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Benjamin Anderson

Male 1747 - 1835  (88 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Benjamin Anderson was born in 1747 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA (son of George Dabney Anderson and Frances Woodson); died in 1835 in Petersburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1810, , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA
    • Residence: 1830, , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA

    Benjamin married Judith Sarah Mims on 26 Jan 1769 in St James Northam Parish, Goochland, Virginia, USA. Judith (daughter of David Mims and Agnes Weldy) was born on 6 Sep 1732 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in Oct 1781 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. George Anderson was born in 1757 in , Edgecombe, North Carolina, USA; died in Aug 1837 in , Henderson, Tennessee, USA.
    2. Elizabeth Dabney Anderson was born on 21 May 1761 in , Newberry, South Carolina, USA; died on 3 Mar 1842 in Lynchburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    3. Betsy Anderson was born in 1770 in Lynchburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 17 May 1843 in Lynchburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    4. Isaac Anderson was born in 1770 in Lynchburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died in Jul 1847 in , Warren, Tennessee, USA.
    5. Judith Anderson (Taylor) was born in 1775 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in 1830 in , Bedford, Virginia, USA.
    6. Frances Ann Woodson Anderson (Bobo) was born on 3 Nov 1777 in , , South Carolina, USA; died on 27 Oct 1857 in Como, Panola, Mississippi, USA.

    Benjamin married Sarah Johnson in 1773. Sarah was born in 1752 in , , Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  George Dabney Anderson was born in 1725 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA (son of Matthew Anderson and Mary Elizabeth Dabney); died in 1808 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1779, , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA

    George married Frances Woodson in 1746 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA. Frances (daughter of Benjamin Woodson and Frances Napier) was born in Sep 1730 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1790 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Frances Woodson was born in Sep 1730 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA (daughter of Benjamin Woodson and Frances Napier); died in 1790 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Anderson
    2. Benjamin Anderson was born in 1745 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in 1810 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.
    3. 1. Benjamin Anderson was born in 1747 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in 1835 in Petersburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    4. Elizabeth Ruth Anderson was born in 1747; died in 1778.
    5. Frances Anderson was born in 1750 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    6. Nathaniel Anderson was born in 1750 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in Oct 1805 in , Fairfield, South Carolina, USA.
    7. George Dabney Anderson was born on 21 Apr 1750 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 28 May 1808 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.
    8. Mary Woodson Anderson was born in 1756 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died in 1835 in Leatherwood Creek, Dickson, Tennessee, USA.
    9. Susannah Anderson was born on 22 Sep 1758 in St James Northam Parish, Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in 1778.
    10. Elizabeth Dabney Anderson was born on 4 Jul 1760 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died on 30 Nov 1819 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.
    11. Nathaniel Anderson was born on 23 Jul 1764 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died on 31 Oct 1834 in , Fairfield, South Carolina, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Matthew Anderson was born in 1695 in Gold Mine, Hanover, Virginia, USA (son of Robert Anderson and Mary Elizabeth Overton); died in Oct 1752 in Hanover, Louisa, Virginia, USA.

    Matthew married Mary Elizabeth Dabney in 1718 in , New Kent, Virginia, USA. Mary was born on 11 Nov 1698 in Saint Peter and Paul Parish, New Kent, Virginia, USA; died in 1729 in , Hanover, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary Elizabeth Dabney was born on 11 Nov 1698 in Saint Peter and Paul Parish, New Kent, Virginia, USA; died in 1729 in , Hanover, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 2. George Dabney Anderson was born in 1725 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1808 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    2. Mary Anderson was born on 29 Aug 1729 in , Hanover, Virginia, USA.

  3. 6.  Benjamin Woodson was born in 1684 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA (son of John Woodson and Judith Tarleton); died on 3 Sep 1778 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.

    Benjamin + Frances Napier. Frances was born in 1694; died in 1778. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Frances Napier was born in 1694; died in 1778.
    Children:
    1. 3. Frances Woodson was born in Sep 1730 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1790 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Robert Anderson was born on 24 May 1663 in , New Kent, Virginia, USA; died on 3 Apr 1716 in Saint Peter and Paul Parish, New Kent, Virginia, USA.

