• The Massachusetts Bay Colony (1628-1691), more formally the Colony of Massachusetts Bay , was an English settlement on the east coast of North America around the Massachusetts Bay , one of the several colonies later reorganized as the Province of Massachusetts Bay . (nitrogenschw137.cfd)
  • She was born in North Carolina, when she arrived with the Walters and Harrells. (blogspot.com)
  • The only knowledge of her origin is found in census records stating that she was born in North Carolina. (blogspot.com)
  • Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press, 2000. (pricegen.com)
  • The following is a list of books and other resources I have found that contain genealogical or historical information relating to the old Tryon County region of North and South Carolina. (logan-family.org)
  • Tryon County existed as a North Carolina county from 1768 to 1779. (logan-family.org)
  • In 1772 when the state line was surveyed between North and South Carolina, much of what was thought to have been Tryon County was found to be in South Carolina. (logan-family.org)
  • In 1779 what remained of Tryon County in North Carolina was abolished and split into Lincoln and Rutherford Counties. (logan-family.org)
  • Title: Anson County, North Carolina wills and estates, 1749-1795. (logan-family.org)
  • Title: Anson County, North Carolina : abstracts of early records / Publisher: Baltimore : Genealogical Pub. (logan-family.org)
  • Title: Mecklenburg County, North Carolina abstracts of early wills, 1763-1790 (1749-1790) / Publisher: Greenville, S.C. : A Press, c1980. (logan-family.org)
  • Title: Mecklenburg County, North Carolina deed abstracts. (logan-family.org)
  • Author: Philbeck, Miles S. Title: Mecklenburg County, North Carolina : index to land surveys, 1763-1768 / Publisher: Chapel Hill, NC (407 Colony Woods Dr., Chapel Hill 27514) : M.S. Philbeck, c1988. (logan-family.org)
  • Author: Philbeck, Miles S. Title: Mecklenburg County, North Carolina land warrants, 1765-1768 / Publisher: Chapel Hill, N.C. : M.S. Philbeck, c1989. (logan-family.org)
  • S14] Obituary of Frank Lanman Holcombe, North Carolina Holstein News , Winston-Salem, North Carolina (3Q 1952). (holcombegenealogy.com)
  • Abstracts of Early Deeds of Edgecombe County, North Carolina 1759-1772. (holcombegenealogy.com)
  • 1 ] Most of Louisa's ancestry was English as well, but her father's paternal grandparents were among those who fled Germany during the turmoil of the Seven Years War, arriving in South Carolina in the early 1760s. (tomitronics.com)
  • Restrictions included prohibiting them from voting (North Carolina had allowed this before 1831), [ citation needed ] bearing arms, gathering in groups for worship, and learning to read and write. (wikipedia.org)
  • Documents Illustrative of the History of the Slave Trade to America, Vol. IV: The Border Colonies and the Southern Colonies. (pricegen.com)
  • An Act for the Naturalizing such foreign protestants and others therein mentioned ___ Settler or shall Settle in any of his Majesty s Colonies in America. (planetmurphy.org)
  • Franklin earned the title of "The First American" for his early and indefatigable campaigning for colonial unity , initially as an author and spokesman in London for several colonies. (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • Franklin became a national hero in America as an agent for several colonies when he spearheaded an effort in London to have the Parliament of Great Britain repeal the unpopular Stamp Act . (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • Since the colonial period , colonies and states had passed laws that discriminated against free Blacks . (wikipedia.org)
  • Kitty was taken from Mississippi, and survived the removal of Choctaws from Mississippi to Indian Territory in 1831. (blogspot.com)
  • [4] The recently identified teapots, sugar bowl, pitcher and beakers are part of a larger service owned by the Mitchum family: the 1831 probate inventory of Dudley Mitchum's estate listed "1 doz silver tumblers, 2 silver tea pots, 1 pitcher, 1 sugar dish, 1 cream jug, 1 tankard," with a combined valued of $400.00 (Figure 5). (mesdajournal.org)
  • He was part of a seventh generation of Sewells in America, with maternal and paternal descent from the earliest English settlers of the Virginia colony in the seventeenth century. (tomitronics.com)
  • The lands of the settlement were in southern New England , with initial settlements on two natural harbors and surrounding land about 15.4 miles (24.8 km) apart-the areas around Salem and Boston , north of the previously established Plymouth Colony . (nitrogenschw137.cfd)
  • Made up of two counties, Northampton to the south and Accomack, an American Indian word meaning "on the other side," to the north, the peninsula is separated from the Virginia mainland by the Chesapeake Bay. (themagazineantiques.com)
  • It is probable that Henry Carter was a descendant of one of the old Carter families of colonial Virginia. (pdx.edu)
  • Cleopatra was an Indian woman born in what is now the Tidewater Virginia area, perhaps around the year 1600 or so. (jeaniesgenealogy.com)
  • Mary Caldwell, wife of James Chew (~1740-1783) was the daughter of Andrew and Jane Caldwell of Berkeley County, West Virginia based on the will of her brother, Andrew Caldwell Jr., and that of her father, Andrew Caldwell Sr., all supported by other primary source evidence. (mikeoneill.us)
