My blog and research are on hold for the moment. My 11 year old computer snarled and growled, causing a minor hiccup in my on-going search for ancestors and their extended families. So a Christmas present to myself arrived, a new computer with all the up to date features and none of my old files. I fear this will be a lengthy process as there are many files, docs, pdf's etc. that I need to get on this new, spiffy computer. Add to that the hustle and bustle of the short time between Thanksgiving and Christmas this year, a few snow storms which hampered getting out and about and learning my way around a new computer, have kept me from getting much research done.
So I'm taking a necessary breather, hoping the dust will settle after the New Year. Wishing everyone peace and happiness in whatever way you celebrate the winter solstice, Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanza, or other special celebration of your chosing. May we all look forward to World peace, joy, hope and love.
A blend of genealolgy, geography, time-lines and personal interests. Most will be about my family history, New England, the Maritime Provinces, England and a few other places associated with my family.
Saturday, December 21, 2019
Friday, November 15, 2019
William Pye of Newfoundland (c. 1760-1810
Fall clean-up and preparing yard and home for the coming
winter months has kept me busy for weeks, it seems. Adding more tulips and
daffodils to the garden, gathering seeds for next year, trimming bushes a bit
will, hopefully, make things much easier in the Spring. So, at last, I feel I
have the time to return to my blog.
I left off with the Maryland Pyes and referencing William
Pye, supposedly of Maryland and Barbados .
Relatives living in Newfoundland back in the
1930’s/40’s told my cousin Pete that this is the William who came to Newfoundland on board
the Junius Brutus, as a prisoner of
the British. He was released there and sought out his Uncle Henry. This is all
hearsay and handed down family legend. I still cannot find a William connected
to any of the Pyes in MD. But I have always believed that where there is smoke,
there is probably fire, so I refuse to throw this information out. One thing to
consider is that William was his middle name and that he is recorded in MD
using his first name, which would make it difficult to find his parents.
Moving on to Newfoundland ,
I have been unable to find an early Henry Pye who could have been his uncle.
Granted, the fishermen were not allowed to reside at NFLD, being forced to
return home at the end of the fishing season. This was enforced by the ships’
Captains, who were fined for every man not returning home without due cause. So
perhaps Henry was one of those who returned to England each time and never became
part of the records in NFLD. It wasn’t until 1790 that NFLD began to be more of
a permanent settlement rather than a temporary fishing enterprise. With this in
mind, it’s quite possible that William returned to England
and, possibly, was married in England .
Why wasn’t he returned to the Colonies after the war was over? As a Colonist, with
connections to MD, one would think he would have returned there after the
American Revolution ended. By staying in or returning to Newfoundland , it suggests he remained or
became a British subject.
Early Newfoundland
records are sketchy at best. Some historical treatises cover its connection to Poole,
Dorset , England ,
Bristol , England
and Cornwall .
There were other ports as well, but these seemed to be prominent. Not only did
the fisheries in Newfoundland do business with
these ports but it appears that many inhabitants from those regions moved to
and became residents of Newfoundland .
Without any specific names to work with, it can only be a
theory that some of the Pyes moved between the various places and finally took
up more permanent residency in Newfoundland, once the Crown allowed it. Using
the customary naming patterns that many families employed during the 18th
and 19th centuries, I have found an unusual similarity between some
settlements in Newfoundland and those found in
Devon and Dorset , more precisely in
Bettiscombe and Broadwinsor, Dorset. There I found the names William, Elisha,
Elijah, Henry, and Benjamin. In 1796, I found the marriage of Elijah Pye to
Abigail Ash and then in 1805, I found the birth of a daughter Ann, to Elijah
and Abigail Pye. Both were recorded in NL. There is nearly a 10 year gap
between marriage and Ann’s birth. Most likely there were 3 – 4 children born in
that time span but there seems to be no records of them. There are many named
Benjamin born in Devon during the years
1780-1810. In, Newfoundland ,
there were also many men named John, James, Charles, Samuel, etc. It is one
giant leap of faith, but so far, is the only one worth taking, when I theorize
that most of the Newfoundland Pyes might find their roots in Devon and Dorset . That’s not to say they were born there. Just like
today, when they needed to find work, they often traveled to where the work was
located. It is most likely that many of them were young and unmarried, able to
live a gypsy type life until they were ready to settle down. The hunt for a
woman named Blanch, either in the UK or in NL has proved fruitless.
My theory on this is that this is her middle name and she has been recorded
under her formal first name, which is unknown.
William Pye, POW on the Junius Brutus arrived in NL by 1782
where he was held in a POW camp until 1785/86, the end of the American
Revolution. We know only that he met and married Blanch Pye, a distant
relative, but we don’t know where
or when. Based on NL records, the following could be
their children:
1William and Blanch - children – William, Elijah and Samuel
(quite possibly more)
2William m. Mary Pike – Children – Thomas, Ann, William
Pike, Mary, John, and Samuel
{For these first two generations, William and William Pike
are the only two KNOWN individuals who have been handed down from earlier
generations as family history. The others fit a timeline that make them
possible, but not enough information is known about them.}
3William Pike m. Esther Ann Snow – Children – Abraham,
Susanna, James, Julia Ann,
Edmund, Edward, *John Charles, William, Maria and Moses
Then there was Elijah Pye who married Abigail Ash, Dec.
1796, in Carbonear. Since it is believed that William didn’t marry Blanch until
sometime after 1786, this Elijah would be too old to be William’s son. This
would indicate that another Pye family existed in or near Carbonear and was
contemporary with the William Pye family. Elijah had Ann, 1805, Jane, 1807, and
Samuel, 1810, Mary, 1812.
*John Charles is my gt. grandfather.
