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1401 Captain William Fuller of the Severn. Governor of Maryland In 1654, he repealed the Tole ration Act and became Member of the Great Council and a Proprietor's deputy (assigned land grants). He was the ranking officer in Oliver Cromwell's Roundhead Army, Commander in Chief in Indian Wars and brought settlers to a colony in South Carolina.
Fuller, Captain William (I23337)
 
1402 Captain William Ward owned "a larged property [in the northern part of Pittsylvania Co. on Staunton River] and was active in the life of the county, serving as justice of the peace, member of the Committee of Safety in 1775, captain of the militia, and sheriff of the county in 1792." Ward, Capt William (I27042)
 
1403 Captain William Ward was a man of large property and was active in the life of the county, serving as a justice of the peace, member of Committee of Safety in 1775, captain of the militia, and sheriff of the county in 1792. His home was in the northern part of Pittsylvania County on the Staunton River.  Ward, Capt William (I27042)
 
1404 Captain Wilson Parrish
Excerpt from Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography, Volume IV:

The descent of the Parrish family, represented in professional circles in Chatham, Virginia, by William Perkins Parrish, M. D., is Irish, he being of the fifth American generation. The name has ever been proudly borne in its Virginia home, and was honorably acquitted in the heaviest fighting of the Mexican war and war between the states. The first two generations of this line in Virginia were resident in Culpeper county, farming being the family occupation. Captain Wilson Parrish was born in Pittsylvania county, Virginia, and attained an age of seventy-four years. He saw active service in the Mexican war, and throughout his life was a farmer. He married a Miss Wells, of Pittsylvania county, and had children, among them Joseph M., of whom further. 
Parrish, Wilson (I33298)
 
1405 Card index to the commissions and civil appointments register of the Secretary of State. Alabama Department of Archives and History, Montgomery, Alabama. Source (S1416)
 
1406 Card Records of Headstones Provided for Deceased Union Civil War Veterans, ca. 1879-ca. 1903; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M1845, 22 rolls); Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, Record Group 92; National Archives, Washington, D.C. Source (S1374)
 
1407 Card Records of Headstones Provided for Deceased Union Civil War Veterans, ca. 1879-ca. 1903; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M1845, 22 rolls); Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, Record Group 92; National Archives, Washington, D.C. Source (S1374)
 
1408 Carlton served in the US Navy in WWII in the Pacific. Moore, Carlton Wayland (I183)
 
1409 Caroline County, Virginia, 12 May 1749, Ann is named one of the executors of the will of her husband, William Hurt. The will is dated 11 Apr 1748 and probated 12 May 1749 in Caroline County - Caroline County Court Order Book 1746-1752, pg. 1

Caroline County, Virginia, 10 May 1751 "Moses Hurt and Ann his wife and Ann Hurt the wife of William Hurt being first privately examined acknowledged their deed indented to Thomas Dickason and admitted to recoord." - Caroline County Court Order Book 1746-1754, pg. 252.
 
Stennard, Ann (I5475)
 
1410 CAROLINE F.W.H. V. ALTER

OBITUARY.
Died, the 21st of this month, Mrs. Caroline Von Alter, at the age of 75 years
and five months. She was born at the ancestral manor of her father Baron Von
Kutzleben near Langensalza in Thuringia, received an excellent education adequate
to her position in life and was early married to Major Charles August Von Alter
in 1819, who was then commanding the 25th Regiment of Prussian Infantry, for whom
she exchanged the idyllic dales of her home with the classic regions of the Rhine;
during her happy married life she became the mother of nine children, of whom only
two are living to mourn her loss, and of whom one son died on the same date of her
own death in 1842, at the age of 20 years. She lost her beloved husband in December
1847, and resolved to leave Germany with her two children for America in 1849,
arriving in Buffalo in November of the same year, where she remained during the
next winter and reached Manitowoc on the 5th of May 1850, where she has resided
ever since with her children and their families.
She was a most exemplary mother, apparently living only for the happiness of her
family and ever trying to be a constant joy and comfort to them and to all who were
near and dear to her, while her daughter and son and their children again, seemed
to vie with each other to make the declining years of their aged parent as void of
cares and troubles as earthly existence ever would permit.
The funeral on last Sunday was very largely attended, her favorite hymns were played
and sung at the grave and a very able and appropriate oration was delivered by one
of her oldest acquaintances and friends, all trying to show the high esteem and
reverence with which the beloved deceased had inspired every one who ever had had
the pleasure and honor of her acquaintance.
We close with the sincere wish that our last moments may be as happy and peaceful
as those of her who has left us to meet again only in eternity.
Manitowoc Tribune Thursday, April 28, 1870 pg. 1
********
[Mrs. Caroline Alter/bur. 04-24-1870]
[Caroline died at age 75, birthplace-Saxony, houskeeper, fam.#17
cause: old age & gen. debility - 1870 census mortality list] 
Von Kutzleben, Caroline (I9901)
 
1411 Caspar Barth was the stamp cutter at Kongsberg Mint during Christian 5's reign. All stamps made by the Norwegian randskriftspecier were cut by Caspar Barth, who, after 4 years of work at the Mint in Oslo, in 1686 moved to Kongsberg, where he worked until 1704.
 
Barth, Caspar (I10924)
 
1412 Casper Barth - b July 16, 1651, d July 2, 1708 buried July 9. He worked 4 years at the Mint in Oslo beginning in 1682 until he moved back to Kongsberg about 1686. In Olso he married Margrete Andersdatter Warbjerg from Kongsberg in Old Aker church in Oslo Nov 21 1683. Margrete Warbjerg died Oct 5 1699 buried Oct 11 in Kongsberg.

Engravings done by Casper in Oslo on 5 coins and 4 medals are kept in the museum. This was in connection to king Christian V visit 1685. He worked at the Kongsberg mint until 1704.

Four of Casper's works from the Royal Mint in Kongsberg from 1686-94-99 were enlarged and fastened to the rail on the Nybrua bridge when it was recently refurbished.
 
Barth, Caspar (I10924)
 
1413 Caswell Co., NC Will Book M, p. 23 Bennett, Thomas (I21871)
 
1414 cause: diphtheria Mitchell, Susan (I46478)
 
1415 CECELIA ANDERSON, b. February 14, 1840, La Salle county, IL. (hus) Styrk Sjurson Reque, b. November 27, 1836, Voss, Norway. Married July 2, 1865, at Cambridge, Wis. Cecelia grew to womanhood in the Norwegian settlement at Koshkonong Prairie, where her parents settled in 1841. After her marriage she took an active part in Lutheran church affairs, and at Spring Grove, Minn., where she and her husband lived for many years, she organized the first Ladies' Aid society of that community. She died, after a lingering illness, on May 30, 1900, at Spring Grove. Rudolf Kvelve (9i) has this to say regarding her: 'I was a small boy at the time of Aunt Cecelia's last illness, but I remember her as a very kindly woman, one who was deeply religious. She was glad to see me and told me she would soon be going home to our Father in Heaven. She did go home soon after that, and I can remember the funeral, the first one of which I have any recollection, and how perplexed I was. I was only eight years old then.' Styrk came to this country with his parents, Sjur Styrkson Reque and Anne Gjermo (Reque) in 1845 and settled at Leeds, Wis., about twenty miles north of Madison, Wis. Three years later they moved to the famous Koshkonong settlement in Dane county, where Styrk received his preliminary education. Later he continued his studies at the University of Wisconsin, and at Concordia Theological Seminary at St. Louis, Mo., graduating with a divinity degree. His first charge was at Roche a Cree, near New Lisbon, Wis., where he served several neighboring congregations. In 1871 he accepted a call extended to him from Spring Grove, Minn., and there he remained as pastor for thirty-nine years. Quoting from Rev. A. 0. Johnson in his biography of Rev. Reque: 'In 1876 the saloons, up to that time a curse and a disgrace to Spring Grove, were voted out, and no one questions the contention that the change was due to the fearless and untiring work of the strong and energetic pastor.' He died August 20, 1910, at Spring Grove, Minn.



