Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Cobb(s) and Bruton Parish Church

Robert Cobb(s), 1627-1682, son of Ambrose Cobbs and Ann White, arrived in the United States with his family when he was 8 years old. As a young man, he settled in Marston Parish, York County, Virginia where he served as church warden of Marston Parish from 1658 until 1674, when Marston Parish and Middletown parish were absorbed into Bruton Parish. Then he became one of the first vestrymen of the Bruton Parish Church.


A tile I found at an antique shop features the present day Bruton Parish Church.

In 1677 the vestry decided that instead of repairing the existing churches in the parish, they wanted to build a new one out of brick to serve the entire consolidated area. An agreement was signed in 1681 that would require the payment of  "L150 and sixty pounds of good, sound, merchantable, sweet-scented tobacco. to be leveyed of each tytheable in the parish for three years together" in order to build the church. The land for the church and churchyard was given as a gift forever by the wealthy colonist, John Page. It was in what was then known as Middle Plantation, but in 1699 it was renamed Williamsburg when it became the colonial capital.


A plaque commemorating those involved in the building of the first brick church
at Bruton Parish includes the name of Robert Cobb.

Robert Cobb(s) died in December of 1682, midway through the construction of the church. A new, larger church was built in the same location in 1715, when Robert's son Ambrose was a member of the vestry, and still stands in Williamsburg. 


A plaque commemorating the 1710-1715 vestry, when the present church was built,
includes the name Ambrose Cobb(s), son of Robert Cobb(s).

Robert Cobb(s) was my 9th Great-Grandfather, his son Ambrose, my 8th Great-Grandfather. These men were in the midst of the beginnings of this country and knew all the important players in colonial Virginia. They were strong Christian leaders in the community and I'm proud to have them as ancestors.

Friday, January 4, 2019

The first Ambrose Cobb

Generation 1: Ambrose, an oft-repeated name in the Cobb family in America, started with Ambrose Cobbs, born circa 1565 in Eastleigh Court, Lyminge, Kent, England and died between 1605-1607 in Petham, Kent, England. He was my 11th Great-Grandfather. His son Ambrose (1603-1655/56) was the first American immigrant in my Cobb line, arriving in Virginia in the early 1630s.

All Saint's Church, Petham, Kent, England
The burial place of Ambrose Cobbs (1565-1605/7).

Generation 2: Ambrose the Immigrant was the second son of Ambrose and Angelica Hunt, so he wasn't likely to inherit land in England. He had two uncles, his mother's brothers, who were some of the first Jamestown settlers. Perhaps it was their encouragement, coupled with his "second son" status, that led to his decision to leave England. He and his wife, Ann White, with their young son Robert and daughter Margaret, arrived in Virginia about 1634. They had at least two more children after they settled, Ambrose in 1635 and Thomas in 1637.

Generation 3: Robert Cobbs, son of Ambrose and Ann, married Elizabeth Thorpe in Bruton Parish (Williamsburg) about 1655. They had at least five children, one of them to be named Ambrose.

Generation 4: Ambrose Cobbs, son of Robert and Elizabeth, married Frances Elizabeth Pinkett in 1687 in Bruton Parish. Ambrose was one of the founding vestrymen of Bruton Parish Church, a building that still stands in Williamsburg. Ambrose and Frances had several children, one of them was a son named Ambrose. Their son Robert, though, was my direct line ancestor.

Bruton Parish Church, Williamsburg, Virginia.

Generation 5: Robert Cobb, son of Ambrose and Frances, was born in 1687 in Bruton Parish, Virginia. He married Crosia Frith by 1725. Of their many children, a son named Ambrose is in my direct line.

Generation 6: Ambrose Cobb, son of Robert and Crosia, was born in 1729 in Bruton Parish. He married Sarah (last name may be Howell) and had at least eleven children. One of those was a son named Ambrose, but my ancestor was a younger son named James, born in 1770. Ambrose and Sarah moved to Lincoln County, North Carolina, where Ambrose died in 1797.

Generation 7: James Cobb, my 5th great-grandfather, is the one that broke the Ambrose tradition in my direct line. He had at least three sons, but none carried the family name as far as I can find. James married Sarah Beach in 1790 and died young, in 1805, leaving his widow with several young children to care for. Sarah died in 1823.

