List, Found the source for Anastasia Coombes d/o Thomas Coombes and Elizabeth Wharton marrying Joseph s/o of John Hamilton and Sarah Stewart. Donnelly put it forth in her book on the Hamilton family. But even if Anastasia didn't marry Wm Hamilton, she would have been to old to marry Joseph. And if she did marry Wm Hamilton she surely wouldn't have remarried to his nephew. So some person having come upon both bits of info took Donnelly's info and the info from the Kelley & Cherault book combined them and made it one Anastasia, marrying both men. Source: IMPRINTS 1608 - 1908 Hamilton, Allied Families by Sister Mary Louise Donnelly. Page 15 " John Hamilton the oldest son of Alexander and Elizabeth Hamilton was b 12/1709. In a 1762 deposition John declares himself 53 years old and the son of Alexander Hamilton. John m Sarah Stewart the daughter of Daniel Stewart and Sarah Roby. In the 1758 tax list of Port Tobacco he is listed with one taxable son Joseph. Joseph m. Anastasia Coombes the daughter of Thomas Coombes and Elizabeth Wharton." Shirley Middleton Moller > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "K Woodring" <katwoodring@yahoo.com> > To: <mdstmary@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Monday, November 10, 2008 1:49 PM > Subject: Re: [MDSTMARY] Wm Hamilton and Anastasia Coombes No middle > initial in his name. > > > I currently have Joseph as eldest son of John Hamilton and Sarah Stewart > and married to Anastacia Coombes b. ca 1743 d. 11 Aug 1799. > > 2 Aug 1769 > Charles Co, MD > Final Account of Sarah Hambleton Adminstratrix John Hamble[ton] £48.12.11 > 3/4 > Representatives: widow and 8 [9] children: Joseph, Ignatius [,] > Elizabeth, Laurence, Marmaduke, Alexander & Clare all at age William 17 > years old the 16th of next November Henry 10 years old 22nd next November > note* Charles County version differs slightly from original Perogative > Court record > > The Inventory of John Hamilton > AN INVENTORY of the Goods and Chattles of John Hambleton late of Charles > County Deceased in CurrY at the rate of late Inspection Law-- > To 1 Draught Horse 11 Years old £7 - - > To 2 Cows & Calves @ 65/ and 1 Heifer > @ 35/ ..............:........................................ 8 5 0 > To 1 Sow 12/6 & 4 Shoats @ 4/ each 1 8 6 > To 8 Barrels of Corn Dd @ 8/ p[er] Barl ................ 3 4 0 > To 2 Barrels of very bad D° @ 3/9 0 7 6 > To 1 old Bed and furniture 60/ and > 2 very bad D° 20/ each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 0 0 > To 2 old Wheels & 1 pair Cards 1 0 0 > To 2 old Tables & 4 old Chairs 0 11 6 > To 1 old Chist [=chest] & 1 old Trunk > both Dd [=damaged] 0 7 6 > To 1 Hive of Bees 10/ & 1 D° 3/9 0 13 9 > To 85% lb. Bacon @ 6d ................ 2 2 9 > To 1 Spade 2/6. 2 old Weeding hoes @ 2/ ... 0 6 6 > To old flukes 4/. a parcel of old Coopers > Tools 5/ 0 9 0 > To 1 Iron Candle Stick 1/. 1 pepper box 3d .. 0 1 3 > To 1 old frying pan 4/ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 4 0 > To 43 Ib Pott Iron @ 4d is 14/4 > 16% lb. Damaged D° @ 1% is 3/3% 0 17 7 ¾ > To 1 old Box Iron & Heaters 5/ 0 5 0 > To 19 lb. old pewter @ 1/. 1 Raw hide 8/ > 10 lb. fatt @ 4d is 3/4 1 10 4 > To a parcel of Earthen Ware 5/ > 2 Bottles @ 3d. 6d. ................ 0 5 6 > To 1 old Saddle & Bridle 5/. % peck > of Beans 6d. 2 old Bags 3/9 0 9 3 > To 2 Bushels of Meal 4/. his Wearing > Apparil 20/ 1 4 0 > To a parcel of old Lumber 20/ 1 0 0 > Rob Mundell for Wm Coomes (seal) > John Glassford - Co > Sam: Hanson, Credr- Willm Coomes Junr (seal) > his her > Alexander + Hamilton Clare + Hamilton > mark mark > Charles County Sst, On the Tenth Day of May 1769 Came Sarah Hambleton > Administratrix of John Hambleton late of Charles County Deceased and made > Oath that the within is a Just and perfect Inventory of all and Singular > the Goods and Chattles of the said Deceased that came to her hands at the > Time of making the Same that she knows of no Concealment of any part or > parcel thereof by any person whatsoever that if she Should Discover any > Concealment or Suspect any to be she will acquaint the Commissary Gen1 for > the Time being or his Deputy with Such Discovery or Cause of Suspicion > that it may be Enquired into and that She will well and truly give an > Account of all and every part of the Deceaseds personal Estate that shall > hereafter come to her hands Possession or Knowledge. > Sworn before Walter Hanson DCom > Maryland Prerogative Court Inventories Liber 100, folio 61-62 > Maryland State Archives, Annnapolis, MD. > > Joseph would have been heir of his father John who died in 1769 BEFORE > his brother William (1773) but who hadn't changed his will to reflect it. > > Thirty Acadians sailed from Port Tobacco, Maryland on the schooner > Britain for New Orleans on Jan. 5, 1769. They got to the mouth of the > Mississippi by Feb. 21, but they couldn't travel upriver due to heavy fog. > A strong east wind blew