William Paxson and his two wives

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Children of William and his first wife Mary:

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

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

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

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

William Hibbs and Hannah Howell

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Children of William and Hannah:

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

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

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

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

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

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

Hannah, b. 1702, died young.

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

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

Joseph Hibbs and his two wives

Joseph was born about 1687, the son of William Hibbs and Hannah Howell. He grew up in Byberry, where his parents were members of Byberry meeting. His father died in 1709, and left the family plantation to Joseph. He received half at first, and the other half when he turned twenty-one.

He was disowned by Abington Meeting on 4th month 1716, at the same time that his brother Jonathan was disowned.1 This is probably for marrying out of unity. The name of his wife is not known; it is often given as Rachel Waring. There is no local Waring family, and her background is unknown.

At some point Joseph moved north to Buckingham, Bucks County. In 5th month 1734 he brought a paper to Abington Meeting expressing sorrow for his outgoing and asking to be reunited with Friends. This was accepted, and a paper sent to Wrightstown, his local meeting for worship.2

The consensus on the web is that Joseph and Rachel had at least thirteen children, over a period of over 25 years. This is possible, but there is no primary evidence for this list. There are no Quaker records of the births of the children, and Joseph did not leave a will. The probable children are: Catherine, William, Sarah, Rachel, Joseph, Hannah, Jacob, Phebe, John, Benjamin, Samuel, and possibly Isaac and Abraham.3 If in fact these children are all Rachel’s, then she must have lived well into the 1730s.4 She died before 1749, when Joseph proposed to marry again. In 10th month 1749 Joseph Hibbs and Catherine Love declared their intentions of marriage at Buckingham Monthly Meeting.5 They were approved and married, but a few years later it was reported that she had been pregnant before they were married. Catherine was the widow of Andrew Love, a weaver who died in Plumstead Township. She and Andrew had five surviving children, as she stated in an Orphan’s Court record, when she and Joseph charged Andrew’s estate for their upkeep, and for two of them, the funeral expenses.6 Andrew had been a member of Plumstead Meeting, and had been in trouble with them in 1747 for drinking to excess, and “other scandalous actions when in drink”.7

Joseph and Catherine lived in Buckingham, where they took out a mortgage in 1760 and where he was taxed in 1761.8 They moved to Plumstead, where Joseph died in March 1762. Bond for administration of his estate was issued to Catherine and to Isaac Kirk and James Spicer. An inventory was made, showing typical farm implements and animals, for a total of £178.3.0.9 The date of her death is not known.10

  1. Abington Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1682-1746, image 47, online on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Montgomery County. All the Quaker records in the account are available on Ancestry.
  2. Abington Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1682-1746, image 97. It is interesting that he took the paper to Abington instead of Buckingham Monthly Meeting, which included Wrightstown. Perhaps it was because he was a member of Byberry Meeting when he was disowned for marrying out of unity. The timing is also interesting. Did he wait until his first wife died?
  3. The problem with the standard list is that Joseph’s wife, either Rachel or someone else, would be having children over a 26-year period, which is not probable.
  4. Martha Grundy gives the date of death as 1740, but admits that there is poor evidence for this family. Her web site is online as of March 2019 at https://sites.rootsweb.com/~paxson/balderston/Hibbs.html.
  5. Buckingham Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1722-1763, image 94.
  6. Bucks County Orphan’s Court Record, file #173. They asked in 1753 for the account to be approved.
  7. Buckingham Monthly Meeting, Minutes 1722-1763, image 113-14.
  8. Bucks County deeds, Book 10, p. 139; Bucks County Tax Lists 1693-1778, Buckingham 1761.
  9. Bucks County Probate file #1117. Why were none of his sons administrators with Catherine?
  10. It is given as 1761 on many web trees. Since she administered Joseph’s estate in 1762, this is obviously incorrect.

William and Margaret Groom of Southampton

William Groom was a Quaker, the son of Thomas and Elizabeth Groom. He grew up in Byberry, Philadelphia County, with his two sisters Elizabeth and Mary. Around 1716 William married a woman named Margaret. Her last name is unknown, but she was probably not a Friend, since in 1716 Abington Meeting drew up a paper of condemnation against him.1

Around 1718, William settled in Southampton, Bucks County, where he erected a grist mill on 112 acres of land.2  It had been sold to him by Joseph Jones, in two parcels, a tract of 50 acres in 1718 and another 62 acres two years later.3 The land lay on the line of Bensalem Township.

William died in 1732,  leaving a widow and several children. Letters of administration were issued to Margaret Groom, Thomas Groom (William’s father), and Thomas Walton. The inventory of William’s estate was taken by Benjamin Scott and William Walton; it included eight acres of wheat, farm implements, livestock, clothing and other personal items. He owned a lot of tools: a whip saw, hand saw, carpenter’s tools, cooper’s tools, axes, adze and chisel, hammer and auger, mill picks, a heading knife, and scythes. He must have been a handy and versatile miller and farmer. He had the assistance of a Negro man, who died soon after William himself.4 In addition to running the mill, William also farmed. He owned several horses, eight cows, thirteen swine and ten sheep. There were seventy bushels of wheat and fourteen well worn mill bags, probably stored in the mill. The appraisers rated his estate at £162.19.2.5

The tax list for Southampton in 1742 shows the ‘widow Grooms’. This must be Margaret, since Thomas’ wife Elizabeth was dead by then. Margaret did not file her account of the estate until March 1757.6 By waiting so long to settle the account, Margaret controlled all of the funds, even as four of her surviving children grew to adulthood and married. There is a stereotype of a grasping miller who cheats his customers; Margaret seems to have been the grasping wife of the miller.7 In her account she followed the usual form, taking the appraised value of the estate and subtracting her expenses and charges to show the total available for the heirs. The more expenses she subtracted the less there would be for her children: Phebe, Thomas and William. In her account she charged for maintaining and schooling the children. The yearly profit of renting the mill and farm for 15 years was £270. During that time she finished the house and repaired the mill and dam race for a cost of £41. When the Orphans’ Court audited her account they disallowed some of the expenses for maintaining the children as well as the value of the Negro man’s service; the court ruled that his life was at her risk and would not allow it. The four children’s share of the estate was £165. She said she had already paid them £105, leaving £60 to be distributed to them.8 The court ruled that this was too little.

