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    1. [MDSTMARY] Branson and Michael Branson who married Rebecca
    2. rubyslippers
    3. Below a Michael Branson bought land "Canterbury" in 1729 and sold it in 1744. The last line says his wife was Rebecca. Does anyone have a clue who this Rebecca might have been? Also a Michael Branson acquired 100 acres of "Beard's Choice in 1732 along with George Whitter who also is listed with 100 acres. Previously in 1705/1707 this land was owned by Robert Beard, John Cissell and William Meakin. Any insight about this is also appreciated. My direct line is the Bransons. It starts with Thomas the immigrant who died in 1683. His wife Ann - maiden name unknown. I strongly suspect that she was a Gerrard or a Garrett as their son John used this as a first name in 1706/7 and this is a common occurrence in the family. Charles County Land Records, Liber M#2 Page 153. At the request of Michal Branson of St Mary's County, the following deed was recorded this May 14, 1729. Apr 10, 1729 from James Husband of Cecil County, planter, to Michael Branson of St Mary's County, planter. Thomas Salmon of St Mary's County had surveyed and laid out for him, a tract of land in St Mary's County, but since the division of the counties, in CC, called Canterbury, bounded by a fresh run near the land of John Hunt called Hunts venture, containing about 200 acres, as by the patent thereof, dated Jun 10, 1671. Sd Salmon, on Jun 24, 1686, conveyed the same land and premises to William Husband of St Mary's County, by deed. Sd William Husband, by his will dated in Cecil County Mar 25, 1717, bequeathed sd land and premises to his eldest son, James Husband. Sd James Husband afterwards sold part of the sd land to Laurance Lant of St Marv's County, bounded by sd tract called Canterbury, containing about 100 acres. Now this deed further witnesses that the sd James Husband, for 6000 lbs of tobacco and for divers other good causes, does sell to sd Michael Branson all that tract of land called Canterbury (so much as is already conveyed to sd Lawrance Lant excepted). Signed - James Husband. Wit - Jno Briscoe*, Robt Yates*. === Charles County Land Record Book X No. 2, 1743-1744; Page 109. At the request of Lawrence Lent, the following deed was recorded on Jun 11, 1744. May 15, 1744 from Michael Branson of CC, planter, to Lawrence Lent of CC. Thomas Salmon of St Mary's County, had surveyed and laid out for him a tract of land then lying in St Mary's county, but since the division of the Counties in CC, called Canterbury, bounded by the north side of a Fresh Run near the land of John Hunt called Hunts Venture, containing about 200 acres, by the patent thereof dated Jun 10, 1671. Said Thomas Salmon, on Jun 24, 1686, conveyed the land to William Husband of St Mary's County. Said William Husband, by his will dated in afd county Mar 25, 1717, bequeathed the land to his elder son, James Husband. Said James Husband afterwards conveyed the land to the afd Lawrence Lent, containing about 100 acres. Now this deed further witnesses that Michael Branson, for 9000 lbs tobacco and 1 cow & calf, and for divers other good causes, has sold to sd Lent all that parcel of that tract of land called Canterbery. Signed - Michael (MB his mark) Branson. Wit - Allen Davies, Young Parran. Rebecca, the wife of the said Michael Branson, released her dower

    11/24/2008 03:51:32
    1. [MDSTMARY] Elizabeth ? Younge ? Barber and Simon Nicholls
    2. rubyslippers
    3. I have not found anything online convincing that Elizabeth who married Dr. Luke Barber was nee Younge. Has anyone else found anything? When Edward Barber in his will of 1694 referred to his cousin Thomas Nicholls and possibly cousin Adam Clarke it seems it could be a clue to cousins on his mother Elizabeth's side. It appears Thomas was the son of Simon Nicholls - who lived till 115 yrs old and had 4 wives. But no one seems to know the names of all the wives. Has there been any proof of when Thomas was born and which mother was his?

    11/24/2008 03:21:49
    1. [MDSTMARY] Robert Clarke immigrants
    2. rubyslippers
    3. According to the will of Robert Clarke died 1664 and information online he married the widow of Thomas Greene - Mrs. Winifred Seybourne (has anyone determined her maiden name?) She died in 1658 and no wife was named in the will. His children were John born 1642, Robert born 1653, Thomas born 1654 and Mary. In 1647 "A" Robt Clarke gave gifts to son and daughter John and Mary witnessed by Thomas Greene. In 1655 "A" Robt Clarke gave bond to Henry Adams to marry widow Jane Causin. It seems to me unlikely that these are the same Robt Clarkes as the son John of the first one would only be 5 yrs old. In 1662 a Thomas Clarke gave a gift to wife Jane witnessed by a Robert Clarke. Again, Thomas Clarke above would only be 8 yrs old so this has to be from a different Clarke family. In 1662/63 a Robert Clarke and John Clarke made sales witnessed by Ignatius Causine. I don't see all of these people as coming from one immigrant above. Edward Barber mentioned Adam Clarke in his will of 1694 (I think he was a cousin?)I would expect this Adam to have been born about 1650. I find it hard to believe that these refer to Adam Clarke, son mentioned in the will of Thomas who died in 1711. That Adam is estimated to have been born in 1682. It seems that some wills and an Adam are missing. Thomas Clarke who had wife Julian made an indenture in 1709 witnessed by Adam Clarke. In his 1695 will Ignatius Crusine, son of Jane said his brother was Thomas and cousin was Francis Greene. What this indicates is that Robert Clarke that married Winifred and Robert Clarke that married Jane were brothers. Has anyone found an inventory or will for a 2nd Robert Clarke of this generation? Thanks!

    11/24/2008 03:15:11
    1. [MDSTMARY] Susannah Wathen
    2. Norma, Thank you for your reply. Karen According to what I have, Susanna Wathen was the d/o John Wathen (1682-1746) and Anne Simpson (1685-aft 1746.) I won't guarantee that Anne was a Simpson, nor that she was the mother of his children. The evidence that I have is considerably less than proof.

    11/22/2008 10:18:47
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] Fenwick line
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: k_gheesling Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.maryland.counties.stmarys/571.574.1.1.1.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I am related to this lineage and would love to have a copy of whatever sources you are willing to part with (death certificates, etc). I am related to Benjamin Fenwick through his daughter, Catherine Fenwick, who married Alexander Brooke. Obtaining sources from DC vital records has been challenging and tedious (they are quick to cash checks & receive money orders without providing a follow up to requests). Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.

    11/22/2008 09:06:41
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] Fenwick line
    2. This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: lebaggett Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.maryland.counties.stmarys/571.574.1.1.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I show that Catherine Elizabeth Fenwick married Alexander M Brooke, son of Edmund Brooke & Eugenia Mary Queen. His name is spelled either Brook or Brooke in the 1850, 1860, 1870, & 1880 census. Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.

    11/22/2008 05:50:57
    1. [MDSTMARY] Photo Bob Jarboe - Dallas TX
    2. James Dunavan
    3.  DALLAS—Former Associated Press photographer Robert "Bob" Jarboe, whose career with the company spanned more than 40 years, has died. He was 85. Jarboe died Thursday after being hospitalized with pneumonia, his daughter said Monday. Born July 27, 1923, he grew up in Topeka, Kan. During his first semester at Kansas State University, Pearl Harbor was bombed, so Jarboe left college to work as an aircraft radio inspector for the U.S. Army and Air Force. When World War II ended in 1945, Jarboe joined the AP in Dallas as a wire photo operator. Aside from several months he served as wire photo operator in Miami in 1946, he worked in Dallas until 1976. He then went to Des Moines, Iowa, where he was a photographer and photo editor. After he retired from AP in 1988, he and his wife returned to Dallas, living in the suburb of Richardson. During his AP career he photographed nine presidents, Pope John Paul II and countless sporting events. He also helped cover the assassination of President Kennedy, the Jack Ruby trial and the Apollo 13 mission. Daughter Roberta Grenfell said her father decided to retire after he spent an hour on his knees taking pictures of first lady Nancy Reagan only to find he needed help getting back up and had to get assistance from Reagan. "He said, 'When the first lady needs to help you get up, it's time to go,'" Grenfell said. Jarboe and his wife, Mary, had three daughters. After his retirement, the couple spent time researching their genealogies, Grenfell said. Mary's death on Feb. 9 left Jarboe broken-hearted, said Grenfell, whose parents had been together since elementary school. "They were lifelong sweethearts," she said. She said her father had a knack for not only making friends, but keeping them, Grenfell said. "He didn't let people slip out of his life," she said. Besides Grenfell, Jarboe is survived by daughters Anne Jarboe and Jan Jarboe. He is also survived by two grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Services are set for 10 a.m. Tuesday at Restland Cemetery in Wildwood Chapel in Dallas. ************   Bob & Mary wrote  "History of a Jarboe Family"     Randy Dunavan    Longview, Texas  

    11/22/2008 01:54:08
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] more about KS leg
    2. buckeyegal
    3. Thanks for the info Randy. If anyone wants more details, my great-uncle, William W. Graves, is well-known in the KS area for the books he wrote, over a dozen, about Neosho County and the surrounding area. He attended the Mission school with Osage children and later owned and operated the St. Paul Journal. He received the Knighthood of St Gregory from Pope Pius XII for his literary contributions to the Catholic Church. At the same banquet he was made an honorary member of the Osage Tribe. A photo from this ceremony hangs in the St. Paul public library, which he started and which is named after him. His books are hard to find, and some are very expensive. His Annals of Osage Mission and Annals of St. Paul consist of excerpts from the Journal. They give an excellent picture of life in Osage/St. Paul from the late 1800's to Dec. 1928. There are a few photos in each book and an extensive index where you can learn if there's mention of your family. It's not the most exciting reading, but it's very interesting to read the tidbits of life in Osage/St. Paul, especially if you're a history buff. Anita Hoyer Ohio

