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Showing posts with label Womacks in Colonial Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Womacks in Colonial Virginia. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2021

Early Womack and Puckett settlers in ChesterfieldCounty and Swift Creek


Eastern part of Chesterfield County- tidewater

1622 massacre in the area include John Rolfe, former husband of Pocahontas and father of the tobacco industry

1673 plague and severe winter which killed 50,000 cattle in Virginia

Cattle were more common than horses, and hogs the most common farm animal of all. Wolves were numerous and ravaged the livestock. Negroes and Indians commonly stole hogs for food. In 1669 the Indian tribes were required by law to deliver 145 wolf heads

The settlers depended heavily on imports from England; yarn and thread and material for clothing, table linens and napkins, blankets, shoes, stockings, metal items such as razors, scissors, candlesticks, pots and pans,lanterns and lamps, fishing hooks and lines, farming implements, nails, gunpowder.

1656- Orphans and the sons of poor men were apprenticed by the parishes to be trained until the age of 21. Spinning wheels were used to make home spun cloth. William Byrd had a millstone at Falling Creek

For the wealthy, English laws of primogeniture held in England, but younger sons could be sent to Virginia to get land patents. Once established, however, primogeniture again took hold.

There were two classes; gentlemen (often planters or merchants) and servants or laborers.

1679-Richard Kennon marked himself as a merchant, Martin Elam and John Bowman called themselves planters.

Drinking was done heavily, card playing and betting a universal pastime, 

Horse racing was the most popular diversion and social gathering event and breeding for sport encouraged as early as 1643. By 1663 importing horses was prohibited although export was allowed. There was a track at Bermuda Hundred. Racing disputes were common. In 1688 Abram Womack and Richard Ligon held a race  with Womack's horse ridden by Thomas Cocke and Ligon's by Joseph Tanner, a servant of Thomas Chamberlaine, who was the starter. Abram Childres was the judge. Womack's  horse shied from the track and Ligon's horse won the race, resulting in a dispute. Heavy betting was common at such events, and disputes went to the court.

1680- John Piggot (puckett) won 300 pounds of tobacco while playing cards with Martin Elam and claimed he was owed more

Thomas Cocke kept a tavern in 1685, but was also a planter. Hospitality at good inns and taverns were matched by the residences of wealthy landowners, who lived as if on an English estate. The landed gentry ruled the county and the state.

 People traveled from one plantation to another on boats or sloops along the rivers and streams; even bridle paths were basic in those times. The settlements were limited to the rivers and creeks. The lands beyond the fall line of the James River were heavily forested and inhabited by savages.



 William Farrar settled in 1656

John Puckett and John Burton settled in 1665

Abraham and William Womack (Womecke) about the same time as John Puckett

Richard Kennon settled in 1665 at Conjurer's Neck- at the junction of Swift Creek and the Appomattox river

By the 1680's land patents began gradually going westward  along Swift Creek.

In 1682 William Puckett and Thomas Puckett received 750 acres in Bristol parish, north of the Appomattox river.

In 1683, Joseph Tanner and Richard Womack received a patent for 260 acres on the north side of the Appomattox river. James Baugh got a patent for 119 acres on the north of the Appomattox.

In 1690 Henry Walthall got a patent for 320 acres on the north side of swift creek in Bristol Parish. A few years later Richard Kennon, Francis Epes, Joseph Royal and George Archer got patents on the north side of the Appomatox at Winterpock Creek. In 1703 more families moved there.

Early Chesterfield county settlers

continue p. 63

Saturday, May 15, 2021

Baugh family and marriage of Elizabeth Womack

 


(see Womack to far left)

Baugh Plantation- Ashton Creek, a branch of the Appomattox River

William Baugh Sr. arrived in Virginia from London in 1638. He was a widower and married Elizabeth Sharpe Parker about 1639 in Henrico County. 


Elizabeth had arrived in Virginia on the "Francis Bonaventure" in August 1620.  She married Sgt. William Sharpe (an "ancient planter in the time of Thomas Dale" and in 1624 they were living on the Bermuda Hundred with their sons Isaac and Samuel. William had 40 acres of land and was elected Burgess for Bermuda Hundred. 

