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Colonel Edward Hill Carter, I

Male 1726 - 1792  (65 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Colonel Edward Hill Carter, I was born on 15 Oct 1726 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA (son of John Carter and Elizabeth Hill); died on 21 Feb 1792 in Blenheim Plantation, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.

    Edward married Sarah Champe in 1755. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Sarah Carter
    2. Charles Carter

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Carter was born on 25 Dec 1696 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA (son of Robert "King" Carter and Judith Armistead); died on 30 Apr 1743 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Shirley Plantation
    Shirley Plantation is Virginia's first plantation (1613) and one of the first economic engines of the new world. Only six years after John Smith's settlement at Jamestown, the crown grant carving Shirley Plantation out of the Virginia frontier was established. The chronicle of Shirley Plantation best exemplifies the period in our nation's history between the settlement at Jamestown in 1607 and the movement towards American independence from Great Britain in 1776. During its long history and under the leadership of one family, Shirley Plantation has survived the Indian Uprising, Bacon's Rebellion, the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, and the Great Depression.

    Shirley Plantation is the oldest family-owned business in North America dating back to 1638. Construction of the present mansion began in 1723 when Elizabeth Hill, great-granddaughter of the first Hill, married John Carter, eldest son of Robert "King" Carter. Completed in 1738, the mansion, referred to as the “Great House,” is largely in its original state and is owned, operated, and lived in by direct descendants of Edward Hill.

    The guided tour of the Great House highlights original family furnishings, portraits, silver, and hand-carved woodwork as well as stories of the Hill-Carter family, eye witnesses to eleven generations of American history. As one architectural historian contends," Shirley Plantation is the most intact 18th century estate in Virginia". Several features such as the "Flying Staircase" and the Queen Anne Forecourt are the only remaining examples in America of this architectural style.

    John married Elizabeth Hill on 6 Oct 1723 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA. Elizabeth (daughter of Colonel Edward Hill, II and Mary Aston) was born on 23 Apr 1667 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 4 Jan 1761 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Hill was born on 23 Apr 1667 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA (daughter of Colonel Edward Hill, II and Mary Aston); died on 4 Jan 1761 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. John Armistead Carter, Jr was born in 1715 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA; died in 1728 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA.
    2. Richard Carter was born on 17 Oct 1718 in Saint Paul Episcopal Church, Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
    3. 1. Colonel Edward Hill Carter, I was born on 15 Oct 1726 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 21 Feb 1792 in Blenheim Plantation, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    4. William Champe Carter was born in 1728 in , , Virginia, USA.
    5. John Carter was born in 1728 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA; died in Dec 1781 in Elizabethton, Carter, Tennessee, USA.
    6. Sarah Carter was born in 1729 in Spotsylvania Courthouse, Spotsylvania, Virginia, USA; died in 1810 in , Russell, Virginia, USA.
    7. George Carter was born in 1730 in , , Virginia, USA.
    8. Elizabeth Hill Carter was born on 13 Oct 1731 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 25 Jul 1760 in Westover Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Charles City, Virginia, USA.
    9. Charles Hill Carter, Sr, Esq was born on 10 Oct 1732 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 28 Jun 1806 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried on 28 Jun 1806 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA.
    10. Robert Carter, II was born on 7 Jun 1734 in Rosegill Plantation, Middlesex, Virginia, USA; died in 1798 in Sabine Hall, Warsaw, Richmond, Virginia, USA.
    11. Mary Carter was born on 15 Dec 1735.
    12. John ll Carter was born in 1737.
    13. Jane Carter was born in 1738 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA.
    14. Anne Hill Carter was born on 24 May 1739 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 10 Jul 1829 in Ravensworth, Fairfax, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Robert "King" Carter was born on 4 Aug 1663 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA (son of Colonel John Carter and Sarah Ludlow); died on 4 Aug 1732 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA; was buried in Weems, Lancaster, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Robert King Carter son of John Carter and Sarah Ludlow