    11/21/2008 12:31:12
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe -- Descendants of Mary Tattershall
    2. The Goughs
    3. Pete, welcome. You've joined the best list in Rootsweb. The Goughs and Jarboes are closely allied since Mary Tattershall Jarboe married Stephen Gough who is the progenitor of most St. Mary's County Goughs. And by extension most of the Catholic Goughs in the country. Here is what I have for Mary and her two families: Descendants of Mary Tattershall Generation No. 1 1. MARY3 TATTERSHALL (EDMUND2, OLD MAN1)1,2 was born Bet. 1628 - 1630 in Wiltshire, England, and died Aft. 1677 in Newtown Hundred - likely, St. Mary's County, MD. She married (1) GENTLEMAN (COLONEL) JOHN JARBOE3,4 Bef. Oct 1651 in St. Mary's Co. MD5. He was born 1619 in Dijon, Burgundy, France, and died 04 Mar 1674/75 in Home Plantation (Newtown Hundred). She married (2) STEPHEN GOUGH6,7 Aft. 04 Mar 1674/75 in SMC or Calvert County8, son of OLD MAN GOUGH. He was born Bef. 1644 in England, and died Bet. 22 Oct 1700 - 02 Jan 1700/01 in St. Bernards, Newtown Hundred, St Mary's Co., Md.. More About MARY TATTERSHALL: Emigration: 1648, Brought with her brother by John Pile Religion: Catholic Transported: 1648, John & Sarah Pile More About GENTLEMAN (COLONEL) JOHN JARBOE: Burial: St. Francis Xavier Cemetery at Newtown, MD Immigration: 1646, from Virginia by Himself Military service: Mercenary; Marine; Lieutenant; Lieutenant Colonel Naturalization: 1666 Occupation: Solider; Planter Probate: 09 Mar 1673/74, St. Mary's Co. - MD Public Office: High Sheriff; Delegate Lower & Upper House of Burgesses Religion: Catholic More About JOHN JARBOE and MARY TATTERSHALL: Marriage: Bef. Oct 1651, St. Mary's Co. MD9 More About STEPHEN GOUGH: Fact: Willed his French books to Father Nicholas Guelick Migration: Bet. 1664 - 1665, transported, Liber 10, fol. 556. (Skordas) to Maryland Probate: 02 Jan 1700/01, Leonardtown, Md Religion: Roman Catholic More About STEPHEN GOUGH and MARY TATTERSHALL: Marriage: Aft. 04 Mar 1674/75, SMC or Calvert County10 Children of MARY TATTERSHALL and JOHN JARBOE are: i. JOHN4 JARBOE, JR.11, b. Abt. 1659, St. Marys Co. MD; d. 16 May 1705, St. Marys Co. MD; m. (1) MARY PAKE/PEAKE, Bef. 1680, Maryland; b. Aft. 1646, St Mary's Co., MD; d. Aft. 1690, St Mary's Co., MD; m. (2) SARAH JOY, Bef. 1693, St. Mary's Co, MD; b. Abt. 1659, St. Marys Co. MD; d. Bef. 1705, St. Marys Co. MD. More About JOHN JARBOE and MARY PAKE/PEAKE: Marriage: Bef. 1680, Maryland More About SARAH JOY: Burial: St. Marys Co. MD More About JOHN JARBOE and SARAH JOY: Marriage: Bef. 1693, St. Mary's Co, MD ii. MARY JARBOE11, b. Aft. 1671, St. Marys Co. MD; d. Bef. Oct 1739, Calvert Co. MD12; m. (1) JAMES CAINE; m. (2) MAJOR WILLLIAM BOARMAN13, 1686, Maryland; b. 22 May 1630, Wiltshire, England; d. 07 Jan 1708/09, Bryantown, Charles Co, Md; m. (3) JOHN SANDERS14, Aft. 1709; b. Charles Co., Md; d. 1730. More About MAJOR WILLLIAM BOARMAN: Immigration: Abt. 1645, immigrated from England aboard a certani Pynnace then riding in St. Inigoe's Creek, the boat in command of a Mr. Monroe. More About WILLLIAM BOARMAN and MARY JARBOE: Marriage: 1686, Maryland More About JOHN SANDERS and MARY JARBOE: Marriage: Aft. 1709 iii. PETER JARBOE15,16, b. Bef. 1671, St. Marys Co. MD; d. Bef. 07 Apr 1698, St. Marys Co. MD; m. ANNE NEVITT17, Abt. 1689, St. Mary's Co, MD; b. Abt. 1678, St Mary's Co., Md; d. 1698, St. Marys Co. MD. More About PETER JARBOE and ANNE NEVITT: Marriage: Abt. 1689, St. Mary's Co, MD iv. HENRY JARBOE I18, b. Apr 1672, St. Marys Co. MD; d. Bef. 18 Mar 1707/08, St. Marys Co. MD; m. MONICA JOY, St. Mary's Co, MD; b. Abt. 1663, St Peter's Hill, Maryland; d. Bef. 1707, St. Marys Co. MD. More About HENRY JARBOE and MONICA JOY: Marriage: St. Mary's Co, MD Children of MARY TATTERSHALL and STEPHEN GOUGH are: v. JAMES4 GOUGH I19, b. Bet. 1676 - 1677, St. Mary's County, Maryland; d. Bet. 18 Dec 1725 - 31 Jan 1725/26, Newtown Hundred, St. Mary's Co., MD; m. (1) UNKNOWN, Bef. 1690; m. (2) ELIZABETH JARBOE20, Bet. 1707 - 1711, St. Mary's Co, MD; b. 1683, St. Mary's Co., MD; d. Aft. 1728, St. Mary's Co., MD.. More About JAMES GOUGH and UNKNOWN: Marriage: Bef. 1690 More About JAMES GOUGH and ELIZABETH JARBOE: Marriage: Bet. 1707 - 1711, St. Mary's Co, MD vi. MONICA GOUGH, b. Aft. 1675, St. Mary's County, Maryland; d. Aft. 1714, St. Mary's County, Maryland. More About MONICA GOUGH: Fact: 1714, she was still single in 1714. vii. BENJAMIN GOUGH, SR.21,22, b. Abt. 1676, St. Mary's County, Maryland; d. 21 Mar 1735/36, St. Mary's County, Maryland; m. JANE "JENY" CLARKE23,24,25, Bef. 1725, St. Mary's County, MD; b. Bef. 1710, St. Mary's County, Maryland; d. Aft. 1737, St. Mary's County, Maryland. More About BENJAMIN GOUGH and JANE CLARKE: Marriage: Bef. 1725, St. Mary's County, MD viii. MARY GOUGH26, b. 1677, Beaverdam Manor, St. Mary's County, MD; d. 15 May 1734, Beaverdam Manor, St. Mary's County, MD; m. JOHN MILES, JR.27, 1706, St. Mary's Co, MD; b. Bef. 1672, St. Mary's County, MD; d. 23 Jan 1726/27, St. Mary's County, MD. More About JOHN MILES and MARY GOUGH: Marriage: 1706, St. Mary's Co, MD Endnotes 1. Michael Mudd. 2. Thomas Morton Gough, "Gough History." 3. Dunavan, Randy. 4. Randy Dunavan, Chronological Notes on Lt. Col. John Jarboe, Immigrant, "Electronic." 5. Raphael Thomas Semmes, The Semmes and Allied Families, The Sun Book and Job Printing Office Inc., 1918, 217. 6. Michael Mudd. 7. Thomas Morton Gough, "Gough History." 8. St. Mary's County, Maryland, Marriages: 1638-1820. 9. Raphael Thomas Semmes, The Semmes and Allied Families, The Sun Book and Job Printing Office Inc., 1918, 217. 10. St. Mary's County, Maryland, Marriages: 1638-1820. 11. The Official Jarboe Web Site. 12. Raphael Thomas Semmes, The Semmes and Allied Families, The Sun Book and Job Printing Office Inc., 1918, 218. 13. Reno, Linda. 14. Raphael Thomas Semmes, The Semmes and Allied Families, The Sun Book and Job Printing Office Inc., 1918, 217. 15. The Official Jarboe Web Site. 16. Mary Louise Donnelly, St. Mary's County, Maryland, Colonial Period Tenants and Owners of "Beaverdam Manor" and Surrounding Manors. 17. Mary Louise Donnelly, St. Mary's County, Maryland, Colonial Period Tenants and Owners of "Beaverdam Manor" and Surrounding Manors, 219. 18. The Official Jarboe Web Site. 19. MARYLAND CALENDAR OF WILLS: Volume 5. 20. James Merritt's Notes. 21. Thomas Morton Gough, "Gough History." 22. Michael Mudd. 23. Thomas Morton Gough, "Gough History." 24. Michael Mudd. 25. Mary Louise Donnelly, Colonial Settlers St. Clement's Bay 1634 - 1780 St. Mary's County, Maryland. 26. Michael Mudd. 27. Reno, Linda. Peter T. Thompson wrote: >Hi list: > He is my 7g's grandfather. Here's some more info: >"He emigrated to Virginia sometime before 1646. During the Ingles >Rebellion in 1645-46 Lord Baltimore was in refuge in Virginia and met >Jarboe and Col. William Evans in York and recruited them to join his >militia to retake Md. (Patents 2:440). So they returned with him in >1646. At Newtown he deposed on 6/21/1659 that he was 40 years >old.(Provincial Court, 5:312) He spelled his name as Jarbo in >beginning. Also spelled, Jabot, Gerber, and Gerbaut. On 1/25/1647 he >deposed that he was with Lord Baltimore at Kocotan and York, >Virginia." >The second COMBES to St. Mary's was actually a COMBER or CUMBER, but >included here "just in case it might be of interest": >22 Jul 1658 Maryland Provincial Proceedings. (Archives Vol. 3:351) >Military Commissions authorized by Governor FENDALL on 20 Jul 1658 >(Archives 3:350-1). [margin: Cap: Lieutnant, John COMBER ] Commission >to Captaine Lieutenant John CUMBER is the same mutatis mutandis with >that of Lieut John JARBO (fol: 24) dated as that of his Colonell. >One reason for including Capt. COMBER is that the above-noted John >JARBOE of St. Mary's County married Mary TATTERSHALL, sister of >William (whose 1670 will was witnessed by Abraham COMBS), and their >daughter, Ann, married (1) John HAMMOND and (2) Pope ALVEY, brother >of the above Joseph, raising the question as to whether the above >John COMBER/CUMBER might have actually been a COMBES or CUMBES. > >Note: This reference to Lord Baltimore is a bit misleading and really >refers to Governor Leonard Calvert, the leader of the Ark and Dove >settlement in Maryland. His older brother Cecil(Cecillius) Calvert, >2nd Lord Baltimore, is the actual Lord Baltimore at that time, but he >never left England to come to the new world. It was Leonard who >retook Maryland in 1646, > Cheers, Pete > > > > > > > > > > > >>The Early Settlers of Maryland >> Skordas, Gust. 525 pp., hard cover. Index to names of >> immigrants. Compiled from records of land patents, 1633-1680. >> >>Page 255 >> >>Jarbo, John Liber 2 Folio 440 remarks: immigrated 1646, (see Jerbo) >> >>Page 257 >>Jerbo, John Liber 2 Foilo 255 remarks: Immigrated 1646, (see Jarbo) >> >> >>John S Wilkinson >>Rome, NY >> >> >> >>-----Original Message----- >>From: mdstmary-bounces@rootsweb.com >>[mailto:mdstmary-bounces@rootsweb.com]On Behalf Of bill waathen >>Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 10:44 AM >>To: mdstmary@rootsweb.com >>Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe >> >> >>Hi Ernie, >> >>Have you checked the St. Mary's County web page? I remember the name in my >>own research, it appears my family married into the Jarboes, or vice versa, >>way, way back. >> >>Bill Wathen >>----- Original Message ----- >>From: <EPERRY4616@aol.com> >>To: <MDSTMARY-L@rootsweb.com> >>Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 9:50 AM >>Subject: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe >> >> >> >> >>> All -- >>> >>> Does anyone know when John Jarboe first arrived in Maryland? Thanks, >>> >>> Ernie >>> **************One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social >>> networks, >>> and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com >>> >>> >>> >>today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?red >>ir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp >> >> >>> %26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001) >>> >>> ------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >>> MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >>> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >>> >>> >>------------------------------- >>To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >>MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >>in the subject and the body of the message >> >> >>------------------------------- >>To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >>MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without >>the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> >> > > > > -- Michael J. Gough ltcolmichaelj@bellsouth.net