If anyone has info to add or correct any of this, please send an email to: thePyePlate@gmail.com
Marriage record for Elijah and Abigail Pye
Birth records for children of Elijah and Abigail Pye
FamilySearch.org
http://ngb.chebucto.org/
: Directories, Historical articles, Parish Records, Colonial Office, Voter’s
lists,
Saturday, September 28, 2019
Charles Pye (1684- 1748) Charles Co., Maryland
Charles, the eldest child of Col. Edward and Anne (Sewall,
Rozier) Pye. Inherited the estate of his father when Edward died in 1696. He
was also heir to the Mynde in Herefordshire ,
England . In May
1703 Charles had land at Pyes Chance and Pyes Hardshift surveyed. Pyes Chance
was 141 acres, leased to Isaac Gilpin and Pyes Hardshift was 323 acres, leased
to Thomas Tuckings. Sometime after this he left for England ,
leaving his brother Walter in charge of the properties in Maryland .
It is uncertain just when Charles left for England . He may
have made several trips back and forth but there is no record of this. He was
heavily involved with the support of King James II who lived in exile in France . James
II died in 1701, but the supporters continued to live on near Saint-Germain.
Since the Catholics were still not welcome in England ,
it was easier to maintain their faith and culture in France . Charles was married to Mary
Elizabeth Booth in St. Gervais ,
France . The
Booths were another Catholic family from Herefordshire supporting the Stuarts
who had chosen to remove to France .
It appears that their children were all born in either England or France . Those known children are:
1. Elizabeth
*2. Charles
3. Walter
**4. John H.
5. Ann, died
young
6. Henry
7. Nicholas
The son *Charles came to Cornwallis Neck, lived there for
some time then returned to England where he died before his mother, and leaving
his estate to his brother **John H. Charles never married.
John H. resided many years upon Cornwallis Neck, where he
died in 1772. This John married his 1st cousin, Henrietta Maria Pye.
Earlier research stated that John Pye had married Henrietta Maria Neale,
daughter of William Neale. This information is incorrect, as shown by the
deposition given by Henry Rozer in 1801.
In 1801, Henry Rozer (aka Rozier) deposed that in 1735, when
he was 10 years old, he was sent to Cornwallis Neck, in Charles Co., to visit
his uncle Charles Pye, before Henry was sent to England to further his education. {This
Charles was the grandfather of the Charles who lived at Cornwallis Neck in
1801.} Henry stated that Charles had married Miss Mary Booth. They had two
sons, Charles and John. Charles (Charles2, Edward1) was
born in England , came to Maryland to live for some years and then returned to England , where
he died unmarried. Charles’ brother John, married Henrietta Pye, daughter of
Walter Pye (son of Col. Edward Pye). He lived for many years on the land at
Cornwallis Neck. John died there in 1772 leaving six children, all minors:
1 Charles
2. Edward Joseph
3. Mary
4. Margaret
5. Anne
6. Elizabeth
After John’s death, the eldest child, Charles, was sent to England in 1772
into the care of his Grand Uncle James Booth, counselor, who undertook Charles’
education. Charles returned to Cornwallis Neck, in 1783, where he continued to
live.
At this point it seems I must end this line of Pye research.
The family history says that a William Pye, of Maryland
and Barbados , was impressed
‘off the docks’ in Barbados ,
to sail on the Junius Brutus, an American privateer. The Junius Brutus engaged
in several combat events, eventually being captured by the British during the
American Revolution. I received a copy of the crew list for the Junius Brutus and
there was a William Pye aboard. The family story says he was taken to Newfoundland where he
was put ashore, hoping to find an Uncle Henry Pye. (Both his father Charles and
his Uncle Walter had a brother named Henry, who seemed to disappear from MD
records. This could be the Henry William was hoping to find. If so, then who
was William’s father?) The ship did go to Newfoundland in October 1782, a British port.
He was imprisoned there until the end of the war. After he was released, he
married Blanch Pye, a distant cousin. Blanch’s father, was John Pye of Falmouth , England .
William’s existence on the ship and in Newfoundland
can be proven. What can’t be proven is his connection to the Maryland Pyes.
There is no record of his being in Barbados
or Maryland .
As mentioned before, earlier research showed John Pye married Henrietta Maria Neale,
daughter of William Neale and Mary Ann (Boarman) Brook. This has been proven
false through research done by the Boarman/Brook family and new documents that
proved John Pye married his 1st cousin Henrietta Maria Pye, daughter
of his Uncle Walter. Although the family history says William was of Maryland and Barbados , no records I’ve searched
have mentioned any William Pye. Perhaps William is a middle name, in which case
the formal name is unknown. It is also possible that William was from Devon , where many of the settlers came from. If so, that
puts a whole new slant on William’s ancestry.
All of the land, the original 5000 acres of the Cornwallis
estate purchased by Col.
Edward Pye, remained in the Pye family until John H.’s death in 1772. After
that it was divided amongst his survivors, who, over time, sold it off or
married into other families where the land was absorbed into the spouse’s
family. By 1890, there were no Pyes with any land holdings on Cornwallis Neck.
Most of the land formerly owned by the Pyes was sold to the
U.S. Gov’t from the late 1800’s to 1920. It remains, today, in government
ownership.
Bonnie B. Morgan, researcher
Wikipedia
A2A English Archives
Shirley Middleton Moller – researcher
Gary E. Young – researcher
The Record, April 1990, #48
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Col. Edward Pye (1640-1697) Charles Co., Maryland
After a major melt down of my computer, which took a few
days to straighten out and get it running smoothly again, I was finally able to
return to my research. I feared that some of it might have been lost, but the
geek gods were standing by me and all was well.
