Notes and Queries; Wm. and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 2, No. 4 Transcribed by Kathy Merrill for the USGenWeb Archives Special Collections Project ************************************************************************ USGENWEB ARCHIVES NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. http://www.usgwarchives.net *********************************************************************** Notes and Queries William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Papers, Vol. 2, No. 4. (Apr., 1894), pp. 270-278. NOTES AND QUERIES. CROSHAW - WEST - GRAVES - WHITE. Joseph Croshaw, J. P. of York County, 1655, and sub- sequent years, major of militia, member of H. of B. in 1659 and 1660, died 10th April, 1667. Married 1. ------ ------ 2. Perhaps widow Finch [the index of the oldest book (1644-1649) in the clerk's office at Yorktown, the front pages being torn away, has "Croshaw's joynture to Mrs. ffinch", "his bond to menteyne Elizabeth ffinch", "his bond for a heifer to Betty ffinch". Henry Finch brother of Sir John Finch was in the Council, 1631-'33]. 3. Anne ----, relict of Augustine Hodges, who d. after Jan. 25, 1660-'61, and she remar. Croshaw before July 24, 1661, and died July 20, 1663. 4. Margaret ---- (d. Sept. 30, 1664), widow of Daniel Tucker who had Dorothy Tucker. (D. T. mar. 1st Capt, Bryan Smith of New Kent and 2d Hugh Owen, the lawyer). 5. Mary ----, widow of Thomas Bromfield (d. Sept. 1665). She survived him and married 2dly Clement Marsh. Issue of Cro- Page 271. shaw by his first wife: Benjamin and Joseph (godsons of Dr. John Broch), living in 1646, but d.s.p. Rachel married to Ralph Graves before 1656; Mary mar. to Henry White before 1661; and Unity, wife of Col. John West, nephew of Lord Delaware. The 3d wife must have married three times as she had a daughter living in 1661 by name Jane Bignall. By the 5th wife [she had Anne Bromfield by 1st marr.] he had Joseph, who married, but d.s.p.; and Col. John West received the whole estate of Major Croshaw. His home was called "Poplar Neck", and was sold by Col. West and Unity, his wife, in 1687 to Edmund Jenings, Secretary of State, who named it "Rippon Hall", and died there June 2, 1727. Ralph1 Graves (d. May 9, 1667), headright to Croshaw, had Anne, Ralph2, William and Mary. His widow, Rachel, m., 2dly Richard Barnes, and d. April 20, 1669. Ralph2 Graves m. his cousin, Unity, d. of Henry and Mary (Croshaw) White, and had Ralph2 (d. Feb. 1748-9), who m. 1st Mary d. of William Pinkethman and 2dly Elizabeth -----, and had William4, Henry, Richard4, Richard Croshaw, Unity m. William Hilliard, Elizabeth m. ----- Stone. William4 died in 1758, and had Ralph5, John, Henry Brown, Mary m. ----- Winfrey, Susannah m. ----- Powsers, and Sally. Ralph5, son of William4, mar. Letitia Power, dau. of Major John Power of New Kent County (his will was proved in York County, 15th Feb. 1768) and had Letitia Power Graves, "his heiress", who m. John M. Gregory, father of Gov. John M. Gregory who was born July 8, 1804. Richard4 Graves, of New Kent County, m. Dyonisia - and had Charles Henry (b. 1753), Mary, William (b. 1756), Ralph (b. 1758), and Sarah Cobb. Richard Croshaw4 m. before 1771 Elizabeth, dau. of Joseph Valentine. Capt. Richard Croshaw was brother of Major Joseph Croshaw and was b. in 1621 and d. in April, 1669; m. Elizabeth -----, and left Benjamin d.s.p. [as Benjamin was a name given to a son by each brother it was probably the name of their father], Rachel who m. John Walker, of St. Steven's Parish in King and Queen County, Margaret d.s.p., and Elizabeth who m. Rie Jones of York County. [The latter's will was proved May 24, 1697; he had Morris Jones, Rebecca, and other children. In 1724, Elizabeth, admr. of Richard Croshaw Walker, was wife to Christopher Beverely. Croshaw is sometimes written Crosher in the records.] Page 272. [Authorities for the above are: York County Records, Bruton Parish Register, Sainsbury MSS., Ludwell MSS., and St. Peter's Parish Register. The Abingdon Parish Register has interesting data about a family of Graves, in which Thomas, John and Benjamin occur as family names. These entries will be given in the next number.] AMERICAN BOOK-PLATES. - The editor asks the kind interest of the public in the good work