Matches 3,201 to 3,250 of 7,964
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In March 1781 the entire county militia of Pittsylvania County Va was drafted for the battle of Guilford Courthouse. The Virginia Militia made up the second line of defense at the Guilford Courthouse battlefield. The main body of the
British hit the American second line where the Virginians gave a good account of themselves. They finally had to withdraw in an orderly fashion. Many military historians comment on the outstanding performance of the Virginian Militia. Cornwallis won the battlefield at a terrible cost, turning his cannons on his own men during hand to hand combat.
Campanies of Militia marched from Pittsylvania County in September 1781, and the one commanded by Captain Charles Hutchings rendezvoused at Stoney Hill (in Pittsylvia County), and marched directly to Yorktown.
References: Pension records, James Brayhill (S32136), Elisha Collins (S10463), David Irby, John Harris, Virginia Militia, Revolutionary War, J.T. McAllister.
source: http://www.genfan.com/getperson.php?personID=I476&tr ee=MASTER
| White, William Sr (I17360)
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In March 1808, Ephraim Bondurant, David Bondurant, Jeremiah Lockett, and David Lockett filed a bond of injunction against Joseph Taylor in Bedford County Chancery Court. This indicates that Ephraim was born prior to March 1787, and probably earlier.
http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/case_detail.asp?CFN=019-1821-022
This link is for a Virginia Chancery case in 1829 that contains Ephraim Bondurant, Thomas Bondurant, and surnames Lockett and Moore. It has not yet been scanned, so check it occasionally. http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/case_detail.asp?CFN=680-1829-007 | Lockett, Jeremiah (I20210)
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In March 1808, Ephraim Bondurant, David Bondurant, Jeremiah Lockett, and David Lockett filed a bond of injunction against Joseph Taylor in Bedford County Chancery Court. This indicates that Ephraim was born prior to March 1787, and probably earlier.
http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/case_detail.asp?CFN=019-1821-022
This link is for a Virginia Chancery case in 1829 that contains Ephraim Bondurant, Thomas Bondurant, and surnames Lockett and Moore. It has not yet been scanned, so check it occasionally. http://www.lva.virginia.gov/chancery/case_detail.asp?CFN=680-1829-007
| Lockett, David (I20290)
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3204 |
In Norse mythology, Domalde, Dómaldi or Dómaldr (Old Norse possibly "Power to Judge") was a Swedish king of the House of Ynglings, cursed by his stepmother, according to Snorri Sturluson, with ósgæssa, "ill-luck". He was the son of Visbur.
The sacrifice of Domalde by Erik Werenskiold.
The luck of the king is the luck of the land, and Domalde's rule was marked by bad crops and starvation. The first autumn, the Swedes sacrificed oxen at the temple at Uppsala, but the next harvest was not better. The second autumn, they sacrificed men, but the following crops were even worse.
The third year many Swedes arrived at Gamla Uppsala at the Thing of all Swedes and the chiefs decided they had to sacrifice the king. They sprinkled the statues of the gods with his blood (see Blót) and the good harvests returned.
He was succeeded by his son Domar whose reign was prosperous.
Snorri Sturluson wrote of Domalde in his Ynglinga saga (1225):
Dómaldi tók arf eptir föður sinn Vísbur, ok réð löndum. Á hans dögum gerðist í Svíþjóð sultr mikill ok seyra. Þá efldu Svíar blót stór at Uppsölum; hit fyrsta haust blótuðu þeir yxnum, ok batnaði ekki árferð at heldr. En annat haust hófu þeir mannblót, en árferð var söm eða verri. En hit þriðja haust kómu Svíar fjölment til Uppsala, þá er blót skyldu vera. Þá áttu höfðingjar ráðagerð sína; ok kom þat ásamt með þeim, at hallærit mundi standa af Dómalda konungi þeirra, ok þat með, at þeir skyldu honum blóta til árs sér, ok veita honum atgöngu ok drepa hann, ok rjóða stalla með blóði hans. Ok svá gerðu þeir.
Domald took the heritage after his father Visbur, and ruled over the land. As in his time there was great famine and distress, the Swedes made great offerings of sacrifice at Upsalir. The first autumn they sacrificed oxen, but the succeeding season was not improved thereby. The following autumn they sacrificed men, but the succeeding year was rather worse. The third autumn, when the offer of sacrifices should begin, a great multitude of Swedes came to Upsalir; and now the chiefs held consultations with each other, and all agreed that the times of scarcity were on account of their king Domald, and they resolved to offer him for good seasons, and to assault and kill him, and sprinkle the stalle of the gods with his blood. And they did so.
Snorri included a piece from Ynglingatal (9th century) in his account in the Heimskringla:
Hitt var fyrr
at fold ruðu
sverðberendr
sínum drótni,
ok landherr
af lífs vönum
dreyrug vápn
Dómalda bar,
þá er árgjörn
Jóta dolgi
Svía kind
of sóa skyldi.
It has happened oft ere now,
That foeman's weapon has laid low
The crowned head, where battle plain,
Was miry red with the blood-rain.
But Domald dies by bloody arms,
Raised not by foes in war's alarms
Raised by his Swedish liegemen's hand,
To bring good seasons to the land.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Cujus [Wisbur] filium Domald Sweones suspendentes pro fertilitate frugum deæ Cereri hostiam obtulerunt. Iste genuit Domar [...]
His [Visbur] son Domalde was hanged by the Swedes as a sacrificial offering to Ceres to ensure the fruitfulness of the crops. Domalde begot Domar, [...]
The even earlier source Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and also gives Dómaldr as the successor of Visburr and the predecessor of Dómarr: vii Visburr. viii Dómaldr. ix Dómarr. | King of Sweden, Domalde (I36956)
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In Norse mythology, Dyggvi or Dyggve (Old Norse "Useful, Effective") was a Swedish king of the House of Ynglings. Dyggvi died and became the concubine of Hel, Loki's daughter. Dyggvi was succeeded by his son Dag the Wise. According to Snorre Sturlason, Dyggvi was the nephew of Dan, the eponymous anchestor of Denmark, through his sister Drott, and was the first to be called King by his family.
Snorri Sturluson wrote of Dygvvi's father Domar in his Ynglinga saga (1225):
Dyggvi hét son hans, er þar næst réð löndum, ok er frá honum ekki sagt annat, en hann varð sóttdauðr.
Dygve was the name of his son, who succeeded him in ruling the land; and about him nothing is said but that he died in his bed.
About Dyggvi's mother Snorri had more to say:
Móðir Dyggva var Drótt, dóttir Danps konungs, sonar Rígs, er fyrstr var konungr kallaðr á danska tungu; hans ættmenn höfðu ávalt síðan konungsnafn fyrir hit œzta tignarnafn. Dyggvi var fyrstr konungr kallaðr sinna ættmanna; en áðr váru þeir dróttnar kallaðir, en konur þeirra dróttningar, en drótt hirðsveitin. En Yngvi eða Ynguni var kallaðr hverr þeirra ættmanna alla ævi, en Ynglingar allir saman. Drótt dróttning var systir Dans konungs hins mikilláta, er Danmörk er við kend.
Dygve's mother was Drott, a daughter of King Danp, the son of Rig, who was first called "king" in the Danish tongue. His descendants always afterwards considered the title of king the title of highest dignity. Dygve was the first of his family to be called king, for his predecessors had been called "Drottnar", and their wives "Drottningar", and their court "Drott". Each of their race was called Yngve, or Yngune, and the whole race together Ynglinger. The Queen Drott was a sister of King Dan Mikillati, from whom Denmark took its name.
In his Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson included a piece from Ynglingatal composed in the 9th century:
Kveðkat dul,
nema Dyggva hrör
Glitnis gná
at gamni hefr,
því at jódis
Ulfs ok Narfa
Konungmann
kjósa skyldi;
ok allvald
Yngva þjóðar
Loka mær
of leikinn hefr.
Dygve the Brave, the mighty king,
It is no hidden secret thing,
Has gone to meet a royal mate,
Riding upon the horse of Fate.
For Loke's daughter in her house
Of Yngve's race would have a spouse;
Therefore the fell-one snatched away
Brave Dygve from the light of day.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Hujus [Domar] filius Dyggui item in eadem regione vitæ metam invenit. Cui successit in regnum filius ejus Dagr [...]
Likewise Dyggve, his [Domar's] son, reached the limit of his life in that same region [Sweden]. His son Dag [...]
The even earlier source Íslendingabók also cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it also gives Dyggvi as the successor of Dómarr and the predecessor of Dagr: ix Dómarr. x Dyggvi. xi Dagr. | King of Sweden, Dyggvi (I36954)
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In Norse mythology, the Swedish king Domar (Old Norse Dómarr, "Judge") of the House of Ynglings was the son of Domalde. He was married to Drott, the sister of Dan the Arrogant who gave his names to the Danes. Drott and Dan are in this work said to be the children of Danp son of Ríg.
His rule lasted long and after the sacrifice of his father Domalde, the crops were plentiful and peace reigned. Consequently, there is not much to tell about his reign, and when he died at Uppsala, he was transported over the Fyris Wolds (Fyrisvellir) and burnt on the banks of the river, where a stone was raised over his ashes.
He was succeeded by his son Dyggvi.