At this point in my journey through the Pye family, I should
be discussing John Pye, son of Sir Walter (1571-1636) and Joan (Rudhall) Pye.
Let me just say there are an unbelievable number of men by that name all living
in the same time frame. I tried to determine where John and his wife Blanch
(Lingen) Pye lived, but to no avail. The only info I have on them has been
handed down and is in no way reliable. They supposedly had a large family and that
one of their sons, Edward, went to Barbados sometime around 1680. It
was at this time that his cousin, Robert, died, leaving his Barbados estate to Edward.
Edward shows up around 1682 in Charles Co., Maryland . Information in
MD records says Edward was from Dymock and Boyce, in England and that his parents were
John and Blanch. I could find no trace of an Edward Pye in Dymock or Boyce, so
again, this may be inaccurate information.
In Maryland ,
Edward was on the Board of Deputy Governors from 1684-1688. He was also a
member of the Upper House and the Governor’s Council and a Colonel in the Army.
He married Anne (Sewall) Rozier, a widow of Benjamin Rozier. They had four
children, Charles, Henry, Walter and Anne. When Edward died in 1697, his
property was valued at £1200. The MD Bulldog mentions that Walter Pye, late of
the West Indies , was Edward’s son. Since
Edward’s children were all minors at the time of his death, this would not be
possible. This same Walter died in 1699 and lists Edward’s children as nieces
and nephews, showing that Walter was an uncle to the children and not a
brother. Also, it was discovered that the term “late of” doesn’t indicate
death, but instead shows the person is no longer in that place and has moved on
to another area.
Edward’s wife, Anne, was the d/o Henry and Jane (Lowe)
Sewall and the widow of Benjamin Rosier. By the time she married Edward, her father had died and her mother had
remarried. Her mother’s 2nd husband was Charles Calvert, Gov. of
Maryland and 3rd Baron Baltimore. Jane and Charles Calvert had four
children, half siblings to Anne. Anne and Benjamin Rozier had been married a fairly short time before Benjamin died.
At this point it’s good to remember that Edward Pye’s
grandfather, Sir Walter Pye, had been a financial supporter of the original
Lord Baltimore’s colony in Avalon, Newfoundland. This colony was meant to be a
refuge for the persecuted Catholics in England . With a Royal Charter, it
was a Palatinate, giving Baltimore
absolute authority. When a series of crises arose, Lord Baltimore sought out a
warmer, more suitable place to relocate. Not all of the settlers chose to go
with this group and remained in Newfoundland .
Lord Baltimore’s son, moved the colonists to the area of south Maryland , across the Potomac River from Virginia . The first ‘city’ was St. Mary’s
City, now a reconstructed, state run historic area with tours and a museum
complex.
Edward raised tobacco on his estate located on Cornwallis
Neck in Charles Co., MD. This was also called Mattawoman Neck. It had belonged
to Thomas Cornwallis, who died in 1688. His wife Penelope conveyed the 5,000
acre property to Capt. {at that time} Edward Pye. When Edward (now called Col. )
died in 1696, the laws of primogeniture prevailed and all 5,000 acres went to
his oldest son Charles. It didn’t appear that Edward’s will provided for his
wife Ann, suggesting that she predeceased him. No record for her death was
found.
Their children were:
1. Charles
(c1682-1758) m. Mary Booth c 1720 in St.
Gervais , France
– 8 children
2. Henry
(c1683-1716)
3. Walter
(1685-1749) m. Mary Taunt (aka Tant) 1703 Prince
George ’s Co. – 9 children
4. Ann
(c1689-c1720) m. Robert Needham in 1714, England – 3 children
Wikipedia
Court and Land Record 1690-1692
Proceedings of the Maryland
Court Provincial 1681-1683 Vol 70
The Record, Publication of the Historical Society of
Charles Co., Inc. April 1990
Monday, August 19, 2019
Sir Walter Pye II O’Mynde in MuchDewchurch, Herefordshire, England (1610-1659)
Son of Sir
Walter Pye and his wife Joann Rudhall
Married: Elizabeth
Sanders, d/o John Sanders
House of commons: 1628
MP for Brecon 1628-1629
Knighted June 29 1630
MP for Hereford
1640
Gentleman of the Privy Chamber by 1641
Lt.Col. of the Royal Horse 1642-1643
High Steward for Leominster
Royalist
Walter was bapt. Dec 10 1610, the first son of Sir Walter
and Joane (Rudhall) Pye. He was educated at Temple ,
entered 1626 and Exeter College , Oxford ,
1627. He married Elizabeth Sanders of Dinton, Buckinghamshire, in 1628. They
had 3 surviving children. Elizabeth
died in 1640. Walter remarried in 1646 to Mary Tyrrell, of Oakley,
Buckinghamshire.
Walter was burdened by the expense of his father’s funeral
and providing portions for his sisters’ marriages, causing him to sell large
amounts of land and timber in the late 1630’s. Even so, at the outbreak of the English
Civil War, he was still one of the wealthiest men in Herefordshire. He was the
last of the senior branch of this family to sit in Parliament. Due to his
loyalties to the crown and his support of the King, he was deprived of his
duties in 1648.
His children, Walter, Catherine and Robert remained Catholic
but Walter II embraced the Church of England. He died in 1659 and was buried in
St. Clement Dane, London .
His granddaughter, Elizabeth Pye, married Henry Gorges, a Tory, bringing the
remaining estate to him. His son, Walter III, remained loyal to the Stuarts,
living in exile, on the Continent, with them, where he was given the title Lord
Kilpec. King James II was in exile, therefore he had no authority to grant titles. This was in name only.