them to Matagorda Bay , Texas , where it was > seized by the Spanish. The crew and passengers were arrested as smugglers > and had to work at hard labor in Presidio de La Bahia (today's Goliad , > Texas ). When they were released, they traveled overland to Natchitoches , > arriving in late October. The fellow in charge, Commandant Athanaze > Demezieres tried to get them to stay there, but they convinced him > otherwise. The made it to Iberville Parish, and were given land on the > west bank of the Mississippi River by mid-April. A number of these > Acadians later moved to the Opelousas area. (The Founding of New Acadia, > Brasseaux, p. 104) > My Very Dear Sir: From the attached documents Your Excellency will see > what happended to an English (Maryland) vessel that enetered Espirtu Santo > Bay... > > To the Most Excellent Senor Don Alexandro O'Reilly...governor of > Louisianna: We, John Steel, Francis Loundiz, Joseph Mattingly, Philip > Ford, Leonard Mattingly, Neal Kerigan, Joseph Hamilton, Charles Steward, > and Joseph Mattingly, Jr., seaman of the English (Maryland) schooner La > Bretana, presenting ourselves most humbly before your Excellency, say the > on the 5th of January this year, we left the port of Maryland (Port > Tobacco) with one hundred passengers aboard, destined for New Orleans, and > that on the 21st of February following, we sighted the coast of Lousianna; > but due to easterly winds and continuous fog we were driven some eighty > leagues south and then to the west of the Mississippi... > ...We were detained by the said Don Francisco Thobar, until the 11th of > September, when Don Rafael Martinez Pacheco, commandant of Fort Cokesaw, > was sent by the governor of that province to take us to Natchitoches. > There we were embarked in some canoes for New Orleans, where we arrived on > the 9th of this month (December)... > MARTÍNEZ PACHECO, RAFAEL (?-?). In 1759 Rafael Martínez Pacheco, presidio > commander and government official, petitioned the viceroy of New Spain for > a post in Texas, where he said he had had experience in helping Diego > Ortiz Parrilla move the San Francisco Xavier de Gigedo Presidio from the > San Marcos River to the San Saba in 1757. Martínez claimed to have > recruited families to settle at San Saba and to have served as conductor > of supplies and horses for San Antonio de Béxar Presidio. On November 23, > 1763, he was appointed commander of San Agustín de Ahumada Presidio,qv on > the lower Trinity River. His inadequate work and failure to report > antagonized Governor Ángel de Martos y Navarrete, who ordered the removal > of the presidio to Los Horconcitos and eventually ordered Martínez's > arrest. In the ensuing conflict the presidio was burned, and Martínez fled > to La Bahía and San Antonio. Hugo Oconór, who came to San Antonio in 1765 > to investigate the matter, found Martínez > Pacheco not responsible for the trouble and returned him to his presidio. > He arrived at the Trinity on September 28, 1769, and began an efficient > administration of his post. In the fall of 1769 he was made responsible > for delivering to the French post at Natchitoches a group of English, > German, and Cajun families who had been shipwrecked near La Bahía. > > > EPERRY4616@aol.com wrote: > > Shirley -- > Do you know a) when/where James Hamilton died? b) the children of James > Hamilton and Mary Ann Coomes/Combs? > > Ernie > > In a message dated 11/10/2008 12:47:55 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, > shirleymoller@verizon.net writes: > > Pulled the original and it reads as follows....... > > 5/8/1750: Lease from Henry Neale of SMC, Gent. to William and Patrick > Hamilton of CC, planters, 225 ac., pt. of "Green Springs" in CC for the > lives of > William Hamilton, Anastasia Hamilton Wife of the said William and Patrick > Hamilton. Ann Neale released her dower. (CC Land Rec. Book Z, #2: > 424-425). > > So I would bet the following deed is correct also. > > 8/11/1768: From John Hamilton, Wm. Hamilton, James Hamilton, and Patrick > Hamilton of CC to Samuel Hamilton of CC, planter pt. of "Spye Park", 80 > ac. > Sarah, Anna Statia, and Mary Anne, wives of sd. John, William, and James > relinq. their right of dower. (CC Deeds). > > William was married, and Anastasia had already died so who else would he > leave his estate to? His family. > > Shirley Middleton Moller > > > > > > **************AOL Search: Your one stop for directions, recipes and all > other > Holiday needs. Search Now. > (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100000075x1212792382x1200798498/aol?redir=http://searchblog.aol.com/2008/11/04/happy-holidays-from > -aol-search/?ncid=emlcntussear00000001) > > ------------------------------- > 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 > > > > < , |/ > < ' /| > > Kat Woodring > > > > > > > > ------------------------------- > 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