in Wells, Maine, about 40 miles north of Hampton, New Hampshire. We drove down there one day and had a look around Founders Park. It is a small park in the shape of a triangle in the south east part of town bounded by Park Ave., Landing Road, and Cuss Lane. The perimeter of the park is lined with small stones about two feet tall with a small plaque with the name of each founding family who had settled in Hampton prior to 1700. I checked and found my ancestor Hussey and Perkins stones. In the center of the park is a large stone. According to the photographs I took, it is over seven feet tall. It has a large plaque that contains the following, "A little band of pioneers under the leadership of Reverend Stephen Batchelder of South Ampton, England seeking a larger liberty in October 1638 settled in the wilderness near this spot to plant a free church in a free town. They were joined in 1639 by others and in that year the town was incorporated. To do honor the founders and fathers of Hampton to exhalt the ideals for which they strove and as an inspiration to posterity this memorial is dedicated. October 16, 1925."

Stephen married Ann Bate in 1586 in , Hampton, New Hampshire. Ann was born about 1565 in Of, Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died in , , , England.

Children from this marriage were:

129       i.  Theodate Batchelder (born in 1596 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England - died on 20 Oct 1649 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire)

         ii.  Nathaniel Batchiler was born about 1590 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died in 1645 in , , , England about age 55.

        iii.  Deborah Bachiler was born in 1592 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England.

         iv.  Stephen Bachiler was born in 1594 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England.

          v.  Samuel Bachiler was born from 1596 to 1597 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England.

         vi.  Nathaniel Bachiler was born about 1600 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire.

        vii.  Anne Bachelder was born in 1601 of Hampshire, Hampton, England.

       viii.  Francis Bachiler was born about 1603.

         ix.  John Bachiler was born about 1605 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England.

          x.  William Bachiler was born about 1607 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England.

         xi.  Henry Bachiler was born about 1609 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England.

Stephen next married Helena (Or Mason) Masom on 26 Mar 1627. Helena was born in 1583 and died before 3 May 1647.

General Notes: From page 143 of The Clark and worth Families, page 143, ... when in idiom of the day he (Stephen Bathcelder) referred to her as "a comely and lusty Wife" and "my dear helper and yoke fellow".

Stephen next married Mary (Widow Beedle) Bailey about 1648 in Portsmouth, , New Hampshire.

General Notes: From page 143 of The Clark and worth Families, page 143: About 1648, at 87, he married, at Portsmouth, his housekeeper, Mrs. Mary Beedle, the widow of Robert Beedle. Mr. Batchelder was fined in 1650 for failing to publish this marriage as the law demanded. The following year Mary was accused of adultrery and she and her lover were sentenced to be whipped.

Stephen next married Christian Weare on 2 Mar 1623/24 in Abbots-Ann, , England.


259. Ann Bate was born about 1565 in Of, Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died in , , , England.

Ann married Stephen Batchelder Reverend 7 in 1586 in , Hampton, New Hampshire. Stephen was born from 1560 to 1561 in Wherwell, Hampshire, England and died in 1656 in London, Middlessex, England at age 96.

260. Issache Perkyns, son of Thomas Perkins and Alice Kebble, died on 1 Dec 1629.

General Notes: Source: Ancestors and Descendants of JEHU COX, by Wayne D. Stout. He attributes the Perkins "sketchy pedegree" to an unpublished manuscript entitled the Perkins Family by M. L. Marston, found in the New England Genealogical Library at Boston in 1950. This source only identified one son, Isaac, b. 1611.

The spelling of this name was provided by Lillian Etter of the San Diego Family History Center, whose husband, William Eller, is a descendent of the Perkins line.

Susanne Braryer provided me with a reference to all children other than Abraham.
She quotes Perkyns Family in Ye Olden Times, Mansfied Parkyns, esq. Ancestors of Dudley Wildes 1759-1820 of Topsfield, Mass by Walter Goodwin Davis. This source also identifies the marriages to two different Alices.

http://www.hampton.lib.nh.us/genealog/d0003/g0000763.html#I10192

Dow reports that tradition, unverifiable though it may be, indicates that Abraham and Isaac were brothers. They arrived in Hampton at or about the same time. The lots assigned to them were adjacent to one another. GDMNH, without adding more detail, declares them to be brothers.

Additional sources: Noyes/Libby/Davis, "Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire," (1939), pg. 541;

Roberts, Gary Boyd, "Ancestors of American Presidents," (1995, N.E.H.G.S. & Boyer), pgs. 167 and 241 (chart), for identity of this Isaac who was "of Ipswich," Essex, Mass. in 1639).

Issache married Alice about 1596. Alice was buried on 17 Jun 1603 in Hillmorton, , England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Sara Perkins was born in 1594.

         ii.  Marie Perkins was born in 1598.

        iii.  Thomas Perkins was born from 1601 to 1602.

         iv.  Elizabeth Perkins was born in 1600.

          v.  Abraham Perkins 7 was born about 1603 of Hillmorton, Warwick, England and died on 31 Aug 1683 about age 80.

Issache next married Alice before 1604-1605.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Jacob Perkins was born from 1605 to 1606.

         ii.  Abigail Perkins was born in 1607.

130     iii.  Isaac Perkins 7 (christened on 26 Jan 1610/11, born in Hillmorton, , England - died on 13 Nov 1685 in Hampton, , New Hampshire)

         iv.  Hannah Perkins was born in 1614.

          v.  Lydia Perkins was born from 1617 to 1618.

         vi.  Mary Perkins was born in 1621.


261. Alice .

Alice married Issache Perkyns before 1604-1605. Issache died on 1 Dec 1629.

262. Humphrey Wise was born of Ipswich, , Massachusetts.

General Notes: Source: Hopkinson and Allied Families, 1965.

The name Wise has had many variations of spelling, Wyeth, Withe, Wyth, Wisse, Wyse, etc.

Humphrey Wise, the immigrant, was living in Ipswich, Massachusetts in 1635, although we do not know just when he came to America. He had a one acre house lot on the south side of the river, and apparently owned other property. His wife's name was Susanna (Susan), but her surname is not known. Humphrey lived in New England for a short time as he died in 1638; subsequently little information is available about him. He did not leave a will.

After Humphrey's death Susanna married secondly in 1639, Samuel Greenfield of Salem, who was later accused by the court of having taken into his possession without legal order, the property which had belonged to Humphrey. On Jan. 13, 1639, the General Court of Boston ordered the Court at Ipswich "to examine and settle all things belonging to the estate of Humfrey Wisse, including all the land sold and unsold." The Ipswich Court on Jan. 26, 1639, asked for an inventory of the estate which amounted to about 140 lbs. Mr. Greenfield must have been able to convince the court of his honesty, as it approved the sale of the house and land and such other sales as had already been made, and appointed him as administrator of the estate. He gave bond to handle the money and to bring up the five minor children until the boys were 21 and the girls 18 years of age, at which time each was to receive a cretain portion of the estate.

The court further agreed that with the consent of Samuel Greenfield and Susan, his wife, that Benjamin the oldest boy, should be apprenticed to his brother-in-law, Abraham Perkins, for seven years from Sept. 29, 1638. Since the apprenticeship was dated back it is probable that Benjamin had been living with his sister, Mary, since that date.

Humphrey and Susanna had eight children, all or most of whom must have been born in England. We do not have their birthdates or order of their births, except that the last five named were minors at the time of their father's death. The three oldest were apparently married and had received their share of the estate before Humphrey's death.

Humphrey married Susan Tidd. Susan was born about 1592 and was buried about 1678.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Abigail Wise was born before 1620.

         ii.  Mary Wyeth was born about 1618 and died on 29 May 1706 about age 88.

131     iii.  Susanna Wise (born about 1614 in Hillmorton, , England - died in 1699 in , New Castle, Delaware)

         iv.  Benjamin Wise was born about 1616.

          v.  Joseph Wise was born about 1618.

         vi.  Edmund Wise was born about 1620.

        vii.  Emma Wise was born after 1620.

       viii.  Ann Wise was born about 1624.

         ix.  Alice Wise was born in 1628 and died in 1657 at age 29.


263. Susan Tidd was born about 1592 and was buried about 1678.

Susan married Humphrey Wise. Humphrey was born of Ipswich, , Massachusetts.

288. William Alias Jessop Sonier, son of William Jessop and Unknown, died after 1650.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

William Sonier alias Jessop, son of William, was baptized at Kirkburton parish, Yorkshire, England 5 April 1579. He died at Great Lepton, Yorkshire, a joyner or carpenter-cabinet maker, leaving a will dated 13 February 1649 (our year 1650). His wife who predeceased him was Dorthy Ireland, the daughter of Laurance and Jenet (Brodhed) Ireland, married at Kirkburton 14 February 1601/2. A Henry Irelande and Margareta Malynson were married in Kirkburton in September 1544, but there is no record of a Laurance baptism. Dorothy Ireland was baptized at Kirkburton 21 May 1580 and was buried there 15 May 1649, a widow. William, the father of William, has not been identified. The sparsity of records, the presence of more than one william of the same era in the same area makes identification uncertain. Surnames were just settling into common usage in this section of rural Yorkshire and parish records contain many alias names as well as indication of considerable childbirth outside recognized wedlock.

William married Dorothy Ireland on 14 Feb 1601/02 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England. Dorothy was buried on 15 May 1649 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

144       i.  Thomas Jessope (born from 1602 to 1603, christened Kirkburton, , England)

         ii.  William Jessop died before 1649.

        iii.  Elizabeth Jessop

         iv.  John Alias Jessop Sonyer

          v.  Joseph Jessop was born of Shelley, Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England and died after 15 Oct 1650.


289. Dorothy Ireland, daughter of Laurance Ireland and Jenet Brodhed, was buried on 15 May 1649 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England.

Dorothy married William Alias Jessop Sonier on 14 Feb 1601/02 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England. William died after 1650.

296. Thomas Pease, son of William Pease and Alice Clyffe, was buried on 16 Jan 1643/44 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

Thomas Pease was baptized at Fishlake, county York, 20 April 1572. He was probably the Thomas who was buried 16 January 1644 at Fishlake. He married, first, at Fishlake 18 Nov. 1604 Alice Guddridge who may have died in November 1606 when a daughter (Elizabeth) was born. He married, second Anna Beamond, 2 February 1606/7 at Fishlake.

Thomas married Anna Beamond on 2 Feb 1606/07 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Nicholas Pease was buried on 18 Mar 1627/28 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

         ii.  Isabella Pease was buried on 17 Aug 1615 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

        iii.  Thomas Pease

         iv.  John Pease

148       v.  William Pease (christened on 5 Sep 1619 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England)


297. Anna Beamond .

Anna married Thomas Pease on 2 Feb 1606/07 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England. Thomas was buried on 16 Jan 1643/44 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

308. William Hollowell, son of John Hollowell and Isabel Garfield, was born on 27 Jan 1591/92 in Ashby St., Ledger, Northamptonshire, England and died in 1645 in Flore, Northamptonshire, England at age 53.

William married Unknown about 1622.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Hollowell was born about 1623 in Flore, Northamptonshire, England.

154      ii.  Thomas Hollowell Sr. (born about 1625 in , Lancashire, England - died in 1687 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia)

        iii.  William Hollowell was born about 1627 in Flore, Northamptonshire, England.


309. Unknown .

Unknown married William Hollowell about 1622. William was born on 27 Jan 1591/92 in Ashby St., Ledger, Northamptonshire, England and died in 1645 in Flore, Northamptonshire, England at age 53.

332. William Clare was born in 1614 in , , , Scotland.

William married William Clare Mrs. about 1635 in Scotland. William was born about 1618 in Scotland.

Children from this marriage were:

166       i.  Timothy Clare (born in 1642 in , , , Scotland - died on 10 Nov 1724 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

         ii.  Jane Clare was born about 1640 in Scotland and died in 1701 in North Carolina about age 61.


333. William Clare Mrs. was born about 1618 in Scotland.

William married William Clare about 1635 in Scotland. William was born in 1614 in , , , Scotland.

334. William Bundy was born about 1630 in , , , England and died on 27 Mar 1692 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 62.

William married Elizabeth in 1663. Elizabeth was born about 1640 in , , , England and died on 4 Mar 1675/76 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 36.

Children from this marriage were:

167       i.  Mary Bundy (born about 1665 in , , Virginia - died on 30 Dec 1694 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

         ii.  Caleb Bundy was born in 1667 in , , North Carolina and died on 1 Mar 1720/21 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 54.

        iii.  Hannah Bundy was born in 1670 in , , North Carolina and died on 28 Oct 1700 at age 30.

         iv.  William Bundy Jr. was born from 1671 to 1672 in , , North Carolina and died on 28 Jul 1700 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 29.

          v.  Samuel Bundy was born on 4 Feb 1676/77 in , , North Carolina and died on 14 Mar 1739/40 in , Pasquotank, North Carolina at age 63.

William next married Mary Scott Pierce on 15 Dec 1683. Mary was born about 1640.

General Notes: !PAF, FHL, 6 September 1994


335. Elizabeth was born about 1640 in , , , England and died on 4 Mar 1675/76 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 36.

Elizabeth married William Bundy in 1663. William was born about 1630 in , , , England and died on 27 Mar 1692 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 62.

336. William Newby was born before 1592 in Probably In, Northumberland, England.

General Notes: In April 1995 Larry M. Bell, 9932 Old Lincoln Trail, Fairview Heights, IL 62208 (618) 235-7743, provided me (RCL) a package of Newby information that contained several new sources. Included was:

- Extracts from Birth, Marriage, Death Registers - Dublin.
- Isabella Roddom's will (mentions Nathan and Gabriel).
- List of subscribers for a Meeting House, Dublin, 1685.
- John Newby family list.
- Register photocopies.
- "The Newbys of England and Ireland" by Wm. Perry Johnson, 1962.
- His son Nicholas' ahnentafel.
- "The Newby Family from Wm. to Emra 1637-1981" by Larry Bell, July 1992.
- "William Newby Family" by Clifford Hardin.

Unfortunately, there is little information or quotation of source for this earliest Newby. All that is said is that he was born before 1592 probably in County Northumberland, England. From this baptismal records of his children in Easington, County Durham, England, there were other Newbys present therein the early 1600s, e.g., Thomas Newbie, Marola (?) Newbie, Nicholas Newbie, Juliana Newbie.

William married someone.

His children were:

          i.  John Newby died in 1691 in Dublin, , Ireland.

168      ii.  Ralph Newby (christened on 14 Mar 1611/12, born in , , , England - died in Mar 1681/82, buried in Stephens Green, Near Dublin, Ireland)

        iii.  Alice Newby was born in , , , England.

         iv.  Rachel Newby


368. John Ellyson was born in Windyedge, Lanark, Scotland.

General Notes: Source: The Complete Book of Emigrants, 1607 - 1660, Peter Wilson Coldham 1987

At Archer's Hope, living on 16 February 1624: John Elison; Elison's wife; ... Dead at Archer's Hope 1624. George Ellison, a child.

Archer's Hope, James City (20 January - 7 February. Muster of the inhabitants of Virginia. [Ages are shown after the name followed by ship and date of arrival - where these are given].) John Ellison by Prosperous; Ellin his wife b Charity; servant John Badeley 24 by Hopewell 1623. Coincidental is that Robert Crew 23, a servant to Thomas Bransby, came to Archer's Hope, James City, on the Marmaduke in 1623.

Elizabeth City - 7 February 1625. William Ellison 44 by Swan 1624 is a servant of Mary Salford 24 by Bono Nova 1620.

18 July 1649. Deposition by Thomas Thrasher, citizen and draper of London, aged 51, made at the request of of Captain John Ellison and his wife Susanne, widow and executrix of Captain John Hayes who died in Barbados, that in February 1642 the deponent saw sugar delivered in London by the Green Dragon, Mr. Michael Wright, for the account of Hayes.

Source: Barbara Petty (Prodigy GRTF63A), 1992.

One good book (for Ellyson research) is Tidewater Virginia Families by Virginia Huchenson Davis, and another is Maryland Virginia Colonoials by Dolinite. However, another genealogy from SC "Mills-Smith A South Carolina Family" by Laurens Tenney Mills lists the Bible pages of Elizabeth Ellyson Erwin of SC where she listed her lineage in the latter part of the 1700s and it takes the Ellysons back to a John Ellyson and his wife Ellin Hamilton of Lanark Scotland. John came to Va. in 1610, and his wife followed about 1615/16 and they lived at Archer's Hope at Jamestown.

Roy, Here is some information from a genealogy by Laurens Tenney Mills called "A South Carolina Family: Mills-Smith and Related Lines" with an addenda by Lilla Mills Hawes and Sarah Mills Norton, copyright 1960, pg. 64:

Bible Records. Elizabeth Allison Ervin's Bible (In 1958 copy of this record obtained from Miss Julia Ervin, Rt. 3, Darlington, S.C. - note: this Bible disappeared after her death. Lillian Etter thinks that the family of Sen. Sam Ervin might possibly have it).

This Bible (printed in London by Robt. Barker, 1613) has no secton for births, marriages, deaths, but she used blank page to record the following:

My father, Robert Allison, passed 1772. (the name during long years has been/spelt, Allyson, Ellison, Elison, Allison, etc.) My mother was Mary Lide or LLoyd,(drt. to Robt. Lloyd from Wales to Penn. abt 1683.) My grparents were John Allison/and Elizabeth Matthews of Va. He being son of Robt. and Ann Myhill. He being son of/ Capt. Robt. Allison & Hannah Gerard of Maryland & Va. He being son of Robt. Allison/ & Sarah Spence of V. He Being son of John Allison, Ellyson b. Windyedge/Lanark, Scotland, who marr'd with Ellin Hamilton came to Va. in early days bef." 1625. The first ones of our family lived in Va. & Maryland/

These Bible pages are the only thing I've found so far to take the Ellyson family back that far. In "Tidewater Virginia Families: A Social History" by Virginia Lee Hutcheson Davis, printed in 1989 and since reprinted by Gen. Pub. Co. She could only go back as far as Robert 3. Sharon Doliante wrote "Maryland and Virginia Colonials:" and it was pub. by Gen. Pub. Co.abt 1990- same thing.

Our line is through Robert Ellyson (3) and wife either Hannah or Elizabeth [as an Eliz. was in the vicinity and is thought to have been his wife], then to Gerrard Robert (4) and wife Anne Myhill, then to Gerrard Robert (5) and wife Sarah _____., then to Agatha who married John Crew Jr. Our line would split with that on Mrs. Irvin after Robert Allison and Anne Myhill and our line continues as Quakers. I don't think her John Allison of the fourth generation were Quakers. There is much controversy waging as to just who the wife of Robt Ellyson was (Hannah of the Bible record or Elizabeth). It is also thought by some that she was a dau. of Dr. Thomas Gerrard of Maryland and later of Va. However his dau Eliz. is said to have married 3 times, none of her husbands having been an Ellyson! Gerrard also had a dau. Susannah who is on the A.F.as wife of Robt. Ellyson. But she also marr. twice, and was line continues as Quakers. I don't think her John Allison of the fourth generation were Quakers. There is much controversy waging as to just who the wife of Robt Ellyson was (Hannah of the Bible record or Elizabeth). It is also thought by some that she was a dau. of Dr. Thomas Gerrard of Maryland and later of Va. However his dau Eliz. is said to have married 3 times, none of her husbands having been an Ellyson! Gerrard also had a dau. Susannah who is on the A.F.as wife of Robt. Ellyson. But she also marr. twice, and was married at the time when she might have been marr. to Ellyson, to Robt. Slye of Maryland. Another gen. has stated that Hannah Gerrard was the dau. of a Samuel and Jane Gerrard, who were Quakers and in the records in 1699, and who came as French Huguenots to Va. I'm suspicious of this, as they would have been pretty ancient and doubt they might have still been alive in 1699, if parents of Hannah. That gen. is "Genealogy of the Gordon-Macy Hiddleston-Curtis and Allied Families" by Jessie Gordon Flack and Maybell Gordon Carman pub. 1967 privately. The only sources they cite for this are: Hinshaw's Ency; Genealogy of the Macy Family by Joel Munsell, 1868; Lineage Books of Daughters of the American Colonists, IV,119, "Robert Elyson was Burgess from James City County, Virginia, sheriff, and in 1656/63 rank of Capt."

John married Ellin Hamilton before 1625. Ellin was born in , , , Scotland.

The child from this marriage was:

184       i.  Robert Of Newcastle Ellyson (born about 1589 in Of, , Virginia - died in 1656)


369. Ellin Hamilton was born in , , , Scotland.

General Notes: From: [email protected] Date: Wed, 19 Jul 2000 22:49:15 EDT

Roy, Have you been able to take the Ellyson line back any farther in Scotland? My friend, Kathy, who is a descendant of John and Ellin Hamilton Ellyson is hoping I can find an ancestral home or something equally as exciting. Also, I found one source that says that Ellin's father was Sir Robert Hamilton. Do you agree and have you a location for him? Thanks! Brenda

Ellin married John Ellyson before 1625. John was born in Windyedge, Lanark, Scotland.

372. John Gerard, son of Thomas Gerard and Jane, was born of New Hall, , England.

General Notes: Source: The Founders of the Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, Vol 1, p348.

John married Isabell.

Children from this marriage were:

186       i.  Thomas Gerard (born on 10 Dec 1608 in New Hall, Lancashire, England - died before Dec 1673 in , Westmoreland, Virginia)

         ii.  Marmaduke Gerard

        iii.  William Gerard

         iv.  Francis Gerard

          v.  Richard Gerard


373. Isabell .

Isabell married John Gerard. John was born of New Hall, , England.

374. John Snowe was born of Brookehouse, Chedulton, England.

General Notes: Source: The Founders of the Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, Vol 1, p348.

John married someone.

His children were:

          i.  Abel Snowe

         ii.  Justinian Snowe

        iii.  Marmaduke Snowe

187      iv.  Susannah Snowe (born about 1610 - died in , , Maryland)


428. Henry Watkins, son of Henry Watkins and Alice Moslin, was born in 1637 in Malvern Hills, Henrico, Virginia and died in 1717 in Malvern Hills, Henrico, Virginia at age 80.

General Notes: Source: The Curd Family in America, The Tuttle Publishing Co.

