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Beverly Frederick Jefferson

Male 1838 - 1908  (70 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Beverly Frederick Jefferson was born in 1838 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA (son of Thomas Eston Hemings and Julian Ann Isaacs Hemings Jefferson); died on 11 Nov 1908 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1850, Chillicothe, Ross, Ohio, USA


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Thomas Eston Hemings was born on 21 May 1808 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA (son of Thomas Jefferson and Sarah Hemings); died on 3 Jan 1856 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA; was buried in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1830, , Albemarle, Virginia, USA
    • Residence: 1840, , Pike, Ohio, USA
    • Residence: 1850, Chillicothe, Ross, Ohio, USA

    Notes:

    Eston Hemings Jefferson
    BIRTH 21 May 1808 Albemarle County, Virginia, USA
    DEATH 3 Jan 1856 (aged 47) Madison, Dane County, Wisconsin, USA
    BURIAL Forest Hill Cemetery, Madison, Dane County, Wisconsin, USA
    PLOT Section 3, Lot 018, Grave 3
    Find a Grave Memorial ID: 10606815

    Eston Hemings Jefferson was the son of President Thomas Jefferson and his slave Sally Hemings.

    ESTON HEMINGS WAS BORN AN enslaved person on May 21, 1808. His mother was Sally Hemings, and his father is believed to have been, Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States.

    Hemings spent his early life in Monticello, Jefferson’s primary plantation just outside Charlottesville, Virginia. Eston’s mother was a mixed-race enslaved person, and he along with his siblings were all 7/8 white, “legally” white in Virginia at the time. Hemings was a trained carpenter, and because Jefferson was so fond of the violin, he and all his siblings were taught it from a very young age. When Jefferson died in 1826, his will freed Hemings and his siblings.

    Now a free man, Hemings married a formerly enslaved person, Julia Ann Isaacs, and they had three children. In 1837 he moved his family to Ohio. He became a professional musician there and had his children educated in integrated schools.

    The family left in 1852 due to the Fugitive Slave Act, which put pressure on ex-slave communities in free states bordering slave states. Hemings moved his family to Madison, Wisconsin, and changed their surname to Jefferson. He died in 1856, a well respected and loved man.

    Inscription
    E. H. Jefferson
    Died ~ Jan. 3, 1856.
    Æ 48 ys 7 ms
    The rest is illegible.
    Gravesite Details
    The grave is located in plot 3, near the road and right across from plot 2.

    Family Members
    Parents
    Thomas Jefferson 1743–1826
    Sally Hemings 1773–1835

    Spouse
    Julia Ann Isaacs Jefferson 1814–1889

    Siblings
    Harriet Hemings 1795–1797
    Beverly Hemings 1798 – unknown
    Unnamed Daughter Hemings 1799–1800
    Harriet Hemings Heckman 1801–1870
    Madison Hemings 1805–1877

    Half Siblings
    Patsy Jefferson Randolph 1772–1836
    Jane Randolph Jefferson 1774–1775
    Infant Son Jefferson 1777–1777
    Mary Jefferson Eppes 1778–1804
    Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson 1780–1781
    Lucy Elizabeth Jefferson 1782–1784

    Children
    John Wayles Jefferson 1835–1892
    Anna Wayles Jefferson Pearson 1837–1866
    Beverly Frederick Jefferson 1839–1908


    Eston Hemings (1808-1856) was born a slave at Monticello, the youngest child of Sarah (Sally) Hemings. It is probable that his full given name at birth was Thomas Eston Hemings. In his later years, he changed his name to Eston Jefferson. Family tradition and oral history hold that he was the son of President Thomas Jefferson. Evidence from a 1998 DNA study of male-line descendants of the Jefferson and Hemings families suggests that if Jefferson sired any of the Hemings children, Eston is the one most likely, as he had the Jefferson “Y” chromosome. Since it is true that some male relatives of Jefferson also had the chromosome, it has been suggested that Randolph Jefferson, the president’s younger brother, may have fathered Eston and/or other Hemings children.

    Eston was manumitted at the age of 21, in accordance with President Jefferson’s will. In his 1873 memoir, Eston's older brother Madison states that this was in keeping with an agreement between the future president and his slave Sally, prior to their return to the United States from France in 1789; Jefferson had been appointed ambassador to France in 1785. Madison, whose probable birth name was James Madison Hemings, stated that “…during that time my mother became Mr. Jefferson's concubine, and when he was called back home she was enciente by him. He desired to bring my mother back to Virginia with him but she demurred. She was just beginning to understand the French language well, and in France she was free, while if she returned to Virginia she would be re-enslaved. So she refused to return with him. To induce her to do so he promised her extraordinary privileges, and made a solemn pledge that her children should be freed at the age of twenty-one years. In consequence of his promise, on which she implicitly relied, she returned with him to Virginia.”