After his death Elizabeth married Thomas Parker, who was living with Thomas Baugh at the West and Sherley Hundred. Thomas was thought to be the son of John Baugh, and nephew of William Baugh, Sr.  Thomas Baugh emigrated from Bristol, England on the "Supply" which arrived in Virginia on 29 Feb. 1621. By January 1625 he had relocated to the "College Lands." The 1624 muster recorded Thomas Parker there as well, under Thomas Osborne's command. Thomas Parker arrived in Virginia on the "Neptune" in 1618, along with William Farrar. After his marriage to Elizabeth, he died prior to July 1836.

Elizabeth was now a wealthy widow, and in July 1636 she patented 500 acres in Henrico between the Curles and Varina, part of a total of 950 acres patented in August 1637 from headrights due to transportations of 13 servants for Sharpe. This land was in Varina, east of Henricus.

Elizabeth married William Baugh Sr. in about 1639 and died before Feb 1, 1650, when her will was recorded.


William Baugh Sr.

William Baugh Sr. arrived in Virginia from London in 1638. He was a widower and married Elizabeth Sharpe Parker about 1639 in Henrico County. He lived at Kingsland and Proctor's Creek prior to 1668, when he received a land grant for 577 acres near his brother, John Baugh. He received 600 acres for transportation of 12 persons to Virginia, including his son, William Baugh, Jr. , who arrived in Jamestown about 1660. This land was on the south side of the James River, and the north side of Appomattox river near Ashton Creek.  His brother, John Baugh, had a 1638 land patent near Johnson Creek.

William Baugh Jr. married Jane Hatcher Branch in 1661 but died prior to 1678 and she remarried. One of her daughters, Priscilla Baugh, married William Farrar III, and William Baugh Sr. left her a tract of land.

William Baugh Sr. married a third time after the death of Elizabeth,  to Elizabeth Womack. Their children were Katherine Baugh born 1653 who married a Jones and James Baugh I born 1655 who married Elizabeth Ashbrook and Mary Baugh. Mary Baugh married 1- Thomas Howlett and 2- Thomas Byrd, the brother of William Byrd I of Westover. Thomas Byrd died in March 1710 and Mary died on May 16, 1710 and her son Thomas Howlett Jr. administered her estate with Capt. Thomas Jefferson giving security.

William Baugh Sr. was buried at the Baugh family cemetery near Ashton Creek.

Read further

http://arslanmb.org/baugh/baugh.html

https://www.jstor.org/stable/1914683?seq=1

https://www.jstor.org/stable/1914991?seq=1

http://files.usgwarchives.net/va/henrico/bios/earlyfam2.txt





Source:

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/119190420/william-baugh by Gresham Farrar

1) "Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635" by Martha W. McCartney, 2007, pp. 120, 528, 529, 631 ,632.
2) "The Farrar's Island Family" by Alvahn Holmes, 1972, p. 145.
3) "Virginia Magazine of History & Biography" Vol. 13, p58.
4) "Virginia Gleanings in England Abstracts of 17th and 18th Century English Wills and Administrations Relating to Virginia and Virginians" by Lothrop Withington, 2007, p113.
5) "Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5" by John Frederick Dorman, 4th Ed., Vol. I, 2004, pp8,12,367,930.
6) "Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5" by John Frederick Dorman, 4th Ed., Vol. 3, 2007, p153.
7) "Cavaliers and Pioneers. Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants" Vol. I by Nell Marion Nugent, 1983, p549.
8) "Virginia Vital Records" Indexed by Judith McGhan, 1984, p9.

"The Correspondence of the Three Byrds of Westover


Richard Womack 1655-1684 Mindmap of Relationships in Henrico


Thursday, February 8, 2018

September 2017 Trip to Colonial Virginia




Sept 19- 

The Trading Post at Petersburg

We met cousin Martha Kenley Dolliver at Dulles Airport and, after experiencing a taste of D.C. rush hour traffic, made it to Petersburg, Virginia just in time to enjoy dinner at Saucy's Barbecue. After filling up with smoked brisket and pulled pork we drove a few blocks to see "Peter Jones Trading Station which was an eerie sight with the stone ruins lit up with spotlights in the dark. We went back to visit it in the daylight later in our trip!

Trading Post at Petersburg, Virginia

Peter Jones was the son-in-law of Abraham Wood, who manned the fort here when Richard Womack the Adventurer was trading with the Indians for William Byrd I in the 1600's. It would have been from this fort/trading post that Richard left when he made his final, fateful trip in 1684. William Byrd wrote back to England...