    Robert King Carter married 1680 Virginia, to Judith Armistead.
    From the "ENCYCLOPEDIA of VIRGINIA BIOGRAPHY" Under the Editorial Supervision of Lyon Gardiner Tyler, LL. D., VOLUME V, 1915, pages 848-849

    The epitaph on his tomb in Christ Church, records his virtues and achievements. Translated from the Latin, it says:
    Here lies Robert Carter an honorable man who by noble endowments and pure morals gave luster to his gentle birth. Rector of William and Mary College, he sustained that institution and its most trying times. And he was Speaker of the House of Burgesses and Treasurer under the most serene princes, William, Ann, George I. and George II. Elected by
    the House of Burgesses its Speaker six years and Governor of the Colony for more than a year he upheld equally the regal dignity and the public freedom. Possessed of ample wealth, blameless acquired, he built and endowed this sacred edifice, a signal monument of his piety towards God. He furnished it richly. Entertaining his friends kindly, he was neither a prodigal nor a parsimonious host.

    His first wife was Judith, daughter of John Armistead, Esq. His second, Betty, a descendant of the noble house of Landon. By these wives he had many children and whose education he expended large sums of money. At length, full of honors and of years, when he had well performed all the duties of an exemplary life he departed from this world on the 4th of August, 1732, in the 69th year of his age.

    This man's grandson had Washington himself as neighbor, and Robert E. Lee's mother was the great granddaughter of his grandfather, Robert "King" Carter. "It was 230 years ago that Robert Carter III, the patriarch of one of the wealthiest families in Virginia, quietly walked into a Northumberland County courthouse and delivered an airtight legal document announcing his intention to free, or manumit, more than 500 slaves.

    He titled it the "deed of gift." It was, by far, experts say, the largest liberation of Black people before President Abraham Lincoln signed the District of Columbia Emancipation Act and Emancipation Proclamation more than seven decades later.

    Ancestor of William Henry Harrison - 9th US President.

    Robert Carter was born 4 August 1663 at Corotoman plantation, Lancaster County, Virginia, a son of John Carter and Sarah Ludlow.[3] His father died when Robert was a young boy, in 1669. So his half-brother, Lt. Col. John Carter (15 years older than Robert), took on the parental role.[3] Per their father's specific instructions, Robert was educated well in England. He had a tutor for English and Latin, and lived with Arthur Bailey who was a family friend and merchant.[3]

    He married 1) in 1688 at Heese, Lancaster, Virginia to Judith Armistead (died 1699).[4] She died in 1699.
    He married 2) in 1701 to Elizabeth (Landon) Willis (marriage contract written April 9, 1701), widow of Richard Willis, and daughter of Thomas Landon.[3]
    Robert "King" married in 1688 to Judith Armistead, daughter of John Armistead of "Hesse," Gloucester County. Their children were:[4]

    John, born ca 1689, died 1742; mar Elizabeth Hill of Shirley
    Elizabeth born 1692; mar Nathaniel Burwell
    Judith died in infancy,
    Sarah died at age 15
    Judith born 1695 (the second named Judith); mar Mann Page[3]
    Note: Some sources, including the Foundation for Historic Christ Church, place the birth date of John Carter III at 1696,[4]while others place it at 1689/90.[5][3]

    Little is known about the intimate family life of Robert and Judith during these years.[3] Judith died February 23, 1699, and only three of her children survived to adulthood.[5]

    Robert's second wife was Elizabeth Landon Willis, (mother of ten of Robert Carter's children) married in 1701:[4]

    Anne Carter (1702–1743) married Benjamin Harrison IV; (parents of Benjamin Harrison V and grandparents of President William Henry Harrison).
    Robert Carter II (1704–1734) married Priscilla Churchill.
    Sarah Carter (~1705–1705)
    Betty Carter (~1705–1706)
    Charles Carter (1707–1764) married Anne Byrd, daughter of Col. William Byrd II.
    Ludlow Carter (born ~1709)
    Landon Carter (1710–1778) married Maria Byrd, daughter of Col. William Byrd II.
    Mary Carter (1712–1736) married George Braxton; (parents of Carter Braxton).
    Lucy Carter (1715–1763) married Henry Fitzhugh
    George Carter (1718–1742)[3]

