JEM Genealogy
Ornes Moore Motley Echols Edwards Fackler Parsons Reynolds Smith Brown Bruce Munger Beer Kern Viele Nims Baker Bondurant Von Krogh Magnus Munthe and others
First Name:  Last Name: 
[Advanced Search]  [Surnames]

Sarah Ellen Hurt

Female 1754 - 1816  (62 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Sarah Ellen Hurt was born in 1754 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA (daughter of Moza Hurt and Mary Estes); died in Nov 1816 in , , Virginia, USA.

    Sarah married Benjamin Byrd Prewitt on 30 Jan 1782 in , Halifax, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Moza Hurt was born in 1730 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA (son of Philemon Hurt and Elizabeth Pond); died on 15 Dec 1792 in , Halifax, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1782, , Halifax, Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    Moza Hurt moved from Caroline County, Va. to the part of Bedford County, Va. that was created from Bedford County and made into Campbell County in 1781. This move was before July 1768. He moved across the Staunton River into Halifax County, Va. between 1780 and 1782 and died there in 1793.

    His will dated 12-15-1791, probated on 1-28-1793 and recorded in Halifax County, Va. in Will Book 3, page 35, names seven children, all by his first wife, Mary.

    Moza Hurt (also known as Moses) was born in 1730 probably in or near Bedford County, Virginia. A number of records exist pertaining to his life. His land deeds, marriage records, and will, as well as records of his children?s marriages, are all preserved. He held substantial amounts of land in three counties: Bedford, Halifax, and Caroline, and he bought and sold land all his life. He acquired land on the Rappahannock River, where he lived in St. Margaret's Parish in Caroline County. He was appointed Constable there in 1752. From 1755 to 1758 he was road-overseer. He married a young lady named Mary (last name unknown) by 1758. They had seven children: Philemon, born 1758; Jane, Betty, Sarah Ellen, born by 1763; James, born 1763; and twins Patience and Prudence, born by 1774. In 1763, at the urging of his wife, Moza gave some slaves to his then four children: Philemon, Jane, Bettey, and Sarah. Why he did this, and why young children needed slaves of their own, is unknown. In 1776, the family moved to Bedford County (cut from Lunenburg County in 1753) where they bought 284 acres of land.
    The Hurts fought with the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. It doesn't look like Moza fought, but he did supply aid to the Continental Army. The Bedford County Lists of publick claims filed by citizens lists Moza Hurt being returned provisions that had been collected in 1781 by Christopher Irvine. A Moses Hurt was recorded as having supplied 1 beef, 9 diets, 4 pecks corn. A Mosses Hurt supplied 2 diets and 2 pecks of corn. In 1782, a new county, Campbell, was cut from Bedford County, where the Hurts had been living. Sometime by 1782, Moza's wife, Mary, died, and he moved to Halifax County (cut from Lunenburg County in 1752), not necessarily in that order. Three and one half months before his second marriage, Moza persuaded his children to file a disclaimer to the slaves given them by Deed of Gift about 1763 in Caroline County. He then married Phebe Vaden, daughter of William Vaden and Frances Wilson, on April 10, 1782. She was the widow of Robert Mann who had died of smallpox.

    The 1782 Heads of Households Census from Halifax County, Virginia, lists Moza Hurt with fourteen whites and nineteen blacks in the household.

    The 1785 Heads of Families Census from Halifax County, Virginia, lists Moza Hurt with eight whites, one dwelling, and eight other buildings.

    Moza died 1793 in Halifax County. His sons, James and Philemon, were the executors of his will. Phebe died two years later in 1795. His will read:
    Sons Philemon and James, Executors.
    To my son James Hurt, land whereon he now lives in Campbell County Virginia 617 acres
    To my daughters: Patience and Prudence Hurt
    To my married daughters: Sarah, wife of Michael Prewett, Jane, deceased wife of John Adams (?my poor daughter Jane, already departed this life?)...whereas: by the tender indulgence and earnest importunity of my wife in the year 1763, I believe, I made a deed of gift of sundry of my negroes to my then four children, namely, Jane, Betty, Philemon and Sarah Hurt, which is recorded at Campbell Court House, and whereas some years ago I loaned John Adams and Jane his wife, my daughter, a negro, and to Michael Prewett and Billy his wife, a negro girl--I give to those who have had the greatest trouble raising the negro children should have their preference in their choices.
    I appoint my son Philemon and my son James as my sole executors -Witnesses: William Mann, Stitts Harrison, Robert Mann, Polly Mann

    Children of Moza and Mary Hurt
    James Hurt was born in 1763 in Caroline or Campbell County. He married his stepsister, Agnes Mann Harrison, daughter of Robert and Phebe Mann, and widow of Peterson Harrison, on June 10, 1782. He died in Campbell County in 1819.