Snorri Sturluson wrote of Domar in his Ynglinga saga (1225):
Dómarr hét sonr Dómalda, er þar næst réð ríki; hann réð lengi fyrir löndum, ok var þá góð árferð ok friðr um hans daga. Frá honum er ekki sagt annat, en hann varð sóttdauðr at Uppsölum, ok var fœrðr á Fyrisvöllu ok brendr þar á árbakkanum, ok eru þar bautasteinar hans. Domald's son, called Domar, next ruled over the land. He reigned long, and in his days were good seasons and peace. Nothing is told of him but that he died in his bed in Upsal, and was transported to the Fyrisvold, where his body was burned on the river bank, and where his standing stone still remains.
The information about Domar's marriage appears after Snorri has presented Domar's son Dyggvi (Danish tongue refers to the Old Norse language as a whole and not only to the dialect of Denmark):
Móðir Dyggva var Drótt, dóttir Danps konungs, sonar Rígs, er fyrstr var konungr kallaðr á danska tungu; hans ættmenn höfðu ávalt síðan konungsnafn fyrir hit œzta tignarnafn. Dyggvi var fyrstr konungr kallaðr sinna ættmanna; en áðr váru þeir dróttnar kallaðir, en konur þeirra dróttningar, en drótt hirðsveitin. En Yngvi eða Ynguni var kallaðr hverr þeirra ættmanna alla ævi, en Ynglingar allir saman. Drótt dróttning var systir Dans konungs hins mikilláta, er Danmörk er við kend.[2] Dygve's mother was Drott, a daughter of King Danp, the son of Rig, who was first called "king" in the Danish tongue. His descendants always afterwards considered the title of king the title of highest dignity. Dygve was the first of his family to be called king, for his predecessors had been called "Drottnar", and their wives "Drottningar", and their court "Drott". Each of their race was called Yngve, or Yngune, and the whole race together Ynglinger. The Queen Drott was a sister of King Dan Mikillati, from whom Denmark a took its name.
As for Domar, Snorri included a piece from Ynglingatal (9th century):
Ok þess opt
of Yngva hrör
fróða menn
of fregit hafðak,
hvar Dómarr
á dynjanda
bana háalfs
of borinn væri;
nú þat veitk,
at verkbitinn
Fjölnis niðr
við fýri brann. I have asked wise men to tell
Where Domar rests, and they knew well.
Domar, on Fyrie's widespread ground,
Was burned, and laid on Yngve's mound.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Iste [Domald] genuit Domar qui in Swethia obiit morbo. Hujus filius Dyggui [...] Domalde begot Domar, who died in Sweden. Likewise Dyggve, his son, [...]
The even earlier source Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and also gives Dómarr as the successor of Dómaldr and the predecessor of Dyggvi: viii Dómaldr. ix Dómarr. x Dyggvi. | King of Sweden, Domar (I36955)
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In Old Virginia Houses Along the James by Emmie Ferguson Farrar (New York: Bonanza Books, 1957). On pp. 61-62, Ms Farrar has this to say about Cobb's Hall:
"AMBROSE COBB patented three hundred and fifty acres on Appomattox River in 1639. The patent was granted him in order that he might bring over himself, his wife, his son and three others to Virginia and settle on the patented land. He was in business in York, and from the records, there were two other sons, Ambrose II and Thomas. (Bishop Meade mentions Ambrose Cobb, vestryman at the Church in Williamsburg, some time between 1674-1769.)
Cobb built the first mansion at Cobb's. Its site was on the north side of
Appomattox River in what is now Chesterfield County. Later John Bolling
(the great-grandson of Pocahontas and John Rolfe) and his wife, Mary Kennon, of Brick House, bought Cobb's, and it became a Bolling home for many generations. John Bolling went into mercantile business and carried on extensive trade with the Indians as well as the English.
John and Mary had a son, John, who was something of a gay blade and liked
dancing, fishing, hunting, dogs and horses. He was devoted to his family.
He became a justice in the courts, while the family acres were still a part of Henrico, and later presided over the first Court of Chesterfield County. John had a son, Thomas, who married Elizabeth Gay. She rode about the county and to church with her coach and four, with coachman, footman and postillion in bright yellow livery.
Many distinguished Americans, including the second Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, were descendants of this family.
The burial ground at Cobb's is surrounded by a high brick wall, and many
Bollings are buried here. There is a granite monument on which is
inscribed, 'Around this stone lie the remains of Colonel John Bolling of
Cobbs. Great Grandson of Rolfe and Pocahontas--Born 1676--Died 1709.'
Some members of the Bolling family were deaf, so William Bolling engaged a teacher, John Braidwood, of Washington, and in 1815 organized the first
school for the deaf in America. It continued for only four years.
Cobbs suffered damage both during the Revolutionary and the Civil Wars.
It eventually burned down but was rebuilt. After the Bollings sold the
place, there was a succession of owners and several changes of name. Now,
since Mr. M. T. Broyhill, of Hopewall, purchased the property and subdivided it into small farms, there are many people living at Cobb's." | Bolling, John Fairfax (I33219)
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In Service of Continental Army. | Bolling, William L (Twin) (I38375)
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In Service to the Queen of England | Wulf, Anders Pederssøn (I16049)
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3210 |
In Stavanger's town records exists a statement: "5/11/1637 Captain Heinrich Magnus, from Lübeck, sailed the ship 'Salvator'". On 5/7/1643 he had been to Bergen with a sailship. Hendrich Magnus, Captain 2nd Sand/Hordland Company, attached to a regiment from Bergen, most probably a son of Heinrich Magnus. A royal commission license, from the records of a Jens Bjelke's dated 12/29/1657, shows that he was stationed in Trondheim in Nov 1657. During March and April 1658, he went with his company to Røras, where they chased a Swedish Regiment. Stavanger records, dated 11/28/1658, show "arrived in Bergen with Captain Magnus and all the soldiers that were discharged". On 10/13/1659 his company received new uniforms and then went by rental boats to Lærdal and then marched over the mountains to Kristiania. From there to Halden, where they fought and captured a Swedish camp in 1660. There were only 67 men alive after the battle. These notes were taken from Wahl: "the old House of Bergen Regiment History". Then his name dissappears from the military records. His company is led by a Captain von Walnitz, in 1662, and a short time thereafter by a Pitter Normann. In the Church of Kors "Book of History" there is mentioned a Major Magnus, born 10/14/1622, died 5/18/1694. It has been impossible to identify this person as Captain Magnus. There is a possibility that Captain Magnus went into foreign service at which time he was promoted to Major. (In Y. Nielsen's book: "The Battle of Trondheim, 1657 -1660", page 150, there is mentioned a Lieutenant Magnus who led a regiment of 16 men and a bugler. On 1/17 1659 12 new men reported and were sent south.)
Sons:
1. Hindrich Magnus, custom house records show he was buried 3/25/1709 in the New Church. (In Bergen records it is mentioned that Johan Herman Brynning's wife's half brother Christian Magnus, Henrik Magnus imprisoned in Dunkerque. Brother Frantz Henriksen Magnus' children: Henrik Frantzen Magnus in Vlissingen. Ahasverus Magnus is living in Trondheim in 1696.)
2. Ahasverus Magnus lived in Trondheim in 1696.
3. Christian Magnus buried 4/21/1730 in the New Church. He was married twice:
a. Margrethe Andersdtr Rask, buried 7/24/1695.
b. Catharina Simons from Amsterdam. Buried 4/3/1730 in the New Church.
(Note: According to the city records in Bergen and Stavanger, dated 3/27/1730, all the children of the 2nd marriage had emigrated to Holland.)
Children of Heinrich Magnus are:
Christian Magnus, b. Abt. 1650, Stord Island, Norway, d. 21 Apr 1730, Bergen, Norway.
Hindrich Magnus, b. 1648, d. 25 Mar 1709, Nykirken. | Magnus, Heinrich (I3545)
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In the Fall of 1772, Nicholas Gillintine, of Halifax County, Virginia, composed his last will and testament. He wrote “... being weak in body but in sound mind & perfect sence & memory... do consider that what of our affairs are not settled in this life cannot be settled hereafter... “ He then went on to describe how he wished his earthly property to be distributed among his heirs. Nicholas must not have been living in Halifax County very long because he had written a will in Amelia County 2 November 1771. It was recorded there but not probated. He was evidently an old man for some of his granddaughters had married.
According to Milner Echols, the nineteenth century Echols family historian, Nicholas was an “outlandish” Englishman who married a daughter of John Echols, Yet no record reveals her name. They were the parents of five known children he named in his will.
Records spelled “Gillintine” different ways including “Gillenton,” “Gillington,” “Gillinton,” “Guilintine,” “Guillintine,” etc. The name may originally have been the French “Guillotin.” By 1782 the Gillinton name had disappeared from Virginia. Nicholas received a patent for land in King William (later Caroline) County on 16 June 1714. It was 200 acres “about a mile back in the woods from Rowells Ford.” Nicholas's name appeared often in the Caroline County order books. He obtained a patent for 997 acres next to Abraham Echols on Flat Creek in Amelia County 28 December 1736. On 17 June 1743, he gave a 397-acre portion of this land to his son John. The deed of gift described the land as on the upper side of Flat Creek, called the “Great Bent.” The same day Nicholas lent 200 acres of land on the upper side of Flat Creek to John and Eleanor Chisum, his son-in-law and daughter, for the rest of their natural life. The three appear to have sold this land to John Cook for £100 on 19 November 1754.
