Mother: MAUD Countess of Huntingdon |
_DUNCAN III "The Gracious" of Scotland_______________________+ | (1007 - 1040) _MALCOLM III Canmore "Longneck" of Scotland_______| | (1033 - 1093) m 1068 | | |_SYBIL FITZ_SIWARD of Northumbria____________________________+ | (1014 - 1040) _DAVID I "The Saint" of Scotland_| | (1080 - 1153) m 1113 | | | _EDWARD "The Atheling" "The Exile" of Scotland_______________+ | | | (1017 - 1057) m 1034 | |_MARGARET "Atheling" Saint of Scotland____________| | (1045 - 1093) m 1068 | | |_AGATHA von BRAUNSCHWEIG of Hungary__________________________+ | (1018 - 1054) m 1034 | |--HENRY of Scotland | (1119 - 1152) | _SIGURD (Siward) "The Dane" Biornsson Earl of Northumberland_+ | | (1020 - 1055) | _WALTHEOF II de HUNTINGDON Earl of Northumberland_| | | (1045 - 1076) m 1070 | | | |_AELFLAED of Bernicia________________________________________+ | | (1027 - ....) |_MAUD Countess of Huntingdon_____| (1072 - 1131) m 1113 | | _LAMBERT II von BOULOGNE of Lens_____________________________+ | | (1022 - 1054) m 1053 |_JUDITH de BOULOGNE of Lens_______________________| (1054 - 1086) m 1070 | |_ADELAIDE de NORMANDY Countess of Aumale_____________________+ (1030 - 1084) m 1053
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Possible spellings: ALVIS, ALVES, OLVIS, ALVICE have been
mentioned in various records of the family.
George may have been from ENG because George was an official in
the Anglican Church in VA. Possible Father & Mother of George
Alves, might be: The Scottish Church records show: 1660, a
George Alves was christened in Alves Parish, county of Moray
Scotland; father, Alexander Alves - Margaret Andersone, dau of
Alexander Andersone and Elizabeth Kellok.
Alexander Alves- Margaret Andersone - christened Nov 6, 1630;
Fife, Scotland married June 15, 1651 - Alves Parish, Moray
Scotland. Their Children: Jonathan b 1651; David b 1655; George
b 1656; Alexander b 1657; John b 1658 and Issobell b 1662 all
christened Church of SCT, Alves parish, Moray SCT.
The Scottish family of Alves is of great antiquity. Records
show that it was known to be in Morayshire around 900 A.D. and
in about 1050 when Scots took surnames, they adopted the name of
Alves, the place they lived. Alves is derived from the Gaelic
word "AILBHE" meaning rolling, rocky land. There is no
connection with the Spanish family of Alves. The armorial
bearings listed or rather recorded with Sir Thomas Innes, Lork
Lyon of Armes, Edinburgh, shows that the family is of Celtic
Origin.
The first Laird of "SHIPLAND" the seat of the family in
Inverness was Sir John Alves of 1556.
Thomas Alves - Burgess of Inverness 9-26-1698
Thomas Alves, Jr. - Burgess of Inverness 6-5-1732
Alexander Alves - Burgess of Inverness 9-28-1785
Archibald Alves - Burgess of Inverness 8-19-1793.
MEMBERS OF THE FAMILY MENTIONED IN BURGH RECORDS etc:
Walter Alves - One of the inquistion on the lands of Meth -
1263.
William Alves - With other nobles of Moray, in 1561, supported
Protestantism against the oppression of Chares II Shaw's
History.
Blair Alves - Burgess of Elgin - 1603-6
Alexander Alves - Burgess of Forres - 1574-5
William Alves - Elected to Twon Council - 1642
Thomas Alves - Elected to Town Council - 1667
William Alves - Burgess of Inverness - 1671
Thomas Alves - Bailie for Forres - 1677-85
Thomas Alves - Burgess for Inverness - 1698
Thomas Alves - Treasurer of the Royal Burgh - 1708
Alexander Alves - Burgess of Elgin - 1765
Robert Alves - Professor and Poet-Elgin - 1745
John Alves-Maj. General of the Army-Elgin - 1863
THE MORAY, Principal Town: ELGIN, Population: 86,250, Area
(Hectares): 223,694; Characteristics: Stretching from the
Cairngorm Mountains northwards to a coastal lowland plain known
as the Laigh of Moray, Moray is bisected by the River Spey which
flows northwards to empty into the North Sea. The region is
renowned for its many whisky distilleries and its chief towns
are Elgin, Forres, Buckie, Fochabers, Keith, Dufftown and
Tomintoul.