    The first actual land grant found on record in the Northern Neck section of Virginia is to Col. Robert "King" Carter, as the agent of Lord Fairfax and to his sons and grandsons. As the agent of Lord Fairfax, the Proprietor of the Northern Neck of VA, Col. Carter handled vast bodies of land and by his will left over 300,000 acres of land to his children.[6]
    Robert was known as "King" Carter due to his immense wealth. He had a remarkable reputation as a Colonial Official and an agent for Lord Fairfax, V. At the age of 28, Robert entered the Assembly as a Burgess from Lancaster County, serving five consecutive years. In 1726 he served as acting governor of Virginia after the death of Governor Drysdale. He served two terms as agent for the Fairfax proprietary of the Northern Neck of Virginia, the first being, 1702-1711, and the second term, 1722-32. During his first term, he began to acquire large tracts of land for himself in the Rappahannock region of Virginia. After acquiring some 20,000 acres for himself, he was succeeded by Edmund Jennings. When he became representative of Fairfax's interests again in 1722, he succeeded in securing for his children and grandchildren some 110,000 acres in the Northern Neck. He also had additional acquisitions beyond the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia. Robert's gifted and productive life centered around the original Christ Church, a smaller wooden structure. His parents were buried within the chancel of the church. A historic marker outside of the Church reads: "Christ Church was built in 1732, on the site of an older Church by Robert ("King") Carter, who reserved one quarter of it for seating his tenants and servants. It is one of the very few colonial churches in America that have never been altered, a typical early eighteenth-century structure.[7]

    Robert owned many slaves. An inventory of his slaves, apparently made as part of the inventory of his estate, was taken in 1733.[8] There are 345 slaves listed with names like: Old Crabb, Old Gumby, and Old Fortune a Woman past Labour.[8]

    Robert left quite a list of property, including the slaves above-mentioned. He held numerous plantations in eight different counties of Virginia:

    INVENTORY, [1733] November ?, of the estate of Robert Carter comprising a detailed list of agricultural equipment, blacksmith tools, books, coaches, furniture, glassware, horses and other livestock, milling tools, silverware and utensils, and slaves at Carter's estates in
    Caroline (Pewmond's End),
    King George (Falls and Richland quarters),
    Lancaster (Brick House Quarter, Changilins Quarter, Corotoman, Corotoman Quarter, Gibson's Plantation, Great Mill, Hills Quarter, Indian Town Quarter, Little Mill, Morattico Quarter, Office Quarter, Old House Quarter, Poplar Neck Quarter, and Wolf House Quarter),
    Northumberland County (Blough Point Quarter, Feilding's Plantation, Jones's Plantation, and Old Plantation),
    Prince William (Bull Run, Frying Pan Quarter, Lodge Quarter, Range Quarter, and Red Oak Quarter,),
    Richmond (Brick House Quarter, Bridge Quarter, Dickinson's Mill, Fork Quarter, Thomas Glascock's, Gumfield's Quarter, Hickory Thickett, Hinson's Quarter, Old Quarter, and Totuskey Quarter),
    Spotsylvania (Mount Quarter and Norman's Ford), Stafford (Hamstead Quarter, Hinson's Quarter, Park Quarter, and Poplar Quarter), and
    Westmoreland (Brent's Quarter, Coles Point, Dick's Quarter, Forrest Quarter, Head of the River, Medcalf's Plantation, Moon's Plantation, The Narrows, Old Ordinary, and Pantico Quarter), counties, Virginia[9]

