Category Archives: Families related to Worthington

Richard Walton and Abigail Walmsley Comly

Richard Walton was born in 1723, the son of Joseph Walton and Esther Carver of Byberry. His father died when Richard was an infant. The next year his mother Esther married Daniel Knight, whose first wife Elizabeth Walker was dead. Daniel and Elizabeth had three children together, one of whom died young. He married Esther in 1728, blending their two families and adding six more children together.1 Richard grew up as one of ten children in the family.

Richard married in 1753 Abigail, daughter of Thomas Walmsley. She was the widow of  Isaac Comly and eight years older than her husband. Isaac, one of nine children of Henry Comly and Agnes Heaton, worked as a blacksmith.2 He and Abigail were married in 1738 and lived in Somerton for ten years before he died, leaving Abigail with children Agnes and Isaac.3 She supposedly took her children and lived with her father for five years until she married again.4

Richard and Abigail were married at Trinity Oxford Church, for which they were reprimanded by the Abington Meeting and which they acknowledged.5  They continued to be Friends, and the births of two of their children were recorded in the Abington Meeting records. They lived in Byberry.  In 1775 Richard bought 128 acres on Byberry Creek from Benjamin Gilbert on which Gilbert had built a grist mill.6 In his will he left this to his son Joseph and son-in-law Ephraim Howell.

He died 10th month 6th, 1776, probably in the epidemic of camp fever which killed many people in Byberry that year.7 In his will he named his wife, children Joseph and Esther, and a grandson Richard Howell. The executors were son Joseph and “son-in-law” Isaac Comly (actually a stepson).8

Children of Abigail and Isaac (surname Comly):9

Agnes, b. 2nd month 1738, d. 1821, m. 1) 1759 John Duncan, son of William Duncan and Rachel Carver, married 2) 1793 Andrew Singley. Agnes and John were married on 12th month 1759 at Abington.10 Agnes and John had five daughters born between 1760 and 1767.11John died in October, 1772. Administration on his estate was granted to Richard Walton (Agnes’ father), William Duncan (John’s brother), Thomas Ridge (John’s brother-in-law) and Daniel Walton.12 Agnes married again, in 1793, to Andrew Singley Jr. of White Sheet Bay on the Delaware River. She died in 1821.13

Isaac, b. 1743, d. 1822, m. 1771 Asenath Hampton, daughter of John and Ann Hampton of Wrightstown. They settled in Byberry, raised a large family, and gained “considerable property”.14 Asenath became a respected elder of Byberry Meeting. She died in 1826. Children: Martha, John, Joseph, Isaac, Ezra, Ethan, Jason. The sons Joseph, John and Isaac were all interested in local history and much of the material in Martindale’s History of Byberry and Moreland came from Isaac’s notes.15

Children of Richard and Abigail:16

Joseph, b. 1754, d. 1821, m. 1780 Deborah Lee, daughter of John and Sarah.17 They lived in Byberry but later moved to Buckingham, Bucks County.18 They had eight or nine children. Children: Sarah, Abigail, Deborah, Asenath, Agnes, Ann, John, Robert, possibly Bernard. Five of the children married into the Worthington family.

Benjamin, twin to Joseph, died in infancy.19

Esther,  b. 8th month 1755, d. 1813, married Ephraim Howell in 1775 at Byberry Meeting. He was from Falls Meeting. The next year Ephraim inherited a grist mill from Esther’s father Richard. Children: Richard, Joseph, Rebecca, Elizabeth, Abigail, Mary, Ephraim, Deborah.20

  1. After Esther died he married Mary Wilson. Daniel died in 1782 at the age of 85. “Comly’s Sketches of the history of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Hist. Soc. Pa., Vol. II, 1827.
  2. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1867, p. 275-76.
  3. There may have been another child as well, but these two are listed in Martindale, and he used a lot of material from the sons of this Isaac Comly. Isaac’s son, also named Isaac, was the chief historian and genealogist of the families of Byberry, along with his brother Joseph. This Isaac the historian died in 1847. (Martindale, p. 281).
  4. Martindale.
  5. Norman W. Swayne, Byberry Waltons, 1958, p. 47.
  6. Byberry Waltons, p. 47.
  7. Martindale, p. 61.
  8. Philadelphia County wills, Book Q, p. 353.
  9. Martindale.
  10. Abington Monthly Meeting, Marriages 1745-1841, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Montgomery County, image 68.
  11. Ancestry trees, no evidence. There should be records in the Philadelphia Orphans Court for the children’s estate after John’s death.
  12. Philadelphia Administration files, 1772, online on Ancestry, image 209.
  13. Martindale.
  14. Martindale, 1867, p. 276.
  15. Martindale, 1867, pp. 279-281.
  16. The births of Joseph and Esther were recorded at Abington. Benjamin’s birth is from Byberry Waltons.
  17. The record of Abington marriages, births and deaths gives his date of birth ambiguously as 1th month 1754.
  18. Byberry Waltons, pp. 100-101.
  19. Swayne.
  20. Byberry Waltons, pp. 101-102.

Joseph Walton and Deborah Lee

Joseph Walton was the son of Richard Walton and Abigail Walmsley of Byberry, Philadelphia County.1 Born in 1754, Joseph was a twin; his twin brother Benjamin died in infancy. Abigail had been married before, to Isaac Comly. When Comly died he left her with two children, Agnes and Isaac, who were much older than Joseph.2 Joseph, Agnes, Isaac, and Joseph’s younger sister Esther, all grew up in Byberry, where Richard owned a grist mill on Byberry Greek.3 When Richard died in 1776 he left the mill to Joseph and Esther’s husband Ephraim Howell. Isaac Comly, Joseph’s half-brother, was the executor.4

In 1780 Joseph married Deborah Lee.5 Deborah was born in 1754, the daughter of John Lee and Sarah Carr. Her parents both died while Deborah was still under age, and she was taken under the care of Wrightstown Meeting.6 When she and Joseph married, she was a member of Wrightstown Meeting, and he got a certificate from Abington Meeting for the marriage. They settled in Byberry and were members of Byberry Meeting, where the births of their children were recorded.7

In 1786 Joseph came down with smallpox. The son of his half-brother Isaac Comly wrote the story in a memoir. Joseph said, “early in 1786 Uncle Joseph Walton caught smallpox in town and as none of our family had it but mother [Asenath Hampton Comly], it was concluded she must go there to help nurse him, and that John and myself were to go and be inoculated and have it there, and we went.”8

They later moved to Buckingham.9 Joseph died in 3rd month 1821. He did not leave a will, and his estate was administered by two sons-in-law, Abner and Joel Worthington. They presented their account to the Orphan’s Court in March 1822, showing an inventory of $426 and a balance after debts were paid of $260. This is not a large amount for the time, but it does not include the value of any real estate Joseph owned at his death. During his life he owned at least eight tracts, some large.10 Deborah died in December 1840, aged 86.11 She did not leave a will.

Joseph and Deborah had seven children who lived to marry. Five of them married Worthingtons.

Children of Joseph and Deborah:12

Sarah, b. 1781, d. 1858, m. about 1805 John Worthington, son of Benjamin Worthington and Hannah Malone. The marriage was contrary to discipline and John was disowned as a member of Byberry Meeting.13 They lived in Byberry and had seven known children there. John wrote his will in 1849, providing for an annuity for Sarah. He died in 1852.14 Sarah died in 1858. Children: Edward, Malvina, Benjamin, Lydia, George, Walton, Asenath.

Abigail, b. 1783, d. 1863, m. in 1804 Abner Worthington, son of Joseph and Sarah, married under the auspices of Byberry Meeting.15 They lived in Buckingham, Bucks County, and had three children: Eber, Sarah, Joseph.

Deborah, b. 1785, d. 1877, m. Anthony Worthington, son of Joseph and Esther. She is probably the Deborah Worthington, late Walton, disowned by Byberry Meeting in 6th month 1805. Anthony and Deborah lived in Buckingham and had children: Joel, Anthony, Robert, Esther, Ann.16 Anthony died before 1850, but Deborah lived until an old age. In the 1850 census she was living in Buckingham with her children Anthony, Ann and Esther.17 She was still there in 1870, in her own household, living with just a housekeeper.18 Deborah died in 1877 and is buried at Buckingham Friends.19

Asenath, b. 1788, married in 1810 Benjamin Tomlinson, son of John Tomlinson and Phebe Malone.20 They had no children.21

Agnes, b. 1790, m. in 1809 Joel Worthington, son of Joseph and Esther. The marriage was contrary to discipline and she was disowned by Byberry meeting in 8th month 1809. The names of their children are not definitely known, but were probably Abner, John, Deborah, and Sarah.22

Ann, b. 1792, m. Benjamin Worthington, son of Benjamin and Hannah. They were married by a minister, as Horsham Monthly Meeting reported on 5th month 1809.23 Benjamin and Ann did not appear to defend their conduct and a testimony was written against them on 8th month. Benjamin died before 1850, and Ann lived with her daughters, still around Byberry.24 Ann died in 1874 and was buried at William Penn Cemetery.25 Children: Amanda, Alfred, Rebecca, Abner, Mary.26

John, b. 1795, m. Elizabeth Matchner about 1816, daughter of John & Elizabeth (Strickler). John Walton is possibly the one who died in 1824, with letters of administration in Phila. Elizabeth lived until 1870.27 Children: Joseph, Jacob, Mary.28

  1. Norman W. Swayne, Byberry Waltons, 1958, p. 100.
  2. Isaac’s son, also named Isaac, was the chief historian and genealogist of the families of Byberry, along with his brother Joseph. This Isaac the historian died in 1847. (Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1867, p. 281).
  3. Byberry Waltons, p. 47.
  4. Philadelphia County wills, Book Q, p. 353.
  5. According to Swayne, a Bible owned 1937 by Walter Earle Walton says Deborah was of the Lee family of Virginia. (Byberry Waltons, p. 100). This is not supported by the evidence. She was from a Quaker family of Bucks County.
  6. Wrightstown Minutes, 3rd month 1767, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Bucks County. All the Quaker records in this account can be found on Ancestry.
  7. Member List 1797, Byberry Preparative Meeting, Philadelphia County, image 33.
  8. Quoted in Byberry Waltons, pp. 100-101. The original has not been traced. This passage is not in Martindale or in Isaac Comly’s “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, vol. 2, 1827, pp. 165- 203.
  9. Byberry Waltons, p. 101.
  10.  Byberry Waltons, p. 101.
  11. Byberry Preparative Meeting, Births and Deaths, image 89.
  12. Byberry Waltons, pp, 10-101 and pp. 207-210, also the Member List 1797 of Byberry Meeting, image 33) The Byberry meeting list does not include Robert or Bernard, who are included in Byberry Waltons. Swayne included Robert because of Joseph Comly’s account, presumably the reference to land of Robert Walton bordering the Comly homestead in Byberry in 1852. This is weak evidence; it could have been sold to Robert rather than bequeathed. He included Bernard based on the time and place. This is also weak evidence. By this time the Walton family was large, and Swayne admitted that there were other places Bernard could fit. The Byberry Meeting Member List of 1797 seems to be the best available evidence, written at the time by people who knew the family personally. Swayne has a lot of material on Bernard, nothing on Robert. (Byberry Waltons, pp. 209-210)
  13. Horsham Monthly Meeting Minutes, 6th month 1805.
  14. Philadelphia County wills, 1852, #171, on Ancestry, Pennsylvania, Wills and Probate Records, 1683-1993, Philadelphia, 1852, Wills 150-199, images 126-133, including the account and inventory.
  15. Their marriage certificate is on Ancestry, wrongly indexed under NJ, Camden, Haddonfield MM, Marriage Certificates 1782-1813, image 99. The first signers after Abigail and Abner were Joseph and Esther Worthington (his third wife), and Joseph and Deborah Walton, followed by Tomlinsons, Waltons, Worthingtons, and other members of the Byberry meeting.
  16. Byberry Waltons, p. 208.
  17. 1850 Federal Census, Bucks County, Buckingham, image 35. Deborah was 65 years old.
  18. 1870 census, Buckingham, image 20.
  19. Findagrave. Anthony is apparently buried there too, but there is no date of death given for him.
  20. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1867.
  21. Byberry Waltons, p. 208. There is a Benjamin Tomlinson who died in 1826, left a will in Montgomery County, but the name of his wife was not Asenath. (Ancestry, PA Wills and Probate Records 1683-1993, Montgomery County, Wills 6-7, image 190.
  22. Byberry Waltons, p. 208.
  23. Horsham Monthly Meeting minutes, 5th month 1809. Horsham was the parent monthly meeting for Byberry at that time.
  24. 1860 and 1870 federal census.
  25. Findagrave.
  26. Ancestry trees, no evidence.
  27. MyHeritage Family Tree, no evidence given.
  28. Ancestry trees, no evidence given.