    Jane died by January 5, 1782, before Moza, married John Adams.

    Elizabeth (Betty) and Sarah apparently were not taught to write because they did not sign their names on official documents, but simply made their marks.

    Betty married Michael Prewitt, Jr.

    Sarah Ellen married Byrd Prewitt. Her father signed his consent in February, 1782.

    Patience married Samuel Hubbard in 1791. I don?t have any info on Prudence. Since Patience married in 1791, and had to be at least 17 years old to do so, she must have been born by 1774.

    Philemon was born on October 6, 1758 in Caroline County, Virginia.

    HURT.

    1783�Moza Hurt sells to Philemon Hurt land in Halifax county lying on Terrible creek.

    1793, January 17�Phebe Hurt, widow of Moza Hurt, deceased, for the sum of ten pounds, paid by Philemon and James Hurt, executors for Moza Hurt, sold to them her third of the estate with rights and titles.

    Witness: Polly Mann.

    1788, April 2�Moza Hurt, of Bedford county, sells to Thomas Hodges, of Halifax county, 30 acres of land, being a part of Wilson Mattox*s survey.

    1793�Will of Moza Hurt.
    Sons, Philemon and James.
    "To my son, James Hurt, the land whereon he now lives in Campbell county,
    containing 617 acres."
    Daughters, Patience and Prudence Hurt, Sarah Prewett (wife of Michael
    Prewett), Jane (deceased), wife of John Adams.
    "My poor daughter, Jane, already departed this life, whereas, by the tender
    indulgence and earnest importunity of my wife, in the year 1763, I believe, I
    made a deed of gift of sundry of my negroes to my then four children, namely,
    Jane, Bettie, Philemon and Sarah Hurt. This is recorded at Campbell Court
    House.
    "Some years ago I loaned to John Adams and Jane, his wife (my daughter), a
    negro girl, and to, Michael Prewett and Bettie, his wife (my daughter), a
    negro girl, &c.
    "Those who have had the greatest trouble raising the negro children should
    have their preference in their choice.
    "I appoint my sons, Philemon and James Hurt, my whole and sole executors.
    "M. Hurt."
    Witnesses: William Mann, Stith Harrison, Robert Mann, Polly Mann.

    Moza married Mary Estes on 30 Apr 1752 in , , Virginia, USA. Mary was born in 1735 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died on 18 Apr 1782 in , , Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Estes was born in 1735 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died on 18 Apr 1782 in , , Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Bettie Hurt
    2. Sarah Elizabeth Hurt was born in 1750; died in 1767.
    3. Jane "Jennie" Hurt was born in 1754 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died on 5 Jan 1782 in , Halifax, Virginia, USA.
    4. 1. Sarah Ellen Hurt was born in 1754 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died in Nov 1816 in , , Virginia, USA.
    5. Virginia Elizabeth Hurt was born in 1756 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died in 1793 in , Halifax, Virginia, USA.
    6. Lucy Hurt was born in 1757 in , Amelia, Virginia, USA; died in May 1845 in Elmwood, Smith, Tennessee, USA.
    7. Philemon Hurt was born on 6 Oct 1758 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died on 17 Jan 1837 in McLemoresville, Carroll, Tennessee, USA.
    8. Sally Sarah Hurt was born in 1759 in , , Virginia, USA.
    9. James Hurt was born in 1763 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died on 8 Nov 1819 in Rustburg, Campbell, Virginia, USA.
    10. Prudence Hurt was born in 1765 in , , Virginia, USA; died in 1820 in , , Virginia, USA.
    11. Patience Hurt was born in 1768 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died in , , Virginia, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Philemon Hurt was born in 1700 in , King William, Virginia, USA (son of John Hurt); died on 14 Dec 1739 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    He left no will. Griggs Yarbrough was appointed administrator of his estate on December 14th 1739. Philemon Hurt was in his thirties when he died in 1739.