In 1760 her son William died, leaving a widow Rachel and four children. Rachel needed money to maintain the children and pay William’s debts. This raised an issue of dividing the mill and land among the heirs. Up until then it was owned jointly by Thomas and William, the two sons.9 The court found that the land could not be divided, and Thomas offered to buy the shares of Rachel’s children so that he could own the mill and land outright. The court valued the property at £800, out of which a yearly payment had to be made for Margaret’s dower, as long as she lived.10

Margaret died in 1773 or 1774.11 Three of her children had died ‘in their minority’—Hester, Phebe and Sarah.12 The other four were alive in 1757. The children were not Quakers and none married in a meeting. In fact Ann’s husband was descended from two Dutch families that moved down to Bucks County from Long Island.

Children of William and Margaret:

Ann, b. ab. 1718, m. 1739 Garret Vansant at Christ Church in Philadelphia13. He was the son of Jacob Vansant and Rebecca Vandegrift. A Garret Vansant, blacksmith, died in October 1779 in Southampton, Bucks County.14 It was probably the same man.15 Children: possibly Jacob and Phebe, probably others.

Thomas, b. ab. 1720, m. 1750 Lydia Goforth, daughter of John and Lydia of Red Lion Hundred, New Castle County, Delaware. They took out the marriage bond on May 1750.16 Thomas initially owned part of a saw mill and grist mill with his brother William, but after William died Thomas bought out the interest of William’s five children in the mill property and settled there in Southampton. Thomas was still alive in 1791 when his son Thomas leased a house to him after Thomas lost the mill property in a sheriff’s sale. Children: Thomas, John, William.

Mary, living in 1761, m. (?) – Halloway.17 No further information.

William, b. ab. 1725, d. 1760, m. about 1748 Rachel Walton, daughter of Joseph and Esther. After William died Rachel married Edmund Briggs, in 1761. At his death William owned part of the saw mill and grist mill with his brother Thomas. There was much litigation over the settlement of his estate and possible mismanagement by Rachel and Edmund.18 Children of William and Rachel: William (died 1773), Esther (died 1773), Thomas (married Hannah Atkinson), Mary (married Joseph Siddell), Mahlon (died without issue).19

Hester, d. young

Phebe, d. young

Sarah, d. young

  1. Abington Monthly Meeting, Men’s minutes 4th month 1716 (on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 12681-1935, Montgomery County, Abington MM, Men’s Minutes 1682-1746, image 47) The paper of condemnation was drawn up for him at the same time as one for Jonathan Hibbs and his wife and Joseph Hibbs. The reason was not given in the minutes, but marrying out of unity was the most frequent offence at the time.
  2. Bucks County Orphans Court records, file #240. The deed for the land has not been traced.
  3. The sales from Jones were referred to in two deeds in 1772 when William’s son Thomas mortgaged the land. (Bucks County Deeds, Book 14, p. 253 and p. 261)
  4. Margaret noted his death as a loss to the estate when she filed her account in 1757. Most Quakers did not own slaves at this time, but some did. It was not yet condemned by the society as it would be later in the 1700s.
  5. They did not include debts owed him but unlikely to be paid, of £56.17.0. Margaret did include these in her account of the estate, making her total over £219. She was technically correct, and it meant that she had to include those debts in the list of her charges.
  6. Bucks County Orphans Court Records, file #240.
  7. For examples of folklore and songs about greedy millers, see the Penn State University Center for Medieval Studies at: https://www.engr.psu.edu/mtah/articles/mills_millers.htm (accessed February 2019)
  8. Bucks County Orphans Court Records, file #240, filed June 1757. £105 was a large amount for the time, but shared among four children over twenty five years it was not significant.
  9. When their father William died intestate, his land was automatically shared by his heirs, with a double share for the oldest son. So Thomas had two shares, and each of his siblings owned a share. When the three youngest died young and intestate, he inherited their shares as well, making five-eighths for him and one share for each of his living siblings or their heirs. It appears that William bought out the shares of the two sisters who did not die young, Ann and Mary.
  10. A wife was entitled to a third of her husband’s property at his death, called her dower or thirds, unless he gave her something different in his will. In this case both the older and younger William died intestate. The value of Margaret’s dower was placed at £150, of which she was to receive interest yearly.
  11. Isaac Comly’s notes on Byberry said 1773; Henry Tomlinson’s book of deaths said 1774. (Henry Tomlinson’s book of deaths, including non-Friends, but saved in the records of Byberry Preparative Meeting, Births and Deaths).
  12. Bucks County Orphans Court Records, file #240.
  13. Pa. Archives, series 2, vol. 8, Christ Church, Philadelphia, May 13, 1739.
  14. Henry Tomlinson’s book of deaths.
  15. Another Garret Vansant died in 1825, a cousin of this Garret.
  16. Delaware Genealogical Society Journal, vol. 7, p. 94.
  17. There is no record of a marriage for her, but the will of Thomas Groom in 1736 named Mary Halloway, listed among other grandchildren of his. By process of elimination this Mary is the only possibility for a Halloway.
  18. Bucks County Orphans Court Records, file #240. William also owned 93 acres in Byberry, Philadelphia County.
  19. The marriages are from a deed in March 1784, when Thomas and Hannah and Joseph and Mary sold a tract of land inherited from William, father of Thomas and Mary. (Philadelphia County Deeds, D 11, p. 274). The deaths of William Jr and his sister Esther are from Bucks County Probate records, Bucks County courthouse. The inventories for Esther and William were taken on the same day and written on the same paper although she was living in Byberry and he in Southampton.