Joseph Walton and Esther Carver

Joseph Walton, born about 1698, was the son of Daniel Walton and Mary Lamb, Quaker immigrants to Pennsylvania.1 He grew up in Byberry, Philadelphia County, with his parents and siblings. In 1719 his father Daniel died, and left the plantation in Byberry to his three younger sons, Joseph and Benjamin and Nathan, to share when they came of age. Until then they were to be diligent on the plantation and under the rule of their mother.2

In 1722 Joseph married Esther Carver, daughter of William and Mary, under the care of Abington Meeting. They were cleared to proceed in marriage in 10th month 1722.3 They settled in Byberry and had two children before Joseph’s death in 1727, at a young age. He did not leave a will, and letters of administration were granted to Esther on April 12, 1727.4

The inventory of his estate was taken on April 18 by John Duncan and Thomas Walmsley, two Quakers of Byberry who would have known Joseph and his family very well. It included very sparse household goods, just a little brass, earthen and iron ware and a frying pan. Could Joseph and Esther have been still living on the plantation with his mother? He owned some farming tools: hoes and axe, a harrow and plow and irons and the ubiquitous saddle and bridle for the riding horse. He owned three horses, some sheep and cattle and had corn in the ground. The total came to only about £50. Twenty years later the children of Joseph and Esther renounced any claim to the estate in favor of their mother and her second husband.5

At Abington Meeting the following year Esther married Daniel Knight, son of Giles and Mary.6 His first wife Elizabeth Walker had committed suicide. Daniel and Elizabeth were married in 1719. A few years later, while Daniel was at the meeting, she left her two children alone in the house and hung herself in the stable. “As no person had discovered before that she was uneasy with her situation, Daniel felt anxious to know the cause of an act so extraordinary, and for several evenings afterwards he sat alone in the stable where she was found, in hopes that something might present to explain this mystery. At length he said he was satisfied, but never would give any person the least information by what means he became so.”7 Daniel and Elizabeth had three children together, one of whom died young. He married Esther in 1728, blending their two families and adding six more children together. After Esther died he married Mary Wilson. Daniel died in 1782 at the age of 85.8

Children of Joseph and Esther:9

Richard, b. 10th month 1723, d. 1776, m. in 1753 Abigail Walmsley Comly, daughter of Thomas Walmsley and Mary Paxson, and widow of Isaac Comly.10 Richard and Abigail were married at Trinity Church in Oxford, but made an acknowledgment to Abington Meeting. She had three children with Isaac and three more with Richard. Richard died in 1776, supposedly of camp fever (typhus), and left a will, naming his wife and two living children. He left the plantation in Byberry to his son Joseph and left 26 acres with a grist mill to his son-in-law Ephraim Howell.11 Children of Richard and Abigail: Joseph, Benjamin (d. inf), Esther.

Rachel, b. 4th month 1727, m. 1) William Groom, son of William Groom, 2) Edmund Briggs; disowned by Abington MM for the Briggs marriage. Rachel and Edmund were the guardians for her children with William Groom: William, Hester, Thomas, Mary, and Mahlon. There was much contention about their handling of William’s estate, with accusations of mismanagement by her Groom in-laws.12 Rachel was still alive in 1774.

Children of Esther Carver and Daniel Knight: (surname Knight)13

William, b. 9th month 1729, d. 1782. “He was somewhat singular in his habits and would utter predictions which were afterwards so nearly fulfilled that many persons believed that he had a knowledge of future events and they looked upon him as more than an ordinary being.”14

Daniel, b. 7th month 1732, married Ann Wilson in 1754 at Abington. It was reported accomplished on 30th 12th month 1754.15 Is he the Daniel Knight Jr who died in 1757 at Byberry?16

Martha, b. 9th month 1736, married Henry Walmsley in 1759 at Byberry. The marriage certificate was signed by many Knights and Walmsleys as well as other members of the meeting like the Duncans and William Groom.17

Joseph, b. 1st month 1739, d. 1799, m. Elizabeth James. He was probably the elder of Middletown Meeting whose death was reported by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting as 3rd 10th month 1799, age 61.18 He left a will naming his wife Elizabeth, one son and five daughters.19

Ann, b. 12th month 1741/2, married in 1762 Daniel Walton, son of Daniel Walton and Elizabeth Cliffton. Daniel owned a saw mill in Byberry and died in 1776 of camp fever. Both Daniel and Ann were in trouble with Abington Meeting. Daniel was disowned for spreading “evil reports” and Ann was disowned for her irregular marriage after Daniel died. They had three or four known children. 20

Thomas, b. 7th month 1744, married in 1771 Sarah Walton, daughter of Benjamin Walton and Rebecca Homer.21 They were married at Byberry. Children: Amos, Rebecca, and Esther. Sarah died in 1807.

Children of Daniel Knight and his first wife Elizabeth Walker.22 (Surname Knight)

Mary, b. 11th month 1719/20, married in 1744 at Byberry David Buckman, son of William and Elizabeth. They lived in Wrightstown, Bucks County, where David was an elder. He died in 1791 but did not leave a will.

Joseph, b. 2nd month 1721, no further record, probably died young.

Jonathan, b. 8th month 1722, married in 1748 at Middletown MM Grace Croasdale. They lived in Southampton. Jonathan died in 1772.23 They had six sons.

  1. Norman W. Swayne, Byberry Waltons, 1958, p. 22.
  2. Philadelphia County wills, book D, p. 119. The full text is online on FamilySearch, PA Probate, Wills 1682-1916, Books C-E, image 276-77.
  3. Online on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Pennsylvania, Montgomery County, Abington Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1682-1746, image 63. All Quaker records cited in this account can be found on Ancestry.
  4. Philadelphia County Administration Book C, p. 78, No. 86. City Hall, Philadelphia. The full text of the administration, inventory, and quitclaim are available on Ancestry, Pennsylvania, Wills and Probate Records, 1683-1993, Philadelphia, Administration Files, No 32-38, 74, 100, 10, 39-45, 47-49, 51-78, 80-86, 87-113, 1726-1728, images 388-396.
  5. It was signed by Richard Walton and his sister Rachel, then married to William Groom, who also signed.
  6. Daniel was the son of Giles Knight of Nailsworth, Gloucestershire, and Mary English of Horsley, who came in 1682 and settled in Byberry.
  7. “Comly’s Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Hist. Soc. Pa., Vol. II, 1827, p. 190.
  8. “Comly’s Sketches of the history of Byberry”
  9. The births of the children were recorded by Byberry Meeting, on Ancestry under Philadelphia County, Byberry Preparative Meeting, Births and Deaths, image 13, also by Abington Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1629-1812, image 140, on Ancestry under Montgomery County. This is actually a record of births, not minutes. Abington Monthly Meeting was the parent meeting for Byberry Meeting.
  10.  Byberry Waltons, p. 47.
  11.  Byberry Waltons, p. 47.
  12. Bucks County Orphans Court Records, file #240. William also owned 93 acres in Byberry, Philadelphia County.
  13. Births at Abington Meeting, Births and Deaths, 1682-1809, image 71, on Ancestry.
  14. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, p. 329.
  15. Abington, Men’s Minutes 1746-1756, image 89.
  16. Byberry Monthly Meeting, Deaths 1736-1823. There were several men named Daniel Knight at this time.
  17. Abington, Marriages, 1745-1841, image 66.
  18. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, Minutes 1731-1800, image 468.
  19. Bucks County Wills, book 6, p. 215.
  20. Byberry Waltons, p. 40.
  21. Byberry Waltons, p. 51.
  22. Births at Abington Meeting.
  23. W. W. H. Davis, History of Bucks County, 1905, p. 598.

Jeremiah Walton and Elizabeth Walmsley

Jeremiah Walton was born in 1694, the son of William Walton and Sarah Howell. His father was an eminent preacher for Byberry Meeting and a traveling friend. In 1712 William bought a tract of 555 acres in Moreland from William Allen, and four years later divided the land between his sons Isaac and Jeremiah. Pennypack Creek flowed through the tract.1

In 1719 Jeremiah married Elizabeth Walmsley, a daughter of Thomas Walmsley and Mary Paxson.  Jeremiah and Elizabeth lived on the Byberry Road in Moreland Township.  Years later, the Comly family recalled Jeremiah. “Jeremiah Walton married one of Isaac Comly’s aunts — Father of the chunky Waltons.  Lived at Horsham — his wife Betty Walmsley — children well ah! – William the oldest, Tommy, Jacob, Jeremy, three girls – one married.  Mary married. Sarah married Jeans, afterwards James Tyson, another Phebe remained unmarried.”2 He had Mary and Sarah mixed up, but had most of the names right.

Jeremiah died in 1740 and was buried at Horsham.3 Elizabeth lived on until 1787. She wrote her will, leaving her tract in Moreland to four children: Thomas, Jeremiah, Jacob and Sarah, to be shared. She left to her daughter Rachel Duncan £40 “if it shall be by her lawfully demanded as she now dwells at a great distance”; Rachel was probably living in Maryland. She also left a legacy to the three children of her son William deceased, and to the three children of her daughter Mary Tyson.4

Children of Jeremiah Walton and Elizabeth Walmsley:5

William, b. 12th month 1719, d. 1770, m. Phebe Atkinson in 1741 at Abington meeting. They lived in Moreland, Philadelphia County, where William died in 1770. He left a will, naming his wife Phebe and three children. Phebe died in 1773. Children: Rebecca, Phebe, Hannah, William, Elizabeth, William, Seneca, Phebe, John. Only the second Phebe, Hannah and John lived past childhood.6

Thomas, b. 8th month 1721, d. 1796, m. Mary Titus in 1754. They were married at Westbury Meeting, Long Island. They settled in Moreland, Montgomery County, where he died in 1796. He left a will, naming Mary and their living children. She died in 1799. Children: Sarah, Elizabeth, Mary, Silas, Phebe, Martha, Amy, Thomas, Jeremiah.7

Rachel, b. 1st month 1724, m. Joseph Duncan in 1744 at Abington MM, had a daughter Phebe Drinker.8 The Duncan family were Quakers of Byberry, descended from John Duncan, an elder of Byberry meeting, and his wife Margaret Crighton or Creighton. They were living “at a great distance” when Rachel’s mother Elizabeth wrote her will in 1775. Joseph was probably the son of George Duncan, who took a certificate in 1715 from Abington to Cecil Monthly Meeting in Kent County, Maryland.9 It is probable that Joseph moved his family there along with his father.

