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Showing posts with label Drake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drake. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2013

Chancery records are so cool!

Alright, I am a slacker.  Seriously, I am.  This week I sat on my couch letting my brains run out of ears far more than I have in the past few months.  You know what, it felt great.  However, that feeling has to go away because it is time to get back to the grindstone if you know what I mean.

Once I got off the couch, I found an interesting little nugget while delving into a family chancery record.  Virginia Chancery Records, for those of you who don’t know, are simply put courts that were involved with disputes where something needed to be divided equally.  These were not criminal cases and most instances they simply needed a mediator between two parties that were in dispute. 

Recently I was looking into the Chancery Records concerning the estate of my 6th great grandfather James Drake.  His third oldest son William was the executor of the will and, well, it seems his siblings were a bit miffed at the way the estate was settled.  So much so that they were suing him for $6,000 which in 1799 was a pretty penny.  Yeah, I bet that made holiday gatherings awkward since the suit went on for several years and there were another 4 cases I have found so far dealing with this estate.

To me the most amazing document in the initial case file was on the last page.  Here on page 27 was an
inventory accounting for everything that William did with his father’s estate.  Who received what, how much, and when.  I am currently comparing this to the will I copied from the Library of Virginia this time last year.  It will be interesting to see where the items from the original inventory ended up.

Page 27 of File 1800-006, Powhatan County Chancery Records, Library of Virginia.

As with the will, I did find a mention of a slave transfer as well as provisions purchased for them.  It is fascinating actually.  One listing states the estate purchased “1 gallon of Rum for sick negroes” another reads “paid for a hat for a negro of the Estate.”  Was rum a common medicine purchased for ailments?  Cough syrup or something to be infused with herbs?  I really need to look into that.

Finally there was the purchase of “a negro woman Nell and her child Jacob” for the sum of £30.  In the past I have told you I feel the need to publish the names of these people when I find them, so I am.  Maybe, just maybe, it will help someone find the answers to their family history.

Blow up of page 27


There were also two others cases that dealt with the division of the plantation.  Originally 800 acres, it was carved up into pieces for the children with a large portion given to James’s wife Mary.  I could not believe my luck when these files contained plats with the land divisions!  Now I get to start the process of trying to use the roads, waterways, and landmarks on the plat to see if I can find the land today.  

Plat 2 from file 1806-015, Powhatan County, Library of Virginia.  Tarlton Drake was James Drake's son, and my 5th great grandfather.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Spring break genealogy adventures with the family


A few weeks back was my kid’s spring break.  We decided to do a long weekend in Williamsburg,
Virginia instead of taking a whole week off and traveling.  Way too much to do around here to be gone that long, which of course the boys hated since I made them clean and icky stuff like that.

We did the usual touristy stuff that we hadn’t done in a couple of years.  Wondered about Colonial Williamsburg and had a picture taken with the boys in stocks.  It was an instant favorite of ours and Facebook.  We also went to the DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum in which I almost lost the boys to the gun and sword collections. There was also a day spent wandering around the Yorktown Victory Center plus watching the musket and mortar demonstrations.  Loud booms are always a plus with my family.

My highlight of the trip was dragging the family to meet a distant cousin from my mother’s Drake family line.  She and her husband live in Williamsburg.  We had a lovely evening talking and getting to know each other over snacks and wine.  It was a great time and I have to say she is one fascinating lady.  We share my 6th great grandfather, James Drake.  In this blog I have written several posts about him and his son Tarleton, my 5th great grandfather. 

What's even more fascinating for me is the that my mother and I are direct line maternal descendants of Tarleton’s wife Mary.  The fact I have been able to piece this line back is, as many of you know, amazing.  The line goes: Me, my mom, my grandmother, Ila Sanders, Mary Ellen Wildman, Mary Frances Moberly, Delilah Drake, and Mary Unknown.  Last week my mother’s mDNA test came in.  I haven’t been able to look at them yet and it is killing me.  Maybe this will help figure out a piece of the puzzle as to who Mary was.

While that is all fascinating and stuff, there was another little adventure we went on thanks to my Drake Cousin.  She gave us directions to the parish church where James and his Siblings were baptized.  It is still there and still functioning.  How could I pass up a trip to see it?

St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in New Kent, Virginia was amazing.  We arrived after services on a Sunday so we were unable to tour the inside, but I am not above peering through windows to see what I can see.  The church has an amazing history and has the honor of being the church that George Washington and Martha Dandridge Custis were married in (the first, first family).

Of course, when I went out to read about the church I did some digging around the website, and much to my glee I found their colonial records are on line.  Yes, I did a happy dance! My Drake Cousin did say that while some of the children from James's parents, William and Sarah are listed, there are a few known children missing.  James is unfortunately one of them.  However, it appears to be due to the fact that the Parish Register was not kept as well up to date as it should have been for a number of years, and there are large holes.  His birth time frame falls into one of these holes.

We spent quite a lot of time wandering around the grounds and looking at the cemetery.  No family was buried there, that am aware of, but there were some very interesting stones.  I and my husband both find looking at gravestones fascinating, and we were not disappointed.