Source: The Anderson-Krogh Genealogy 1956, p. 209 
Anderson, Cecelia (I18773)
 
1416 Census analysis for Minard and Catherine Schutt

1810 Jefferson, Schoharie, NY (ancestry image #4 of 8)
Minard Scutt
1 M < 10 (Isaac abt 5)
1 M 10-16 (Abraham 12)
1 M 26-45 (Minard abt 43)
2 F under 10 (Mary 7, Charity abt 2)
1 F 10-16 (Anna 14)
1 F 26-45 (Catherine 36)
[Lena was 17, married to Thomas Hunter. Elizabeth was 16, married to Isaac Shutts. Both listed next to Minard.]

1820 Jerusalem, Ontario, NY (ancestry image #3 of 4)
Minard Scutt
2 M <10 (John 10, Henry 4)
1 M 10-16 (Isaac abt 15)
1 M 45+ (Minard abt 53)
1 F <10 (Eleanor est 2)
1 F 10-16 (Charity abt 12)
1 F 16-26 (Mary 17)
1 F 45+ (Catherine 46)
2 persons in agriculture
[Next to John Tincklepach, son-in-law, husband of Anna.]

1825 Jerusalem, Yates, NY (p. 84-85)
Minard Scutt
4 M and 3 F
1 M subject to militia
1 M qualified to vote
1 F unmarried under 16 (Eleanor est 7)
1 F unmarried 16-45 (Charity abt 17)
30 acres; 9 neat cattle; 11 horses; 40 sheep; 11 hogs; 20 yds. of fulled cloth; 13 yds. of flannel and other woollen cloth; 56 yds of linen, cotton.
[Mary married in 1822 and left household. Next listing on the page is son Abraham Scutt.]

1830 Jerusalem, Yates, NY (ancestry image #29 of 36)
Minard Schutt
1 M 50-60 (Minard abt 63)
1 F 10-15 (Eleanor est 12)
1 F 50-60 (Catharine 56)

1835 Barrington, Yates, NY (p. 22-23)
Minard Scutt
3 M and 3 F (Minard abt 68, John 24, Henry 19)
1 M subject to militia
1 M entitled to vote
1 F unmarried under 16 (??)
1 F unmarried between 16-45 (Eleanor est 17)
60 acres; 2 neat cattle; 0 horses; 14 sheep; 4 hogs; 13 yds of fulled cloth; 70 yds of flannel and other woollen cloths.

1840 Barrington, Yates, NY (ancestry image #19 of 22)
Minard Scutt
1 M 20-30 (John 29 or Henry 24)
1 M 60-70 (Minard abt 73)
1 F 20-30 (Eleanor est 22)
1 F 60-70 (Catherine 66)

1850 Wayland, Steuben, NY (ancestry image #11 of 50)
Goodrich, Allen 50 Farmer b NY
, Charity 42 b NY
, Alpheus 22 Farmer b NY
, Warren 21 Farmer b nY
, William 19 b NY
, Ann 16 b NY
, Charles 15 b NY
Schultz, Catharine 76 b NY

1860 Campbell, Steuben, NY (ancestry image #6 of 42)
Goodrich, Alpheus A. 32 Farmer b NY
, Sarah L. 22 b NY
, William A. 3 b NY
, Maximilian 1 b NY
, Allen 60 Domestic b NY
, Charity 51 Domestic b NY
Schutt, Catherine 96 Domestic b NY
[Catherine was actually 86.] 
Schutt, Meindert (I76)
 
1417 Census of the state of New York, for 1855. Microfilm. Various County Clerk Offices, New York. Source (S729)
 
1418 Census of the state of New York, for 1855. Microfilm. Various County Clerk Offices, New York. Source (S729)
 
1419 Census of the state of New York, for 1855. Microfilm. Various County Clerk Offices, New York. Source (S729)
 
1420 Census of the state of New York, for 1855. Microfilm. Various County Clerk Offices, New York. Source (S729)
 
1421 Census of the state of New York, for 1855. Microfilm. Various County Clerk Offices, New York. Source (S729)
 
1422 Census of the state of New York, for 1865. Microfilm. New York State Archives, Albany, New York. Source (S730)
 
1423 Census of the state of New York, for 1865. Microfilm. New York State Archives, Albany, New York. Source (S730)
 
1424 Census of the state of New York, for 1875. Microfilm. New York State Archives, Albany, New York. Source (S731)
 
1425 Census Publishing. <i>State Census Records</i>. West Jordan, Utah: Census Publishing, 2003-2009. Source (S748)
 
1426 Census Publishing. <i>State Census Records</i>. West Jordan, Utah: Census Publishing, 2003-2009. Source (S748)
 
1427 Census Publishing. <i>State Census Records</i>. West Jordan, Utah: Census Publishing, 2003-2009. Source (S748)
 
1428 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: IN COUNTY: Noble DIVISION: Swan Township REEL NO: M432-162 PAGE NO: 279a
REFERENCE: Enumerated by me on the 26th day of Oct 1850
=========================================================================================================================
LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB
=========================================================================================================================
13 90 90 Schult Abraham 52 M Farmer N.y
14 90 90 Schult Eluta 53 F Mass
15 90 90 Schult Jackson 20 M Farmer N.Y
16 90 90 Schult Dilila * 17 F N.Y
17 90 90 Schult Abraham 14 M N.Y X
18 90 90 Schult Elizabeth 13 F N.Y X
19 90 90 Schult Roxanna 10 F N.Y X
20 91 91 Schult Thomas 34 M Farmer 600 N.Y
21 91 91 Schult Hannah 21 F Ohio
22 91 91 Schult Lewis C 2 M Ind
23 91 91 Schult Thomas N 1/12 M Ind 
Schutt, Abraham (I74)
 
1429 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Pittsylvania DIVISION: Northern District REEL NO: M432-968 PAGE NO: 232A
REFERENCE: enumerated by me on the 21st day of October 1850 Wm.H.Waller
==================================================================================================================
LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB REMARKS
==================================================================================================================
17 914 914 Reynolds James M. 47 M / Farmer 1,000 Va . . . . .
18 914 914 Reynolds Rebecca 43 F . . . Va . . . . .
19 914 914 Reynolds Elizabeth 22 F . . . Va . . . . .
20 914 914 Reynolds William 20 M . . . Va . X . . .
21 914 914 Reynolds Mary 18 F . . . Va . X . . .
22 914 914 Reynolds John 16 M . Laborer . Va . X . . .
23 914 914 Reynolds Samuel 14 M . . . Va . X . . .
24 914 914 Reynolds Joseph 12 M . . . Va . X . . .
25 914 914 Reynolds Henry 10 M . . . Va . X . . .
26 914 914 Reynolds James 8 M . . . Va . X . . .
27 914 914 Reynolds Wilson 7 M . . . Va . X . . . 
Reynolds, Elizabeth Ann (I25)
 
