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John Prendergast

Male 1709 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Prendergast was born in 1709 in , , Pennsylvania, USA (son of John Pendergrass and Anne Pleasants).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Pendergrass was born in 1685 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA (son of John Michael Pendergass and Rebecca Jane Bolling); died on 20 Jul 1715 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Married: 1705, , Northumberland, Virginia, USA
    • Married: 9 Dec 1709, , Northumberland, Virginia, USA

    John + Anne Pleasants. Anne was born in 1690 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in 1717 in , , Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Anne Pleasants was born in 1690 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in 1717 in , , Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. John Pendergrass
    2. William Pendergrass died in 1804.
    3. Michael Pendergrass was born in 1706 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in , , Virginia, USA.
    4. Jesse G Pendergrass was born in 1707 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in 1770 in , Allegheny, Pennsylvania, USA.
    5. 1. John Prendergast was born in 1709 in , , Pennsylvania, USA.
    6. Robert Raleigh Pendergrass was born on 8 Dec 1711 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in 1782 in , Richmond, Virginia, USA.
    7. William Pendergrass was born on 14 May 1714 in St Stephens Parish, Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died in 1785 in Bute, Granville, Monongalia, West Virginia, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John Michael Pendergass was born in 1664 in , County Mayo, Ireland; died in 1705 in Farnham, Richmond, Virginia, USA; was buried in Farnham, Richmond, Virginia, USA.

    John + Rebecca Jane Bolling. Rebecca (daughter of Robert Bolling and Jane Rolfe) was born in 1675 in Kippax, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 24 Aug 1714 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA; was buried in Farnham, Richmond, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Rebecca Jane Bolling was born in 1675 in Kippax, Charles City, Virginia, USA (daughter of Robert Bolling and Jane Rolfe); died on 24 Aug 1714 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA; was buried in Farnham, Richmond, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Rebecca Pendergrass

    Notes:

    Check out the "Shawnee Heritage" books by Don Greene (available as GOOGLE books on-line and for purchase on Amazon), specifically pages 84-88 of Volume III Pre-1700's A-L (published 2014) and pages 101-102 of Volume IV Pre-1700's M-Z (published 2014). These pages assert that the Jane Bolling (1675–1714) who married REV James Clack Sr was 1 of the 5 out-of-wedlock children that COL Robert Bolling I had with Mary Pettis, a Shawano servant/slave/wet nurse in Robert's household. These pages also document the lineage of Mary Pettis as being the 1G Granddaughter of Matoaka-POCAHONTAS Powhatan and her 1st husband KOKUM Stream-Patawomeck [FindAGrave 131558962]. That would make the Jane Bolling (1675–1714) who married REV James Clack Sr the 2G granddaughter of Pocahontas from Pocahontas' 1st marriage . . . NOT from Pocahontas' 2nd marriage to John Rolfe II.

    Discussion from Genealogy.com
    Regarding Story of Jane Bolling Clack

    Jane Bolling as first or second child of Robert Bolling and Jane Rolfe would have been without a mother to care for her as an infant; Jane Rolfe Bolling died at childbirth of infant Jane or her brother. Father Robert would have been busy with duties in Virginia militia and rebellions, so both children probably were initially cared for by the local parish. When father Robert remarried, presumably he took back his son, but not daughter Jane, as her care probably was easier at the parish church. Also, sentiment in the area was strongly anti Indian. Robert Bolling needed to maintain political support; being father to an Indian child would have been unpopular. Letting baby Jane remain with the parish church to receive a "proper" Christian upbringing would have been deemed prudent. Thus Jane Bolling would have been raised in the parish church; sixteen years later the young woman raised by the church would have been a "perfect" wife for the just arrived Reverend James Clack from England, come to take over duties as the parish minister. Circumstantial, but compelling.

    When Jane Rolfe Billing died, she had one child, a son; but may also have had an infant daughter as well. Robert Bolling later acknowledges a son, but no mention of a daughter is found in the records. The argument in support of the existence of a daughter includes circumstantial evidence and later testimony by descendants who would have had to have come from this Line in order to have been Pocahontas descendants.

    It needs to be noted that circumstantial evidence needs to include consideration of the society and events at that time in Virginia. In the 1600's there was a large gap between European settlers, Christianity, and social norms vs. native American culture, beliefs, and practices. Col. Robert Billing held a position of authority in the Virginia colony, and the responsibilities of his position may have pushed him into making decisions that made him sacrifice his personal life and family duties to maintain his position in the community. There was conflict, Indian wars, and rebellion all at the time of the death of his wife (Jane Rolfe Bolling). There was a great deal of hatred and mistrust between the two cultures.

    Pocahontas was required to convert to Christianity before her marriage to John Rolfe was allowed. Of the three generations of descendants of Chief Powhatan who lived in the new society, not the old (native American), the only one whohad lived a long life at that point, was Thomas Rolfe, who was totally isolated from native American culture since he was raised by his grandparents in England. The other two generations, his mother Pocahontas, and his daughter Jane Rolfe, lived in white society in Jamestown, but were clearly able to remain in contact with their native American roots. They both died very young.

    IF in fact, Jane Rolfe Bolling left an infant son AND a daughter, the decision of who to raise these infants may have been a difficult one. If they were initially cared for by the local church, it is plausible that a decision was made that the daughter Jane should be cared for by the local church, so that she "would fit in better" as an adult, while the son would do fine with his father as a role model at home.

    Given that later generations claimed to be descended from Pocahontas, and that all these individuals are descended from Rev. James Clack and his wife Jane; it is reasonable to conclude that Jane Clack was Jane Bolling Clack.

    "Presumably her granddaughter, Sarah (Clack) Maclin, was reliably
    informed concerning her grandparents and it is certain that she claimed
    descent from the Bolling family and from the Indian chieftain, Powhatan,
    and his daughter, Pocahontas. Abundant cumulative evidence in all the various branches of her descendants is to that effect. Many of her descendants, early as well as later ones, were given the names, Bolling, Powhatan, and, Pocahontas."

    Rebecca was the name that the white settlers gave Pocahontas.
    There were other names in their descendants Jane, Powhatan, Pocahontas, etc..