Thomas Groom and Lydia Goforth

 

Thomas Groom was a son of William and Margaret Groom of Southampton, Bucks County, where William owned a saw mill and grist mill. Thomas was born about 1720. His father William died in 1732, when Thomas was still a boy, and his grandfather Thomas Groom, for whom he was probably named, died four years later. In his will the grandfather left £20 to each of his grandsons, Thomas and William, and the carpenter’s tools “at their mother’s house”.1 Thomas and his brother William were taught to be coopers, barrel-makers.2

In the spring of 1750 Thomas was of age to marry and he did something unusual. He married a young woman from New Castle County, Delaware, over sixty miles south of Southampton. Her name was Lydia Goforth and she was the daughter of John and Lydia of Red Lion Hundred, New Castle County.3 The Groom family had no known connections to New Castle, but members of the Goforth family make occasional appearances in Bucks County records. In particular when John Goforth was accused in Bucks County Court in 1747 of getting Rebecca Kelly pregnant, William Groom was one of his sureties.4 John Goforth may have been Lydia’s brother.5 Since Lydia’s father John owned a saw mill, perhaps her brother was in Bucks County to learn the miller’s trade. (He inherited his father’s mill in 1750 when the older John died.) Both families were originally Quaker, but had fallen away from the society in the previous generation.6

The same year that Thomas married Lydia, he had some financial difficulties. He and his brother William owned jointly two tracts in Southampton, one of 50 acres and one of 62 acres, land they had inherited from their father. In September they mortgaged the 62-acre part to Paul Isaac Voto of Philadelphia. They repaid this the following year. In 1760 William died, leaving a widow Rachel and five children.7 This set off a prolonged legal process of dividing the land, a process that left Thomas with sole ownership. Thomas petitioned the Orphans Court in March 1761 to have the land valued, with its grist mill and saw mill.8 The sheriff’s jury valued the land at £800, with the obligation of paying the yearly interest on £150 to the widow Margaret, Thomas’ mother, as long as she lived, as her dower or widow’s thirds as it was called. Thomas wanted full ownership, so in March 1762 he paid £300 to Rachel and her new husband Edmund Briggs to buy out their share.9 To pay for this Thomas and Lydia mortgaged the land, and paid off the mortgage the following year.

There was no love lost between Thomas and Edmund. In 1763 Thomas complained to the court that Rachel and Edmund had gotten William’s estate into their hands, had moved to Maryland, and had left a property of William’s in Philadelphia County “much injured”.10 The court appointed Samuel Biles as a guardian for the property rights of William’s children.11 When Biles presented his account to the court, it was decided that Rachel had already taken more than her share of the estate, and the residue should be shared among his three living children.12

By 1772 Thomas and Lydia were in financial difficulties. They mortgaged the 62-acre tract and they did not repay it.13 This was the beginning of a fourteen-year period when Thomas was constantly in the courts, unable to pay his debts, with many judgments against him.14 The sheriff advertised the land for sale in the Pennsylvania Gazette from 1786 through 1788.15 Finally, to repay the mortgage, the sheriff sold the 62 acres with its mills to Henry Walmsley of Southampton.16 The remaining 50 acres was sold to Thomas’ son Thomas.17 For perhaps the final indignity Thomas and Lydia rented a house from their son Thomas, paying 10s a year rent. The lease, on 8 March 1791, was their last appearance in the records.18

Children of Thomas and Lydia:19

Thomas, b. about 1750. Married a woman named Rebecca.20 Stayed in Southampton. In 1788 he bought from the sheriff the 50-acre tract of his father. There in 1791 when he leased a house to his parents. In 1794 he sold the land to Garrett Vansant.21 Somehow Thomas retained or repurchased part of the land, since in 1823 Thomas (then of Byberry) and Rebecca his wife sold six acres of the land to Evan Groom, son of Thomas’ brother John.22 Probably the Thomas Groom in the 1810 census in Southampton, with eight people in his household, plus two free Black people.23

John, b. 1750, lived in Southampton through 1779, where he was a constable.24 married ab. 1779 his cousin Phebe Cooper, dau. of Thomas and Phebe.25 Phebe was disowned by Buckingham Monthly Meeting for marrying “with the assistance of a hireling minister” and for marrying a non-Friend.26 They moved to Upper Makefield by 1798,  and bought a lot there from John Beaumont.27 John died in 1810 in Upper Makefield.28 Four children are listed in the Orphans Court record for his estate, but five in the will of Phebe’s father Thomas Cooper in 1805. Children: Thomas, Phebe, Mary, John, probably Evan.29

William, moved to Upper Makefield, possibly d. 1836.30 He is said to have married Hannah Atkinson31. Children: Mary, William, John, Jonathan.32 William did not leave a will in Bucks County and there is no listing for his estate in the Bucks County Orphan’s Court records.33