    Robert married Mary Elizabeth Overton in 1701 in Saint Peter and Paul Parish, New Kent, Virginia, USA. Mary was born on 28 Jun 1673 in , King William, Virginia, USA; died on 8 Sep 1739 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Elizabeth Overton was born on 28 Jun 1673 in , King William, Virginia, USA; died on 8 Sep 1739 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 4. Matthew Anderson was born in 1695 in Gold Mine, Hanover, Virginia, USA; died in Oct 1752 in Hanover, Louisa, Virginia, USA.

  3. 12.  John Woodson was born in 1658 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA (son of Col Robert "Potato Hole" Woodson and Elizabeth Ferris); died on 5 Dec 1715 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.

    John married Judith Tarleton in 1680 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA. Judith was born in 1660 in , New Kent, Virginia, USA; died on 7 Feb 1714 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Judith Tarleton was born in 1660 in , New Kent, Virginia, USA; died on 7 Feb 1714 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Tarleton Woodson was born in 1681 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 4 Dec 1761 in , Chesterfield, Virginia, USA.
    2. 6. Benjamin Woodson was born in 1684 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 3 Sep 1778 in , Fluvanna, Virginia, USA.
    3. John Woodson, Jr was born in 1684 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 21 May 1754 in Genito Creek, Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    4. Robert Woodson was born in 1686 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 17 Jun 1729 in Genito Creek, Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    5. Sarah Woodson was born in 1691 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1772 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    6. Elizabeth Woodson was born in 1694 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 4 Aug 1767 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA.
    7. Jacob Woodson was born in 1699 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 5 Aug 1728 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    8. Josiah Woodson was born in 1700 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died on 16 Nov 1736 in Stoney Creek, Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    9. Stephen Woodson was born in 1704 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1736 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    10. Judith Woodson was born in 1706 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 28 Nov 1774 in , Cumberland, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 5

  1. 24.  Col Robert "Potato Hole" Woodson was born in 1634 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA (son of Dr John Woodson and Sarah Isabelle Winston); died on 1 Oct 1707 in Varina, Henrico, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1656, , , Virginia, USA

    Col married Elizabeth Ferris on 21 Oct 1656 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA. Elizabeth (daughter of Richard Ferris (Ferrar Fariss) and Sarah Hambleton (Ferris Ferrar)) was born on 8 May 1634 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1689 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 25.  Elizabeth Ferris was born on 8 May 1634 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA (daughter of Richard Ferris (Ferrar Fariss) and Sarah Hambleton (Ferris Ferrar)); died in 1689 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Agnes Woodson was born in 1656 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 1 Feb 1766 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    2. 12. John Woodson was born in 1658 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 5 Dec 1715 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    3. Robert Woodson was born in 1660 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1729 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    4. Elizabeth Woodson( Lewis) was born in 1662 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 1 Feb 1766 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    5. Richard Ferris Woodson was born in 1662 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 4 Mar 1704 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    6. Joseph Richard Woodson was born in 1664 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 15 Oct 1735.
    7. Sarah Woodson( Mosby) was born in 1665 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 12 Oct 1710 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    8. Stephen Woodson was born in 1665 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    9. Benjamin Lewis Woodson was born on 21 Aug 1666 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in Aug 1723 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    10. Judith Woodson( Cannon) was born in 1673 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in Jun 1733 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    11. Mary Jane Woodson was born in 1678 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 15 Jan 1744 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 6

  1. 48.  Dr John Woodson was born in 1586 in Dorsetshire, England; died on 19 Apr 1644 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Arrival: 1619, , , Virginia, USA
    • Residence: 1624, Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    Dr. John Woodson was born in 1586 in Devonshire, England. He matriculated at St. John's College in Oxford on March 1, 1604. He lived in Dorsetshire until 1619, when he and his wife Sarah decided to join an expedition to the new colony of Jamestown. On January 29th, 1619, the ship George sailed from England and landed the following April at Jamestown, Virginia. The ship carried Sir George Yeardley and a company of his men to the Virginia colony, where Sir George had been appointed the new governor. Among the passengers on the George was Dr. John Woodson, attached to Sir George's company as surgeon. His wife Sarah accompanied him, and was one of only a handful of women to voyage to the colony before 1620. At the time of their arrival the Jamestown colony was just over a dozen years old and numbered no more than 600 residents. Drought, disease, starvation, and war with the local tribe of Powhatan Indians meant that only about half the colonists who arrived between 1607 and 1624 survived.