    Like his brother Madison, Eston trained in woodworking with his uncle, John. Upon gaining freedom, Eston initially pursued a career in wood working and carpentry in the Charlottesville, Virginia area. In 1830, he purchased property and built a house on Main street, where his mother lived with him until her death in 1835. In 1832, he married a free woman of color, Julia Ann Isaacs (1814-1889), daughter of Jewish merchant David Isaacs and Ann (Nancy) West, a former slave. About 1837 he moved with his family to Chillicothe, Ohio, where he became a professional musician, playing the violin and leading a successful dance band. In a 1902 newspaper article, an observer wrote: “Eston Hemings, being a master of the violin, and an accomplished "caller" of dances, always officiated at the "swell" entertainments of Chillicothe; and they were more frequent then than now, I think.”

    Eston and Julia Ann Isaacs Hemings had three children: John Wayles Jefferson (1835-1892), Anne Wayles Jefferson (1836-1866), and Beverly Frederick Jefferson (1838-1908). In 1852, the family moved to Madison, Wisconsin, where they changed their surname to Jefferson and became part of the white community. Their eldest son John served as an officer in the United States Army during the American Civil War, leading the Wisconsin 8th Infantry. He was wounded twice in battle, and ultimately promoted to Colonel in 1864. The entire Eston Hemings family is buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, Madison, Wisconsin.

    From the memoir of Madison Hemings, 1873:
    “She (Sally) gave birth to four others, and Jefferson was the father of all of them. Their names were Beverly, Harriet, Madison (myself), and Eston--three sons and one daughter.”

    “We all became free agreeably to the treaty entered into by our parents before we were born. We all married and have raised families.”

    From the Scioto Gazette, 1902:
    “…on one occasion the writer of this sketch, in company with the late Addison Poarson, Edward Adams, Gen. James Ryan and Seneca W. Ely, while going from Pennsylvania avenue to the White House, came upon the bronze statue of Jefferson, which is located upon the broad walk leading from the avenue to the mansion. "Gentlemen, who in Chillicothe looks most like that statute?" I asked. Instantly came the unanimous answer, "Why, Eston Hemings!" Some time after my return from Washington, happening to have some business with Hemings, I told him of the incident. "Well," answered Hemings quietly, "my mother, whose name I bear, belonged to Mr. Jefferson." and after a slight pause, added, "and she never was married."

    On the question of race, Eston Hemings was indisputably "black" while he was a slave at Monticello. Years later, living in Ohio as a free man in 1850, Eston was described by a census taker as "mulatto." A decade later in Wisconsin, a census taker listed Eston and his wife as "white."

    Thomas married Julian Ann Isaacs Hemings Jefferson on 14 Jun 1832 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA. Julian was born in 1814 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 22 Mar 1889 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Julian Ann Isaacs Hemings Jefferson was born in 1814 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 22 Mar 1889 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1850, Chillicothe, Ross, Ohio, USA

    Children:
    1. Col John Wayles Hemings Jefferson was born on 8 May 1835 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 13 Jun 1892 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.
    2. Anna Wayles Hemings Jefferson Pearson was born in 1836 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 11 Apr 1866 in Burke, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.
    3. 1. Beverly Frederick Jefferson was born in 1838 in Charlottesville, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA; died on 11 Nov 1908 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Thomas Jefferson was born on 13 Apr 1743 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA (son of Peter Jefferson and Jane Randolph); died on 4 Jul 1826 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Married: 1 Jan 1772, , Charles City, Virginia, USA
    • Residence: 6 Aug 1810, St Anns, Albemarle, Virginia, USA
    • Residence: 7 Aug 1820, , Albemarle, Virginia, USA

    Thomas married Sarah Hemings in Apr 1789 in Paris, Île-de-France, France. Sarah was born on 9 Feb 1773 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died in 1835 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sarah Hemings was born on 9 Feb 1773 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died in 1835 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Harriet (Hattie) Hemings was born on 6 Feb 1801 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 26 Feb 1870 in Frederick, Frederick, Maryland, USA; was buried in Frederick, Frederick, Maryland, USA.
    2. 2. Thomas Eston Hemings was born on 21 May 1808 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 3 Jan 1856 in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA; was buried in Madison, Dane, Wisconsin, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Peter Jefferson was born on 28 Feb 1707 in Osbornes, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA (son of Capt Thomas Jefferson, II and Mary Field); died on 17 Aug 1757 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; was buried in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.