of Mr. Charles Dexter Allen, of Hartford, Connecticut. Mr. Allen proposes to publish a book on American book-plates, and patriotically desires the South to be fitly represented. Book- plates are often valuable by representing the coat-of-arms borne by the family when using them. When they do not represent arms, they express in some degree the character of the user. These plates are found in many old books in Virginia, and Mr. Allen would be gratified to represent them in his work. Old books and other property are perfectly safe with him, and will, to the writer's experience, be promptly returned. Look over your libraries and the libraries of your friends and do write to Mr. Allen. So much has perished! Let us save the rest. FAUNTLEROY. - Mr. Christopher Johnston send the following extract: "3d. August 1663. I receiv'd this letter & a letter from yr Lopp for Coll Fontele Roy & a warrant for him, both whch I carried wth me to Virginia, but afore I could gett it sent to him he was dead, soe that I have the warrant & shall keepe it untill ye Lopp shall further direct in't" - Calvert Papers I. pp. 236-237. BEVERLEY. - In the QUARTERLY for January, 1893, it is stated that Mrs. Chew's father was Robert Beverley. See "Spotsylvania County. - Marriage Licenses". Mr. Stanard, who compiled the paper, writes that the correct name of Miss Beverley, who became Mrs. Chew, and also of all the Miss Beverleys mentioned was Harry Beverley and not Robert Beverley. SANFORD. - In Worthy's "Practical Heraldry", p. 168, is given as an example of the use of wills, the statement that Dorothy Tucker of Exeter, widow made will May 13, 1693 (pro. June 30, 1693), and left a small legacy to "seven poor widows of the City of Exeter", and her interest & term of years in certain houses to her brother John Sanford of Va & her cousin Ann Chilcott. Hotten's "Immigrants" shows that a Jno Sanford went from England to Barbadoes and that Oct 1, 1679 he left that island for Virginia. In Va Calendar of State Papers, I., 18 is: "Petition of Porter Page 273. Smith agant one John Sanford, in relation to joint ownership of a vessel trading to Jamaica etc." WAYLES, JOHN, of the "Forest" in Charles City Co was born in Lancaster, England, in 1715. He was King's attorney in 1756. He married three times, according to Randall's "Life of Jefferson", but his last wife's name was not Martha but Elizabeth, and he mentions four daughters in his will. Martha, the youngest of these, was born in 1749, married 1st Bathurst Skelton (b. June 1744 and d. 1768). His will was proved in Charles City Court 30 Sept., 1768, - devisees: his wife Martha, and son John, who d.s.p. The widow, Martha, m. 2dly Thomas Jefferson President U.S. According to Randall, one of her half-sisters married Francis Eppes, son of Lewellin Eppes, Clerk of Charles City Co., which last was son of Col. Littlebury Eppes (Inventory presented in 1737). Francis Eppes was father of John Wayles Eppes, a distinguished member of Congress. Another daughter married Fulwar Skipwith. But Slaughter's account is different. (Slaughter's "Bristol Parish"). The will of John Wayles, proved Sept. 1st 1771 by the oaths of Joseph Harris, who declared that he wrote the will, and of Francis Eppes, mentions as living in 1760 daus. Elizabeth, Tabitha, Anne and Martha; gives to his wife, Elizabeth, all the slaves devised to her by the will of Reuben Skelton. By a codicil in 1770 gives 200L to Robert Skipwith, Esq., and mentions 3 grand children Richard Eppes, John Wayles Eppes and Pasty Jefferson. Witnesses to the codicil Anderson Bryan and Henry Skipwith. The will of Henry Skipwith, b. Oct 22, 1714, was proved in York Co Feb 21, 1736, leaves the estate given by the will of Sir William Skipwith deceased, his father, to his sisters Ann, Sarah, Mrs Mary Kemp, and Dorothy [Randall's "Life of Jefferson", Slaughter's Bristol Parish, Charles City Records, York Records]. BLAIKLEY. - The spelling on the tomb in Bruton churchyard is "Blaikley", and not "Blackley", as published in Virginia Historical Society Papers, Volume XI. To information in last QUARTERLY add will of John Kaidyee of Queen Mary's Port (Williamsburg) pr. 21 Feb., 1742: "Unkle Frederick Bryan, kinsmen Charles and John Rudder, and John Whitehead; cousin Mary Blaikley and her sisters, Casson, and Elizabeth". CALTHORPE - BACON. - Rev. Horace E. Hayden, of Wilkesbarre, Penn., send the following, by which it appears that the grandmother of Christopher Calthorpe was not a daughter of Francis Page 274. Bacon (see QUARTERLY for October, 1893), but a daughter of John Bacon of Hesset: "At Cockthorpe, North Greenhoe Hundred, Co Norfolk, England there is still preserved in the church a monumental Tablet at the East End of the South Aisle, with two coloured Shields: 1. Chequy or and azure, a fesse ermine, Calthorp. 