    11/21/2008 12:25:05
    1. [MDSTMARY] Found an interesting site on Cartwright
    2. http://www.fortunecity.com/millenium/sherwood/163/index.html I found this site on Cartwright. It has a bunch of adds on it, but was interesting. B. Treon _________________________________________________________________ Get more done, have more fun, and stay more connected with Windows Mobile®. http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/119642556/direct/01/

    11/21/2008 12:02:24
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] Susannah Wathen & Edward Edelen
    2. Norma Lundgren
    3. According to what I have, Susanna Wathen was the d/o John Wathen (1682-1746) and Anne Simpson (1685-aft 1746.) I won't guarantee that Anne was a Simpson, nor that she was the mother of his children. The evidence that I have is considerably less than proof. ----- Original Message ----- From: <ktrouvat@aol.com> To: <mdstmary@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2008 1:38 AM Subject: [MDSTMARY] Susannah Wathen & Edward Edelen > > <?USANNAH4ATHEN, b. Abt. 1721, St Mary's Co., Maryland; d. > March 25, 1780; m. > EDWARDEDELEN; b. Abt. 1696, Maryland.> > > Sorry, I had a bit of a hard time following, but are the > parents of > this Susannah Wathen known? Karen > > > > > > > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' > without the quotes in the subject and the body of the > message

    11/21/2008 11:10:44
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe
    2. Peter T. Thompson
    3. Hi list: He is my 7g's grandfather. Here's some more info: "He emigrated to Virginia sometime before 1646. During the Ingles Rebellion in 1645-46 Lord Baltimore was in refuge in Virginia and met Jarboe and Col. William Evans in York and recruited them to join his militia to retake Md. (Patents 2:440). So they returned with him in 1646. At Newtown he deposed on 6/21/1659 that he was 40 years old.(Provincial Court, 5:312) He spelled his name as Jarbo in beginning. Also spelled, Jabot, Gerber, and Gerbaut. On 1/25/1647 he deposed that he was with Lord Baltimore at Kocotan and York, Virginia." The second COMBES to St. Mary's was actually a COMBER or CUMBER, but included here "just in case it might be of interest": 22 Jul 1658 Maryland Provincial Proceedings. (Archives Vol. 3:351) Military Commissions authorized by Governor FENDALL on 20 Jul 1658 (Archives 3:350-1). [margin: Cap: Lieutnant, John COMBER ] Commission to Captaine Lieutenant John CUMBER is the same mutatis mutandis with that of Lieut John JARBO (fol: 24) dated as that of his Colonell. One reason for including Capt. COMBER is that the above-noted John JARBOE of St. Mary's County married Mary TATTERSHALL, sister of William (whose 1670 will was witnessed by Abraham COMBS), and their daughter, Ann, married (1) John HAMMOND and (2) Pope ALVEY, brother of the above Joseph, raising the question as to whether the above John COMBER/CUMBER might have actually been a COMBES or CUMBES. Note: This reference to Lord Baltimore is a bit misleading and really refers to Governor Leonard Calvert, the leader of the Ark and Dove settlement in Maryland. His older brother Cecil(Cecillius) Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore, is the actual Lord Baltimore at that time, but he never left England to come to the new world. It was Leonard who retook Maryland in 1646, Cheers, Pete >The Early Settlers of Maryland > Skordas, Gust. 525 pp., hard cover. Index to names of > immigrants. Compiled from records of land patents, 1633-1680. > >Page 255 > >Jarbo, John Liber 2 Folio 440 remarks: immigrated 1646, (see Jerbo) > >Page 257 >Jerbo, John Liber 2 Foilo 255 remarks: Immigrated 1646, (see Jarbo) > > >John S Wilkinson >Rome, NY > > > >-----Original Message----- >From: mdstmary-bounces@rootsweb.com >[mailto:mdstmary-bounces@rootsweb.com]On Behalf Of bill waathen >Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 10:44 AM >To: mdstmary@rootsweb.com >Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe > > >Hi Ernie, > >Have you checked the St. Mary's County web page? I remember the name in my >own research, it appears my family married into the Jarboes, or vice versa, >way, way back. > >Bill Wathen >----- Original Message ----- >From: <EPERRY4616@aol.com> >To: <MDSTMARY-L@rootsweb.com> >Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 9:50 AM >Subject: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe > > >> All -- >> >> Does anyone know when John Jarboe first arrived in Maryland? Thanks, >> >> Ernie >> **************One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social >> networks, >> and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com >> >today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?red >ir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp >> %26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001) >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >in the subject and the body of the message > > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without >the quotes in the subject and the body of the message -- Peter T. Thompson White Horse Village email: pthomps1@swarthmore.edu 535 Gradyville Road Department of Chemistry Newtown Square, PA Swarthmore College 19073 Swarthmore, PA 19081-1390 phone: 610-558-2167 fax: 610-328-7355

    11/21/2008 07:30:07
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe
    2. John S Wilkinson
    3. The Early Settlers of Maryland Skordas, Gust. 525 pp., hard cover. Index to names of immigrants. Compiled from records of land patents, 1633-1680. Page 255 Jarbo, John Liber 2 Folio 440 remarks: immigrated 1646, (see Jerbo) Page 257 Jerbo, John Liber 2 Foilo 255 remarks: Immigrated 1646, (see Jarbo) John S Wilkinson Rome, NY -----Original Message----- From: mdstmary-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:mdstmary-bounces@rootsweb.com]On Behalf Of bill waathen Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 10:44 AM To: mdstmary@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe Hi Ernie, Have you checked the St. Mary's County web page? I remember the name in my own research, it appears my family married into the Jarboes, or vice versa, way, way back. Bill Wathen ----- Original Message ----- From: <EPERRY4616@aol.com> To: <MDSTMARY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 9:50 AM Subject: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe > All -- > > Does anyone know when John Jarboe first arrived in Maryland? Thanks, > > Ernie > **************One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social > networks, > and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com > today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?red ir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp > %26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/21/2008 04:01:28
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe
    2. bill waathen
    3. Hi Ernie, Have you checked the St. Mary's County web page? I remember the name in my own research, it appears my family married into the Jarboes, or vice versa, way, way back. Bill Wathen ----- Original Message ----- From: <EPERRY4616@aol.com> To: <MDSTMARY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, November 21, 2008 9:50 AM Subject: [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe > All -- > > Does anyone know when John Jarboe first arrived in Maryland? Thanks, > > Ernie > **************One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social > networks, > and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com > today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?redir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp > %26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001) > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/21/2008 03:44:24
    1. [MDSTMARY] John Jarboe
    2. All -- Does anyone know when John Jarboe first arrived in Maryland? Thanks, Ernie **************One site has it all. Your email accounts, your social networks, and the things you love. Try the new AOL.com today!(http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212962939x1200825291/aol?redir=http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp %26icid=aolcom40vanity%26ncid=emlcntaolcom00000001)