    Children:
    1. 2. John Pendergrass was born in 1685 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA; died on 20 Jul 1715 in , Northumberland, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Robert Bolling was born on 26 Dec 1646 in All Hallows, Barking, London, England; was christened on 6 Jan 1647 in All Hallows, Barking, London, England (son of John Bolling and Mary Carie); died on 17 Jul 1709 in Kippax, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Petersburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Robert Bowling

    Notes:

    Parents of Robert Bolling were John Bolling and Mary Cary who resided in Bolling Hall, Bradford, Yorkshire,England. Robert was baptised at All Hallows, Barking Essex. Emigrated to America, arrived on October 2,1660 at age 13. He married Jane Rolfe in 1675. Jane Rolfe was a descendent of Pocahantas and John Rolfe. His wife died the next year in 1676, leaving one child. Robert remarried in 1681 to Jane Anne Stith. They had 7 children. Robert, Edward, Anne, Drury, Thomas, Agnes (1700-1762), Mollie (1702) in Virginia. Descendents of Jane Anne Stith-Bollings were referred to as the "white bollings" and descendents of Jane Rolfe were known as the "red bollings". Robert died at Kippax, Virginia on June 17th, 1709.



    Robert Bolling, founder of the family in Virginia, was the son of John Bolling, of "All Hallows," Backen Parish, Town St., London. This John Bolling was descended from a younger branch of the Bolling Hall. His son, Robert, b. December 26, 1646, arrived in Virginia, October 2, 1660, when not quite fifteen years old. He lived at Kippox, sometimes called Farmingdale, a large estate below Petersburg on James River. His dwelling house is now in ruins. Robert Bolling grew up, and early attained prominence in the colony and married Jane Rolfe, daughter of Lieut. Thomas Rolfe and Jane Poythress, and granddaughter of John Rolfe and Pocahontas. They had one son, Col. John Bolling, b. 1676, the same year his mother died. He settled, lived and died on his plantation called "Cobbs," on the Appomattox River, below Petersburg, hence his sobriquet "of Cobbs." Col. John Bolling engaged in commerce and soon became very wealthy. He is described as gay and social in his disposition and eminently adapted for society. Judge Windham Robertson, a descendant of the Bollings, in his "Biographical Sketches," relates the following anecdote of him: "Col. Robert Bolling, in England, at a feast given him by a kinswoman, met a Yorkshire lady, who hearing him talk, exclaimed, 'Oh, mine Got, you no hear dat man, an he talk English as well as me.' 'Aye, madam, and a good deal better, or I would not talk at all,' was the Colonel's quick and not over gallant rejoinder."
    Volume IV Chapter XII Bolling Family.

    Robert married Jane Rolfe in 1674 in Petersburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA. Jane (daughter of Thomas Rolfe and Jane Poythress) was born on 10 Oct 1650 in Varina, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 26 Jan 1676 in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Jane Rolfe was born on 10 Oct 1650 in Varina, Henrico, Virginia, USA (daughter of Thomas Rolfe and Jane Poythress); died on 26 Jan 1676 in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Jane Rolfe (October 10, 1650 – 1676) was the granddaughter of Pocahontas and English colonist John Rolfe, (credited with introducing a strain of tobacco for export by the struggling Virginia Colony). Her husband was Colonel Robert Bolling who lived from 1646 to 1709. Robert and Jane had one son John Fairfax Bolling (1676–1729).

    Pocahontas, who adopted the Christian name of Rebecca, [1] [2] married John Rolfe on April 5, 1614 in Jamestown. Rolfe's longtime friend, Reverend Richard Buck presided the wedding. [3] They had one child, Thomas Rolfe, who was born in Virginia on January 30, 1615.

    Jane Rolfe was born in Varina, Henrico County, Virginia on October 10, 1650 [4] to Thomas Rolfe and his wife, Jane Poythress, whose parents were Francis Poythress and Alice Payton of England. [5] [6] [7]

    In about 1675, Jane married Robert Bolling of Prince George County, Virginia. Their son John was born on January 27, 1676. Jane is said to have died shortly afterward. [4]

    John Bolling married Mary Kennon, daughter of Richard Kennon and Elizabeth Worsham of Conjurer's Neck.[4] The couple had six surviving children, each of whom married and had surviving children. [8] As a result, many Americans are today able to claim descent from Pocahontas through her great-grandson, John Bolling.

    Rolfe's interment was near her father in the Kippax Plantation, but her birth year was never engraved on her headstone.

    References
    The conversion of Pocahontas to Christianity was undertaken by Alexander Whitaker.

    "Pocahontas Biography: also called Matoaka and Amonute, Christian name Rebecca (1595–1617)".

    Travels and Works of Captain John Smith (Edinburgh 1910), p. 514

    John Frederick Dorman, Adventurers of Purse and Person, 4th ed., Vol. 3, pp. 23–36.

    Snow, Megan (May 2003). "Thomas Rolfe". Historic Jamestowne. National Park Service.

    Pecquet du Bellet, Louise (1907). "Bolling Family". Some prominent Virginia families. Lynchburg, VA: J.P. Bell Co. p. 304. Retrieved August 31, 2011.

    "The Descendants of Pocahontas: An Unclosed Case", by Elizabeth Vann Moore and Richard Slatten, Magazine of Virginia Genealogy, XXIII, no.3, pp. 3–16, cited by John Frederick Dorman, Adventurers of Purse and Person, 4th ed., Vol. 3, p. 26, fn23–24. Moore and Slatten traced the suggestion that his wife was a Poythress back to a comment by W. G. Stanard in "Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents", Virginia Historical Magazine(I, 1894, 446–447): "His wife is said to have been a Miss Poythress (if so, doubtless a daughter of Francis Poythress." According to Moore and Slatten, Stanard cited as evidence handwritten notes on the flyleaf of a copy of A Complete Collection of All the Laws of Virginia Now in Force Carefully Copied from the Assembled Records (London, 168[?], now in the Library of Virginia. Moore and Slatten state: "Interestingly, Thomas Rolfe here is recorded as married to a 'Miss Payers'. We recall that in John Rolfe's will the name of his third wife is spelt Pyers (Peirce) and that it was John who married a "Jane". Here again a Bolling descendant confused the son with his father. Not recognizing the name 'Payers' as another variant of Peirce, someone searched the records for a name beginning with 'P' and having a 'y' in the first syllable. Francis Poythress lived in adjacent Charles City County and his name ended in s! Stanard wrote, 'His wife is said to have been a Miss Poythress (if so, doubtless a daughter of Francis Poythress).' (VMHB I, 446) Wyndham Robertson, a Bolling descendant, wrote in Pocahontas Alias Mataoke and Her Descendants (Richmond, 1887), 'I adopt "Jane Poythress" (not "Poyers") whom he is stated in the Bolling Memoirs to have married in England.' He added in justification of his charming adoption of an ancestress, '...no such name as "Poyers" is anywhere known ... the family of Poythress was already settled in Virginia.' ... The result has been the acceptance of a non-existent personage, 'Jane Poythress', in the Bibles of Virginia genealogy, as the bona fide ancestress of many illustrious Virginians. Who the wife (or wives) of Thomas Rolfe may have been remains an unanswered question."
    Henrico County Deeds & Wills 1697–1704, p. 96

    VA PROMINENT FAMILIES VOL 4 Chapt XII BOLLING FAMILY

    For over a year Pocahontas was held as a hostage by Gov. Dale and lived in his family. During these months she proved a willing and apt scholar in many things. An old chronicle says quaintly, "When instructed in the Christian religion she made good progress and was baptized." While staying with Gov. Dale, she met a young Englishman, one Capt. John Rolfe, Gent., of the old family of Beacham Hall, County Suffolk, England. They were married at Jamestown, and, a year or so later, Capt. Rolfe took her to England, where she became the guest of the Virginia Company, was introduced at court and received marked attention from the Queen and her ladies. She was also "entertained with special and extraordinary state festival and pomp by the Lord Bishop of London." Imagine what the contrast must have been to her, taken from the wigwam of an Indian chief, to the palace of England's queen. Some one has said, "It was small wonder this wild flower of the wilderness drooped and died when transported to the hot bed of civilization."