    Philemon married Elizabeth Pond. Elizabeth (daughter of Richard Pond) was born in 1700 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elizabeth Pond was born in 1700 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA (daughter of Richard Pond); and died.
    Children:
    1. 2. Moza Hurt was born in 1730 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died on 15 Dec 1792 in , Halifax, Virginia, USA.
    2. Philemon Hurt was born in 1730 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; died in 1809 in , Mecklenburg, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John Hurt was born in 1681 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA (son of John Hurt and Sarah Yarbrough Or Webber); died in 1748 in , Amelia, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Titus Hurt
    2. James Hurt died in 1789 in , Culpeper, Virginia, USA.
    3. 4. Philemon Hurt was born in 1700 in , King William, Virginia, USA; died on 14 Dec 1739 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA.
    4. John Hurt was born in 1703 in , King William, Virginia, USA; died on 23 May 1754 in , Amelia, Virginia, USA.
    5. Benjamin Hurt was born about 1705; died in 1769 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA.

  2. 10.  Richard Pond died in , Caroline, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 5. Elizabeth Pond was born in 1700 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA; and died.


Generation: 5

  1. 16.  John Hurt was born in 1655 in St Stephens, King William, Virginia, USA (son of William Hurt and Margaret); died on 9 Feb 1724 in , King William, Virginia, USA.

    John married Sarah Yarbrough Or Webber in 1673 in St Stephens, King William, Virginia, USA. Sarah was born in 1655 in , New Kent, Virginia, USA; died in 1723 in , King William, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 17.  Sarah Yarbrough Or Webber was born in 1655 in , New Kent, Virginia, USA; died in 1723 in , King William, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Name: Sarah WEBBER

    Children:
    1. James Hurt
    2. Joseph Hurt
    3. Philemon Hurt was born in 1679 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA; and died.
    4. William Hurt was born in 1680 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA; died in 1749 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA.
    5. 8. John Hurt was born in 1681 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA; died in 1748 in , Amelia, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 6

  1. 32.  William Hurt was born in 1628 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England (son of Thomas Hurt and Martha Winston); died in 1701 in , King William, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Arrival: 1650, , , Virginia, USA

    Notes:

    William Hurt, Senior.
    It is highly probable that he was the same William Hurt as the William Hurt who was one of 25 immigrants brought over from England to the Virginia Colony in 1650 by Stephen HamIin and the same as the William Hurt who patented 213 acres of land in St. Stephen's Parish in New Kent County, Virginia in 1673/4. King William County was a part of New Kent County then. King and Queen County was cut off of New Kent County in 1691 and King William County was cut off of King and Queen County in 1702. William Hurt was a very young man when he came to Virginia in1650 and was probably not yet 21 years of age at that time. Record No. 217 on page 33 states that John Hurt (son of William Hurt Sr.) was living in St. Stephens Parish in King and Queen County, Va. on November12,
    1691. This proves that the 213 acres of land in St. Stephens Parish in New Kent County, patented by William Hurt in 1673/4 was in the same vicinity as
    where William Hurt Senior was living in 1701. St. Stephen's Parish was in that part of New Kent County that was cut off of New Kent County in 1691 (but
    before November 12, 1691) and made into the new County of King and Queen.




    William Hurt, designated in many records as William Hurt, Sr. was the son of Thomas Hurt of Bristol and his wife, Martha Winstone. He was christened 23 Jul 1614
    at All Saints parish, one of the original seventeen parishes of the City of Bristol. [LDS Family History Library microfilm # 1596655].

    In the 1619 Visitation of Kent [Harlean Society Publication XLII, pg. 31] with information provided by his paternal uncle William Hurt, a mercer who had residences
    in Dover and in London, William Hurt, Sr. appears to have been a very young child at the time of that recording. Similar information is given in Berry's County
    Genealogies of Kent [FHL # 973300, pg. 101], except that both the children of Thomas Hurt of Bristol and the children of William Hurt of Dover (by two different
    wives) have been all been lumped together as children of William of Dover.