The name Ambrose continued, however, in other lines. Vintner, another son of Ambrose and Sarah, named a son Ambrose. Another of their sons, William, named a daughter Ambrosia. I haven't researched all of the family lines, but I would bet that I'd find another Ambrose somewhere along the way.

Note: I have done a lot of work researching the Cobb family from James to the present, but the research into the earlier lines is not my own. Credit goes to Cobb and Cobbs, the Kent Cobb Families, and research done by Robert S. Cobb, which is included now on the Cobb and Cobbs website in its entirety.

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Finding my 6th Great Grandfather, James Cavanaugh

I am a Cavanaugh. Out of all the names that I research, Cavanaugh is the one I most want to take way back. The country of origin is likely Ireland, though I haven’t made it there yet in my backwards-through-time journey. Over the last few years, however, I have made some fantastic discoveries that revealed two additional generations of the Cavanaugh family as far back as the early 1700s in Virginia 

For many years, the earliest Cavanaugh in my tree, and those of other researchers that I corresponded with, was James W. Cavanaugh, born in 1818 in Kentucky. He is found in federal census records, first in Bedford County, Tennessee in 1850 and then in Wright County, Missouri in 1860. The 1850 record shows an older woman named Elizabeth Cavanaugh, born in Virginia about 1794, living in the household. No relationship was stated, but my guess was that this must be his mother. There was also a young girl listed; Elizabeth Louallen, age nine, who was born in Indiana. Louallen? I’d never seen that name before in my research and it was a mystery. Search after search ended with no results.
About six years ago, I located a marriage record that broke through the brick wall. Polly Ann Cavanaugh married Noah Llewelling on 29 June 1837 in Bartholomew County, Indiana. Other records showed the name as Llewellen. Misspellings were common in old records and it was pretty easy to see how Llewellen and Louallen could be versions of the same name. The connection between the surnames and the marriage in Indiana prior to Elizabeth’s birth were huge clues that led to even greater discoveries.  

I found an Elizabeth Cavanaugh listed as head of household in Bartholomew County in the 1840 federal census. That census didn’t list the names of other family members, just showed tick marks for each male or female in different age brackets. One particular tick mark showed a male that could be my end-of-line-at-the-time James!  

The 1840 Federal Census listing for Eliz Cavanaugh in Columbus, Bartholomew, Indiana: 
Males – 15-19      - 2  (b. 1821-1825) 
Males – 20-29      - 1  (b. 1811-1820 matches James W.) 
Females – 15-19   - 1  (b. 1821-1825) 
Females – 30-39   - 1  (b. 1801-1810 has to be Elizabeth as head of household, age off by a few years) 

Now I had an Elizabeth Cavanaugh that could be the same woman from the 1850 census, who lived in the same community where Polly married Noah Llewelling, and she had a son the right age for my James. I followed a hunch that Polly and James were both Elizabeth’s children and young Elizabeth Louallen from the 1850 census was her granddaughter.  

Several months passed before I found the next clue. It was a message board post, http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.northam.usa.states.indiana.counties.bartholomew/4476.1/mb.ashx ,that was a response to a query looking for information on Polly Cavanaugh and Noah Llewellen. It mentioned a guardianship record for several minors in Bartholomew County, including Polly Ann Cavanaugh and James W. Cavanaugh. Following is the full text of that response: 