One that was a modern tech and old world charm learning moment was the stone of Willliam Langborn.  Below is the inscription from the stone:

to the Memory of
William Langborn
Son of Robert
And Mary Langborn
Of Fetter Lane London
Born the 21st of October 1723
And died the 19th of March 1766
Also Francis Dandridge
Langborn, Son of William
and Susanna Langborn
Born the 9th of March 1760
and died the 3rd of September 1760

I could not believe all of the genealogical information I found on this stone.  If he was my ancestor I would have felt like I hit the jackpot.

My husband found this grave first, and to be honest when I saw him with his phone out I assumed he was checking email or doing something for work.  However, next thing I know he is calling us all over.  He began reading the stone to our boys and then stopped when he came to the street in London this gentleman had been born on.  Hubby produced his phone and showed them the map with this street on it.  You should have seen their eyes as they digested this information; that his man had come from there all the way over to where we were standing.  Once again, never underestimate the power of mobile technology.  One other element caught my attention on the stone, and that was a crest.  If you don’t know, I love heraldic display of all types and find it fascinating. Currently I am tracking it down to see if it was his family crest, his and his wife's marshaled together, or if it is a civic type crest.  

Finally there was one other stone that stood out, and that was for Calvin Hooker Goddard.  His tombstone caught me from across the yard as it was one of the largest there and on the back I saw a large coat of arms as well as the words “Order of the Crown of Italy.”  Wow, I just had to find what that was all about.  This man, simply put, was amazing.  In fact, after reading the back of the stone and doing some Googling I couldn't believe I was standing there reading about the man who is the father of firearms identification.  If you don’t know who he was, please take a moment to read about his fascinating life and his contributions to forensic technology.  Oh, and his work on the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, which is by far the most important thing according to my kids.

The inscription reads on the front:
Calvin Hooker Goddard
Colonel, United States Army
Oct. 30, 1891 - Feb. 22, 1955

Son of

Capt. Henry Perkins and Lida Whitman Goddard
of Norwich, Conn.

His Beloved Wife
Eliza Cunningham Harrison
Jan. 25, 1888 - Sept. 24, 1960

The inscription reads on the back: 
Legion of Merit 
Expert Marksman

Crest (my research indicates: heraldic grenade for the ordinance corps, 
crossed pistols for military police, caduceus for medical corps, 
and the quill with parchment for writing.)

Order of the 
Crown of Italy

He held three commissions in the United States Army
In the ordnance corps. the military police corps and 
the medical corps and served in each with distinction.

"He was an historian and a prolific writer."

with vision and imagination, he developed firearm 
identification and pioneered in scientific criminology 
thus serving his country and his fellowman well
and for all time.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Next FTF post is up: Slavery in the family

A wheat field in Virginia, taken by
photographer Dorothea Lange in
1936. Courtesy of the Library of Congress
Prints & Photographs Online Catalog.
My latest post from Family Tree Firsts is up, and you can read it here.

As I stated in the opening paragraph, when you are researching Virginia Colonial roots, there is a good chance you are going to come across slave listings.  I don’t have anything new to say, but I do want to share with you names on it.  Perhaps, someone out there can use this information in their research.

However, there is a term I don’t understand, and if you do, please let me know.  What does “Salve Vix” mean?  It is the heading for the listing of those James owned, and I have not had a lot of luck finding the definition of it.  I have found several references to “vix” in newspapers of the day, but nothing that would lead me to understanding the term.

The full inventory can be found at the Library of Virginia on microfilm reel 1 of the Powhatan County Deeds.  (Part of the index to Powhatan County Wills and Administrations (1777-1800), pages 375-377, Inv. & appr. rec. 20 Sept. 1797; Drake, James; Deed Book No. 2, 1792-1800 (reel 1))
 

Agreeable to an order of Powhatan Court which is hereunto assured we whose names are subscribed below being first sworn did appraise such of the estate of James Drake deceased as was shown to us Sept. 20th 1797
 



 
Slaves Vix
£
S
D
 
Shadrach
a man
100
~
~
Morocco
Do
100
~
~
George
Do
100
~
~
Stephen
a Lad
90
~
~
Charles
Do
95
~
~
Margaret
a Child
20
~
~
Pheba
a Woman
50
~
~
Charlotte
Do
50
~
~
Phillis
Do
90
~
~
Maria
a Girl
30
~
~
Harry
a Man
70
~
~
Pat
a Woman Slave
50
~
~

 

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Adventures in Genealogy: Finding James Drake

File:Falls of the James, Downtown Richmond, Virginia, 2008.JPG
Richmond, Virginia
Image from Wikimedia Commons
Sometimes you wake up in the morning and you decide to have an adventure.  Of course, if you have a particularly ingenious spouse, they may suggest the adventure.  So let me tell you a story...about what I did today.

One night, a few weeks back, I was out poking around on Find-a-Grave, as I am sure many of you have done.  This particular night I got a hit for the possible burial location of James Drake, my 6th great grandfather.  It gave me a lead that he was at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Richmond, Virginia.  He died in Powhatan County but who knows, he could have been buried here since he was a prominent figure.  Also, this church is a national historic site because it was where Patrick Henry gave his “give me liberty or give me death” speech.  All I could think was how exciting it would be to stroll around the grounds, take some pictures, and if I was really lucky see his tombstone.

