Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
This is just the tip of the Iceburg, to much info and facts for one post. Appreciate if can find any mistakes recommend corrections thankyou
The archives reflect that the blood line of Pochantas came to the Bollings through William Burton and his wife not the mythical stories of Richard Randolpp and WyNdham Robertson much later than the myth of person who never existed on paper such as Jane Poythress in the line that claims to be the Red bollings. The line of pochahantus appears to have come into another branch of Bollings through the Barnetts and Blue Bollings who also were dubbed the Melungeon Bollings the Indians Bollings and Melango tribe Bollings all connected through the ancient Burtons.
John Rolfe, husband of Pocohontas.
John Rolfes white wife was Sarah Hatcher Therefore a aunt of Thomas and John Burton
22 Jun 1635 (VA PB1-Part I:255) Capt. William PEIRCE, Esqr., one of the Councell of State, 2000, A in Lawnes Cr., Sly upon land in tenure of Alice DELKE, widdowe, Nly towards land of William Spencer, Ely upon the Cr. & Wly into the woods, towards Chipoakes Cr. Trans. of 40 persons who included: Rich. BURTHEN, Tho. ROLFE
Myth .
Fact: Sorry folks, but North American Indians did not have royalty. There never was any such thing as a Cherokee princess or anything similar in the Navajo, Apache, Pueblo, Abenaki, or other tribes. When Pocahontas went to England, the publicists of the seventeenth century claimed she was a princess in order to create publicity. However, the title existed only in the imaginations of the early promoters. P.T. Barnum was also known to apply the word “princess” to some of his female Indian performers but, again, you shouldn’t believe everything that P.T. Barnum claimed.
Children of RICHARD BURTON and KATHERINE CHRISTIAN are:
RICHARD BURTON came to Virginia with Thomas Rolfe under Capt William Pierce
A essay on causes of of variety of of complection in Human Species.
PUBLISHED 1787,
Chestelluxs Travels by Stanhope Smith, Chevalier De C hastellux Travels. In the 1780 year Chastelllux went to the home of Mary Marshall Tabb Bolling. Second wife and Widow of Robert Bolling. Robert Bolling owned half the town of Petersburg. Greeted by Mrs Bolling her son Robert and his new bride Mary Burton.. She is 17 years old and decsended from Pochanta daughter of King Powhaton. Chevalluxs presumes the amicable American woman her exterior beauty which Mrs Bolling inherits is the blood of Pochanta flows in the viens of Mrs Bolling Chevalluxs was enchanted by Marys appearance. Her Indian genetic appearance had been bred out between her and Pochanta..
She Pochantis left a son who[ left daughters and others.] Note!!! daughters!!! not daughter. note !!!others.
This the blood flows in the viens of the charming Mrs Bolling, Chastellux was enchanted by Marys European appareance..
There resided a in the college in New Jersey 1785 to 1787 to young gentlemen from from the most respected families in Virginia.
They were descended from the female line of the Emporer Powhaton and were in the 4rth descent from Pochantis.
no names are given
Robert Bolling owned half the town of Petersburg. Greeted by Mrs Bolling her son Robert and his new bride Mary Burton.. She is 17 years old and decsended from Pochanta daughter of King Powhaton. Chevalluxs presumes the amicable American woman her exterior beauty which Mrs Bolling inherits is the blood of Pochanta flows in the viens of Mrs Bolling
ROBERT BOLLING was born on 3 Mar 1759 in Centre Hill,Petersburg,Chesterfield County,Virginia. He died on 26 Jan 1839 in entre Hill,Petersburg,Chesterfield County,Virginia. He was buried in Blandford Cemetery,Petersburg,Chesterfield County,Virginia.
Robert Bolling married Mary Burton on 4 Nov 1781 in Brunswick Co.,Virginia. Mary was born on 30 Apr 1764 in Jordans,Prince George,Virginia. She died on 3 Aug 1787 in Blandford Cemetery,Petersburg County,Virginia. She was buried in landford Cemetery,Petersburg,Chesterfield County,Virginia.
They had the following children:
Ann Robertson Bolling was born about 1787. She died on 1 May 1828.
Ann married J. N. Campbell. J. N. Campbell was born in Phildalphia. He died about 1828.
Mary Burton Augusta Bolling was born on 18 Jun 1787. She died on 11 Apr 1853.
She Pochantis left a son who[ left daughters and others.] Note!!! daughters!!! not daughter. note !!!others.
François Jean de Beauvoir, Marquis de Chastellux, (French pronunciation: [f???swa ??? d? bovwa? ma?ki d? ?atly]; 5 May 1734, Paris – 24 October 1788, Paris) was a military officer who served during the War of American Independence as a major general in the French expeditionary forces led by general Comte de Rochambeau. Being on general Rochambeau's staff for the duration of the war, Chastellux acted as the principal liaison officer between the French commander in chief and George Washington. However the Chevalier de Chastellux was also widely recognized, at the time of his campaigns in America, as a highly talented man of letters and a member of the French Academy.
He first became known as a writer, historian and philosopher. He was the third member elected to occupy Seat 2 of the Académie française in 1775.
Thereafter, Chastellux remained a personal friend of George Washington for life. Furthermore, the College of William and Mary and the University of Pennsylvania also awarded Chastellux with honorary degrees. After his return to France, Chastellux also remained in contact with Thomas Jefferson, now the American representative in Paris, whom he had previously visited on his Virginia estate at Monticello.
Travels in North America in the Years 1780-81-82 Marquis de Chastellux. BiblioBazaar
Pocahontas myth
The
organization that printed that book does require documentation to back up any
claims for descent from one of the first families of Virginia.
One source to support Jane as the only child of Thomas Rolfe is as follows:
John Bolling of the County of Henrico and Parish of Varina gave a deed 1
October 1698 to William Brown of the Parish of Wilmington in the County of
James City, for 1000 acres commonly called 'The Fort', the deed also reciting
that the said John Bolling was "son and heir of Jane, late wife of Robert
Bolling of Charles City County, Gent., which Jane was the only child of
Thomas Rolfe, dec'd." The original deed was destroyed but was published in
the Southern Literary Messenger Vol XXI, p. 211 by Richard Randolph.
In other words no such document exists, just someones word
She Pochantis left a son who[ left daughters and others.] Note!!! daughters!!! not daughter. note !!!others
THE FACT is there no documented record that any Jane poythress ever even existed
Marquis de Chastellux records are impeccable his credibility is beyong repoach. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were aware of his work and did not refute it at the time. Jane the only daughter of Thomas Rolfe is out the window .A simple myth without any proof or worthy merit. .
JSTOR
Open Court Richard Tyas Surry March 5 1677 Fort Smith Mr Rolf, Bill of Ssale to Mr Warren parcel. Said Mr Thomas Rolfe afersaid Plantation called Fort Smith
Thomas rolfe, wife- there is no proof. Richard Randolph allegded speculated without any documents in Oct 1698 John Bolling of Henrico Gent and heir of Jane late wife of Robert Bolling was the only child of Thomas Rolfe.
Thomas Rolfe his Will destroyed along with all records of that county.
1635 Thomas Rolfe Headright of Captain William Pierce..
PORTRAIT OF POCHAHANTUS.
Rebecca wife of Won!! M!! Thomas Rolth
Surry clerk book pg 54 pg 55 Thomas Rolfe conveying this property described as the guift of the Indian King to one William Cocker may 9 1674.
did you catch this? It could not be Warren house, also the dates Thomas Rolfe was in England the Old King has already died so then how did he get the gift. Maybe only possible passed to his father to him.
Wyndham Robertson (January 26, 1803 – February 11, 1888) was the Acting Governor of the U.S. state of Virginia from 1836 to 1837. He also served twice in the Virginia House of Delegates, the second time during the American Civil War.
Pocahontas, alias Matoaka, and Her Descendants through Her Marriage at Jamestown, Virginia, in April, 1614, with John Rolfe, Gentleman, written by Robertson and published at Richmond, 1887
After the American Civil War, Northern writers began questioning the validity of the rescue story of Captain John Smith and Pocahontas, attacking the accounts of the historical role played by both, as well as that of her husband John Rolfe.[19] The movement was led by Henry Adams, a descendant of John Adams whose rival was John Randolph of Roanoke, a descendant of Pocahontas.[19] Several Virginians replied, one of whom was Robertson. "Northern attacks disturbed him so much that he prepared a detailed study" and wrote Pocahontas alias Matoaka and Her Descendants through Her Marriage with John Rolfe.[20] He traced her descendants, who included the Bollings, Branches, Lewises, Randolphs, and Pages, as well as his own family. His thesis was that because her descendants were notable, so was she. "History, poetry, and art," wrote Robertson,
"True Story of Pocahontas Romantic Legend of the Virginian Princess -- The Illusion Dispelled." [San Francisco] Daily Evening Bulletin 29 December 1869. Stimulated by the debunking work of Edward Neill. "It is the habit of the English people . . . to forget the very names of the races whom, in the course of their destiny as God Almighty's plowshare, they plow up into the soil," but "a sort of legendary halo has, however, preserved the word 'Pocahontas.'" But Neill is putting an end to the illusions surrounding her name. She was "just a savage of the ordinary kind, the effort to exult her was a "well-planned fraud" against the government, and Rolfe was a man of "some ambition and few scruples," who used her for financial purposes. "No trace whatever of her conversation or her character can be recovered, nor is there any evidence that she was regarded in any other light than a converted Tasmanian or Maori would now be, that is, as a subject of intellectual curiosity, but little admiration.
Adams, Henry. "Captain John Smith." Chapters of Erie and Other Essays. Boston, 1871. 192-224.
[Electronic Version]
"Neill, Edward D. "Pocahontas and Her Companions." The English Colonization of America during the Seventeenth Century. London, 1871. 68-89.
Custalow, Dr. Linwood "Little Bear," and Angela L. "Silver Star" Daniel. The True Story of Pocahontas: The Other Side of History. Golden: Fulcrum Publishing, 2007. This, we might say, is the ultimate debunking of the Pocahontas mythology. It's the oral history of Pocahontas "passed down generation by generation within the Mattaponi tribe." It is "vastly different" and was "hidden for nearly 400 years . . . out of fear of violent retribution if it were told publicly." Smith's life was never in danger; he was in the process of being made a werowance; Pocahontas would not have been allowed at the ceremony. Argall's men killed Kocoum, Pocahontas's husband, but their son lived. Pocahontas was deeply depressed at Jamestown and suffered a nervous breakdown. In addition, she was raped, possibly by more than one person and repeatedly. Her child was born before her marriage, father unknown, possibly Governor Dale. It is doubtful she loved Rolfe; she married because she had a child. Pocahontas was murdered in England, perhaps by poison.
. Argall's men killed Kocoum, Pocahontas's husband, but their son lived.
oral history of Pocahontas "passed down generation by generation within the Mattaponi tribe." It is "vastly different" and was "hidden for nearly 400 years . . . out of fear of violent retribution if it were told publicly
In addition, she was raped, possibly by more than one person and repeatedly. Her child was born before her marriage, father unknown, possibly Governor Dale. It is doubtful she loved Rolfe;
Pocahontas Attacked." New York Times 12 September 1881: 2. An example of debunking now going wild. "History has, indeed, been rather hard on the conventional heroines of romance. . . . The first American romancer has not even been spared evisceration. . . . . It now turns out that so far from being the innocent young barbarian of the novelist, [Pocahontas] was an impish and not very well-behaved little squaw." Smith barely knew her in Virginia and never saw here in England. The story was trumped up by "penniless" Smith. Rolfe was a bigamist, "more rogue than fool." "There threatens to be no end to this cruel awakening from the dreams of our youth."