His son, Robert (1638-1680) married Meliora Drax, dau. of
James and Meliora (Horton) Drax. She was born c. 1650. The Drax were cousins of
Sir Fernando Gorges and Col. Christopher Coddington, Dep. Gov. of Barbados . James
Drax and his brother William, built Drax Hall in St. George, the site of the
first sugar cane plantation in Barbados ,
around 1637. William Drax left for Jamaica in 1669 where he
established another Drax Hall estate. Drax Hall in Barbados is still owned by the Drax
family and is still a working plantation today.
Drax Hall Plantation
In attempting to find the cousin of Robert Pye, called
Edward Pye, it was discovered that there were at least two by that name
involved in Barbados
sugar cane plantations. The first Edward is noted in 1640 and appears to be a
barrister, assisting with the legal aspects of Drax Hall. The second Edward
Pye, later known as Col. Edward Pye of Maryland ,
was not born until 1640, therefore was most certainly not the barrister. The
first Edward has alluded discovery of any information, although it was noted
that he was ‘of Dymock and Boyce.’ Maryland
records show Col. Edward to be the son of John and Blanche (Lingen) Pye of
Stoke Edith England and a first cousin of Robert of England and Barbados . Their
fathers were brothers.
To finish up this line of the Pye family, Robert and Meliora
(Drax) Pye had a daughter, Elizabeth. She married Henry Gorges, a cousin of Sir
Fernando Gorges, Founder of Province of Maine in New
England . Robert died when Elizabeth
was an infant. Robert’s wife sued for support. This appears in the Archives:
Meliora Pye,
widow and administratrix of Robt. Pye. v. Edwd. Pye, Peter Smyth, and Eliz. Pye (an infant), by
her guardian).: Goods and chattels and
debts of Robert Pye, deceased (plaintiff's late husband), an annuity payable out of the estate of Robt. to
Edwd. Pye (one of the defendants), and
the jointure lands of the plaintiff, lying in Mynde, Kilpeck, Much Dewchurch, and Saint Devereux; and touching a meadow called "The Long
Meadow," parcel of the manor of Kilpeck, and an annuity of 100l. payable to plaintiff (before her
marriage with Robt.) out of "some estate in the Island of Barbadoes " settled upon her by her father, Sir
James Drax, &c., &c.: Hereford
Date: 2 Jas 2
Held by: The National Archives, Kew (1687)
In the 1680 census for St.
George , Barbados ,
there is an Edward Pye, Esq. listed as a resident. This is most likely the
Edward Pye who soon made his way to Maryland
in 1682.
The History of Parliament
Journals of the House of Commons
barbados-beaches-plus.com/drax-hall-plantation
A History of the Mansions and Manors of Herefordshire
By Rev.
Charles J. Robinson, M.A. 1873
The Castles of Herefordshire and Their Lords
By Rev.
Charles J. Robinson 1869
T
Friday, July 12, 2019
Sir Robert Pye (1585-1662) of Faringdon, Berkshire, England
The second son of Roger and Bridget Pye of the Mynde was
Robert. Unlike his older brother, Sir Walter, he apparently did not attend a
university. He was a member of the Westminster Assembly and Scottish
Commissioners from 1642-1649. He was also listed in the Members of the House of
Commons as Sir Robert Pye (bap. 1585, d. 1662). Sir
Robert was Auditor of the Exchequer and was a Royalist in service to
King James I and King Charles I.
It is important to remember that there were several men by
the name of Robert Pye. Over the last few hundred years, they have often been mixed
up and sometimes grouped into one person. It is really important to check dates
of each one and all locations where they lived. Some Roberts were father and
son, some were cousins and some were more distantly related, or not connected
at all. For instance, Sir Robert’s brother Walter also had a son and a grandson
named Robert. Since they all lived at approximately the same time, it’s easy to
see how the confusion could happen.
This Robert is of the Mynde, MuchDewchurch, Herefordshire.
He married Mary Croker, daughter of John and Joan (Riddall) Croker of Batsford,
Gloucestershire, before 1620. Four children have been found for him, although
there may have been others.
1. Robert (b.
c. 1622-1662) – Was a Roundhead and supported Oliver Cromwell.
During the civil Wars, he laid siege to his father’s home and
eventually captured it. He married Anne Hampden, about 1642. After the Restoration, he
took little part in politics. He was the gt. gt. grandfather of Henry James Pye, Poet Laureate of
England, in 1790. Four children have been found for this
couple.
2. John
(1626-1721) of Hone, Derbyshire, married Rebecca Rainton. Four children have been
found for them. The Baronetcy of Pye of Hone was
created Jan. 13 1665 for him.
3. Mary
(c1620-c1706) – Mary was a politically active woman who married George Speke. In earlier
years, he became a ward of Sir Robert Pye and then, eventually, married
Robert’s daughter, Mary. He was a
politician serving as High Sheriff of Somerset and later as MP from
Somerset . They
had nine children, five of whom followed their parents’
politics.
4. Anne (c.
1621-?) married Edward Phelips. No further information.
Members of the Westminster
Assembly and Scottish Commissioners
from C. B. Van Dixhoorn, ed. The Minutes and Papers of the Westminster
Assembly, 1643-1652 (Oxford : Oxford University
Press, 2012), vol. 1:170 –175.
Members of the Westminster Assembly
Members of the House of Commons
A2A Scope and Content
Dictionary of National Biography
Wiki-Tree
Sunday, June 23, 2019
Sir Walter Pye (1571-1636) of the Mynde, Much Dewchurch, Hereforsdshire, England
Roger Pye of The Mynde (rhymes with tinned) was one of a
large clan of gentry in the western marches of Herefordshire. He gained some
distinction by marrying an Esquire’s daughter, Bridget Kyrle (pronounced Curl).