Henry Watkins of Henrico Co., Va, presumably the immigrant ancestor was b. in 1638. He was a Quaker and member of the Society of Friends, a fact that caused him at times to clash with the ruling authorities in Virginia. In the list of heads of families in Henrico County, 1679, he is listed as head of family with three tithables and shown as living in the vicinity of Turkey Island. In 1679 he received a patent for 170 acres of land on the north side of James River in Henrico Co. adjoining land of John Lewis, Mr. Cocke, and Mr. Beauchamp, and touching the 'three runs' of Turkey Island Creek (patent book 7, p. 17). In July 1690 he purchased of Lyonel Morris 360 acres of land in varina parish, Henrico Co., on the south side of Chickahominy Swamp, and in October of the same year he patented 60 acres of land "adjoining his own land and touching a run of Turkey Island Creek." In 1699 he subscribed 500 pounds of tobacco towards building the Friends meetinghouse at Curls and in 1703 he paid 50 pounds of tobacco towards finishing the building. He was the father of at least seven childred and in 1692 deeded his land in Henrico to his five sons. To William, Joseph and Edward he deeded each 120 acres of land on the south side of Chickahominy Swamp, to Henry the 'track of land on which his father then lived" acreage not given, and to Thomas 200 acres on the 'three runs.' We quote from William Clayton Torrence, "Beginnings of the Families of Henrico," as follows:

One of the most interesting families in Virginia from the point of view of economic, social and political development is the distinguished family of which Henry Watkins is the immigrant ancestor.

1704 Quit Rents of Virginia lists Henry Sr. with 100 acres in Henrico County.

Source: Henry Watkins of Henrico County, Jane Allen 1985.
That Henry Watkins was the son of Henry, born 1585 in Wales, remains to be proved. However, in 1634/35 there was a deed in which John Cawsey of Charles City County conveyed to Walter Aston acreage in Charles City near Shirly Hundred "bordering south upon a Creeke called Henry Watkins, his Creeke." A Henry Watkins, therefore, lived not more than a few miles from the home in 1679 of Henry, born 1637/8.

Henry Watkins was a small but hard working farmer. As a member of the Society of Friends, or Quakers, he clashed with the authorities.

In 1660 the Virginia Assembly had passed a strict law against Quakers. They were described as:

... an unreasonable and turbulent sort of people, who daily gather together unlawful assemblies of people, teaching lies, miracles, false visions, prophecies, and doctrines teneing to disturb the peace, disorganize Society and destroy the peace, disorganize Society and destroy all laws, and government, and religion.

In June, 1684, the Courts of Henrico refused his petition for a remission of fines imposed upon him "he not appearing himself to supplicate this Court but (as ye Court Conceives) continuing still in his Quakerism."

His daughter Elizabeth also held his loyalty to his faith. At the age of 16 in April, 1685, she refused "for conscience sake" to swear to a deposition she had made. The Henrico County Court ordered her imprisonment. In June she was again brought to the bar and "still persisting in ye same obstinacy as she pretends out of conscience sake and seconding her request the court have out of their clemency in consideration of her young years remiteted her offence and releast her of her confinement."

On 21 January 1691/2, Henry Watkins conveyed 120 acres each to his sons Edward, William, Joseph, Henry, and Thomas near the Chickahominy. He also on 25 Janurary 1691/2 made a gift of land "I now live on" to Henry Watkins and 200 acres to Thomas Watkins.

Henry made his will in November 1714, proved 7 February 1715, Henrico County, Virginia.

Jane Allen has different birthdates for nearly all of the children. She has:
Edward
Henry c.1660
Mary (JA has this Mary married to Nicholas Hutchins.)
William c.1667
Elizabeth c.1669
Rachel c.1670 (Rachel is not included in the Curd text above.)
Thomas c.1680

Here is an interesting message that contains some conflicting, but interesting information:

Area: SEgen ---------------------------------------------------------- "Msg#: 5059 Date: 03-27-95 11:16
From: Betty Harris Read: Yes Replied: No
To: Wiley Jarrell Mark:
Subj: PRIDE
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Henry II Watkins, [1637-abt 1710] s/o Henry I Watkins and Alice Moslin.
He m 1-Rachel Griffin abt 1658 and had 8 ch. He married 2nd Katherine
Pride abt 1680 and perhaps the last 2 children I have for 1st marriage
are Katherine Pride's. Henry was a Quaker and an ancestor of Henry
Clay.

There is a debate about sequence of wives. If you read the Henrico
County Records you will run across Katherine and Henry in court. I have
no certainty about his ancestors. Wish this were more accurate but
happy to have someone add on to it."

Henry married Katherine Pride. Katherine was born about 1642.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  William Watkins was born in 1690.

         ii.  Joseph Watkins was born about 1656 and died about 1725 about age 69.

        iii.  Edward Watkins was born about 1658.

214      iv.  Henry Watkins Jr. (born in 1660 in Malvern Hills, Virginia - died in Nov 1714-1715 in Henrico Co., Virginia)

          v.  Thomas Watkins was born about 1662.

         vi.  Elizabeth Watkins was born about 1664.

        vii.  Rachel Watkins was born about 1670 in , Henrico, Virginia.


429. Katherine Pride was born about 1642.

General Notes: From: "Prentice Stanley" <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 23:08:30 +0000

Roy;
...

I have much additional information that I'd like to share with you, but I'll have to do it in stages. Following is one of the most interesting, and probably controversial bits to consider.
This regards Katherine (Pride) Watkins, wife of Henry Watkins (b. 1637) and ancestor to us both. Apparently there was a very unsavory court case in Henrico Co., in 1681 involving Katherine. I stumbled on it some years ago in a book citing examples of colonial court cases. I quote a portion of it here:

KATHERINE WATKINS' CASE, 1681.
Henrico County Deed Book, 1677-1692, 192-195

The examination of Katherine Watkins, the wife of Henry Watkins of henrico County in Virginia had and taken this 13 of September 1681 before us William Byrd and John Farrar two of his Majesties Justices of the County aforesaid as followeth (vizt.)
The said Katherine aforesaid on her Oath and examination deposeth, That on fryday being in the Month of August aboute five weeks since, the said Katherine mett with John Long (A Mulatto Belonging to Capt. Thomas Cocke) at or neare the pyney slash betweene the aforesaid Cokes and Henry Watkins house, and at the same tyme and place, the said John threw the said Katherine downe (He starting from behind a tree) and stopped her Mouth with a handkerchief, and tooke up the said Katherines Coates [i.e., petticoats], and putt his yard into her and ravished her; Upon which she the said Katherine Cryed out (as she deposeth) and afterwards (being rexuced by another Negroe of the said Cockes named Jack White) she departed home, and the said John departed to his Masters likewise, or that way; after which abuse she the said Katherine declares that her husband, inclinable to the Quakers, and therefore would not prosecute, and she being sicke and her Children likewise, she therefore did not make her complaint before she went to Lt. Col. Farrass, which was yesterday, morning, and this day in the morning she went to William Randolphs' and found him not at home. But at night met with the gentlemen Justices aforesaid at the house of the aforesaid Cocke in Henrico County in Virginia aforeaid before whom she hath made this complaint upon oath . . .

((my note: and here we get the other side of the story))

The deposition of John Aust aged 32 yeares or thereabouts Deposeth, that on fryday being the twelvth of August or thereabouts he came to the house of Mr. Thomas Cocke, and soe went into his Orchard where his servants were a cutting downe weeds, whoe asked the deponent to stay and drinke, soe the deponent stayed and dranke syder with them, and Jacke a Mulatto of the said Thomas Cocke went in to draw syder, and he stay'd something long whereupon the deponent followed him and coming to the doore where the syder was, heard Katherine the wife of henry Watkins say (Lord) Jacke what makes thee refreaine our house that you come not oftner, for come when thou wilt thou shalt be as well come as any of My owne Children, and soe she tooke him aobut the necke and Kissed him, and Jacke went out and drawed Syder, and she said Jack wilt thout not drinke to me, who sayd yes if you will goe out where our Cupp is, and a little after she came out, where the said Thomas Cockes negroes were a drinking and there dranke cupp for cupp with them (as others there did) and as she sett Negroe dirke passing by her she tooke up the taile of his shirt (saying) Dirke thou wilt have a good long thing, and soe did several tymes as he past by her; after this she went into the roome where the
syder was and then came out agine, and between the two houses she mett Mulatto Jacke a going to draw more syder and putt her hand on his codpiece, at which he smil'd, and went on his way and drew syder and she came againe into the company but stay'd not long but went out to drinking with two of the said Thomas Cockes Negroes by the garden pale, And a while after she tooke Mingoe one of the said Cocke's Negroes about the Necke and fling on the bedd and Kissed him and putt her hand into his Codpeice, Awhile after Mulatto Jacke went into the Fish roome and she followed him, but what they did there this deponent knoweth not for it being near night this deponent left her and the Negroes together, (He thinking her to be much in drinke) and soe this deponent went home about one houre by sunn . . .
----------------
I have the testimonies of four other witness, who back up the depostion of William harding. I'll send them along in the next message.
I did notice that you cited, Roy, about Henry Watkins "In 1679 he received a patent for 170 acres of land on the north side of James River in Henrico Co.
adjoining land of John Lewis, MR. COCKE, and Mr. Beauchamp, and touching the 'three runs' of Turkey Island Creek." So, (Capt. Thomas) Cocke, was indeed a neighbor, and apparently the owner of the slaves involved in this case with Katherine Watkins.

Katherine married Henry Watkins. Henry was born in 1637 in Malvern Hills, Henrico, Virginia and died in 1717 in Malvern Hills, Henrico, Virginia at age 80.

460. William Borton, son of Borton and Unknown, was born on 29 Nov 1590 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England and died on 25 Mar 1656 at age 65.

William married Elizabeth on 16 Jun 1613. Elizabeth was born about 1594 and died on 17 Jun 1689 about age 95.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  William Borton was born on 5 Jan 1615/16 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England.

         ii.  Elizabeth Borton

        iii.  Jana Borton

         iv.  Margaret Borton

          v.  Henry Borton

230      vi.  John Borton (born in 1634 in Aynhoe, Northamptonshire, England - died on 28 Jul 1687 in Hillsdown, Burlington, West Jersey)


461. Elizabeth was born about 1594 and died on 17 Jun 1689 about age 95.

General Notes: According to Jerry Bickerdyke ([email protected]) in 1997, I had Elizabeth born in 1606, which is what the ancestral file shows, but her first child was born in 1616. A GEDCOM file in Kindred Konnections posted by Chester & Ella Asay shows birth abt 1594, which looks more reasonable.

Elizabeth married William Borton on 16 Jun 1613. William was born on 29 Nov 1590 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England and died on 25 Mar 1656 at age 65.

462. William Kinton was born about 1600.

William married Elizabeth. Elizabeth was born about 1600 in Croughton, Northampshire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

231       i.  Anne Kinton (born about 1636 in , , , England - died on 8 Jan 1687/88 in Hillsdown, Evesham, Burlington, New Jersey)


463. Elizabeth was born about 1600 in Croughton, Northampshire, England.

Elizabeth married William Kinton. William was born about 1600.

480. William Newby, son of Ralph Newby and Dorothy Hinchley, was born in Easington, Durham, England and died after 1704 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.
(Duplicate. See Below)

481. Isabell Turner was born in 1630 and died from 1687 to 1701 at age 57.
(Duplicate. See Below)

484. Edmund Nicholson was born about 1612 of Boothby, Cumberland, England and died in 1660 in Marblehead, Essex County, Massachusettes about age 48.

General Notes: Source of birth, marriage, and children: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, 1976.

Edmund Nicholson was a fisherman and died by drowning. His wife and two sons, in a celebrated witchcraft case, were accused of causing the drowning.

Sharon Minton indicates all children were born in Mass. Since Edmund died by drowning in Mass., I would assume this to be true.

Edmund married Elizabeth Simson. Elizabeth was born in 1616 of Boothby, Cumberland, England and died before 1666.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Joseph Nicholson was born about 1640 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 10 Mar 1726/27 about age 87.

         ii.  Thomas Nicholson was born in 1643 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina.

        iii.  Samuel Nicholson was born in 1644 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina.

         iv.  John Nicholson was born in 1646 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

          v.  Elisabeth Nicholson was born in 1649 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 5 Dec 1727 in Marblehead, Essex, Massachusetts at age 78.

242      vi.  Christopher Nicholson (born about 1638 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina, Born In England - died on 10 Sep 1688 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)


485. Elizabeth Simson was born in 1616 of Boothby, Cumberland, England and died before 1666.

Elizabeth married Edmund Nicholson. Edmund was born about 1612 of Boothby, Cumberland, England and died in 1660 in Marblehead, Essex County, Massachusettes about age 48.

488. Nicholas Albertson .

Nicholas married Mary Sutton.

The child from this marriage was:

244       i.  Albert Albertson (born about 1645 - died on 28 Feb 1700/01 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)


489. Mary Sutton .

Mary married Nicholas Albertson.

492. Christopher Nicholson, son of Edmund Nicholson and Elizabeth Simson, was born about 1638 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina, Born In England and died on 10 Sep 1688 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 50.
(Duplicate. See Below)

493. Hannah Redknap, daughter of Joseph Rednap and Sarah Haughton, was born about 1641 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts and died on 2 Dec 1678 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 37.

Hannah married Christopher Nicholson on 22 Oct 1662 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts. Christopher was born about 1638 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina, Born In England and died on 10 Sep 1688 in , Perquimans, North Carolina about age 50.

494. William Charles was born about 1595 in , , Devonshire, England and died in 1673 in Salem, , Massachusetts about age 78.

General Notes: From Sharon Minton:

This is what I have on William Charles & Abigail Bailey

William Charles s/o William Charles & Sarah Elizabeth
b. abt 1640
d. 6 Aug 1677 Perquimans Co. N.C.
m. abt 1660 possiably R.I.
Abigail Bailey d/o William Bailey & Grace Parons
b. abt 1540/1645 R.I.
d. 14 Mar 1687

children:
1. William
b. 13 Jul 1661 Perquimans Co. N.C. d. 6 Aug 1687 Perq. Co. N.C.
m. 9/7/1683 Perq. CO. N.C. Elizabeth Kent
2. Daniel
b. 24 Sep 1666 Perq. Co. N.C. d. 1687/88 Perq. Co. N.C.
3. John
b. 22 Nov 1668 Perq. CO. N.C. d. 1689 Perq. Co. N.C.
4. Jane or Jeane
b. 20 Jan 1670 Perq. Co. N.C. d. 1688 Perq. Co. N.C.
5. Elizabeth
b. 8 Jan 1672 Perq. Co. N.C. d. Jan 1748 Perq. Co. N.C.
(allready gave you other marriages)
6. Samuel
b. 22 Mar 1674 Perq. Co. N.C. d. 1727/8
m. Elizabeth Jones
7. Isaak
b. 12 Mar 1676 d. bef. 1687

William married Abigail Bailey.

Children from this marriage were:

247       i.  Elizabeth Charles (born on 8 Jan 1671/72 - died in Jan 1747/48)

         ii.  Samuel Charles was born in 1674.


495. Abigail Bailey, daughter of William Bailey and Grace Parons,.

General Notes: Source of Abigail's parents: Sharon Minton (S.MINTON). Sharon also indicated:

Abigail Bailey married 3 times and had children by each marriage.
1. William Charles (done before)
2. John Lacy
1 child: Sarah Lacy
3. Frances Tomes 1-6-1683 Perquimans Co. N.C.
children;
1. Priscilla
b. 10 Dec 1684 Perq. Co. N.C.
2. Abigail
b. 10 Dec 1684 Perq. Co. N.C.
d. 17 Mar 1687 Perq. Co. N.C.

Abigail Bailey's parents were William Bailey & Grace Parons I don't have anything else on them.

Abigail married William Charles. William was born about 1595 in , , Devonshire, England and died in 1673 in Salem, , Massachusetts about age 78.

496. Ratcliff .

General Notes: While the following Richard Ratcliff of Talbot County, Maryland, is not our direct ancestor, he is a Quaker and very probably shares the common ancestors of our Richard Ratcliff of Isle of Wight, Virginia. These two locations are about 100 miles apart across Chesapeake Bay. I obtained the information from Robert Ratliff (Prodigy - CVTK59A) in 1992.

I am Robert Brownloe RATLIFF and am descended as follows:
Richard Ratliff 1661-1721 Talbot MD
John Ratliff 1694-1719 Talbot MD
Elam Ratliff 1778-1855 Lenoir NC & Lawrence TN
Obediah Ratliff 1827-1884 Lawrence & Giles TN
Franklin L. Ratliff 1850-1929 Lawrence/Hardin TN
Robert Tilman Ratliff 1882-1953 Hardin TN
Brownie Arvis Ratliff 1929-living Hardin TN
me--> Robert Brownloe Ratliff 1953-living Ohio

The Paternal Ancestry of Richard Ratcliff of Chapel Hill, Forest Rossendale, Lancashire, England and St Michaels,Talbot Co., Maryland.

1 Ivo (or John) de Tailbois the brother of the Earl of Anjou (Anjou a province bordering on Normandy in France) was born probably in Anjou, or Normandy, France, c 1020 AD Ivo married Lucia, a daughter of Earl Aelfgar, and therefore granddaughter on the paternal side of the great Leofric, and her mother's side of Gruffydd, King of Wales. Ivo was known as "Argon of Kendal" and after the Conquest he shared Copeland,. Kentdale, and the lands south of the Ribble River with Count Roger de Poitou. Ivo de Tallbois, or the name when anglicized, John Talbot, was one of the most illustrious families of Normandy. Ivo went to England 1066.

Issue:
Aelftred de Tailbois "The Englishman" born c 1045. He was succeeded by his son and heir:

Gilbert de Furnesco de Tailbois born c 1070 m Goditha.:

Children:
1. William de Tailbois b c 1095, know as William de Lancaster, "The First" 2. Nicholas de Tailbois b c 1097 Nicholas Fitz-Gilbert de Tailbois a knight, was granted the Manor of Radeclive from his lord, and may have been the one who built Radcliffe Tower, the ruins of which may still be seen near Radcliffe in Lancashire. In any event Nicholas deTailbois assumed the name of de Radcliffe, no doubt because of his residence in or near the village of Radcliffe, so named because it was built along the red banks of the River Irwell. It is thought that Nicholas married a Saxon girl, perhaps a lady of the Booths.

Children:
1. Mathew de Radcliffe born at Radcliffe Tower, c 1122 owned lands in Oswaldtwissel, in Lancashire, which he exchanged with his brother, Hendry for land in Herton.
2. Simon de Radcliff born at Radcliffe Tower, c 1124, demised lands in Radcliffe for a term of years to Henry de Oswaldtwissel. #3 Henry de Radcliffe born at Radcliffe Tower, c 1126. Henry de Radcliff owned land in Oswaldtwissel. He was a witness to the charter of Robert de Latham at the foundation of Burscough Priory in the time of Henry II (1154-1189)Henry de Radcliffe married a daughter of Booth.

REFERENCES: Hampson, Charles P. Book of the Radclyffes.Edinburgh: T & A Constable 1940 and Whitaker, Thomas D.History of Whalley. Lendon: George Routledge & Sons 1876. 2 Vol.

Children of Henry and ____Booth Radcliffe:
1. Richard de Radcliffe born at Radcliffe Tower c 1160. When he was 24 years old he gave lands in Morton to Burscough Abbey, in the time of Henry II.
2. A daughter Radcliffe b c 1162., m Robert de Honotwisell.
3. William de Radcliffe b Radcliffe Tower c 1164
4. John de Radcliffe b c 1166, m Muriel Ramville.

William de Radcliffe received his Radcliffe Tower and Radcliffe Manor inheritance sometime prior to 1190. He and his ancestors has extended their territorial holdings so that they attained considerable influence. By his marriage to Cccilian de Montbogon, Lady of Kirkland, William further enhanced his status, as the Montbogons had vast holdings from William the Conqueror. William wa appointed High Sheriff of Lancastor about 1194, by Richard the Lionhearted. William held 12 oxgangs of land in Edgeworth and land in Heartshead, County York. (An oxgang of land was 16 acres, or about what an ox could plow in one winter.) A messuage was 20 Acres of land.

William de Radcliffe was one of the knights of the Grand Survey of 1212. Sir William was one of the twelve trusty knights of the shire. William lost his first wife, Cccilia de Montebogon, about 1202, and later married Eugenia ___, thought to be a daughter of Alexander, son of Uvieth. William de Radcliffee died 1220.

Children of William and Cccilia:
1. Adam de Radcliffee b c 1188 d 1250.
2. Geoffrey married a daughter of Adam de Bury, from whom he had a grant of lands in Bury, as well as a holding in Radcliffe, under the will of his father.
3. Hugh de Radcliffe to whom his father gave the manor of Hartshead. He married Maegory, dau of Richard de Pennington. Adam of Radcliffe Tower, owned lands in Oswaldwissel, the woods and moor were deforested (this was a mark of royal favor and was in appreciation for service he had given and indicates the important position he had attained.) by the king's mandate, dated 9 Henry III (30 June 1225) Adam was living in 31 Henry III. 1247 AD. Adam married a daughter of Alan de Curwen, a distant cousin of his.

Children:
1. Robert of Radcliffe Tower b c 1215.2 William a priest. He was appointed by King Henry III in 1247 as chaplain of the Castle of Dublin.
2. John a soldier of the King's service living 20 Edward I (1292 AD). From his father he received land in Harewood. Robert de Radeclive of Radcliffe Tower, was born c 1215. He owned lands in Oswaldtwissel (in the forest of Rossendale) lands in Hartshead, and lands in Tottington. Robert died c 1290. Robert married Amabil, daughter of Sir Richard deTrafford.

References: Lancashire Inquest, Final Concords, Part 1,page 47 and Pedigree of Radclyffe of Rudding Park, Yorkshire.

Another reference for Rat(c)liff ancestry is "Richard Ratcliff of Lancashire, England & Talbot Co. MD and His Ancestors and Descendants 1066-1991" by Clarence Earl Ratcliff, B.S., M.A. Rt 5 Box 454, Toccoa, GA 30577.

Ratcliff married someone.

His child was:

248       i.  Richard Ratcliff (born about 1642 - died in 1718 in , Isle Of Wight, Virginia)


500. Thomas Hollowell Sr. son of William Hollowell and Unknown, was born about 1625 in , Lancashire, England and died in 1687 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia about age 62.
(Duplicate. See Below)

501. Alce (Alice) was born about 1627 in , , , England and died on 19 Sep 1700 in Lower Mm, Chuckatuck, Nansemond, Norfolk, Virginia about age 73.
(Duplicate. See Below)

504. Ralph Fletcher was born in 1632 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina and died on 21 Jan 1727/28 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 96.

