Matches 6,601 to 6,650 of 8,319
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6601 |
Ongentheow (Old English: Ongenþeow, Ongenþio, Ongendþeow; Swedish: Angantyr) (died ca. 515) was the name of a semi-legendary Swedish king of the house of Scylfings, who appears in Old English sources.
He is generally identified with the Swedish king Egil Vendelcrow mentioned in Ynglingatal, Historia Norwegiae and in Ynglinga saga. The reason why they are thought to have been the same is that each has the same position in the line of Swedish kings and is described as the father of Ohthere and grandfather of Eadgils.
The name Ongentheow contains as its second element þeōw "servant, slave". The first appears to be ongēan "against, opposite".
Old English sources
In the Old English epic Beowulf Ongentheow is described as a fearsome warrior and it took two warriors Eofor and Wulf Wonreding to take him down.
The epic tells that the Geats under their new king Hæþcyn captured the Swedish queen, but old king Ongenþeow saved her, at a hill fort called Hrefnesholt, although they lost her gold. Ongentheow killed Hæþcyn, and besieged the Geats at Hrefnesholt. The Geats were, however, rescued by Hygelac, Hæþcyn's brother, who arrived the next day with reinforcements. Having lost the battle, but rescued his queen, Ongenþeow and his warriors returned home.
However, the war was not over. Hygelac, the new king of the Geats, attacked the Swedes. The Geatish warriors Eofor and Wulf fought together against the hoary king Ongenþeow. Wulf hit Ongentheow's head with his sword so that the old king bled over his hair, but the king hit back and wounded Wulf. Then, Eofor retaliated by cutting through the Swedish king's shield and through his helmet, giving Ongentheow a death-blow. Eofor took the Swedish king's helmet, sword and breastplate and carried them to Hygelac. When they came home, Eofor and Wulf were richly awarded, and Eofor was given Hygelac's daughter. Because of this battle, Hygelac is referred to as Ongentheow's slayer.
Ongentheow is also mentioned in passing by the earlier poem Widsith as the king of Sweden:
lines 30–33:
Wald Woingum, Wod þyringum, Wald [ruled] the Woings, Wod the Thuringians,
Sæferð Sycgum, Sweom Ongendþeow, Saeferth the Sycgs, the Swedes Ongendtheow,
Sceafthere Ymbrum, Sceafa Longbeardum Sceafthere the Ymbers, Sceafa the Lombards,
Egil
Middle royal tumulus at Old Upsala, suggested grave of King Ongentheow/Egil
In Ari Þorgilsson's Íslendingabók and in Historia Norwegiae, he was called Egil Vendelcrow (Vendilcraca/Vendilkráka, a name traditionally given to those living at the royal estate of Vendel in Sweden).[22] Snorri Sturluson, however, gave the name Vendelcrow to Egil's son Ottar (Ohthere). In these sources, Egil was the son of Aun the Old, and like him, not very warlike. After he had made the thrall Tunni (or Tonne) responsible for the treasury, Tunni rebelled against Egil. They fought eight battles after which Egil fled to Denmark, according to the Ynglinga saga (Ynglingatal does not mention where he fled and Historia Norwegiae does not mention any escape at all). Snorri wrote that Fróði, the Danish king, aided Egil in defeating Tunni, and made Egil a tributary to the Danish king.
Egil was killed by a bull during the sacrifices at Gamla Uppsala.
Ok lofsæll
ór landi fló
Týs óttungr
Tunna ríki,
en flæming
farra trjónu
jötuns eykr
á Agli rauð.
Sás of austr
áðan hafði
brúna hörg
of borinn lengi,
en skíðlauss
Skilfinga nið
hœfis hjörr
til hjarta stóð.
The fair-haired son of Odin's race,
Who fled before fierce Tunne's face,
Has perished by the demon-beast
Who roams the forests of the East.
The hero's breast met the full brunt
Of the wild bull's shaggy front;
The hero's heart's asunder torn
By the fell Jotun's spear-like horn.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation:
Auchun vero genuit Eigil cognomento Vendilcraco, quem proprius servus nomine Tonne regno privavit, et cum domino pedisseqvus VIII civilia bella commisit, in omnibus victoria potitus, in nono tandem devictus occubuit; sed paulo post ipsum regem truculentus taurus confodiens trucidavit. Cui successit in regnum filius suus Ottarus [...]
Aukun's son was Egil Vendelkråke, whose own bondman, Tunne, drove him from his kingdom; and though a mere servant he joined in eight civil combats with his master and won supremacy in all of them, but in a ninth he was finally defeated and killed. Shortly afterwards however the monarch was gored and slaughtered by a ferocious bull. The successor to the throne was his son Ottar, [...]
The even earlier source Íslendingabók also cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and it also gives Egil as the successor of Aunn and the predecessor of Óttarr: xvi Aun inn gamli. xvii Egill Vendilkráka. xviii Óttarr.
Interpretation
The argument for connection between Ongenþeow and Egil being the same figure are as follows. It is important, though, to note that this is an interpretation of the facts and not definite proof of a connection.
The two versions seem contradictory, but it has been shown that the two stories may very well describe the same event (Schück H. 1907, Nerman B. 1925), and that Ynglingatal was probably misinterpreted by Snorri due to a different dialectal meaning of the word farra. In Ynglingatal, it says
en flæming
farra trjónu
jötuns eykr
á Agli rauð.
If there is any authenticity behind the traditions, the origin of Ynglingatal was most probably a Swedish poem which has not survived (see also Sundquist 2004). In Old Swedish, farra did not mean "bull" but it meant "boar" (cf. English farrow meaning "young pig"). Moreover, in Old Norse Trjóna normally meant a pig's snout (modern Scandinavian tryne). Flæmingr meant "sword" (originally a Flemish sword imported by Vikings).
Moreover, the sword of the snout can hardly refer to the horns of a bull, but it is more natural to interpret it as the tusks of a boar. In English, the lines can be translated as but the giant beast coloured its tusk red on Egil.
In Old English, the name eofor meant "boar" and consequently Ynglingatal could very well relate of Eofor (the boar) killing Egil with kennings for boars. These kennings, sung originally by Swedes, were later misinterpreted by Norwegians and Icelanders as literal expressions due to the different dialectal meanings of farra.
Moreover, according to Schück, the name Tunni which has no meaning in Old Norse should in Proto-Norse have been *Tunþa and derived from *Tunþuz. Consequently, it would have been the same word as the Gothic Tunþus which meant "tooth". This would mean that the name of Egil's enemy, actually meant "tooth" and Tunni and the bull/boar would consequently have been the same enemy, i.e. Eofor.
Some scholars have suggested that the name Ongentheow is connected to the Danish king Ongendus, (fl. c. 700) who appears in one sentence of Alcuin's life of Willibrord. | Ongentheow (I36935)
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6602 |
Opechancanough. A Powhatan chief, born about 1545, died in 1644. He captured Capt. John Smith shortly after the arrival of the latter in Virginia, and took him to his brother, the head-chief Powhatan (q. v.). Some time after his release, Smith, in order to change the temper of the Indians, who jeered at the starving Englishmen and refused to sell them food, went with a band of his men to Opechancanough's camp under pretense of buying corn, seized the chief by the hair, and at the point of a pistol marched him off a prisoner. The Pamunkey brought boat-loads of provisions to ransom their chief, who thereafter entertained more respect and deeper hatred for the English. While Powhatan lived Opechancanough was held in restraint, but after his brother's death in 1618 he became the dominant leader of the nation, although his other brother, Opitchapan, was the nominal head-chief.
He plotted the destruction of the colony so secretly that only one Indian, the Christian Chanco, revealed the conspiracy, but too late to save the people of Jamestown, who at a sudden signal were massacred, Mar. 22, 1622, by the natives deemed to be entirely friendly.
In the period of intermittent hostilities that followed, duplicity and treachery marked the actions of both whites and Indians. In the last year of his life, Opechancanough, taking advantage of the dissensions of the English, planned their extermination. The aged chief was borne into battle on a litter when the Powhatan, on Apr. 18, 1644, fell upon the settlements and massacred 300 persons, then as suddenly desisted and fled far from the colony, frightened perhaps by some omen. Opechancanough was taken prisoner to Jamestown, where one of his guards treacherously shot him, inflicting a wound of which he subsequently died. | Mangopeesomon Powhatan, Chief Opechancanough (I23770)
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6603 |
Oppkalt etter fastermanden lekto Leyrdahl. Han var sogneprest til Vardø i Trondhjem Stift da han giftet seg med Olave Marie Tuchsen, de var beslektet i 3. ledd. Ved skiftet etter foreldrene 1787 ble det utlagt på hans part gårdene Sandø i Evindvig samt Midtbø, vurdert tilsammen for 250 rdl., Anvigen, Dukkeskind og Kasevold, vurdert tilsammen for 494 rdl. og forlods av boet 200 rdl. | Daae, Ove Christian Leyrdahl (I39507)
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6604 |
Organist ved Nykirken i Bergen | Dahle, Endre Christian (I39569)
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6605 |
Original anecdotes of Peter the Great, collected from the conversation of several persons of distinction at Petersburg and Moscow
By Jakob von Staehlin, 1788, Page 417.
Cruys (John), by birth a Dutchman, merchant in Petersburgh. He had the rank of captain in the service of Holland, and was son of the celebrated Vice-admiral Cornelius Cruys. Peter the Great, judging him worthy of his confidence, visited him frequently, and employed him, always with advantage, in the works carried on in the dock yard, and in his military expeditions by sea. This valuable officer died in 1751.
https://books.google.com/books?id=n8sGAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA417&lpg=PA417&dq=cornelius+cruys+death&source=bl&ots=kcoo3OvQDK&sig=crtGwg2dCyawVk7RMS3fahB4rmI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi1utSw1qvaAhWB7oMKHRvDBbcQ6AEIpwEwGw#v=onepage&q=cornelius%20cruys%20death&f=false | Cruys, Jan (I11380)
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6606 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6607 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6608 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6609 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6610 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6611 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6612 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6613 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6614 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6615 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6616 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6617 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6618 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6619 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6620 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6621 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6622 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
|
6623 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
|
6624 |
Original sources vary according to directory. The title of the specific directory being viewed is listed at the top of the image viewer page. Check the directory title page image for full title and publication information. | Source (S92)
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6625 |
Ortnevik, Sogn og Fjordane | Tuchsen, Anne Catharine (I39527)
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6626 |
Ortnevik, Sogn og Fjordane | Fasting, Johan Jakob (I39546)
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6627 |
Ortnevik, Sogn og Fjordane | Fasting, Michael Sundt Tuchsen (I39528)
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6628 |
Other given names: François
Other surnames: Pépin / Lachance / Pépin dit Lachance / Lachanse
Date: 04 Feb 1742
Residence: St-Jean-de-Île d'Orléans, Montmorency, Québec
Jean François Lachanse was born and baptized on this date at St-Jean-de-Île d'Orléans. His parents were identified as Jean Lachanse and Marie Louise Marchand, and his godparents were Jean François Fortie and Marianne Terien.
[Source: See Jean François' baptism record info]
Date: 02 Feb 1768
Residence: Assumed to be L'Ange-Gardien, Montmorency, Québec
François Pepin and Veronique Trudelle married on 02 Feb 1768 at L'Ange-Gardien. The groom was identified as the son of Jean Pepin and Marie Louise Marchand. The bride was identified as the daughter of Ambroise Trudelle and Angelique Parent. Present at the wedding were Jean Fortie, Pierre Potin, Charles Lapointe, Ambroise Trudelle, Jean Trudelle, Pierre Jacque and others.
[Source: See their marriage record info]
Date: 31 Mar 1787
Residence: St-Jean-de-Île d'Orléans, Montmorency, Québec
About 1 week before his death, their son, Guillaume Pepin dit Lachance was born at Île d'Orléans. Guillaume's parents were identified as François Pepin dit Lachance and Veronique Trudelle.
[Source: See his baptism record under "Child Info..." (below]
Date: 07 Apr 1787
Residence: St-Jean-de-Île d'Orléans, Montmorency, Québec
François Pepin dit Lachance died on this date at St-Jean-de-Île d'Orléans and was buried the next day at St-Jean-de-Île d'Orléans. His age and his spouse's name were not recorded. Present at his funeral were Antoine, Barthelemy and Gabriel Blouin.
COMMENTS:
- This burial record does not identify his spouse or his age, and therefore might not be the burial record for the husband of Marie Véronique Trudel. Marie Véronique Trudel died 18 May 1787. In her burial record, she was identified as the widow of the late François Pepin. Therefore, Jean François Pepin dit Lachance died before 18 May 1787. Jean François Pepin dit Lachance was alive at the time of conception of his youngest son, Guillaume Pepin dit Lachance, who was born 31 Mar 1787. Assuming a 9 month period between conception and birth, Jean François Pepin dit Lachance was alive about Jun 1786. Therefore, if this burial record is not the burial record for "our" ancestor, then he died sometime between Jun 1786 and 18 May 1787.
[Source: See François' burial record info]
COMMENTS:
About 6 weeks after his death, his wife, Veronique Trudelle, died. On 31 May 1787, his 10 yr old son, Etienne Pepin dit Lachance also died.
[Source: See Véronique's burial record info and see "Child Info..." below for the burial record of his son, Etienne]
-----
Children of Jean François Pépin dit Lachance and Marie Véronique Trudel:
They gave birth to at least 12 children: 7 boys, 4 girls, 1 child who died at birth
See "Child Info..." above for information about their children.
Locations:
- Berthierville is located in the county of Berthier, Québec.
- Château-Richer is located in the county of Montmorency, Québec.
- Deschambault is located in the county of Portneuf, Québec.
- Île-d'Orléans is located in the county of Montmorency, Québec.
- Lévis is located int he county of Lévis, Québec.
- St-Cuthbert is located in the county of Berthier, Québec.
- Ste-Élisabeth is located in the county of Joliette, Québec.
1) Un-named Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- She was born and died on 07 Jan 1769 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
2) Marie Véronique Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- She was baptized 03 Jul 1770 at St-François, Île-d'Orléans (St-François) [01].
- She married Joseph Lefrançois on 05 Feb 1793 at La Visitation-de-Notre-Dame of Château-Richer [02]. Joseph was the son of Charles Lefrançois and Marie Charlotte Bélanger [02].
COMMENTS: Charles Lefrançois and Marie Charlotte Bélanger were 4th great-grandparents of Elizabeth (Robert) Ladebauche.
- Marie Véronique Pepin dit Lachance died 15 Aug 1806 at St-Cuthbert [02].
3) Marie Josèphe Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- She was born 26 Sep 1771 and baptized 27 Sep 1771 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- She married Ignace Gagnon on 26 Jan 1796 at La Visitation-de-Notre-Dame of Château-Richer [02].
4) Geneviève Euphrosine Pepin [01]:
- She was born 01 May 1773 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- Joseph Dion dit Dumontier married Euphrosine Pèpin dit Lachance on 02 Oct 1798 at Château-Richer. The groom was identified as the son of Pierre Dion dit Dumontier, farmer, and Marie Margueritte Trépagnier, of Château-Richer. The bride was identified as the daughter of the late François Pépin dit Lachance and the late Marie Véronique Trudelle of St-Jean of L'Isle d'Orléans. Present at the wedding were Pierre Dion dit Dumontier (groom's father), Ignace Trépagnier (groom's uncle), Pierre Dion (groom's brother), François Trépagnier (groom's cousin), Pierre Gagnon (bride's maternal uncle) and François Pepin dit Lachance (bride's brother) [04].
COMMENTS:
...Joseph was the brother of Pierre François Dion dit Domontier (2nd great-grandfather of Elizabeth (Robert) Ladebauche).
...Euphrosine was the sister of François Xavier Pépin dit Lachance (2nd great-grandfather of Elizabeth (Robert) Ladebauche).
...According to one internet source and Louise (Ladebauche) Glass' family genealogy book, Joseph and Euphrosine gave birth to 15 children.
- Joseph Dion dit Dumontier died 12 Apr 1835 and was buried 14 Apr 1835; both at Château-Richer at the age of about 60 yrs old (his spouse's name was not recorded) [06].
-"Ephrosine Pépin dit Lachance" died 09 Sep 1843 and was buried 2 days later at Château-Richer. She was identified as 69 yrs old and the widow of the late Joseph Dumontier. Present at her burial were Charles Cauchon and Ignace Taillon [05].