Jeremiah, b. 3rd month 1726, d. 1792, m. Mary Kirk in 1761 at Horsham Meeting, the daughter of Thomas Kirk and Mary Shaw.10 He was apparently a short, fleshy man, called Chunky Jerry.11 They lived in Moreland. He died there and left a will naming Mary and nine children.12 Children: Thomas, Susanna, Amos, Elizabeth, Joseph, Jeremiah, Jonathan, Jesse, Isaac.13

Jacob, b. 6th month 1728, d. 1799, m. Mary Conard in 1762 at Horsham Meeting. She was the daughter of Cornelius and Priscilla. He was taxed in Moreland in 1769 for 133 acres.  Jacob left a will, named his wife Mary and seven children. Mary died in 1814. Children: Enoch, Anna, Priscilla, Elizabeth, Isaiah, Charles, Martha, Jacob.14

James, b. 12th month 1730, died young.

Mary, b. 9th month 1732, m.1) in 1753 Isaac Jeanes, son of William and Esther, 2) 1761 James Tyson, son of  Henry and Ann. Isaac was first married to Abigail Sands and had a daughter Mary with her.15 After Abigail died, he married Mary Walton and they had two sons, William and Levi.16 Then in 1757 Isaac died, leaving Mary with the three children. In 1761 she married James Tyson, son of Henry Tyson and Ann Harker.17 James was born in 1738, six years younger than Mary. James and Mary had a daughter Elizabeth, born in 1762.

Sarah, b. 10th month 1734, m. James Spencer in 1761 at Horsham Meeting.18 They lived in Upper Dublin, where Sarah died in 1787. James married the widow Elizabeth Marple, but they had no children together. Children of James and Sarah: Josiah, Enos, William, Seneca, Ezra, Elizabeth, James, Abner.

Elizabeth, b. 5th month 1737, died young.

Phebe, b. 5th month 1740, died 1756 unmarried.

  1. Old York Road Historical Society Bulletin, vol. XXII, 1961.
  2. Comly’s Notes on Byberry 1680-1852, Microfilm #20436, Family History Center, probably Joseph and Isaac Comly.
  3. Theodore Bean, History of Montgomery County, 1884.
  4. Philadelphia County wills, Book T, p. 483. The full text is available on FamilySearch, Philadelphia County, Wills, 1682-1916; indexes to wills, 1682-1924, Book T-U, image 273.
  5. Norman W. Swayne, Byberry Waltons, p. 26. The births were recorded at Abington meeting.
  6. Byberry Waltons, p. 59.
  7. Byberry Waltons, p. 60.
  8. History of the Richardson & Kimminau Families online.
  9. Cecil Monthly Meeting minutes, 9th day 1st month 1714/15.
  10. Byberry Waltons, pp. 60-61.
  11. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1876.
  12. Montgomery County wills, Book 1B, p. 281.
  13. Byberry Waltons, p. 61.
  14. Byberry Waltons, p. 61.
  15. Born about 1751, Mary married Timothy Roberts, son of William Roberts. She was named in her father’s will of 1757, and was named as a granddaughter by Richard Sands in his will in 1758.
  16. Abington meeting records. William married Elizabeth McVaugh about 1780; Levi married but had no children.
  17. Henry was the youngest children of Rynear Tyson and Margaret Opdengraff, the immigrants from Krefeld, Germany, who came on the Concord in 1683.
  18. Byberry Waltons, p. 62.

Four Walton brothers of Byberry

The Quaker Walton family has been traced back to Thomas Walton, born about 1536 in Oxhill Parish, Warwickshire. Oxhill is close to Stratford-upon-Avon, in the Vale of the Red Horse. The valley’s name comes from a horse figure cut into the red soil of the hill above the village of Tysoe. Oxhill itself is an old town, named in the Domesday Book as Octeselve.1

The first reliable Walton ancestor is William, born in 1629 in Oxhill, who married Alice Martin in 1657.2 Before 1656 William and Alice moved out of Warwickshire, and their sons were baptized at Bibury Parish in Gloucestershire, which is about 25 miles from Oxhill. William died in England in 1681, but his four sons became Quakers, and they emigrated.3

The four brothers arrived around 1682 or 1683, in the first great wave of migration of English Friends to Pennsylvania.4 “These dates are confirmed by a letter written by Nathaniel, the eldest of the brothers, to his youngest brother William, dated October 7, 1713 in Byberry, in which he reminds his brother that he had paid his passage from England and that he claimed interest on this payment for thirty years and upwards.”5 Nathaniel said that, “he paid for William’s passage to this country, £5 sterling; that he laboured hard for this money in Old England at a groat a day; that the principal and compound interest which he had forborne thirty years and upwards, had almost come to £200 old currency; that William had got him nothing, but might see he had made a man of him to that very day; and that he most certainly expected him to pay some way or other to his content; not, he adds, because he could not do without it, for he blessed God, he had plenty of every thing, but because it was his due, and William was able to pay it.”6

In the Keithian separation in 1692 John Hart, Nathaniel Walton and others at Byberry followed Keith.7 They kept possession of the meeting house. Daniel Walton, William Walton, Thomas Walton, John Carver, Giles Knight and others formed their own meeting and remained Friends.8 This may have caused some estrangement between the brothers, which never healed. Nathaniel’s was written long afterwards.

Children of William and Alice: (all baptized at Bibury in Gloucestershire)

Nathaniel, b. 1656, d. 1733, m. 1685 Martha Bowling at Philadelphia Monthly Meeting

Thomas, b. 1658, d. 1758, m. 1) 1689 Priscilla Hunn, 2) 1736 Elizabeth Eastburn

Daniel, b. 1660, d. 1719, m. 1688 Mary Lamb9

William, b. 1662, d. 1736/7, m. 1689 Sarah Howell10

 

Nathaniel stayed in Byberry, while his brothers later moved to Bucks County. Daniel and William were both counted as eminent early Friends. Their names both appear in a list kept by Middletown Monthly Meeting.11 Thomas was not as active in the meeting as his brothers, while Nathaniel followed George Keith in the separation of 1692 and was no longer a member of Byberry Meeting.

Second generation: The four brothers in Pennsylvania

Nathaniel and Martha lived in Byberry. In 1688 the four brothers bought land from Thomas Fairman.12 The four tracts were side by side in Byberry.13 They were laid out at the northern end of the township, running along the line of Moreland Township, extending south of Byberry Road.14 Nathaniel later bought more land, four tracts in Byberry and one in Bucks County.15 Some of this land went to his sons Joseph, Benjamin and Malachi. Some of it was sold by his executors after his death.16

In 1692, when the Keithian separation tore Friends into two factions, Nathaniel followed the Keithians, unlike his three brothers. In a profile of Daniel Walton, written in 1854, a story was told about Nathaniel.

“Nathaniel, the eldest of the family,… became entangled in the sophistries of Keith, lost his spiritual perception and slid back again into outward observances, from which his parents and himself had been led; but the younger brothers stood firm, and all three signed the testimony of the Yearly Meeting against Keith. The Keithites kept possession of the meeting-house, where the Friends of Byberry had been wont to assemble, yet they found their numbers small and deceasing, whilst those who kept to the faith and practice of their forefathers in the Truth, increased in numbers… It is narrated that on a certain occasion, he [Nathaniel] came to Friends’ meeting, and one of his brothers being led to labour in the gospel… stirred up angry feelings in the man, who probably feeling himself wrong, took every defence of the truth as a personal attack, so in the heat of the moment, he interrupted the speaker with the coarse language, “Brother, thou lyest.”17

Nathaniel died in 1733. In his will he named his wife Martha and ten children: Mary, Lydia, Elizabeth, Margaret, Esther, Martha, Joseph, Benjamin, Nathaniel, and Malachi. Nathaniel and Malachi were the executors.18 The daughter Martha was probably deceased, as he gave her legacy to her children. He left varying amounts to the different children; some had probably already received assistance from him. The real and personal estate was to be sold, and the proceeds divided among Martha and three of the children. Martha wrote her will in 1736 and died in 1741.19 Eight of the children were still alive.

Thomas, the second brother, was a member of Abington Meeting, but was not as active as his brothers Daniel and William. He moved north to Moreland, Philadelphia around 1708.20 He married twice. His first wife was Priscilla Hunn. They declared their intentions in 11th month (January) 1689 and were cleared to proceed the next month.21 In 1716 Thomas appeared before Abington Meeting and “seemed to be some what sorry that he had indulged his children and that for ye future he hopes to be more carefull and desires friends to pass it by.” This was probably for allowing liquor to be served at the wedding. Thomas and Priscilla had seven known children: Thomas, Caleb, John, Joseph, James, Mary and David.22 In 1718 Thomas Walton’s son Thomas appeared before the meeting to repent of “Several Evil practises whereby ye truth hath been reproached”, including frequenting ill company. He hoped to be more careful in the future. In 1736 Thomas was an elderly widower of 77, when he married the 41-year old Elizabeth Eastburn from Southampton.23 Thomas died in 1758, probably in 1st month (March). Byberry Meeting records noted his death and added, “aged near a hundred, by computation”.24 He did not leave a will.

Daniel Walton immigrated with his three brothers and settled in Byberry, where he eventually owned 500 acres of land.25 In 1688, he married Mary Lamb in 1688 under the auspices of Abington Meeting.26  “Throughout his long life he was much respected, and was considered among the faithful Friends of that day. He died in 1719, leaving seven children:  Samuel, Daniel, Joshua, Joseph, Benjamin, Hannah, and Mary.  Nearly all the Waltons at present residing in the vicinity of Byberry are descendants of the ancient Daniel.”27 Daniel served as a minister in Byberry Meeting for many years, represented the meeting at the Quarterly Meeting in Philadelphia many times, and served on many committees. In 1711 he was approved as a traveling minister with his brother William.28 He died in 1719 and left a will, describing himself as a husbandman of “Bibery”.29 In it he named his wife Mary and six sons.30 He essentially disinherited his eldest son Samuel, for “disobedience and undutifulness to me and to his mother and also his extravagant life whereby I have been forced to pay several sums of money to discharge his debts which doth amount to such a sum or to so great a part of my estate as I doo think fitt to be his portion.” He gave tracts of land to his sons Daniel and Joshua, and the home plantation to the three younger sons to share when they reached the age of 21, and to be diligent around the plantation under their mother until then. The daughter Mary, youngest of the children, was to receive a cow and £15 when she came of age.31 Children of Daniel and Mary: Samuel, Daniel, Joshua, Joseph, Benjamin, Nathan, Mary.

William Walton was the youngest of the four brothers. Like his brother Daniel he was a preacher at Byberry Meeting. He served as an elder, a representative to Quarterly meeting, and visited families. In 1688 he bought a tract in Byberry, and eventually owned 750 acres there.32 In 1689 he married Sarah Howell under the auspices of Abington Meeting and they had ten children, who married into other Quaker families like Walmsley and Parry.33 “His descendants are now widely scattered, but a greater proportion of them probably retained membership in the Society of Friends than the descendants of his brothers.” 34 William died in late 1736 while on a missionary trip to Tortola Island. At the time Henry Tomlinson called him “a public Friend in good esteem.”35 He wrote his will in April 1734, calling himself a yeoman of “Buyberry”. In it he named his wife Sarah, seven children, and three grandchildren.36 The son William was to inherit the plantation and to keep Sarah there while she lived. Sarah died on 25 of 6th month (August) 1749.37 She left a will, proved the following month.38 She was living in Byberry at the time, obviously with one of her children.39 She left household goods and small amounts of money to her daughter Sarah and several grandchildren. Her friend William Duncan was the executor.40 Children of William and Sarah: Rachel, Isaac, Jeremiah, Jacob, Sarah, William, Abel, Job, Hannah, and Mary.