"Old Sturdivant, his son, Millner, Shipy, Womacke, and Hugh Cassell were all killed by Indians in their return from the Westward, about 30 miles beyond Ochanechee..."

The Occaneechee Trail led 80 miles from Fort Henry in Petersburg to the Occaneechi Town on the Virginia border (near what is now Occaneechi State Park.) We think that Richard Womack was in his thirties at the time of his death- he left a wife (Mary Puckett- who was remarried to John Granger) and four young children. 

Tensions with the Indians had been running high, and Henrico County, where Richard lived, was on the western frontier and subject to attacks. The governor, William Berkeley, was not popular with the settlers in Henrico; they felt he was too passive regarding the Indian issues, and that he was establishing unfair rules regulating trading. Richard's employer,William Byrd I, who was a friend and neighbor of Nathaniel Bacon, encouraged him to form a local militia to drive out the Indians from nearby lands. This was the beginning of Bacon's Rebellion- an attempt to take over the government from Berkeley. Many men from Henrico were among the 600 followers of the Rebellion, but we do not know if Richard was one of them.

We found our hotel at Colonial Heights and were glad for a rest!

Sept 20-

 Did Richard Womack burn Jamestown?

We took a ferry across the James River to Jamestown. Bacon's supporters attacked Jamestown in September 1676. While the governor fled to safety, Bacon's men burned the capital to the ground. We viewed the reconstructed early capital of Virginia.

On the south side of the James River to Surrey, Virginia, we viewed a Jacobean brick structure known as "Bacon's Castle." 


"Bacon's Castle" home of Arthur Allen, looted by Bacon's supporters in 1676
This beautiful home was not owned by Bacon, but by a loyal supporter of Governor Berkeley, who was chased from his home in the fall of 1676 by Bacon's supporters, who  stayed in the home for several months, drinking his wine and feasting on his cattle. It was these actions that caused William Byrd to withdraw his support form the rebellion and return his loyalty to the governor.  If Richard Womack was involved in the rebellion, it was likely that he followed his employers political decision at this time, which may have saved his life. 

The death of Bacon by "bloody flux" and "lousey disease" led to an end of the rebellion. Berkeley regained power, hanging many of the rebels.

On a happier note, we ate dinner overlooking "Graybill Creek" at the Surrey Seafood Company. Something bit my eye, causing it to swell, and the owner rushed out, thinking it was an allergic reaction. A bit of ice and it was fine the next day.

On the way back to our hotel we stopped at Weston Manor overlooking the Appomattox River. We also saw Appomattox plantation, which was Grant's headquarters during the civil war.


Appomattox Plantation


Sept 21- 

Brick Beauties


Richard Kennon's Brick House

We drove to Richard Kennon's Brick House. Richard Kennon was a contemporary of the Womack's who was their neighbor on Swift Creek and the Appomattox River. 


Swift Creek

We toured Blandford Church, which was in Bristol Parish, the parish that the Womack's worshipped in. This simple church has hidden treasures- Tiffany stained glass windows representing each of the Confederate states. We couldn't take pictures, but these were the most impressive examples of stained glass that we had ever seen, with colors changing and illuminating the interior of the building in a most amazing way.


Blandford Church

We drove across the river to Upper Shirley Vineyards on the James River and had a nice lunch and wine-tasting.


Martha at Upper Shirley Vineyards
Janice at Shirley Vineyards

It was a longer drive than we expected to find the remote colonial home of Eppington at Winterpock. The Womack's had land at Winterpock which was eventually sold to the grandfather of Thomas Jefferson. The Eppes family built this home there, and Thomas Jefferson (the president) sent his daughters to stay there with Eppes relatives while he was ambassador to France.


Janice at Eppington Plantation at Winterpock

That night we had dinner at the Brickhouse English Pub in Petersburg.

Sept 22

The Road Home


Monticello

Martha at the Monticello gardens

We drove from Colonial Heights to Thomas Jefferson's home at Monticello and enjoyed a tour there, followed by lunch at the historic Michie Tavern.


Michie Tavern

Tired and anxious to head back home to WV, we were barely on the highway when the muffler broke off the van and we had to be towed to a repair shop where we spent several hours before we could continue our drive.