Ralph married Elizabeth Sutton on 11 Mar 1673/74. Elizabeth was born on 28 Aug 1653 in Scituate, , Massachusetts and died in 1700 in No Carolina at age 47.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Elizabeth Fletcher was born on 22 Feb 1674/75 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

252      ii.  Ralph Fletcher II (born on 24 Dec 1676 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

        iii.  George Fletcher was born on 4 Apr 1679 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         iv.  Sarah Fletcher was born on 8 Sep 1681 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

          v.  Margaret Fletcher was born about 1683 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         vi.  Joshua Fletcher was born about 1685 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

        vii.  William Fletcher was born on 10 May 1687 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

       viii.  William Fletcher was born on 9 Dec 1688 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         ix.  John Fletcher was born on 21 Jan 1689/90 in , Perquimans, North Carolina and died on 2 Jun 1690.

          x.  Jane Fletcher was born about 1691 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.

         xi.  James Fletcher was born on 5 Nov 1693 in , Perquimans, North Carolina.


505. Elizabeth Sutton, daughter of George Sutton and Sarah Tilden, was born on 28 Aug 1653 in Scituate, , Massachusetts and died in 1700 in No Carolina at age 47.

Elizabeth married Ralph Fletcher on 11 Mar 1673/74. Ralph was born in 1632 of Perquimans Co, North Carolina and died on 21 Jan 1727/28 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 96.

506. James Morgan was born about 1648 of Maryland.

James married Jane Knea on 12 Oct 1673 in Maryland. Jane was born about 1652 of Maryland.

The child from this marriage was:

253       i.  Jane Morgan (born about 1680-1686 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)


507. Jane Knea was born about 1652 of Maryland.

Jane married James Morgan on 12 Oct 1673 in Maryland. James was born about 1648 of Maryland.
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512. George Hussey, son of Thomas Hussey and Bridget Bowes, was born about 1551.

General Notes: I have been told that the New England Genealogical and Historical Society (as of 1991) does not recognize any Hussey genealogy beyond John Hussey, born in Dorking about 1570. However, Dora Davenport Jones (Mrs. Jo Buck Jones), The Village Apts. 4717 Wellesley, 143, Fort Worth, TX 76107, in 1988 (now deceased) researched and compiled a genealogy that traces the line back seven generations prior to that John Hussey.

Mrs. Jones indicates that John Hussey is the son of George II, last generation on "Lincoln Pedigrees".

Source: The reference included for George Hussey is MS. C.23, Herald's College. "History of Doddington" by Rev. R.E.G. Cole.

In my (RCL) research, I have found many references to Hugh Hussey being the father of John Hussey, father of our Christopher Hussey, the immigrant. As you see, I have chosen to identify this George Hussey as John's father. Here is an exerpt from the Hussey Manuscript:

George Hussey, son of Thomas Hussey and Jane Townshend Hussey, was born about 1520. Of this individual nothing more is known, however some researchers suggest that he, rather than his brother, Hugh Hussey, was the father of John Hussey. Hugh Hussey, son of Thomas Hussey and Jane Townshend Hussey, was born about 1524. He was married about 1558 to Ellen Devereaux. Children born to Hugh Hussey and Ellen Devereaux Hussey reportedly include: John Hussey born in 1559 John Hussey, son of Hugh Hussey and Ellen Devereaux Hussey, was born in 1559. Some reseachers claim that he was the individual who was married February 5, 1593-94 to Mary Wood. It has been documented that Mary Wood Hussey was the mother of Christopher Hussey, progenitor of much of the Hussey descendants in the United States. Documentation is lacking to prove Christopher Hussey a son of John Hussey.

George married someone.

His child was:

256       i.  John Hussey (born in 1570 in Dorking, Surrey, England - died before 24 Jul 1632 in Dorking, Surrey, England)


514. Henry Wood, son of John Wood and Audrey,.

Henry married Marthey Bull.

The child from this marriage was:

257       i.  Marie Wood (christened on 9 Sep 1581 in Dorking, Surrey, England - died on 16 Jun 1660 in Hampton, Rockingham, New Hampshire)


515. Marthey Bull .

Marthey married Henry Wood.

520. Thomas Perkins, son of Henry Perkins and Unknown, died in 1592.

General Notes: Source: Donna J. Howard, PO Box 261, Stoughton, WI 53589.

Thomas married Alice Kebble.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Henry Perkins was born in 1559 and died in 1609 at age 50.

         ii.  John Perkins

        iii.  Elizabeth Perkins

         iv.  Thomas Perkins

          v.  Joan Perkins

         vi.  Edward Perkins

        vii.  William Perkins

       viii.  Lysle Perkins

         ix.  Luke Perkins

260       x.  Issache Perkyns (christened on 20 Dec 1571 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England - died on 1 Dec 1629)


521. Alice Kebble .

Alice married Thomas Perkins. Thomas died in 1592.

576. William Jessop .

General Notes: Source: The Ancestry of ALLEN GRINNELL CLEAVER and MARTHA IRENE JESSUP - 172 Allied Families - Compiled by WILLIAM JESSUP CLEAVER, 1989.

The name Jessup is said to have been derived from Joseph or the Italian equivalent Giuseppe. This in turn has been extended in the family tradition in Yorkshire (ably collected by the Rev. Jasper Newton Jessup in 1908) that the first Jessups were Roman soldiers of the fourth century occupation of Britain. Kirkburton Church (where early records of this branch of the family are found) was erected in the thirteenth century and during a later restoration the uncovering of a broken crusifix gives evidence of fourth century Christianity. One of the first names in the Kirkburton parish Registers which dates from 1540-41 is Johana Jesope. A Roman camp and fort were excavated in 1907 near the church. Of course the use of Biblical derivation was popular in the era when surnames were being developed. Conjecture about the origin of any name has to be no more than conjecture. Some early wills are signed Joseph alias Jessop, however the name does not appear to be Anglo-Saxon or Norman.

William married someone.

His child was:

288       i.  William Alias Jessop Sonier (christened on 5 Apr 1579 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England - died after 1650)


578. Laurance Ireland .

Laurance married Jenet Brodhed.

The child from this marriage was:

289       i.  Dorothy Ireland (christened on 21 May 1580 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England - buried on 15 May 1649 in Kirkburton, Yorkshire, England)


579. Jenet Brodhed .

Jenet married Laurance Ireland.

592. William Pease, son of Edward Pease and Unknown, was born about 1530 of Fishlake, Yorkshire, England and died on 10 Mar 1597/98 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England about age 68.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

William Pease of Fishlake, was born about 1530. He was buried at Fishlake, county York, England 10 March 1597/98. He married, first, Margaret who was buried at Fishlake 27 May 1565. He married, second, Alice Clyffe 25 November 1565, as recorded in the Fishlake Parish Register. Her burial is recorded there as 29 May 1601.

William married Alice Clyffe on 25 Nov 1565 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England. Alice died on 29 May 1601 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Richard Pease was buried on 13 Jan 1594/95.

         ii.  Maria Pease died on 18 Mar 1575.

        iii.  Alice Pease

         iv.  Francis Pease

296       v.  Thomas Pease (christened on 20 Apr 1572 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England - buried on 16 Jan 1643/44 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England)


593. Alice Clyffe died on 29 May 1601 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

Alice married William Pease on 25 Nov 1565 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England. William was born about 1530 of Fishlake, Yorkshire, England and died on 10 Mar 1597/98 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England about age 68.

616. John Hollowell was born about 1560 in , Northamptonshire, England and died on 15 Sep 1601 in Asby St., Ledger, Northamptonshire, England about age 41.

General Notes: Early information on this line is from Cheska Wheatley. See her Internet home page, Cheska's Family Carousel which contains list of surnames currently being researched: http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/6630 (December 1996)

John married Isabel Garfield in Nov 1582. Isabel died about 9 Nov 1627.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Ann Hollowell

         ii.  Elizabeth Hollowell

        iii.  John Hollowell

         iv.  Frances Hollowell

308       v.  William Hollowell (born on 27 Jan 1591/92 in Ashby St., Ledger, Northamptonshire, England - died in 1645 in Flore, Northamptonshire, England)

         vi.  Isabel Hollowell

        vii.  Mary Hollowell


617. Isabel Garfield died about 9 Nov 1627.

Isabel married John Hollowell in Nov 1582. John was born about 1560 in , Northamptonshire, England and died on 15 Sep 1601 in Asby St., Ledger, Northamptonshire, England about age 41.

744. Thomas Gerard, son of Gerard and Unknown, was born from about 1540 to 1541 and died on 11 Jan 1628/29 in Winwick about age 89.

General Notes: Source: The Founders of the Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, Vol 1, p348.

Thomas married Jane before 1586. Jane was born about 1542 of Garswood, , England and died after 1628.

The child from this marriage was:

372       i.  John Gerard (born of New Hall, , England)


745. Jane was born about 1542 of Garswood, , England and died after 1628.

Jane married Thomas Gerard before 1586. Thomas was born from about 1540 to 1541 and died on 11 Jan 1628/29 in Winwick about age 89.

856. Henry Watkins, son of James Watkins and Unknown, was born in 1585 in , , , Wales.

General Notes: Source: Betty Harris (Prodigy PKPB43B) on 10/12/1992 posted from "Henry Watkins of Henrico City" by J M Allen, 1985: Gateway Press. Exerpt from

1-Henry Watkins [1585-?}
2-Henry Watkins [1637/8-c1714/5] m Katherine Pride
3-Edward Watkins [c1665-c1771]
4-John Watkins [c1710-1765] m Phoebe Hancock
5-Henry Watkins [1758-1829] m Elizabeth Hudson Clay>>
6-John Watkins [1785-1845] m Catherine T Milton
7-Thomas Bodley Watkins [1835-1903] m Annie Bell McMurty
8-Jane Worley Watkins [1885-1964] m George Marcus Allen

Henry I Watkins was overseer of Dale Plantation. He had brothers Peregrin and Daniel.

Issue:
1-John who lived in Lower Norfollk
2-Lewis b 1640 lived in Henrico and descendants in New Kent
3-Thomas was of Mattiponi R, King Wm Co
4-Henry II [1637/8-1714/5] m Katherine Pride c 1658>> Issue of Henry II 1-Edward
2-Henry III [1660-Nov 1714/5 , Mary Crisp
issue: 1-John m Elizabeth Sullivant or Daniels
He died 1743-I need information on this family
2-Benjamin m Jane Watkins
3-Joseph m Mary Farrar
4-Henry IV
5-Stephen [d 1754+] m Judith Trabue
6-Mary [1682]
3-Mary m 1701 Nickolas Hutchins>
4-William [1667] m Elizabeth ?
5-Elizabeth [c1669] m 1692 John Bottemly
6-Rachel [c1670] m Robert Woodson-his 2nd wife
7-Thomas of Swift Creek [1680-1760] m Elizabeth Pride 8-Joseph d c1725

This early presence in Virginia of Henry I is further supported by "The Complete Book of Emigrants 1607-1660" by Peter wilson Coldham. On page 46, the text indicated that on 28 February 1624, a Henry Watkins signed a report from the Governor and Council of Virginia at James City to the king rebutting the accusations against the plantations made by Captain Nathaniel Butler, Six thousand, not ten thousand, persons have been transported to Virginia who, for the most part, were wasted by the cruelty of Sir Thomas Smyth's government.

This same page indicates that Henry Wattkins, Peregree Wattkins, and Daniell Wattkins were living (in 1624) at the Eastern Shore.

According to Jane Allen's text "Henry Watkins of Henrico County", Henry Watkins was in Accomack County, Virginia, before 1621 and settled on the Eastern Shore. As mentioned above, Henry was the overseer of the Dale Plantation. Sir Thomas Dale had died in 1619 and Henry made a claim against his estate for six barrels of corn.

Henry Watkins of the Old Plantation was one of the first two Burgesses to represent the Eastern Shore at the 1623 Assembly. He was one of the listed burgesses on laws and orders concluded by the General Assembly 5 Marcy 1623/24.

On 3 July 1624 he was one of the signers of a petition of the Governor and Assembly of Virginia to the King as to the true state of the plantation.

In 1625 John Taylor made a disposition about a transaction which happened when Henry Watkins had been oversser for Lady Dale "about the tyme of our Lord 1620".

Jane Allen's text is the source of Henry's children.

Henry married Alice Moslin before 1637. Alice was born in Probably, , Virginia.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Watkins

428      ii.  Henry Watkins (born in 1637 in Malvern Hills, Henrico, Virginia - died in 1717 in Malvern Hills, Henrico, Virginia)

        iii.  Lewis Watkins was born in 1640.

         iv.  Thomas Watkins


857. Alice Moslin was born in Probably, , Virginia.

General Notes: Source: [email protected] Wiley Alston Jarrell, 15610 Edenvale, Friendswood Tx 77546, Mar 1997.

Alice married Henry Watkins before 1637. Henry was born in 1585 in , , , Wales.

920. Borton .

General Notes: Source: Ancestral Lines Revised - 190 Families in England, Wales, Germany, New England, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, Compiled by Carl Boyer, 3rd, New Hall, CA 1981

Freeman Clark Mason's History of the Borton and Mason Families in Europe and America was for years the most comprehensive work on the Borton family, but the book did not reflect scholarly methods of research, being for the most part simply a compilation of names, relationships and dates. Mason contended that all Bortons living in America in 1908 were descendants of John Borton, and stated further that John Borton was probably the only member of the English Borton family to belong to the Society of Friends. This latter point was challenged in 1971 by Nellaray Holt (201 E. Holmes, #A6, Selah, Wash 98942), who compiled a genealogy of 8227 Bortons and related people, and stated that the Protestant Returns of Oxforshire for 1641-42 listed many Bortons who broke from the Church of England, the implication being that probably several of them were Quaker.

Borton married someone.

His child was:

460       i.  William Borton (born on 29 Nov 1590 in , Aynho, Northamptonshire, England - died on 25 Mar 1656)


986. Joseph Rednap, son of Benjamin Rednap and Mrs. Elizabeth Rednap, was born about 1597 of London, Middlesex County, England and died on 22 Jan 1684/85 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts about age 88.

General Notes: Source of birth and children: The Batchelor - Williams Families and Related Lines by Lyle Keith Williams, 1976.

Came to Lynn, MA; admitted as a Freeman, Sept. 3, 1634, a wine cooper from London, Hampton, England.

Sharon Minton indicates Joseph was over 100 years old when he died.

Joseph married Sarah Haughton in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts. Sarah was born in 1615 of London, Middlesex County, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Nathaniel Rednap was born about 1637 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts.

         ii.  Benjamin Rednap was born about 1639 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts.

493     iii.  Hannah Redknap (born about 1641 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts - died on 2 Dec 1678 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)

         iv.  Sarah Rednap was born about 1649 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts and died on 26 Feb 1679/80 about age 31.


987. Sarah Haughton was born in 1615 of London, Middlesex County, England.

General Notes: Source of name: S.MINTON

Sarah married Joseph Rednap in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts. Joseph was born about 1597 of London, Middlesex County, England and died on 22 Jan 1684/85 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts about age 88.

990. William Bailey .

William married Grace Parons.

The child from this marriage was:

495       i.  Abigail Bailey


991. Grace Parons .

Grace married William Bailey.

1010. George Sutton was born in 1613 in Kent, England and died on 12 Apr 1669 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 56.

General Notes: Note: A more recent (1991) version of the Ancestral File states that John Sutton, AFN:9GPS-84, is the husband of this marriage. John was born abt 1593 in Rehoboth, Bristol, England. His marriage to Sarah was 13 Mar 1636. He had another spouse named Juliana Little. He died 1 Jun 1672 at Rehoboth, Bristol, Massachusetts. In the newer file, there are no children listed under George, all are listed under John.

George married Sarah Tilden on 13 Mar 1635/36 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. Sarah was born on 13 Jun 1613 in Tenterden, , Kent, England and died on 20 Mar 1676/77 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 63.

The child from this marriage was:

505       i.  Elizabeth Sutton (born on 28 Aug 1653 in Scituate, , Massachusetts - died in 1700 in No Carolina)


1011. Sarah Tilden, daughter of Nathaniel Tilden and Lydia Hucstepe, was born on 13 Jun 1613 in Tenterden, , Kent, England and died on 20 Mar 1676/77 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 63.

Sarah married George Sutton on 13 Mar 1635/36 in Scituate, Plymouth, Massachusetts. George was born in 1613 in Kent, England and died on 12 Apr 1669 in , Perquimans, North Carolina at age 56.
picture

previous  11th Generation  Next




1024. Thomas Hussey, son of Giles Hussey Sir and Jane Pigot, was born in 1526.

General Notes: Source: From HUSSEY chart "Lincoln Pedigrees", edited by Rev. Canon A. R. Maddison, 1902-1906.

Thomas Hussey may have been named for his father's brother, Thomas. The exact number of children of these generations is not known but no doubt there were other children as in the 1700s there was a famous portrait painter by the name of Giles Hussey in England.

According to http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~gowenrf/husseyms_003.html, Thomas Hussey, son of Giles Hussey and Jane Pigott Hussey, was born about 1526 in Lincolnshire. He was married about 1550 to Bridget Bowes, daughter of Richard Bowes of Aske, Yorkshire, according to "Hussey Record."

Through his mother's family Thomas Hussey received his mother's portion of Kirkby Sigston manor, Carlton Miniott manor and Catton manor. He also held Exelby manor in 1569.

He was "attainted for his part in the Rebellion of the Earls in 1570," according to "History of Yorkshire, North Riding." "He was stoutly and manfully apprehended in the field by George Lamplough to whom his lands were subsequently granted as reward," according to the Yorkshire volume. Lamplough received the last of the manors in 1574.

Children born to Thomas Hussey and Bridget Bowes Hussey include:
John Hussey born about 1552

Thomas married Bridget Bowes. Bridget was born in Of, Yorkshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Hussey

512      ii.  George Hussey (born about 1551)

        iii.  Elizabeth Hussey


1025. Bridget Bowes was born in Of, Yorkshire, England.

Bridget married Thomas Hussey. Thomas was born in 1526.

1028. John Wood was buried on 5 Jun 1612 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

General Notes: Source: Historic Nantucket, Vol. 27, Oct 1979, No. 2, quotes Dorking Parish Register.

John married Audrey on 5 Feb 1593/94 in Dorking, Surrey, England. Audrey was buried on 18 Apr 1603 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Wood

514      ii.  Henry Wood


1029. Audrey was buried on 18 Apr 1603 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

Audrey married John Wood on 5 Feb 1593/94 in Dorking, Surrey, England. John was buried on 5 Jun 1612 in Dorking, Surrey, England.

1040. Henry Perkins, son of Thomas Perkins and Alyse De Astley, was born in 1505.

Henry married someone on 29 Nov 1579.

His children were:

          i.  William Perkins

520      ii.  Thomas Perkins (died in 1592)


1184. Edward Pease, son of John Pease and Unknown, was born of Sike House, Fishlake, Yorkshire, England.

General Notes: Source: Cleaver.

Edward Pease of Sike House, in Fishlake, co. York, time of Henry VIII. He died intestate seized of lands in Sike House, co. of York.

Edward married someone.

His children were:

          i.  George Pease

592      ii.  William Pease (born about 1530 of Fishlake, Yorkshire, England - died on 10 Mar 1597/98 in Fishlake, Yorkshire, England)


1488. Gerard .

General Notes: The following text was provided to me by Patricia L. M. Stanley, 10505 N.
Fores Ave., Kansas City, MO 64155, in January, 1994:

Gerrard- Ellyson

The surname Gerrard is also spelt Gerard and Girard and was originally FitzGerald.
The arms of the principal branch of the family are : Argent, a salties, glues,

and the crest: A lion, rampant ermins crowned or, and the motto: En Dieu Est Mon Esperance. The linage of the family of Bryn County,England based on Burk's Peerage,Banonetage and Knightage is as follows:

William FitzGerald of Carrun Castle, county Pembroke, eldest son of Gerald FitzWalter, constable of Penbroke castle and brother of Maurice FitzGerald, Lor of Maynooth. He went to Ireland with Strongbow in 1171, but died in England in 1173;

Leaving with other issue, Otho, ancestor of the Carew family and: William FitzWilliam FitzGerald, his youngest son, who was Justice in Eyre, for the county of Chester, and had:

William, Lord of a Moiety of Kingsley, county Chester, in right of his wife, Emma, second daughter and co-heir of Richard de Kingsley, Chief Forester of Delamere. He died before 1259,leaving a son:

William Gerrard of Kingsley, died before 1316 having by his wife, Margaret, his son and heir:

William Garrard of Kingsley and Cantenhall living in 1330, who married Matilda, daughter of Henry de Glasshowse of Kingsley and died before 1352.
They had:

William Gerrard of Kingsley, born about 1322, who married Joan, the daughter of heir of Peter de Bryn and had:

Sir Peter Gerard of Kingsley and Byrn, who died before 1380, having had:

Thomas of whom presently, and John the ancestor of Gerard of Ince and Macclesfield. His eldest son was:

Sir Thomas Gerard of Kingsley and Bryn, Knight, who died March 27th 1415-16, leaving issue:

John Gerard of Kingsley [d.April 10th 1431] who married Alice, daughter of Sir John le Boteler, and had:

Sir Peter Gerard of Kingsley and Bryn, who married Isabella Strangeways, and had:

Sir Thomas Gerard of Kingsley and Bryn, who married Douce, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Assheton of Ashton-under-Lyne,and had:

Peter Gerard, who married [1481] Margaret, the daughter of Sir Thomas Stanley of Hooton, Cheshire. He died June 19th 1485. They had:

Sir Thomas Gerard, of Kingsley and Bryn, who married Margaret, the daughter of Sir Edmund Trafford of Trafford, and widow of Nicholas Longfored and Sir John Port, and had:

Sir Thomas Gerard, of Kingsley and Bryn, who married Jane, the daughter of Sir Peter Legh of Haydock and had:

Sir Thomas Gerard of Kingsley and Bryn, who being accused of a design to deliver Mary, Queen of Scots, out of her confinment, was committed to the tower, and was forced to give his estate of Bromley to his kinsman, Sir Gilbert Gerrard, Attorney General and mortgage many others before he could obtain his liberty. He married Elizabeth, daughter and co-heiress of Sir John Port, Knight of Etwall, co. Derby. He died in September 1601. He was survived by his son:

Sir Thomas Gerard, born 1560, was created a Baronet on the first day of the institution of the order, May 22, 1611, and received back the fee which he had given for the dignity in consideration of the sufferings of his father on behalf of Queen Mary. He married first, Cecily, daughter of Sir Walter Maney, Knight, and had:

Sir Thomas Gerard, Second Baronet of Bryn, who married Frances, daughter of Sir Richard Molyneux, First Baronet of Sefton, and sister of 1st Viscout Molyneux, and had:

John, Peter and Gilbert, who are said to have died unmarried [see William Playfair], Frances,who became a Nun. William, the 3rd Baronet, who married Elizabeth,daughter of Sir Cuthbert Clifton, Knight, Thomas (below), Richard [1612-1686], Anne,who married 1st Cox and 2nd Thomas Green, who came on the Ark and Dove to Maryland in 1634 and was governor of the province. He was married three times, first to Elizabeth, sister of Leonard Calvert, 2nd to Anne, and 3rd to the widow, Winifed Seyborne.