  1. Philadelphia County wills, Book F, p. 22. The older Thomas owned property in both Philadelphia and Bucks County, and died in 1736.
  2. In the estate account of their father William, their mother Margaret itemized £30 paid for “procuring my sons Thomas and William to be instructed in the coopers trade.” (Bucks County Orphan’s Court records, 1757)
  3. Thomas and Lydia took out the marriage bond in May 1750 in New Castle County. There is no record of exactly where they were married. (Delaware Marriages 1645-1899 on Ancestry) The surety for their bond was Richard McWilliams, who later became a judge.
  4. There was a Rebecca Kelly around with a connection to the Groom family. Rebecca Cooper was the sister of William Cooper (who married Mary Groom, Thomas Groom’s aunt). Rebecca married Daniel Kelly in 1735 as her second husband. She would have been considerably older than John Goforth. Rebecca and Daniel had a child, mentioned but not named, in the will of Rebecca’s brother Samuel Cooper in 1750. (Bucks County wills, Book J, p. 322.) If that child was named Rebecca, she would have too young for John.
  5. Her brother John was named in the 1750 will of her father John Goforth. Her probable uncle William Goforth immigrated and lived in Bucks County before moving to Maryland. (Goforth Genealogy). Another probable uncle Aaron Goforth died in Philadelphia before 1735, but left children who may have lived in Bucks County.
  6. When William married Margaret he was disowned by Abington Monthly Meeting, probably for marrying out of unity. (Abington Monthly Meeting, Men’s minutes 4th month 1716, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Montgomery County, Abington MM, Men’s Minutes 1682-1746). The minutes did not explicitly state why he was disowned, but the timing suggests that it was his marriage. In 1747 when Thomas’ brother William married Rachel Walton, they were married at Christ Church.
  7. William married Rachel Walton, daughter of Joseph Walton and Esther Carver. They had five children: William, Esther, Thomas, Mary and Mahlon. William and Esther died in 1773; Mahlon died without heirs. Thomas married Hannah Duffield. Thomas’ sister Mary married Joseph Siddall. William (the one who died in 1760) owned a 93-acre tract in Byberry, Philadelphia County. When it was partitioned among his heirs in 1775, Abraham was a surety for Thomas Groom, the second son, who took possession and made payments to Mahlon and the Siddalls, as well as yearly payments to Rachel Briggs for her widow’s thirds. (Philadelphia County Orphans Court #591).
  8. Bucks County Orphan’s Court record #240, vol. 1, p. 250-51, 255, 267, 281, online at FamilySearch, Pennsylvania Probate, Bucks County, Orphans’ court records, 1683-1866 ; also see the General index to the Orphans’ Court records, 1683-1958.
  9. Bucks County Orphan’s Court, vol. 1, p. 308, 10 March 1762. Edmund Briggs was the son of William Briggs and Margaret Cutler; Rachel Groom was his second wife. They were married in 1761. Edmund died before 1791 when Rachel sold land in Bensalem as his widow.
  10. William owned 93 acres there in his own right. Thomas’ petition was on 16 March 1763. (Bucks County Orphan’s Court, vol. 1, p. 346)
  11. William and Rachel had five children before his death in 1757. (Bucks County Orphan’s Court record, #2002) Two of the children, William and Esther, died unmarried in 1773, probably of an infectious disease. The inventory of their estates was taken on the same piece of paper on the same day. Another child, Mahlon, died without issue in June 1783. (Phila County Administrations, 1783-65. He was a tailor from the inventory of his estate.)The remaining heirs were Thomas and Mary (who married Joseph Siddall, a tailor of Bensalem). Thomas married Hannah Duffield and lived in Byberry, later in Bensalem. (Philadelphia County deeds, Book D 11, p. 274; Will of Jacob Duffield, Lower Dublin, Philadelphia County 1774; Bucks County deeds, Book 26, p. 87; administration of Mahlon Groom in 1783 when Jacob and Abraham Duffield both posted bond with Thomas Groom) Thomas bought out the rights of the Siddalls and owned the 93 acres outright.
  12. Bucks County OC, vol. A2, p. 414, 13 March 1776.
  13. They mortgaged it to Joseph Warner. (Bucks County deeds, vol. 14, p. 253)
  14. In 1790 a list was made by John A. Lewis, probably at the request of the Court of Common Pleas. It showed that Thomas Groom had ten judgments against him in the court, probably for debts unpaid. (“An examination of the judgment dockets of the court of Common Pleas since March 1770 to the year 1786. The above judgments appear against Thomas Groom.” In the Groom file at the Bucks County Historical Society, Spruance Library.
  15. Index to Bucks County References in Pennsylvania Gazette, Bucks County Historical Society, Spruance Library.
  16. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 25, p. 616. The sheriff sold it to Walmsley in 1785, but did not convey a deed, so his successor confirmed the sale in 1791. Henry Walmsley died intestate and the property went to his son Daniel, who sold part of it to Thomas Ridge Jr of Bensalem in 1797, and part of it to Robert Mason in 1808. (Bucks County deeds, vol. 29, p. 487)
  17. Bucks County deeds, vol. 29, p. 439, a later grant from Thomas Jr to his brother William.
  18. Bucks County deeds, vol. 31A, p. 457.
  19. Davis, History of Bucks County, p. 543.
  20. Thomas and Rebecca conveyed land previously owned by Thomas Groom Sr, in 1810. (Bucks County deeds, Book 41, p. 439) Some have said that he married Hannah Duffield, but that was probably his cousin Thomas, son of William. In 1784 Thomas and Hannah conveyed land in Byberry formerly owned by William Groom, father of that Thomas. (Phila County Deeds, book D11, p. 274). In addition, when the Byberry tract was partitioned among William’s heirs in 1775, Abraham Duffield was a surety for Thomas Groom, son of William, who took possession by making payments to his sister Mary and her husband. (Phila County Orphan’s Court, File #591).
  21. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 28, p. 225.
  22. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 52, p. 313.
  23. 1810 Federal census, Bucks County, Southampton.
  24. 1779 tax list for Southampton; PA Oyer and Terminer Court Papers 1757-1787, Bucks 1778-1781.
  25. W. W. H. Davis picks up this line. The inventory of his estate, made by Jonathan Warner and David Felix, is at BCHS, #3719, 1810.
  26. 5th month 1780, Buckingham Monthly Meeting, women’s minutes 1734-1792.
  27. 1800 federal census for Upper Makefield; Davis, History of Bucks County.
  28. Bucks County Orphan’s Court Record, #2002.
  29. Evan is the child omitted from the Orphan’s Court record, probably in error. It is possible that John and Phebe also had a daughter Elizabeth. James Worthington, son of Benjamin and Hannah, married Elizabeth Groom as his second wife between 1820 and 1824, and had five children with her. There were several connections between Elizabeth Groom Worthington and Evan Groom. Elizabeth named her first son Evan Groom Worthington. Her son John married and had a son Evan, born in 1850, who was living with the family of Evan Groom, son of John and Phebe, in 1860 as an apprentice. When James died he owed money to Evan Groom. The close connection between this family and that of the older Evan suggests that Elizabeth Groom may be an undocumented younger sister of Evan. She is not listed in the children of John and Phebe, and may be illegitimate or adopted.
  30. Wrightstown Monthly Meeting, Births and Deaths 1770-1901, image 337.
  31. Buckingham Monthly Meeting, Women’s minutes 1734-1792, in the index as “Hannah Atkinson (now Groom)”. The page number in the index is incorrect and the minute has not been found. It may have been a statement that she married out of unity.
  32. The children of Hannah Groom were listed in the will of her sister Mary Atkinson, who died in 1856 in Wrightstown. (Bucks County wills, book 14, p. 52)
  33. No reference was found in the Bucks County Orphan’s Court index or the Bucks County estate index 1684-1939 A-R (both online).