Subject: Re: Polly Cavanaugh md Noah Llewellen 1837 Bartholomew, IN 
Date: Sun, 09 May 2010  
Author: Donna_Kuhlman 
Surnames: 
Classification: queries 
Found Cavanaugh estate papers in Bartholomew Co. Archives. Probate Court, February 1852. Smallwood C. Cavanaugh, guardian of James, Polly A., John, Robert H. and Nancy Jane Cavanaugh, reports that said wards have all arrived at the age of majority. A financial distribution of $48.43 each is made and he asks to be discharged. Also found were two original signed receipts for these funds. One is from James W. Cavanaugh, who signed his own name, and the other is from Noah Lewelling and Polly A. Lewelling, who both signed with an "X." This last reads: Columbus Bartholomew Cty Indiana Received of S.C. Cavanaugh guardian of the heirs [of] Philip Samuel Cavanaugh decd the sum of forty eight dollars and forty three cents it being our part of a lagacy left by William Cavanaugh late of Virginia to the heirs of James Cavanaugh late of said State in witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this third day of January 1838. Noah (X) Lewelling, Polly (X) Lewelling.  
Smallwood Cavanaugh (1806-1855) was the son of Fielding Cavanaugh Sr. Fielding and Phillip S. Cavanaugh were both on census in Fayette Co. KY in 1820, and I would suppose that they were brothers; and these documents would suggest Fielding and Phillip were sons of a James Cavanaugh of Virginia. William Cavanaugh, who money was here distributed, might have been an uncle with no direct descendants. It appears that Smallwood Cavanaugh had been appointed guardian of his young cousins, although their relationship isn't spelled out in any of the documents I found in Bartholomew Co. You might find more in Fayette Co. KY probate records.  
Donna 

I contacted the county clerk in Bartholomew County and requested copies of the guardianship papers. I received four pages of documents, beginning with the original guardianship bond following Samuel’s death in 1837 and ending with a final accounting of the probate case in 1852. The papers confirmed the sibling relationship between Polly and James, named the other siblings and gave the name of their father, Samuel Cavanaugh. All matched the information Donna provided in the message board post. However, the papers I received did not include the signed receipts that she referenced, though the distribution amounts she listed do match those shown in the document. The pages I received all reference the name Samuel, not the full name Phillip Samuel, and there is no reference to a James or William as stated on the receipt that Donna transcribed. (A trip to Indiana to search those archives in person may be in my future...) 

10 May 1837, Guardianship Bond, Bartholomew County, Indiana

I was beginning to develop a more complete picture of the household: 
Father: Philip Samuel Cavenaugh/Cavanaugh died about 1837 in Indiana 
Mother: Elizabeth born about 1794 in Virginia 
Children: 
James W. Cavanaugh born about 1818 in Kentucky 
Polly Ann Cavanaugh married Noah Llewellen/-ing/Louallen 
Nancy Jane Cavanaugh 
John H. Cavanaugh 
Robert Henry Cavanaugh 

While offering some wonderful new information, this document (and the other three received with it) raised some new questions, too. There was no mention of their mother, Elizabeth, though in 1837 she was still living. Who was the guardian, Smallwood C. Cavanaugh? Donna mentioned in her post that he was a cousin, the son of Fielding Cavanaugh. I would need to verify this new information. Also mentioned in the document were James H. J. Glanton and Edmund Orr. I would need to research those names as well as the siblings names. And my James would be 18 or 19 years old in 1837; why would he need a guardian? Add to that some new locations to research. Fayette County, Kentucky and Virginia. Whew! 

Some research into the laws of the time period answered a few of the questions. At that time, one was considered a minor until the age of 21, so James was still a minor at 18 or 19 years old in 1837. I also learned that it was common practice then for a guardian to be named even when the mother survived. Women were not considered capable of handling finances or making major decisions concerning the upbringing of their children. This raised even more questions for me. I wondered how Elizabeth felt about having someone else come in and take over after her husband died. Was she relieved? Or, easier for me to imagine, was she angry and frustrated? She and son James travelled south to Tennessee by the late 1840s. Why did they leave? Did Polly and Noah travel with them? Was their daughter being raised by relatives following their death? I still haven't found those answers and may never know. 

I searched for records to more fully document the lives and family of Elizabeth and Phillip Samuel Cavanaugh. The first item I found was this marriage bond: 

Ancestry.com, Kentucky, County Marriages, 1797-1954 > 004542756 > Image 511 of 712
This marriage bond showed that a Philip Samuel Cavenaugh/Cavanaugh planned to marry a Betsy Smith in Bourbon County, Kentucky in 1817. Betsy is a common nickname for Elizabeth, so that part fit. Also, the date made sense, since I knew that their son, James W., was born in 1818. The place is Kentucky, which also matched James birthplace. This was a good start! I looked for more records in Kentucky. 