    The health of Pocahontas became affected by the excitement and strain of court life, and she pined for her baby boy. In 1617 Capt. Rolfe determined to return to America, and took passage on a vessel belonging to the Virginia Company, which was specially fitted up for the comfort of his wife; but on the eve of her embarkation, she died at Gravesend, and was buried under the chancel of St. George's Church, where the tablet erected to her memory and record of her death and burial may still be seen. On the tablet is inscribed, "Pocahontas Rebecca Rolfe, b. 1595; d. 1617, wyff of John Rolfe, Gent." At "Beacham Hall," Norfolk, England, there is a handsome portrait of her, painted in 1616, by de Passe.

    The name of Rolfe is Danish and first occurs in history when Rolfe Kroke was King of Denmark. This special branch of the Rolfes are recorded as owners of Beacham Hall, County Norfolk, where they were living as far back as 1560. The first entry in the record is the marriage of Eustace Rolfe to Jener (Joanna). These were the grandparents of John Rolfe. The record further states that John Rolfe, son of John Rolfe and Dorothea Mason, was b. May 6, 1585. John Rolfe, Jr., was one of the prominent characters of his time, being the first Secretary of State and Recorder General of Virginia, also a member of the Royal Council for the colony. Thomas Rolfe, the only child of John Rolfe, Jr., and Pocahontas Rebecca, b. 1615 in the colony, after the melancholy death of his young mother was taken in charge by his uncle, Henry Rolfe, of London, by whom he was reared to manhood. In 1640, when he was twenty-five years old, he came to Virginia and took possession of his property, called "Varina," located some sixteen miles below Richmond. The Rev. William Stith, President of William and Mary College, speaks of him in his "History of Virginia" as "a man of distinction and fortune" in the colony. In Hening's Statutes we find the following entry, "And be it further enacted and granted that Left. Thomas Rolfe shall have and enjoy for himself and his heirs forever ffort James, ole Chickahominy ffort, with four hundred acres of land adjoining the same, with all the houses and edifices belonging to the said ffort, provided the said Left. Rolfe doe keepe and maintaine sixe men upon the place during the term and tyme of three years, for which tyme he, said Left. Rolfe, for himself and sixe men, are exempted from publique tax." That Thomas Rolfe should have been entrusted by the government with so important a position shows him to have been a man of high standing, possessing the confidence of the leading men of the time.

    Lieut. Thomas Rolfe, b. 1651, son of Capt. John Rolfe and Pocahontas, married Jane Poythress, daughter of Lieut. William Poythress, of Jamestown, Va. They had one child, a daughter, called Jane Rolfe, who married (1675) Col. Robert Bolling.

    Children:
    1. 5. Rebecca Jane Bolling was born in 1675 in Kippax, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 24 Aug 1714 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA; was buried in Farnham, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
    2. John Fairfax Bolling was born on 26 Jan 1676 in Kippax, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 20 Apr 1729 in Cobbs Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in Enon, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 5

  1. 20.  John Bolling was born in 1615 in Barking, London, England; died on 11 Nov 1648 in London, London, England.

    John married Mary Carie on 23 Nov 1640 in London, London, England. Mary was born in 1620 in London, London, England; died on 11 Nov 1648 in London, London, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 21.  Mary Carie was born in 1620 in London, London, England; died on 11 Nov 1648 in London, London, England.
    Children:
    1. 10. Robert Bolling was born on 26 Dec 1646 in All Hallows, Barking, London, England; was christened on 6 Jan 1647 in All Hallows, Barking, London, England; died on 17 Jul 1709 in Kippax, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Petersburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.

  3. 22.  Thomas Rolfe was born on 30 Jan 1615 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA (son of John Rolfe and Pocahontas Amonute Matoaka "Rebecca" Powhatan); died in 1675 in Richmond, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA.

    Thomas married Jane Poythress in 1645 in Richmond, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA. Jane (daughter of Francis Poythress and Mary Frances Sloman) was born in 1625 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA; died in 1676 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 23.  Jane Poythress was born in 1625 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA (daughter of Francis Poythress and Mary Frances Sloman); died in 1676 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 11. Jane Rolfe was born on 10 Oct 1650 in Varina, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 26 Jan 1676 in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 6

  1. 44.  John Rolfe was born on 6 May 1585 in Heacham, Norfolk, England (son of Eustace Rolfe and Joanna Jenner); died on 22 Mar 1622 in Varina, Henrico, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Married: 1614, Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    John Rolfe was born in Heacham, Norfolk, England as the son of John Rolfe and Dorothea Mason, and was baptised on 6 May 1585. John Rolfe was one of a number of businessmen who saw the opportunity to undercut Spanish imports by growing tobacco in England's new colony in Virginia. Rolfe had somehow obtained seeds to take with him from a special popular strain then being grown in Trinidad and South America, even though Spain had declared a penalty of death to anyone selling such seeds to a non-Spaniard. He is credited with the first successful cultivation of tobacco as an export crop in the Colony of Virginia.

    Heading the Third Supply fleet was the new flagship of the Virginia Company, the Sea Venture, carrying Rolfe and his wife, Sarah Hacker. The Third Supply fleet left England in May 1609 destined for Jamestown with seven large ships, towing two smaller pinnaces. The colony at Bermuda dates its settlement from 1609. Among those left buried in Bermuda were Rolfe's wife and his infant daughter, Bermuda Rolfe.

    In May 1610, two newly constructed ships set sail from Bermuda, with 142 castaways on board, including Rolfe, Admiral Somers, Stephen Hopkins, and Sir Thomas Gates. On arrival at Jamestown, they found the Virginia Colony almost destroyed by famine and disease during what has become known as the Starving Time. Very few supplies from the Third Supply had arrived because the same hurricane that caught the Sea Venture badly affected the rest of the fleet. Only 60 settlers remained alive. It was only through the arrival of the two small ships from Bermuda, and the arrival of another relief fleet commanded by Lord De La Warr on 10 June 1610 that the abandonment of Jamestown was avoided and the colony survived.