Thomas and Elizabeth Groom of Byberry

Thomas Groom arrived in Philadelphia in late 1683. He probably shipped goods on the Comfort of Bristol, which left Bristol in May 1683 and arrived a month later.1 His brother Peter had already arrived. Their sister Mary might have come with either of them.2 Peter settled in Burlington County, New Jersey. He and Thomas remained close, and years later Thomas named some of Peter’s family in his will. When Mary Groom married John Rogers in 1685, she was living in Byberry, probably with Thomas, and Peter Groom was one of the witnesses. Mary and John Rogers “published their intentions of marriage by writing affixed on the meeting house doore according to law … 16th day of 7th mo 1685 … in their publick meeting place in the house of John Hart on Poequesy (alias Bybury Creek in the upper part of the county of Philadelphia.”3 After their marriage they lived on Crosswicks Creek, Burlington County, New Jersey, and had four children, John, Deborah, Mary and Joseph, born between 1687 and 1692. John died in 1700. Mary’s death in 1692 or 1693 was recorded by Chesterfield Meeting.

Peter Groom probably started out living in Bucks County. In May 1682 he bought 200 acres in Southampton from Thomas Fairman.4 That November he sold that tract; at the time he was still living in Bucks County.  In 1683 he rented 200 acres in Bucks County, and requested that it be joined to Thomas “Hold”.5 This is probably Thomas Howell, who shipped goods on the same ship as Peter’s brother Thomas. In 1690 Peter sold that tract of 200 acres.6 By March 1691, when Peter gave a power of attorney to his brother Thomas, he was living in Burlington County. He married twice and had children with both wives. In 1694 Peter was hauled into Burlington Court, accused of living in sin with the wife of Thomas Wright. Peter did not do his case a favor by appearing drunk in court and refusing to take off his hat.7 In his will of December 1726 Peter named his wife Elizabeth (née Wood) as well as five sons and five daughters. He died around October 1728, when the inventory was made of his estate.

The Groom family of southeastern Pennsylvania is descended from Thomas, since Peter’s descendants stayed in New Jersey. In 1683 William Penn issued a warrant to lay out 200 acres in Southampton Township, Bucks County, for Thomas Groom.8 This was the first of several pieces of land Groom would own. As one of the earliest settlers there, he is shown on Holme’s map of early landholders, with land on Poquessing Creek.9 In addition to farming, Thomas was described in a 1691 power of attorney as a carpenter.10 In 1694 Thomas bought 150 acres in Philadelphia County from Thomas Fairman adjoining Job Howell (son of Thomas Howell) and Peter Groom.11 This may have been his primary plantation.

Sometime around 1690, Thomas married Elizabeth; her last name is unknown. Thomas and Elizabeth were members of Byberry Meeting. He was active there; she was not. Along with William Walton and many others, Thomas signed a paper signifying disunity with the faction of George Keith, denouncing the spirit of separation.12 In 1707 he was appointed by Byberry Meeting as an overseer, along with William Beal. Two years later he attended the Quarterly Meeting, along with Rynear Tyson.

Thomas and Elizabeth had three children who lived to marry. Since the births of their children were not recorded at Byberry or Abington (the monthly meeting that Byberry belonged to), there may have been other children who died young. Their daughter Mary married William Cooper, son of James and Hester, but this was not her first choice. A mason named Samuel Grimsditch lodged with the Groom family for two years until his death in January 1713. He was contracted to marry Mary Groom and “intended (had not death prevented) in a short time to have made [her] his wife”. He wanted her to have his possessions. After his death Thomas Groom, William Groom (Mary’s brother), and William Marshall (the husband of Mary’s sister Elizabeth) affirmed his statements before a justice and letters were granted to Mary Groom.13

Thomas had multiple dealings with William Marshall. Although there is no record of the marriage, there is strong circumstantial evidence that William was his son-in-law, married to Thomas’ daughter Elizabeth. Thomas named her in his will as Elizabeth Marshall, although he did not give her husband’s name. In 1697 Thomas sold land to William Marshall. This was part of a tract of 350 acres in the Manor of Moreland, bought from John Holme on June 4.14 Groom promptly divided the tract into three parts, selling 100 acres to Thomas Scott and 150 acres to William Marshall, tailor of the Manor of Moreland.15 Groom sold the remaining 101 acres to Hugh Morgan, bought it back again, and finally sold it to John Wharton in 1715.16 In 1713 Thomas Groom and William Marshall bought land together, along with a man named Thomas Kemball. They went to the Commissioners of Property in Philadelphia and bought 2500 acres, a large tract, in the Great Swamp in Bucks County, near Richland. They proposed to build a grist mill on it.17 Half the money was to be paid at next summer fair, on the 16th of May, and the remainder six months later. The Great Swamp was in the northern end of Bucks County, about twenty miles north of Byberry. In 1713 only a few settlers had moved there, but people were buying up the land on speculation. In 1707 Groom sold a tract of 550 acres in Bucks County that he had bought a few years earlier; this may have been another speculation.18 In 1716 Groom acted as an intermediary for a sale of two tracts in Philadelphia County, from Thomas Kimber to James Cooper. Kimber sold the land to Groom on March 6, and a week later Groom sold it to James Cooper, merchant of Philadelphia.19 William and Mary Groom, children of Thomas, witnessed the deed. Soon after this Mary married William Cooper, James’ son.20

In 1735 Thomas was approaching the end of his life. His son William had died before him. His wife Elizabeth was dead. He was lodging in a room in Byberry and no longer lived on his Byberry land. He had mortgaged it and later assigned it to Samuel Cooper, who paid off the mortgage. Samuel was another son of James Cooper, and the brother of William Cooper, Thomas’ son-in-law.21