2. Calthorp, impaling, Argent, on a fesse engrailed gules, between three escutcheons of the last, as many mullets of the first, Bacon of Hesset. Crest: A boar's head couped (Calthorp, A boar's head couped at the neck azure, bristled and tusked or. - Bl. Norf. ix. 218). 'To God and posterity, in assured hope of a joyful resurrection, resteth the body of Sr James Calthorp, Knight, and Dame Barbara his wife, daughter to John Bacon of Hesset, Esqrs. By her he had 8 sons and 6 daughters, in whose several marriages and issue the ancient glory of yt family (resting then chiefly and almost solely in himself) did reflourish and is dilatated into many of the best houses of this country. He was buried the 16th day of June, A.D. 1615, and of his age 57. The said Dame Barbara surviving him, and much comforted with the sight of 193 of her children and their offspring, at the age of 86 years exchanged this life for a better upon the 3d day of November, 1639.' 'Behold, children are the inheritance of the Lord, And the fruit of the womb his reward. PS. 127, 3'" From Farrer's "Church Heraldry" of Norfolk, II. 345. BALLARD. - Thomas Ballard b. 1630; buried March 24, 1689. Clerk of York County in 1652 and for many years later. Burgess from James City in 1666, member of the council in 1675, speaker of H. of B. in 1680. His case as a creditor of "Bacon the rebel" was in 1686 represented to the King by the council. Married Anne ----, who died Sept 26, 1678. William Thomas of York Co, whose wife was Anne -----, calls Ballard "son-in-law" and Sarah Henman and Jane Hillier wife of John Hillier, "daughters-in-law". Ballard's wife was captured by Bacon, and placed, with other ladies of the Council, upon his breastworks before Jamestown, where their white aprons warned Berkeley from attack. Capt Robert Baldrey [J.P. of York, came to Virginia in 1635, aged 18, and died in 1675] left his estate to the following children of Col. Ballard: John, eldest son, Thomas, Lydia, Elizabeth and Margaret. In 1694, Capt Thomas Ballard was sheriff of York Co and his brother, Francis (probably not born in 1675), sub-sheriff. John, I think, died without issue before 1694. Page 275. THE PARISH REGISTERS AND VESTRY BOOKS. - It is certainly mortifying to have to record the failure of the Virginia Historical Society to secure an act of the Legislature, recently ad- journed, for copying the few remaining parish registers and vestry books, now scattered throughout the State and so full of family and historic interest. The copies were to be deposited in the new fire-proof Library. The sum asked for the purpose was a mere trifle; and the bill, had it been put to the vote of the House of Delegates, would have certainly passed. The unreasoning opposition of one or two members of the Finance Committee of the House of Delegates delayed the favorable report which the bill received till too late to be reached on the calendar. The previous Legislature had come up nobly to the mark, and provided for a new Library and for the copying of the county records to 1700. HARIVE - GREENE. - Nicholas Harvie = Jane = Thomas Greene Came to Md, 1641; Came to of Elizth River, Lowr granted msnor of Md 1641; Norfolk Co. Va. living St. Joseph's 25 Jany remard 1694 1642 Frances Harvie - George Beckwith dau. & h. of Nicho. of Potomac River, Md. mard, before 1657. From Maryland Land Records, Lib. 1. fol., 129; Lib. 3, fol. 216, 396. (Communicated by Christopher Johnston, Esq.) DUKE. - Charles Hansford, in his will proved July 24, 1702, mentions his daughter Lydia, wife of Mr. Henry Duke - H.D. was J.P. of James City 1680, burgess 1692, 1699; councillor 1703. The Ludwell MSS. mentions, in 1724, Elizabeth, widow of Henry Duke; and James Duke, Gent., "surviving Exor. of