    The land gifted by Powhatan (now known as Smith's Fort Plantation, located in Surry County) was willed to Rolfe's son Thomas, who in 1640 sold at least a portion of it to Thomas Warren. Smith's Fort was a secondary Fort to Jamestown, begun in 1609 by John Smith.

    John and Rebecca Rolfe travelled to England on the Treasurer, commanded by Samuel Argall, in 1616 with their young son. They arrived at the port of Plymouth on 12 June and Rebecca was widely received as visiting royalty, but settled in Brentford. However, as they were preparing to return to Virginia in March 1617, Rebecca became ill and died. Her body was interred in Gravesend's St George's Church. Their two-year-old son Thomas survived, but was adopted by Sir Lewis Stukley and later by John's brother, Henry Rolfe. John and Tomocomo returned to Virginia.

    In 1619, Rolfe married Jane Pierce, daughter of English colonist Captain William Pierce and Jane Eeles. They had a daughter, Elizabeth, in 1620, who married John Milner of Nansemond, Virginia and died in 1635. Rolfe died in 1622 after his plantation was destroyed in a Native American attack. It remains unclear whether Rolfe died in the massacre or whether he died as a result of illness. His widow Jane married Englishman Captain Roger Smith three years later. He was the son of John Smith (no relation to Captain John Smith) and Thomasine Manning.

    Rolfe's son with Pocahontas, Thomas, who grew up in England, married Elizabeth Washington in September 1632 at St James's Church in Clerkenwell and they had a daughter Anne in 1633. Elizabeth died shortly after Anne's birth. Thomas returned to Virginia two years later, where he married Jane Poythress. Her English parents were Francis Poythress and Alice Payton. Thomas and his second wife had one child, Jane, who married Robert Bolling in 1675 and had a son, John, in 1676. She died later that same year.

    John married Pocahontas Amonute Matoaka "Rebecca" Powhatan on 5 Apr 1614 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA. Pocahontas (daughter of Chief Wahunsonacock Powhatan and Matatishe Winanuske Nonoma Powhatan) was born on 15 Sep 1595 in Matoaka, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 21 Mar 1617 in Gravesend, Kent, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 45.  Pocahontas Amonute Matoaka "Rebecca" Powhatan was born on 15 Sep 1595 in Matoaka, Gloucester, Virginia, USA (daughter of Chief Wahunsonacock Powhatan and Matatishe Winanuske Nonoma Powhatan); died on 21 Mar 1617 in Gravesend, Kent, England.
    Children:
    1. 22. Thomas Rolfe was born on 30 Jan 1615 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA; died in 1675 in Richmond, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA.

  3. 46.  Francis Poythress was born in 1614 in London, London, England; died in 1661 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Descendants of Francis Poythress
    Trial Chart of the Descendants of Francis Poythress
    Prepared April 1977 by R. Bolling Batte
    Review Transcription and Research Notes

    Francis Poythress
    ( - c. 1650) m. Mary_____; English immigrant to Virginia c. 1633; patented 400 acres on Bailey’s Creek in Charles City County in 1637 (PB 1, 439) and 350 additional acres adjoining (total 750) in 1648 (PB 2, 139). This land fell into Prince George County upon its formation in 1702. Was lieutenant of the militia in 1644; a captain by 1648. Was burgess for Charles City County 1644, 1645, 1647, and for Northumberland County in 1648. His name disappears from the records after that. The family name of the wife of Captain Francis Poythress has not been discovered.. After his death she became the wife of Colonel Robert Wynne. Issue of Francis and Mary___ Poythress: 1. Jane 2. John 3. Thomas 4. Francis

    1 Jane Poythress m. Thomas Rolfe, son of John Rolfe and Pocahontas.

    2 John Poythress m. Christian Peebles, daughter of David and Elizabeth ( ) Peebles. In 1661 Edward Hill deeded 50 acres in Charles City County, adj. Capt. Robert Wynne to John Poythress, "son of Captain Francis Poythress, dec’d".

    21 Joshua Poythress
    ( -1740), m. ______. The name of the wife of this Joshua has never been proved. The fact that one of his sons was named "Littlebury" suggests that she may have been an Eppes or a Hardyman. In 1725 John Hardyman, whose mother had been Mary Eppes 124, and whose grandmother had been Elizabeth Littlebury, conveyed to "Joseph" Poythress 300 acres, part of the Flowerdew Hundred Tract in Prince George. The consideration expressed was 5 shillings, which means that it was a deed of gift. John Hardyman had actually paid 600 pounds lawful money of England for 150 of the same 300 acres he was now giving away. The "Joseph" named as grantee in the deed was certainly an error in transliteration. Joshua was intended, not "Joseph". This will be clear later when Joshua’s grandson William (211 2) sells the same land to Peachy 65 years later. Why should John Hardyman give valuable land away to Joshua Poythress? A most likely answer would be that a Joshua Poythress had married a close relative of John Hardyman, a daughter or a sister. By 1725 John and Henrietta Maria Hardyman would hardly have a daughter old enough to marry. He had sisters, however. Their names do not appear in any known record but their existance is established by the 1726 will of Littlebury Hardeman, brother of John, which leaves one shilling "to each and every one of my brothers and sisters." These circumstances, plus the existance of a Hardyman Poythress in Prince George, bolster a growing suspicion that the wife of Joshua Poythress was a daughter of John Hardyman, Sr. and Mary Eppes, his wife, and thus a grandaughter of Francis and Elizabeth (Littlebury-Worsham) Epes. Hardyman Poythress, as yet unidentified, in 1809, may have been a grandson of Joshua Poythress. Joshua left a will dated January 17 1739 (o. s.) in which he leaves property to his wife (but inconsiderately fails to name her), and to three sons,three daughters, brothers William, Robert, and others.. The original will is now in the archives of the Virginia State Library (Accession 23849)

    211 Joshua Poythress m. Mary Short, daughter of William and Mary ( ) Short of Surry County. William Short’s 1757 will mentions his daughter Mary Poythress, her husband Joshua Poythress, and three of their children. Joshua Poythress was captain of a packet ship that plied between London, Glasgow and Petersburg. He left a will, now lost, but referred to in a 1790 deed from his son William to Peachy. (See William 211 2).

    211 1 Joshua Poythress ( - 1794), m. Elizabeth Robertson, daughter of Archibald and Elizabeth (Fitzgerald) Robertson. Joshua and his wife were second cousins. They lived and died at Flowerdew Hundred and both were there buried. She died 7 September 1787.