Gen.I---Thomas Gerrard, The Immigrant [died 1673]

The last quarter of the 16th century witnessed the beginning of a Catholic exile movement to America. As early as 1574 Sir Humphrey Gilbert half-brother of Sir Walter Raleigh, conceived a plan of colonization which was to have the support of two Catholic gentlemen, Sir George Peckham and Sir Thomas Gerard. A state paper hinted that he was hand in glove with "the Papists" in looking for relief to a new world. Sir Humphrey was not a Catholic, but he was glad of support from this quarter. It was not until four years later that he was able to obtain a grant to discover and colonize any land in North America then unsettled. At the time of this venture there was in force a statue called "An Act against Fugitives over the Sea", which was designed to prevent the migration of Catholic recusants. Notwithstanding this opposition the English Catholics, led by Peckham and Gerard, continued their efforts to plant a Catholic colony under the Gilbert grant. In 1582 they renewed their efforts with Sir Humphrey. At this time an informer submitted to Walsingham the following report.: "There is a muttering among the Papists that Sir Humphrey Gilbert goeth to see a new found land; Sir George Pickham and Sir Thomas Gerrard goeth with him. I have heard it said among the Papists that they hope it will prove the best journey for England that was made in forty years". Walsingham still adhered, however, to his policy of allowing Catholic recusants to accompany the expedition provided they made provision for the payment of their fines. [J.Moss Ives The Ark And The Dove]

On June 11th 1583, Sir Humphrey's fleet of five ships and some two hundred men, including Catholic recusants, sailed from Plymonth and reached Maine on August 20th. On their return trip at midnight on September 9th, during a heavy storm, Sir Humphrey's ship with all on board went down.

In 1632 Charles I granted a charter to Cecil Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore, making him the proprietor of the largest tract of land granted to a single person up to that time. His father, George, the first Baron Baltimore, had been the promoter of the charter. He had previously received a land grant in Newfoundland, but found the climate unsuitable. Before returning to England he had sailed up the Chesapeake Bay and found Maryland more to his liking and petitioned the King for the grant. He died, however, shortly before the charte was issued and his son, Cecil, succeeded him to both his title and the land. [Ives]

After much preparation the Ark and the Dove spread their sails in the early morning of November 22nd, 1633. The departure was from Cowes on the Isle of Wight. The number of voyagers and the proportion of Catholics and Protestants have been questioned. On September 8th 1635, A Relation of Maryland was printed to attract adventurers to settled in the new province. On page 56 we find seventeen names "of the gentlemen adventurers that are gone in person to this plantation". Among them we find "Richard Garard, son to Sir Thomas Gerard, Knight and Baronet." [ Savin's Reprints [No.II] It is also said that Anne Cox, a widow, his sister, came with him. She was to become the 2nd wife of Gov. Thomas Green and to die in Maryland. Richard, who had been the cup-bearer to King James was to return to England, where he was to become a distinguished soldier and to die on September 5th 1686. [Ives, Burk's Peerage, Alice Norris Parran, Register of Maryland's Heraldic Families,Series I and II.]

The First stop for the Ark and the Dove was made at the Fortunate, now Canary Islands. Then after sailing two hundred miles on a southerly course, the Ark changed her course to the westward and sailed across the Atlantic headed for the West Indies. Barbados was reached January 3, 1634, where the Ark joined the Dove. On February 24th, 1634 they dropped anchor at Point Comfort, Virginia. They were there several days and then entered the Chesapeake and reached the Potomac. On St.Clement's Island these Maryland colonists made their first landing on March 25th 1634.

According to the Book of Early Settlers in the Land Office, Annapolis, Dr. Thomas Gerrard emigrated to the province in 1638, four years after his brother, Richard, and sister, Anne. Some historians identify this Dr. Thomas Gerrard with the Second Baronet, but according to Burke's Peerage the Second Baronet died on May 15th, 1630. [Parran]

On October 29th, 1639, Thomas Gerrard requested a land grant for transporting himself and five able men into the provice. On March 30th, 1640 a survey of 1,000 acres of land lying to the north of St. Clement's Manor where the town of Matapania now stands and including the island of St. Catherine's Creek called St. Catherine's Island was made for Thomas. The warrant is signed by Leonard Calvert on November 3, 1639. The orginal was in the Maryland Historical Society. Among other of his land possessions taken from the rent rolls of St. Marys County from 1639 to 1724 are: St. Clement's Manor, St. Clement's Island, 11,400 acres granted to him by Lord Baltimore in 1638-9 and resurveyed for Justinian Gerrard, his eldest son in 1678, Gerard's Freehold, 243 acres in St.Mary's Hundred, surveyed April 21 1640, St. Winefreides Freehold surveyed March 28, 1651, in Charles County, Wiccocomico, 550 acres surveyed for him in 1666, Westwood Manor, surveyed in 1651. In all there are 32,343 acres. Some of the place names were: Bromley, Chaptico, River View, Bushwood, Hackley, Little Hackley, Waterloo, Dukehard, Branton, Longworth Point, and Chancellor Point. [ Parran] Bromley Manor was perchased in 1719 by Charles Carroll of Carrollton. [ibi]

The first proprietors of what is now called Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C.
were George Thompson and Thomas Gerrard, who patented the land jointly under several titles in 1663. The largest of these grants were Duddington Manor and Pasture, New Troy, and St. Elizabeth. Thompson and Gerrard were remote kinsmen and jointly named "Duddington". In 1664 Gerrard sold his intrest to Thompson and in 1670 he disposed of the entire estate to Thomas Notley, who united the three grants into one Manorial holding to be known as Gerne Abbey Manor. Notley willed the land to Notley Rozer, grandson of Jane [Lowe] Sewall Calvert, Landy Baltimore.

In 1727, Anne Rozier, daughter of Notley, married Daniel Carroll, uncle of Charles Carroll of Carrollton. He died in 1734 leaving three children and a year later his widow married Col. Benjamin Young. In 1758, Mrs. Young, again a widow, petitioned the court to permit her elder son, Charles Carroll of Carrollsburgh to divide the property with his half-brother, Notley Young. By this division, Cerne Abbey Manor went back to the original component parts and Carroll was given Duddington Manor with the remainder to Notley Young. Charles died about 1778 leaving, as principal heir, his eldest son, Daniel, who very property called himself "of Duddington Manor" He with his co-heir, Notley Young, negotiated the sale of the property with President Washington's commission. Of the three commissioners, who purchased the land for the Federal Government, Daniel Carroll of Rock Creek was the brother of the Most Rev. John Carroll, first Catholic Bishop in the United States and uncle of David of Duddington's first wife, Anne Brent, whose brother, Robert, was to be the first mayor of Washington D.C. This purchase by the Federal Government took place one hundred and twenty-seven years after George Thompson and Thomas Gerrard acquired the original title. [ Margaret Bret Downing, The American Capitoline Hill and it's Early Catholic Proprietors, The Catholic Historical Review, Vol.II, pp. 269-282]

That Thomas Gerrard was a Cathiloc is universally admitted and it is but necessary to recall that he, as Lord of St.Clement's Manor, is the historical personage always cited to prove the broad toleration of Maryland's charter. He was fined 500 pounds of tobacco, no light penalty, for locking a Protestant chapel and refusing to open if for service located on his property. He is also brought forth to prove the Court Leet and Court Baron held on his manor from 1659 to 1672. Thomas was one of the first doctors or "chirurgeons" in the province. A list of his patients may be found in the administration Accounts of the colonial courts.
As early as 1639, Richard Lee and his wife of Virginia died at his home having come to him f...........(sic)

Thomas patented 1,000 acres on the Nomini River on October 18, 1650 in Westmoreland County,Virginia. He moved there after he lost his Maryland estates in the revolution of 1659 under his friend, Josias Fendall.
The Assembly met at Thomas's home, Bromly and Buchwood the home of Robert Slye, his son-in-law. They issued the first declaration of Independence in America and Gov. Fendall proclamed Maryland a republic. [ Douglas S.Freeman Geo.Washington,S.R. Hardy,Colonial Families of the Southern States of America, and Side-Lights on Maryland History.]

Thomas married Susannah, the daughter of Justinian Snow who also immigrated from England as his first wife. He had the following children.

1.Justianian Gerrard..the eldest married Sarahm widow of Wilkes Manunders.,but left no issue.
left no issue.

2.Elizabeth Garrad, who m. 1st, Nehemiah Blackistone, 2nd, Ralph Rymer, and 3rd, Joshua Guilbert.

3.Susannah [Hannah] Gerrard, who m. 1st, Robert Slye, and was given Bushwood by her father, which was built in 1667 and became the sire of the first mint in the colony, and m. 2nd, Robert Ellyson [below].

4.Thomas Gerrad, who married a widow Curtis, but died without issue.

5.Frances Garrard, who married 1st, Thomas Specke, and second Dr. Valentine Peyton, and 3rd, Capt. John Appleton, and 4th, John Washington, great grand- father of George Washington, after her sister's death in 1676.

6.Anne Gerrard, who married 1st, Walter Broadhurst, and 2nd, Henry Brett, and 3rd, John Washington,above, who had no children by the two Gerrard sister's.

7.John Garrard, who married Elizabeth, who married 2nd, James Johnson after his death in 1678.

8.Patience Garrard, who married Daniel Hutt, and second John Crabbe.

9. Janette Garrard, who married Richard Eltonhead.

10. Judith Gerrard, who married John Goldsmith.

11.Mary Garrard, who married Kenelm Cheseldyne III.

12. Rebecca Gerrard, who married Hon. Charles Calvert, Governor of Maryland, 1720-1728, uncle of Lord Baltimore. [Parren, Freeman, Wm.& Mary College Quarterly,Vol.4 and 5.]

It seems that Susannah, Thomas's first wife, died in Maryland. He then married second in Virginia Rose Tucker. She already had a daughter Sarah, who married the prosperous immigrant, William Fitzhugh. After Thomas's death, his widow, Rose, contracted a third marriage with John Newton, who had himself been married twice previously and had several sons. We know only that Thomas's eldest son and his daughters, Elizabeth, Susannah, Frances, and Patience were born in England and by his first wife. In his will he mentions his three sons, two, Justinian and John by name, and five daughters, one Mary by name. He only refers to the possibility of children by his second wife, Rose. He wills his "title" to his son Justinian. His son, John, had one son, John Jr., but he died without issue, so there are no descendants of Thomas by the name Gerrard.

In Westmoreland County where relationship was general and the dominant class nearly unified, Thomas Gerrard, John Lee, Henry Corbin, and Isaac Allerton symbolized even more than they executed in an interesting documents to which they set their hand on March 30th 1670 at a time when boundaries were often uncertain and the law required a periodic "processioning" of each parish to mark property lines. To simplify this these neighbors convenanted not only to set their boundaries clearly,but to provide a meeting for the firendly celebration. At the junction of Allerton's land with Gerrard's the four friends agreed to construct a Banqueting House to met with wives, heirs, and friends yearly. All neighbors were, however, not so friendly. Two, Richard and his wife, Anna Cole, were of a type not frequent in Virginia. In 1664 Mrs. Cole had been comitted to the custody of the sheriff "upon suspicion of the murder of Rose Parker". Of this charge she must have been acquitted, but she did not bridle her tougue and evidently the Coles looked upon Thomas Gerrard and his two daughters, Anne and Frances, as enemies and in due time the Garrards had to bring charges of libel against Mrs. Cole. It appears the Gerrards won the case. John Washington was one of the Justices of the Court and subsequently married Anne after the death of her second husband and Frances, after Anne's death. [Freeman,Vol.1.p.2; 18ff]

Thomas Gerrard died between Feb.5th, 1672, when he made his will and Dec.15th 1673, when it was proved. According to it he was to be buried as close as possible to his first wife, Susannah [Hall of Records,Annopolis,MD, Wills 1, ff. 567-73;Testamentary Proceedings 6, ff. 23, 48-55, 163-64.]

Gen.I- Captain Robert Ellyson, The Emigrant:

Capt. Robert Ellyson came from Maryland with Thomas Garrard and patented 577 acres in New Kent County, Virginia. It is likely that he came from England under the sponsorship of Gerrard and that they may have been distant relatives, since an ancestor of Thomas had married a daughter of Cutbert Ellyson. He married Susannah [Hannah], Thomas' daughter and the widow of Robert Slye.

Capt. Robert Ellyson, also called Doctor, formerly resided in St. Mary's Parish,Maryland. Part of his Virginia land was in James City County and he served as High Sheriff of both counties, and as Sergeant at Arms of the House of Burgesses, 1657-58. He was a Burgess from 1656 to 1663.
He had two children by Thomas Gerrard's daughter: Hannah who married Capt. Anthony Armistead, who served as a Burgess from 1693 to 1699, and a member of the Court Martial, under Sir William Berkeley in 1676 to try the Bacon insurgents, and Gerrard, below. Capt. Robert Ellyson died about 1688.

Anthony and Hannah [ Ellyson] Armistead had among other children, Robert [d.1742], who married first the daughter of Robert and Anne [Bray] Booth, whose daughter, Mary [1761-1792] married Hon. John Tyler, a descendant of John Page, and they were the parents of John Tyler, the tenth president of the United States.

Gen.II- Gerrard Ellyson:

After his father's death Gerrard Ellyson patented his land as his "son and heir". He married Anne, the daughter of John Myhill of Elizabeth City and their children were:

1.John Ellyson, baptized in 1668 in St.Peter's Parish, New Kent, VA.

2.Gerrard Ellyson.

3.Robert Ellyson, who died in Chesterfield about 1761.

4.Elizabeth Ellyson, who married John Johnson Jr. on 6th Aug.1725.

5.Hannah Ellyson who married Andrew Crew in 1720.

6.William Ellyson, who married Agnes, also a daughter of John Johnson of Hanover County in 1772.

7.Judith Ellyson, who married in 1726 James Ladd.

8.Cecelia Ellyson, who married Thomas Ellyson, her cousin in 1729.

9.Ursula Ellyson,who married William Ladd in 1730.

Anne [ Mayhill] Ellyson died in Elizabeth City County and her will is dated January 7th 1727.

[ Based on Ellyson Family, Tyler's Quarterly Magainze,Vol.10.p.32.,Lorand V.Johnson, The Ancestry of William and John Johnson. p.151 and Hardy pp. 25 and 518.]

Note by RCL: This account differs slightly from the genealogy I have recorded in this Personal Ancestry File. That account is based on The Founders of the Maryland Legislature 1635-1789, Vol 1, p348.

Gerard married someone.

His child was:

744       i.  Thomas Gerard (born about 1540-1541 - died on 11 Jan 1628/29 in Winwick)


1712. James Watkins .

General Notes: To: [email protected]
Subject: Henry Watkins of Henrico County.
From: Kathleen Schmid <[email protected]> Date: Sun, 5 Oct 1997

I am a direct descendant of the Henry Watkins of Henrico County., VA. b. 1637/38 m. 1658 d. 1714/15.

Based on information that was generously sent to me, the connection back to England I seek to make is:

James Watkins b. ?, Wales, Great Britain, Came to the US aboard the PHOENIX with Captain John Smith in 1608. James had a son named Henry Watkins b.
1585, Wales, Great Britain; and Henry was the father of the Henry Watkins which I referenced above.

James Watkins apparently had three sons who came to America. Per one source: "Henry's brother's Peregrin and Daniel, had come to Accomack County in 1621, Peregrin aboard the GEORGE. He was 20 years of age (his muster of James City in 1624); 'Perregrim Watkinses, age 24, in the GEORGE, 1621.' Daniel came aboard the CHARLES to James City County, Virginia."

I would be grateful for any information that will help me trace my roots back to Wales/Great Britain.

Thank you. Kathleen

[email protected]

James married someone.

His children were:

856       i.  Henry Watkins (born in 1585 in , , , Wales)

         ii.  Peregrin Watkins

        iii.  Daniel Watkins


1972. Benjamin Rednap .

General Notes: Source of name: S.MINTON

Benjamin married Mrs. Elizabeth Rednap. Mrs. was born about 1575.

The child from this marriage was:

986       i.  Joseph Rednap (born about 1597 of London, Middlesex County, England - died on 22 Jan 1684/85 in Lynn, Essex, Massachusetts)


1973. Mrs. Elizabeth Rednap was born about 1575.

Mrs. married Benjamin Rednap.

2022. Nathaniel Tilden, son of Thomas Tilden and Alice Biggs, was born in 1583 in , , , England, died on 25 May 1641 of Marshfield at age 58, and was buried in Cem, Old Men, Kent, Scituate.

Nathaniel married Lydia Hucstepe about 1607 in , Tenterden, Kent, England. Lydia was born in 1587 in , , , England and died in Scituate, , Massachusetts.

The child from this marriage was:

1011       i.  Sarah Tilden (born on 13 Jun 1613 in Tenterden, , Kent, England - died on 20 Mar 1676/77 in , Perquimans, North Carolina)


2023. Lydia Hucstepe, daughter of Stephen Hucstepe and Winnifred Hatch, was born in 1587 in , , , England and died in Scituate, , Massachusetts.

Lydia married Nathaniel Tilden about 1607 in , Tenterden, Kent, England. Nathaniel was born in 1583 in , , , England, died on 25 May 1641 of Marshfield at age 58, and was buried in Cem, Old Men, Kent, Scituate.
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2048. Giles Hussey Sir, son of John Baron Hussey Sir and Ann Grey, was born about 1505 of Caythorpe, Lincoln, England.

General Notes: "Knights of England", vol II, p 45 lists: Giles Hussey - 1523, July 1 Knights made by the Lord Admiral after taking of Morlaix "for their hardness and courage". He was probably about 18 at this time. Bravery, family, standing, etc. counted more than a mature age.

Over the years, many Husseys of England and Ireland were knighted. Half brother, William was knighted in 1513.

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees; Sir Giles Hussey of Caythorpe, Knight, knighted by the Earl of surrey at the Sacking of Morlaix in France 1522.

Date: Mon, 24 Aug 1998 07:38:49 -0500
From: "D. J. Faris, Jr." <[email protected]>
Subject: Sir Giles

There is a more recent series "The Complete Peerage" that clears up the matter placing Anne Grey as Hussey's second wife rather than the first wife. The Giles that died as an infant or young child was of the first wife. Wills have been found of John Hussey and Anne Grey. John's dated October 22, 1535, has provisions for wife, Lady Anne, sons William, Thomas, Gilbert and Sir Giles and others. Lady Anne's will was dated March 1, 1544/5 and probated February 11, 1545/6, mentions two daughters and sons Sir William and Sir Giles. If you have access to "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists", Fifth Edition by Frederick Lewis Weis with additions and revisions by Walter Lee Shepard, Jr. you will find links between John and Anne (Grey) Hussey back to the Planteganets and beyond.

According to http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~gowenrf/husseyms_003.html, Giles Hussey, son of John Hussey and Margaret Blount Barr Hussey, was born about 1500 at Sleaford, Lincolnshire. He was knighted by the Earl of Surrey at the Battle of Morlaix in France in July, 1522, according to "Lincolnshire Pedigrees." The battle occurred at the French town, about five miles from the English channel, during the Hundred Years War, and he returned home in October 1522. He was appointed peace commissioner at Kesteven, Lincolnshire in 1523, according to "Calendar of State Papers."

He and his father were appointed on the commission of sewers for Lincolnshire in March, 1524. Giles Hussey was married about 1525 to Jane Pigott, daughter of Thomas Pigott of Clotherham, Yorkshire. He was mentioned in the will of Thomas Cappe of Normanton, Lincolnshire written April 2, 1530, according to "Lincoln Wills." He was appointed co-executor of the will of Anne Grey Hussey, his step-mother.

Children born to Giles Hussey and Jane Pigott Hussey include:
Thomas Hussey born about 1526
Alice Hussey born about 1530
Francis Hussey born about 1532
Elizabeth Hussey born about 1535

Giles married Jane Pigot.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Francis Hussey

1024      ii.  Thomas Hussey (born in 1526)

        iii.  Alice Hussey

         iv.  Elizabeth Hussey


2049. Jane Pigot, daughter of Thomas Pigot and Unknown,.

Jane married Giles Hussey Sir. Giles was born about 1505 of Caythorpe, Lincoln, England.

2080. Thomas Perkins, son of William Perkins and Joanna Read, was born from 1458 to 1475 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and died in 1528 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England at age 70.

General Notes: Source: Donna J. Howard, PO Box 261, Stoughton, WI 53589, indicates birth in 1458, Ancestral File indicates 1475.

Thomas married Alyse De Astley about 1482 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England. Alyse was born about 1461 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and died in 1538 in Hilmorton, Warwickshire, England about age 77.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Jane Perkins was born in 1500.

         ii.  Julianna Perkins was born in 1503.

1040     iii.  Henry Perkins (born in 1505)


2081. Alyse De Astley, daughter of Thomas De Astley and Edith, was born about 1461 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and died in 1538 in Hilmorton, Warwickshire, England about age 77.

General Notes: Note: AFN:9GM7-67 does not indicate the surname, this is from the Donna J. Howard source.

Paula Mortensen, Prodigy (1992), indicates a source as "Some Account of the Parish of Hillmorton," by Matthew Holbeche Bloxam.

Alyse married Thomas Perkins about 1482 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England. Thomas was born from 1458 to 1475 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and died in 1528 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England at age 70.