    Peter married Jane Randolph. Jane (daughter of Isham Randolph and Jane Lilburne Rogers) was born on 9 Feb 1720 in Shadwell Parish, Tower Hamlets, London, London, England; died on 31 Mar 1776 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Jane Randolph was born on 9 Feb 1720 in Shadwell Parish, Tower Hamlets, London, London, England (daughter of Isham Randolph and Jane Lilburne Rogers); died on 31 Mar 1776 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Jefferson was born in 1733; died in 1744.
    2. Jemima Jefferson Collins Davis Woodward was born on 27 Jun 1740 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 1 Oct 1765 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    3. Mary Jefferson was born on 1 Oct 1741.
    4. 4. Thomas Jefferson was born on 13 Apr 1743 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 4 Jul 1826 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    5. Elizabeth Jefferson, * was born on 4 Nov 1744 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 24 Feb 1774 in Monticello, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    6. Martha Jefferson Carr was born on 29 May 1746 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 3 Sep 1811 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    7. Peter Field Jefferson, * was born on 28 Nov 1748 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 29 Nov 1748 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    8. Lewis Jefferson was born in 1749; died in 1749.
    9. Son Jefferson was born on 9 Mar 1750; died on 9 Mar 1750.
    10. Lucy Jefferson Lewis, * was born on 10 Oct 1752 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 26 May 1810 in Rock Hill, Smithland, Livingston, Kentucky, USA.
    11. Randolph Jefferson, * was born on 1 Oct 1755 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 15 Aug 1815 in Snowden, Buckingham, Virginia, USA.
    12. Anna Scott Jefferson, * was born on 1 Oct 1755 in Shadwell, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 8 Jul 1828 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 5

  1. 18.  Isham Randolph was born on 24 Feb 1684 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA (son of William Randolph and Mary Isham); died on 2 Nov 1742 in Dungeness, Goochland, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    Col. Isham Randolph
    Birth: Feb. 24, 1685, Henrico County, Virginia Colony
    Death: Nov. 2, 1742, Goochland County, Virginia Colony
    Headstone/Memorial at Randolph Family Cemetery Presque Isle, Henrico County, Virginia, USA

    “Sacred to the memory of COL. ISHAM RANDOLPH of Dungness in Goochland County Adjutant General of this Colony He was the third son of William Randolph and Mary his Wife. The distinguishing qualities of the gentleman he possessed in the most eminent degree to justice probity and honour so firmly attached that no view of secular interest or worldly advantage no discouraging frowns of fortune could alter his steady purpose of heart By an easy compliance and obliging deportment he knew no enemies but gained many friends thus in his Life meriting in universal esteem He died universally lamented Nov. 1742 aged 57 Gentle Reader go and do thou likewise."

    Son of Col. Wm. Randolph and Mary (Isham) Randolph who built up a large estate near tidewater of James River, and became one of the most influential political leaders of his generation. By the time of the father's death in 1711, he had established a leading dynasty and was able to bequeath thousands of acres of land to his children. Taking advantage of opportunities in the interior, his sons moved further upriver: Richard settled at Curles Neck, Thomas far beyond the falls at Tuckahoe (the first great plantation on the upper James), and Isham further upriver still. As a young man Isham had gone to sea, become a successful merchant, and lived for many years in London, serving as an agent for Virginia affairs. In 1718 he married Jane Rogers and three years later their daughter, Jane, was baptized at St. Paul's Church, Shadwell. Jane Randolph, Thomas Jefferson's mother, was English by birth and spent her childhood in London surrounded by the busy streets and docklands of the East End, before moving to her father's plantation at Dungeness in the frontier county of Goochland.