    Robert Carter died 4 Aug 1732 at Corotoman, Lancaster, Virginia and was buried at Christ Church.[4] "(see tombstone inscription and pictures). At his death in 1732, his obituary in Gentleman's Magazine described his estate to be "about 300,000 acres of land, about 1000 Negroes, 10,000 pounds in money." The tombstones of Robert and his two wives were placed at the east end of the old Christ Church.
    The tombstones have been replaced by the church, and the inscription on his tombstone (taken from the original):

    "Here lies buried Robert Carter, Esq., an honourable man, who by noble endowments and pure morals gave lustre to his gentle birth. Rector of William and Mary, he sustained that institution in its most trying times. He was Speaker of the House of Burgesses, and Treasurer under the most serene Princes William, Anne George I and II. Elected by the House its Speaker six years, and Governor of the Colony for more than a year, he upheld equally the regal dignity and the public freedom. Possessed of ample wealth, blamelessly acquired, he built and endowed, at his own expense, this sacred edifice - a signal monument of his piety toward God. He furnished it richly. Entertaining his friends kindly, he was neither a prodigal nor a parsimonious host. His first wife was Judith, daughter of John Armistead, Esq.; his second Betty, a descendant of the noble family of Landons. By these wives he had many children, on whose education he expended large sums of money. At length, full of honours and of years, when he had performed all the duties of an exemplary life, he departed from this world on the 4th day of August, in the 69th year of his age. The unhappy lament their lost comforter, the widows their lost protector, and the orphans their lost father."

    Robert married Judith Armistead in 1678 in Hesse, Mathews, Virginia, USA. Judith (daughter of Lt Colonel John Armistead and Judith Bowles Hone Robinson) was born on 23 Feb 1665 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 23 Feb 1699 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Judith Armistead was born on 23 Feb 1665 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA (daughter of Lt Colonel John Armistead and Judith Bowles Hone Robinson); died on 23 Feb 1699 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. George Carter was born in 1683; died in 1743 in White Hall, Loudoun, Virginia, USA.
    2. Elizabeth Carter was born in 1685 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA; died on 30 Apr 1734 in Carters Creek, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.
    3. Judith Carter was born in 1695 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA; died on 18 Dec 1750 in Rosewell Plantation, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.
    4. 2. John Carter was born on 25 Dec 1696 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA; died on 30 Apr 1743 in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Shirley Plantation, Charles City, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Lt Colonel John Armistead was born in Apr 1635 in Elizabeth City, Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA (son of William Armistead and Anne Netherton Ellis); died on 2 Oct 1703 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: , , Virginia, USA
    • Married: 1665, , Gloucester, Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    A son of William Armistead, of Elizabeth City county, and grandson of Anthony Armistead, of Kirk Deighton, in Yorkshire, England, settled in Gloucester county, of which he was sheriff in 1676, and a justice and lieutenant-colonel of horse in 1680. In 1685 he was a member of the house of burgesses, and on Feb. 14, 1687-88, Gov. Effingham wrote to the English government that a vacancy had occurred in the council and that he had nominated Col. John Armistead as in every way qualified for the place. This nomination was confirmed on April 30, 1688, and Col. Armistead was sworn as member on Oct. 18 of the same year. He remained a councillor until 1691, when, feeling that he could not consistently with the allegiance he had sworn to James II., take the same oath to William and Mary, he declined and was accordingly removed from the council. It is probable that he later realized the hopelessness of the Stuart cause, and relented in his determination, for in 1693 Gov. Andros wrote that Col. John Armistead had retired from the council. He died soon after. He left two sons and two daughters and through them was the ancestor of many distinguished Virginians.; ; III--Colonial Councillors of State