    The 1634 Visitation of London [Harlean Society Publication XV, pg. 406] shows that the information was again supplied by Uncle William, now residing in the
    Bishopsgate Ward area of London. None of Thomas's living children were shown to be married at that time. His younger daughter, Alice, married the following year
    at St. John Hackney, London. William was the fifth child born in a family of twelve. Three are known to have died in infancy, and three more deceased before the age
    of 25. Only children currently known to be living were listed by Uncle William in these visitations.

    [It is interesting that William Hurt, mercer of Bishopsgate Ward, London and Dover, Kent chose to use the coat-of-arms originally granted by patent 4 Sept. 1565 to
    3rd cousin Thomas Hurt of Ashbourne, Derbyshire (b. abt 1494), but his father and brother in Gloucestershire did not.]

    No apprenticeship records have been found for William or his sibilings in the Bristol Apprentice Books, suggesting that they were either trained by their own father
    in the family mercantile trade, as were approximately two-thirds of the young people of that day - or - they were apprenticed elsewhere.

    There seems to be a general consensus among researchers that the William Hurt who was transported to Charles City Co., VA in 1650 by Mr. Stephen Hamelin [Early
    Virginia Immigrants 1623-1666 by George Cabell Greep, Clerk, VA State Land Office - FHL fiche # 6051246 pg. 172] and [Virginia Land Book 2 pg. 266} is our
    immigrant ancestor. Others with the Hurt surname being transported in that time period included an Edward Hurt in 1650 by Mr. James Williamson - county not given
    and Thomas Hurt, who arrived in 1653, courtesy of Nicholas Meriwether, Northumberland Co., VA, who may have been the brother of William (Thomas chr. 17 Sep
    1615, All Saints parish, Bristol, England) Neither Edward or Thomas left any record of descendants in Virginia and may have either moved or not survived. George
    Magruder Battey III, in his 1947 monograph, "Notes Mostly Concerning Hurts in Tidewater Virginia" proposes that this Thomas is the one who moved to North
    Carolina.

    Calculating an approximate date of marriage at age twenty-five, William would probably have married around 1639 somewhere in England. His marriage record has
    not yet been located. That being considered, he may have had five or so children born prior to immigrating in 1650. His current family group record, as proposed by
    Oscar Hurt's research [The Early Hurt Family of Virginia, Oscar H. Hurt, FHL# 854152 item 4 pg. 5] shows three children, all born in Virginia after 1654:
    Isabella Hurt, b. 26 Apr 1654, King William Co., VA - md. Philip Pendleton in 1682
    John Hurt b. abt. 1655, St. Stephen's Parish, King William Co., VA d. 9 Feb 1724, King William Co., VA md. abt 1679 Sarah Webber, or more likely, Sarah
    Yarbrough abt. 1679
    William Hurt, Jr. b. abt. 1657, King William Co. VA d. after 1702.

    On 18 Feb. 1673/4 the following was recorded in Virginia Land Book 6, pg 502:
    "To all ye, whereas...etc... Now know ye that I, the said Wm Berkely, Knt. Governr doe the Consent of the Councill of State accordingly give and grant unto William
    Hurt two Hundred and thirteen acres of Land Lying in St. Stephen's Parish in New Kent County, beginning at a white oke corner of Pecks land thence running NE by N
    42 poles to a red oake thence E SE 1/2 S jog poles to a red oke thence E NE 63 poles to a red oke upon the side of a hill, thence S 200 poles to a red oke upon the
    side of another hill then west 89 poles to a red oke by the mill path, then W NW 100 poles to a Spanish oke by a branch, then N 141 poles to a hicory then N NE 10
    poles to where it began. The said land is due unto the said Wm Hurt by and for the transportation of 3 persons etc. To have and to hold or to be held or yielding or
    paying on provision dated the 18th Feb. 1673/4.
    Names of the Transported: Thos. Brownell & wife; Lambo, a Negroe" (This land was northwest of the present day Aylett, VA and approximately 28 miles NE of
    Richmond, VA.)

