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Father: Charles CHERRY Mother: Rose YARRELL |
_Samuel CHERRY II____+ | (1685 - 1754) _Charles CHERRY _____| | (1730 - 1805) | | |_Gatsey LLEWELLYN ___+ | (1700 - ....) _Charles CHERRY _____| | (1750 - 1818) | | | _____________________ | | | | |_Winifred MERCER ____| | (1730 - ....) | | |_____________________ | | |--Ruth Mercer CHERRY | (1800 - ....) | _____________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | |_____________________ | | |_Rose YARRELL _______| (1760 - ....) | | _____________________ | | |_____________________| | |_____________________
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Children:
Son s 1387 Sir William Culpeper of Preston Hall, Knight
Son s 1389 Peter Culpeper of Bletchenden
Son s 1391 John Culpeper of Oxen Hoath d. 1434 "Dominus de
Oxnode 13 Henry VI (1434)" per Colepeper of Aylesford pedigree.
Progenitor: Sir Thomas Culpeper (M) b. s 1170, #8397
Charts Descendant Chart for the Earliest Colepepers and
Culpepers
http://gen.culpepper.com/ss/p8397.htm#i8397
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Father: John Reid CUNNINGHAM Mother: Mary Frances DAVIES |
_James CUNNINGHAM ________+ | (1760 - ....) _Reese CUNNINGHAM ___________| | (1790 - ....) m 1819 | | |__________________________ | _John Reid CUNNINGHAM _| | (1823 - 1889) | | | _James DILLARD Jr.________+ | | | (1755 - 1832) m 1782 | |_Jane Chase DILLARD _________| | (1789 - ....) m 1819 | | |_Jane STARKE _____________ | (1759 - 1843) m 1782 | |--George Edwin CUNNINGHAM | (1853 - ....) | _Nicholas Clayton DAVIES _+ | | (1769 - 1814) | _Francis A. Kemper DAVIES ___| | | (1785 - 1832) m 1812 | | | |_Elizabeth CRAWFORD ______+ | | (1770 - ....) |_Mary Frances DAVIES __| (1831 - 1918) | | _John MCDANIEL ___________+ | | (1751 - 1839) m 1773 |_Elizabeth "Betsy" MCDANIEL _| (1785 - ....) m 1812 | |_Margaret "Peggy" RUCKER _+ (1760 - 1807) m 1773
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Father: Joel HENDRIX Mother: Elizabeth TAYLOR |
__ | __| | | | |__ | _Joel HENDRIX _______| | (1840 - ....) | | | __ | | | | |__| | | | |__ | | |--Joel Wigfall HENDRIX | (1860 - ....) | __ | | | __| | | | | | |__ | | |_Elizabeth TAYLOR ___| (1840 - ....) | | __ | | |__| | |__
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Father: Abram Alonzo Amherst Standish Mills b: 14 MAR 1820 in
Southport, Connecticut
Mother: Izola Maria Mendoza b: ABT. 1820 in Cordoba, Spain
Marriage 1 Charles Still Bellows b: 30 MAY 1824 in Boston, Mass.
or Vermont Married: 30 JUL 1855 in Boston, Mass. 6
Children
Harry L. Bellows b: ABT. 1855
Charles Alonzo Still Bellows b: 1861 in Mass.
Marriage 2 John Wilkes Booth b: 10 MAY 1838 in Bel Air, Maryland
Married: 9 JAN 1859 in Cos Cob, Connecticut 7
Marriage 3 John Horatio Stevenson b: 1840 in Cleveland, Ohio
Married: MAR 1871 in Boston, Mass. 8
Children
Harry Jerome Dresbach Stevenson b: 27 FEB 1871 in 1 Spring St.,
Boston, Mass.
