Mareen ("The Younger") Duvall
M, #2301, b. 1680, d. 9 June 1741
Parents
Birth | 1680 | In All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, British America.1 |
Marriage | 21 October 1701 | In All Hallow's Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, British America.1 |
Death | 9 June 1741 | At age ~61 at Pleasant Grove in Queen Anne Parish, Prince George's County, Maryland, British America.2 |
Misc | | Children. Mareen Duvall, Susannah (Duvall) Fowler, Elizabeth (Duvall) Denune, Samuel Duvall, Anne Duvall, Benjamin Duvall, John Duvall, Jacob Duvall, Mary Duvall, Lewis Duvall and Gabriel Duvall |
Misc | | Parents: Remember Maureen I had TWO children named Maureen! |
Last Edited | 4 November 2024 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
- [S4782] "Mareen Duvall b. 1630 Nantes, Britanny, France d. 13 Aug 1694 Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10103&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See PDF file:
Duvall Marreen b. 1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties.pdf![Duvall Mareen b1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
Catherine Duvall
F, #2302, b. 1682, d. 1703
Parents
Birth | 1682 | In All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, British America.1 |
Death | 1703 | At age ~21 in All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, British America.1 |
Misc | | Married William Orrick.2 |
Last Edited | 5 February 2024 |
Citations
- [S4782] "Mareen Duvall b. 1630 Nantes, Britanny, France d. 13 Aug 1694 Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10103&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See PDF file:
Duvall Marreen b. 1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties.pdf![Duvall Mareen b1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
Elizabeth Duvall
F, #2303, b. about 1680, d. 1713
Parents
Birth | about 1680 | In Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, British America.1 |
Death | 1713 | In Prince George's Co., Maryland, British America.1 |
Misc | | Married Abraham Clarke.2 |
Last Edited | 5 February 2024 |
Citations
- [S4782] "Mareen Duvall b. 1630 Nantes, Britanny, France d. 13 Aug 1694 Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10103&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See PDF file:
Duvall Marreen b. 1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties.pdf![Duvall Mareen b1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
Mary Duvall
F, #2304, b. about 1683, d. 12 March 1735
Parents
Birth | about 1683 | In Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, British America. |
Death | 12 March 1735 | Probate in Calvert County, Maryland, British America. |
Misc | | Married Henry Hall and John Davis.1,2 |
Last Edited | 5 February 2024 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
- [S4782] "Mareen Duvall b. 1630 Nantes, Britanny, France d. 13 Aug 1694 Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10103&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See PDF file:
Duvall Marreen b. 1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties.pdf![Duvall Mareen b1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
Johanna Duvall
F, #2305, b. before 1687, d. 19 March 1711
Parents
Birth | before 1687 | In All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America.1 |
Death | 19 March 1711 | In All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America.2 |
Misc | | Married Richard Poole.1,2 |
Last Edited | 5 February 2024 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
- [S4782] "Mareen Duvall b. 1630 Nantes, Britanny, France d. 13 Aug 1694 Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10103&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See PDF file:
Duvall Marreen b. 1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties.pdf![Duvall Mareen b1630 in Maryland Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
Benjamin Duvall
M, #2306, b. 1684, d. 11 December 1774
Parents
Birth | 1684 | In Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America. Findagrave says 4 Apr 1692 Early Colonial Settlers says 1684.1 |
Marriage | 1713 | In Maryland, British America. Marriage record quoted (I did not find): U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 Name: Benjamin Duvall Birth Place: MD Spouse Name: Sophia Griffith Spouse Birth Year: 1691 Marriage Year: 1713 Marriage State: MD1,2,3 |
Death | 11 December 1774 | At age ~90 in Maryland, British America.1 |
Last Edited | 5 February 2024 |
Citations
- [S4735] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/237523680/benjamin-duvall: accessed 31 January 2024), memorial page for Benjamin Duvall (4 Apr 1692–11 Dec 1774), Find a Grave Memorial ID 237523680, citing Friendship Cemetery, Linthicum, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA; Maintained by Debbie (contributor 46911311).
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
- [S4780] "Family Group Sheet for Benjamin Duvall / Sophia Griffith (F14490) m. 13 Jan 1714 : Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/familygroup.php?familyID=F14490&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See PDF for details:
Duvall Benjamin B1692 Family Group Sheet_ Sophia Griffith (F14490) m. 13 Jan 1714 Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties.pdf![Duvall Benjamin b1692 family group sheet](../st/pdficon.png)
Susannah Duvall
F, #2307, b. 3 September 1698
Parents
Birth | 3 September 1698 | In Westminster Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America.1,2 |
Misc | | Married Alexander Falconer.1 |
Last Edited | 13 January 2024 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
- [S4627] "Maryland Births and Christenings, 1650." 1995 https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:HYL4-1PPZ. Accessed 13 Jan. 2024.
Ruth Duvall
F, #2308, b. 31 July 1703
Parents
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
Esther Duvall
F, #2309, b. 4 October 1705, d. 5 March 1750
Parents
Birth | 4 October 1705 | In Queen Anne's Parish, Prince Georges County, Maryland.1 |
Death | 5 March 1750 | At age 44 in Frederick County, Maryland. |
Misc | | Married William West.1 |
Last Edited | 29 January 2024 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
Sarah Duvall
F, #2310, b. 1708
Parents
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
Lucy Duvall
F, #2311
Parents
Misc | | Married William Forrest.1 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
Rachel Duvall
F, #2312, b. 1720, d. 1767
Parents
Birth | 1720 | In Collington, Prince George's, Maryland, British America.1 |
Marriage | 17362,1,3 | |
Death | 1767 | At age ~47 in Collington, Prince George's, Maryland, British America.1 |
Burial | | At Richard Butt Family Burials in Collington, Prince George's, Maryland, British North America.1 |
Last Edited | 13 January 2024 |
Citations
- [S4615] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/243683028/rachel-butt: accessed 13 January 2024), memorial page for Rachel Duvall Butt (1720–1767), Find a Grave Memorial ID 243683028, citing Richard Butt Family Burials, Collington, Prince George's County, Maryland, USA; Maintained by The Blue Salt Box (contributor 48537896).
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
- [S7309] WikiTree contributors, "Richard Butt (1703-bef.1744)," WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, (https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Butt-55 : accessed 05 November 2024).