1430 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Pittsylvania DIVISION: Northern District REEL NO: M432-968 PAGE NO: 235B
REFERENCE: enumerated by me on the 24th day of October 1850 Wm H.Waller

21 964 964 Reynolds Allen 31 M / Overseer . Va . . X . .
22 964 964 Reynolds Martha 31 F .. . N.C. . . . . .
23 964 964 Reynolds Levi 12 M .. . Va . . . . .
24 964 964 Reynolds James 6 M .. . Va . . . . .
25 964 964 Reynolds Tabby 3 F .. . Va . . . . .
26 964 964 Reynolds William 1 M .. . Va . . . . .

CENSUS YR: 1880 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Franklin DIVISION: Dickensons Series: T9 Roll: 1366 Page: 252
REFERENCE: enumerated by me on the 16th day of June 1880

Reynolds,AllenWM60MarriedFarmerVaVaVa
Martha A.WF50WifeMarriedKeeping HouseVaVaVa
JohnWM24SonSingleFarm LaborerVaVaVa
CephusWM22SonSingleFarm LaborerVaVaVa 
Reynolds, Allen G (I21505)
 
1431 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Pittsylvania DIVISION: Southern District REEL NO: M432-968 PAGE NO: 254A/B
REFERENCE: enumerated by me on the 12th day of November Wm H. Waller
====================================================================================================================================
LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB REMARKS
====================================================================================================================================
39 1236 1236 Edwards George 60 M / Farmer 1,265 VA . . . . .
40 1236 1236 Edwards Judith 62 F . . . VA . . . . .
41 1236 1236 Edwards George 25 M / Laborer . VA . . . . .
42 1236 1236 Edwards Calahill 20 M / Laborer . VA . . . .
1 1236 1236 Edwards Harriet 27 F . . . VA . . X . Handwritten page #506
2 1236 1236 Edwards Almira 24 F . . . VA . . . . .

CENSUS YR: 1860 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Pittsylvania DIVISION: Northern - Museville PAGE 166
====================================================================================================================================
LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. RE PERS BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB REMARKS
====================================================================================================================================
39 1236 1236 Edwards George A. 78 M W Farmer 5500 12000 VA . . . . .
40 1236 1236 Edwards Judieth C. 77 F W . . . VA . . . . .
41 1236 1236 Edwards George H. 37 M W Farm Laborer . VA . . . . .
42 1236 1236 Edwards Harriet 30 F W . VA . . . .

1860 Slave Schedule, Pittsylvania County, VA
North District, page 444
George A Edwards 18 slaves 
Edwards, George Allen (I26)
 
1432 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Pittsylvania DIVISION: Southern District REEL NO: M432-968 PAGE NO: 68B
REFERENCE: enumerated by me on the 31 July 1850 Wm H Wooding
====================================================================================================================================
LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB REMARKS
====================================================================================================================================
1 8 8 Stowe Samuel 4 M . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . Handwritten pg#134 in upper left corner
2 9 9 Pigg Peyton 47 M / Farmer 400 Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
3 9 9 Pigg Susan 44 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
4 9 9 Pigg Martha 20 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
5 9 9 Pigg Matilda 18 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
6 10 10 Dunn Isaiah 32 M / Ditcher . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
7 10 10 Dunn Nancy 26 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
8 10 10 Dunn Martha 40 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
9 10 10 Dunn Sally 28 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
10 10 10 Dunn Harmon 5 M . . . Pittsylvania, Va . . . . .
11 10 10 Dunn John 4 M . . . Tennessee . . . . .
12 10 10 Dunn Elizabeth 2 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
13 11 11 Hurt Robert 37 M / Baptist Clergeman . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
14 11 11 Hurt Levinia 33 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
15 11 11 Hurt Elizabeth 13 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . X . . .
16 11 11 Hurt William 11 M . . . Pittsylvania Va . X . . .
17 11 11 Hurt Hariett 6 F . . . Pittsylvania Va . X . . .
18 11 11 Hurt Robert 1 M . . . Pittsylvania Va . . . . .
19 12 12 Owen Sarah 72 F . . . Halifax Va . . . . . 
Hurt, Robert Smith (I548)
 
1433 CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: VA COUNTY: Pitttsylvania DIVISION: Northern District REEL NO: M432-968 PAGE NO: 230B
REFERENCE: Enumerated on the 18th day of Oct.1850 by Wm H. Waller
==================================================================================================================
LN HN FN LAST NAME FIRST NAME AGE SEX RACE OCCUP. VAL. BIRTHPLACE MRD. SCH. R/W DDB REMARKS
==================================================================================================================
8 890 890 Jones Drusy 29 F . . . Virginia . . X . .
9 890 890 Jones Julia 10 F . . . Virginia . . . . .
10 890 890 Jones Green 8 M . . . Virginia . . . . .
11 890 890 Jones Vincenti 4 M . . . Virginia . . . . .
12 890 890 Jones Ellis 8/12 M . . . Virginia . . . . .
13 890 890 Griffith Jane 45 F . . 100 Virginia . . X . .
14 890 890 Griffith Polly 47 F . . . Virginia . . X . .
15 890 890 Griffith Rebecca 56 F . . . Virginia . . X . . 
Griffith, Drusey (I1828)
 
1434 Chandler Awbrey (b 1711 Westmoreland Co., VA & d 1756 there
) marr. Elizabeth Sorrell (bc 1707 VA & d 1748 Westmoreland Co. She was the dtr of Thomas Sorrell & Elizabeth O'Cahane, both of Westmoreland Co., VA). The Awbrey children were James (bc 1743) and Martha (bc 1742 in Stafford Co., VA, marr. Philip Pendleton in 1766, & d aft. 1790 Pittsylvania Co., VA.)


Virginia County Records, New Series, Volume I, 1913: Westmoreland County
Westmoreland County Wills
Book XIII.
Westmoreland County Wills Book XIII.

Awbrey, Chandler, 9 Dec. 1755; 25 Sept. 1756.

Son James Sorrell Awbrey at 21 years; daus. A. and --- Awbrey; wife Elizabeth one third of land, a horse and saddle; to sister Hannah McAuley, niece Mary McAuley, Mrs. Elizabeth Atwell and to Sarah Atwell a suit of mourning each; children to be educated.

John Awbrey Jr. of Virginia had a son Chandler Awbrey. He was named after William Chandler who raised John Jr. and Francis after their father, John Sr., died in 1692.