Council Address: The Moray Council, Council Offices, High
Street, Elgin IV30 1BX
Council Chief Executive: Anthony Connell
© Dept. of Geography, University of Edinburgh, 1996.
****
Scotland:
Alves, John Acceded: Shipland
Child 1: Alves, Anne Died: 19 JUL 1846; Married 13 SEP 1900 to
Arbuthnot, William, Bt. 1st.
Child 1: Arbuthnot, Archibald Francis, b. 8 JAN 1805 son of
Arbuthnot, William, Bt. 1st. Born: 24 DEC 1766 Acceded: 24 AUG
1822 Died: 18 SEP 1829 Notes: Lord Provost of Edinburgh
Arbuthnot, Archibald Francis Born: 8 JAN 1805 Died: 31 MAR 1879
Married 12 DEC 1837 to Gough, Gertrude Sophia, Gough, Gertrude
Sophia Died: 21 NOV 1882; Father: Gough, Hugh, Viscount Gough
1st, b. 3 NOV 1779, Acceded: 15 JUN 1849; Died: 2 MAR 1869;
Notes:Field Marshall. Married 1807 to Stephens, Frances Maria
Mother: Stephens, Frances Maria
Child 1: Arbuthnot, George Gough, Sir, Died: 3 MAY 1929; m. 9
SEP 1873 to Boyle, Isabella Albinia d. 25 AUG 1929
Father: Boyle, Richard Cavendish, Rev., b. 28 FEB 1812
Mother: Gordon, Eleanor Vere
Child 1: Arbuthnot, Cecilia Albinia m. 10 OCT 1903 to Lygon,
Robert, Lt.Col., Hon. b. 9 AUG 1879
Father: Lygon, Frederick, Earl of Beauchamp 6th, Born: 10 NOV
1830, Died: 19 FEB 1891
Married 18 FEB 1868 to Stanhope, Mary Catherine, Lady
Married 24 SEP 1878 to Pierrepont, Emily Annora Charlotte
Died: 11 MAY 1935
Father: Pierrepont, Sydney Herbert, Earl Manvers 3rd, b. 12 MAR
1825
Mother: de Franquetot, Georgine Jane Elizabeth
Died: 28 JUL 1910
Father: de Franquetot, Augustin Louis Joseph, Duc de Coigny
Mother: Pierrepont, Emily Annora Charlotte
Child 1: Lygon, Reginald Arthur, b. 28 JUL 1904 m. 5 FEB 1930 to
Bell, Agnes Mary Louise
Father: Bell, George Fancourt, Rev. Canon
Child 1: Lygon, Margaret Annora Mary, b. 19 OCT 1931
Child 2: Lygon, Anne Juliet, b. 29 JAN 1937
Child 3: Lygon, Eleanor Barbara Muriel, b. 1 NOV 1938
1790 Census - Fayetteville, Cumberland Co. NCCumberland County
1790 Census
Fayetteville Town
Key: Column A - Free white males of 16 years and upward,
including heads of families.
Column B - Free white males under 16 years
Column C - Free white females, including heads of families
Column D - All other Free persons
Column E - Slaves
Alves, Andrew 1 1 3 0 0
Genealogical Publications: A List of 50,000 Sources from the
Library of Congress Family Histories
TITLE: Ancestors and descendants of the brothers Rev. Robert
Rose and Rev. Charles Rose of Colonial Virginia and Wester
Alves, Morayshire, Scotland : with information on their
brothers Patrick, James, Hugh, George, and Alexander /
AUTHOR(S): Rose, Christine. (Main)
PUBLISHED: San Jose, Calif. (1474 Montelegre Dr., San Jose
95120) : Privately published by Rose Family Association, 1985.
DESCRIPTION: xvi, 318 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
NOTES: Spine title: Rev. Robert Rose and Rev. Charles Rose of
Scotland and Colonial Virginia. Includes index. Bibliography: p.
[277]-280.
SUBJECTS: Rose family.
Virginia--Genealogy.
ALTERNATE TITLES: Rev. Robert Rose and Rev. Charles Rose of
Scotland and Colonial Virginia.