Elizabeth Iiams
F, #2313, b. about 1667, d. 1719
Elizabeth Iiams was the daughter of William Ijams who dying in 1699 bequeathed five shillings to his daughter, Elizabeth Duvall. Her mother was Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Cheyney, an early planter of South River. She married Samuel Duvall, son of Mareen Duvall.
Parents
Birth | about 1667 | In Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, British America.1,2 |
Marriage | 1696 | In Maryland, British America. This marriage date is probably wrong.3,4,2,5 |
Marriage | 18 June 1697 | In Westminster Parish, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British Colonial America. Also have date as July 16, 16976,7,8,9,1,2,10,5 |
Death | 1719 | In any case before 1742 because she as not named in Samuel Duvall's will.1,2 |
Misc | | Adopted? Parents? Early Colonial Settlers says of her: Father Adopted and on her own page says adopted by both. That would mean we have neither Iiams or Cheney ancestry. It says the same for Susannah.11,12,2 |
Misc | | DNA Matches good. 11/2/2024 Judy's DNA on Kimsey 1 match with Susannah Duvall, both parents.
9/12/2024 Judy's DNA on Kimsey 1 match with Susannah Duvall, both parents. 9/13/2024 Scott's DNA on Kimsey 4 matches with siblings (common ancestors not available?) Esther 1; Sarah 2, 1 both parents; Rachel 1 both parents |
Misc | 16 February 1698/99 | Named in her father's will in Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, British America.12 |
Last Edited | 4 November 2024 |
Citations
- [S7288] "Elizabeth (Iiams) Duvall (abt. 1667." abt. 1742) ID/Link/URL/Cite/UserID https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Iiams-68. Accessed 2 Nov. 2024., see PDF for a few sources and some additional information:
Iiams Elizabeth (abt.1667-abt.1742) at WikiTree.pdf![Iiams Elizabeth (abt.1667-abt.1742) at WikiTree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S7289] "Elizabeth Ijams b. 1671 Anne Arundel County, Maryland d. Bef 1742 All Hallows Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I39081&tree=Tree1. Accessed 2 Nov. 2024.
- [S4634] "Elizabeth Iiams in the U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560." 1900 https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/631565:7836?indiv=try&h&_phsrc=Sgq3441&db. Accessed 13 Jan. 2024.
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., For much more, see the book
- [S7366] Newman, H. W. (1990). Anne Arundel Gentry: A Genealogical History of Some Early Families of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. United States: Family Line Pub. Downloaded from archive.org 11/9/2024.
- [S4628] "Maryland Marriages, 1666." 1970 https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F4VW-DM4. Accessed 13 Jan. 2024.
- [S4733] "Maurice Falconer Rodgers." Ancestry https://www.ancestry.com/mediaui-viewer/collection/1030/tree/83450457/person/172159745432/media/569cac7a-fe32-46cb-aba7-b1f65fe4e9b9?indiv=try&h&_phsrc=Sgq4176&db. Accessed 31 Jan. 2024.
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023.
- [S4879] Warfield, J. D. (1905). The Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland: A Genealogical and Biographical Review from Wills, Deeds and Church Records. United States: Kohn & Pollock. Downloaded 1/29/2024., Downloaded 1/29/2024
- [S7303] WikiTree contributors, "Samuel Duvall (1667-abt.1742)," WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, (https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Duvall-112 : accessed 05 November 2024)., Nice profile and some sources here:
Duvall Samuel (1667-abt.1742) _ WikiTree.pdf![Duvall Samuel (1667-abt.1742) _ WikiTree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4609] "Thomas Butt b. 20 Dec 1705 Queen Anne Parish, Prince George's County, Maryland d. 18 Aug 1758 Prince George's County, Maryland." inventory: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I45928&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Nov. 2024., See PDF of page
![Richad Cheney b1625 at Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4774]
"William Ijams b. Abt 1640 Anne Arundel County, Maryland d. 10 Nov 1703 Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10100&tree=Tree1&sitever=standard. Accessed 4 Feb. 2024.
William Iiams
M, #2314, b. about 1640, d. 27 July 1703
As in all families the emigrant is the most interesting. William Iiams was seated in the South River Hundred as early as 1665. His entry into Maryland is rather inauspicious, that is, there is no record of his financing his own passage or being transported by another or his coming in as an indentured servant. All extant records style him as a freeholder. Furthermore, there is no record of filing for land-rights. Besides the deed of gift from his father-in-law (Richard Cheyney), he had other plantations at the time of his death.
Birth | about 1640 | In maybe Maryland, maybe England.1,2 |
Marriage | about 1669 | In Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America.3,4,2 |
Death | 27 July 1703 | In Anne Arundel County, Maryland, British America. Colonial Settlers says he died 10 Nov 17031,2 |
Burial | 29 July 1703 | At All Hallows Church Cemetery in Anne Arundel County Maryland, British America.1 |
Misc | | WikiTree entry: Legends, Biography.5 |
Misc | | The name. According to Imes in America researchers, the name originated in 1160 as Innes and has since been spelled I'ans, Eyoms, Eyams, Iiams, Ijams, Ijames, Iames, Iiames, Iams, Imes since William came to America in the 1600s. One theory in particular is that scriveners thought the appostrophe in I'ans/I'ams was a J and thus the original Ijams spelling in America. For the purpose of making the name easier to spell, many descendants changed their names to Imes and Iams in later years but many have retained the original spellings.5 |
Misc | | Parents: unknown by anybody. And it has been carefully researched by many.6![Ijams Family FAQ](../st/pdficon.png) ![Iiams William b1640 at Wikitree](../st/pdficon.png) |
Religious Affiliation | | William Iiams was affiliated with Episcopal.7,8 |
Misc | 1 March 1674 | Deeded "Cheney's Resolution" by Richard Cheney.9,10 |
Will | 16 February 1698/99 | In Ann Arundel County, Maryland, British America. Will of William Iiams. WILL: Dated 16 Feb 1698, probated in Anne Arundel Co., Maryland 10 Nov 1703; names wife Elizabeth, son William, daughter Elizabeth Duvall, son Richard, and son George. Parish register lists his burial as 29 July 1703.[1]
WILL: Eyoms, William,A. A. Co.,16th Feb., 1698; 10th Nov., 1703.[1]
To eld. son William, 5 shillings. To dau. Eliza: Duvall, 5 shillings. To son Richard and hrs., 100 A. (unnamed) nr. Patuxent R., Prince George's Co. To young. son George and hrs., 100 A. on s. side Western Run. To wife Eliza:, extx., dower rights. Residue of personalty to be divided among sons Richard and George, and daus. Hester and Susanna. Test: Clement Davies, Rich'd Chaney, Jno. Robertson, Robt. Davis. 11. 358.10,2,8 |
Probate | 10 November 1703 | In Ann Arundel County, Maryland, British America.10 |
Last Edited | 2 November 2024 |
Citations
- [S4623] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104223148/william-iiams: accessed 13 January 2024), memorial page for William Iiams (1640–27 Jul 1703), Find a Grave Memorial ID 104223148, citing All Hallows Church Cemetery, Birdsville, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA; Maintained by Nathan Haines (contributor 46775496).