    Isham married Jane Lilburne Rogers on 25 Jul 1717 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA. Jane was born on 29 January 1698 in Shadwell Parish, Tower Hamlets, London, London, England; died on 1 March 1761 in Dungeness, Goochland, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 19.  Jane Lilburne Rogers was born on 29 January 1698 in Shadwell Parish, Tower Hamlets, London, London, England; died on 1 March 1761 in Dungeness, Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. 9. Jane Randolph was born on 9 Feb 1720 in Shadwell Parish, Tower Hamlets, London, London, England; died on 31 Mar 1776 in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    2. Thomas Isham Randolph, Sr. was born in 1722 in Dungeness, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died in 1778 in Wilton, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in Amphill, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA.
    3. Judith Randolph was born in 1724 in Tuckahoe, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1745 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    4. Mary Randolph was born on 15 Oct 1725 in Dungeness, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died on 13 Oct 1803 in Buck Island, Goochland, Virginia, USA; was buried in Keswick, Albemarle, Virginia, USA.
    5. Elizabeth Randolph was born in 1727 in , Essex, Virginia, USA; died on 11 September 1782 in , Fauquier, Virginia, USA.
    6. William Randolph was born in 1727 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England; died on 27 June 1791 in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England.
    7. Anne I Randolph was born in 1732 in Dungeness, Albemarle, Virginia, USA; died in 1765 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    8. Dorothea Randolph was born in 1732 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; died on 2 February 1794 in Dover, Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    9. Susanna Anne I Randolph was born on 24 Sep 1738 in Dungeness, Goochland, Virginia, USA; died in 1806 in , Goochland, Virginia, USA; was buried in Cartersville, Cumberland, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 6

  1. 36.  William Randolph was born on 7 Nov 1650 in Moreton Morrell, Warwickshire, England; died on 21 Apr 1711 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.

    Notes:

    William Randolph was a colonist and land owner who played an important role in the history and government of the Commonwealth of Virginia. He moved to Virginia sometime between 1669 and 1673, and married Mary Isham a few years later. His descendants include Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall, and Robert E. Lee. Genealogists refer to him and his wife as the "Adam and Eve of Virginia."

    Randolph appears to have arrived in Virginia with little capital and few connections. By 1674 he had acquired enough money to import 12 persons and earn his first of many land patents (between 1674 and 1697 he imported 72 servants and 69 slaves for which he collected patents for more than 7000 acres). In later years he became a merchant and planter and co-owned several ships used to transport tobacco to England and goods back to Virginia. He established several of his sons as merchants and sea captains.

    Following Bacon's Rebellion (in 1676), Nathaniel Bacon's estate, Curles, near Turkey Island, was forfeited. Randolph assessed the property for Gov. Berkeley and was allowed to buy it for his estimated price, adding 1230 acres to his land holdings.

    Randolph held numerous official appointments and offices: clerk of Henrico County; justice of the peace; member of House of Burgesses; Speaker of the House; Clerk of the House.

    He was a founder and one of the first trustees of William and Mary College.

    He built a mansion on the Turkey Island plantation on high ground overlooking the island the river. It featured a ribbed dome and was known as the "Bird's Cage."


    The Randolph family is a prominent Virginia political family, whose members contributed to the politics of Colonial Virginia and Virginia after it gained its statehood. They are descended from the Randolphs of Morton Moreton, Warwickshire, England. The first Randolph to come to America was Henry Randolph in 1643. His nephew, William Randolph, later came to Virginia as an orphan in 1669. He made his home at Turkey Island along the James River. Because of their numerous progeny, William Randolph and his wife, Mary Isham Randolph, have been referred to as "the Adam and Eve of Virginia."

    Descendants of William Randolph and Mary Isham Randolph include President of the First Continental Congress Peyton Randolph, U.S. President Thomas Jefferson (son of Jane Randolph, first cousin of Peyton Randolph), First Lady Edith Bolling, U.S. Attorney General Edmund Randolph, Chief Justice of the United States John Marshall, [2] [3] Virginia Governor Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr. ( son-in-law of Thomas Jefferson), and Confederate States Secretary of War George W. Randolph (grandson of Thomas Jefferson), as were the Confederate General Robert E. Lee through his father Henry Lee III and his grandfather Henry Lee II.

    Historic homes associated with the family include Tuckahoe Plantation in Goochland County, the Peyton Randolph House in Williamsburg, the Wilton House Museum and the John Marshall House in Richmond, and Monticello near Charlottesville. Members of the Randolph family also intermarried with other prominent Virginia families including the Blands, Byrds, Carters, Beverleys, Fitzhughs, and Harrisons. Native American Pocahontas was directly related to members of the Randolph family through marriages of Robert Bolling's two granddaughters, Lucille and Jane Bolling. Some evidence suggests that the famous American frontiersman, politician and hero Davy Crockett was in fact of Randolph descent. The Randolph family are also a distant relative of Powhatan tribe's princess Pocahontas.

    Today, many Randolphs still hold political prestige in America. The Randolphs and descendants have made one of the greatest contributions in the history of American politics.