    211 11 Elizabeth Poythress
    Shown as a child of Joshua and Elizabeth (Robertson) Poythress in the notes on the Robertson family made by Gov. Wyndham Robertson. Elizabeth (Robertson) Poythress was the governor’s aunt. He certainly would have had personal knowledge of her children. Several printed accounts of the Cocke and Poythress families state that James Cocke, son of Benjamin, married Elizabeth Poythress, daughter of Joshua, without identifying the Joshua, and that they had a daughter Elizabeth Cocke who married Jacob Hoffman. As to this last couple there can be no doubt. In 1955 I ran across a monument

    in the cemetery in Leesburg inscribed: "In memory of Jacob Hoffman/and his wife/ Elizabeth Cocke/and their children/erected by their grand-daughter/1928." If the mother of this Elizabeth Cocke had indeed been the daughter of any Joshua Poythress at all she would have to have been the daughter of Joshua 211 1. She could not possibly been the daughter of Joshua 211 and Mary Short, for their daughter Elizabeth (as we shall see later) married Simon Fraser in 1775. Elizabeth Poythress who married James Cocke is said to have died in 1800. Tentatively I place her here.

    211 12 Mary Poythress
    Shown in the notes of Gov. Wyndham Robertson. Probably died young.

    211 13 Susanna Peachy Poythress
    (1785-1915), m. 1804 John Vaughn Willcox (11 Aug 1779 Charles City - 23 Nov 1863 Flowerdew Hundred, Pr. Geo.) John Vaughn Willcox was very wealthy; a very large holder of Confederate Bonds. He acquired by purchase the several parcels comprising the original Flowerdew Hundred tract, including the original 300 acres that had been given by John Hardyman in 1725 to his wife’s great grandfather Joshua Poythress 21. John Vaughn Willcox was buried in Blandford Cemetery in Petersburg. Susanna Peachy (Poythress) Willcox was buried at Flowerdew Hundred where a tombstone marked her grave until 1864 when the yankees destroyed it along with all other Poythress monuments that were then there.

    211 2 William Poythress
    (c. 1753 -1794 Pr. Geo.), m. Mary Gilliam, daughter of John and Jane (Henry) Gilliam of Pr. Geo. William Poythress was a captain in the Continental Army during the Revolution. He was the principle beneficiary of the 1779 will of Thomas Epes 132 32. In 1790 William Poythress deeded to William S. Peachy the same 300 acres of Flowerdew Hundred, previously mentioned, that John Hardyman had conveyed by deed of gift to the first Joshua Poythress and had by the latter been devised to the second Joshua, who had, in turn, devised the same to his son William, the present grantor. William also owned a tract of 863 acres on Simmons Branch upon which he had been living at the time he died.

    It is probable that the youngest of the sons had reached legal age by that time. William Poythress may have been buried there.

    211 21 Joshua Poythress
    (1784 - post 1854), m. 1810 in Petersburg Jane Mills Angus, daughter of John and Lucy (Wortham) Angus, then of Petersburg but formerly of Scotland. In 1850 Joshua and his

    wife Jane were living in Petersburg (census). By 1854 he was living in New Jersey when he deeded some lots in the town of Blandford to one Shanks. Jane did not join in the deed. Presumably she had previously died.

    211 211 Nancy G. D. Poythress
    m. (1) 1834 Robert Carter Harrison, son of Collier and Beersheeba (Bryant) Harrison of "Kittewan," Charles City County. Nancy later m. (2) John Crane. What names her middle initials "G. D." stood for is now anybody’s guess. My guess is that the "G" was for Gilliam, her grandmother’s family name.

    211 22 Thomas Eppes Poythress
    (c. 1785 - 1847), m. c. 1815 Beersheeba, nee Bryant, but then the widow of Collier Harrison who died in 1809. Beersheeba, by her first marriage, was the mother of Robert Carter Harrison who m. Nancy G. D. above. T. E. P. had but one child by Beersheeba, Caroline, who died at the age of seven. By his 1847 Will Thomas Eppes Poythress left his entire estate to wife Beersheeba for life, and after her death, to brother Joshua, niece Nancy G. D. Harrison, nephew William P. Poythress, and to Harrison step-children. The will provided for having the graveyard at Kittewan enclosed with a brick wall forty feet long on all four sides. Presumably, he, Beersheeba, Caroline, and a number of Harrisons are buried there.

    211 221 Caroline Poythress
    (1817 - 1824) Obituary appears in "Southern Churchman".

    211 23 William Poythress
    died unmarried.

    211 24 Patrick Henry Poythress
    ( - 1824), m. Mary Elizabeth Eppes (1785 - 1822), daughter of Peterson Eppes of Dinwiddie County. It might be supposed that P. H. P. was named for the famous orator, it having been a popular custom in that period to name children in honor of persons prominent in the affairs of the times. Actually, this Patrick was named for his own great-grandfather, the Rev. Patrick Henry who was an uncle of the orator.

    211 241 William Peterson Poythress
    (1810 - 1862), m. Charlotte Reed (1825 - 1897), daughter of Elias and Sarah (Block) Reed of Richmond. After their marriage W. P. P. and Charlotte lived in Richmond where all of their children were born. Mr. Poythress died in Nassau, B. W. I., during blockade-running operations in the war between the States. Charlotte died in Richmond and was buried in Hollywood.

    211 241 1 Mary Poythress
    d. inf.

    211 241 2 Patrick Henry Poythress
    (1846 -1863) Accidentally shot while in C. S. A.

    211 241 3 William Powhatan Poythress
    (1847 - 1920), m. 1877 in Lunenburg Co. Louisa Campbell Mayo (1849 - 1927), daughter of John and Mary Louisa (Campbell) Mayo of Westmoreland County and Richmond. She was granddaughter of Joseph and Jane Poythress 281 9 Mayo of Richmond. W. P. P. was in the wholesale drug business and was founder and owner of W. P. Poythress & Co., of Richmond, a drug manufacturing firm still in operation under that name, although no Poythress is any longer connected with it. Both William P. and Louisa died in Richmond and are buried in Hollywood.

    211 241 31 Charlotte Reed Poythress
    (9 Feb 1880 - 29 May 1880), buried in Shockoe Cemetery, Richmond.

    211 241 32 Charlotte Reed Poythress
    (1881 -1906). She was given the same name that had been given to her deceased sister, that of their grandmother. Charlotte died in Richmond as a result of an accidental fall. She was unmarried. The marble slab marking her grave in Hollywood, like all the others in the lot bears only her name. It reads: "Charlotte Poythress" - no more.

    211 241 4 Sarah Reed Poythress
    (1852 - 1927) , unm. Upon her decease in Richmond, passed the last living descendant of Joshua Poythress 21 to be born with the surname "Poythress." The name thus became extinct in the "21" branch.

