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5351 == Biography ==This person was created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree.ged on 05 July 2010. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability.

=== Birth ===
:: User ID: C58A06CE-34E1-4E9A-AF6D-F3D4E44541B3
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF1089
:: Date: 1533
:: Place: England

=== Death ===
: Death:
:: User ID: 836B7030-430A-4CD7-A5D4-D7C8DAA0AA96
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF1821

== Sources ==
<references />
: Source: [[#S-2122066708]]
:: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461924647

: Source <span id='S-2122066708'>S-2122066708</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2122066709]]
: Title: Ancestry Family Trees: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.: Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.* Source: <span id='S1'>S1</span> Record ID Number: MH:S1 User ID: D7EE7E0D-6B73-4CFB-8669-A0DEE2892A23 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461924647 * Source: <span id='S1'>S1</span> Record ID Number: MH:S1 User ID: D7EE7E0D-6B73-4CFB-8669-A0DEE2892A23 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461924647

===Acknowledgements===* WikiTree profile Dahr-3 created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree_2b.GED on Sep 5, 2011 by [[Warner-33 | Michael Robert Warner]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Dahr-3 Changes page] for the details of edits by Michael Robert and others.
* WikiTree profile Dahr-2 created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree.ged on Aug 29, 2011 by [[Warner-33 | Michael Warner]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Dahr-2 Changes page] for the details of edits by Michael and others.
<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text, including this note. Be bold and experiment! If you make a mistake you can always see the previous version of the text on the Changes page. --> 
Dahr, Freda (I351)
 
5352 == Biography ==Thomas was born 23 jan 1684 in New Shoreham, Newport, Rhode Island, Colony. He is a son of [[Dodge-493|Tristram Dodge]] and [[Dickens-4|Dorcas Dickens]].

Baptism November 16, 1886

Descendants of Thomas Dodge
Thomas Dodge b: January 23, 1683/84 in New Shoreham, Newport Co., RI Colony d: July 14, 1755 .. +Susannah Hutchings b: December 28, 1690 in of Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony m: Abt. 1712 in near Cow's Neck, Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony? d: Bef. 1790 Burial: April 11, 1778# ........ 2 William _Dodge b: May 15, 1714 in Cow's Neck, Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony # ........ 2 Mary Dodge b: March 8, 1715/16 in Cow's Neck, Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony ............ +Thomas _Thorn b: April 14, 1718 in Flushing, Queens Co., Long Island, NY Colony m: October 2, 1738 in near Flushing, Queens Co., Long Island, NY Colony? d: September 5, 1778 in Cow's Neck, Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony # ........ 2 Amos Dodge b: September 2, 1719 in Cow's Neck, Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony # ........ 2 Thomas Dodge II b: January 17, 1721/22 in Cow's Neck, Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony d: May 12, 1789 ............ +Sarah _Onderdonk b: June 6, 1722 in Jamaica, Queens Co., Long Island, NY Colony m: February 1748/49 in near Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony? d: July 9, 1800 # ........ 2 Unknown Dodge b: Abt. 1725 in near Hempstead, Nassau Co., Long Island, NY Colony? possible son of Thomas

== Sources ==
<references />* "James Bailey and Norman Dodge, Dodge Family of New Shoreham, Rhode Island; A Genealogy of the Descendants of Tristram Dodge, (Dodge Family Association), Pg. 11,16"
* Submitter Info Unavailable, Brøderbund Software, Inc., World Family Tree Vol. 2, Ed. 1, (Release date: November 29, 1995), "CD-ROM," Tree #6090, Date of Import: May 26, 1999. "Electronic," Date of Import: Jul 6, 1999.
Author: Steven Mix 
Dodge, Thomas (I326)
 
5353 == Biography ==Tobias Dircksz Keyser was buried on 18 September 1655 in Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands. <ref>see image death notice</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />* Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Koehler-616|Marlena (Koehler) Lidell]] 
Keyser, Tobias Dircksz (I443)
 
5354 == Biography ==Twin of Henry. Both boys died shortly after birth.<ref name=GrundyPA>Grundy, MJP. ''Paxson Family in Colonial Bucks County''. online [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~paxson/PaxsonCol.html rootsweb] (3/3/2015)</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />
<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text, including this note. Be bold and experiment! If you make a mistake you can always see the previous version of the text on the Changes page. --> 
Paxson, William (I736)
 
5355 == Biography ==William Dodge, son of Tristram Dodge, was born about 1651.<ref name="TRWDodge">Theron Royal Woodward. ''Dodge Genealogy Descendants of Tristram Dodge''. Chicago, Illinois: Lanward Publishing Co., 1904. [http://archive.org/stream/cu31924029840448#page/n11/mode/2up Woodward -Dodge]</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />Book: Book Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island Comprising of Three Generations of Settlers Who Came before 1690, by John Osborne Austin, Originally Printed 1887, Copied 1967, p. 66 Tristam Dodge, These are the only Children of Tristam Dodge, Sr. listed in this book.
#John Dodge, Sr. I (1644-1733), m. Mary Enos (Innes)
#Tristram Dodge, Jr. II (1646-1733), m. Dorcus Dickens
#Israel Dodge, (1648 - ?), m. Hannah Weeks
#William Dodge, Sr. (1650-1731), m. Sarah George
#Ann Dodge, (1660-1723), m. Hon. John Rathbone, Jr. II
::These are the only children listed as Tristram Dodge, Sr. I's.
::See uploaded page
* <span id='French'></span>French, Miss Elizabeth. ''Genealogical Research in England'', [[Space:NEHGR|The New England Historical & Genealogical Register]] (NEHGS, Boston, Mass., 1915) Vol. 69, [https://archive.org/details/newenglandhistor69wate/page/28 Page 28] 
Dodge, William (I333)
 
5356 == Biography ==William was born about 1734, the son of Andreas Keyser and Hannah Lucken. William married Maria Salome Unverzagt in 1758 and they were the parents of my 4th great-grandfather, Andrew Keyser. William passed away in 1786.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/keyserfamilydesc00keys/page/142 ''The Keyser family : descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam''] by Charles Shearer Keyser, William F. Fell & Company, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1889.</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, William (I420)
 
5357 == Biography ==William was born in 1435. William Lovelace ... He passed away in 1496. <ref>Entered by Audrey Neva, Apr 26, 2012</ref>
William LOVELACE was born about 1435. He died in 1495. He signed a will on 24 Jul 1495. He had an estate probated on 3 Sep 1495. In his will requested to be burried in the church of St. Michael at Queenhithe within London. Bequests to wife Lore, sons John & William and daus. MArgaret and Agnes. gave wife use of lands within shire of Kent and after her decesse John myne oldest son shall have the tener ment called Heivr (Hever in Kingsdown)... and for lack of heirs to remayne to William Lovelas his brother, ...And after the decesse of my wife William Lovelas my sonne shall have all my landes in the parish of Mapilscompe and Fremyngham, as well as all the landes that I bought of John Jyncok of Dartford, of Robert a Woode of the parish of Aisshe (ash); and tenement called Catottys which I bought of William Radok, prest. If he dies without heirs shall remain to my son John... executer Reynold Peckham, squier.

== Sources ==
<references />* [[Dilorenzo-28 | Audrey Neva]], firsthand knowledge. Click the Changes tab for the details of edits by Audrey and others.
*http://miles-shute-kouns-families.com/getperson.php?personID=I6506&tree=Mosby 
Lovelace, William (I85)
 
5358 == Biography ==William was born in 1783. He is the son of [[Keyser-20|Andrew Keyser]] and [[Palmer-212|Mary Palmer]].
The date of birth comes from the Andrew and Mary Palmer Keyser Family Bible. The supposition is that this son William died at birth or early in infancy. The next child was also a son named William and hence we designate him as William Keyser II to show respect for the brother that died and of course to be historically and genealogically correct.
<ref>
Source was added by [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]] on 23 Aug 2018.
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, William (I410)
 
5359 == Biography ==William was born in 1819. He is the son of [[Keyser-291|William Keyser]] and [[Workman-1024|Margaret Workman]].
<ref>
Unsourced family tree handed down to [[Magyar-2|Skip Magyar]].
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references /> 
Keyser, William (I401)
 
5360 == Biography ==William, born in 1631 or 1632; probably married, Oct 12, 1660, Catherine Morgan. <ref>Musser and allied families : a genealogical study with biographical notes [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.Original data: Musser and allied families : a genealogical study with biographical notes. New York: The Company, 1941</ref> [https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/16315/dvm_GenMono002841-00062-1?pid=69&backurl=https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/89279162/person/342062887676/gallery&usePUB=true&_phsrc=bHc16988&usePUBJs=true#?imageId=dvm_GenMono002841-00063-1]



== Sources ==

<references />
* Source: <span id='S-781676472'>S-781676472</span> Repository: [[#R-1197866539]] Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Page: Ancestry Family Tree Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=65838841&pid=1036 * Repository: <span id='R-1197866539'>R-1197866539</span> Name: Ancestry.com
Author: Kern Brogan 
Gorsuch, William (I50)
 
5361 == Biography==
George Workman...<ref>sources are needed for his birth, death
</ref>

Census Record Bath, Kentucky, United States in 1830 George Workman.<ref>United States Census, 1830," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XHGG-THV : 18 August 2015), George Workman, Bath, Kentucky, United States; citing 194, NARA microfilm publication M19, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 33; FHL microfilm 7,812.
</ref>

== Sources ==
<references />
This person was created through the import of Workman _ Bree(2).ged on 20 January 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability.
[http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17332090&pid=496627414 Ancestry Family Trees] 
Workman, George (I540)
 