  1. The history of Oxhill website at www.oxhill.org.uk/History/Introduction.htm, accessed March 2019.
  2. Researchers have suggested three earlier generations for William, based on parish records of Oxhill. But the name is common there, and there is no way to be sure of the identity. For the record, William’s parents have been claimed as Thomas Walton and Ann Hurd, and his grandparents as William Walton and Elizabeth Dalby, and his great-grandparents as Thomas Walton and Elizabeth Banbury. These names may have first appeared in a manuscript by Alfred R. Justice, cited in Norman Walton Swayne, Byberry Waltons, 1958,  page 5. Alfred Justice was a genealogist, born in 1857, whose papers are held in the Chester County Historical Society in West Chester. The earlier Walton generations are also cited in Ernest Spofford, Armorial Families of America, 1929, online at the Hathi Trust site. Spofford cited Oxhill parish registers and English probate and land records as his sources, but did not give details.
  3. Clarence V.  Roberts, Early Friends Families of Upper Bucks.
  4. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland,  claims that they arrived in 1675, but this would have been highly improbable, and Nathaniel’s letter seems to settle the matter. There were no Quakers in Pennsylvania in 1675.
  5. Roberts, p. 573 and in Swayne.
  6. Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Historical Society of Pa., vol. II, 1827.
  7. George Keith was a charismatic preacher, originally a Quaker, who taught that reliance on the inner light was insufficient and that Quakers needed belief more closely based on scripture. He later left the society, and his followers either returned to the traditional Quaker meetings, or became Baptists, Anglicans, or other groups.
  8. W. W. H. Davis, History of Bucks County.
  9. Marion Balderston (in Walter L. Sheppard, Passengers and ships prior to 1684, 1970, p. 98) describes three Lamb brothers: Hugh, Daniel, and Joseph.  Hugh owned over 7000 acres of land, had no children and left the land to his brother Daniel, who in turn left it to Joseph.  There was no mention of Mary or any other relations.
  10. McCracken, Welcome Claimants, lists many Howell families, probably unrelated, since this is a common name. There is no evidence to connect any of them directly to Sarah, the wife of William.
  11. Watring and Wright, vol. 2, Bucks County Church Records.
  12. Philadelphia County Deeds, Vol. E2-5, pp. 85-89.
  13. Swayne has a map of the tracts. (p. 2 and p. 5)
  14. Compare Swayne’s map on page 5 with a historic map of Philadelphia, such as the “Map of the Whole Incorporated City of Philadelphia 1867”, plate 1, on the website of the Free Library. Also “Philadelphia2035: Far Northeast District Plan” at www.phila.gov/historical/Documents/Far%20Northeast%20HP%20Memo_REVISED.pdf.
  15. Swayne’s map (page 5) shows the later holdings of the brothers and some of their sons, extending northeast from the Moreland township line all the way across Byberry Township to Poquessing Creek, which formed the boundary with Bensalem township, Bucks County. Their holdings were not contiguous; there was a gap around Byberry Crossroads, where Comly’s Road, Meeting House Lane, Townsend’s Mill Road and Southampton Road came together. (The 1867 map)
  16. Swayne, p. 4.
  17. The Friend, vol. 28, p. 381.
  18. Philadelphia County wills, book E, p. 232.
  19. Philadelphia County wills, book F, p. 247.
  20. Swayne, p. 8.
  21. Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1685-1767 (Men’s minutes) and Minutes 1686-1728 (Women’s minutes) on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Thomas and Priscilla went there instead of to Abington Meeting for approval because Priscilla attended the meeting in Philadelphia. Thomas got a certificate from Abington to proceed in marriage with her. There does not seem to be a copy of the marriage certificate for Philadelphia (misplaced in Ancestry under Lancaster County, Nottingham and Little Britain MM, Marriage Certificates 1672-1759) or Abington (Montgomery County, Abington MM, Marriages 1685-1721). All of the references to Quaker meeting records in this account are found on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935.
  22. Swayne, p. 9. There is some uncertainty about the list, since the births were not recorded by Byberry or Abington Meeting. Swayne notes that four of them are placed here because of their “times, places and connections”, and since “we have complete lists of the children of Thomas’ three brothers”. There were no other early Walton families around.
  23. Swayne, p. 6.
  24. Byberry Monthly Meeting, Deaths 1736-1791, image 3. Although these records are included in records of Byberry Meeting, they are actually taken from a list kept by Henry Tomlinson of deaths around Byberry and Bensalem, including many non-Friends.
  25. Swayne, p. 10.
  26. The parentage of Mary is not known. Some claim she was born in Massachusetts, but the Mary Lamb born there in 1669 apparently died two months after birth. A connection to Massachusetts at this early date would be improbable on the face of it.
  27. Martindale, p. 350; Swayne, p. 9.
  28. Swayne, p. 11.
  29. Philadelphia County wills, book D, p. 119. The full text is online on FamilySearch, PA Probate, Wills 1682-1916, Books C-E, image 276-77.
  30. The date of Mary’s death was apparently not recorded.
  31. Full text of the will, image 277. It was signed in 1st month (March) 1718 and proved in April 1719.
  32. Swayne, p. 13.
  33. Swayne, p. 12, 14.
  34. Clarence V. Roberts, Early Friends Families of Upper Bucks, p. 574.
  35. Henry Tomlinson’s book of deaths, at Historical Society of Pennsylvania, and included in Byberry Meeting records.
  36. Philadelphia County wills, book F, p. 27. Full text on FamilySearch, Book F, image 18-19.
  37. Byberry Monthly Meeting, Deaths 1736-1791, image 2.
  38. The administration papers, including the will and inventory, are on Ancestry, PA Wills and Probate Records, 1683-1993, Administration Files 1-63, 111-134, 1749-50, images 124-131.
  39. It was not her son William who had inherited the plantation, since he died before her, in 10th month 1740.
  40. This was probably the William, son of John Duncan and Margaret Creighton, who was a respected elder of Byberry Meeting.

Daniel Walton and Mary Lamb

Daniel Walton immigrated around 1682 or 1683 with his three brothers from Bibury, Gloucestershire, and settled in Byberry, where he eventually owned 500 acres of land.1 In 1688, he married Mary Lamb in 1688 under the auspices of Abington Meeting.2  “Throughout his long life he was much respected, and was considered among the faithful Friends of that day…”3 Daniel served as a minister in Byberry Meeting for many years, represented the meeting at the Quarterly Meeting in Philadelphia many times, and served on many committees. In 1711 he was approved as a traveling minister with his brother William.4

He died in 1719 and left a will, describing himself as a husbandman of “Bibery”.5 In it he named his wife Mary and six sons.6 He essentially disinherited his eldest son Samuel, for “disobedience and undutifulness to me and to his mother and also his extravagant life whereby I have been forced to pay several sums of money to discharge his debts which doth amount to such a sum or to so great a part of my estate as I doo think fitt to be his portion.” He gave tracts of land to his sons Daniel and Joshua, and the home plantation to the three younger sons to share when they reached the age of 21; they were to be diligent around the plantation under their mother until then. The daughter Mary, youngest of the children, was to receive a cow and £15 when she came of age.7

The date of Mary’s death was apparently not recorded. “Nearly all the Waltons at present residing in the vicinity of Byberry are descendants of the ancient Daniel.”8

Children of Daniel Walton and Mary Lamb:

Samuel, b. ab. 1689, d. about 1758 in Bucks County, married Marcy Waterman in 1709 at Abington. She was the daughter of Humphrey and Margaret. In 1716 Abington Meeting testified against Samuel for his “gross actions” and “vicious practices” and ordered that the condemnation should be read and posted at Byberry.9 Samuel died in 1758 in Bucks County; he did not leave a will, but Marcy survived him and renounced as administrator.10 The list of children is uncertain.

Daniel, b. ab. 1691, d. 1757, m. about 10th month 1714 Elizabeth Cliffton, daughter of Henry, at Philadelphia MM.11 In 1715 Daniel was “overcome with strong liquor” and had to condemn his behavior before the meeting.12 They lived in Byberry, where Daniel died in 1757, leaving in his will a wife Elizabeth, and three children. Other sources add two more children. Probable children: Daniel, Jane, Joseph, Benjamin, Mercy.13

Joshua, b. ab. 1693, d. 1759, m. Cassandra “Case” Albertson. In 1757 he was on a list of members of Byberry Meeting, although he apparently did not contribute to the collection for the yearly meeting.14 His house in Byberry was supposedly haunted. “Joshua committed suicide by hanging himself to a tree in front of his house and was buried in one of his back fields.  For many years after the death of Joshua the premises were believed by the superstitious to be haunted, and ‘marvelous tales were told of sights, sounds, and presentations, terrific in their nature.’ Men were actually frightened from the  ‘Timber Swamp’ in the daytime, but the ghosts have since departed.”15  Joshua left a will.16 He described himself as a yeoman of Byberry, aged and “somewhat infirm in body”. He named seven children, but not his wife, who must have died before him. The will was proved in July 1759. Children: Elizabeth,  Cassandra, Jonathan, Albertson, Hannah, Joshua, Ann.

Joseph, b. ab. 1698, d. 1727,  m. Esther Carver, daughter of William & Mary.17 Joseph and Esther were cleared to marry by Abington Meeting on 11th month 1722. They had only two children, Richard and Rachel, before Joseph’s death at a young age. He died in Byberry.18 Letters of administration were granted to Esther and her father William in April 1727. In 1747 Richard and Rachel (by then married to William Groom) filed a paper, releasing all claim on the estate, in favor of their mother Esther, by then married to Daniel Knight.19 The inventory, taken on 18 April 1727, was rather sparse, with some household goods and farm tools, three horses, some cattle and sheep, for a total of £48. Esther later married Daniel Knight, son of Giles and Mary. Daniel’s first wife Elizabeth Walker, while Daniel was at the meeting, left her children alone in the house and hung herself in the stable.20 Daniel and Esther had six children together: William, David, Martha, Joseph, Ann, Thomas. In addition Daniel had children from his marriage to Elizabeth: Mary, Joseph, Jonathan.21 After Esther’s death he married Mary Wilson. Daniel died in 1782.

Benjamin, b. 1701, d. 1753, m. Rebecca Homer in 1724. Abington Meeting reported in 1724 that Benjamin Walton of Byberry “having been Educated Amongst friends” had married his wife by a justice.22 They lived in Byberry and raised their nine children there. Years later their daughter Elizabeth married Benjamin Gilbert and was captured by Indians in a famous incident.23 Children: Elizabeth, Mary, Daniel, Hannah, Rebecca and Sarah (twins), Benjamin, Esther, and William.

Nathan, b. ab. 1703, died unmarried before 1724.