True Story of Pocahontas Romantic Legend of the Virginian Princess -- The Illusion Dispelled." [San Francisco] Daily Evening Bulletin 29 December 1869. Stimulated by the debunking work of Edward Neill. "It is the habit of the English people . . . to forget the very names of the races whom, in the course of their destiny as God Almighty's plowshare, they plow up into the soil," but "a sort of legendary halo has, however, preserved the word 'Pocahontas.'" But Neill is putting an end to the illusions surrounding her name. She was "just a savage of the ordinary kind, the effort to exult her was a "well-planned fraud" against the government, and Rolfe was a man of "some ambition and few scruples," who used her for financial purposes. "No trace whatever of her conversation or her character can be recovered, nor is there any evidence that she was regarded in any other light than a converted Tasmanian or Maori would now be, that is, as a subject of intellectual curiosity, but little admiration.
Robertson, Wyndham. "The Marriage of Pocahontas." Southern Literary Messenger 31.2 (August 1860): 81-91. Robertson, governor of Virginia and descendant of Pocahontas, meets the debunkers with a six-point argument, then, climactically, confronts the question of why Smith didn't disclose the rescue earlier, admittedly "a question easier asked than answered." The answer, though, may be to avoid exactly the kind of suspicion of gaining power through an alliance with Pocahontas that King James was in a snit with Rolfe, a commoner, about for marrying a princess and perhaps controlling her possessions.
Thomas rolfe, wife- there is no proof. Richard Randolph allegded speculated without any documents in Oct 1698 John Bolling of Henrico Gent and heir of Jane late wife of Robert Bolling was the only child of Thomas Rolfe.
There is no Documented Proof of anything merely the writings of Richard Randolph the revised 150 yrs later by Wyndham Robertson.
NO CIGAR
29 John Bolling Gent. VPB 22:289 23 Jul 1745 2980a Albemarle/ on both Sides of the Fluvanna
60 John Bolling VPB 28:459 10 Jan 1748/9 5000a Lunenburg/ on Heads of the Branches of Fa
1698 by John Bolling. John inherited Fort James through his mother, Jane, and transferred the land to William Brown in this deed. Thomas' name was mentioned in the document as deceased, and it is the last known reference to him.
Surry clerk book pg 54 pg 55 Thomas Rolfe conveying this property described as the guift of the Indian King to one William Cocker may 9 1674..
NOTE THIS can only mean then Jane could of only have been a Cocker, or a Warren
NO CIGAR
1769-70: Will of William Burton, signed 11/1/1769, was proved 2/13/1770. Recorded in Northampton Co, VA Wills and Inventories Book 24, page 238.
daughter Margaret Savage: given 1,600 acres in Old Plantation Neck in Northhampton Co, 22 slaves, 600
acres in Mossongoe in Accomack, also 320 acres in NC.
grand-daughter Mary Burton Bolling
cousin John Burton
kinsman John West
son-in-law Robert Bolling, husband of daughter Mary.
kinsman Mr. Teackle Robins
executors: friend Griffin Stith, Teackle Robins, Littleton Savage and daughter Margaret.
witnesses: Littleton Chandler, Jacob Haughton, Henry Trower.
kinsman John West
Powhatan had three brothers and two sisters. Powhatan's war chief was his brother Opechancanough. Ketataugh and Itoyatan were his other brothers. Cockacoeske was his sister. She ruled from 1656 - 1686. Her son was Captain John West, after his English father, Colonel John West.
Maxwell (III) 1850:73-75Queen of Pamunkey & son John West
John West the son of Cockacoeske was 1st cousin of Thomas Rolfe.
William Hatcher may have been a nephew of John Rolfes wife Sarah Hatcher, his son was noted by Abraham Wood as living at Powhaton
therefore by A essay on causes of of variety of of complection in Human Species.
PUBLISHED 1787,Chestelluxs Travels by Stanhope Smith, Chevalier De C hastellux Travels
And the will of William Burton. The blood line of Pochantas came through the Burton to the Robert Bolling family. Not any speculation and created mythology without any valid of vierified documents as promoted by William Randolf or Wyndham Robertson.
JOHN BURTON, b. about 1632, England; d. April 1, 1690, Henrico County, Virginia
THOMAS BURTON, b. 1634, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1686, Bristol Parish, Henrico County, Virginia; m. SUSANNAH HATCHER
Children of JOHN BURTON and RACHEL HUTCHINS are:
JOHN BURTON, b. about 1656; d. January 1678/79; m. MARY ?
McIlwaine 1979B:478John Burton & IndianCourt23 June 1640
courtComplaint Burton killed an Indian he thought was the one who stole his goods, but this was not the case. Since much danger may arise to Burton or the other English from some revenge for the death of this particular Indian, Burton shall remove his habitation out of this county where he now liveth and pay a fine 20 lbs. sterling to stay committed and security for good behavior.
McIlwaine 1979B:478John Burton & IndianPetition23 June 1640
courtFine Burton fined 20 lbs. sterling last Saturday for his contempt in killing of an Indian. Petition for remission to the board- "some of his great men" interceded to the board on Burton's behalf and stated that they are satisfied concerning the same. Court therefore remitted fine, provided he enters recognizance for good behavior.
[Note: footnote #58 indicated that the Indian leader McIlwaine 1979B:478John Burton & IndianCourt23 June 1640
courtComplaint Burton killed an Indian he thought was the one who stole his goods, but this was not the case. Since much danger may arise to Burton or the other English from some revenge for the death of this particular Indian, Burton shall remove his habitation out of this county where he now liveth and pay a fine 20 lbs. sterling to stay committed and security for good behavior.
McIlwaine 1979B:478John Burton & IndianPetition23 June 1640
courtFine Burton fined 20 lbs. sterling last Saturday for his contempt in killing of an Indian. Petition for remission to the board- "some of his great men" interceded to the board on Burton's behalf and stated that they are satisfied concerning the same. Court therefore remitted fine, provided he enters recognizance for good behavior.
[Note: footnote #58 indicated that the Indian leader might be Opechancanough.]
Att a Court holden att Varina for the County of Henrico the second day
of June Anno Dom 1679 . . .
An account of ye several fortye Tythables ordered by this Wor'll Court
to fitt out men horse armes &c. according to act, viz:
Ben Hatcher
Sally Indian
Thomas Burton
Why did Opechancanough give John Burton a walk married to Mary unknown
ROBERT BURTON (JOHN BURTON3) was born about 1660 in Henrico County, Virginia and died about 1724 in Henrico County, Virginia. He married MARY NOWELL in 1686 in Charles City, Virginia, daughter of JOHN NOWELL and LYDIA PERKINS. She was born about 1660 in Charles City, Virginia and died 1727 in Henrico County, Virginia.
Children of ROBERT BURTON and MARY NOWELL are:
HUTCHINGS BURTON, b. April 9, 1694, Henrico County, Virginia; d. October 3, 1763, Mecklenburg County, Virginia
HUTCHINS BURTON (ROBERT BURTON4) was born April 9, 1694 in Henrico County, Virginia and died in October 3, 1763 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia. He married SUSANNA ALLIN, March 31, 1719 in St. Peter's Parish in New Kent County, Virginia, daughter of ROBERT ALLIN and SARAH. She was born May 17, 1700 and died 1762.
Children of HUTCHINS BURTON and SUSANNA ALLIN are:
ROBERT BURTON, b. December 4, 1736; d. about 1806
Henrico Co., VA, Deed Bk 1750-67, p. 606, 4 January 1759 Hutchins Burton, Sr., of Henrico County to Royall Richard Allen of Middlesex County, 23 pounds, 100 acres on Upnam Brook, adj. William Gordon, John Watson and Thomas Jackson; being the tract formerly belonging to John Childro. Wit: Richard Burton, David Allen, Julius Burton. Signed: Hutchins Burton, Sr. Recorded 4 February 1760.
Cumberland Co., VA, Order Bk 1758-62, Susanna Burton, wife of Hutchins Burton, gives consent for an indenture to Robert Williamson, 800 acres and James Patterson 200 acres, May 1760.
(Original will at LVA virtually illegible; this is abstract)
Henrico Co., VA Will Bk 6, p. 1887, Will of Hutchins Burton, w. 9 May 1763, recorded 3 Oct. 1763.
To son Samuel Burton, 2 shillings
To son Hutchins Burton, 2 negroes [actual will states: "Item, I give unto my son Hutchins Burton Negro man which he hath already in possession named Peter and Negro boy named Pompey" per Jacqueline Hudson]
To son William Allen Burton, 2 negroes
To son Noel Burton, 90 acres on upperside of Westham Creek including plantation where he lives, cow and calf, 1 negro for life, and after his death to his daughter Ann Burton
To my son-in-law Anthony Mathews and to my daughter Ann Mathews, a negro man, also my negro woman Fillis for life, and 2 negroes to grandaughter Elizabeth Mathews and negro to grandaughter Susannah Mathews
To son Charles Burton, 2 negroes and 100 lbs of the money one land in Cumberland County sold for
To son Robert Burton, 5 shillings
To son-in-law William Price and my daughter Susannah Price 6 negroes, and to said daughter a negro to be divided after her death, between her daughters Barley, Susannah and Elizabeth
To son Richard Burton, 2 negroes and items; and if he dies to my son Julius Burton
To son Julius Burton, 2 negroes and items; and if he dies to my son Richard Burton
To son Hutchins Burton, 300 acres where he lives and 1/2 the mill
To son Julius, after death of his mother, all the other cart of that tract where I live, abaout 400 acres
To sell negro woman Doll, and divide money between my daughters Ann Mathews and Susannah Price
To Magdalene Burton, daughter of my son Hutchins Burton, a cow and calf
To wife Susannah, house and plantation for life & negroes
Wife and sons Hutchins & William to be executors. Dated 9 May 1763. Wit: William Street & Lewis Hall. Recorded 3 Oct. 1763.
Henrico Co. Order Bk 1763-67, p. 206, April Court 1764, Inventory of Hutchens Burton returned.
Henrico Co. Order Bk 1767-69, p. 252, June Court, 1763, Case of Anselm Gathright and Elizabeth his wife against Anthony Matthews and Ann his wife and Susannah Matthews, their daughter: Hutchen Burton made a gift of a slave named Phillis to Elizabeth Matthews, his granddaughter, wife of Anselm Gathright, after the death of her mother, Ann Matthews.
Deposition taken Oct. 6, 1767 by Susanna Burton, age 67 who says that her late husband, Hutchens Burton, 18 years ago, gave Phillis to Anthony and Ann Matthews, who had possession of her and her increase since.
Deposition of Anthony Matthews, age 50, who says that in Oct. 1749 he and his wife, a daughter of said Burton, called on him on their way to Cumberland Co., and he said they might have the negro girl Phillis, who was on his Cumberland [...] Ann Matthews, age 38, deposes same as her husband, and that she delivered slave to Elizabeth Gathright.