    By 1701, our William had attached the title, Senr. after his name. "To all ... Whereas...Now know you that of the said Francis Nicholson, Esq. Govornd etc. do with if
    and advice and consent of the Coundil of the State accordingly give and grant unto William Hurt, Senr. two hundred ninety and eight acres of land lying in Pamunkey
    being bounded as followeth, viz: Beginning at a Corner Hiccory called Peter White's corner hiccory hard by Richard Yarbrough's plantation and running thence
    southwest by south four hund: forty pole to a corner red oake, thence northwest sixty nine poles to a corner Hiccory, thence north north-east three hundred seventy six
    pole to a Corner hiccory, thence east one hundred and four pole, thence East by southe forty-one ople through a meadow all along by John Hurt's and Richard
    Yarbrough's plantations, thence east half a point north sixteen pole, thence south-west twenty-one pole to the beginning place, the said land being due unto the said
    William Hurt by and for the transportation of six persons into this colony whose names are to be in the records mentioned under this patent. To have & hold & to be
    held & Yielding & paying & provided & Given under my hand and ye seale of ye Colony this 24th day of October, anno Domini 1701.

    fr. Nicholson


    Names of the six persons transported into the Colony:
    William Hurt, Senr., Margt. Hurt, Edward Freeland, Herbert Benahan, Duksell Brown and Eliza Lea." [Virginia Land Book 9, pg. 384]

    It is from this record that it has been assumed that the wife of William Hurt, Sr. was Margaret. At one time it was thought that he had returned to England to marry a
    second time, bringing her back with him. It is more probable that he never made that trip, but rather padded his headright list with his and his wife's names, and none
    of the officials caught it. He needed six headrights in order to obtain the piece of land he wanted next to his son, John's property. He had four legal headrights, and
    made up the balance with the two additional.

    In Ralph Whitelaw's History of Northampton and Accomack Counties concerning these early land grants, states "In spite of the precautions presumably taken, there
    was much padding of headright lists and a number of names are duplicated in separate patents to different people for different lands. Among the headrights listed in a
    certificate by the Accomak Commissioners in 1672 to Edmund Scarburgh III, was included "his owne transportation three tymes'".

    By now, New Kent Co. had been divided forming King and Queen Co. in 1691, and was again divided in 1702 to form King William Co. Each time, the Hurt
    properties had been in the newly formed county. William Hurt, Sr. was on the Virginia Quit Rent Rolls for King William Co., VA for 250 acres of land in Oct. 1704.
    [Virginia Historical Magazine, Vol. 32, pg. 71] The last reference we have of him was made by his grandson, James Hurt, in a 1722 deed fragment which is very
    difficult to read, as it was "toasted" in the 1885 fire which burned the King William Co. courthouse and has crumbled, with large chunks missing. There is mention of
    74 1/2 acres, being one-fourth of the 298 acres previously mentioned, which were willed to him by his grandfather. This indicates that William Hurt, Sr. wrote a will,
    but it is no longer available. One would assume that it burned in 1885 along with many other documents. From these fragments, and other indicators, it has been
    estimated that William Sr. was deceased by Nov. 1704.[Moore_from ancestry_09262007.FTW]

    William Hurt, Senior.
    It is highly probable that he was the same William Hurt as the William Hurt who was one of 25 immigrants brought over from England to the Virginia Colony in 1650 by Stephen HamIin and the same as th e William Hurt who patented 213 acres of land in St. Stephen's Parish in New Kent County, Virginia in 1673/4. King William County was a part of New Kent County then. King and Queen County was cut of f of New Kent County in 1691 and King William County was cut off of King and Queen County in 1702. William Hurt was a very young man when he came to Virginia in1650 and was probably not yet 21 years o f age at that time. Record No. 217 on page 33 states that John Hurt (son of William Hurt Sr.) was living in St. Stephens Parish in King and Queen County, Va. on November12,
    1691. This proves that the 213 acres of land in St. Stephens Parish in New Kent County, patented by William Hurt in 1673/4 was in the same vicinity as
    where William Hurt Senior was living in 1701. St. Stephen's Parish was in that part of New Kent County that was cut off of New Kent County in 1691 (but
    before November 12, 1691) and made into the new County of King and Queen.




    William Hurt, designated in many records as William Hurt, Sr. was the son of Thomas Hurt of Bristol and his wife, Martha Winstone. He was christened 23 Jul 1614
    at All Saints parish, one of the original seventeen parishes of the City of Bristol. [LDS Family History Library microfilm # 1596655].