Thomas wrote his will on October 1, 1736. He did not mention his wife Elizabeth or his daughter-in-law Margaret Groom, widow of William Groom. He did name both daughters, a niece, some of his grandchildren but not others, and several people named Marshall of unspecified relationship. He left a small legacy of five shillings to Mary Dunning; perhaps she was keeping house for him. The largest legacies were to his daughters, Mary Cooper and Elizabeth Marshall. Johanna Page got £5; she was a niece, the oldest daughter of Peter and Elizabeth Groom. He left £5 to Mary Halloway, who was not a known child of Peter. She was probably a granddaughter, a married child of William and Margaret, since he named the other three of their children.22 He left £20 to each of his grandsons, Thomas and William (sons of William and Margaret), and the carpenter’s tools “at their mother’s house”. He left to Ann Groom, daughter of William and Margaret, the moveable goods at Margaret’s house. He only named one of the children of Mary and William Cooper, their daughter Rebecca, leaving her the remaining moveable goods “in the room where I lodge”. The Coopers were relatively well off, with a substantial legacy from William’s father James; perhaps Thomas felt that they did not need as much from him. He left another £5 to Mary Johnson, the eldest daughter of William Marshall. This is plausibly another granddaughter, although the wording is odd, since he did not name her as a relative, for example “my granddaughter” or the “daughter of my daughter Elizabeth”. Yet the legacy of the same amount suggests that she was a granddaughter or a niece. A Mary Marshall married John Johnson in 1728 at the First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia.23 Was this the same Mary? Finally he left another £5 to Sarah Marshall, wife of Moses. Her relationship to Thomas is unknown. If she was a granddaughter, she would have to be an unknown daughter of William and Mary Cooper or else a daughter of Elizabeth Groom Marshall. Thomas’ daughter Elizabeth and Mary were the executors. Normally the son would be executor, but William had died four years before.

Children of Thomas and Elizabeth:24

Elizabeth, m. — Marshall. This was probably William Marshall, who is surely related to the tailor of the Manor of Moreland who bought land with Thomas in 1697 and 1713, and who attested to the will of Samuel Grimsditch in 1713. A man who bought land in 1697 could be a generation too old to marry Elizabeth, and her husband could be the son of that William. A William Marshall died in February 1764, according to the Byberry death record kept by Henry Tomlinson. However he does not fit easily into the Marshall family of Tinicum, Bucks County, which included a Moses, born about 1701, who married a woman named Sarah, possibly referred to in Thomas’ will.25

Mary, b. ab. 1695, d. 1772, m. ab. 1722 William Cooper, son of James and Hester of Philadelphia. They lived in Byberry until William’s death in 1736. Mary died in Byberry in 1772. Children: Rebecca (married William Hibbs), Thomas (married Phebe Hibbs), James (married Hannah Hibbs), Samuel (married Grace Ridge), Letitia (married Abraham States).

William, b. ab. 1698, d. 1732, m. ab. 1716 Margaret—.  Lived in Southampton, Bucks County, where he operated a grist mill. He was disowned by Abington Meeting in 1716, possibly for marrying out of unity. He died in 1732, before his father Thomas, and did not leave a will. Children: Anne (married Garrett Vansant at Christ Church in 1739), Thomas (married Lydia Goforth of New Castle County), Mary (possibly married — Halloway), William (married Rachel Walton), and three daughters who died young.

 

  1. Peter Coldham, Complete Book of Emigrants 1661-1699, p. 415) Oddly, Marion Balderston does not list Groom in her list of people who declared goods (“Penn’s 1683 Ships”, in Walter Sheppard, Passengers and Ships prior to 1684) She might have used a different source, since there were port shipping books kept by Searchers, Controllers, Waiters, Customers and Surveyors. Thomas Howell shipped goods on the same ship as Thomas Groom and also settled in Southampton.
  2. The parents of Thomas, Peter and Mary are not known, though some researchers claim their father was Samuel Groom, the Surveyor general of East Jersey. He had a brief and stormy career in 1682 and 1683, clashing with the acting governor Thomas Rudyard over land grants to large purchasers, and died before October 1683. He had a son Samuel, a merchant who stayed in England. (Corcoran, Life of Thomas Holme; Wacker, Land and People; Whitehead, East Jersey under the Proprietary Governments; Early records of NJ; Col Doc Rel Hist State NJ). There are no records to connect this family with Thomas, Peter and Mary. Groom, as an occupation name, was very common.
  3. Abington Monthly Meeting, Marriages 1685-1721, image 7, online on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935, Montgomery County. All the Quaker records in this account can be found on Ancestry.
  4. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 2, p. 59.
  5. Copied Survey Books, D68-179, p. 357, on the website of the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.
  6. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 1, p. 367. Peter sold it to Hugh Marsh, who sold it to Anthony Morgan, who sold it to Josias Hill. Peter signed the deed with Marsh and Morgan, and made his brother Thomas his attorney to acknowledge it in court. In November 1706, John Ellet, who had apparently bought it from Josias Hill, sold it in three tracts. William Marshall, who was closely associated with Thomas Groom, signed the three deeds along with Ellet. (Bucks County deeds, vol. 3, p. 274-278) Ellet had sold the tract to William Marshall but not conveyed it, so Marshall got the payment from the buyers. This tract adjoined land of Thomas Groom.
  7. Burlington Court Book, 1693/94, pp. 162-64, 168, 171, 177. Ultimately they got off with a fine, probably because there was evidence that Thomas Wright beat his wife and “turned her out of doores”.
  8. The Historian, Bucks Co., vol. 5, no. 5, 1868, p. 42.
  9. For more information about the map and the people on it, see my blog at TakingtheLongView.org.
  10. Bucks County Deeds, book 1, p. 370. Peter Groom made Thomas his attorney to acknowledge a deed.
  11. Philadelphia County Deeds, book H5, p. 238. Since Job Howell’s land was in Southampton, Groom’s land must have been right on the county line between Philadelphia and Bucks Counties.
  12. Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, Minutes 1679-1703, image 170, an evocative torn page.
  13. Philadelphia County Wills, book C, p. 336. Grimsditch is a rare English surname, found mostly in Cheshire and Lancashire. The ornate lettering in the will copy book makes it difficult to read his name. He asked to be buried next to his cousin Joshua Tittery. Tittery had come to Philadelphia as a glass blower, later worked as a potter, and died in 1709.
  14. Philadelphia County Deeds, book E3 v5, p. 118.
  15. The sale to Scott was recorded in Philadelphia County Deeds, book E3 v5, p. 137. The sale to Marshall was the same day but recorded later, in book E7 v9, p. 82.
  16. Philadelphia County Deeds, book F2, pp. 39-42.
  17. Minutes of the Board of Property, Book H, 8th month 1713. The Commissioners sold them 2250 acres immediately, for £12 per hundred acres, plus another 250 acres “in case they build a good grist mill on it”.
  18. Bucks County Deeds, vol. 3, p. 356. He sold it to Bernard Christian Van Horn.
  19. Philadelphia County Deeds, book H17, p. 152. Sometimes this kind of pass-through sale was done in order to settle an estate. In this case it may have been to establish a clear title for the final buyer. There were five witnesses for the sale to Cooper, more than the usual three.
  20. There is no record of their marriage. It was obviously after March 1716, since Mary witnessed the deed as Mary Groom. But it could not have been much later, since she was already of marriageable age at the death of Samuel Grimsditch in January 1713.
  21. Philadelphia County Deeds, book F8, p. 154. He mortgaged 150 acres in Byberry adjoining Job Howell and Peter Groom. These were probably no longer the actual owners. (Recitals in deeds were often copied from earlier deeds without updating the current owners of adjoining land.) The witnesses included William Cooper and Mary Cooper. In March 1737 William Hudson acknowledged the receipt of principal and interest from Samuel Cooper.
  22. With no records for the marriages of Thomas’ daughters (or their births) it is difficult to pin down the dates. A granddaughter married by 1736 could have been born about 1716, which is plausible for a marriage for William. A Mary Halloway, widow, died in Philadelphia in 1747. Her estate was administered by Jacob Cooper, possibly a coincidence.
  23. Pennsylvania Compiled Marriage Records, on Ancestry.
  24. There are no birth or marriage records for them, in spite of Thomas’ known affiliation with Byberry Meeting. The dates here are estimates. Elizabeth is placed first because she was named first in the will.
  25. William Marshall of Tinicum died in 1757, left no children and a wife Ann, named his three brothers: Edward (of the Walking Purchase), John, and Moses. (Bucks County wills, book 2, p. 314) The brothers were probably all born in the early 1700s. Could they be sons of William Marshall of Moreland? That William was not the one who died in Philadelphia County in 1764 (since he named children Thomas, Ann, Elizabeth and Margaret).