Henry Duke, Esq." In January, 1656, George Duke, then a prisoner to the Parliamentarians at Exeter, petitioned to be transported to Virginia, which was granted. james Duke, sheriff of james City in 1719. John Duke married Jane, daught. of Lt. Col. John Scasbrooke, of York County. John Duke, their sone, who married Susannah -----, was living in 1697. Henry, son of Mr. Henry Duke of James City Co., living in 1767. - York Co. Records. SERVANTS. - According to the York Co. Va. books, Thomas bell, by appointment from Robert Cornwell, "Deputy Registrar of the Office appointed by Letters patent for that purpose", entered the indentures of John Graves of Brackley, Northamptonshire, carpenter, as a servant for four years to Richard Kitchener of Virginia, 19 Feb. Page 276. 1697. Similar entries are noticed in other years. Dr. A.G. Grinnan sends an extract from "Notes and Queries", 1884: "June 1691. A grant from William III unto Edward Thompson of the office for registering all servants yt shall go voluntarily or be sent to his Majesty's plantations in America, for 21 years, with all fees thereto belonging", &c. Can any one inform the editor where the records of this office are preserved in London? The statistics as to servants in the colony would be interesting. LENOX LIBRARY. - The attention of Virginia students is called to the good work done by this Library. Mr. Wilberforce Eames, the kind and accomplished Librarian, writes: "We are trying to improve our collection of the early laws, sessions acts, and legislative journals before 1785, and would be glad to know of any opportunity to purchase that may come to your notice. It may interest you to know that this Library has a copy of the printed Charter, Transfer and Statutes of the College of William and Mary in Latin and English, printed at Williamsburg by William Hunter in 1758, with the autography of Rev. Samuel Davies, President of the College of Wm. & Mary". Our Trustees would not consent to exchange for the William and Mary Charter, but they would be glad to purchase any desiderata for our collection. The Lenox Library possesses, probably, the bst and largest collection of early printed books on Virginia in America, printed before 1700. Our original copy of Hariot's Virginia of 1588 is the only copy in this country, so far as I know, and we have nearly all the early tracts and broadsides issued before 1630. And we have the original Williamsburg edition of the Washing- ton journal, 1754. It is only recently that we have begun to buy the laws, most of these in inclosed list having been purchased this year: Lenox Labrary has Virginia Laws: 1662, Laws of Virginia now in force (Morison) 82 pp. Fo. 1704, Abridgement of Laws in force, 304 pp. 8o. 1727, Acts of Assembly, 1662-1715, 291 pp. Fo. 1733, Collection of Acts of Assembly, 622 pp. Fo. 1737, Exact Abridgement of Public Acts (Mercer), 345 pp. 8o. 1756, Acts 1st Session, 28 pp. Fo. 1756, Acts 2d Session, 4 pp. Fo. 1757, Acts 3d Session 48 pp. Fo. 1758, Acts 2d Session, 2 pp. Fo. 1759, Acts 3d Session 36 pp. Fo. 1759, Acts 4th Session, 8 pp. Fo. 1760, Acts 5th Session,6 pp. Fo. 1760, Acts 6th Session, 6 pp. Fo. 1760, Acts 7th Session, 7 pp. Fo. 1761, Acts 7th Session, 9-50 pp. Fo. 1761, Acts 1st Session, 14 pp. Fo. 1762, Acts 2d Session, 2 pp. Fo. 1762, Acts 3d Page 277. Session, 10 pp. Fo. 1762, Acts 4th Session, 52 pp. Fo. 1769, Acts of Assembly now in force, 577 pp Fo. 1770, Acts 1st Session, 80 pp. Fo. 1785, Collection of Public Acts General Assembly, 1768-'83, 235 pp. Fo. 1772, Journal of the House of Burgesses, 164 pp. 1788, Debates and other Proceedings of this Convention of Virginia, convened at Richmond, on Monday, the 2d day of June, 1788, for the purpose of deliberating on the Constitution recom- mended by the Grand Federal Convention. Petersburg; Printed by Hunter and Prentis, 1788-'89. 