- [S7291] WikiTree contributors, "William Iiams Sr. (1640-1703)," WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, (https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Iiams-14 : accessed 02 November 2024)., See quite thorough profile:
Iiams Willia Sr. (1640-1703) at WikiTree.pdf![Iiams Willia Sr. (1640-1703) at WikiTree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4631] "Iiams Family," in Harry Wright Newman, Anne Arundel Gentry. Baltimore: Lord Baltimore Press, Maryland Pioneer Series, 1933. Reprinted 2009, Apple Manor Press, www.yesterbooks.com. pp. 392-394
- [S4642] "Elizabeth (Cheney) Iiams (1652-aft.1726)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-408#S1766. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024., See PDF of page. Lots of sources.
![Elizabeth Cheney b1652 at Wikitree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4629] "William Iiams Sr. (1640-1703)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Iiams-14. Accessed 13 Jan. 2024., See the PDF of the page:
Iiams William Iiams Sr. (1640-1703) WikiTree FREE Family Tree.pdf - [S4775] "Ijams Family Questions and Answers." Soaz https://soaz.info/IjamsFAQ.html. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024., See the PDF:
Ijams Family Questions and Answers.pdf - [S4741] "Genealogies of Virginia Families." Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Genealogies_of_Virginia_Families/55I38FXWyPgC?hl=en&gbpv=1. Accessed 1 Feb. 2024.
![Excerpts Genealogy of Virginia Families from Tyler's Quarterley google](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S7366] Newman, H. W. (1990). Anne Arundel Gentry: A Genealogical History of Some Early Families of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. United States: Family Line Pub. Downloaded from archive.org 11/9/2024.
- [S4716] "Truman Library: Truman Genealogy, Family Page for Richard CHENEY." Trumanlibrary https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/genealogy/index.php?m=family&id=479. Accessed 29 Jan. 2024.
- [S4774]
"William Ijams b. Abt 1640 Anne Arundel County, Maryland d. 10 Nov 1703 Anne Arundel County, Maryland: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties." Colonial-settlers-md-va https://colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10100&tree=Tree1&sitever=standard. Accessed 4 Feb. 2024.
Elizabeth ("Eliza") Cheney
F, #2315, b. 30 October 1652, d. after 1726
Parents
Father | Richard Cheney (b. about 1625, d. between 1686 and 1688) |
Mother | Charity (b. about 1620, d. 24 August 1668) |
Birth | 30 October 1652 | In Anne Arundel County, Maryland, British America.1,2,3 |
Marriage | about 1669 | In Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America.4,5,6 |
Death | after 1726 | In Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, British America.1,7 |
Misc | | Private Trees and other References.5,8 |
Misc | | Quaker connection. "She is included on the Quaker Ancestors page because her son William married into a Quaker family." Note from Pitard.net https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-408#S1766 |
Misc | | Parents: Richard Cheney. |
Misc | 1 March 1674 | Receives "Cheney's Resolution" from her father.9,10 |
Misc | 1688 | Named in father's will. |
Last Edited | 9 November 2024 |
Citations
- [S4632] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104223767/elizabeth-iiams: accessed 13 January 2024), memorial page for Elizabeth Cheney Iiams (30 Oct 1652–1726), Find a Grave Memorial ID 104223767, citing All Hallows Church Cemetery, Birdsville, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA; Maintained by Nathan Haines (contributor 46775496).
- [S4741] "Genealogies of Virginia Families." Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Genealogies_of_Virginia_Families/55I38FXWyPgC?hl=en&gbpv=1. Accessed 1 Feb. 2024.
![Excerpts Genealogy of Virginia Families from Tyler's Quarterley google](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4776] "Elizabeth (Cheney) Iiams (1652-aft.1726)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-408. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024.
- [S4631] "Iiams Family," in Harry Wright Newman, Anne Arundel Gentry. Baltimore: Lord Baltimore Press, Maryland Pioneer Series, 1933. Reprinted 2009, Apple Manor Press, www.yesterbooks.com. pp. 392-394
- [S4642] "Elizabeth (Cheney) Iiams (1652-aft.1726)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-408#S1766. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024., See PDF of page. Lots of sources.
![Elizabeth Cheney b1652 at Wikitree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S7291] WikiTree contributors, "William Iiams Sr. (1640-1703)," WikiTree: The Free Family Tree, (https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Iiams-14 : accessed 02 November 2024)., See quite thorough profile:
Iiams Willia Sr. (1640-1703) at WikiTree.pdf![Iiams Willia Sr. (1640-1703) at WikiTree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4777] "Elizabeth (Cheney) Iiams (1652-aft.1726)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-408. Accessed 5 Feb. 2024.
- [S4643] "chaney." Web https://web.archive.org/web/20091025090920/http://geocities.com/wells789/chaney.html. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024., See PDF of tree
![Chaney Lineage by Gayl Ramey Wells](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4644] "Truman Library: Truman Genealogy, Family Page for Richard CHENEY." Trumanlibrary https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/genealogy/index.php?m=family&id=479. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024.
- [S4716] "Truman Library: Truman Genealogy, Family Page for Richard CHENEY." Trumanlibrary https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/genealogy/index.php?m=family&id=479. Accessed 29 Jan. 2024.