John Groom and Phebe Cooper

John Groom was the son of Thomas Groom and Lydia Goforth of Southampton, Bucks County.  Born about 1755, John came of age around 1775. Thomas and Lydia lost their 112 acres and mill in a sheriff’s sale in 1788, due to many debts. Their son Thomas, John’s brother, bought 50 acres of the 112-acre tract and settled there. John was taxed in Southampton in 1778 as a single man, probably living with his brother Thomas.1 Is he the John Groom who served in the militia, First Battalion, 6th Company in Southampton Township in 1775, under the command of John Folwell?2 He was still in Southampton in 1781, taxed for no land, but two horses and two cows, still probably living with his brother. He served as constable and in 1782 was indicted for failing to execute a writ properly.

By 1784 John owned 30 acres and a house. He had married about four years earlier, to his cousin Phebe Cooper, daughter of Thomas Cooper and Phebe Groom. Phebe was a member of Buckingham Monthly Meeting along with her parents.3 But John was not a Quaker; his grandfather William had been disowned in 1716, probably for marrying out of unity. In 2nd month 1780 the women’s meeting of Buckingham sent a committee to meet with her, and in 6th month she came to the meeting with a paper of acknowledgment. This was not accepted, and in 8th month they drew up a testimony against her.4

By 1800 John and Phebe had moved to Upper Makefield with their five children. Phebe died before 1803, when her father wrote his will and described her as deceased.5 John died in May 1810, when the inventory of his estate was taken.6 He owned the usual household goods and tools, but no luxuries such as a teapot or multiple feather beds. His estate was valued at about $244. Coupled with the two small pieces of land that he owned, four acres in Southampton, and five acres in Upper Makefield, John was a man of few means, and his estate was not sufficient to pay his debts. His administrator Edmund Smith had to sell the land to support the children who were underage, and in the end most of the creditors had to be content with repayment of half what they were owed.7 Two of the children were still under 21 and unmarried at this time; they were probably taken in by their three older siblings.8

Children of John and Phebe:9

Thomas, b. ab. 1781, married before 1808. Lived in Upper Makefield.10 His wife’s name is not known. Had a son Jonathan who married Rebecca Pidcock. (Davis, History of Bucks County, vol. 3,  biography of Ezekiel A. Groom)

Phebe, b. ab. 1783, m. ab. 1803 John Hagerman, son of Adrian Hagerman and Mary Dyer; children: Mary, Letitia.11 The daughter Mary married Thomas Atkinson, moved to Auglaize County, Ohio, and had sons named Evan Groom Atkinson and Amos Bennett Atkinson.

Mary, b. ab. 1790, d. 1851, m. 1810 Amos Bennett, moved to Auglaize County, Ohio, where Amos died in 1856 and Mary died in 1851.12 Probable children: Sarah, Henry, John, George.13

John. b. after 1790, alive in 1810, no further information.

Evan, b. ab. 1795, d. 1872, m. ab. 1818 Rachel Randall, daughter of George Randall and Rachel Ridge. Evan lived in Southampton, where he was a successful farmer and stone mason.14 He served in the militia and was sometimes called Captain Groom. He represented Bucks County in the State Representative Assembly in 1853 as a Democrat. He died in 1872 and left a will; Rachel died a year before him. Children: Lydia Ann, Warren, Owen, Emaline, Rebecca, Elizabeth, Evan Jerome, Franklin, Ellen.

? Elizabeth, b. 1799, married James Worthington as his second wife.15 They lived in Southampton and were there as late as 1850. In the 1850 census they lived next to Warren Groom (son of Evan Groom). Known children: John, Warren. The son John named his oldest son Evan. In 1860 Evan Worthington, age 10, was an apprentice for Evan Groom, living in Evan’s household.16 There are no records of Elizabeth as a daughter of John and Phebe, but her close association with Evan Groom suggests a relationship. Perhaps she was an adopted daughter, or illegitimate.