Charlotte Co., VA, Deed Bk 3, p. 547, Mar 4, 1771 Mathew Marable of C to Menoah Sullivant of C for 28 lbs 10 shillings, a certain tract of 255 ac in C, and bounded by Norris, Barnes, Brown, Harris. The 250 ac was granted to the sd Marable by Lunenburg Co. deed from John Ashworth dated Sep 13, 1764. Signed: Ma. Marable. Wit: Peter Harllee, John Lain, William Harllee, Robert Burton, Abia Clay. Recorded Oct 2, 1775.
p. 100, Jul 6, 1772 from Robert Burton of Mecklenburg Co. to Charles Burton of C, for 80 lbs, a certain tract of 400 ac of land in C on both sides of the Kings Rd on the branches of the Meherrin R and on the Horsepen Cr, being part of a larger tract patented to James Williams on Apr 6, 1759 and bounded by Love, Adkinson. Signed: Robert Burton. Wit: none. Recorded July 6, 1772.
p. 168, Dec 7, 1772 from Robert Burton of Mecklenburg Co. to Edwin Farned of C, for 70 lbs, a certain tract of 525 ac of land in C on the branches of Horsepen Cr & bounded by May, Lain, Walton, Hudspeth, Marable. Signed: Ro: Burton. Wit: None. Recorded Dec 17, 1772.
1783: Personal Property Tax List for Buckingham Co, VA (Binns website).
Taken by John Bernard
Burton, Robert & Jude, Nedd- 1 white tithe, 2 blacks, 3 horse, 12 cattle.
Burton, William- 1 white tithe, 6 cattle
Madison Co., Court Order Bk A, 23 Oct 1787, A deed of gift of negro named Jacob from Robert Burton to Allen Burton was proved by the oath of John Phelps, Junr. and Abraham Burton and Ordered Recorded.
Madison Co., KY, Court Order Bk A, 5 May 1789, Robert Burton assee vs John Phelps judgment confessed for lbs. 11-9-0 with Interest from October 1787 until paid.
17 July 1789, Robert Burton vs John Phelps dismissed. John Phelps to pay John Phelps Jr. 1 days attendance. Same to pay William Harris Ditto. Same to pay Cary Phelps Ditto against Robert Burton.
2 Feb 1790, John Phelps vs Robert Burton refered to Charles Dibrell and John Goggins and their empire [sic]
Robert Burton to pay William Harvey 1 days attendance vs Phelps.
3/13/1790: Robert Burton, of Madison Co, sold to Abraham Burton, for 70 pds, one negro woman slave named Jude and child named Nancy. Wit: Wm West, Solomon Turpin, Philip Williams. Recorded in Madison Co, KY Deed Book C, pages 387-8.
1 June 1790 John Phelps vs Robert Barton [sic] order reference to arbitration set aside and continued.
3 Aug 1790 John Phelps vs Robert Burton acknowledgment filed and discontinued.
5 May 1795 A bil of sale from Robert Burton to Abraham Burton was proved by Philip Williams and Soloman Turpin and ordered recorded.
6/20/1798: Robert Burton, of Madison Co, sold to Sherod Burton, of Garrard Co, for 75 pds, ONE NEGRO BOY by the name of NED 16 YEARS OLD. Wit: Benjamin Wheeler, Abraham Burton, Sharod Willis, Allin Burton. Recorded in Madison Co, KY Deed Book D, page 499-500.
2 Oct 1798 A deed of gift from Robert Burton to Allin Burton was proved by Abram Burton and Sherwood Willis and recorded.
A deed of sale from Robert Burton to Sherwood Burton was proved by Abram Burton and Sherwood Willis and ordered recorded.
Madison Co., KY, Will Bk A, p. 309-316, Appraisement of the estate of Doctor Reuben Smith, deceased, 15 Dec 1805...Outstanding accounts due from: BURTON, Robert; BURTON, William; GULLY, William, ..
p. 400-01, The inventory of Robert Burton, deceased. One note on Saml. Griffith, one note on Sherod Burton. Due from Abraham Burton. Signed: Stephen Salle, Samuel Davis, and Joseph Bondurant. 4 Aug 1807 this inventory of Robert Burton, dec'd, was returned and ordered to be recorded.
8/25/1832: Suit of Jefferson Burton vs Abraham Burton, administrator of Isaac Burton, deceased. In a deposition by Polly Wilson (former wife of Allen Burton, now wife of Moses Wilson), she stated that she knew the family when and before Jefferson Burton was born, and her first husband knew the family when and before Jefferson was born, and her first husband was a brother of Isaac Burton and she was living in Pulaski County when Jefferson was born.....she returned to Madison County about 1808.
ROBERT BURTON
Father: Hutchins Burton b: 9 APR 1694
Mother: Susanna Allen b: 17 MAY 1700
Marriage 1 Spouse ? Gibson
Children
Isaac Burton
Allen Burton b: ABT 1760
Abraham Burton b: ABT 1764 in VA
Elizabeth Burton b: ABT 1765
William Burton b: ABT 1768
Nancy Burton b: ABT 1771
Sherod Burton b: ABT 1772
Jane Burton b: ABT 1775
Julius Burton b: ABT 1779
Madison Co., KY, Court Order Bk A, At a Court called and held at Madison Courthouse on Wednesday 23rd April 1788 for the examination of Isaac Burton and Sarah his wife charged with the robbing James Durham of sundrie goods before the worshipful Court of John Snoddy, David Gass, James Barnett, John Boyles, Archibald Woods, Bennett Pemberton and John Miller, gent. Upon sundry witnesses being examined and the prisoners heard in their defense. It is the opinion of this Court that they be acquitted and discharge from the aforesaid charge.The Court then dissolved. John Snoddy.
23 Dec 1788, A state of the County Levy for 1788...To the Clerks for attending an exam Court on Jane and Rachel Burton [Isaac Burton et ux] 200 [lbs?]
5 May 1794, Charles Dibrell vs Isaac Burton dismissed at defendants costs.
1 Mar 1796 Ordered that Isaac Burton be appointed surveyor of the road from John Goggins to where the path from John Davises to Hamm's mill intersects in the room of John Davis and with same hands open and keep in repair.
6 Aug 1799 Ordered that Isaac Burton be appointed surveyor of the road from Goggins' Ferry to where the old path crosses from John Davis's to William Hamm's and Drury Ham to allot the tithes.
10/3/1817: Isaac Burton to Richard Burton for Personalty Estate Settlement. Recorded in Madison Co, KY Deed Book M, page 447. (posthumously for Isaac)
8/25/1832: Suit of Jefferson Burton vs Abraham Burton, administrator of Isaac Burton, deceased. In a deposition by Polly Wilson (former wife of Allen Burton, now wife of Moses Wilson), she stated that she knew the family when and before Jefferson Burton was born, and her first husband knew the family when and before Jefferson was born, and her first husband was a brother of Isaac Burton and she was living in Pulaski County when Jefferson was born.....she returned to Madison County about 1808.
Isaac Burton
Father: Robert Burton b: 4 DEC 1736
Marriage 1 Sarah Bolen
Charlotte Co., VA, Deed Bk 3, p. 547, Mar 4, 1771 Mathew Marable of C to Menoah Sullivant of C for 28 lbs 10 shillings, Robert Burton
Isaac Burton . Sally Bolling. 26 Jan 1785. Charlotte Co VA .
Benjamin Bolling I married Martha Patsy Phelps, daughter of John Phelps and Mary Gibson.
2 Feb 1790, John Phelps vs Robert Burton refered to Charles Dibrell
5 May 1794, Charles Dibrell vs Isaac Burton dismissed at defendants costs.
Charles Lee Dibrell, Sr.
b. 24 Oct 1757, Albemarle Co, VA
d. 16 Jul 1840, Union City, Obion Co, TN
Son of Anthony Dibrell and Elizabeth Lee
m1 Martha Burton, 1776
b. cir 1757
d. cir 1797
Daughter of John Burton and Sarah Gibson
John Phelps and Mary Gibson.
John Burton and Sarah Gibson
ROBERT BURTON
Father: Hutchins Burton b: 9 APR 1694
Mother: Susanna Allen b: 17 MAY 1700
Marriage 1 Spouse ? Gibson
Glasgow family history that this Roffe/Rolfe family line was descended from John Rolfe, husband of Pocohontas.
Roffe/Rolfe Family of Mecklenburg, VA:
Index of Individuals More About Edward Roffe and Miney Burton:
Marriage: July 16, 1787
Roffe/Rolfe Family of Mecklenburg, VA:
Index of Individuals
Mecklenburg County, Virginia Will Book 4, page 67
Will of Robert Burton
Item: I give and bequeath unto my loving son Robert Burton one Negro man by the name of Lowe(?) and one bed and furniture.
Item: I give and bequeath unto my loving daughter Miney Roffe one Negro woman by the name of Wine and one bed and furniture and one large copper kettle and no more of my estate.
I give and bequeath unto my loving son Allen Burton two Negroes by name Frank and Lewis and one bed and furniture and one young mare by the name of Flag and the plantation I now live on with the lands on the north side of Allen's Creek.
9th day of July 1798
p. 100, Jul 6, 1772 from Robert Burton of Mecklenburg Co. to Charles Burton of C, for 80 lbs, a certain tract of 400 ac of land in C on both sides of the Kings Rd on the branches of the Meherrin R and on the Horsepen Cr, being part of a larger tract patented to James Williams on Apr 6, 1759 and bounded by Love, Adkinson. Signed: Robert Burton. Wit: none. Recorded July 6, 1772.
NOTE there were 2 Robert Burtons in Mecklenburg Co First cousins. The one that died there son married a girl of William rolfe said be a great grandaughter of Thomas Rolfe.
the other one removed later to Madison Kentucky.
John Phelps and Mary Gibson.
John Burton and Sarah Gibson
Robert Burton and? Gibson
The gibsons are full of contraversy speculation. some were called later melungeons some mustees some indians some indian cheifs some were bandits. the line of gibsons from henerico in connnection with the burtons appears to be greatly associated with many french huguenot families.
in this case you may have do your own research some usefull websites
George Gibson
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If the above is correct then what happened to George Sr., and George Jr., of Charles ... Thomas Gibson made a deposition which stated he was born in 1647 and is ... 1733 Richmond VA DB09:14 Thomas DODSON Sen and wife Mary and ... Gilbert Gibson son of Gibby Gibson was in Henrico/Richmond before moving to ...
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The Children of John Worley and his wife, Esther (who was NOT a ...
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31 Jul 2010 – Mary, born before or around 1720 in what was Henrico Co., Virginia. ... Her brother, John, Jr., witnessed Thomas Gibson's will, written 18 ...
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gibsontl
GOOD adivise. Contact Joanne Pezzulo on the subject she has one of the most extensive records on the Virginia Thomas Gibsons Gilbert Gibson Gibbey Gibson. Yet the Gibson Burton line appears to be deeply intermarried with the Manakintown French Huguenots
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In 1639 he assigned 100 acres of land to Thomas Gibson, land which Utie ... he and Thomas Gibson inventoried the estate of John Davis, Sr., (Beverly Fleet, VA. ..... Gilbert Gibson sued in Henrico County by John Ellis for a debt of 2 pounds ...