Their first son, Walter (1571-1636) was educated at Oxford
then went on to legal training at the Chancery Inns, then New Inn, then Middle Temple .
He qualified as a barrister in 1597. He married in 1602, Joanne Rudhall,
daughter of William and Margaret (Croft) Rudhall.
In 1616, Walter became attached to Sir George Villiers, who
later became the 1st Duke of Buckingham. It’s unclear what role
Walter played, but probably was a legal advisor. Walter’s younger brother, Robert,
also provided services for Buckingham, possibly as a financial manager. By this
time Walter was already a distinguished lawyer and with Buckingham’s influence,
he was appointed a circuit Judge for sessions in South
Wales . In 1620, Buckingham secured for him the position of
Attorney of the Court of Wards and Liveries. Not long after, Buckingham
presented Walter to King James I, during which time he was knighted.
King James I died in 1625 and was succeeded by his son,
Charles I. Buckingham continued to serve the new King but was extremely
unpopular with the people. He was stabbed to death in 1628.
Walter’s position as Attorney of the Court of Wards and
Liveries was a lucrative one and he continued in this post until his death in
1636. The puzzling thing is the amount of money he spent on land purchases,
improvements and building, which he began doing in 1602-1603, before he reached
any major, well-paying office. In these early years his annual income was only
in the 100’s. He did receive an inheritance when his father, Roger, died in
1611, but it still was a modest sum. By 1620, he had spent well over £7000 in land
purchases, which included Kilpec, buildings and improvements.
Sir Walter’s oldest son, Walter II, found himself in
difficult straights after paying the funeral expenses and sisters’ portions of
the inheritance by 1637. He was forced to sell some lands and timber. He
married Elizabeth Sanders in 1628. Between 1628 and 1640, he sat in the House
of Commons and supported the Royalist cause. Elizabeth died in 1640.There were three
children in this family and they remained Catholic and loyal to the Stuarts. Walter
eventually remarried to Mary Tyrrell. His staunch Royal stand and dwindling
finances forced him to sell Kilpec. They eventually joined the Stuarts in France where
they all lived in exile.
Walter II had a brother, Robert, b. 1638, who married
Meliora Drax (Drakes). Her father owned land in Barbados
and settled an annuity of £100 from the Barbados estate on her before she
married. See next installment for Robert Pye.
The children of Sir Walter and Joanne Rudhall Pye:
1. Margaret (c1603-?)
m. Fulke Walwyn in 1621 – 11 children, 3 died as infants
2. Bridget
(1605-?) m. Richard Chamberlayne in 1627 – This family or their
children may have moved to the Virginia
colonies.
3. Joyce
(1606 - ?) m. Henry Calverly; Henry was from Yorkshire . Four children
have been found for them, all christened in Calverly Yorkshire.
4. Ann
1608-c.1689) m. Henry Williams, who carried the titles of Sir and Baronet.
5. Roger
(1609-1609)
6. Walter
(1610-1659) m. Elizabeth
Sanders in 1628. They had 3 children before she died in 1640. He
married again to Mary Tyrell. Unknown if
there were any children from this 2nd marriage.
7. Alice (1612-1684) m. Henry
Lingen in 1628; a Royalist, was noted for his attachment to Charles I.
This couple had two sons and 15 daughters, but only two,
Frances and Alice, left issue.
8. William
(1613-1617)
9. John
(1614-1614)
10. James
(1616-1646) He is recorded on his father’s shrine in St. David’s,
Much Dewchurch, as Jacobus. The Catholics still used the Latin form of
names in this time period. No marriage info found for him.
11. Robert
(1617-1640)
12. Mary
(1618-?) m. Thomas Thompkins of Monington, in 1633. He was married
twice before and had several children with each wife. They lived
in Monington, Herefordshire. With Mary, he had five children.
13. John
(1620-1701) m. Blanch Lingen in c 1645. She is the sister of Henry
Lingen who married Alice Pye, sister of her husband. Hence, a brother and sister Lingen
married and brother and sister Pye. John attended Oxford and was a
student at Middle Temple in 1638.
It is reported that John and Blanch had 23 children. The name Blanch has carried on in the
Pye family for 6 to 7 generations. Their son
Edward joined the Maryland colony begun by Lord Baltimore. John died in 1701 and is buried in Hereford Cathedral.
14. Frances (1621-1701) m. aft 1635 Henry Vaughan
There are dozens of men
named Henry Vaughan but none have a wife named Frances . It’s
possible she used her middle name, which is an unknown. No info
found for this couple.
The King’s Servants: Office and Wealth: Families and
Individuals, The Civil Service of Charles I 1625-1642, G. E. Aylmer, 1961, p.
308-314
Alumni Oxonienses (Alumni of Oxford )
Wikipedia
Geni
Monday, June 3, 2019
Phebe Buck2 (1814-1881)
Phebe2 was the youngest child of Edward1
and Phebe Tower Buck. She married Leighton Card, Nov 25 1834, a farmer, in Dorchester NB.
His name is also spelled Layton .
They had 12 children: William3, Elizabeth3, George Buck3,
Maria3, John3 Wesley3, Sarah Ann3,
Mary Jane3, Clara3, Charles3, Benjamin Miles3,
Bedford Layton3.
1. William3
(1836-1895) married Esther Kent from PEI .
They had 10 children. After Layton and Phebe died, William and many of his children
moved to Clinton MA . He was a Hostler, which probably means
that he tended to and cared for horses, perhaps at a livery stable.
One of his sons was also a Hostler and another was a horse trainer. Both he and Esther
are buried in Woodlawn Cemetery , Clinton , MA .