    11/21/2008 02:50:28
    1. [MDSTMARY] MD to KY migration - a KS leg
    2. David Roberts
    3. Randy: This is excellent material ! Thanks for posting it. David David Roberts Hollywood, MD 2nd Vice President SMCGS Editor "Generator" ----- Original Message ----- From: "James Dunavan" <jeep71@att.net> To: <MDSTMARY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2008 12:21 PM Subject: [MDSTMARY] MD to KY migration - a KS leg > > How about a little change of pace? Interested in some trivia? > > This is one of those long posts. It’s been e-ons since I’ve posted the list, so I hope you will bare with it. Perhaps there may be some appeal in this post for those that have followed their Marylandancestors out of Kentucky. > > So here it goes… > > In 1834 Joseph Jarboe, Jr [ (1790c -1867) b. Fredrick Co. Md] a native of Bardstown, KYrelocated his family to the French Colony of Westport Landing on the Missouri River. (Joseph married Lydia Ann Clements, daughter of William H. Clements > and Winifred Hardy of St. Mary's County, Md.) Joseph established the Jarboe line in that area and was engaged as merchant, and holder of a general store until his death. He suffered that death by the smoking of too many cigars, according to Jarboe's 2nd wife Cordelia A. Wilson (b. 1819 in MD). Coridelia' s first husband was Charles W. Jarboe (1815-1850) of Baltimore, Md. > > As it was, Westportwas a jumping off point (west of St. Louis) for pioneers on their travels west into Indian Territoryand in 1834 was a community of 250 souls. It wasn't until May of 1839 that Westportwas referred to as the town "Kansas". And in time referred to as Kansas City, on both sides of the Missouri River. Jarboe and children establish themselves as civic leaders, serving in various positions in city government. The family prospered - and to this day, the Jarboe surname and descendant still survive. > > As it went... > > Along about 1843, Chief White Hair of the Osage tribe (Sioux sect) which inhabited the NeoshoRiverValley (S.E. corner of KS) asked the US Senate to send blackrobes to setup schools among Osage. White Hair was a one time student of the Jesuits. The request was made law (treaty) and the first white settlers headed for the Neosho, all catholic religious, who began their migration to Indian Territory. > > Things didn’t get going until the spring of 1847 when Fr. John Scheonmakers from Holland, Fr. John Bax of Belgiumand three brothers, all Jesuit missionaries, established a permanent mission, they called it "Osage Mission". These men erected the first structures. The geography boundary of the Missiontoday is located in NeoshoCountybetween the NeoshoRiverand Flat Rock Creek. Osage Mission changed its name in 1895 to St. Paul(after St. Paulof the Cross founder of Passionist Order). > > This is where Joe Jarboe comes back into the picture. The Rev. Schoemakers - back in WestportMissourioutfitting supplies and a small caravan for the Mission. Just so happened, Fr. John hired Mr. Jarboe, (the merchant) and his two-horse wagon to escort them to the newly established Osage Mission. The Jesuit and 3 nuns of the order of the Sisters of Loretto set out on a 150 mile southerly trek into Indian Territoryon the Neosho. For the sisters, this was the last leg of their journey from Nerinx, KY.The little caravan consisting of the Jesuit priest, Mr. Jarboe, Mother Concordia Henning, Sisters Bridget Hayden (of KilKenny Ireland), Sister Mary Van Prother and Sister Vincentia Van Cool. The group started for the Osage Mission, from Mrs. P.M. Chouteau house (One of the founding families of St. Louis). > > The Sisters of Lorretto and the Jesuits built up the Missionministering the willing Osage through the times of treaties and the Civil War. The Indian population (some 5,000) due to those treaties and war were being displaced to the west and the Oklahomaterritory. In 1860 there were only 88 white settlers (mostly squatters) in the Southeast corner of the new state of Kansas. But when things changed, with the onset of the Homestead Act of 1862, this legally opened up Indian Territoryto white settlements. Homesteadand the 1865 Osage Reserve Treaty allowed for ex-soldiers & civilian emigration to settle the fertile bottom lands of the NeoshoRivervalley. Many of these soldiers hailed from central Kentucky. > > To put the Kansas migration into perspective, those 88 white settlers in the entire southeast corner of the state in 1860 grew to 11,211 in just one county according to 1870 Neosho County census (est. 1861). Pretty intense numbers. > > The city of Osage Missionwas laid out in December of 1867. The city and much of Neoshocounty were arranged in square mile grids or 640 acre plots. With the implementation of Kansas-NebraskaAct of 1854 along with the Osage Treaty of 1865 > white settlers were able to purchase a 160 acre track for $1.25 an acre as long as they lived and improved the land. Families would band together and buy a full 640 acre > plot or section to combine their labor force. The offer of cheap bottom land attracted immigrant and Kentuckysettlers alike. Business was brisk and in 1869 the state accepted over 2,000 land applications. > > Now we get to the meat… > > In 1867 the first Kentuckian family with southern Maryland ancestry settled in the Osage Mission area was Francis Pius Coomes and spouse Rachel Ann Hagan, Then, came the Wheats, Leakes, Mudds, Jarboes, O’Bryans, Owens, Abells, Smiths, and so on. The attraction was more than the land, Osage Mission offered a religious community with familiarity. The Kentuckians kept coming and the city grew to over 3,000 in the 1870s and was the 13th largest community in the state. With the influx of so many Kentuckians the community continued the Marylandtraditions. The town developed into a catholic stronghold in the state with a monastery, convent, catholic school, and college. The streets were even lined with Kentuckyelms that my ancestors and others broght from MarionCountyin covered wagon. A few still survive after a 140 years of tornados. > > The point of this glimpse into prairie history is to make available a list of names of that relate to St. Mary County, ancestry. Our hope is to instigate dialog to expand the Maryland linage database. We are going to post this and a second e-mail with a list of names. If you see a name of interest on that list, I would welcome your input. Thank you for taking the time to read… > > Randy Dunavan > Longview, Texas > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/20/2008 01:00:48
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] Sister Mary Louise Donnelly-reply
    2. David Roberts
    3. Excellent point .... Nobody is 100% correct. Nobody knows all there is to know. So many people waited until their genealogy is "correct," until "there are no mistakes" That day never arrived. They die. Their heirs clean out their "stuff" & all that geneaology is hauled off to the landfill. Publish what you have NOW .... esp. on the Internet. If you are incorrect on something, it can be corrected in the future. But at least it's out there for others to use. So, even if Sister was wrong on this family or wrong on that point, at least she got something in print & gave us something to act as a starting point. I've been adding to the CONKLIN page on http://longislandgenealogy.com Is everything I'm posting 100% correct .... NO ! But, it sure helps people looking for info on the Huntington, L. I. CONKLIN family a lot more to find my stuff on-line on that site than just having it sit in my file drawers here in Southern Maryland. So, let's not fault Sister for her errors but praise her for getting started in getting the information about Southern Maryland families out there. She has given you a starting point. David David Roberts 2nd Vice President, SMCGS Editor "Generator" ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dottie Himes" <djhimes@bellsouth.net> To: <mdstmary@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 10:58 AM Subject: [MDSTMARY] Sister Mary Louise Donnelly-reply > Thanks Bob for sending the obits for Sister Mary Louise Donnelly. > > I agree she has kept us hopping, and yes she may have some mistakes (but we > all have made mistakes at some time), but like many of us think, it is > extremely hard to put a family book together, and sometimes she also may > have been led down the wrong road. Like many of us, we tend to believe, as > not everyone, can afford to get every birth and death certificates nor can > we find all of them, and sometimes they are even wrong when we get them. > > May she rest in peace. > > Dottie Porter Himes > > Dottie (Porter) Himes > Lewisport, KY 42351 > djhimes@bellsouth.net > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "The Goughs" <ltcolmichaelj@bellsouth.net> > To: <mdstmary@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 5:03 PM > Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] Sister Mary Louise Donnelly > > > > Bob, thanks. > > > > BobcatBob@aol.com wrote: > > > >>Found the following obits and articles following the unfortunate death of > >>Sister Mary Louise Donnelly while in the hospital following her knee > >>surgery > >> > >>Bob Alvey > >> > >> > >>Ennis Journal (TX), September 25, 2008 > >>Mary Louise Donnelly, 81, passed away Sept. 16, 2008 at Baylor Hospital > >>in > >>Dallas. Mary Louise was born in Clear Lake, South Dakota on Nov. 26, 1926 > >>to > >>parents Leo H. Donnelly and Martha Almyra (Tollett) Donnelly. She grew up > >>in > >>Kansas and earned a Masters Degree in Religious Education. She was, for a > >>time, a member of the Sisters of Charity in Xavier, Kansas and then the > >>Sisters > >>for Christian Community in Virginia, until they disbanded. From 1987 to > >>1993 > >>she worked at St. John Catholic Church in Ennis as Director of Religious > >>Education. Mary Louise is preceded in death by her parents and seven > >>brothers: > >>Leo, Jr., Frank, Myron, Bob, Harry, Charles and Tedd. Mass was celebrated > >>Friday, Sept. 19, 2008 at 2 p.m. at St. Joseph Catholic Church in > >>Waxahachie, > >>Texas, with the Rev. Msgr. Mark Seitz as celebrant. Rosary was recited > >>Thursday, > >>Sept. 18, 2008 at 7:30 p.m. in the Keever Chapel (408 N. Dallas Street) > >>in > >>Ennis, Texas. Interment will be in St. Joseph Cemetery in Ennis under the > >>direction of J.E. Keever Mortuary Inc. > >> > >>Waxahachie Daily Light, The (TX) > >>September 18, 2008 > >>Mary Louise Donnelly, 81, passed away Sept. 16, 2008, at Baylor > >>University > >>Medical Center in Dallas. Mary Louise was born in Clear Lake, S.D,. on > >>Nov. > >>26, 1926 to parents Leo H. Donnelly and Martha Almyra (Tollett) Donnelly. > >>She > >>grew up in Kansas and earned a master's degree in religious education. > >>She > >>was, for a time, a member of the Sisters of Charity in Xavier, Kan., and > >>then > >>the Sisters for Christian Community in Virginia, until they disbanded. > >>From > >>1987 to 1993, she worked at St. John Catholic Church in Ennis as director > >>of > >>religious education. Mary Louise was preceded in death by her parents and > >>seven > >>brothers: Leo Jr., Frank, Myron, Bob, Harry, Charles and Tedd. Mass will > >>be > >>celebrated at 2 p.m. Friday, Sept. 19, 2008, at St. Joseph Catholic > >>Church in > >>Waxahachie, Texas, with the Rev. Msgr. Mark Seitz as celebrant. Rosary > >>will > >>be recited at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008, in the Keever Chapel, > >>408 N. > >>Dallas St., in Ennis. Interment will be in St. Joseph Cemetery in Ennis > >>under > >> the direction of J.E. Keever Mortuary Inc. > >>

    11/19/2008 02:55:45
    1. [MDSTMARY] Susannah Wathen & Edward Edelen
    2. <?USANNAH4ATHEN, b. Abt. 1721, St Mary's Co., Maryland; d. March 25, 1780; m. EDWARDEDELEN; b. Abt. 1696, Maryland.> Sorry, I had a bit of a hard time following, but are the parents of this Susannah Wathen known? Karen