5) François Pepin dit Lachance (aka François Xavier Pepin) - 2ND GREAT-GRANDFATHER OF ELIZABETH (ROBERT) LADEBAUCHE. SEE HIS PERSONAL PAGE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
- He was born and baptized 30 Nov 1774; both at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
6) Jean Joseph Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- He was born 20 Jun 1776 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- He died 20 Nov 1776 at 5 months old at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
7) Étienne Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- He was born 01 Oct 1777 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- He died 30 May 1787 at 10 yrs old at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
8) Marguerite Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- She was born 04 Apr 1779 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- She married Joseph Blouin dit Dufresne (aka Dufrëne) on 13 Aug 1810 at Ste-Geneviève of Berthierville [02].
- She died 11 Nov 1815 at St-Cuthbert [02].
9) Louis Lachance [01]:
- He was born 12 Jan 1781 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- He married Josette Ayotte on 30 Jan 1804 at St-Cuthbert [02].
- "Louis Lachance" died 17 Mar 1862 at Ste-Elisabeth. He was identified as the husband of Josephte Ayotte and was 84 yrs old [03].
10) Bertelmi (aka Barthelemy) Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- He was born 28 Feb 1783 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- He married Françoise Demers on 20 Apr 1807 at Notre-Dame-de-Québec of Québec City, Québec [02].
- He was buried 19 Jan 1866 at St-Joseph of Deschambault [02].
11) Benoit (aka Pierre Benoit) Pepin dit Lachance [01]:
- He was born 09 Apr 1785 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- He married Françoise Rosalie Leclerc dit Francoeur on 03 Feb 1806 at St-Jean of St-Jean-Port-Jolie, L'Islet, Québec [02].
- He died 02 May 1866 at Lévis, Lévis, Québec [02].
12) Guillaume Pepin dit Lachance [01].
- He was born 31 Mar 1787 at St-Jean, Île-d'Orléans [01].
- He married Catherine Gendreau on 27 Feb 1810 at St-Laurent of Île-d'Orléans [02].
Note:
QVR = Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Page numbers are based on copies obtained at ancestry.com
FHL = Family History Library Online, http://pilot.familysearch.org/.
-[01] See "Child Info..." (above) for the children's names and actual baptismal and burial records.
-[02] http://www.lachance.org/genealogy/surnames.php, created by Larry Lachance.
-[03] QVR, 1862, Ste-Élisabeth (Joliette), Page 12 of 45.
-[04] QVR, 1798, Château-Richer, Page 8 of 22; also in Louise Ladebauche Glass' family genealogy book, Page 7.
-[05] FHL, 1835-1856, Château-Richer, Page 101 of 257.
-[06] QVR, 1835, Château-Richer, Page 4 of 12; also in Louise Ladebauche Glass' family genealogy book, Page 7.
| Pepin Lachance, Jean-François (I24818)
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6629 |
Other surnames: Rémilliard / Roüillard / Rémillard dit Roüillard / Rémiard
Date: 24 Jul 1721
Residence: St-Vallier, Bellechasse, Québec
Augustin Rémillard was born on this date and baptized the next day; both at St-Vallier. His parents were identified as Françis Rémillard and François Hely. His godparents were Pierre Coriveau and Marie Brochu.
[Source: See his baptismal record info]
Date: 26 Apr 1746
Residence: St-Vallier, Bellechasse, Québec
Augustin Remillard and Madeleine Denis were married on this date at St-Vallier. The groom was identified as the son of François Remilllard and Françoise Hely, of this parish. The bride was identified as the daughter of Joseph Denis and the widow of the late François Dallaire, of the parish of St-Michel. Present at the wedding were Louis Remillard (groom's brother, Antoine and Etienne Remillard (groom's uncles) and Joseph Denis (bride's father).
[Source: See their marriage record info]
Date: 17 Apr 1794
Residence: St-Cuthbert, Berthier, Québec
His wife, Magdeleine Denis, died on this date and was buried two days later; both at St-Cuthbert. She was identified as 68 yrs old and the wife of Augustin Remillard (who was still alive). Present at his funeral were Pierre Dubois and Pierre Jacques Boulet.
[Source: See Magdeleine's burial record info]
Date: 13 Apr 1807
Residence: St-Cuthbert, Berthier, Québec
Augustin Rémillard, farmer, of this parish, died on this date at 89 yrs old. He was the widower of Magdeleine Denis. Present at his funeral were two sons, Joseph Marie and Jean Baptiste Rémillard.
[Source: See his death record info]
-----
Children of Augustin Rémillard dit Roüillard and Marie Madeleine Denis dit Lapierre:
They gave birth to at least 12 children (8 boys and 4 girls), as identified below.
Locations:
- Berthierville (aka Berthier-en-Haut) is located in the county of Berthier, Québec.
- Rivière-du-Loup (Louiseville) is located in the county of Maskinongé, Québec.
- St-Cuthbert is located in the county of Berthier, Québec.
- St-Michel is located in the county of Bellechasse, Québec.
- St-Vallier is located in the county of Bellechasse, Québec.
Unless otherwise noted, the spelling of the children's names was obtained from their baptismal records.
1) Augustin Rémillard:
- Augustin Rémillard was baptized 17 Apr 1747 at St-Vallier. His birth date was not recorded. He was identified as the son of Augustin Rémillard and Marie Mad. (i.e. Madeleine) Denis. His godparents were François Rémillard (identified as the child's grandfather) and Marie Jeanne Clement (identified as the child's grandmother) [01, 21].
COMMENTS: His godfather was his paternal grandfather and his godmother was his maternal grandmother.
- Augustin Roüillard died 11 Nov 1748, probably at St-Vallier (identified as his parents residence), and was buried the next day at St-Michel of Bellechasse. He was identified as the son of Augustin Roüillard and Magdeleine Denis. Present at his burial were Nicolas Chamberlan and Jacques Baquet [01, 27].
2) Pierre Rémillard:
- Pierre Rémillard was baptized 29 Dec 1748 at St-Vallier. His birth date was not recorded. His parents were identified as Augustin Rémillard and Madeleine Denis. His godparents were Pierre Rémillard and M. Angélique Mercier, wife of Michel Richard [01, 20].
COMMENTS: Since this child's parents gave birth to another child, named Pierre, on 10 Aug 1763 at St-Vallier, this Pierre Rèmillard probably died before 10 Aug 1763.
3) Marie Magdeleine Rémillard:
- Marie Madeleine Rémillard was baptized 18 Sep 1750 at St-Vallier. Her birth date was not recorded. She was identified as the daughter of Augustin Rémillard and Marie Mad' (i.e. Madeleine) Denis. Her godparents were Jacques Rémillard and Marie Moricet, wife of Etienne Leroy [01, 18].
- Marie Magdeleine Rémillard married Gabriel Laliberté (aka Colin dit Laliberté) on 11 Feb 1771 at St-Cuthbert. The groom was identified as the son of Joseph Laliberté and the late Angélique Berare dite Lepine (aka Bérard dit Lépine), of St-Cuthbert. The bride was identified as the daughter of Augustin Rémillard and Marie Magdeleine ---- (her surname was either omitted or was not copied), also of St-Cuthbert. Present at the wedding were Gervais Rivard, Claude Cuineau, François Morel and Jean Baptiste Berare dit Lepine [01, 19].
- They gave birth to at least one son, Pierre Gabriel Colin dit Laliberté on 22 Nov 1771 at St-Cuthbert [01].
- Magdeleine Rouillard was buried 27 Apr 1773 at about 25 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. She was identified as the wife of Gabriel Colin. Her burial record was published in the records of the parish of Ste-Geneviève of Berthierville (aka Berthier-en-Haut) [14].
COMMENTS: She might have died in Berthierville. Her death date was not recorded.
- Her husband remarried with Marie Anne Commartin dit St-Joseph, then died on 03 May 1777 at St-Cuthbert [01].
4) Joseph Marie Rémillard - 3RD GREAT-GRANDFATHER OF ELIZABETH (ROBERT) LADEBAUCHE. SEE HIS PERSONAL PAGE FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
- He was baptized 02 Jun 1752 at St-Vallier.
5) Jean Batiste Rémillard (i.e. Jean Baptiste Rémillard):
- Jean Batiste (sic) Rémillard was baptized 29 Apr 1754 at St-Vallier. His birth date was not recorded. His parents were identified as Augustin Rémillard and Marie Madeleine Denis. His godparents were Pierre Denis and Marie Joseph Rémillard [01, 17].
- He married Marie Josèphe Ricard on 03 Feb 1777 at Rivière-du-Loup (Louiseville) [01].
- Jean Baptiste Rémillard died 04 Jun 1827 at 74 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. He was identified as the husband of Marie Josephte Ricard. Pierre Dumontier attended the burial [03].
6) Marie Exupere Rémillard (her name is from source 01):
- She was baptized 18 May 1756 at St-Vallier [01].
- Marie Exuper Rémiard dit Roüillard married Joseph Jacques on 25 Sep 1775 at St-Cuthbert. The groom was identified as the son of Joseph Jacques and Marie Joseph Gronier, of St-Cuthbert. The bride was identified as the daughter of August Rémiard dit Roüillard and Marie Magdeleine Denys of St-Cuthbert. Present at the wedding were both fathers and also Antoine and Jean Baptiste Jacques (groom's brothers) and Joseph and Jean Baptiste Rémiard dit Roüillard (bride's brothers) [01, 15].
- Marie Rémillard died 25 Dec 1807 at 49 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. She was identified as the wife of Joseph Jacques, farmer, of St-Cuthbert. Present at her burial were Joseph Marie Rémillard (her brother) and Pierre Jacques ("beau-frère," probably brother-in-law) [16].
7) Marie Véronique Rémiare:
- Marie Véronique Rémiare was born 01 Oct 1757 and baptized the next day; both at St-Vallier. Her parents were identified as Augustin Rémiare and Marie Madeleine Deny. Her godparents were Joseph ---- (illegible surname) and Véronique Saint-Jean [01, 22].
- "Marie Véronique Rémiard dit Roüillard" died 23 Sep 1774 at 17 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. She was identified as the daughter of Augustin Rémiard dit Roüillard and Marie Magdeleine Lapierre dite Denys [01, 12].
8) Marie Rose Rémillard (her name is from her burial record):
- She was born before Oct 1759 in Québec Province (unknown location) [01].
- Marie Rose Rémillard was buried 02 Jan 1760 at St-Vallier and was identified as about 3 months old. Her death date was not recorded. She was identified as the daughter of Augustin Rémillard and Magdeleine Lapierre [01, 11, 26].
9) Augustin Rémillard:
- Augustin Rémillard was baptized 09 Mar 1761 at St-Vallier. His birth date was not recorded. He was identified as the son of Augustin Rémillard and Marie Magdeleine Dénis. His godparents were Joseph Gaboury and Geneviève Dallaire [01, 23].
- He married Marie Morin dit Valcourt on 07 Aug 1797 at St-Cuthbert. The groom was identified as the son of Augustin Rémillard and the late Magdeleine Denis. The bride was identified as the daughter of the late Louis Morin and Marie Louise Boulet [01, 05].
- His wife, Marie Morin, died after 22 Jun 1800, where she was identified as the godmother of Honoré Rémillard, son of Joseph Rémillard and Pélagie Roberge.
- He married a 2nd time with Françoise Vésina (aka Vézina) on 16 Jan 1804. The groom was identified as a major (i.e. 21 yrs or older), farmer, and the widower of Marie Louise Morin dit Valcour (aka Morin dit Valcourt) of St-Cuthbert. The bride was also identified as a major and the daughter of Charles Vésina, farmer, and Elisabeth Bérare dite Lépine (probably Bérard dit Lépine) of St-Cuthbert. Present at the wedding were Joseph Rémillard (groom's brother), Charles Vésina (bride's father), Jean Guilmont and others [02].
10) Pierre Roüillard:
- Pierre Roüillard was born 10 Aug 1763 at St-Vallier. He was identified as the son of Augustin Roüillard and Magdelaine Denys. His godparents were René Cauchon (? illegible) and Elisabeth Fortin, wife of Pierre Etienne Corrivaux [01, 13].
- Pierre Rémilliard married Marie Perrault (aka Marie Louise Perrault dit Chateaugay) on 12 Feb 1787 at St-Cuthbert. The groom was identified as the son of Augustin Rémilliard dit Rouillard and Magdelaine Denis of St-Cuthbert. The bride was identified as the daughter of Pierre Sulpice Perrault dit Chateauguay and Ursule Mondor, also of St-Cuthbert. Augustin Rémilliard, Claude Luineau, Joseph Faucher, Etienne Cherret, Louis Sylvestre and Joseph Rémilliard attended the wedding [01, 08].
- Pierre Rémillard died 12 Aug 1833 at 72 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. He was identified as a farmer, resident of St-Cuthbert and the husband of Marie Chateauguay [09].
- His wife, "Marie Chateauguay," died 24 Mar 1846 at 76 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. She was identified as a resident of St-Cuthbert and the widow of Pierre Rémillard [10].
11) Joseph Rémillard:
- Joseph Rémillard was born and baptized 01 Apr 1767; both at St-Vallier. He was identified as the son of Augustin Rémillard and Magdelaine Deny. His godparents were Pierre Destroismaison and Marie Geneviève Queret, wife of François Rémillard [01, 24].
COMMENTS: The 2nd wife of the child's uncle, François Rémillard, was Marie Gertrude Quérette dit Latulippe.
- Joseph Rémilliard and Marie Pélagie Roberge married 30 Jun 1794 at St-Cuthbert. The groom was identified as the son of Augustin Rémilliard and the late Magdeleine Denis of St-Cuthbert. The bride was identified as the daughter of Joseph Roberge and the late Charlette Dutaut dit Vilandré of this parish [01, 04].
- His wife, Pélagie Roberge, died 17 Mar 1819 at about 42 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. She was identified as the wife of Joseph Rémillard [06].
- Joseph Rémillard died 16 Aug 1839 at 74 yrs old at St-Cuthbert. He was identified as a farmer, resident of St-Cuthbert and the widower of Pélagie Roberge. Sylvère Dumontier and Joseph Génereux attended his burial [07].
12) Antoine Rémillard:
- Antoine Rémillard was born and baptized 25 Nov 1768; both at St-Vallier. He was identified as the son of Augustin Rémillard and Marie Magdelaine Deny. His godparents were Joseph Michel Richard and Judith Cretien [01, 25].
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sources:
Abbreviations:
-- QVR = Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Page numbers are based on copies obtained at ancestry.com.
-- FHLO - Family History Library Online, http://pilot.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#p=0.
-[01] PRDH - Programme de Recherche en Démographie Historique.
-[02] QVR, 1804, St-Cuthbert, Page 3 of 43.
-[03] QVR, 1827, St-Cuthbert, Page 23 of 64.
-[04] FHLO, 1794, St-Cuthbert, Page 21 of 35.
-[05] FHLO, 1796 to 1803, St-Cuthbert, Page 55 of 238.
-[06] QVR, 1819, St-Cuthbert, Page 13 of 45.
-[07] QVR, 1839, St-Cuthbert, Page 22 of 32.
-[08] QVR, 1787, St-Cuthbert, Page 4 of 22.
-[09] QVR, 1833, St-Cuthbert, Page 13 of 26.
-[10] QVR, 1846, St-Cuthbert, Page 9 of 31.
-[11] QVR, 1756-1770, St-Vallier, Page 22 of 94.
-[12] QVR, 1773-1777, St-Cuthbert, Page 11 of 96.
-[13] QVR, 1763-1788, St-Cuthbert, Page 2 of 95.
-[14] QVR, 1762-1776, Bertherville (Ste-Geneviève), Page 233 of 331.
-[15] QVR, 1773-1777, St-Cuthbert, Page 23 of 96.
-[16] QVR, 1807, St-Cuthbert, Page 38 of 44.
-[17] FHLO, 1713 to 1755, St-Vallier, Page 150 of 159.
-[18] FHLO, 1713 to 1755, St-Vallier, Page 135 of 159.
-[19] QVR, 1770-1773, St-Cuthbert, Page 3 of 25.
-[20] FHLO, 1713 to 1755, St-Vallier, Page 123 of 159.
-[21] FHLO, 1713 to 1755, St-Vallier, Page 112 of 159.
-[22] FHLO, 1756 to 1770, St-Vallier, Page 13 of 112.
-[23] FHLO, 1756 to 1770, St-Vallier, Page 39 of 112.
-[24] FHLO, 1756 to 1770, St-Vallier, Page 89 of 112.
-[25] FHLO, 1756 to 1770, St-Vallier, Page 98 of 112.
-[26] FHLO, 1756 to 1770, St-Vallier, Page 31 of 112.