  • The go-to resource for the Dodson family is the Dodson Family of North Farnham Parish, Richmond County, Virginia, an exceptional two volume set by the Reverend Silas Lucas published in 1988. (dna-explained.com)
  • [6] The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation purchased the other Mitchum teapot (Figure 8) at public auction in 2013. (mesdajournal.org)
  • The only published source I have found for this connection is an unsourced sentence in "Courses of Empire: The Thomas Chew Family of Orange County," an undated article written by Frederick Madison Smith and posted on the National Society of James Madison Family Descendants website. (mikeoneill.us)
  • Living Descendants of Blood Royal in America" 5th Volume, p. 267. (hammroots.com)
  • That is the painful and sad reality of slavery in America. (blogspot.com)
  • How the North Promoted, Prolonged, and Profited from Slavery. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • The story of how Connecticut and all of the north benefited from slavery is documented in this book. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • It includes details about slavery in the 17th and 18th centuries, the West Indian Trade, and the importation of ivory tusks from Africa for the piano industries. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • Slavery Before Race: Europeans, Africans, and Indians at Long Island's Sylvester Manor Plantation, 1651-1884. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • After that, most of the Indians in southern New England made peace treaties with the colonists or were sold into slavery after King Philips's War (apart from the Pequot tribe, whose survivors were largely absorbed into the Narragansett and Mohegan tribes following the Pequot War). (nitrogenschw137.cfd)
  • And there are my ancestors from Indian Territory in the Choctaw Nation. (blogspot.com)
  • If they are fortunate, some will find ancestors in a probate record, listed among other enslaved people on a white slave holder's will or estate inventory. (blogspot.com)
  • I believe there is enough here to help you find sources you can use to trace your Copper Country ancestors. (habitant.org)
  • Anyone who has spent time doing family history research knows the many challenges involved in building a family tree with complete and accurate information - but researching African American ancestors can present its own unique set of complications. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • In this guide to African American genealogy research, we will talk about how to get started researching your African American ancestors, discuss common challenges and potential strategies for avoiding them, and highlight the best resources to help you begin to uncover your family's roots. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • FamilySearch's very detailed and useful Finding Records of Your Ancestors, Part A-African American 1870 to Present and their quick guide Beginning African American Research points out that you may have more information available to you than you realize via family members or documents stashed away in an attic or basement. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • The steps walk you through locating specific information about your ancestors using recommended documents and suggested sources. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • Researching your African American ancestors can be more difficult than other family research due to the complex history of enslavement, oppression, and marginalization of people of African descent in the United States. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • But it can be very difficult to find African American ancestors prior to 1870 and this challenge is sometimes referred to as the "1870 Brick Wall. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • I tried to point out that some of these organizations were of very recent beginnings and many had no hard-and-fast membership requirements, as to the DAR, Colonial Dames of America, as far as authenticating each detail of descent. (dna-explained.com)
  • The author included the stories of those held in servitude during colonial and early American periods. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • Amanda's mother was Amanda whose mother Kitty Perry who was a slave of the Perry family of Skullyville in Indian Territory. (blogspot.com)
  • John Bent Sr., Father of the Bent Family in America relates the story of this man born during the reign of Elizabeth in Penton-Grafton, Hampshire, England who founded the Bent family that spread across North America. (ancestorsinaprons.com)
  • John Bent, Jr., Tithingman of Framingham , born in 1636, traveled with his family to America when he was only two-year-old. (ancestorsinaprons.com)
  • His family endured a violent Indian attack that injured a young son and killed an apprentice, he accidentally killed his younger brother Joe, and Peter died overseas. (ancestorsinaprons.com)
  • On April 15, 1635, Matthew took passage on the Increase with his family for America, landing near Hartford, Connecticut, 1st of June 1635. (blogspot.com)