    Thomas Jeffferson Foundation, Inc
    https://www.monticello.org/site/jefferson/william-randolph

    William Randolph (1650-1711), Thomas Jefferson's great-grandfather, was baptized November 7, 1650, in Moreton Morrell, Warwickshire, England, a small village situated midway between Warwick Castle and Edgehill. He was the fourth of seven children of Richard Randolph (1620 - ca. 1671) and Elizabeth Ryland (1625 - ca. 1669).

    William's father (baptized February 24, 1621/2) was born in Little Houghton, Northamptonshire, where his grandfather, also William, was steward and servant to Edward, Lord Zouche, a councilor for the Virginia Company of London. William's mother was from Warwickshire, where the Randolphs moved sometime before 1647, when Richard and Elizabeth's first child was born at Moreton Morrell. The family remained in the heart of Parliamentarian Warwickshire through the end of the Civil Wars, the Commonwealth, and much of the Protectorate.1 At some point after William's seventh birthday, when his last sibling was born and his grandfather William buried (both in Moreton Morrell), the family moved to Dublin, Ireland. His mother died in Dublin ca. 1669, followed by his father ca. 1671.2

    William's uncle, Henry Randolph (baptized November 27, 1623, Little Houghton, Northamptonshire), emigrated to Virginia ca. 1642. It is known that Henry visited Ireland and England between 1669 and 1670, at which time he may have encouraged his nephew to join him in Virginia. Henry died in Henrico County, Virginia, in 1673.3

    William first appears in Virginia records as witness to a deed on February 12, 1672. In 1674, he qualified for his first land patent by claiming headrights for importing twelve people. Around 1676, he married Mary Isham, a widow of some means, daughter of Henry Isham from Northamptonshire. Mary bore William ten children, of whom nine survived to adulthood (Mary, William, Henry, Elizabeth, Isham, Thomas, Richard, John, and Edward), an astonishingly high number given seventeenth-century child survival rates.4 In addition to dozens of grandchildren and hundreds of great-grandchildren – among whom are Thomas Jefferson, John Marshall (1755-1834), Edmund Randolph (1753-1813), John Randolph of Roanoke, Sir John Randolph (ca. 1693-1737), Richard Bland (1710-1776), and Peyton Randolph (ca. 1721-1775) – he was responsible for importing 168 indentured servants and slaves into Virginia.5

    Although primarily a tobacco planter and transatlantic merchant – several of his sons and grandsons would boost the family's commercial operation by becoming ship's captains – William served in the House of Burgesses, was elected Speaker of the House for one term, served as clerk of the House of Burgesses, and for four years was Attorney General of the colony (a post that members of his family would hold for most of the eighteenth century). He was recommended for appointment to the Virginia Council in 1705, but he never received the position.6

    William died at his home, Turkey Island, on the James River, on April 21, 1711.7

    Although William has been variously described as a carpenter who started off in Virginia by building barns, as one of the "high loyalists in the Civil Wars," and as a member of the wealthy English gentry, there is no evidence for any of those claims. In fact, the evidence that does exist makes the first unlikely and rules out the others.

    William married Mary Isham in 1680 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA. Mary was born on 10 Oct 1660 in Bermuda Hundred, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA; died on 29 Dec 1735 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 37.  Mary Isham was born on 10 Oct 1660 in Bermuda Hundred, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA; died on 29 Dec 1735 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Randolph was born in 1680 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 22 Jan 1720 in Jordans Point, Prince George, Virginia, USA; was buried in Jordans Point, Prince George, Virginia, USA.
    2. William Randolph, II was born on 6 Nov 1681 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 19 Oct 1741 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    3. Thomas Randolph was born on 3 Feb 1683 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died in 1729 in Tuckahoe, Goochland, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Goochland, Virginia, USA.
    4. 18. Isham Randolph was born on 24 Feb 1684 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 2 Nov 1742 in Dungeness, Goochland, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    5. Elizabeth Randolph was born in Mar 1685 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 17 Apr 1685 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    6. Richard Randolph was born on 2 May 1686 in Turkey Island, Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 17 Dec 1748 in Curles Plantation, Henrico, Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    7. Edward Randolph was born on 1 Oct 1690 in , Henrico, Virginia, USA; died on 15 Mar 1737 in , , Virginia, USA; was buried in , Henrico, Virginia, USA.
    8. John Randolph was born in Apr 1693 in , Charles City, Virginia, USA; died on 7 Mar 1737; was buried in Williamsburg, Independent Cities, Virginia, USA.