2368. John Pease .

General Notes: Source: The Ancestry of ALLEN GRINNELL CLEAVER and MARTHA IRENE JESSUP - 172 Allied Families - Compiled by WILLIAM JESSUP CLEAVER, 1989.

The first two generations are from a Pedigree compiled in 1871 by Joseph Foster and are not further documented and thus are problematical. The generations starting with William Pease and his second wife, Alicia Clyff, are Friends records and are essentially the same as the Foster pedigree--at least, sufficiently to give some credence to those parts of the pedigree that are not documented here.

John Pease was a defendant in a Plea touching Lands in the County of Essex, 10 Henry VII (1495).

John married someone.

His children were:

1184       i.  Edward Pease (born of Sike House, Fishlake, Yorkshire, England)

         ii.  Richard Pease was born of Mash, Esses, England.

        iii.  John Pease


4044. Thomas Tilden, son of Richard Tilden and Elizabeth Glover, was born about 1551 in , , Kent, England, died from Mar 1615/16 to 1677 in Wye, , Kent, England about age 65, and was buried on 6 Jun 1617 in , Wye, Kent, England.

Thomas married Alice Biggs from about 1576 to 1577 in Tenterden, , Kent, England. Alice was born in 1551 in , , , England, died on 13 May 1593 in Tenterden, , England at age 42, and was buried on 13 May 1593 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

2022       i.  Nathaniel Tilden (born in 1583 in , , , England - died on 25 May 1641 of Marshfield)


4045. Alice Biggs, daughter of Robert Bigge and Elizabeth, was born in 1551 in , , , England, died on 13 May 1593 in Tenterden, , England at age 42, and was buried on 13 May 1593 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

Alice married Thomas Tilden from about 1576 to 1577 in Tenterden, , Kent, England. Thomas was born about 1551 in , , Kent, England, died from Mar 1615/16 to 1677 in Wye, , Kent, England about age 65, and was buried on 6 Jun 1617 in , Wye, Kent, England.

4046. Stephen Hucstepe, son of Lawrence Hucsteppe and Jone Pope, was born about 1557 in Tenterden, , Kent, England, died on 20 Jun 1633 in Tenterden, , Kent, England about age 76, and was buried on 20 Jun 1633.

Stephen married Winnifred Hatch on 14 Feb 1582/83 in Tenterden, , England. Winnifred was born in 1552 in Tenterden, , Kent, England, died on 6 Oct 1592 in Kent County, , England at age 40, and was buried on 6 Oct 1592.

The child from this marriage was:

2023       i.  Lydia Hucstepe (born in 1587 in , , , England - died in Scituate, , Massachusetts)


4047. Winnifred Hatch, daughter of Thomas Hatch and Joanne, was born in 1552 in Tenterden, , Kent, England, died on 6 Oct 1592 in Kent County, , England at age 40, and was buried on 6 Oct 1592.

Winnifred married Stephen Hucstepe on 14 Feb 1582/83 in Tenterden, , England. Stephen was born about 1557 in Tenterden, , Kent, England, died on 20 Jun 1633 in Tenterden, , Kent, England about age 76, and was buried on 20 Jun 1633.
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4096. John Baron Hussey Sir, son of William Hussey Sir and Elizabeth Berkeley, was born in 1466 of Sleaford, Lincoln, England and died on 27 Aug 1537 at age 71.

General Notes: Source: Compiled by Dora Davenport Jones, deceased. Furnished by Jean A. Sargent, 12217 Shadetree Lane, Montpelier, Laurel, MD 20708. The genealogy and notes from Sir John to John Hussey, born 1572, are based on Ms Jones' information, which is contained in an unpublished manuscript entitled:

_______________
L I N E A G E
_______________

From the VIKINGS = NORSEMEN = NORMANS to England
with WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR
to the BARONS WHO WERE MAGNA CHARTA SURETIES
to the first emigrant ancestor

_____________________
CHRISTOPHER HUSSEY
_____________________

to the New England Colonies in America ca 1630
down to the Present Time = 1973
and
Allied families, including the Royalty and
Nobility of Europe and the British Isles, to
Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and others

A great deal has been written concerning the political activities of Sir John Hussey during the reign of Henry VIII and even though all data were abstracted from original court records, some details vary slightly. He fought on the king's side at Stokes in 1486 and became comptroller of the royal household. Hussey received large grants of land in Lincolnshire and neighboring counties, became one of the council, master of the king's wards, knight of the body, and took 340 men to the French War in 1513, when he was one of the commanders in the rear guard. He was employed on various diplomatic missions, and was sent as envoy to the emporor after the Field of Cloth of Gold.

John Hussey was amoung those knighted at the battle of Blackheath, Jun 17, 1497. He was made a 'Knight Banneret', possibly at the Battle of Spurs, in France on 16 Aug. 1513. A banneret had the privilege of leading his retainers to battle under his own flag. They ranked at the next order below Knights of the Garter providing they were created by the king on the field of battle.

In 1521 he was made chief butler of England. In 1529 he was summoned by writ to the House of Lords as 'Johannes Hussey de sleford, chivaler'. He was a signatory to the document sent from England begging the papal sanction to Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Arragon, and was one of those at the queens trial who gave evidence as to her previous marriage with Prince Arthur.

He was appointed in 1533 chamberlain to the illegitimized "Princess" Mary, and his allegiance to her father seems about the same time to have begun to waver.

On the outbreak of the Lincolnshire rebellion, known as the Pilgriamage of Grace, in the autumn of 1536, Hussey seemed to remain firm in his allegiance to the King. Lord Hussey had been able to bring in his tenants to fight for the king when he had been ordered to do so. He was accused of making no effort to raise men to put down the rebellion, and the king accused him of being a traitor when he refused to tell the names of the men behind the rebellion. He was tried with Lord Darcy at Westminster on 15 May 1537. Cromwell offered him a pardon if he would furnish particulars concerning the rebellion and he said he could not do so. There is a difference of opinion as to where he was executed -- Sleaford or Tyburn, and as to whether he was hung or beheaded.

In a history of "The Earlier Tudors" by Mackie, it is related that Hussey was beheaded in Lincoln.

After John Hussey was attainted of treason and executed, his manor of Sleford, with other lands to the value of five thousand pounds per annum were confiscated, and barony forfeited. His childred were, however, afterwards restored in parliament the 5th year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth (1563); but neither his estates nor the title were granted to his heirs.

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir John Hussey of Sleaford, Knight, 1st son and heir; Sheriff of county Lincoln 9 Henry 7; aet. 30 at his father's death; Knight of the King;s Body 5 Henry 8; Chief Butler of England 13 Henry 8; summoned to Parliament 3 Nov 21 Henry 8, 1529; attained and beheaded at Lincoln 29 June 29 Henry 8, 1537; his children restored in blood only 5 Eliz., 1562.

John married Ann Grey. Ann was born about 1490 in Of, Kent, England, died after 1537, and was buried from before 11 Feb 1545 to 1546.

Children from this marriage were:

2048       i.  Giles Hussey Sir (born about 1505 of Caythorpe, Lincoln, England)

         ii.  Thomas Hussey

        iii.  Bridget Hussey died on 12 Jan 1600/01 and was buried in Watford, Herts, England.

         iv.  Elizabeth Hussey died from 23 Jan 1571 to 1572 and was buried in Weston Underwood, Bucks., England.

          v.  Anne Hussey

         vi.  Dorothy Hussey

        vii.  Mary Hussey

John next married Margaret Blount.

The child from this marriage was:

          i.  William Hussey Sir Knight


4097. Ann Grey, daughter of George Grey 2nd Earl Of Kent and Katherine Herbert, was born about 1490 in Of, Kent, England, died after 1537, and was buried from before 11 Feb 1545 to 1546.

General Notes: In 1536 she was sent to the Tower for calling the 'illegitimized' Mary (daughter of Henry VIII by his divorced wife Catherine of Arragon) 'princess'.
Henry's reason: he did not want a female heir to the thown.

Ann married John Baron Hussey Sir. John was born in 1466 of Sleaford, Lincoln, England and died on 27 Aug 1537 at age 71.

4098. Thomas Pigot was born of Clotherham, York, England.

Thomas married someone.

His child was:

2049       i.  Jane Pigot


4160. William Perkins, son of Thomas Perkins and Margaret, was born in 1438 in , Warwick, England and died after 1495.

General Notes: Source: Donna J. Howard, PO Box 261, Stoughton, WI 53589. Living in 1495.

William married Joanna Read about 1455 in Hillworton, Warwk., England. Joanna was born in 1434 in Hillmorton, Warwick, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Perkins was born in 1456.

2080      ii.  Thomas Perkins (born in 1458-1475 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England - died in 1528 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England)

        iii.  William Perkins was born in 1460 in Morton, Warwick, England and died in 1536 at age 76.


4161. Joanna Read was born in 1434 in Hillmorton, Warwick, England.

Joanna married William Perkins about 1455 in Hillworton, Warwk., England. William was born in 1438 in , Warwick, England and died after 1495.

4162. Thomas De Astley .

Thomas married Edith.

The child from this marriage was:

2081       i.  Alyse De Astley (born about 1461 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England - died in 1538 in Hilmorton, Warwickshire, England)


4163. Edith, daughter of Peter and Unknown,.

Edith married Thomas De Astley.

8088. Richard Tilden was born about 1510 in Benenden, Kent, England and died in 1566 in Tenterden, , Kent, England about age 56.

Richard married Elizabeth Glover in 1540. Elizabeth was born about 1515 in Benenden, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

4044       i.  Thomas Tilden (born about 1551 in , , Kent, England - died in Mar 1616-1677 in Wye, , Kent, England)


8089. Elizabeth Glover was born about 1515 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Elizabeth married Richard Tilden in 1540. Richard was born about 1510 in Benenden, Kent, England and died in 1566 in Tenterden, , Kent, England about age 56.

8090. Robert Bigge, son of Edward Bigge and Alice, was born about 1505 in Benenden, Kent, England and died on 2 Jan 1548 about age 43.

Robert married Elizabeth about 1547. Elizabeth was born about 1507 in Benenden, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

4045       i.  Alice Biggs (born in 1551 in , , , England - died on 13 May 1593 in Tenterden, , England)


8091. Elizabeth was born about 1507 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Elizabeth married Robert Bigge about 1547. Robert was born about 1505 in Benenden, Kent, England and died on 2 Jan 1548 about age 43.

8092. Lawrence Hucsteppe was born about 1521 in Tenterden, , Kent, England and died before 1559.

Lawrence married Jone Pope in 1546. Jone was born about 1525 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

4046       i.  Stephen Hucstepe (born about 1557 in Tenterden, , Kent, England - died on 20 Jun 1633 in Tenterden, , Kent, England)


8093. Jone Pope was born about 1525 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

Jone married Lawrence Hucsteppe in 1546. Lawrence was born about 1521 in Tenterden, , Kent, England and died before 1559.

8094. Thomas Hatch, son of John Hatch and Mrs. John Hatch, was born about 1525 in Selling, Kent, England and died on 13 Oct 1568 in , , , England about age 43.

Thomas married Joanne. Joanne was born about 1531 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

4047       i.  Winnifred Hatch (born in 1552 in Tenterden, , Kent, England - died on 6 Oct 1592 in Kent County, , England)


8095. Joanne was born about 1531 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

Joanne married Thomas Hatch. Thomas was born about 1525 in Selling, Kent, England and died on 13 Oct 1568 in , , , England about age 43.
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8192. William Hussey Sir, son of John Hussey and Elizabeth Sheffield, was born about 1443, died on 8 Sep 1496 about age 53, and was buried in Sempringham.

General Notes: Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench (1481-1495).

According to Burke, Sir William Hussey, knight, an eminent lawyer in the time of Edward IV., after filling the office of attorney-general, and having been called by writ to the degree of serjeant at law, was constituted lord chief justice of the court of the King's Bench, in the 17th year of that monarch's reign, when he received an allowance of 140 marks, for greater state. He was living temp. Henry VII., as is evident by this inscription over his arms, in the semicircular or bow window, of Grey's Inn Hall, viz., "W. House miles capitalls justiclarius de banco regis, temp. R. Henry VII."

In one of the windows of the chapel, belonging to the same inn, are his arms impalling those of his wife, with the following inscription. "Will. Hussee miles capitalis justic. ad placita coram rege, et Elizabeth a uxor ejur filia Thomae Berkeley arm."

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir William Hussey, Knight of Gray's Inn; Commissioner of Sewers for Kesteven 7 Edward 4; M. P. for Grantham 1467; Attorney-General 16 June 11 Edward 4. 1471; Serjeant-at- Law 14 Oct 17 Edward 4, 1477; Chief Justice of King's Bench 7 May 21 Edward 4, 1481; Commissioner of Array in county of Lincoln 23 Dec 4 Henry 7, 1489; died 8 Sept 11 Henry 7, 1495; burried at Sempringham. Will dated 15 Dec 10 Henry 7; proved (C.P.C.) 4 July 1496.

Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench (1481-1495).

According to Burke, Sir William Hussey, knight, an eminent lawyer in the time of Edward IV., after filling the office of attorney-general, and having been called by writ to the degree of serjeant at law, was constituted lord chief justice of the court of the King's Bench, in the 17th year of that monarch's reign, when he received an allowance of 140 marks, for greater state. He was living temp. Henry VII., as is evident by this inscription over his arms, in the semicircular or bow window, of Grey's Inn Hall, viz., "W. House miles capitalls justiclarius de banco regis, temp. R. Henry VII."

In one of the windows of the chapel, belonging to the same inn, are his arms impalling those of his wife, with the following inscription. "Will. Hussee miles capitalis justic. ad placita coram rege, et Elizabetha uxor ejur filia Thomae Berkeley arm."

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir William Hussey, Knight of Gray's Inn; Commissioner of Sewers for Kesteven 7 Edward 4; M. P. for Grantham 1467; Attorney-General 16 June 11 Edward 4. 1471; Serjeant-at-Law 14 Oct 17 Edward 4, 1477; Chief Justice of King's Bench 7 May 21 Edward 4, 1481; Commissioner of Array in county of Lincoln 23 Dec 4 Henry 7, 1489; died 8 Sept 11 Henry 7, 1495; burried at Sempringham. Will dated 15 Dec 10 Henry 7; proved (C.P.C.) 4 July 1496.

Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench (1481-1495).

According to Burke, Sir William Hussey, knight, an eminent lawyer in the time of Edward IV., after filling the office of attorney-general, and having been called by writ to the degree of serjeant at law, was constituted lord chief justice of the court of the King's Bench, in the 17th year of that monarch's reign, when he received an allowance of 140 marks, for greater state. He was living temp. Henry VII., as is evident by this inscription over his arms, in the semicircular or bow window, of Grey's Inn Hall, viz., "W. House miles capitalls justiclarius de banco regis, temp. R. Henry VII."

In one of the windows of the chapel, belonging to the same inn, are his arms impalling those of his wife, with the following inscription. "Will. Hussee miles capitalis justic. ad placita coram rege, et Elizabeth a uxor ejur filia Thomae Berkeley arm."

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Sir William Hussey, Knight of Gray's Inn; Commissioner of Sewers for Kesteven 7 Edward 4; M. P. for Grantham 1467; Attorney-General 16 June 11 Edward 4. 1471; Serjeant-at- Law 14 Oct 17 Edward 4, 1477; Chief Justice of King's Bench 7 May 21 Edward 4, 1481; Commissioner of Array in county of Lincoln 23 Dec 4 Henry 7, 1489; died 8 Sept 11 Henry 7, 1495; burried at Sempringham. Will dated 15 Dec 10 Henry 7; proved (C.P.C.) 4 July 1496.

The Hussey Manuscripts says: William Hussey, son of John Hussey and Elizabeth Neffield Hussey, was born about 1427, probably at Sleaford, Lincolnshire. He became the most prominent figure in legal circles in late fifteenth century England. He was married about 1460 to Elizabeth Berkeley, daughter of Thomas Berkeley of Wymondham, Leicestershire. "Visitation of Yorkshire" records her father as "Sir Morris Berkeley, knight." William Hussey was appointed by King Edward IV July 16, 1463 to inventory the estate of William Viscount Beaumont, according to "Cambridge Society Publications," Volume I, Series III. He and John Murdock received property from the king at Staunford, Lincolnshire in 1464, according to "Hussey Record." He became commissioner of sewers for Kesteven, Lincolnshire in 1467 and was summoned to Parliament in the same year to represent Grantham, Lincolnshire. William Hussey was appointed Chief Justice of the Common Pleas April 21, 1470. Part of his compensation was "a fee of 40 marks and a cask of wine from the Port of London yearly." He was a resident of Lincolnshire in 1475, according to "Hastings Manuscripts." As Attorney-General he conducted the impeachment of the Duke of Clarence for treason. He was Serjeant-at-Law to King Henry VII on October 17, 1477. He was Chief Justice of the King's Bench on May 7, 1481 at a salary of 140 marks a year. This appointment was repeated by each of the next three kings of England. He received a portion of Tateshall manor, Lincolnshire August 8, 1481, according to "Manuscripts of Lord D'Lisle." Under Henry VII he was a commissioner who decided the claims to fill various offices at the coronation. He was a member of Parliament in 1485, 1486 and 1487. In 1489 he was Commissioner of Array in Lincolnshire. In 1492 he was appointed to negotiate with the French ambassadors. He died September 8, 1495 and was buried at Sempringham, Lincolnshire. His will, dated December 15, 1494, was probated July 4, 1496. A probable relative of William Hussey was "Sir Mark [or Marques] Hussey, master of All Saints Church in Lombard Street, London," according to "Camden Society Publications." Mark Hussey, who previously held the office of chantry priest in Charing church, died in London in 1499. Elizabeth Berkeley Hussey wrote her will in August 1503 in which she also requested to be buried at Sempringham. Her will was probated December 21, 1504.

William married Elizabeth Berkeley about 1464. Elizabeth was born about 1445, died before 21 Dec 1504, and was buried in Sempringham.

Children from this marriage were:

4096       i.  John Baron Hussey Sir (born in 1466 of Sleaford, Lincoln, England - died on 27 Aug 1537)

         ii.  Robert Hussey [Sir Knight] was born about 1467 in Of, Linwood and died on 20 May 1546 about age 79.

        iii.  William Hussey Sir was born before Aug 1503 and died in 1531.

         iv.  Elizabeth Hussey

          v.  Mary Hussey


8193. Elizabeth Berkeley, daughter of Thomas IV Berkeley Sheriff and Petronella Brooksby, was born about 1445, died before 21 Dec 1504, and was buried in Sempringham.

General Notes: A majority of the ancestors of Elizabeth BERKELEY are contained in the LDS Ancestral File. Les Sutton, Houston, TX (1995) provided the notes that accompany the records extracted from the LDS Ancestral Files.

Les Sutton's notes:

According to the Lincolnshire Pedigrees, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Berkeley of Wymondham, county Leicester. Her will is dated Aug 1503; proved (C.P.C.) 21 Dec. 1504; (to be) burried at Sempringham.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Elizabeth married William Hussey Sir about 1464. William was born about 1443, died on 8 Sep 1496 about age 53, and was buried in Sempringham.

8194. George Grey 2nd Earl Of Kent .

George married Katherine Herbert after Jul 1489.

The child from this marriage was:

4097       i.  Ann Grey (born about 1490 in Of, Kent, England - died after 1537)


8195. Katherine Herbert .

Katherine married George Grey 2nd Earl Of Kent after Jul 1489.

8320. Thomas Perkins, son of William Perkins and Margaret, was born about 1397 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and died before 1427.

General Notes: See Issache PERKYNS notes for source.

According to Donna J. Howard, he died before 1427.

On Sat, 24 Jun 2000 18:21:18 -0600 (MDT), Patricia Max <[email protected]> wrote to Roy Leggitt <[email protected]>:
>
>I'm confused looking at some of the early perkins data
>
>Thomas Perkins b abt 1397 has a father William with the same birth date.
>Is there a typo somewhere?
>

Roy Leggitt <[email protected]> responded:

Patricia,

Either I or my source recorded the wrong date for Thomas Perkins or that of his father William. However, I just checked the LDS FamilySearch.org in the Ancestral File and they had his birth recorded as 1358, thirty-nine years before his father's birth of 1397. From looking at that data, it would be most logical for William's birth to be about 1370-80 and Thomas' to be about 1400-10.

The LDS IGI has the following record to support Thomas' later birth date:

FamilySearch® International Genealogical Index™ v4.01 British Isles
IGI Record

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Thomas PERKINS
Sex: M

Event(s):
Birth: Abt. 1410
Hillmorton, Warwick, England

Parents:
Father: William PERKINS
Mother: Mrs Margaret PERKINS

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Just in case you haven't seen it, here is what the LDS Ancestral File has recorded for the first five generation:


Descendants of Pierre De Morlais


First Generation

1. Pierre De Morlais (1) was born about 1350 in Frence. Ancestral File
Number:8X8W-CM.

Pierre married Agnes Taylor.

Children from this marriage were:

+ 2 M i. William Perkins (1) was born about 1397 in
<Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England>.

Second Generation (Children)

2. William Perkins (1) (Pierre De 1) was born about 1397 in <Hillmorton,
Warwickshire, England>. Ancestral File Number:8QRB-47.

William married Margaret Mrs Perkins.

Children from this marriage were:

+ 3 M i. Thomas Perkins (Parkyns) (1) was born in 1358 in
Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England.

Third Generation (Grandchildren)

3. Thomas Perkins (Parkyns) (1) (William 2, Pierre De 1) was born in 1358 in
Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England. Ancestral File Number:91RW-H2.

Thomas married Ellen Tompkins.

Children from this marriage were:

+ 4 M i. William Perkins (1) was born in 1430 in , Warwick,
Eng. and died after 1495.
5 M ii. John Parkyns (1) was born about 1445 in , Madresfield,
Nottinghamshire, Eng and died after 1495 in Ufton
Court, , Berkshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-77.
6 M iii. Thomas Parkyns (1) was born about 1441 in Of
Madresfield, , Nottinghamshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-3J.
7 M iv. Humphrey Parkyns (1) was born about 1446 in ,
Madresfield, Nottinghamshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-8D.
8 M v. James Parkyns (1) was born about 1442 in ,
Madresfield, Nottinghamshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-4P.
9 M vi. Richard Parkyns (1) was born about 1443 in ,
Madresfield, Nottinghamshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-5V.
10 M vii. Lawrence Parkyns (1) was born about 1443 in ,
Madresfield, Nottinghamshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-62.