In the 1820 Federal Census there is a Phillip S. Cavanaugh in Fayette County, Kentucky:  
Males –under 10     - 1  (may be James W., born 1818, age 2) 
Males –26-44          - 1  (Phillip S., putting his birthdate between 1776 and 1794) 
Females –under 10  - 2  (one of these may be Polly Ann) 
Females –16-25       - 2  (one may be Betsy, putting her dob bet. 1794 and 1804) 

The only name shown was the head of household and that was almost always the eldest male in the house. One of the females is a near match with the Elizabeth in Bartholomew County, Indiana in 1840 (born between 1801-1810) and does match the Elizabeth in Bedford County, Tennessee in 1850 (born about 1794). I'm not too concerned that the ages are different in 1840 and 1850. That was actually very common. Census takers didn't record which member of the household was interviewed and each person's recollection could be different. The enumerator may have even obtained the data from a neighbor if no one was home when he knocked on the door. The dates are close enough for me to believe they are the same woman. The young boy also fits with the information I have for James W. Cavanaugh. At this point I was fairly confident that I was on the right track.  

In 1830, again on the Federal Census for Fayette County, Kentucky, I found a listing for Saml Cavenaugh: 
Males – 5-9         - 3  (b. 1821-1825 may be John H., Robert Henry + ?) 
Males – 10-14     - 1  (b. 1816-1820 matches James W.) 
Males – 40-49     - 1  (b. 1781-1790, head of house, Philip Samuel) 
Females – < 5     - 1   (b. 1825-1830 may be Nancy Jane) 
Females – 5-9     - 2   (b. 1821-1825 may be Polly Ann + ?) 
Females – 30-39 – 1  (b. 1791-1800 matches Elizabeth "Betsy") 

Sometime between the date of the 1830 census and Samuel's death in 1837, the family moved from Kentucky to Indiana. Migrations during this time were commonplace, but usually happened with clusters of family members. I needed to look for those other names...Smallwood, Fielding, Glanton. 
Ancestry searches yielded several matches in census and marriage records. A Fielding Cavanaugh was listed in the Fayette County, Kentucky census records in 1810, 1820 and 1830. I found a Smallwood Cavanaugh had married a Mary Glanton in Bartholomew County, Indiana in 1833 and his family is listed there on the 1850 census. But most interesting were three marriage records from Virginia. All three were dated 1808, from old Rappahannoch and Essex County records, and all three were labeled as daughters of James Cavanaugh: 

Polly Cavanaugh married Burwell Glanton 
Phebe Cavanaugh married John H. Glanton 
Roadie Cavanaugh married Daniel M. Gaines 

A closer look at the record information showed that the marriages were derived from a deed and a copy was found in the Family History Library on microfilm. I ordered it into the local genealogy library and waited. And waited. Oh, lordy, I couldn’t wait to take a look at that microfilm. When it arrived I hurried to the library to view it. The Yakima Valley Genealogical Society Library is a fantastic local resource. I’ve been a member of the society off and on for many years and love researching at the library. But those microfilm viewers are old and don’t print copies so I took pictures of screen shots with my phone. Not as clear as I’d like, but I got copies, nonetheless. 
This document was the golden ticket. Right away, in the first paragraph, I had some answers: 

This indenture made this 20th day of September one thousand eight hundred and five between Thomas Cavanaugh, William Cavanaugh, Susanna Cavanaugh, Burwell Glanton and Polly his wife, Daniel Gaines and Roadie his wife, John Glanton and Phebe his wife, Fielding Cavanaugh, Caty Cavanaugh, Grace Cavanaugh, and Phill Cavanaugh of the one part and Turner Dixon of the other part… 
that the said Thomas Cavanaugh, William Cavanaugh, Susanna Cavanaugh, who are brothers and sister of Frederick Cavanaugh deceased and Fielding Cavanaugh, Burwell Glanton and Polly his wife, Daniel Gaines and Roadie his wife, John Glanton and Phebe his wife, Caty Cavanaugh, Grace Cavanaugh and Phill Cavanaugh who are children and heirs of James Cavanaugh another brother of the said Frederick Cavanaugh… 

The deed is for the sale of a “lott of land containing one acre” that was “known by the name of Dublin” belonging to the estate of Frederick Cavanaugh deceasedThe acre was sold for eighty pounds (about $3400 today). Then at the end of the deed it lists the following witnesses: 