    11/18/2008 09:38:31
    1. [MDSTMARY] Richard Eltonhead and Ann Sutton Lineages
    2. marianne dillow
    3.  It appears that Richard Eltonhead that married Ann Sutton also has a lineage back to Edward I, King of England.   This is a correct new lineage from Richard Eltonhead that married Ann Sutton. I haven't included the other lines going to Edward I, King of England but just a short version how it starts.   A second Savage line has been added  : DULCIA / DULCE SAVAGE married HENRY BOLD..... DULCIA is a sister of CHRISTOPHER and MARGARET, daughter of SIR JOHN SAVAGE and CATHERINE STANLEY. MAUD BOLD married THOMAS GERARD JENNET GERARD married RICHARD ELTONHEAD WILLIAM ELTONHEAD married ANNE BOWERS RICHARD ELTONHEAD married ANNE SUTTON...       Correct lineage of Anne Sutton lineage to Henry II, King of England : HENRY II, King of England, by a mistress, IDA DE TONI. WILLIAM LONGESPÉE, Knt., Earl of Salisbury, married ELA OF SALISBURY. STEPHEN LONGESPÉE, Knt., of King’s Sutton, Northamptonshire, married EMELINE DE RIDELISFORD. ELA LONGESPÉE, married ROGER LA ZOUCHE, Knt., of Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire. ALAN LA ZOUCHE, Knt., Lord Zouche, married ELEANOR DE SEGRAVE. MAUD LA ZOUCHE, married ROBERT DE HOLAND, Knt., 1st Lord Holand. MAUD DE HOLAND, married THOMAS DE SWINNERTON, Knt., 3rd Lord Swinnerton. ROBERT DE SWINNERTON, Knt., 4th Lord Swinnerton, married ELIZABETH DE BEKE. MAUD SWINNERTON, married JOHN SAVAGE, Knt., of Clifton, Cheshire. MARY SAVAGE, married (as his 1st wife) WILLIAM STANLEY, Esq., of Hooton (in Wirral), Cheshire. WILLIAM STANLEY, Esq., of Hooton (in Wirral), Cheshire, Stanley, married ALICE HOGHTON (or HOUGHTON). WILLIAM STANLEY, Knt., of Hooton (in Wirral), Cheshire, married AGNES GROSVENOR. WILLIAM STANLEY, Knt., Hooton (in Wirral), Cheshire, married ANNE HARINGTON. PETER STANLEY, Esq., of Moor Hall (in Aughton), Lancashire, married CECILY TARLETON. ANNE STANLEY, married EDWARD SUTTON, Gent., of Knowsley (in Huyton), Lancashire and Hall House (in Rushton Spencer), Staffordshire. ANNE SUTTON, married RICHARD ELTONHEAD, Gent., of Eltonhead (in Prescot), Lancashire. MARTHA ELTONHEAD, married EDWIN CONWAY, Gent., of Northampton and Lancaster Counties, Virginia.   Marianne Dillow