Caroline Irene Stevenson b: 1873
Marriage 4 Edwin Sylvanus Bates Married: 22 SEP 1881
[507398]
died of Heart Failure
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In Lancashire the name appears as early as 1246 when Siward de
Penelton, deceased, was mentioned. The same year in the Assize
rolls of Lancashire, mention was made of Thomas de Parva
Pendleton who was surety for Adam, Richard and Roger de
Penelton, sons of Matilda de Penelton, who was probably the
widow of Siward de Penelton. In 1332 Adam de Penholton paid
taxes in Salford and Robert and Thomas de Penholton of Penholton
paid taxes there. The town of Pendleton was a portion of
Saldfordborough.
Arms. - Gules, an inescutcheon argent between four escallops in
saltire or.
Crest. - On a chapeau gules, turned up ermine a demi-dragon with
wings endorsed or, holding an escallop argent.
Mottoes. - Maneo qualis manebam; Se maintiens la Verite; Audaces
Fortuna juvat.
THE BEGINNING OF THE VIRGINIA PENDLETONS
The name Pendleton seems to have been originally Pen-Huton,
meaning top of the hill; the Pen-Eton and finally Pendleton. The
name is from two Gaelic words, pendle adn dun, meaning summit or
top and his tespectively.
The Pendletons were rooted in England 500 years before the name
was transplanted in America. They emerged from the Crusades with
a coat of arms for bravey, old English churches abound in
baptismal records of the family, and around Pendleton, England,
are tombs of many generations of them.
Siward Pendleton b c 1246 of Lancashire was one of the earliest
recorded progenitors, the name appeared in public life during
the regin of Henry VII (1485-1509). About 1580 George Pendleton
of Manchester married Elizabeth Pettinglae for more go below.
The same year, in the Assize Rolls of Lancashire, mention was
made of Thomas de Parva Pendleton who was surty for Adm. Richard
and Roger de Pendleton, sons of Matilda de Penelton, who was
probabley the widow of Siward de Penelton. In 1332 Adam de
Penholton paid taxes in Saford and Robert and Thomas de
Penholton of Penholton paid taxes there. The town of Pendleton
was portion of Saldfordborough.
Virginia, Prominent Families, Vol. 1-4; Volume IV; Chapter X The
Pendleton Family
Three miles from Manchester, in Lancashire County, England, is
the town of Pendleton, known as a portion of Salfordborough.
Over the door of one of the inns swings the arms of the
Pendleton family, exactly like those brought to America by the
emigrant, Philip Pendleton. Some little distance off is the
manor house, occupied still by a family of Pendletons, and
around the old church are the tombs of departed Pendletons. Here
we pause, feeling ourselves aliens in our father's house. Under
that roof tree are the records that would carry us back along
the line of English history until we found the ancestor whose
bravery in the Crusades, won him the right to place upon his
shield the silver pilgrim's shells, which form a distinctive
feature of the coat-of-arms. The family evidently belonged to
the English gentry, a purer and prouder distinction oftentimes
than many of the titles which have changed hands and family
names many times as they come down the avenue of ages.
The first name upon the Virginia record is that of George
Pendleton, Esquire, of the town of Pendleton, Lancashire,
England. His son was George Pendleton, who married, sometime in
the fifteenth century, Elizabeth Pettingall, daughter of John
Pettingall, Gentleman, of Norwich, Norfolk County. George
Pendleton moved to Norwich, and was buried at St. Stephen's,
Norwich, in 1613. His eldest son was Henry Pendleton, who
married in 1605 Susan Carmyer, at St. Simeon and St. Jude's. He
was buried on July 15, 1635, at St. Stephen's, Norwich. His
third son was Henry Pendleton who married Elizabeth -. This
gives four generations on English soil, carrying us from
Pendleton near Manchester, to Norwich.