    211 241 5 Walter Eppes Poythress
    (1861 - 1888), m. 1887 Marie Joseph Brouse, native of Pennsylvania. Walter Eppes Poythress was a musician. He died of yellow fever while in Jacksonville, Fla. In 1911

    his remains were removed to Richmond and reinterred in the family lot in Hollywood. In 1893 his widow m. (2) James Chandler Dorst in Tazewell County, Virginia.

    211 242 Mary Poythress
    d. unm.

    211 243 A. H. Poythress
    d. unm. I have never been able to learn what the initials "A. H." stood for.

    211 3 Elizabeth Poythress
    m. 1775 in Middlesex Co. Simon Fraser, a recent immigrant from Scotland to Petersburg where he was engaged as a merchant. It is conjectured that the marriage took place in Middlesex County because she had been at that time living with her aunt Elizabeth Poythress 215 , then the wife of James Mills of that county. James Mills and her brothers Joshua and William were sureties on the bond. After their marriage the couple settled in Petersburg. Simon Fraser died there 28 Oct 1792 and was buried in Blandford. Elizabeth was still living in 1795 when she was named in the will of the same aunt who, by that time, was the wife of Thomas Griffin Peachy. It is likely that Elizabeth was buried in Blandford but there is no record to establish that fact. The earliest record of Blandford interments now available begin in 1842.

    211 4 Susan Ann Poythress
    (1766 - 1799), m. 1788 in Pr. Geo. David Maitland (1759 - 1838), a native of Barcaple, Scotland, and son of David and Mary (Currie) Maitland of that place. David and Susan had two daughters born in Petersburg; Mary Currie in 1790 and Elizabeth Agnes in 1793. Tombs may be seen in Blandford churchyard today for Susan Ann, who died in Petersburg on 9 Feb 1799, and for her daughter Mary Currie Maitland, who died there in 1795. Afterward, David Maitland returned to Scotland to live, taking with him their daughter, Elizabeth Agnes. He died in Barcaple 18 May 1838. Elizabeth Agnes was still living there, unmarried, in 1865.

    212 Littlebury Poythress
    d. w/o issue. Mentioned in his father’s 1739/1740 will with an inference that he was incapacitated, either physically or mentally. No further record of him.

    213 William Poythress
    214 Ann Poythress

    m. John Wall. Numerous decendants are given in the trial chart of the Eppes Society.

    215 Elizabeth Poythress (1725 - 1795). She was married three times; (1) to Walter Boyd, who died in the town of Blandford in 1779; (2) to James Mills (1718 -1782) of Middlesex County; and (3) to Thomas Griffin Peachy (1734 - 1810) of Williamsburg, but then the Clerk of the Court in
    Amelia County. Elizabeth had no children by any of her three husbands. She died in Petersburg leaving a will on record there. In it she named as beneficiaries her husband, nephews, nieces, and others. The will has been very helpful in establishing with certainty a number of relationships within this branch of the Poythress family. Elizabeth (Poythress-Boyd-Mills) Peachy was buried by her second husband in the churchyard of Christ Church, Middlesex. Thomas G. Peachy died 6 March 1810 in Williamsburg and was buried in the garden of his home where all three of his children by his first marriage, and whom he had outlived, had been buried. In 1911 expansion of Eastern State Hospital necessitated the removal of the remains in the former Peachy garden to nearby Cedar Grove Cemetery. A single large, granite block was then erected as a monument on the lot. It bears ten names, one below the other, with associated years. The first three lines read:

    "Col. Thomas G. Peachy 1734-1810

    Elizabeth Gilliam Peachy 1741-1781

    Elizabeth Beverley Peachy - 1795

    * * * * * "

    The second line, of course, refers to TGP’s first wife. The third line apparently was intended to refer to his second wife who is not even buried there. While the year of death shown is correct for Elizabeth Poythress, the second wife, the name "Beverley" is an error. The great-grandchildren of TGP who caused the monument to be erected more than 100 years after his death probably had very scant information as to the second wife.

    They had her confused with the first wife of James Mills who was Elizabeth Beverley. After all, TGP’s second wife was only a step-grandmother to these 20th century Peachys.

    The late John McGill, in his very excellent The Beverley Family of Virginia was also confused as to the respective marriages of James Mills and Thomas G. Peachy. On page 616 he has Elizabeth Beverley married in 1743 to James Mills, which is correct. Then he shows her as marrying (2) in 1783 to Thomas Griffin Peachy. Actually Elizabeth (Beverley) Mills, who died in 1770, was married but once. It was her husband who married twice as is clearly shown in The Virginia Gazette for Sept. 4, 1771. It was this second wife of James Mills; I. e, his widow, Elizabeth (Poythress) Mills, who married Thomas G. Peachy in 1783, thirteen years after Elizabeth (Beverley) Mills had been buried.

    216 Mary Poythress
    m. Peter Epes (1730 - 1807), son of Francis and Sarah (Hamlin) Epes of "Causons", Prince George County. They lived at "High Peak" in Pr. Geo. and for this reason he was known as "Peter Epes of High Peak". She died there 25 Jan 1792. Numerous descendants are listed on the Epes chart.

    22 Elizabeth Poythress
    m. (1) John Fitzgerald, who died around 1736. Among her Fitzgerald children were: A- Francis Fitzgerald who married (1) Mary Epes 122 125, and B-Elizabeth Fitzgerald who m. Archibald Robertson and was the mother of the wife of Joshua Poythress 211 1. Elizabeth (Poythress) Fitzgerald m. (2) Thomas Epes 132 3, who died in Pr. Geo. in 1743.

    There are many descendants of this second marriage, especially through Mary Epes 132 31, who m. Col. David Mason of Sussex.

    23 Christian Poythress
    The only knowledge we have of her existence was her appearance as a witness on the 1740 will of Joshua Poythress 21. Presumably she was his sister. 1740 seems much too late for the signature to be that of Christian (Peebles) Poythress, their mother.

    24 David Poythress
    In a 1735 deed David Poythress conveyed 350 acres in Pr. Geo. to Robert Poythress (his brother), stating that the land had been devised to him by the will of his father John Poythress. The name of the wife of David Poythress is unknown. In 1739 his son Edmund Poythress came into court and stated that his father had died without a will. William Poythress, brother of David, was William’s surety.

    241 Edmund Poythress
    His qualification as administrator of his father’s estate (above) is the only record we have of him.

    25 William Poythress
    (1694 - 1763), m. c. 1725 Sarah Epes 121 7 (1702 -1750), daughter of Francis and Anne (Isham) Epes of Henrico. William Poythress served as a colonel in the militia, a vestryman of Bristol Parish, and a sheriff of Prince George County. Upon the formation of Dinwiddie County in 1752 his lands fell within that county. Sarah’s tomb in Blandford churchyard is perhaps the earliest in Virginia still in existence for either the Epes or the Poythress families. William’s is next to it.