1820: William Burton (M>45, born bef 1775) appears as head of a family in Madison Co, KY census, page 158. Also enumerated are F26-45, M16-18 (Laban), M10-16 (Allen), 2F10-16 (Sarah is one), 2M<10 (William B. and Peter),
NOTE LABAN was named for Laban Gibson
Mary Burton [7120.2.2.3.7.7] was Mary Crumpton when her father made his 1799-will and was the mother of several children including Laban Gibson. She apparently married first Thomas Gibson. Chesterfield County charged “Thos. Gipson” on two tithes in 1756.
Gibson was dead by 1775 when John Burton began to report on his estate. Burton remained guardian to Laban Gibson, orphan of Thomas Gibson, until 1779 when the court appointed John Crumpton, presumably now the boy’s stepfather.
John Crumpton, “late of Halifax” died drunk 1 April 1786
The inventory of Robert Burton, deceased. One note on Saml. Griffith, one Samuel Davis,
4 Aug 1807 this inventory of Robert Burton, dec'd
1787-1844 MARRIAGE RECORDS OF MADISON COUNTY, KENTUCKY
Griffith, Samuel Teater, Sarah 47 Jun 12 1791
Note for those interested in Sarah Teator daughter of George Teator and Sarah Parris and her husband,this shows Samuel Griffith was still in Garrard Kentucky in 1807.
Burton, Sada Teater 26753255
b. 1852 d. 1893 Burton Cemetery Hwy 39
Garrard County
Kentucky, USA
Burton, Patsy Ray 85796659
b. 1843 d. 1888 Burton Cemetery Hwy 39
Garrard County
Kentucky, USA
Burton, Eady Lawless 84891593
b. 1800 d. Sep. 26, 1875 Burton Cemetery Hwy 39
Garrard County
Kentucky, USA
Clouse, Sally Teater Unknown Unknown None
Davis, Minerva 1832-1862
*********************Burton Cemetery*********************
Burton:
Robert 1798-1866
Wife Edie Lawless 1800-1875
William 1836-1911
Wife Mary A. Reynolds 1836-1913
Patsy Ray 1843-1888 w/o Robert Jr.
Teater, Margaret ????-???? w/o John
HUTCHINS BURTON (ROBERT BURTON4) was born April 9, 1694 in Henrico County, Virginia and died in October 3, 1763 in Mecklenburg County, Virginia. He married SUSANNA ALLIN, March 31, 1719 in St. Peter's Parish in New Kent County, Virginia, daughter of ROBERT ALLIN and SARAH
Boyds Marriage Index 1
Boyds Records
George Teator Ellen Allin 08 DEC 1698 Prestbury, , Dorset, England
NOTE there maybe ancient conections between the Burton wives and the Teator wives going back to England.
The inventory of Robert Burton, deceased. One note on Saml. Griffith, one Samuel Davis,
4 Aug 1807 this inventory of Robert Burton, dec'd
1 Mar 1796 Ordered that Isaac Burton be appointed surveyor of the road in the room of John Davis
1769-70: Will of William Burton, signed 11/1/1769 kinsman John West
Maxwell (III) 1850:73-75Queen of Pamunkey & son John West
NOTE it appears that many of powhantans white grandchildren and realtives crossed to the quaker areas of old albemrle NC to avoid the troubles of bacons rebellion includng several rolfes.
Opechancanough, the celebrated chief of the Powhatans, was brutally murdered while a prisoner in 1644. He left a lovely young daughter, the child of his old age, the Princess Nicketti. Some years after this graceful Indian maiden had reached the years of mature womanhood, a member (the name is not given)} of one of the old Cavalier families of Virginia "fell in love with her and she with him". This resulted in a clandestine marriage and the birth of of a half-breed Indian girl, (Mary) Elizabeth Hughes, who married about 1680 a Welshman (others say a native of Devonshire, England), named Nathaniel Davis. Nathaniel was an Indian trader and according to some accounts, a Quaker. From these alliances of indian and white man many notable families in Virginia are descended.
Indian son of Col John West of Jamestown Va. His mother was CockaCoeskie, who the English called the Queen of the Pamunkey. CockaCoeskie was the neice of Powhatten, and the ruler of the Powhatten Confederecy during Bacon,' Rebellion. When CockaCoeskie sighned the Treaty of Bacon's Rebellion, she had her son Capt. John West with her to act as her interpreter, and he also sighned the treaty. He was 20 years old at the time. Then he seemed to dissappear. 17 years later (in 1690) I found a "John West, Indian" listed in the will of John Fleming in Old Albermerle, North Carolina. This area is less than 40 miles from Jamestown, and it is known that many of the refugees from Bacon's Rebellion fled to North Carolina. .
In 1692 in Pasquotank Precinct, AlbemarleDist., NC, the inventory of GEORGE FLEMING'S estate, "JOHN WEST, INDIAN" received a payment.
Fleming, George 1694 Pasquotank
West, Charles 1748 Pasquotank
West, Jonathan 1751 Pasquotank
,Hyde Co., North Carolina
Tithables, 1740 - 1748
all and every White Person, Male, of the Age of Sixteen Years, and upwards, all Negroes, Mulattoes, Mustees Male or Female, and all Persons of Mixt Blood to the Fourth Generation, of the Age of Twelve Years, and upwards, and all white Persons intermarrying with with any Negro, mulatto, or Mustee, or other Persobn of mixt Blood, while to intermarry with no other Person or Persons whatsoever, shall be deemed Taxables..."
A List of Tidibels for the year 1740 (?)
Taken by me BENJ MARTIN
Nathanal Davis (?) 2
Bath County, NC Immigrants (1695-1702)
No date, by Thomas JONES
Thomas Barnett
Betty, an Indian
September, 1701, by Nathaniel CHEVIN
Wm. Borwn
Craven- orphan bonds before 1760 no date
No date—Orphan ch John West; William West;
Pasquotank County NC
ESTATE RECORDS
West, Hezekiah 75 1754
West, Jonathan 75 1752
West, Benjamin 75 1762
West, Anthony 75 1752
West, Charles 75 1752
Davis, James 1758
Davis, John 1753
Davis, Levi 1820
Overton, Noah Sr. 1921
Overton, Robert 1754
Relfe, John 1750
Relfe, Thomas 1772
Relfe, Thomas 1788
Relfe, Thomas T. 1811
Relfe, Thomas 1813 (of Kentucky)
Relfe, William 1741
Relfe, William 1774
Relfe, William 1797
1786-1844 MARRIAGE RECORDS OF MADISON COUNTY, KENTUCKY
Davis, John West, Rachel 67 Mar -- 1788
NOTE Many of the children of John Davis and Rachael West of Pasqoutank NC intermarried with the children of Parris M Teator and Rebecca Totten as well as her brother Joseph H Totten Garrard Kentucky
A List of Tidibels for the year 1740 (?)
Taken by me BENJ MARTIN
Nathanal Davis (?) 2
Powhatan of Virginia
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Princess Nicketti Powhatan and Trader Hughes had the following child: child ... Elizabeth Hughes and Nathanial Davis had the following children: child 3r
Burton:
Robert 1798-1866 A.K.A. Devil Bob Burton
Father Isaac Burton
Isaac Burton . Sally Bolling. 26 Jan 1785. Charlotte Co VA
Madison Co., KY, Court Order Bk A, At a Court called and held at Madison Courthouse on Wednesday 23rd April 1788 for the examination of Isaac Burton and Sarah his wife
Isaac BURTON and Sarah BOLEN were married on 26 Jan 1785. 2nd marriage for Sarah, . Isaac gave consetfor daughter Elizabeth Bolen's marriage. Children were: Robert D. BURTON, Jesse BURTON, Richard BURTON, John BURTON, Patsy BURTON, Isaac BURTON, Lucy BURTON.
Mary E. BURTON -.
Issac burton 1st married Sally Bolling then 2nd marriage to Sarah Bolen. She appears to be a wife of Sally Bollings brother deceased..
2/12/1796: Know all men by these presents that we James Land, William Gulley are held & firmly bound unto Isaac Shelby Esquire Governor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky in the just and full sum of fifty pounds to which payment will and truly to be made to the said Governor or his Successors we bind our selves our heirs Exors and Admors firmly by these presents Sealed with our seal & dated this day of 12 of February 1796. The Condition of the above obligation is such that whereas there is a marriage Shortly Intended to be Solemized between the above bound James Land & Elizabeth Bolan and both of Madison County if there be no lawful cause to obstruct the same then the above obligation to be void Other wise to Remain in full force Power & Virtue. Sign'd Seal'd & del'd James Land In presents of } William Gulley.
Elizabeth was Isaac Burton's step-daughter; he gave his consent and said she was this. He had marr. Mrs. Sarah Bolan.
The wedding bond of Elizabeth Bolan and James Land, Madison Co., KY, dated 21 Feb 1796, indicates that Isaac was the stepfather of the bride. Sarah was her mother.
Jesse May married Elizabeth Land formely Bolen
GARRARD CO KY MARRIAGES,
Bowlin, JohnApril 1, 1798Daugherty, Catherine
Bondsman is Joel K
Burton, RobertOct. 30, 1817McMullen, Rachel
Burton, RobertNov. 11, 1818Burton, Sally
Burton, RobertOct. 14, 1822Lawless, Fay
Land, JacksonApril 10, 1827Camron, Elizabeth
May, JacksonAug. 28, 1838Burton, Matilda
State: Kentucky Year: 1850
County: Garrard Roll: M432_201
Township: Division 1
Page: 20/214a 30 Jul 1850
154/157
Paris Teater 70 M Methodist Minister KY
Rebecca 60 F TN
Robt. 27 M Farmer KY
Thomas Weaver 14 M KY
156/159
Henry B. Davis 51 M Farmer VA
Sally 45 F KY (Sally Taylor, sister Polly Taylor m. John Renfro & John Land)
Louisa 20 F KY
William C. 18 M KY
Rodolphus 16 M KY
Talton 14 M KY
Angeline 12 F KY
Cyrus 10 M KY
Sally A. 8 F KY
Sarah F. Montgomery 7 F KY
Ambrose Davis 4 M KY
Ann 2 F KY
288/302
Levi Davis 36 M Farmer KY
Minerva 33 F KY
Elizabeth 13 F KY
Paris 12 M KY
Sarah 10 F KY
Samuel 8 M KY
Levi Jr. 6 M KY
Sima? 5 F KY
William 4 M KY
Minerva 2 F KY
Nancy 1/12 F KY
290/303
Jackson May 32 M Farmer KY
Matilda 30 F KY (Matilda Burton dau Robert "Devil Bob" Burton)
James R. 9 M KY
Robert 8 M KY
John W. 5 M KY
Susan A. 2 F KY
Malcolm 3/12 M KY
293/306
Land, Thomas 47 M Farmer KY (son James Land/Sally Land)?
Sally 45 F KY (Sarah Lowery)?