Westmoreland County, Virginia Wills, 1654-1800
Awbrey, Chandler, 9 Dec. 1755; 25 Sept. 1756. Son James Sorrell Awbrey at 21 years; daus. A. and --- Awbrey; wife Elizabeth one third of land, a horse and saddle; to sister Hannah McAuley, niece Mary McAuley, Mrs. Elizabeth Atwell and to Sarah Atwell a suit of mourning each; children to be educated
[Moore_from ancestry_09262007.FTW]

Chandler Awbrey (b 1711 Westmoreland Co., VA & d 1756 there
) marr. Elizabeth Sorrell (bc 1707 VA & d 1748 Westmoreland Co. She was the dtr of Thomas Sorrell & Elizabeth O'Cahane, both of Westmoreland Co., VA). The Awbrey children were James (bc 1743) and Mart ha (bc 1742 in Stafford Co., VA, marr. Philip Pendleton in 1766, & d aft. 1790 Pittsylvania Co., VA.)


Virginia County Records, New Series, Volume I, 1913: Westmoreland County
Westmoreland County Wills
Book XIII.
Westmoreland County Wills Book XIII.

Awbrey, Chandler, 9 Dec. 1755; 25 Sept. 1756.

Son James Sorrell Awbrey at 21 years; daus. A. and --- Awbrey; wife Elizabeth one third of land, a horse and saddle; to sister Hannah McAuley, niece Mary McAuley, Mrs. Elizabeth Atwell and to Sarah At well a suit of mourning each; children to be educated.

John Awbrey Jr. of Virginia had a son Chandler Awbrey. He was named after William Chandler who raised John Jr. and Francis after their father, John Sr., died in 1692.


Westmoreland County, Virginia Wills, 1654-1800
Awbrey, Chandler, 9 Dec. 1755; 25 Sept. 1756. Son James Sorrell Awbrey at 21 years; daus. A. and --- Awbrey; wife Elizabeth one third of land, a horse and saddle; to sister Hannah McAuley, niece Mar y McAuley, Mrs. Elizabeth Atwell and to Sarah Atwell a suit of mourning each; children to be educated





















 
Awbrey, Chandler (I596)
 
1435 Charity Ballenger & Jeremiah Wade
Jeremiah, born c. 1710, was probably the brother of Pearce Wade, who married Charity's sister Mary Ballenger. Their father may have been Robert Wade of Hanover County, VA, and Robert in turn may have been the brother of Charity Wade Ballenger, mother of both girls.
c. 1723: Charity Ballenger was born in New Jersey.
Jeremiah and Charity were already married before Joseph Ballenger made his will on 5 Jun 1744.
21 May 1745: Jeremiah purchased 150 acres on Great Byrd Creek in Goochland County from John and Sarah Denny for £45. The parcel adjoined John Martin, John Hinson, Ebenezer Adams, deceased, and John Denny. The witnesses were Pearce Wade, James George, and Joseph Pare.[1]
20 Dec 1748: Jeremiah and Charity Wade sold 150 acres on Byrd Creek to John Faris for £45. The adjoining landowners were Richard Adams, John Hinson, and Colonel John Martin. Witnesses: John Mosely Junior, William Robards, and Benjamin Denny.[2]
26 Dec 1748: Jeremiah bought 197 acres on Old Johns Creek in Goochland from Charles and Tabitha Rayley for £70. It was bounded Stephen Hughes, Daniel Stoner, William Runnals, and John Rayley. Witnesses: Robert Hughes, Tucker Woodson, Robert Hughes Junior, and R. Walton.[3]
24 Feb 1749: Along with Pearce Wade, Jeremiah Wade of "Cumberland County" was security on a bond of £400 for John Britt of Goochland County as executor for John Britt, deceased.[4] Cumberland County was formed from Goochland that year.
11 Apr 1750: As co-executors of the estate of Joseph Ballenger, Jeremiah Wade of Cumberland County and Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon [Cawthon] of Albemarle County sold 128 acres on Byrd Creek in Goochland County to John Britt for £60. The parcel was adjoined by John Haden, Bryan Connely, and Arthur Hopkins. The sale was witnessed by James George, William Britt, and John Faris.[5] John Britt was apparently already living on the acreage.
12 Jul 1751: Jeremiah Wade, planter, purchased 180 acres on Thrasher's Creek in Albemarle County from Howard Cash, planter. Witnesses: David Wade, Michael Smith, and Chisley Daniel.[6]
2 Apr 1752: Jeremiah sold land adjoining Pearce Wade to David Wade. Witnesses: Pearce Wade, James George, and Christly Daniel.[7]
2 Jul 1752: Jeremiah sold the parcel bought from Charles Rayley to David Siser. The land was now in Cumberland County, while Jeremiah was described as being of Albemarle County. Witnesses: Tarleton Woodson Junior, Ben Watkins Junior, Stephen Tampton Junior, Drury Woodson, and Thomas Pleasants.[8]
2 Jul 1763: Along with Pearce Wade and Richard and Joseph Ballenger, Jeremiah sold 800 acres, part of a grant of 2,000 acres, on the south side of the Buffalo River under the Tobacco Mountains in Amherst County, VA to George Seaton.[9] Originally granted to Richard and Joseph, 400 acres each had been granted by them to Jeremiah and Pearce.
20 Aug 1768: Jeremiah sold 114 acres on the top of Smith's Mountain adjoining Joseph Ballenger and William Cabell to Joseph Ballinger for £10. On the same day, he sold 378 acres on the headwaters of Thrasher's and Franklin Creeks to John Parks. This second conveyance was witnessed by Matthew Tucker, Drury Tucker, and Joseph Ballenger.[10] Jeremiah was described as being of St. Ann's Parish.
According to William Scroggins, Jeremiah sold three slaves to Hector McAllister, but the date wasn't available to him. He also reports that, along with Neil Campbell "and others", he sold 400 acres on Rockfish Creek to George Donald and Company.[11] Could the latter have been a trust deed? Neil Campbell's mistress, Tabitha Ballowe later married Joseph Ballenger.
17 Feb 1772: Jeremiah Wade Senior sold 378 acres in the fork of the James River adjoining Matthew Tucker, Drury Tucker and Lacy Sine in Albemarle to Richard Bennett.[12]
8 Jul 1772: Jeremiah made his will in Bedford County, VA, naming executors Richard Ballenger and James and Nathan Hilton. In it, he left his estate was to be equally divided among his children, but he made no mention of a wife, thus Charity must have predeceased him. Witnesses: Abraham Ervine, Jesse Hilton, and Elizabeth Mitchell. It was proved 28 Sep 1772, with Guy Smith serving as security for James Hilton. Executor Hilton made his inventory and appraisal on 10 Oct 1772.[13] Jesse Hilton had been surety for the marriage daughter Mary Ballenger Wade to Whitehead Ryan.
Children of Jeremiah and Charity Ballenger Wade:
Jacob Wade (c. 1743 - ; m. 1st Anne _______, m. 2nd Mary Branch 31 Oct 1800)
Jeremiah Wade (c. 1747 - ; m. Milly _______
Isaac Wade (1756 - 9 Aug 1823, Bedford Co, VA; m. Mary "Polly" Gibbs 11 Feb 1779)
Elizabeth Wade (m. Nathaniel Newman Hylton)
Charity Wade (m. John Dawson)
Mary Ballenger Wade (c. 1761 - ; m. Whitehead Ryan 15 Dec 1778)
Ketturah "Kitty" Wade (c. 1762 - 18 Jul 1839; m. Stephen Mitchell 8 Mar 1783)
Joshua Wade (1762 - 17 Feb 1800, Bedford Co, VA; m. Anna Boatwright 2 Nov 1786)
Lucy Wade (1764 - ; m. James Hylton) 
Wade, Jeremiah (I2169)
 