Fourth Generation (Great Grandchildren)

4. William Perkins (1) (Thomas 3, William 2, Pierre De 1) was born in 1430 in
, Warwick, Eng. and died after 1495. Ancestral File Number:8JDL-K1.

William married Joanna Read about 1455 in Hillworton, Warwk., Eng.

Children from this marriage were:

11 M i. John Perkins (1) was born in 1456 in Hillmorton,
Warwick, Eng.Ancestral File Number:8QG9-5B.
12 M ii. William Perkins (1) was born in 1460 in Morton,
Warwick, Eng., died in 1536 and was buried in 1536.
Ancestral File Number:8QG9-6H.
+ 13 M iii. Thomas Perkins (1) was born in 1458 in Hillmorton,
Warwick, Eng., died on 21 Apr 1528 in Hillworton,
Warwickshire, England and was buried in 1528.
14 M iv. Richard Parkyns (1) was born about 1470 in ,
Hillmorton, Warwickshire, Eng. Ancestral File
Number:GRMZ-F8.

Fifth Generation (Great Great Grandchildren)

13. Thomas Perkins (1) (William 4, Thomas 3, William 2, Pierre De 1) was born
in 1458 in Hillmorton, Warwick, Eng., died on 21 Apr 1528 in Hillworton,
Warwickshire, England and was buried in 1528. Ancestral File
Number:8JDL-HN.

Thomas married Alys Mrs Perkins about 1482 in Hillworton, Warwk., Eng.

Children from this marriage were:

15 M i. Thomas Perkins (1) was born in 1484 in , Hillmorton,
Warwickshire, England, died in 1547 in , Hillmorton,
Warwickshire, England and was buried in 1547.
Ancestral File Number:8JDL-FB.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources

1. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Ancestral File (R),
(Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998).

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Patricia,,

After looking at this for a while, I see that I have two extra generations starting with Pierre De Morlais' son Henry and grandson William. Since both my data and the LDS Ancestral File (and IGI) are not clear, I don't know where to start. Maybe you have an idea.

Thomas married Margaret about 1430. Margaret was born in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  John Perkins

         ii.  Thomas Perkins

4160     iii.  William Perkins (born in 1438 in , Warwick, England - died after 1495)

         iv.  Humphery Perkins


8321. Margaret was born in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England.

Margaret married Thomas Perkins about 1430. Thomas was born about 1397 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England and died before 1427.

8326. Peter .

General Notes: Source: Donna J. Howard, PO Box 261, Stoughton, WI 53589.

Constable of Melton in Norfolk.

Peter married someone.

His child was:

4163       i.  Edith


16180. Edward Bigge, son of Robert Bigge and Agnes, was born about 1480 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Edward married Alice. Alice was born about 1482 in Benenden, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

8090       i.  Robert Bigge (born about 1505 in Benenden, Kent, England - died on 2 Jan 1548)


16181. Alice was born about 1482 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Alice married Edward Bigge. Edward was born about 1480 in Benenden, Kent, England.

16188. John Hatch, son of Thomas Hatch and Mrs. Thomas Hatch, was born about 1495 in Selling, Kent, England and died before 1537.

John married Mrs. John Hatch. Mrs. was born about 1500 in Selling, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

8094       i.  Thomas Hatch (born about 1525 in Selling, Kent, England - died on 13 Oct 1568 in , , , England)


16189. Mrs. John Hatch was born about 1500 in Selling, Kent, England.

Mrs. married John Hatch. John was born about 1495 in Selling, Kent, England and died before 1537.
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16384. John Hussey, son of William Hussey and Daughter Of Lumley, was born about 1417 of Old Sleaford, , England and died about 1440 about age 23.

General Notes: Recorded in the 19th year of the reign of Henry 6, 1440.

The Hussey Manuscripts say: John Hussey, son of William Hussey, was born about 1402. He was married about 1425 to Elizabeth Neffield [or Nesfield] of Yorkshire. "Complete Peerage" shows her name as "Elizabeth Sheffield. John Hussey was collector of customs and subsidies at Boston, Lincolnshire in 1431. On April 30, 1438 a pardon was given to "John Pawelyn of Brampton, Lincolnshire, a gentleman, for not appearing to answer John Husy touching a plea of a debt of 10 marks," according to "Patent Rolls." John Hussey was holding Sleaford manor, Lincolnshire in 1440.

John married Elizabeth Sheffield. Elizabeth was born about 1419 in Of, Yorkshire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

          i.  Gilbert Hussey

8192      ii.  William Hussey Sir (born about 1443 - died on 8 Sep 1496, buried in Sempringham)

        iii.  Thomas Hussey


16385. Elizabeth Sheffield was born about 1419 in Of, Yorkshire, England.

Elizabeth married John Hussey. John was born about 1417 of Old Sleaford, , England and died about 1440 about age 23.

16386. Thomas IV Berkeley Sheriff, son of Sheriff Lawrence Berkeley and Joan Woodford, was born about 1413 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England, died in May 1488 about age 75, and was buried in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

General Notes: OCCU Sheriff of Leicestershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

Thomas married Petronella Brooksby. Petronella was born about 1415, died in 15 Sep, and was buried in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

8193       i.  Elizabeth Berkeley (born about 1445 - died before 21 Dec 1504, buried in Sempringham)


16387. Petronella Brooksby, daughter of William Brooksby and Unknown, was born about 1415, died in 15 Sep, and was buried in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

Petronella married someone.

Her children were:

          i.  Maurice Berkeley [Shrffofleiceste was born about 1439 in Of, Wymondham, Leicestershire, England and died on 23 Mar 1522 about age 83.

         ii.  Lawrence Berkeley was born about 1441.

        iii.  Edith Berkeley was born about 1443, died on 23 Oct 1538 about age 95, and was buried in , Rypengale.

         iv.  Joyce Berkeley was born about 1447 and died after Aug 1503.

          v.  Miss Berkeley was born about 1449 and died after Aug 1503.

Petronella married Thomas IV Berkeley Sheriff. Thomas was born about 1413 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England, died in May 1488 about age 75, and was buried in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

16640. William Perkins, son of John Perkins and Unknown, was born about 1397.

General Notes: According to Donna J. Howard, he was living in 1427.

William married Margaret.

The child from this marriage was:

8320       i.  Thomas Perkins (born about 1397 in Hillmorton, Warwickshire, England - died before 1427)


16641. Margaret .

Margaret married William Perkins. William was born about 1397.

32360. Robert Bigge, son of Richard Bigge and Agnes, was born about 1449 in Benenden, Kent, England and died on 17 Jul 1500 about age 51.

Robert married Agnes. Agnes was born about 1541 in Benenden, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

16180        i.  Edward Bigge (born about 1480 in Benenden, Kent, England)


32361. Agnes was born about 1541 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Agnes married Robert Bigge. Robert was born about 1449 in Benenden, Kent, England and died on 17 Jul 1500 about age 51.

32376. Thomas Hatch, son of Thomas Hatch and Mrs. Thomas Hatch, was born about 1465 in Selling, Kent, England and died before 1535 in See Notes.

Thomas married Mrs. Thomas Hatch. Mrs. was born about 1470 in Selling, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

16188        i.  John Hatch (born about 1495 in Selling, Kent, England - died before 1537)


32377. Mrs. Thomas Hatch was born about 1470 in Selling, Kent, England.

Mrs. married Thomas Hatch. Thomas was born about 1465 in Selling, Kent, England and died before 1535 in See Notes.
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32768. William Hussey, son of Earliest Known Hussey and Unknown, was born about 1391.

General Notes: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Ancestral File contains a genealogy that traces the Hussey line from about 1391 to the mid-1500s.

The British Harleian Society, Volume 51, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, was compiled in about 1750. Pages 526 - 532 contain an extensive genealogy of "Hussey of Sleaford and Honington" that starts with William Hussey in the late 14th century and continues through about 1750. One line of this genealogy is represented here. It runs from William Hussey, born about 1391 through John Hussey, born in the late 1500s. The Lincolnshire Pedigrees for this specific Hussey line ends with that John Hussey with no information other than his name. However, that John Hussey's family is of Surrey County, England, the same county as the John Hussey who is the father of the recognized immigrant to America in 1632, Christopher Hussey.

The Hussey Manuscripts says: William Hussey, believed to be a son of William Hussey, was born about 1379, probably at Flintham, Nottinghamshire. It is believed that he removed to Lincolnshire. John Campbell refers to him as a Lincolnshireman of small means. He was married about 1400 to a Miss Lumley, according to "Lincolnshire Pedigrees."

William married Daughter Of Lumley. Daughter was born about 1393.

The child from this marriage was:

16384        i.  John Hussey (born about 1417 of Old Sleaford, , England - died about 1440)


32769. Daughter Of Lumley was born about 1393.

Daughter married William Hussey. William was born about 1391.

32772. Sheriff Lawrence Berkeley, son of John III Berkeley Sheriff and Miss Isabel Berkeley, was born about 1387 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England and died in 1458 in France about age 71.

General Notes: OCCU Sheriff of Leicestershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

Lawrence married Joan Woodford in Bef 5H4. Joan was born about 1389.

The child from this marriage was:

16386        i.  Thomas IV Berkeley Sheriff (born about 1413 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England - died in May 1488, buried in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England)


32773. Joan Woodford, daughter of Robert Woodford and Unknown, was born about 1389.

Joan married Sheriff Lawrence Berkeley in Bef 5H4. Lawrence was born about 1387 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England and died in 1458 in France about age 71.

32774. William Brooksby was born about 1389.

William married someone.

His child was:

16387        i.  Petronella Brooksby (born about 1415 - died in 15 Sep)

William next married someone.


33280. John Perkins, son of Henry Perkins and Unknown,.

General Notes: According to Donna J. Howard, he was living in 1399 and was Senschal to Thomas, Duke of Glouchester, 1398.

John married someone.

His child was:

16640        i.  William Perkins (born about 1397)


64720. Richard Bigge was born about 1424 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Richard married Agnes. Agnes was born about 1426 in Benenden, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

32360        i.  Robert Bigge (born about 1449 in Benenden, Kent, England - died on 17 Jul 1500)


64721. Agnes was born about 1426 in Benenden, Kent, England.

Agnes married Richard Bigge. Richard was born about 1424 in Benenden, Kent, England.

64752. Thomas Hatch, son of John Hatch and Mrs. Agnes Hatch, was born about 1442 in Tenderden, Kent, England and died after 1464 in Selling, Kent, England.

Thomas married Mrs. Thomas Hatch. Mrs. was born about 1447 in Selling, Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

32376        i.  Thomas Hatch (born about 1465 in Selling, Kent, England - died before 1535 in See Notes)


64753. Mrs. Thomas Hatch was born about 1447 in Selling, Kent, England.

Mrs. married Thomas Hatch. Thomas was born about 1442 in Tenderden, Kent, England and died after 1464 in Selling, Kent, England.
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65536. Earliest Known Hussey .

General Notes: Source: State of Maine, ca 1909. This is an ancient English which came into England with William The Conqueror, in 1066, and can be traced back to Hugh Hoese of the year 1014. He married a daughter of the third Duke of Normandy and his name became changed from its German form to the French, De Hosey, and this has been anglicized to Hussey. Very soon after its arrival in this country the family became identified with the Society of Friends or Quakers, and most of its members have ever since continued in that affiliation. In England it is represented by Sir George Alfred Ernest Hussey, who was mayor of South Hampton from 1898 to 1901. In this county, William J. Hussey, an astronomer of note is the author of many scientific works and professor at the University of Michigan. It is supposed that all the Husseys in this country, who can trace their ancestry through several generations, are descendants of Christopher Hussey of Hampton, New Hampshire. This New England family dates its history in America from the year 1632 and is descended from the still older English family of the same name which in the last half of the sixteenth century was seated in Dorking, Surrey. The first authentic account we have of the family here under consideration is the record of marriage of John Hussey and Mary Wood. December 5, 1593, when they both were of Dorking, and were persons of good position and of moderate estate in lands. John Hussey died in England, leaving a widow and children. Of the latter the records are meagre, but there is known to have been a son John, who died young, a son Christopher and one or more daughters, of whom we have no authentic account.

The following is taken from "My Family Tree", privately published in 1982 by Adelle Whitby Olney. The text is in the FHL as 929.273 H9650.

The name of Hussey was probably derived from the residence of the first bearers of a place of that name, probably at Heusse, in the department of La Manche, France; or at Hosa, Normandy. Family tradition has it that the progenitor of the familly in England was HUBERT HUSE who came with Wm. the conquerer in 1066. After the successful conquest, many lands of the English were confiscated and given to certain leaders of the Norman army. Many Barons, Earls and Lords were created and Hubert Huse was knighted and obtained the title SIR in his name and all the first born sons in succession. The sons of record of Sir Hubert were Wm. & Henry. Both received lands and were knighted. Wm. became Sir Wm. in the counties Dorset and Somerset. Sir Henry headed the house of County Sussex.
Sir Henry's line ended aftrer 9 successions.

Much of the information regarding the English line until they emigrated to America is taken from the INSTITUTE OF HERALDRY & THE MEDIA RESEARCH BUREAU OF WASHINGTON D.C. Then taking up in America, information from a manuscript by Isaac N. hussey, first in pencil about 1900 then tyhped in 1932...and from correspondence with living descendants. The English descendants are probably as follows:
I. SIR HUBERT HUSE (as mentioned above.)
(Direct line of Descent will be in Capitols.)
II. Wm. son of Sir Hubert settled in Somersetshire, One of his sons III. GEOFFERY, Lord of Charlacombe, whos son
IV. Henry (and Matthew & Wm. & Hubert & Sir Hugh) who emigrated to Ireland and established the name there.
V. Ralph m the dau. of Earl of Warwick & sons:
VI. WILLIAM (and Edward, Geoffrey, Henry.)
VII. REGINALD m Alianora Dawbignie and had sons Sir Edmund who changed name to
HUSSEY. And a son
VIII. WM. who took name Hussey also & had son
IX. JAMES who m Joan Winterbourne & settled in County Dorset X. THOMAS m Joan de Bowoode & whose son
XI. THOMAS m Mary Tourney and sons
XII. THOMAS & Helias who became a priest. and Thomas' son XIII. JOHN m Eleanor Turgus. Sons Robert, John,
XIV. THOMAS m Christian FitzJames, 8 sons & several daughters; Thomas, Bartholomew, Richard, James, Wm., Robert, Samson, Nicholas, XV. THOMAS of the above sons m Eliz. Keymer. Several children reported of whom XVI. THOMAS m Jane Townshend. To whom born amoung others, a son XVII. HUGH m Ellen Devereaux and son
XVIII. John m MARY WOOD and was the father of Christopher who was the emigrant who carried the name to America.

Ms. Olney credits the above chart to Martha Hollingsworth, Jamestown, Ohio.

However, the genealogy I have chosen to follow is the one described by Dora Davenport Jones. See the entry for George Hussey, whom she indicates is the father of John (XVIII above).

Go to the Hussey Manuscripts at http://bz.llano.net/gowen/hussey_millenium/husseyms_001.htm and read a detailed interpretation of early Hussey genealogy going back to the 12th century. It starts with:

T H E H U S S E Y M I L L E N N I U M Page .
_

By family tradition the English Husseys were Normans, earlier Danes, and prior to that, Scandinavians who had invaded northern France and, settling there, adapted to French language and customs. According to Stapleton's "Rotulli Scaccarii Normanniae," Osbert de Hozu, who was living in England in 1180, was so named for le Hozu, a fief in the parish of Grand Quevilly near Rouen, France. Adella Whitney Olney, a genealogist of Niland, California, suggests that the name may be derived from Heusse in the department of La Manche, France. In an old account of the Hussey family the name is said to have been Touasi de Hosa. German and French versions render it as de Hoese and de Hosey. In early medieval England the name Hussey was usually spelled Hose. In the Latin form it was Hosatus. During the thirteenth century it tended to evolve into Hoese, later to Huse and Husee and ultimately to Hussey.

The following was provided to me in Aug 2007 by Jerry Hussey:

By family tradition the English Husseys were Normans, earlier Danes, and prior to that, Scandinavians who had invaded northern France and, settling there, adapted to French language and customs.

According to Stapleton's "Rotulli Scaccarii Normanniae," Osbert de Hozu,who was living in England in 1180, was so named for le Hozu,a fief in the parish of Grand Quevilly near Rouen, France. Adella Whitney Olney, agenealogist of Niland, California, suggests that the name may be derived from Heusse in the department of La Manche, France. In an old account of the Hussy family the name is said to have been Tousai de Hosa. German and French versions render it as de Hoese and de Hosey. In early medieval England the name Hussey was usually spelled Hose. In the Latin form it was Hosatus. During the 13th century it tended to evolve into Hoese, later to Huse and Husee and ultimately to Hussey.

The Hussey family, after the conquest, was seated in Dorsetshire according to "Directory of Ancestral Heads of New England Families,1520-1700" by Frank P. Holmes. Members of the family were frequently found in the early records of Berkshire, Wiltshire and Somersetshire, according to "Genealogical Dictionary of Maine and New Hampshire" by Charles Thornton Libby.

The earliest claimed progenitor of the Hussey family in Normandy is Hugh Hussey who in 1014 was married to a daughter of the Third Earl of Normandy, who is conjectured to be a descendant of Rollo of Normandy.

Here is the beginning of the manuscript entitled "Pedigree of the Hussey's"

"The pedigree of the husseys, anciently called Hose, Huse, Hoese, Husee, de Hosato and Hosato, formerly in posession of Nicholas Gould, of Frome Hall, Esq., is deducted from very ancient times.

A marginal note gives us an account of this very ancient and knightly family: See 'Camden's Remains,' p. 191.

'Duke Rollo the Stronge was a Saryson, and came out of Denmarke into France; and there by his valiencie and stron battailes, did so fear the Kinge, that he caused the King of France to make an agreement in which agreement it was concluded he should marry the King's daughter, and should have with her the duchy of Normandie in marriage, and so was Rollo the first Duke of Normandie. William Long Espe, in english called William with the Longe Sword, was a sonne of Rollo, and the second duke.

Richard san Pavoyn, in English called Richard Without Fear, was the son of William, and the third duke. Richard the Second, was the sonne of Richard and the fifth duke; which Richard had issue, Robert the sixth duke, and Helen, Comtesse Huse. Robert begat William , which was the seventh duke of Normandie. This William was a vibrant man, but illegitimate, and base bourne; yet he succeeded his father Robert, in the dukedom, and by warlike prowess arrived also in England, and by conquest was crowned King of this lande. His mother was the daughter of a certain citizen of Falesia.

The aforementioned Comtesse Helen was the wife of a nobleman called Hubert Huse, near to Ceasersburyn in Normandie; which Hubert the aforesaid Duke William brought to England, with all his natural brethren according to the flesh; and when he had conquered the isle, created the aforesaid Hubert his constable there, by means where of the said Hubertgained great substance. This Hubert had by his wife Helen, William. This William Huse begat William. William begat Godfryd. This Godfrydwas one which did chiefly assist his kinsman, Maud, Empresse, and her son against King Stephen. This Godfryd begat Henry and Hubert, King ofthe Ambages, and Lord William Huse, the religious Mounke of Glastonbury, and ten brethren more, which were knights.

Henry begat Ralph Huse, which married the Earl's daughter of Warwick. Ralph begat William, William begat Raynold; Raynold begat Edmund Huse and William Huse; so from teh aforesaid Huses came all the Huses, which dispersed in the realm of England. The richer sort of them do inhabit the higher parts of the land; the other towards Poole, or thereabout. This genealogie was written in ancient French and found in the Abbey of Glastonbury, at such time it was supressed by King Henry the Eighth."

At the top of the pedigree are the arms of Hussey: "Barry of six Ermineand Gules"
Crest: a boot, sable, turned down ermine; the spurs and leathers, or perhaps an allusion to their name, quasi de Hosato, from Hosa; a buskinor boot.

At the bottom of the shield issue two arms and hands, sable, holding a human heart, proper.
Motto: Cor Immobile

There of course is much more but I am tired of typing. I hope you enjoy this as much as I do.

Regards, Steve Irons.

Earliest married someone.

His child was:

32768        i.  William Hussey (born about 1391)


65544. John III Berkeley Sheriff, son of John II Berkeley Sheriff and Miss Elizabeth Berkeley, was born about 1361 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England and died before 20 Mar 1413.

General Notes: OCCU Sheriff of Lancastershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750.

Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

John married Miss Isabel Berkeley. Miss was born about 1363 and died about 1437 about age 74.

The child from this marriage was:

32772        i.  Sheriff Lawrence Berkeley (born about 1387 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England - died in 1458 in France)


65545. Miss Isabel Berkeley was born about 1363 and died about 1437 about age 74.

Miss married John III Berkeley Sheriff. John was born about 1361 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England and died before 20 Mar 1413.

65546. Robert Woodford was born about 1363.

Robert married someone.

His child was:

32773        i.  Joan Woodford (born about 1389)


66560. Henry Perkins, son of Pierre (Perkins) De Morlais and Agnes Taylor,.

General Notes: According to Donna J. Howard, his name could have been spelled Pierrekin.

Leggitt note - this is an interesting derivation of Perkins, kin of Pierre.

Henry married someone.

His child was:

33280        i.  John Perkins


129504. John Hatch was born about 1415 in Selling, Kent, England and was buried after 1463 in Selling, Kent, England.

John married Mrs. Agnes Hatch. Mrs. was born about 1419 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

The child from this marriage was:

64752        i.  Thomas Hatch (born about 1442 in Tenderden, Kent, England - died after 1464 in Selling, Kent, England)


129505. Mrs. Agnes Hatch was born about 1419 in Tenterden, , Kent, England.

Mrs. married John Hatch. John was born about 1415 in Selling, Kent, England and was buried after 1463 in Selling, Kent, England.
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131088. John II Berkeley Sheriff, son of John I Berkeley and Isabel Burdet, was born about 1335 and died in 1374 about age 39.

General Notes: OCCU Sheriff of Lancastershire

The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750. Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

John married Miss Elizabeth Berkeley before 1374. Miss was born about 1337 and died after 1400.

The child from this marriage was:

65544        i.  John III Berkeley Sheriff (born about 1361 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England - died before 20 Mar 1413)


131089. Miss Elizabeth Berkeley was born about 1337 and died after 1400.

Miss married John II Berkeley Sheriff before 1374. John was born about 1335 and died in 1374 about age 39.