Mary, b. ab. 1708, m. William Homer. He was the widower of Mary’s first cousin, also named Mary Walton, the daughter of William Walton and Sarah Howell.24 Mary (the second Mary) and William had eight children: Daniel, Thomas, David, Esther, Nathan, Joseph, Mary, and Jacob. The three youngest sons were known as “Taff”, Joe and Jake. They lounged at home and drank much whiskey, and were called the Young Homers, since they were by the second wife.25

  1. Norman W. Swayne, Byberry Waltons, 1958, p. 10.
  2. The parentage of Mary is not known. Some claim she was born in Massachusetts, but the Mary Lamb born there in 1669 apparently died two months after birth. A connection to Massachusetts at this early date would be improbable on the face of it.
  3. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1876, p. 350; Swayne, p. 9.
  4. Swayne, p. 11.
  5. Philadelphia County wills, book D, p. 119. The full text is online on FamilySearch, PA Probate, Wills 1682-1916, Books C-E, image 276-77.
  6. The date of Mary’s death was apparently not recorded.
  7. Full text of the will, image 277. It was signed in 1st month (March) 1718 and proved in April 1719.
  8. Martindale, p. 350; Swayne, p. 9.
  9. The minute said he was guilty of “divers gross actions to the great dishonour of God and the great grief of his parents and friends.” He was disowned on 12th month 1715. (Abington MM, Men’s Minutes 1682-1746, image 46, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Montgomery County.) The testimony was drawn up by 2nd month 1716, and ordered to be posted at Abington and Byberry.
  10. Swayne, pp. 19-20.
  11. Abington MM, Men’s Minutes 1682-1746, image 43. He received a certificate to marry Elizabeth Clifton of Philadelphia.
  12. Men’s Minutes 12th month 1715. This was probably too late to be on the occasion of his marriage.
  13. Swayne, Byberry Waltons, p. 21.
  14. Byberry Preparative Meeting, Minutes 1753-1792, image 293, listed on Ancestry under Philadelphia County.
  15. Martindale, pp. 350-351. A World Connect tree of Rick Swayne on Rootsweb said that it was his brother Samuel who committed suicide; this is probably an error. (Swayne/Walton/Frazee/Skinner Origins on wc.rootsweb.com, person ID=14519, accessed March 2019)
  16. Philadelphia wills, book L, p. 294, spelled as “Whalton”. Full text on FamilySearch, Book L-M, image 197-98.
  17. In 1731 Joseph Walton brought in a paper to Abington Meeting signifying his sorrow in marrying out of unity. Was that this Joseph or one of his cousins?  He had two first cousins named Joseph.
  18. His probate papers, Administration #86, are on Ancestry, Philadelphia, Administration Files, No 32-38, 74, 100, 10, 39-45, 47-49, 51-78, 80-86, 87-113, 1726-1728, images 389-397.
  19. In the administration file, image 393.
  20. Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Historical Society of PA, vol. II, 1827, p. 190.
  21. Comly said Elizabeth had two children with Daniel, but the births of these three were listed in Abington meeting records.
  22. Byberry Waltons, p. 22.
  23. Byberry Waltons, p. 48.
  24. Byberry Waltons, p. 23.
  25. Martindale, repeated in Swayne, p. 23.

Thomas Walmsley and Elizabeth Rudd

Thomas Walmsley was born in the rolling hills of the Ribble Valley in northern Lancashire, not far from the edge of the Yorkshire Dales.1 His family lived near Waddington, a town between Slaidburn and Clitheroe, and probably attended the church there when he was little. Nearby Clitheroe is a larger town, with a landmark castle, one of the last places to surrender during the Civil War. From the top of Clitheroe Castle one can see Pendle Hill, famous in Quaker history. It was at the top of this hill that George Fox, founder of the Friends, had a vision of the work ahead for him and his fellow Quaker missionaries. He wrote in 1652, “As we travelled, we came near a very great hill, called Pendle Hill, and I was moved of the Lord to go up to the top of it; which I did with difficulty, it was so very steep and high. When I was come to the top, I saw the sea bordering upon Lancashire. From the top of this hill the Lord let me see in what places he had a great people to be gathered.”

The valley that Fox looked down on was fertile ground for the Quakers. Within the next generation it would be filled with Friends, some suffering fines and imprisonment for their beliefs. In 1654 Cuthbert Hayhurst and Thomas Wigglesworth were arrested for “breakinge of the peace up on the lords day in the church of Slaidburn.” In 1671, Hayhurst was “convicted for beinge at a Conventickle or an unlawfull meeteinge and assemblie at the house of Thomas Wiglesworth of Skelshay.”2 In 1682 when the opportunity came to move to the new province of Pennsylvania, many of the Friends of Clitheroe and Waddington and Slaidburn chose to leave the valley.

Thomas was married by then. His wife Elizabeth Rudd was from a Slaidburn family, part of the local Quaker community that worshiped at Bolland meeting. In November 1665 Thomas and Elizabeth were married at the house of her cousin Jane Waln in Slaine Merrow, Yorkshire. By 1682, when they made the decision to leave Lancashire for Pennsylvania, Thomas and Elizabeth had six children. As was the Quaker custom they asked their monthly meeting at Settle for a certificate to take with them, showing that they were members in good standing. This was normally written by the clerk of the meeting for an individual or one family, but in the case of Thomas Walmsley and his kin, the clerk wrote out one certificate for the entire group of over thirty adults and children. This Settle certificate, as it is known, is unusual, and was given because the group intended to travel together and because they were tightly connected by marriage. Two of Elizabeth’s cousins, Dorothy and Mary Rudd, had married the Hayhurst brothers, William and Cuthbert. The Hayhursts had a sister Alice, married to Thomas Wigglesworth. Nicholas Waln was a nephew of the Hayhursts. Thomas Stackhouse was married to Margery Hayhurst and Bridget Croasdale married John Cowgill.

This clan of Lancashire Friends may have chartered their own boat, the Lamb of Liverpool. The Lamb loaded goods from Liverpool. It was a long trek of sixty miles southwest, through the valley of the Ribble to Liverpool’s fine harbor on the Mersey. They took their household goods—bedding, clothes, kitchen ware, tools—and some of them took goods to sell, which had to be declared to the customs men. Thomas Wigglesworth brought gunpowder, lead and brass. James Dilworth, not on the Settle certificate but sailing on the Lamb with them, brought 150 pounds of woolen cloth, hats, shoes and cheese. Thomas Clayton brought boxes and crates of linen, hats, rugs (coverings) for beds, tobacco pipes, calico and neck cloths. Cuthbert Hayhurst brought the most. He declared cargo of 35 dozen woolen stockings, five dozen hats, 35 pots, 462 cheeses, 40 grindle stones and five millstones. He must have either conveyed this on ox carts to Liverpool or bought the goods there.3 Thomas Walmsley did not declare any goods, but it is said that he intended to set up a mill, possibly using some of Cuthbert’s stones.

In any case Thomas did not live long enough to build his mill. The Lamb was infected with disease, probably smallpox or dysentery, and had a difficult journey. Disease spread easily in close quarters on a ship. Most of the adults and children survived, but the Walmsley family was hard-hit, losing daughters Margaret and Rosamund and probably also Mary. Some of those who did survive the voyage were ill when they arrived. This was probably the case with Thomas, since he died of dysentery within two months after they arrived.

When the Lamb landed in Philadelphia in October 1682, the immigrants would have urgent priorities: to unload their goods, to find temporary housing, and to have their land surveyed. Some of them bought their land before emigrating, but it still needed to be laid out. Most of the Settle group chose to stay together in Bucks County. Thomas Holme’s map shows many of them on “Neshameneh Creek” between 1685 and 1687. On the east side of the creek were “Widdow Crosdal”, Robert Heaton (also on the Lamb), Thomas Stackhouse, Thomas Stackhouse Senior, James Delworth, “Widdow Hurst”, and Nicholas Walne. “Widdow Walmsly” was on the west side of the creek, with more land of Nicholas Waln. Other settlers lived around them: Robert Holdgate, Alexander Giles, “Widdow Bond”, and Richard Thatcher.

Four of the Settle certificate women lost their husbands within months of their arrival. Thomas Walmsley died of dysentery, leaving Elizabeth with the surviving children.4 Thomas Wigglesworth wrote his will in the first month and died that winter, leaving his widow Alice but no children. The Hayhurst brothers (the name was pronounced as one syllable) chose a bad place to settle along the creek and died soon after, leaving Cuthbert’s widow Mary and her six children. As Penn wrote in 1684, “Poor Cut Hurst and Brother deceast soon after arrivall, fixing on a low marshy place (tho a dry banck was not a Stone’s cast from ym) for ye rivers sake: they had ye Ague and feaver but no Sickening in any other settlements.”5 Thomas Croasdale died the following May. Margery Stackhouse, wife of Thomas, died in 1683, leaving them childless. Nicholas Waln, who was literate, well-off, and of mature age, became the unofficial leader of the Settle group. He took in an apprentice, witnessed wills, and acted as trustee for property.

After Thomas Walmsley died in 10th month 1682, Elizabeth was responsible for the family and the estate. Her 250 acres on the Neshaminy were patented to her in 5th month (July) 1683. She managed the farm, probably with paid help. In early 1684 Middletown Monthly Meeting ordered David Davis to pay 8 shillings to the widow Womesley for damage done to her sow.6  (The meeting had received several complaints about Davis’ dog and Henry Paxson and James Dilworth were assigned to speak to him about it.) At about the same time Alexander Giles complained to the meeting that Elizabeth owed him two bushels of meal.

Finally in 10th month 1684 Elizabeth probated Thomas’ estate, two years after his death, mostly to ensure the property rights of her children as she prepared to marry again. Letters of administration were granted by the registrar Phineas Pemberton to Elizabeth, and to her intended husband John Purslow, both of whom signed by mark, and to Nicholas Waln, who signed his name.7 An inventory of Elizabeth’s property, taken then, included a horse, two heifers, a sow and pigs and some household goods. The total value, not including the land, was £27 10s. This was less than the other Settle people who died early. Thomas Croasdale left property worth over £47; Thomas Wigglesworth’s estate was £99; Cuthbert Hayhurst left £112; Agnes Croasdale in 1685 left £106.8 Elizabeth was able to raise the three surviving children to adulthood with a smaller estate than her neighbors, perhaps because of her marriage to Purslow. Nicholas Waln was keeping some land in trust for the two sons. In 1686 he conveyed the land to them and brought the releases into court, to be held by Ezra Croasdale in trust until the sons were grown.9

John Purslow, who would become the stepfather of the Walmsley children, was an Irish Quaker who had arrived in 1677 on the Phoenix. When he testified in the Bucks County court in 1689 he gave his age at about sixty years, making him born about 1630.10 He acted for the family in March 1690 when he petitioned the Orphan’s Court on behalf of his stepson Henry, who was in the service of Nicholas Waln, “against the will of the relations.”  Normally this kind of dispute was settled quietly in the Monthly Meeting. Henry was about nineteen years old then, so it must have been a very long apprenticeship. By 1693, Henry paid his own taxes in Middletown, showing that he was now over 21, while John Pursley still paid for a Walmsley child, probably Thomas, since he owned land which could be taxed and he was not quite of age.

Children of Thomas Walmsley and Elizabeth Rudd: (all born in England)

Margaret, b. 1666, believed to have died at sea in 1682, since there are no further records for her.

Mary, b. 1669, possibly died at sea, since there are no further records for her.11

Henry, b. 1671, d. 1759, married Mary Searle in 1699 at Abington Meeting. Mary’s father Frances Searle was a butcher who accumulated over 1,000 acres of land by the time he died in 1722 and left a solid legacy to his daughter Mary. Henry and Mary settled in Bensalem, and had a family of two sons and seven daughters. They lived to see all but one of them married, some outside of Quaker meetings. Mary died in 1747, the year after the youngest child was married. Henry lived on to 1759, and was named in Henry Tomlinson’s list of “aged persons” as 88 years old. Children: Mary, Thomas, Francis, Elizabeth, Joan, Rebecca, Sarah, Ann, Grace.

Thomas, b. 1673 or 1674, d. 1754, m. Mary Paxson in 1698 at Middletown Meeting. They moved to Byberry, where Thomas was a farmer and dealer in horses. He was not active in the meeting or in government. By the time he died Thomas owned a large tract in Byberry, 200 acres in Middletown, land in Buckingham, another 60 acres in Byberry, and a farm in Moreland. Mary was subject to seizures. Her great-grandson John Comly remembered a story about her. “Mary had fits, many years before she died, took all her senses away, once fell in the fire, had to mind her carefully as a child.  After a while she would come to…”12 They had nine children who all lived to adulthood and married. Children of Thomas and Mary: Elizabeth, Mary, Thomas, William, Agnes, Abigail, Phebe, Esther, Martha.

Elizabeth, b. 1676, d. 1760, m. William Homer in 1700 at Middletown Meeting. They settled in Byberry and had at least thee children. William died rather young in 1715; Elizabeth lived on to 1760, surviving her husband by over 45 years.13 Children: Rebecca, William, another child mentioned but not named in William’s will. The younger William married twice, both times to women named Mary Walton. His wives were first cousins.14 His sister Rebecca also married a Walton.