2. Elizabeth3
(1838-1894) married Simon Peter Beach in 1872. They had four
children and lived in the Moncton ,
NB area. Simon died in 1883 at age 45 and Elizabeth died in 1894 at
age 56. No records were found for their deaths or
burials. The four children all married and appear to have stayed ion
the Moncton NB area.
3. George3
(1840-1906)(Buck was his middle name) married Rhoda Chase
c. 1860-61. They had 7 children. This family lived in Woodhurst
which is NE of Dorchester, NB. Both George and Rhoda died in 1900 and are buried in the cemetery at Woodhurst , NB.
4. Mariah3
(1842-?) married George Bowser in 1863. They had two children
and by the 1871 census, Mariah who was also called Maria and Mary, and the children were back
living with her parents. It states that Mariah is a
widow. It’s unclear how George
died. There seems to
be no grave or death report for him. He may have been lost at sea. No further information has been
found for Mariah.
5.
John3 (1844-1919) married in 1879 to Catherine Coyle of NB. They remained
in the Dorchester NB area, had five children, one died young.
John died of Pneumonia in 1919. John and Catherine were buried in
the St. Edward’s Catholic Cem., in Dorchester
NB. A couple
of the children were married in Moncton ,
NB.
6.
Wesley3 (1847-1912) Wesley remained single, living in NB until sometime
after 1891. Then he moved to Clinton
MA and by 1910 is found living in his sister’s,
Sarah Ann (Card) Boyce’s, household. She went by the
name Annie. This census gives no occupation for Wesley. He
died in 1912 from Chronic Nephritis and is
buried in Woodlawn Cem., Clinton
MA .
7.
Sarah Ann3 (1849-1919) Known by the name Annie, she first married Hiram
Chase on Jul 20 1869, the same date her younger sister, Mary
Jane, married. The Chases had a daughter, Lily Mary in 1870 and another
daughter in 1873. Hiram was an iron molder. He died at the age of 26 and is buried in Fairfield NB.
Annie married again, to
Harvey Boyce, in 1877. The Boyces had three children. The 1900 census says
Annie had 5 children and 5 children were still living.
A record for the 5th child has not been found as yet. Annie died in 1919 and
is buried in Woodlawn Cem., Clinton
MA .
8.
Mary Jane3 (1852-1925) married Ebenezer Cook in1869. It appears she used the name Jane
throughout her life. They had four children. Ebenezer was a Truck Man,
which could mean he was some sort of delivery
man. He died in 1924 and Jane died in 1925. They are both
buried in the Dorchester Rural Cem., in Dorchester
NB.
9.
Clara Card3 (1853- ?) married Isaac Beach in 1871. Sometime after they
married, they moved to Clinton
MA where Isaac became a Naturalized
citizen in 1888. Three children have been found for them,
although there could be more. Isaac died in 1920 and Clara, in
1935. They are both buried in Woodlawn Cem., Clinton , MA .
10.
Charles Card3 (1855-1955) married Mary Alice Crossman in 1878. They
had four children, however only the first born child, a son, survived
to adulthood. Mary died in 1900, the same year the last child
was born and died. Charles married again in 1906 to Annie Cole,
a spinster at age 42. There were no children showing for them
in the 1911 census and it can be assumed this couple had no issue. Charles
stayed in Dorchester all his life, lived to be
100 and is buried
there with his wives and children in the Dorchester Rural Cem.
11.
Benjamin Miles3 (1858-1935) married Sarah Jane Wry in 1877. She went
by the name Jane, although some records refer to her as Sarah
J. He went by the name Miles. They had 7 children and immigrated in 1886 to Clinton MA ,
where the last two children were born. Miles became a Naturalized
citizen. He was a teamster working for a carpet mill in his
earlier years. Later on, he worked at a stable. At least four of his children married and stayed
in MA. One went to ME and another to MD.
The last one disappeared and no
amount of tracking has found any
information. Jane died in 1931 and Miles died in 1935, in Danvers MA .
They are both buried in Woodlawn Cem., in Clinton MA .
Miles and Jane Card
12.
Bedford Layton3 (1860-1948) married Lois Ward in 1881 in Dorchester NB. Bedford was a
farmer in Woodhurst , NB , where they settled and
had 6 children. Some of the children moved to Clinton
MA and worked for the textile mills
and the rest stayed in Canada .
Bedford and
Lois are buried with Phebe Buck and Layton Card in the Woodhurst
Cem., Woodhurst NB.
Ancestry.ca
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Canadian
census 1851 – 1911
Find
a Grave
Birth,
death, marriage records
Letters
from Buck family members
Friday, May 10, 2019
James Richard Buck2 (1812-1874)
James Richard Buck2 was b. in Sackville , NB
and, later, became a farmer. He married Sarah Mitton in 1836 and they had 8
children. Sarah was born in Hull , Yorkshire , England .
Their children were:
1. Phebe
Elizabeth Buck3 (1838-1897) m. James Alexander Buck (They were
first cousins)
2. William
Edward Buck3 (1839-1887) m. Lucinda Jane Cole (They were first
cousins once removed)
3. Frances Maria
Buck3 (1841-1925) m. Albert Cook
4. James
Richard Buck3 (1845-1909) m. Theodora Woodworth
5. Charles
Albert Buck3 (1848-1914) m. Matilda Brown
6. John
Wilmot Buck3 (1849-1883) m. Sarah Augusta Buck
John
was a Master Mariner, Capt of the brigantine Bessie May. A newspaper
article states that he had returned from NY and was ill. His
brother William Edward was with him when he died. He left 4 small
children all under the age of seven. Guardianship was given to
James Richard Buck, his brother.