    251 Anne Isham Poythress
    (1726 - 1790), m. Thomas S. Gordon. Anne Isham survived her husband and left a will naming nephews, nieces, and others.

    252 William Poythress
    (1728 - c. 1768), m. (1) Mary Eppes (1731 - 1750). The only knowledge of her existence comes from her tomb in Bothwell graveyard in Dinwiddie County. This recites that she was "daughter of Capt. William Eppes and wife to William Poythress, Jr." Which of the

    several William Eppes was her father has not been definitely settled. There were no known children of this marriage. William’s second, but unidentified, wife was the mother of his six known children whose names come to light by a division of the slaves of William’s estate, decreed in 1775. William Poythress was elected to the vestry of Bristol Parish on 5 Aug 1760 to succeed his father, recently deceased. He was County Lieutenant for Prince George County in 1761.

    252 1 William Poythress
    was party to division of father’s slaves in 1775. No further record.

    252 2 Anne Isham Poythress
    (1760 - 1784), m. 1777 in Middlesex County William Yates, son of William and Elizabeth (Randolph) Yates.

    252 3 Mary Poythress
    m. Francis Muir of Dinwiddie County

    252 4 Benjamin Poythress
    see note for William Poythress 252 1 above.

    252 5 Sally Poythress
    same

    252 6 Lucy Poythress
    m. John Gordon.

    253 Sarah Poythress
    (1731 - ), d. s. p.

    254 Elizabeth Poythress
    (1741 - ), m. 1760 in Dinwiddie Patrick Ramsay, a native of Glasgow, Scotland. Patrick Ramsay was a merchant in Petersburg until shortly before the Revolution when he

    removed with his family to Scotland. In 1791 Elizabeth (Poythress) Ramsay, then a widow, returned to Virginia with her children and settled in Alexandria.

    26 John Poythress
    m. Mary Batte, daughter of Henry and Mary (Lound) Batte. To avoid confusion with his first cousin John Poythress 43 (whose wife was also named Mary), this John was usually designated as "Sen." or "Sr." while cousin John was designated as "Jun." or "Jr.". In 1720 John Poythress, Sr. and Mary, his wife, together with four other couples, the five wives all being daughters of Henry Batte, dce’d., join in deed of partition whereby they divide 1200 acres in Prince George left by the will of Henry Batte to his daughters. John Poythress, Sr. was a captain in the militia and he represented Pr. Geo. in the House of Burgesses in 1723 and 1726. In 1727 as Capt. John Poythress he was granted 225 acres on the south side of the Meherrin, which land later fell into Brunswick County. The identical land was sold in 1773 by one Thomas Poythress who may have been a son or grandson of John Sr.

    27 Peter Poythress
    m. 1711 in Charles City Anne_____, a widow, whose own maiden name and the name of her first husband are unknown. He was sometimes referred to as "Peter Poythress of Flowerdew Hundred" to distinguish him from his nephew (and son-in-law) Peter Poythress "of Branchester".

    271 Anne Poythress
    (1712 - 1758), m. Richard Bland (1710 - 1776) "of Jordans", son of Richard and Elizabeth (Randolph) Bland. Their daughter Elizabeth was the wife of Peter Poythress 281 "of Branchester".

    28 Robert Poythress
    (1690 - c. 1747), m. Elizabeth, last name unknown. Robert left a will dated 24 May 1743, now lost, but quoted from in a deed given by his daughter Tabitha in 1793.

    281 Peter Poythress
    (1715 - 1785), m. c. 1756 Elizabeth Bland (1733-1792), daughter of Richard and Anne (Poythress 271) Bland of "Jordans", Prince George County. Peter Poythress resided at

    "Branchester" in Prince George. He represented that county in all sessions of the House of Burgesses from 1768 through the last in 1776. He was also a member of both the 1775 and 1776 conventions. Peter and Elizabeth (Bland) Poythress had one son and eight daughters, through whom they have many descendants.

    281 1 Ann Poythress
    (1757 - 1804), m. 1777 in Pr. Geo. John Randolph (1743-1803), son of Henry and Tabitha (Poythress 285) Randolph of Chesterfield.

    281 2 Elizabeth Poythress
    (1759 - 1806), m. 1776 in Pr. Geo. William Mayo (1757-1837) of "Powhatan Seat", Henrico County, son of John and Mary (Tabb) Mayo. Her husband was educated at William and Mary College, served in the Revolution, represented Henrico in the House of Delagates, and was a member of the first Board of Trustees for the Virginia Theological Seminary. Both died at "Powhatan Seat" and were buried there. In 1894 all remains at the Powhatan graveyard were reinterred in Hollywood Cemetery and all tombstones thither removed. In 1807 William Mayo m. (2) Lucy Fitzhugh in Petersburg.

    281 3 Mary Poythress

    (1762 - 1815), m. 1780 at "Branchester", Pr. Geo. Co., John Batte (1757-1816) of "Mancelle", Prince George County, son of Robert and Martha (Peterson) Batte of that county. John and Mary (Poythress) Battle resided at "Mancelle" which was part of the

    original grant made to Henry Battle in 1668. John Batte was a captain in the militia and one of the justices of the Prince George court. Mary died at "Mancelle" 17 Dec 1815 and was buried in the Batte graveyard on the place. John died 19 Sept of the following year while on a visit to the White Sulphur Springs in Greenbrier County. He was buried in the churchyard of the Old Stone Church in Lewisburg, (now) West Virginia. His tombstone is still standing.

    281 4 Lucy Bland Poythress
    (1764 - ante 1823), m. 1806 in Prince George John Eppes ( - 1832), son of John and Susanna (Epes)Eppes of "Hopewell". No issue. John Eppes later married Hannah Roane.

    281 5 William Poythress
    (1765 - 1811), m. 1787 in Prince George Elizabeth Blair Bland (1770 - ), daughter of Richard and Mary (Bolling) Bland and granddaughter of Richard and Anne (Poythress 271) Bland of "Jordans". Issue: one daughter, Elizabeth Bland Poythress. William Poythress m. (2) Rebecca Williams. No issue. As William left no male issue the Poythress

    name became extinct as to his branch with the death of his only daughter.

    281 51 Elizabeth Bland Poythress
    m. 1817 Richard Marks of Prince George. She survived her husband, who died before 1834. According to a statement in 10V106 [Swem index?] she was buried at "Branchester". With her decease, whenever that was, passed the last person born with the surname Poythress among the descendants of Robert Poythress 28, and possibly also among the descendants of John and Christian (Peebles) Poythress 2. Since John and Mary

    (Batte) Poythress 26 are not known to have had issue, it is likely that the name Poythress

    exists today only among the descendants of Francis Poythress 4.