WV

We spent a few days relaxing at home in WV, visiting with Cat Hainfeld at her art gallery, viewing local sights, and bird watching. Tuesday we headed back to the airport, and Martha caught her flight, while Kerry and I had lunch with our grandson, Gabe. All in all, a great week!


Dolly Sods WV





Wednesday, September 13, 2017

1697 Will of Thomas Womack- Richard's brother

Henrico County Deeds, Wills 1688-1697

From Thomas' will, it is shown that Abraham Womack (also Richard and John) were his brothers

Pucketts- brother (inlaw) Thomas Puckett, cousin Elizabeth Puckett, godson Thomas Puckett, Mary-dtr of Will Puckett, Frances dtr of Thomas Puckett

Baughs- goddaughter Catherine Baugh

John Granger (2nd husband of Richard Womack's widow, Mary Puckett Womack)

Witnessed by Henry Walthall and James Baugh

In the name of god Amen
 Know all Christian people that I Thomas Womack of the County of Henrico and parish of Bristoll being Weak of body but of Sound Memory & under Standing doe here make my last will and Testament Revoaking all others formerly be me made bequathing of my personall Estate in manner and forme following.
 Item I Bequath my Sole to god that gave it mee trusting in the meritts of Jesus Christ my Saviour and Redeemer that at the General resurrection of the Last day my Soul and body Shall be united to gether and to rest with my redeemer in Glory amen.

21y I doe give to my godson Thomas Puckett my new four foot Chest

Item I doe give to my Couzen Elisabeth Puckett one Cow Browing Shee being great with Calfe

Item I doe give to my god Daughter Catherine Baugh one heifer of two yeares old

Item I doe give to my godson Thomas Puckett one heifer of four years old

I doe give to my Brother Thomas Puckett one Steer of three years old and a two
years old heifer and my hoggs like wise I give to my brother Thomas Puckett

Item I give to my Brother Thomas Puckett my Mare Colt

Item I give to my godson Thomas Puckett my fether bed with all its furniture

Item I give to my Brother Abraham Womack my long gun

Item I give to my godson Thomas Pucket my Small Gunn

Item I give to John Granger one Muskett

I give to my godson Thomas Puckett one old pewter dish one new plate

Item I give to Cuzo: Eliz: Puckett one old pewter dish and one new plate

Item I give to Mary Puckett daughter of Will Puckett one new Small pewter dish & two new plates

Item I give to my Brother Abraham Womack two old Pewter dishes two old plates one new large pewter bason

Item I give to John Granger one pewter bason one old pewter Dish one old plate

Item I give to Frances Puckett daughter of Thomas Puckett one new Tankard two new plates

Item I give to my brother Abraham Womack one Suite of Stript Serge

Item I give all my Linnen and Wollen that is in my new Chest I Say all that is not bequeathed I doe give to Abra: Womack Will Puckett Tho: Puckett & John Granger to be Equally Shared amongst them

Item all my goods & Chattles not bequeath I give to Thomas Puckett & William
Puckett whome I leave Execrs of this my last will to pay my debts and make a
Deacent Buriall for testimony of the Same I have hereunto Set my hand &

Seale this 21st of jannuary 1697 Thm his marke
Testis Henry Walthall Seale of red wax
James Baugh Thomas Womack

Henrico County August 2d 1697 Proved in Court by the oaths of ye Subscribed
Wittnesses and farther confirmed by verdict of a jury Entred in ye other
book of Records Test James Cocke Cl Cur."

Mean John Womack- Richard's brother


Mean John Womack- Richard's brother

This website says it all!

Mean John Womack- brother of Richard

Womack wills and inventories in colonial Virginia


Richard Womack was killed by Indians in 1684. He left a wife, Mary Puckett (who later married John Granger) and son Richard Womack born in 1674/6, William born 1679, and ?

