All posts by takinglonger

James and Hester Cooper of Philadelphia

In September 1682 Edward Byllynge, one of the proprietors of West Jersey, sold 50 acres to James Cooper of Stratford upon Avon, Warwick, shoemaker, to be surveyed later.1 There are no records of when Cooper arrived, but he probably came in 1683, when many ships sailed from England full of Quakers bound for Pennsylvania and New Jersey.2 Cooper probably did not live on his West Jersey land, since by October 1683 he was in Philadelphia, getting a warrant from William Penn for a city lot to be laid out.

James married a woman named Hester; her last name is unknown. They were married either in England or Pennsylvania, but there is no record of the marriage.3 Since the records of Philadelphia Meeting are intact since its establishment, it is more likely that they married in England and immigrated together. James and Hester were both active as Quakers, but only after leaving and returning. Around 1692, James and Hester broke with the Philadelphia Monthly Meeting and followed George Keith, the charismatic founder of a separatist movement.4 Keith taught that reliance on the Inner Light as a source of truth was insufficient and urged Quakers to conform more closely to Scripture. The resulting schism led many to follow him out of their meetings, although some, like the Coopers, later rejoined.5 In 1695 James and Hester wrote a letter of acknowledgment to Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, where they had already returned.

“9th day 11th month 1695. Dear and faithful friends, brethren and sisters with whom formerly we have had dear fellowship in the spirit of Jesus (as also of late)… we are made sencible of that Spirit of Iniquity that doth Labour against the Operating Power of the Spirit of Truth and which hath captivated the soules of many and led in the way of untruth to witt prejudice enmity and seperation by George Keiths division and strive about things to no profit. Wherein as farr as we have bin concerned we do condemn disown and judge… we do desire we may be for the future kept in unity with you. Your poor afflicted Brother and Sister, James and Hester Cooper.”6

The experience of the separation seemed to deepen Hester’s religious feelings. She became a minister, one of a select group of men and women who were accepted speakers in the meetings. In 7th month 1701 Hester was one of three women who joined with fifteen men to form a group of approved ministers, in response to concerns from the Yearly Meeting about people who spoke inappropriately in meetings for worship. “Inasmuch as some painful instances had appeared both amongst Men and Women, in their using unseemly noises, tones and gestures, drawing their words out to a great length, and drowning the matter, also in the use of many needless repetitions in Doctrine, prayer, etc. For prevention thereof, and that the respective Meetings may be supplied with able Ministers, especially Philadelphia, it was agreed that there be a Meeting of Ministring Friends…”7 This group was supposed to serve the meeting in Philadelphia and others within a “moderate distance from the City, as to be conveniently visited from thence in a morning.”8 They were asked to correspond to “know each others minds as to avoid too many being at some Meetings while others are left without any.” The men who signed included such eminent ministers as William Penn, Thomas Story and Griffith Owen. Hester was in elite Quaker company.9

The Ministers met weekly, kept their own minutes, and signed up to attend the nearby meetings for worship.10 At the following meeting they would often report back how they found the meeting they had attended, “well”, “easy”, “not very open”, “a good meeting”.  When Griffith Owen reported in 2nd month 1702 that the meeting at Frankford had a “dark drowsie earthly spirrit”, the others presumably knew exactly what he meant. There was noticeably less travel in the winter months. Hester was not active in 1702, but from 1703 into 1706 she travelled to nine different meetings, usually with a companion. For example, in 9th month 1704 she went to Radnor by herself, in 12th month 1704 with Martha Chalkley to Abington, in 2nd month 1705 with Anthony Morris to Bank Street meeting, the week after with Morris to Frankford, and in 4th month 1705 with Henry Willis to the Phila High Street meetings, one in the forenoon and one in the afternoon.11 Besides Martha Chalkley she went to meetings with Mary Lawson and Elizabeth Durborrow. The women ministers did not go as frequently as the men, but they appeared in a variety of meetings.12 In 5th month 1706 Hester went to Byberry with Hugh Durborrow and the Bank Street meeting with Ralph Jackson. This is her last appearance in the quarterly meetings of ministers.13

In 1701, the Philadelphia Meeting approved Hester’s request to attend the Yearly Meeting in Maryland, along with Elizabeth Key.14 Hester was included in John Smith’s 1785 list of “Persons eminent for piety and virtue among the people called Quakers”. As Smith put it,  “Elizabeth Morris informs me that she was reputed an innocent and acceptable minister and died at Philadelphia.”15 From 1702 into early 1706 she was active in the Women’s Meeting of Philadelphia, presenting young couples to the Men’s Meeting after they had been approved for marriage and inquiring about the clearness of young women who wished to marry (freedom from marital promises to others).16

In 3rd month 1707, after she died, James Cooper came to the Women’s Meeting and presented a gift from Hester, “£2.10 as a legacy from his dear wife, which Friends accepts of as the last Token of her love.“17 Hester died in 10th month (December) 1706. Her death was noted in the minutes of the Yearly Meeting, where she was “raised in testimony”, an exceptional tribute from her fellow Friends.18

James was not a minister like Hester but he was active in the usual Quaker committees. In 6th month 1701 he was one of four Friends appointed to “look after the children that are disorderly or kept out of the meetings on First Days”.19 In 3rd month 1703 he was appointed to attend the Quarterly Meeting, and in 7th month to make inquiry about James Streator’s fitness for marriage.20 He was again asked to “take care that boys and young people be not disorderly about the meeting house on first days”, and was to discuss with workmen a new fence for the burying ground.21 In 1706 he and Hugh Durborough were appointed to take care of a matter about the widow Russell, reportedly in want because David Powell was detaining money from her.22

Some of James’ Quaker activities were not with his home meeting in Philadelphia but were instead with Byberry Meeting. Byberry was seventeen miles northeast of Philadelphia and would have been a long ride, although it was considered at a “moderate” distance for travel (as per the agreement of the Ministers in 1701). James’ first connection with Byberry Friends was in 6th month 1694, when he witnessed Henry English’s donation of land for a burying place for Quakers. Previously Byberry Friends had been buried on land of John Hart, but after Hart left to follow George Keith, the Friends remaining in unity needed their own land.23 Why was James active in a meeting so far from his home in Philadelphia? Had he already repented of his Keithian affiliation, but still felt estranged from the meeting in Philadelphia?24

James and Hester bought the rights to 50 acres in West Jersey in 1682, and sold the rights three years later to William Dillwyn, a saddler of Philadelphia.25 In October 1683 James Cooper went to Penn’s land office in Philadelphia to get a warrant for a lot in the city. Originally these lots were given by Penn as a bonus for people who bought land in the countryside, but by 1683 Penn saw the profit to be made in selling city lots. His warrant directed Thomas Holme to survey a lot, “thirty foot in breadth and in length as the rest of the lotts there.”26 The lot was surveyed, a return was filed with the land office, and Cooper got a patent for the lot in December 1684. This lot was on Chestnut Street, between fourth and fifth streets. It was soon rented to Robert Row and finally sold to him in 1695.27

In 1686 Cooper bought a part of a lot from Joseph Phipps where he and Hester would live for the rest of their lives and raise their family, and which served as the basis for the family’s solid economic status. This lot, with the addition of the other half from Phipps a year later, was divided into lots and rented out, providing the family with a yearly income of over £20 from the ground rents. The first piece was along Mulberry Street (present-day Arch Street), extending westward from the corner of 2nd Street. After buying the second lot from Phipps, Cooper owned most of the block of Mulberry between 2nd and 3rd  Streets, extending over 300 feet along Mulberry. Starting in 1719, he rented out portions of the Mulberry Street land to others, including John Head, Grace Parsons, James Estaugh, and Henry Jones.28 After James’ death this land was partitioned out to the heirs.

James was a cordwainer, a shoemaker. Later he called himself a merchant. It is commonly said that he had a store on the corner of Mulberry and 2nd Street.29 He would certainly have sold shoes, and possibly other merchandise that people could not make themselves. Merchants of the time sold goods like paper, ink, nails, and cotton cloth.30 In 1693, Cooper just missed being in the top quartile of wealth in the city, with a valuation of £100 for his estate. (Samuel Carpenter led the list with £1300.)31 In 1710, with other merchants and tradesmen, James signed a petition to the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, asking for power for the Mayor and Aldermen to make ordinances, to build a watch house, erect a work house for the poor, and to repair wharves and bridges.32 In 1714 James Cooper requested a certificate from Philadelphia Meeting, since he “intends for New England upon his lawful occasions”.33 If this was James the merchant, he was probably going on a buying trip.

In 1706 Hester died, leaving James with eight children, most still living at home, and several still very young. As a well-off merchant he probably had a housekeeper to manage the household servants and supervise the children.34 He did not remarry for fourteen years, so the younger children were effectively raised without a mother. Perhaps that helps to explain why only two of the eight married in a Quaker meeting.

By 1711 the sons were growing close to maturity, and James bought his first land outside of the city, perhaps for his sons to settle on. He bought a 300-acre tract in the Manor of Moreland, in Philadelphia County from the heirs of Nicholas More. His sons James and Benjamin later lived on this tract.35 In 1714 Cooper bought 100 acres from John Brock of Byberry but sold it back to Brock a year later.36 In 1716 Cooper bought a larger tract, of 260 acres in Moreland, from Thomas and Elizabeth Groom. Nine years later James and Mary sold most of this to his son Samuel.37 Two other transactions were probably meant as investments, at a time when there were few options for getting a return on excess capital. In 1723 James bought 150 acres in Great Swamp in Bucks County, in the far northwest corner of the county, later called Richland Township.38 Originally too far from Philadelphia, land there became more settled about 1720. None of the family settled on the tract, and it was sold at a loss by the heirs after James died. Another transaction, for 200 acres on Neshaminy Creek in Northampton, Bucks County, was never completed.39

In 1722 James applied for a certificate of clearness in order to marry Mary Borrows of Falls Meeting. They were married the following month but had no children together.40 In 10th month 1732, James and Mary were buried on the same day.41 James died before he could sign his will, and although it was admitted for probate there were blanks for the date and name of his executors. According to testimony of the witnesses, he intended to appoint his son Samuel to be executor, along with John Cadwallader. But Samuel lived out of the city, in Moreland township, and James wanted him to be there for the signing of the will. Sarah Elfreth said that when Cooper was at her house about ten days before he died, he told her that he wanted to settle his affairs and wished that his son Samuel was in town.42 The will was admitted to probate and letters of administration were granted to Samuel and to John Cadwalader.

The provisions of the will were typical of the time. Mary was to have one third of the rent from the real estate and one third of the personal estate. Esther received £10 per year from the rents. Isaac also got £10 per year, and “if he be restored to his former capacity” and marry, then his heirs were to have the annuity. Rebecca and the only named grandson, James son of James deceased, were to have an annuity, but only after the death of Mary and Isaac. The remainder of the estate was to be divided among Samuel, William, Benjamin, Isaac, Esther, Rebecca and the grandson James. The son Joseph had died before his father, leaving no heirs. There was no legacy to Philadelphia Friends, although some well-off Quakers did this.

The inventory shows that James was wealthy but does not suggest that he kept a normal dry-goods shop. There was a bountiful list of his household goods, plus the land in the Great Swamp and a 40-acre tract in the Manor of Moreland. The business is reflected in the bonds from 56 different people, from Philadelphia and Bucks County. Cooper probably kept an account book for his business, to manage these debts owed to him.43 The inventory did not include shoemaker’s tools or dry goods such as quantities of cloth or nails. It did include 2 ½ dozen knives, 1750 feet of boards,1200 feet of scantling (small lumber), and 3000 bricks. Was he in the process of building a house or did he sell building supplies? The total value of the estate was over £855, wealthy for the time.44

Two years after James and Mary died, the heirs faced the challenge of dividing the main asset, the land on Mulberry Street. James had not specified that in the will, leaving it for them to do. They solved the problem in an unusual way. There were seven of them, the six surviving children and the grandson James who was entitled to a double share, as his deceased father James was the oldest son. The grandson James and his wife Susannah sold their two shares to Samuel Cooper, leaving six people to divide the property into eight shares. They met together in the Manor of Moreland, and divided it up, numbered each share, put each number on a piece of paper, put them into a hat, shuffled them together, and took turns drawing out the numbers. Samuel went first and drew his three shares, and the others followed, each drawing one share. They wrote out the results in a complex partition deed and proclaimed themselves “fully satisfied contented and agreed”.45 Some of the lots were less valuable than the others, probably because some were vacant and others were rented out, but they balanced the values with a system of payments between themselves. For example, whoever drew lot eight would get yearly payments from the holders of three other lots, and the holder of lot six paid yearly to that of lot one. This appears to have been an amiable process, since it bound the siblings together in a web of yearly payments for as long as they owned the land.

It is noteworthy that only the two daughters married in Philadelphia Meeting. The sons either did not marry (Joseph, probably Isaac, possibly Samuel) or married outside of meeting (James, William, and Benjamin). All apparently stayed in or near Philadelphia.

Children of James and Hester:46

Esther, b. about 1683, m. in 1705 Jedediah Hussey of New Castle, Delaware. James and Hester went to the Philadelphia MM to give their consent to the marriage. Jedidiah, born in 1678, was from a large Quaker family that moved from Massachusetts to New Castle County.47 Esther and Jedidiah lived there and had four children: Rebecca, Jedidiah, Sylvanus and Esther.48 Jedediah died in 1734. In his will he left one third of his estate to Esther, £50 to his daughter Rebecca, the plantation and two mulatto girls to his son Sylvanus, a young colt to Susanna his former servant, a house and lot to his daughter Esther, a portion to his “poor afflicted son Jedediah”, which was to belong to Sylvanus for the care of Jedediah. It is not known when Esther died.

James, b. ab. 1684, married but his wife’s name is unknown, died before 1732, lived in Moreland, Philadelphia County.49 James was a member of Byberry Meeting for a few years around 1714 to 1717. He lent the meeting £50 to build a meeting house, repaid by subscription in 1723.50 In 1717 he was one of 19 signers of the certificate of Giles Knight who was returning to England.51 In 1718 James Cooper, of the Manor of Moreland yeoman, lent money to both Oddy Brock and John Brock; they each gave him a mortgage and both repaid the money.52 James’ only heir in 1732 was a son James, a shoemaker, who married Susannah Chaffin in 1733 at Christ Church.53

Joseph, b. ab. 1686, d. 1720. His death was noted in the records of Philadelphia Meeting: Joseph, son of James and Hester, died 7th month 4th day 1720.54 He left no heirs.