-[27] FHLO, 1693 to 1757, St-Vallier, Page 308 of 514.
| Remillard, Augustin (I24833)
|
6630 |
OTTO W. ALTER
OTTO W. ALTER DIES; FUNERAL TO BE MONDAY
Lifelong Resident, For Over 40 Years With Schuette Bros., Was 75 Years Old Otto W. Alter, 75, 624? North Tenth street, a lifelong resident of the city, died Friday afternoon. He had been in failing health for several months. Funeral services will be held Monday at 8:30 a.m. from the Wattawa, Urbanek and Schlei funeral home and at 9 a.m. from the
Sacred Heart church. Interment will be at Evergreen cemetery.
The deceased was born in Manitowoc in 1859 and after attending the local schools became identified with the Schuette Bros. Co. store here. For a 40 year span he was affiliated with the clothing department of the store. He retired from active work four years ago.
Mr. Alter was married here in 1895 to Miss Minnie Pruss(sic) of this city. He was a member of the Holy Name society of the Sacred Heart congregation and the Elks lodge. Survivors are his widow; a son George, vice president of the Invincible Metal Furniture company; and two brothers, Oscar and Gust Alter, both of this city. The body may be viewed at the funeral home tonight and also Sunday afternoon and evening.
Manitowoc Herald Times, Saturday, May 11, 1935 p.4
[bur. May 13, 1935/age 75 yrs/cause: renal disease hypostatic pneumonia/ bur. on Herman Preuss lot]
http://www.2manitowoc.com/44Allobit.html#alterotto | Alter, Otto Wilhelm (I9732)
|
6631 |
Ove Christian Leyrdahl Daae og Olave Marie Tuchsen gift 18. september 1796 i Bergen etter kgl. bevilling (fetterens datter)
Ekteskapsbevilling for Bergen stift 1717-1804:
Fornavn Etternavn Gård Prestegjeld
Ove christian Wardøe
Olave Marie Tuchsen Wardøe
19.08.1796
Kilde:
https://digitalarkivet.arkivverket.no/gen/vis/131/pc00000000184128 | Family: Ove Christian Leyrdahl Daae / Olave Marie Tuchsen (F9291)
|
6632 |
Overbergamtskriver in Christiania, later the mine superintendent at Kongsberg silver mining. Married in 1657 with Sophie Fredriksdatter Bøyesen (d. about 1662). Daughter of the forest inspector and leaseholder of the king's mill Fredrik Bøyesen (d. 1679) and Annichen Johansdatter Gaar Man .) (born about 1605). Married in 1663 with his first wife's cousin Christiane Sophie Gaar Male (ca 1650-1696). Daughter of overlandskomissarius and castles writes at Akershus Castle Johan Johansen Gaar Mann (1608-1673) and Maren Willumsdatter Drugs (1620-1654)
Overbergamtskriver i Christiania, senere overbergmester på Kongsberg sølvverk. Gift 1657 med Sofie Fredriksdatter Bøyesen (d. ca 1662). Datter av skoginspektør og forpakter av kongens mølle Fredrik Bøyesen (d. 1679) og Annichen Johansdatter Gaarmann.) (f. ca 1605). Gift 1663 med sin første kones kusine Christiane Sophie Gaarmann (ca 1650–1696). Datter av overlandskomissarius og slottsskriver ved Akershus slott Johan Johansen Gaarmann (1608–1673) og Maren Willumsdatter Dop (1620–1654)
Mikael Sundt: Stamtavle over Familien Barth , Kristiania 1891 side 30-33
Arthur Skjelderup: Ingeborg Marie Barth Meyer f. Guus og hendes ascendenter, Slægtshistoriske meddelelser, 1923 , side 27-28. | Barth, Johannes (I10928)
|
6633 |
Overhalla, Namdal, Nord-Trøndelag | Elster, Frederikke Sophie (I39623)
|
6634 |
Overstreet Family- Revolutionary War.
Thomas Overstreet, Sr. was the first person with this surname tohave an entry in any of the Bedford County records. Bedford County was
formed in 1754 from Lunenburg County, and in 1755 Thomas Overstreet, Sr.
records a purchase of about 400 acres near the headwaters of a small sized tributary of the Otter River.
Thomas Overstreet, Sr. and Agnes were married before arriving in
Bedford County, possibly in Orange County, where their oldest child Thomas Jr. was born. At the time of the move three of the six children had been born.
This first Overstreet family farm on Orrix Creek was certainly in
wilderness. Life was very difficult, with any land that was to be planted to crops having to be cleared by hand. This family had no other adults to assist Thomas Sr., only Agnes and a twelve year old Thomas Jr. Neighbors did exist, but they had a similar lack of labor available. The nearest community was New London, more than ten miles away by trail. New London was not identified as a village until 1757. The settlers of this day and area had to be very self-sufficient in every respect.
Challenges from Native Americans were always a possibility. In 1774
the situation with the Native Americans became very difficult with the
English expansion pushing west of the nearby Appalachian Mountains, into an area where the French felt they had authority and control. Both the British and the French had friends among the native tribes. It was in this environment that the Bedford Militia was mobilized and under the direction of the British participated in the Point Pleasant Campaign.
It appears that William Overstreet was able to participate as a
private with the company of Thomas Buford in the Point Pleasant Campaign.
All of the known children in the Thomas Overstreet Sr. & Agnes
family were born by the end of 1760. When the American Revolution started in 1776 the Bedford militia was again mustered. This time Thomas Overstreet, Jr. and the youngest brother John Overstreet answered the call for excitement. By this time the farm was producing an ample supply of goods for the family and they could share with others in need. This apparently is how Thomas Overstreet, Sr. and Agnes were able to help the freedom cause, by providing provisions to the forces.
It was about 1780 when Thomas Overstreet, Jr. returned from the war
effort with a wife Barsheba. There is no known record of where Barsheba was born, or where and when the marriage took place. It seems to be a common belief among family members that Barsheba was at least a partial Native American, and possibly a full blood.
The youngest son John Overstreet probably returned from the war
about the same time.
By 1783 another Thomas Overstreet had arrived in Bedford County, to
take up residence. Thomas 'the hatter' Overstreet (1755-1833) & Judith
Walker (1765-1836) remained in Bedford County for at least ten years. Seven
of their children were born in Bedford County. Scott Swanson, a Butler
University history professor, recently distributed an excellent group of
working papers. In these papers he writes "Thomas apparently removed his
family from Bedford County VA about 1793, but where he lived until he showed up in the 1808 Mercer County KY tax lists remains unknown." A different source indicates Thomas, Judith and family were in Halifax County VA in the period between 1793-1808. Convenient for us, this Thomas had the craft of a Hatter, therefore being known today as the ''the hatter' or Thomas 'the hatter'. Records seem to indicate that one or more of his male children also had the craft of Hatter.
Regarding the male parent for Thomas 'the hatter' in Bedford County,
Scott Swanson writes "I'd say that the father of James and Thomas 'the
hatter' was the elusive Thomas Overstreet floating almost out of sight in the records of Caroline County VA. James might well have named his eldest son after his father. Thomas might well be the younger son bearing his own father's name." In this situation, Scott is discussing a James Overstreet that had three wives, and apparently did not spend any time in residence in Bedford County VA.
The James Overstreet from Goochland County, Virginia moved into a
location near Suck Mountain in the northern part of Bedford County. This
line of Overstreets were often referred to in future decades as the
'Northern Overstreets' and were closely identified with Taylor's Mountain and surroundings. The wife of this James Overstreet was Frances Eubanks.
# # #
"Overstreet-Hall Family"
Thomas Overstreet 1744-1842(From his pension application)
On the 29th day of October, 1833, personally appeared in open court, before the county court, now sitting, Thomas Overstreet, as resident of Russell Parish in this county and state aforesaid, aged 89 years, who being first duly sworn according to law, doth on his oath make the following declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the act of congress, passed June 1833.
"That he entered the service of the United States, under the following named officers and served as herein stated--That in the fall, probably in September, he cannot recollect the day, 1777, he volunteered into the
Service of the United States in Bedford County, Virginia, where he resided, under Capt. Samuel Campbell and Lieut. John Phelps, to march against the Indians, who were said at that time to be collected together in the western part of Virginia--His company rendezvoused at Bedford court house, and marched from thence thro Botecourt (sic-Botetourt) to a place called Benhevers Ford on Greenbrier River in Greenbrier County (now in West Virginia), a distance of about 130 miles, where they remained stationed one month--in expectation of the Indians--but not meeting with them, we were then marched to a mill in the same county, where we stationed about two months, still looking out for Indians, but they did not make their appearance. He was discharged by Capt. Campbell sometime in December 1777, but received no written discharge--There was no regular officers with the troops, nor any Continental regiments or companies with the troops during this tour--He was engaged in this tour three months--no other troops of any line along, but his company & no field officers.
"Again in the winter of 1777, he thinks the last of December, but he cannot recollect the day, he volunteered into the service of the United States, in Bedford county, Va., where he then lived, under Capt. William Leftwich, Lieut. John Phelps to march against the Indians, who were said to be still collected in the western counties of Virginia. His company rendezvoused at Anthony's Store in Bedford county & marched from thence thro Boutecourt to the lead mines on New River in Wythe county, Va. They were stationed at this place five weeks & were engaged in building a Fort, for the purpose of protecting the country against the Indians, but no Indians making their appearance, and the people becoming pacified, they were discharged by Capt. Leftwich, but received no written discharge. He was engaged in this tour five weeks--There were no regular officers, nor any continental regiments, or companies with the troops--no field officers--The troops consisting of his company alone--He was discharged at the expiration of his tour by Capt. Leftwich.
"In the month of October, he cannot recollect the day, 1779, he again
volunteered into the service of the United States, in Bedford County, Va. under Capt. Jacob Early of the Virginia militia, for three months . His company rendezvoused at Maj. Ward's in Bedford County, Va. (now Campbell), and marched thence thro Charlotte, Prince Edward, Cumberland, Powhatan & Chesterfield counties to Petersburg, where (he) joined the army commanded by Genl. Lawson. His other officers were Col. Charles Lynch, Maj. Leftwich, latter of whom is the same officer he marched under at certain lead mines. He was stationed about half mile from Petersburg during the whole time. Of the regular officers he recollects, Genl. Lawson, Baron Steuben, Col. Holcombe. He was discharged in December 1779 by Col. Lynch, but received no written discharge--He refers to the affidavit of Maj. Samuel Mitchell, who served with this tour, to prove his services. "In the past two first tours mentioned above, there was but one company at any time in the service--He served not less than the period mentioned below, to wit--the first tour three months--the second tour, five weeks--& the third tour, three months, for which he claims a pension--He has no documentary evidence of any of his services--He refers to the affidavits of Maj. Sam'l Mitchell & John Turner. Mr. Turner cannot recollect the time, in which, he served the two first tours--"
'In answer to interrogatories he states
1. He was born in Orange county, Va.--he believes 15 Oct--1744
2. He never had any register of his age
3. He lived in Bedford county, Va. when he entered the service each time & has lived there ever since the revolution & now resides there
4. He entered the service each time as a volunteer.
5. & 6. he has answered to the best of his recollection, in his declaration
7. William Leftwich & Samuel Mitchell are persons to whom he is known in his present neighborhood, who can testify to his character, veracity and their belief of his services as a soldier of the Revolution.' Record
After relinquishing his claims to any other pension or bounty, except for the present one, he then declares that his name is not on the pension roll of any other agency nor any other state, he signs his name.
William Leftwich, Samuel Mitchell, and John Turner all residents of Bedford county then gave their affidavits as to their memories of Thomas' service these in turn witnessed by various Justices of the Peace. The court then certified the declarations.
Thomas Overstreet was allowed a pension of $22.88 per year. His allowable service was seven months and forty-five days; the pension was dated back to March, 1833. He died in April, 1842.
Marriage On November 23, 1826 he had married Fanny Roberts of his home
county. She was allowed a pension on her application, dated March 11, 1854, at which time she was eighty-five years of age, and residing in Bedford
County.
The account of his War activities as given by Thomas Overstreet gives a good idea of the type of services rendered by the militia forces. | Overstreet, Thomas Jr (I41860)
|
6635 |
Overtok foreldrenes (morens?) gård Torsvik, som han drev til sin død. Torsvik br.nr. 1 og 2 skiftet han med sine to sønner, mens han bygslet bort br.nr. 3 og 4, og nr. 6 Dragsøy.. 10 barn. | Brügger, Hans Andreas (I39479)
|
6636 |
overtollbetjent i Øster-Risør | Daae, Anders (I39720)
|
6637 |
OWEN FAMILY
Richard OWEN - b. about 1550. Married Jan. 14, 1580, Steventon Parish, Berkshire. Joane DANIELL - b. about 1555-1560; d. after 1604. Daughter of Robert DANIELL.
Robert OWEN - bap. Nov. 7, 1583, Steventon Parish, Berkshire. Son of Richard OWEN and Joane DANIELL. Married Nove. 21, 1613, Steventon Parish, Berkshire. Joane WHITE - b. about 1595.
Bartholomew OWEN - bap. Aug. 24, 1619, Steventon Parish, Berkshire, England; d. 1677/8, Surry Co., VA. Probable son of Robert OWEN and Joane WHITE. The earliest record of Bartholomew in America is 1658, but the related Court records in Surry Co., VA from 1658 to late 1660 indicate he was probably well established had some sort of dispute with Thomas GRAY, an early Planter. The Court found that Bartholomew was guilty of scandalous and defamatory language in the case. On Oct. 17, 1659, Bartholomew served on an Inquest Jury in an accidental death. He was a Church Warden of Southwark Parish in 1661. In a land sale of Mar. 1, 1661 and cattle sale of Apr. 1, 1662, Bartholomew was called Gentleman. On Nov. 3, 1663, Bartholomew lost a suit and forfeited 2129 pounds of tobacco, and in 1664 he was co-surety on a King's bond of 10,000 pounds of tobacco. These and other land and Court records between 1658 and 1670 indicate that Bartholomew OWEN held considerable wealth in land and commodities and was called upon to serve the community in positions of trust and responsibility. Bartholomew may have been married first on May 9, 1641 in England to Ann CHARLES, by whom he had no known children. Bartholomew's wife is named as Joanna in a conveyance dated Jan. 3, 1670, and in the Sep. 9, 1674 sale of 150 acres in Surry Co., VA to William FOREMAN. A 648 acre land patent by Bartholomew on May 14, 1673, and a 1689 patent by Edmund JENNINGS including headrights for Robert OWEN, Jone OWEN and William OWEN, together the absence of Bartholomew from Court records from early 1670 to mid 1673, suggests that the family may have made a trip to England during this time. Bartholomew granted a power of attorney to Nicholas Meriweather on Oct. 8, 1677, and on Jan. 31, 1677/8, Joanna OWEN was granted administration of the estate of Bartholomew OWEN, deceased. The estate was inventoried and appraised at 30 pounds by Will FOREMAN and John MORING on Feb. 14, 1677 in Surrey Co., VA. Married Joanna about 1666.
Joanna - b. about 1652; d. after 1704, New Kent Co., VA. It has been suggested that she was the daughter of Edmond JENNINGS. On Apr. 17, 1693, Joanna deposed that she was "about 40 years." She had four minor children when she was name administrator of her husband's estate.