5362 == Family and Education ==
1st s. of William Lovelace by Alice Stevens, wid. of one Shawe. educ. G. Inn 1548, called 1551. m. (1) Anne, da. of Robert Lewis†, alderman of Canterbury, 2s. 1da.; (2) Mary, da. of Sir Thomas White of South Warnborough, Hants, wid. of Thomas Caryll, 1da. suc. fa. 1540.2
Offices Held
Counsel to Cinque Ports 1557, to Canterbury 1559, to Faversham by 1564; j.p. Kent from 1561, q. from 1564, many other counties from c.1573; reader, G. Inn 1562, 1567; serjeant-at-law by 1567; justice of assize by Dec. 1571.3
Biography
Lovelaces were living at Bethersden as early as the fourteenth century, and Lovelace used the proceeds of his legal career to buy more land in his county. At his death he held the manor of Lydden Court near Sandwich as well as property in Bethersden, Chartham, Smarden and Newnham. In Canterbury he possessed the house and site of the Grey Friars and a large house in the parish of St. Alphage. He also bought the hospital of St. Lawrence outside the city, part of which was claimed by the Crown as concealed land.
His parents died when he was very young, and his father’s will did not allow him to inherit the family property until he was 26. By that time he was probably already a barrister and practicing lawyer. He may have been the ‘Mr. Lovelles’ who in November 1554 attended Lord Cobham at Rochester when Cardinal Pole returned to England, but apart from his appointment as legal counsel to the Cinque Ports in 1557, no references have been found to him before Elizabeth’s reign.
In 1559 he was appointed to the ecclesiastical commission which visited the south-western dioceses, covering, according to Bishop Jewel, about 700 miles. During the next few years he was active mainly in Kent. He wrote the detailed reports for the commissioners who in the autumn of 1561 decided that £2,000 was needed to repair Rochester bridge, and was one of the first to pay his assessment of £5 towards the project. At Canterbury and Faversham he seems to have been a popular adviser: in 1564 or 1565 the Faversham corporation gave him a dinner ‘for his aid given by his counsel unto the town’, and in addition to his annual fee of £2 he received presents of sugar and wine. Canterbury, although here the borough authorities had more great men to ‘gratify’, sent him porpoises and other gifts of food at various times. The corporation’s subscription to the Act of Uniformity in 1569 stated that they were acting ‘by the advice of their counsel, Serjeant Lovelace’.4
The Cinque Ports during Elizabeth’s reign provided their lawyers with plenty of work. Letters from Lovelace survive about a number of their disputes and claims to ancient privileges. In February 1571, he, Roger Manwood and John Jeffrey gave their opinion that the Cinque Ports’ charters exempted the inhabitants from the payment of loans by privy seal; four years later he exerted himself to get favourable terms for the Ports in a quarrel with the city of London; and, probably about the same time, he joined the lieutenant of Dover castle and other commissioners in examining new ordinances drawn up by the borough of Rye. In all these matters he acted in conjunction with the lord warden, Lord Cobham, but when in 1573 differences developed between Cobham and the Ports, Lovelace wrote a tactful letter advising the town authorities to submit—describing himself ‘as one that for your yearly fee [originally 20s. but recently increased to 40s.] ought to respect your doings’; he suggested that a guestling or assembly should be called to discuss the matter. Seeing that it would be impossible to further their suits in the courts unless Cobham gave his support, Lovelace hoped that his clients would take his writing in good part.
After serving for some time as justice of assize, mainly in the south and west of England, it is clear that in 1572 Lovelace expected early promotion to the bench. For some reason this was not forthcoming. In fact his career was prejudiced by his unsuccessful rivalry with Manwood, who took a leading part in the attacks on his title to St. Lawrence’s hospital, and after Lovelace’s death continued the case against his son, making a personal profit of £600 from the final award. Still, as the two leading Kent lawyers of the day they co-operated on a number of important commissions and at Archbishop Parker’s funeral in June 1575 they walked together as mourners.5
Lovelace was an active Member of Parliament. In 1566 he was appointed to two committees to consider a proviso to the bill concerning bishops (7 Nov.) and the Lords’ amendments to the bill concerning informers (19 Dec.). While speaking in the subsidy debate on 7 Apr. 1571, arguing ‘that every loyal subject ought to yield to the relief of the prince and that without any condition or limitation’, Lovelace took the opportunity to propose three reforms:
First, the abuse of purveyors, wherein he had to desire the Council and the masters of the Household to consider of it ... and in his opinion it should not be amiss to take away the purveyors, and to limit every county to a proportionable rate, so should her Majesty be better served, and the commons eased.
His other two proposals referred to the reform of the Exchequer. He was appointed to the subsidy committee on 7 Apr. A week later, when the House was debating Carleton’s bill about religion, Lovelace intervened to point out that judges were unable to deal successfully with cases involving clerical dispensations and licences for non-residence, since
by the ancient laws of the realm and by order the certificate of the bishop is to be expected, who whether he will certify against himself or his own doings, it is not to be doubted that he will not. And so the whole travail in making of the law is nothing.
On 19 Apr. 1571 the bill against usury was before the House. Lovelace condemned usury and covetousness as ‘these great evils to the which man of his nature is born and made prone and too apt’, but disliked the general nature of the bill and the severity of the proposed penalties.
Withal, he added, that to prohibit the ill of covetousness in generality were vain, void and frivolous, since that the speech and the act itself is indefinite, comprehending all kind of our actions and doings ... When we may not reach to the best, farthest and uttermost, we must do as we may say, by degrees, as to say there shall be no sleight or deceit in making of this kind or that kind of wares, that the husbandman shall till his arable land, he shall not keep above such a number of sheep, that there shall be no forestalling, regrating, etc. and this in particularity ... whereupon he concluded that there should be degrees in the punishment of usury, as he that should take so much to lose or be punished thus, he that should take more more deeply.
His committee work in 1571 included topics such as returns (6 Apr.), fraudulent conveyances (11 Apr.), the order of business (21, 26 Apr.), vagabonds (23 Apr.) and respite of homage (27 Apr., 2, 17 May).
On 20 May 1572 Lovelace spoke on the bill against vagabonds and was appointed to the committee on 22 May:
Of all people vagabonds the worst. Impiety to give them any thing. They have such devices to deceive men, and their clamours be so great, as it moveth many to pity them, and yet most of them none other but thieves.
He extolled the example of Worcestershire, where no vagabond had been brought before the j.p.s at the last assizes although the county was well populated:
This there brought about especially by the appointing one special person to search for them. He goeth to all fairs and markets, where if he find any he carrieth them to the justices at his own costs and charges; he seeth that they receive ... punishment; and at his like costs and charges seeth them placed according to the statute, and findeth means that they be from time to time set on work sometimes by one and sometimes by another. And for the same hath a competent living allowed him in the shire. And so concludeth that he wisheth the like provision to be made in this statute.
On 3 June 1572 Lovelace spoke in support of the bill against fraudulent conveyances, moved to speak, he said, by ‘the number of clients which come to him, being greatly endangered and almost undone hereby’. He was appointed to the committee the same day. On 28 May he was named to committees concerning recoveries, and Mary Queen of Scots. In a discussion about a certain clause in the bill against the Queen of Scots (7 June), he reminded the House that the words of the clause were ‘only to be considered according to the lawyers’ phrase and not to any logical sense’.
During the 1576 session Lovelace focused all his attention on committee work, and no speeches have been found in his name. His committees included the following topics, mostly of a legal nature: the subsidy (10 Feb.), fines and recoveries (13 Feb., 7 Mar.), bastardy (15 Feb.), jeofails (15 Feb.), privilege cases (16, 28 Feb.), sheriffs (18 Feb.), the butlerage and prizage of wines (21 Feb.), the county palatine of Chester (25 Feb.), the confirmation of letters patent (25 Feb.), William Isley’s debts (27 Feb.), trials by juries (28 Feb.), cloth and clothiers (1, 9 Mar.), the inning of salt marshes (6 Mar.), benefit of clergy (7 Mar.), collateral warranties (7 Mar.), fraudulent conveyances (8 Mar.) and the justices of the Queen’s forests (8 Mar.).6
He was on circuit in the summer of 1576, and in good health in the July of that year. He died in London 23 Mar. 1577, evidently not from natural causes, as in May Henry Binneman bought a licence to print The Brief Course of the Accidents of the Death of Mr. Serjeant Lovelace, no copy of which has been found. The will, which left £200 to each of his two daughters and a £60 annuity to the widow, divided Lovelace’s non-entailed lands between his two sons William and Thomas, both of whom were under age. In addition to generous legacies to servants, £6 13s. 4d. was to be distributed to the poor of Canterbury at his burial. Two local ‘hospitals’ or almshouses also benefited. A codicil set up a special trust to settle heavy debts, probably arising from the purchase of the St. Lawrence property. Lovelace was buried, as he asked, in the nave of Canterbury cathedral: his effigy there, showing him in lawyer’s robes, remained until the beginning of this century.7
== Source == Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1558-1603, ed. P.W. Hasler, 1981

== Notes ==

1. Did not serve for the full duration of the Parliament. 2. Vis. Kent (Harl. Soc. xlii), 125-6; (lxxiv), 65; (lxxv)l 64; Arch. Cant. x. 189, 197; DNB (Lovelace, Richard); Vis. Hants (Harl. Soc. lxiv), 82. 3. Indexes of Great White Bk. and of Black Bk. of the Cinque Ports, 253; Cantenbury burmote bk. 1542—78, f. 127; Arch. Cant. x. 198 n; Dugdale, Origines Juridiciales, 294; HMC 9th Rep. pt. 1, p. 156. 4. DNB (Lovelace, Richard); Lansd. 44, f. 40 seq.; C142/181/121; Arch. Cant. x. 197, 198, 200-2; xvii. 217-27; CSP Dom. 1547-80, p. 348; 1581-90, p. 286; APC, v. 83; Strype, Annals, i(1), p. 248; Zurich Letters, ser. 1 (Parker Soc.), 39; HMC 9th Rep. pt. 1, 156. 5. CSP Dom. 1547-80, p. 407; HMC 13th Rep. IV, 25, 38-45 passim; Cinque Ports black bk. ff. 3, 5; Strype, Parker, ii. 168, 433; Lansd. 44. f. 40 seq.; Arch. Cant. x. 201-2. 6. CJ, i. 76, 80, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 90, 97, 98, 99, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 111, 112, 113; D’Ewes, 133, 156, 158, 159, 160, 167, 173, 178, 179, 181, 184, 213, 219, 220, 221, 247, 248, 250, 251, 253, 254, 255, APC, viii. 70, 371, 375; Flenley, Cal. Reg. Council, Marches of Wales, 143; Trinity, Dublin, anon. jnl. ff. 7, 23, 32; Trinity, Dublin, Thos. Cromwell’s jnl. ff. 29, 48, 55, Cott. Titus. F.I. ff. 129 seq. 7. Reg. St. Alphage, Canterbury, ed. Cowper, 202; PCC 15 Daughtry; Arch. Cant. x. 200.

== Local History Notes ==
[1] William Lovelace c.1527 - 1577, sometimes called Serjeant Lovelace, obtained a grant of arms in 1573. This is noted in the following article which is devoted mainly to his son, Sir William Lovelace 1561 - 1629 and which is quoted on his Profile:
https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1604-1629/member/lovelace-sir-william-1561-1629
The same article also tells us that the Lovelace family had settled in Bethersden by 1247 and that they bought the manor in Bethersden which was later known by their name 120 years later in 1367. The house now known as "Lovelace" stands on the site of the former Lovelace Manor or Lovelace Place. This site lay in the Hundred of Chart. I aim to show that Serjeant William Lovelace was associated with the Manor of Barbodinden or Berbodynden, and that this lay not in Chart Hundred but in the Hundred of Blackborne (which covered the southern part of Bethersden parish).


[2] The book referred to in the following link :
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=GB5DAAAAcAAJ&pg=PP30&lpg=PP30&dq=barbodynden&source=bl&ots=GpfMmNMAfy&sig=ACfU3U2-XaCFydjPe0peIlWy_Sk09tCYmg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwik5_3dnsfkAhUJZcAKHW3xAa4Q6AEwAXoECAYQAQ#v=onepage&q=barbodynden&f=false
includes the entry: Barbodynden. De Willelmo Lovelace, Arm. occasionato ad offendendum quo Titulo tenet Manerium de Barbodynden, in Comitatu Kanciae. Paschae recorda. 13 Eliz. Rotulo 25. This can only refer to Serjeant William Lovelace and suggests that he was known at that time as "of Barbodynden".
[3] A register made in 1346/1347 called "Assessments in Kent for the Aid to Knight the Black Prince" records on page 141 a reference to John son of William of Berbodyndenne, and the entry is included under the Hundred of Blakebourne (or Blackborne). See: https://www.kentarchaeology.org.uk/Research/Pub/ArchCant/010%20-%201876/010-13.pdf
[4] In 1389 a reference was made to "a pasture in the parish of Halden called 'Berbodynden'. " This pasture was probably adjacent to the parish boundary and adjoining the manor of Barbodynden and the parish of Bethersden. (It was common practice to name peripheral fields after adjoining properties or parishes.) See this link:

http://www.belnapfamily.org/CFR_v10_Richard_II_p282-283.pdf .

My contention, therefore, is that the Lovelace family owned the manor of Barbodinden/Berbodynden which lay in the parish of Bethersden and in the Hundred of Blackborne. Either this was the Manor they purchased in 1367 or the latter was a separate Manor, name unknown, which was later called by their surname, That may more likely, since the manor house called Lovelace was in Chart Hundred. However, another possibility is that the Manor lay in Blackborne Hundred but they chose to build a new residence on a different site in Chart Hundred, closer to the village centre.
When Serjeant Lovelace's son, Sir William Lovelace, drew up his Will in 1628, he stated that the house and fifty acres of land called Barboddenden were then in the tenure of Thomas Waterman.
Where was the Manor of Barbodinden? It seems likely to me that it may be identified with Old Chequertree which is shown on the O.S. map of 1871 as Chequertree House, not that which is now known as Chequertree Farm, but right beside the High Halden boundary. Alternatively, it could be identical with Pin House on the site of what is now called Green Lane Farm. Other possibile locations are the properties now called Potten Farm or Winder Farm. Wherever it was, it must have adjoined the High Halden parish boundary as shown in [4] above.[[Oliver-4952|Oliver-4952]] 07:26, 12 September 2019 (UTC)
Author: John Akard 
Lovelace, William (I80)
 
5363 === Biography ===

: Occupation: Sheriff of Hertfordshire.