    John Armistead was a member of the governor's Council of Virginia late in the seventeenth century. A planter in Gloucester County, he also entered into several successful business ventures. Becoming active in politics, Armistead sat on the county court and served as sheriff. He opposed the tobacco cutting riots and favored English policies put in place after Bacon's Rebellion (1676–1677). Armistead twice represented Gloucester in the House of Burgesses before the governor appointed him to the Council in 1688. Armistead relinquished his seat in 1691 when he refused to take the oaths to the new monarchs William and Mary. Although restored to his place later in the decade, Armistead did not rejoin the Council. His date of death is unknownArmistead was the second of three sons and one of at least four children of William Armistead and Anne Armistead, of Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England. He may have been born in Virginia, his parents having settled in Elizabeth City County in the mid-1630s, which is the most likely approximate time of his birth. When he reached adulthood he moved to Gloucester County, where he lived and farmed for the rest of his life. His father had prospered so rapidly after immigrating to Virginia that both of his surviving sons began their adult lives as substantial planters. He may have sent John Armistead to Gloucester County in the 1650s to manage the properties he acquired after that section of the colony was first opened to English settlement.

    Sometime in the 1660s Armistead became associated with Robert Beverley (1635–1687), an association that led to several profitable joint business ventures. The relationship grew even closer when Armistead married Beverley's sister-in-law Judith Hone. Armistead had two sons and two daughters, and he acquired even more influential family connections later, when one of his daughters married Ralph Wormeley (d. 1701) and the other married Robert "King" Carter.

    Destruction of most of the records of Gloucester County has obscured the details of Armistead's participation in politics. He probably became a vestryman of Kingston Parish within a few years of moving to the county, and by 1670 he was a member of the county court as well as a colonel in the county militia. He became sheriff in 1676 and again in 1680. In 1682 he arrested several local women who were destroying tobacco plants. This put him in opposition to Robert Beverley, the putative instigator of the plant-cutting riots, by which the perpetrators hoped to reduce the supply of tobacco and thereby raise its price. Armistead differed from Beverley on political issues, too. Beverley grew increasingly outspoken in his opposition to English policies designed to control Virginia after Bacon's Rebellion, while Armistead inclined favorably toward the new order.

    Armistead served in the House of Burgesses twice. Elected in 1680, he sat at the first meeting of the General Assembly of 1680–1682. His part in suppressing the plant cutters may explain his absence at the second session, and he did not return to the House until 1685. By the mid-1680s he was on friendly terms with Governor Francis Howard, baron Howard of Effingham, who resided at times with Armistead's son-in-law Ralph Wormeley. The association with Effingham proved beneficial, and in 1688 Effingham appointed Armistead to a vacancy on the governor's Council. He was sworn in on October 18, 1688, but his tenure lasted only two and a half years. In April 1691, following the Glorious Revolution, Armistead refused "thro Scruple of Conscience" to swear allegiance to the new monarchs, William and Mary. He consequently lost his seat on the Council. Seven years later the Crown ordered him restored to his place, but Armistead did not take the oaths after the commission was presented to the Council on December 9, 1698.

    John Armistead may have been dead by that date, but he could also have been alive and in political retirement in Gloucester County while continuing his refusal to forswear his oath to James II. The date and place of his death are not recorded.

    Time Line
    1650s - Sometime during this decade, John Armistead's father William Armistead sends him to Gloucester County to manage the properties he acquired after that section of the colony was first opened to English settlement.
    1660s - Sometime during this decade, John Armistead becomes associated with Robert Beverley. Armistead will marry Beverley's sister-in-law Judith Hone.
    1670 - By this year, John Armistead is a member of the Gloucester County court and a colonel in the county militia.
    1676 - John Armistead becomes sheriff in Gloucester County.
    1680 - John Armistead is elected to the House of Burgesses.
    October 18, 1688 - John Armistead in sworn in to fill a vacant seat on the governor's Council.
    April 1691 - Following the Glorious Revolution, John Armistead refuses to swear allegiance to the new monarchs, William and Mary, and loses his seat on the council.
    Categories Colonial History (ca. 1560–1763) Colonial Government