Days passed and I was getting ready to go to Richmond for an errand this morning when my husband suggested that I stop by the church.  I was going to be in the area after all, why didn’t I just pop on over there and see what I could find.  Yeah, that sounded like a plan, how hard could it be?  Just a few minutes, maybe an hour, perusing the area and then I would drive home.  Well, best laid plans and all that, this is not quite what happened.
File:RichmondVA StJohnsChurch.jpg
St. Johns Church
From wikimedia commons

I strolled up to the visitor’s center and boldly asked for help.  Enthusiastically I explained that I was looking for information on internments and that I thought I had an ancestor located in the cemetery.  A very nice woman, dressed in colonial attire, gave me a very fat old book to look through.  It was the index of the internments, and James was not in it.  I was crushed.  Another member of the church staff gave me the number for the church office and said I should talk to them.  Maybe they could give me a lead or I could talk to their archivist.  It was at this point that I realized I had only put half of my new found knowledge of cemetery research into practice.  However, I was doing this on a whim and not nicely planned out.  Next time I would be on top of my game.

After perusing the bookstore (I couldn’t help myself) I went out to the street and called the number written on the piece of paper.  I repeated my story to the lady on the phone and she asked me if I was standing outside on the corner.  Well, they could have told me the office was just across the street.  In I went, and sadly they had no information for me either.  However, she suggested I drive over to the Virginia Historical Society.  They had the early parish records there and maybe, just maybe, they could help me locate him. 

15 minutes later I was there, checked in, and asking my questions to the reference librarian.  She was stumped too.  There were no parish death records for the time frame I was looking for.  However, we found him listed in the “VirginiaWills and Administrations 1632-1800.”  I was told this was a good thing, but that the Historical Society could not help me.  To get this information I would need to go to the Virginia State Library, back the way I had come. Yes, I had already driven by it…twice.  Well, off I went.

To be honest, I have been meaning to go to the Library of Virginia for, well, a couple years but I have just never got around to it.  Since I was there I went ahead and got my library card so I can do more research there and from home.  I was giddy!  Looking at the clock I had an hour, just an hour, until I had to leave so that I would make it home in time to get my kids from school.  No pressure.

Once again the research librarian pointed me to the microfilm for the wills of Powhatan County, Virginia.  Those from 1797 were on book 2 of the reel.  Great!  This will take no time.  30 minutes later I still hadn’t found him.  Back to the desk to ask for more help, and I get taken to the index.  THE INDEX!  I could have saved 30 minutes of my life because it told us…he didn’t have a will.  Perplexing a librarian seems to be the name of the game today, however after a quick computer search he found that James Drake was listed in the deed books for that year.  Lesson:  don’t assume that your record is where it should be.  There wasn’t a will, but an inventory of the estate at the time of his death on page 375-7 of deed book 2.

I downloaded the three ledger pages to my thumb drive and got the heck out of dodge.  Best of all, I made it home in time to meet the school bus.  Whew!  Now to go through what I saved since there was no time to look through it then.  Wonder what I will find?  Also, I still need to find out about the James Drake who is now MIA from the cemetery.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

The DAR

Some of you may know that I have taken the plunge and I am going to attempt to get all the paperwork in order to make my grandmother’s dream come true by applying to join the Daughters of the American Revolution.  I attended the meeting of the local chapter, Susannah Chandler, on the 10th.  They are a nice group of ladies and were very welcoming to a prospective member.

I have 4 suspected lines that are in the DAR database; which when I discovered that completely floored me.  Only 4?  Bet you I can find more…go on, bet you.  Now, I was disappointed not to find my suspected Arvin ancestor (still proving that line) or my suspected Combs ancestor (which William Combs) in the database.  That is a personal goal of mine, to find them and bring them to the attention of my living relatives.

The lines that are there and I just need to gather the documents to prove my findings to their satisfaction are:
James Drake (mother’s side)
Rodolphus Norris (mother’s side)
William Hayden (father’s side)
William Price (father’s side)

A few of these lines I am still tracing, well, how about I am double checking the sources on published genealogies to make sure I am satisfied that the person is correct.  One of those very first lessons I had, not all trees that are published are sourced well…never trust an Ancestry.com public tree.

Of course, I also have a new trail to follow.  I was doing random surname searches on the DAR database and I came across a James Cannon who died in Daviess County Indiana 1849.  Looking at some of the information on the available descendants lists it appears that he and his children resided in Martin County Indiana…where my mother’s family is from. 

This is interesting to me as I have a Bethena (Betheny) Cannon on my mother’s side of the family.  She was born in Martin County Indiana 1838, to parents who were from Virginia and Indiana according to the census information given.  Taking the information from the DAR site I am going to go and do some searches for the family using the possible siblings and aunts/uncles listed.  Love it when I get new leads!

*Image from the Library of Congress, "Daughters of the American Revolution. Exterior of Daughters of the American Revolution Building"