In 1613, Sir John Pettus and his brother Thomas Pettus both made
wills, remembering their cousins, Henry and Susan Pendleton, of
Norwich, leaving them property in that city. These gentlemen
lived at Cristree, St. Edmund's, near Norwich. Thomas Pettus,
the son of one of these men, was one of the early councilors of
the Colony, and probably influenced his cousins to come to
Virginia. The two sons of Henry and Elizabeth Pendleton came to
Virginia in 1674, Philip, a young teacher, and Nathaniel, a
minister of the Church of England. Nathaniel died very soon,
leaving no children
The arms of Pendleton are taken from English records and are
described as follows: Arms-Gules, an inescutcheon argent,
between four escallops (or shells) or. Crest-On a chapeau gules,
turned up ermine, a demi-dragon, wings expanded, or, holding an
escallop (or shell) argent. Motto-Maneo Qualis Manebam
George Pendleton, Esq., born Bef. 1542 in Pendleton, Lancashire,
England; died Deceased.George of Lancs ("of the community of
Pendleton, Lancashire who flourished...1509-1547"
The results of this search are printed in the Virginia Magazine
of History and Biography, Volume 39 pp. 277-284. It is from this
source and corroborative English records that the information
now about to be set down on the English origins of the Pendleton
Family is derived and here quoted.
"The name Pendleton seems to have been originally pen-Hulton,
meaning top of the hill; then Pen-Elton and finally Pendleton.
The name is from the Gaelic words, pendle and dun, meaning
summit (or top) and hill respectively. In Lancashire the name
appears as early as 1246 when Siward de Pendleton, deceased, was
mentioned. The same year, in the Assize Rolls of Lancashire,
mention was made of Thomas de Parva Pendleton who was surety for
Adam, Richard and Roger de Pendleton, sons of Matilda de
Pendleton, who was probably the widow of Siward de Pendleton
(supra). In 1332 Adam de Pendleton paid taxes in Salford and
Robert and Thomas de Penholton of Penholton paid taxes there.
The town of Pendleton was a portion of Saldfordborough."
This shows that the Pendletons were first seated in the hills of
Lancashire where the Pendleton coat of arms still hangs over an
ancient inn. An old manor house occupied by Pendletons is near.
Here also is an old Pendleton graveyard. Pendleton Township
stretches across Pendle Hill and Pendle Forest. One hall called
Malkin tower once stood on Pendle Hill. It was from this area
that the Pendletons removed to Norwich, Norfolk County. Pendle
Hill is an elevation of I, 831 feet lying about five miles south
of Skipton and about thirty one miles west of Leeds. This
configuration still bears the name, Pendle Hill. Pendleton
community is still shown on good maps of England--just south of
the city of Clitheroe.
A continuous line of descent can be traced from George
Pendleton, Esq., Sr., of the community of Pendleton, Lancashire
who flourished during the reign of Henry VIII (1509-1547). It
was either this George Pendleton or his son George Pendleton who
moved from Pendleton and settled in Norwich.
(For verification of these details see Harlean 1552, Folios 241
and 246, Visitations of Norfolk, 1613, and Harlean Society,
Volume 32, page 219. These sources are cited in the article
quoted above and have also been independently examined and
confirmed by the compilers of these notes.)
Book, "Genealogical and Historical Notes on Culpeper County,
VA", Raleigh Travers Green, 1958, Page 80
PENDLETON - THE SUMMIT OF A HILL, FROM GAELIC PENDLE, THE
SUMMIT, AND DUN, A HILL, PENDALTON, THE TOWN AT THE HEAD OF THE
VALLEY.