    In the 1619 Visitation of Kent [Harlean Society Publication XLII, pg. 31] with information provided by his paternal uncle William Hurt, a mercer who had residences
    in Dover and in London, William Hurt, Sr. appears to have been a very young child at the time of that recording. Similar information is given in Berry's County
    Genealogies of Kent [FHL # 973300, pg. 101], except that both the children of Thomas Hurt of Bristol and the children of William Hurt of Dover (by two different
    wives) have been all been lumped together as children of William of Dover.

    The 1634 Visitation of London [Harlean Society Publication XV, pg. 406] shows that the information was again supplied by Uncle William, now residing in the
    Bishopsgate Ward area of London. None of Thomas's living children were shown to be married at that time. His younger daughter, Alice, married the following year
    at St. John Hackney, London. William was the fifth child born in a family of twelve. Three are known to have died in infancy, and three more deceased before the age
    of 25. Only children currently known to be living were listed by Uncle William in these visitations.

    [It is interesting that William Hurt, mercer of Bishopsgate Ward, London and Dover, Kent chose to use the coat-of-arms originally granted by patent 4 Sept. 1565 to
    3rd cousin Thomas Hurt of Ashbourne, Derbyshire (b. abt 1494), but his father and brother in Gloucestershire did not.]

    No apprenticeship records have been found for William or his sibilings in the Bristol Apprentice Books, suggesting that they were either trained by their own father
    in the family mercantile trade, as were approximately two-thirds of the young people of that day - or - they were apprenticed elsewhere.

    There seems to be a general consensus among researchers that the William Hurt who was transported to Charles City Co., VA in 1650 by Mr. Stephen Hamelin [Early
    Virginia Immigrants 1623-1666 by George Cabell Greep, Clerk, VA State Land Office - FHL fiche # 6051246 pg. 172] and [Virginia Land Book 2 pg. 266} is our
    immigrant ancestor. Others with the Hurt surname being transported in that time period included an Edward Hurt in 1650 by Mr. James Williamson - county not given
    and Thomas Hurt, who arrived in 1653, courtesy of Nicholas Meriwether, Northumberland Co., VA, who may have been the brother of William (Thomas chr. 17 Sep
    1615, All Saints parish, Bristol, England) Neither Edward or Thomas left any record of descendants in Virginia and may have either moved or not survived. George
    Magruder Battey III, in his 1947 monograph, "Notes Mostly Concerning Hurts in Tidewater Virginia" proposes that this Thomas is the one who moved to North
    Carolina.

    Calculating an approximate date of marriage at age twenty-five, William would probably have married around 1639 somewhere in England. His marriage record has
    not yet been located. That being considered, he may have had five or so children born prior to immigrating in 1650. His current family group record, as proposed by
    Oscar Hurt's research [The Early Hurt Family of Virginia, Oscar H. Hurt, FHL# 854152 item 4 pg. 5] shows three children, all born in Virginia after 1654:
    Isabella Hurt, b. 26 Apr 1654, King William Co., VA - md. Philip Pendleton in 1682
    John Hurt b. abt. 1655, St. Stephen's Parish, King William Co., VA d. 9 Feb 1724, King William Co., VA md. abt 1679 Sarah Webber, or more likely, Sarah
    Yarbrough abt. 1679
    William Hurt, Jr. b. abt. 1657, King William Co. VA d. after 1702.

    On 18 Feb. 1673/4 the following was recorded in Virginia Land Book 6, pg 502:
    "To all ye, whereas...etc... Now know ye that I, the said Wm Berkely, Knt. Governr doe the Consent of the Councill of State accordingly give and grant unto William
    Hurt two Hundred and thirteen acres of Land Lying in St. Stephen's Parish in New Kent County, beginning at a white oke corner of Pecks land thence running NE by N
    42 poles to a red oake thence E SE 1/2 S jog poles to a red oke thence E NE 63 poles to a red oke upon the side of a hill, thence S 200 poles to a red oke upon the
    side of another hill then west 89 poles to a red oke by the mill path, then W NW 100 poles to a Spanish oke by a branch, then N 141 poles to a hicory then N NE 10
    poles to where it began. The said land is due unto the said Wm Hurt by and for the transportation of 3 persons etc. To have and to hold or to be held or yielding or
    paying on provision dated the 18th Feb. 1673/4.
    Names of the Transported: Thos. Brownell & wife; Lambo, a Negroe" (This land was northwest of the present day Aylett, VA and approximately 28 miles NE of
    Richmond, VA.)