LC CALL NO.: CS71.R7961985
DEWEY CLASS NO.: 929/.2/0973 ED: 19
FORMAT: Book
LCCN: 84-62409
Genealogical Publications: A List of 50,000 Sources from the
Library of Congress
U.S. Local Histories and Biographies
TITLE: A history of northeast Dubois County.
AUTHOR(S): Kreitzer, Alves John, 1912- (Main)
PUBLISHED: Dubois, Ind., 1970.
DESCRIPTION: xi, 458 p. illus., facsim., maps, plans, ports. 24
cm.
SUBJECTS: Dubois County (Ind.)--History.
LC CALL NO.: F532.D8K7
DEWEY CLASS NO.: 917.72/37
FORMAT: Book
LCCN: 70-286258 //r84
Genealogical Publications: A List of 50,000 Sources from the
Library of Congress Family Histories
TITLE: Aulwes family history and genealogy : a history of the
immigrant brothers Bernhard and Frederick W. Aulwes, 1810-1899
and their descendants through 1983 /
AUTHOR(S): Jones, Zona Perry, 1933- (Main)
PUBLISHED: Decorah, Iowa (108 Washington St., Box 230, Decorah
52101) : Anundsen
Pub. Co., 1984.
DESCRIPTION: xvi, 431 p. : ill. ; 29 cm.
NOTES: Includes index.
SUBJECTS: Alves family.
LC CALL NO.: CS71.A469541984
DEWEY CLASS NO.: 929/.2/0973 ED: 19
FORMAT: Book
LCCN: 84-71003
A Topographical Dictionary of England
A Topographical Dictionary of England: Volume 1
Y.
Preface
page xviii
Alves, Duncan D., Esq., Lime-st.-square, do.
Alves from Scotland a Gaelic name meaning "a hard rock". Alves
small town in parish of Alves 4 miles west of Elgin Morayshire
Scotland.
Alvis Charles H 9 Georgia Infantry. Private Private
Confederate
Alvis Charles E 1 Batt'n Virginia Infantry. Local Defense.
(Ordnance Battalion. Armory Battalion.) Private Private
Confederate
Alvis Charles B 61 Tennessee Mtd. Infantry. (Pitts' Regiment.
81 Tenn. Inf.) Corporal Private Confederate
Alvis Charles A. K 50 Georgia Infantry. Private Private
Confederate
Alvis Charles W. A 15 Virginia Infantry. Private Private
Confederate
________________
Pallot's Marriage Index for England: 1780 - 1837
Alvis, Chas Spouse: Abby, Mary (35) Marriage Date: 1793 Parish:
ST. MARYLEBONE
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Mother: Judith DUDLEY? CLAIBORNE? |
"She married twice. First, William Lindsey, about 1775, father:
James Lindsey, mother: (possibly) Sarah Daniel. They had six
children. 1. William Lindsey. 2. Henry Lindsey. 3. Christopher
Lindsey. 4. Rebecca Lindsey. 5. Mary (Polly) Lindsey, born 1778,
died 1859. and 6. Jesse Lindsey. Mary Barksdale married a second
time to John Hurst, in Shenandoah County. One child, Beverly
Hurst. Mary Barksdale died in 1834 in Dubois County, Indiana"
"About 1792 after 10 years in Culpepper co. John Hurst yoked up
his oxen and started his journey to Bedford co. Va. to marry
Mary Lindsey his second wife.
The following story is preserved in the traditions of the Hurst
family as given to me by Boliver Hurst.
"On arriving in Bedford co.Va., John made his first stop some 30
mi. or 2 days from where the widow Lindsey lived and when he had
fairly settled he made ample preparations to go courting, by
taking two ox teams and wagons, 2 of his boys and feed and lunch
for a 2 day journey. They were ready to camp at the widow the
second night. It so happened at this early day that mails were
so slow and uncertain that questions of such importance could be
more quickly settled by having both parties present when
questions were open for discussion. On arrival at the widows,
accomodations were meager, but the teams were tied to the wagon
and supper prepared. You can now vision the old man past three
score bald and grey, sitting at the end of the table, while Mary
Lindsey, widow, sitting at the opposit end with 2 boys and 3
girls between. "I have come to marry you and take you back with
me." The first notice he had given her of his purpose of making
the journey over rough mountian roads with 2 wagons. Being faced
with this sudden proposal Mary Lindsey with her many hardships,
disappointments and sorrow in life could not make a reply. The
matter was dropped and soon the boys were relating to the girls
the incidents of their trip and of sleeping at nights with
lizzards crawling over their necks. But Mary Linsey was sad- she
was thinking- that night she slept not, tears flowed freely.