== Sources ==
<references />* Richardson, Douglas. Everingham, Kimball, G., Editor. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Vol. III, pg 231, #15. Salt Lake City, Utah. 2013. 
Pulter, Edward (I154)
 
5364 === Biography ===

=== Sources ===
<references />
: ''' Acknowledgements '''* WikiTree profile Sandys-53 and Sandys-105 were created through the import of Frank Walter Sands_ Family Tre.ged on Nov 14, 2011 by [[Sands-185 | Frank Walter Sands]].

See also:* [http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=25971230&pid=1777981023 Ancestry.com. Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.]* [http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=25971230&pid=1929920166 Ancestry.com. Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.] This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
Author: Carol Van Sickle 
Sandys, William (I159)
 
5365 === Biography ===
{{British Isles Aristo|place=England}}
{{England Sticker|Worcestershire}}
Miles was born at 12 o'clock in the morning on the 29 Mar 1563, the son of [[Sandys-16|Edwin Sandys]] and [[Wilford-64|Cecily Wilford]]. <ref>"England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NP3J-B2F : 11 February 2018, Myles Sandys, 31 Mar 1563); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 577,577.</ref> He was baptised at Hartlebury, Worcestershire on 31 Mar 1563.
=== Sources ===
<references />
See Also:*History of Parliament Online [http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1604-1629/member/sandys-sir-miles-1563-1645]

*[[Wikipedia:Sir_Miles_Sandys,_1st_Baronet]]
*A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire.p 472 [https://www.ancestry.ca/interactive/48558/ExtinctPeerages-001269-472/399814?backurl=https://www.ancestry.ca/family-tree/person/tree/76453340/person/320082260546/facts/citation/940262039873/edit/record]
* http://www.thepeerage.com/p57249.htm#i572490




==Acknowledgements==* WikiTree profile Sandys-70 created through the import of Frank Walter Sands_ Family Tre.ged on Nov 14, 2011 by [[Sands-185 | Frank Walter Sands]]. 
Sandys, Myles (I158)
 
5366 === Name ===
: Name: Edward /Parrish/
:: Source: [[#S0133130]]
: Name: Edward /Parrish/<ref>Source: [[#S-2050775427]] Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: [http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=13232476&pid=404932484]</ref>

=== Birth ===
:: Date: 1600
:: Place: , Yorkshire, England
:: Source: [[#S0059490]]
:: Source: [[#S0059492]]
:: Source: [[#S0059488]]
:: Source: [[#S0120354]]

=== Death ===
:: Place: Anne Arundel, Or Baltimore, Md
:: Source: [[#S0059490]]

=== Event ===
:: Type: Ancestral File Number
:: Place: 1DD9-WB2
:: Source: [[#S0059490]]

=== CHRISTENING ===
: CHRISTENING
:: Place: Settled In, Elizabeth City, Va
:: Source: [[#S0059490]]
:: Source: [[#S0059492]]
:: Source: [[#S0059488]]
:: Source: [[#S0120354]]

=== Marriage ===

: Husband: [[Parrish-92|Edward Parrish]]
: Child: [[Parrish-93|Edward Parrish]]
:: Relationship to Father: Natural
:: Relationship to Mother: Natural
: Child: [[Parrish-90|Edward Parrish]]
:: Relationship to Father: Family member
:: Relationship to Mother: Private
: Marriage:
:: Date: 1640
:: Place: , Yorkshire, England
:: Source: [[#S0059490]]
:: Source: [[#S0059492]]
:: Source: [[#S0059488]]
:: Source: [[#S0120354]]


* Marriage of <ref name="Marriage">[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=1624&h=5561168&tid=21660137&pid=1179409624&hid=34692960018&usePUB=true&_phsrc=kui63&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true]<br> London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812. Birth, Marriage & Death. Name: Edward Parrish. Spouse: Dorothy Kerton. Marriage: 7 Jan 1631 - St Benet Paul's Wharf, London, England (Need to research more.)</ref>
* Immigration of Edward Parish, 1635, Virginia.<ref>[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=2063&h=11510&tid=21660137&pid=1179409624&hid=36505763718&usePUB=true&_phsrc=kui63&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true] Virginia Immigrants, 1623-1666. Immigration & Emigration. Name: Edward Parish. Arrival: 1635</ref>
* Immigration of Edward Parish, 1655, Maryland.<ref>[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=7486&h=1392584&tid=21660137&pid=1179409624&hid=33517141160&usePUB=true&_phsrc=kui64&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true]U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Immigration & Emigration. Name: Edward Parrish. Arrival: 1655 - Maryland </ref>
* Baptism of Edward Parrish, 29 Mar 1620 - Hannah Cum Hagnaby,Lincoln,England.<ref name="Baptism">[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=9841&h=130401274&tid=21660137&pid=1179409624&hid=36135705153&usePUB=true&_phsrc=kui63&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true]<br>England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975. Birth, Marriage & Death. Name: Edward Parrish. Father: Thomas Parrish. Baptism: 29 Mar 1620 - Hannah Cum Hagnaby,Lincoln,England.</ref>
* Birth of Edward Parrish, 1600 - Yorkshire.<ref name="Birth">[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=5769&h=3401508&tid=21660137&pid=1179409624&hid=33517141148&usePUB=true&_phsrc=kui64&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true]<br> Family Data Collection - Births, Family Trees, Name: Edward Parrish. Father: Thomas Parrish. Birth: 1600 - Yorkshire.</ref>
* Death of Edward Parrish, 1680 - Annapolis, Ann Arundel, MD, USA.<ref name="Death">[http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=5771&h=1984203&tid=21660137&pid=1179409624&hid=33517141164&usePUB=true&_phsrc=kui64&_phstart=default&usePUBJs=true]<br>Family Data Collection - Deaths. Family Trees. Name: Edward Parrish. Death: 1680 - Annapolis, Ann Arundel, MD, USA.</ref>
* Source: <span id='S-2050775427'>S-2050775427</span> Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Name: Name: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;;;; Note: Ancestry Family Trees (Name: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;;), Ancestry Family Trees (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.), _APID: 1030::0 CONT This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. CONT .

== Sources ==
<references />
: Reference: 17102

: Source <span id='S0059488'>S0059488</span>
: Title: Parrish.ftw

: Source <span id='S0059490'>S0059490</span>
: Title: PARRISHe.FTW

: Source <span id='S0059492'>S0059492</span>
: Title: PARRISHj.FTW

: Source <span id='S0120354'>S0120354</span>
: Title: Voldseth.FTW

: Source <span id='S0133130'>S0133130</span>
: Title: The Parrish Family
: Author: Brent Parrish
: Publication: 1991
: Repository:
:: Call Number:
::: Media: Book



=== Acknowledgments ===
*This person was created through the import of Morse.ged on 22 March 2011.
Author: Shae Simpson
Author: M M 
Parrish, Edward (I238)
 
5367 === Name ===
Called Thomas Brooke of Leighton.

== Sources ==* <span id='Ormerod'></span>Ormerod, George. ''[[Space:The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester|The History of the County Palatine and City of Chester]]'' (George Routledge and Sons, Broadway, Ludgate Hill, London, 1819) [https://archive.org/stream/historyofcountyp03orme#page/241/mode/1up Vol. 3, Page 241]* <span id='CE'></span>Cheshire, England, Extracted Parish Records (Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001):: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=epr_cheshire&h=32221&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
:: Marriage: Bradley Frodesham Frodesham, Cheshire, England* <span id='UKPR'></span>UK, Extracted Probate Records (Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2009):: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=ukprobate&h=1550853&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
:: Marriage: Cheshire, England
* [http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p1111.htm Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins by Mr. Marlyn Lewis, Portland, OR]; Thomas Brooke - #33365. Marriage date is wrong (1531 is too late: oldest son, John, was born in 1517).* [https://books.google.co.za/books?id=QS8wAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA334&lpg=PA334 The Baronetage of England: Or The History of the English Baronets ..., Volume 2]. By William Betham; pp. 334-35 - Brooke of Norton, Cheshire. A Google book.* [http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/john-ohart/irish-pedigrees-or-the-origin-and-stem-of-the-irish-nation-goo-806/page-10-irish-pedigrees-or-the-origin-and-stem-of-the-irish-nation-goo-806.shtml John O'Hart: Irish pedigrees; or, The origin and stem of the Irish nation online], pg. 10 of 116 - see #4. "Thomas : younger son of John; m. ___ Starkey, and had : 1. Anna, 2. Kath., 3. Edward, 4. Reginald, 5. Richard."

: Page 51 in "The Visitation of Cheshire, 1580"
http://fhsc.org.uk/visitations/BookVC1580/p051.htm

==== Notes ====
<references/>
<!-- Please edit, add, or delete anything in this text, including this note. Be bold and experiment! If you make a mistake you can always see the previous version of the text on the Changes page. -->
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Chet Snow
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Maryann Hurt
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson
Author: Kairen Brooke-Anderson 
Brooke, Thomas (I143)
 
5368 === Occupation ===
: Occupation: Harness maker
:: Date: 1880

=== Census ===
: Census:
:: Date: 1880
:: Place: Marshalls, Harford, Maryland


=== Data Changed ===
: Data Changed:
:: Date: 17 MAY 2015
::: Time: 15:13:40
Prior to import, this record was last changed 15:13:40 17 MAY 2015.

== Sources ==

&lt;references /&gt;

=== Notes ===
No NOTE record found with id NI01153. 
Chalk, George W (I276)
 
5369 ===Biography ===

=== Name ===
: Name: Alice //
:: Given Name: Alice
Couldn't find any valid last name at birth.

=== Birth ===
:: User ID: C52197CC-5C2E-4338-81E1-424428B91077
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF168
:: Date: 1562
:: Place: Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England
:: User ID: C52197CC-5C2E-4338-81E1-424428B91077
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF168
:: Date: 1562
:: Place: Chesham, Buckinghamshire, England

=== Death ===
:: User ID: 9B266BC0-D921-4D91-A642-A7D26D1D96C7
:: Record ID Number: MH:IF1826

== Sources ==
<References/>

: Source: [[#S-2122066708]]
:: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461912721
: Source: [[#S-2122066708]]
:: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461912721
: Source: [[#S-2122066708]]
:: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461912721
: Source <span id='S-2122066708'>S-2122066708</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2122066709]]
: Title: Ancestry Family Trees: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.: Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.* Source: <span id='S1'>S1</span> Record ID Number: MH:S1 User ID: D7EE7E0D-6B73-4CFB-8669-A0DEE2892A23 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461912721* WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-105426 created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree_2b.GED on Sep 5, 2011 by [[Warner-33 | Michael Robert Warner]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=UNKNOWN-105426 Changes page] for the details of edits by Michael Robert and others.* Source: <span id='S1'>S1</span> Record ID Number: MH:S1 User ID: D7EE7E0D-6B73-4CFB-8669-A0DEE2892A23 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17069438&pid=461912721

==Acknowledgments ==
* WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-103838 created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree.ged on Aug 29, 2011 by [[Warner-33 | Michael Warner]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=UNKNOWN-103838 Changes page] for the details of edits by Michael and others.
This person was created through the import of Warner-Lilley Family Tree.ged on 05 July 2010. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability
=== User ID ===
: User ID: 0DC4451C-EEDF-49F5-9C04-9B7562C826F1
=== Record ID Number ===
: Record ID Number: MH:I91
=== UPD ===
: UPD 04 SEP 2011 13:14:45 GMT-5 
UNKNOWN, Alice (I344)
 
5370 ===Early Years===David Gorsuch was the youngest boy in a family of eleven children. His baptism was recorded in the register of St. Paul’s Church on 2 MAR 1734 just five years after the founding of Baltimore Town.<ref> Reamy, Bill and Martha. Records of St. Paul's Parish. Vol. I. Westminster, Maryland: Family Line Publications, 1988.</ref> It is difficult to tell exactly where he grew up in the Baltimore area, but he likely lived close to the three mills on the Jones Falls about two miles north of town owned by Jonathan Hanson. Hanson’s name appears as the appraiser of the estate of Charles Gorsuch, David’s father, on his inventory of 1748 and David would marry Hanson’s daughter about ten years later.<ref>Balt. Co. Inventories Box 11/26</ref> There is no record available for David’s marriage to Elizabeth Hanson, but it likely took place around the year 1759 when Elizabeth turned eighteen. All evidence for this marriage is gained from examining the many land records involving Elizabeth Hanson Gorsuch who inherited large tracts of land from her father and brothers.