Rosamund, b. 1679, believed to have died at sea in 1682, since there are no further records for her.

  1. As the ancestor of a large family, Thomas Walmsley has been documented in many secondary sources, including George McCracken, The Welcome Claimants, 1970; Clarence Roberts, Roberts-Walton Family Sketches, 1940; Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1867; Arthur E. Bye, A Friendly Heritage along the Delaware, 1959; Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Hist. Soc. of Pa.; vol. II, pp. 182-3. Clarence Roberts was particularly careful to include his sources.
  2. Quoted on a post to Old-Chester mailing list on Rootsweb, Aug 2004.
  3. Walter Sheppard, Passengers and ships prior to 1684, 1970.
  4. Middletown Monthly Meeting recorded his death as 11th da 10th month 1682. Since the meeting recorded it, he and Elizabeth must have been members of the meeting, showing that they settled in Bucks County right away, instead of staying in Burlington as some have suggested.
  5. Dunn & Dunn, Papers of William Penn, vol. 2.
  6. Middletown Monthly Meeting minutes, 1st month 1684.
  7. Bucks County Probate Records for Thomas Walmsley, Bucks County Courthouse. This is one of the first estates probated in Bucks County.
  8. Bucks County probate records, Bucks County Courthouse.
  9. He conveyed 150 acres to Henry and 100 to Thomas. (Minutes of the Board of Property)
  10. These ages could sometimes be inaccurate, even up to ten years or so.
  11. Bye suggested that she survived the voyage and married William Carver as his third wife. Without a marriage record there is no way to prove or disprove this suggestion. However the fact that William and Mary Carver had six children, none named Thomas or Elizabeth, is strong circumstantial evidence against the idea.
  12. “Comly’s Notes of Byberry 1680-1852”, microfilm #20436, Family History Center, probably by Isaac and Joseph Comly.
  13. William left a will, Bucks County D.45, proved in March 1715. Elizabeth, widow of “William Homer Sr” died in 1760, according to Isaac Comly’s notes. It is hard to see to whom this could refer except this William and this Elizabeth.
  14. This was against Quaker practice, but he does not seem to have been reprimanded for the second marriage.

Thomas Walmsley and Mary Paxson

Thomas Walmsley was born in Waddington, Lancashire, the son of Thomas Walmsley and Elizabeth Rudd. His parents were Quakers. By 1682, when they made the decision to leave Lancashire for Pennsylvania, Thomas and Elizabeth had six children, including a son Thomas. They immigrated on the Lamb, which was infected with disease. Most of the adults and children survived, but the Walmsley family was hard-hit, losing daughters Margaret and Rosamund and probably also Mary. Some of those who did survive the voyage were ill when they arrived. This was probably the case with Thomas, since he died of dysentery within a month after they arrived.

The younger Thomas grew up in Bensalem with his mother and stepfather John Purslow, brother Henry and younger sister Elizabeth. In 1698 he and Mary Paxson announced their intention to marry.1 This was an advantageous marriage for him. She was the daughter of William Paxson, a member of the Assembly, active in local government, and prominent in the Middletown meeting. Thomas and Mary moved to Byberry, Philadelphia County, about 1703 and settled down to run their farm and raise a family. In addition to farming he was also successful as a dealer in horses. Thomas was not active in the meeting or the government, in contrast to his father-in-law. He did buy several tracts of land, including 400 acres in Buckingham which was so far back in the woods that he traded it for a smaller tract with his nephew William Carver Jr.2 By the time he died Thomas owned a large tract in Byberry, 200 acres in Middletown, land in Buckingham, another 60 acres in Byberry, and a farm in Moreland.3

Mary was subject to seizures. Her great-grandson John Comly remembered a story about her. “Mary had fits, many years before she died, took all her senses away, once fell in the fire, had to mind her carefully as a child.  After a while she would come to…”4 Thomas and Mary went on to have nine children who lived to marry. There were gaps between the births of their children, and they may have lost at least two more. They raised the children in a one-story wood house with three rooms, built at different times, probably added to as the family grew.5

Thomas was “a quiet, peaceable man, attending to his private business; and doing but little in the affairs of either Church or State.” He was considered wealthy, and his property consisted principally of lands and horses. He was also generous. “He had good natural abilities, and although successful in accumulating property, was not at all parsimonious. As a proof of this, having a number of daughters, most of whom were married in meeting, he made provision to entertain large numbers of wedding guests, sometimes amounting to more than a hundred; and on one occasion after meeting broke up, he invited the whole congregation to dine with him.”6

Thomas Jr, eldest son of Thomas and Mary, was killed as a newlywed when he was thrown off his horse. This left seven daughters and only one son to carry on the family name (along with some first cousins). The surviving son, William, was favored in Thomas’ will, written in early 1750, when Thomas was in his late 70’s. He died four years later, in 10th month 1754. Mary died the following year.7

Thomas used his will to provide for Mary as a widow and to divide his estate among his surviving children.8 She was to have the full use and benefit of the plantation while she remained a widow, not just the use of a room or two as was often the case. In addition she was to have three horses, three cows, ten sheep and six swine, a generous bequest. After her death the plantation was to go to the son William, along with the tract in Middletown. William also received the bonds and book debts, worth over £1278, out of which he had to pay legacies of £600, to be shared among five of his sisters. (Mary and Abigail got land instead of cash.) The two youngest daughters, Esther and Martha, were unmarried at the time. They were to share a tract of land in Buckingham and the household goods not kept by his wife Mary. They also received a larger cash payment than the married daughters, who had presumably received an “outset” or dowry at the time of their marriage.

William also received the residue of the estate, and acted as executor. As Thomas put it, “Now considering my son William he having remained long in my service and proving a duty full son and considering the cumber and trouble of executing this will with divers other good considerations ingages me to conclude in manner following lastly I give and devise to my son William Walmsley and to his heirs and assigns forever all the residue and remainder of my whole estate.”9

Three of the sons-in-law were given five shillings each, a relatively token amount given the size of Thomas’ estate. It is perhaps no surprise that one of them, Isaac Carver, issued a caveat against the will. A few days afterward, Mary wrote a note to the registrar supporting the will. “I am sensible of what the contents of my late deceased husbands last will and testament is with respect to my dowry and I am therewith fully sattisfied and contented and do desire that the sd will may stand and not be frustrated nor broken by no means not withstanding any opposition made and if it was not for infirmity of body I would be glad parsonally to appear before thee to testifie my desire that my late husband Thomas Walmsleys last will may not be broken. I subscribe my self thy friend.” Five of her daughters also wrote in support, referring to Isaac as a “troublesome person.” They said, “…informed by our brother William Walmsley of .. the contents of sd will… we nothing doubting of the truth and verity of his information according to law and that notwithstanding any opposition or interruption … the same may stand in good force and not be frustrated nor broken by no means as we believe it to be our fathers will and testament. From thy friends..” This was signed by Martha Walmsley, Esther Walmsley, Abigail Walton, Elizabeth Walton , and Mary Worthington. Each signed well, showing that they had been taught to write.

It is disconcerting to see that Thomas owned slaves. Slavery was a difficult issue for early Friends, one that divided them. Some, like Benjamin Lay, John Woolman and Anthony Benezet, fought to persuade other Friends that slavery was inconsistent with Quaker beliefs. In spite of their efforts, the institution was too entrenched and too many people benefited from it. By 1754 Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends cautiously warned against slave-holding, but it was not until 1776 that they banned it for members.10

The inventory of Thomas’ possession showed the typical goods of a well-to-do farmer of his day: his clothing and ready money, debts owed to him, household goods, livestock, corn and other grain crops, tools, and a gun, amounting to about £1560. The Negro slaves were valued at £120. Only one of them, a girl named Hannah, was specifically named in his will. The others would have been left to son William as the residual legatee. When Mary died in 1755, her inventory included only her clothing and a small legacy left to her by her father William Paxson “which she had not disposed of in her lifetime”. She must have turned the farm over to her son William.

The children of Thomas and Mary were provided for by their relatives via legacies. Elizabeth and Mary received 20 pounds each from the estate of their great-uncle Henry Paxson, who died childless in 1723 (not their uncle Henry Walmsley, who had about nine children of his own to provide for). The four oldest children got a legacy from their grandfather William Paxson. All of the daughters got a legacy from their father Thomas. Mary and Abigail got land; the others got cash.

Most of them stayed around Byberry and probably saw each other in Byberry meeting. They attended each other’s marriages. For example when Esther married Stephen Parry in 1755, the certificate was signed by her brother William, and sisters Elizabeth, Martha, and Mary.

Children of Thomas and Mary:11

Elizabeth, b. 5th month 1699, d. 1787, m. 1719 at Abington Jeremiah Walton, (1694-1740), son of William and Sarah. They lived on the Byberry Road in Moreland Township.  Years later, the Comly brothers recalled the family of Jeremiah and Elizabeth. “Jeremiah Walton married one of Isaac Comly’s aunts — Father of the chunky Waltons.  Lived at Horsham — his wife Betty Walmsley — children well ah! – William the oldest, Tommy, Jacob, Jeremy, three girls – one married.  Mary married. Sarah married Jeans, afterwards James Tyson, another Phebe remained unmarried.”12 He had a few of the names mixed up. Jeremiah died in 1740 and was buried at Horsham.13 Elizabeth lived on until 1787. Her will named five of her children, as well as several grandchildren. Children of Jeremiah Walton and Elizabeth Walmsley: William, Thomas, Rachel, Jeremiah, Jacob, James, Mary, Sarah, Elizabeth, Phebe. Seven of them lived to marry.

Mary, b. 1701, alive in October 1754, m. about 1720 John Worthington, the emigrant. His parents and origin are not known; he was probably born in England and immigrated as a child or young adult. They settled in Byberry and had eleven children, recording their births at Abington Meeting. In 1734 John was on the list of landowners in Philadelphia County with 25 acres. He made his living as a weaver.14 In 1752 John was elected as an overseer of the poor. The job was “to provide the necessaries of life to all who are unable to procure them, and not let any suffer.”15 John died in 1777. In his will he named his six living children, referred to six pieces of land, and provided for his unmarried daughter Mary, specifying that four of his sons were to build her a suitable house. Children: Elizabeth, Mary, Thomas, Hannah, John, William, Isaac, Joseph, Martha, Benjamin, Esther.

Thomas, b. 1706, d. 1728, m. 1728 at Abington Hannah Walton, daughter of  William and Sarah; as a newlywed he was  thrown off his horse and killed.16 Hannah died about 1741. After Thomas’ death she married Thomas Mardon in 1730 at Christ Church. Hannah’s mother Sarah named two Mardon granddaughters in her will. Children with Thomas: Richard, Rachel, Mary, Jacob, Sarah.17

William, b. 1708 or 1709, d. 1773, m. 1735 Sarah Titus at Westbury Meeting in Long Island, m. 2) 1764 at Byberry Mtg, Susannah Mason Comly, widow of Walter Comly. William became prosperous as the main heir of his parents. In the 1769 tax list of Byberry he was listed with 350 acres, by far the largest holding. He married Sarah Titus, a Friend from Westbury, Long Island, in 1735. In 1759 William noted in his account book that his wagon was used to deliver supplies to the English during the French and Indian War. It was pressed into service and brought back three months later.18 William was active in meeting affairs and often represented Byberry meeting at quarterly meetings. His wife Sarah was an elder of the meeting. She died in 1763 and William later married Susanna Comly, widow of Walter Comly. William died in 1773. Elizabeth Drinker went to his funeral and noted it in her diary for June 18: “We went to Wms house great numbers of carriages and horses there, thought it best to go to meeting before the burial, as it was very hot and dusty.” In his will William named his widow Susanna, and five children. He left three slaves – Bett, Nane, and Sam – to serve until they were 30 years old, then to be freed with a set of clothes. This was at a time when many Quakers no longer held slaves.19

Agnes, b. ab. 1710, d. ab. 1754, m. 1728 at Abington Job Walton, son of William and Sarah. He was the son of William Walton the preacher and his wife Sarah. Job attempted to preach at Byberry Meeting but was not accepted there. As Abington meeting noted in 11th month 1754 “Complaint is made by Byberry friends against Job Walton who was guilty of drinking strong liquor to excess frequently and of an unbecoming ridiculous behavior in his drunkenness as taking upon himself to preach.” John Michener and James Paul were asked to visit him and “lay the evil and inconsistency of his behavior and ridiculous conduct before him.” Agnes and Job lived in Byberry and had eight children. “He had a strong constitution and performed a great deal of hard work, yet did not get rich.”20 Agnes died in 1755. In 1757 Job married Catherine McVaugh at Swedes Church in Phila. She was probably the widow Catryna Van Pelt who married the widower John McVaugh in 1754 at the Dutch Church.21 Job died in 1784, leaving his widow Catherine and seven grown children. Children of Agnes and Job: Isaac, Sarah, Job, Isaiah, Thomas, Mary, William, Elijah.