Married second in James City to Thomas BROOKES (1695, Henrico Co., VA; will dated Feb. 23, 1694/5 and proved Oct. 1695).  I was likely born in the Colony of Virginia. Since the early records of Henrico County where I lived are mostly missing, I can tell you nothing about my father, who died when my brother, William, and I were very young. Our mother, Joanna, who was born about 1655, married second Thomas Brookes. His 1694-will in Henrico County left one shilling each to Thomas and William Owen, whom he called his “sons-in-law,” a term that then meant stepson. In 1704 mother was living in Henrico County on a large farm belonging to Capt. William Walker of New Kent County and I had my own 68 acres. Mother was likely dead by 1710 when Captain Walker’s son sold the land, calling it the plantation where Joan Brooks formerly lived. William and I lived on the south side of the Chickahominy River near Seth Rench, whose will I witnessed in 1704. Elizabeth and I were the parents of 3 sons and 2 daughters. Since I deeded property to sons, John and William, in March 1740, my 1741-will left them one shilling each. I divided two slaves between the families of daughters Priscilla Fuqua and Elizabeth Britton and expressed my desire that Thomas receive the remainder of my property after the death of his mother. Since I outlived Elizabeth, I deeded my home plantation to Thomas in 1743. I was dead by May 1744.  Land activity Thomas Owen purchased 100 acres on the south side of Chickahominy Swamp 2 February 1712/3, of which he deeded half to Daniel Fitzpatrick 7 February 1714/5. After Rench’s daughter Sarah Rench married Lancelot Armstrong, they sold her half of Rench’s land to Owen 1 September 1728. Thomas deeded 50 acres to Watson Brumfield 3 March 1734/5 and 350 acres to Isaac Winston 30 May 1735. As Thomas Owen of Henrico County, he purchased a tract of land on the north side of the James River in Goochland County 2 June 1737. His wife, Elizabeth, relinquished her dower right when he deeded 190 acres in Goochland County to John Simkins 17 September 1737, the same day Simkins sold Owen a neighboring 150 acres in Henrico County. Thomas Owen, planter living in Henrico County, appointed “loving friend Ralph Fuqua” his attorney 5 April 1743. Thomas Owen, in his own words If he could speak to us today, Thomas Owen might describe his life as follows.  I was likely born in the Colony of Virginia. Since the early records of Henrico County where I lived are mostly missing, I can tell you nothing about my father, who died when my brother, William, and I were very young. Our mother, Joanna, who was born about 1655, married second Thomas Brookes. His 1694-will in Henrico County left one shilling each to Thomas and William Owen, whom he called his “sons-in-law,” a term that then meant stepson. In 1704 mother was living in Henrico County on a large farm belonging to Capt. William Walker of New Kent County and I had my own 68 acres. Mother was likely dead by 1710 when Captain Walker’s son sold the land, calling it the plantation where Joan Brooks formerly lived. William and I lived on the south side of the Chickahominy River near Seth Rench, whose will I witnessed in 1704. Elizabeth and I were the parents of 3 sons and 2 daughters. Since I deeded property to sons, John and William, in March 1740, my 1741-will left them one shilling each. I divided two slaves between the families of daughters Priscilla Fuqua and Elizabeth Britton and expressed my desire that Thomas receive the remainder of my property after the death of his mother. Since I outlived Elizabeth, I deeded my home plantation to Thomas in 1743. I was dead by May 1744.  Land activity Thomas Owen purchased 100 acres on the south side of Chickahominy Swamp 2 February 1712/3, of which he deeded half to Daniel Fitzpatrick 7 February 1714/5. After Rench’s daughter Sarah Rench married Lancelot Armstrong, they sold her half of Rench’s land to Owen 1 September 1728. Thomas deeded 50 acres to Watson Brumfield 3 March 1734/5 and 350 acres to Isaac Winston 30 May 1735. As Thomas Owen of Henrico County, he purchased a tract of land on the north side of the James River in Goochland County 2 June 1737. His wife, Elizabeth, relinquished her dower right when he deeded 190 acres in Goochland County to John Simkins 17 September 1737, the same day Simkins sold Owen a neighboring 150 acres in Henrico County. Thomas Owen, planter living in Henrico County, appointed “loving friend Ralph Fuqua” his attorney 5 April 1743. 
WILL OF THOMAS OWEN 13 October 1741 To wife Elizabeth, use of Negroes for life and then 2 of them to my son Thomas. Also to wife, items and parts of land, as law directs, for life, and then to son Thomas. To son Thomas, all my lands, except that Martha Robards may have life on the land; also to him, Negroes & items. To son John, 1 shilling. To son William, 1 shilling. To Martha Robards, 1 cow and calf. After wife’s death, my Negro girl to Ralph Fuqua and Priscilla, his wife, for life, and then to their son John, if he live to 21. If he dies, then to Elizabeth Fuqua, daughter of said Ralph & Priscilla. Elizabeth Fuqua also to get the Negro Jack, after the death of her parents provided William Britton Sr. will give his son William Britton one Negro to the value of the Negro girl Lucy, then I give my grandson William Britton, if he reach 18 years of age, the Negro girl Lucy. If he dies, said Lucy goes to his sisters, Elizabeth and Mary Britton. All rest of estate divided between wife and son, Thomas. Thomas did not identify Martha Robards as a daughter, although perhaps she was. 
John Owen (-1767) John Owen, son of Thomas and Elizabeth Owen, married first Sarah Brackett. Sarah joined John on a deed in August 1731 but was dead by 1739 when John’s wife was Phoebe. William Bratchett, perhaps Sarah’s brother, was residing in John’s household in 1749. During his lifetime, John acquired large tracts of land in present-day Prince Edward County, including 4,273 acres by patent. A resident of St. Patrick’s Parish, he helped procession farms in the fork of the Sandy River in 1760. John left a will in Prince Edward naming wife, Phoebe, and twelve children (will dated 24 Feb. 1767, recorded 28 Aug. 1767). Prince Edward County charged the estate of John Owen on five tithables and 773 acres in 1767.
William Owen (-1804), a patroller, was charged on one tithe in Amelia County in 1749. He was deeded 100 acres on the upper side of Mountain Creek by his father 25 December 1750 and got a neighboring 100 acres from Mumford DeJarnette 13 April 1762. After selling DeJarnette 8 acres in 1759, he was left with 192, which he deeded to his brother Brackett Owen 7 October 1762. William secured a patent to 400 acres in present-day Halifax County 29 May 1760. Pittsylvania County charged William Owen Sr. on one tithe and 100 acres in 1770. William deeded 100 acres to son John in 1772, 42 acres to son William in 1774, 41 acres to son Hatcher in 1783, 100 acres to son Hatcher in 1790, and 100 acres to son Thomas in 1797. During the Revolution, William escorted prisoners and contributed oats and corn, for which he was later compensated. William was head of a household of seven whites in Halifax County in 1782 and five whites in 1785. William left a will in Halifax County naming sons John, Hatcher, and Thomas Owen, daughters Lucy Powell, Susanna Brady, Agnes Thomas, Hatcher’s son William, and Thomas’ son William (will dated 10 Aug. 1804). Hatcher Owen married first Elizabeth Roberts in Halifax County 27 July (bond) 1781. She died soon afterwards because Hatcher was living alone and owned one “Negro” slave in 1782 and 1785. He married second Mary Abbott 16 October 1787. Daughters of Hatcher Owen who married in Halifax County Rebecca Owen married Edwin Vaughan in Halifax County 29 November 1819. | Owen, Thomas (I25879)
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p. 380, July 23, 1777 from Arthur Fuller of Pittsylvania County To Zachariah Fuller of Pittsylvania County, for 150 pounds, about 200 acres in Pittsylvania County on Turkey Cock Creek, and bounded by Harmon Cook's line below the Mill, thence to Stockton. Recorded July 24, 1777
p. 386, October 28, 1775 from George Jefferson of Lunenburg County, to Arthur Fuller of Pittsylvania County, for 110 pounds, about 305 acres in Pittsylvania County on Turkey Cock Creek, and bounded by trees. Recorded July 24, 1777
p. 389, July 22, 1777 from Arthur Fuller of Pittsylvania County to Jacob Coolly of Amherst County, for 90 pounds, about 270 acres in Pittsylvania County on the head branches of Sandy River, bounded by Elisha Walling, and is included by the lines called John Warren's part of the same tract given by the said Fuller to the said walling; also, Mr. Daniel Hawkins' lines. Recorded July 24, 1777
Source - Pittsylvania County, VA, Deeds for 1774 - 1778 | Fuller, Arthur (I19380)
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P. 398-399 (Deed Book G) Aug 30, 1811, Joshua F. Kennady & Josiah M. Kennady jointly to Tapley Bennett all of said county, $500 for 321 acres being part of an 8,000 acres survey originally surveyed and granted to John Hinson on waters of Turkey Creek and Beaverdam Creek | Bennett, Tapley (I21869)
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på gården Uren i Luster | Falch, Cathrine Marie Helene (I39701)
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Page 162-163
6 December 1787
Pr: 21 July 1788
LWT WILLIAM NEALE (NEALEY/NELY) being very sick and weak but of perfect mind and memory.
To my beloved daughter MARY REYNOLDS a mare.
To my beloved grandson WILLIAM REYNOLDS all my lands and my tenaments.
To my beloved grandson JOSEPH REYNOLDS all and every other part of my estate.
Appoint JOSEPH REYNOLDS and WILLIAM REYNOLDS executors.
WILLIAM NELY
Wit: GEORGE SMITH, MICAJAH HUGS
HUGH REYNOLDS security for executors.
(Source: Abstracts of Pittsylvania County, Virginia Wills, 1767-1820, Compiled by Lela C. Adams, Bassett, Virginia, pgs. 65-66) | Nealey, William (I21476)
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Page 554 - 3 matching terms
… Mary Gibbs, who d. at Sudbury, 6 Jan. 1690/1, dau. of Matthew and Mary (Bradish) Gibbs. She m. (2) at Sudbury, 12 Nov. 1678, Thomas Frost, b. abt. 1647, d. at Framingham, Mass., in 1724. John Goodrich's will, proved 12 Apr. 1676, calls him "son of John Goodrich sen.," provides for wife and child, a…
Hale, House, and related families, mainly of the Connecticut ...Jacobus, Donald Lines, 1887-1970.
From https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt/search?q1=Matthew+Gibbs&id=wu.89066151523&view=1up&seq=576 | Gibbs, Mary (I6487)
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page line dwelling family Persons living in family on the 1st day of June 1860 age sex occupation r.e. value pers.prop. birthplace
5 11 34 34 Eugene Von Alter 28 M Saloon Keeper 100 Prussia
5 12 34 34 Margaret Von Alter 20 F ---- 500 Oldenburgh(Germany)
5 13 34 34 Otto Von Alter 1 M ------ Wisconsin
5 14 34 34 Caroline Von Alter 65 F ------ Saxony
5 15 34 34 Caroline Richter 9 F ------ Wisconsin
1880 US Census
Manitowoc, County of Manitowoc, State of Wisconsin, 17th of June, 1880, by Francis Stirn.
Second side of page 218
Taken from ancestry.com site: image 32 of 53 in Manitowoc, enumeration district # 70
House Family Given name Family name Color Sex Age Relation Status Profession Born Father born Mother born Page Township County
84 90 Julia Beer w f 49 Divorced Keeping House Bavaria Bavaria Bavaria 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
84 90 Anna Beer w f 21 daughter Single At home Wisconsin Bavaria Bavaria 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
84 90 Dora Beer w f 19 daughter Single At college Wisconsin Bavaria Bavaria 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
84 90 Mina Kaizer w f 12 daughter Single At home Wisconsin Bavaria Bavaria 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
84 90 Bertha Wilsinger w f 20 Servant Single Servant Wisconsin Prussia Prussia 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
90 96 Eugene Alter w m 48 Married Clerk in store Prussia Prussia Saxony 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
90 96 Martha Alter w f 40 wife Married Keeping house Olgenburg Olgenburg Olgenburg 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
90 96 Otto Alter w m 21 son Single Miller Wisconsin Prussia Olgenburg 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
90 96 Oscar Alter w m 19 son Single Druggist Wisconsin Prussia Olgenburg 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
90 96 Gustav Alter w m 16 son Single Clerk in store Wisconsin Prussia Olgenburg 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
90 96 Marion Boothe w f 16 Servant Single Servant Wisconsin Prussia Prussia 218 Manitowoc Manitowoc
Name: Gustav Alter Marriage Date: 30 Dec 1890 Vol:04 Page:0149 Vol:A Sequence:00291
Name: Kittie Guttmann Marriage Date: 30 Dec 1890 Vol:04 Page:0149 Vol:A Sequence:00292
ALTER: Gustav
Marriage Date: 30 Dec 1890 Vol:04, Page:0149 Vol:A, Sequence:00291
to: Kittie Guttmann Marriage Date: 30 Dec 1890 Vol:04, Page:0149 Vol:A, Sequence:00292
ALTER: Oscar A
Marriage Date: 08 May 1884 Vol:03 Page:0245 Vol:A Sequence:00199
to: Dora J Beer Marriage Date: 08 May 1884 Vol:03 Page:0245 Vol:A Sequence:00200
ALTER: Otto W
Marriage Date: 04 Dec 1895 Vol:04, Page:0418 Vol:A, Sequence:00370
to: Johanna M M Pruss Marriage Date: 04 Dec 1895 Vol:04, Page:0418 Vol:A, Sequence:00371 | Alter, Oscar Alexander (I1415)
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Pally Palatiah Shelton
The following deed was received from the Jefferson County TN Director of Archives:
January 24, 1795 Jefferson County deed for 245 acres from Palatiah Shelton to John Loe. Because those 245 acres had the same legal description as the 245 acres in the September 6, 1790 Hawkins County deed from Jesse Riggs to Pally Shelton, it is clear these deeds involved the same land and Pally Shelton and Palatiah Shelton were the same man.
"This indenture made the twenty fourth day of January in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred & ninety five between Pallatial Shelton of the County of Hawkins & Territory of the United States of the one part and John Loe of the County and territory aforesaid of the other part Witnesseth that the said Pallatial Shelton, for and in consideration of the sum of two hundred pounds to him in hand paid, the receipt is hereby acknowledged hath & by these presents doth grant bargain sell alien Enfeoff and confirm unto the said John Loe his heirs and assigns forever a certain tract of land containing two hundred and forty five acres be the same more or less lying and being in the County of Jefferson and territory aforesaid beginning at a white oak on Spurgins corner thence south three hundred and forty poles to a stake thence west two hundred and twenty eight poles to a stake thence north fifty seven degrees east four hundred & ten poles to the beginning, with all and singular the woods waters water courses profits commodities & hereditaments and appurtenances whatsoever to the said tract of land belonging or appertaining and the reversion and reversions remainders & remaining rents and issues hereof and all the estates right title interest property claims and demands of him the said Pallatial Shelton his heirs and assigns and to the same and every part and parcel thereof either in law or equity to have and to hold the said two hundred and forty five acres of land with the appurtenances unto the said John Loe his heirs and assigns forever against the lawful title claims demands of all and every person or persons whatsoever shall and will warrant forever defend by these presents in witness whereof the said Pallatial Shelton hath hereunto set his hand and seal this day and year first above written signed sealed and delivered in presence of Christopher Hussy affirmed."
In the same handwriting there is a signature below the body of the record for Palatiah Shelton as the seller. Also in the same handwriting above the body of the record are "Palatiah Shelton to John Loe Registered 9th March 1795" | Shelton, Palatiah (I37874)
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Panteregisteret
No 23 Söre Askeland (Lindås) fol. 482
1806 May 22de 113 Bÿgselbrev fra Sognepresten M. S. Tuchsen til
John Nielsen paa 1 pd. Smör 2/3 Faar ........
af 24de April 1806
Aflöst 5 Marts 1845
1808 Marti 1te 658 Bygselbrev ....fra Sognepresten M: S: Tüchsen
til Mons Knudsen paa 16 pd. Smör 4/9 Mark?
i ......... Gaard, dat 20de Novb 1807.
1810 May 24. 911 Löyvebrev fra Sogneprest M: S: Tüchsen til Knud Joha-
nesen ÿtre ........ , paa 16 sh? 8m 4/9 ........ : ........ dat.
16 Martii 1810
1819 Octbr 30 253 Bygselbrev fra Madam Tuchsen til Ole
Jacobsen Duesund ......efter .......
16 Mrk? , 4/9 Faar og som? forlangt? af Ole Johnsen
dat 26 Juli 1819
http://www.arkivverket.no/URN:tl_read?idx_primreg=kilde&idx_fylke=12&idx_sted=Lind%C3%A5s&idx_textsearch=&js=j
Hordaland
Herdla/Lindås/Hosanger/Eikanger
II A.a. 2
Fra "Lindås Bygdebok I" av Martin Toft. Gard nr. 17 Søre Askeland:
Side 276:
Bruk 1. 22/5-1806. Bøgsel frå sokneprest Tuchsen til Jon Nilsen på 1 pd. sm. 2/3 får.
Bruk 1. 5/3-1845. Bøgsel frå Ole Olsen Håtuft og Anna Olde til Nils Jonson. Kår til stykmora Sygni Monsdtr.
Side 277:
Bruk 1. 11-1871. Skøyte frå Johs. Knutson Håtuft til Jon Nilsson. Jon bodde en tid på Hindenes, flyttet så til Totland i Fana. ......
Side 281:
Bruk 3. 1808. Bøgsel frå sokneprest Tuchsen til Mons Knutson og kår til svigerforeldra.
Bruk 3. 1810. Bøgsel frå sokneprest Tuchsen til Knut Johnson og kår til svigerforeldra.
Bruk 3 1830. Bøgsel frå e. Anna Harboe til Jon Hansson og enkja etter han.