Almost exactly ten years later, a nearly identical deed was recorded. On 10 September 1764, Nicholas transferred 200 acres of his original patent to John Cook of Amelia for £100. They recorded this deed among others of 1766. This land was owned by Nicholas, daughter Eleanor Chisum, son-in-law John Chisum, all of Amelia County, and James Chisum of Halifax County.
Early Amelia County court records reported few crimes. Then, in 1743, Amelia County arrested Lodowick Ferguson for suspicion of felony. The court records included the reports of witnesses including Gillintines. The county alleged that Lodowick stole about £22, mainly of gold coins, from a trunk belonging to Catherine Whitworth, the daughter of Thomas Whitworth. Sadly, it seems Ann Gillintine, Catherine's friend, had earlier shown Lodowick where the gold was. Ann would later marry Matthew Hilsman. On 25 July 1743, they brought Ferguson into the courtroom. In front sat the eight justices of the peace: Edward Booker, John Burton, William Clement, William Booker, Richard Booker, Samuel Tarry, Hezekiah Ford, and Wood Jones. According to depositions, John Gillintine had seen Lodowick at his father's house helping harvest wheat Wednesday, June 29. Ferguson owed John money but declared that he then did not have any. Two days later, Ferguson arrived at the Whitworth home while Thomas was away helping others harvest wheat. He told Catherine he had work to do at Whitworth's with Samuel Martin, who was on his way. While she was on the porch sewing with her mother, Catherine heard Ferguson go to her trunk and then saw him leave the house. The next day, Saturday, the militia mustered at Scott's Ordinary. While the men were waiting about, Ferguson asked John Leonard to change a doubloon for him, claiming he owed James Scott some money. Both James Scott and Dennis Reagan also exchanged doubloons with Ferguson. After Church Sunday, John Gillintine ran into Ferguson who repaid his debt to John with some gold and silver coins he took from a purse. Additionally, Wednesday, Ferguson bought a horse from Gillintine for £3:14:0 that he said he had borrowed. Ironically, the same day, Samuel Martin arrived at Whitworth's to work yet denied he was to have met Ferguson the previous Friday. Ferguson evidently began to realize he was in a bind. He took Martin aside and asked him to rearrange his story to say that he did not arrive at Whitworth's because he lost his horse. He also convinced Martin to come with him to Warwick, Virginia. Martin later reported that Ferguson had much money on hand and made several purchases from merchants. Martin's forthrightness in the court was presumably because they had charged him with a felony and he was going to distance himself from Ferguson. The evidence was sufficient to arrest Ferguson. Fearing they would hang him, Ferguson anxiously offered to become a witness for the King and impeach Samuel Martin for the theft. This failing, he hired a lawyer, who he was clearly able to pay. John Gillintine even said in court he saw Ferguson give money to the attorney. Apparently Ferguson and his father and brother tried to negotiate a settlement with the Whitworth's. One scenario had John Gillintine, an unwitting beneficiary of the crime, helping with restitution. Although theft is common today, in Colonial Amelia County, Virginia, it was not. Nine different citizens helped guard Lodowick in the prison and the county paid them 18 pounds of tobacco per day. Lewis Vaughan got 36 pounds for two days of jailer service. The Ferguson trial directly cost the county 1,368 pounds of tobacco, more than 7% of the annual county budget of less than 19,000 pounds. Things must have looked bleak for Ferguson. A volunteer jailer reported that Lodowick tried to escape, breaking down a door and taking up several bricks from the hearth and chimney. The evidence overwhelmed the justices and they ordered Lodowick Ferguson to be taken to Williamsburg and tried at the next General Court on October 4. The Ferguson's put up a bail bond for Lodowick. To ensure they personally appeared at the court, the witnesses were bound to the King for £20. We do not know the disposition of the case because of the loss of General Court records. We do know Lodowick was back in Amelia County in May 1744 when Justice Edward Booker was awarded a judgement against him for £0:41:11 and court costs. Lodowick failed to appear in court. Perhaps his experiences there were sufficient justification to stay away. Amelia County set aside 1,288 pounds of tobacco - 322 pounds each - in its November 1744 county levy to pay John Gillintine, Thomas Whitworth, Thomas Whitworth Jr., and Catherine Whitworth.
In 1754 Nicholas became guardian of John Hurt Jr. Surety on his orphan bond was George Booker. George was guardian of John's brother, Joel Hurt, and Nicholas was his surety. Nicholas was a good citizen who served on several juries while in Amelia County. Serving with him at various times were William Craddock , Benjamin Clement, Edward Osborne, Henry Robertson Sr., William Hudson, John Gillintine, Lodowick Tanner, Jacob Seay, John Clement, and William Ligon.
Nicholas died in Halifax County about 1773 (will dated 21 Oct. 1772 , recorded 16 Dec. 1773) at ninety-seven years of age. He still had one black slave in Amelia County appraised at £36:0:10 on 29 November 1773. Nicholas appointed Thomas Mumford Sr. and George Booker coexecutors of his will, which Matthew Hilsman, James Garrett, and Robert Willson witnessed. | Gillintine, Nicholas (I1569)
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3212 |
In the mainstream encyclopedias, reference is made to numerous Danish families named Paludan. The Flemish-Danish family is descended from the doctor Johannes (Hans) Paludan in East Flanders, Belgium. His daughter Elisabeth Paludan married Hans Ludvig Munthe and they had Hans Ludvigsen Munthe.
Johannes Paludan enrolled at the Medical University of Montpellier, France, in 1528, and according to Montpellier Medical University records he was born in 1497 at a place called Hetland van Aalst at Ghent in East Flanders - a Land in the area around the town of Aalst in Belgium, on the river Dender. His name was originally “Van den Broeck.” The family tradition has him coming from Gent—two villages with the same name may have been mixed up in the medical school records. There is also a possibility that he was a brother of Nicholas Buscoducensis.
The medical school quote is as follows: "1528: 883rd Paludanus Joannes, Alostensis, dioctyl Cameracensis. (Schyron) 13 Janvier". This means: “Hans Paludan came from the city or country Aalst in Cambrai pin in present Belgium. He was on 13.1.1528 enrolled at Montpellier University medical school, probably the doctor Schyron. “ Years later, a son, Joannes Paludanus, also enrolled at the same medical school.,
The Medical University of Montpellier expelled Michel de Nostredame, or "Nostradamus", in 1529 for working as an apothecary, considered a "manual trade", and expressly forbidden in the school's statutes.
Hans Paludan (or Johannes Paludanus) was a physician in Gent, Dr of medicine 1548-1565 and later Physicus ordinarius in Lübeck. After becoming protestant, the family fled to Lübeck along with other wealthy families, to escape the new Spanish rule and high taxes. A family legend says he was thrown in prison by the Duke of Alba, whom he cured.
His son, Hans Paludan (1538 Ghent - Nov. 19 1615 Viborg ) was arch-deacon and personal physician to Queen Dowager Dorothea on Koldinghus and Sønderborg Castle. Subsequently he was for several years a doctor in Viborg and had pharmacies privilege (for the entire Jutland ) in Viborg, 8 December 1577 to 5 februar 1587. Hans Paludan had only daughters in his marriage and did not continue the name.