1436 Charlemagne 742-814 father of
Louis I of France 778-840 father of
Gisele Of France 820-874 mother of
Berenger I of Italy 840-924 father of
Bertila of Spoleto circa 860-914 mother of
Adelbert I of Ivrea 880-925 father of
Beringer I 900-966 father of
Adelbert of Lombardy 936-971 father of
Otto of Lombardy 958-1004 father of
Gerberga of Burgundy 985-1023 mother of
Geoffrey d'Arles 1018-1063 father of
Gerberga de Provence -1112 mother of
Etinette de Gevaudan 117-1160 mother of
Bertrand des Baux 1138-1180 father of
Bertrand des Beaux 1163-1201 father of
Raymond des Baux 1188-1236 father of
Guillaume des Baux 1215-1266 father of
Barrele de Baux -1308 mother of
Foulques de Ponteves -1294 father of
Isnard de Ponteves -1349 father of
Blancas de Ponteves -1396 father of
Antoine de Ponteves -1443 father of
Tanneguy de Ponteves -1524 father of
Marguerite de Ponteves 1502-1546 mother of
Louise de Porcelet -1564 mother of
Louise de Montcalm mother of
Louise de Vabres -1628 mother of
Jeanne Belcastle -1685 mother of
Gabrielle Barjon wife of Jean Bondurant 
Debarjon, Gabrielle (I15205)
 
1437 Charlemagne, meaning Charles the Great (numbered Charles I of France and the Holy Roman Empire) (742/747 28 January 814) was King of the Franks from 768 to his death. He expanded the Frankish kingdoms into a Frankish Empire that incorporated much of Western and Central Europe. During his reign, he conquered Italy and was crowned Imperator Augustus by Pope Leo III on 25 December 800, in an attempted revival of the Roman Empire in the West. His rule is also associated with the Carolingian Renaissance, a revival of art, religion, and culture through the medium of the Catholic Church. Through his foreign conquests and internal reforms, Charlemagne helped define both Western Europe and the Middle Ages.

The son of King Pippin the Short and Bertrada of Laon, he succeeded his father and co-ruled with his brother Carloman I. The latter got on badly with Charlemagne, but war was prevented by the sudden death of Carloman in 771. Charlemagne continued the policy of his father towards the papacy and became its protector, removing the Lombards from power in Italy, and waging war on the Saracens, who menaced his realm from Spain. It was during one of these campaigns that Charlemagne experienced the worst defeat of his life, at Roncesvalles (778). He also campaigned against the peoples to his east, especially the Saxons, and after a protracted war subjected them to his rule. By forcibly converting them to Christianity, he integrated them into his realm and thus paved the way for the later Ottonian dynasty.

 
Charlemagne, Emperor Charles I Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire (I36657)
 
1438 Charles (953–993) was the Duke of Lower Lorraine from 977 until his death.

Born at Laon in the summer of 953, Charles was the son of Louis IV of France and Gerberga of Saxony and the younger brother of King Lothair.[1] He was a sixth generation descendant of Charlemagne.[1][2] When his father was captured by the Normans and held, both his sons were demanded as ransom for his release.[3] Queen Gerberga would only send Charles, who was then handed over and his father was released into the custody of Hugh Capet.[3]

In or before 976, he accused Lothair's wife, Emma, daughter of Lothair II of Italy, of infidelity with Adalberon, Bishop of Laon.[4] The council of Sainte-Macre at Fismes (near Reims) exonerated the queen and the bishop, but Charles maintained his claim and was driven from the kingdom, finding refuge at the court of his cousin, Otto II. Otto promised to crown Charles as soon as Lothair was out of the way and Charles paid him homage, receiving back Lower Lorraine.[4]

In August 978, Lothair invaded Germany and captured the imperial capital of Aachen, but failed to capture either Otto or Charles. In October, Otto and Charles in turn invaded France, devastating the land around Rheims, Soissons, and Laon. In the latter city, the chief seat of the kings of France, Charles was crowned by Theodoric I, Bishop of Metz. Lothair fled to Paris and was there besieged. But a relief army of Hugh Capet's forced Otto and Charles to lift the siege on 30 November. Lothair and Capet, the tables turned once more, chased the German king and his liege back to Aachen and retook Laon.

Around 979, Charles transferred the relics of Saint Gudula from Moorsel to the Saint Gaugericus chapel in Brussels. This is generally accepted as the time when the city was founded. Charles would construct the first permanent fortification in the city, doing so on that same island.

As he had been a vassal also of Lothair, Charles' acts on behalf of Otto were considered treason and he was thereafter excluded from the throne. On Lothair's death (986), the magnates elected his son Louis V and on the latter's death (987), Hugh Capet. Thus, the House of Capet came to the throne over the disgraced and ignored Charles.[5] Charles' unexceptional marriage and his lack of wealth are two of the reasons he was denied the throne.[5] Charles made war on Hugh, even taking Rheims and Laon. However, on Maundy Thursday[6] (26 March) 991, he was captured, through the perfidy of the Bishop Adalberon, and was imprisoned by Hugh in Orléans, where he died a short while later, in or before 993.[7] He was succeeded as Duke of Lower Lorraine by his son Otto.[7]

In 1666, the sepulchre of Charles was discovered in the Basilica of Saint Servatius in Maastricht.[need quotation to verify] His body appears to have been interred there only in 1001, but that is not the date of his death, as some scholars assumed. Though Charles ruled Lower Lorraine, the Dukes of Lorraine (Upper Lotharingia) counted him as Charles I of Lorraine.

Family
In 970 Charles married Adelaide of Troyes. Together he and Adelaide had:

Otto, succeeded as Duke of Lower Lotharingia [1]
Ermengarde, who married Albert I, Count of Namur[1]
Gerberga of Lower Lorraine (b. 975–1018), who married Lambert I, Count of Louvain[1]
Louis (c. 989–aft. 993)[1]
Charles (b. 989)[1]

References
Detlev Schwennicke, Europäische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten, Neue Folge, Band II (Marburg, Germany: J. A. Stargardt, 1984), Tafel 1
Detlev Schwennicke, Europäische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten, Neue Folge, Band I (Marburg, Germany: J. A. Stargardt, 1980), Tafel 2
The Annals of Flodoard of Reims, 919–966, eds. & trans. Stephen Fanning; Bernard S. Bachrach (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2004), p. 44
Pierre Riché, The Carolingians; A Family Who Forged Europe, trans. Michael Idomir Allen (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983), p. 276
Pierre Riché, The Carolingians; A Family Who Forged Europe, trans. Michael Idomir Allen (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983), p. 278
La cathédrale de Laon by madame Suzanne Martinet, page 80
Pierre Riché, The Carolingians; A Family Who Forged Europe, trans. Michael Idomir Allen (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983), p. 279 
Duke of Lower Lorraine, Charles (I36780)
 
1439 Charles B. Brown

b: 1849

Charles B. Brown, a prominent farmer of LeRoy township, was born in Noble county, Indiana, August 19, 1849, son of Asa and Lucy (Baker) Brown. He received his early education in Cold Springs, Ind., and at Austin, Minn., and then engaged in farming in Lansing and LeRoy townships until 1885, when he went to Anoka, Minn., and engaged in lumbering for some fourteen years.