    281 6 Sally Bland Poythress
    (1768 - 1828), m. (1) at "Branchester", Prince George County, Richard Lee (1726-1795) of Westmoreland County, sone of Henry and Mary (Bland) Lee of that county. Four Lee children were born of this marriage. In 1796 Sally m. (2) in Westmoreland County Willoughby Newton, son of John and Elizabeth (Vaulx) Newton of that county. There were five children by this marriage. "Squire" Richard Lee was buried at "Burnt House Field" in Westmoreland. Sally Bland (Poythress-Lee) Newton was buried at "Lee Hall" in that county.

    281 7 Susanna Poythress
    (1769 - 1839), m. 1787 at "Branchester" Richard Bland (1762-1806), son of Richard and Mary (Bolling) Bland of "Jordans". Richard Bland was a grandson of Richard and Anne (Poythress 271) Bland, and brother of Elizabeth Blair Bland who married William Poythress 281 5 . They both died at "Jordans" and were buried there, leaving issue.

    281 8 Agnes Poythress
    (1779 - 1821), m. 1788 at "Branchester" Roger Atkinson (1764 - 1829) of "Olive(?) Hill", Chesterfield County, son of Roger and Anne (Pleasants) Atkinson. There were ten children. She died 28 Nov 1821 in Halifax County while visiting a married daughter. Roger Atkinson later married Sarah Spotswood in Petersburg. He died 23 April 1829.

    281 9 Jane Poythress
    (1773 - 1837), m. 1792 Joseph Mayo (1771 - 1820) son of Joseph and Martha (Tabb) Mayo of Richmond. There were nine children. Joseph Mayo died in Richmond 1 Oct 1820 leaving a will on record. Jane (Poythress) Mayo died 20 Mar 1837 in Faquier County at the home of her daughter Elizabeth Bland Mayo who had married Charles James Stovin.

    282 Robert Poythress
    He was a soldier in the Revolution. I was told by a lady of Memphis, now deceased, that Robert Poythress died in January 1782 in Charleston, S. C. without issue. No record was cited.

    283 William Poythress
    His existence would not have been known except for a statement made in a 1793 Chesterfield deed given by Tabitha (Poythress 285) Randolph to the effect that her father Robert Poythress 28 had by his will left property to his sons Robert, Peter, and William Poythress.

    284 Jane Poythress
    Supposedly married John Baird. He came from Scotland c. 1750 and settled at City Point.

    285 Tabitha Poythress
    (1725 - 1805), m. 1742 Henry Randolph (1721 - 1771) of Chesterfield County, son of Henry and Elizabeth (Epes 121 5) Randolph. There were eight children. In 1793 Tabitha made a deed conveying her interest in some slaves to Henry Archer. The deed recited that her father Robert Poythress 28 had by his will dated 24 May 1743 left some slaves to his wife (Tabitha’s mother) and after his wife’s death the slaves were to go in (sic) his (Robert’s) three sons, Robert, Peter, and William, and to such of his daughters that were at that time unmarried.

    286 Elizabeth Poythress
    m. John Gilliam

    Notes & Comments: Return To Top of Document Poythress Home

    1. I have used Mr. Batte’s text throughout....i. e. his abbreviations, punctuations, spellings, etc., saving comments and/or observations and/or questions for this separate section.

    2. While Mr. Batte’s generational numbering system is not difficult to figure out, this text is still best read with the chart at hand for illustration.

    3. Mr. Batte uses italics whenever he is introducing a new spouse to the line. He also uses italics for emphasis in places.

    4. Of Francis Poythress’ four children this traces the line of only one, first son John. Daughter Jane married out of the surname line. Thomas returned to England and there is no further record of him. Francis2’s line was to have been "Section B". Mrs. Batte informed me personally that Mr. Batte had never done Section B.

    5. It is worth only a slight mention that for a family that used the same Christian names over and over again, the name Francis does not appear in John’s line.

    6. Batte refers to Wyndham Robertson as "Governor". I expect we may assume that this Wyndham Robertson (or one of his descendants) is the author of "Pocahontas and her

    Descendants".

    7. Projection: William Poythress # 211 2 is the one of whom we have the line drawing. William 252 would not seem to be a likely candidate.

    8. The "Peterson" name appears at # 211 24 and # 211 241. This name is one of many suggested for the surname of the wife of Francis1.

    9. This probably doesn’t need saying but just to be sure, the "Hollywood" referred to is a cemetery in Richmond.

    10. The raised tomb of William Poythress 25 is directly in front of the front door of Blandford Church, about 20 feet away.

    11. The name Peachy has been assigned (without documentation) to the mother of Francis1. The name Peachy has appeared in the Poythress line lending some presumed credibility to the assignment. However, as this document shows, for the purpose of this line Peachy is introduced at 211 3 and 215, and in both instances is "brought in" by an "outside" spouse. The mother of Francis may or may not have been named Peachy but

    these later appearances of the name would seem to be immaterial to that issue.

    12. Note John Poythress 26 comments with respect to a son or grandson Thomas! Is this our man?

    13. Spouse of Mary Poythress # 281 6, "Squire Lee" is brother of Harry Lee and uncle of General Robert E. Lee.

    14. Observation with respect to the supposedly "legendary" nine Misses Poythress, all daughters of Peter Poythress of Branchester and all married: Three of the daughters (Sally, Agnes, and Jane) had 28 children between them. Only one daughter (Lucy) is shown with "no issue" and Mr. Batte’s document is silent on five other daughters. If the five unmentioned only had half as many children as the three mentioned....we should not be surprised that "Poythress" shows up for a long time all over Virginia as an "honorary" middle name.

    15. Special to Lou Poole the Eppes chaser.....all those numbers in Batte’s code beside Eppes names in this document tell me that somewhere in the Va. Historical Society Library there is a Bolling Batte Eppes trial chart.....or somebody’s Eppes trial chart! I think I’d be making a phone call over there and seeing if a "donation" of some reasonable amount wouldn’t get me a copy on the way. Another angle...ask Craig Scott if he has anything on it....although I don’t believe Mr. Batte is "published"....Craig would know if anybody would. Craig runs Willowbend Books and you can click his link on the web page. He is a Poythress researcher himself.

    Francis married Mary Frances Sloman in 1629 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA. Mary was born in 1624 in London, London, England; died on 8 Oct 1675 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 47.  Mary Frances Sloman was born in 1624 in London, London, England; died on 8 Oct 1675 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 23. Jane Poythress was born in 1625 in Jamestown, James City, Virginia, USA; died in 1676 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hopewell, Prince George, Virginia, USA.