Samuel, b. ab. 1697, d. 1750, possibly unmarried.55 He lived in the city around 1734 and 1735 and called himself a cordwainer. By 1739 he was a yeoman of Moreland. He acquired valuable land in the city in the partition deed after his father died. In 1735 Samuel arranged with William Britton of Bristol Township, Philadelphia County. Samuel sold Britton the 210 acres in Moreland that his father had sold him in 1724, and left part of the purchase price (£200) in Britton’s hands in return for Britton “to provide the said Samuel Cooper in meat drink washing loading and mending of apparel during all the days of his natural life”.56 Samuel died in 1750. He left a will, leaving land to his sister-in-law Mary Cooper (widow of William) and her sons, to his sister Rebecca Kelly, and a residual legacy to his niece Esther Hussey, to Rebecca Kelly’s children, and to his cousin James (son of James). He also left £30 to Rachel Britton, wife of William Britton, perhaps in gratitude for her services in caring for him.57 The inventory of his estate showed comfortable furnishings for one room and a few luxuries like an ivory cane.

William, b. about 1699, d. 1736, married before 1726 Mary Groom, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth of Byberry. They lived in Byberry, where he was taxed in 1734. William and Mary had six known children: Rebecca, Thomas, James, Joseph, Samuel, Letitia.58 William died in 1736; he did not leave a will. Mary outlived him by many years, dying in 1772. William and Mary were the great-grandparents of James Fenimore Cooper, through their son James.59

Benjamin, b. about 1700, m. 1720 Elizabeth Kelly at Christ Church, Philadelphia, lived in Moreland. Taxed in 1734 for 100 acres there.60 It is not known when Benjamin or Elizabeth died. Since they do not appear in Samuel’s will, they probably died before 1750 and left no children.

Isaac, b. ab. 1701, in 1734 he was named in the partition deed as a tailor of Philadelphia. Since he does not appear in Samuel’s will, he probably died before 1750 without heirs.

Rebecca, b. ab. 1703, d. after 1735, married first 1726 Ralph Hoy at Philadelphia Meeting, married second in 1735 Daniel Kelly at Christ Church. Rebecca’s first husband, Ralph Hoy, was a weaver from Yorkshire, who arrived in 1725 at Middletown, Bucks County, but soon moved to Philadelphia, where he married Rebecca in 6th month 1726. They had a daughter Elizabeth (who married Francis Kelly in 1747 at Christ Church). Ralph died by February 1734, when Rebecca signed a deed as his widow.61 In September 1735 she married Daniel Kelly. They had at least one child, mentioned but not named in Samuel’s will of 1750.62

 

  1. The family of James Cooper has been well documented because he and his wife Hester were the great-great grandparents of the novelist James Fenimore Cooper. The website of the James Fenimore Cooper Society includes two genealogies of the Cooper family, one by William W. Cooper in 1879 and one by Wayne Wright in 1983. Both have been used throughout this account. The one by William Cooper has extensive documentation for the first generation, while Wright added more recent evidence. James Fenimore Cooper believed that James Cooper the immigrant was the son of a William Cooper; others have repeated this as well, without providing a plausible candidate. The Cooper Society website is now at: https://jfcoopersociety.org/. William Cooper of Pyne Point, West Jersey, is sometimes named as a possible brother or even father of James Cooper. William Cooper was born in Coleshill, Hertfordshire, and immigrated to West Jersey where he bought land on Pyne Point and prospered. He named only two sons in his will of 1709/10, Joseph and Daniel, so he could not have been James’ father. (NJ Archive, volume 23, p. 108) There was a connection between William and James Cooper, but it is not conclusive; in 1688 James Cooper rented a lot in Philadelphia to William Cooper of New Jersey yeoman. (Philadelphia County deeds, Book E2, vol. 5, p. 89). This is interesting, but not unusual for the time, when there many transactions between Pennsylvania and Jersey people. It certainly does not prove that William and James were brothers. They were from different places, but Coleshill is only twenty-five miles from Stratford. The parish records of Warwickshire have been checked for a James Cooper, born about 1660 to 1661, with no results. (Ancestry.co.uk, Warwickshire, Church of England baptisms, marriages and births 1535-1812). William Davis in his History of Bucks County suggested, without evidence, that “the ancestor of the novelist was probably born in 1645, at Bolton, in Lancashire.” The problem is that Cooper was a very common name. In 1699 Middletown Monthly Meeting reported the arrival of William Cooper, his wife Thomasina and their children from Low Ellinton, Yorkshire. They remained in Bucks County and are confusable with the later family of James Cooper in records there. There was also a William Cooper of Philadelphia, who died in 1767, leaving five children, including, coincidentally, a Jacob who owned property on Mulberry Street. Jacob Cooper married Elizabeth Corker in 1742 at Philadelphia Meeting. Another James Cooper was a cloth worker of Darby (see below for more about him). These are probably five unrelated families, all sharing a common name.
  2. Walter Sheppard, Passengers and ships, 1970. Byllynge apparently never came to West Jersey, but stayed in England, so the sale to Cooper must have been arranged there.
  3. The records on Ancestry, All England & Wales, Quaker Birth, Marriage, and Death Registers, 1578-1837, were checked for any marriage of a woman named Esther or Hester to a James Cooper between 1674 and 1684. The English parish records on FamilySearch do not provide any results. The US Quaker records similarly come up without a match. (The marriage of Hester Gardiner to James Wills Cooper in Burlington in 1680 is not a match; James Wills was a cooper, not a Cooper.) Some web trees give Hester’s last name as Burrows; this is probably a confusion with Mary Borrows, James’ second wife.
  4. Horle and Wokeck, in their magisterial work on Lawmaking and Legislators in Pennsylvania, volume 1, 1991, listed the signers of the various manifestos issued in 1691 and 1692 by the two sides: the conventional Quakers and the followers of Keith. Horle and Wokeck list James Cooper Junior and James Cooper Senior as signing Paper E, the June 1692 paper from 28 eminent Quakers disowning Keith. This is an error. Both men named James Cooper were followers of Keith, and neither signed the letters. The various letters, with their signees, are given in Keith’s The Judgement Given Forth by Twenty Eight Quakers Against G. K. and His Friends, 1693-94. Both men named James Cooper did sign the letter written in July 1692 at the house of Philip James by supporters of Keith. Neither one signed the letter from the Keithian group on 7th month 1692 at Burlington.
  5. Horle and Wokeck cite a contemporary estate of 143 Quakers who left the traditional meetings. (p. 44). This estimate seems low.
  6. Their letter was copied into Quaker records, Phila Monthly Meeting, Removals 1681-1758, 11th month 1695 (on Ancestry, US Quaker meeting records, image 296). Others rejoining about the same time included William and Sarah Dillwyn, William Preston, John Jones, and Robert Ewer. This letter of acknowledgment, along with the signatures on the letter of July 1692, poses a problem, because James Cooper Jr also wrote a letter of acknowledgment to Philadelphia Meeting in 1695, expressing his remorse for having followed Keith. (on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, minutes for 7th month 1695; text in Minutes 1695-1708, image 21). Who is this James Cooper Jr? He could not be the son of James and Hester, who would not have been old enough in 1695. He was not necessarily related to them. At the time it was customary to use Sr and Jr to differentiate two men of the same name, even if they were unrelated. The most likely candidate is James Cooper of Darby. He married first in 1698, so he was certainly younger than James Cooper of Philadelphia. Darby was ten miles from Philadelphia, so he could easily have shown up in meeting records there. If he was the follower of Keith, there is a good story about his involvement. In 1692 in Burlington, when the Yearly Meeting was in session, Keith issued a challenge to the Quaker establishment and sent a messenger to deliver it. Finding the door of the meeting house blocked, the messenger climbed up into an open window and read the challenge, continuing even though Thomas Janney was praying inside. The name of the messenger is not shown in the accounts of this confrontation, but in his letter of acknowledgment James Cooper Jr said, “That very day I read that paper so irreverently before a great congregation there met and gather to worship the Lord. To the grief of my heart I remember with what rigour I introduced it in the window where I stood.” After reading the paper he found George Keith, who said, “I have done with them, and I hope, when we die, they and I shall not both go to the same place.” This struck James Cooper with amazement and he thought to himself, “Surely this man wants charity.” (The Friend, vol. 28, 1855, p. 51, where the letter of acknowledgment is quoted in full but wrongly attributed to the husband of Hester Cooper.) Five years later James Cooper of Darby found himself in another controversy. Margaret Jenner, an elderly Swedish widow, left her property to her three children and made James Cooper and Paul Saunders, non-relatives, her executors. A month later, on the reverse side of the will, she added a legacy to “my executor James Cooper one half of my meadow lying and being upon the other side of Peter Yokum’s island … to defend my meadows against all that shall lay claim or endeavor to wrong my children when I am dead.” Her siblings filed a caveat and petitioned the Council, claiming undue influence on an old woman not in her right mind. After much eye-witness testimony, William Penn himself declared the will valid, and Cooper and Saunders were left to execute it. (Philadelphia County Will 1701, #51, Book B, p. 129)
  7. Letter from 18 Friends, Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1762-1806, on Ancestry, US Quaker Mtg Records, image 301.
  8. The meetings were Germantown, Frankford, Merion, Radnor, Haverford, Abington, Byberry, Newtown, and Northwales.
  9. The profile of Hester in The Friend, volume 28, 1855, p. 51.
  10. Philadelphia Quarterly Meeting, minutes 1701-1727, on Ancestry, US Quaker Mtg Records. The Griffith Owen quote is on image 25.
  11. Philadelphia Quarterly Meeting, minutes 1701-1727, image 93 through 100.
  12. Hester went with Mary Lawson to Plymouth, Byberry, and Abington, with Elizabeth Durborrow to Byberry, and with Martha Chalkley to Gwynedd, Philadelphia, and Abington.
  13. Image 114. Hester’s name does not appear in the early minutes of the Quarterly Women’s Meetings at Phila. (Ancestry, Phila Q Meeting, Minutes 1692-1792). Perhaps because she was active in the minister’s group, she was not also called upon to attend quarterly meetings as a delegate from Philadelphia.
  14. Philadelphia Monthly Meeting minutes, 7th month 1701, in Ancestry, US Quaker Mtg Records, Phila MM, Minutes 1682-1705, image 105. Note that Watring, Early Quaker Records of Philadelphia, volume 1, has “Hess” for “Key”. There are several copies of this minute online; some are clearer than others.
  15. John Smith, “Memoirs concerning many persons Eminent for Piety and Virtue among the people called Quakers”, three notebooks, written about 1785-1787, on Ancestry, US Quaker Mtg Records 1681-1935, Phila Monthly Meeting. The three parts are named as : Minutes 1646-1757, Minutes 1666-1789, Minutes 1667-1761. Esther’s memoir is in part 1, image 45.
  16. Philadelphia Men’s minutes for 4th month 1702, 3rd month 1704, 6th month 1704 and Women’s minutes for 4th month 1702, 8th month 1703, 6th month 1704, 7th month 1704, 3rd month 1705, 1st month 1706.
  17. Philadelphia Monthly Meeting Arch Street, Women’s Minutes 1686-1728, p. 57, image 48.
  18. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Minutes, online at Ancestry, Minutes 1682-1713, image 81. Since Hester was still having children as of about 1703, it is possible that she died as a result of complications of childbirth.
  19. Phila MM, Minutes 1682-1714, 6th month 1701, image 159.
  20. Phila MM, Minutes 1682-1714, 3rd month 1703 (image 184), 7th month 1703 (image 188).
  21. Phila MM, Minutes 1682-1714, 5th month 1703 (image 185), 7th month 1703 (image 187).
  22. Philadelphia Men’s Minutes, 5th month 1706, in Minutes 1706-1709, image 7, 10, 11.
  23. Philadelphia County Deeds, E2, vol. 5, p. 279, online at Phila-records.com/historic-records/web, Roll 10, image 142.
  24. His son James was not yet old enough to sign a document as a member. There is not enough material to postulate an entirely different James Cooper on the basis of this one record. All the other transactions of the Coopers in Byberry can be attributed either to James Cooper, the merchant of Philadelphia, or to his son James when he came of age.
  25. Gloucester Deeds, originally in Documents Relating to the Colonial History of the State of New Jersey, now online at the West Jersey History Project. The land was apparently laid out on Cooper’s Creek, named for William Cooper of Pyne Point, but this coincidence does not show a relationship between James and William Cooper.
  26. Copied Survey Books, D71-280, on the website of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.
  27. Warrant and Survey Books, entry #2670, at the Philadelphia Archive; Patent Index Book A, p. 81, on the PHMC website; Blackwell Rent Roll, in Hannah B. Roach, Colonial Philadelphians; Philadelphia County Deeds E2, v5, p. 295 (Deed to Robert Row for a lot 30 feet by 178 feet granted to Cooper by patent in 10th month 1684).
  28. Rental to John Head, cabinetmaker, March 1719, Philadelphia County Deeds, book G1, p. 99; to Grace Parsons, widow, book F4, p. 229; to James Estaugh, boulter, book G4, p. 278; in 1728 to Henry Jones, tailor, book F10, p. 238.
  29. Hannah Benner Roach, Colonial Philadelphians, 2007, and the William W. Cooper genealogy of the family.
  30. Frederick Tolles, Meeting House and Counting House, 1948.
  31. 1693 tax list of Philadelphia City and County, PA Magazine of History and Biography, vol. 8, 1897.
  32. Samuel Hazard, Register of Pennsylvania, vol. 4, July 1829 to January 1830, p. 29. James Cooper was also supposed to have signed a petition to King William in 1694 with other Friends. (W. W. Cooper, 1879) This reference has not been traced.
  33.  Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1705-1714, online on Ancestry, image 100. In 1705 James Cooper Jr requested a certificate to go to Barbadoes. (11th month 1705). Who was this?
  34. For example, the family of Henry and Elizabeth Drinker was supported by Elizabeth’s sister Mary Sandwith, who never married and lived with them for fifty years. She managed the household, hired and supervised the servants, tended the children. She was so important to the family that Henry wrote to Elizabeth that he felt especially “clever… to have two wives”. (Karin A. Wulf, Not All Wives: Women of Colonial Philadelphia, pp. 85-87.) In the family of Humphrey Morrey, wealthy merchant of Philadelphia, the housekeeper was Jane Laurence, remembered in Humphrey’s will in 1715 (Philadelphia County Wills, Book D, p. 49, proved in 1716). Jane in turn left money to Humphrey’s children in her own will in 1735 (Will Book E, p. 346).
  35. Philadelphia County Deeds, Book E7, v. 8, p. 78, online by subscription at phila-records.com/historic-records/web, roll 11, images 338-341.
  36. Philadelphia County Deeds, Book E7, v.9, p. 350.
  37. Philadelphia County Deeds, Book H17, p. 154, on September 1, 1725.
  38. W. H. Davis, History of Bucks County, chapter on Richland.
  39. It was entered in the Bucks County Deed book by mistake, with a note that the clerk made an error. (Bucks County deed book 13, pp. 385-386.)
  40. Minutes of Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, 6th month 1722, also the Women’s Minutes of 10th month, where the marriage was reported accomplished. There was a Borroughs family in Falls township, but Mary’s parentage has not been traced.
  41. Anna M. Watring, Early Quaker Records of Philadelphia, vol. 1, 1997. They were buried on 6th day 10th month.
  42. Philadelphia Wills, City Hall, Will Book e, p. 219, 1732. Sarah Elfreth was probably the wife of Henry Elfreth and a neighbor of the Coopers. Her father John Gilbert owned a lot on the east side of 2nd Street, where the alley known as Gilbert’s Alley later became the well-known Elfreth’s Alley. (Elfreth Necrology, Publications of the PA Genealogical Society, vol. 2, pp. 172-174).
  43. His tenant John Head, a cabinetmaker, kept such a book, which was preserved and recently published by the American Philosophical Society.
  44. Philadelphia County will packets, City Hall.
  45. Philadelphia County Deeds, G6, p. 419, August 2, 1734. It is a complex document. The shares were not completely equivalent in value, so to make a fair division the owners of some properties had to make yearly payments to the holders of other properties. For example, Rebecca Hoy drew paper number seven and had to make payments of £0.15.3 per year to the holder of paper number eight, her brother William. The partition deed omitted the month and day and was dated only as 1734. In the acknowledgment before the justice on July 4, 1735, John Campbell swore that he had witnessed the signing on “the second day of August last past”, which is to say August 1734.
  46. There is no record of their births in the records of Philadelphia Meeting. The dates here are estimates based on the dates of their marriages, and on the order named in James’ will.
  47. Horle and Wokeck, vol. 1; Herbert Standing, “Quakers in Delaware in the time of William Penn”, 1982, pp. 137-39 (available online at nc-chap.org/church/quaker/standingDH3crop.pdf, accessed 2/2019).
  48. The children are named in his 1734 will. (New Castle County wills, Misc vol. 1, p. 193, online on FamilySearch, Misc Will records v. 1-2, 1727-1788, p. 193) Interesting names run in the Hussey family: Sylvanus, Batchelor, Theodate, Puella, etc. Sylvanus later sold his share of the estate, and the responsibility for caring for Jedidiah, to Stephen Lewis, his brother-in-law (husband of Rebecca).
  49. There is no record of the marriage in Philadelphia Meeting records. Did the sons fall away from the Quakers?
  50. Joseph Martindale, History of Byberry and Moreland, 1867, p. 45. Record of this loan has not been found in records of Abington Meeting (the parent monthly meeting for Byberry).
  51. Martindale, p. 301.
  52. Philadelphia County Deeds, book F1, p. 190, 198 (online roll 12, repaginated, image 507 and image 511).
  53. In February 1733/34, William and Mary Cooper were the administrators for Samuel Cooper, late of Philadelphia, as the next of kin. (Administration Book C, in PA Genealogical Magazine, vol. 22) This could not be William’s brother Samuel, who died in 1750. The only brother who could have married soon enough to have a son of age in 1734 is probably James. But this Samuel is not mentioned in the will of James Cooper, written before March 1732. In spite of the coincidence of names, Samuel probably belongs to another family.
  54. Watring, Early Quaker Records of Philadelphia, vol. 1.
  55. The Cooper Genealogy (W. W. Cooper, 1879) claimed that he married Sarah (?Dunning) and had children Jacob and Rebecca. Considering the other Cooper families around, this cannot be accepted without evidence. Samuel named no wife or children in his will. There was a Mary Cooper who died in 1732, according to records of Philadelphia Meeting. Was this a wife of his?
  56. Philadelphia County Deeds, Book H17, p. 149 (online roll 28, image 202). This was a fairly standard arrangement for someone like Samuel with no heirs.
  57. Philadelphia County Wills, Book J, p. 322, File #207, 1750.
  58. The Cooper Genealogy. The son James married Hannah Hibbs. William, son of James and Hannah, was the father of James Fenimore Cooper. Rebecca and Thomas also married into the Hibbs family.
  59. The Cooper Genealogy, 1879 and 1983.
  60. It is sometimes claimed that he moved to Virginia in 1725 and had sons Fleet and Thomas. This claim started with Murphy R. Cooper, author of the Cooper Family, but has been debunked by John H. Croom, with an exhaustive review of the evidence on his website.
  61. Bucks County Church Records, vol. 2, p. 259; Philadelphia MM Certificates of Removal 1686-1772; Philadelphia MM minutes 1696-1750; Philadelphia County deeds H1, p. 47, a release by heirs to John Parratt. Note that there is no mention of Ralph as Irish in the certificates of arrival (in spite of the record in Albert Cook Myers, Quaker Arrivals to Philadelphia). Also note that there is no known relation between Francis Kelly and Rebecca’s second husband Daniel Kelly. In 1750 Daniel Kelly was a witness for the will of Thomas Foster of Lower Dublin, Philadelphia County. Other witnesses were Joseph Kelly (a brother?) and William Brittin, who cared for Samuel Cooper for years (Philadelphia County will book J, p. 365).
  62. William W. Cooper gave her date of death as 1755 (Cooper, 1879), with no evidence.