7. Lemuel
Allen Buck3 (1852-1914) m. Mary Wilmot
8. Sarah A.
Buck3 (1856-1861)
1. Phebe Elizabeth3 and James Alexander Buck3
were first cousins. Their fathers were
brothers. They had six children, 3 boys and 3 girls. They were married in 1859 and spent all their
lives in the Dorchester NB area. James was
a farmer. They are buried together in the Dorchester Cape Cem., in Dorchester ,
NB.
2. William Edward Buck3 and Lucinda (Lucindy)
Jane Cole4 were first cousins, once
removed. Lucinda’s mother, Catherine Buck Cole3 was a first cousin to William Edward Buck3. They were married
in 1866. William was a Master Mariner,
Captain of the Arabella. This couple
had a tragic life. Ten children were
born to them but only three survived to adulthood. In 1874, their third child, a two year old son, died.
In 1877, the three oldest living children
died, Jul 6, Jul 14 and Jul 16. A newspaper article says William lost three children from diphtheria, within
one week (sic), while he was away
at sea and that now his wife was ill. At this point all their children have died. Another son was born in Jun 1878 and died the following Nov. Another
son was born in Jan 1880 but died in Apr 1883. The first six children all died. Another daughter was
born in 1882 who lived to adulthood,
married and moved to Medford
MA . A son was born in 1884, lived to marry and have one daughter.
He died at the age of 26 and his daughter
died at age 7. Another son was born to
Lucindy in 1886 but died before
his first birthday. Child #10, was born in 1888, married, had four children and lived to the age of 80. William Edward, however, didn’t fare as
well. In Nov/Dec 1887, the Arabella went
down off the coast of Cape Cod in a violent storm. All hands were lost,
including my gt. grandfather.
3. Frances Maria Buck3 married Albert Cook, a
farmer, in 1865. They had eight children.
The first child died at the age of 5. Their oldest daughter never married. Three of their children did
marry and of the remaining three, one died
at the age of 24, unmarried. Their youngest daughter, Etta Cook married Walter Cole, the illegitimate
son of Mary Cole. They moved to Framingham , MA
around 1922. They both died from pneumonia, four days apart in 1929. Etta and Walter were 2nd cousins, once
removed.
4. James Richard Buck3 (Jr.) married Theodora
Woodworth in 1875. James was a farmer. He
was born in Sackville and Theodora was born in Hopewell . He
and Theodora had 9 children, one boy died at the age of 2. In 1883, when James’ younger brother John Wilmot
Buck3 was lost at sea, he became
guardian to John’s four young children, who were all under the age of 7. James and Theora’s family seemed
to stay in NB except for one daughter who went to Lynn , MA , married and raised a family there.
5. Charles Albert Buck3 married Matilda Brown in Brooklyn , NY ,
1872. He was a Master Mariner.
By 1873 they had settled in Hartford , CT , where their first child was born. They had 6 children, 2
boys and 4 girls. Only two of their children
married, giving them 4 grandchildren. By 1900, Charles was a RR Conductor. Both he and his wife are buried
in Cedar Hill Cem., in Hartford CT.
6. John Wilmot Buck3 married Sarah Augusta Buck4,
d/o George3 and Ann Baxter
Buck. They were first cousins, once removed. John was a Master Mariner, Captain of the brigantine Bessie May. He was home when
he died. His brother William Edward3, was with him at the time of his death. He left behind his wife and
four children under the age of 7: John
A.4, George F.4, Clara A.4, and Chester A4.
Guardianship of the children was
given to his brother James Richard3. A family story is told that his wife, known as Augusta ,
had a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized
in St. John , NB. She died there in 1894 from typhoid pneumonia. Guardianship of the children was
given to DeMille Buck4 (brother-in-law,
his wife’s brother) about 1891. George Buck4 went to live in Hartford
CT with his Uncle Charles Albert3 by
the 1900 US
census. Chester A4. was living with his Aunt Emma Buck4 Scurr, sister of DeMille4, in the 1901 Canadian census. No further
information on the other two children
John A3. and Clara A3.
7. Lemuel Allen Buck3 married Mary Wilmot in
1878. They were living with his brother,
James Richard, in 1881. He doesn’t appear in the 1891 Canadian census which might indicate they had already moved to the states. In 1900,
Lemuel, Mary and their three children: Mildred, William (he was born at sea off the coast of Brazil )
and Bertha were living in Hartford
CT. He was
listed as a Sea Captain. In 1903 Mildred died at the age of 17, The cause of death was not given. In 1910, Mary
indicated she had given birth
to four children and only two were living, William and Bertha. A name for the fourth child was not found.
8. Sarah A. Buck3 died when she was five years
old.
The next installment will discuss the last child of James
Richard Buck2 and will conclude the coverage of three generations of
the Buck family.
Canadian Census Reports 1840-1921
US Federal Census 1880-1930
Birth, Marriage and Death certificates or records
Find a Grave
Saturday, April 13, 2019
Ann Buck2 (Edward Buck1) (1800-1883) – 2nd generation
Ann was the third child of Edward1 and Phebe
Tower Buck. She is the sister of the previously posted Edward2 and
George2. She was born in Dorchester
NB and married Benjamin Simonton
there in 1819. Benjamin was a farmer from Portland
ME. Through his mother he was a
Mayflower Descendant of John Alden. This means his children and all descendants
of his are also Mayflower Descendants. Benjamin also served in the War of 1812.
They immigrated to Portland
ME in 1825. They had 15 children,
the first five born in New Brunswick .
The rest of the children were born in Portland ,
ME. Ann was on a list of
passengers arriving in Portland
ME in 1825. She had with her 4 or
5 children and an adopted orphan, age 5.