    Dr. John Woodson settled on Governor Yeardley's plantation, known as Flowerdew Hundred, which was about 15 miles up the James river from Jamestown. Dr. Woodson lived in a small, fortified compound on the plantation with about 10 other families. Dr. Woodson and his wife arrived at the start of the second major wave of colonists to Jamestown. Between 1619 and 1622, the number of colonists grew to about 1000. This tide of newcomers upset Chief Opechancanough of the Powhatan Confederacy of Indian tribes, who saw the influx as proof that the English planned to expand in to Powhatan lands.

    The Massacre of 1622
    On March 22, 1622 Chief Opechancanough launched a series of coordinated attacks on all the English plantations and towns developing around Jamestown. Powhatan Confederacy braves entered each settlement with trade goods, looking as if they wished to barter. When the colonists approached them, the braves grabbed any weapons or tools that were at hand and attacked the unprepared colonists. 347 people were killed, a quarter of the colony's total population. Only the most fortified positions survived. The fortifications at Flowerdew Hundred held and the Woodson family survived the attack.

    The settlement at Flowerdew Hundred plantation was one of the few that was allowed to remain outside the walls of Jamestown after the 1622 attack. The next ten years involved attacks of retribution by the colonists. The time passed relatively peacefully for the Woodsons. Two sons were born to them, John in 1632 and Robert in 1634. In 1634 the colonists built a palisade defense wall across a six-mile wide strip of land between the James River and York River estuaries. This structure may have lulled the colonists in to a false sense of security. The Powhatan tribes were in no state to attack, having been nearly wiped out by English reprisal attacks. Emboldened, the colonists started building plantations outside the palisade around 1640. Chief Opechancanough was once again outraged by the English encroachment on his lands.

    The Indian Massacre of 1644
    An account of the Woodson family's ordeal during this attack was handed down through the Woodson family and first printed by a Woodson family genealogist in the early 19th century. On the morning of April 18, 1644, Thomas Ligon, a soldier in the Governor's employ, stopped by the Woodson's house seeking Dr. Woodson's services. Sarah Woodson informed him that her husband was out on his rounds through the nearby plantations, and Ligon elected to wait for the doctor to return. When Ligon saw the Indians approaching, he raised an alarm and told Sarah to hide inside with her two sons. Ligon grabbed his eight-foot muzzle-loaded rifle, and bracing his gun in the fork of a tree, fired on the approaching Indians. Meanwhile, Sarah gathered her boys together and desperately searched for a place to hide her 10 and 12 year old sons. She spied the root cellar where the family kept potatoes during the winter. She put Robert in the pit and covered it. Then she upturned a washtub and had John hide beneath it. With the boys hidden, she grabbed her husband's rifle and proceeded to load and fire upon the Indians from the window of the cabin. Before she could get off a second shot, the Indians had made their way around the back of the cabin and out of her sight. Then she heard sounds on the side of the cabin and on the roof. The Indians climbed atop the cabin and two of them attempted to come down the chimney. The fire had gone out, but she still had a pot of hot water sitting in the hearth. Thinking quickly, she upended the pot in to the fireplace just as the first Indian descended in to view, scalding his face. His companion then climbed out over his wounded fellow and came towards her. Sarah grabbed an iron roasting spit hanging next to the hearth and swung it at her attacker, knocking him senseless. Sarah grabbed her children from their hiding places and fled the house. She ran towards Ligon, who was still firing upon the Indians, who were now in retreat. Ligon struck another Indian as they fled. In total, he and Sarah killed seven of their attackers. As she watched the Indians flee back in to the woods, Sarah noticed a familiar horse wandering riderless through the field from which the Indians had attacked. It was her husband's horse. Running to it, she found her husband lying beside the road to their house, an arrow in his chest. He had evidently returned just as the Indians attacked, and having forgot his musket at home, was defenseless against them.

    Dr. John Woodson was one of 500 colonists who died that fateful day in 1644. Although the number was even greater than that killed in the 1622 attack, it represented less than 10% of the colony's population in 1644. Nevertheless, the retribution by the colonists was severe. A counterattack on all the nearby Powhatan-allied tribes nearly wiped them out. In 1646 Chief Opechancanough was captured and brought to Jamestown. He was nearly 100 years old at the time. While being held at the stockade awaiting trial, he was killed by one of his guards in revenge for a family member killed in the 1644 attack. After the death of their leader, the Powhatan Confederacy fell apart, and the individual tribes were either confined to reservations or left the area.