Abigail, b. 1715, d. 1789, m. 1) 1738 at Abington MM Isaac Comly, 2) 1753 Richard Walton,  son of Joseph and Esther, at Trinity Oxford Church in Philadelphia.

Phebe, b. 1723, m. 1742 at Abington Meeting Isaac Carver, son of John and Isabel. Phebe married Isaac Carver in 1742. The son of John and Isabel, he was a local character. He taught school in Byberry. Known as “Poet Carver”, he was shrewd and sarcastic in his verses about local events.22 In 1754, when Thomas Walmsley died, Isaac filed a caveat against the will. The other heirs supported the will and called him a “troublesome person”. He died in early 1787.

Esther, m. 1755 at Abington Meeting Stephen Parry, son of Thomas and Jane. Married Stephen Parry in 1755. Born in 1723, he was from a Welsh family of Radnor Township, where his father Thomas owned a grist mill near Willow Grove. Stephen died in 1763 in Moreland and left a will naming his children Martha and Jane.23

Martha, m. 1761 at Abington Meeting David Parry, son of Thomas and Jane, brother of Stephen Parry. They lived in Moreland, where Stephen left a will in 1794.24 He probably married a second wife after Martha’s death, also named Martha.25

  1. Middletown Monthly Meeting Minutes, 3rd month 1698
  2. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, p. 354. The land in Buckingham went to William Carver, Jr. who was married to Elizabeth Walmsley, daughter of Henry and Mary Searle, and Thomas Walmsley’s niece.
  3. Martindale, p. 338.
  4. “Comly’s notes on Byberry 1680-1852”, microfilm #20436, Family History Center, probably by Joseph and Isaac Comly.
  5. Martindale, p. 355. Much of Martindale’s information came from Joseph and Isaac Comly, brothers who were keenly interested in local history.
  6. Martindale, revised edition, 1705, p. 355.
  7. Henry Tomlinson’s journal of deaths, at the Pennsylvania Historical Society, and included in the records of Byberry Preparative Meeting (although Tomlinson included many non-Friends). Also in Martindale, 2nd ed. 1705, p. 189.
  8. Philadelphia County wills, 1754, #137, Book K, p. 212.
  9. Thomas’ will was probated in Philadelphia County, 1754, 137, file K212. Mary’s estate was also probated there, 1755, 81, file G16. It included the administration letter and an inventory. There was no mention of Hannah Walton Walmsley, the widow of son Thomas. She married Thomas Mardon two years after Thomas’ accident.
  10. Gary J. Kornblith, Slavery and Sectional Strife in the Early American Republic, 1776-1821.
  11. Records of Middletown, Abington and Byberry Meetings; Martindale. The births of the first four children were listed in the records of Middletown Meeting.
  12. “Comly’s notes on Byberry 1680-1852”, microfilm #20436, Family History Center, probably by Joseph and Isaac Comly.
  13. Bean, History of Montgomery County.
  14. Martindale.
  15. Martindale, p. 141.
  16. Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the history of Byberry”, Memoirs of the HSP, vol. II, 1827.
  17. From Ancestry trees.
  18. Martindale, p. 194.
  19. Philadelphia County wills, Book P, p. 299.
  20. Martindale.
  21. Her maiden name may have been Hoagland.
  22. Martindale.
  23. Philadelphia County wills, Book N, p. 6. The website of Mark D. Webster, “WebsterGriggsFamilies”, accessed March 2019, has documentation on the Parry family.
  24. Montgomery County wills, Book 1, p. 435.
  25. Website of Mark D. Webster.

William Paxson and his two wives

William Paxson was baptized in St. Mary’s Church in Marsh Gibbon, Buckinghamshire, in 1648, one of the four sons of James Paxson and Jane Clerk. William and his three brothers became Quakers and appeared in the minutes of the meeting at the Upperside of Bucks.1 Three of the brothers, Henry, William and James, married while still in England, and immigrated in 1682 with their younger brother Thomas. They came on separate ships. William and James came on the Amity, while Henry and Thomas came on the Samuel. Disease broke out on the Samuel, and Henry’s wife and brother Thomas died at sea. William, James and Henry arrived safely and settled in Middletown.

William’s land in Middletown is shown on Holmes’ 1687 map of Pennsylvania near the land of Robert Heaton, Thomas Stackhouse, James Dilworth, and Nicholas Waln.2 In 1693 James, William and Henry Paxson were all taxed in Middletown. James had the most land of the three. William eventually owned about 900 acres of land and sold only one piece, to his son-in-law Thomas Walmsley.3

William apparently married twice, both times to women named Mary. There are no records of either marriage, but circumstantial evidence for their names. In England he married Mary Sydenham and had two or three children with her.4 The evidence for her name is the family Bible of William Sydenham, which included the births of Sydenham’s children as well as the children of William and Mary Paxson, not William Paxson the immigrant but his son William and wife Mary Watson. The only logical reason for them to be there is that the wife of the older William was William Sydenham’s sister.5

William and Mary immigrated together with their two children and settled in Middletown. Mary died before September 1698 when he married Mary White, the widow of Judge John White.6 Again there is no record, so the date is unknown and her maiden name is uncertain. It is often said to be Packingham, but there is no good evidence for this.7 William and his second wife had no children together, but she had three children by John White, named in his will of 1693 as James, Mary and Grace.
William was active in local government and in the Pennsylvania Assembly. “William was elected a representative from Bucks County to the Pennsylvania General Assembly in 1692, 1696, 1700, 1701, 1703, and from 1705 through 1708.  He served as a highway overseer in 1693 and was suggested as a County tax collector in 1696.  He served on eight grand and twelve petit juries before 1700, and was asked by the court to appraise distrained goods which had been overpriced and would not sell. He was listed as one of the justices sitting at the Quarter Session held 13 December 1704 …  He also witnessed wills and served as an executor at least once.”8

He was also active in Middletown Friends Meeting. “His name appeared often in the minutes as he was appointed to various committees to clear a man for marriage (five times), deal with a Friend who acted out of unity with  Friends’ principles (twelve times), and other jobs. In 1690 he was one of several asked to set out and fence the burial ground, and to oversee the building of a stable for the meeting house. He had subscribed £10 to help build the meeting house and 10s for the stable. He signed with his mark the 1687 Meeting testimony against selling rum to the Indians. He attended and signed the certificates of at least eight weddings in the Meeting, including that of his brother Henry.”9 A letter written by a Friend in 1688 stated that “William Paxson is a man mild in manner but as strong in the cause of Truth as the great oaks by which he is surrounded.”10

In 1692, when the teachings of George Keith split the Quaker community into two factions, William followed Keith and withdrew from Middletown Friends for a time. Keith was a charismatic preacher who taught that Quakers needed more than just the inner light; they needed specific beliefs in scripture. On 6 August 1692 the Middletown minutes showed that William Paxson had separated. He did not reappear in their minutes under September 1696, when he wrote a paper acknowledging his fault and condemning it. This was accepted and he was once more active in committees, as a trustee, overseer, and representative to the Quarterly and Yearly meetings.11

William wrote his will in August 1709; it was proved the following January.12 He was buried in the burying ground of Middletown Meeting on 2 January 1710. In the will he left the usual one-third of his estate to his wife Mary, plus a bond for £120 for her heirs. He left a smaller sum to his daughter Mary and her husband Thomas, plus a legacy for their four oldest children. (Their other five children were born after their grandfather’s death.) He left the land to his son William, three tracts for a total of 900 acres, and made William the executor. There was no mention of Mary’s children with John White; they would be provided for by the £120 bond. The inventory was extensive. He owned six horses, four oxen, fourteen cattle, the usual household furnishings, a wolf trap, tools, bushels of wheat and rye, the time of a servant woman and a Negro boy. The value was over £391.13

Mary died in 1718. In her will she provided for her daughters Mary and Grace and several grandchildren.14

Children of William and his first wife Mary:

Elizabeth, bapt. Feb. 1676/7 in Marsh Gibbon, England, died in infancy.

Mary, bapt. Mar 1678/9 in England, d. 1755, m. 4 April 1698 Thomas Walmsley, the son of Thomas Walmsley and Elizabeth Rudd. The older Thomas died two months after landing in Pennsylvania, and Thomas and his brother and sister were raised by their mother and her second husband John Purslow. Thomas married Mary in 1698 and they moved to Byberry, where Thomas was a farmer and dealer in horses. He was not active in the meeting or in government. By the time he died Thomas owned a large tract in Byberry, 200 acres in Middletown, land in Buckingham, another 60 acres in Byberry, and a farm in Moreland. Mary was subject to seizures. Her descendants remembered a story about her. “Mary had fits, many years before she died, took all her senses away, once fell in the fire, had to mind her carefully as a child.  After a while she would come to…”15 They had nine children who all lived to adulthood and married. Children of Thomas and Mary: Elizabeth, Mary, Thomas, William, Agnes, Abigail, Phebe, Esther, Martha.

William, b. June 1685 in Middletown, d. 1733, m. Mary Watson in May 1711 at Falls Meeting, daughter of Thomas and Rebecca.16 She d. 1760. William served in the Provincial Assembly for many years, where he was “remarkably inactive”.17 He was a Justice of the Peace, and was active in Middletown Monthly Meeting. Mary was even more active in the Meeting, serving as the clerk of the women’s meeting for almost 25 years.18 William’s will named his wife, sons and daughters. His estate included a Negro man, who was probably the Negro boy bequeathed to him by his father years earlier. “William’s personal estate (excluding real property but including crops “in the ground”) was worth £542.03.0. It included possessions his parents had not owned such as two looking glasses, two brass kettles and six brass pans, two maps, and table linens.”19 Children of William and Mary: William, Mary, Thomas, John, Henry, James, Deborah. All but John lived to marry and have children.

  1. Martha Grundy’s thorough and well-documented website on the Paxson family, online as of March 2019 at https://sites.rootsweb.com/~paxson/PaxsonCol.html. It is the most careful source for information on the family.
  2. These men had all sailed together with their families on one certificate from the monthly meeting at Settle.
  3. Grundy website.
  4. Only two children were known to be in Pennsylvania: Mary and William.
  5. Jeff Moore, compiler of the website at “American Ancestors of Edgar Scudder Cook and his wife Josephine Bailey”, was skeptical of the evidence, pointing out correctly that there is nothing in the Bible to directly connect Paxsons and Sydenhams. I would add: except for their presence in the Bible itself. The Bible was donated to the Spruance Library.
  6. There is no question about her identity as the widow of John White, only about her maiden name.
  7. Grundy says, “It may have been Packingham as appears in other old family records.” Jane Brey, A Quaker Saga, 1967, included her as Mary Packingham, but gives no source. Jeff Moore summarized the evidence on his webpage at: http://jeffsgenealogy.info/CookLine/g2/p2086.htm (accessed March 2019).
  8. Grundy website.
  9. Grundy website.
  10. Various web sites. The original has not been traced.
  11. Grundy website.
  12. At that early time the wills for the Bucks County were recorded in Philadelphia County.
  13. Philadelphia County wills, City Hall, 1709 #153.
  14. Bucks County wills, book 1, p. 44.
  15. Isaac Comly’s notes on Byberry, microfilm #20436, Family History Center.
  16. Jane Brey, A Quaker Saga, 1967.
  17. Horle and Wokeck, Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, vol. 1.
  18. Grundy website.
  19. Bucks County wills, quoted in Grundy.