He married Barbara van der Rhone with whom he fathered four children - Barbara, Hans, Rasmus, and Elisabeth. Johannes Paludan died on 15 Oct 1565 in Lübeck and is buried in St. Katharine's Church in Lübeck. At some point after her husband's death, Barbara van der Rone traveled with her son Hans Paludan to Denmark. Here she lived presumably with son in law Hofpræsten Christoffer Knoph, who was married to her daughter Barbara in 1569. | Paludan, Hans (I1040)
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3213 |
In the name of God Amen I Benjamin McCraw being in sound mind and memory do make and ordain this my Last Will and Testament. Item. 1st I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Ursley the Tract of land where on I now live together with all my stock of horses cattle hogs sheep and gees with all my household and kitchen furniture farming tools of every description to remain as hur natural property for and during her natural life and at her death to be equally divided together with its increase. my cold excepted which I give unto my youngest son Sherod McCraw as his share of my estate. Iten 2nd. I give unto my three children Deborah Elizabeth and Locky mcCraw to be equally divided between them after my wife deceased. item 3rd. My tract of land lying in Franklin Co. State of VA on Bull Run Branch of blackwater if recovered of suit in the high court of Chancery to be equally divided between all my children and I have appointed Deborah McCraw Elizabeth McCraw to execute this my will. Signed sealed and delivered in presents of us Ano domini Dec. 8th 1812. Banjamin A. McCraw | McCraw, Benjamin Albin (I24161)
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3214 |
In the name of God Amen I Joseph Berry of Prince Edward County, make and publish this my last Will and testament hereby revoking all former ones by me made. First I give unto my son in law Joseph Sharp one Negro man named Taylor upon his paying unto my son will of one humndred dollars. Secondly, I give unto my two grand children Joseph and John Piler the sum of fifty pounds each to be paid unto them by my executor when they come of age. Not if either of my said frand sons should die before they come of age it is my will that their legacy divested to them be should be divided among all my children. Thirdly, I give unto my grandson William Cressy my Tarter Colt. Fourthly, I give unto my daughter Elizabeth Mason the sum of one dollar. Fifthly, I give unto my daughter Sarah Cressy one Negro woman Nancy. Sixthly, it is my will and desire to my executors dispose of the Negro Kezziah to some person for the benefit of my estate. Seventhly, it is my will and desire that the remainder of my estate both real and personal be sold by my executor and equally divided among my children hereafter named to wit: Peter, Joseph, John, Mary Sharp, Lucy Berry, Sarah Cressy and Jane Ellington to them and their heirs. Lastly I appoint my son in law Joseph Sharp and Obeion Lockett my executors to this my last will and testament and witness whereof have set my hand and seal this twenty second day of December one thousand eight hundred and eight. Wit: Nancy ve will which relates to John Berry and do give him the sum of one dollar only, signed sealed and published this sixteenth day of May one thousand eight hundred and twelve. Wit: Joel Ellington, William Ellington. At a court held for Prince Edward County May the 19th 1812 this last will and testament of Joseph Berry deceased with a codicil was presented in court. From Prince Edward County Will Book, Volume 4, page 334. | Berry, Joseph (I5995)
|
3215 |
In the name of God amen, I Richard Bennett Senr of the County of Pittsylvania and the State of Virginia being weak in body | Bennett, Richard (I12545)
|
3216 |
In the name of God, Amen, I Samuel McCraw being in bad health but perfect mind and memory calling to mind the fraelty of mankind wish to dispose of what it has pleased God to bless me with and as such I do give the following property. 1st. I give unto my loving wife Susana McCraw the hole of my household and kitchen furniture and stock of all kind enofe for her confortable support and if it is not enofe the above named children must find her etc. 2nd. My horses and waggon I give unto my wife and family for their use and benefit etc. 3rd. My black smith tools I give unto my wife and family for their use til the death of my wife then I give them to my son Abner B. McCraw. 4th. I give unto my son Willis McCraw one bed and one man's saddle. 5th. I give unto Peggy Dugan one bed. 6th. I give my gran daughters polly Ann Humphries, Lucinda Humphries Raney Humphres four head of cattel two cows and two yearlings. But my Daughter Btcey Humphreys is to have the use of said cows and yearlings to her benefit and support of her family and to find and feed said cattle til these children come of age. etc. and William Humphres to have no right or clame at all in said carel. Signed and sealed in the presence of us this 28th day of Jan. 1840. Samuel McCraw | McCraw, Samuel (I24206)
|
3217 |
In the name of God. Amen. I John Wright of the County of Bedford being in Good Health and Sound mind and disposing Memory for which I thank God, and calling to mind the uncertainty of human Life, do make and ordain this my last will and Testament, and hereby Revoking all other Wills, heretofore made by me, And dispose of my Wordly goods in Manner following to wit. I lend to my Beloved wife during her Natural life my Tract of Land whereon I now live also my Negroes Jack, Dick Hannah, Dolly, & Grace and all my Household and Kitchen furniture my Stock of Horses, Cattle, Hogs, & Sheep, to be under the Care and direction of my son Benjamin Wright for the use of her my said Wife and at her Death to be divided in the following Manner to wit. My Household & Kitchen furniture except one Feather Bed which is call'd Betsy's Bed, with my stock of Horses Cattle Sheep & Hogs to be sold and the Monies arising therefrom to be Equally divided between my Son Joseph Wright and my three GranChildren to wit. Mary Watts, Benjamin Watts, & John Watts Children of William Watts by my Daughter Ann Watts dec. I also give to my son John Wright after the death of his Mother my Negro woman Grace to him & his Heirs forever I also give tto my Son Thomas Wright after the death of his Mother my Negro Woman Dolly and her Increace including her Son Armstead to him & his Heirs forever I also give to my Daughter Mary Watts after the death of her Mother my Negro Man Jack to her and her Heirs forever I also give to my son Benjamin Wright after the death of his Mother all the Tract of Land which I now live on Containing Three Hundred Acres more or less also my Negro Man Dick and my Negro Woman Hannah he said Benjamin Wright paying to my Daughter Elizabeth Wright Thirty dollars p year during her Natural Life he also paying all my Just debts I also give to my Daughter Elizabeth Wright the Feather Bed above Mentioned and excepted with its furniture to her & her Heirs forever To my Son William Wright I have already given Two Hundred & thirty seven pounds to purchase a Tract of Land I therefore leave him Nothing more It is also my will and desire that my Son
Benjamin Wright be my Whole and sole Executor witness my hand & Seal this
Twenty eight day of December in the year of our Lord Christ One Thousand
Eight Hundred and four
Sign'd Sealed &c ) John Wright
in the presence of )
Interlind before sign'd with the words of After the death of her Mother and also another line mentioning Dolly's Increace including her son Armstead
W.J. Walker
John Hopkins
Price Hopkins
At a Court held for Bedford County at the Courthouse the 20th (26th?) day of
December 1814
This last will and Testament of John Wright Dec'd was exhibited in court by Benjamin Wright the Executor therein named, and proven by the Oaths of William J. Walker & Price Hopkins witnesses thereto and directed to be received. And on the motion of the said Executor who made Oath and gave bond & security according to Law, Certificate is granted them for Obtaining a probate thereof in our forum
Teste,
J Steptoe CBC" | Wright, John (I21539)
|
3218 |
In the Published Books in Massachusetts concerning the children of Rev. John Holmes it states his son Isaac Holmes married Mary Allerton. So far only a record of marriage found in Massachusetts Vitals is of Mary Nye to Isaac Holmes.
In record searches to see if Mary Allerton married first to a Mr Nye and second to Isaac Holmes nothing is showing this to be a fact.
Could Nye must her maiden name?
The records found in Massachusetts vitals concerning Nye-spelling is transcribed as Nie, so far no listing of a Mary Nye or Nie as child of the Nye Family.
More information is needed to progress her lineage.
It also states that Isaac Holmes had a Will dated 30 March 1738; Proved 3 May 1738 | Holmes, Isaac (I42167)
|
3219 |
Indenture between Jeremiah & Pearce Wade and Thomas Cawthon & John Britt, Goochland County, VA., 4 April 1750
This indenture made this eleventh day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and fifty BETWEEN Jeremiah Wade of Cumberland County, Pierce Wade and Thomas Cothon of Albemarle County Executors of Joseph Ballenger Decd of the one part and John Britt of Goochland County of the other part.
Witnesseth that the said Jermiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon for and in consideration of Sixty pound of lawfull money of Virginia by him the said John Britt to them the said Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon in hand paid before the sealing and delivery hereof the receipt whereof they the said Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon doth hereby acknowledge and thereof doth acquit and discharge the said John Britt his heirs executors and administrators hath granted bargained sold ens?? and confirmed and by these presents doth grant bargain sell enf?? and confirm unto the said John Britt his heirs or assigns all that Massuage Plantation and tract of land whereon the said John Britt now dwelleth situate which said land is lying and being in Goochland County on the Byrd Creek containing by estimation one hundred and twenty eight acres be the same more or less and being bounded as followeth to witt/BEGINNING at the corner at the Byrd thence on John Hadens line to a corner on Bryan Connelys line thence on the said Connelys lines and Arthur Hopkins line to the Bryd and thence down the Bryd according to its meander to the place begun at which said tract of parcel of land was left by the aforesaid Joseph ballenger, Deceased to be sold by his aforesaid executors as may apear by the records of the County Court of Goochland and the reversion and reversions remainder and remainders Rents Issues and profits thereof with the appurtances. TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the said Messuage Plantation and tract of land with the apurtenances unto the said John Britt, his heirs and Assigns to the only use and behoof of the said John Britt, his heirs and assigns forever, and the said Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon, their heirs and the Messuage Plantation and tract of land with the appurtenances unto the said John Britt his heirs and assigns shall and will warrant and forever defend by these present against the claim and demand of them the said Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon for themselves their heirs executors and administrators doth covenant promise and agree to and with the said John Britt his heirs and assigns that the premises and every part thereof with the appurtenances are free and discharged from all manner of incumberances and that the said John Britt his heirs and for notwithstanding any act or thing by them the said Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cothon their heirs and assigns or any other person committed done of suffered shall or lawfully may forever hereafter have hold use occupy possession and enjoy the same and every part thereof with the appurtenances without the lawfully set molestation or eviction of them and the said Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade and Thomas Cawthon their heirs or assigns or any other person whatsoever. In witness where of the parties aforesaid to these present have set their hands and seals the day and year above written.
Signed Sealed and Delivered in presence of us: James George, William Britt, John Haris
SIGNED: Jeremiah Wade, Pearce Wade
Deed May 15, 1750
At a court held for Goochland County May 15, 1750.
James George, William Britt and John Faris proved this deed with the livery of seizin and receipt endorsed to be the acts and deeds of Jeremiah and Pearce Wade which were ordered to be recorded.
KNOW all men by these present that we, Jeremiah Wade of Cumberland County and Pearce Wade of Albemarle County at held and firmly bound unto John Britt of Goochland County in the sum of four hundred pounds of Lawfull money of Virginia to be paid unto the said John Britt his heirs Executors and Admrs to them which payment well and truly to be made, be bind ourselves our heirs Execrs and Admrs firmly by these presents, Sealed with our seals and dated this 24th day of February in the year of our lord 1749.