Martha 22 F KY
Overton L. 18 M Farmer KY
Shelton 15 M Farmer KY
William H.? 14 M KY
Lucy 11 F KY
Thomas F. 8 M KY
Robert B. 5 M KY
James S. 2 M KY
State: Kentucky Year: 1850
County: Garrard Roll: M432_201
Township: Division 1
Page: 104/255a 17 Sep 1850
780/824
Robert Burton 52 M Farmer KY
Sarah 53 F KY
Woodson 22 M Atty at Law KY
Amanda 16 F KY
Sarah 8 F KY
State: KY Year: 1860
County: Garrard County
Township: Lancaster P.O.
Pg 103/733 26 Jul 1860
707/699
Robert Burton 61 M Farmer KY
Sally 62 F KY
Sarah A. 18 F KY
973/964
John N. Teater 21 M Farmer KY
Marg't 20 F KY
975/966
James J. Davis 42 M Farmer KY
Lucinda 39 F KY
Mary J. 15 F KY
Elizabeth 13 F KY
Almyra 11 F KY
Rolinda 9 F KY
James 6 M KY
John 4 M KY
Moses 1 M KY
Eda Austin 82 F VA
976/967
Squire Gully 34 M Farmer KY
Eliza 30 F KY
Mary 13 F KY
Moses 11 M KY
Lucy 9 F KY
Wm. 7 M KY
Marg't 5 F KY
Lousian 10/12 F KY
977/968
Richard Burton 28 M Farmer KY
Elizabeth 24 F KY
John 25 M KY
978/969
Nancy Davis 69 F KY
John 40 M Farmer KY
Moses 30 M Farmer KY
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State: KY Year: 1860
County: Garrard County
Township: Lancaster P.O.
Pg 142/772 15 Aug 1860
979/970
Wm. Davis 34 M Farmer KY
Nancy 24 F KY
Patsy 7 F KY
James A. 5 M KY
Mat 2 M KY
Infant unnamed 8/12 F KY
985/976
Paris Teater 80 M Minister VA
Rebecca A. 74 F KY
Robert L. 36 M Farmer KY
Paulina 36 F KY
Laura 8 F KY
Malcolm 6 M KY
C. F. 4 F KY
Milton 2 M KY
Calvin 1 M KY
989/980
Joseph H. Totten 68 M Farmer TN
Nancy 67 F KY
David 16 M Farm Hand KY
State: Kentucky Year: 1870
County: Garrard
Precinct: Dist. No. 2 Buckeye
PO: Buckeye
Page: 84/391a 4 Aug 1870
215/214
Sanders, Moses 27 M W Farmer KY
Clarky 21 F W Keeping House KY
Bertha J. 4 F W KY
Thomas J. 2 M W KY
William 3/12 M W May KY
217/216
Burton, Edie 66 F W Keeping House VA (Edie Lawless, widow of Robert D. Burton)?
Squire 26 M W Farmer KY
James R. 22 M W Farmer KY
George 10 M B Comon Laborer KY
221/219
Teater, Nelson H. 59 M W Farmer KY
Permelia 58 F W Keeping House KY
Allen 25 M W Farmer KY
Mary 16 F W No Occupation KY
Scott, Thomas 14 M W Farm Laborer KY
225/222
Davis, Lausinda 48 F W Keeping House KY
Rolinda 19 F W No Occupation KY
James W. 17 M W Farm Laborer KY
John C. 15 M W Farm Laborer KY
Moses F. 13 M W Farm Laborer KY
Lausinda 8 F W KY
226/223
Teater, Zackeriah 23 M W Farmer KY
Rebecca 26 F W Keeping House KY
Alen T. 1 M W KY
1788: Madison Co, Ky Tax list
Taken by Robert Rodes
Isaac Burtin- WM>16; 3 horses .
Samuel Burtin- WM>16; 4 horses
Allen Burtin- WM>16; 1 horse
Charles Debrill- WM>16; 2 blacks; 6 horses
Taken by Michael McNeely
Robert Burton- 2WM>16; 1 black; 2 horses
Abraham Burton- WM>16; 3 horses
Allen Burton- WM>16; 1 horse
Peter Ford- no WM>16; 2 horses
Daniel Ford- WM>16; 1 horse
2/3/1790: Charles Dibrell vs Isaac Burton dismissed at defendent's cost. Recorded in Madison Co, KY Court Order Book A, page 090.
7/22/1791: Isaac Burton, living on Paint Lick Creek, found a heifer. Reported in Kentucky Gazette, issue dated 10/18/1791.
1796 Robert Burton- WM>21; 4 blacks, 2 horses; 12 cattle
Abram Burton- 60 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by Wm. Kirtley; WM>21; 2 blacks; 10 horses; 9
cattle;
Charles Dibrell- WM>21; 3 blacks; 7 horses; 8 cattle
July 22
Isaac Burton- 75 acres on Paint Lick Creek; WM>21; 6 horses; 14 cattle .
Peter Ford- 212 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by John Cook; no WM>21; 3 horses; 11 cattleApr 21: William Burton- 14 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by Wm. Kirtley; WM>21; WM16-21;
4 horses; 9 cattle
May 13: James Barton- WM>21; 5 horses; 4 cattle
1797: Madison Co, Ky Tax List
Abraham Burton- 130 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by Elijah Kirtley; WM>21; 3 blacks; 7 horses
Isaac Burton- 100 acres on Paint Lick Creek; 1 black; 5 Daniel Ford- 89 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by Phillip Hammond; WM>21; 2 horses
1801: Madison Co, KY Tax List
Burton, Abraham- 200 acres on Paint Lick Creek surveyed for Elijah Kirtley, 1W>21, 6 blacks, 8 horses
Burton, Isaac- 100 acres on Paint Lick Creek, 1W>21, 3 blacks, 5 horses
Ford, Laban- 1W>21, 1 horse
Ford, Peter- 200 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by Jno Cook, 1W>21 exempt, 5 horses
1811: Madison Co, KY Tax List
Burton, Jesse- 1W>21, 1 horse
Burton, Abraham- 500 acres on Paint Lick Creek, 1W>21, 12 blacks, 9 horses
Burton, Isaac- 100 acres on Paint Lick Creek entered by Jas Downing, 1W>21,
5 blacks, 10 horses
Burton, John- 1W>21, 1 horse
Burton, Isham- 1W>21, 1 horse
the bolling bowlin bolen family associates of isaac burton. this group of bollings have been dubbed the blue bollings the melungeon bollings the malango tribe bollings.
Benjamin Bolling I married Martha Patsy Phelps, daughter of John Phelps and Mary Gibson.
2 Feb 1790, John Phelps vs Robert Burton refered to Charles Dibrell
5 May 1794, Charles Dibrell vs Isaac Burton dismissed at defendants costs.
GARRARD CO KY MARRIAGES,
Bowlin, JohnApril 1, 1798Daugherty, Catherine
1781-1844 MARRIAGE RECORDS OF MADISON COUNTY, KENTUCKY
Baker, Boling Bunch, Betsy 27 Sep 20 1804
Barnett, James Hawkins, Mary 70 Mar 04 1790
Bolin, Larkin Cain, Elizabeth 113 Feb 04 1812
Bolin, Patsy Carver, John 226 Nov 02 1829
Boling, Isham Bunch, Detion 27 Sep 06 1804
Bowlin, James Maupin, Nancy 35 May 24 1814
Bowling, Benjamin Howard, Anasteria 227 Feb 27 1835
Bowling, Beven Ballard, Catherine 95 Aug 22 1816
Bowling, Daniel March, Lucinda 227 May 16 1835
Bowling, David Johnson, Hannah 191 Jul 17 1832
Bowling, Delphia Rogers, Nathan 140 Jun 21 1821
Bowling, John Holman, Paulina 192 Jan 11 1833
Bowling, Louisa Freeman, James W 227 Jan 12 1838
Burton, Patsy Collins, David 129 Aug 10 1820
Burton, Polly West, Alex 02 Nov 24 1795
Burton, Houtching Stepp, Betsy (Stapp) 85 Sep 21 1798
Burton, Isham Howard, Permilia 216 Dec 20 1838
Burton, Jesse Pinkston, Milly 104 Sep 05 1813
Burton, William Ford, Sally 69 Jul 20 1797
The 1782 Montgomery County, Virginia Land Tax List
.
Bowling, Christopher 1 1 4 1
Bowling, James 1 1 1
Bowling, John 1 1 3
Bowling, John 1 1
Bowling, John, Jun. 1 1
Bowling, Joseph 1 1
Bowling, William 1 2 3
Burton, Abraham BROTHER OF ISAAC 400 25 5/
Burten, William BROTHER OF ISAAC 1 2
Burton, John 1
Blevins, James, Jun. 100 20 4/
Blevins, John 50 5 1/
Blevins, James, Sen. 100 40 8/
Blevins, James 40 10 2/
Hutchens, John 1
May, Benjamin 1 4 2
May, Thoams 1
line of Jesse May whom married Elizabeth land Bolen
McMullen, William 1 father in law of Devil Bob Buton
Collins david.
note David Collins married Isaac Burton and sarah bolens daughter in madison KY
on Burton, Patsy Collins, David 129 Aug 10 1820
Book pg 178
Deeds, pg. 87-90 – Joseph P. Kennedy to Samuel Packwood
Samuel Packwood of New Orleans paid $893.94 ½ for 107.77 acres, part of 500 acres once owned by
the heirs of William Powell containing a house & apple trees
Signed: Joseph P. Kennedy.
Wit: George Packwood, John Powell.
Date: 19th Feb. 1808. Recorded: 28th Feb. 1816. Christopher Bollin, surveyor.
“Residents of the Southeastern Mississippi Territory, Records of Spanish West Florida, Pre-1820
Land Records, Book 8”, by Jean Strickland & Patricia N. Edwards, Moss Point, MS, Pub. by Gay
Strickland, 1999.
Book pg 51-53
Supplementary Report, Register A, Spanish Patents:
Claimant
Original Claimant
Date
Arpents
Location
Sam’l McCaleb
Wm. Bolling
3 Aug 1797 600
W. Feliciana
Valid Claims (h/o=heirs of; O=Order of Survey; S=Spanish Patent; B=British Patent; P.C.=Plat &
Certificate):
Claimant
John Rhea
Register A #1 (date of claim or inhabited):
John Rhea
John Buck
Sale
Report B, 15 Nov. 1820, St. Helena Courthouse
h/o C. Bolling James Duly
P.C.
24 Jan 1794
[Note by Diane: the above appears to mean that C. Bolling died bef. 1820]
Inhabitants of the Natchez District 1816 [Note by Diane: Franklin & Amite counties of Mississippi
are just north of East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana. West Feliciana Parish is obviously just west of E.