In 1899 he returned to LeRoy township and engaged in farming on the Mason place in section 8, where he is now successfully engaged in diversified farming, making a specialty of Durham and Black Poll cattle.

Mr. Brown was married November 5, 1873, to Florence Mason, born in Rutland county, Vermont, May 12, 1856, daughter of Joseph and Lucinda (Freeman) Mason. This union has been blessed with three children: Jay R., born March 6, 1875, is manager of the North American telegraph in the Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce; May, born July 16, 1880, is the wife of Charles Howe, of LeRoy village. Grace is the wife of Arthur J. Arnot, of Bismarck, N. D.


HISTORY OF MOWER COUNTY, MN. 1911. 
Brown, Charles Bond (I4365)
 
1440 Charles Carter
Birth: 1732
Death: Jun. 24, 1806 Charles City County Virginia, USA
During the first War for American Independence (1776-1783) Shirley Plantation and the Carter's of Shirley played a vital role in the forming of the new nation. Charles Carter, fifth generation owner of Shirley, was a loyal member of the House of Burgesses. He was member of the House representing two localities, Lancaster and Charles City County, from 1758 until 1774. The reasons this membership ceased was due to the Declaration of Independence being signed and the House of Burgesses was dissolved by Governor Lord Dunmore. Charles then served as a member of Virginia Convention of March and December, 1775. He then served in Charles City County Militia during the Revolutionary War, but records do not indicate that he saw any action. Charles allowed his James River home of Shirley to serve as a supply depot for the Continental Army towards the end of the war. This action allowed the Marquis de Lafayette to supply his army with the munitions and armaments needed to besiege Yorktown, ultimately resulting in General Lord Cornwallis' surrender and the United States of America becoming an independent and sovereign nation.

Charles Carter's will of 1803 reads: "That is to say I commend my body to the Earth to be decently laid near my honored parents as soon after my decease as may be convenient, without any funeral pomp and nothing but the burial service to be read over my grave by the parson of the Parish (should we be so fortunate as to have one among us) for which trouble, I desire he may be amply paid: And when this my departure may happen, I earnestly request of my family and friends that they do not go into mourning or wear black clothes; and this whim I expect they will gratify me in, as I always thought the custom absurd and extravagant answering no good purpose that I know of."

Parents:
John Carter (1690 - 1742)
Elizabeth Hill Carter Cocke (1703 - 1771)
Spouse:
Anne Butler Moore Carter (1750 - 1809)
Children:
Robert Hill Carter (1774 - 1806)
Bernard Carter (1776 - 1776)
John Carter (1777 - 1784)
Catherine Spotswood Carter Berkeley (1778 - 1809)
Anne Hill Carter Lee (1779 - 1829)
Bernard Moore Carter (1780 - 1843)
Butler Carter (1784 - 1786)
Infant Daughter Carter (1792 - 1792)
Infant Carter (1794 - 1794)
Calphemia Carter (1796 - 1797)

Burial: Shirley Plantation, Shirley, Charles City County, Virginia, USA 
Carter, Charles Hill Sr, Esq (I43312)
 
1441 Charles Carter of Cleve, was born about 1707 to Robert "King" Carter, a land baron and member of the Governor's Council, and Elizabeth Landon Willis Carter. It was the second marriage of both his parents. His elder half brother John Carter (1690-1742) became secretary of the colony and also a councillor, and his younger brother, Landon Carter (1710-1763), served with him in the House of Burgesses. Charles Carter and his brothers were educated in England. After his return to Virginia early in 1724 he moved to one of his father's estates near Urbanna, in Middlesex County. The governor appointed Carter naval officer, or customs official, for the Rappahannock District on November 1, 1729, and on the following April 29 named him a justice of the peace for Middlesex County.

After the death of his father Carter moved to King George County to the Stanstead plantation, which he inherited. Later he purchased nearby Cleve Plantation, where he resided for the rest of his life. He was often referred to as Charles Carter of Cleve to distinguish him from several relatives of the same name. About 1728 Carter married Mary Walker I, of Yorktown (-1742). They had three daughters and two sons before her death early in 1742. Their eldest daughter, Mary Walker Carter II, married Carter's nephew Charles Carter (1732–1806), who served with him in the House of Burgesses, and their only surviving son, Charles Carter (1738–1796), also served with him in the House of Burgesses and later sat on the Council of State. On December 25, 1742, Carter married Anne Byrd, the seventeen-year-old daughter of William Byrd II, of whose estate he was an executor. They had six daughters and two sons before she died on September 11, 1757. Carter courted at least two women, including the widow Martha Dandridge Custis, before he married sixteen- or seventeen-year-old Lucy Taliaferro about June 9, 1763. They had one daughter, who was born a few weeks before his death. 
Carter, Charles (I47151)
 
1442 Charles Robert Warren and Anne Warren; connection to the Mullins/Terry/Davenport/Irby and other allied families in VA, NC and KY.

Charles Robert Warren was due to family associations and connections, likely first married to Ann Graves; daughter of Thomas Graves b. 1721 and Isabella Susan Bartlett. *Of course, as a genealogist, sometimes associations are all you have if marriage documents no longer exist.* This is especially true for the wife, as she is often left out of records. Ann Graves Warren's grandmother was Sarah Ann Davenport who married Thomas Graves Sr. b. 1691 in King and Queen, VA. Sarah Ann Davenport Graves had two brothers who married into the Terry family; Thomas and Richard Davenport. Grace and Elizabeth Terry were cousins of James Terry who married Rebecca Dudgeon. James Terry b. abt 1702 in King William, VA and Rebecca Dudgeon Terry b. abt 1705 in Donegal, Ireland, were the great grandparents of Mary Polly Terry who married Henry Mullins. James Terry's father was James Terry Sr. who died 1744 in Caroline Co., VA or Prince George, VA. He was married to Mary Dianne Royall. Cousin of James Terry was Grace Terry who m. Thomas Davenport. Grace was daughter of Thomas Terry and Sarah Ashburn.

Henry and Mary Polly Terry Mullins lived for about 20 years in Wilkes, NC before moving to KY abt 1804. Mary Polly Terry's parents were Olive and Elizabeth Irby Terry. Olive and Elizabeth Irby Terry lived in Caswell, NC; moved there (first Orange, NC) in 1757 with James and Rebecca Dudgeon Terry. James Terry was JP of Halifax, VA in the 1750's. Before this, he lived in Goochland. Ann Graves Warren had an Uncle; Rice Graves; younger brother to her father Thomas - who married Jane Young. Rice and Jane Young Graves had two daughters who married the same man - William Abney. They were Amelia Graves who died 1810 and then Julia Graves. William and Julia Graves Abney had a son named Elijah Abney who first married Lucinda America Mullins - daughter of Gardner Mullins and Rachel L. Dennis Mullins. Gardner was the son of Henry and Mary Polly Terry Mullins. Then Elijah Abney married Emily Owens - granddaughter of Spencer and Mary King Mullins. Spencer was also a son of Henry and Mary Polly Terry Mullins.