The condition of this present obligation is such that is the said Jermiah Wade and Pearce Wade, their heirs shall pay of all accounts bills bonds debts dues and demands which shall come against the Estate of Joseph Ballenger, Decd fromt he day of the Marriage of Charrity Ballenger, the widow of Joseph Ballenger decd, unto Jno Britt unto the day of her death and the lear and discarge the said John Britt, his heirs and c from all damages which sall arise from any of the said debts and th leave the said Jno Britt his heirs and c. inquiet and peaceable possession of the remainder of the Estate of Jos. Ballenger decd. without any interuption by the said Jeremiah Wade and the said Pearce Wade, their heirs and which the said John Britt hath not delivered by bond and if the said Jeremiah Wade shall lend unto the said John Britt, his heirs and c. one negro man named Tom until the said Jeremiah Wade and the said Pearce Wade shall purchase a negro man between the age of fourteen years and twenty or pay thirty pounds current money if the said Jeremiah Wade and the said Pearce Wade their heirs and c. shall comply with the articles above mentioned that this obligation to be void otherwise to remain in full force power and virtue. signed Sealed and Delivered in the presence of us: James George, John Haris
Jeremiah Wade, seal
Pearce Wade, seal | Wade, Jeremiah (I2169)
|
3220 |
Indenture of James Terry to Thomas Foster of Southham Parish
Posted 11 Apr 2023 by John Moore
Deed Book 2, p. 45: Indenture 29 Jan 1753 - James Terry of Antrim Parish, Halifax County to Thomas Foster of Southham - 630 acres in Southham adjoining John William, Robert Peak, James Allen and witnessed by William Womack Jr., John Woodson, and Daniel Coleman.
***Note: Dr. Thomas Foster is connected to the Tinsley and Golding families in Essex, VA. His daughter Ann Foster marries William Davenport; son of Thomas Davenport who was married to Grace Terry - a cousin to James Terry above. Grace Terry's father was Thomas Terry; a judge in King William, VA in 1702. Thomas Terry was a brother to Captain James Terry (father of James Terry b. abt 1702) who married Mary Diane Royall. Dr. Foster was in Prince Edward County, VA by 1761 (8 yrs later) where he then married Caroline Rogers after his first wife Elizabeth Meador Foster died abt. 1755 likely in Southham Parish, Cumberland, VA. Shortly after 1761, Dr. Thomas Foster moves to South Carolina where he dies in 1769. Dr. Foster's connection to the Tinsley and Golding families through the marriages of his brother John and Sister Elizabeth to Goldings in Essex, VA further cements the connection of the Tinsleys and Goldings to the Davenport and Terry families and to Joseph Irby who may have been the brother to Elizabeth Irby who married Olive Terry, son of James Terry who deeds 630 acres in Southham, VA to Dr. Thomas Foster. We now know that James Tinsley b. abt 1726 in Essex, VA was connected to James and Zachariah Terry (see James Terry's will of 1775) and James Tinsley's nephew James Tinsley b. abt 1759 who escaped the Hayes Massacre. We can also find that James Tinsley b. abt 1759 fought at the Guilford County Courthouse where Olive Terry (married to Elizabeth Irby) also fought. We also see a connection through deeds in Southham Parish, Cumberland, VA with Zachariah Terry (James Terry's son), and witnesses on these deeds or land adjoining were amongst others such as William Womack Jr., John Williams (son or husband of Mary Womack - daughter to William Womack and sister to William Womack Jr.) and James Terry. The Davenports can be seen on many of these deeds as well. *See Davenport information attached. | Terry, Grace (I38694)
|
3221 |
Index to New York City Marriages, 1866-1937. Indices prepared by the Italian Genealogical Group and the German Genealogy Group, and used with permission of the New York City Department of Records/Municipal Archives. | Source (S1117)
|
3222 |
Index to New York City Marriages, 1866-1937. Indices prepared by the Italian Genealogical Group and the German Genealogy Group, and used with permission of the New York City Department of Records/Municipal Archives. | Source (S1117)
|
3223 |
Index to Pittsylvania County, Virginia Land Entries 1737 to 1770Who Filed Claims for Revolutionary Supplies 1782
Part II - Alphabetical Index to Claims for Refunds Revolutionary War 1782
Page 47
"Luck, Francis - 69 (1747)Luck, Sarah - 53, 66 (1747,1747)" | Luck, Francis (I25006)
|
3224 |
Indian Attack
August 20, 1756: Cpt. Stebbins with daughter Tabitha and son Elijah and others, were harvesting wheat, 2 Indians discovered the reaping party & lay in ambush among the thick alders. When observed from horseback by The men fled up the path with the Indians in pursuit, expecting that Wright would fall from his horse and they would obtain his scalp as a trophy of victory. The white men had only 1 gun, Stebbins requesting Wright to hold his horse, he would return & kill at least one of the Indians as they came up the brook. One shot, an Indian leaped in the air & exclaimed "Ugh !" & fell to the ground. Returning to the waiting party, they proceeded to Fort Hinsdale, New Hampshire. | Stebbins, Joseph (I14181)
|
3225 |
Indian Raid on Richard & Addra White's Plantation (Elizabeth White's father)Richard White's son, Thomas and two men were brutally murdered.John -Orphaned Inlaws Killed By Indians raised by Stepfather *Original at the bottom, cut-n-pasted to make story easier to read.
In 1661 John was only 5 years old when an Indian raid on the neighboring plantation killed Thomas White, brother to his future wife Elizabeth. An Army of 250 men was raised, but proved to be ineffective against the hit and run method of the Indians.
Deta il s: 1661 Sep - Old Rap. Deed Book 1:201:"The records of Old Rappahannock County told about a terrible raid that took place in September of 1661 at the plantation of Richard White which layed on the North side of Hoskins Creek in Old Rappahannock County, Virginia.Richard White's son, Thomas and two men were brutally murdered. A committee of twelve men gave an accounting of this gruesome raid: "We, the undersigned being impaneled and sworn to enquire into the deaths of the Englishmen lately murthered at the house of Richard White in the freshes of Rappanhannock County - we went up to the said plantation and viewed the bodies and found the body of ___ massacred in the house of White - his skull splitt on the forehead down to the ___ - His skull beaten in the side of the head over the eyes - moreover near the door of the said house we found the body of Thomas White, Sonn of Richard - striped naked with his skull beaten in over the eye - Also we found the skull of Daniel Pigness, servant to the Lord Richard White beaten in the side of his head with an axe as we conceive by the bigness of hole in the skull...also we found that part of the body of said Pigness was carried away by varments but the hind quarters from the loins we found dragged in a swamp by which said consequences of the said action and by the examination of an English servant of Whites named John Evans that escaped out of the house at that time when the murther was committed - we do all agree in our verdict that it was the Indians - Also by the report of an Indian of Nanzemum named George - a great man of the side towne that went with us to the plantation the same time when we viewed the dead bodyes...he told us that the same day that the murther was committed he found the footing of Divers Indians going from the said plantation" | White, Richard (I3092)
|
3226 |
Indiana County, District and Probate Courts. | Source (S1394)
|
3227 |
Indiana County, District and Probate Courts. | Source (S1394)
|
3228 |
Indications are that Anna Maria Catherine was a twin sister to Anna Marie Catherina a premature baby that died two and one-half months after birth. | Von Krogh, Anna Marie Catherina (I59)
|
3229 |
Individual Report for Million Travers
Name: Million Travers Gender: F
Born: Abt 1662 Place: Gloucester Co, Virginia
Christened: Place:
Died: Bef 8 Jun 1727 Place: Richmond Co, Virginia
Buried: Place:
Father:
Mother:
Spouse: William Downman (Abt 1655 - Bef 4 Jun 1712)
Married: Abt 1700 Place: Lancaster Co, Virginia
Children: 1 Rawleigh Downman (1680-1719)
2 Million Downman (1683-1750)
3 Priscilla Downman (1701-1741)
General
* Married Raleigh Downman son of Wm., who died 1712, leaving Raleigh, Robt Travers, Wm, Million, Eliz., Prisca--see
Hayden Va. Gen.. I think it more prob that Million Travers mard Wm. Downman above, who died in 1712, hence the
names of her children, Raleigh, Travers, Million, Eliz. from William and Mary College Quarterly, 1896, Pedigree of the
Travers Family.
!12 Nov 1693: Mentioned in Elizabeth Wormeley's will as sister Million Downman.