Feliciana]
Heads of Families
County
Jesse Bolling
Amite
John Bolling
Amite
Arthur Bowlin
Franklin
Early Census Records, Ancestry. com:
Bowling(any sp) and Blevins in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana (this is by no means everything I
am sure):
Blevins, Dillin, Madison Co., MS, 1809; pg 692 - MS Early Census Index
Blevins, Dillin, Madison Co., MS, 1810, (Later Alabama Territory), MS 1810 Territorial Census
Bowlin, Thomas, Madison County, MS (Later Alabama Terr.), 1810, MS 1810 Territorial Census
11
Original Claimant
William Smith
Claim
S
Date
5 Feb 1799
Arpents
480
Location
Feliciana
1800-1820
240
Feliciana
320
E.Baton Rouge
Bullen, John, Natchez District, Santa Catalina, MS, 1792 - MS Early Census Index
Bolan, Absolom, Washington District, MS, 1804 - Petitioners; pg 355, MS Early Census Index
Bowlin, William, Washington County, MS, 1809 - Petitioners; pg 696, MS Early Census Index
Bowlin, William, Washington County, MS, 1810, MS 1810 Territorial Census
Bowlin, William, Washington County, MS, 1811 - Tax list, MS Early Census Index
Bolan, Jesse, Amite County, MS, 1810, MS 1810 Territorial Census
Bolan, Doyle V., Adams County, MS, 1810 - Tax List, MS 1810 Territorial Census
[Note that Dillin Blevins and Thomas Bowlin are living in the same county (Madison). Dillon Blevins
did come from Virginia originally.]
From “Louisiana Soldiers in the War of 1812”, compiled by Marion John Bennett Pierson, Clearfield
Pub.:
Pg 12
Blevings, William; Private; Captain Ogden's Co., Dragoons, LA. Militia
Pg 13
Bolan, Eli; Private; DeClouet's Reg't, LA. Militia
Boland, Eli; Private; Declouet's Reg't, LA. Militia (Orig. under Bolan, Eli)
Bolin, Elin; Private; Declouet's Reg't, LA. Militia (Orig. under Bolan, Eli)
Bollen, Eli; Private; DeClouet's Reg't, LA. Militia (Orig. under Bolan, Eli)
Boling, William; Private; 10th Reg't, LA. Militia
Boling, Christian; Private; 10 and 20 Cons. Reg't, LA. Militia (Orig. under Boling, Christopher)
Boling, Christopher; Private; 10 and 20 Cons. Reg't, LA. Militia
1810 Clay County Kentucky Census
Isham Boling 1 0 0 1 0 - 1 0 1 0 0 - 0
Joseph Boling 3 0 1 0 0 - 1 0 1 0 0 - 0
Ely Boling 1 0 1 0 0 - 2 0 1 0 0 - 0
William Boling 2 0 2 0 1 - 2 1 0 1 0 - 0
John Boling 2 0 1 0 0 - 3 1 0 1 0 - 0
Boling Baker 2 0 1 0 0 - 1 0 1 0 0 - 0
James Boling 0 0 1 0 1 - 0 0 0 0 1 - 0
Christopher Boling 1 0 1 0 0 - 0 0 1 0 0 - 0
Mary Barnett 0 0 1 0 0 - 1 0 1 0 0 - 0
Jesse Boling 2 2 0 0 1 - 2 1 0 0 1 - 0
Justus Boling 1 0 1 0 0 - 0 0 1 0 0 - 0
Francis McMillen 0 0 1 0 0 - 0 0 0 0 0 - 0
BLUE BOLLINGS and the Melungeons
Part of 1810 list, Grainger Co., TN:
William Bolenfpc's8
21. David Bolenfpc's5
Edmund Bolenfpc's8
10. David Bolen2113001
176/3Edmund Boley
Sims grant opened to claims between 1830 and 1840: Records in Register's Office,
William Bowlin-500 acres-north side of Clinch River-p. 6
William Boling-50 acres on Blackwater Creek-p. 86
Names on early warrant deeds & land papers
Hawkins Co., TN:
Hawkins co Tenn Deeds
1801: Wm Roberts to T. A. Burtin/Bowlin, Book 1, page 349
1810: Wm Cox to Jesse Burton, Book 6, page 275
1812: Jesse Burton to Robt Burton, Book 6, page 491
1818: Robert Burton to Peter Livesay, Book 7, page 123
1820: William Buton to Grant, Book 10, page 061
1833: Thomas Johnson to Samuel Burton, Book 13, page 256.
,
District No. 5: Beginning on Clinch river at Kyles ford thence along the road leading to Lee by John Wallen's to a small school house thence a due north course to
the Virginia line thence eastwardlywith said line to the Claiborne County line thence with said line to Clinch river at the mouth of Greasy rock thence up the river to the beginning. The Election to be held at the house of Jacob Delp
Isham; Boling,.
William; Boling, Rosick; Boling,
Rev. Hughes Bowling - Hector Creek, April 22, 1898
I was born in Leslie County, Key. then Clay, April 8, 1857.
I was born on Bull Creek.? My father was John Bolling.? My
mother was Susan Napier.? My paternal grandfather was
James Bowling.? His wife was Mahala Wilson.? My great
grandfather Bollling was named Eli.? He came from Licking
River, Tenn. to Clay County, Key. in 1807.? His sister Mary
called Mollie, came with him and became the wife of Rev. John
Gilbert.? His brothers Levi, John and James came with him also
a sister Nancy who married a Sizemore.? My great grandfather
settled on Bear Creek, Clay Co..? He paid for a tract of land on
that creek, containing 1500 acres by herding hgs one winter on
the mast.? Dan and Dave Bowling (sons of James Bowling) own and
residee on it.? They sold it in the boom for $7,000 but the parties
failed to pay for it.?? Rev. Jesse Bowling who settled on the North
Fork in Breathitt County was the unclue of Eli, John, James, Levi,
Mary and Nancy Bowling.? This is the way I've always heard it.? I
have heard my father say that he heard Rev. John Gilbert say that
he had the settling of Clay County.? He first thought that he would
settle the mouth of Hctor but he finally had to settle higher up
Red Bird.? Taylor Gilbert says that his grandfather Rev. John
Gilbert preached in "hard shell" doctrine but I have heard many
old people say that he did not, but preached a free salvation for
all.? Hector Creek was named by John Gilbert in honor of a
favorite bear dog by that namewhich was killed by a bear on it.
Old JohnHays who lived and died on Hector said that the Bowlings above
mentioned all came from Tennessee that is, that Jesse Bowling
ogNorth Fork came from the same place that the others did.? Hays
dided five year ago, at the age of 93.? He said there was a Levi
Bowling in that neighborhood, Uncle to Eli and perhaps brother of
Jesse above (mentioned).? I think od JohnGilbert came from the
same place.? Taylor Gilbert wrote them a few years ago to get the
ordination record of Jesse Bowlingand others who ordained John
Gilbert but failed to get them.? I have always learned that the Hard
Shells broke off from the Baptist Church in 1833.? They were
100,000 strong at firstand in 60 years that had fallen off to
40,000.? I learned it from Throckmorton and Potter debate held
in Indiana.? Silas Hensley, on this creek has a copy.? I joined the
church in 1884, am a preacher in the Missionary Baptist Church.
Justice Bolling
THE BLUEBOLLINGS AND THE MELANGO TRIBE
By Mark French Jr.
Of Clintwood, Virginia
Paper Originally Written, November 22, 1947.
.
Uncle Wash Osborne of Copper Ridge near Dungannon in Scott County gave me more information about the Melungeons than anyone else. Uncle Wash's full name is George Washington Osborne.
From what I gathered from Uncle Wash, the Melungeons started coming to Wise and Scott Counties about 1820. These people came in about equal numbers from Kentucky from Newmans' Ridge and lower end of Lee County. A few came from North Carolina.
The first Collins family, who came to Scott County from Newmans Ridge were white.
From Kentucky came the following families; Collins, Gibsons, and Sextons. From Newman's Ridge; Collins, Littons and Bollings. Very few people with these names came from Newman's Ridge.
From Blackwater, Tennessee came the Sweeneys, Adkins, Lucas, Bollings, Goins and Baldwins.
Also the Melungeons came to Scott County from Letcher County, Kentucky near Whitesburg at a place called Lick Rock. These people lived in large numbers. Uncle Poke Gibson came to Scott from Letcher about 1820. He claimed to be Portuguese Indian. A few Littons came from Newman's Ridge who are member of the Melango Tribe. There are two groups of Littons members of the Melango Tribe who live in Scott County and the Littons of Wise County who are not members. The Littons of Wise are no relation to the Littons of Scott.
The Bollings, who are numerous in Scott and Wise Counties, came from Newman's Ridge. The have all the features of the Indian race.
Old Jack Bolling, the originator of this family, is believed to have come from a low life grade of Indian. He married a melungeon by the name of Collins or Sexton but this is the first and last crossbreed in the family. His people were strong and spoke half-broken English. He was pure bred Melango and had no other blood in him. In this case word Melango pertains to Indian blood only.
So who were the Malangos.? Uncle Osborne is the only informant. He said they were low grade Indians from KENTUCKY, They drifted in to Wise and Scott co VA between 1820 to 1850, They were low grade Indians. But the 1st Collins were white, the Bollings were more full blooded Indian and married some of Blackwaters Melungeons and some of the other Bollings were also Indians from higher up on Newmans Ridge,
86. Lawrance Strother IMORTANT HERE 1740 John Bowling Indian for terrifying one Lawrence Strother & on suspicion of stealing hoggs
25. Christopher Clark
John Massey
Capt. Andrew Hampton’s Company
28. James Bolling
29. William Bolling
Benjamin Bolling
48. John Bolling
"OCTOBER, 1734: The earliest valid record date found relating to Andrew Hampton shows on Virginia
land records for October 3, 1734, as a joint patentee with Benjamin Borden and David Griffith for a grant
of 1122 acres west of the Sherrando (Shenandoah) River, in the area to become part of Orange County. The
land patented to the three parties was theirs "to hold or co-hold, yielding and paying rents as provided." The
tract was adjacent to the land of Edward Maloy, was on the south side of Bullskin Run and Bullskin Marsh,
(would show today to the north of Berryville, Virginia) north of Winchester near Summit Point, West
Virginia.... Benjamin Borden, an early land speculator in the Valley was probably the senior partner to this
patent.
1734 - Orange County formed form Spotslyvania.
In 1746 and 1747, John Hampton Sr. sold most of what he still owned and deeded the rest to his sons
George and Thomas, reportedly in order to protect those holdings against lawsuit. After that he disappeared
from the records. Since he was into his upper sixties by then, it is believed he died about 1748.
In 1741, Andrew bought land in Brunswick County from George and Susannah King. The King family was
much involved with the Hamptons, but the extent is not yet known. A John Hampton sold Northern VA
land to Robert King in 1717. Joseph King operated a mill on Andrew Hampton's NC land about 1750.
Joseph King is listed as Andrew Hampton's son (son-in-law) on Granville County tax lists. Joseph King
and Andrew Hampton later (1765) migrated together to Georgia.
The Andrew Hampton home place in Granville was along the old Trading Path (by then a road) about a
mile and a half west of where the Trading Path crossed the Tarr River a short distance upstream from the
present crossing of Interstate 85. A short time before the Revolution the area became part of the Oxford
District of Granville County. Andrew bought the property, 400 acres on both sides of Indian Fields Creek,
from John Addcock 4 March 1752.
old Trading Path (by then a road) about a
mile and a half west of where the Trading Path crossed the Tarr River a short distance upstream from the
present crossing of Interstate 85.
