Pitt County NcArchives Wills.....Haddock, William 1821 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/nc/ncfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Elizabeth Ross martingen@hotmail.com December 5, 2011, 9:06 pm Source: N C Archives Written: 1821 HADDOCK, William. Pitt Co., Sept. 11, 1821, no probate date shown. Wife Martha Haddock (negroes woman Chane, boy Moses); dau. Zilpha Harrington (negro woman Chane & her increase after wifešs death); son Hardee Haddock; dau. Nancy Haddock; heirs of John Haddock; son Charles Haddock; son Wetherington Haddock; son Frederick Haddock. Remainder divided equally between 6 children: son Luke Haddock, son William Haddock, son Zachariah Haddock, son Hardee Hardee, dau. Nancy Haddock, dau. Desiah* Sutton. Execs.: son Frederick Haddock and Jacob Harrington. Wits.: Jas. Ringgold, Jesse Cox. Signed by mark, William Haddock {Seal}. A true copy certified Mar. 5, 1856, H. Sheppard, Clk. -- NC Archives, Supreme Court Case, Box 3155. Case: Rhoderick Carroll, pltf., vs. John Hancock, Barnes J. Summerell, Amariah B. Cox, Allen Jackson, and Nancy Harrington, defts. Re: rights to negroes devised to Zilpha and Joab Harrington. [*Note: Other legal documents prove her name to be Keziah.] Additional Comments: ABSTRACTS OF PITT COUNTY, NC WILLS: 1760­1858 Typing and transcription conventions: 1. The names of negroes/slaves are given in parentheses following the devisee to whom they were given, or otherwise listed, in order to facilitate Aftrican-American genealogical research. 2. If a relationship was stated in the will, it is spelled out; otherwise, the word "Devisee" may be inserted by the compiler for clarification. 3. If the surname of a devisee was not given, it is not guessed herein. 4. If other persons were mentioned, but not as devisees, their names are flagged as "Mentioned." 5. Unless a word or spelling is in question by the transcriber, no indication will be made of strange spellings (no "sic" or underlining). Spelling, prior to the 20th century, was phonetic -- the clerks simply wrote what they heard or saw. 6. The wills are presented in alphabetical order. Abbreviations/short names for often used sources: ECU Manu. Coll.: East Carolina University Manuscript Collection, J. Y. Joyner Library, Greenville, North Carolina. NC Archives: North Carolina Department of Archives and History, Raleigh, North Carolina. SHC UNC-CH: Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/nc/pitt/wills/haddock2106gwl.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/ncfiles/ File size: 2.9 Kb