===Land Records===
David’s marriage to Elizabeth must have been a very advantageous one. His new father-in-law may have provided the funds for David to purchase his own farm when he was just twenty-five. The tract called East Humphreys was purchased on 5 OCT 1759. David is called a farmer of Baltimore County in the deed for 122 acres for which he paid £100 sterling.<ref>Balt. Co. Land AL B/105</ref> His next purchase was a large grant of land he named Gorsuch’s Lot by patent in Frederick County in 1761. The tract was located along the Monocacy River and contained 525 acres.<ref>MD Patents BC 14/59</ref> This purchase may have been made as an investment for his only son, Charles Gorsuch, because it was advertised for sale twenty-one years later in the Maryland Journal 23 APR 1782. The property must have been rented to tenants over the years as it had two dwelling houses, a barn and a stable. The advertisement ends with the statement: “to purchase the whole or any part of said land, may know the terms, by applying to the subscriber, living within half a mile of Baltimore-Town.” David also made some real estate investments in Baltimore during the years 1761 thru 1770. He purchased a total of four lots in different parts of the city for which he spent a total of £200. He purchased one very large lot on Charles Street from his sister and her husband, George and Barbara Pickett.<ref>Balt. Co. Land BI/488; BI/490; BK/470; ALB/617</ref>. David’s final land acquisition was a farm called Stone’s Range. This farm had once been the plantation of George Cole, who was likely David’s uncle. The tract contained 194 acres and was purchased from all the heirs of George Cole via several different deeds. All together, David paid £206 for this farm. The descriptions of these tracts in the land records only mention stumps or trees and lengths in perches so it is difficult to determine where they were.<ref>Balt. Co. Land ALA/19,422; ALD/727</ref> By the time the American Revolution began in 1776, David owned about 310 acres about a ½ mile east of Baltimore, 525 acres in Frederick County and four lots in the city.
David’s property was valued at £670 pounds in the 1783 tax assessment for the Patapsco Lower Hundred. A typical farmer of this time period owned personal property valued from £100 to £500 pounds, so it would be reasonable to classify David Gorsuch as a well-to-do farmer.<ref> Main, Jackson. The Social Structure of Revolutionary America. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1965:110</ref>. According to this assessment, David Gorsuch owned 230 acres of land, twelve slaves, nine horses, and nineteen beef cattle. Only what were known as black cattle were taxed at this time. Cows kept for milk production were not taxable. David's household was rather large. Besides his wife and six daughters, there were four other persons listed under the column marked whites, a total of twelve whites living on the farm. There is a possibility the other whites were indentured servants, or distant relatives living with the family. The farm also supported a number of slaves, although five of them were under the age of fourteen.

===Life Style===
David and Elizabeth Gorsuch were the parents of eight children. Their only son, Charles, died sometime in 1781. His name is written with the year of death just below his father’s on the burial record of the family vault located in Green Mount Cemetary. On 10 MAR 1778 Charles placed the following advertisement in Dunlap’s Maryland Gazette: “TWENTY DOLLARS REWARD. Lost between Mr. Larch’s mill and Baltimore town, a small SILVER WATCH, with leather strap and a steel key—the watch was made by MARMADUKE STARR, London, No. 7058. Whoever gives information of the said watch, so that I get it in good repair, shall receive the above reward, paid by CHARLES GORSUCH, son of David.” The names of the daughters were all mentioned in the will of their father: Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, Jemima, Kezia, Kerenhappuch and Anne.
David and Elizabeth were active members of St. Paul’s Parish. In 1763 he signed a petition related to the church along with his father-in-law, Jonathan Hanson. The petitioners were seeking the authority to impose a tax of less than three pounds of tobacco on the taxable inhabitants of the parish to hire an organist to play “the very good organ” at St. Paul’s Church.<ref> Peden, Henry C. Jr., Inhabitants of Baltimore County 1763-1774. Family Line Publications. Westminster, MD. pg. 9.</ref>
The following advertisement was placed in the Maryland Journal on 5 MAY 1775 by David: “FORTY SHILLINGS REWARD. Baltimore April 10, 1775. Ran away from the subscriber, living near Baltimore town, Maryland, the 3rd instant, a NEGRO GIRL, named Moll, about 16 or 17 years of age, low in stature, well fed and generally wears her hair filleted. Had on when she went away a white holland jacket, petticoat and apron . . .” He placed a far different ad in the paper on 15 MAY 1776: “TWENTY SHILLINGS Reward. Some time past was stolen from the subscriber a white silk, flowered bonnet, a woman’s large silk black cloak, sprigged and fringed, a pair of women’s carved silver buckles, a black ground chintz gown, some shifts, aprons, handkerchiefs, and caps of various sorts—and many other articles too tedious to mention. The THIEF is supposed to be a woman who goes by different names. Sometimes she calls herself Betsy Lloyd, and sometimes by other names. She appears to be about 20 years of age, is a good deal pot-marked, a lightish complexion, black hair and black brows, a thick well fed woman, of a low stature, speaks much, says she is an English woman, and affects great knowledge of the Welsh tongue.—All true friends of the public are expected to use their endeavors to detect this Adventurer, and bring her to Justice. And if any of the above goods should or may have been offered for sale, on giving notice and on conviction of the thief, shall receive the above reward, paid by DAVID GORSUCH.”
By 1779 David's oldest daughter, Sarah, had married Elijah Stansbury and given birth to David's first grandchild. Sarah died sometime before her father’s death in 1784. There is a slight mystery surrounding David and Elizabeth's second daughter who was named Elizabeth after her mother. In 1781, when Elizabeth Jr. was about seventeen, David’s wife leased a house from William Fell on the corner of Bond and Lancaster Streets in Baltimore. The grantees listed on this deed were Elizabeth Gorsuch, Sarah Stansbury, wife of Elijah Stansbury and Elizabeth Gorsuch both daughters of the first named Elizabeth. It was extremely unusal in 1781 for a woman to own property in her own name without the name of her husband also being listed. After the signature of William Fell is a note stating: In consideration of the regard I have for Elizabeth Gorsuch I consent to release all the rent for the within ground during Mrs. Gorsuch’s natural life but not longer. <ref>Balt. Co. Land WG G/416.</ref> Will Fell owned extensive properties in the Baltimore area and the area of Fell’s Point carries his name today. According to David’s will written in 1784, Elizabeth Jr. was living in this house with her son, William Gorsuch. The boy was only called by his name while the son of Sarah Stansbury was described as Sarah’s “lawfully begotten son.” <ref>Balt. Co. Original Wills</ref>
The inventory taken of David’s estate after his death gives more clues to the life style of his family. It was valued at £781, and over half of the total was the value of fourteen slaves. One of the most interesting items listed in the inventory account is an entry for house and school books valued at 25 shillings/3 pence. Were the Gorsuch children taught at home, if so by whom? Their mother, Elizabeth Hanson, always signed deeds with her mark, but David Gorsuch signed his will with a signature. There were no public schools in Baltimore at this time. The inventory also reveals that the family slept on feather beds which were a very valuable item in that era and were assessed according to the weight of the feathers they contained. They ate their meals from earthenware, tin or pewter plates instead of fine china. The women most likely made their own fabrics, as the inventory lists a supply of wool and cotton, as well as a weaver's loom.<ref> Balt. Co. Inventories Box 27/Folder 58</ref>

===Probate===

5 MAY 1784 signed; presented to the court 26 MAY 1784
I give the use of my three negroes named Simon, Gill & Moll to my wife Elizabeth Gorsuch during her widowhood. There is a lot of land on Fells Point made over by William Fell to my wife Elizabeth & my two daughters Sarah & Elizabeth after my wife's decease and now my daughter Sarah is already dead and left a living lawfully begotten son named Charles Stansbury who will inherit half of the said house and lot. I give to Charles Stansbury my grandson when he shall arrive to 21 my negro girl named LIddy 2-1/2. My daughter Elizabeth now inhabits the house under the direction of her mother. I give her twenty shillings and no more. I give to William Gorsuch son of my said daughter Elizabeth when he shall arrive 21 my negro child Rachel (age 3 mos.)
I give to my 3 daughters Mary, Jemima and Kezia my lot of land I bought of George Pickett and all my part of the land called Stones Range that lies on the south side of the road leading from Baltimore Town to William Smiths Mill. I give to my two daughters Kerenhappuck and Anne my two lots lying on Philpotts Hill and a tract of land called East Humphreys lying on Patapsco Neck. I give to Kerenhappuch my negro girl named Rose (age 5) and my negro girl named Jean (age 9) to Anne.
I give part of lot number 35 I had from Lancelot Watson and where Barbary Wilkinson now lives, after the decease of her and her heirs to my heirs. My tract of land lying in Frederick County called Gorsuch's lot containing 400 acres to be sold and the money used to provide the maintenance of my younger children and my wife.
It is my further will that my four negroes namely, Old Toney, Harry, Jack and Winder and the after increase of Moll to be at the disposal of my executors. Wife Elizabeth and friends Josias Pennington and William Askew executors.<ref>Balt. Co. Will Book Liber 4/3</ref>

[will abbreviated by Seely Foley].
There are three separate addministrations for the estate of David Gorsuch. The first administration shows the tract in Frederick County was sold for £600 and one of the lots in the city was sold for £80. The estate also received payments from creditors of over £155. The total value of the estate of 12 OCT 1786 was £1616.9.9. David’s funeral cost £26.16.3 and money owed by David was paid out in the amount of £228.19.10. <ref>Balt. Co. Administration Accounts 8/322</ref> The second accounting has additional income from the collection of debts and shows that two of the slaves were given to David’s daughters. Dick was given to Mary Jessop and his value of £80 was deducted as well as the value of £80 for Toney given to Jemima Gorsuch. David’s wife was remarried by this date so Elizabeth Weatherby took her third of £144.13.6 out of this valuation of the estate. The balance due the heirs on 21 AUG 1787 was £1010.7.5.<ref>Balt. Co. Administration Accounts 9/99</ref> The final accounting of the estate was made on 19 FEB 1794. By this time Elizabeth Gorsuch Weatherby was deceased and Josias Pennington was the sole surviving executor. This last accounting mentions two slaves named Jack and Rose paid to the guardian of Kerehappuch, James Stansbury.<ref>Balt. Co. Adm. Accts. 11/382</ref>

===Sources===

<references/>*Note All children are listed in: Barnes, Robert W. Baltimore County Families, 1659-1759. Baltimore, Maryland: Clearfield, 1989. Print.
&copy; Seely Kenny Foley [[Kenny-549|Kenny-549]] 11:18, 17 February 2015 (EST)
Author: Seely Foley 
Gorsuch, David (I37)
 
5371 ==Biography ==

<ref>https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39034135</ref>

=== Sources ===
<references/>
*Source: [[#S-2117433450]]Page: Ancestry Family Trees:: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=17332090&pid=496627394
* This person was created through the import of Workman _ Bree(2).ged on 20 January 2011.
Author: Melissa McKay
Author: K. Bloom 
Workman, Abraham (I535)
 
5372 ==Biography==

== Sources ==
: Source <span id='S2730'>S2730</span>
: Title: Public Member Trees: Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.Original data: Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.;

England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975

Family Data Collection - Births

Family Data Collection - Deaths

Pennsylvania, Land Warrants, 1733-1987

U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
Place: Pennsylvania; Year: 1683; Page Number: 109

U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900Source number: 983.016; Source type: Pedigree chart; Number of Pages: 21

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; Minutes, 1683-1892; Collection: Quaker Meeting Records; Call Number: MR Ph 309
Author: Andrew Lancaster 
Scaife, Jeremiah (I711)
 
5373 ==Biography==

=== Name ===
: Name: Jonathan /Scaife/
:: Source: [[#S2730]]
::: Page: Ancestry Family Trees:::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=1034466&pid=-1021405787
::: Note: [[#N3831]]

=== Sources ===
: Source <span id='S2730'>S2730</span>
: Title: Public Member Trees: Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.Original data: Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.;
: Repository: [[#R1]]: NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.