The land Andrew bought from the Kings was on the Roanoke River where the Great Occaneechee Trading
Path crossed the river. It is possible he operated a ferry, because the next owner, Thomas Jefferson's uncle,
had a ferry on the property. The land was in the part of Brunswick, which later became Lunenburg, then
Mecklenburg. Andrew sold the Roanoke River property to Field Jefferson (Thomas's uncle) in 1746.
MARCH 3, 1746: Andrew Hampton and wife Sarah show in Luenburg County, Virginia Deed Book as
transferring land by sale to Field Jefferson, land next to Ephraim Parham. Lunenburg formed in 1746 from
Brunswick County, Virginia. The Lunenburg Court ordered two Justices to go to Sarah Hampton to get her
acknowledgement to the sale because, "Sarah the wife of said Andrew Hampton, cannot conveniently travel
to our county court of Lunenburg to make acknowledgement of the said conveyance."
It should be noted that one Joseph Hampton was born about 1746. Perhaps the reason Sarah could not come
to court? [Joseph Hampton (Andrew 1) was born 1746, and died about 1803 in Jefferson County, Georgia.
He is reported as moving to Georgia about 1769, and later appears in the 1801 Tax Digest of Jefferson
County, Georgia with one slave, and 200 acres, according to Hines-Hampton and Allied Families of
Georgia and Florida, Frances Hines Kolner, 1997, Anundsen Publishing Co., Decorah, Iowa, p. 51.]
In the Granville “Miscellaneous” box there is a slip of paper dated 1747, or 1749, which says Joseph King
is granted permission to operate a mill on Indian Fields Creek. The only land on Indian Fields Creek
suitable for a mill was Andrew Hampton's land. It is assumed that Joseph King was Andrew Hampton's
son-in-law. Indian Fields Creek, about 1750, became Hampton's Mill Creek. A few years later, Ephraim
Hampton went into the mill business with a neighbor named Addcock. SOURCE: James Foster
The
"MONDAY, MAY 23, 1757: A petition from Andrew Hampton was read in the North Carolina House at Newbern, the petition praying for an allowance for the provisions furnished 160 Indians was placed under consideration. Earlier the North Carolina Assembly in 1753, had appointed Commishioners in Granville and three other frontier communities to furnish provisions for the Indians allied with the Province against the French and the Cherokee Indians. The allied Indians were probably Tuscarora and Saponi. In 1753-58, some thirty Saponi lived north of present Henderson, North Carolina on land of Colonel William Eaton, who acted as their interpreter. The first Court of Granville in 1746 was held in Colonel Eaton's house, he served as Public Registar for the County and was Commander of the Regiment of eight Companies of the Militia."
http://harrisonheritage.com/anhamptn.htmhttp://harrisonheritage.com/anhamptn.htm
The following served under Col. Eaton, in Capt.Andrew Hampton's company:
James Bolling
William Bolling
Benjamin Bolling
John Bolling
1759-1762 Halifax Co. VA Benjamin, James, John Ref: Halifax Ct. Book
3
1759-1762 Halifax Co.[ VA David and John ]Ref: Halifax Ct.
Book 3
1761 Halifax Co. VA John Bolling Ref: Halifax
Ct. Book 3
1740 Orange County, Virginia. Order Book No. 3 1741-1743 (Microfilm, Genealogical Society of Utah, 1948). At a Court held for Orange County on 27 January 1742 [1743 NS]. Thursday, the xxviith day of January MDCCXLIII. p. 309: "Alexander Machartoon, John Bowling, Manincassa, Capt. Tom, Isaac, Harry, Blind Tom, Foolish Jack, Charles Griffin, John Collins, Little Jack, Indians being brought before the Court by precept under the hands & seals of Wm Russell & Edward Spencer, Gent, for terrifying one Lawrence Strother & on suspicion of stealing hoggs . . . ." pp. 309-312. The above put up security individually. It was ordered that their guns be taken from them till they are ready to depart out of this county, "they having declared their intentions to the Court to depart this colony within a week" (Orange Co., VA, Order Book 3, 1741-1743, 309). Orange Co., VA, Microfilm Reel 31, VA State Archives."
"NOTE FROM WES TAUKCHIRAY: See 12 May 1740, Orange Co., VA, reference to "about twenty-six of the Saponi Indians that inhabit on" Colonel 's land. Charles Griffin had been a white man who taught school in the Saponi Indian town at Fort Christiana from January 1715 NS to the spring of 1718."
List of Voters at an Election of Burgesses in Fairfax County in 1744
William Bowling
Charles Griffin
Orange County in 1742 regarding some Saponi Indians accused of hog stealing
John Bowling Charles Griffin
Indians, giving security for good behaviour.”
Governor Clarence Gooch of Virginia reported to the Colonial Office for the years 1743 to 1747 that the “Saponies and other petty nations associated with them…are retired out of Virginia to the Cattawbas.”:
THIS WOULD BE Anson county NC,
NOTE this branch of Bollings were Indians froma son of William Bolling Fairfax and son of the Indian teacher Charles Griffith
1693 PHIL. TAX LIST GEORGE PARIS. WILLIAM BOWLING
Spotsylvania County ... extracted, indexed and published by the Virginia Highway & Transportation ...
FINED
WILLIAM BOLEN
DAVID BOLEN
JOHN BOLEN.
DEC 1722
FAIRFAX COUNTY.
LAWS OF VIRGINIA, SEPTEMBER 1758??32d GEORGE II.
Joshua Meaks, John Wren, William Short Ridge, Samuel Jenkins,
Samuel More, Richard Pell, William Bowling, Philip Merchant,
George Valendingham, Robert Bowling,
Ann 'Nancy' Bowling married Peter Wise as proven by the will of Gerrard Bowling, written 9 December 1779, and was still married to Peter Wise on 17 January 1798, when settlement of the will of Gerrard Bowling was reached, and therefore could not have been the mother of Sara, Lavina Elizabeth and John O'Daniel, fathered by John O'Daniel and his second wife, Nancy.
Deed Book A, No. 2, Page 18, Fairfax County, Virginia)
Fairfax County Sct.
On this 17th day of January, MDCCXCVIII, We the Subscribers, Representatives & Legatees of Ger'd Bowling dec'd & those of his Children now deceased, on acc't of whose Estates etc, we had any claim, did meet at the house of Samuel Bowling, & then & there did make an amicable division etc of our claims, which being done to Satisfaction, We do for ourselves our Heirs etc, fully release & exonerate each other from all other Claims & Demands, respecting the premises, except that Samuel Bowling is to pay to Richard Ratcliffe, the sum of Ninety pounds, & Robert Bowling to pay to Peter Wise, the sum of Ninety pounds. Witness our hands the date above.'
Peter Wise; R'd Ratcliffe; Sam'l Bowling; Robert Bowling
Signed & acknowledged in the presence of Joseph Bowling
LAWS OF VIRGINIA, SEPTEMBER 1758??32d GEORGE II.
l. s. d.
Joshua Meaks, John Wren, William Short Ridge, Samuel Jenkins,
Samuel More, Richard Pell, William Bowling, Philip Merchant,
George Valendingham, Robert Bowling.
It was William Bowling his he had a half Indian girl a woman of Charles Griffin.
The sons were one quater Indian sometimes lived white sometimes lived Saponey.
John the Indian terrorist went later with the Hamptons and strothers to Granville his sons were John William Benjamin James Bolling.
These Bollings after they left Mongomerey Va aquired Mulatta Portuguse Indian women
List of inhabitants of Granville County who took the oath of allegiance to North Carolina, including oaths
No Author
May 22, 1778 - August 02, 1778
Volume 22, Pages 168-179
This Book contains the Names of Persons that hath taken the Oath of Allegiance in the Nap of Reed District before me, Robt. Harris.
John Bolling.
Joseph Justice.
Henry (his X mark) Straiter. STROTHER
James Bolling produced a certificate from Gilford City, also John Haig.
William Bolling produced a certificate from Guilford County.
CONCLUSION. THIS branch of the Burtons Bollings variants Bolen Bolin Bowlin ect. Center around William Bowling Jesse Bolling Justice Bolling. Common known as Blue Bollings Melango tribe Bollings Melunjin Bollings, begining with William Bowling and a Indian girl of Reverand Charles griffin in the northern neck Va Staffod co Loudon ect
Russell Co Va Recods
Signed: Hezekiah Farchild & Jemima Farchild. Witnesses: Aaron Hendricks, David Bolling, George Belcher
Page 69 - February 2, 1807 in Castlewoods...Beginning by the french road then south...line of William Bolin...Signed: George Mackey & mary McCoy
1797...270 ac...Beginning corner to Charles Bickleys formerly David Cowans land...line of William Bolins
Page 489 - October 21, 1811 between William Bolin & Sarah and John Banor...340 ac on the south side of Clinch River on some sinking waters...Beginning on a road side...Signed: William Bolin & Sarah Bolin. Witnesses: Ezekiel Burdine, Henry Dickenson, Jr. & Benjamin Fugitt
Page 490 - October 21, 1811 between William Bolin & Sarah and John Banor...50 ac on both sides of Castles Run...Beginning corner to Bolin...line of Robert
McCoy...to the mouth of a branch crossing the run...Signed: William Bolin & Sarah Bolin. Witnesses: Ezekiel Burdine, Henry Dickenson, Jr. & Benjamin Fugitt
P83 - John Young vs Bennett Bollen, plaintiff not appearing to prosecute, suit ordered to be discontinued
P54 - Commonwealth vs William Bolin, presentment, dismissed
P95 - Court expenses for 1800: Clerk for services, clerk for examining comm. books,
P290 - John Holubrook, Mary Holubrook, Ambrose Hammons, Catherine Hammons, & Thomas Large be paid for 2 days as witnesses, also pay Thomas Francis, Nancy Hall, David Conley, Margaret Conley & Susanna Conley be paid for 1 day as witness. Also pay William Bowlen be paid for 1 day as witness for the def
P350 - Certified that Pleasant Horn & Henry Dickenson impressed as guard and served 4 days each for the safekeeping of Barnet Bolin in the jail, also impressed for the safekeeping of John Vickers in the jail
P350 - Certified that James Dickenson impressed as a guard served 3 days securing Barnet Bolen and 2 days in securing John Vickers in the jail accused of horse stealing
P350 - Certified that Thomas Davis, James Carrell, William Fugate & James Morgan impressed as guards and served 2 days each in securing Barnet Boling in the jail accused of horse stealing
P351 - Certified that James Carrell & William Fugate impressed to serve as guard for securing JOhn Vickers in the jail - James Carrell for 2 days and William Fugate for 1 day. Certified that Jonathan Davis was impressed and served 2 days in securing Barnet Bolin
? impressed as a guard for 2 days in securing Barnet Bolen in the jail
P352 - Certified that William Bolen, James Dickenson, Samuel Ewing, William F. McNutt & William Fugate impressed and served as guards for the conveyance of Barnet Bolen from this jail to the district jail, distance of 22 miles
P353 - Certified that William Bolen, Samuel Tate, Joseph Tate, Benjamin Fugate, Daniel Price, William Fugat & Alexander Lyle served as guard for conveying JOhn Vickers from the county jail to the district jail distance of 22 miles
Tax list for the Lower district of Russell
County VA that became Scott County in
1815.