Side 286:
Bruk 5. 1796. Bøgsel frå Tuchsen til Ola Jonson. | Tuchsen, Michael (Severin) Sundt (I39512)
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Parents of Robert Bolling were John Bolling and Mary Cary who resided in Bolling Hall, Bradford, Yorkshire,England. Robert was baptised at All Hallows, Barking Essex. Emigrated to America, arrived on October 2,1660 at age 13. He married Jane Rolfe in 1675. Jane Rolfe was a descendent of Pocahantas and John Rolfe. His wife died the next year in 1676, leaving one child. Robert remarried in 1681 to Jane Anne Stith. They had 7 children. Robert, Edward, Anne, Drury, Thomas, Agnes (1700-1762), Mollie (1702) in Virginia. Descendents of Jane Anne Stith-Bollings were referred to as the "white bollings" and descendents of Jane Rolfe were known as the "red bollings". Robert died at Kippax, Virginia on June 17th, 1709.
| Bolling, Robert (I33230)
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Patience Cobb
The following notes on Patience (Cobb) Parker are taken from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. 112, July 1958, article on "Robert Parker of Barnstable, Mass." by Maclean W. McLean, of Pittsburgh, PA.
PATIENCE (COBB) PARKER
The records show that Patience (Cobb) Parker survived her first husband by more than forty years. Baptised in Barnstable 13 March 1641/2, she was among the heirs under the will, dated 1656, of her grandfather James Hurst, and she was named, also, in the will of her father, Henry Cobb (see below), in 1678. She married secondly, Dea. William Crocker, a widower and father of six sons and a daughter. In his Will, dated 9 Sept. and proved 22 Oct. 1692, Deacon Crocker bequeathed to "Patience, my loving wife, besides the liberty to dispose of all ye Estate which she brought with her or had at ye time of our inter-marriage, and besides ye 40 pounds I then promised to give her in case she survive me, I give unto her my best bedd and bedstead with all ye furniture thereto belonging". The will of her son, Daniel Parker, dated 10 Sept. 1724, gives certain property to Daniel's son, Samuel Parker, with the provision that the latter fulfill "to his grandmother", the testator's obligation.
Patience (Cobb) (Parker) Crocker apparantly had with her in her household her unmarried daughter, Alice Parker, until the latter's death on 20 Aug. 1727. Slightly more than two months later, the mother's own death occurred-- 23 Oct. 1727. She lies buried in the old "Lothrop's Hill Cemetery" in Barnstable, where her stone is clearly (in 1956) readable: "Here lyes ye Body of Mrs. Patience Crocker, wife of Deacon William Crocker, who died October ye 23rd, 1727 in ye 87th year of her age". Her oldest stepson was about five years older than herself and her daughter (Sarah Parker), married her step-grandson, Samuel Crocker. She outlived all of the children of her first husband's first marriage, all of her second husband's children (by his first wife) and four of her own eight children.
| Cobb, Patience (I55245)
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Pendelton County Court Records
Tuesday, 2 July, 1799
At the house of Alvin Mountjoy in Falmouth. Those present: John Mountjoy, James Littel, William Arnold, Jezeriel Ellis, John Sanders, Charles Stern, James C. Goodwin, Elijah McClenachan, John Ewing.
Ordered Charles Colvin be appointed overseer of a road; also John Angell as a road overseer. Jeremiah Glinn and Elijah McClenachan are to "set apart the hands to work on said road".
Mentions a road from near Charles Stern's to Samuel McCarthy's be established and that James C. Goodwin to appointed overseer and that Julius Coleman and Samuel Lockwood set apart "the hands" to work on said road.
License is granted to William Barnes to keep a tavern in Falmouth; John Angell provides security. | Angell, John (I23270)
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Pendleton District, SC:
DEED BOOK A-1 Vol. 1 pages 152-153
year 1828-1831
Pendleton District, SC:
DEED BOOK A-1 Vol. 1 pages 152-153
year 1828-1831
HEIRS OF NATHANIEL REID
State of South Carolina Pickens (Judicial) District.
The heirs of Nathaniel Reid deceased: Isabel Reid, widow, and Ambrose Reid, Nathaniel Reid, Elizabeth R. Reid, Stephen C. Reid and Joseph B. Reid the children did on the 10 Jan 1820 enter into a bond to divide the estate both real and personal among themselves by which bond was given to me the said Isabel Reid to be at my disposal and believing that division was fairly made and being desirous that whatever I may require or now have may be equally divided among all my children who are all equally near me
cont'
Now know all men that I the said Isabella Reid for consideration of the premises before mentioned and also for the sum of one dollar paid by Nathanrel Reid for one negro man named Jacob, one negro woman named Jinny and one negro girl named Jinny with the increase of the family together with all my stock of horses, cattle, hogs, household and kitchen furniture and also all my other estate as fully as if each and every article was particularly mentioned and all such other property as I may acquire by inheritance purchase or otherwise to Nathaniel Reid: Nevertheless in trust and with the following reservations and limitations that is to say I the said Isabella Reid do reserve to myself the use of the said property or a support out of it during my natural life and after my death the said Nathaniel Reid share, sell at public auction all the residue and remainderof the sa'id property to the highest bidder after giving due notice and out of the proceeds of the said state he is to retain to himself the sums of two hundred dollars and to pay to Elizabeth B. Keith, Ambrose Reid, Stephen O. Reid each the sum of two hundred dollars to make them equal to Joseph B. Reid whom I have let have a negro boy of the value of two hundred dollars.All the residue and remainder the said Nathaniel Reid to divide among my said five children: Ambrose Reid, Nathaniel Reid, Elizabeth B. Keith, Stephen C. Reid and Joseph B. Reid or their heirs. Dated 20 March 1829
Sg:Isabel Reid X.
Wit: John Keith, Allen Keith, Green Troller?.
Prov. 28 May1829
Rec. 20 July 1829
SOURCE: Old Pendleton District Newsletter Jan. and May 1996 | Reed, Nathaniel Jr (I53740)
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Pendleton is the name of a town in Lancashire, near Manchester England. In 1469 Thomas Pendleton was living in Lancashire, in which county he held lands; at the same time were two brothers William and Robert Pendleton, who were probably his sons. Another member of the family was the Rev. Henry Pendleton (1521-1557), who may have been a brother of George Pendleton ST. Who lived in the town of Pendleton during the reign of King Henry VII. Thomas Pendleton, who died in 1534, was nephew of the Rev Henry Pendleton(supra); he had five sons: George, Edward,(who died in 1576 and was married to Anne Newton adn they had four children: Edward; Frances,Thomas and Elizabeth) William, Henry and Frances Pendleton, who married Cecily Beck (a daughter fo Thomas Beck and his wife, Isabel Beswicke, daughter and heiress of Richard Beswicke, JR., who was Founder of Jesus Chantry, Manchester and married Joan, sister of Bishop Oldham of Exeter, who died in 1519 and was buried in the Cathedral Chantry) and they had with three daughters and a son Henry Pendleton who was grandfather of Henry Penleton, Gentleman, living in Manchester in 1635.
George Pendleton, Esq Sr of the Town of Pendleton was living in the regin of King Henry VIII. His son George Pendleton Jr. was born abt 1558 and died 1603. He was buried at St Stephen's Norwich on Oct 27, 1603 the family haveing moved to Norfolk. He was admitted to the Freedom of Norwich as a Scrivener's apprentice on Sept 21,1578. He married at St Peter's Mancroft, Norwich, July 29,1578 Elizabeth Penttingale (who died in 1625 and was buried at St. Stephen's Norwich, on Jan 27,1625) daugher of John Pettingale, Gent of Swardiston, Norwich. (Harleian 1552, folios 241 adn 246, Vistation of Norfolk 1613 Harleian Society, Vol. 32 page 219. More on this family look below,.
GENEALOGIES OF VIRGINIA FAMILIES From Tyler's Quarterly Historial and Genealogical Magazine VOL II" by Indexed by Robert and Catherine Burns
THE BEGINNING OF THE VIRGINIA PENDLETONS
The name Pendleton seems to have been originally Pen-Huton, meaning top of the hill; the Pen-Eton and finally Pendleton. The name is from two Gaelic words, pendle adn dun, meaning summit or top and his tespectively.
The Pendletons were rooted in England 500 years before the name was transplanted in America. They emerged from the Crusades with a coat of arms for bravey, old English churches abound in baptismal records of the family, and around Pendleton, England, are tombs of many generations of them.
Siward Pendleton b c 1246 of Lancashire was one of the earliest recorded progenitors, the name appeared in public life during the regin of Henry VII (1485-1509). About 1580 George Pendleton of Manchester married Elizabeth Pettinglae for more go below. The same year, in the Assize Rolls of Lancashire, mention was made of Thomas de Parva Pendleton who was surty for Adm. Richard and Roger de Pendleton, sons of Matilda de Penelton, who was probabley the widow of Siward de Penelton. In 1332 Adam de Penholton paid taxes in Saford and Robert and Thomas de Penholton of Penholton paid taxes there. The town of Pendleton was portion of Saldfordborough.
Virginia, Prominent Families, Vol. 1-4; Volume IV; Chapter X The Pendleton Family
Three miles from Manchester, in Lancashire County, England, is the town of Pendleton, known as a portion of Salfordborough. Over the door of one of the inns swings the arms of the Pendleton family, exactly like those brought to America by the emigrant, Philip Pendleton. Some little distance off is the manor house, occupied still by a family of Pendletons, and around the old church are the tombs of departed Pendletons. Here we pause, feeling ourselves aliens in our father's house. Under that roof tree are the records that would carry us back along the line of English history until we found the ancestor whose bravery in the Crusades, won him the right to place upon his shield the silver pilgrim's shells, which form a distinctive feature of the coat-of-arms. The family evidently belonged to the English gentry, a purer and prouder distinction oftentimes than many of the titles which have changed hands and family names many times as they come down the avenue of ages.
The first name upon the Virginia record is that of George Pendleton, Esquire, of the town of Pendleton, Lancashire, England. His son was George Pendleton, who married, sometime in the fifteenth century, Elizabeth Pettingall, daughter of John Pettingall, Gentleman, of Norwich, Norfolk County. George Pendleton moved to Norwich, and was buried at St. Stephen's, Norwich, in 1613. His eldest son was Henry Pendleton, who married in 1605 Susan Carmyer, at St. Simeon and St. Jude's. He was buried on July 15, 1635, at St. Stephen's, Norwich. His third son was Henry Pendleton who married Elizabeth -. This gives four generations on English soil, carrying us from Pendleton near Manchester, to Norwich.
In 1613, Sir John Pettus and his brother Thomas Pettus both made wills, remembering their cousins, Henry and Susan Pendleton, of Norwich, leaving them property in that city. These gentlemen lived at Cristree, St. Edmund's, near Norwich. Thomas Pettus, the son of one of these men, was one of the early councilors of the Colony, and probably influenced his cousins to come to Virginia. The two sons of Henry and Elizabeth Pendleton came to Virginia in 1674, Philip, a young teacher, and Nathaniel, a minister of the Church of England. Nathaniel died very soon, leaving no children
The arms of Pendleton are taken from English records and are described as follows: Arms-Gules, an inescutcheon argent, between four escallops (or shells) or. Crest-On a chapeau gules, turned up ermine, a demi-dragon, wings expanded, or, holding an escallop (or shell) argent. Motto-Maneo Qualis Manebam
George Pendleton, Esq., born Bef. 1542 in Pendleton, Lancashire, England; died Deceased.George of Lancs ("of the community of Pendleton, Lancashire who flourished...1509-1547"
Could this be same George as above George Pendleton, born 1536 in Manchester, Lancaster, England. He was the son of Thomas Pendleton. He married Anne (Pendleton) 1557 in England?. Could George Pendleton father was Thomas Pendleton?
Could this be the children of George Pendleton and Anne (Pendleton) are: ?
1 William Pendleton.
2 Robert Pendleton.
3 Thomas Pendleton.
4 George Pendleton, born 1553; died 1603 in England; married Elizabeth Pettingale July 29, 1579 in St Peters Mancroft, Norwich, England.
George Pendleton father was
Thomas Pendleton.
Notes for George Pendleton, Esq.: Book, "The Kay-Pendleton-Neel Families" , George and Margaret Rose, 1969, Pages 104-105
The results of this search are printed in the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 39 pp. 277-284. It is from this source and corroborative English records that the information now about to be set down on the English origins of the Pendleton Family is derived and here quoted.
"The name Pendleton seems to have been originally pen-Hulton, meaning top of the hill; then Pen-Elton and finally Pendleton. The name is from the Gaelic words, pendle and dun, meaning summit (or top) and hill respectively. In Lancashire the name appears as early as 1246 when Siward de Pendleton, deceased, was mentioned. The same year, in the Assize Rolls of Lancashire, mention was made of Thomas de Parva Pendleton who was surety for Adam, Richard and Roger de Pendleton, sons of Matilda de Pendleton, who was probably the widow of Siward de Pendleton (supra). In 1332 Adam de Pendleton paid taxes in Salford and Robert and Thomas de Penholton of Penholton paid taxes there. The town of Pendleton was a portion of Saldfordborough."
This shows that the Pendletons were first seated in the hills of Lancashire where the Pendleton coat of arms still hangs over an ancient inn. An old manor house occupied by Pendletons is near. Here also is an old Pendleton graveyard. Pendleton Township stretches across Pendle Hill and Pendle Forest. One hall called Malkin tower once stood on Pendle Hill. It was from this area that the Pendletons removed to Norwich, Norfolk County. Pendle Hill is an elevation of I, 831 feet lying about five miles south of Skipton and about thirty one miles west of Leeds. This configuration still bears the name, Pendle Hill. Pendleton community is still shown on good maps of England--just south of the city of Clitheroe.
A continuous line of descent can be traced from George Pendleton, Esq., Sr., of the community of Pendleton, Lancashire who flourished during the reign of Henry VIII (1509-1547). It was either this George Pendleton or his son George Pendleton who moved from Pendleton and settled in Norwich.
(For verification of these details see Harlean 1552, Folios 241 and 246, Visitations of Norfolk, 1613, and Harlean Society, Volume 32, page 219. These sources are cited in the article quoted above and have also been independently examined and confirmed by the compilers of these notes.)
Book, "Genealogical and Historical Notes on Culpeper County, VA", Raleigh Travers Green, 1958, Page 80
Child of George Pendleton, Esq. is:
1 George Pendleton, Jr., born 1558 in Manchester, England; died Abt. October 27, 1603 in Norwich, England; married Elizabeth Pettingale July 29, 1579 in St. Peters Mancroft, Norwich, England. George("became a scrivener's apprentice in Norwich September 21, 1578" More below.
Generation No. 2
George Pendleton, born 1553; died 1603 in England Burial: October 27, 1603, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England. He was the son of George Pendleton and Anne (Pendleton). He married Elizabeth Pettingale July 29, 1579 in St Peters Mancroft, Norwich, England. Elizabeth Pettingale, born 1562 in Swardiston, England; died January 1613 in Norwich, England Burial: St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England. She was the daughter of John Pettingale.
George Pendleton, Esq Sr of the Town of Pendleton was living in the regin of King Henry VIII. His son George Pendleton Jr. was born abt 1558 and died 1603. He was buried at St Stephen's Norwich on Oct 27, 1603 the family haveing moved to Norfolk. He was admitted to the Freedom of Norwich as a Scrivener's apprentice on Sept 21,1578. He married at St Peter's Mancroft, Norwich, July 29,1578 Elizabeth Penttingale (who died in 1625 and was buried at St. Stephen's Norwich, on Jan 27,1625) daugher of John Pettingale, Gent of Swardiston, Norwich. (Harleian 1552, folios 241 adn 246, Vistation of Norfolk 1613 Harleian Society, Vol. 32 page 219
Notes for George Pendleton, Jr.: Book, "The Kay-Pendleton-Neel Families" , George and Margaret Rose, 1969, Page 104
George Pendleton became a scrivener's apprentice in Norwich September 21, 1578 and in this same year he had grant of the freedom of the town.