    11/18/2008 09:59:00
    1. Re: [MDSTMARY] Hugh THOMAS
    2. bill waathen
    3. Hi Randy, In the "Descendants of James Wathen Generation No. 11", it's true that James had five sons, one of whom was named John. However, after recently receiving a copy of a will of John Wathen, son of James (same family), it appears this John was not our guy. The will came from a contact I have in heref., Brian Harris. The John, who was one of five sons of James and Margaret Wathen of Allensmore, never left home. His will was probated in 1726 in Heref, and witnessed. Will be glad to send a transcribed copy to you if you wish. It was copied by Carol Collins, a Wathen genealogist in South Bend, Indiana. The question Carol and I had about John was that he would have had to return to England to execute his mother's will in 1705, the same year that John died. John, along with brother William, were named executors of her estate. With the recent revelation that the John we believed was the son of James of Allensmore, was indeed not, it put us in the position of starting over from square one. I'll send you Carol's transcription, with credit going to Brian Harris of Heref. If there is a family crest for WATHEN, I doubt if it pertains to our branch of the family. I don't see how a person of "means", if John indeed was, would have a trade as a carpenter and come to the settlement of Maryland as an indentured servant. I need to see the book, "The Bristol Records of Servants and Apprentices, etc., to find out more. However, there is a site devoted to indentured servants from the same period, 1654-1688, in which John is mentioned, but nothing as to his background, etc. It gets curioser and curioser. Bill ----- Original Message ----- From: "James Dunavan" <jeep71@att.net> To: <mdstmary@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 2:52 PM Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] Hugh THOMAS > Bill, Perhaps this will assist.... > > Randy Dunavan > Longview, Texas 903-720-3914 > > Descendants of James WathenGeneration No. 11. > Notes for J > The Will & Estate Inventory of JAMES WATHEN as published (4/9/1667) in > Allenshore Parish, Kingstone, Herefordshire, England, states that he had 5 > sons, one was John (c1645-1705), who in 1670 sailed from Bristol on the > Francis & Mary to the Maryland Plantation of Hugh Thomas. On 5/12/1674, > John Wathen was released from servitude, and Charles Calvert, 3rd Lord > Baltimore, issued 50 acres in his name. In 1676, paid for Susanna Brayne > passage from Bristol. In 1684, married Susannah Hudson, in Saint Mary’s > Cnty, MD, and paid passage for 3 servants from Hereford on the ship > Comfort". Sons in Will probated 7/4/1705 in Charles Cnty, MD: Ignatius, > John, James, Hudson, & Henry. Note: various spelling of Wathen. See > Warthen. Also, Worthen Parish, an English town in Shropshire County, > England, in the Hereford Diocese. > > ******* > Name: Wathen > Origin: English > Coat of Arms: Silver on a black bend between six red crosses, three > bezants. > Crest: An eagle. > Motto: Fidei coticula crux > Motto Translated: The cross is the test of truth > Spelling variations include: Wattone, Watone, Wathon, Watton, Watten, > Wattan, Whattone, Whatone, Whathon and many more. > First found in Nottingham where a Norman noble, Robert de Watone, the > youngest son of Gaitier de Tirell, Seigneur de Poix in Picardy, was > granted the Lordship of Wattone in the Vale in that shire, and it was > shown in the Domesday Survey of 1086. > Some of the first settlers of this name or some of its variants were: John > Watton who settled in Virginia in 1623; followed by another John Watton in > Virginia in 1656; Thomas Watton settled in Virginia in 1639; another > Thomas arrived in Baltimore in 1775. > **** > Herefordshire Record Office: Kentchurch Court archive [AL40/1022 - > AL40/3329] > The contents of this catalogue are the copyright of Herefordshire Record > Office. > Rights in the Access to Archives database are the property of the Crown, © > 2001-2004. > To find out more about the archives described below, contact Herefordshire > Record Office > Kentchurch Court Archive > Catalogue Ref. AL40 > Creator(s): > Scudamore family of Kentchurch, Herefordshire > Deeds and Papers for the Kentchurch Court Estate > FILE [no title] - ref. AL40/680 - date: 1627, June 20 > [from Scope and Content] 2. John Wathen of the parish of Keinchurch, > yeoman. > FILE [no title] - ref. AL40/660 - date: 1631/2, Jan. 24 > [from Scope and Content] 1. John Wathen of the parish of Kenchurch, co. > Hereford, yeoman, and Margarett, his wife > FILE [no title] - ref. AL40/624 - date: 1642, May 20 > [from Scope and Content] 1. John Wathen of the parish of Kenchurch, co. > Hereford, yeoman > **** > Herefordshire Record Office: Title Deeds Relating to the Clive Family of > Whitfield Estate > The contents of this catalogue are the copyright of Herefordshire Record > Office. > Rights in the Access to Archives database are the property of the Crown, © > 2001-2004. > To find out more about the archives described below, contact Herefordshire > Record Office > TITLE DEEDS RELATING TO THE CLIVE FAMILY OF WHITFIELD ESTATE > Catalogue Ref. BB2 > Creator(s): > Clive family of Treville, Herefordshire > [Access Conditions] > The depositors permission is required for access to the documents > > KINGSTONE > Cockyard Meadow > FILE [no title] - ref. BB2/78 - date: 3 August 1868 > [from Scope and Content] (2) John Wathen of Bridge Court, Kingstone, gent. > and Edwin Wathen of The Green [Kingstone], gent. > Hanley Court etc. > FILE [no title] - ref. BB2/92 - date: 19-20 April 1736/37 > [from Scope and Content] Third part of messuages and land occupied by Hugh > Wathen, William Price, Clement Williams, Roger Ravenhill, Joseph Maddy, > William Lewis, Thomas Rowland, Henry James, James Good and William Haynes > in Bredwardine, Willersley, Letton, Dorston, Peterchurch, Kingston, St. > Devereux and Dore. > FILE [no title] - ref. BB2/93 - date: 13-14 July 1737 > [from Scope and Content] Henleys Court, Bayes Farme, the Barrow Farme, Big > styes and Cheif Rent in Kinson alias Kingston, Dowre alias Abydoore, > Thruxton alias Druxton, and Allensmoore alias Alismore in occupation of > James Wathen and his undertenants Humphrey Carwardine and George Powell. > FILE [no title] - ref. BB2/110 - date: 28 September 1874 > [from Scope and Content] Declaration by Edwin Wathen of Kingston, farmer > and Charles William Lawrence of Cirencester, co. Glous., gent. concerning > land to be sold to Rev. Archer Clive (including Green Court and part of > the Dunswater Estate). > ST. DEVEREUX > Messuage and land inc. Bakers Farm > FILE [no title] - ref. BB2/154 - date: 2 June 1820 > [from Scope and Content] James (24 May 1755), William (8 August 1758), > John (28 February 1763) and Hugh (23 September 1764), sons of James Wathan > and Elizabeth, and William, son of William and Martha Wathan (2 February > 1797) [baptisms]; William Wathan (18 July 1815, aged 57), John Wathan (24 > November 1786), James Wathan (26 February 1797), James Prichard Parry (18 > July 1791), John Parry (19 November 1792), William Wathen (27 October > 1801, aged 67), William P. Parry Esq. (19 September 1806), Elizabeth > Powell (20 January 1811), William Wathen (18 July 1815, aged 57), Judith > Preece (11 August 1819, aged 49), Thomas Wathen (21 March 1829, aged 79), > and James Barnet (24 June 1815, aged 68), Rachel Barnet (11 April 1829, > aged 74), and Elizabeth Wathen (17 December 1815, aged 69). > THRUXTON > Thruxton Manor > FILE [no title] - ref. BB2/258 - date: 4-5 February 1745/46 > [from Scope and Content] (1) Mary Merrick of Kilpeck, widow (dau. of John > Pye of Kilpeck, gent.); John Merrick of the same place, sergeant in Sir > Robert Rich's regiment of dragoons; Aristarchus Merrick of Kings Caple, > yeoman and Mary his wife; Elizabeth Wathen of kilpeck, widow; John Barrar > of the same place, joyner and Artimona his wife (grandchildren of John Pye > by Mary Merrick, his dau. John Merrick is also bro. of Artimidorus > Merrick, decd., the other grandchild of John Pye); Arnold Russell of > Hereford, gent.; John Russell of Didley, gent. and Elizabeth his wife; > Richard Russell of Dorston, gent. and Elizabeth his wife; Jemima Jones and > Arnemaria Jennings of Hereford, widow (grandchildren of John Pye by his > dau. Jemima. Mary Merrick and Arnold Russell [exor.] are also heirs of > John Pye of Thruxton, gent., decd., son of John Pye of Kilpeck). > *** > Kingston village lies in the green fields of Herefordshire, close to the > city of Hereford. It was mentioned in the Domesday Book as "Land of the > King" or "Kings' Tun". The old church, houses, gardens, hedges, stone > walls, cows, crops and grass, still reflect a harmony of nature and man. > The twelfth century stone church of Saint Michael and All Saints, stands > in the village on a slight elevation. The square stone tower of the Norman > style, in the mode of a fortress, brings to mind the bloodied early > history of the Welsh borders. > Old gravestones are incorporated into the floor of the church, some of > them bearing the names of Preece and Wathen forebears. Judith Preece is > buried in the churchyard. A brilliant stained glass window gives a more > modern touch to the ancient building. > > *** > I noticed some US citizens are searching the surname WATHEN. It may be of > interest to you that there is a cluster of Wathens in the UK. > It seems the Wathen families, many of whom were Hand Silk Weavers were > quite settled until the early 1800s. When automisation came along their > trade was devastated and forced whole families to seek a living else where > or starve. > Many lived through the 1700s in the charming village of Worrel Under Edge, > Gloucestershire, England. It's in the heart of the beautiful 'Cotswolds' > Look for it on Google Earth (Worrel Under Edge UK) > Child of JAMES1ATHENwas born in of Allenshore, Herfordshire, England, and > died Bef. April 09, 1667 in Allenshore Parish, Kingstone, Herefordshire, > England.AMESWATHEN:AMESWATHENis:2. i. J > OHN2ATHEN, b. Abt. 1645, Herfordshire, England, Likely; d. Bef. July 10, > 1705, Charles County, Md.Generation No. 22. > Notes for J > Most likely NOT the son of Sir John Wathen.... > John Wathen, a carpenter, came to America on 9-10-1670 from Bristol, > England on the ship Francis & Mary. As the indentured servant of Hugh > Thomas for 3 yrs. ref: Servants to Foreign Plantations Vo. II:191 (Bristol > was an embarkation town] > ***** > Key: Servant Last Name, Servant First Name, Servant Origination, Servant > Occupation, Port of Departure, Ship Name, Ship Date, Indentured by Last > Name, Indentured by First Name, Identured by Origination, Indentured by > Occupation > Chronicle of Barbados - Bristol Servants - List of Servants in Barbados > April 9 1655 Wathen James shoemaker > November 15 1655 Wathen James cordwainer > June 22 1659 Wathen James > **** > > In April 1671 John built for Nicholas Grosse a house 15' long and 10' wide > and made on bedstead and performed other work. John's master, Hugh Thomas, > went to court in Charles Co., Md to collect a debt of 500lbs of tobacco > from Nicholas Grosse for this work performed by his servant John Wathen. > The court found for Hugh Thomas, ordering that he be 350lbs of tobacco > plus costs of 240lbs of tobacco. ref: Records of Charles Co., Md 1671-1674 > in Archive of MD 60:354-355. > After completion of 3yrs. service, he became a free Man. John Wathen > demands right for land due to him for his servitude within this > province according to conditions of plantation now in force which right > the 4th day of May was proved. May 12, 1674.....Warrant then issued in the > name of said John Wathen of St. Mary's Co., Md for 50 acres of land due > for the consideration above said. (L 18, f.16) > July 29 11676 John bough acreage in St.Thomas Manor, in Charles Co., Md > A document at the Bristol, England Record Office: A Rought Volume of > Apprenticeship Entries. This lists the name of 3 servants bound to John > Wathen dated 10-16-1684: > Christoper Gwynn of Abby Door in County Herford, to John Wathen for 4 yrs > in Maryland, ship Comport. > Thomas Williams of Dowchurch to the same 4 yrs, same ship. > James Williams of the same 4yrs, same ship. > John did not claim the 200 acres due him until Feb. 10 1701 for the > passage of the above men. This he took in Charles Co., Md and called it > Wathen Adventure. "Held of Zachia Manor", this began