William Carver and his three wives

The founding legend about the Carver family of Byberry is that there were four brothers who came together from England: John, William, Joseph, and Jacob.1 Joseph moved to North Carolina and Jacob died unmarried. Whether the story is true or not, only John and William appeared in Byberry. They both immigrated in 1682. John came on the Welcome with his wife Mary.2 William came in 1682, possibly on the Samson.

Life was difficult for these early settlers. “The frank and generous hospitality of the Indians to the original settlers deserved a kind and generous return. The descendants of the original settler, (Carver), have told me of a striking case of kindness. When his family was greatly pinched for bread-stuff, and knew of none nearer than Chester or New Castle, they sent out their children to some neighboring Indians, intending to leave them there until they could have food for them at home; but the Indians took off the boys’ trousers, tied the legs full of corn, and sent them back thus seasonably loaded.”3

First generation: the immigrant brothers

John, d. 1714, m. Mary Lane in England before 1682. Lived on Poquessing Creek, where John was a maulster. Children: Mary, Richard, John, Ann, James.

William, d. 1736, m. 1) 1690 Joan Kinsey at Middletown MM, m. 2) about 1693 Mary —, m. 3) 1723 at Falls MM Grace Carter. Children: Sarah (with Joan); William, Joseph, Rachel, Esther, Rebecca, Mary (all with Mary); Hannah (with Grace).

John and Mary lived on a large tract on Poquessing Creek. He had bought rights to the land before leaving England; in the record he was listed as a maulster from Hedly in Southampton.4  The Philadelphia Monthly Meeting reported in 1692 that “John Carver lost most he had by fire that fell out while he and his wife were at their usual meeting.”5 A collection was taken up for him at the meeting at Richard Wall’s and at Germantown. They worshipped at Byberry Meeting, where John was an overseer in 1695. During the Keithian schism around 1692, both John and William stayed with the traditional Friends.

In 1697 John bought 700 acres of land jointly with Francis Searl, perhaps to provide for his three growing sons. John and Francis partitioned the land four years later.6 John and Mary had five children. Their daughter Mary became an approved minister among Friends. In 1713 John made his will, naming his wife Mary, sons James, John and Richard and a daughter Mary.7 He left his wife the use of two rooms in the house and liberty of the cellar and privilege to keep a horse and a cow and to take fruit from the orchards.8 The land on Poquessing Creek was passed down through six generations, all the owners named John.9

In 1701 John and William had a dispute with their neighbor, William Hibbs, who claimed that they had moved his boundary post. The matter was taken before the Commissioners who heard land disputes in Philadelphia.10

“William Hibbs having purchased of Thomas Ffairman a Tract of Land contiguous to the above; there has been for some Time past a Contest between him and the said John Carver and his Brother William Carver about a Corner Post which Hibbs complains has been taken away and thereby the Bounds altered, … the Surveyor General being present affirmed he had executed to the utmost of his Power, being present himself at the Survey; it was to be presumed the Lines as returned were the true ones, unless it could be made appear to the contrary, which William Hibbs was not sufficiently able to do.

…It is Ordered that J. Carver’s Patent be no longer delayed by be granted forthwith…

The bad feelings apparently lingered from this. In 1707 John Carver and George Duncan took Hibbs to court, “unadvisedly and contrary to ye practice of Friends appeared before Justice Fenny and John Carver delivered a paper of accusation against William Hibbs, to ye Scandalizing of truth, which this meeting do Condemn.”11 In 1709 the boundary between John Carver and the widow Hibbs was still at issue, and Abington meeting appointed six Friends to view the land and put an end to it.12

William was a member of Byberry Meeting for worship. He witnessed marriages there in 1685 and 1686.13 For business purposes Byberry Meeting was part of Abington Monthly Meeting, where in 10th month 1689, William got a certificate to proceed in marriage with Joan Kinsey of Middletown Meeting. She lived near Neshaminy Creek. William and Joan duly “published their intencions of marriage by affixing a paper on the meeting house doore of the people called Quakers.” In January 1690 the marriage was recorded.14 William and Joan settled on his land in Byberry.

In 1st month William and Joan were involved in a lurid scandal. 1690 Nathaniel Harding requested a certificate from Middletown Meeting to go to England, normally a routine process.15 The meeting consented to his request, but then word came of an evil report concerning him. He wrote a letter of acknowledgment, but the meeting investigated further and found that he had been involved in a disorderly proceeding with William and Joan Carver. Middletown sent a committee to Abington Meeting to inform them, and Abington requested a joint gathering of Friends from both meetings to settle the difference between William and Joan and Nathaniel. The joint committee met and issued a statement on 4th month 1690.16

Whereas there has been great reproach and infamy concerning Nathaniel Harding Jane and also William Carver making agreement with him it was brought under the consideration of the two monthly meetings whereunto they belong who appointed James Dilworth, Henry Paxson, William Paxson, Giles Knight, George Walker, John Hart, Anne Dilworth, Grace Langhorne, Mary Ellis and Elizabeth Cutler to meet together with the aforesd parties and examine the matter

Whereupon it does appear that William Carver and his wife are guilty of looseness in suffering Nathaniel Harding to lodge in bed with them which probably did excite lust in him to lie with her as appears that he used endeavor to tempt and allude her there unto by salutations wantoness and unseemly discourse and behavior which had too much acceptance with her and a second time also he having a like liberty of lodging with them hardened him with expectation that he should prevail with her and inviting her to his house she went alone then he made a second attempt though she refused to fulfill his desire yet did yield to his salutations wantonness and the like and afterwards when known to her husband William Carver he proceeded with him requiring satisfaction for the aforesaid attempts as a husband to his wife whereupon they reached an agreement for a certain sum of money without having regard to the order of truth among friends, all which actions condemnable and more especially that corrupt spirit prevailing in Nathaniel Harding to sin against God and endeavor the ruin of the woman and her husband – then after deliberate consideration and due rebuke to each person respectively it was agreed that the agreement made between them ought not to stand it being unfast on William Carver’s part – then the time being spent it was referred to Henry Paxson and John Hart to meet with them again and make a conclusion. The parties submitted themselves to friends acknowledged their guilt and willing … all such practice, taking shame to themselves—in testimony thereof they set their hands the 9th of 4th month 1690.

All three of them signed—Nathaniel Harding, William Carver, Jane Carver.17 Nathaniel’s fault was clear. He tried to seduce Jane on several occasions. Her fault was more subtle. She encouraged him, perhaps what we would nowadays consider innocent flirtation, but not using good judgment as a married Quaker woman. William’s fault was against the Quaker rules for handling disputes. Instead of taking Nathaniel’s behavior to the monthly meeting to be judged, he pushed Nathaniel into paying him damages, an agreement that was “unfast”, either because William wanted to retract it or because it was made improperly to begin with.

Nathaniel sent another letter of acknowledgment after the meeting, expressing his shame even more explicitly. “… With humility and contrite heart I repent of the evil of my doings in offering lewdness with Jane Carver, also all wanton carriage, rude discourse and unseemly behavior. I do free condemn it… I desire to be one with you that I may enjoy the assistance and benefit of fraternity in the truth.”18 The meeting finally gave Nathaniel his certificate and that was the end of the matter, at least in the written records.

A few months later Joan and William had a daughter, named Sarah. She was their only child, since Joan died sometime between late 1690 and 1692.19 Around 1693 William married again, to a woman named Mary. Her last name is not known.20 They had six children together.21 The births of the first two were recorded at Abington Meeting, showing that William was still in good standing as a Friend.22 The date of Mary’s death is not known; she might have died soon after the birth of their sixth child, around 1704, or it may have been later. In any case, in 1723 William married for the third time, getting a certificate from Abington meeting. His wife was Grace Carter of Falls Monthly Meeting. She was the daughter of John White, a gentleman of Philadelphia, and the widow of John Carter. When she married William her three children with Carter were in their teens: Robert, Mary and Martha. The records of Falls Monthly Meeting show that “Care to be given to secure what was left to Grace’s children by her former husband.” This was routine, and does not show any special concerns about William. William and Grace had a daughter Hannah together. By then William must have been in his fifties, a decade older than Grace.23 In 1726, William and his wife Grace leased a lot in the city to Thomas Chase, merchant, on the bank of the Delaware river between Front and King Streets. This must have been property that Grace brought into the marriage.

William wrote his will in 1733 and died in 1736. In the will he named his wife Grace and seven living children. His son Joseph must have died by then. The five older daughters were married, as was William Jr, the only surviving son. He left five shillings to each of his daughters, a token amount, so they must have already received a marriage portion. He left a feather bed and furniture to his wife Grace, which was to be appraised by two men, one chosen by Grace and one by William Jr. The bulk of the estate was to be divided between Grace and William. It is not clear how they were to share the land or the house.24 William Jr was the executor.

The inventory of William’s estate was sparse for the time. Besides the furniture and kitchenware, he owned one old horse, two ewes and a lamb, two cows and a sow. The value of the estate was only £24.15.4. Either William had been unsuccessful as a farmer or else he had given much of his capital to his children before his death. Grace died a year after William. In her will she named her four children: Robert Carter, Mary Deane (Doane), Martha Beale and Hannah Carver.25 The three older children each got one shilling, while Hannah got the rest of the estate. The inventory of her estate showed a value of £33, more than William’s.

Children of William and Joan:26

Sarah, b. 1690, m. 1) 1707 at Abington, John Rush of Byberry, 2) possibly William Marshall before 1733.27

Children of William and Mary:28

William, b. 1694, d. 1759, m. 1719 at Abington MM Elizabeth Walmsley, daughter of Henry Walmsley.29 They lived in Buckingham, where William died in 1759. Elizabeth survived him and died in 1772. Her will named their sons Joseph, William and Henry, son-in-law Isaac Worthington, daughters Elizabeth Buckman, Mary Wilkinson, Rebecca Schofield, and Martha Worthington, and some of the Worthington grandchildren.30

Joseph, b. 1696, d. before 1733, may have died young

Rachel, b. ab. 1698, d. 1771, m. William Duncan. William was born about 1699, the son of John and Margaret. Rachel’s death in 8th month 1771 was noted in the records of Byberry Meeting.31 Rachel and William had a large family.