    John married Judith Bowles Hone Robinson in 1656 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA. Judith (daughter of 1st Baronet of London, Lord Mayor of London Sir John Robinson and Lady Elizabeth Catherine Potter - Robinson (1619-1688), (Immigrant) (Eng to VA)) was born in Dec 1645 in Heswick, Cleasby, Middlesex, Yorkshire, England; died in Jan 1693 in Kingston, Gloucester, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Judith Bowles Hone Robinson was born in Dec 1645 in Heswick, Cleasby, Middlesex, Yorkshire, England (daughter of 1st Baronet of London, Lord Mayor of London Sir John Robinson and Lady Elizabeth Catherine Potter - Robinson (1619-1688), (Immigrant) (Eng to VA)); died in Jan 1693 in Kingston, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Frances Armistead was born on 15 Jun 1657 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 25 May 1685 in Virginia Beach, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    2. John Armistead was born in 1662 in Hess, Gloucestershire, England; died in 1703 in Eastmount River, Mathews, Virginia, USA.
    3. Mary Armistead was born on 8 Jun 1663 in Kent, England; died in 1724 in , King and Queen, Virginia, USA.
    4. 5. Judith Armistead was born on 23 Feb 1665 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 23 Feb 1699 in Corotoman Plantation, Lancaster, Virginia, USA.
    5. Julia Armistead was born in 1666 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died in 1699.
    6. Elizabeth Armistead was born on 16 Feb 1667 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 11 Nov 1716 in Bushy Park, Middlesex, Virginia, USA.
    7. Sarah Armistead was born in 1669; died in 1699.
    8. Judith Armistead was born in 1670; died in 1740.
    9. William Armistead was born on 13 Jun 1671 in Kingston, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 13 Jun 1711 in Eastmore River, Mathews, Virginia, USA.
    10. Colonel Henry Robinson Armistead was born in 1673 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA; died on 11 Feb 1740 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 5

  1. 20.  William Armistead was born on 3 Aug 1610 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England (son of Anthony Armistead, I and Frances Thompson); died on 13 Jun 1671 in Elizabeth City, Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: , , , USA
    • Baptism: 3 Aug 1610, Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England
    • Arrival: 1636, , , Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    1. William ARMISTEAD was born in 1610 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA. He died in 1666 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.

    LAND: Descriptions of Lands patented within the present boundaries of Gloucester and Matthews Counties, Virginia. Abstracted from the Land Patent Books in the Land Office, Richmond, Virginia. Book 2, Pg 331, July 1, 1651, 1231 acres.

    On the head of Eastermost River in Mockjack Bay on the NW side of a small creek on the NE side of river encompassing the heads of river to the SW side.

    Headrights: Elizabeth Price, John Crists, John Lancelott, Richard Gold, Robert Hunly, William Frasey, Barbary Frasey, Edward Morgan, Theo. Frasey, John Paptast, James Kittenue, Roger Paynter, Katherine Teye, Thomas Hudson, William Taylor, John Frasey, Jose: Brewster, William Smith, Mary Rekey, Kath. Ayres.

    LAND: Matthews County, Book 2, Pg 331, July 1, 1651, 600 Acres.

    On E side of Eastermost River in MockJack Bay above Pudden Creek. Headrights: James Steward, Thomas Jones, Ann Perry, Mary Hall, William Wells, John Owen, Henry Edwards, Tho. Dyer, Danil Forrest, John Hunningford, Tho. Guige, Marg. Brookes. (These rights are written my mistake on Philip Hunley's patent of June 29, 1651).

    BIRTH: Alternate location is Kirk, Deigton, York, England

    William married Ann E. ELLIS about 1642 in , Middlesex, Virginia, USA. Ann was born in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA. She died in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.

    They had the following children:
    + 2 M i. Colonel John ARMISTEAD was born about 1635. He died about 1698.
    + 3 M ii. Anthony ARMISTEAD was born about 1637. He died in 1726.
    + 4 F iii. Catherine ARMISTEAD was born about 1643. She died on 23 Apr 1692.