George Pendleton, Jr.: Occupation: September 21, 1578, Scrivener's Apprentice, Norwich, England
Children of George Pendleton and Elizabeth Pettingale are: Per Judge Edmund Pendleton's Bible
1 George Pendleton, born in England; died young
2. Henry Pendleton, born 1583 in Norwich, England; died Abt. July 15, 1635; married Susan Camden September 30, 1605 in St. Simon & St. Jude Church, Norwich, England
3. Francis Pendleton, born Bef. 1595 in England; died Abt. October 08, 1618 in Norwich, England; married Anne Unknown 161026; born in England; died Deceased.Burial: October 08, 1618, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England
4. Anne Pendleton born in England; died Deceased.
5. George Pendleton, born in England; died Abt. June 01, 1621; married Elizabeth Osborne February 13, 1613/14; born in England; died Deceased.Burial: June 01, 1621, St. Simon & Jude Church, Norwich, England
GENERATION 3
2.*Henry Pendleton (George, George,?) born August 12, 1580 in Norwich, Norfolk, England; died July 1635 in Norwich, England. He was the son of George Pendleton and Elizabeth Pettingale. He married Susan Camden September 30, 1605 in Sts Simon & Jude, Norwich, Norfolk, England. Susan Camden, born 1584 in Norwich, Norfolk, England. She was the daughter of Humphrey Camden and Cecily Pettus. Cecily father was Mayor of Norwich (1591) Thomas Pettus, father of John, father of Sir Thomas. Cecily's mother was Christina Dethick and her parents were Symond Dethick Esq. (b 1490 Norfolk Co., Eng.) & Rose Crowe (b there 1506). Rose Crowe's father was Christopher (b 1480, Norfolk, Eng), and his father was Richard Crowe
Notes for Henry Pendleton: Book, "The Kay-Pendleton-Neel Families" , George and Margaret Rose, 1969, Pages 105-106
Henry Pendleton (1583-1635), son of George Pendleton and his wife Elizabeth Pettingale Pendleton, born 1583 and buried at St. Stephen's, Norwich on July 15, 1635. He was buried at St. Stephen's Norwich July 15,1635. It seems that he was brought up in the profession of his father for he had the Freedom of Norwich as a Scriptor on date of September 6, 1605 at which time he was aged twenty one past. In his day there were many who could not write and were obliged to rely on the scribe or scriptor to carry on their correspondence. Twenty four days after his becoming a public scriptor he married (Sept. 30, 1605) at St. Simon and St. Jude's, Norwich, Susan daughter of Humphrey and Cecily (Pettus) Camden. and the granddaughter of Sir Thomas Pedttus the mayor of Norwich in 1591 and wife was Christian Dethick, daughter of Simon Dethick, Esq. of North Elmham. Norfolf. Sir Thomas Pettus was son of John Pettus, ESQ, whose father was Thomas Pettus, an opulent citizen of Norwich, who was buried St. Edmund's Lombard Street, London He became a man of consequence in the affairs of his city and country. Records show that he subscribed a loan to James I.
Children of Henry Pendleton and Susan Camden are:
1. George Pendleton, born Abt. April 01, 1607 in Norwich, England ;Christening: April 01, 1607, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England ; died Abt. June 02, 1607Burial: June 02, 1607, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England
2. Cecily Pendleton, born Abt. July 03, 1608 in Norwich England; Christening: July 03, 1608, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England England; died Deceased; married Thomas Fitton February 19, 1624/25.
3. John Pendleton, born Abt. July 27, 1609 in Norwich, England; Christening: July 27, 1609, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England ; died Abt. January 09, 1636/37; Burial: January 09, 1636/37, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England22
4. Susan Pendleton, born Abt. July 27, 1609 in Norwich, England; Christening: July 27, 1609, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died Abt. January 09, 1636/37; Burial: January 09, 1636/37, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England
5. Henry Pendleton, born Abt. September 19, 1613 in Norwich, England;Christening: September 19, 1613, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England ; died Abt. September 26, 1613;Burial: September 26, 1613, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England;
6. Henry Pendleton, Jr., born Abt. December 26, 1614 in Norwich, England; died 1682; married twice.
7. Anne Pendleton, born Abt. June 20, 1615 in Norwich, England ; Christening: June 20, 1615, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England;died Deceased.
8. Abigail Pendleton, born Abt. October 20, 1617 in Norwich, England; Christening: October 20, 1617, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died Abt. December 28, 1617;Burial: December 28, 1617, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England 9. Thomas Pendleton, born Abt. February 28, 1618/19 in Norwich, England; Christening: Abt. February 28, 1618/19, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died Deceased.
10. Matilda Pendleton, born Abt. February 23, 1619/20 in Norwich, England; Christening: February 23, 1619/20, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died Abt. September 02, 1622; Burial: September 02, 1622, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England
11. Mary Pendleton, born Abt. July 27, 1623 in Norwich, England; Christening: July 27, 1623, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died Deceased
12. Matthew Pendleton, born Abt. November 30, 1624 in Norwich, England; Christening: November 30, 1624, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England Burial: January 23, 1625/26, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died Abt. January 23, 1625/26
13. George Pendleton, born Abt. December 13, 1626 in Norwich, England; Christening: December 13, 1626, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England;died Deceased
3. Francis Pendleton (George, George,?) , born Bef. 1595 in England; died Abt. October 08, 1618 in Norwich, England; married Anne Unknown 161026; born in England; died Deceased.Burial: October 08, 1618, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England
Children:
1 Elizabeth who was baptized at St. Stephen's April 25,1611
2 Ann who was baptized at St. Stephen's July 8,1612
3 Susan who was baptized at St. Stephen's June 23, 1613
4 Mary who was baptized at St Stephen's Feb 2,1615 buried there Nov 29,1617
5 Elizabeth who was baptized at St. Stephen June 21,1677
6 Enoch who was baptized at St. Stephen Nov 13. 1618 d.s.p 1651
5. George Pendleton (George, George,?) , born in England; died Abt. June 01, 1621; married Elizabeth Osborne February 13, 1613/14; born in England; died Deceased.Burial: June 01, 1621, St. Simon & Jude Church, Norwich, England
Children:
1 Richard who was baptized at St. Simon and St Jude's Dec 27,1618; buried at ST. John's March 17,1639.
2 Mary who was baptized at St, Simon and St. Jude's May 4,1621; buried there Feb 26,161/2
GENERATION NO 4
Henry Pendleton, Jr. (Henry,George, George,?) , born Abt. December 26, 1614 in Norwich, England; Christening: December 26, 1614, St. Stephen's Church, Norwich, England; died 1682. He was the son of Henry Pendleton and Susan Camden. On Sept. 8,1637, he had the Freedom of Norwich as a grocer. He was marred twice 1st in 1636 to Hannah who died in 1648 adn was buried at St. Peter's Mancroft, Norwich, April 15,1648. and 2nd in 1649 Elizabeth Douglass d about 1708. She survived him and was granted administration of his estate. Dec 20 1682 in Norwich
Notes for Henry Pendleton, Jr.: Book, "The Kay-Pendleton-Neel Families" , George and Margaret Rose, 1969, Pages 106-107
Henry Pendleton, Jr. (1614-1682) son of Henry Pendleton and his wife Susan (Camden) Pendleton was christened at St. Stephen's, Norwich December 26, 1614. On September 8, 1637 Henry Pendleton had the Freedom of Norwich as a grocer. This date probably marks the end of his apprenticeship and the beginning of his career as a merchant. He married twice. His first wife, Hannah (???) whom he married 1636, died and was buried at St. Peter's, Mancroft, Norwich, April 15, 1648. His second wife Elizabeth (Douglass?) whom he married in 1649 died about 1708. She was granted administration of his estate Dec. 20, 1682 at Norwich. It is certain that he died earlier in that same year. He subscribed a loan to the king, the effect of which was to identify him as a loyalist. His fortune declined severely with the establishment of the Commonwealth.
Children of Henry Pendleton and Hannah (???) are:
by first marriage
1 Henry who was bapt. at St. Peter's Mancroft, March 4,1637 and he died before 1676 married ? children : Henry and John
2 John who was bapt. at St Peter's Mancroft Dec. 7, 1640
3 Matthew who was bapt at St. Peter's Mancroft Dec 22,1642
4 Samuel who was bapt at St. Peter's Mancroft Sept 14,1647 born Sept 6,1647 Note Buried there Nov 30,1647.
Children of Henry Pendleton and Elizabeth Douglass are:
1. Nathaniel Pendleton, born Aft. 1650 in Norwich, England baptized at St. Peter's Mancroft, April 7,1650; died Bef. 1680 in Virginia. Nathaniel Pendleton ;Emigration: 1674, England to Virginia. Nathaniel, accompanied his brother to Virginia; he was a clergyman; died soon after emigrating, leaving no children. He was admitted to the Merchant Taylor's School, London in 1661; in 1669 he was admitted sizar Corpus Christi in 1672; on Sept 20,1673 he was ordained Deacon by the Bishop of Norwich; he became Curate of Badwell Ask in Suffolf and in 1674 came to Virginia with his younger brother, Philip Pendleton.
2. Philip Pendleton, born 1650 in Norwich, England; died November 09, 1721 in King & Queen Co., VA; married Isabella Hurt 1682 in Virginia. Philip Pendleton, the emigrant, was born in 1650. He was, therefore, twenty-four years of age, when he came to Virginia in 1674. In 1680 he returned to England, and tradition
Book, "Seldens of Virginia vol 2", Mary Selden Kennedy, 1911, Page 180
"In 1613 Sir John Pettus and his brother, Thomas Pettus, both made wills, remembering their cousins, Henry and Susan Pendleton, of Norwich, leaving them property in that city. These gentlemen lived at Caistree, St. Edmund's, near Norwich. Thomas Pettus, the son of one of these men, was one of the early councillors of the colony, and probably influenced his cousins to come to Virginia." These two sons of Henry and Elizabeth Pendleton were i Philip, married Isabella Hart or Hurt. ii Nathaniel, accompanied his brother to Virginia; he was a clergyman; died soon after emigrating, leaving no children.
GENERATION NO 5
The first Virginia Generation: This young man of 20, Philip Pendleton (Mch 26,1654-Nov 9,1721) became the founder of the family in Virginia. Records show his baptism in St Peter's Mancroft, Norwich, England, as April 2,1654. When he came to Virginia in 1674 under a 5-year contract he lived in Rappahannock, later move to Essex the to King and Queen. Philp work out his contract, returnd ot England,where is is said by some authorities that he married but within a year lost his wife and after the death of his father, Henry, in 1682 he returned to Virigina and married Isabella Hurt, had seven sons, died in King and Queen Countym,1721. In 1674 he and his brother Rev Nathaniel Pendleton migrated to American where Philip was apprenticed to Edmund Craske, Clerk of Rappahannock Co. and in 1678 was Deputy Clerk of that county. He later lived in Essex Co. and about the beginning of the 18th century he moved to King and Queen. In 1704 his name appears on the Rent Roll of King and Queen Co. as owning 300 acres. Philip m'd Isabella Hurt in 1682.
Pendleton King and Queen county
George Pendleton removed from the latter city to Norwich in 1613, and married Elizabeth, daughter of John Pettingall, gent., of that city; they had a son, Henry, who married Susan ---, by whom a son, Henry, who had two sons, the Rev. Nathaniel Pendleton, who d.s.p., and Philip Pendleton, who came to Virginia in 1674. Philip was born about 1650, and married Isabella Hurt or Hart, by whom he had three sons and four daughters. His eldest son, Henry, born 1683, married, 1701, Mary, daughter of James Taylor of Caroline county by his second wife, Mary Gregory. He died 1721 and left issue: Philip, Nathaniel, John, Edmund, Mary and Isabella Pendleton.
*Phillip Pendleton, born March 26, 1654 in Norwich, England and baptized at St. Peter's Mancroft, Norwolh, England on April 2m, 1654; died November 9, 1721 in King and Queen Co., VA. He was the son Henry Pendleton and Elizabeth Douglass. He married Isabella Hurt March 1681/82 in VA. Isabella Hurt, born April 26, 1661 in King and Queen co., VA; died November 06, 1724 in Caroline Co., VA. She was the daughter of William Hurt born 1630 in England; died 1706 in King William Co., VA and Margaret (Hurt)born Abt. 1635.William Hurt, father of Isabella Elizabeth Hurt.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Philip b 26 March 1654 bapt 2 April 1654 St Peter's Mancroft,Norwich, England; d 1721, son Henry JR; m' Isabella Hurt; res Rappahannock Co. and Esseex Co. Some refrences states New Kent Co and King and Queen Co. 28792; 24W(1)256;Framer, pp 64 65: pagee; [ 239;Slaughter p 148;Winston p 195; Hartford C 1317 8 Feb 1958 Signed E. P.
Notes for Philip Pendleton: "Colonial Familes of the Southern States of America, Second Edition", 1968, pp. 506, 510.
"Supplement to A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1973, p. 306.
Book, "Genealogical and Historical Notes on Culpeper County, VA", Raleigh Travers Green, 1958, Page 79-80
The first of the name of Pendleton who came to the Colony of Virginia to make their home (in 1674) were two young men, Philip Pendleton, a teacher, and Nathaniel, his brother, a clergyman. The latter died very soon, unmarried; he evidently held no clerical charge in the Colony, as his name has never been given among the lists of the clergy of that time. Philip returned to England about 1680; tradition says he married a lady of high social position, but she died, and he returned to the Colony, and in 1682 married Isabella Hurt (or Hert or Hart,) and from this marriage are descended all the Pendletons of Virginia. Philip was born in Norwich, England, in 1650, son of Henry Pendleton, 3rd son of Henry Pendleton, son and heir of George Pendleton, Gentleman, who married Elizabeth Pettingall dau. of John Pettingall, Gentleman of Norwich, Eng. George Pendleton moved from Manchester to Norwich in 1613. His son and heir, Henry, probably married Susan(???) because in Vol. 48 of the New England Hist. and Gen. Register, is found a copy of the will of Sir John Pettus, Knight, of Norwich, Jan. 1613, which says: "Appoint my cousin, Henry Pendleton, Supravisor of my estate." Also Thomas Pettus, of Caistree, St. Edmond's Norfolk, Oct. 1618. "To my Cousins, Henry Pendleton and Susan, his wife, annuity out of my houses &c. in Norwich." This family of Pettus is the same as the one in Va.
The Pendletons were originally from Manchester, where the name was well known, some of them being in public life as early as the reign of Henry VIII. The Coat of Arms used by the Pendletons of Norwich and by the emigrant, Philip, indicate by the presence of Escallop shells and by the Cardinal's chapeau, in the Crest, a connection with Crusader traditions. The New England Pendletons, descendants of Brian Pendleton, came from Lancaster, and show a different Coat of Arms.
Philip Pendleton is said to have settled in New Kent Co., but there is no record of the family on the Register of St. Peter's Parish; he probably lived always in the portion called afterwards Caroline county, the records of which were burnt during the war of '61-65. Most of his descendants settled in counties to the north of New Kent. He died in 1721, the same year his oldest son Henry died, and the same year his grandson, the eminent Judge Edmund Pendleton, was born. He had three sons and four daughters, two of his family married into the family of James Taylor, of Carlisle, Eng., and by other intermarriages, a close connection with the Taylor family has been preserved. Some of his descendants were among the founders of St Mark's Parish
More About Philip Pendleton: Emigration: 1674, England to Virginia
Notes for Isabella Hurt: "Colonial Familes of the Southern States of America, Second Edition", 1968, pp. 506, 510.
"Supplement to A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1973, p. 306.
Children of Philip Pendleton and Isabella Hurt are:
1. Isabella Pendleton, died Aft. 1748 in Virginia; married Richard Thomas Unknown; died 1748 in Virginia.
Notes for Richard Thomas: Book, "Genealogical and Historical Notes on Culpeper County, VA", Raleigh Travers Green, 1958, Page 224
Richard and Isabella Thomas both took out land in King and Queen and Spotsylvania counties in 1728. Richard Thomas died in 1748, and his widow, Isabella, went to live in Drysdale Parish, Caroline county. Their children are uncertain as to number and name. There is a Rowland Thomas and a Joseph Thomas mentioned with her in deeds of land, but the relationship is not defined.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Isabella m Richard Thomas
Virginia, Prominent Families, Vol. 1-4
They both took out land in King and Queen and Spottsylvania Counties in 1728. Richard Thomas died in 1748, and his widow, Isabella, went to live in Drysdale Parish, Caroline County, Va. Their children are uncertain as to number and name. There is a Rowland Thomas and a Joseph Thomas mentioned with her in deeds of land, but the relationship is not defined. It is certain though, that her daughter, Mary, married Col. Thomas Barbour((3)) (James((2)), James((1))). Catherine Thomas married Ambrose Barbour (Barbour Family, pp. 136-7, St. Mark's Parish, by Dr. Slaughter.) Her son, Richard Thomas, married (1753) Mildred Taylor, Orange County, Va. Their children were Richard, George, James, Thomas (married 1781, Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Pendleton), Sarah Mildred (married John Piper)
2. Rachel Pendleton, died Deceased; married John Vass Unknown Bef. March 25, 1713 in Essex Co., VA. ; died Deceased.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Rachel m John Vass
3. Henry Pendleton, born May 15, 1683 in King & Queen Co., VA; died 1721 in King & Queen Co., VA; married Mary Bishop Taylor 1701 in King & Queen Co., VA.She married second, Edward Walkins, and died 1772, aged 83 years.