William Hibbs and Hannah Howell

William Hibbs the Quaker was supposedly born in Gloucestershire, England, around 1665. Many sources claim that he was the son of William and Joan, from Dean Forest, but there is no evidence for this, and the name is a common one.1 William emigrated on the Kent in 1677 as a young man. It is sometimes said that he was a cabin boy on the Kent. He more likely came over as a servant, like so many others who lacked money to pay their passage. The Kent carried colonists to Burlington, West New Jersey; it loaded in London and sailed in May 1677. This was a well-known voyage, as it was one of the earliest to bring Quakers to the New World. As the story goes, “King Charles the second, in his barge, pleasuring on the Thames, came along side, seeing a great many passengers, and informed whence they were bound, asked if they were all quakers, and gave them his blessing.” 2 They landed first in New York, then sailed up the Delaware to West Jersey, where most of the passengers got off. They stayed at first with the Swedes, who had thin settlements on both sides of the Delaware, then began to build their own houses.

The first definite record of William in Pennsylvania is his marriage to Hannah Howell. In 10th month 1686 they accomplished their marriage at the house of John Hart in Byberry. Those present who signed their wedding certificate included Hannah’s father Thomas and brother Job, neighbors like John and William Carver, members of Byberry meeting like William Walton and John Rush.3

In 1692, when many Quakers split off from the main group to follow George Keith, Hibbs remained with the traditional meeting. He signed a paper that was sent to Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, denouncing the “spirit of separation” of Keith and his followers.4 Even so William’s relations with Byberry Meeting could be strained. In 1698 William was reprimanded by the meeting for his “disorderly behaviour in keeping on his hat when William Walton was at prayer in their meeting.” This showed great disrespect for Walton’s ministry. At the next meeting Hibbs promised to do so no more.5 The early Friends were stern with those who did not follow their code of behavior. As one historian put it, “It is fair to say that this part of Pennsylvania, from Germantown…to Byberry…to the headwaters of the Pennypack and the Little Neshaminy above Horsham, was guided and policed for 25 years by the weighty Friends of Abington Monthly Meeting.”6

William also got into trouble for his actions outside of the meeting. In 1708 Abington Meeting reported on a problem between him and Thomas Harding. “A complaint was made today against William Hibbs for detaining £3 being part of pay for a horse bought of Thomas Harding, by William Hibbs, ye matter being heard and considered, The result of this meeting is that William Hibbs do within a month pay the said Thomas Harding in Silver Money, and likewise Condemn his abusive language to Thomas Harding.”7

In 1701 William contested the boundary between his land and that of the brothers William and John Carver. When John tried to get a patent for his land in Byberry, Hibbs filed a caveat with the Secretary of the land office. At the hearing of the case, he claimed that the Carvers had taken away a corner post and thereby altered the boundaries. The Surveyor General pointed out that he himself had done the survey “to the utmost of his Power”, so that a resurvey would be futile. In the end the patent was granted to Carver.8

William died in 1709. His will, made in 1708, named his wife Hannah and eight children, Joseph, Jonathan, Jacob, William, Jeremiah, Sarah, Phebe and Hannah.9 He left a Negro man to his wife, and after her death to his sons Joseph and Jonathan, if the man was still alive then. Hannah and Joseph were to share the plantation. Each of the other children was to receive £20 when he or she turned 24 years of age. Hannah was specifically allowed to raise the children at her discretion. “I leave the whole charge of bringing up my children to my dear wife she doing this according to her own discretion.” But friends Daniel and William Walton were chosen as overseers to assist Hannah in managing her affairs. William apparently trusted Hannah with the family affairs, but not the financial ones.

Even after William’s death Hannah continued a feud he had begun with his Carver neighbors eight years before over the precise location of the property boundary. Abington Meeting minutes reported that “Whereas there hath been a former difference between John Carver and Widdow Hibbs, about a former line between them; The meeting being willing to put an end to ye sd difference: have appointed Six friends, with two Surveyors to view ye land and ye lines and to endeavor to put an end to ye differ.”10

In 1712 Hannah married Henry English at Byberry Meeting. He was a widower, a Quaker, and a resident of Byberry. They had no children together. Before they were married, Henry gave her 124 acres “in consideration of the love and good will and affection which he had and did bear towards his loving friend Hannah Hibbs.”11

Hannah died in 1737. In her will, made as Hannah English, she named her children Sarah, Phebe, Jeremiah, Joseph and William, as well as two namesake granddaughters. She gave her sidesaddle to her granddaughter Hannah Cooper and her “pilers” (pillows) to her granddaughter Hannah Hibbs. She left her clothing to daughters Sarah and Phebe (the brown gown and petticoat and riding hood and bonnet), her bed and bolster and bedding to Phebe, and residue of property to sons Joseph and William and son-in-law Jonathan Cooper. She specified that her Negro servant Trail should be set free, to have his own mare and scythe and ox, and enough wool to make him a coat and waistcoat and britches.12

The children of William and Hannah generally stayed in Bucks County, married, and left descendants. Some of them are sparsely documented, and some of the numerous people named Hibbs in Bucks County in the 1700s cannot be placed in the family.

Children of William and Hannah:

Joseph, b. 1687, d. 1762, m. 1) 1711 Rachel –, 2) 1749 Catherine Love, widow of Andrew Love. The name of Joseph’s first wife is often given as Rachel Waring, with no evidence. The children of Joseph and Rachel are not definitely known, since their birth was not recorded in Quaker records. Rachel died before 1749, when Joseph married Catherine Love at Buckingham Meeting. Soon after, he acknowledged “misconduct” with her before the marriage. He died in early 1762. He did not leave a will, and letters of administration were granted to Catherine, along with Isaac Kirk and James Spicer.13

Jonathan, b. 1689, m. Elizabeth –. The name of his wife is given as Elizabeth in a record of Abington Monthly Meeting; her last name is not given.14 The names of their children are also not known.15 In 4th month 1716 Abington Meeting issued a paper of condemnation against Jonathan Hibbs and his wife.16 In 6th month 1717 Jonathan wrote another paper condemning his outgoing with his wife.17 The paper was accepted. This may have been in an attempt at rejoining the meeting. Was he the Jonathan Hibbs buried in Philadelphia in June 1722 as a non-Friend?18

Sarah, b. 1692, m. 1714 Jonathan Cooper. Jonathan was not from the Cooper family of Philadelphia. He immigrated in 1699 with his parents from Yorkshire and settled in Buckingham.19 Wrightstown Meeting recorded the death of Jonathan Cooper the elder in 2nd month 1769 at the age of 98.20 Children: Hannah, William, Sarah and others.

Phebe, b. 1697, m. 1715 Paul Blaker at Abington Meeting. He was the son of Johannes Bleikers, one of the original thirteen settlers of Germantown in 1683. Bleickers was the only one of the original thirteen to move away from Germantown and settle in Bucks County. The names of children of Phebe and Paul, if any, are unknown.

Jacob, b. 1699, m. 1727 Elizabeth Johnson with a license from New Jersey. In 1723 Jacob was living in Byberry, where he took out a mortgage for his land adjoining his brother Joseph.21 Jacob is supposedly buried in the Johnson-Williamson Cemetery in Bensalem. Jacob and Elizabeth do not appear in Quaker records. Children: Jonathan, Jacob and Phebe.22

William, b. 1700, d. 1789, m. 1728 Ann Carter at Middletown Meeting.23 In order to marry Ann at Middletown Meeting, William brought a certificate from Abington Meeting.24 They had twelve children, including Hannah, who married James Cooper, son of William and Mary.25 Hannah and James were the grandparents of James Fenimore Cooper.26

Hannah, b. 1702, died young.

Jeremiah, b. ab. 1707, m. 1735 Hannah Jones, daughter of John and Margaret, at the First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia.27 John Jones was wealthy.28 Jeremiah did not manage his money well, according to a petition by his sister Sarah and her husband Jonathan Cooper to the Bucks County Orphans Court.29 Jeremiah and Hannah had a daughter Hannah, named in the petition. He did not leave a will in Bucks County.

  1. Many web trees and message boards repeat this information. Martha Grundy has a thoughtful discussion on her website, online as of March 2019 at https://sites.rootsweb.com/~paxson/balderston/Hibbs.html.
  2. Samuel Smith, History of Colony of Nova-Caesaria or New-Jersey, excerpts on the web.
  3. Abington Monthly Meeting, Marriages 1685-1721, online on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Montgomery County, image 13. All the Quaker records in this account can be found on Ancestry.
  4. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, Minutes 1679-1703, image 170. It was probably sent from the Quarterly Meeting. Others who signed the paper included Thomas Groom, Thomas Howell, William and Daniel Walton, Giles Knight and Henry English.
  5. Minutes of Philadelphia MM, cited in Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the HSP, vol. II, 1827.
  6. Arthur Jenkins, “The significance of the history of Abington Meeting”, Old York Road Historical Society Bulletin, vol. 1, 1937, p. 30.
  7. Abington MM Minutes, 7th month 1703.
  8. Minutes of the Board of Property, series 2, Minutes Book G, 10th month 1701, formerly available on Google Books, now (2019) available on Archive.org.
  9. Philadelphia County wills, book C, p. 198.
  10. Abington Meeting minutes, 3rd month 1709. There is no word about how the matter was settled.
  11. Comly’s Sketches of the History of Byberry, p. 181.
  12. Philadelphia County wills, book F, p. 31.
  13. Bucks County Probate records, file #1117. Why were none of his children named as administrators?
  14. Various names have been suggested, with no evidence.
  15. Some web trees give the names of the children as Elizabeth, William, Jonathan, and Eli.
  16. Abington Monthly Meeting, minutes 1682-1746, image 47.
  17. Abington Monthly Meeting, minutes 1682-1746, image 50.
  18. William Hudson kept a list of burials of non-Friends, included in the Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, Births Deaths Burials 1688-1826, on Ancestry, image 289.
  19. Jonathan was named in the 1709 will of his father William.
  20. Wrightstown Monthly Meeting, Births and Deaths, image 22. He did not leave a will in Bucks County, although he had plenty of time to make one.
  21. Abstracts of General Loan Office Mortgages, PA Genealogical Magazine, vol. 6, p. 270.
  22. Margaret Johnson of Bristol died in 1751. In her will she named Jonathan, Jacob and Phebe Hibbs, children of her daughter Elizabeth.
  23. In contrast with some of his siblings, William’s marriage, death and children are well documented. His death and age at death were recorded in the records of Henry Tomlinson (in Byberry Monthly Meeting, Deaths 1736-1823).
  24. Middletown Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1698-1824, on Ancestry, image 86.
  25. Three other children—Sarah, James, and Mahlon—married into the Blaker family.
  26. The Cooper Genealogy, at jfcoopersociety.org (accessed February 2019)
  27. They were married on Christmas.
  28. Philadelphia County Deeds, book G5, p. 14.
  29. Orphans Court Record #152, Vol. A1, p. 169, online on Family Search, Bucks County Orphans Court records 1683-1776, image 105.