Richard Cheney
M, #2316, b. about 1625, d. between 1686 and 1688
Richard Cheney emigrated from England to the colony of Maryland prior to 1658 at which time he as granted 100 acres of land for himself and his wife Charity, by which he had 4 children including my ancestor Elizabeth. He settled at "Cheney's Resolution in Anne Arundel County. He became one of the largest land owners in South River Hundred and named his plantations: "Cheney's Hill," Cheney's Neck," "Cheney's Hazard," "Cheney's Rest," and "Cheney's Purchase" amounting in all to 1110 acres. His marriage to Eleanor and the birth of their seven children are recorded in the register of All Hallow's Parish, Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
Family 1: Charity (b. about 1620, d. 24 August 1668)
Birth | about 1625 | In England. Early Colonial Settlers has birth 1625 in Woolwich, London, Middlesex, England1,2,3 |
Marriage | 1650 | In Anne Arundel County Maryland, British America.3 |
Marriage | about 1668 | In Anne Arundel County Maryland, British America. |
Death | between 1686 and 16881 | |
Misc | | Additional Cheney Resources. There is a Chaney facebook group which has some activity.
Chaney Family Research on rootsweb (early 2024 to become readonly, don't know if links will remain the same). Not useful for my family...
There is reference to chaneygenealogy.com but it appears to be dead in 2023. |
Misc | | Chaney origins. Chaney is an interesting surname. It is associated with the Norman invasion of England but also turns up as ‘Cheyne’ in both Aberdeenshire and Shetland in Scotland. If your Chaney ancestor departed Britain then it is often impossible to make the connection back to the UK and ultimately It is really only with commercial ancestral DNA testing that you can determine whether your Chaney ancestors were Norman, English or Scottish. In addition your DNA can determine whether your Scottish Cheynes were from Aberdeenshire or Shetland or whether your English Chaney ancestors were from Norfolk, Kent or Northamptonshire!
https://www.englishorigenes.com/content/new-chaney-y-dna-case-study-added-english-origenes |
Misc | | Who his parents are not... Numerous genealogies show Richard Cheyney, Immigrant to Anne Arundel County, Maryland to be the same person as Richard Cheney-1454 baptized 14 June 1616 at St. Mary Woolnoth Church in London, England, son of Richard Cheney and Ann Ellinor]]. This cannot be, because the English Richard was deceased by the time his father wrote his will in 1625. (Refer to that profile for documentation of the English Richard and his claimed ancestry).
The conflation of the two Richards is attractive because it gives Richard Cheney of Maryland an illustrious English ancestry. A number of prominent genealogies of an earlier era assume such an ancestry, including:
Newman seems to support such speculation when he writes, "The Cheney (Cheyney)family of ancient antiquity was ennobled in England, but through extravagance and being royalists during the civil wars lost most of their property. There is every reason to believe that the Maryland emigrant was a scion of the ennobled family. He was lettered (could read) and the fact that he financed his own passage and that of his wife is further indication of his social level.
The Richard Cheney who was born in England is NOT the Richard Cheney who lived in Anne Arundel County, Maryland.3 |
Property | | One of the largest land owners in the South River Hundred.3,4,5 |
Misc | | 1999 Newspaper article. Homebuilding site develops into an archaeological find; Cheney homestead from 1650s offers remnants, mystery By PUBLISHED: September 14, 1999 at 12:00 a.m. | UPDATED: September 28, 2021 at 8:52 p.m.
It doesn’t look like much — angular depressions knifed a foot deep into the hard clay in woods about 5 miles from Annapolis.
But archaeologists believe the location marks an important site — the home of a well-known Anne Arundel and southern Maryland family, dating to about 1658.
An excavation begun last year has revealed the first known Chaney — or Cheney, as the spelling varies — homestead, called Cheney Hill.
The site, believed to have once held two wood-post buildings, each with a fireplace and chimney, was discovered during an archaeological check of acreage for a proposed residential development.
Working through 350 years of land records revealed that Richard and Charity Cheney bought 100 acres that included that site in 1658, and Cheney rapidly extended his holdings to 1,200 acres.
Through generations, the family settled largely in the Bristol-Lothian area of southern Anne Arundel County, but also moved into Calvert County. Chaneys, under various spellings, account for more than half a page in the Annapolis phone book.
What makes the find particularly significant is the information it might hold about life in an early period and the mystery of its location, said Al Luckenbach, Anne Arundel County archaeologist, whose office is supervising the dig.
The dig has turned up shards of imported German pottery, beads for Indian trading, pipes, utensils, a finger-length iron key, glass, a brick and other common items. The soil points to frequent repair of rotted or termite-eaten posts sunk 2 1/2 feet in the ground.
“We never really knew where they landed, other than it was in Anne Arundel County,” said descendant E. Steuart Chaney, whose interest in 19th century history is so intense that he is putting together a small village with buildings from that era at Herrington Harbour. “And now to have the house discovered. It is significant not only to the heritage of our family, but to the heritage of the county.”
The structures would have been built about 24 years after the founding of Maryland colony, and their abandonment would have been just at the time London Town, to the south, was developing into a population and business center.
Fewer than a dozen sites from 1658 to the mid-1680s, when the Cheney buildings are believed to have been abandoned, have been found in Anne Arundel County, where Luckenbach is researching “lost towns” of that era.
But this site is perched on a steep knoll off Riva Road and the South River.
“One of the obvious questions is, Where are you growing your tobacco? He is sitting on top of this hill,” Luckenbach said.
Tobacco was so lucrative that it inspired a gold rush-like stampede to grow the cash crop. It was similar to the fur-trapping and trading boom that was on its way out by the time Cheney bought the property.
“The way the story goes is that they lived on low areas and grew tobacco. He is not fitting the paradigm. There may be others [who] don’t fit the paradigm, but this is the first one that we found,” Luckenbach said.
With the house built so high up, someone would have had to carry water up from the river or creek for daily use.
Luckenbach speculated that the site may have been defensive — protection from Indian raids, or perhaps from other settlers during a time of intense strife in England that also resulted in clashes in Maryland. The Cheney family is believed to have left England soon after King Charles I was beheaded in 1649, said descendant Bill Chaney, a Revolutionary and Civil wars buff who visited the site earlier this month.
Luckenbach speculated that Cheney might have feared Royalists. But Bill Chaney said yesterday that a 1955 genealogical paper referred to his ancestor as a Royalist. So maybe he worried about local Puritans or was security-minded in general.
Early work on the dig was paid for by CJF Joint Venure and Koch Associates, which still hopes to build a single-family development there. Since spring, when the developers’ archaeological obligation ended, Luckenbach has taken it over. He wants to map at least the footprint of the main house.
The find has left more questions than answers. Why did Richard Cheney come to the New World? What did he do for money? Why are there two buildings with fireplaces? And why was his home lot on a steep hill?