Henrico County Records, 1677-1692, Part 2, page 185 or 285:
Inventory of Richard Womack 1684

Augt: the 19th. 1684:
An Acct. of ye Appraisal: of ye estate of Mr. Richd. Womeck, the Apprizers Sworn before Fran. Epes: (Appraised value listed in casks of tobacco)
p. tobo. & cask

Two Steers 6 yrs old 1000
Two Steers 5 yrs growth 800
one Steer of 3 years 200
Seven Cowes 2300
Three yearling Heifers 450
Four yearling Calves 280
One horse Saddle & bridle 450
One Mare & Colt 500

one pr of old belts: 10
Two joynter Stocks & joynter 60
 1 pcell (parcel?) of old Coopr tools 130

 Eight trading knives, 2 tomahauks 20
three old guns 400
1 old tent, saw 30
1 sword and belt and form 300

 Two pds (pounds) of beads, 1 plow chain, 62
one ditto 60
330 pcell (parcels) skins 100
one small do 50

One Canvas tick fether bed 14,
blankets and rug, old 450
blankets and rug 550
One old feather bed blanketts 550
6 wooden? the half of a feather bed, rug, chairs 42, 92
blankett
1 warming pan
1 chamber pot
old press 80 (his JE mark- James Ekins senior)
one chest 30
one long table
one box of iron

16 old pewter Spoons 20
seven pewter dishes 130
1 pewter flagon 35
1 qrt pot 165
one brass ladle: 6 16 old
 Two old water pails 20
 Two Small Iron potts 80
1 pr of pot racks
1 dripping pan (JB his mark- John Baugh), 1 spit 35
One old brass kettle 380
 One fryeing pan, 1 Square

 Sworn to in Henco (Henrico) County Court ye first day of October 1684
 p. by me Fran. Epes (appraiser) by Mary Womack admn

Carryed over 7662
Test H Randolph Cl Cur p whom it recorded."

This Francis Epes (Known as  was the son of Col. Francis Eppes (below) and step son of Elizabeth Worsham Epes of Bermuda Hundred.  He married Anne Isham  (dtrof Henry Isham and Katherine Royall) He was justice of the peace in Henrico in 1683.

 Francis Epes in 1658 married Elizabeth Worsham, widow of Wm Worsham of Henrico. Her dtr. Elizabeth was the wife of Richard Kennon.

Col. Francis Eppes was a justice in Henrico County in 1664/5 and served in the House of Burgesses in 1670-6. In 1673 he was granted 927 acres on the north side of the Appomattox River on Swift Creek. He and the Henrico Militia with 46 horsemen acted in August 1678 when 150-200  Indians came down the James River in Henrico- Maj. Wm. Harris was killed and two militia wounded during this encounter. Col. Francis Eppes died of wounds. His father owned Hopewell farms which is now a Nat. Historical Park at City Point in Hopewell on the Appomattox.
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~poythress/Epes.html


 http://www.martinosworld.com/Genealogy/WomackDocuments.htm


Homes in Henrico in the 1600's

http://eppington.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2014/06/A-Documentary-History
-of-Eppington-Part-1.pdf

Homes were built of wood, with roofs having chestnut shingles. Finer homes had snow white lime on the walls, and windows. Homes generally had only two rooms on the ground floor and two rooms in the  attic. The kitchen was separate from the main house.

Outbuildings provided homes for white indentured servants and negro slaves.

Sheds were built to dry tobacco. The raising of tobacco was labor intensive, and as fewer indentured servants came from Europe, more slaves were brought in from Africa. At first they were also indentured, but eventually laws were passed (the Black Code of 1705) which introduced slavery.

The History of Swift Creek- other landowners


1620-

Charles Magnor-650 acres known as Conjurer's Field- west of Swift Creek bordered on the south by the Appomattox River

Samuel Sharp- east of Magnor, inland across the creek

Abraham Piercey-head of Ashen Swamp

1638-

John Baugh- 250 acres on the Appomattox from Swift Creek to Ashen Swamp- eventually increased his lands, selling to:

William Walthall- bought 750 acres from John Baugh

Ambrose Cobbs- east of Baugh, near the Point of Rocks

Abraham Wood- east of Cobbs- extensive land on both sides of the Appomattox- thousands of acres by mid 1600's, including the trading post known as Fort Henry established on Wood's land on the lower side of the Appomattox in 1644. By 1646 Fort Henry was the legal site of all Indian trade south of the James River.

South of the Appomattox-

Francis Eppes I- 1980 acres- Francis served as the Charles City County's burgess

1677- Francis Eppes II- 927 acres on the north side of the Appomattox on Swift Creek

1690- Francis Eppes III patented 580 acres of swampy land in Henrico known as Capt. Martin's Swamp (with 3 other landowners)

1690- Frances Eppes III, Richard Kennon, Joseph Royall and George Archer patented 2,827 acres on the north side of the Appomattox in Bristol Parish, Henrico County- on Worapock (Winterpock) Creek.