Esther, m. 1) 1722 at Abington MM Joseph Walton, son of Daniel and Mary, 2) 1728 Daniel  Knight at Abington Meeting. Joseph and Esther had two children, Richard and Rachel. Joseph died in the spring of 1727; letters of administration were granted to Esther on April 12. The daughter Rachel was born less than a month later. In early 1728 Esther married the widower Daniel Knight.32 Daniel and Esther had six children together, making a household of ten children since each of them had two from their first marriage. After Esther’s death Daniel married Mary Wilson. He died in 1782. 33

Rebecca, b. ab. 1702, m. —Brock34. Her marriage was not recorded in the local monthly meetings and the name of her husband is not known.

Mary, m. Samuel Worthington by 3rd month 1724. Later in 1724 Samuel produced a paper of acknowledgment to Abington meeting; the first child was born too soon after the marriage.  In 1736 they moved to Buckingham in 1736 with a certificate from Abington Meeting, at the same time as Mary’s brother William and his family. Samuel died in 1775 in New Britain, leaving a will naming his wife Mary and seven surviving children. Children: Jonathan, David, Samuel, Sarah, Hester, Rachel, Pleasant.35

Children of William and Grace

Hannah, unmarried in 1733. She may have later married into the Beal family.

  1. Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, cited in George McCracken, The Welcome Claimants Proved, Disproved and Doubtful, 1970. Joseph Martindale suggested that they came from Sussex. (History of Byberry and Moreland, Rev Ed, p. 263). John Carver is supposed to have had his daughter christened at St. Alban’s, Hertfordshire. But in the list of people who bought land from Penn in England, Carver was listed as a maulster of Hedly in Southampton. Headley is in the present-day county of Hampshire, about forty miles south of St Alban’s.
  2. Elias Carver, The Genealogy of William Carver, 1903.
  3. John F. Watson, Annals of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania in the Olden Times, vol. 2, chapter on Byberry.
  4. John was a First Purchaser, buying from Penn while still in England. List of First Purchasers from the Pa. Archives, 1:1:40-46, available online.
  5. Anna Watring, Early Quaker Records of Philadelphia, vol. 1.
  6. Philadelphia County Deeds, book E5, Vol. 7, page 283, dated June 5, 1700.
  7. John and Mary are supposed to have had another daughter, Ann, who must have died before he wrote his will.
  8. Philadelphia County Wills, Book D, p. 9, online at FamilySearch, Philadelphia County Will Books C-E, image 213.
  9. Martindale, revised edition, p. 263.
  10. Minutes of the Board of Property, Book G, p. 215, 10th month 1701.
  11. Abington Monthly Meeting minutes 1707.
  12. Abington Monthly Meeting minutes 1709.
  13. Abington Monthly Meeting marriages.
  14. Abington Monthly Meeting minutes, 10th month 1689; Middletown Monthly Meeting minutes, 10th month 1689, “Early marriages”, PA Genealogical Magazine, 37(3).
  15. Middletown Monthly Meeting Minutes, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Minutes 1664-1807, image 12.
  16. Middletown Monthly Meeting Minutes 1664-1807, image 88.
  17. Her first name is sometimes written as Joan, sometimes Jane.
  18. Middletown Monthly Meeting Minutes 1664-1807, image 88
  19. Joan’s death was not recorded by Byberry or Abington meeting. Elias Carver missed the marriage to Mary and assigned the first six children to Joan. The records of Abington Meeting clearly state that some of the children were of William and Mary.
  20. She was not Mary Hayhurst, who married William Carter of Northampton. Some suggest that she was Mary Walmsley, who immigrated in 1682 with her parents Thomas and Elizabeth and her brothers Thomas and Henry. Thomas and Elizabeth had several children who were believed to have died on the trip, but the only evidence is the lack of records for them in Pennsylvania. This is weak negative evidence. Note that William and Mary had six children together, none of them named Thomas or Elizabeth.
  21. Martindale, Abington MM records for William and Joseph, and William’s will.
  22. It is not particularly significant that the births of the other children were not recorded. Records of births were sporadic, especially in the early years, and the records of Abington meeting were scattered until they were collated in 1722 by George Boone.
  23. Grace married John Carter in 1702/03. Their three children were born before his death in 1710.
  24. Philadelphia County Wills, Book D, p. 45, File #443. Part of the will is cut off in the microfilm at City Hall.
  25. Philadelphia County Wills, Book F, p. 42.
  26. Sarah’s birth is listed in the records of Abington MM, as the daughter of William and Joan Kinsey.
  27. Marshall’s name might have been William. A grave was dug for the widow Marshall at Pennypack Baptist Church in 1778. (Findagrave, no evidence that this is the right marriage for Sarah.)
  28. The births of William and Joseph were listed in records of Abington Monthly Meeting. All except Joseph were named in William’s will, written in 1733 and proved in 1736.
  29. According to Davis, History of Bucks County, he moved to Buckingham and built the Green Tree Tavern at Bushington.
  30. The daughter Elizabeth married Thomas Buckman. They had no children, but he had three by his long-time mistress Mary Wisener. (George McCracken, The Welcome Claimants Proved Disproved and Doubtful, 1970.)
  31. Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, Philadelphia, Byberry Preparative Meeting, Births and Deaths, image 38.
  32. His first wife Elizabeth Walker had hanged herself in the stable. (Swain, Byberry Waltons, p. 22)
  33. Comly’s Sketches of the history of Byberry, Memoirs of the Hist. Soc. Pa., Vol. II, 1827.
  34. The name of her husband is not known. There was a Brock family in Byberry, descended from John Brock. John Jordan, Colonial Families of Philadelphia, vol. 2, p. 1162, discusses the family of John Brock, but does not include anyone who married Rebecca.
  35. Bucks County wills, 1775, file #1460, Bucks County courthouse.

John Lee of Makefield and his family

John Lee was an early settler in Bucks County. There is no record of his arrival, but he registered his cattle mark in Phineas Pemberton’s list of 1684.1 John was a member of Falls Monthly Meeting.2

He appeared in Bucks County court in 1690, along with two other members of his family. They were called as witnesses when John Pidcock assaulted Pilocarpus Rose.3 Rachel Lee and Martha Lee were called; from the wording of the record it looks as though Rachel was John’s wife.4 Who was Martha? If she was a daughter of John and Rachel, and old enough to be a witness in 1690, then John must have been born before 1655. The alternative is that Martha is a sister of John’s, and that John was born around 1675.5

John Lee was back in court a few months later when Thomas Tunnecliff brought a suit against him, which was withdrawn. Tunnecliff had been a member of Falls Meeting at least until 1686. If he was still a member in 1690 he should not have brought suit against Lee; if they were both Friends the matter should have been handled by the Meeting. In 1712 John Lee served on a jury that tried Reuben Pownall for condemning the authority of the court. This was usually viewed severely at the time, and in fact the jury found Pownall guilty and fined him.

In 1719 Daniel Lee, the only known child of John Lee, married Mary Ashton at Falls Meeting, and settled in Makefield.6 In 1726 John and Daniel were on a jury together. Adam Pettet, late of Makefield, a cooper, went into the river with Samuel Hough and John Pickering to “wash and bath himself”. He got in too far, was unable to swim, and drowned.7

John died in Makefield in 1733. He did not leave a will, and letters of administration were granted to Daniel Lee, John Clowes and Henry Woodward of Makefield.8 His wife Rachel must have died before him, since she was not an administrator. An inventory was taken of John’s estate. He owned two guns, some carpenter’s tools, a horse and mare, and a few other oddments, but no livestock or other household goods. He was clearly living with someone, probably his son Daniel. The total value of the estate was about £25.

Children of John:

? Martha, b. ab. 1670, alive in 1690 (She may have been a sister of John, rather than a child.)

Daniel, b. ab. 1695, m. 1719 Mary Ashton, dau. of Thomas & Deborah at Falls Meeting

Next generation: Daniel and his family

Daniel Lee and Mary Ashton were married in 1719. They were Quakers, members of Falls Meeting. He was a blacksmith. They lived a quiet life and appear in few records. It is not known when Daniel died. It is very likely that Mary died between 1721 and 1723, because in 1723 her father and stepmother named a daughter Mary, which would be very unusual if the first Mary were still alive. The second Mary was probably to commemorate her.

Daniel and Mary had two known children:

Deborah, b. 1720, her birth in the Falls Meeting Records, no further records

John, b. ab. 1721, m. in 1749 Sarah Carr, daughter of John & Mary

Next generation: John and Sarah Lee

John lived in lower Bucks County, and was a member of Wrightstown Monthly meeting. 9 In 1749 he requested a certificate of clearance to marry Sarah Carr, a member of Falls Monthly Meeting. He was on the tax list in Lower Makefield in 1753. In 1755 John requested a certificate from Wrightstown for him and his wife to Radnor Monthly Meeting, on the other side of Montgomery County. The record of Radnor show their arrival there by 5th month 1755, when they brought a certificate from Wrightstown.10 It is probable that both John and Sarah died by 11th month 1766, when Radnor issued two certificates to Wrightstown for the five children of John Lee deceased. The children were all underage and needed someone to care for them. Joseph Buckman of Wrightstown Meeting was married to Martha Carr and was the uncle of the Lee children on their mother’s side. The minutes of Wrightstown recorded that at least the three youngest children were put under the care of Joseph Buckman, David Buckman and John Story.11

Children of John and Sarah:12

Mary, b. ab. 1750, m. 1770 Thomas Powell of Marple Twp, Chester County. They had at least two children before Thomas’ death in 1785. He did not name Mary in his will; she probably died before him. He did however name her siblings, Daniel, John, Deborah and Merebe Lee, showing that they all lived to adulthood, and that Thomas had some connection to them, even though they returned to Bucks County after their parents died.

John, b. ab. 1752, alive in 1785, no other records

Daniel, b. 1753, m. 1774 Margaret Buckman at Upper Makefield MM13. He was taxed in Newtown in 1775 and paid a militia fine in 1780. They moved to Roaring Creek, Northumberland County, where there was a Quaker meeting house. They had twelve children, born between 1775 and 1797.14 Daniel died in March 1803.15

Deborah, b. 1754, m. 1780 Joseph Walton at Wrightstown Monthly Meeting. 16 He had a certificate from Abington Monthly Meeting; they were married under the auspices of Wrightstown, where she was a member. They lived in Warwick Township until about 1786 and their first three children were born there. They later lived in Byberry and were members of Byberry Monthly Meeting. Joseph died 3rd month 19th, 1821; Deborah died in 1840. They had nine children, born between 1781 and about 1798.

Meribah, alive in 1785, no further record.

  1. Davis, History of Bucks County.
  2. There was another John Lee, more prominent, who arrived from Nailsworth, Gloucestershire, and presented a certificate to Philadelphia Monthly Meeting in 1700. He married Hannah, widow of Joseph Webb, and settled in Concord, Chester County. John and Hannah were both well-known Quaker ministers. In addition, there were other early Quaker families named Lee, including William and Joan, William and Hannah, Anthony and Mary. None of them seem to be related to John and his family.
  3. Records of the courts of quarter sessions and common pleas of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, pp. 143, 225, on Ancestry.
  4. The summons was issued for “John Lee his wife Rachel Lee Martha Lee and Robert Benson”. There is no way to find her name unless a record is found in England. This is unlikely, given the common name and the lack of a starting place to look.
  5. This is a more appealing possiblity, since it makes the birth of Daniel Lee less problematic.
  6. He is presumed to be a son, since letters of administration were granted to him. It is possible, but less likely, that he was a much younger brother.
  7. “Coroner’s Notes from Bucks County”, in PA Genealogical Magazine, vol. 35(3).
  8. The letters of administration and inventory are in File #361, Bucks County Probate records, at the county courthouse in Doylestown. Although some probate records are online at FamilySearch, these are not. John Clows was a generation younger than John Lee. He was the second husband of Mary Carr, whose daughter Sarah would marry John Lee’s grandson John in 1749. Henry Woodward was probably the Henry Woodworth who appeared in the minutes of Falls Meeting in 1705. In December 1704 he hosted a party at his house “at the time called Christmas” and got several Friends in trouble for attending, singing and drinking. (Falls MM Men’s Minutes, in Watring & Wright, Bucks County Church Records, vol. 2, p. 64).
  9. John should not be confused with another John Lee, son of Anthony and Mary, who was born in 1719, married Jane Hughes, and died in Berks County, Pa.
  10. Minutes of Radnor-Haverford-Merion Monthly Meeting, 9th day 5th month 1755, in Early Church Records of Delaware County, p. 106.
  11. Watring, Bucks County Church Records, vol. 3, p. 52. Wrightstown Minutes, 3rd mo 1767.
  12. There are no birth records of the children. The order is taken from the certificates of Radnor Meeting and the order in which the children married.
  13. The marriage record of Daniel and Margaret stated that his father John was dead. Daniel and Margaret were members of Wrightstown Meeting.
  14. Wrightstown Monthly Meeting, Births & Deaths. Children of Daniel and Margaret Lee: Sarah b. 1775; Ellen b. 1776; Rachael b 1778; John b 1781; Elizabeth b 1783 d. 1789; Deborah b 1785 d. 1789; Ruth b 1787; Mary b 1789 and d 1789; Margaret b 1791. More children are listed in Records of Wrightstown Meeting, Genealogical Record, 1796-1917, pp. 92-93, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, Bucks County.
  15. Federal census 1790 and 1800. Roaring Creek was in Northumberland County, now Columbia County. Daniel’s will is online at FamilySearch, PA Probate Records, Northumberland County Wills 1772-1845, Volume 1-3, image 170.
  16. Swain, Byberry Waltons, p. 100

John and Mary Carr of Middletown

John Carr was a Quaker who lived in lower Bucks County and died there in 1731. Nothing is known of his origins or those of his wife Mary. John and Mary were probably born between 1690 and 1695, either in England or Pennsylvania.1

John Carr lived in Middletown and his affairs were under the care of Falls Monthly Meeting.2 He died in 1731. Letters of administration were granted to his widow Mary and to Joseph Wildman. Mary signed by mark. The usual inventory was taken of the estate. It included four horses, two cows and their calves, “nine piggs running at large” and a servant man. Although the list of household furniture and goods seems sparse, the estate was valued at £95, a good sum for the time. However, he had debts as the meeting discovered when Mary remarried. Two years later the marriage of John Clows and Mary Carr was accomplished at Falls Monthly Meeting.34 As the minutes state “Care was to be taken that what belongs to Mary’s children by her former husband was secured. However, after his debts were paid there was nothing for them.”5 Who were these children? Looking at the Quaker marriage records for Falls and Wrightstown, we find two daughters, who can be tentatively placed as children of John and Mary, and one known to be their child.6 There may have been others who did not live to marry.

John Clows, who became the stepfather of the Carr daughters, came from good Quaker families. He was the son of Joseph Clows and Elizabeth Pownall, whose families came over from Cheshire in the great migration of the 1682 and 1683. John and his brothers Thomas and George all lived in Makefield. Since John’s brothers were carpenters, perhaps he was too.  John and Mary Clows had a daughter Meribah born in 1733.7

In 1735, the meeting at Falls reported that “It is evident that Mary the wife of John Clows hath been disorderly in her conversation in several respects.” We don’t know what she had done. There is no record of her death.