What Bill Chaney knew from the 1955 genealogical paper on his family was that the family came from the Isle of Sheppey and that Richard Cheney financed his passage to America. Richard and Charity had four children. After Charity’s death, Richard remarried and had seven more children.
But he had no idea where they lived.
“If I didn’t know where it was, I’d never have found it,” Chaney said.
Pub Date: 9/14/996 |
Immigration | before 1650 | . The ancestor of the Cheney family of Maryland was Richard Cheyney who settled in the Province sometime before 1650. Soon after his landing he applied for land warrants and received first “ Cheney’s Hill ”, lying on South River. It is evident that he was single when he arrived in the Province, because between the years 1634 and 1682 no female by the name of Cheney was listed among the immigrants. He, however, married twice, but the name of his first wife is unknown.5 |
Residence | 1652 | In Anne Arundel County Maryland, British America. Arrival in Marylane. Shortly after 20 June 1652, Richard Cheney and his wife Charity arrived in Maryland, where they settled on the south bank of the South River in Anne Arundel County. We know the arrival was after this date because if they had arrived earlier, they would have been eligible for 100 acres of land each rather than the 50 they received. [2] We know it was shortly after this date because soon there were children, who, if they had already been born when Richard and Charity arrived, would have entitled the couple to an additional 50 acres each.3 |
Property | about 1657 | About 1657 in Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, British America. |
Will | 6 March 1685 | In Anne Arundel County Maryland, British America. will. The following transcript was made from a photograph of Richard Cheiney's will.
I Richard Cheiney Senior of the Couty of Ann Arundel in the province of of Maryland being now in good health and perfect memory doe make this my last Will & tetament revocking all other Wills by me made formerly as Witness my hand and Seale hereunder subscribed this sixth day of March Annoq. Domn 1685/6.
Imprimis I give and bequeath unto my eldest sonn Richard Cheiney to him & his heires forever all my tract or parcell of Land called by the name of Cheiney's Rest lying and being near South River in the County of Ann Arundell aofresaid Containing by estimacion two hundred and fivety acres (and my will is that hee possess this same immediately after my decease.
Item. I give and bequeath unto my two Sonns Thomas & Charles Cheiney all my Plantation whereon I now live called by the name of Resolucion to be equally divided betwixt them only Tenn acres of the said Land I give unto my Wife during her life or widdowhood. Butt if she marry or dye that then I give the said Tenn acres of Land bee divided also between my two Sonnes Thomas and Charles.
Item I give & bequeath unto my three daughters Eliza - Mary and Anne each of them five shillings lawful English money to bee paid them immediately after my decease.
Item. I give and bequeath all the rest of my reall Estate and personall Estate to bee equally divided amongst my wife and my two sonns Thomas & Charles and my Will is that my said Sonnes Thomas & Charles Cheiney shall be all age (and shall enjoy the Estate I have here left them when they shall become sixteene years olds, also my Will is that immediately after my decease the two third parts of the chattell hoggs & horses bee marked for my said two sonnes that when they come at age may possess the increase thereof as well as principall, also I commit into the custody of my said wife during her life or widdowhood my said two sonns together with theire Estate tell they shall become sixteen yeares old only excepting what is above excepted that is that the cattell hoggs and horses be marked as above but iff my wife dye or marrye again my will is that imediately after her death or marriage my said two Sonnes alsoe theire Estate herein mentioned be delivered into the Custody & to the management of my Sonn Richard Cheiney and my son in law John Jacobs and his wife till they shall becomes Sixteen year old and when they shall become sixteen yeares old my will is that what estate I have herein given & bequethed to the bee delivered to them togeather with their increase of the cattell hogges and horses if there be any.
This is my last will and testament. Wittness my hand and seale the day and yeare above written.
Witness his his William Burgess Richard X Cheiney Sealed Willm Cocks mark
I ordaine constitute and appoint my Eldest son Richard Cheiney to be my Executor of this may last will and testament vide. Probates to this Will entered Libr G. P. no 5 fol. 290 for the year 1726 [illegible]3,7,5![Richard Cheney b1616 will](../st/picicon.png) |
Last Edited | 9 November 2024 |
Citations
- [S3428] "Richard Cheney : Family tree by Tim DOWLING (tdowling)." Geneanet https://gw.geneanet.org/tdowling?lang=en&pz=timothy%2Bmichael&nz=dowling&p=richard&n=cheney. Accessed 24 Apr. 2023., See attached PDF
![Richard Cheney b1616 Family Tree (Dowling)](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4609] "Thomas Butt b. 20 Dec 1705 Queen Anne Parish, Prince George's County, Maryland d. 18 Aug 1758 Prince George's County, Maryland." inventory: Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I45928&tree=Tree1. Accessed 5 Nov. 2024., See PDF of page
![Richad Cheney b1625 at Early Colonial Settlers](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4645] "Richard Cheney Sr. (abt.1621-1685)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-405. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024., see PDF of the page
![Richard Cheney b ca 1621 at Wikitree](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4662] "Cheney's Resolution Land Tract." Wikitree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Cheney's_Resolution_Land_Tract#_note-1. Accessed 21 Jan. 2024., See PDF of the page
![Cheney's Resolution Land Tract](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S7366] Newman, H. W. (1990). Anne Arundel Gentry: A Genealogical History of Some Early Families of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. United States: Family Line Pub. Downloaded from archive.org 11/9/2024.
- [S4646] "14 Sep 1999, Page 130." The Baltimore Sun at Newspapers.com https://www.newspapers.com/image/173515663/?terms=cheney&match=1. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024., See JPG of the article
![Cheney in Baltimore Sun Sept 14, 1999](../st/picicon.png)
- [S4656] "Documents: Will of Richard Cheney, Sr.: Ron's Family History." Ronsgen https://ronsgen.com/showmedia.php?mediaID=412&medialinkID=436. Accessed 21 Jan. 2024.
![Richard Cheney b1621 about will](../st/picicon.png)
Charity
F, #2317, b. about 1620, d. 24 August 1668
Mary married Richard Cheney (1616-1684)about 1650. This couple had the following 5 known children: Richard, Elizabeth, Maray, Anne and Thomas.
Charity died on 24 Aug 1668 in S River Hundred, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA. She was only 38 years old. She is buried in All Hallows Church Cemetery, Birdsville, Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
From a document attached to her on ancestry.