1703- Eppes, Archer, and their offspring patented 4,000 acres at the mouth of Winterpock Creek. (444 acres each)

1725- Thomas Jefferson (grandfather of the president) purchased 250 acres called Wintopock that had originally belonged to Richard Womack (Henrico County Deeds 1706-1737 p 16)


1646

A treaty with the Indians ceded land from the fall line of the James as far south as the Blackwater River- the land on the south of the James between the head of the Blackwater River and Old Manakin Town was reserved for Virginia planters. Eppington was within the land that was left to the Indians.

1670's- Nathaniel Bacon of Curles neck on the upper side of the James across from Bermuda Hundred claimed that the settlers near the head of the river were being harrassed by Indians. The people of Henrico county claimed that the forts built by Sir William Berkeley in 1676 were useless and that Indian attacks were not being addressed.  They felt that the Indian trade was being monopolized by high ranking government officials. They claimed they could not distinguish friendly Indians from foes and demanded a war against all Indians.

Bacon's Laws of 1676 allowed planters to occupy any land vacated by Indians- encouraging settlers to drive off existing tribes. A new treaty in 1677 allowed for peaceful relations, with a market for Indian trade at Manakin town on the south side of the James, and forts at the head of the four main rivers.

http://eppington.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2014/06/A-Documentary-History-of-Eppington-Part-1.pdf



The History of Swift Creek- Abraham Piersey


Swift Creek, where the Womack's settled in Henrico County, was originally settled by Abraham Peirsey.

Abraham was an investor for the Virginia Company. He came to Virginia from his home in Maidstone, Kent, England, in 1616, on the "Susan" the first magazine ship for the Virginia Colony. He was authorized to trade freely, with expectations that he would sell the goods from his ship in exchange for tobacco and sassafras. After a successful voyage on the "Susan", he returned the following year on the "George" and stayed in Virginia.  By 1618 he was the "Cape Merchant" or Treasurer of the Virginia Colony. In 1619, the London Company gave him 200 acres for his service to the colony, the start of what became "Peirsey's Toile"- 1,150 acres on the upper side of the Appomattox River near Swift Creek and the Bermuda Hundred. He renamed this "Peirsey's Hundred." Peirsey traded with John Rolfe of Jamestown, among others.



On March 22, 1622, the Peirsey plantation on the Appomattox was attacked by Indians and four people were killed. At this point Peirsey was 45 years old. He testified in England that year regarding several charges against him. He returned to Virginia on July 31, 1622, on the "James." He was a member of the House of Burgesses in 1622 and the Council from 1624 until his death. However, he was not in Virginia when the census was made in February 1624.

Peirsey also owned the 1,000 acre Flowerdew Hundred Plantation, bought from Sir George Yeardley by 1624, and Weyanoke, 2,200 acres across the James.  By 1626 he had 1,150 acres on the Appomattox. He also had property in Jamestown. He was known as the second wealthiest man in Virginia at the time- with only Gov. Sir George Yeardley being wealthier. Besides his land, he had 29 bonded servants and 7 negroes.

Abraham died in Jamestown in 1628. The plantation went to his 2nd wife, Frances Greville, who later married Samuel Matthews. At her death in 1633, the plantation went to his daughter, Mary Peirsey Hill, who renamed it Flowerdieu Hundred. Abraham's daughter, Elizabeth Piercy, married  Capt. Richard Stephens, who died in 1636. They had  4 sons. After Stephen's death, Elizabeth married Gov. Harvey.

Abraham Piersey's will (proved 10 May 1633) allows for paying his debts in full, including land patents for persons imported by him since March 1620.




The Majors and their marriages by James Branch Cabell

https://www.geni.com/people/Abraham-Piersey-Sr/295308277430002260

  • Virginia immigrants and adventurers, 1607-1635: a biographical dictionary By Martha W. McCartney
https://books.google.com/books?id=orDbMGpInaQC&pg=PA215&lpg=PA215&dq=Elizabeth+Cole+1618&source=bl&ots=WG-9bdo0XK&sig=MuuEo7JkyuotFzvO6QSpvPYhGIE&hl=en&ei=1XHETLPNHYe-sAPx2Ii5BA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result#v=onepage&q=pierce&f=false


Colonial Virginia resources and readings

Cultural Overview of City Point Petersburg

Indentured Servants in the Virginia Colony

Thomas Jefferson Papers Virginia 1600's Timeline

Wentopock Creek

Richard Womack the Adventurer
Old Richard Womack
Richard Womack Georgian 1710-1785

The name Wentopock, which evolved to Winterpock, was thought to be derived from the Indian word "Win-to-poak-ke."