4. Elizabeth Pendleton, born 1685; died in 1761; In 1701 married Samuel Clayton (1689-1735), of Caroline Co., Va. Samuel was son of Samuel adn Susannah Clayton, later Southfarnham Parish, Essec Co. The Will of Samuel Clayton was probated in Essex. Co. on Aug 19,1735 Will book 5 page 349 and the Will of Elizabeth Clayton his widow was probated in 1761 Issue: Philip, of "Catalpa and Daughter Clayton. Married her first cousin, Nathaniel Pendleton.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Elizabeth m' Samuel Clayton
5. John Pendleton, born 1691; died 1775; married Mary Tinsley Unknown; born in Madison Co., VA; died Deceased. had one know child Elizabeth.
Go here for Pendletonbrothers page
Click here for Pendletonbrothers
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
John b 1691 d 1775 son of Philp and Isabella Hurt Pendleton; m ? Tinsley of Madison Co.; rem ot Amberat Co. Mar ca 1719 Mary Tinsely dau of Samuel.
6. Philip Pendleton, born 1695; died Deceased; married Elizabeth Pollard Unknown; died Deceased.
Children:
1 SARAH Pendleton m'd Josepeh Thomas
2.MARY PENDLETON m'd Edmund Waller
3. HENRY PENDLETON could have married Martha Custis
4. BENJAMIN PENDLETON Married Mary Macon
5. PHILIP PENDLETON who settled in Buckingham Co. VA
6. EDMUND PENDLETON b 1730 d 1779
7. JOHN PENDLETON b 1736
8.PRISCILLA PENDLETON she married a William Harwood. Wonder if there might be mix-up with Henry Harwood as Henry and Mary Pendleton on lineage lines. I wonder if he should go with family.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Philip JR b 1695 d 1753 son of Philip and "Elizabeth" Hurt( She should be Isabella not Elizabeth) m Elizabeth Pollard sis of Joseph d 1791.
7. Catherine Pendleton, born December 08, 1699 in King & Queen Co., VA; died July 26, 1774 in Granville Co., NC; married Colonel John Taylor February 14, 1715/16 in King & Queen Co., VA12; born November 11, 1696 in Caroline Co., VA12; died March 22, 1780 in Granville Co., NC. John Taylor, brother of Mary Taylor
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Catherine m John Taylor
Notes for Catherine Pendleton: "Colonial Familes of the Southern States of America, Second Edition", 1968, p. 510.
"Supplement to A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1973, p. 306.
"Encyclopedia of Virginia Biographies", vol. IV, 1915, p. 476.
"Encyclopedia of Virginia Biographies", vol. V, 1915, p, 795.
"Virginia Bible Records", Jeannette Holland Austin, 1987, pp. 21, 175.
Notes for Colonel John Taylor: "Colonial Familes of the Southern States of America, Second Edition", 1968, pp. 506, 510.
"Supplement to A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1973, p. 306. John Taylor took the Oath of Allegiance in Island Creek District, Granville Co., NC in 1778 (North Carolina Colonial Records, vol. 22, p. 169).
"Encyclopedia of Virginia Biographies", vol. IV, 1915, p. 476.
"Encyclopedia of Virginia Biographies", vol. V, 1915, pp 794-795. His second wife was Miss Thomas.
"Virginia Bible Records", Jeannette Holland Austin, 1987, pp. 21, 175, 287.
GENERATION NO 6
III *Henry Pendleton, (Philip)born 1683 in Rappahannock Co., VA or in King & Queen Co., VA; died May 1721 in King and Queen Co., VA. He was the son of Phillip Pendleton and Isabella Hurt. He married Mary Bishop Taylor August 06, 1701 in King and Queen Co., VA. Mary Bishop Taylor, born June 29, 1688 in Caroline Co., VA; died June 10, 1770 in Culpepper co., VA at the age of 82. She was the daughter of James Taylor and Mary Bishop Gregory. Henry adn Mary (Taylor) Pendleton of St.Stephen's Parish, King and Queen Co. had seven children. After the death of Henry Pendleton, Mary remarried Edward Watkins in 1723. Their son Edward Watkins. JR died in Culpeper Co. in 1787 and his will mentioned his wife Sarah; sister Elizabeth Campbell and his brother (half) Nataniel Pendleton.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Henry b 1683 Old Rappahannock Co. d May 1721, King and Queen Co son of Philip and Isabella Hurt Pendleton; m 1701 Mary Taylor b 1688; d 1770 dau James of Carlysle, England and Mary Gregory of King and Queen Co.Will of James Taylor, 1702 Essex Co., proves the marriage. She m 2nd Edmond Walkins.
Henry Pendleton married when he was 18 and Mary Taylor was 13 years old. The children listed below were the only ones mentioned in the genealogy report and no date was given for Isabella. However there could have been more children before these.
Henry Pendleton: "Colonial Familes of the Southern States of America, Second Edition", 1968, p. 506.
"Supplement to A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1973, p. 306.
"The Gaines Family of Colonial Virginia and Their Descendants", p. 406, Calvin Sutherd, 1982.
Book, "Genealogical and Historical Notes on Culpeper County, VA", Raleigh Travers Green, 1958, Page 80
Henry Pendleton, eldest son of Philip Pendleton, the emigrant, and Isabella Hart or Hurt, was born in 1683. He m. in 1701, Mary Taylor, dau. of James Taylor,of Carlisle, Eng.. and his 2nd. wife Mary Gregory. Henry was 18 and Mary 13 years of age. He died in 1721, the same year his youngest son, Edmund, was born. His wife m. 2nd. Edward Watkins and died 1770. Of his five sons, the oldest, James, and the third, Nathaniel, were for many years Clerks of the Vestry and Lay readers at the small chapels of St. Mark's Parish; and Philip, the son of James, was Clerk in 1782, when the Vestry books closed. His two daughters married brothers, James and William Henry Gaines. His youngest son, Edmund, though without a father's care, made for himself a name which will be known and remembered as long as Virginia's sons read her history. By his large circle of nephews and neices, many of them his own age, he was loved and revered, and the tradition of his kindness and ever ready help is handed down through nearly every branch of the family. Almost all the Pendletons of Virginia trace their descent to Henry Pendleton and Mary Taylor;
Mary Bishop Taylor: "Colonial Familes of the Southern States of America, Second Edition", 1968, p. 506.
"Supplement to A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1973, p. 306.
"The Gaines Family of Colonial Virginia and Their Descendants", p. 406, Calvin Sutherd, 1982.
"A Compilation of Gaines Family Data With Special Emphasis on the Lineage of William and Isabella (Pendleton) Gaines", Calvin E. Sutherd, 1969, p. 32 states that "It is said that Mary Bishop Taylor had traced her ancestors through her mother, Mary Gregory, to Charlemagne of France."
Children of Henry Pendleton and Mary Taylor are:
1 *James Pendleton, born 1702 in King and Queen Co., VA; died Bef. April 08, 1763 in Culpepper co., VA; married (1) Mary Clayton Lyall January 08, 1726/27 in Lancaster Co, VA; married (2) Elizabeth Anderson Bef. 1733. James Pendleton was “continued” as Lay Reader of the Little Fork Church, In 1758 James, Sheriff, gave bond and security as collector of the Parish Levy
2 Phillip Pendleton, born 1704; died 1778; married Martha Ruffin. Their daughter was Jemina who married her first cousin Richard Gaines, son of Isabella Pendleton and William (Henry ?) Gaines. Their daughter was Anne, whose second husband was Christopher Crigler, grandson of Jacob Crigler, of the Germanna Colonies, and name sake for Criglersville, VA (Madison County).
3 Isabella Pendleton, born 1712 in King and Queen Co., VA; died 1790 in Culpepper Co., VA; married William Henry Gaines 1730 in Culpepper Co., VA. This family is in the "NOTABLE SOUTHERN FAMILIES" by Zella Armstrong. I have few of the pages copied.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
4 Nathaniel Pendleton, born 1715 in King and Queen Co., VA; died 1793 in Berkeley Co., VA; married Elizabeth (Clayton) Anderson 1740.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Nathaniel b 1715 King and Queen d 1794 Culpeper Co son of Henry and Mary Taylor Pendleton; served in Rev War; m 1740 his cousin Elizabeth Clayton Anderson, widow of Joseph Anderson and dau of Samuel and Elizabeth Pendleton. Marriage proven by Court record 14 Oct 1745 Essex Co.
5 Mary Pendleton, born 1717 in King and Queen Co., VA; died 1803 in Madison Co., VA; married James Gaines 1731 in VA. son of RICHARD GAINES and CATHERINE RAWLINS. He was born 1710 in King & Queen Co., VA, and died March 10, 1786 in Madison Co., VA
Virginia, Prominent Families, Vol. 1-4
(III. Mary Pendleton, b. about 1703. Married William Gaines (mixup)
IV. Isabella Pendleton, b. before 1715. Married James Gaines.(mixup)
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Mary m' Richard Gaines.)
6 John Pendleton, born 1719 in King and Queen Co., VA; died 1799 in Hanover Co., VA; married (1/2) Sarah Madison; married (2/1) Phoebe James 1740.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
John b 1719 d 1799; m (1)/ James and 2 Sarah Madison res King and Queen Co and Hanover Co.
7 Edmund Pendleton, born September 09, 1721 in Caroline Co, VA; died October 23, 1803; married (1) Elizabeth Roy January 1740/41; married (2) Sarah Pollard Aft. 1742.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Edmund, Judge b 9 Sept 1721 Caroline Co.; d 23 Oct 1803. Richmond Co, son of Henry and Mary Taylor Pendleton; m 1 Jan 1741 Elizabeth Roy d NOv 1741 and m 2nd 2 June 1743,Sarah Pollard b 4 May 1726 dau of Joseph. Judge Edmund Pendleton, of Edmundsburg, Caroline Co., Va. Died Oct. 23, 1803, aged 82 years says he was married, and his wife died. There may be no foundation for this. In 1682 he returned to the colony and married Isabella Hart, or Hurt. He is said to have lived in New Kent County, but the parish records of that county, which are very early and very full, do not contain the names of any Pendletons. It is more probable that he lived in King and Queen County, Va. He signed a deed in Essex County in 1677, and his son, Henry, signed one there in 1719, and is designated as being from King and Queen County, Va. Philip died in 1721, the same year his son Henry died, and the same year his illustrious grandson, Edmund Pendleton, was born. He was probably a man of quiet tastes and not progressive enough to build up a large estate, as many of his contemporaries did.
V John Pendleton, second son of the elder Philip (he who came from England), b. about 1691, and emigrated in company with his younger brother, Philip, to the County of Amherst, and settled on the eastern slope of the Tobacco Row Mountain. Some years thereafter, married Miss Tinsley, of Madison County, Va., by whom he had thirteen children, eight boys and five girls. He continued to reside in Amherst until his death, which occurred about the time of the Revolution (1775). He was buried in the old Pendleton burying ground, near the "Tobacco Row," on the farm now owned by - Ambler. Issue: More this man at the bottom of this page.
I. Benjamin Pendleton.
II. Isaac Pendleton.
III. John Pendleton.
IV. Edmund Pendleton.
V. Richard Pendleton. Married Miss Tinsley, his first cousin; left numerous descendants.
VI. Reuben Pendleton. Married Ann Garland, sister of David S. Garland, of Amherst County, Va.
VII. James Pendleton. Married Miss Rucker.
VIII. William Pendleton.
IX. Polly Pendleton. Married - Whitton.
X. Sally Pendleton. Married - Mahone.
XI. Frances Pendleton. Married - Cambden.
XII. Betty Pendleton
XIII. Margaret Pendleton. Married - Miles.
“INDEX TO MARRIAGES OF OLD RAPPAHANNOCK AND ESSEX COUNTIES, VIRGINIA 1655 -1900” by Eva Eubank Wilkerson
1885 Nov 3 Pendleton, Agnes Roy m’d Edward Christian
1834 Apr 7 Pendleton, Joseph H m’d Sarah M Hundley
1742 Pendleton, Mary : widow of Henry m’d Edward Walkins
1742 Pendleton, Nathanel: m’d Elizabeth Admfx. Of Joseph Anderson
1810, Oct 16 Pendleton, P. Baylor m’d Polly Ward
1858 Jul 15 Pendleton Robert L m’d Christian G Micou
GENERATION NO 7
James Pendleton,(Henry, Philip), born 1702 in King and Queen Co., VA; died 1761 or died Bef. April 08, 1763 in Culpepper co., VA.(Estate appraised and recorded on May 20,1763)In 1758 he was High Sheriff of Culpeper Co. He was the son of Henry Pendleton and Mary Bishop Taylor.when he died in 1763 he had four children: Henry, James, Philip and Anne.
He is said to have been the James Pendleton who married in Lancaster Co Jan 8,1827/8 to Mrs Mary Lyall as widow.(In the marriage bond he is described as James Pendleton Gent of Drydales Parish, King and Queen Co. If he is this man then he was married twiced.
He married Elizabeth Anderson (COLEMAN)Bef. 1733. Elizabeth COLEMAN, died September 21, 1769 in Culpepper County, Virginia. Elizabeth daughter of THOMAS COLEMAN and MARY COLEMAN. He lived in Culpeper County, Va., and was a very active member of St. Mark's Parish, being often warden and lay reader. Married (1727) Mrs. Mary Lyall, a widow, of Lancaster County, Va.
In his will mentioned his wife as Elizabeth and name their four children. She died 1769 and in her will described herself as the widow of James Pendleton dec'd and name the same four Children. She was probably the mother of all the children adn the first married had none.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
James b 1702 d ca 1807 son of Henry and Mary Taylor Pendleton. farmer
Children of James Pendleton and Elizabeth Anderson are:
1 Henry Pendleton, born 1733; died 1798; married Anne Thomas.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Henry son James and Mary Taylor serverd in Rev war m Ann Thomas
2 James Pendleton, born 1735; died 1793; married Catherine Bowie 1763.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
James Jr b 1735 Culpeper Co son of James and Mary Taylor Pendeton served in Rev War m 1763 Catherine Bowie b 1747 d 1795 dau of John and Juditn(Catlett)of MD. The DAR for this is old one 84/841. They got the father and son mix-up and will have to reproven.?
3 Ann Pendleton, born in Caroline Co., VA; married James Taylor 1756. one of the ten brothers who served in the Revolutionary War.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Ann m Capt. James Taylor
4 *Phillip Pendleton, born 1741 in Caroline Co., VA; died 1811. Married Martha Aubrey/Awbrey 1766. Martha father was Chandler Aubrey.
Phillip Pendleton,(Henry, Philip), born 1704; died 1778; married Martha Ruffin. Their daughter was Jemina who married her first cousin Richard Gaines, son of Isabella Pendleton and William (Henry ?) Gaines. Their daughter was Anne, whose second husband was Christopher Crigler, grandson of Jacob Crigler, of the Germanna Colonies, and name sake for Criglersville, VA (Madison County). When he died had five daughters and all of whom had married and had children
The record of his residence, with the names of some of his children, is lost. He probably lived in Caroline County, Va., because he is mentioned in the only record of that county not burned during the Civil War, as witness in a suit in 1768, and as having travelled 30 miles to attend Court. His wife is supposed to have been named Martha -, because of a deed of sale to his step father, Edward Watkyns, in Culpeper County, Va., signed by Philip Pendleton and his wife, Martha. He is said to have had fifteen children, five of whom were daughters, all married, according to the records of Judge Pendleton's bible. Of these five daughters:
Mary Pendleton. Married Col. Edward Waller, second clerk of Spottsylvania.
Jemima Pendleton. Married Richard Gaines, her first cousin.
Martha Pendleton. Married Massey Thomas, of Culpeper County, Va.
Mildred Pendleton.
Judith Pendleton.
Henry Pendleton. This is proved by the deed in Orange County, Va., of land left to him, to go after his decease to his sister, Mary Waller, recorded in 1742. A great-granddaughter of Philip mentions sons of his were
John Pendleton.
Philip Pendleton.
Edmund Pendleton.
Some of them probably moved West, as did his daughter, Martha. His youngest son, Micajah, lived and died in Amherst County, Va. Philip Pendleton d. 1788. We have records of only four children
ISABELLA PENDLETON,(Henry, Philip), was born 1712 in Norwich, Norfolk, England, and died Bet. 1790 - 1796 in Culpeper County, Virginia. She married WILLIAM HENRY GAINES 1730 in Culpeper County, Virginia. William died about 1790
Children of ISABELLA PENDLETON and WILLIAM GAINES are:
1. JAMES GAINES, b. 1743, Culpeper County, Virginia; d. Bet. 1829 - 1834, Sullivan, Tennessee.
2. BENJAMIN GAINES, b. 1732, Culpeper County, Virginia; d. August 18, 1818, Culpeper County, Virginia.
3.THOMAS GAINES, b. Abt. 1740, Culpeper County, Vitginia; d. January 30, 1811, Stokes, North Carolina.
4 RICHARD GAINES b m 2nd to Jemina Pendleton. Jemina's parents were Philip Pendleton and Martha Ruffin Their daughter was Anne, whose second husband was Christopher Crigler, grandson of Jacob Crigler, of the Germanna Colonies, and name sake for Criglersville, VA (Madison County).
Nathaniel Pendleton,(Henry, Philip)born 1715 in King and Queen Co., VA; died 1793 in Berkeley Co., VA; married his second cousin, Elizabeth Clayton 1740 daughter of his first cousin, Philip Clayton, son of his aunt, Elizabeth Pendleton, and Samuel Clayton. Nathaniel lived in Culpeper County, and was very active in the Parish of St. Mark's. Note: His will was probated on Sept 19,1793in Berkeley Co. A copy of it was filed in Deed Book YY,Page 94 Culpeper Co as part of an “indenture made, Sept 13, 1831 between William Pendleton, surviving executor of William Pendleton deceased and as such executor of the last will and testament of Nathaniel Pendleton, deceased of the County of Berkeley and State of Virginia, of the one part, and Francis Ferguson of the County of Culpeper --------- of the other part” It would seem from the foregoing that Nathaniel Pendleton died in Berkeley Co., probably while on a visit to his son William, who was then living in that county
I. NATHANIEL PENDLETON JR., b. 1756, New Kent County, Virginia; d. October 20, 1821, Hyde Park, New York. m'd Susan Bard
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Nathaniel b 1756 Culpeper Co/; d 20 Oct 1821 Hyde Park, NY son of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Clayton Anderson Pendleton. served in Rev War from Ca m 4 Oct 1785 Savannah Ga to Susan bard dau of Dr John and Susanna Vaklleau Bard.
II. William Pendleton b. 1748. m'd 1st Apr 17,1700 Elizabeth Fargeson b Oct 10,1756 d Aug 15 1799 daughter of Benjamin and Sarah Ann Fargeson.and 1806 2nd Elizabeth Daniel b Feb 2,1749 d Aug 6,1808 daughter of Robert and Susannah Fargeson Daniel. She was first cousin to first wife.
III. Henry Pendleton b. 1750; d. in South Carolina, Jan., 1789. He is said to have married Anne Knight.
IV. Philip Pendleton b. 1752. Married Miss Pendleton. Moved to Martinsburg, Va. one book that I found has him marry Miss Pendleton and the other has his wife as Agnes Patterson
V. Mary Pendleton Married John Williams.
VI. Elizabeth Pendleton. Married Benjamin Tutt.
VII. Susanna Pendleton. Married Feb 11,1781 James Wilson.
MARY PENDLETON ,(Henry, Philip), was born Abt. 1703. She married JAMES GAINES. Edmund states that Mary, the youngest, married James Gaines and is still living; has decendents to the fourth geneation. Her husband died a few years past.
Children of MARY PENDLETON and JAMES GAINES are:
1. JAMES GAINES JR., b. Abt. 1739, Orange County, Virginia.
2. RICHARD EDWARD GAINES, b. Abt. 1743.
3. CATHERINE GAINES, b. Abt. 1735.
JOHN PENDLETON COL ,(Henry, Philip), was born 1719 in King and Queen County, Virginia, and died April 1799 in Hanover County, Virginia. He married 1st in 1740 PHOEBE JAMES and 2nd in 1761 SARAH MADISON, daughter of Thomas Madison and the cousin of James Madison the President of USA
Virginia, Prominent Families, Vol. 1-4
He was in his 58th year at the beginning of the Revolutionary war. He held various offices of honour and trust in the Colony of Virginia, and in the Senate. He was appointed by a convention of delegates of the counties and corporations in the Colony of Virginia, at Richmond Town, on Monday, July 17, 1775, to sign a large issue of Treasury Notes. These notes were issued upon the credit of the colony, taxes and duties having been suspended to suit the distressed circumstances of the Colonists. The issue was about £350,000, and the ordinance read: "Of the notes to be so issued, 50,000 shall be of the denomination of one shilling, and shall be signed by John Pendleton, Jr., Gentleman, which notes last named shall be on the best paper." John Pendleton was appointed, by the Governor of Virginia, judge of her courts, at a time when they were composed of the leading men of the Colony. (Taken from Hening's Statutes at large, 9th Vol.) Married, first, Miss James; second, Sarah Madison, cousin of President James Madison. Issue by first marriage:
1st marriage
1 Mary
2 EDMUND PENDLETON JR., b. February 04, 1743/44, King and Queen County, Virginia; d. July 04, 1827, Caroline County, Virginia. m'd Aug 161764 Mildred Pollard, NOTE: Edmund the son of John Pendleton was called JR to distinguish him from his uncle "Judge Edmund Pendleton"
3. John Pendleton Married Miss Taylor, of Orange Co., Va.
4. Elizabeth Pendleton b 1750 d 1831 m;d 1767 Rev William P Martin
2nd marriage
5. Henry Pendleton, b. 1762; d. 1822. Married, first, Alcey Ann Winston; second, Mrs. Mary B. (Overton) Burnley.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Henry b 4 Dec 1762;d 1 Nov 1822 of "Cuckoo," Louisa Co., son of Col John and Sarah Madison; m 1769 20 Nov 1785, Louisa Co. Alice or Alcey Ann Dickerton and 2nd m Mary Overton Burnley, widow of Col Hardin Burnley of Hanover Co(d 11 Nov 1811) Sur on Mar Cond Elijah Dickinson, Louisa Co.
6. Sarah Pendleton, Sarah or her 1/2 sister married Thurston James. For John Pendleton mention him as his son-in-law
7. James Pendleton (There was a James Pendleton among the Hanover Petitioners)
8. Lucy Pendleton m'd Robert Sydnor
9. Thomas Pendleton.
10. HENRY HARWOOD PENDLETON.
Edmund Pendleton,(Henry, Philip), born September 09, 1721 in Caroline Co, VA; died October 23, 1803; married 1st Elizabeth Roy January 1740/41; she died the following Nov when she delivered a dead child. ; married 2nd Sarah Pollard June of 1743. There were no children. Sarah Pollard father was Joseph Pollard b 1701 d Dec 26, 1791 at the age of 90. Edmund told his family history in the Family Chronlogy on 1792. (Copied from John S. Pendleton's MS. of "Redwood," Culpeper County, Va., May 1st, 1868.)
The seven children of the first settlers started on a career of multiplication befitting a new country; so that, as late as 1803, if Judge Edmund Pendleton had been in the prime of life, and the most active man in Virginia, it would have been a very serious, if not an impossible, undertaking to have identified and recorded the names of half of them; whilst he was, in fact, a man of upwards of eighty years of age when he died. He had, for sixty years, without the intermission of a single year, been laboriously engaged in professional and official duties, usually of great importance. He was for the last twenty years of his life most painfully disabled for any physical activity, by reason of an accident which made him a cripple, and consigned him to crutches for life.
He was a posthumous child and when only a few years old his mother married again to Edward Watkins and he was deprived of the loving care of parents; nevertheless, he grew to be the greatest member of his family and one of the noblest patriots which Virginia has produced. In his youth he studied law with his cousin John Penn., the Signer of the of the Declaration of Independence.
For more on Edmund Pendleton click here.
Slade Anderson's Web Page
Notes for EDMUND PENDLETON:
EDMUND PENDLETON.
Was the fifth son of Henry Pendleton and Mary Taylor. His father died before his birth. The following sketch of him is taken from Appleton's Encyclopedia of American Biography:
"Edmund Pendleton, statesman, was born in Caroline county, Va. 9th Sept., 1721. His grandfather, Philip, descended from Pendleton, of Manchester, Lancaster county, England, came from Norwich, Eng., to this country in 1674. Edmund began his career in the Clerk's office of Caroline county. He was licensed to practice law in 1744; became County Justice in 1751, and the following year was elected to the House of Burgesses. In 1764 was one of the Committee to memorialize the King. During the session of 1766, he gave the opinion `that the stamp act was void, for want of Constitutional authority in Parliament to pass it,' and voted in the affirmative on the resolution that the `act did not bind the inhabitants of Virginia.' He was one of the Committee of correspondence in 1763; County Lieutenant of Caroline in 1774. A member of the colonial convention, of the latter year, that was consequent on the Boston Port Bill, and was chosen by that body to the first Continental Congress. Accordingly, in company with George Washington, Peyton Randolph, Patrick Henry, Benjamin Harrison, and Richard Henry Lee, he attended in Philadelphia in 1774. As President of Virginia Convention, he was at the head of the government of the Colony from 1775 until the creation of the Virginia constitution in 1776, and was appointed President of the Committee of Safety in that year. In May, 1776, he presided again over the convention, and drew up the celebrated resolutions, by which the delegates from Virginia were instructed to propose a declaration of independence in Congress, using the words that were afterwards incorporated almost verbatim with the Declaration. As the leader of the Cavalier or Planter class, he was the opponent of Patrick Henry, and as leader of the Committee of Public Safety, he was active in the control of the military and naval operations, and of the foreign correspondence of Virginia. On the organization of the State Government, he was chosen Speaker of the House, and appointed, with Chancellor George Wythe and Thomas Jefferson, to revise the Colonial laws. In 1777, he was crippled for life by a fall from his horse; but the same year he was re-elected Speaker of the House of Burgesses, and President of the Court of Chancery. In 1779, he became President of the Court of Appeals, holding the office until his death. He presided over the State Convention, which ratified the Constitution of the United States in 1788. His masterly advocacy of the document gained him the encomium from Jefferson that `taken all in all, he was the ablest man in debate that I ever met with.' He received very large grants of land from the State, and having no children, was ever generous to his nieces and nephews, whose descendants still hold his memory in tender veneration. He married twice--1st. Elizabeth Roy, 2nd. Sarah Pollard. He died in 1803."
Ref: Genealogical Notes on Culpeper Co., VA
GENERATION NO 8
Henry Pendleton, (JAMES,Henry, Philip), born 1733; died 1798; married Anne Thomas. He lived to the time of his death on his plantation at the fork of the Hazel and Thornton rivers. He was member of the Culpeper Committee of Safety and of Patriot Convention 1775-76; d. about 1798, leaving three sons and several daughters. He was a Gentleman Justice of Culpeper Co. 1763-4.
Issue:
I. Frances Pendleton. m’d 1st 29 May 1799 John Browning d 1800 and 2nd 1802 William Ward
II. Joanna Pendleton d 1838 m’d 30 Sept 1796 Married Jesse Smith.
III. Catherine Pendleton. Married Armistead Green. had children:
III. Bowie Pendleton; d. a bachelor, quite young.
IV. Edward Pendleton b 12 Apr 1770 d 13 Feb 1803. Married 28 Oct 1794 Sarah Strother.
V. Henry Pendleton b 1764 d 1848. Married 5 Mar 1796 his cousin Elizabeth Pendleton.
I. Kitty Pendleton.
II. Marianne Pendleton.
III. Thomas Pendleton.
VI. Elizabeth m'd 1781 James Thomas
VII. Edmund Pendleton b 1 Nov 1776 d 10 Sept 1820. Married 10 Feb 1800 Elizabeth Ward.
2. JAMES PENDLETON (JAMES,Henry, Philip)was born 1735 in Virginia, and died 1793 in Culpeper County, Virginia. He married CATHERINE BOWIE 1763 the daughter of John adn Judith (Catlett) Bowie. Col. James Pendleton, was for many years a representative of Culpeper County, Va.; in the House of Burgesses and in the State Legislature, under the Commonwealth, Justice of Culpeper, Colonel of the Army of the Revolution, and High Sheriff of the county. When quite young he married Catherine Bowie, of Maryland. Died 1798, leaving nine grown children.
Child of JAMES PENDLETON and CATHERINE BOWIE is:
I. John Pendleton b 1766 d 1807. Married Miss Elizabeth Taylor, of Orange Co., Va. his cousin the daughter of James and Ann Pendleton Taylor.
II. Thomas Pendleton m'd Jane Farmer
IV. William Pendleton. Married Nancy Strother.
V. Catlett Pendleton b 1783 and died unmarried March 11,1824. He was an Ensigan in The Virginia Troops during the War of 1812.
VI. Margaret Pendleton. Married, first, Robert Slaughter (1762-18030; second, Aug 31,1809 to John Lightfoot and third Rev Joshua Morris. Issue:
VII. Nancy Pendleton. Married, first, William Brown; second, Col. Valentine Johnson, of Orange Co.; d. without leaving any descendants.
VIII. Catherine Bowie Pendleton b d 1818 m'd Nov 10,1789 to Archibald Tutt d 1827 .
IX. Elizabeth Coleman Pendleton. Married Henry Pendleton, her cousin.
PHILIP PENDLETON (JAMES,Henry, Philip)born 1741 in Caroline Co., VA; died 1811 Where? He was the son of James Pendleton and Elizabeth Anderson. He married Martha Aubrey 1766 in Westmoreland Co. Va. . Martha Aubrey, born 1742 in Falmouth, Stafford Co., VA. She was the daughter of Chandler Aubrey. He, having resigned as Lay Reader in 1780 moved from St Mark's Parish Culpeper Co., where he had been Clerk of the Vestry in 1771, to Pittsylvania Co. where his name appears on the Tax for 1785 when ten white people were listed with him. According to family traditions he was captain in the Revolutionary War
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
Philip b ca 1745 d 1811 son James and Mary Taylor Pendleton m 1756 Martha Awbrey dau of Chandler of Westmoreland Co rem 1780 from Culpeper Co to Pittsylvania Co.
"MARRIAGE OF SOME VIRGINIA RESIDENTS 1607-1800" by Dorothy Wulfeck
? Awbrey
Martha m Philp Pendleton
Tax list
Pendleton Henry King & Queen County, 1704
I own the original copies of the Court case of what I am posting below
The first documents:
Sept Court 1785
The complaint of Martha this wife of Philip Pendleton and the Recognizance of this said Philip for his appearance here for reasons appearing to the court is ordered to Dismissed
Next
Sept Court 1785
Pendleton vs. Pendleton
Robert Williams Gent. Deputy Attorney for the Commonwealth comes into Court in given the Court now where to understand and be inform for and on behalf of Sarah Pendleton daughter of Philip Pendleton that the said Philip hath lately at three different time committed a Rape on the body of his said Sarah Where inform this ordered that the Sheriff with the Posey of the county do take the said Philip Pendleton into his Custody and him safety keep until he shall be thense discharge by due course of Law
Next
Sept Court 1785
Pendleton
The said Philip Pendleton was lend he the Bar in Custody of Abraham Shelton Sherif of this County to where custody for the cause aforesaid he was committed and Robert Williams Gent. States Attorney protested against proceeding on his Examination alloying That no witness have appeared on behalf of the commonwealth. Where upon it was demanded of this said Philip Pendleton whether guilty or not guilty of the fat wherewith he stands charged. Answer not guilty and no witness appearing on be half of the Common Wealth ordered that he be acquitted and discharged out of custody Sign Wm Witcher Gent
Next
Nov Court 1785
Corbin vs. Pendleton for the peace
Rawley Corbin comes into Court and craved the peace of Philip Pendleton and took the oath by law presided Whereupon it is order that the said Philip Pendleton be in custody of the Sherif until he fined sufficient security for his good behavior that some the said Philip Pendleton together with I monies Maid and Beverly Willard his Securilerie? And acknowledged themselves severally inedible the common wealth of Virginia That is to say the said Philip Pendleton in the sum of Thirty pounds and his said securities in the sum of fifteen pounds each to be levied if their several and respective goods and Chattles, Lands and Tenements to the use of behavior and keep the peace towards all the citizens of these Common Wealth and especially the said Rawley Corbin for one whole year and a day.
Next
Dec. 1785
Commonwealth vs. Pendleton
Ordered that the Sheif with the posie of this County do take Philip Pendleton into his custody and him safely keep until he shall find sufficient Securities for his good behavior (that is to say) the said Philip Pendleton on the sum of five hundred pounds and his securities in two hundred and fifty pounds each
Next Dec 1785
Pendleton vs. Pendleton
Martha Pendleton Complainant
Against } In Chanery for Alimony
Philip Pendleton Defendant
Ordered that the defendant pay unto the Complainant five pounds immediately and the like sum at the end of three months successively for her supposed unto this matter shall be fully heard and determined in Equity and if is further Order that a summon be issued to compell the defendant to answer allowing to the payer of the bill
This all of the court record I could find. By the last case sound like Martha divorce him. If so what happen to him? Where did he go? Did he get married in Bedford County, VA. I found a marriage of Philip Pendleton getting married to Miss Peas Did Martha move with children to Washington Co. VA.? Where Rebecca m’d William Monkes. I have their marriage records from there but at this time th | Pendleton, Phillip Nathaniel (I1233)
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