!31 Mar 1727: Will, Richmond Co., VA, Parish N. Farnham. In the name of God amen. I Millan [sic] Downman of the
County of Richmond and in the parrish of North Farnham being in perfect health and memory but considering the
uncertainty of this life I do make this my Last Will and Testament in manner and form following, first: I give my soul into
the hand of almighty God who gave it me and I Bequeath my body to the Earth to receive Christian Burial and as for the
worldly goods God hath Blest me with I Bestow as followeth. I give unto my son Travers Downman four Negroes and
their increase Mary, James, Anne, and Flora. I give them to him and his heirs for ever they are already received. Item I
give unto my above said son one feather Bed and furniture if not received already. I lend unto my Daughter Priscilla
Heale five negroes with heir increase for the term of her life Dinah, King, Robin, Dick, and Hester, and I give the above
said negroes and their increase unto the heirs Lawfully Begotten of her Body but for want of such heirs the above said
negroes and increase shall return to my sons and Daughters or my next heirs at Law. Item I give unto my aforesaid
Daughter tenn [?] sheep. Item I give unto my two grand sons William and Rawleigh sons of my son Rawleigh Downman
the ith [?] part of that Estate left by my sister Elizabeth Wormley but the same shall remain in the hands of my two sons
to be mannaged for their best advantage untill they come to twenty years of age and then they shall have it themselves. I
lend unto my Daughter Elizabeth Downman During her life one Negroe Woman and her increase and I give the above
said Negroe to her heirs Lawfully Begotten of her body but for want of such heirs the above negroe and increase shall
return to my sons or my next heirs at Law. I order as much of this Estate as I possess as will be four parts and each part
made equall by men [?] to that part my Daughter Heale had which parts I give to be equally divided to my sons William
Downman and Travers Downman and my two Daughters Millian Glasscock and Elizabeth Downman each one taking
their part by Lott. Item I give unto my Daughter Elizabeth one feather bed and furniture, and all the rest of my Estate I
give to be equally Divided Between my two sons and my three Daughters William Downman and Travers Downman
Millian Glasscock Elisabeth Downman and Priscilla Heale, after my Debts and Legacies paid I give all my wearing cloths
to be equally Divided Between my three Daughters. Lastly I make and appoint my two sons to be whole and sole
executors of this my Last Will and Testament. Signed seald and declared in presence of us.
! 8 Jun 1727: Will probated, Bk 5, p. 75-76, Richmond Co. VA. William Glasscock, Tobias Phillips, and Caron Brannon in
open court made oath that they are acquainted with the handwriting of Mrs: Million Downman Late Deceased, and that
they do verily believe this Will was wrote by her, also William Downman Gent. made oath in court that he found this
writing amongst the said Million Downman's papers and doth verily believe to be her own handwriting. Whereupon on
the motion of the said William Downman the same is ordered to be Recorded. Test. W: Beckwith Clk. Court.' Richmond
Co., VA, Will Book 5, pp. 75-76.
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=thamm&id=I484 | Travers, Million (I787)
|
3230 |
indskr. i Preetz Kloster. | Schack, Juliane Catharine Elisabeth komtesse (I21258)
|
3231 |
indskr. i Preetz. | Schack, Sophie komtesse (I21265)
|
3232 |
Indviken Prestegård, Sogn og Fjordane | Finde, Henrik (I39639)
|
3233 |
Info and Will
Daniel Havens, son of John, married Christian __________. He died in 1740. Will of Daniel Havens, January 21, 1739 In the Name of God, Amen, the twenteth first day of January, One thousand seven hundred and thirty nine I Daniel Havince of Shrewsbury in the County of Monmouth and Province of New Jersey Yeoman being sick and week of Body but of perfect mind and memory thanks be to God therefore—calling to mind the mortality of my Body and knowing that it is appointed for all men once to die Do make & ordain this my last Will and Testament that is to say principally and first of all I Give and Recommend my Soul into the Hands of God that gave it and for my body I recommend it to the Earth to be buried in a Christian like manner at the discretion of my Executors nothing Douting but at the General Resurrection I shall receive the same again by the mighty Power of God and as touching such Earthly Estate whearewith it has plesed God to bless me with in this life I Give Devise and Dispose of the same in the following manner and form Imprimis I give and bequeth to Christian my dearly beloved Wife all my moveable Estate after my lafull Depts and funerall charges are paid and also all my Lands and Tenements so long as she lives my Widow but if she ceseth to live my Widow either by Marage or Death then I give and Bequeth all my Lands and Tennements to my son George to him his Heirs or assigns for ever but if it shall plese God that my Son George dye before he poseseth my Lands and Tennements or not having lawfull Issue then my will and intent is that my Lands and Tennements Shall be Sold and the money to be equally Divided amongst all the rest of my Children eaquelly alike Item I give to my Daughter Anna five Shillings Item I give to my Son Daneel five shillings Item I give to my son John five shillings Item I give to my Daughter Mary five shillings Item I give to my Daughter Margrett five shillings Item I give to my Daughter Christian five shillings Item I give to my Daughter Ann five shillings all which Legecies so bequethed to be made out of my moveable Estate. My Desire is that my Daughter Ann may live with her mother or Brother George tell She is of Age I likewise Constitute make and Ordain my only and sole Executors of this my last Will and Testement and singular my Lands Measuages and Tennements my well beloved Wife and my Dutiful Son George retifying and Confirming this and no other to be my last Will and Testement in Witness Whereof I have hearunto Set my Hand and Seal the day and year above written Signed Sealed published pronounced & Declared by the said Daniel Havince as his last Will & Testament in the presence of us the Subscribers Jo ” Herring Pr. Traverrie William Matters Wm. Cosgrave his Daniel D Havince mark Be it Remembered etc., etc., (oaths of two witnessed, William Matters and Wm. Cosgrave) Lewis Morris Be it also Remembered etc., etc., (oaths of executrix and executor) Lewis Morris Lewis Morris, Esq., Captain General and Governor in Chief in and over his Majesty’s Province of New Jersey and the Territories thereon depending in America and Vice Admiral in the same To All to whom these Presents etc., etc., (Record of Proving of Will, March 25, 1740) Thomas Bartow, Reg’r | Havens, Daniel (I23482)
|
3234 |
Info on Colby Family from Genealogical and family history of the state of New Hampshire:Volume 4
Available online: http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA1566&dq=hannah%20colby&id=PHPLT1QY9LQC&output=text
(I) The founder of the family in America was Anthony Colby, who came with Rev. John Winthrop's colony in 1630, his name being the ninetythird on the list of church members. He came from the eastern coast of England, and was one of the many driven by persecution to seek a home in the New World. He is found of record in 1632, at Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he married Susannah, supposed to have been a daughter of William Sargent. He removed to Salisbury in 1634, and in 1647 he sold his house and two-acre lot to William Sargent, and settled on the west side of the Powow river, in what is now Amesbury. He was recorded as a "planter," and received land in the "first division," in 1640 and 1643; was one of the first commoners of Amesbury, where he received land in 1654 and 1658, and his widow in his right in 1662 and 1664. He died in Salisbury, February 11, 1661. His widow Susannah, married (second) William Whitridge (or Whitred) in 1663, and was again a widow in 1669. She died July 8, 1689. "or thereabout." The children of Anthony and Susannah were: John, Sarah, a child died young, Samuel, Isaac, Rebecca, Mary, and Thomas.
(II) Thomas, youngest child of Anthony and Susannah Colby, was born in Salisbury, March 8, 1651, and died before March 30, 1691. He took the oath of allegiance and fidelity in December, 1677, He married, September 16, 1674, Hannah, daughter of Valentine and Joanna (Pindor) Rowell (see Rowell, II), born in Salisbury, January, 1653, and they had five children: Thomas, Hannah. Isaac, Abraham and Jacob. After the death of her husband Hannah Colby married (second), probably about 1691, Henry Blaisdell.
(III) Jacob, youngest child of Thomas (1) and Hannah (Rowell) Colby, was born in Amesbury, April 13, 1688, and lived in Amesbury, East Parish. He married (first), in Amesbury, April 9, 1711, Hannah Hunt, born March 23, 1688, fourth daughter of Edward and Ann (Weed) Hunt; (second), at Amesbury, November II, 1724, Elizabeth Elliot, born in Amesbury, November 11, 1691, third child of John and Naomi (Tuxbury) Elliot. A Mrs. Elizabeth Colby died in Amesbury. February 5. 1737- Their children were: Bekius, Jacob, Edmund, Valentine and Thomas Elliot. | Colby, Jacob (I27141)
|
3235 |
Ingeborg Grytten - salmediktar frå Sunnfjord | Grytten, Anders Johannessen Prest (I21060)
|
3236 |
Ingeborg Grytten - salmediktar frå Sunnfjord | Munthe, Maren Ludvigsdatter (I21038)
|
3237 |
ingen barn | Family: Michael (Severin) Sundt Tuchsen / Anne Harboe Frimann (F9299)
|
3238 |
ingen barn | Family: Ove Christian Leyrdahl Daae / Anne Elisabeth Jersin (F9296)
|
3239 |
ingen barn | Family: P. Olsen / Lovise Andrea Brügger (F9338)
|
3240 |
Ingen barn. Også kalt Anne Harboe Tuchsen på grunn av ektemannens navn. Til brylluppet var det skrevet et dikt av brudens bror, som var forhindret å komme; det er trykt hos Christopher Kothert i Bergen på 4 sider i 4to. I Lampes bok står feilaktig dødsår 1831. Ingen barn med Michael Sundt Tuchsen. | Frimann, Anne Harboe (I39521)
|
3241 |
Ingjald illråde or Ingjaldr hinn illráði (Ingold Ill-ruler or Ill-ready) was a semi-legendary Swedish king of the House of Ynglings, son and successor of King Anund, and the father and predecessor of King Olof Trätälja.
Ingjald is mentioned in medieval historiographical sources including Ynglinga saga, Historia Norvegiæ, Hervarar saga, Upplendinga Konungum, Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar and Íslendingabók. The setting of Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar is roughly the 7th century. Johannes Magnus in his 16th-century list of kings places Ingjald (Ingevallus, Ingellus) in AD 883.
Ynglinga saga
Snorri Sturluson gave an extensive account on the life of Ingjald in the Ynglinga saga which is part of the Heimskringla.