The children were (all surname Simonton): Mary Alden,
William Buck,
Ann Phoebe, Susan M., Jane T., Sarah M., Thomas B., Elizabeth ., James P.,
Charles McLellan, Caroline L., John L.,
George E., Olive A., Silas A., William L. George and Olive died by the
age of 2. The first William in the list was Ann’s brother and was adopted.
Ann’s mother died in 1822 leaving several small children behind. It seems
likely that Ann adopted him and took him to Maine . They remained in the Portland
ME area until about 1852.
In 1870, Benjamin and Ann were living in Munson , Illinois .
Their son Charles M. and his wife and family were living in the same household.
Nearby, another son Silas with his wife and family lived. They were all
involved in farming.
By 1880, Benjamin and Ann had moved to Franklin ,
Cass , Iowa
where they lived until they both died in the 1883. They are buried in the Wiota
Cem., Cass Co., Iowa .
Their son Thomas had moved to CA, where he worked as a carpenter.
A memorial to their son, Silas Simonton, was found on Find A
Grave:
Silas A. Simonton Biography and Obituary, Atlantic, Cass Co
IA
LATE ATLANTIC MAN HAD REMARKABLE CIVIL WAR RECORD
United States, Civil War and Later Pension Files, 1861-1917
Name: Silas A. Simonton
Rank:
Company: B
Regiment: 42
State: Illinois
Arm of Service: Infantry
Date of Filing:
State/Arm of Service:
Company/Regiment:
Publication Title: Organization Index to Pension Files of Veterans Who Served Between 1861 and 1900
NARA Publication Number: T289
Publisher: National Archives and Records Administration
Collection Title: Civil War Pensions
***************
S. A. Simonton Was Wounded Three Times and Served Term in Libby Prison
A civil war record of more than passing interest was that of the late Silas A. Simonton, former Atlantic man, descendant of John Alden and well known veteran of the historic conflict, who passed away at his home here this week. Not only did he serve for a time during the war in the historic Libby prison, undergoing the hardships of that Bastille, but in the nearly four years he served he was wounded three times and was in many of the conflict's worst engagements. He was a member of company B, 42ndIllinois
infantry, and enlisted July 28, 1861. He was born in Portland Me. ,
March 5, 1842, and when a young man moved to Henry Co IL where he enlisted. He
got a taste of the horrors of war at Farmington MS , December 31, 1862; Stone Ridge
TN , September 19, 1863; Missionary Ridge, May
24,1864; the siege of Atlanta ,
August 28, 1864; Lovejoy Station, November 29, 1864 and Franklin GA, December
12, 1864.
He was wounded atStone
Ridge TN , at Pine Tree Creek GA ,
and at Lovejoy Station GA.
REFUSED TO QUIT
He was honorably discharged from the service at the expiration of his term of service, September 16, 1864, but refused to quit and was in several engagements after his discharge.
MARRIED IN 1868
After leaving the service he went back to IL and was married to Clarissa Ann Turner, November 4, 1868. To this union four children were born.
The family came to Cass Co in 1872 and located on a farm south of Anita. In 1880 they moved toAtlantic
where they have since resided.
The wife and mother passed away March 13, 1920.
DESCENDANT OF JOHN ALDEN
He was a direct descendant of John Alden, being in the 8th generation from the famous colonial hero. Mr. Simonton lived a quiet, simple life but was honored and respected by a large circle of friends and neighbors. Although having passed thru hard experiences in the army and in the pioneer days, yet his health was unusually good through the years and his last illness lasted but five days. He passed away Monday, January 18, at the advanced age of 84 years, 10 months and 13 days.
LATE ATLANTIC MAN HAD REMARKABLE CIVIL WAR RECORD
United States, Civil War and Later Pension Files, 1861-1917
Name: Silas A. Simonton
Rank:
Company: B
Regiment: 42
State: Illinois
Arm of Service: Infantry
Date of Filing:
State/Arm of Service:
Company/Regiment:
Publication Title: Organization Index to Pension Files of Veterans Who Served Between 1861 and 1900
NARA Publication Number: T289
Publisher: National Archives and Records Administration
Collection Title: Civil War Pensions
***************
S. A. Simonton Was Wounded Three Times and Served Term in Libby Prison
A civil war record of more than passing interest was that of the late Silas A. Simonton, former Atlantic man, descendant of John Alden and well known veteran of the historic conflict, who passed away at his home here this week. Not only did he serve for a time during the war in the historic Libby prison, undergoing the hardships of that Bastille, but in the nearly four years he served he was wounded three times and was in many of the conflict's worst engagements. He was a member of company B, 42nd
He was wounded at
REFUSED TO QUIT
He was honorably discharged from the service at the expiration of his term of service, September 16, 1864, but refused to quit and was in several engagements after his discharge.
MARRIED IN 1868
After leaving the service he went back to IL and was married to Clarissa Ann Turner, November 4, 1868. To this union four children were born.
The family came to Cass Co in 1872 and located on a farm south of Anita. In 1880 they moved to
The wife and mother passed away March 13, 1920.
DESCENDANT OF JOHN ALDEN
He was a direct descendant of John Alden, being in the 8th generation from the famous colonial hero. Mr. Simonton lived a quiet, simple life but was honored and respected by a large circle of friends and neighbors. Although having passed thru hard experiences in the army and in the pioneer days, yet his health was unusually good through the years and his last illness lasted but five days. He passed away Monday, January 18, at the advanced age of 84 years, 10 months and 13 days.
I apologize for the lack of pictures but didn't find any that were legible enough to post.
Next on the list is James Richard Buck, the youngest son of
Edward and Phebe Tower Buck.
Find a Grave
Familysearch.org
Wikipedia
History of Cass Co., Iowa
Correspondence with Richard Scheumaker, a Buck/Simonton descendant
Of Omaha , NE
Military Records
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