History of this Area

Soon after the founding of Jamestown in 1607, the Virginia Company became interested in making other settlements on the James River. 50 miles upriver, the Appamattuck Indians, part of the Powhatan confederacy, had a village at Swift Creek, and another at Bermuda Hundred Point. Lt. Gov. Thomas Dale destroyed the Bermuda Hundred village in 1611 and planned a town at Henricus. In 1613, he tried another site at Bermuda Hundred at the confluence of the James and Appomattox rivers. This colony survived. Between 1611 and 1615, Henricus and Bermuda Hundred were the focus of settlement in the Virginia Colony. But in 1622, the Powhattan Confederacy attacked the settlements, killing many of the settlers. In 1624, Virginia was made a royal colony due to the lack for profits from the Virginia Company. Rather than the previous communal company land, the land was privatized, and headrights of 50 acres were given for each person transported to the new colony. Plantations began to develop along the rivers and main creeks in the area of the James and Appomattox.

In his last will and testament, Old Richard Womack left some of his land at Wentopock Creek, on the north side of the Appomattox River,  to his son Richard Womack (Deeds 1725-1736 p 16 Henrico Va) and also some to George Carter.

George Carter sold 250 acres of this land to Thomas Jefferson in 1726. Originally the plantation was know as Winterpock.

The Eppes Family and Winterpock Plantation

Later the Eppes family later added on to the land and constructed Eppington Plantation in about 1768. Francis Eppes was closely related to Martha Jefferson, the wife of Thomas Jefferson. After Martha's death, Francis and his wife raised Jefferson's two daughters while Jefferson was minister to France. One daughter, Lucy, died in 1784 and is buried at Eppington. The other daughter, Mary "Polly" married her cousin John Eppes and spent a great deal of time at Eppington.

In 1703, Francis Eppes III, a resident of Bermuda Hundred and justice of Henrico (who signed the inventory of Richard Womack the Adventurer in 1684 and was a founder of the college of William and Mary in 1693) was granted 4000 acres at the mouth of Winterpock Creek for transporting 80 people to Virginia. He and his son Francis IV continued buying land near Swift Creek. This was the most desirable land in the area, and wealthy planters vied to buy tracts.

His son, Francis IV (1683-1734) acquired more land in the area and eventually had over a dozen plantations, making him one of the wealthiest men in the colony. While the previous generation had lived simply, this generation (beginning in 1700) began to buy slaves to work the tobacco fields, and their wealth was reflected with ornate brick homes, fine furniture, and fine coaches and horses.

Eppington was built by Francis V, and lived there beginning in about 1773.





Historical paper on the area of Eppington/Winterpock

Eppington Plantation

article on Winterpock



http://www.chesterfieldobserver.com/news/2008-04-09/family/015.html

http://eppington.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2014/06/A-Documentary-History-of-Eppington-Part-1.pdf

http://virginiahistoricaltidbits.blogspot.com/2013/05/abraham-piersey.html


Monday, June 12, 2017

A visit to Petersburg, Virginia- in 1655-1685 Richard Womack set out from this fort to trade with the Indians

We drove to Petersburg, Virginia on our way to North Carolina. This is the area, just south of Richmond, where the Womack's lived in the 1600's. We wanted to see the ruins of the fort and trading post where Richard Womack set out from to trade with the Indians in the mid 1600's. The path from here followed south along the Occaneechi Trail.


We stopped at the visitor's center, and found out that the courtyard there was the setting for the washing area scene in "Mercy Street" in case you are a fan (we are!) I remembered the gate to the street vividly as that is where the young slave boy had to decide whether to remain with his mistress or make a break for freedom.





Nearby was the trading post, now known as "Peter Jone's Trading Post" which had originally been called Fort Henry. It was commanded by Abraham Wood in Richard Womack's time. Later it was left to Abraham's son-in-law, Peter Jones, for whom Petersburg was named. The ruins stood near the banks of the Appomattox River.