=== Notes ===
: Note <span id='N3831'>N3831</span>
Author: Andrew Lancaster 
Scaife, Jonathan (I708)
 
5374 ==Biography==

===1714 Birth and Parentage===
Hannah Gorsuch was born in Baltimore County, Maryland, Apr. 24, 1714<ref name="grave"> [https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=52704105. Find A Grave Memorial# 52704105: Hannah Gorsuch Stansbury]. Created by: MDE; Record added: May 22, 2010.
Accessed Jan 25, 2017 </ref>
Hannah Gorsuch, born in Baltimore County, Maryland, was the daughter of [[Gorsuch-20|Charles Gorsuch]] and [[Cole-62|Sarah Cole]]. <ref name="lemmon"> Research of Kenneth Lemmon on Mordecai Price Ancestors. Original Information on Alexis Lemmon down thru John Lemmon Sr. and on came from Paul E. Shickle, in CA. Lemmon, Kenneth, (15 Apr 2006) [http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=lemken&id=I06432 "Hannah Gorsuch."] Ancestors of Kenneth & Carla (Stephens) Lemmon.</ref>

===1734 Land===

Thomas Stansbury owned the following tracts of land:*Daniel's Gift (assigned by his brother Daniel Stansbury), 127 acres, 13 June 1734 <ref name="coldham1731"> Peter Wilson Coldham. Settlers of Maryland 1731-1750. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1996, page 212 </ref>*Stansbury's Plains, 692 acres, 10 June 1734. <ref name="coldham1731"/>*Stansbury's Needs Must, 8 acres, 14 Nov 1740.<ref name="coldham1731"/>

Thomas Stansbury, jr, owned the following tracts of land:
*Father's Care, 100 acres, 12 June 1745<ref name="coldham1731"/>
*Jericho, 100 acres, 12 June 1745<ref name="coldham1731"/>
*Stansbury's Good Luck, 90 acres, 4 Nov 1743.<ref name="coldham1731"/>

===1735 Marriage and Children ===
Hannah was married, on 2 March 1735 at St. Paul's Protestant Episcopal Church, Baltimore, Maryland, to [[Stansbury-162|Thomas Stansbury, Jr]],<ref name="Mar">[https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4NC-1JC ''Maryland, Church Records, 1668-1995.''] FamilySearch (24 February 2016), Thomas Stansbury and Hannah Gorsuch, 02 Mar 1735; citing Marriage, St. Paul'S Protestant Episcopal Church, Baltimore (Independent City), Maryland, various libraries, churches, historical and national societies, private and public records; FHL microfilm 13,696.</ref> son of Thomas Stansbury and Jane Hayes. He was born 24 Apr 1714 in Baltimore Co., MD, and died 15 Jun 1798 in Baltimore Co., MD.<ref name="lemmon"/>

She married Thomas Stansbury (1714 - 1798) <ref name="grave"/>

They had 12 children.

===1800 Death and Burial===
Hannah died 11 September 1800 in Baltimore County. <ref name="lemmon"/><ref name="grave"/>
She was buried in the Long Crandon Cemetery, Timonium, Baltimore County, Maryland, USA<ref name="grave"/>

===Long Crandon Cemetery at Stella Maris===
The Long Crandon Cemetery is located on the property of Stella Maris, 2300 Dulaney Valley Road, Timonium, Baltimore County, Maryland, 21093. It is hidden from the road by a stand of trees near the first parking lot when entering from Dulaney Valley Road. Buried here are members of the Bosley and Stansbury families of Towson. <ref> Long Crandon Cemetery, Find A Grave.https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&GRid=52704105&CRid=2355080&. There is one photograph of the cemetery. Accessed Jan 25, 2017. </ref>
A correspondent wrote to a descendant in 2001 stating, "The cemetery is suffering the same fate of all family cemeteries. It is absolutely cloaked by an overgrown hemlock grove. The people who work in the adjacent school, Villa Maria don't even know it is there. Probably the best thing we can do is make sure the archdiocese knows that there are still family members who know about it and care...The Stansbury & Bosley families whose graves are located there, are historical families dating back to 1650's when they first immigrated to Maryland.... To those of you not familiar with who is buried at Stella Maris, they are Thomas Stansbury Jr, wife Hannah Gorsuch, William Stansbury of Thomas, Elizabeth Stansbury of William, husband William Bosley. These are 4th, 5th & 6th generation Stansbury graves so you can understand my concern. Thomas Stansbury was born April 24, 1714 and this cemetary must be preserved."

==Children==

Children of Hannah Gorsuch and Thomas Stansbury are:

#Charles Stansbury, b. 24 Jan 1735/36.<ref name="lemmon"/>#[[Stansbury-239|Sarah Stansbury]], b. 07 Mar 1736/37, Baltimore Co., MD; d. 03 Apr 1815, Baltimore Co., MD.<ref name="lemmon"/>#Thomas Stansbury III, b. Abt. 1738; d. Abt. 1818, Bullitt Co., KY.<ref name="lemmon"/> m. Ruth Lemmon, Baltimore Co., MD; b. 22 Jan 1741/42.<ref name="lemmon"/>#[[Stansbury-160|Hannah Stansbury]], b. 20 Apr 1743, Baltimore Co., MD; d. Abt. 1798, Baltimore Co., MD; m. Henry Sater; b. 27 May 1745, Lutherville, MD; d. 08 Mar 1788. Henry Sater buried at Sater's Baptist Cemetery, Baltimore Co., MD. Hannah Coale Stansbury Sater (1743 - 1798)* <ref name="grave"/>#[[Stansbury-422|Rachel Stansbury]], b. 11 Nov 1746; d. 04 Jan 1823, Morrow, OH; m. (1) Alexis Lemmon, Jr. b. 28 Feb 1745/46, Baltimore Co., MD; marriage on 29 Nov 1771, Baltimore Co., MD; d. 12 Junm1826, Johnsville, Morrow Co., OH. Rachel Buried at Shauck Cmt. Alexis Lemmon came to America about 1737. Appointed officer Captain of the Baltimore Militia, or horse troop, Jan 4, 1777, was still in service as of February 1, 1782, Baltimore Co., MD. In Revolutionary War. Buried in Shauck Cemetary North of the town of Jonesville, Ohio. The famiiy Migrated with a large number of other families to Pittsburgh, then down the Ohio River by flatboat. They stayed for a short time in Clark Co., Indiana. They bought land in what is now Louisville, KY. But because the women folk did not like it, they moved to Harrison Co, Indiana. In this migration there is said to have been two brothers of John Lemmon. One stopped near Cincinnati, the other located between Jefferson & Madison, Indiana. there were 2 sources listed as DOB as Mar 12, 1746, i believe this is christening or baptisim date. Also death date is listed as Jan 21, 1826, from Cliff Lemmon. Alexis Lemmon Jr was buried at Shauck Cmt. Christening: 12 Mar 1745/46, Baltimore Co., MD#Luke Stansbury, b. 04 Apr 1749; d. 1798, Baltimore Co., MD.<ref name="lemmon"/>#[[Stansbury-250|Jane Stansbury]], b. 14 Apr 1750; d. 10 Jun 1798; m. William Wilson, 14 Jul 1774; b. Abt. 1749, Limerick, Ireland.<ref name="lemmon"/>
#Benjamin Stansbury, b. 28 Jun 1752.<ref name="lemmon"/>#John Dixon Stansbury, b. 19 Dec 1754; m. Ruth Crook, 09 Dec 1779.<ref name="lemmon"/>#David Stansbury, b. 27 Jan 1757; m. Henrietta Marie Fowler, 13 Apr 1786, First Baptist Church, Baltimore, MD; b. MD.<ref name="lemmon"/>#Daniel Stansbury, b. 08 May 1759, Baltimore Co., MD; m. Elizabeth Garrettson.<ref name="lemmon"/>#William Stansbury, b. 11 Sep 1761; d. 23 Jun 1818.<ref name="lemmon"/> William Stansbury (1761 - 1818)* <ref name="grave"/>

== Sources ==
<references />

See also:* Barnes, Robert William, and Thomas L Hollowak, (1980) ''Maryland genealogies : a consolidation of articles from the Maryland historical magazine ...'' Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co.
Author: Robin Lee
Author: Jack Day
Author: Jack Day
Author: Cynthia B
Author: Jack Day
Author: Seely Foley 
Gorsuch, Hannah (I31)
 
5375 ==Biography==

Hannah's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Hannah's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...
She was born in 1712.


== Sources ==

U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; Births 1690-1805 Deaths, 1715-1802; Collection: Quaker Meeting Records; Call Number: MR-PH 218


==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. 
Rumford, Hannah (I697)
 
5376 ==Biography==

Jonathan's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Jonathan's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...
He was born in 1705 and died in 1782.

== Sources ==

U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940
1 citation provides evidence for Name, Birth

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935
1 citation provides evidence for Name, Birth
U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970
1 citation provides evidence for Name, Death, Birth

U.S., Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783
1 citation provides evidence for Name, Military

Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots
1 citation provides evidence for Name

==Notes==
==Acknowledgements==
This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. 
Rumford, Jonathan (I694)
 
5377 ==Biography==

Martha's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Martha's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...
She was born in 1713 and died in 1790.

==Sources ==

U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; Births 1690-1805 Deaths, 1715-1802; Collection: Quaker Meeting Records; Call Number: MR-PH 218


==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. 
Rumford, Martha (I698)
 
5378 ==Biography==

Mary was born in 1707. Mary's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Mary's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...She died in 1737.


== Sources ==


U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940 Record

==Acknowledgements==
This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. 
Rumford, Mary (I695)
 
5379 ==Biography==

Meriam's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Meriam's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...
She was born in 1715.


==Sources ==

U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; Births 1690-1805 Deaths, 1715-1802; Collection: Quaker Meeting Records; Call Number: MR-PH 218


==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. 
Rumford, Meriam (I699)
 
5380 ==Biography==

Rachel's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Rachel's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...
She was born in 1710.

== Sources ==

U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; Births 1690-1805 Deaths, 1715-1802; Collection: Quaker Meeting Records; Call Number: MR-PH 218


==Acknowledgements==
This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. 
Rumford, Rachel (I696)
 
5381 ==Biography==

Rebecca's father [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] ...
Rebecca's mother [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]] ...
She was born and died in 1703.

== Sources ==

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935 Record

==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. 
Rumford, Rebecca (I693)
 
5382 ==Biography==

Sarah was born in 1675. Sarah's father [[Wood-2765|John Wood]] ...