133120. Pierre (Perkins) De Morlais was born about 1350 in , , , France.

General Notes: Source: PERKINS PRESS by Jennifer A. Perkins Publications, N. 5803 Ash, Spokane, WA 99205, Vols 2 and 6 submitted by Donna J. Howard, PO Box 261, Stoughton, WI 53589.

Pierre Morlaix (Peter Morley alias Perkins) of Shropshire. Sargeant to Lord Hugh de Spencer of the Manor of Shiptonin, Oxfordshire, living in 1381.

Source: The information pertaining to AFN:8X8W-CM is from the LDS Ancestral File as of Oct 1990.

Paula Mortensen, Prodigy (PWHC05B) indicates several sources for Perkins information:

The History of Ufton Cout of the Parish of Ufton in the County of Berks and of the Perkins Family, by A. Mary Sharp.

Perkins Families in Ye Olden Times, by D. W. Perkins,

Some Accounts of the Parish of Hillmorton, by Matthew Holbeche Bloxam.

The Ancestry of Dudley Wildes 1759-1820, by Walter Goodwin Davis.

Pierre married Agnes Taylor. Agnes was born about 1352.

The child from this marriage was:

66560        i.  Henry Perkins


133121. Agnes Taylor was born about 1352.

Agnes married Pierre (Perkins) De Morlais. Pierre was born about 1350 in , , , France.
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262176. John I Berkeley, son of Thomas III De Berkeley and Isabel Hamelin, was born about 1310 in Coston, Leicestershire, England and died before 1356.

General Notes: The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750. Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

John married Isabel Burdet before 1341. Isabel was born about 1312.

The child from this marriage was:

131088       i.  John II Berkeley Sheriff (born about 1335 - died in 1374)


262177. Isabel Burdet, daughter of Robert Burdet and Unknown, was born about 1312.

Isabel married John I Berkeley before 1341. John was born about 1310 in Coston, Leicestershire, England and died before 1356.
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524352. Thomas III De Berkeley, son of Thomas De Berkeley and Joan De Ferrers, was born about 1280 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England and died before Apr 1346 in Probably Coston, Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

General Notes: The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750. Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

Thomas married Isabel Hamelin before 1318. Isabel was born about 1276 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

262176       i.  John I Berkeley (born about 1310 in Coston, Leicestershire, England - died before 1356)


524353. Isabel Hamelin, daughter of John Hamelin Sir and Matilda Erdington, was born about 1276 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

Isabel married Thomas III De Berkeley before 1318. Thomas was born about 1280 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England and died before Apr 1346 in Probably Coston, Wymondham, Leicestershire, England.

524354. Robert Burdet was born about 1286.

Robert married someone.

His child was:

262177       i.  Isabel Burdet (born about 1312)


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1048704. Thomas De Berkeley, son of Maurice De Berkeley Lord and Isabel Fitz Roy, was born in 1245 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England, died on 23 Jul 1321 at age 76, and was buried in St Augustines, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

General Notes: The British Harleian Society, Lincolnshire Pedigrees, compiled about 1750. Burke, "Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyany, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire" (1866).

Lygon, "The Ligon Family and Connections" (1947).

Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

http://www.tomkinshome.com/familyweb/aqwg180.htm has this:

BIOGRAPHY: Thomas de Berkeley, b. at Berkeley in 1245, was summoned to parliament by writ as a baron from 23 June 1295 to 15 May 1321. This nobleman was of great eminence in the reigns of Edward I and and Edward II, being in the French, Welsh, and Scottish wars of those periods, particularly at the celebrated siege of Caerlaverock. He was involved, however, at the close of his life in the treason of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster. His lordship m. circa 1267 Jane, dau. of William de Ferrers, Earl of Derby, and dying July 23, 1321 (his wife d. 19 Mar 1309], left issue,

BIOGRAPHY: I. Maurice, 2nd baron II. Thomas, ancestor of the Berkeleys of Wymondham, co. Leicester, extinct in Sir Henry Berkeley, living 1622. III. John, d. s. p. 10th Edward II [c. 1317] IV. James, a bishop I. Isabel, d. unm. II. Margaret, d. unm.

BIOGRAPHY: [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 44, Berkeley, Viscount Berkeley, Earl of Nottingham, and Marquess of Berkeley]

Thomas married Joan De Ferrers in 1267. Joan was born about 1238 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England, died from 19 Mar 1309 to 1310 about age 71, and was buried in St Augustines, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

524352       i.  Thomas III De Berkeley (born about 1280 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England - died before Apr 1346 in Probably Coston, Wymondham, Leicestershire, England)


1048705. Joan De Ferrers was born about 1238 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England, died from 19 Mar 1309 to 1310 about age 71, and was buried in St Augustines, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

Joan married Thomas De Berkeley in 1267. Thomas was born in 1245 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England, died on 23 Jul 1321 at age 76, and was buried in St Augustines, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.

1048706. John Hamelin Sir was born about 1250 in Of.

General Notes: OCCU Knight

John married Matilda Erdington. Matilda was born about 1252.

The child from this marriage was:

524353       i.  Isabel Hamelin (born about 1276 in Wymondham, Leicestershire, England)


1048707. Matilda Erdington was born about 1252.

Matilda married John Hamelin Sir. John was born about 1250 in Of.
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2097408. Maurice De Berkeley Lord, son of Thomas De Berkeley and Unknown, was born in 1218 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England and died in 1281 at age 63.

General Notes: Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

Look at http://www.berkeley-castle.com/

It says the Berkely Castle was completed in 1153 by Lord Maurice de Berkeley at the command of King Henry II, view our timeline and the history surrounding twenty-five generations of Berkeleys.

That timeline can be seen at http://www.berkeley-castle.com/history.html.

Maurice married Isabel Fitz Roy.12 Isabel was born about 1225 in Chilham Castle, Kent, England, died on 7 Jul 1276 in Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England about age 51, and was buried in St. Augustine's Priory, Briston, Gloucestershire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

1048704       i.  Thomas De Berkeley (born in 1245 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England - died on 23 Jul 1321, buried in St Augustines, Bristol, Gloucestershire, England)


2097409. Isabel Fitz Roy,12 daughter of Richard Fitz Roy and Rohsie (Rose) Dover, was born about 1225 in Chilham Castle, Kent, England, died on 7 Jul 1276 in Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England about age 51, and was buried in St. Augustine's Priory, Briston, Gloucestershire, England.

General Notes: (Isabel de Dover)

Isabel married Maurice De Berkeley Lord. Maurice was born in 1218 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England and died in 1281 at age 63.

Isabel next married Maurice De ' Berkeley.12 Maurice was born about 1218 in Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England and died on 4 Apr 1281 in St. Augustine's Priory, Briston, Gloucestershire, England about age 63.

The child from this marriage was:

             i.  Thomas De ' Berkeley 12 was born about 1245 in Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England and died on 23 Jul 1321 in St. Augustine's Abbey, Bristol, England about age 76.


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4194816. Thomas De Berkeley was born in 1170 and died in 1232 at age 62.

General Notes: Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

Thomas married someone.

His child was:

2097408       i.  Maurice De Berkeley Lord (born in 1218 in Castle Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England - died in 1281)


4194818. Richard Fitz Roy,12 son of John I Lackland ' Plantagenet King Of England and Agatha De ' Ferrers, was born about 1186 in Chilham Castle, Kent, England and died before 24 Jun 1246.

General Notes: Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

Larry Giles says: baron of Chilham (Richard de Dover)

Richard FITZROY was born about 1186 in Of, Chilham Castle, Kent, England. He died on 6 Aug 1270. He married Rohsia (Rose) DOVER about 1207 in Of, Chilham, Kent, England.

At http://www.ishipress.com/pafg172.htm Douglas Richardson said:

King John's bastard son, Richard Fitz Roy, was known under several designations as follows:.

Cal. of Liberate Rolls 2 (1930): 136 (Richard de Chilham styled "king';s brother"). Curia Regis Rolls 16 (1979): 115,145,169,178 (instances of being styled "Ricardus de Chilham"), 175 (styled "Ricardus Fiz le Roy"), 232 (styled "Ricardus de Warenn' filius regis Johannis"), 450 (styled "Ricardus de Warein'"); 17 (1991): 26 (styled "Ricardus filius Regis de Chileham").

One of Richard's seals which has survived calls him Richard de Warenne. Due to his various forms, I have elected to call him Richard Fitz Roy (otherwise de Warenne, also de Chilham) in the forthcoming book, Plantagenet Ancestry.

Interestingly, Richard's son, Richard the younger, was known as both "de Dover" and "de Chilham" as appears below:

Cal. of Liberate Rolls 2 (1930): 122 (Richard son of Richard de Chilham styled "king's nephew"), 249 (Richard de Dovor styled "king's kinsman").

As for Philip Fitz Roy, if you know of a original contemporary record which specifically refers to Philip as "Philip de Cognac," please let me know. Kindly provide your source.

Best always, Douglas Richardson, Salt Lake City, Utah

Richard married Rohsie (Rose) Dover.

The child from this marriage was:

2097409       i.  Isabel Fitz Roy 12 (born about 1225 in Chilham Castle, Kent, England - died on 7 Jul 1276 in Berkeley Castle, Thornbury, Gloucestershire, England)


4194819. Rohsie (Rose) Dover .

General Notes: http://www.ishipress.com/pafg172.htm says: Rohsia (Rose) DOVER was born about 1188 in Of, Chilham, Kent, England. She married Richard FITZROY about 1207 in Of, Chilham, Kent, England. That site lists her parents as:

Robert (Richard) De DOVER was born about 1161 in Of, Chilham, Kent, England. He married Isabel De BRIWERE about 1187 in Of, Chilham, Kent, England.

Isabel De BRIWERE was born about 1184 in , Stoke, Devonshire, England. She died in 1233. She married Robert (Richard) De DOVER about 1187 in Of, Chilham, Kent, England.

Rohsie married Richard Fitz Roy.12 Richard was born about 1186 in Chilham Castle, Kent, England and died before 24 Jun 1246.
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8389636. John I Lackland ' Plantagenet King Of England,12 son of Henry II Plantagenet King Of England and Alienor D' ' Aquitaine, was born on 24 Dec 1167 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, died on 19 Oct 1216 in Newark Castle, Nottinghamshire, England at age 48, and was buried in Worcester Cathedral, Worcestershire, England.

General Notes: Frederick Lewis Weis, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists", 7th ed.

John was the youngest of the 4 sons of King Henry. He first claimed the crown in 1193 when news broke that his brother, King Richard (the Lion Hearted), was held prisoner "somewhere in Germany." In April 1193 Richard was offered for ransom by the Holy Roman Emperor. (See Winston Churchill's detailed account of this episode in Vol. 1 of "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The Birth of Britain" at pgs.236-237) Richard reclaimed the crown in 1194 after his release.

Larry Giles says: Richard was killed by a crossbow in a small skirmish in 1199. He died on April 6, 1199 from the wound, and John had been declared his heir before Richard died.

Much is written about King John in Chapter 15 of Churchill's book (above) because it was he who was king at the signing of the Magna Carta on June 15, 1215. He died the following summer.
king of Ireland (1177-1216), king of England (1199-1216), duc de Normandie (1199-1204), (1199-1216), comte de Poitiers , d'Anjou and de Tours (1199-1216), comte du Maine (1200-1205) (John Plantagenêt )

http://www.aritek.com/hartgen/htm/kings.htm has the following: King John - JOHN OF ENGLAND (1167-1216). Vicious, shameless, and ungrateful, King John has been called the worst king ever to rule England. Yet the very excesses of his reign proved positive in that they provoked such a violent reaction that his subjects revolted and forced him to put his seal on the Magna Carta. This document became the safeguard of English liberty. John's nickname was Lackland because at first he owned no land. Later his father, King Henry II, gave him castles, lands, and revenues in both England and France. John plotted against his father, however, and the discovery of this conspiracy was a factor in the king's death. John's brother, Richard the Lion-Hearted, became king and added to John's possessions. While Richard was absent from England on the Third Crusade, John conspired against him also. When Richard died in 1199, the barons selected John to be their king. This denied the royal claim of Arthur, son of another brother, Geoffrey. Two French provinces fought for young Arthur, but the boy fell into the hands of John and died soon after. During the war John lost all his French possessions except Aquitaine. John then quarreled with Pope Innocent III about the appointment of Stephen Langton as archbishop of Canterbury. John was excommunicated, and England was forbidden all religious services except baptism and extreme unction. The growing discontent of his subjects finally forced John to recognize the new archbishop. When John went to France seeking to regain his lands in Normandy, the barons marched against the king and demanded a charter of liberties. All but a handful of followers deserted John. He was forced to meet the barons at Runnymede on June 15, 1215, and to sign the Great Charter. John had no intention of supporting the charter, however. He recruited a new army and destroyed the estates of the barons. The barons then offered the English crown to Louis, a French prince. In the midst of a war for the throne, John died of a fever. The task of restoring the torn kingdom fell to his nine-year-old son, Henry III.

John was on the list of those who had plotted against his father, Henry I, but was not successful in plotting against his brother, Richard. Richard gave him lands in Normandy and England, but these were not enough. While Richard was imprisoned, John unsuccessfully rebelled several times. Upon Richard's return, he was reprimanded and kept out of trouble for the last five years of his brother's reign and earned the succession to the throne.

John was respected as successor in England, but in Anjou, Maine, and Touraine Arthur, son of Geoffrey of Brittany, was recognized as sovereign. John persuaded Philip II to oust the twelve-year-old Arthur and became Lord of the Angevin Empire. He then annulled his marriage to Isabella of Gloucester, whom Richard had betrothed to him, and, in an effort to unite the two halves of his empire, married Isabella of Angouleme. Unfortunately, John's bride's former fiance appealed to Philip II, and Philip declared all of John's recent acquisitions forfeit.

John captured Arthur shortly after his possessions were forfeited. Arthur disappeared and the murder has never been proven.

Determined to get his territory back, John levied high taxes on his nobles. This also came at the time of a conflict with Pope Innocent III. John refused to accept the papal appointment to the position of Archbishop of Canterbury. The pope punished John by placing England and Wales under an interdict and excommunicating John a year later John, however, needed papal support to win his invasion of France. John made England a papal fief and invaded. In 1214, John lost the Battle of Bovines and the English barons had enough.

In 1215, the barons seized London and forced John to sign the Magna Carta at Runnymead. John had no intention of living up to the document, and the barons looked to Louis of France, Philip's son, for aid. Louis invaded England in 1216. John died that year in October with a nine-year old son as his successor.

John (reigned 1199-1216) was an able administrator interested in law and government but he neither trusted others nor was trusted by them. Heavy taxation, disputes with the Church (John was excommunicated by the Pope in 1209) and unsuccessful attempts to recover his French possessions made him unpopular. Many of his barons rebelled and in June 1215 they forced the King to sign a peace treaty accepting their reforms.

This treaty, later known as Magna Carta, limited royal powers, defined feudal obligations between the King and the barons, and guaranteed a number of rights. The most influential clauses concerned the freedom of the Church; the redress of grievances of owners and tenants of land; the need to consult the Great Council of the Realm so as to prevent unjust taxation; mercantile and trading relationships; regulation of the machinery of justice so that justice be denied to no one; and the requirement to control the behavior of royal officials.

The most important clauses established the basis of habeas corpus ('you have the body'), i.e. that no one shall be imprisoned except by due process of law, and that 'to no one will we sell, to no one will we refuse or delay right or justice'.

The Charter also established a council of barons who were to ensure that the Sovereign observed the Charter, with the right to wage war on him if he did not. Magna Carta was the first formal document insisting that the Sovereign was as much under the rule of law as his people, and that the rights of individuals were to be upheld even against the wishes of the sovereign. As a source of fundamental constitutional principles, Magna Carta came to be seen as an important definition of aspects of English law, and in later centuries as the basis of the liberties of the English people.

A peace treaty Magna Carta was a failure and the rebels invited Louis of France to become their king. When John died in 1216 England was in the grip of civil war.

John married Agatha De ' Ferrers 12 (not married) in England. Agatha was born about 1168 in Chartley, Staffordshire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

4194818       i.  Richard Fitz Roy 12 (born about 1186 in Chilham Castle, Kent, England - died before 24 Jun 1246)

John next married Isabella D' ' Angouleme 12 on 24 Aug 1200 in Bordeaux Cathedral, Gascony, France. Isabella was born about 1186 in Angouleme, Charente, France, died on 31 May 1245 in Fontevrault, Maine, France about age 59, and was buried in Fontevrault Abbey, Maine, France.

General Notes: Queen of England (1200-1216)


8389637. Agatha De ' Ferrers,12 daughter of William ' Ferrers and Sybil De ' Braose, was born about 1168 in Chartley, Staffordshire, England.

Agatha married John I Lackland ' Plantagenet King Of England 12 (not married) in England. John was born on 24 Dec 1167 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, died on 19 Oct 1216 in Newark Castle, Nottinghamshire, England at age 48, and was buried in Worcester Cathedral, Worcestershire, England.
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16779272. Henry II Plantagenet King Of England,12 son of Geoffrey Plantagenet and Matilda/Maud Empress, was born on 5 Mar 1133 in Le Mans, Sarthe, France, died on 6 Jul 1189 in Chinon, Indre-Et-Loire, France at age 56, and was buried on 8 Jul 1189 in Fontevrault Abbey, Maine-Et-Loire, France.

General Notes: Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The Birth of Britain", Vol. 1 at pgs 199-225.

Henry II became king in 1154 and reigned until his death in 1189.

For a more detailed account of King Henry's reign see chapter 12 of Sir Winston's book (above).

He conquered Normandy in September 1106.

Larry Giles says: Courtemanche duc de Normandie (1150-1189), comte d'Anjou , de Tours and du Maine (1151-1189), duc d'Aquitaine (1152-1189), king of England (1154-1189), suzerain de l'Irlande (1171-1175), gardien de la Bretagne(1166-1189) (Henri Plantagenêt )

www.aritek.com/ hartgen/htm/kings.htm has the following: King Henry II "Curtmantle" Plantagenet - was born on 5 Mar 1132 in Sarthe, France and died on 3 Jul 1189 in Chinon, Indre-et-Loire, France and was buried on 19 Dec 1154 in Westminster Abbey, London, England. He was the son of Count Geoffrey V "le Bon" - "The Handsome" Plantagenet.
King Henry married Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine on 18 May 1152 in Bordeaux, Gironde, France. Queen Eleanor was born in 1123 in Chateau De Belin, Bordeaux, Aquitaine. She was the daughter of Duke Guillaume X of Aquitaine and Eleanor de Chatellerault. She died on 31 Mar 1204 in Poitiers, Poitou, Aquitaine .

Henry married Alienor D' ' Aquitaine 12 on 18 May 1152 in Bordeaux. Alienor was born about 1122 in Cheateau DE Belin, Bordeaus, Aquitaine, died on 31 Mar 1204 in Mirabell Castle, Tarn-Et-Garonne, France about age 82, and was buried in Fontevruad Abbey, Maine-Et-Lorie, France.

Children from this marriage were:

8389636       i.  John I Lackland ' Plantagenet King Of England 12 (born on 24 Dec 1167 in Beaumont Palace, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England - died on 19 Oct 1216 in Newark Castle, Nottinghamshire, England)

            ii.  Alienor ' Plantagenet 12 was born on 13 Oct 1162 in Domfront, Normandy, France, died on 31 Oct 1214 in Las Huelgas, Burgos, Spain at age 52, and was buried in Monasterio, Las Huelgas, Burgos, Spain.

Henry next married Rosamund ' Clifford.12 Rosamund was born Est 1130, died about 1176 about age 46, and was buried in Godstow.




16779273. Alienor D' ' Aquitaine,12 daughter of Guillaume X D' ' Aquitaine and Aenor De ' Chatellerault, was born about 1122 in Cheateau DE Belin, Bordeaus, Aquitaine, died on 31 Mar 1204 in Mirabell Castle, Tarn-Et-Garonne, France about age 82, and was buried in Fontevruad Abbey, Maine-Et-Lorie, France.

General Notes: Larry Giles says: duchesse d'Aquitaine and de Gascogne (1137-1204), comtesse de Poitiers (1137-1204), reine de France (1137-1152), queen of England (1154-1189) (Aliénor de Guyenne) (Éléonore d'Aquitaine)

www.aritek.com/ hartgen/htm/kings.htm has the following: Queen Eleanor - In an age known largely for the exploits of kings, princes, dukes, and their warriors, Eleanor of Aquitaine stood out as one of the most remarkable of women. She was the wife and mother of kings and a dominant political force in the Europe of her time.

When her fagther died in 1137 she inherited his domain, which was larger than that ruled by the king of France. The same year she married the heir to the French throne, who became King Louis Vii a month afterward. During their 15-year marriage, she exerted considerable influence upon the running of the country and even accompanied him on the Second Crusade from 1147 to 1149. His jealousy led to separation, and the marriage was annulled; but she regained possession of Aquitaine.

In 1152 she married Henry Plantagenet, who became Henry Ii of England two years later. Together they had eight children, among whom were Richard I the Lion-Hearted and John, both of whom later became kings of England. This union brought together England, Aquitaine, Anjou, and Normandy under one rule. Two centuries later England's various French possessions became an underlying cause of the Hundred Years' War.

After the revolt of her sons against Henry Ii, Eleanor was kept in semi-confinement from 1174 to 1189, when Henry died. She then became active in affairs of state under her son Richard I and, after his death without an heir in 1199, under John. She worked for peace between France and England and helped preserve John's French domains. Eleanor died on April 1, 1204, in the monastery at Fontevrault in Anjou. (Sources: - <plantagenet_2.htm>)
Then King Henry married Rosamond de Clifford <de-normandie.htm>. Rosamond was born about 1136 in Clifford Castle, Clifford, Herefordshire, England. She was the daughter of Walter de Clifford <de-normandie.htm> and Margaret de Toni <de-toni.htm>. She died about 1176 in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England .

Alienor married Henry II Plantagenet King Of England 12 on 18 May 1152 in Bordeaux. Henry was born on 5 Mar 1133 in Le Mans, Sarthe, France, died on 6 Jul 1189 in Chinon, Indre-Et-Loire, France at age 56, and was buried on 8 Jul 1189 in Fontevrault Abbey, Maine-Et-Loire, France.

Alienor next married Louis VII ' Capet.12 Louis was born about 1120 and died on 18 Sep 1180 in Paris, France about age 60.