Smallwood Coghill 
Thomas Coghill 
Lewis Spindle 
Robert Gibson 

I have filled in some bits and pieces of the stories of these Cavanaugh, Glanton and Gaines families since I stumbled onto this deed. The migration patterns to Kentucky (Fayette and Woodford Counties) and then on to Bartholomew County, Indiana in all of the families closely match that of Philip Samuel Cavanaugh and his family. There is still much work to be done. That witness named Smallwood Coghill was either related somehow or just a very good friend of Smallwood's father and I'm working to figure that out. I'm also curious if Frederick Cavanaugh naming his acre "Dublin" might be a clue to the Ireland connection. Were the Cavanaughs originally in America as indentured servants? I want to look for other land transactions in Virginia up to 1800. I have an entire book on Fayette County, Kentucky that I've just started reading. Simple historical research to learn about events happening in these places at the time my ancestors were there can add to the stories. I hope for many more years of health so that I can continue researching and see where it leads. 

But, for now, this is my Cavanaugh line: 

(first name unknown) Cavanaugh, b. abt. 1725 (my 7th great grandfather)


Children of Cavanaugh, 1725-?: 

Frederick Cavanaugh, b. abt 1755, d abt 1805 
Susanna Cavanaugh, b. abt 1755 
William Cavanaugh, b abt 1755 
Thomas Cavanaugh, b abt 1755 
James Cavanaugh, b abt 1755, d bef 1805  




Children of James Cavanaugh, 1755-1805: 

Rhoda Cavanaugh, b abt 1775, d 1821 
Fielding Cavanaugh, b abt 1778 
Caty Cavanaugh, b abt 1780 
Mary "Polly" Cavanaugh, b abt 1782, d 1839 
Grace Cavanaugh, b abt 1783 
Phoebe Cavanaugh, b abt 1784 
Philip Samuel Cavanaugh, b abt 1785, d 1837 




Children of Philip Samuel Cavanaugh, 1785-1837: 

Female (first name unknown) Cavanaugh, b abt 1817 
James W. Cavanaugh, b abt 1818, d 1866  
Polly Anne Cavanaugh, b abt 1820, d abt 1849 
John H. Cavanaugh, b abt 1822 
Robert Henry Cavanaugh, b abt 1823, d 1851 
Nancy Jane Cavanaugh, b abt 1825 




Children of James W. Cavanaugh, 1818-1866: 

William S. Cavanaugh, b 1847, d 1900 
Martha Ellen Cavanaugh, b 1849, d 1918 
Nancy J. Cavanaugh, b 1851, d 1894 
Sarah Anne Cavanaugh, b 1854, d 1913 
Lucy C. Cavanaugh, b 1855, d 1914 
Henry Newton Cavanaugh, b 1858, d 1922 
Jackson Lee Cavanaugh, b 1863, d 1941 
John Harrison Cavanaugh, b 1865, d 1936 
(name unknown) Cavanaugh, d bef 1900 




Children of William S. Cavanaugh, 1847-1900:

 James E. Cavanaugh, b 1868, d 1936 
John Houston Cavanaugh, b 1870, d 1954 
Mary M. Cavanaugh, b 1871, d 1872 
Arminda C. Cavanaugh, b 1873, d 1874 
Flora B. Cavanaugh, b 1875 
Thomas H. Cavanaugh, b 1877 
Joseph E. Cavanaugh, b 1879 
Emma Martha Cavanaugh, b 1881, d 1972 
Susan T. Cavanaugh, b 1887, d 1977 
Margaret S. Cavanaugh, b 1890, d 1986 




Children of John Houston Cavanaugh, 1870-1954:

Lexon Charlie Cavanaugh, b 1891, d 1949 
Elmer Diamond Cavanaugh, b 1893, d 1957 
Arthur Virgil Cavanaugh, b 1895, d 1988 
Orvel Burgess Cavanaugh, b 1897, d 1991 
Zona Ruby Cavanaugh, b 1901, d 1991 
Opal Edna Jane Cavanaugh, b 1906, d 1946 


Then Art's son William Virgil Cavanaugh,
William's son William Carl Cavanaugh,
and then me.