Ann Graves Warren also had a brother named William Graves who married Ann Pettus. I think this may be the Ann Graves mentioned with regards to her dower. I believe William and Ann Pettus Graves lived in Fayette, KY with Thomas Graves - William and Ann Graves' father. Thomas Graves b. 1721 also was in Caswell, NC for a time before moving to Fayette, KY. So there is definitely a strong Caswell, NC connection. I can see this as well with Charles Warren's brother Burris Warren who had a son named Charles W. Warren who married Mary Haggard; sister to Eleanor Haggard who m. Micajah Sutton. Both Mary and Eleanor Haggard were daughters of Rev. Henry Hazelrigg Haggard and Dorothea Randolph Haggard. It is also believed that Henry and Dorothea Randolph Haggard were in Caswell before moving to Tennessee. Dorothea Randolph's brother William Randolph fought in the same Caswell Lamb's Artillery in NC as Olive Terry; father to Mary Polly Terry (Mullins). It appears now that Dorothea Randolph's father died in Caswell, NC. Rebecca Sutton- daughter of Micajah Sutton and Eleanor Haggard Sutton married Jackson Mullins - son of Gardner Mullins who was son of Henry and Mary Polly Terry Mullins.

Yet another Uncle to Ann Graves was John Graves b. 1714 in Spotsylvania, VA and married Lucy Adams. They had a son named John Adams Graves b. 1737 who married Frances Coleman. They moved to Boone, KY. Their son Easom Graves married Elizabeth Mourning Parrott; daughter of John Parrott and Ruth Treadwell. John Parrot was son of Nathaniel Parrott and Penelope Irby. I believe Penelope was likely now the half sister to Elizabeth Irby who married Olive Terry. Elizabeth Irby Terry was the mother of Mary Polly Terry mentioned above.

**Also, Charles and Ann Graves Warren had a younger daughter Mary Warren who married Walker Langford; brother to Stephen Langford. As we know, Henry and Mary Polly Terry Mullins also had a younger daughter named Lois Mullins (close in age to Mary Warren), who married Stephen Langford in 1807; a few years after the Mullins' family moved to KY from Wilkes, NC. It is possible that Stephen Langford assisted the family in their travels through the Cumberland Gap. They could have stayed at Langford's Station at first. So, my guess is that Mary Polly Terry Mullins was acquainted with the Warren family through Ann Graves who married Charles Warren. 
Terry, Grace (I38694)
 
1443 Charles was one of five children born to John Oakes III and his wife, Rachel Rawlings. Charles was born about 1713 in King William Co VA, and died about 1760 in Orange Co VA. The earliest record showing his presence in Orange Co is a land deed dated November 18 1735. By 1737 he had surveyed 400 acres of new land for himself. In July 1736 he was accused of trespassing by a Mr Henry Willis. In September 1736 John Cuddin claimed Charles owed him two pounds for a mule he had sold him; both cases were dismissed. In 1738 Charles appeared on a delinquent tax list in Orange Co, he evidently had a runaway slave who would have been taxable.

Charles married Sarah Haley before 1730 in Orange Co VA. She was one of ten children born to Edward & Catherine Haley.
Their 4 children:
(1) James Sr., b. abt. 1730 Orange Co, VA
(2) Elizabeth, b. abt. 1732; m. Rev. Dutton Lane Sr. #71034359
(3) John, b. 07/01/1735 King William Co, VA
(4) Charles Jr., b. abt. 1736; m. Jane (Sloan) 
Oakes, Charles (I48337)
 
1444 Charlotte Lee, Lady Baltimore
Born 13 March 1678 (Old Style); 23 March 1678 (New Style)
St. James's Park, St. James, London, England
Died 22 January 1721 (Old Style); 1 February 1721 (New Style)
Woodford Hall, Woodford, Essex, England
Spouse(s)Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore, Christopher Crowe
Issue
Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore
Hon. Benedict Leonard Calvert, Governor of Maryland
Hon. Edward Henry Calvert
Hon. Charlotte Calvert
Hon. Jane Calvert
Hon. Cecil Calvert
Christopher Crowe
Catherine Crowe
Charlotte Crowe
George Crowe
Father
Edward Henry Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield
Mother
Lady Charlotte Fitzroy
ReligionAnglican
Charlotte Lee, Lady Baltimore (13 March 1678 Old Style – 22 January 1721 Old Style), was an English noblewoman, and granddaughter of King Charles II of England and his mistress Barbara Villiers. She married in 1699, Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore, from whom she separated in 1705; she later married Christopher Crowe. She was the mother of Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, and of Benedict Leonard Calvert, who was Governor of Maryland from 1727–1731.

Early life
Lady Charlotte Lee was born on 13 March 1678 at St. James's Park, St. James, London.[2] She was the eldest of at least fourteen children of Edward Henry Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield (4 February 1663 – 14 July 1716) and Lady Charlotte Fitzroy (5 September 1664 – 17 February 1718), illegitimate daughter of King Charles II by his mistress Barbara Villiers, Countess of Castlemaine, Duchess of Cleveland. Lady Charlotte's mother was fourteen years old at the time of her birth, having married the Earl of Lichfield at the age of thirteen. Her father was also only fifteen at the time of her birth. Her paternal grandparents were Sir Francis Henry Lee of Ditchley, 4th Baronet of Quarendon and Elizabeth Pope, daughter of Thomas Pope, 2nd Earl of Downe.

Marriage to Lord Baltimore
Charlotte Lee's first husband, Benedict Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore
On 2 January 1699, at the age of twenty, she married her first husband Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore (21 March 1679 – 16 April 1715), son of Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore and Jane Lowe. Charlotte assumed the title of Lady Baltimore in February 1715, when her husband succeeded to the title of 4th Baron Baltimore upon the death of his father, the third Baron. The title of Proprietary Governor of the Province of Maryland had been lost to the third Baron during the Glorious Revolution and would be restored to Charles Calvert, the son of Charlotte and Benedict, upon the latter's death on 16 April 1715.

Charlotte and Lord Baltimore had six children:

Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, 18th Proprietor Governor of Maryland, FRS (29 September 1699 – 24 April 1751), married Mary Janssen, daughter of Sir Theodore Janssen, 1st Baronet Janssen and Williamsa Henley,[4] by whom he had three children, including Frederick Calvert, 6th Baron Baltimore, Louisa Calvert, and Caroline Calvert. He also had an illegitimate son, by the name of Benedict Swingate Calvert, who settled in Maryland, and married Elizabeth Calvert, by whom he had issue.

Hon. Benedict Leonard Calvert, Governor of Maryland, (1727–1731). He died 1 June 1732 on his passage home to England.

Hon. Edward Henry Calvert (born ca. 1700), held office of Commissary General and President of the council of Maryland, was married without issue.

Hon. Charlotte Calvert (died December 1744), married Thomas Breerwood, by whom she had a son, Francis Breerwood.