General Notes: roi de France (1137-1180), duc d'Aquitaine (1137-1152) (Louis Capet )


16779274. William ' Ferrers,12 son of Robert De ' Ferrers and Margaret ' Peverel, was born about 1150 in Oakham, England and died before 21 Oct 1190 in Acre, Palestine.

General Notes: Earl of Derby (3rd)

William married Sybil De ' Braose.12 Sybil was born about 1150 in Bramber, Sussex, England and died after 5 Feb 1227 in England.

Children from this marriage were:

             i.  William ' Ferrers 12 was born about 1170 in Ferrers, Derbyshire, England and died on 22 Sep 1247 about age 77.

8389637      ii.  Agatha De ' Ferrers 12 (born about 1168 in Chartley, Staffordshire, England)


16779275. Sybil De ' Braose,12 daughter of William De ' Braose and Bertha Of ' Gloucester, was born about 1150 in Bramber, Sussex, England and died after 5 Feb 1227 in England.

Sybil married William ' Ferrers.12 William was born about 1150 in Oakham, England and died before 21 Oct 1190 in Acre, Palestine.
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33558544. Geoffrey Plantagenet .

General Notes: Geoffrey was Matilda's second husband. She was first married to Henry V of Germany, the Holy Roman Emperor, who died in 1125 when she was only 22.

Geoffrey married Matilda/Maud Empress. Matilda/Maud was born in 1103 in , , , England and died in 1169 in , , , England at age 66.

The child from this marriage was:

16779272        i.  Henry II Plantagenet King Of England 12 (born on 5 Mar 1133 in Le Mans, Sarthe, France - died on 6 Jul 1189 in Chinon, Indre-Et-Loire, France)


33558545. Matilda/Maud Empress, daughter of Henry I King Of England and Matilda, was born in 1103 in , , , England and died in 1169 in , , , England at age 66.

General Notes: Maud, as a widow, became the Holy Roman "Empress", at the age of 22, only 5 years after she married Henry V of Germany (the Emperor).

Sir Winston Churchill, Vol. 1 of "A History of the English Speaking Peoples -The Birth of Britain" at pg. 190.

Jane Murray, "The Kings and Queens of England" (1974) Charles Scribner's Sons, at pgs. 207-209.

Matilda/Maud married Geoffrey Plantagenet.

33558546. Guillaume X D' ' Aquitaine,12 son of Guillaume IX ' Aquitaine and Mahaut-Philippa De ' Toulouse, was born about 1099 in Toulouse, France and died on 19 Apr 1137 in St. Jacques DE Compostelle about age 38.

General Notes: duc d'Aquitaine and de Gascogne (1127-1137), comte de Poitou (Guillaume VIII) (Guillaume d'Aquitaine )

Guillaume married Aenor De ' Chatellerault 12 about 1121. Aenor was born about 1103 in Chatellerault, Poitou, Aquitaine, died after Mar 1130, and was buried in St. Vincent DE Niseil.

The child from this marriage was:

16779273        i.  Alienor D' ' Aquitaine 12 (born about 1122 in Cheateau DE Belin, Bordeaus, Aquitaine - died on 31 Mar 1204 in Mirabell Castle, Tarn-Et-Garonne, France)


33558547. Aenor De ' Chatellerault,12 daughter of Aimeri I De ' Chatellerault and Dangerose De ' L'isle Bouchard, was born about 1103 in Chatellerault, Poitou, Aquitaine, died after Mar 1130, and was buried in St. Vincent DE Niseil.

General Notes: (Aliénor de Châtellerault) (Eléonore de Châtellerault)

Aenor married Guillaume X D' ' Aquitaine 12 about 1121. Guillaume was born about 1099 in Toulouse, France and died on 19 Apr 1137 in St. Jacques DE Compostelle about age 38.

33558548. Robert De ' Ferrers 12 was born about 1090 in Derbyshire, England, died before 1162 in Merevale, England, and was buried in Merevale Abbey, Merevale, England.

General Notes: Earl of Derby (2nd)

Robert married Margaret ' Peverel.12 Margaret was born about 1114 in Nottingham, England.

The child from this marriage was:

16779274        i.  William ' Ferrers 12 (born about 1150 in Oakham, England - died before 21 Oct 1190 in Acre, Palestine)


33558549. Margaret ' Peverel 12 was born about 1114 in Nottingham, England.

Margaret married Robert De ' Ferrers.12 Robert was born about 1090 in Derbyshire, England, died before 1162 in Merevale, England, and was buried in Merevale Abbey, Merevale, England.

33558550. William De ' Braose,12 son of Philip De ' Braose and Aenor De ' Totnais, was born Est 1120 in Brecknock, Bamber, Sussex, England and died about 1180 in England about age 60.

General Notes: Guillaume de Briouze Baron Gwentland (1st) Sheriff

William married Bertha Of ' Gloucester.12 Bertha was born about 1130 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England and died about 1204 about age 74.

Children from this marriage were:

16779275        i.  Sybil De ' Braose 12 (born about 1150 in Bramber, Sussex, England - died after 5 Feb 1227 in England)

               ii.  William De ' Braose 12 was born about 1153 in Bamber, Sussex And Totnes, England, died on 10 Aug 1211 in Corbeil, France about age 58, and was buried on 10 Aug 1211 in St. Victor's Abbey, Paris, France.


33558551. Bertha Of ' Gloucester,12 daughter of Milo ' Fitz Walter and Sibyl De' Newmarsh, was born about 1130 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England and died about 1204 about age 74.

Bertha married William De ' Braose.12 William was born Est 1120 in Brecknock, Bamber, Sussex, England and died about 1180 in England about age 60.
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67117090. Henry I King Of England, son of William I King Of England and Matilda De Flanders Duchess/Queen, was born in 1068 in , , , England and died on 1 Dec 1135 in , , , England at age 67.

General Notes: King Henry claimed the crown upon the death of his brother, Rufus, (William II) in August, 1100, when Rufus was mysteriously shot through the head by an arrow while hunting in the New Forest. Historians have been suspicious that Henry was somehow involved (He was a member of the hunting party), but there is no evidence of this. Henry was the youngest of four sons, but he was the first to be born on English soil. Henry lost his only son in the winter of 1120 when the royal yacht called the White Ship struck a rock, sank, and only one man, a butcher, survived.

Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The Birth of Britain" (1966) Dodd, Mead & Co., Vol. 1 at pgs. 181-187.

Jane Murray, "The Kings and Queens of England" (1974) Charles Scribner's Sons, at pgs.

Henry married Matilda. Matilda was born in Scotland.

The child from this marriage was:

33558545        i.  Matilda/Maud Empress (born in 1103 in , , , England - died in 1169 in , , , England)


67117091. Matilda was born in Scotland.

General Notes: http://www.aritek.com/hartgen/htm/kings.htm says Princess Matilda was born about 1070/1080 in Dunfermine, Fifeshire, Scotland. She was the daughter of King Malcolm III "Ceanmor (Longneck)" of Scotland and Queen Margaret of Scotland. She died on 1 May 1118 in Westminster, Middlesex, England .

Matilda married Henry I King Of England. Henry was born in 1068 in , , , England and died on 1 Dec 1135 in , , , England at age 67.

67117092. Guillaume IX ' Aquitaine 12 was born on 22 Oct 1071 in Aquitaine and died on 10 Feb 1126 in France at age 54.

General Notes: comte de Poitiers (1086-1126), duc d'Aquitaine and de Gascogne (1086-1126) (Guillaume d'Aquitaine )
le Troubadour.

Guillaume married Mahaut-Philippa De ' Toulouse 12 in 1094 in France. Mahaut-Philippa was born about 1070 in Toulouse, France and died on 28 Nov 1117 in Fontevraud-L'abbaye about age 47.

Children from this marriage were:

33558546        i.  Guillaume X D' ' Aquitaine 12 (born about 1099 in Toulouse, France - died on 19 Apr 1137 in St. Jacques DE Compostelle)

               ii.  Agnaes ' Aquitaine 12 was born about 1100 in Aquitaine and died on 8 Mar 1159 about age 59.


67117093. Mahaut-Philippa De ' Toulouse 12 was born about 1070 in Toulouse, France and died on 28 Nov 1117 in Fontevraud-L'abbaye about age 47.

Mahaut-Philippa married Guillaume IX ' Aquitaine 12 in 1094 in France. Guillaume was born on 22 Oct 1071 in Aquitaine and died on 10 Feb 1126 in France at age 54.

67117094. Aimeri I De ' Chatellerault 12 was born about 1076 in Chatellerault, Vienne, France and died on 7 Nov 1151 in Noyers Abbey about age 75.

General Notes: vicomte de Châtellerault (Aimeri de Châtellerault ) (Amaury-Adhemar de Châtellerault)

Aimeri married Dangerose De ' L'isle Bouchard.12 Dangerose was born about 1075 in Isle Bouchard, France and died about 1119 about age 44.

The child from this marriage was:

33558547        i.  Aenor De ' Chatellerault 12 (born about 1103 in Chatellerault, Poitou, Aquitaine - died after Mar 1130, buried in St. Vincent DE Niseil)


67117095. Dangerose De ' L'isle Bouchard 12 was born about 1075 in Isle Bouchard, France and died about 1119 about age 44.

General Notes: (Dangereuse-Maubergeonne de L'Isle-Bouchard)

Dangerose married Aimeri I De ' Chatellerault.12 Aimeri was born about 1076 in Chatellerault, Vienne, France and died on 7 Nov 1151 in Noyers Abbey about age 75.

67117100. Philip De ' Braose 12 was born about 1073 in Bamber, Sussex, England and died in Holy Land, Palestine.

General Notes: Lord Bramber (2nd)

Philip married Aenor De ' Totnais.12 Aenor was born about 1084 in Barnstaple, Devonshire, England.

The child from this marriage was:

33558550        i.  William De ' Braose 12 (born Est 1120 in Brecknock, Bamber, Sussex, England - died about 1180 in England)


67117101. Aenor De ' Totnais 12 was born about 1084 in Barnstaple, Devonshire, England.

Aenor married Philip De ' Braose.12 Philip was born about 1073 in Bamber, Sussex, England and died in Holy Land, Palestine.

67117102. Milo ' Fitz Walter 12 was born about 1104 in Gloucestershire, England, died on 25 Dec 1143 in Gloucestershire, England about age 39, and was buried in Llanthony Priory, Gloucestershire, England.

General Notes: Died on 24 December 1143 - in the Forest of Dean (accidentally shot with an arrow
Earl of Hereford and of Gloucester , Constable of England (Miles FitzWalter)

Milo married Sibyl De' Newmarsh.12 Sibyl was born about 1108 in Aberhonwy, Breconshire, Wales, died about 1143 in Gloucestershire, England about age 35, and was buried in Llanthony Priory, Gloucestershire, England.

Children from this marriage were:

                i.  Margaret ' Gloucester 12 was born about 1126 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England and died in England.

33558551       ii.  Bertha Of ' Gloucester 12 (born about 1130 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England - died about 1204)


67117103. Sibyl De' Newmarsh 12 was born about 1108 in Aberhonwy, Breconshire, Wales, died about 1143 in Gloucestershire, England about age 35, and was buried in Llanthony Priory, Gloucestershire, England.

Sibyl married Milo ' Fitz Walter.12 Milo was born about 1104 in Gloucestershire, England, died on 25 Dec 1143 in Gloucestershire, England about age 39, and was buried in Llanthony Priory, Gloucestershire, England.
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134234180. William I King Of England, son of Robert Duke Of Normandy and Arlette Unknown, was born in 1027 in Falaise, Normandy, France and died on 9 Sep 1087 in Priory Of St. Ge, Rouen, France at age 60.

General Notes: (DEAT) 2 PLAC Priory of St. Gervase, Rouen, France

The Duke of Normandy defeated and killed King Harold (Godwinson) of England at the Battle of Hastings on October 14, 1066. Thereafter, he became commonly known for all time as William the Conqueror. See also the notes under Robert, Duke of Normandy, William's father.

Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The Birth of Britain", Vol. 1 at pgs. 153-178.

William and Matilda had 4 sons and 5 daughters.

Jane Murray, "The Kings and Queens of England" (1974) Charles Scribner's Sons, pgs. 215-219.

The LDS Ancestral File traces the ancestry of King William I back to Charlemagne, Emperor Of The HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE (AFN:9GCC-89). From there, it is possible to trace back to Adam according to various genealogies!

King Guillaume "Le Conquerant" de Normandie - also known as: Willam The Conqueror - was born on 14 Oct 1024 in Falaise, Calvados, Normandy, France and died on 9 Sep 1087 in Hemmenbraville, Rouen, Normandie and was buried in Abbey of St. Stephen, Caen, France . He was the son of Duke Robert I "The Magnificent" de Normandie and Herleva de Falaise.
King Guillaume married Queen Matilda van Vlaanderen in 1053. Queen Matilda was born about 1031, lived in Flandres. She was the daughter of Count Badouin V of Flanders and Countess Adele of France. She died on 2 Nov 1083 in Caen, France .

Queen Matilda - daughter of Boudewijn V van Vlaanderen and Adèle de France (Sources: - 1)

King Guillaume - William I, called "William the Conqueror", was an illegitimate son of Robert I, duke of Normandy. His mother was a tanner's daughter. William succeeded his father when he was only 7 years old. At 24 he had made himself the mightiest feudal lord in all France by various conquests, but his ambition was not satisfied. He laid plans to become king of England also.

William's wife Matilda was descended from the old Anglo-Saxon line of kings. Among their children were four sons: Robert, future duke of Normandy; Richard, who died as a youth; William Rufus, who succeeded his father as king of England; and Henry, who succeeded William Rufus. One daughter, Adela, became the mother of England's King Stephen.

Edward the Confessor, king of England, was William's cousin. William used his connection with Flanders to put pressure on Edward to extort a promise that he would become heir to the English throne. It is probable that Edward made some kind of pledge to William as early as 1051. Edward died childless on Jan. 5, 1066. William then claimed the throne on the basis of this promise. The English, however, chose Harold, earl of Wessex, as their king.

William prepared a large expedition and set sail for England. On Oct. 14, 1066, he defeated and killed Harold at Hastings in one of the decisive battles of the world (see Hastings, Battle of). Then he marched on London, and on Christmas day he was crowned king.

After subduing England's powerful earls, William seized their lands for his Norman nobles and ordered the nobles to build fortified stone castles to protect their lands. As payment for their fiefs, the nobles supplied the king with armed knights. French became the language of the king's court and gradually blended with the Anglo-Saxon tongue.

William won the loyalty of the mass of the people by wisely retaining the old Anglo-Saxon laws, courts, and customs with only a few changes. Thus the principle of self-government, which lies at the root of the political system of English-speaking peoples, was preserved and strengthened. At the same time, William taught the English the advantages of a central government strong enough to control feudal lords.

Toward the end of his reign, William ordered a great census to be taken of all the lands and people of England. This survey was called Domesday Book. Two of the original books may still be seen at the Public Records Office in London. "So very narrowly did he cause the survey to be made," complained the old Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, "that there was not a single rood of land, nor an ox, or a cow, or a pig passed by, and that was not set down in the accounts."

William was often on the continent dealing with his widespread holdings. He died there in 1087 from injuries received while warring with Philip I of France. William was a man of great stature and had a tremendous voice. Such was the good order he established that, according to a quaint historian of his time, "any man, who was himself aught, might travel over the kingdom with a bosom of gold unmolested, and no man durst kill another, however great the injury he might have received from him." He was succeeded in Normandy by his eldest son, Robert, and in England by his second son, William II, called William Rufus.

He invaded England defeating the English forces in the Battle of Hastings in Oct. 1066. He became King of England on Christmas Day 1066 and ruled until his death in 1087.

He appointed the Norman nobles to high positions and divided the land among Norman's, forcing most Anglo-Saxons to become servants. William had England surveyed to determine how much property there was in England and who owned it. This survey became known as Doomsday Book. It is claimed that the ancestral lineage of William also is directly traceable to Charlemagne and then on back to Julius Caesar.

William and Matilda founded two monastic communities in Caen, France. The Abbaye-auz-Hommes, dedicated to St. Stephan for men, and the Abbaye-aux-Dames for women.

An interesting point is that many U. S. presidents trace their ancestry to King William I. (See http://users.legacyfamilytree.com/USPresidents/Royalpresidents.htm#37th%20President)

14th President Franklin Pierce b: 23 Nov 1804, Hillsboro, New Hampshire, d: 8 Oct 1869, Concord, New Hampshire
19th President Rutherford Birchard Hayes b: 4 Oct 1822, Delaware, Ohio, d: 17 Jan 1893, Fremont, Sandusky Co., OH
27th President William Howard Taft b: 15 Sep 1857, Cincinnati, Ohio, d: 8 Mar 1930, Washington D.C.
38th President Gerald Rudolph Ford b: 14 Jul 1913, Omaha, Nebraska
41st President George Herbert Walker Bush b: 12 Jun 1924, Rye, New York
43rd President George W. Bush b: July 6, 1946, in New Haven, Connecticut
4th President James Madison b: 16 Mar 1751, Port Conway, King George Co., Virginia, d: 28 Jun 1836, Montpelier, Orange Co., Virginia
12th President Zachary Taylor b: 24 Nov 1784, Montebello, Orange Co., Virginia, d: 9 Jul 1850, White House, Washington D.C.
24th President Grover (Stephen) Cleveland b: 18 Mar 1837, Caldwell, New Jersey, d: 24 Jun 1908, Princeton, New Jersey
2nd President John Adams b: 30 Oct 1735, Quincy, Massachusetts, d: 4 Jul 1826, Quincy, Massachusetts, m: 25 Oct 1764, Weymouth, Massachusetts
6th President John Quincy Adams b: 11 Jul 1767, Braintree (now Quincy), MA, d: 23 Feb 1848, Speaker's Room, Congress, Washington D.C.
32th President Franklin Delano Roosevelt b: 30 Jan 1882, Hyde Park, Dutchess County, New York, d: 12 Apr 1945, Warm Springs, Georgia
5th President James Monroe b: 28 Apr 1758, Monroe's Creek, Westmoreland Co., Virginia, d: 4 Jul 1831, New York City, New York
26th President Theodore Roosevelt b: 27 Oct 1858, New York City, New York, d: 6 Jan 1919, Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York
3rd President Thomas Jefferson b: 13 Apr 1743, Shadwell, Albemarle Co., Virginia, d: 4 Jul 1826, Monticello, Charlottesville, Virginia
1st President George Washington b: 11 Feb 1732, Pope's Creek, Wakefield, Westmoreland Co., VA, d: 14 Dec 1799, Mount Vernon, Fairfax Co., Virginia
37th President Richard Milhous Nixon b: 13 Jan 1913, Yorba Linda, California, d: 23 Apr 1994, Yorba Linda, California
13th President Millard Fillmore b: 7 Jan 1800, Locke, New York, d: 8 Mar 1874, Buffalo, New York
9th President William Henry Harrison b: 9 Feb 1773, Berkeley, Charles City Co., Virginia, d: 4 Apr 1841, White House, Washington D.C.
23th President Benjamin Harrison b: 20 Aug 1833, North Bend, Ohio, d: 13 Mar 1901, Indianapolis, Indiana
18th President (Hiram) Ulysses Simpson Grant b: 27 Apr 1822, Point Pleasant, Clermont County, Ohio, d: 23 Jul 1885, Mount Mcgregor, New York
30st President John Calvin Coolidge b: 4 Jul 1872, Plymouth, Vermont, d: 5 Jan 1933, Northhampton, Massachusetts

William married Matilda De Flanders Duchess/Queen.

The child from this marriage was:

67117090        i.  Henry I King Of England (born in 1068 in , , , England - died on 1 Dec 1135 in , , , England)


134234181. Matilda De Flanders Duchess/Queen .

General Notes: Crowned as Queen of England at Westminster on Whit Sunday, 1068.

Queen Matilda van Vlaanderen was born about 1031, lived in Flandres and died on 2 Nov 1083 in Caen, France .

Matilda married William I King Of England. William was born in 1027 in Falaise, Normandy, France and died on 9 Sep 1087 in Priory Of St. Ge, Rouen, France at age 60.
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268468360. Robert Duke Of Normandy was born about 1003 in France and died in 1034 in Falaise, Normandy, France about age 31.

General Notes: Robert was the 4th descendant of Rollo, founder of Normandy. Robert never married Arlette, and he was still married to "a lady of quality" when Arlette gave birth to their son, William in 1027. William the Conqueror, as he was later to become known, was also known as William the Bastard (but NOT to his face)2E Robert died when his son was only 7 years old. William needed and was provided lots of help to hang onto his Dukdom. King Henry of France came to his rescue, first by policy and later on the battlefield in 1047. Sir Winston wrote, "The taint of bastardy clung, and sank deep into William's nature. It embittered and hardened him. When, many years afterwards, he beseiged the town of AlenE7 on the citizens imprudently hung out hides upon the walls, shouting, 'Hides for the tanner' William repaid this taunt by devastating the town, and mutilating or flaying alive its chief inhabitants."

Sir Winston Churchill, "A History of the English Speaking Peoples - The Birth of Britain", Vol. 1 at pgs. 153-154.

Duke Robert I "The Magnificent" de Normandie - was born about 1003 in Normandy, France and died on 22 Jul 1035 in Nicea, Bithynia, Turkey . He was the son of Duke Richard II "The Good" de Normandie and Judith de Bretagne.
Duke Robert married Herleva de Falaise about 1023 in Not Married. Herleva was born about 1003 in Falaise, Clavados, France. She was the daughter of Fulbert de Falaise and Doda of Falaise. She died in 1050 .

Herleva - also married Herluin de Conteville, son of Earl Jean de Conteville

Harlette is a form of harlot. She was not married to William. William was famously known as a bastard.

Robert married Arlette Unknown.

The child from this marriage was:

134234180       i.  William I King Of England (born in 1027 in Falaise, Normandy, France - died on 9 Sep 1087 in Priory Of St. Ge, Rouen, France)


268468361. Arlette Unknown .

General Notes: Arlette was the daughter of a tanner in Falaise, capital of Normandy. Duke Robert saw her one day while she was washing linen outside of town. He fell in love immediately. He swept her onto his horse, rode back to his castle, and he lived with her (unmarried) the rest of his days.

Arlette married Robert Duke Of Normandy. Robert was born about 1003 in France and died in 1034 in Falaise, Normandy, France about age 31.


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