at a marked black oak > of Mathew'Purchase near Port Tobacco Road. > John Wathen purchased Wythe's Adventure in July 1702, (Patents, DD#5, f. > 106; CD, f. 94} > > The year 1788 marked the beginning of a period of accelerated settlement > in KY, and the population of Cartwright Creek Grew rapidly. By the spring > of 1789 Thomas Hill had purchased and settled on the land there. Other who > Joined him to become patriarchs of the settlement included: > John Thomas Jarboe and wife Dolly Hill, Henry, Stephen, Benjamin, and > Arnold Jarboe. > > Joseph Harding, Planter > 16xx - 1685 > Joseph Harding, the progenitor of his family in St. Mary County, settled > in the Province of Maryland prior to May 22, 1668, as shown by the > following claims of William Wathen for land rights by rights of > transporting settlers to the Province . > "Came William Wathen of Bristoll. and proved as followeth Know all men by > these Presents that I William Wathen master of the Ship Providence of > Bristoll for a Valuable Consideration to me paid by Daniel Jenifer of St. > Maries in the County of St. Maries in the Province of Maryland, Gent., doe > assigne unto the said Daniel Jenifer all my right, title interest, claime, > and demand of in and to the right of land due to me by Virtue of the > Condition of Plantacon of the right Honble the Lord Propy of the said > Province for transporting Barbary Jones, John Vincent, William Howell, > Margaret Thomas, Ann Morris, George Read, Jenkins ???????? and Joseph > Harding in all eight persons to the only use and benefit of him the said > Daniel his Heirs and assignes for ever. Witness my hand the xxii day of > May in the xxxvi year of his Lordships Dominion Anno Domini MDCLXVII." > (signed) Wm Wathen > Signed & delivered in the presence of John Bloomfield. > Randy: > I came across some archived emails from you regarding the Wathen line in > St. Mary's County, MD. Following is an extract from some research done > on my line (Harding). this is possibly the beginning of the Wathens in > SMC. Thought you might be interested. do you have any further info on > William Wathen? > Gene McLaughlin > (Graves, Harding, Dick, Buckler, Barnes, Conyers Henning, Alvey, Jones, > ) > **************************************** > Joseph Harding, the progenitor of his family in St. Mary County, settled > in the Province of Maryland prior to May 22, 1668, as shown by the > following claims of William Wathen for land rights by rights of > transporting settlers to the Province . > "Came William Wathen of Bristoll. and proved as followeth Know all men > by these Presents that I William Wathen master of the Ship Providence of > Bristoll for a Valuable Consideration to me paid by Daniel Jenifer of > St. Maries in the County of St. Maries in the Province of Maryland, > Gent., doe assigne unto the said Daniel Jenifer all my right, title > interest, claime, and demand of in and to the right of land due to me by > Virtue of the Condition of Plantacon of the right Honble the Lord Propy > of the said Province for transporting Barbary Jones, John Vincent, > William Howell, Margaret Thomas, Ann Morris, George Read, Jenkins > -------- and Joseph Harding in all eight persons to the only use and > benefit of him the said Daniel his heires and assignes for ever. Witness > my hand the xxii day of May in the xxxvi year of his Lordships Dominion > Anno Domini MDCLXVII." > (signed) Wm Wathen > Signed & delivered in the presence of John Bloomfield. > [98_Dunavan_Dec.FTW] > The year 1788 marked the beginning of a period of accelerated settlement > in KY, > and the population of Cartwright Creek Grew rapidly. By the spring of1789 > Thomas Hill had purchased and settled on the land there. Other who Joined > him to become patriarchs of the settlement included: > John Jarboe and Wife Dolly Hill > Henry, Stephen, Benjamin and Arnold Jarboe. > Notes for S > Henry Hudson > English navigator, who explored the NE coast of North America, making > claims for both the English and the Dutch. Nothing is known about his > early life. He sailed in search of a passage across the Pole (1607), > reached Novaya Zemlya (1608), entered the river which was named after him > (1609), and (1610) travelled through the strait and bay which now bear his > name. He resolved to winter there, but food ran short, the men mutinied, > and he and eight others were cast adrift to die. > > Henry Hudson's Final Voyage, financed by the British East India Company, > sailed from England in 1610 and wintered in Hudson Bay. In the summer of > 1611 the crew mutinied and set Henry Hudson, his son John, and seven > other men adrift in a small boat without food or water. They were never > seen again. > In 1614 Katherine Hudson, widow of the explorer, asked the East India > Company for employment for her youngest son Richard. Richard sailed on the > ship Samaritan and continued in the service of the company, making trips > as far away as Japan and India. He died in 1648 leaving several children, > some of whom emigrated to America. > Llewelyn Powy, author of Henry Hudson (Harper, 1928), named three sons: > Oliver, John & Richard. States that beyond this all is conjecture. > Oliver was already married in 1609; John was probably around 16 when he > died in 1611. Richard was probably born around 1600. > Katherine Hudson, the widow of Henry Hudson, entered the East India trade > and traveled to India herself, making remunerative deals in indigo and > other commodities. She died in 1624, leaving her property to her sons > Oliver & Richard. Her will provided that "in case the said Richard should > not return > from the East and India, that then her son Oliver should have all." > Ann Susannah Hudson Wathen born around 1660, could NOT have been the > daughter of Richard Hudson, since he died in 1648; and she was probably > not the daughter of Oliver, who had been married more than 50 yrs in > 1660. This leave the possibility that she was the granddaughter of either > Richard or Oliver ? > Records of early Virginia and Maryland show many with the name Hudson. > Skordas, in 'Early Settlers of MD, show 28 Hudsons. One which was.. > Susanna Hudson was transported in 1669 > ref: Our Ancestors - GREENS, WATHENS, BYRNES, HOEHNS & OTHERS > a supplement by Genevieve Hoehn Bellis> Henry Hudson's Final Voyage, > financed by the British East India Company, >> sailed from England in 1610 and wintered in Hudson Bay. In the summer of >> 1611 the crew mutinied and set Henry Hudson, his son John, and seven >> other men adrift in a small boat without food or water. They were never >> seen again. >> >> In 1614 Katherine Hudson, widow of the explorer, asked the East India >> Company for employment for her youngest son Richard. Richard sailed on >> the >> ship Samaritan and continued in the service of the company, making trips >> as >> far away as Japan and India. He died in 1648 leaving several children, >> some >> of whom emigrated to America. >> >> Llewelyn Powy, author of Henry Hudson (Harper, 1928), named three sons: >> Oliver, John & Richard. States that beyond this all is conjecture. >> Oliver was already married in 1609; John was probably around 16 when he >> died in 1611. Richard was probably born around 1600. >> >> Katherine Hudson, the widow of Henry Hudson, entered the East India trade >> and traveled to India herself, making remunerative deals in indigo and >> other >> commodities. She died in 1624, leaving her property to her sons Oliver & >> Richard. Her will provided that "in case the said Richard should not >> return >> from the East and India, that then her son Oliver should have all." >> >> Ann Susannah Hudson Wathen born around 1660, could NOT have been the >> daughter of Richard Hudson, since he died in 1648; and she was probably >> not the daughter of Oliver, who had been married more than 50 yrs in >> 1660. This leave the possibility that she was the granddaughter of either >> Richard or Oliver ? >> >> Records of early Virginia and Maryland show many with the name Hudson. >> Skordas, in 'Early Settlers of MD', show 28 Hudsons. One which was.. >> Susanna Hudson was transported in 1669 >> >> ref: Our Ancestors - GREENS, WATHENS, BYRNES, HOEHNS & OTHERS >> a supplement by Genevieve Hoehn Bellis > ***** > Susannah Hudson is SUPPOSED to be the daughter of Henry Hudson and Ann > Hill - born in Barbadoes - parents to Va. I've never found her birth > record, > baptismal records - etc. - in Barbadoes records (not that they're all in > print, I suppose. Someday I'm going to have to go there, I guess -- but > staying off the beach long enough to really research may be tough! > It would be logical that Henry Hudson was the grandson of THE Henry - > probably through Richard - but possibly through John - no one said he died > in > 1611. > ******* > Children of JOHN2ATHEN(JAMES1USANNAHBRAYNEAbt. 1671 in Maryland. She was > born in England. He married (2) SUSANNA'ANN'HUDSON1676 in St Mary's Co., > MD, daughter of WILLIAMHUDSONand ANNHILL. She was born Bet. 1662 - 1668 in > Barbados, and died Aft. 1705 in Charles Co., > MD.OHNWATHEN:USANNA'ANN'HUDSON:OHNWATHENand SUSANNAHBRAYNEare:3. i. I > 4. ii. J > 5. iii. J > iv. A > Notes for A > Inherited 4,000 lbs of tobaccoGNATIUS3ATHENI, b. 1679, Charles County, Md; > d. December 15, 1757, St Mary's Co., Maryland.OHNWATHENIII, b. Bet. 1681 - > 1684, St. Marys County, MD; d. Abt. 1745, St Mary's Co., > Maryland.AMESWATHEN, b. Abt. 1683, St Mary's Co., Maryland; d. 1723, > Surrey Co., Va.NNWATHEN, b. Maryland.NNWATHEN:Children of JOHNWATHENand > SUSANNAHUDSONare:v. J > Notes for J > inherited 10,000 lbs of tobacco > 6. vi. J > 7. vii. H > viii. J > 8. ix. H > ANE3ATHEN.ANEWATHEN:OHNWATHENII, b. 1681, St. Marys County, MD; d. January > 13, 1745/46, Charles County, Md.ENRYWATHEN, b. 1687, Maryland; d. May > 1738, Prince George County, Md.ULIAJUDEAWATHEN, b. Abt. > 1689.ENRYHUDSONWATHENI, b. 1694, St Mary's Co., Md; d. March 1760, Charles > County, MD.Generation No. 33. > Child of IGNATIUS3ATHENI(JOHN2AMES1ARY[WATHEN]. He married (2) ?[WATHEN]. > He married (3) SUSANNAHHAWKINSAbt. 1730. She was born Abt. 1708 in Charles > Co., MD.GNATIUSWATHENand MARY[WATHEN]is:i. L > Notes for L > known as Vidilicit Leonard WathenEONARD4ATHEN, b. Abt. 1738, St Mary's > Co., Md; d. May 1782, Montgomery Co., MD; m. ELIZABETHANNMATTINGLY, St > Mary's Co., MD; b. 1730, St. Mary's Co., MD.EONARDWATHEN:Children of > IGNATIUSWATHENand ?[WATHEN]are:ii. A > iii. E > iv. E > v. H > vi. J > vii. S > viii. > ix. W > x. H > xi. > WNN4ATHEN.LEANORWATHEN.LIZABETHWATHEN.ENRIETTAWATHEN.ANELYDIAWATHEN.USANNAWATHEN.?WATHEN.EARINGWATHEN.ENRYWATHEN, > b. Abt. 1705, St Mary's Co., Maryland; d. Bef. March 1762, Charles County, > Md; m. (1) ANN[WATHEN], Maryland; m. (2) ANN[WATHEN].ILLIAMWATHEN, SR, b. > 1720, St Mary's Co., Maryland; d. June 30, 1784, St. Marys County, MD; m. > (1) MARYSUTTLE; b. Abt. 1726; d. Abt. 1747; m. (2) ANNMATTINGLY, Aft. > 1747, St Mary's Co., MD.Children of IGNATIUSWATHENand > SUSANNAHHAWKINSare:xii. S > xiii. E > xiv. I > Notes for I > Owen Wathen's Adventure on Pile's Fresh in Charles Co., MD > Served with his brother John Baptist Wathen in Capt. John Hanson's > Company., 12 Battalion of the Charles County Militia in 1777 > "somewhere in the files at the Historical Society", > I found this note: Charles Fenwick stated that James Hanson Wathen had a > brother named William Hanson Wathen who went to KY before 1790. Perhaps > this may be provide a clue to the parents of James Hanson Wathen. > > > xv. S > xvi. J > Notes for J > Sergeant in Capt. John Hasons Co., 12th Battalion of Charles Co., Md > Militia in 1777. > His brother Ignatius was also in the same unit. > The were ordered to watch the movement of the enemy fleet and prevent any > thef or plundering. > ****** > MARYLAND INDEXES > (Census, Index) > 1776-1778 > Wathen, Baptist John > Date: 1778 Charles County Port Tobacco East Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 636. MSA S 1419-15-17101 > Wathen, Nicholas > Date: 1778 Charles County Port Tobacco East Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 636. MSA S 1419-15-17111 > > > With brohter Ignatius and Leonard the moved to Montgomery Co., MD > John moved to Randolph Co, VA now W.VA by 1796. Then in 1799, bought 50 > acres of land on Cartwright's Creek in KY > USANNAH4ATHEN.LEANORWATHEN.GNATIUSWATHENII, b. Abt. 1730, Charles County, > Md; d. March 1804, Montgomery Co., MD; m. SUSANNAH[WATHEN], Abt. 1750; d. > abt 1802.GNATIUSWATHENII:ARAHWATHEN.OHNBAPTISTWATHEN, b. Abt. 1735, > Charles Co., Md; d. December 12, 1810, Washington Co., Ky; m. > HENRIETTARINEY, Abt. 1770, Kentucky; b. St. Marys County, MD; d. Aft. > 1810, Washington Co., KY.OHNBAPTISTWATHEN:4. > Notes for J > Gent. > Children of JOHN3ATHENIII(JOHN2AMES1NNBARTONAbt. 