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Mother: Martha CURTIS |
_Philip PENDLETON Sr. "the Immigrant"_+ | (1654 - 1721) m 1681 _Philip PENDLETON Jr._| | (1689 - 1753) m 1710 | | |_Isabella HURT _______________________+ | (1654 - 1724) m 1681 _Henry PENDLETON Sr. Gent._| | (1724 - 1818) m 1746 | | | _Robert POLLARD ______________________+ | | | (1679 - 1709) | |_Elizabeth POLLARD ___| | (1693 - 1751) m 1710 | | |______________________________________ | | |--John PENDLETON | (1750 - ....) | _Rice CURTIS Sr.______________________+ | | (1681 - ....) m 1703 | _Rice CURTIS Jr.______| | | (1704 - 1763) m 1723 | | | |_Elizabeth BROCK? ____________________ | | (1685 - ....) m 1703 |_Martha CURTIS ____________| (1729 - 1794) m 1746 | | _Henry THACKER _______________________+ | | (1663 - 1710) m 1690 |_Martha THACKER ______| (1701 - ....) m 1723 | |_Elizabeth PAYNE _____________________ (1670 - 1714) m 1690
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Mother: Dorothy Elizabeth WALLER |
Elmwood, Norfolk, VA: Home current Colonial Theater, Tazewell
street.
Took John Marshall's seat in Congress.
related to Robert Anderson b 1787 raised by his GF Benj Waller.
Child: 4 Anne Elizabeth Tazewell, + Edmund Bradford
______________________________________ | _______________________| | | | |______________________________________ | _Henry TAZEWELL ___________| | (1733 - 1799) | | | ______________________________________ | | | | |_______________________| | | | |______________________________________ | | |--Littleton Waller TAZEWELL Gov. of Virginia | (1774 - 1860) | _John II WALLER Gent. "the immigrant"_+ | | (1673 - 1753) m 1696 | _Benjamin WALLER Judge_| | | (1716 - 1786) m 1746 | | | |_Dorothy (Dorothea) KING _____________ | | (1675 - 1759) m 1696 |_Dorothy Elizabeth WALLER _| (1754 - 1778) | | _Robert HALL _________________________ | | (1700 - ....) |_Martha HALL __________| (1728 - 1780) m 1746 | |_Mary TUCKER _________________________ (1700 - ....)
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Father: Edward WARE Sr. Mother: Lettice POWELL |
[141504]
Mount Moriah Church, Amherst
_Nicholas WARE II________________+ | (1655 - 1704) _Nicholas WARE III___| | (1670 - 1744) | | |_Elizabeth GRESHAM ______________ | _Edward WARE Sr._____| | (1710 - 1786) m 1743| | | _John GARRETT II "the Immigrant"_ | | | (1634 - 1706) | |_Elizabeth GARRETT __| | (1655 - ....) | | |_Elizabeth WARE _________________+ | (1634 - 1676) | |--Sarah "Sallie" WARE | (1765 - ....) | _Thomas POWELL __________________+ | | (1640 - 1701) m 1667 | _Thomas POWELL III___| | | (1675 - 1739) | | | |_Mary PLACE _____________________+ | | (1648 - 1710) m 1667 |_Lettice POWELL _____| (1725 - 1786) m 1743| | _William WIATT? _________________ | | (1650 - ....) |_Mary WIATT? ________| (1680 - 1754) | |_Elizabeth GIBSON _______________+ (1660 - ....)
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Mother: Elizabeth TERRELL |
_Thomas WINGFIELD "the Immigrant"_+ | (1664 - 1720) m 1690 _Thomas WINGFIELD ________| | (1693 - 1782) | | |_Mary STEGALL? ___________________ | (1670 - 1714) m 1690 _Thomas WINGFIELD ___| | (1733 - 1806) m 1754| | | _John GARLAND ____________________ | | | (1660 - 1731) | |_Sarah Elizabeth GARLAND _| | (1695 - 1782) | | |__________________________________ | | |--Sarah Garland WINGFIELD | (1756 - ....) | _William A. TERRELL Sr.___________+ | | (1660 - 1743) m 1685 | _Joel TERRELL Sr._________| | | (1692 - 1758) m 1717 | | | |_Susanna WATERS __________________+ | | (1667 - 1734) m 1685 |_Elizabeth TERRELL __| (1740 - 1800) m 1754| | __________________________________ | | |_Sarah Elizabeth OXFORD __| (1700 - ....) m 1717 | |__________________________________
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