![](../ti/Mary-Charity-Wood-Cheney-family-0200-0279.jpg)
Mary Charity Wood Cheney family
Birth | about 16201,2 | |
Marriage | 1650 | In Anne Arundel County Maryland, British America.3 |
Death | 24 August 1668 | In South River, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British America.2 |
Burial | | At All Hallows Church Cemetery in Birdsville, Anne Arundel, Maryland, British North America.2 |
Religious Affiliation | | Charity was affiliated with Episcopal.2 |
Misc | | Is her last name Wood or Woodard or... The confusion "Mary Charity Cheney" arises from conflating records for the Richard Chaney who married Charity, and the Richard Cheney who married Mary, Both couples appear as separate articles on this site. I suspect that not distinguishing between them has led to a number of conflations, including birth, land, and will records. The birth records are easily disentangled since in most cases the father and mother are both mentioned. Unless the land and will records mentions the name of the wife, it becomes difficult to associate the record with the right RIchard Cheney.
see much more about this in Richard's Wikipedia page
Also Tim Dowling's tree: https://gw.geneanet.org/tdowling?lang=en&pz=timothy+michael&nz=dowling&p=charity&n=wood3![Richard Cheney b ca 1621 at Wikitree](../st/pdficon.png) |
Citations
- [S3429] "Charity Wood : Family tree by Tim DOWLING (tdowling)." Geneanet https://gw.geneanet.org/tdowling?lang=en&pz=timothy%2Bmichael&nz=dowling&p=charity&n=wood. Accessed 24 Apr. 2023., See attached PDF file
![Charity Wood b1628 family tree by Tim Dowling](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4598] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/104496647/mary-charity-cheney: accessed 11 January 2024), memorial page for Mary Charity Wood Cheney (1620–24 Aug 1668), Find a Grave Memorial ID 104496647, citing All Hallows Church Cemetery, Birdsville, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, USA; Maintained by Stella (contributor 47848948).
![Excursus Cheney](../st/picicon.png)
![Richard Cheney b1616 in Maryland and Virginia Colonials](../st/picicon.png)
- [S4645] "Richard Cheney Sr. (abt.1621-1685)." WikiTree FREE Family Tree https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Cheney-405. Accessed 17 Jan. 2024., see PDF of the page
![Richard Cheney b ca 1621 at Wikitree](../st/pdficon.png)
Nancy Ann Langley
F, #2318, b. 1732, d. 31 July 1820
Family: Edward Tyler, II, (b. 1719/20, d. 20 May 1802)
Son | Robert Tyler+ (b. 19 August 1751, d. 6 April 1815) |
Son | Peter Jordan Tyler (b. 1752, d. 23 April 1832) |
Son | Moses Tyler (b. 1 January 1755, d. 27 January 1839) |
Daughter | Delilah Tyler (b. 10 February 1755, d. 7 June 1797) |
Son | William Tyler (b. 1 October 1755, d. 23 September 1836) |
Daughter | Elizabeth ("Betsy") Tyler (b. circa 1756, d. 1810) |
Daughter | Mary Tyler (b. 1760) |
Daughter | Nancy Ann Tyler (b. 1763, d. 1796) |
Son | Edward Tyler (b. 1767, d. 25 March 1840) |
Daughter | Priscilla Tyler (b. 1770, d. 1843) |
Daughter | Eleanor Tyler (b. about 1772, d. 27 February 1797) |
Birth | 1732 | In Prince William County, Virginia, British America.1 |
Marriage | about 17502,3,4,5 | |
Death | 31 July 1820 | At age ~88 in Jeffersontown, Jefferson, Kentucky, United States.1 |
Burial | | At Tyler Cemetery in Jeffersontown, Jefferson, Kentucky, United States.1 |
Citations
- [S3436] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7829714/nancy-ann-tyler: accessed 24 April 2023), memorial page for Nancy Ann Langley Tyler (1732–31 Jul 1820), Find a Grave Memorial ID 7829714, citing Tyler Cemetery, Jeffersontown, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA; Maintained by Michael Guinn (contributor 47021121)., Tombstone image
- [S3432] "Edward Tyler in the U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560." 1900 https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/1247201:7836?indiv=try&h&db. Accessed 24 Apr. 2023.
- [S3433] "Edward Tyler in the Millennium File." Ancestry https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/10503523:7249?indiv=try&h&pid=422287721375&db. Accessed 24 Apr. 2023.
- [S3435] 'The Encyclopedia of Louisville, Kentucky', ed. by John E. Kleber; The University Press of Kentucky, 2001.
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
Robert Tyler
M, #2319, b. 19 August 1751, d. 6 April 1815
Captain Robert Duvall or Langley Tyler, Rev War vet. b. 19 July 1751, Cross Creek, Frederick, Virginia d. 6 April 1815, Tyler's Station, Shelby, Kentucky. He was buried Tyler's Station, Shelby County, Kentucky. His parents: Edward Tyler and Nancy Ann Langley. Captain Robert Duvall or Langley Tyler married Margaret Unknown about 1772 in Virginia. [There is speculation that her name was Margaret Adam, Margaret Ballard, and Margaret Tyler, the daughter of Robert Tyler and Eleanor Bradley; however they were married in 1756 so I disagree with this speculation. Some say her father was Samuel Tyler (no known mother). However, there was a Ballard family at Tyler's Station.] Robert was sufficiently educated to read, write, and do basic arithmetic. Like many frontiersmen, Robert served periodically in the militia during the Revolutionary War and it was perhaps from this service that he gained the title of Captain by which he was nearly always known; as no document has been located to prove the he actually served in that capacity. He took the oath of allegiance on August 27, 1777, along with his brother Moses. By April 1780 Robert and Margaret Tyler were among the first settlers of Boone's Station, which had been erected by Squire Boone. This is where their daughter, Ann Drusilla, was reportedly born. (She would become the great-grandmother of Harry Truman). Robert and his family were among the settlers that were attacked during the Long Run Massacre. Robert was among those that returned the next day to bury the dead when Peter A? Sturgis, the husband of Robert's sister Nancy was killed in a second attack by Indians. This event became known as Floyd's Defeat. It was then that the settlers abandoned Boone's Station. In