  • If you find this article helpful to your own family history, please don't copy the full text to ancestry.com or other genealogy site. (mikeoneill.us)
  • As of October 2014, eleven family trees on Ancestry.com list James Caldwell as the father of Mary Caldwell, wife of James Chew (including, for a time, my own tree. (mikeoneill.us)
  • Notes: An alphabetical list (by family name) of individuals identified as residing in Mecklenburg County during 1762-1790, with reference to source of information. (logan-family.org)
  • A decade later, things had calmed, the remnants of the Indians were gone, and births of many English families were being recorded in the Farnham Parish Church register. (dna-explained.com)
  • Farnham Parish was split into two when Old Rappahannock County was split into Richmond and Essex County, with Richmond County becoming North Farnham Parish and Essex County becoming South Farnham Parish. (dna-explained.com)
  • The North Farnham Parish register transcription, which includes the original Farnham Parish records, does still exist, but is fragmentary and known to be incomplete. (dna-explained.com)
  • Http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~langille/maindatabase/dat18.html#2. (sladegenealogy.net)
  • The next section discusses the "1870 Brick wall" that is often encountered in African American genealogy research. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • 24 cm. (available online to ancestry.com subscribers) Author: Holcomb, Brent. (logan-family.org)
  • This work was written by the grandson of Gad Asher who was enslaved in Guilford and fought in the American Revolution. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • His efforts proved vital for the American Revolution in securing shipments of crucial munitions from France. (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • Richmond and Essex were both formed in 1692 when old Rappahannock was dissolved and divided into half, with Richmond County being on the north of the Rappahannock River and Essex on the South. (dna-explained.com)
  • Immigrant servants listed in the following sources have been added to the database. (pricegen.com)
  • Currently, there are two possible ancestry tracks: (1) A German immigrant, and (2) an English Green clan from Maryland and Pennsylvania. (planetmurphy.org)
  • Time, Space, and the Evolution of Afro-American Society on British Mainland North America," The American Historical Review , Vol. 85, No. 1 (Feb 1980), pp. 44-78. (pricegen.com)
  • This is a well researched monograph that shows the use of colonial courts to deprive the Quinnipiac, a southern Connecticut tribe, of their ancestral lands. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • Roe, Melissa A. "Differential Tolerances and Accepted Punishments for Disobedient Indentured Servants and Their Masters in Colonial Courts," Honor's Thesis, Lafayette College, 1996. (pricegen.com)
  • Surprise sources were a footnote in a town history and the summary of a trial (that took place 13 years later) in a book of passenger lists. (ancestorsinaprons.com)
  • Located on the Keweenaw Peninsula in the far north of Michigan, Houghton County has a rich history of French-Canadian communities. (habitant.org)
  • April 5, Tuesday, 5:15 - 7:30pm, Constructing Castle William: An Intimate History of Labor and Empire in Provincial America , at the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Massachusetts. (blogspot.com)
  • As a scientist, he was a major figure in the American Enlightenment and the history of physics for his discoveries and theories regarding electricity. (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • 144008. "Ranney- Middletown Upper Houses/A history of the North Society of Middletown CT from 1650-1," Ancestry Library Edition, Date Viewed: 31 Oct 2020, Image94of361 Pg 210 Nathaniel2 Bosworth & Bridget Lobdell ch: John3 Bosworth Marr: Sarah. (hillfamilymd.org)
  • 144010. "Ranney- Middletown Upper Houses/A history of the North Society of Middletown CT from 1650-1," Ancestry Library Edition, Date Viewed: 31 Oct 2020, Image94of361 Pg 210 John Bosworth b: 1656. (hillfamilymd.org)
  • It is quite a bit of American history! (blogspot.com)
  • During the colonial period there were very few naturalizations becuase most were English, Welsh, Irish, and Scottish settlers who were all considered part of the English empire. (planetmurphy.org)
  • In 1675, war with Indians continues, with 2 settlers being killed in Richmond County by Indians from Maryland. (dna-explained.com)
  • This act was the fuel that the Indians needed and a number of attacks were carried out on the small groups of settlers. (dna-explained.com)
  • S8870 ] North Shore Archives Society, Tatmagouche, Nova Scotia, unknown publish date, email from Joyce Ferguson 8/4/2022. (sladegenealogy.net)
  • By 10.00am we were ready to start and I opened the first ever Dalton Genealogical Society American Gathering and gave a warm welcome to all the delegates. (daltongenealogicalsociety.org)
  • The Swedish Colonial Society has 70 feet of genealogical books in its Archives. (colonialswedes.net)
  • Murphy, Nathan W. "Origins of Colonial Chesapeake Indentured Servants: American and English Sources," National Genealogical Society Quarterly , Vol. 93, No. 1 (March 2005). (pricegen.com)