    By 1701, our William had attached the title, Senr. after his name. "To all ... Whereas...Now know you that of the said Francis Nicholson, Esq. Govornd etc. do with if
    and advice and consent of the Coundil of the State accordingly give and grant unto William Hurt, Senr. two hundred ninety and eight acres of land lying in Pamunkey
    being bounded as followeth, viz: Beginning at a Corner Hiccory called Peter White's corner hiccory hard by Richard Yarbrough's plantation and running thence
    southwest by south four hund: forty pole to a corner red oake, thence northwest sixty nine poles to a corner Hiccory, thence north north-east three hundred seventy six
    pole to a Corner hiccory, thence east one hundred and four pole, thence East by southe forty-one ople through a meadow all along by John Hurt's and Richard
    Yarbrough's plantations, thence east half a point north sixteen pole, thence south-west twenty-one pole to the beginning place, the said land being due unto the said
    William Hurt by and for the transportation of six persons into this colony whose names are to be in the records mentioned under this patent. To have & hold & to be
    held & Yielding & paying & provided & Given under my hand and ye seale of ye Colony this 24th day of October, anno Domini 1701.

    fr. Nicholson


    Names of the six persons transported into the Colony:
    William Hurt, Senr., Margt. Hurt, Edward Freeland, Herbert Benahan, Duksell Brown and Eliza Lea." [Virginia Land Book 9, pg. 384]

    It is from this record that it has been assumed that the wife of William Hurt, Sr. was Margaret. At one time it was thought that he had returned to England to marry a
    second time, bringing her back with him. It is more probable that he never made that trip, but rather padded his headright list with his and his wife's names, and none
    of the officials caught it. He needed six headrights in order to obtain the piece of land he wanted next to his son, John's property. He had four legal headrights, and
    made up the balance with the two additional.

    In Ralph Whitelaw's History of Northampton and Accomack Counties concerning these early land grants, states "In spite of the precautions presumably taken, there
    was much padding of headright lists and a number of names are duplicated in separate patents to different people for different lands. Among the headrights listed in a
    certificate by the Accomak Commissioners in 1672 to Edmund Scarburgh III, was included "his owne transportation three tymes'".

    By now, New Kent Co. had been divided forming King and Queen Co. in 1691, and was again divided in 1702 to form King William Co. Each time, the Hurt
    properties had been in the newly formed county. William Hurt, Sr. was on the Virginia Quit Rent Rolls for King William Co., VA for 250 acres of land in Oct. 1704.
    [Virginia Historical Magazine, Vol. 32, pg. 71] The last reference we have of him was made by his grandson, James Hurt, in a 1722 deed fragment which is very
    difficult to read, as it was "toasted" in the 1885 fire which burned the King William Co. courthouse and has crumbled, with large chunks missing. There is mention of
    74 1/2 acres, being one-fourth of the 298 acres previously mentioned, which were willed to him by his grandfather. This indicates that William Hurt, Sr. wrote a will,
    but it is no longer available. One would assume that it burned in 1885 along with many other documents. From these fragments, and other indicators, it has been
    estimated that William Sr. was deceased by Nov. 1704.

















    Notes for William Hurt of England and Virginia
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=64b9acbc-ed7e-46e2-8647-1e9b60fdbc53&tid=13149490&pid=-116855811





    William married Margaret in 1653 in , King William, Virginia, USA. Margaret was born in 1635 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA; died in 1704 in , King William, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 33.  Margaret was born in 1635 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA; died in 1704 in , King William, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. William Hurt was born in 1653 in , , , England; and died.
    2. Isabella Elizabeth Hurt was born on 26 Apr 1654 in , King William, Virginia, USA; died on 6 Nov 1724 in , Caroline, Virginia, USA.
    3. 16. John Hurt was born in 1655 in St Stephens, King William, Virginia, USA; died on 9 Feb 1724 in , King William, Virginia, USA.
    4. William Hurt was born in 1657 in Pamunkey Neck, King William, Virginia, USA; died in 1702 in , King William, Virginia, USA.