Bolin, Benjamin1
The Kentucky Land Grants, p.1043
Grantee: Bolin, Isham
Acres: 211 1/2
Book: 36
Page: 187
Date Survey: 6- 4-1851
County: Russell
Watercourse: Wolf Cr
The Kentucky Land Grants, p.1043
Grantee: Bolin, John
Acres: 9
Book: 36
Page: 188
Date Survey: 9- 6-1851
County: Russell
Watercourse: Roaring Lilly Cr
The Kentucky Land Grants, p.481
Grantee: Bolin, Wm
Acres: 50
Book: L-2
Page: 185
Date Survey: 4- 1-1836
County: Hardin
Watercourse: Abrams Br
The Kentucky Land Grants, p.482
Grantee: Bolin, David
Acres: 50
Book: T
Page: 200
Date Survey: 8-15-1822
County: Pulaski
Watercourse: Indian Cr
GRANVILLE COUNTY.
Muster Roll of the Regiment in Granville County, under the Command of Colo.
William Eaton, as taken at a General Muster of the said Regiment 8 October,
1754.
42. John Stovall.
43. John Stovall, Junr.
44. Bartholomew Stovall.
72. Francis Strother
86. Lawrance Strother.
25. Christopher Clark.
28. James Bolling.
29. William Bolling.
36. Benjamin Bolling.
40. Francis West.
48. John Bolling.
.
FIRST LIST OF TITHABLES OF PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY, VIRGINIA
YEAR 1767
John Blevins (son of Daniel)
John Bolling-------------------------------------------------------
Arch Boling
John Bollin
William Bolin
Little William Blevins
Arch'l Hughes
James Burnett, tithe
Christopher Bowlin, son William
Joseph Bowlin, 1 tithe
James Bowlin, 1 tithe
Christopher Bowling, Jun
Henry Burnett
John Warring
Jonothan Davis
Isaac Barton
Benjamine Barten
NOTE John Isham Benjamin Bowling Madison Garrard Kentucky are the Bowlings connected to Isaac Burton these were the sons of of William Bolling Bowling, appearance Isaac Burton married a maiden Sally Bolling whom died the remarried a widow Sarah Bolen and took in her daughter Elizabeth Bolen as his own, Conclusion she would of been the wife of one of Isaac Burtons 1st wife Sally Bollings brothers. One was William Bowling or family Jesse Bolling Justice Bowling David Bolling Jeremiah others..
Page 490 - October 21, 1811 between William Bolin & Sarah
William Bolen, James Dickenson, Samuel Ewing, William F. McNutt & William Fugate impressed and served as guards for the conveyance of Barnet Bolen from this jail to the district jail, distance of 22 miles
Barnet Bolen
Letter from Henry Clay Barnett to ES Riggs
My mother was married to Ambrose d Barnett, at her father’s home on May 3 11840. My father was born n bourbon county, Ky. The 24th of July 1809, but his fathers family came to Johnson County, Ind. In the spring of 1822, and settled on a tract near Edinburg, Blue river Township which the government granted him as a veteran of the revolutionary war, he being born in Virginia, and after the war migrated to Kentucky, and he being the youngest child of a family of 26 children. 18 boys and 6 girls 17 of whom were soldiers in the revolutionary war.
Having only 17 brothers and six -----------------------------------------------------------of the other 17 being soldiers in the revolution from t--------------------------------------------of Virginia, and all serving till the war was ended-they the great-great-great grandchildren of Pocahontas (Wolfe) and john Rolfe, whose marriage was the first to take place between the White and Native American races, she being given the name of Rebecca, at her baptism by the rev. Richard Buck, Pastor of the English church at Jamestown, Virginia.
To Sophronia Riggs and Ambrose D Barnett were born nine children, -four sons and five daughters, in the order here given: William Harrison, born in 1840, died in 1920’ Benjamin Franklin, born in 1842, now deceased at about the 86; Martha J.; born Oct 31 1843,died with scarlet fever July 23 1847’Mary Ann, bornSept 22, 1847, and died of spotted fever June 17, 1864,being struck down on Monday in the school room where she was teaching her first school, on Monday afternoon and dying about 11 o’clock Wednesday Am.
Henry Clay (H C) was born dec 12 1848, and was married to Mary Catherine Tucker April 25 1872, and to them were born 7 children, two sons and five daughters, two of the daughters being deceased. The others living at Franklin. Indiana, except the older son Emmett, living at Martinville, Morgan County, Indiana. Henry as you know is Attorney-at-law.
Dewitt Clinton (DC) commonly by early associates know as Clint was born in blue river township, Johnson co Ind. On the farm which his grandfather entered in the pioneer days and where all the children of his mother were born, except the two sisters, yet to be mentioned.
DC Barnett as he is now known and subscribed, attended the common schools, the Ninevah High school, Franklin College, butler University (as it is now named) at Indianapolis, and then four years at the Indiana state University of Indian, where he graduated and received his degree of A.B. July 1,1875 Here he has made his residence ever since
RootsWeb: POCAHONTAS-L [Poca] Re: Thomas ROLFE (only child ...
archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/.../2004.../107810145... - Cached
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29 Feb 2004 – Subject: [Poca] Re: Thomas ROLFE (only child of Pocahontas) Date: Sun, 29 Feb ... It is Anna Rolfe she married william Barnett > and they had ...
NOTE there appears to be only 2 more solid verified familes from Pochantas. One is William Barnett family the other is William Burton and wife unknown relative of John West nephew of Powhaton father of Pochantas. All other myths speculations by Richard Randolph Wyndham Robertson have been discredited by general Chastellux and other unverified archives which dont exist.. it should also be noted the names like Mutacha and others belong to the Blue Bollings.
AND the powhaton burtons
McIlwaine 1979B:478 John Burton & Indian Court 23 June 1640
court Complaint Burton killed an Indian he thought was the one who stole his goods, but this was not the case. Since much danger may arise to Burton or the other English from some revenge for the death of this particular Indian, Burton shall remove his habitation out of this county where he now liveth and pay a fine 20 lbs. sterling to stay committed and security for good behavior.
McIlwaine 1979B:478 John Burton & Indian Petition 23 June 1640
court Fine Burton fined 20 lbs. sterling last Saturday for his contempt in killing of an Indian. Petition for remission to the board- "some of his great men" interceded to the board on Burton's behalf and stated that they are satisfied concerning the same. Court therefore remitted fine, provided he enters recognizance for good behavior.
[Note: footnote #58 indicated that the Indian leader might be Opechancanough.]
Ayres 1968:93 John Smith Informant 18 Feb. 1678/9
court Verdict Said Henry Burton & Ed. Gilley entertained & dealt with the Indians. Verdict: "Not guilty."
Thomas "of Cobbs" Burton.
early Burtons of Colonial Virginia were tobacco farmers like all the early settlers. The colonial farmers would raise tobacco until a farm was depleted of its nutrients and then move to other land, usually westward. The 350-acre plantation was patented by Ambrose Cobbs in 1639 as a crown reward for bringing seven persons to the New World Thomas and John Burton purchased the Cobbs Plantation and Burtons lived on the land for the next forty-eight years. John would eventually move on and patent his own plantation in the curls of the James River, which he would call "Longfield."
In a will recorded 1 Feb, 1685, Thomas Burton leaves 100 acres each to his sons, Thomas, John, Abraham and Issac. Note that the original 350 acres has become 400 acres. We do not know if 50 acres were acquired after 1656 or if the descriptions were general in nature.
In 1735, Issac Burton sold his 100 acres to John Bolling, son of John Bolling of Cobbs, and thus the last Burton family line left "Cobbs".
John Bolling purchased "Cobbs" in Nov, 1704 from John Burton, the land consisting of 300 acres.
The question is how many graves of people like Indian Sally others with the Powhaton family names were left there by the Burtons
John Burton & Indian
23 June 1640
court "some of his great men" interceded to the board on Burton's behalf and stated that they are satisfied
#58 indicated that the Indian leader might be Opechancanough.]
John Smith Informant
18 Feb. 1678/9
court Said Henry Burton dealt with the Indians. Verdict: "Not guilty."
Att a Court holden att Varina for the County of Henrico the second day
of June Anno Dom 1679 . . .
An account of ye several fortye Tythables ordered by this Wor'll Court
to fitt out men horse armes &c. according to act, viz:Sally Indian 1Tho Burton 1
Born in Mecklenburg, Virginia, USA on 1768 to William Roffe and Elizabeth. Edward married Miney Burton and had 9 children. He passed away on 24 Dec 1803.
Att a Court holden att Varina for the County of Henrico the second day
of June Anno Dom 1679 . . .
An account of ye several fortye Tythables ordered by this Wor'll Court
to fitt out men horse armes &c. according to act, viz:
Ben Hatcher 1
Sally Indian 1Tho Burton 1
BURTON, Powhatan R.Mr; Rogers, Nannie A. Miss, Richmond,
marraied.
Note: Daily Express (Petersburg, VA)
Note: December 29, 1865 Page 2, colulmn 3
Powhaton Burton (1873 - 1876) - Find A Grave Photos
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Algonquian East DNA RESULTS SO FAR, ONLY Y MALE
Chicacoan (C'ekakawwon, Sekakawon) merged to Wicocomico 1655 A.D.
ISAAC FREEMAN, B.C.1787, NORTH CAROLINAUnited StatesQ1a3a1 1323131017-17121213141432149-911102714213213-13-18-20111119-231516192036-36121111815-1681110812101221-23201112121581225211312111311111212
109170FreemanUnited StatesQ1a3a1 1323131017-17121213141432149-911102714213213-13-18-20111119-231516192036-36131111815-1681110812101221-24201112121581225211312111311111212
201189John Freeman 1774 - 1870, Yancey County NCEnglandQ1a3a1 1323131017-17121213141432149-911102714213213-18-19-20111119-231516182036-36121111815-1681110812101221-23201112121581225211312111311111212
144826 Unknown OriginQ1a3a1 1323131017-17121213141432149-911102714213213-18-20-20111119-231516182036-36121111815-1681110812101221-23201112121581225211312111311111212
81415John Freeman, b.1771, Bedford Co., VAUnited StatesQ1a3a1 1323131017-17121213141432149-911102714213213-18-20-20111119-231516192036-36121111815-1681110812101221-23201112121581225211312111311111212
194857Elijah Freeman 1802-1875, NC,AlUnknown OriginQ1a3a1 1323131117-17121213141432149-911102714213213-13-18-20111119-231516192036-36121111815-1681110812101221-23201112121581224211312111311111212
177132Elijah Freeman b c 1802-1875, NC,TN,AlaUnited StatesQ1a3
At least there is one part of scientific evidence. DNA. By the Georgia parris bible ,the extensive records of the Indian Trader Revoltion Patriot Major George parris his Indian wife from the Chowan Tribe Hyter Freeman family. His daughters Sarah Parris married George Teator Rhoda married Henry Hohimer Chrisitan married Freeman Jones There is DNA evidence they relalated to the Powhaton family. Although the children of Parris M Teator and brother in law Joseph Totten by John West and Nathaniel Davis. through John Davis and Racheal West of Paquotank NC
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
Ace Maupin 5/23/12
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
Jeanette Lambert 5/24/12
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos
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Re: Blue Bollings Burtons Powhanton Melungeons Melangos