The Ynglinga saga relates that the viceroy of Fjädrundaland was named Ingvar and he had two sons, Alf and Agnar, who were of the same age as Ingjald. Svipdag the Blind was the viceroy of Tiundaland, the province of Uppsala where the Tings and the Yule (Midwinter) sacrifices were held (see the Temple at Uppsala). One midwinter, when Ingjald and Alf were six years old, many people had assembled at Uppsala for the sacrifices. Alf and Ingjald played, but Ingjald found that he was the weaker boy and became so angry that he almost started to cry (which was strange because people named Ingjald were known to be stronger than average). His foster-brother Gautvid led him to his foster-father Svipdag the Blind and told Svipdag about Ingjald's lack of manliness and strength. Svipdag said that it was a shame and the next day he gave Ingjald a roasted wolf's heart to eat. From that day, Ingjald became a very ferocious person and had a bad disposition and breath.
Anund arranged a marriage for his son Ingjald with Gauthild, the daughter of the Geatish king Algaut, who was the son of Gautrek the Mild and the grandson of Gaut. Gautrek consented as he believed that Ingjald had inherited his father's disposition. Gauthild's maternal grandfather was Olof the Sharp-sighted, the king of Närke.
Snorri Sturluson relates that when his father Anund had died, Ingjald became the king of Sweden. The kings at Uppsala were the foremost among the kings of the various provinces since Odin ruled the country, and they were the supreme chiefs of the other kingdoms since the death of Agne and Sweden was divided between Erik and Alrik. The descendants of these two kings had spread, cleared land and settled new territories, until there were several petty kings.
In honour of his own ascendance to the throne, Ingjald invited the kings, the jarls and other important men to a grand feast in a newly built hall, just as large and sumptuous as the one in Uppsala. It was called the hall of the seven kings and had seven high seats. Algaut the Geatish king of West Götaland, King Ingvar of Fjädrundaland with his two sons Agnar and Alf, King Sporsnjall of Nerike and King Sigvat of Attundaland came but not King Granmar of Södermanland. The kings filled all seven seats but one. All the prominent people of Sweden had seats, except for Ingjald's own court whom he had sent to his old hall in Uppsala.
According to the custom of the time, for those who inherited kings and jarls, Ingjald rested at the footstool until the Bragebeaker was brought in. Then he was supposed to stand up, take the beaker and make solemn vows, after which he would ascend his father's high seat. However, when the beaker was brought in, he took a bull's horn and made the solemn vow that he would enlarge his own kingdom by half towards all the four-quarters, towards which he pointed his horn, or die.
When all the prominent guests were drunk, he ordered Svipdag's sons, Gautvid and Hylvid, to arm themselves and their men and to leave the building. Outside, they set fire to the building which burnt down and those who tried to escape were killed. Thus Ingjald made himself the sole ruler of the domains of the murdered kings.
Granmar won allies in his son-in-law the sea-king Hjörvard of the Ylfings and his father-in-law Högne the Geatish king of East Götaland. They successfully withstood Ingjald's invasion where Ingjald realised that the men from the provinces he had conquered were not loyal to him. After a long standstill there was peace for as long as the three kings lived. However, one night Ingjald and his men surrounded a farm where Granmar and Hjörvard were at a feast and burnt the house down. He later disposed of five more kings, and he thus earned the name Illråde (ill-ruler) as he fulfilled his promise.
Snorri Sturluson tells that it was a common saying that Ingjald killed twelve kings by deceiving them that he only wished for peace, and that he thus earned his cognomen Illråde (ill-ruler or ill-adviser).
Downfall
Ingjald had two children, a son Olof Trätälja and a daughter Åsa. His daughter had inherited her father's psychopathic disposition. She married King Guðröðr of Skåne. Before she murdered her husband she managed to make him kill his own brother Halfdan the Valiant, the father of the great Ivar Vidfamne. In order to avenge his father, Ivar Vidfamne gathered a vast host and departed for Sweden, where he found Ingjald at Ræning. When Ingjald and his daughter realized that it was futile to resist, they set the hall on fire and succumbed in the flames. | Illråde, Ingjald (I36933)
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Inpatient | Heyward, Grace E (I51284)
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Iowa Births, 1880-1904, 1921-1946. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines, Iowa.;
Iowa Delayed Births, 1856-1940. State Historical Society of Iowa, States Archives, Des Moines, Iowa. | Source (S1635)
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Iowa Deaths, 1880-1904. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines, Iowa.; Iowa, Deaths, 1920-1951. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines, Iowa. | Source (S1616)
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Iowa Deaths, 1880-1904. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines, Iowa.; Iowa, Deaths, 1920-1951. State Historical Society of Iowa, State Archives, Des Moines, Iowa. | Source (S1616)
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Ira Hill and Nancy Peck Absten Marriage
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=4891fd03-8ecc-4296-a63c-9a4e21cced4b&tid=42551717&pid=63 | Peck, Nancy (I20617)
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Isaac arrived in Virginia aboard the Peter and Anthony, Galley of London, Daniel Perreau Commander, 20 Sep 1700. He then married Madeleine Parenteau and settled at Manakin. In 1700 he and his wife are named in the List of Meals at Falling Creek Mill.
Source: C. Allen, "Isaac Lefebure (Lefevre) of Manakin Town and His Immediate Descendants," 74 Virginia Magazine of History & Biography 26-33 (1966)
In 1712 Isaac became the First Professor of Mathematics and Physics at William and Mary College.
The 1714 census of King William Parish shows they had one son and three daughters.
The Register of the Church of the French refugees gives a record in 1724 of the death of their daughter Magdelaine.
No will or estate records available as all of James City County Records destroyed by fire in 1861.
Le Fevre, Isaac (of Manakin). d. between 1717-1719; md. 1701 Madeleine Parenteau (Will proved 6 Jun 1720); arrived Manakin, VA, 20 Sep 1700. Children: Judith, b ca 1702, d ca 1785 Amelia Co. VA, md. between 1720-1723 Pierre Dupuy; Magdelaine b ca 1706 d. 1724 unm.; male, living ca 1714, not in mother's will; Elizabeth, b ca. 1712, d. between Jul 1740-1744 King William Parish, Goochland Co. VA md. by 1732 Jacques BRIAN.
Source: Cameron Allen, "Isaac Le Fevre of Manakintown, "VA Mag., 9 (1966):26-33.
Source: Allen, Cameron; "Isaac LeFebure (LeFevre) of Manakin town and His Descendants"; Virginia Mag of Hist and Bio, vol 26 (1966).
Lefevre, George N.; Genealogical Chart of Isaac le Fevre, A Huguenot who settled in Virginia, Strasbur, VA; 1933.
In the spring of 1700 (1701) over seven hundred Huguenots sailed from Gravesend England for Virginia. The names of three of the ships are known, the "Peter and Anthony", "Le Nasseau" and the "Mary and Ann". The colony came under the leadership of the Marquis Oliver de la Muce and his assistant Charles de Sailly.
Arriving in Virginia there arose dissension among the colonists as to what lands they would settle on; so two hundred odd of the number settled on the extinct Manacan Indian lands of manakin, twenty miles West of Richmond where ten thousand acres of land was given them by the King.
This land is located in Goochland and Powhatan Counties, principally in Powhatan, on the south side of James River.
The colonists constructed a town with dwellings, church, school and hospital. Their Minister, Benjamin de Joux and Clerk Jacques Sublet, their physicians, Doctors Castogne and Paul Micou. they named the town King William Town and the Parish King William. the land was divided into tracts of one hundred thirty-three acres.
English settled with these Huguenots and intermarried. As they prospered they acquired more land and slaves and built homes on their farms and enjoyed entertaining their friends and travelers.
These refugees were of the best blood of France, many of the nobility and some had royal blood in their veins. These refugees were frugal, industrious, and good loyal citizens, gave their lives and means in the struggle for independence of the Colonies. Their homes and crops, in many instances, were destroyed by the British. They never complained, but continued fighting until the end. Their names are found in the list of soldiers in the Battles throughout the Revolutionary War. Their descendants are found in every line of endeavor.
II. LEFEVRE (Peter Dupuy m. Judith LeFevere)
1. ISAAC LEFEVRE was born in France in 1667. His brothers were Jacques, Hypolite, and Jean, who was among the first settlers on the Delaware River. Isaac came to Manakin in the summer of 1699 in the PETER AND ANTHONY with his wife, Magdalene ---. Isaac LeFevre became an Instructor in Philosophy and Mathematics at William and Mary College in 1712.
Isaac LeFevre was born in France and fled to England after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. He and his family sailed from Gravesend England on the ship "Peter & Anthony" (Galley of London) to Mankakin, Virginia in the spring of 1700 and landed at Jamestown, July 1700.
In 1700, he and his wife are named in the "List of Meal" at Falling Creek Mill, "Ye Refugees to receive one bushel per head of meal monthly as settled in and about King Williamtowne," From Tax records, Isaace LeFevre was born in France in 1667 and died in Virginia 1720/24.
The register of the Church of the French Refugees gives the name of his wife as Magdelaine. The census of King William Parish of 1714 proves they had one sone and three daughters.
He was elected instructor of Philosophy and Mathematics in William and Mary College and served one year. He resigned after some difficulty with the Governor anf faculty in regard to studies.