350 years after Richard Womack set off from here on trading expeditions!


Connected Blog Posts:
1655-1685 Richard Womack- Trading Paths 1600's
1655-1685- Richard Womack- Fellow Traders


Further information:
Historical Marker for Peter Jone's Trading Station
Abraham Wood
1673 Abraham Wood's letter describing a trading expedition

Sunday, May 14, 2017

1770 Virginia Map- Account of Colonial Virginia at base of map



             





"A concise account of the number of inhabitants, the trade, soil, and produce of Virginia"



“In the Colony of Virginia, are 131,000 Tithables, 55, 958 pf which are white Men, and the residue consists of Negro Men and Women; It will I suppose be reckoned a very moderate computation to allow three Children for every pair of Negros Thithable, if so the Number of Negro slaves will amount to 187,606, and as none but White Men are listed as Tithables, we must suppose there are 50,863 women, the proportion between the Sexes being commonly stated as 11 to 10, and allowing three Children to every Woman there will be 152,589 Children; consequently the number of Inhabitants White and Black in Virginia will amount to 447,008, a number greatly exceeding any of the Colonies in America. As to the Value of this great number of Slaves, we can only make a probably computation founded on Principles well known and admitted in the Colony; A Negro Man or Woman between 16 and 40 Years of Age is reckoned now worth Fifty Pounds, tho 3 or 4 Years ago they went at double that Price, reckoning then the above number of Negro Thithables but at 40 Pounds each they will amount to 3,001,680 Pounds Virginia Currency, and as to the residue valuing them but at 30 Pounds each they will amount to 3,376,890 Pounds and all of them to 6,378,570 Pounds. 

 As to the Trade of the Colony, its Staple is Tobacco; and tho it does not yield much to the Planter; notwithstanding that- between 50 and 60,000 Hogsheads are commnibus Annis, exported to Great Britain, yet as 17,000 Tons of Shipping are employed, and many thousand British Inhabitants supported thereby, it is very valuable to the Subjects and may also be said to be a Jewel to the Crown as so large a sum arises out of the Duties. 

The Country indeed is very capable of improvement and some attempts have been made to raise Hemp though not considerable, the Soil however is very proper for such production. As to the Drink chiefly used in the Colony, it is generally Cyder, every Planter having an Orchard, and they make from 4,000 to 5 or 6,000 Gallons annually, in proportion according to their Rank and Fortune. As to the Soil it is very different in different Parts, that which lies upon the Rivers and their Branches is generally a black deep soil and produces the largest Tobacco, and all other Plants, and as the Country abounds in large Navigable Rivers a great proportion of the Land is of this kind the produce of which is very easily brought to Market, but the Land that lies distant from the Rivers is generally of a middling Quality yet produces Maize or Indian Corn sufficient for the supply of the Inhabitants who chiefly use Bread made from this Grain and the very meanest and hilly Lands are very properly for the Peach Tree, every Planter having an Orchard of those Trees the Brandy made from that Fruit being excellent, and indeed might be made in sufficient Quantities for the supply of the People, was there not so much Rum imported from the Sugar Islands.

 As to the Manufactories of Virginia, they consist chiefly of Cotton, for very little Woollen and Linnen Cloth is made in the Province, there being but few Sheep, and as but little Land is spared from Tobacco and Grain, so few of the Inhabitants understand the management of Flax most of the Men as well as Women of the lower Classes wear Cotton Cloth, both in Summer and Winter and it has been computed that there has been Manufactured for one or two Years past of this kind of Cloth to the amount of 250,000 Pounds Annually. Altho’ this necessarily lessens the Importation of European Goods, it is not wholly of choice, the People being obliged to it, as the Balance of Trade has for many Years been against them, the Colony being much indebted to Great Britain,, even in the opinion of good Judges to the amount of 1,500,000 Pounds.

In regard to the Stocks of Horses, Cattle, and Hogs, they are very considerable especially the first, there being a great Number of the best English breed now among us, and as to Plate and Household Furniture this Colony exceeds all the others upon the Continent, so that upon the whole it is much the richest as well as the greatest Importance to Great Britain and therefore well deserves its Encouragement and Protection.”

                                              
 At the top right of the map is a symbolic Indian maiden holding a portrait of King George III and a cornucopia of plenty representing the main products of the colony; tobacco and fruits.