October of 1782, Robert joined his Militia under the command of Gen. George Rogers Clark for the next four weeks on an Indian campaign. It was in the spring of 1784 that Robert Tyler established Tyler's Station about 5 miles east of present Shelbyville. ( In the winter of 1788, five member of the Bland Ballard family were killed by Indians at Tyler's Station and shortly after that, Tyler's Station was abandoned and Robert and his family continued to live on Tick Creek at the Brashear's Creek Settlement. Shortly before 1793, he moved to his Guist Creek property on the Old State Road. During the 1790's rightful ownership of Robert's property on Tick Creek came into question when Squire Boone confused a tree he had marked for Robert's early survey with one marked for Eli Cleveland. The case lasted until 1803, when the Franklin County Court of Appeals handed down the final decision in favor of Robert Tyler. Robert died and was buried on his Guist Creek property on April 6, 1815. His widow died on October 15, 1840. She was buried beside her husband . [Robert and Margaret's 1st child Robert is the great-great-great grand father of the 46th vice-president, Richard Bruce Cheney.] [Robert and Margaret's 4th child Nancy is the great-grandmother of the 33rd president, Harry S. Truman.] Their children:
Robert Duvall (19 Mar 1773-6 Sep 1827) born in Fayette, Va. and died in Fulton Co, KY, he married Sarah Prichard (1775) on February 18, 1794. Their children: John (16 Feb 1795, George (1796), Alfred (28 Oct 1796), James Abraham (7 Oct 1799), Benjamin (1800), Austin (6 Aug 1801), Mary (19 Sept 1805) married David Blankenbaker, Willet (26 Feb 1808), Abraham (9 May 1811), and Robert Duvall (1 Feb 1817). Willet Tyler (26 Feb 1808) married Rachel Montgomery(24 Sep 1810). Their son: James Alexander Tyler (6 May 1848) married Sarah Elizabeth Swift (15 Mar 1843) in 1869. Their daughter: Margaret Ellen Tyler (15 June 1877) married Thomas Herbert Cheney (10 Apr 1869) on May 20, 1914, the son of Captain Samuel Fletcher Cheney and Ella A Phillips. Their son: Richard Herbert Cheney (15 June 1915) married Marjorie Lorraine Dickey (8 Jan 1918), Their son: Richard Bruce Cheney (30 Jan 1941) 46th Vice-President of the United States under George W. Bush
John (11 June 1775) married Margaret Henshaw Mitchell (1775) on Sep 13, 1803.
Catherine (13 Jun 1777-10 Aug 1839) married Charles Baird (28 May 1777) on Jan 22, 1798. He was the son of Thomas Baird and Esther Kilgore. Their children: Hettie Ester (Aug 1804)
Nancy Ann Drusilla (4 Apr 1780-8 July 1874) married Jesse Holmes (17 Dec 1775-8 May 1840) on Nov 17, 1803, the son of James Holmes and Margaret Lewis. Their children: Margaret (15 Aug 1804), Elizabeth (24 Feb 1806), Sarah (23 Dec 1807), Robert James (15 Jan 1810), Catherine (1 Jan 1912), Silas (1 Mar 1814), Jesse, Jr. (9 Apr 1816), Martha Ann "Patsy" (14 Oct 1818), Mary Jane (15 Mar 1821) and Emily (10 Oct 1823).
Mary Jane Holmes (15 Mar 1821-15 Feb 1879) married Anderson Shippe Truman (27 Feb 1816-3 Jul 1887), the son of William Truman II and Emma Grant Shippe, on Aug 13, 1846. Their son: John Anderson Truman (5 Dec 1851-2 Oct 1915) married Martha Ellen Young (25 Nov 1853-26 Jul 1947), on Dec 28, 1881. Their son: Harry Shippe Truman (8 May 1884-26 Dec 1972) married Elisabeth "Bess" Wallace. He was the 33rd President of the United States.
Delilah (22 Feb 1783) died in infancy.
Margaret (29 Dec 1785) married Thomas Weakley (1781-1833) on June 29, 1807; the son of Thomas Weakley and Elizabeth Redding. Their children: Robert (1808), Eliza Ann (1810), Granville (17 Sep 1811), Thomas R (6 Dec 1819), Delilah (1821), Mayland Tayrol (1824), Ambrose (1827), and John Calvin (1 Nov 1831).
Deed Book E2 p.188, Jan 13, 1838-Margaret Weakley, widow in her own right, guardian to Delilah Jane Weakley, Mayland Weakley, and John Weakley, AND Stephen Weakley guardian to Granville and Ambrose Weakley; heirs of Thomas Weakley to William F. Campbell. (Stephen was the brother of Thomas Weakley)
Abraham (24 Feb 1788)
Delilah (b. 17 Oct 1790) married Walker Satterwhite (b. 1790) on Sept 28, 1815. She was known as ?Lily?. Walker married Sarah Church on June 6, 1822 after the death of Delilah.
Elizabeth (28 Feb 1793-3 Mar 1847) married James B. McClellann (23 Jul 1789- 18 Oct 1851) ) on Oct 13, 1811. Their children: Salem Piatte (26 Sep 1812), Zulina (14 Oct 1815), Margaret Jane (18 Jan 1817), Eliza Eleanor (20 May 1819), Catherine( ), Louisa Ann (24 Mar 1824), Robert Henry (118 Jul 1826), John Russell (18 Dec 1828), Angeline Amanda( ), and Madaline (1834).
Eleanor (17 Nov 1797). Married Sanford Connelly (1793), the son of Sanford Ramey Connelly and Mary Caldwell, Aug 6, 1818. Their children: Robert (1821), Mary (1823), Margaret (1825), Thomas (1826), and George (1832).
Parents
Birth | 19 August 1751 | In Frederick County, Virginia, British America. |
Marriage | 1772 | Note, current belief about his wife is they do not know who she was except her name was Margaret.1 |
Death | 6 April 1815 | At age 63 at Tyler Station in Shelby County, Kentucky, United States. |
Misc | | Ancestor of Harry Truman.2 |
Military | | Revolutionary Army.3,4 |
Misc | | Tyler's Station. Note, Tyler's Station is not the same as Tyler Settlement, started by his father, some brothers, and his nephew our Robert Tyler (1751-1836)5,6 |
Property | 1783 | Property in 1783.3 |
Military | 9 April 1784 | On 9 April 1784 Robert8 Tyler produced his commission as Lieutenant of Militia to the Jefferson County Court and had the oaths of fidelity and office administered. He rose to the rank of Captain in the fierce border warfare and was always spoken of as Captain Robert Tyler. *3 |
Last Edited | 3 February 2024 |
Citations
- [S3426] Maureen Duvall of Middle Plantation by Harry Wright Newman. Washington, D.C. : H.W. Newman, 1952. Downloaded from archive.org April 6, 2023., See PDF of the book
- [S4663] "Truman Library: ROOTED IN HISTORY: The Genealogy of Harry S. Truman." Trumanlibrary https://www.trumanlibrary.gov/genealogy/index.php?m=g_essay. Accessed 21 Jan. 2024., See the PDF for the entire article.