1720 in St Mary's Co., > MD. She was born in Maryland, and died in > Maryland.OHNWATHENIII:OHNWATHENand ANNBARTONare:i. S > ii. M > Notes for M > ARYLAND INDEXES > (Census, Index) > 1776-1778 > > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Bryan Town Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 640. MSA S 1419-15-17102 > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17103 > Wathen, Basil > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17104 > Wathen, Bennett Sr. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17106 > Wathen, Clements > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17107 > Wathen, Ignatius > Date: 1778 Charles County Port Tobacco East Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 636. MSA S 1419-15-17108 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17109 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17110 > > iii. J > Notes for S > the Hanson family were neighbors > iv. J > v. B > Notes for B > MARYLAND INDEXES > (Census, Index) > 1776-1778 > > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Bryan Town Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 640. MSA S 1419-15-17102 > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17103 > Wathen, Basil > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17104 > Wathen, Bennett Sr. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17106 > Wathen, Clements > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17107 > Wathen, Ignatius > Date: 1778 Charles County Port Tobacco East Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 636. MSA S 1419-15-17108 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17109 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17110 > > vi. C > Notes for C > ARYLAND INDEXES > (Census, Index) > 1776-1778 > > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Bryan Town Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 640. MSA S 1419-15-17102 > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17103 > Wathen, Basil > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17104 > Wathen, Bennett Sr. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17106 > Wathen, Clements > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17107 > Wathen, Ignatius > Date: 1778 Charles County Port Tobacco East Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 636. MSA S 1419-15-17108 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17109 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17110 > > vii. J > Notes for J > ARYLAND INDEXES > (Census, Index) > 1776-1778 > > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Bryan Town Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 640. MSA S 1419-15-17102 > Wathen, Barton > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17103 > Wathen, Basil > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17104 > Wathen, Bennett Sr. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17106 > Wathen, Clements > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17107 > Wathen, Ignatius > Date: 1778 Charles County Port Tobacco East Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 636. MSA S 1419-15-17108 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17109 > Wathen, John B. > Date: 1778 Charles County Newport West Hundred > Source: X 3, p. 638. MSA S 1419-15-17110 > > USANNAH4ATHEN, b. Abt. 1721, St Mary's Co., Maryland; d. March 25, 1780; > m. EDWARDEDELEN; b. Abt. 1696, Maryland.ARYANNWATHEN, b. St Mary's Co., > Maryland; m. RODEUSSIMMS.ARYANNWATHEN:OHNWATHENIV, b. Abt. 1724, Charles > Co., Md; d. Aft. 1798; m. SARAHHANSON, Abt. 1738, Trinity Parish, Charles > Co., Md; b. of Kent Co., Md.ARAHHANSON:OSEPHWATHEN, b. 1725, Charles Co., > Md; d. Bef. September 20, 1775, Maryland.ENNETTWATHEN, b. 1729, Charles > Co., Md; d. March 1792, Charles Co., Md; m. UNKNOWN[WATHEN], > Maryland.ENNETTWATHEN:LEMENTWATHEN, b. Abt. 1732, Charles Co., Md; d. > March 1805, Charles Co., Md; m. ELIZABETH[WATHEN], Charles Co., MD; d. > 1807, Charles Co., Md.LEMENTWATHEN:OHNBARTONWATHEN, b. Abt. 1724, Charles > Co., Md; d. April 1797, Charles Co., Md; m. (1) CLOTILDA[WATHEN], > Maryland; d. Bet. 1758 - 1768; m. (2) MARYANN[WATHEN], Maryland; d. 1829, > Ohio Co. W. VA.OHNBARTONWATHEN:5. > Child of JAMES3ATHEN(JOHN2AMES1ARY[WATHEN]. AMESWATHENand > MARY[WATHEN]is:i. A > NN4ATHEN.6. > Child of JOHN3ATHENII(JOHN2AMES1NNBARTON. OHNWATHENand ANNBARTONis:i. J > OHNBARTON4ATHEN.7. > Children of HENRY3ATHEN(JOHN2AMES1ARYHALL. ENRYWATHENand MARYHALLare:i. J > ii. E > iii. C > iv. C > v. C > AMES4ATHEN.LIZABETHWATHEN.HILDWATHEN.HILDWATHEN.HILDWATHEN.8. > Notes for H > He was under age when his father died but he was to receive 10,000 lbs. of > tobacco when he turned 21 years old. > 1724 bought 50 acres of Westwood Manor > 3/11/1728: Deed from Luke Russell and Mary, his wife, of SMC, planter to > Hudson > Wathen of CC, planter 100 ac. that was formerly purchased by Gilbert > Cropper of > Thomas Jaret, Esq., it being pt. of "Westwood Manor". (CC Liber M, #2). > Will of Luke Russell, SMC, 3/15/1728-9; 6/3/1729. Son: Luke, 50 ac. _____. > Wife: Mary, to possess 1/2 of sd. 50 ac. called "Brough" on Cook's Race > during > life and then to revert to son Luke. Sons: Thomas and Robert Russell and > Joseph Watkins, "Golden Springs" equally; they to lay out to Elias > Hannington > his part of sd. lands. Execs: Wife and son, Thomas. Wit: Samuel Hurst, > Hudson Wathen, Marmaduke Simmes. > > The Baptisms of the children of Henry Hudson and Sarah may be found in > Early Protestant Episcopal Church Records of Trinity Parish, East Newport, > Md > 1748 He purchased 100 acres of St. Georges, ajoining the west side of > Henry's land. > In 1753 he purchase 75 acres of St. Thomas bordering Westwood Manor from > Richard & Ann > Edelen and another 60 acres of St. Thomas from his nephw Joseph Wathen in > 1756. > In 1752 he sold 100 acres of The Bile, on the east side of Zachia Swamp > near land of Benedict Boarman, to Richard Bennet Boarman. Henry Hudson's > wife, Sara release dower rights. > Hudson wrote his will on 2-6-1760, and it was probated 3-22-1760. The four > middle son Richard, Henry Hudson, II, Martin and Bennett, received land, > The eldest, Basil, undoubtedly had alread received his portion. His wife, > Sarah was executrix and she brought in the invenotry on 4-30-1760. Nearest > of kin were Bennett and Joseph Wathen. Apraisers were Peter Wood and > Edward Edelen, creditors Andrew Buchana and Robert Horner, In 1761, Sarah > sold 60 acres of St. Thomas to John Winter according to the terms of the > will. > > Children of HENRYHUDSON3ATHENI(JOHN2AMES1ARYBRAYFIELDin Unknown, daughter > of JOHNBRYFIELD. She was born 1711 in Charles County, Md, and died Bet. > 1731 - 1739. He married (2) SARAHMUDD1736 in Maryland, daughter of > HENRYMUDDand ELIZABETHLOWE. She was born Abt. 1711 in Charles Co., > Maryland, and died Abt. 1760 in Charles Co., > Maryland.ENRYHUDSONWATHENI:ENRYWATHENand MARYBRAYFIELDare:i. J > ii. B > Notes for B > His father registered cattle marks for him and his brother John when they > were 11 yrs. > iii. M > iv. E > v. R > vi. H > Notes for H > Henry boufht 139 acres of New Castle in Newtonw Hundred, St. Mary's Co., > Md from > John Baptist Graves on 10-15-1765. > On 7-19-1768 He sold 100 acres of this land to Thomas Reeder. > Henry was Execurtor with Cornelius Wildman, Jr of the estate of Cornelius > Wildman Sr. in 1765 > Cornelius had dide in 1764 and Henry married his widow, Ann Langley. > Henry wrote his will 4-22-1774 and probated in St. Mary's Co., Md > 7-14-1774. > Executrix was his wife. Testator: John Ireland, George McClarke and Jame > Roach. > He mentions his ons and daughter, sister Elizabeth Monarch, and brother > Bennett in the will.OHN4ATHEN, b. Abt. 1722, Charles Co., Md.ASILWATHEN, > b. 1723, Charles Co., Md; d. Charles County, Md; m. (1) NONE; m. (2) > NONE.ASILWATHEN:ARYWATHEN, b. 1725, Charles Co., Md; d. Aft. 1762; m. > WILLIAMPRICE.LIZABETHWATHEN, b. 1727, Charles Co., Md; d. Aft. > 1774.ICHARDWATHEN, b. 1729, Charles County, Md; d. Abt. May 1785, St. > Marys County, MD; m. (1) MONICA[WATHEN], St Mary's Co., MD; d. Aft. 1782, > St. Marys County, MD; m. (2) MARGARET[WATHEN], Abt. 1750, Maryland; d. > Bet. 1767 - 1773, St. Marys County, MD; m. (3) ELEANORMATTINGLY, September > 28, 1773, St. Mary's Co. MD; d. Abt. 1782.ENRYHUDSONWATHENII, b. 1731, > Charles Co., Md; d. Abt. June 1774, St. Mary's Co., MD; m. > SUANNA'ANN'LANGLEY, 1764, St. Marys County, MD; b. Abt. 1723, St. Marys > County, MD; d. 1791.ENRYHUDSONWATHENII:Children of HENRYWATHENand > SARAHMUDDare:vii. M > viii. M > Notes for M > Born probably near Newport, MD, since he was baptised in the Trinity > Parish, East Newport. > St. Mary's Co., Malitia, 1794 > In the 1790 MD Census he had 3 boys under 16 yrs and 3 females living with > him. > ix. B > Notes for B > Born 1-30-1740 Probably near Newport, Md, Trinity Parish were he was > baptised. > Received from his father 103 acres of St. Georges in Charles Co., Md when > he was 21. > Served in Capt. Benjamin S. Curry's Company of the Charles Co., Militia in > 1776. > In 1774 he was appointed guardian of his brohter Henry Hudson's Children > in case of > Henry wife's death. > x. E > xi. S > xii. A > Notes for J > Move to Washington Co. Ky about 1790, then to Perry Co., Mo after 1800 > xiii. E > xiv. KARYPRICE4ATHEN.ARTINWATHEN, b. February 02, 1738/39, Charles Co., > Md; d. Aft. 1794; m. (1) ELIZABETHMUDD; m. (2) ELIZABETHANDERSON, May 23, > 1787, Maryland; d. Abt. 1796.ARTINWATHEN:ENNETTW.WATHEN, SR., b. 1740, > Charles Co., Md; d. August 1809, Charles Co., Md; m. SARAH[WATHEN], Abt. > 1762, Maryland; d. Aft. 1800, Charles Co., Md.ENNETTW.WATHEN, > SR.:LEANORWATHEN, b. November 01, 1744, Maryland.ARAHWATHEN, b. 1747, > Maryland.NNEWATHEN, b. 1750, Charles County, Md; d. November 01, 1834, > Perry Co., MO; m. JOSEPHMILES; b. 1757, Maryland; d. 1834, Perry Co., > Mo.OSEPHMILES:LIZABETHWATHEN, b. Abt. 1753, Charles Co., > Maryland.ATHERINEWATHEN, b. Abt. 1754, Charles Co., Maryland. > > > ________________________________ > From: bill waathen <bwathen@cfl.rr.com> > To: mdstmary@rootsweb.com > Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 1:12:17 PM > Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] Hugh THOMAS > > Hi Randy, > > Thank you so much for the information. And a special thank you for Capt. > William Wathen, we're researching him also. I'm aware of John sailing on > the "Francis and Mary" from Bristol, his indenture to Hugh Thomas, etc. I > believe I'm descended from John, John and Ignatius then down the line. > Given that Hugh Thomas was from Llanmadoc, Glarmorgan, Wales, I am hoping > that John may have been from that area as well. Two reasons for my > thinking.....the geographical location of Hugh's birthplace and the fact > that Glamorgan stayed very heavily Roman Catholic in spite of efforts by > the > Church of England to make it otherwise. My question is, where did John > come > from? Wales, England or where? The other geography I'm looking at is that > Llanmadoc is very near Swansea at the mouth of the Bristol Channel. Taking > shots in the dark for now, but hoping to find more on John. > > bill > ----- Original Message ----- > W W) was born 1694 in St Mary's Co., Md, and died March 1760 in Charles > County, MD. He married (1) M, J W H W) was born 1687 in Maryland, and died > May 1738 in Prince George County, Md. He married M, J W H W) was born 1681 > in St. Marys County, MD, and died January 13, 1745/46 in Charles County, > Md. He married A, J W J W) was born Abt. 1683 in St Mary's Co., Maryland, > and died 1723 in Surrey Co., Va. He married M, J W J W) was born Bet. > 1681 - 1684 in St. Marys County, MD, and died Abt. 1745 in St Mary's Co., > Maryland. He married A, J W J W W W) was born 1679 in Charles County, Md, > and died December 15, 1757 in St Mary's Co., Maryland. He married (1) M, J > W I W W) was born Abt. 1645 in Herfordshire, England, Likely, and died > Bef. July 10, 1705 in Charles County, Md. He married (1) S W J W W J > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > MDSTMARY-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/18/2008 08:24:39