Probable children of John and Mary:

Dorothy, b. ab. 1715, m. 1) 1737 Isaac Ashton, son of Thomas & Hannah, 2) by 1756 m. John Ballance. Had 9 children with Isaac and a son Joseph with John.

Martha Carr, b. ab. 1720, m. 1746 Joseph Buckman at Falls MM. He was from Wrightstown Mtg.8

Sarah, b. ab. 1725, m. 1749 John Lee, son of Daniel & Mary. Had children Mary, John, Deborah, Daniel and Meribah.

Child of Mary and John Clows: (surname Clows)

Meribah, b. 7th mo 1733, alive in 1755 when she got a certificate to Philadelphia9

Next generation:

Dorothy Carr married twice. Her first marriage, to Isaac Ashton, was contrary to rules, as reported at Wrightstown Monthly Meeting in 1st month 1737, since they were married with a license from New Jersey. They were apparently not disowned.10 Dorothy and Isaac named their first two children Mary and John (for her parents) and the next two Hannah and Thomas (possibly for his parents). The others were Elizabeth, Ann, Martha, Lydia and Susanna.11 According to one site, with no evidence, Isaac died on 22 September 1751. In 1753 Dorothy was living in Lower Makefield and taxed there as “Doratha” Ashton. By 1756 she was married to John Ballance.12 In the birth record of their son Joseph she was listed as the daughter of John Carr.13

Her sister Martha married Joseph Buckman. He requested a certificate from Wrightstown in 8th mo 1746 to proceed in marriage with her, since she was a member of Falls Meeting. Joseph was born in 1723, to a solid Quaker family. (His grandfather William had come on the Welcome with William Penn.) Joseph died in 1798. His will named eight children, but there was no mention of Martha. She must have died before him.14 The children were Joseph, Esther, Mary, Agnes, Letitia, Sarah, Elizabeth and Asenath. All seven of the daughters were married by then.

Sarah, probably the youngest of the sisters, married John Lee. She was a member of Falls Meeting, when in 1749 he got a certificate from Wrightstown to proceed in marriage with her. They had five known children, before moving to Radnor in 1755.15 John died before 11th month 1766 when the children were granted a certificate to return to Wrightstown.16 Since there is no mention of Sarah in the minutes, the implication is that she was dead as well. The children were Daniel, Deborah, Meribah, Mary and John.

 

[7]

[8]

[9]

[10]

[11]

[12]

[13]

[14]

[15]

[16]

  1. Mary had a daughter born in 1733, so she could not have been born much before 1690, and her daughter Dorothy was married by 1737, so Mary could not have been born much after 1695.
  2. The meeting left no record of his arrival or any marriage or the birth of his children. We have to assume that he was a member, because his widow and daughters married as Friends.
  3. Falls Mtg Men’s Minutes, in Watring & Wright, Early Bucks County Church Records, vol. 2. The birth of their daughter Meribah followed soon after in the same year.
  4. John Clows and his wife Marjery arrived on the Endeavor in 1683, the same ship that Thomas Janney came on. (Log of Phineas Pemberton, in Battle, History of Bucks County) They brought their children Marjery, Rebeckah, and William. John was a grandson of John and Marjery.
  5. Watring & Wright, p. 78.
  6. There are no birth records for these daughters. They are placed here because this was the only known Quaker Carr family in the area at the time. Dorothy was described as a daughter of John at the birth of her son Joseph Balance, in the records of Wrightstown meeting. There was another Carr family in Bucks County, but they were Presbyterians and lived in Warwick Township according to Davis, History of Bucks County.
  7. In 1755 she got a certificate to Philadelphia. No further record.
  8. Falls Monthly Meeting minutes, 9th and 10th month 1746.
  9. Records of Falls Meeting, in Watring & Wright, p. 160.
  10. They were married in New Jersey on November 30, 1736. Why didn’t they go through the normal Quaker marriage procedure? Their first child was born on August 20, 1737, so apparently they did not have to rush.
  11. Cope Collection, Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  12. A Bucks County Orphans Court record of 1756 shows her as D. Balance, late D. Ashton.
  13. Wrightstown Monthly Meeting, Births and Deaths 1716-1800…, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, image 27.
  14. Bucks County wills, book 6, p. 78. The full text is online at FamilySearch, under PA Probate Records 1683-1994, Bucks County wills, books 6-7, Image 57.
  15. Records of Radnor-Haverford-Merion, minutes of 9th day 5th month 1755, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records.
  16. Records of Radnor, minutes of 14th day 11th month 1766.

John and Francis Bowman

John Bowman came with to Bucks County with a certificate from the meeting at Pardshaw, Cheshire in 1701, which he presented to Middletown Monthly meeting.1 It said that he came with his wife and children.2 The wife was probably Francis; the children were Sarah and Jeremiah.3

John was listed as a cordwinder of Middle Township, Bucks County when he bought land there in 1708, paying £40 to Israel Morris.4 It was a 52-acre tract in Newtown, adjoining land of Israel Morris, Henry Paxson and Ezra Croasdale.5 John left this land to his son Jeremiah, who sold it to Stephen Twining in December 1735.6 According to the records of Middletown MM, John died in December 1712. He wrote a will, dated 12th 8th mo (October) 1712, but it was lost. In it he left £40 to his daughter Sarah and his land to Jeremiah.7

His widow Francis requested in 1st mo 1716 that the marriage of her daughter Sarah to Alexander Beal be accomplished at the house of Stephen Twining in Newton. The marriage was reported orderly accomplished the next month.8 Francis died in December 1730, still a member of the Middletown Monthly Meeting.9

Children of John and Francis:

Sarah, b. ab. 1695, m. 1716 Alexander Beal, son of William and Elizabeth. Alexander grew up in Bensalem and was a member of Abington Meeting. In 1716 he married Sarah at Wrightstown Meeting. The births of their children were not recorded, but only two survived to adulthood, Hannah and William.10 Sarah died about 1722, possibly in childbirth, leaving Alexander with small children to raise. He later married Sarah Town, had two children with her, after her death married Hannah Rogers, moved with Hannah to Burlington County, after Hannah’s death married Esther Butterworth. Alexander died in 1754.

Jeremiah, named in minutes of Buckingham Meeting in 1723, sold 52 acres in Newtown to Stephen Twining in 1735, witnessed the will of John Chapman of Wrightstown in 1743.11 Jeremiah was probably dead by January 1748, when his niece Hannah, her brother William, and her father Patrick confirmed the sale of the 52 acres to make the title good for Twining and others.12

Children of Sarah and Alexander: (surname Beale)

Hannah, b. 1717, d. between 1769 & 1784, m. Patrick Malone about 1742. Patrick bought a farm in 1745 in Buckingham near Forest Grove. He was a member of Buckingham Meeting, although not active in its affairs. In 1781 he released from bondage a mulatto lad named Jesse, filing the record with Bucks Quarterly Meeting.13 Patrick died in 1788. In his will he named seven of his eight children; another daughter, Sarah, had died before him.14

William, b. ab. 1722, d. 1752, m. 1742 Grace Gill at Buckingham Meeting, the daughter of Thomas Gill and Alice Comly of Byberry. William and Grace had six children.15 They lived in New Brittain on a farm of 157 acres. William left a will, as did Grace. She outlived him by forty years, dying in 1793. By the time she died the plantation was reduced to 30 acres.16

  1. He should not be confused with the wealthier Thomas Bowman, purchaser of 5000 acres, or with a John Bowman who died in 1708 for whom letters of administration were granted to Thomas Stroud of Philadelphia County.
  2. Certificate of arrival, Middletown Meeting, on Ancestry, Quaker records, Bucks, Middletown MM, Minutes 1698-1824, image 19. Note that Francis is the only name in early Pennsylvania that could be either a man or a woman. See for example Francis Searle (male), Francis Barnett Bowater (female), Francis Bezer (female), Francis Chadsey (male), to name a few.
  3. In 12th mo 1681 Jeremiah Bowman of Papcastle married Jane Tiffin, daughter of John Tiffin of Mockerkin, in the meeting house at Pardshaw Crag. (On Ancestry, English and Wales, Quaker Births Marriage and Deaths, Cumberland, Piece 1026: Monthly Mtg of Pardshaw. These would be plausible parents for John except that they apparently had a son John born on 8 Nov 1689 in Pardshaw. This could not be the John who immigrated with a family in 1701, if the dates are correct. (England, Select Births and Christenings 1538-1975, on Ancestry)
  4. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 4 p. 32, Bucks County Courthouse.
  5. There is a hill along the Delaware River near Washington Crossing called Bowman’s Hill. Tradition in the 1800s said that Bowman was one of Captain Kidd’s pirates, who settled in Newtown after Kidd was hanged in 1700. There were rumors that he had a chest full of gold. Even more dramatically, “the story used to be told that if one would go quietly and lie down by Bowman’s grave and say, ‘Bowman, what killed you?’, the reply would come back, ‘Nothing.’” (Davis, History of Bucks County). Needless to say, this story does not connect well with the Quaker shoemaker John.
  6. This deed was not recorded, but is reported in Davis, History of Bucks County, chapter 29. Davis probably got the information from Josiah Smith, who apparently acquired unrecorded deeds. (Josiah Smith, Smith’s Records, 4 volumes, Spruance Library, Doylestown.)
  7. Josiah Smith’s Records.
  8. Minutes of Middletown Meeting, in Watring & Wright, Bucks County Church Records, vol. 2.
  9. Watring & Wright, p. 186.
  10. A deed, apparently not recorded but referenced in Josiah Smith’s notebooks, named “William Beal of New Britain and Patric Malone of Buckingham and Hannah his wife, only surviving children of Sarah Beal, formerly Sarah Bowman, who died intestate, daughter of John Bowman…”.
  11. In 1723 a member of Buckingham Meeting apparently owed money to Jeremiah (Men’s minutes, 5th month 1723). It is not clear whether Jeremiah himself was a member. The reference to the land sale is from Davis, History of Bucks County, probably taken from Josiah Smith’s records.
  12. Josiah Smith’s Records.
  13. A Record of Divers Manumissions, Bucks County Quarterly Meeting, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, image 69.
  14. Bucks County probate records, File #2148, Bucks County Courthouse, Doylestown.
  15. Comly Family, p. 41
  16. William’s will is online at Bucks County Wills, 1713-1759 vol. 1-2, image 312; hers is at Wills 1786-1797 vol. 5, image 211, both on Ancestry, Pennsylvania Probate Records.

William and Elizabeth Beale of Bensalem

Before 1685 a man named John Clarke emigrated to Pennsylvania or West Jersey, bringing four servants with him: Bernard Littlejohn, Mary Chapman, Christian Chapman (sister to Mary), and William Beale.1 Clarke bought 300 acres on Pennsaukin Creek in West Jersey, but apparently did not stay there. In May 1685 he was living in Pennsylvania when he made his will, and in July of that year he died. The terms of the will were unusual. He left his estate to Littlejohn and the Chapmans, to be divided among them. Littlejohn also got Clarke’s clothes and working tools, and stones, and the “indenture and time of service of William Beale”. Clarke was a mason, and Beale was an indentured servant, learning to be a mason.2 When Beale’s time of service was done Littlejohn was to give him twenty shillings, and a hammer, trowel and pick. By leaving his time to Littlejohn, Clarke provided Littlejohn with valuable labor, while also giving Beale a place to live until he came of age. They probably lived somewhere near Philadelphia, since in October 1685 Littlejohn got a certificate of clearness to marry from the monthly meeting there. It was granted the following month, and he married Mary Chapman.3 William probably lived with Bertrand and Mary Littlejohn for three years, either in New Jersey or in Pennsylvania, until 1688 when he bought his own land.4

Who was William Beale, the apprentice mason? He was probably the son of William and Elinor Beale, members of Ross Monthly Meeting in Herefordshire. William Senior was a cordwainer who had been fined and persecuted for his Quaker faith. William and Elinor were married at Ross meeting in 1664. They had three sons: Alexander, William and John.5 There are no further records of Alexander and John, and William was believed to have come with John Clarke as an apprentice.

William Beale bought land three times in his life: once when he was starting out on his own, ten years later when his family was growing, and much later when he wanted a parcel to leave to his sons. The first land that he bought was near Poquessing Creek, a small piece of Joseph Growden’s great manor of Bensalem. Growden had come over from Cornwall about 1683 with a lot of money and great plans. He had purchased 5000 acres of land, to be laid out in Pennsylvania, and his father Lawrence had bought another 5000 acres. Growden’s plan was to establish a manor, where his servants worked the land and where anybody who bought part of his land owed him yearly rent and a day’s work in the time of harvest.6

On the 10th day of the 12th month [February] 1688 a group of men gathered together to transact land business, probably at Joseph Growden’s mansion. On that day Growden sold land to Stephen Nowell, a mason, Abel Hinkston, William Beale, also a mason, Thomas Fox and Joseph Wilford, both shipwrights. Nicholas Hickst and Thomas Fox witnessed most of the transactions, except the one to Fox himself. While they were there Beale authorized Nowell to be his attorney to receive the deed when it was acknowledged in court the following month, signing a paper to that effect. Beale paid £16 for his 102 acres, lying on Potquessink Creek and adjoining the land that Abel Hinkston bought the same day. He also had to pay to Growden the yearly ground rent of two English shillings and “one day’s work in time of harvest forever”. Beale signed with his initials; he had not learned to write.7

About 1690 William married a woman named Elizabeth, probably at Byberry Meeting.8 There is no marriage record for them. Byberry Friends did not keep their own records until later, and Abington Monthly Meeting records do not include a marriage for William and Elizabeth, or the birth of their children.9 Elizabeth was undoubtedly a Friend, possibly the daughter of a local family, although many single women Friends came on their own, sometimes as indentured servants to pay their way. Since William and Elizabeth are apparently not mentioned in the wills of other local families, it is possible that they were on their own, with no family support.

Bensalem had no Quaker meeting of its own. The Friends of Bensalem would have met with Friends in Byberry, on the other side of Poquessing Creek. At first Byberry Friends met in private houses, especially those of Giles Knight and John Hart. In 1694 Henry English gave an acre of land for a meeting house and burying place. A log building was erected there, which served for 20 years until a two-story stone building was erected in 1714. It had a fireplace at one end, hinged windows that could be opened, and separate seating for men and women on either side.10 For William Beale and his family it was a three-mile trip to the Meeting. As good Friends they would know that route well. They had six known children. Alexander was the oldest, named first in William’s will, followed later by John. If William was in fact from the family of Ross, then these sons may have been named for William’s brothers.

The big news in Bensalem in 1692 must have been exciting even to the sober Quakers. An unknown man was found murdered by the mouth of Neshaminy Creek in May. Suspicion fell on Derrick Jonson, a Swede, when blood was found on his bed and wall, appearing about the time that the stranger was murdered. Derrick and his wife Britta and sister Eliza were indicted by the grand jury, but the court put the trial off for the winter, evidently hoping that evidence would appear to exonerate him, but it did not, and he was hanged for the murder the next summer.11

In 12th month 1698/9 (February 1699) William bought another 202 acres from Joseph Growden. This was also on the Poquessing and adjoined Abel Hinkston’s land. Growden reserved two acres near one side for a mill “when he shall think fit to build on thereon”, along with ingress, egress and regress. The Poquessing was a fast-running stream, and many mills were eventually built along it.

William was a respected Friend. In 1694 he was appointed a representative from Abington Monthly Meeting to the Quarterly Meeting in Philadelphia.  This was an honor for someone so young, and suggests that he was trustworthy, since he would be representing the entire meeting. He was appointed again in 1709. In 1700 Byberry Meeting chose William Beale and Thomas Groom as overseers for the following year. This was another honor. The overseers were responsible for the welfare of the members, especially the youth, the poor, and those who might be straying in their conduct. Along with the elders, the overseers were the leaders of the meeting. Of the six children of William and Elizabeth who lived to adulthood, at least five of them married under the auspices of a Friends meeting. William and Elizabeth were successful as Quaker parents in keeping their children from leaving the faith.

William was also mentioned in civic records. In 1703 he was appointed with Joseph Growden, Frances Searle, Thomas Knight and others, to lay out a road to Albersons Mill. This was a typical obligation for landowners who lived in the neighborhood and had a stake in the location of the roads. In the middle of June 1714 he was chosen to review the layout of a road from Newtown to Dunks Ferry.12

In 1713 William bought his final piece of land, probably to leave to his sons. It was in Buckingham, far from his Bensalem land.13 This was a tract of 550 acres, bought from Thomas Stevenson.

In January 1715, William was 47 years old. His six children were in their teens or early twenties. None of them were yet married. His life came to an abrupt end, as he made his will on January 1, and died within five days.14 He left the Buckingham land to be split between his sons John and Alexander, with 225 acres to each. He left his daughter Ann £10 and a black mare. The residue of the estate, including the personal property and the Bensalem land, was left to Elizabeth with no restrictions. He trusted her to manage the affairs and made her the sole executrix. When she died it was to be shared among their four daughters. One of the witnesses was William’s old neighbor Abel Hinkston.15

His inventory shows the standard possessions of a farmer in these early decades of the 1700s. The house had four beds (everybody doubled up), earthen and woodenware, cooking gear, chairs and a table, a dough trough and money scales, glass bottles, barrels and tubs. They had no chests, side tables, no extra items in the kitchen or dining room. A few tools were mentioned: axes, pitchfork and dung fork, grubbing hoes, two spinning wheels, old iron, a plow and plow irons, a cart. The livestock included 17 cows, 14 sheep, 8 horses and a colt, and 15 swine. There were stored 75 bushels of wheat and 25 of barley. The family owned two Bibles. It was a respectable living, with no luxuries. There is some indication of excess production for the Philadelphia market, particularly the number of cows, but there is no mention of dairy equipment. With a value of over £150, it was a solid estate for the time.

In 1717 the widowed Elizabeth bought land from Henry and Mary Walmsley, 16.5 acres in Bensalem, probably adjoining her existing land. (She later sold that same parcel to her son John.)16] In 1721 she subscribed to a collection for the poor of Byberry, along with her son John and many other members of Byberry Friends.17 She outlived William by forty years. In 1751 she was living in Warminster, possibly with one of her children. She died in early 1754, probably well into her eighties.18 Her estate was administrated by her son-in-law Eli Welding, husband of her daughter Elizabeth.

Children of William and Elizabeth:19

Alexander, b. ab. 1690, d. 1754, m. 1) 1716 at Wrightstown Sarah Bowman, dau. of John and Francis, 2) 1723 at Falls, Sarah Town, 3) 1737 Hannah Rogers, 4) 1746 Esther Butterworth

Ann, b. ab. 1694, d. 1747, m. 1717 John Watson, son of Thomas and Elinor, at Abington MM20

Elizabeth, b. ab. 1695, d. 1773, m. 1721 Eli Welding, with a certificate from Abington MM

John, b. ab. 1696, d. 1762, m. 1729 Martha Carter, daughter of John and Grace21, prob at Abington MM

Rebecca, b. ab. 1698, m. 1733 Samuel Richey at Christ Church22

Martha, b. ab. 1700, d. 1786, m. 1729 John Taylor at Abington MM

Most of these siblings married into local Quaker families.

Alexander was probably the oldest, and the first to marry. He first married Sarah Bowman at Wrightstown Meeting. They became members of Buckingham Monthly Meeting. The births of their children were not recorded, but only two survived to adulthood, Hannah and William.23 Sarah died about 1722, leaving Alexander with small children to raise. In early 1722/3 he married Sarah Town, a member of Falls Meeting. They had at least two children, but she died before 1737 when he asked  Buckingham for a certificate to Burlington, West Jersey, to marry the widow Hannah Rogers. He married her, probably without permission since he made acknowledgement to the meeting for his misconduct.24 The following year he came before the meeting again to acknowledge fornication with Hannah before marriage. Around 1742 he and Hannah moved to Burlington, New Jersey, where she died. Alexander was to marry one more time. In 1746 he married Esther Butterworth.25 He died in Gloucester County, New Jersey, in 1754.26

Ann made the most advantageous match when she married John Watson in 1717 at Abington Meeting.27 He was not trained in a medical school, but he read several books about surgery and “physic” and became the local doctor in Buckingham. He set broken bones, cured disorders in general, and prescribed a spicy medicine of his own invention called Watson’s Black Drops.28 Ann and John had three children before her death in 1747, Thomas, Joseph and Elizabeth. John died in October 1760, leaving a very large estate and a will written on one enormous piece of parchment.29 Ann and John lived a comfortable life for the time. Their house was full of material goods:  maps of Asia and Africa and Europe and America, a tea table with porcelain tea cups and silver tea spoons, the imported china known as “Delf ware”, a looking glass, hat box, case of drawers, clock, brass candlesticks, abundant furniture, stacks of linen. The house had a cheese room with cheese, a coffee mill and other goods. Around the farm John had many tools, two hives of bees, a wolf trap. As a country doctor he needed to travel to his patients, so he had a chair and chair horse to pull it. This was a light-weight riding cart with two large wheels, pulled by a single horse, and with a folding top to protect the rider from the elements.30 Their house had a parlor, front room, back room, a front and back room upstairs, a garret, cellar, kitchen, a room over the kitchen, cheese room, and an addition in back called a “linto”. Outside there was an outhouse (probably a storage building, not a privy), chair house, cart house and barn. These were surrounded by an orchard, fields and meadow. The house and land was to go to son Thomas, but John’s widow Sarah, whom he married after Ann died, got the privilege of living in three of the rooms until her death, the usual provision for meat and drink and firewood and a riding creature and an annual cash payment.31 The estate was valued at over £1200.32

Elizabeth Beale married Eli Welding. Eli was a blacksmith who had emigrated from Wales with his brother Jacob, also a blacksmith. Jacob stayed in New Castle County, while Eli married Elizabeth and settled in Buckingham, where he bought land from Humphrey Morrey and Alexander Beale. The area where he lived was probably named for him, the village of Weldon. Eli and Elizabeth were married under the auspices of Abington Meeting and had three children. He died in 1771; she died two years later.

John Beale lived next to his brother Alexander on his share of the land inherited from their father.

In about 1729 John Beal married Martha Carter.33 In 1732 they got a certificate from Abington to Buckingham Meeting. They settled down in Buckingham and raised their family, with two children surviving to adulthood. In 1754, after their mother died, John and Alexander agreed to partition their remaining inheritance.34 John died in Dec 1761.35 His will was unusual in two ways. Instead of the usual provision for his wife to have the use of a room or two in the house, he provided Martha with the use of a small log house on the south east corner of his land, along with the profits, probably in case she should choose to rent it out. In addition, he left land to his daughter Phebe, with the provision that she supply firewood and a cow and an annuity for Martha. This was a typical provision for a son, but rare for a daughter. The son John got the remainder of the land and was also expected to keep a horse and firewood for Martha. The will also stipulated that “my cousen Jonathan Beal” should be under the care of John’s sisters Elizabeth Welding and Rebekah Richey, to be bound out for a trade and to be educated. At the time “cousin” could mean nephew, and it is not clear who this is. Martha outlived John by twenty-four years and died in 1786.

Rebecca Beal was the only one to not marry as a Quaker. In 1729 she and Joseph Gilbert Jr. were brought before the Bucks County court and convicted of fornication. This offense was discovered in the usual way when Rebecca became pregnant. Joseph denied the charge, but was convicted on her word, and was fined for the cost of prosecution and the cost of nursing the child. Joseph died before 12th month (February) 1730/31, when Abington Meeting took up the case. The meeting felt a “tender regard” for Joseph, who was no longer around to speak for himself. They wanted Rebecca to “take the shame and blame on her self as far as she was guilty and leave his name out of her condemnation”. She refused, and they drew up a paper against her, disowning her, “until it may please God to bring her to a sight and sence of her out going. That she may be received again is the sincere desire and prayer of this meeting.” Rebecca apparently did not take any action that would satisfy the meeting, since she and Samuel Richey were married in 1733 at Christ Church. They must have stayed in Bucks County since she was charged with the care of Jonathan Beal along with her sister Elizabeth Welding in 1761.

Martha Beal, probably the youngest child of William and Elizabeth, married John Taylor at Abington Meeting in 1729. They lived in Buckingham, where Martha died in 1786. She left a will, naming her daughter Phebe Tucker and son John.36 The inventory of her estate showed the furniture for one room, plus cookware, a horse and a cow. She must have been living with one of her children.

  1. The combination of these names – Clark, Littlejohn and Chapman – suggests an origin in Devonshire or Somerset, assuming they immigrated together.
  2. Will proved at Philadelphia.
  3. The certificate was granted by the Philadelphia Monthly Meeting (Watring, Early Quaker Records of Phila, vol 1, p. 151). The marriage is from the land record of 1694, West Jersey Records, Liber B.
  4. Bernard Littlejohn died before 1694 and Mary married Joseph Adams, a tailor of Burlington, West Jersey. Her sister Christian had already married a Burlington man, Michael Buffin. In 1694 Joseph and Mary Adams sold the 300 acres on Pennsauken Creek which had been John Clarke’s. Mary had inherited 100 acres, acquired another 100 when her husband Bernard died, and bought the final 100 from Michael Buffin. West Jersey Records, Liber B, on USGenWeb Archives for New Jersey.
  5. There is no direct evidence, though this relationship is accepted by many researchers including Blanche Beal Lowe, author of William Beal of Bucks County. William Beal of Ross was the right age, a Quaker, and he named his sons Alexander and John. And there are no records of him in Ross meeting as an adult.
  6. This remnant of feudal custom was written into a few contracts, but it is not clear that it was enforced.
  7. Bucks County deeds, Volume 1, pp. 223-225.
  8. The earliest it could be was in 1688 when William owned his own land. The latest was about 1695, since their first son was old enough to marry in 1716. Assume that it was earlier, and that the children were not married until their mid-twenties.
  9. Byberry Preparative Meeting kept some records starting in 1726 (with the earliest being the burial of Giles Knight), and the early Abington records are sketchy. The more systematic record of marriages at Byberry does not start until around 1737 to 1740.
  10. Friends of Poquessing, http://www.friendsofpoquessing.org/ByberryFriends.html, no longer online
  11. There are numerous sources for this story. A good summary is at the Wikitree entry for Derrick (Johnson) Clawson.
  12. Bucks County Court records, p. 491.
  13. Bristol Township, which adjoined Bensalem, was originally known as Buckingham. The name was changed to Bristol around 1702, at the same time that Buckingham Township was established, further north in Bucks County.
  14. The dates in January and February of each year were ambiguous, depending on whether the month names or the Quaker numbers were used, since the year started in March as the first month. William’s will was dated January 1st, in the first year of the reign of King George. Since George was crowned midway through 1714, the will must have been written in January 1715. (William was healthy and inspecting roads in January 1714.) The date of probate for the will was given as January 6, 1714. Again this must mean 1715. (Bucks County Wills 1713-1759, vol. 1-2, image 30, on FamilySearch, PA Probate.)
  15. Bucks County wills, vol. 1, page 16.
  16. Bucks County Deeds, volume 8, p. 226. On 19 August 1751, Elizabeth Beal, widow of Warminster, to her son John Beal yeoman of Buckingham, 16.5 acres £12… Line of James Carver… Purchased 1717 of Henry and Mary Walmsley, signed Elizabeth Beal. She signed by mark.
  17. Isaac Comly, “Sketches of the History of Byberry”, Memoirs of the Hist. Soc. Pa, Vol II, 1827
  18. Lowe, William Beal of Bucks County.
  19. The dates of birth are not known, since the births were not recorded at Abington meeting. This is the order in which the four daughters were named in William’s will, with John placed according to the date of his marriage. Alexander’s marriage in 1716 places a late bound on the marriage of William and Elizabeth.
  20. Buckingham Monthly Meeting Births, Burials and Marriage Certificates 1720-1801, on Ancestry, US Quaker Records, image 59.
  21. John Carter died in 1710 and Grace later married William Carver as his third wife.
  22. Possibly Rickey. But two other people named Richie were married at Christ Church within a few years of Samuel (Francis Richie married Mary White and Mary Richie married Joseph Bayley).
  23.   A deed, apparently not recorded, named “William Beal of New Britain and Patric Malone of Buckinsham and Hannah his wife, only surviving children of Sarah Beal, formerly Sarah Bowman, who died intestate, daughter of John Bowman…”. This was in January 21, 1742/3. They were giving good title for a lost deed. (Josiah Smith notebooks at Spruance Library)
  24. According to one record they were married at Mount Holly Monthly Meeting.
  25. New Jersey Archives, Series I, vol. 22, p. 21, marriage license granted December 11, 1746 (on Archive.org)
  26. Blanch B. Lowe, William Beal, Bucks County Pa. She missed the first marriage for Alexander and listed Rebecca as Barbara instead.
  27. Minutes of Abington Meeting, 25th 1st month 1717, on Ancestry, US Quaker Records. John Watson the doctor of physic should not be confused with his famous cousin, also named John Watson, who died a few months after him. This was John Watson the surveyor. A bachelor and eccentric character, he traveled to New Castle to help survey the line between Pennsylvania and Maryland, caught a fever there, rushed home but died a few days later. He left the very large sum of £250 to Hannah Blackfan, “out of sincere friendship and honourable esteem”, and many books, a few owned in partnership with his cousin John (four volumes of Cato’s Letters, The Independent Whig). John’s funeral at Buckingham Meeting was supposed to be the largest ever.
  28. Albert Bolles, Pennsylvania: Province and State, 1899.
  29. Bucks County estate records, File #1058.
  30. There is a chair of this type on display at the Mercer Museum in Doylestown, called a road cart.
  31. From John’s will and the inventory of his estate. Sarah is believed to be Sarah Shaw, widow of Charles Brown. She and Charles were married in 1722 at Middletown Meeting.
  32. Inventory of the estate, Bucks County estate papers file #1058, Bucks County courthouse, Doylestown.
  33. Martha was the daughter of John Carter and Grace White. Grace later married William Carver, as his third wife. Grace named her daughter Martha Beale in her will in 1737.
  34. Bucks County Misc. Deeds, John Beal of Buckingham Twp. and Alexander Beal, heirs of William Beal, agree to partition of estate. Bk. 82/p. 423. May 27, 1754.
  35. The published records of Buckingham Meeting say that he died in 1769, but according to the original probate record his will was proved in April 1762. The meeting record must be an error.
  36. Bucks County wills, File #2039, Bucks County Courthouse. John did not leave a will in Bucks County.

William and Elinor Beal of Ross

William Beale was born in Gloucestershire around 1640, moved to Ross, Herefordshire and became a committed Quaker.1 He is often said to be a son of William and Susanna Beale of Nailsworth, Gloucestershire, whose house was a meeting place for Quakers as early at 1655. Since William and Susanna had a son William baptized in 1641 it is easy to see how the William Beale of Ross might fit in their family.2 However the records of Nailsworth Meeting show that William Beale, presumably the son of William and Susanna, married Hannah Carter in 1668 and had three children with her.3 These records overlap with the time when William Beale of Ross was marrying and having children.4

William of Ross had become a Quaker by 1660. In that year at Ross, “James Merrick, Thomas Atkins, John Merrick, William Beale …(and eleven more) were taken from the Meeting, others in the street, and some from their own houses, and committed to the Marshall’s custody: Next day the Oath of Allegiance were tendered them by a Justice of the Peace, who sent them to Prison for refusing it. Six of these were very poor men, having families dependent on their labour, for one of whom, when five persons in compassion offered to be bound, the Justice refused it.”5

Four years later William Beale “of the parish of Tufley county of Gloucestershire”, married Ellinor Bellamy, daughter of Guy Bellamy, late of Ross on second month (April) third day, 1664.6 The marriage certificate was signed by Thomas Merrick, James Merrick, William Fisher and John Caton. Tuffley is a small town about twenty miles from Ross, across the Severn in Gloucestershire. It is unlikely that William moved from Ross to Tuffley and back again between 1660 and 1665. More likely the marriage record showed his birthplace or where he was living before he moved to Ross, not where he was living at the time. In the marriage record William is shown as a cordwainer, a skilled shoemaker. In 1665 William Beale was taxed at Ross-on-Wye for three hearths.7

The general meeting also recorded the birth of three sons of William and Elinor between 1664 and 1669, named Alexander, William, and John.8 In 1670 Elinor died, leaving William with at least one young child to raise. 9 There is no record that he married again. He was still in Ross in 1683 when goods were taken him to the value of £12 7s 10d, along with six other Friends.10 He was an active member of the meeting, serving as a witness to marriages from 1677 through 1693, most of the recorded marriages of Ross Meeting.11 William died in Ross in 7th month (September) 1694, still a member of Ross Meeting.12

William and Elinor had three known children: 13

Alexander, b. 5th 11th month 1664, no further record

William, b. 21st 6th month 1667, emigrated before 1685, d. 1714 in PA, m. Elizabeth —

John, b. 18th 7th month 1669, no further record

There are no further records of Alexander and John. William born in 1667 is probably the one who appears in Pennsylvania in 1685. He is a Quaker of the right age. He first bought land in Pennsylvania in 1688, when he would have been 21. He named his own sons Alexander and John, matching the names of his brothers. John is a ubiquitous name at the time, but Alexander is uncommon.14

  1. Blanche Beal Lowe, William Beal of Bucks County, 1961
  2. Jeanne W. Strong, Beal Findings: some ancestors and descendants of William Beal of Gloucester, 1992. She cites the marriage of William Beale and Susanna Wilkins, and the baptism of their son William in February 1640/41.
  3. William and Hannah’s marriage was on 25th of 4th month 1668. (Quarterly Mtg of Gloucester and Wilshire, on Ancestry, England and Wales, Quaker Births Marriages Deaths 1578-1837, piece 1190, image 40. The children were Susanna (died 1675), John (born 1671, died 1689), and William (born 1674, died 1675), on Ancestry, Quaker BMD, piece 1190, image 38, 43, and piece 1421, image 31 (Monthly Mtg of Nailsworth). Hannah Beale, wife of William, died in 1709, while William Beale schoolmaster died in 11th month 1710/11 (February 1711). Is this Hannah’s husband? (Piece 1421, image 35).
  4. Beale is a common name in Gloucestershire and nearby counties. There is an unrelated Beals family of Chester County, Pennsylvania.
  5. Joseph Besse, Quaker Sufferings, 1753, indexed in 1990, Herefordshire, p. 255.
  6. Monthly Meeting of Ross (1654-1775), Ancestry, Quaker Births Marriages Deaths, piece 1001, Monthly Meeting of Ross, image 9.
  7. Post on the Ward surname board, Rootsweb, 1999, no longer online.
  8. Strong; Lowe.
  9. She was buried May 17, 1670. (Ancestry, Quaker records, piece 1001, Monthly Meeting of Ross.)
  10. Besse, Hereford, p. 261.
  11. Piece 1001, Monthly Meeting of Ross, images 10 through 17. One of the marriages was that of Thomas Beale of Tufly and Alice Chapman in 1669 (Image 10). Was this a brother of William?
  12. Piece 1001, Monthly Meeting of Ross, image 65.
  13. Piece 1001, Monthly Meeting of Ross, images 39-40.
  14. Lowe

Alexander Beale and his four wives

 

Alexander Beale, son of William and Elizabeth Beale of Bensalem, had a complicated life, with four marriages and many changes of residence. He grew up in Bensalem and was at first a member of Abington Meeting. In 1716 he married Sarah Bowman at Wrightstown Meeting. A year or so later he got a certificate from Abington to go to Falls Meeting. Perhaps he and Sarah were living with his widowed mother and farming her land in Bensalem. He and Sarah later became members of Buckingham Monthly Meeting.1 The births of their children were not recorded, but two survived to adulthood, Hannah and William.2 Sarah died about 1722. In early 1722/3 Alexander got a certificate from Buckingham to marry Sarah Town, a member of Falls Meeting. They lived in Buckingham, where in 1724 he mortgaged a 200-acre tract bounded by land of his brother John and others.3

Alexander and Sarah Town had at least two children, but she died before 1737 when he asked  Buckingham for a certificate to Burlington, West Jersey, to marry Hannah Rogers. The request was denied. He asked again the next month, and married her the month after that, probably without permission since he made acknowledgement to the meeting for his misconduct. The following year he came before the meeting again to acknowledge fornication with Hannah before marriage. Alexander was almost 50 years old at this time, so he should have known better. Hannah was the widow of William Rogers, who had been a lieutenant of militia of Northampton in 1706 and who died in 1736 in Burlington County.

In 1741 and 1742 Alexander sold off his Buckingham land, apparently preparing for a move to West Jersey.  He sold a small portion of it to Elizabeth and Ely Welding, and the remainder to John Watson, practitioner in physic. It was about this time that his older children married and started households of their own.4 After his eventful life Alexander remained in good standing with Buckingham Meeting, and in 1743 he requested a certificate from them to Burlington Meeting. Around 1742 he and Hannah moved to Burlington, NJ and owned a farm in Hanover Township. Alexander was to marry one more time. In 1746 he married Esther Butterworth, with a license in New Jersey on December 11, 1746.5

In March 1749/50 his daughter Deborah married Thomas Rambo, both of Gloucester County. Married at St. Michael’s and Zion Church in Philadelphia, they lived in Deptford Township, Gloucester County.6

Alexander died in Gloucester County, New Jersey, in 1754.7 Thomas Rambo was the administrator for Alexander’s estate. Beal was described as a husbandman of the Township of Deptford, Gloucester County. Was he living with Deborah and Thomas when he died?

Children of Alexander and Sarah Bowman:8

Hannah, b. 1717, d. between 1769 and 1784, married Patrick Malone about 1742. They bought a farm in Buckingham in 1745 near Forest Grove. Patrick died in 1788. In his will Patrick named his sons John and James, and his daughters Elizabeth, Mary, Hannah, Phebe, and Ann, as well as grandchildren Abner and Sarah Worthington, children of his daughter Sarah Worthington deceased. John was the residual heir and executor.  Since there was no mention of Hannah, she had clearly died before him.

William, b. about 1722, d. 1751, married 1742 Grace Gill at Buckingham MM.  She was the daughter of Thomas Gill and Alice Comly of Byberry. They lived in New Britain and had six children before William’s death in March 1752. In his will he provided for the maintenance of his “dearly beloved” wife Grace, left the plantation to his two sons Thomas and Joseph, asked his father-in-law Thomas Gill and cousin Thomas Watson to be executors. His inventory showed the typical farming household of the time.9

Children of Alexander and Sarah Town: (born between 1723 and 1730)

Deborah, married in 1749 Thomas Rambo at St. Michael’s and Zion Church, Philadelphia; lived in Deptford Township, Gloucester County, New Jersey. They had children James, Jonathan, Elizabeth and Hannah.10

Benjamin, mentioned in a certificate of 1741. Benjamin was called before Bucks County court in May 1758 to answer a suit of Richard Yardley. His uncle John Beal of Buckingham and brother-in-law Patrick Malone were sureties for his appearance. There is no record of how this case ended. In 1764 he was probably the Benjamin Beal taxed in Buckingham, and in the same year Isaac Beal, son of Benjamin Beal of Buckingham Twp, was apprenticed to Edmond Kinsey, blacksmith. In 1769 Benjamin Beal, possibly the same one, was called before Bucks County court for assault and battery. Again there is no record of how the case ended.

  1. Blanch Beal Lowe, William Beal of Bucks County, 1961; Jeanne Strong, Beal Findings, 1992; the World Connect Tree of Jon Holcombe; records of Falls, Abington, Middletown and Buckingham Monthly Meetings.
  2. A deed, apparently not recorded but acquired by Josiah Smith, named “William Beal of New Britain and Patric Malone of Buckinsham and Hannah his wife, only surviving children of Sarah Beal, formerly Sarah Bowman, who died intestate, daughter of John Bowman…”. This was in January 21, 1742/3. (Notebooks of Josiah Smith, fourl volumes at the Spruance Library, Doylestown)
  3. The General Loan Office had recently been established as a way for the government to put more money into circulation without coining money, which the government in England forbade them to do.
  4. William and Grace were married at Buckingham. Buckingham MM marriages were published in PA Marriages prior to 1810, available online at OpenLibrary.org.
  5. New Jersey Archives, Series I, vol. 22, p. 21.
  6. Ron Beatty, Rambo Family Tree, E-95 and E-96, on Google Books
  7. Blanch B. Lowe, William Beal, Bucks County Pa., 1961. She missed the first marriage for Alexander and listed Rebecca as Barbara instead.
  8. These are the only children known to survive to adulthood. Some sources add Alexander, born in 1716, and John, born in 1719. There is no clear evidence for either one, except that the deed record says “only surviving children”.
  9. There is no record of a son Jonathan born to William and Grace, to account for the Jonathan in the will of William’s uncle John in 1761.
  10. She was not a daughter of Sarah Bowman, and was born too early to be a daughter of Hannah Rogers, so she must be a daughter of Sarah Town, probably named for Sarah’s mother.

Bryan and Ann Bains

Bryan and Ann Baines lived in Wennington, a village in Lancashire just north of the Forest of Bowland.1 Wennington was too small to have its own church, and Bryan and Ann had their children christened at St. Wilfrid’s in Melling, a few miles away.2 There were four christenings recorded there, starting in 1662, with their son Gabriel. But the church records of baptism between 1650 and 1662 were lost, and at least one other child was probably christened there as well.3

Bryan and Ann were probably not Quakers, at least at first, but four of their children became Quakers and at least three of them immigrated to Pennsylvania. In 3rd month 1694 Thomas Banes married Janet Ward at the Friends meeting house in Bentham, just two miles east of Wennington.4 His siblings Gabriel, Agnes and Deborah all signed the wedding certificate.5 Two years later Thomas and Janet arrived in Bucks County with a certificate from Wennington Meeting. Arriving in 9th month 1696, Thomas was described as a tailor by trade, “late of Wenninton in Lancashire, but belonging to the monthly meeting at Settle.”6

In 1698 Gabriel, Deborah, and their mother Ann immigrated to Bucks County, arriving with a certificate from the monthly meeting at Settle that they presented to the meeting at Falls.7 Signed by 23 members of the meeting, the certificate included reassurance that Gabriel and Deborah were free of marriage entanglements.8

Deborah married Thomas Ashton in 1701 at Falls Meeting. Gabriel, Thomas and Janet all signed the marriage certificate.9 Oddly enough, her mother Ann did not sign, although she was still alive.10 Thomas and Deborah had two daughters, Mary and Ann, before Deborah died. They may also have had a son Isaac, who is believed to be a son of Thomas’, either by Deborah or by his second wife.11 The date of Deborah’s death is not known; it was before 1710 when Thomas remarried, to Hannah Hough.

In 1702 Gabriel and his mother Ann bought land together, paying £150 to William Duncan for 145 acres in Falls Township.12 This is Ann’s last appearance in the records. It is Gabriel’s only known land purchase. He served several times on juries and was chosen by Falls meeting in 1712 to speak with Friends who were behind in their subscriptions. In 1717 he married Elinor Botting of Middletown Meeting, and they had one son, Bryan, presumably named for Gabriel’s father. Gabriel was 55 years old when he married; Elinor must have been considerably younger.

In 1727 Gabriel wrote his will. His estate was to go to his wife Ellin and son Bryan, but if Bryan died without issue, then the estate was to in equal shares to his brother Thomas, sister Agnes Wood, and to the heirs of his sister Deborah, who died fifteen years before him. Specifically, the will named her heirs as his “cousin Ann Hillborn” and the two children of his “cousin Mary Lee”. Ann and Mary were his nieces, daughters of Deborah; it was a common locution of the time to use “cousin” instead of niece. His estate was valued at over £120, a good amount for the time. The inventory included a flock of 54 sheep, unusual for the time. Was Gabriel’s father Bryan a sheep farmer as well?

Ellin died in 1749; Bryan clearly died before her, since he was not named in her will.13  Half of her estate was to go to the monthly meeting at Falls, for the “service of truth”, and the other half was to be sent to England for the use of Shipley Meeting and for her brothers John and Thomas Botting of Gillington Parish, Sussex.

Children of Bryan and Ann14

Deborah, born about 1660, died between 1703 and 1710, married Thomas Ashton in 1701 at Falls Monthly Meeting, had daughters Mary and Ann.

Gabriel, christened 12 Oct 1662, died 1727, married Elinor Botting in 1717, had a son Bryan born in 1718.