    Sarah Woodson remarried twice and outlived all her husbands. She died in 1660. Her sons both married and had large families. Their descendants passed on the story of Sarah saving her sons from the Indian massacre, and referred to themselves as being either "potato hole" or "washtub" Woodsons. The Woodson musket was also passed down from generation to generation, until in 1925 it was donated to the Virginia Historical Society, where it is on display in Richmond.

    Dr. Woodson and Sarah were also one of the first recorded slaveholders in Colonial America. In 1619 a Dutch privateer ship called The White Lion, and an English privateer called the Treasurer, captured a Portuguese slave ship São João Bautista in the Caribbean. The privateers took the slaves aboard their ships and set sail for Jamestown to sell them to the colonists. The ships arrived at Point Comfort, on the James River, late in August 1619, with "20 and odd" Africans aboard the White Lion and at least a few more aboard the Treasurer. Dr. Woodson bought some of these Africans. In 1623 a census of the colony listed 23 Africans, six of whom appear in Dr. Woodson's household. Notably, Dr. Woodson's six African servants are the most of any colonist, and one of only two households that did not give names for their African servants on the 1623 census. The fact that all the other Africans listed in the census were named could be interpreted as them having been indentured at the time of the census, while Dr. Woodson's servants were slaves. This is similar to how slaves were counted but not named on future census. If so, then the record of Dr. Woodson's servants on this census could be considered the first recorded mention of African slaves in Colonial America.

    It should be noted that in the early stages of Colonial America, Africans, though imported against their will, were not necessarily considered slaves as we understand it today. Instead, they were considered indentured servants, similar to poorer English who agreed to work off their passage to the colonies under the headright system. Several Africans were able to gain their freedom and become planters with headright contracts of their own. Anthony Johnson was one such man, transported prior to 1622. By 1651 he was a free man with 250 acres and five indentured servants of his own. But Anthony Johnson is the exception. By 1650 there was already some distinction made between indentured servants based on race. The records of the early colony in Virginia show a number of African indentured servants having "life terms" of servitude, while their white counterparts only served a limited seven-year term. This was the first step towards the racial, hereditary institution of slavery in America.

    It is not clear what happened to Dr. Woodson's servants. There is no further record of them in his household (it is possible they were killed in the Indian attack of 1644). When Sarah died in 1660, her will did not mention any servants. Around 1670 the first laws defining slaves were enacted in the colony. When their son John Jr. wrote his will in 1699, he bequeathed several slaves to his children. The idea that one man could be another man's property was fully accepted by 1700 in Colonial Virginia.

    Selected sources:
    "Virginia's First Africans" from the Encyclopedia Virginia.
    Archaeological Excavation of Flowerdew Hundred, by University of Virginia
    J.C. Schreiber, "The Woodson Family"
    Paul E. Pennebaker, "Dr. John Woodson"

    Dr + Sarah Isabelle Winston. Sarah was born in 1600 in , Devonshire, England; died on 17 Jan 1660 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 49.  Sarah Isabelle Winston was born in 1600 in , Devonshire, England; died on 17 Jan 1660 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Deborah Woodson was born in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA.
    2. John "Washtub" Woodson was born in 1632 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA; died on 1 Oct 1684 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    3. 24. Col Robert "Potato Hole" Woodson was born in 1634 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George, Virginia, USA; died on 1 Oct 1707 in Varina, Henrico, Virginia, USA.

  3. 50.  Richard Ferris (Ferrar Fariss) was born in 1596 in London, London, England; died in 1642 in White Oak Swamp, Varina Parish, Henrico, Virginia, USA.

    Richard married Sarah Hambleton (Ferris Ferrar) in 1637 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA. Sarah was born in 1616 in , James City, Virginia, USA; died on 5 Feb 1690 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 51.  Sarah Hambleton (Ferris Ferrar) was born in 1616 in , James City, Virginia, USA; died on 5 Feb 1690 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 25. Elizabeth Ferris was born on 8 May 1634 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1689 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA.