Matches 801 to 850 of 7,964
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
801 |
31 jan 1862 Oslo? | Daae, Cathrine Elisabeth von der Lippe Knagenhjelm (I39726)
|
802 |
35 slaves | Witcher, Vincent Oliver (I14188)
|
803 |
358 acres||for 45 pounds||The land was located on the branches of Lickinghole Creek and is the same property granted to David Mimms by patent dated 1726. | Wright, John (I21539)
|
804 |
36 slaves | Motley, Joseph (I43)
|
805 |
37 slaves | Motley, Joseph (I43)
|
806 |
38th va.inf., co.b,sgt.,pittsylvania co.va..p.o.w., five forks,va.4/1/1865, sent to city point at harts' island prison.released there, 6/20/1865. 5'7"tall, light complexion,light hair,blue eyes.
occupation in 1860; tin peddlar | Riddle, John A (I19971)
|
807 |
38th Virginia Infantry (CSA)
Wyatt K. McNeely
Rank: Private
Company: D
died of dyspepsia,21 March 1862, in Chimborazo Hospital #4, Richmond, Va., buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Richmond,Va.
| McNeely, Wyatt K (I16770)
|
808 |
3rd Generation
“GEORGE BOONE III. (son of George and Sarah Boone) was born at Stoak (a Village near the City of Exeter) in A.D. 1666, being a Weaver; his Wife’s Maiden Name was Mary Maugridge, who was born in Bradninch (eight Miles from the City of Exeter) in the Year 1669, being a Daughter of John Maugridge & Mary his Wife whose maiden Name was Milton.
They (the said George & Mary Boone) had nine Children that lived to be Men and Women: namely, George, Sarah, Squire, Mary, John, Joseph, Benjamin, James & Samuel, having each of them several Children, excepting John who was never married. (A daughter named Mary died in infancy, so they named a later daughter Mary also.) The said George and Mary Boone with their Family, came from the Town of Bradninch in Devonshire, Old-England (which is a Town at 8 miles Distance from the City of Exeter, and 177 measured Miles Westward from London); they left Bradninch the 17 Aug. 1717, and went to Bristol where they took Shipping, and arrived at Philadelphia in 1717 September 29, Old-Stile, or October 10th New-Stile; three of their Children, to wit, George, Sarah & Squire they sent in a few Years before. From Philadelphia they went to Abington, and staid a few Months there; thence to North-Wales and liv’d about 2 Years there; thence to Oley in the same County of Philadelphia, where Sarah (being married) had moved to some Time before. This last Place of their Residence (since the Divisions made in the Township of Oley & County of Philadelphia) is called the Township of Exeter in the County of Berks: It was called Exeter, because they came from a Place near the City of Exeter. And,
“He the said George Boone the Third, died on the Sixth Day of the Week, near 8 o’clock in the Morning, on the 27th of July 1744, aged 78 Years; and Mary his Wife died on the 2d Day of the Week, on the 2d of February 1740-1; aged 72 years; and were decently interred in Friends Burying-Ground, in the said Township of Exeter. When he died, he left 8 children, 52 Grand-Children, and 10 Great-Grand-Children, Living; in all 70, being as many Persons as the House of Jacob which came into Egypt.”
The Boone Society has the marriage record of George III & Mary Maugridge (note different spelling of “Moggridge” on original old English hand-written document below) performed at St. Disen’s Church in Bradninch:
Document owned by the Boone Society:
George Boone married unto Mary Moggridge the 16th day of August 1689
The Boone Society also has the baptism record of Mary Moggridge from St. Disen’s Church as follows:
Document owned by the Boone Society:
1668 Mary ye daughter of John Moggridge baptized ye 23rd day of December | Boone, George (I22780)
|
809 |
3rd Wife of Anthony Walke I | Family: Anthony Walke / Anna Lee Armistead (F11641)
|
810 |
4 barn
Ekteviede 1878 Masfjorden
No: 21
Ægteskabet stiftet: 23 Octbr.
Hans 1ste ægte.
Hennes 1ste ægte.
Brudgommens og Brudens fulde Navn: Erik Arnesen, Andrea Hansine Hansdatter
Brudgommens borgerlige stilling: Gdbr. paa Sæternes i Eivindvik
Brudgommens Fødested og Fødselsaar: Hopen 25/1 1852
Brudens Fødested og Fødselsaar: Hösteland 1/2 1854
Brudgommens Faders fulde Navn og borgerlige Stilling: Gdbr. Arne Arnesen Hopen
Brudens Faders fulde Navn og borgerlige Stilling: Gdbr. Hans Hansen Brygger
Kilde:
https://media.digitalarkivet.no/view/2148/183
Skannede kirkebøker
Hordaland
Masfjorden / Masfjorden: 1876-1899, Ministerialbok
Ekteviede 1878 (184)
Folio 185 | Family: Erik Arnesen Hope / Andrea Hansine (Monsina) Brügger (F9331)
|
811 |
4 barn | Family: Ove Christian Bugge / Anne Cathrina Engh (F9359)
|
812 |
4 barn | Family: Ivar L. Fivelsdal / Gjerthina Brügger (F9337)
|
813 |
4 November 1791
No 1311 .... efter Johan Leganger og hans Hustru
Else Cathrine Finde af Færstad gaard i Ous Præste-
geild under Bergens Stift ...........
15 Maj 1792
http://arkivverket.no/URN:sk_read/24038/213/?size=gigant&mode=0
Sunnhordland
A.a. 10b 1790-1792
Folio 499
Skifte efter Johan Leganger og Hustru paa
Færestad i Ous Skibr: begyndet den 29de Janu-
ari 1796 og sluttet d?17 Junii 1797.-
.... som bemelte Salig Leganger og hans ..... ved
Döden afg. Hustrue Elsa Catharina Friman Finde
........ 2 Börn som 1 Sön i Da
...... 1. ..... Sön Hr. Niels Leganger, 9 Aar gl. op-
holder sig ......
............ 2. ............. Jomfru Maria Fÿren
Finde Leganger, 8 Aar gl. opholder sig .......
http://arkivverket.no/URN:sk_read/
Sunnhordland sorenskriveri
Skifteprotokoll Aa 11a, 1796 - 1801
Side 169-190 | Finde, Elisabeth (Elsa) Catharina Friman (I39643)
|
814 |
4 November 1791
No 1311 .... efter Johan Leganger og hans Hustru
Else Cathrine Finde af Færstad gaard i Ous Præste-
geild under Bergens Stift ...........
15 Maj 1792
http://arkivverket.no/URN:sk_read/24038/213/?size=gigant&mode=0
Sunnhordland
A.a. 10b 1790-1792
Folio 499
Skifte efter Johan Leganger og Hustru paa
Færestad i Ous Skibr: begyndet den 29de Janu-
ari 1796 og sluttet d?17 Junii 1797.-
.... som bemelte Salig Leganger og hans ..... ved
Döden afg. Hustrue Elsa Catharina Friman Finde
........ 2 Börn som 1 Sön i Da
...... 1. ..... Sön Hr. Niels Leganger, 9 Aar gl. ....
...... 2. ..... Jomfru Maria Fÿren Finde Leganger, 8 Aar gl. ......
http://arkivverket.no/URN:sk_read/
Sunnhordland sorenskriveri
Skifteprotokoll Aa 11a, 1796 - 1801, side 169 | Leganger, Johann (I39644)
|
815 |
4 slaves | Motley, Daniel Edward (I16)
|
816 |
4 slaves | Reynolds, James Mitchell (I1821)
|
817 |
425 acres on the branches of the Tomahawk and Banister River | Reynolds, Hugh (I1044)
|
818 |
4th Generation
The Boone Society has copies of actual baptisms at St. Disen’s Church in Bradninch, Devonshire, England, for 6 of the children of George Boone III and wife Mary. (Note: the Old James Boone Genealogy gives us the actual birth dates.) George III & Mary actually had 10 children, which include two daughters named Mary, (the first died in infancy). The children are numbered (1) through (10) below:
Document owned by the Boone Society:
(1.) 1690 George ye son of George Boone baptized the 20th day of July (George IV) From James Boone Genealogy: “GEORGE BOONE IV. (the eldest Son of George & Mary Boone) was born in the Town of Bradninch aforesaid, on the 13th of July 1690 about ½ H. past 5 in the Afternoon; and died in Exeter Township aforesaid, on the 20 November 1753; in the 64th Year of his Age. He taught School for several Years near Philadelphia; was a good Mathematician, and taught the Several Branches of English Learning; and was a Magistrate for several Years. His wife’s maiden name was Deborah Howell. She died in 1759 January 26.”
They married 27 July 1713 in Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania. Page 590 of Hazel Spraker, “The Boone Family” showing minutes of the Abington Monthly Meeting of Quakers:
5 mo 27, 1713 (27 July 1713 – old style calendar first month was March): Whereas George Boone and Deborah Howell, the daughter of William Howell, having declared their marriage intentions before two Mo. Meetings, Enquiry being made by persons Appointed and found Clear from all others on ye account of marriage, Did accomplish their Marriage in ye United of Friends as is signified by their Marriage Certificate.” | Boone, George (I8235)
|
819 |
4th Virgina Regiment during War of 1812
Moses Echols son of Moses Nichols Echols and Elizabeth Wynne served in the Lynchburg Rifles of the 4th Virginia Regiment during the War of 1812. | Echols, Joseph Nichols (I522)
|
820 |
4th Wife of Anthony Walke I | Family: Anthony Walke / Mary Moseley (F11619)
|
821 |
5 barn
Kilde:
http://digitalarkivet.arkivverket.no/nn-no/ft/person/pf01052307003416 | Family: Samuel Mandrup Bugge / Synnøve Anderdatter Eickum (F9358)
|
822 |
5 slaves | Moore, Thomas (I1993)
|
823 |
5 slaves | Edwards, George Allen (I26)
|
824 |
5 slaves | Edwards, Calahill M (I24)
|
825 |
50 BCE | King of Uppsala, Fjölner (I36960)
|
826 |
526 RECORDS OF THE COLONY OF RHODE ISLAND
. . . . . . . . .
Proceedings of the Generall Assembly of the Collony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, held at Newport, the 4th of May 1675
Mr. William Coddington, Governor.
Mr. John Easton, Deputy Governor.
ASSISTANTS.
Mr. Henry Bull, Mr. Thomas Harris,
Mr. Walter Clarke, Mr. Joshua Coggeshall,
Mr. Daniell Gould, Mr. John Tripp,
Mr. William Harris, Mr. Job Almy,
Capt. Arthur Fenner, Mr. Benjamin Barton.
AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS. 527
DEPUTIES. 1675
For Newport
, Mr. John Coggeshallj Sen'r, engaged. ~~
" Mr. William Case.
" Mr. Peter Easton, engaged.
" Mr. John Wood, engaged.
" Mr. Thomas Clifton, engaged.
•' Mr. John Read, engaged.
For Providence
, Mr. Tolleration Harris, engaged.
" Mr. Edward Smith, engaged.
" Mr. William Astin, engaged.
" Mr. Vail. Whitman, engaged.
For Portsmouth,
Capt. John Albro, engaged.
" Mr. George Lawton, engaged.
" Mr. Gideon Freeborne, engaged.
" Mr. William Wodell, engaged.
For Warwicke,
Capt. Randall Holdon.
" Capt. John Greene.
'' Mr. John Weecks,
" Mr. James Greene,
Mr. William Coddington, Governor, chosen Moderator.
John Sanford, chosen Clerke of the Assembly.
Voted, Elisha Smith, James Barker, Jun'r, Walter
Newbery, William Coddington, Jun'r, Adam Wooley,
Joseph Bryer, Nathaniell Coddington, James Weeden,
Jun'r, Robert Malins, William James, William Edwards,
John Johnson, Thomas Peckham, Richard Hailes, Clement
Weaver, the third,
John Weaver, George Browne,
James Carde
, John Woodman, beinge freemen of the
towne of Newport, are all admitted freemen of this Collony.
Voted, John Pearce Mason, William Manchester, John
Wilbore, Joseph Tripp, beinge freemen of the towne of
Portsmouth,
are admitted freemen of this Collony.
Voted, William Greene, John Weecks, Jun'r, John
Rice, John Low, Thomas Stafford, Jun'r, Jeremiah
Smith, beinge freemen of the towne of Warwicke, are
admitted freemen of this Collony.
| Greene, James (Captain) II (I27541)
|
827 |
53 slaves | Witcher, Vincent Oliver (I14188)
|
828 |
53rd inf reg | Shelhorse, Jacob (I12895)
|
829 |
57th va. inf., c.s.a. 6'tall,dark complexion,light hair,gray eyes. | Shelton, Victor C (I19906)
|
830 |
6 April 1589
[S-6] Christening of Captain William Tucker at St Nicholas Acons, London, England
1610
[S-7] Captain William Tucker immigrated to America on the Mary and James.
1612
[S-6] Captain William Tucker & brother Thomas each received a bequest of 10 pounds sterling from Henry Steevens, Citizen & Haberdasher of London.
1617 & 1618
[S-6] Captain William Tucker sent two men from England in 1617 and followed in 1618.
1618
[S-8] In 1618 Governor Samuel Argall appointed Captain William Tucker commander of Point Comfort.
30 July 1619
[S-5] & [S-12] Captain William Tucker of Kicoughtan was a member House of Burgess.
6 December 1620
[S-20] Captain William Tucker patents 650 acres in Norfolk, along the James River. This property was sold by 1644 to Captain John Sibsey.
17 April 1621
[S-24] William Tucker of Elizabeth City, VA gives a deposition.
May 1621
[S-18] Captain William Tucker recommends Richard Norwood as surveyor who was anxious to emigrate to Virginia.
1621
[S-10] Captain William Tucker and Ralph Hamor went to London to see Parliament for Virginia's case in opposing the tobacco contract proposed by Sir Thomas Roe and others.
[S-25] William Tucker is involved in a lawsuit.
23 December 1621
[S-1] & [S-23] Governor in Virginia. Commission to William Tucker: To trade in Bay for corn.
22 March 1622
[S-3] & [S-4] The Powhatan Indian Attack kills 347 colonists, setting off a war that lasted a decade.
18 May 1622
[S-23] Commission to Captain William Tucker to command Kecoughtan.
16 July 1622
[S-1] & [S-23] Governor in Virginia. A Commission to William Tucker: To begin a plantation on the Eastern Shore.
3 January 1622/3
[S-2], [S-13] & [S-23] Governor in Virginia. Instructions to Captain William Tucker.
12 May 1623
[S-2] & [S-23] Governor in Virginia. Commission to Captain William Tucker.
22 May 1623
[S-3] & [S-4] Captain William Tucker met with Opechancanough and other prominent Powhatans.
12 July 1623
[S-23] Commission to Captain William Pierce, Captain Samuel Mathews, Captain Nathaniel West and Captain William Tucker to raise men to attack the indians.
23 July 1623
[S-16] Captain William Tucker was assigned the attack upon the "Nansamums, & Wariscoyacks".
31 August 1623
[S-23] Proclamation touching payment of debts: No one shall dispose of any part of his tobacco until he has paid all his debts, whether the debt be to the Magazine, the Company, to Captain Tucker or to private individuals.
October 1623
[S-23] Warrant to Captain William Tucker: Levy on tobacco throughout the Plantations to pay for the public debt. Levy on sassafras.
28 October 1623
[S-23] Warrant to Captain William Tucker: To recruit thirty men for the defense of the colony from the plantation under his command.
27 November 1623
[S-2] Governor in Virginia. A Warrant to Captain William Tucker.
26 December 1623
[S-2] Governor in Virginia. A Letter to Captain William Tucker.
31 December 1623
[S-2] Council in Virginia. A Commission to Captain William Tucker.
9 January 1623/4
[S-2] Council in Virginia. An Order to Captain William Tucker.
20 September 1624
[S-6] & [S-20] Captain William Tucker, now commander of Koccoughton, 150@ w/in Elizabeth City County. This property was sold to Ralph Barlowe 18 March 1645.
7 February 1624/5
[S-11] Captain William Tucker and family are listed in Muster.
1625
[S-7] Captain William Tucker member of the King's Council
1626
[S-6] & [S-17] Undated, lands granted by patent to Captain William Tucker, Elizabeth City (150@) and south of the river (650@).
17 October 1628
[S-20] Captain William Tucker patents 50 acres.
17 November 1628
[S-20] Captain William Tucker sells the property he patented a month earlier to Thomas Willoughby.
18 December 1628
[S-21] Captain William Tucker sails for England landing at Plymouth 2 February.
12 May 1630
[S-21] Captain William Tucker gives evidence about the ship the Sun.
28 May 1631 (about)
[S-9] William Claiborne "took command" of his Kent Island venture and sailed from England on the ship Africa (hired from William Tucker, who had married a sister of Maurice Thomson) with servants and supplies.
1 June 1632
[S-20] Captain William Tucker patents 100 acres in Elizabeth City.
1632 & 1633
[S-10] William Tucker and Thomas Stone in a syndicate given a right to market the entire Virginian tobacco crop.
6 February 1633
[S-20] Captain William Tucker sells the 100 acres he patented eight months earlier in Elizabeth City to Lancelott Barnes.
17 January 1634
[S-27] Examination of William Tucker of Redrith (co. Surrey), aged 44, "armiger".
1634
[S-19] Richard Thompson of Walton, Herts, married Elizabeth, daughter of John Harsnett (Visitation of Herts, 1634). They had issue: Mary, born 1599, married Captain William Tucker, born1589, who was in Virginia 1610, member of the House of Burgess 1623, member of the Council 1626, and had issue: Elizabeth, born in Viriginia 1624-5.
14 July 1635
[S-20] Captain William Tucker patents 200 acres in Norfolk. This property was sold to Richard Joanis in November of 1646.
9 February 1636
[S-7] & [S-20] Captain William Tucker partner in Berkeley Hundred Land Deal (8000 acres in Charles City Co., VA).
18 June 1638
[S-28] Depositions of William Tucker and William Harris against Ralph Wyatt over a quantity of tobacco brought back from Virginia in the "Globe".
17 September 1638
[S-26] Petition of the defendants John West, Samuel Mathew, William Tucker and others to Lord Coventry.
1638 (about)
[S-10] Captain William Tucker was in partnership in trade to an unnamed area with Maurice Thomson, George Thomson and James Stone.
1638 - 1641
[S-10] Captain William Tucker may have been involved in Captain William Jackson's raiding voyage to the Spanish West Indies with William Pennoyer and Thomas Frere. (Brenner, Merchants and Revolution, p. 158 has it that Capt. William Jackson was once an apprentice of William Tucker in the London Clothworkers Company.)
12 October 1639
[S-22] Captain William Tucker involved in auditing accounts between Cloberry and Claiborne (Cleborne).
1 October 1642
[S-14] Captain William Tucker, Assistant to the Committee going to Ireland.
11 October 1642
[S-15] Captain William Tucker to be Assistant to the Committee that are to go into Ireland.
12 October 1642
[S-6] Will of Captain William Tucker written.
22 December 1643
[S-6] !LAND: William Tucker, near land of John Carter, 22 Dec 1643.(p150 Cavaliers & Pioneers of VA vol I).
Sources.
1. Thomas Jefferson Papers: Records of the Virginia Company: Table of Contents for Volume III
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/jefferson_papers/vc03.html
2. Thomas Jefferson Papers: Records of the Virginia Company: Table of Contents for Volume IV
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/jefferson_papers/vc04.html
3. Virtual Jamestown - Timeline
http://www.virtualjamestown.org/timeline2.html
4. TheHistoryNet - Powhatan Uprising of 1622
http://www.historynet.com/wars_conflicts/17_18_century/3035981.html?featured=y&c=y
5. The Colonial Virginia Register
http://www.newrivernotes.com/va/vareg1.htm
6. William Tucker page by Brad Behrens
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bradsdata&id=I11433
7. The Thom(p)son Conundrum:
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~bianco/Resources/riddle.html
8. Origin of the Melungeons - 1619, Part 4
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/read/Melungeon/2004-09/1096428217
9. The First Campbells on Jamaica
http://www.danbyrnes.com.au/blackheath/jamaica.htm
10. Merchants and Bankers From 1625-1650
http://www.danbyrnes.com.au/merchants/merchants6a.htm
11. Search the Jamestown 1624/5 Muster Records:
http://www.virtualjamestown.org/Muster/muster24.html
12. Uncovering Traces of Historic Kecoughtan
http://www.wm.edu/wmcar/pentran.html
13. Virginia Company and Colonial Jamestown Documents
http://www.reinhardtpublications.com/documents_in_book.htm
14. British History Online: House of Lords Journal Volume 5: 1 October 1642
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=34914
15. British History Online: House of Lords Journal Volume 5: 11 October 1642
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=34922
16. Isle of Wight Plantation
http://web.ukonline.co.uk/lordcornell/iwhr/va/iwplant.htm
17. Early Virginia imigrants/emigrants
http://www.phc.igs.net/~gordpace/lines/fact0010.htm
18. Economic History of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century: Chapter VIII
http://www.dinsdoc.com/bruce-1-8.htm
19. Virginia Heraldica by William Armstrong Crozier
ISBN: 080630085X
20. Virginia Patents of Captain William Tucker
Sent to me by Doug Tucker of FL
21. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 4200 (revised 4001)
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/04001/0001.tiff
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/04001/0002.tiff
22. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 8901
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/08901/0001.tiff
23. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 13629
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/13629/0005.tiff
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/13629/0006.tiff
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/13629/0008.tiff
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/13629/0009.tiff
24. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 8691
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/08691/0004.tiff
25. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 4240 (revised 4041)
http://ajax.lva.lib.va.us/F/D8F6N352SD9JCTHGS13HSHYPG7L3NEPP8TNLAUMB3YDEISNS27-01582?func=full-set-set&set_number=005891&set_entry=000001&format=999
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/04041/0002.tiff
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/04041/0003.tiff
26. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 7294
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/07294/0001.tiff
27. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 4201 (revised 4002)
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/04002/0004.tiff
28. Virginia Colonial Records Project - Survey Report # 5760 (revised 5496)
http://lvaimage.lib.va.us/disk18/CR/05496/0001.tiff | Tucker, William (I49504)
|
831 |
6 barn
Kilde:
http://arkivverket.no/URN:db_read/db/40139/68/?size=bigger&mode=0 | Family: Christian Frederich Tuchsen / Cathrine Elisabeth von der Lippe Hanning (F9297)
|
832 |
6' 8" tall with firey red hair. Worked as a saloon builder. Died after stepping on a nail and getting lockjaw. | Farrar, Richard Issac (I52610)
|
833 |
7 barn | Daae, Drude Catharine Marie (I39505)
|
834 |
7 barn | Family: Christen Daae / Elisabeth Maria Friis (F9324)
|
835 |
7 slaves | Witcher, Vincent Oliver (I14188)
|
836 |
8 barn | Family: Anthon Eigil Bugge / Johanne Othilde Bergh (F9360)
|
837 |
8 barn | Family: Ludvig Daae Bugge / Johanne Andersdatter Eickum (F9362)
|
838 |
85 acres on the South side of Stanton River|| The price was 25 pounds 10 shillings.||The deed was acknowledged by Benjamin Tarrant in open court on 23 Apr 1778. | Bennett, Reuben (I12535)
|
839 |
85 acres on the south side of the Stanton River||for natural love and affection||This deed identifies [R:grantor] as being of Wilkes County, Georgia. | Bennett, Thomas Fullilove (I21651)
|
840 |
85 acres||for twenty five pounds ten shillings|| | Bennett, Reuben (I12535)
|
841 |
9 slaves | Echols, David (I176)
|
842 |
9 slaves | Echols, Coleman E (I1564)
|
843 |
1840 Harris County, Georgia, Census (Floyds Dist.) lists W. Hopkins with wife and 11 children.
Dennis Sheffield Hopkins, son of William's brother Samuel Hopkins, married Sarah Jane (or Sarah John) Motley, sister of John Milton Motley and Coleman Pendleton Motley, who married the Perkins sisters. | Hopkins, William (I5858)
|
844 |
Ann Gillintine, the daughter of Nicholas Gillintine and his Echols wife, inherited £20 from her father. She married Matthew Hillsman [208]. | Gillintine, Ann (I9857)
|
845 |
Catherine Gillintine, the daughter of Nicholas Gillintine and his Echols wife, married a Brown. Her father left her one feather bed in his will.
Catherine may have been the wife of Daniel Brown. Daniel lived in the same tithable district as the Echols and both a Daniel and Catherine Brown witnessed a deed in Amelia County between George Marchbanks [838.7/S] and Thomas Foster on 17 September 1748.
The Marchbanks and Gillintine families were related. Amelia County listed Daniel as a tithable until 1753 and appointed him a surveyor in 1741. Amelia County listed Daniel Brown head of a household of two whites and four blacks in 1782. He was then living in the same census district with the Hillsman and Clement families. Yet no deeds appeared in Amelia County for Daniel Brown throughout 1786. Daniel and his wife may have moved to Halifax County because it was here in 1771 that Daniel witnessed the will of Catherine's uncle William Echols Sr. [838.3]. | Gillintine, Catherine (I9855)
|
846 |
Coleman Pendleton Motley
born: 2 December 1823 in Talbottom, Monroe County, Georgia
died: 1 August 1885 in Daviston, Tallapoosa County, Alabama
Occupation: Farmer, Merchant
1850 Tallapoosa County, Alabama, Census (Daviston): Coleman 27, Hester A. 27, John 6, Louisa A. 4, Martha A. 3, Elizabeth 2.
1860 Tallapoosa County, Alabama, Census (Daviston): Coleman 37, $960 Real Estate, $9400 Personal Estate, "Henrietta" 37, John 16, Louisiana 14, Martha 13, Sarah 11, Coleman 9, James D. 6, Mary 3, Nancy 2.
1860 Tallapoosa County, Alabama, Slave Schedule: Coleman Motley, one 60 yr old male, one 36 yr old female, one 26 yr old male, one 15 yr old female, one 11 yr old female, one 9 yr old female, one 6 yr old male, one 2 yr old male.
1870 Tallapoosa County, Alabama, Census (Daviston): Coleman, 47, Hester, 48, Mary 16, James 14, Nancy 11, Cornelia 8, George 4, William 2. He is next door to William Wesley Williams and near William Lafayette Williams and his son Coleman Pendleton Motley Jr.
1880 Tallapoosa County, Alabama, Census (Daviston): Coleman 56, H. Ann 57, George 12, William L. 11; also in the household are Luke Carlisle, 23, Black male servant; James Worth, 19 Black male servant; Neal or Ned Grice, 19, Mulatto male servant; Net Williams, 14 Mulatto female servant; and William R. Watts, 20, White male, clerk.
Father: James P. Motley
Mother: Nancy Haynes
Spouse: Hester Ann Perkins
married: 5 October 1843 in Harris County, Georgia
Children:
1. John Motley (m. Mattie Floyd)
2.
Louisiana Antinette Motley 3. Martha Ann Motley (m. Daniel Moses Cotney)
4. Sarah Elizabeth Motley (m. William Arnold "Billy" Cotney)
5. Coleman Pendleton Motley, Jr. (m. Annis Minerva Williams)
6. James D. Motley (m. T. E. //)
7. Mary Jane Motley (m. James M. Gay)
8. Nancy Motley (m. James Beglar Carlisle)
9. Cornelia Motley (m. Rufus Berry)
10. George Motley (m. Cora Smith)
11. William Motley | Motley, Coleman Pendleton (I2273)
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Comments: "I have been trying to find accurate dates for Constance Le Gros, daughter of Conan Le Gros and Maud FitaRoy and everything I find is totally implausible. It's like peope post stuff to their family trees without even thinking. If Constance was indeed born in 1118 (which is reasonable if Conan and Maud were married around 1113 and Constance was the youngest of 3 children), how could she have born a son (Alan) in 1124 and another (Geoffrey) in 1126? Six and eight years old seems awfully young for people to have had children. Some people show Constance born in 1108, but with Conan born in 1096, which most historical sites I have examined seem to agree on, he would have only been 12 years old when she was born. I see you are listing as sources the LDS Family Search web site, which is only as accurate as the people submitting the information and a lot of people don't seem to have been looking at dates when submitting. Most historical sites I have looked at also put ! Constance's birth at 1118, and Geoffrey's at 1126 (I've only seen the earlier 1124 son Alan on one other site besides yours), but I just don't see how that is possible. Have you considered the absurdity of that information?"
Sincerely,
Sharee Hughes
| Bretagne, Constance Princess Of (I36527)
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Elijah Beardsley by the book #313
Added by v160360 on 21 Oct 2008
Originally submitted by mossybeard to Beardsley Moss Stafford Younkin Tree on 13 May 2007
313. Elijah 6 (Phineas 5 Obadiah 4 John 3 Samuel 2 William 1) born at New Fairfield, Connecticut 16 May 1760; died at Springfield Ohio, 22 Oct. 1826; married, 27 June 1780, Sarah Hubbell; born 1 Dec. 1763, daughter of Parnach and Lydia (Beardsley) Hubbell. They were married at New Fairfield, where they lived till Feb. 1796, when they moved to Delhi, NY and stayed there till Oct. 1811. They then started for Ohio, arriving in Delaware county Dec. 1811, remaining till April 1814, when again they moved, this time to Urbana Ohio. In Oct. 1815, they moved to Springfield, Ohio, where they remained a short time, then moved to Mechanicsburg where they stayed until April 1821, then moved back to Springfield. He served in the Revolutionary War, and was a member of the “Boston Tea Party.”Children:679 i. Ezra, b. 17 Oct. 1781680 ii. Parruck (Paruch) ,b. 17 Sept 1783 iii. Ruth, b. at New Fairfield, 6 May 1785; d. at Delhi, BY 1 Sept. 1859; m. 25 Feb. 1803, Daniel Frisbie (Frisbee) m. 1781; d. 1860681 iv. Darius, b. 6 Feb. 1787 v. Heman, b. 1 Aug, 1789; d. at Urbana, Sept. 1814. vi. Clara, b. at New Fairfield, 30 June, 1791; d. at Delhi, NY 28 June 1814; dm. 16 March 1809, Gideon Frisbie (Frisbee) vii.. Lydia, b. at New Fairfield 31 May 1793; died at Springfield, Ohio, 29 Oct. 1821; married 29 March 1821, Daria Bingham682 viii. Havilah, b. 1 April 1795 ix. Abbe, b. at Delhi, NY 27 Nov. 1797; d. at Springfield. 18 July 1819 married at Springfield, 4 Aug. 1816, Ira Paige x. Sarah ,b. at Delhi, 9 Oct. 1799; m. 4 Jan 1820, Ira Paige (her brother in law) xi. Fanny, b. at Delhi, 22 Sept. 1801; d. ae 76 years, n. 18 March 1830, at Cass co., Michigan,, Erastus Felton xii. Laura, b. at Delhi, 11 June 1803; d. 23 March 1888; m. 1824, James S. Christie xiiii. Marilla, b. at Delhi, 16 Oct. 1805; d at Dayton Ohio 30 Oct. 1840; m. at Springfield, Ohio. 6 Jan. 1836, James Dean683 xiv. Elijah Hubbell, b. 10 Sept. 1807.
Elijah Beardsley by http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohclark/ohckbios/query001.htm#- 1
Originally submitted by mossybeard to Beardsley Moss Stafford Younkin Tree on 11 May 2007
Elijah BEARDSLEY deceased, was born in New Fairfield, Conn., May 2; 1760; at the age of 16, he entered and served in the war for American independ-ence; was married at New Fairfield, the place of his nativity, to Sally Hubbel, June 27,1780, to whom were born fourteen children-six sons and eight daughters; about A. D. 1796, removed to Delaware Co., N. Y.; early in the war of 1812, he removed with his family to the State of Ohio; lived a short time in Urbana, Champaign Co., thence to Springfield, then Champaign (now Clark) County, where his good wife died, July 23, 1823; he survived until Oct. 2, 1826, and died at the age of 66 years; he lived and died a true and honored patriot.
Additional information about this story
Description
Date
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Attached to Elijah Beardsley (1760 - 1826
Elijah Beardsley by the book #313
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=2040aa2b-b061-417c-9e84-71939533a1bd&tid=7977787&pid=-1009362074
Elijah Beardsley by http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohclark/ohckbios/query001.htm#21
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=d2bf16af-3705-46c3-8404-9bfb010e1193&tid=7977787&pid=-1009362074 | Beardsley, Elijah (I4562)
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Elizabeth Gillintine, the daughter of Nicholas Gillintine and his Echols wife, married a Collins. Her father left her one feather bed in his will. Her husband was probably James Collins.
On 15 July 1743, James Collins conveyed to William Hutchison 100 acres on the upper side of Flat Creek. Elizabeth, his wife, relinquished her dower right. This land was part of James's 400-acre land patent of 14 October 1736. James and Elizabeth sold another 100-acre portion of his patent to John Compton of Louisa County 24 September 1743 for £10.
They continued to live in Amelia County until 20 November 1747 when they sold their last 200 acres to John Compton for £60. The Collins's disappeared from Amelia County about 1748 and probably moved to Lunenburg (now Halifax) County with the Marchbank, Gillintine, and Hubbard families.
| Gillintine, Elisabeth (I9856)
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John Gillintine, the son of Nicholas Gillintine and his Echols wife, did not inherit anything in his father's will because his father had already given him 397 acres of land. Nevertheless John's heirs got £5 cash so they would not dispute the will. John appeared himself on a tithe list beginning in 1738, soon after receiving the land from his father.
John was often assigned to jury duty in Amelia County. On 19 August 1745, the churchwardens bound out William Allen, an orphan, to John Gillintine.
Researchers believe John married Rachel Hendrick, the daughter of Adolphus Hendrick. Adolphus secured a patent for 490 acres in King William County 20 February 1719/20, and 1,000 acres on 28 September 1728. Hans Hendrick, Adolphus's father, appeared first in Virginia first on 25 April 1701 when he received a patent for 594 acres in King and Queen County for the importation of twelve persons including himself and his wife, Jane. A year later, on 28 October 1702, Hans obtained a patent for 175 acres “in sight of Hance's old plantation.”
Later, on 24 March 1725/6, Hance Hendrick Sr. patented 200 acres in St. John's Parish of King William County. On this same day Hans Hendrick Jr. patented 100 acres nearby. The latter was the Hans Hendrick who appeared later in Amelia County records. This Hans Hendrick wrote his will in Amelia County 30 January 1773.
On 20 March 1746/7, John Gillintine deeded an acre of his Amelia County land to William Echols [838.3] and Joseph Collins [838.7.8/S] “for love and affection he bears for his friends”. John disappeared from the Amelia County tax rolls the same year and moved to Lunenburg County. He disposed of his land next to his father's property in three transactions.
On 20 March 1748/9, John Gillintine, “of Lunenburg County,” made two deeds in Amelia County. One was for 100 acres to Nicholas Gillintine for £8 and the other was for 50 acres for £5 to John Hill, of Raleigh Parish. He later sold Moses Estes 240 acres on 7 October 1749, for £40. On 3 November 1750, John Guillintine held 204 acres on the south side of the Staunton River in Lunenburg County.
John Gillintine appeared as a single tithable on Lunenburg County lists in 1748, 1749, and 1750. When they created Halifax County, his land fell in the new county. From 1752 until 1756, he was a member of the Vestry of Antrim Parish in Halifax County. Among the other first vestrymen of Antrim were Richard Echols [838.5], Paul Carrington [862.3.1], and William Wynne.
John was in a mess of trouble in 1753. Clement Read, then the king's prosecutor, accused John of passing counterfeit coins. A few months later they charged him the cost of a trial because he wrongly accused Nathaniel Terry of riding a stray horse.
John left no will and they returned the inventory of his estate on 20 January 1763.
Children of John Gillintine:
William Gillintine [418.4.1] was identified as a son of John Gillintine in the original will of his grandfather, Nicholas. On 10 July 1762, William Gillintine made a deed of gift to his father “for love, good will & the better maintenance of sd John.” The tract was 102 acres in Halifax County next to Edward Booker. Witnesses to this deed were Richard Murphy and Joseph Echols [838.4].
We know that three years earlier Edward Booker was farming land John already owned. This suggests that John could not farm his own land but was supporting himself on rent. William died before 7 October 1786 when three Halifax County citizens inventoried his estate. Two Gillintine women married in Halifax County and we have placed them as daughters of William Gillintine - the only known male Gillintine.
Elizabeth Gillintine [418.4.1.1] married Isaac Martin in Halifax County 5 October 1791. He was the son of Isaac Martin of Halifax County who originated in Caroline County.
Susanna Gillintine [418.4.1.2] married Benjamin Hubbard [234.H1.5] in Halifax County 7 April (bond) 1786. Benjamin's father was married to Hannah Martin, another child of the elder Isac artin.
Priscilla Gillintine [418.4.2] was Priscilla Hendrick in the will of her grandfather. She married Nathaniel Hendrick, her first cousin once removed. Nathaniel died in Pittsylvania County (will dated 25 Jan. 1793 , recorded 19 June 1797).
Mary Hendrick [418.4.2.1] married John Craddock [412.5].
Sarah Hendrick [418.4.2.2] married a Dews.
Ezekiel Hendrick [418.4.2.3].
Jerusha Gillintine [418.4.3] was identified as a daughter of “John Gillington, decd.” in the original 1772-will of her grandfather, Nicholas.
| Gillintine, John (I9858)
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