James, christened 28 Aug 1664, died 1681.15

Thomas, christened 11 Feb 1666, died 4th month 1743, married in 3rd month 1694 Janet Ward at the meeting house at Bentham, Yorkshire. They immigrated in 1697, settled in Middletown, had a daughter Ann who married Daniel Doan Jr.16 Janet died in 10th month 1732; Thomas died in 4th month 1743. His will left his property and estate to his daughter Ann and her husband, who were also executors of the estate.17

Agnes, christened 7 Aug 1670, married a man named Wood after 1694 and before 1727. It is not known whether she immigrated to Pennsylvania. Gabriel left her a legacy in 1727 but did not say where she lived.

  1. Note that there are many variant spellings of the last name: Beanes, Baynes, Bains, Baines. There are numerous records of people named Banes in Lancashire through the 1600’s. Gabriel and Bryan seem to be common given names. For example, in 1587 Gabriel Croft of Claughton (about five miles from Wennington) made his will leaving an advowson to his sister’s son Gabriel Baynes and a 60-year lease on a house to his “servant” Bryan Baynes. (Lancashire and Cheshire Wills 1572 to 1696, selected wills only, on Google Books) Was this the Bryan Baynes of the parish of Claughton who left a will in 1624? (Lancashire Wills proved in the Archdeaconry of Richmond, vol. 10, on Google Books).
  2. England, Births and christenings 1538-1975, on FamilySearch.
  3. Register of the Parish Church of Melling, transcribed by Henry Brierley, 1911, online at UK Genealogy Archives.
  4. England and Wales Quaker Birth, Marriage and Death Registers 1578-1837, Yorkshire, Monthly Meeting of Settle, image 281, on Ancestry. They were married on 20th day 3rd month 1694. Gabriel, Agnes and Deborah were the only Baynes to sign as witnesses.
  5. Deborah is often said to be the daughter of Matthew Baines and Margaret Hatton, who were married at Lancaster Monthly Meeting. In 1686 Matthew immigrated with two of their children, William and Eleanor. Matthew died at sea, and the orphans were placed with Friends in Chester County. William and Eleanor both moved to Bucks County, married and left descendants. (Davis, History of Bucks County; Cope Collection, volume 4, at Historical Society of Pennsylvania). There is no evidence connecting Deborah to anyone in that family and multiple pieces of evidence connecting her to Bryan and Ann: the wedding certificate of Thomas and Janet, the certificate of arrival of Deborah, and the will of Gabriel.
  6. Middletown Monthly Meeting records, in Watring & Wright, Bucks County Church Records, vol. 2, p. 240.
  7. Falls Monthly Meeting records, Watring & Wright, p. 152.
  8. Middletown Monthly Meeting records, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, Bucks County, Middletown Monthly Meeting, “Record of Commery 1683” (sic – should be “commencing 1683”), image 92.
  9. “Falls copy Births Deaths Marriages”, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, Bucks County, Falls Monthly Meeting, image 15
  10. There are several possibilities for this omission. She may have been too ill to attend the wedding; she may have signed but her name was omitted from the list as recorded; she may have been illiterate and unable to sign, even by mark.
  11. The birth of Isaac was not recorded at Falls meeting, leaving his mother’s identity ambiguous. The death of Deborah was also not recorded.
  12. Bucks County Deeds, book 3, p. 94, online at FamilySearch, Vol. 3-4, image 61.
  13. Bucks County probate records, Will Book 2, p. 167, online at FamilySearch, Pennsylvania Probate Records 1683-1994.
  14. Records of St. Wilfrid’s Church, Melling, in England, births and christenings 1538-1975, on FamilySearch. Note that the baptisms from 1650 to late 1662 were missing from the registry. Deborah was probably born and christened before 1662, although she might have been born in 1668 and missed in the registry. This would make her younger than 40 when her children were born.
  15. Register of the Parish Church of Melling, transcribed by Henry Brierley, 1911, online at UK Genealogy Archives. The birth record is in Latin and calls him “Jacobus”. The burial record gave his name as James.
  16. Marriage record in England & Wales Quaker Birth, Marriage and Death Registers 1578-1837, Yorkshire, Piece 1116: Monthly Meeting of Settle, online on Ancestry, Image 281. Thomas’ and Janet’s deaths were recorded at Middletown Meeting, online at Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records, Middletown Monthly Meeting, Minutes Marriages… 1682-1807, Image 108 and 109. Daniel was the son of Daniel and Mehitabel, who became Quakers and moved to Bucks County from Massachusetts. The older Daniel was expelled from Middletown Meeting for his contemptuous behavior toward the meeting, but his children, including Daniel Jr, remained members.
  17. Bucks County probate records, File #482, Will book 2, p. 28, online at FamilySearch.org, Books 1-2, Image 199

Thomas Ashton and his wives Deborah and Hannah

Thomas Ashton and his wives Deborah and Hannah

Thomas Ashton first appeared in the records in Pennsylvania when he married Deborah Baines in the summer of 1701 at Falls Monthly Meeting. Various parents have been proposed for Thomas, but none are known. There is no real evidence to link him to any other Ashton. What is known is that he was a Quaker, probably from northern England where the Ashton name was common.1

His first wife, Deborah Baines, immigrated with her brother Gabriel and mother Ann in 1698.2 They came with a certificate from Settle Monthly Meeting in Yorkshire.3 Gabriel and Deborah were children of Bryan and Ann, of Wennington, Lancashire. Deborah was probably christened about 1660 when the baptismal records of St. Wilfrid’s church are missing.4

Thomas and Deborah were married in 5th month (July) 1701 under the auspices of Falls Monthly Meeting. Gabriel, Thomas and Jennet Baines all signed, while no Ashton signed except for Thomas himself.5 In the marriage record Thomas was described as a husbandman of Falls Township, suggesting that he did not yet own land. In 1703 he requested 100 acres from the commissioners of property. He wanted it to lie between Newtown lots and the back of the lots on the Delaware River.6 It was laid out for him, adjoining Reuben Pownall, Joseph Clows, Thomas Janney and Shadrach Walley.7 In 1708 he got a patent for the land.8

Thomas lived a quiet life in Makefield. He was a constable there for the year starting September 1710.9 He was not active in the Friends Meeting, but he was still a member as late as 1728 when he requested a certificate for himself and his family from Falls to Wrightstown, which was probably closer to their home.10

Thomas and Deborah had two daughters and possibly a son. The daughters were Mary and Ann. The possible son was Isaac. Isaac Ashton was born about 1710 and married Dorothy Carr in 1736. They named two of their children Thomas and Hannah, which could have been for his parents, making him a son of Thomas and his second wife Hannah Hough. But Thomas and Hannah recorded the birth of eight children, not including Isaac. There was sufficient time for him to be an unrecorded son of Thomas and Deborah, born sometime before her death.11

Sometime before 1710 Deborah died, leaving Thomas with two or three small children. In 1710 he remarried, again under the auspices of Falls Meeting. His second wife was Hannah Hough, daughter of John Hough and Hannah Rossell. John and Hannah had emigrated in 1683 and settled in Middletown. The following year John was reprimanded by the Falls Monthly Meeting for fighting and drinking to excess. The Houghs remained members of Falls Meeting.12

Thomas and Hannah would go on to have eight children, whose births were recorded at Falls meeting.13

In 1719 Mary, the oldest daughter of Thomas and Deborah, married Daniel Lee of Makefield. They had two children before her death in 1722 or 1723, possibly in childbirth. The next child of Thomas and Hannah was named Mary, probably to commemorate her.

In 1728 Thomas was in trouble with the monthly meeting and the Bucks County court. In June 1728 he pleaded guilty to an unknown offence and was fined. Several other men were fined at the same time; it may have been fighting or drunkenness or some other relatively minor offence.14 In 7th month 1728, three months later, Friends were appointed to speak with him about “his behavior at Newtown Court some time past”.15 He was not asked to submit a paper of acknowledgement.

1731 was a bad year for Thomas and Hannah. Three of their children died within six weeks, probably of a contagious disease. John died in the middle of December; the baby Martha died two weeks later; William died on February 1.16 There were other deaths at Falls Meeting around that time, but no family was hit as hard as the Ashtons.17

Thomas died in 1733. The inventory of his estate showed a successful farmer, with the usual household furniture and goods, seven horses, nine cows, farm implements, and sixteen acres of wheat in the ground. The bonds, bills and book debts—amount that others owed him—came to over £75, and the total value of the estate was appraised at £207.18 In spite of this abundance, he left Hannah with all eight children unmarried, and some of them under the age of five. It must have been difficult for her. Several of the children died unmarried, and none were known to be married in a Friends meeting. The date of her death is unknown; it was apparently not recorded in Falls or Middletown Meeting.

Of the ten known children of Thomas, only three were sons, and only one of them, Thomas, lived long enough to marry.

Thomas, b. in England, d. 1733, m. 1) 1701 Deborah Bains, 2) 1710 Hannah Hough, daughter of John Hough

Children of Thomas and Deborah:19

Mary, b. 1702, d. before 1723, m. 1st month 1719 Daniel Lee of Makefield, married at Falls MM.20 Daniel was a blacksmith. They had children Deborah and John before Mary died, possibly in childbirth.

Ann, b. 1703, m. 5th month 1726 Thomas Hillborn, son of Thomas and Elizabeth, married at Falls MM.21 They lived in Newtown and had seven known children. Thomas Hillborn died in 1779.

Probable son of Thomas, with either Deborah or Hannah

? Isaac, d. 1750, m. 1736 Dorothy Carr, dau. of John & Mary, lived in Makefield. They were married in New Jersey but made acknowledgment to Wrightstown and continued as members there. They had eight children, naming the first two for her parents and the second two Thomas and Hannah. Isaac died in 1750 and Dorothy married John Balance.

Children of Thomas and Hannah:22

John, b. 2nd month 1711, d. 1731, his death reported at Falls meeting.

Hannah, b. 6th month 1716, possibly died in 1717.23

William, b. 11th month 1718, d. 1731, his death reported at Falls meeting.

Isabel, b. 2nd month 1721, no further records

Mary, b. 6th month 1723, no further records

Thomas, b. 6th month 1726, m. Mary Strickland, dau. of John. John Strickland died in 1766 and in his will named his daughter Mary Ashton; his son-in-law Thomas Ashton was an executor.24 Thomas did not leave a will in Bucks County; the date of his death is not known.

Deborah, b. 9th month 1727, m. ? Wm Waters in 1746 at the Churchville Presbyterian Church

Martha, b. 7th month 1730, d. 1731, her death reported at Falls meeting.

  1. Some sources claim that his parents were Thomas Ashton and Margaret Hough of Overton, Cheshire who were married in 1661 and who had a son Thomas born in 1665. This is a little too soon for the Thomas who immigrated. He would have been 36 at his first marriage and 65 when his last child was born. Another possibility is the Isaac Ashton who is supposed to have had a large family and died in Philadelphia in 1699. However, that Isaac left a will naming his “intended wife” Elizabeth Richardson, hardly the will of a man with a family.
  2. Deborah is sometimes described as a daughter of Matthew Baines and Margaret Hatton of Wyresdale, Lancashire, who were married in 1672. Matthew immigrated in 1687 with some of his children, but died on shipboard, and Friends took charge of his two surviving orphan children, William and Ellin. (Davis, History of Bucks County, volume 3, has a detailed story of Matthew and his family.) There are no records that link Deborah with Matthew, Margaret, William or Ellin, while many records link her with the family of Bryan and Ann Baynes of Wennington, Lancashire.
  3. “Vital Records of Bucks Quarterly Meeting”, Mss. at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, a copy of the original record. Also in Watring and Wright, Bucks County Church Records of the 17th and 18th Centuries, vol. 2.
  4. Register of the Parish Church of Melling, transcribed by Henry Brierley, 1911, online at UK Genealogy Archives. Another brother, Thomas, immigrated with his wife Janet. (Middletown Meeting certificates, in Watring and Wright) Thomas and Deborah were married in 1694; Gabriel and Deborah signed as witnesses. (England and Wales Quaker Birth, Marriage and Death Registers 1578-1837, Yorkshire, Monthly Meeting of Settle, image 281, on Ancestry)
  5. When Gabriel made his will in 1727 he named his brother Thomas as well as his “cousin” Ann Hillborn and his “cousin Mary Lee’s two children”. Ann and Mary were daughters of his sister Deborah. Terms such as niece were not in use at the time. (Bucks County wills, probate record file #254).
  6.  Minutes of the Board of Property, series 2, p. 390, 3rd month 1703.
  7. Copied Survey Books, D-72-34, on the website of the Pa Historical and Museum Commission. Davis, in his History of Bucks County, chapter 29, claimed that Thomas and Reuben Ashton each bought 100 acres. This must be a confusion with Reuben Pownall, who is of course no relation to Thomas.
  8. Minutes of the Board of Property, p. 411.
  9. Bucks County Court Records to 1730, p. 459, at Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
  10. Watring & Wright, p. 75.
  11. However, Deborah was probably born about 1660, and was into her forties before she had her children. Isaac could not plausibly be born much past 1704, if he was her son.
  12. Falls Monthly Meeting minutes: multiple references between 4th month 1684 and 4th month 1685, when his paper acknowledging his fault was finally accepted and read.
  13. Falls MM births, deaths and marriages, on Ancestry.
  14. Bucks County Court records to 1730, p. 526.
  15. Falls Meeting minutes, Watring & Wright, p. 75.
  16. Falls MM births, deaths and marriages, on Ancestry, image 205.
  17. Two other daughters, Isabel and Mary, disappear from the records. They may also have died young, although their deaths were not recorded at Falls.
  18. Bucks County probate records, file #365. He is not known to have left a will.
  19. Births recorded at Falls Meeting. Mary and Ann were both remembered in the will of their cousin Gabriel Bains who died in 1727 in Falls Twp.
  20. She was called “of Makefield” in the marriage record.
  21. Thomas and Elizabeth were originally from Shrewsbury, New Jersey.
  22. Isaac is not in the list of births at Falls MM, and could be the son of Joseph Ashton of Lower Dublin, who died in 1751 and named a son Isaac in his will. However, Isaac and Dorothy named two of their children Thomas and Hannah, which seems conclusive. It is also possible that Isaac is the son of Thomas and Deborah, in which case the name Hannah is not accounted for.
  23. Who was the Hannah Ashton who married David Newburn in New Jersey in 1733 and had eight children with him? They were disowned by Wrightstown Meeting in 1768 because “they had removed from amongst us and buried one of their children at Plumstead and set up a stone at the grave” and when Friends advised them to remove the stone they refused. In fact, Hannah “in an angry Humer,” took their certificate instead of exchanging it for another, as they should have. (Wrightstown Mtg records, 3rd month 1766, (Watring, Early church records of Bucks County, vol. 3).
  24. Bucks County wills, file #1203. Thomas is sometimes said to have married Rebecca Cotman, but that may be a different Thomas. Of course, it is possible that the marriage to Mary Strickland shown here is in error.