  • [5] To Walter Isaacson , this makes Franklin "the most accomplished American of his age and the most influential in inventing the type of society America would become. (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • He organised and was the first secretary of the American Philosophical Society and was elected president in 1769. (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • Map of Hartford in 1640, showing the location of the Marvin land on the North side of town. (blogspot.com)
  • Bent's Fort tells the story of brothers William and Charles Bent, two key figures in the building of the American West in the early 19th century. (ancestorsinaprons.com)
  • Building was, however, impeded by the scarcity of building lots, the north part of the hill being included in the Watson estate, which was not thrown into market till after the death of Widow Samuel Watson in 1813. (connecticutgenealogy.com)
  • Political differences with England after the English Restoration led to the revocation of the colonial charter in 1684. (nitrogenschw137.cfd)
  • After emancipation most African American persons were included in general records such as census records, vital records, school records, voter registration and so on. (familyhistorydaily.com)
  • In my own research into James and Mary Chew, I have found only two primary sources that provide any support for this relationship. (mikeoneill.us)
  • 1765 September 24 Maryland: A certain Gerrard Green, was found in Colonial Maryland Naturalizations who could be our ancestor. (planetmurphy.org)
  • The Morse's were very successful grocers in Omaha, Nebraska, and I found much information about Mr. L. V. Morse in the city directories, newspapers and other sources. (blogspot.com)
  • On January 21, 1675/1676, a group of northern Indians went to war with the English and killed 36 people in Rappahannock County. (dna-explained.com)
  • Starting near Port Royal, the Indian warriors fanned out in a circle and destroyed everything English. (dna-explained.com)
  • Most of his 4th and 5th great-grandparents were natives of southwest Germany between Barweiler to the north and Weingarten to the south. (billickfamilyhistory.net)
  • Now known as Rheinland-Pfalz, it was the motherland of countless Palatine families who joined the great migration to North America. (billickfamilyhistory.net)
  • A retaliatory force of 30 men crossed the Potomac River into Maryland and killed Indian King and 10 warriors. (dna-explained.com)
  • A researcher will read and reread the article, make notes and look at the sources. (jeaniesgenealogy.com)
  • Doctor Webb left town before completing his house, and was followed by Doctor Horatio Holbrook, who built on the north side of the street, adjoining Esquire Larned's. (connecticutgenealogy.com)
  • The author, Rev. Jeremiah Asher, was an abolitionist and the first African American chaplain in the army to die in service to the United States during the Civil War. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • Before Ancestry.com and other online sources, the author gathered and arranged evidence of the hundreds of free and enslaved African Americans from Connecticut who fought and served in the Revolutionary War. (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • Searchers jump from ancestry tree to ancestry tree looking for one that "proves" Grandma right. (jeaniesgenealogy.com)
  • The 29th Regiment came to America in 1766 (W.C. Ford's British Officers serving in America), and was one of the two regiments which arrived at Boston in September, 1768. (colonialsociety.org)
  • A slightly delayed American Airlines flight from London Heathrow touched down in Boston, where the weather was very clear and sunny, at about 1.45pm local time (EST), that s 6.45pm BST. (daltongenealogicalsociety.org)
  • By about 3.00pm we were away, navigating ourselves out of Boston airport on the road north to Newburyport and Hampton. (daltongenealogicalsociety.org)
  • [4] Franklin was foundational in defining the American ethos as a marriage of the practical values of thrift, hard work, education, community spirit, self-governing institutions, and opposition to authoritarianism both political and religious, with the scientific and tolerant values of the Enlightenment . (cloudflare-ipfs.com)
  • This important source contains the autobiographies/slave narratives of two individuals held in captivity in Connecticut (Venture Smith and James Mars). (atlanticblackbox.com)
  • The Copper Country is an important area for genealogist because it was the first home of many immigrants to the United States of America who later moved to other parts of the nation, to Canada, or even back to their homeland. (habitant.org)
  • Martha Bent, American Born was the youngest of John and Martha Bent's children seven children. (ancestorsinaprons.com)
  • We then had contributions from Nancy Samuelson, K T Mapstone, Wendy Fleming, John White and Arthur Young, who each introduced themselves and their Dalton ancestry. (daltongenealogicalsociety.org)
  • When I looked at Jean's compilation , I figured he had obtained documents from multiple sources. (ancestraldiscoveries.com)
  • s father named him for his friend Peter Noyes, who organized the group from Penton-Grafton to travel to America. (ancestorsinaprons.com)