==Sources==

U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
Place: New Jersey; Year: 1677-1678; Page Number: 144

Liverpool, England, Quaker Registers, 1635-1958

England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975


<references/>
==Notes==
==Acknowledgements==This person was created on 24 May 2011 through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged.
Author: Beryl Meehan
Author: Marion Poole
Author: Beryl Meehan 
Wood, Sarah (I793)
 
5383 ==Biography==
"Thomas Rumford, son of [[Rumford-32|John Rumford]] and [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]], was born the 22nd day 8th month 1719, in Chester County, Pennsylvania. There’s not very much known about him except that he was one of the executors in his father’s will in 1738. He was received on a certificate to the Newark Monthly Meeting, New Castle County, dated May 5, 1739. On the 6th day 4th month 1741 he was disowned at the Kenneth Meeting for not paying his just debts. This is the last known account on him." (rumford46)



==Sources ==

U.S., Hinshaw Index to Selected Quaker Records, 1680-1940

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935Swarthmore College; Swarthmore, Pennsylvania; Births 1690-1805 Deaths, 1715-1802; Collection: Quaker Meeting Records; Call Number: MR-PH 218


==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. 
Rumford, Thomas (I700)
 
5384 ==Biography==
James was born in 1702. James's father [[Paxson-11|William Paxson]] ... James's mother [[Pownall-11|Abigail Pownall]] ...James Paxson died in 1747.


== Source ==

*Family Data Collection - Births

*Family Data Collection - Individual Records
Detail: Birth year: 1702; Birth city: Bucks Co; Birth state: PA

*Family Data Collection - Individual Records
Detail: Birth year: 1702; Birth city: Bucks; Birth state: PA

*New Jersey, Marriage Records, 1683-1802

*Millennium File

*U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935


: Source: [[#S90]]
: Birthdate, etc. from Millennium File

: Source <span id='S90'>S90</span>
: Abbreviation: "Our Quaker Ancestry" by Rusha Wesley 1945
: Title: "Our Quaker Ancestry" by Rusha Wesley 1945
: Note: Source Media Type: Book
: Repository: [[#R1]]
: Paranthetical: Y

* Source: <span id='S-1889365840'>S-1889365840</span> Repository: [[#R-1889517904]] Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=28893884&pid=141
No REPO record found with id R-1889517904.


<references/>

== Note ==
: Note: @NI7218@: @NI7218@ NOTEJames & his brother Thomas Paxson each inherited half of his great uncle Henry Paxon's land in Solebury township upon which they settled.

==Acknowledgements==
* WikiTree profile Paxson-71 created through the import of Pownall Family Tree.ged on Aug 15, 2011 by [[Helma-1 | Ashley Helma]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Paxson-71 Changes page] for the details of edits by Ashley and others.
* WikiTree profile Paxson-74 created through the import of Kingsbury-Avery Family Tree.ged on Nov 3, 2011 by [[Simpson-1546 | Andrew Simpson]]. See the [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Paxson-74 Changes page] for the details of edits by Andrew and others.
Author: Robin Lee
Author: Robin Lee
Author: Andrea Powell
Author: Andrea Powell
Author: Andrea Powell
Author: Andrea Powell
Author: Andrea Powell 
Paxson, James (I715)
 
5385 ==Biography==
John Heaton was born in 1690 in Middletown, Bucks, Pennsylvania. His parents were [[Heaton-96|James Heaton]] and [[Scaife-5|Mary Scaife]]. John's birth was a huge scandal at the time. He was raised by his grandfather, Jonathan Scaife.

Written by Jana Jenkins.... James was not the stereotypical well-behaved Quaker. He had an affair with Mary SCAIFE (born 10 August 1678, died before 1738), daughter of Jonathan Scaife, Justice of the Peace and Coroner (1697 and 1699). Both James and Mary were convicted of bastardy in 1695 in the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and fined, although Mary’s fine was later forgiven by William MARKHAM, Governor of Pennsylvania. Middletown Monthly Meeting also condemned James Heaton for having a child out of wedlock. Heaton denied it, as he also did in court. James and Mary Scaife never married.
He married Sarah Roberts in 1715 at the age of 25. After Sarah's death in 1731, he married Mary Bennings in 1734.
John Heaton died at 72 in Hardwick, Warren, New Jersey in September of 1762.

==Sources==

Family Data Collection - Individual Records
Detail: Birth year: 1690; Birth city: Bucks; Birth state: PA

Millennium File

U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900Detail: Source number: 3291.009; Source type: Pedigree chart; Number of Pages: 19

<references />

=== Notes ===

:Note for consideration written by Syd Rumford, 3 April 2015:
In the History of the Heaton Family, it is stated that Mary Scaife had a son out of wedlock with James Heaton. The Heaton family stated the son's name was John, born in 1690 and raised by his grandfather, Jonathan Scaife.
None of this is substantiated by any reasonable evidence. What evidence there is from 1695 court records stating that Mary had a child with James Heaton, and her father Jonathan Scaife paid a fine of £10. James Heaton denied of having had a child with Mary. But a jury trial found that he was the father. The records do not specify the child sex, name, or if the child lived. And a birth date of 1690 and court records of 1695 is too much time elapsed, especially for a small Quaker community of Middletown, Pennsylvania. And there is no evidence that Jonathan Scaife supported a grandson name John Heaton.

----


==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. 
Heaton, John (I685)
 
5386 ==Biography==
Mary Paxson was born in 1696 to [[Paxson-11|William Paxson]] and [[Pownall-11|Abigail Pownall]].



== Source ==

U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935


: Source: [[#S90]]
: Reference: 47284


<references/>
==Notes==
==Acknowledgements==This person was created through the import of JDS_09_17_10.ged on 09 February 2011. 
Paxson, Mary (I725)
 
5387 ==Biography==
Sarah Lucken was born "1689, 19th of 7th mo." which in the Julian calendar is equal to September 19th, 1689 in the Gregorian calendar.<ref>"How to interpret Quaker dates in the eleventh or twelfth month with only one year?" Stack Exchange.
Accessed April 13, 2016. http://genealogy.stackexchange.com/questions/6703/how-to-interpret-quaker-dates-in-the-eleventh-or-twelfth-month-with-only-one-yea.</ref>
Jill Hurd notes that "JanBib. The birthdates of William and his younger sister, Sarah, are difficult to explain as the two dates are only 7 months apart." <ref>Hurd, Jill J. The Ancestors & Descendants of Jan Lucken. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 1989. Page 20.</ref>

==Sources==

<references/>
Hurd, Jill J. The Ancestors & Descendants of Jan Lucken. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 1989.

: Source: [[#S-1492602156]]:: Page: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was
:: Note:
:: Data: ::: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=555902&pid=-1336522095

: Source <span id='S-1492602156'>S-1492602156</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2068617806]]
: Title: Public Member Trees
: Author: Ancestry.com: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.Original data: Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.: Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.

No REPO record found with id R-2068617806. 
Lucken, Sarah (I471)
 
5388 ==Biography==
This profile is being updated with research published in 2017.<ref>Daniel G. Armstrong, "Marmaduke Horseman and the Fly-Boat ''Martha''," in ''The American Genealogist,'' 89 (July 2017): 161- </ref>
For years it's been assumed that Marmaduke Horseman's parents were named Marmaduke and Frances. And that the father Marmaduke was he by thes ame name travelling on the ship "Martha." However, two things:
# Yorkshire, England parish records include the following family unit the children of which match later West New Jersey Horseman individuals, known to be children of mother Frances:
: George Horsman and Frances Carlile, m 25 Nov 1662
: Marmaduke the son of George Horsman of Whitwell, bp 27 Nov 1663
: Susannah daughter of GEorge Horseman of Whitwell, bp 14 Dec 1665: Duglessa "filia" [daughter of] George Horseman of Whitwell, bpt 19 Jul 1668<ref>Armstrong, p 164, citing Crambe, Yorkshire North Riding, parish register [images, findmypast.com from Borthwick Institute for Archives, Univ. of York].. The entry for "Duglessa fillia" is abstracted and indexed on findmypast.com as "Douglas," without indication that she was a daughter."</ref># Examination of the other passengers of the fly-boat "Martha" indicate that it's compmletely likely that the Marmaduke on the ship was the son of Frances, not the spouse of Frances.
Therefore the father of Marmaduke and the husband of Frances was George, not an older Marmaduke.

== From previous version of this profile ==

Marmaduke's father [[Horseman-44|Marmaduke Horseman]] ...
Marmaduke's mother [[Blakeborough-8|Martha Blakeborough]] ...

==Sources==
<references />

See also:
* Yorkshire, England Extracted Parish Records
* New Jersey, Compiled Census and Census Substitutes Index, 1643-1890
* U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
Detail: Place: New Jersey; Page Number: 369
Author: Jillaine Smith 
Horseman, George (I790)
 
5389 ==Biography==
This profile is being updated with research published in 2017.<ref>Daniel G. Armstrong, "Marmaduke Horseman and the Fly-Boat ''Martha''," in ''The American Genealogist,'' 89 (July 2017): 161- </ref>
Marmaduke was baptized 27 Nov 1633 in the parish of Crambe, Yorkshire, England, son of '''George Horsman''' and '''Frances Carslile.'''<ref>Armstrong, citing </ref>
Marmaduke Horseman first appears in West New Jersey when he was a witness in a case tried by the Burlington County Court in 1682.<ref>Armstrong, p 162, citing H. Clay Reed and George J. Miller, eds., ''The Burlington Court Book[:] Record of Quaker Jurisprudence in West New Jersey, 1680-1709,'' (Washington DC: 1944), p 10.</ref> He appears in various records in both Burlington County and Monmouth County until his death in 1748 or 1749.

== Previous version of this profile ==

Marmaduke's father [[Horseman-14|Marmaduke Horseman]] ...
Marmaduke's mother [[Warwick-331|Mary Warwick]] ...

==Sources==
<references />

See also:* Family Data Collection - Individual Records; 1 citation provides evidence for Name, Death, Birth, Marriage* U.S., Quaker Meeting Records, 1681-1935; 1 citation provides evidence for Name, Residence
Author: Andrea Powell 
Horseman, Marmaduke (I787)
 
5390 ==Biography==
Very little is known of the life of John Godfrey. There is a record of a John Godfrey being transported to Maryland in 1662, but there is no way to tell if it was the same man as the one who died in Baltimore County in 1672.<ref>Early Settlers of Maryland</ref>
Many genealogists have placed him as the father of Priscilla, the wife of Thomas Cole, but his will provides no evidence that she was more than a neighbor in Baltimore County when he died.

==Will==
In the name of God, amen. I John Godfrey of ye Province of Maryland in the county of Baltimore in Patapsco River, planter being very sick & weak but being yet in perfect sense and memory thought fit to order & devise of what —?— I have in my possession of my own and that this is my last will and testament. And this my will shall stand in full force and value against all other wills & of testament formerlly made by me, John Godfrey in manner as followth. . . .
Item, I give and bequeath unto John Malam whom I do hereby appoint and make my true & lawfull executor my now dwelling plantation in Patapsco River called (there is a large blank space here) and all my stock of hoggs & young cattle. The said Malam being at the charge of proving this my will and burying of me.
Item, I give unto '''Thomas Cole one sow and to Presella his wife a silver Seal which I formerly received of her.'''
Item, I give & bequeath unto Edward Houghton one cow and all my moveable goods.

Item, I give and bequeath unto Sarah Colle one —?—
Item, I give and bequeath unto Ann White Thomas Cole’s maid servant, one cow.
Item, I give & bequeath unto Richard Kene formerly Thomas Coles servant, one cow.