Hon. Jane Calvert (died July 1778), married John Hyde, by whom she had issue John Hyde, Henry Hyde and Mary Calvert Hyde, wife of George Mitchell and mother of George Calvert Mitchell, 1st Earl of Royalton.

Hon. Cecil Calvert (born 1702)
Charlotte and Lord Baltimore were divorced in 1705. Charlotte had an affair in 1706 with Colonel Robert Fielding, then the (bigamous) husband of her grandmother the Duchess of Cleveland, and was rumoured to have borne a child by him, born 23 April 1707.

Marriage to Christopher Crowe
She married her second husband Christopher Crowe (c.1681 – 9 November 1749), Consul at Leghorn, sometime before 10 December 1719. Charlotte was three years older than her husband. This marriage produced four more children.

Charles Calvert, 5th Baron Baltimore, was the eldest son of Charlotte Lee and her first husband, Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore.

Charlotte's four children from her second marriage:
Christopher Crowe (1716–1776), married Barbara Duncombe
Catherine Crowe (1717 – ?), married Roger Henry Gale
Charlotte Crowe (1718–1742)
George Crowe (25 November 1719 – 10 October 1782), married Anne Swift, by whom he had a son Robert.

Death and legacy
Charlotte Lee died of rheumatism on 22 January 1721 at Woodford Hall, Woodford, Essex. She was buried at Woodford on 29 January 1721. She died intestate and her estate was administered on 4 March 1721 at Woodford Hall.

Ancestors of Charlotte Lee, Lady Baltimore:
Sir Henry Lee, 1st Baronet
Francis Henry Lee, 2nd Baronet
Eleanor Wortley
Sir Francis Henry Lee, 4th Baronet of Quarendon
Sir John St. John, 1st Baronet
Anne St. John
Anne Leighton
Edward Henry Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield
Sir William Pope
Thomas Pope, 2nd Earl of Downe
Elizabeth Watson
Elizabeth Pope
John Dutton
Lucy Dutton
Elizabeth Baynton
Charlotte Lee
James I of England
Charles I of England
Anne of Denmark
Charles II of England
Henri IV of France
Henrietta Maria of France
Marie de Medici
Lady Charlotte Fitzroy
Sir Edward Villiers
William Villiers, 2nd Viscount Grandison
Barbara St. John
Barbara Villiers
Paul Bayning, 1st Viscount Bayning
Mary Bayning
Anne Glemham 
Lee, Charlotte (I47709)
 
1445 CHATHAM Jack G. Moore, 84, of 4169 Oxford Road, died Friday, May 20, 2011, at Carilion Roanoke Memorial Hospital.

Born Aug. 24, 1926, in Pittsylvania County, he was a son of the late Lee A. Moore and Lena Yeatts Moore. He was also predeceased by seven brothers, Edward Moore, Julius Moore, Hunt Moore, Robert Moore, Herman Moore, Harry Moore and Addison Moore. He was a Navy veteran of World War II and a member, deacon, and clerk of Greenpond Baptist Church. Mr. Moore was the former owner of Gretna Western Auto, and the former co-owner of R & M Texaco. He was also a member of the Gretna Chamber and the former president, secretary, treasurer, charter member and life member of the Gretna Jaycees. Mr. Moore was also a member of the Gretna Lions Club and a member of the board of directors for Charter Federal Savings and Loan. He was the chairman of the board of WMNA, the chairman of the Gretna Horse Show for 32 years, and a charter member, life member, and former captain of the Gretna Rescue Squad. He was also a member of the Merchants Association.

He is survived by his wife, Susan Rorer Moore, of the residence; a son, Michael W. Moore, and his wife, Veronica, of Chatham; two daughters, Jackie Moore, of Vinton, and Cheryl Moore, of the residence; a sister, Mildred M. Hudson, of Durham, N.C.; and two grandchildren, Susan Moore and John I. Moore.

Funeral services will be conducted at 3 p.m. today, May 22, 2011, at Greenpond Baptist Church by the Rev. Steve Carlton, Rev. R. G. Rowland and Pastor John David Rorer. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.

The family received friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Saturday, May 21, 2011, at Colbert-Moran Funeral Home, and at other times at the residence of his son and daughter-in-law, Michael and Veronica Moore, 4153 Oxford Road, Chatham.

The family suggests that memorial contributions be made to the Greenpond Baptist Church building fund, 7120 Anderson Mill Road, Chatham, VA 24531.

Colbert-Moran Funeral Home, Gretna, is assisting the family. Condolences may be sent to the family by visiting www.colbertmoran.com.

Published in Danville and Rockingham County on May 22, 2011 
Moore, Jack Gilmer (I2111)
 
1446 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Lewis, N.G. (I20361)
 
1447 Chatham, Sept. 7 – Abram Fackler died at his home in Pittsylvania County today after a lingering illness of several months from paralysis. He was born in this county nearly seventy-nine years ago. Two sisters and two daughters survive.
8 Sep 1904, Washington Post 
Fackler, Abram (I5057)
 
1448 Check out the "Shawnee Heritage" books by Don Greene (available as GOOGLE books on-line and for purchase on Amazon), specifically pages 84-88 of Volume III Pre-1700's A-L (published 2014) and pages 101-102 of Volume IV Pre-1700's M-Z (published 2014). These pages assert that the Jane Bolling (1675–1714) who married REV James Clack Sr was 1 of the 5 out-of-wedlock children that COL Robert Bolling I had with Mary Pettis, a Shawano servant/slave/wet nurse in Robert's household. These pages also document the lineage of Mary Pettis as being the 1G Granddaughter of Matoaka-POCAHONTAS Powhatan and her 1st husband KOKUM Stream-Patawomeck [FindAGrave 131558962]. That would make the Jane Bolling (1675–1714) who married REV James Clack Sr the 2G granddaughter of Pocahontas from Pocahontas' 1st marriage . . . NOT from Pocahontas' 2nd marriage to John Rolfe II. Bolling, Rebecca Jane (I33251)
 
1449 Chicago and North Western Railroad Employee Records. Chicago & North Western Historical Society, Berwyn, Illinois.
<p>Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway Employee Records. Chicago & North Western Historical Society, Berwyn, Illinois.</p> 
Source (S1642)
 
1450 Chief Engineer

(November 12, 1818-June 1, 1821)

Born in Virginia in 1785, Walker Armistead was named a cadet in the Corps of Artillerists and Engineers by President Jefferson in 1801. On March 5, 1803, he became the third graduate of the new Military Academy and was commissioned in the Corps of Engineers. He served as superintending engineer of the defenses of New Orleans and Norfolk. During the War of 1812, he was successively Chief Engineer of the Niagara frontier army and the forces defending Chesapeake Bay. He was promoted to colonel and Chief Engineer on November 12, 1818. When the Army was reorganized on June 1, 1821, he became commander of the 3d Artillery. He was brevetted brigadier general in 1828. He commanded the United States troops that opposed the Seminole Indians in Florida in 1840-41. He died in Upperville, Virginia, October 13, 1845. (Source: http://www.hq.usace.army.mil/history/coe.htm#8) 
Armistead, Walker Keith (I44476)
 

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