![The Genealogy of Harry S. Truman](../st/pdficon.png)
- [S4750] "Genealogies of Virginia Families." Google Books https://www.google.com/books/edition/Genealogies_of_Virginia_Families/55I38FXWyPgC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=tyler. Accessed 3 Feb. 2024., Don't confuse Tyler Station with Tyler Settlement
His wife was not the daughter of Robert and Eleanor (Bradley) Tyler. - [S4752] Collins, L., Collins, R. H. (1874). Collins Historical Sketches of Kentucky VI: History of Kentucky. United States: Collins & Company. Downloaded 1/21/2023., We can't be sure that one of these Robert Tylers is not our Robert Tyler (1751-1836)
- [S4752] Collins, L., Collins, R. H. (1874). Collins Historical Sketches of Kentucky VI: History of Kentucky. United States: Collins & Company. Downloaded 1/21/2023.
- [S4753] "Squire Boone's Station." Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squire_Boone's_Station#cite_note-4. Accessed 3 Feb. 2024., See PDF:
Tyler Robert (1751-1815) Squire Boone's Station - Wikipedia.pdf
Nancy Ann Tyler
F, #2320, b. 1763, d. 1796
Nancy Ann Tyler (c. 1763-1838); came to the Falls in 1780; married Captain Peter A'Sturgus of A'Sturgus Station on Beargrass Creek; became a widow when her husband was killed at Floyd's Defeat in 1781; was kidnapped by Indians c. 1782; returned, married James Denny, sheriff of Jefferson County, 1785; widowed again in 1808, married Michael Humble.
Parents
Birth | 1763 | |
Death | 1796 | At age ~33. |
Moses Tyler
M, #2321, b. 1 January 1755, d. 27 January 1839
Parents
Birth | 1 January 1755 | In Berkeley County, Virginia, British America. (West Virginia)1 |
Marriage | 1779 | In West Virginia, United States.1 |
Death | 27 January 1839 | At age 84 in Jefferson County, Kentucky, United States.1 |
Citations
- [S3438] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/31511674/moses-tyler: accessed 25 April 2023), memorial page for Moses Tyler Sr. (1 Jan 1755–27 Jan 1839), Find a Grave Memorial ID 31511674, citing Tyler Cemetery, Jeffersontown, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA; Maintained by Sedoris (contributor 46926094).
Delilah Tyler
F, #2322, b. 10 February 1755, d. 7 June 1797
Delliah Tyler (1754-1798); wife of Captain Charles Polk; came to Kentucky in 1780 with her parents, husband and several children; settled at Polk's Station in Nelson County, was kidnapped by Indians in 1782; rescued and returned home in December 1783.
Parents
Birth | 10 February 1755 | In Virginia, British America.1 |
Death | 7 June 1797 | At age 42 in Nelson County, Kentucky, United States.1 |
Misc | | Married Charles Polke. Delilah Married Charles Polke (the son of Charles Polke, the Indian Trader of the Potomac, and his wife Christian Cartledge) about 1774 at or near Cross Creek, Virginia. She and Charles had twelve children. They were William (1775-1843), Elizabeth (1777-1847), Sarah(Sally) (1780-1818), Nancy(1778-1823), Charles (1782-1845), Edmund (1786-1814), Christiana (1787-1850), Eleanor "Nellie" (1786-1859), Mary "Polly" (1790), Thomas (1792-1872), Unnamed Male (1796-1796) and Robert (1797-1843).1 |
Citations
- [S3437] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/63716524/delilah-polke: accessed 24 April 2023), memorial page for Delilah Tyler Polke (10 Feb 1755–7 Jun 1797), Find a Grave Memorial ID 63716524; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by dennis gard (contributor 47257528).
William Tyler
M, #2323, b. 1 October 1755, d. 23 September 1836
William Tyler (Walking Billy) (1755-1836); was a private in George Rogers Clark's conquest of the Northwest Territory; active in the early exploration and surveying of Jefferson County; seemingly the first of his family to attempt settlement on his father's 1,000 acre tract; was kidnapped by Indians c. 1782; escaped unharmed after about two years.
Parents
Birth | 1 October 1755 | In Prince George's County, Maryland, British America.1 |
Death | 23 September 1836 | At age 80 in Jeffersontown, Jefferson, Kentucky, United States.1 |
Citations
- [S3440] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/58990548/william-tyler: accessed 25 April 2023), memorial page for William “Walking Billy” Tyler (1 Oct 1755–23 Sep 1836), Find a Grave Memorial ID 58990548, citing William Tyler Cemetery, Jeffersontown, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA; Maintained by: Find a Grave.
Peter Jordan Tyler
M, #2324, b. 1752, d. 23 April 1832
Parents
Birth | 17521 | |
Death | 23 April 1832 | At age ~80 in Powhatan, Lawrence, Arkansas Territory, United States. |
Misc | | Married Rachel Wolfe.1 |
Misc | | Findagrave has a different father! William Tyler Sr. |
Citations
- [S3479] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/101129306/peter-jordan-tyler: accessed 28 April 2023), memorial page for Peter Jordan Tyler (1752–23 Apr 1832), Find a Grave Memorial ID 101129306; Burial Details Unknown, Powhatan, Lawrence, Arkansas; Maintained by Lois Pate (contributor 47668444).
Elizabeth ("Betsy") Tyler
F, #2325, b. circa 1756, d. 1810
Elizabeth (Betsy) Tyler (c. 1756-1782); married the Reverend John Corbly c. 1773 in Monogalia County, Virginia; was killed there by Indians in 1782. John Corbly made a survey map of Louisville in 1779.
Parents
Birth | circa 1756 | In Berkeley County, West Virginia, British America.1 |
Death | 1810 | } |
Citations
- [S3441] Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/19446651/elizabeth-corbly: accessed 25 April 2023), memorial page for Elizabeth Tyler Corbly (1756–10 May 1782), Find a Grave Memorial ID 19446651, citing Garards Fort Cemetery, Garards Fort, Greene County, Pennsylvania, USA; Maintained by The Ancestor Hunter (contributor 46853198).