Item, I give & bequeath unto John Kemp one cow.
And my will is ye John Malam shall pay all lawfull debts as shall come from any person as well as receive what it due to me from any person and that my last will and testament shall well & truly performed by the said John Mailum within six months after my decease. In witness whereof I have here unto set my hand and seal this 6th day of May 1672.
John Godfrey signed with his mark in the presence of Richard Ball and Richard Gwinn.Charles Gorsuch & Nicholas Ruxton were named to appraise the estate.<ref>Testamentary Proceedings of the Prerogative Court Liber 5/291. Maryland State Archives</ref>

== Sources ==

<references /> 
Godfrey, John (I199)
 
5391 ==Biography==
William Lucken was born "1688, 22nd of 12th mo." which in the Julian calendar is equal to February 22nd, 1689 in the Gregorian calendar.<ref>"How to interpret Quaker dates in the eleventh or twelfth month with only one year?" Stack Exchange.
Accessed April 13, 2016. http://genealogy.stackexchange.com/questions/6703/how-to-interpret-quaker-dates-in-the-eleventh-or-twelfth-month-with-only-one-yea.</ref>
Jill Hurd notes that "JanBib. The birthdates of William and his younger sister, Sarah, are difficult to explain as the two dates are only 7 months apart." <ref>Hurd, Jill J. The Ancestors & Descendants of Jan Lucken. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 1989. Page 20.</ref>

== Timeline ==

== Genealogical Proof Standard ==

== Research Notes ==
Married 27 Nov 1710 to Elizabeth Tyson 1690-1765.<ref>Entered by [[Fields-574|Bob Fields]].</ref>
From The Establishment Of Horsham Friends Meeting:<ref>http://www.horsham1.com/quaker.html</ref>The Horsham Preparative Meeting of Firends was set up by the Abington Monthly at Jenkintown, for the convenience of those of its members who had purchased land in the southern end of Horsham township, and had made the first white settlement there. ... The next to come was probably William Lukens, the oldest son of Jan Lucken, one of the thirteen original German settlers of Germantown. His father brought 505 acres from Carpenter in February 1709, and William is believed to have occupied it at once. It lay along the south side of Privet Road from Horsham Road to the county line. William's house was almost certainly the log building, now in ruins, which stands a few rods from Privet Road on the opposite side of a small stream, known as early as 1713 as William Luken's Run. It antedates the Park House, the next oldest building in the township, by ten or fifteen years. ... three other settlers signed the petition for the opening of the Welsh Road in March, 1712. ... The marriage of Peter Davis and Rebecca Michener on 11 mo 15, 1717, took place in "the meeting hous at Horsham". ... the following partial list: ... William and Elizabeth (Tyson) Lukens, Peter and Gainor Lukens, ... John and Alice (Lukens) Conrad, and the Michener family. All of those lived in Horsham except the Micheners.

== Links ==

=== Acknowledgments ===
* Thank you to [[Lynch-78|Alice Lynch]] for [http://www.wikitree.com/index.php?title=Special:NetworkFeed&who=Lucken-9 creating] Lucken-9 on 06 August 2010.

== Sources ==

<references />

See also:
* "William Lukens." Family Search. Accessed April 28th, 2019. https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/LVQD-8R9.
* Hurd, Jill J. The Ancestors & Descendants of Jan Lucken. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 1989.
* [http://trees.ancestrylibrary.com/tree/51679378/person/13289810795 cites 'Family Data Collection - Individual Records'. This ''Ancestry Library Edition'' requires a User ID and Password, so it is not useful for most Wikitree members.]
* [http://fabpedigree.com/s098/f078899.htm The pedigree of William Lukens]
* [http://www.ancestry.com/genealogy/records/william-lukens_37614404 William Lukens on Ancestry.com]
* The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, "Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:SBJ7-7VQ : accessed 2017-04-12), entry for William /Lucken/.

* ''Add [[sources]] here.''
''This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?'' <!-- This comment, and everything else, can be edited or removed. -->
Author: Erik Granstrom
Author: Bob Fields 
Lucken, William (I470)
 
5392 ==Biography==
William was born on his parents farm in Baltimore County. In 1750 he owned a 100 acre tract called Matthews Farms, a 50 acre tract called Matthew's Meadows and a 40 acre tract part of Matthew's Addition.
The name of his wife is unknown. He had five known children: John, William, Charles, Jemima and Sara.<ref>Barnes, Robert W. Baltimore County Families, 1659-1759. Baltimore, Maryland: Clearfield, 1989. Print.</ref>
He left all his lands and personal estate to his daughter Jemima, she to pay her sister, Sarah three pounds a year. He left the sum of one shilling each to his three sons: John, William and Charles,<ref>Baltimore County Wills Liber 5/534</ref>

==Sources==

<references/>
Author: Seely Foley 
Gorsuch, William (I32)
 
5393 ==Biography==
Susanna's father [[Horseman-13|Marmaduke Horseman]] ...
Susanna's mother [[Wood-2770|Sarah Wood]] ...


== Sources ==
<references />
: Source <span id='S2730'>S2730</span>
: Title: Public Member Trees: Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.Original data: Family trees submitted by Ancestry members.;
: Repository: [[#R1]]: NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.

==Acknowledgements==* This person was created on 14 September 2010 through the import of 124-DeCoursey.ged.* This person was created through the import of Conley - Dye,_2010-11-16.ged on 24 May 2011.
---- 
Horseman, Susanna (I788)
 
5394 ==Biography==

Son of Johannes "Jan" & Maria "Mercken" Gastes Luckens
He married Gaynor Evans 28 Oct 1719 in Philadelphia, PA - parents of John, Abraham, Ann, Mary, Hannah, Joseph, Evan, Benjamin, Peter & Gaynor

=== Will ===

: Wills: Abstracts, Book F: 1736 - 1743: Philadelphia Co, PA
: LUCKENS, PETER. Philadelphia Co. Feb 22, 1741. F.227.
: LUCKENS, PETER. Philadelphia Co. Yeoman.
: Apr 27, 1741. Feb 22, 1741. F.227.
: Exec: Wife Gaynor and Abraham Luckens.: Children: Peter, John, Abraham, Joseph, Benjamin, Eseu (Evan), Mary, Susan na, Anne and Gaynor.: Wit: John Crossley, John Palmer and Robert Healon,<ref>http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/pa/philadelphia/wills/willabstrbkf.txt</ref>

: Will of Peter Lukens dated 27 April 1741, probate September 1741
: I, Peter, of Horsham, Montgomery Co, ...To my wife, Gaynor, all household furniture, implements of weaving and husbandry, cattle, etc...50 acres bought of John Thompson with buildings and improvements, also 25 acres I bought of William Reynolds, it being the place whereon I dwell, shall be appropriated for the bringing up of my children and a dwelling place for my wife, until my youngest son, Peter, comes of age of 21 years. In case my wife should remarry, she shall have the moveables or the value of the home which I desire my wife to accept of, as her part of fower[sic-should be dower], and the plate to put to the best use. I give and bequeath to my six sons to wit: John, Abraham, Joseph, Benjamin, {Eden}, and Peter each to have 100 pd. to be paid to each of them in manner following: my son John to have 1/2 of his money at age 22 and the other half at 25 years. The other sons to have 1/2 of their money at age of 21 and remaining part at 22. To my four daughters, viz: Mary, Hannah, Anna, and Gaynor, to each, 50 pd. at time of marriage if accomplished by and with the consent of my executors, and trustee hereinafter named, or at age of 21 years. If my wife should happen with child, I give and bequeath to said child (100 pd. if male, but if a female, 60 pd.) I appoint my beloved wife ( to whom I bequest 30 pd.) and Abraham Lukens to be executors, and in the case of death of either, I appoint my well beloved brother, Matthias Lucken, in the place of the deceased. I appoint as my only and sole Trustee, my well beloved brother Matthias Lucken. <ref>Will Book F, p 227, Register of Wills, City Hall, Philadelphia Co, PA; Jill J Hurd's "The Ancestors and Descendants of Jan Lucken" 1989</ref>

== Sources ==
Hurd, Jill J. The Ancestors & Descendants of Jan Lucken. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, Inc., 1989.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, "Pedigree Resource File," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:2:SBJD-KRD : accessed 2017-04-12), entry for Peter /Lucken/.

<references />
Author: Erik Granstrom 
Lukens, Peter (I474)
 
5395 ==Biography==Elizabeth Critchfield is named as spouse of John Frampton in the DAR Patriot Index.<ref>http://services.dar.org/public/dar_research/search_adb/default.cfm accessed 19 July 2018.</ref>

=== Sources ===*Title: Family Data Collection - Individual Records Author: Edmund West, comp.*Title: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 Author: Yates Publishing*This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files.

== Footnotes ==
<references/>

==Acknowledgements==*This person was created on 11 June 2010 through the import of ged22.ged.
*This person was created through the import of Roberts-Bischoff Family Tree.ged on 31 August 2010. 
Critchfield, Elizabeth (I626)
 
5396 ==Biography==Matthias was born in 1733, the son of Andreas Keyser and Hannah Lucken. He married Hester Belitz in 1763 and they were the parents of Sarah, Hannay, Lydia, Elizabeth and Andrew. Matthias passed away about 1766.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/keyserfamilydesc00keys/page/142 ''The Keyser family : descendants of Dirck Keyser of Amsterdam''] by Charles Shearer Keyser, William F. Fell & Company, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1889, page 143.</ref>

==Sources==
<references /> 
Keyser, Mathias (I424)
 
5397 ==Biography==No birth record has been found for Dennis Garrett Cole. His relationship to his father comes from wills and land records.
Stated in the book, Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties Maryland; A Genealogical and Biographical Review from wills, deeds and church records. By: J.D. Warfield, A.M. Kohn & Pollock Publishers, Baltimore, MD. 1905, page 133 describes The Cole Family Dennis Garrett Cole, his wife Rachel, children and parents. The purchase of land by Thomas Stone and Dennis Garrett on "Long Island Point" in 1683 and in 1691, Thomas Stone gave his portion to the children of Dennis Garrett.
==Marriage==Dennis married Rachel Price the daughter of Mordecai Price and Mary Parsons.

==Children==
:Edith b. 28 AUG 1728 m. 8 NOV 1748 John Mallonee
:Urith b. 25 Nov 1731 m. John Price Jr.
:Dennis b. 9 DEC 1734 - d. 1770
:Rachel m. --?-- Pearce
:Henry
:Cassandra b. 1751 - d. 1811 m. Stephen Gill
:Rebecca m. --?-- Pitt

==Other Events==1750- He owned 59 acres of Price's Favor and 50 acres of Maynor's Beginning.
Cole Harbor, Cole's Choice, and additional tracts of land near the Patapeco River, were owned by the Cole family beginning in 1690's.
==Will==
In his will proved 16 JUN 1773 he named grandson, Dennis Cole, the children of his deceased daughter Edith Mallonee; grandson Stephen Gill, born of his daughter Cassandra Gill; daughters Urith Price and Rachel Pearce; his son, Henry; granddaughter Rebecca Pitt and his wife Rachel. He also mentioned sons-in-law John Price Jr. and Stephen Gill.

==Sources==All of the above information is from: Baltimore County Families 1659-1759 by Robert W. Barnes.
Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties Maryland; A Genealogical and Biographical Review from wills, deeds and church records. By: J.D. Warfield, A.M. Kohn & Pollock Publishers, Baltimore, MD. 1905.
* https://archive.org/details/foundersofannear00warf/page/n7
<references />
Author: Seely Foley
Author: Seely Foley 
Cole, Dennis Garett (I208)
 
5398 ==Caution: Multiple Cornelius Profiles==
[[Howard-171|Cornelius-171]], born 1643, son of Matthew Hall and Anne Howard is the destination profile. A merge has been proposed to merge [[Howard-9216|Cornelius-9216]], b. 1643 into Howard-171.

==Caution: Did Elizabeth Gorsuch marry Cornelius Howard?==
Cornelius' wife Elizabeth exists in several profiles; is Elizabeth Gorsuch one of them? it increasingly appears that she is not, and she is tentatively delinked as the wife of Cornelius.