3 vols. 8o." Mr. Eames writes further: "Since my last letter I have procured the Virginia Acts of Assembly for 1734, 1736, 1738, and 1740, all original editions. Also the continuation of Mercer's Abridgement 1739, and the Reprint of 1759. And the original editions of the Acts of 1771 and 1772." "THE NATION'S" CRITICISM. - The opinions of the New York Nation are always weighty. In its issue of February 22d, it justly criticises the failure of the paper entitled "Names of Princess Anne County (Va.) slave-holders who, during the year 1810, owned ten or more slaves", published in the January QUARTERLY, to state "the number or proportion of small owners of slaves, and the source of the list given". The source is the papers in the clerk's office of Princess Anne county, and a fuller statement of hte slave-owners will appear in a subsequent issue. The Nation, while saying "there was never a census of American slave-holders", apparently adopts the claim of "their partisans", that the total number did not exceed 350,000. This estimate was popular also with the partisans on the other side - the Abolitionists, - since it lent support to their claim that the South and the Union were dominated by a slave oligarchy. Their plan, as voiced by Seward in his Rochester speech, was to frighten men into believing that the innumerable freemen of the North were in imminent danger of being "gobbled up" by a ferocious handful of slave-owners who would open markets again in Boston and New York, in "the bodies and souls of men". The ridiculous features of the case never seemed to occur to them. Extremes meet always, and there was perhaps no essential difference but their environment between "the higher law" anarchists and the fire-eating part of the slave-holders. For the present, it may suffice to quote the language of an Englishman "In considering the proportion of the population pecuniarily interested in slave property, those having expectations must be taken into account; and when this is done, I believe that it will be found that three-fourths or more of the native-born citizens are thus interested". - Ten Years in the United States, by D.W. Mitchel Page 278. London, 1862. It was also a fond notion with the anti-slavery partisans, that the increased subbornness of the slave-owners in 1856 and thereabouts was due to the increased price of slave property. But it is readily shown from the inventories that the price of negroes only kept pace with the price of other personalty. Thus, if the price of slaves in 1682 was between L12 10s. and L20 16s., the price of good horses was between L1 5s. and L2. If good negroes brought $700 in 1856, horses brought between $100 and $300. The Nation's critic entirely disregards the fact that the violence of the Abolitionists provoked counter-violence. Nor is it just to regard the language of Judge Tyler, when wounded by an uncalled-for attack upon Williamsburg, as indicative of an inherent bias towards secesion in the Southern mind. Judge tyler's patriotism in the Revolution was unquestioned, and Mr. Madison states that the passage of the resolution by the Virginia Legislature for the Annapolis Convention was entirely due to him. The Federal Convention resulted from the Annapolis Convention. Judge Tyler was for a stronger government than the old Articles permitted, but not for the un- defined powers of the new Constitution. In the State Convention, seven years before his letter, he said that "he watned it to be handed down to posterity that he poopsed the wicked clause" of the Constitution engrafted by New England, Georgia, and South Carolina, for keeping open the slave-trade; and among the last letters that he wrote was on in which he said that "he would die in the good old cause [of the Revolution], still hoping that there would not be wanting patriots enough to hold the helm of government for many centuries to come, and again, bring it back to first principles". The grumbling of Judge Tyler in 1795, in a private letter, was assuredly something vastly different from the organized efforts and public resolves of the Abolitionists "to dissolve the American Union", and it is not entirely fair in the Nation's critic to pass by the threats and other evidence if ill-nature to the Union on the part of Northern men, other than Abolitionists, of which there is abundant proof in those old days. VOLUME I. OF QUARTERLY. - The demand for the QUARTERLY has rendered it necessary to re- issue the four numbers of Volume I. It will appear in book form, revised and with index, not later, it is hoped, than May 1. To those who have paid for Volume 1. and received the numbers as they came out, it will be furnished at $2; to all others at $3.