    SOURCE: William Armistead, 14 generations in America, http://www.surnames.com/jamesriver/descendants/william_armistead/default.htm

    William married Anne Netherton Ellis in 1632 in Giggleswick, Yorkshire, England. Anne was born in 1611 in Giggleswick, Yorkshire, England; died on 4 Dec 1678 in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 21.  Anne Netherton Ellis was born in 1611 in Giggleswick, Yorkshire, England; died on 4 Dec 1678 in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Arrival: 1636, , , Virginia, USA

    Children:
    1. Ralph Armistead was born in 1632 in , Yorkshire, England; died in 1638 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA.
    2. Elizabeth Armistead was born in 1633 in Giggleswick, Yorkshire, England; died on 25 May 1685 in Williamsburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    3. 10. Lt Colonel John Armistead was born in Apr 1635 in Elizabeth City, Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA; died on 2 Oct 1703 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.
    4. Anthony Armistead was born in 1636; died in 1738.
    5. William Armistead was born in 1637 in Elizabeth City, Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA; died in 1660 in Hesse, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.
    6. Frances Armistead was born in 1637 in Elizabeth City, Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA; died on 25 May 1685 in Williamsburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    7. Catherine Armistead was born in 1643 in , Middlesex, Virginia, USA; died on 21 Jul 1726 in Urbanna, Middlesex, Virginia, USA.
    8. Captain Anthony Armistead was born in 1645 in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 26 Oct 1726 in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    9. Mary Armistead was born in 1645 in , , Virginia, USA; died in 1700 in , , Virginia, USA.
    10. Ralph Armistead was born in 1647 in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died in 1698 in , Gloucester, Virginia, USA.

  3. 22.  1st Baronet of London, Lord Mayor of London Sir John Robinson was born on 10 Jan 1615 in North Riding, Yorkshire, England; died on 1 Mar 1688 in Cleasby, Yorkshire, England.

    John married Lady Elizabeth Catherine Potter - Robinson (1619-1688), (Immigrant) (Eng to VA) on 15 Nov 1640 in Cleasby, Yorkshire, England. Lady was born on 16 Sep 1616 in Cleasby, Yorkshire, England; died on 1 Mar 1688 in Cleasby, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 23.  Lady Elizabeth Catherine Potter - Robinson (1619-1688), (Immigrant) (Eng to VA) was born on 16 Sep 1616 in Cleasby, Yorkshire, England; died on 1 Mar 1688 in Cleasby, Yorkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 11. Judith Bowles Hone Robinson was born in Dec 1645 in Heswick, Cleasby, Middlesex, Yorkshire, England; died in Jan 1693 in Kingston, Gloucester, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 6

  1. 40.  Anthony Armistead, I was born in 1587 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England (son of Roger Armistead and Epham Naissance); died on 15 Nov 1642 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England.

    Anthony married Frances Thompson on 15 Aug 1608 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England. Frances was born on 15 Oct 1587 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died on 25 Jun 1634 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 41.  Frances Thompson was born on 15 Oct 1587 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died on 25 Jun 1634 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; was buried in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England.
    Children:
    1. 20. William Armistead was born on 3 Aug 1610 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died on 13 Jun 1671 in Elizabeth City, Elizabeth City, Virginia, USA; was buried in Hampton, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.
    2. Robert Armistead was born in Oct 1612 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died on 28 Jul 1680 in Bradford, Yorkshire, England.
    3. John Armetstead was born in 1613 in Settle, Yorkshire, England; died in 1696 in , Yorkshire, England.
    4. Anthony Armetstead was born in 1615 in Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died on 13 Jun 1671 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England.
    5. Epham Armetstead was born in 1616 in Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died on 8 May 1636.
    6. Jane Armistead was born on 17 Sep 1620 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died in 1680.
    7. Margaret Armetstead was born on 16 Dec 1622 in Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died in 1680.
    8. Henry Armetstead was born on 10 Jan 1627 in Kirk Deighton, Yorkshire, England; died in 1680.