===Reasons she might be the wife of Cornelius===
Becky Fox asserts that Elizabeth, wife of Cornelius Howard, was Elizabeth Gorsuch. <ref name="fox">Email from Becky Fox <beckfox @ aol.com> (28 Jun 2003) at http://dgmweb.net/FGS/H/HowardMathew-Anne_.html. Accessed My 13, 2015 </ref>
#In the 1663 will of Capt. John Sisson, husband of Elizabeth's sister Frances Gorsuch, Cornelius Howard is named executor of Sisson's will, is called "brother," and is asked to look after Sisson's wife and children. Howard is bequeathed an indentured servant, Richard Warfield; <ref name="newmanfox"> Newman, Anne Arundel Gentry, pages 261, cited by Becky Fox. </ref> In what way is Cornelius Howard John Sisson's brother? John Sisson was married to Frances Gorsuch.#In 1671 Cornelius Howard was named guardian to John Todd, son of Captain Thomas Todd. <ref name="newmanfox"/> Todd was married to Anne Gorsuch, sister to Frances. #The 1690 will of Lancelot Todd, son of Anne Gorsuch and Capt. Thomas Todd, names Cornelius Howard's wife Elizabeth as daughter Mary Todd's "Aunt Elizabeth Howard." <ref name="newmanfox"/>. Newman observes that this does not byitself "prove conclusively that she was of Todd patrimony, <ref name="newmanfox"/> but in conjunction with the other facts, it seems to clearly be part of a pattern.

===Reasons she might not be the wife of Cornelius===
[[Gorsuch-157|Elizabeth Gorsuch-157]], b. May 13, 1641, Herdfordshire, England to John Gorsuch and Anne Lovelace.
*1659 moved to Baltimore County, Maryland.
*Married to Howell Powell before 1662.
* She was Elizabeth Powell when she moved to Maryland in 1661
*She is addressed as Elizabeth Powell in her grandmother' 1662 will.

===Other women who might be the wife of Cornelius===
*[[Sisson-655|Elizabeth Sisson-665]], born May 13, 1641, Walker, Hertfordshire. Died 1680, Baltimore. No parents. No other information, No sources, Married Cornelius Sr, 1 child, Joseph. PM William Foster. TL.*[[Todd-3662|Elizabeth (Todd-3662) Howard]], b. 1641, d. 1680. Married two Corneliuses. No parents, No children. PM Marlene Hightower. Not TL.*[[Todd-397|Elizabeth Todd-397]], b. 1642. m. Cornelius,. No parents, three children. PM Carl Rhodes. TL.
While the situation remains unresolved, final merges should not be undertaken.




===Marriage to Powell ===
If Elizabeth Todd was actually Elizabeth Gorsuch, she first married _____ Powell. <ref name="VMHB27.34">Pleasants, J. Hall, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243737 "The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families (Concluded)"] ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,'' Vol. 27, No. 3/4 (Jul. - Oct., 1919), pp. 379-392, Virginia Historical Society, JSTOR.org accessed April 19, 2015</ref>

== Biography ==

=== Name ===
: Elizabeth /Gorsuch/<ref>Source: [[#S682]] Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Lois Howard</ref>

===1641 Birth and Baptism.===
[[Gorsuch-192|Elizabeth Gorsuch]] bpt May 13, 1641, to Virginia. <ref name="VMHB27.34" />

===Immigrant Siblings===
Because the lives of Alice Lovelace Gorsuch and her children intersect in various ways, those who immigrated to Virginia and then Maryland are shown below. <ref> Children from "Bishop's Transcripts" of the Walkern Parish Register (pg 87), cited by Pleasants, J. Hall, [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243521 "The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families (Continued)."] (Vol. 24, No. 2 (Apr., 1916), pp. 214-221) ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,'' Virginia Historical Society, JSTOR.org accessed April 19, 2015</ref>
Those who remained in England include Daniel, b. 1628 or 1629; William, b. 1631 or 1632 who married Catherine Morgan; Robert; the following all immigrated to Virginia.

# [[Gorsuch-178| John Gorsuch]] b c. 1630, 2nd son, poss died young# [[Gorsuch-174|Katherine "Katheren" Gorsuch]] bpt Nov 26, 1633, to Virginia Theo. Hone; mar William Whitby
# [[Gorsuch-25|Richard Gorsuch]] bpt Apr 19, 1637, to Virginia# [[Gorsuch-26|Anne/Anna Gorsuch]] bpt March 13, 1638/9 Walkern, to Virginia; mar 1) Capt. Thomas Todd, 2) Capt. David Jones, 3) Capt. John Oldton# [[Gorsuch-192|Elizabeth Gorsuch]] bpt May 13, 1641, to Virginia; mar ____ Powell# [[Gorsuch-21|Charles Gorsuch]] bpt Aug 25, 1642; certificate of marriage 1690/1 to Anne Hawkins at a West River, Maryland Quaker MM
# [[Gorsuch-168|Lovelace Gorsuch]] b after 1638
# [[Gorsuch-215|Joanna Gorsuch]] bpt March 15, 1639/40# [[Gorsuch-214|Frances Gorsuch]] b after 1642, called a granddaughter in Anne (Barnes) Gorsuch's will (Pg 85), b after 1638, poss died young. The daughter, Frances, (erroneously often identified as a son), was clearly called "daughter" in the 1662 will of her grandmother, Alice (Hall) Gorsuch, "Johanna and Frances daughters of my said son John" (Pg 392).<ref name="VMHB27.34" />

===1652 Immigration to Virginia===
Elizabeth Gorsuch came with six other children of her family to Virginia in 1652 where they settled in Lancaster County. <ref name="vmhb"> Page 91 The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. Vol. 24, No. 1, Jan., 1916, pp. 81-93, The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families. Arthur: J.H.P. Published by the Virginia Historical Society. Accessed 29 May 2012 at 1341 hours. Database online at jstor.org. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243492. </ref>
Assuming her birth in 1641, she would have been aged 11 when she immigrated to Virginia.

===1659 Immigration to Maryland===

In 1659 all but sister Katherine came to Maryland. <ref name="vmhb"/>
Assuming her birth in 1641, she would have been 18 when she immigrated to Maryland. Since she came with her family, it may be assumed that she was not yet married in 1659.

===1659 Move to Baltimore County, Maryland with Gorsuch Family===
1659 July 16. Thomas Powell was granted 700 acres, Howell Powell was granted 300 acres on north shore of Patapsco River in Baltimore County, MD. Grants in same vicinity the same date were made to other residents (or former residents) of Lancaster County, VA: Robert Gorsuch, Richard Gorsuch, William Dickinson, and others. <ref name="strong"> Robert T. Strong<rtstrongjr@juno.com > Manager, Strong Mail List, Thomas POWELLs of Old Rappahannock Co., VA & Lancaster Co., VA; 08 Apr 1997. http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/POWELL/1997-04/0860525213. Accessed February 9, 2016 </ref>
1661 May 13. Thomas Powell and Richard Gorsuch claimed headrights for transporting 12 persons to Maryland, including Howell Powell, Elizabeth Powell, Ann Powell, Thomas Powell, Ann Powell, Richard Gorsuch, Elizabeth Gorsuch, <b>Lovelace Gorsuch</b>. <ref name="strong"/>

The Powells and Gorsuch's moving to Maryland in 1661 are therefore:
*[[Powell-2191|Thomas Powell]] (1627-1669), age 34. Leader of the group. Married to Ann before 1657 when he was age 30.*[[Gorsuch-25|Richard Gorsuch]]. (1637-1694), age 24, son of Anne Lovelace Gorsuch (1611-1652). Richard, joined the Society of Friends, and were with the group of Quakers driven out of Lancaster County, Virginia by Gov. Berkeley in 1660. <ref name="VMHB24.1">J. H. P., [http://www.jstor.org/stable/4243492 "The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families"] ''The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography,'' Vol. 24, No. 1 (Jan., 1916), pp. 81-93, Virginia Historical Society, JSTOR.org accessed July 19, 2015</ref> Three years later, in 1665, married Elizabeth Rowe and had children.*[[Powell-5835|Howell Powell]] (1628-1704), age 33. Affiliated with Society of Friends. Was in Tred Avon Monthly Meeting, Baltimore County at his death.
*Elizabeth Powell (see below)*Ann Powell, wife of Thomas Powell. Married before 1657. Estimate her age as 27 in 1657, therefore born in 1630, either in Virginia or England*Ann Powell, eldest daughter of Thomas. If her parents were married in 1657 and she was born a year later in 1658, she would be aged 3 in 1661.
*Elizabeth Gorsuch (see below)*[[Gorsuch-168|Lovelace Gorsuch]] (1644-1702), age 17, son of Anne Lovelace Gorsuch (1611-1652). Lovelace joined the Society of Friends, and were with the group of Quakers driven out of Lancaster County, Virginia by Gov. Berkeley in 1660.<ref name="VMHB24.1"/> Married in 1696 at age 52 in Third Haven Quaker Meeting, Talbot Co, MD, had daughter Sarah.
Note: Elizabeth Powell and Elizabeth Gorsuch. Note that this list includes both an Elizabeth Powell and an Elisabeth Gorsuch at the same time. It is possible that Elizabeth Powell's maiden name was unknown and she was already married to Howell Powell and that Elizabeth Gorsuch was another person who did not marry Howell Powell -- or it is possible that Elizabeth Powell was a sister of the Powells and that Elizabeth Gorsuch was the future wife of Howell. [[Day-1904|Day-1904]] 23:51, 12 December 2019 (UTC)
[[Gorsuch-157|Elizabeth Gorsuch]] (1641-1680, age 20, son of Anne Lovelace Gorsuch (1611-1651). In the colonies women married young and often to older men; marriage to Howell Powell, age 33, would have been quite normal. On the other hand, if he married earlier, Elizabeth Powell shown on the list might be an older women, leaving Elizabeth Gorsuch in a position to marry Cornelius Howard upon her arrival in Maryland.

===1660 Marriage to Powell ===
Elizabeth was the wife of Howell Powell. <ref name="ra3634"> Douglas Richardson, [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1463561687/sr=8-1/qid=1397864689/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=&qid=1397864689&seller=&sr=8-1 ''Royal Ancestry.''] (2013) Douglas Richardson, [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1463561687/sr=8-1/qid=1397864689/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=&qid=1397864689&seller=&sr=8-1 ''Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families.''] 5 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham, (Salt Lake City, Utah: the author, 2013), volume III, page 634, Anne Lovelace.</ref>
Though no date has been provided for this marriage, one may estimate that her marriage took place soon after her arrival in Maryland, say 1660, when she was 19.

===1662 Named in grandmother's will as Elizabeth Powell===
Elizabeth Powell was named in the July 7, 1662 will of his grandmother [[Hall-347|Alice (Hall) Gorsuch]], of Weston, Co. Hertford, spinster, widow of Daniel Gorsuch, proved February 3, 1662-3 in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, to receive a bequest of £10. <ref name="jhp"> The Gorsuch and Lovelace Families, by J. H. P., Baltimore, Md. Virginia Historical Magazine, pp. 85-86. https://archive.org/stream/jstor-4243492/4243492_djvu.txt. Accessed Feb 10, 2016 </ref>

== Sources ==

<references />

See also:

: Source <span id='S-2093685953'>S-2093685953</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2093685954]]
: Title: Ancestry Family Trees
: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com.
: Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.: Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. : Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
: Page: Ancestry Family Trees: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=18646117&pid=901240406

: Source <span id='S-456906241'>S-456906241</span>
: Repository: [[#R-2097757945]]
: Title: Ancestry Family Trees: Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network.
: Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.: Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. : Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
: Page: Ancestry Family Trees: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=283722&pid=171808167
Author: Terry McClintock
Author: Rick Saunders
Author: Jack Day 
Gorsuch, Elizabeth (I54)
 
5399 1004 E. Monument St.
Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Head 
Dobson, George W E (I274)
 
5400 1813, Oct. 11. Affidavit of William Hoffman, giving consent to said revocation and sworn at Middle Twsp., Cape May Co. Witnesses—Josiah
Wills, Edmond Stancliff.


"Documents relating to the colonial history of the state of New Jersey, Vol. 41" 
Stancliff, Edmond (I297)
 

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