In 1724, he seems to have been a resident of Jamestown near the capitol of Williamsburg. The reference to the Royal Governor summoning him to pass upon the work of the surveyors shows that he resided near the capitol. He patented 68 acres on October 31, 1716.
Isaac LeFevre died before 1720
Husband of Magdelaine (Parenteau) LeFevre
Their children were ...
1. Abram LeFevre (m. Catherine MNU) 2. Magdalaine LeFevre 3. Elizabeth LeFevre (m. James Bryant, II) 4. Judith LeFevre (m. Pierre DuPuy) | LeFevre, Isaac (I33204)
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Isaac Finch - Killed by Indians, or not?
Posted 23 Jan 2023 by John Moore
Lived in the Pittston District, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. July 14, 1777, Isaac Finch purchased a mill seat on the Lackawanna River, from a committee of proprietors consisting of Abraham Harding, Daniel Cass and Isaiah Halstead. (The purchase amount was £130.) On February 12, 1790 a portion
of this same land was sold by Isaac Finch to Dr, William Hooker Smith, witnessed by Jesse Gardner and John Davidson.
On July 3, 1778, at the time of the Wyoming Valley Massacre, Isaac Finch and family were said to have been in Pittston Fort (also known as "Fort Brown") which was located on the east side of the Susquehanna river. Per page 79 of "Historical Map of PA.", (published in 1875) Captain Jeremiah Blanchard commanded at Fort Brown where Isaac Finch was listed (among others) as an inmate. This account negates claims that Isaac was in Forty Fort, (on the west side of the Susquehanna river), during the battle.
It is further believed that following the battle, Isaac Finch and family retreated to Orange County New York, where they took shelter with relatives residing there. On the day of the Wyoming Valley Massacre, Isaac Finch was considered a "defender" of Fort Brown, which according to DAR standards, qualifies him as having performed "Patriotic Service", though not "Military Service". In addition, after having relocated to New York, Isaac Finch is said to have provided monetary donations toward the war effort, which by DAR standards, also qualifies as an act of "Patriotic Service".
Isaac Finch is believed to have died abt. 1790 in Wyoming Valley, Pittston Township, Luzerne County, PA.
Quit claim dated February 16, 1790, deeds a portion of (deceased) Isaac Finch's mill seat from Samuel Finch of Kingston, Luzerne Co., Pennsylvania to William Hooker Smith Esquire.
On December 12, 1792, son, Isaac Kinney Finch was appointed administrator of (this) Isaac Finch's estate. On March 29, 1793 the estate of Isaac Finch was officially closed, after a portion of the deceased Isaac's mill seat property was sold to son, Moses Finch of Minisink, New York. The burial site of Isaac Finch is to date, unknown.
Note:
Counter to the above, family sources indicate that Isaac Finch did indeed die July 3, 1778 in the Wyoming Valley Massacre, though there is no official documentation to support this claim, nor is Isaac Finch's name included on the battle monument along Route 11, in Luzerne County, PA.
Per "Flowing Stream" by Florence Finch Kelley, (page 5);
"... dates from 1778 and the Valley of the Wyoming, where then were living Isaac Finch, my great-grandfather, and his brother John and their families. They were both fighting with the Colonial troops and both were killed in the massacre when the prosperous little colony was
attacked and ravaged by British and Indian forces, its inhabitants slaughtered, its homes burned, and those who were able to make their escape did so only by instant flight." (page 6) "...Amy Kinney, wife of Isaac, who, knowing that her husband had been killed in the massacre and that the only safety for their children was in immediate escape, hurriedly bundled into a wagon her household goods and her nine sons, among them the six- months-old Solomon, who became my grandfather, and joined the flight of the few remaining colonists. They drove across country to the Finger Lakes region in central New York, where lived other Finches."
Per "Biographical And Reminiscent History Of Richland Clay And Marion Counties, Illinois 1909" (page 212);
"On the 4th day of July, 1778, Amy Finch, The widow of Isaac Finch, with the aid of faithful servants, loaded her household effects into a wagon drawn by a pair of oxen, and with all the children, excepting Isaac Finch and Amy Finch, who were visiting in Massachusetts, prepared to fly from the recent scene of the bloody carnival. As the wagon was about to pull out, with all the household goods and children, a number of Indians seeing one of the servants standing by the wagon, with savage yells and flourishing tomahawks, dashed out his brains, bespattering with blood and brains, the five-months-old baby of the deceased Isaac Finch and his widow, who was lying upon the bed clothing in the wagon. The name of this five-months-old baby was Solomon Finch, the last born. The widow of Isaac Finch, together with these children, then took their departure from the scene of the massacre, and after many days of tedious, tiresome and dangerous travel, made their way through swamp and wilderness for some three hundred miles to Genesee County, New York, where they were finally given shelter, food and clothing and abided until they were joined by the son and daughter who had gone on a visit to Massachusetts. They finally built them a house of logs and remained in this settlement for many years, and until the
children were grown and married."
A will, however, probated March 29, 1793, and administered by son, Isaac Kinney Finch, indicates that this Isaac Finch died between February 12, 1790 and December 1792 in Wyoming Valley, Pittston Township, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.
See:
"Biographical And Reminiscent History Of Richland Clay And Marion Counties, Illinois" 1909 (page 212)
Battle Of Wyoming | Finch, Isaac III (I47385)
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Isaac Frizzell served in the War of 1812 (Pension Certificate # 13,691). Inducted as a corporal, he became a sergeant in a company commanded by Captain John Jackson, First Regiment Tennessee Militia, Col. William Metcalf, General William Carroll’s Division. He was wounded in the Battle of New Orleans.
TSLA Home > Research Collections >
Regimental Histories of Tennessee Units During the War of 1812
Prepared by Tom Kanon, Tennessee State Library and Archives...
"COLONEL WILLIAM METCALF
DESIGNATION: 1st Regiment West Tennessee Militia
DATES: November 1814 - May 1815
MEN MOSTLY FROM: Davidson, Bedford, Franklin, Lincoln, Maury, Warren, and Giles Counties
CAPTAINS: John Barnhart, Daniel M. Bradford, Barbe Collins, John Cunningham, Lewis Dillahunty, Alexander Hill, Bird S. Hurt, John Jackson, Thomas Marks, William Mullen, Andrew Patterson, William Sitton, Obidiah Waller
BRIEF HISTORY:
Part of the division under Major General William Carroll's at New Orleans, this regiment comprised the right section of Carroll's line at the breastworks at Chalmette. Muster rolls show casualties in the engagements of December 1814 and January 1815. Lieutenant Colonel James Henderson was killed in the skirmish of 28 December 1814. Captain Daniel Bradford led the elite corps known as "Carroll's Life Guard." The division reached New Orleans in mid-December 1814 after an excursion down the Mississippi River." http://www.tn.gov/tsla/history/military/1812reg.htm | Frizzell, Isaac (I46493)
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ISAAC LEFEVRE
"Isaac arrived in Manakintown in 1699/1700 from London on the galley "Peter and Anthony". In 1700 he and his wife, Madeleine Parenteau, are named in the List of Meals at Falling Creek Mill.
The Register of the Church of the French refugees gives a record in 1724 of the death of their daughter Magdalaine. The 1714 census of King William Parish shows they had one son and three daughters.
No will or estate records available as all of James City County Records destroyed by fire in 1861.
Isaac was the First Professor of Mathematics and Physics at William and Mary College.
Arrived in Virginia aboard the Peter and Anthony 20 Sep 1700; settled at Manakin; married Madeleine Parenteau.
See C. Allen, "Isaac Lefebure (Lefevre) of Manakin Town and His Immediate Descendants," 74 Virginia Magazine of History & Biography 26-33 (1966)
Le Fevre, Isaac (of Manakin). d. between 1717-1719; md. 1701 Madeleine Parenteau (Will proved 6 Jun 1720); arrived Manakin, VA, 20 Sep 1700. Children: Judith, b ca 1702, d ca 1785 Amelia Co. VA, md. between 1720-1723 Pierre Dupuy; Magdelaine b ca 1706 d. 1724 Abraham.; male, living ca 1714, not in mother's will; Elizabeth, b ca. 1712, d. between July 1740-1744 King William Parish, Goochland Co. VA md. by 1732 Jacques BRIAN.
"There was an Isaac LeFevre who came to Manakintown, VA in 1700. From tax records it is gathered that he was born in France in 1667 and died in VA after 1724. His wife was named Magdelaine or Madelaine. The census of King William Parish in 1714 proves they had 1 son and 3 daughters:
Abraham, Magdelaine, Elizabeth, and Judith. The name of Abraham's wife was Catherine. Abraham resided in Augusta and Washington Counties, VA. He appears on the Washington Co. Tax list as owning considerable land. On 14 Jul 1789 Abraham LeFevre gave Power of Attorney to Abraham LeFevre, Jr. , the former of Augusta Co., VA. Deed Bk 1, p. 235."
Evidence: R. Le Fevre, 408; Cameron Allen, "Isaac Le Fevre of Manakintown, "VA Mag., 9 (1966):26-33.
Ref: Allen, Cameron; "Isaac LeFebure (LeFevre) of Manakin town and His Descendants"; Virginia Mag of Hist and Bio, vol 26 (1966). Lefevre, George N.; Genealogical Chart of Isaac le Fevre, A Huguenot who settled in Virginia, Strasbur, VA; 1933 | LeFevre, Isaac (I33204)
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