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]

John Edwards

Male 1727 - 1801  (74 years)


Personal Information    |    Notes    |    Event Map    |    All

  • Name John Edwards 
    Birth 8 Feb 1727  Cardiff, Glamorganshire, Wales Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Death 16 Mar 1801  , Greenville, South Carolina, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I29  Master
    Last Modified 20 Oct 2012 

    Father Thomas Edwards,   b. 14 Oct 1690, North, Denbighshire, Wales Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Mar 1762 (Age 71 years) 
    Mother Isabelle Downing,   b. 12 Mar 1694, Cardiff, Glamorganshire, Wales Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 8 Jun 1742, Savannah, Chatham, Georgia, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 48 years) 
    Marriage 14 Mar 1714 
    Family ID F16  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Children 
     1. William Edwards,   b. 10 Feb 1768, , Bedford, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 23 Nov 1832, , Pittsylvania, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 64 years)
    Family ID F15  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 8 Feb 1727 - Cardiff, Glamorganshire, Wales Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 16 Mar 1801 - , Greenville, South Carolina, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • Edwards of Northampton

      JOHN EDWARDS, GENTLEMAN
      Born in 1727 in Wales, sixth son of Sir Thomas Edwards, Baron, he came to
      America at about 23 years of age. One can only guess at his reason for coming.
      Religious oppression, political pressure, the excitement and thrill of high adventure, or more possibly the lack of opportunity for self-expression under the common practice of inheritance by the oldest son may have motivated him.

      There is little doubt that his kinsmen had preceded him over a period of more than a hundred years and were firmly established in the New World. He would have had no particular reason to come to, Northampton County unless there had been communication with family connections. At this time the influx of settlers was greater in the New York and Pennsylvania area than in the Carolinas and Virginia. A flood of emigrants was pouring into the country. The Edwards name appeared from New England to South Carolina and into Georgia. Dr. Lawrence Edwards, in his book "Old Speedwell Families", traces his family to William Edwards (1720-1808), son of Thomas. Very possibly he was of our family - brother of John. We do, not know how many, other than the three in our records, of these brothers came to America. His William Edwards came through the valley of Virginia across the mountains into Tennessee. There is little doubt that historians are correct in tracing another William, son of John - one of the four
      brothers - to Kentucky where many prominent public servants originated, including the Governor of Illinois in 1826. It is most probable that the Edwards' of Isle of Wight, Southampton and Surry counties in Virginia and Bertie and Northampton counties in North Carolina were closely related.

      When John Edwards came to Northampton the Tidewater was thickly settled.
      Colonists had pushed westward to the mountains. The rights of the Eight Proprietors, to whom King Charles II had granted the territory from about Cape Kennedy to the Virginia line and westward to the "south seas" in 1633, had been reclaimed by King Goerge II with the exception of the one-eighth interest held by John Carteret, Earl of Granville. He would not sell to the Crown and still held title to a huge area along the Virginia-North Carolina line that was laid off in 1744 as his portion. Titles to land in Eastern North Carolina then were by deeds known as "Granville Grants", continued by him and his succeeding son Robert up until they lost their rights by reason of the American Revolution. In 1750 the New World was firmly held by the British as Royal Colonies.

      It was still a raw land. There were practically no roads in the interior
      and travel was by horseback where there were no navigable streams. Emigrants had never seen such a land before, much less hope to own a part of it, and they took up all the land they could get, clearing it as they could. By 1750 the most desirable land had changed hands several times. Away from the settlements on the Coast and in Eastern Virginia, schools were nonexistent. There was by then some wealth in North Carolina but it was far from being a place of fine homes and leisurely living. Another John Edwards, Clerk of Northampton Court, reported in 1754 that there were 902 white taxables (heads of families)and 837 blacks in the county. The now growing population and difficulty of travel made it expedient to form Northampton County from Bertie in 1741. This was the land
      that John Edwards found on his arrival.

      Traces of John Edwards, our ancestor, are limited. He married about the
      time he bought property in 1752 - we do not know his wife's name. The family picked up the name "Elizabeth" from old deeds, but we cannot be sure. He had a son named Samuel Edwards. John's wife died and he was also in ill health, possibly from the swampy, low lying nature of his property, and he returned to England. He must have expected to return for he did not dispose of his real property. He did not return, however, but died - date unknown. His deed to the 167 acre farm, recorded in Book 2 page 47, was dated 30 April 1752. He paid thirty pounds for it in "current money of the Colony of Virginia", the accepted currency at that time. It is a long and flowery document, evidently prepared by a lawyer, and recited the title as having been by grant to John Godley on 2 Aug. 1729, sold by him to Daniel O'Quinn, who sold it to Isaac Hunter in Nov. 1741. His son Theophilus Hunter inherited it from him and sold it to "John Edwards,
      Gentleman".

      He was further identified on 11 Nov. 1755 as "John Edwards, Gentleman" when he proved the signature on a will. No other record of him is identifiable except for the written word of his heirs. Information about his marriage, his son Samuel and his return to England is from his grandchildren.

      Whether or not he bought and sold other property is confused by the fact that there were at least three other "John Edwards' " in Northampton at the same time. His identity is established by the fact that his son Samuel returned to Northhampton and made his home on the property described in the deed, willing it along with other property he acquired to his heirs. Others of the same name left record of their heirs and there is no confusion between them.

      What construction can be placed on the fact that the term "Gentleman" was
      applied to him, absent in reference to the others of the same name, is an interesting conjecture. His father held a title, but John had little hope of inheriting it as a sixth son. Generally it appears to have had reference to one of considerable means who did not find it necessary to work with his hands. Samuel, his son, returned to America with sufficient funds to purchase considerable property, although only a boy. He could only have acquired it at his age by inheritance. This would picture John Edwards as a young man of
      prestige and means whose health prevented him from becoming a part of the developing Nation.

      John EDWARDS 1,2
      Birth: 10 Feb 1727, Wales
      Married: May 1750, Fauquier County, Virginia
      Death: 16 Mar 1801, Greenville, SC

      General Notes:

      1. Came from Virginia in 1787 with his wife, Henrietta Ayers Edwards
      2. There are two Edwards family cemetaries in the area. One located on Wade Hampton Blvd., and another located at Edwards Rd Baptist Church.

      Marriage Information:

      John married Henrietta AYERS, daughter of Thomas AYERS and Unknown, in May 1750 in Fauquier County, Virginia. (Henrietta AYERS was born in 1728.

      Sources

      1 Steve Skidgel, (http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/SC/Greenville Bios Greenville County Biographies).

      2 P 191. Source Text: P 191 Will of John EDWARDS ....whole estate to my beloved HENRIETTA EDWARDS during her natural life whats hereafter mentioned to my children Daughter Sarah EDWARDS Son William EDWARDS Daughter Elizabeth BRIDWELL Daughter mary BRUCE (sp?) Son Joseph EDWARDS Son John EDWARDS Beloved wife Henrietta Edwards Six children-namely Elizabeth, Joseph, Mary, John, William, and Sarah. My friend Thomas EDWARDS and Pleasant HUDSON. Written Sept 29, 1799 John Edwards Witnesses: Mary Ann EDWARDS, Thomas EDWARDS Supposing John Edwards never should come, Item I will and bequeath what is for him to my daughter Sarah EDWARDS. Witness: Joseph MCAFEE, George ROSS Proven Mar 16, 1801