Breakfast early as was the custom and soon the table was
surrounded. John asked her, "Well, have you made up your mind?
Her answer "No, I have not, but I recken I will.
They married at the Bedford co. courthouse. John and Mary had
one child between them Beverly Hurst. Mary died in 1834 in
Harrison county Indiana.
Her son Jessie Lindsey married his step-sister Leah Hurst and
they settled in Dubois co. Indiana. It is listed in my notes
that she had eleven children by her first husband but I do not
know the names or if that is even correct."
_William BARKSDALE Sr. "the Immigrant"_+ | (1633 - 1694) _William BARKSDALE Jr.___| | (1675 - 1771) | | |_______________________________________ | _Thomas Henry BARKSDALE ____| | (1717 - 1788) | | | _______________________________________ | | | | |_Sallie (Sarah) COLLIER _| | (1664 - 1721) | | |_______________________________________ | | |--Mary BARKSDALE | (1748 - 1834) | _______________________________________ | | | _________________________| | | | | | |_______________________________________ | | |_Judith DUDLEY? CLAIBORNE? _| (1718 - 1748) | | _______________________________________ | | |_________________________| | |_______________________________________
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Mother: Mary FIELD |
_____________________ | _____________________| | | | |_____________________ | _Samuel DEDMAN Sr.___| | (1720 - 1800) m 1746| | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | |_____________________ | | |--Sarah DEDMAN | (1755 - 1835) | _Henry FIELD ________+ | | (1720 - 1778) | _John FIELD Sr.______| | | (1740 - 1789) | | | |_Ann LIGHTFOOT ______ | | (1720 - 1778) |_Mary FIELD _________| (1725 - 1819) m 1746| | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Mother: Elizabeth Ann THOMPSON |
_(RESEARCH QUERY) KENDRICK of GA > LA > TX_ | _James KENDRICKS ____| | (1730 - ....) | | |___________________________________________ | _William KENDRICK _______| | (1755 - 1838) m 1778 | | | ___________________________________________ | | | | |_Susannah ROBERSON __| | (1730 - ....) | | |___________________________________________ | | |--Kenyon Thompson KENDRICK | (1796 - ....) | ___________________________________________ | | | _William THOMPSON ___| | | (1730 - ....) | | | |___________________________________________ | | |_Elizabeth Ann THOMPSON _| (1758 - 1800) m 1778 | | ___________________________________________ | | |_Hannah BELL ________| (1730 - ....) | |___________________________________________
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This Jeremiah Lindsey, Sr. died with a will in Greene County,
Georgia, in 1800.
TIMELINE
c. 1652-68 (forget the exact date now, just consider the general
time period) A John Maddison received land in New Kent County,
Virginia, for the importation of a whole bunch of people into
the Virginia Colony. On this one grant was, one of the men
imported, a Jno. Durham. In the St. Peter's Parish Register of
New Kent County, Virginia,
c. 1698-1701 one
James Durum Durham) with wife, Eliza, had the birth of a
daughter Susannah and a
son, James recorded.
c. 1702-3 St. Peter's Parish is divided and part becomes St.
Paul's Parish. Then
c. 1720 Hanover County is formed from New Kent and St. Paul's
Parish become part of Hanover instead of New Kent.
c. 1710-1713 one Jeremiah Lindsey (various spellings and
misspellings) gets a land grant in Bissland Parish of New Kent
County which is paid for by his father, Joseph in pounds of
tobacco.
On the 1704 Quit Rent Rolls both Joseph Lindsey and a William
Lindsey, I think, are listed in New Kent. Since Joseph has more
land, perhaps, he is the father and William is a son and then
Jeremiah is a younger son who does not come of age (?) until
about 1710. Then we have James Durum/Durham also in New Kent and
a John Durham in King and Queen, I think. These Durham men would
have been just about the right age to have been sons of the
imported
Jno. Durham.
It has always bothered/interested me that Durhams and
Lindsey/Lindsays were
still connected/married to each other in North Carolina. I think
I recall a posting by someone on the lists that they had found a
deed in North Carolina that referenced back to a William Lindsey
in the New Kent area. There is a book published on the Bissland
and James City Parish register which has a number of references
on at least one William Lindsey and other connections.
Bissland Parish and St. Paul's Parish were right next to each
other. Just a few miles apart. I don't think these families
moved very far, the place names just changed.
Both Durham/Durum and Lindsey (various spellings) references
appear in the Vestry Book of St. Paul's Parish beginning in the
1720's. There is an early James Durham who is a pensioner and an
early Abraham Durham and the Lindseys and Durhams continue to be
neighbors in the land processionings.
I am guessing/theorizing that this older Abraham Durham was
probably also a son of James of New Kent born after c. 1701 and
whose birth was not entered in the register because they had
been cut into St. Paul's Parish.
I have no idea how many Jeremiah Lindseys there were. There had
to be at least two, an older one and then the one that was in
the militia.
I have figured out that the Lindseys and the Durhams lived in
the southern part of St. Paul's Parish, Hanover County because
of the various petitions that they signed about the county lines
etc. on the Chickahominy Swamp.
c. 1785-6 my Abraham Durham and his wife, Sarah/Sally _?_
migrated to Wilkes County, Georgia, by 1787, were cut into
Oglethorpe County, Georgia, c. 1793 and then moved on westward
to Clarke County, Georgia, c. 1812.
My Abraham Durham died with a will in Clarke County, Georgia, in
1826.
A Samuel Davis Durham also migrated to Georgia perhaps about the
same time as Abraham Durham. I think that this Samuel Davis
Durham is the Samuel Durham with Abraham Durham on the early
Wilkes County, Georgia, tax lists prior to 1800.
My Abraham Durham was the administrator of the estate of Samuel
Davis Durham in Greene County, Georgia, in 1800. These two
Durham men and their families obviously knew each other, but
this Abraham Durham was not the father of Samuel David Durham as
some researchers have reported.
The early part of this theory definitely does not fit some of
the recorded, but unverified, family tradition information put
down by some earlier researchers on the family of Samuel Davis
Durham and Isabella Lindsey in regard to the Durhams, but it is
what I have found.
Does anyone have any more information or ideas on the origins of
James Durham and Joseph Lindsey on the 1704 Quit Rents Rolls?
Lots of food for thought here. I am open to ideas. Was Joseph
Lindsey the immigrant or
was there an earlier generation in the colonies.
I found additional information on John Maddison on the Madison
List on either rootsweb or genealogy.com which has information
on John Maddison back in England. Perhaps John Durham was from
the same part of England as John Maddison. Was John Durham
somebody John Maddison knew from England or just an indentured
servant he bought on the wharf just off the ship from overseas?
Vivian Cates, [email protected] , amateur genealogist researching
Jeremiah Lindsey b. circa, 1735-40 St. Paul's Parish, Hanover
County, Virginia, d.1800 Greene County, Georgia. A 1710 Land
Patent in New Kent County, Virginia identifies a Joseph Lindsey
(b. circa 1670) as father of a Jeremiah Lindsey. Thus there
were probably at least two generations of Jeremiah Lindseys in
Hanover which was taken from New Kent County, VA in 1720. A
Joseph Lindsey and a William Lindsey were on the 1704 quit rent
roll for New Kent County, VA.
1798 Jeremiah Linsey Oglthorpe County
1798 1800-1802 Abraham Lindsay Wilkes County
__ | __| | | | |__ | _(RESEARCH QUERY) LINDSEY _| | | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Jeremiah LINDSEY | (1750 - 1800) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |___________________________| | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Mother: Catherine EHART |
_Peter RUCKER Sr. "the Immigrant"_+ | (1661 - 1743) m 1679 _Thomas RUCKER ______| | (1683 - 1763) m 1710| | |_Elizabeth FIELDING? _____________ | (1660 - 1752) m 1679 _George RUCKER Sr.___| | (1729 - 1815) m 1780| | | _Cornelius I REYNOLDS ____________+ | | | (1659 - ....) | |_Elizabeth REYNOLDS _| | (1690 - 1788) m 1710| | |_Margaret BEASLEY ________________ | (1660 - ....) | |--George RUCKER Jr. | (1780 - 1853) | __________________________________ | | | _Michael EHART ______| | | (1740 - 1794) | | | |__________________________________ | | |_Catherine EHART ____| (1760 - 1835) m 1780| | __________________________________ | | |_Katherine___________| (1740 - ....) | |__________________________________
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