  1. McNealy and Waite, Bucks County Tax Lists 1693-1778.
  2. Pennsylvania Archives.
  3. Buckingham MM, Women’s Minutes 1734-1792, 7th month 1768, on Ancestry, US Quaker Meeting Records 1681-1935.
  4. Buckingham MM, Women’s Minutes 1734-1792. She had married with the assistance of a “hireling minister” to a man who was not a Quaker.
  5. Bucks County wills, proved 1805.
  6. Bucks County Probate records, file #3719, Bucks County courthouse.
  7. Bucks County Orphan’s Court record, #2002, multiple entries, 1812-1813.
  8. There is a problem with the list of children of John and Phebe, and two contradictory records. The will of Phebe’s father Thomas Cooper, proved in 1805, listed the five children of daughter Phebe (Groom) deceased (Phebe, Thomas, Evan, Mary, John); he left £5 to each of them. However the Orphan’s Court record of 2011 listed only four children (Thomas, Phebe, Mary, and John). The two daughters were already married, and only John was listed as a minor. The omission of Evan is surely an error, since another petition by Edmund Smith, on 26 September 1811, described the “minor children of the said intestate”. Who was the Elizabeth Groom, born about 1799, who married James Worthington, lived in Southampton next door to one of the sons of Evan Groom, and named two of her sons Warren and Evan? She may have been an undocumented daughter of John and Phebe.
  9. From the Orphan’s Court record, the 1803 will of his father-in-law Thomas Cooper, and Davis. Evan is included because he was in the will of Phebe’s father Thomas. Elizabeth is included because of her close association with Evan.
  10. His wife may have been Mary Holcomb (web sources).
  11. Ancestry trees.
  12. 1850 federal census, Auglaize County, Ohio. Amos was 61, a merchant; his wife Mary was 60.
  13. Findagrave for Amos S. Bennett, Auglaize County, Ohio.
  14. Davis, History of Bucks County,
  15. James first married Ann Maclay and had two children with her before her death.
  16. 1860 federal census, Southampton, image 1.

Evan Groom and Rachel Randall

 

Evan was born on October 30, 1794, the son of John Groom and Phebe Cooper of Upper Makefield, Bucks County.1 He inherited £5 in 1805 from his grandfather Thomas Cooper, but nothing from his father, who died in debt in 1810. Evan’s mother died when he was young. He grew up with three older siblings, who probably took him in after his father’s death.2 He may have been especially close to his sister Phebe who married John Hagerman, since Mary Hagerman, Phebe’s daughter, named one of her sons Evan Groom Atkinson.

About 1818 Evan married Rachel Randall, daughter of George Randall, a shoemaker of Bensalem, and his wife Rachel Ridge. Evan and Rachel settled in Southampton, where he was a successful farmer and stone mason.3 In the census records they always had a large family, both living with them and nearby. In 1830 they had 14 people in their household. In 1850 their five youngest children were still living with them. In 1860 they were next door to their son Frank and his wife Harriet. In the 1870 census Evan, Rachel, and their daughter Rebecca shared a house with two servants, one of whom was Rachel’s older sister Grace Randall. They were next door to Emaline and Jacob Van Horn.

Evan was described as Captain Groom in the marriage notice of his daughter Emaline.4 This was not just an honorific, since he had served in the militia as a young man. “The firing of the British frigate, Leopard, on the Chesapeake, in 1807, caused an outburst of patriotism among the Bucks county militia, and steps were taken to form volunteer companies…The President called for 93,500 militia, of which Pennsylvania was to furnish 14,000…The martial spirit of the young men of Bucks County was greatly stimulated by the war with Great Britain..By 1822 there were 19 companies in the county, the greater part of them were riflemen, a popular arm in the war just closed.”5 Evan Groom was the captain of one of those companies. When Evan died, the Doylestown Democrat said of him, “Although he never set a squadron in the field, or faced the foe in grim visaged war, it was from want of opportunity not of will. He had a natural fondness for military life, and there be many of us now in middle life, who well remember as amid the exciting events of boyhood, how our Captain marched in martial pomp at the head of his large company of riflemen – a wearing of the green!… the gallant Groom and his brave boys, preceded by martial music, were the cynosures of each eye, the admiration of all hearts.”6

He worked at first as a mason, and bought his first land in 1813, a two-acre lot in Southampton on the county line.7 He enlarged his holdings with at least ten more purchases from 1826 through 1857.8 In the early deeds he still called himself a mason.9

In 1853 he had the honor of representing Bucks County in the State Representative Assembly as a Democrat. He traveled to Harrisburg when the Assembly was in session.10 The Republican Compiler, a newspaper of the time, recorded Groom as voting yea on a routine amendment to the Commonwealth Constitution, along with the rest of the House of Representatives.11

Evan made his will in 1869 and died on 11 February 1872.12 He was 78 years old.13 In his will Evan named nine of his children. He signed his will with an X. Since he had signed documents earlier, this was probably a physical disability at the time he made the will. He was living on the Attleborough Road in Southampton. This was in Bucks County, not Philadelphia, but he was buried at William Penn Cemetery in Somerton, Philadelphia County, a few miles south across the county line. His son, Evan Jerome the doctor, was one of the executors, along with a son-in-law Charles Willets. Evan bought land over a forty-year period in both Southampton and Bensalem, and evidently became quite wealthy. His estate was worth over $35,000. The inventory showed the possessions of a well-to-do farmer of the time, including livestock, grain, farm machinery, a two-horse carriage, sleigh, wagons and a sulky and nine rooms worth of household goods. In his will he requested that his executors “enclose my burial lot in the William Penn cemetery with neat iron railing and also put up head and foot stones at my grave and also have my name on the gate of said lot.”14

He left extra money to his daughter Rebecca for her “extra services”. He left his wife Rachel her choice of household goods to furnish “one room complete” and directed his executors to sell his other real estate and property and use the interest from four thousand dollars to support Rachel. Although she died before him, he did not rewrite his will after her death.

Children of Evan and Rachel:  (none named for their grandparents)

Lydia Ann, b. 1818, d. 1908, m. Benjamin Worthington, son of John and Sarah. Benjamin grew up in Byberry, and married Lydia Groom before 1839. He worked as a storekeeper, but moved around between Philadelphia County and Bucks County, from Bensalem, to Moreland, then Warrington. Benjamin died in 1876, and Lydia lived in Cheltenham, first with her daughter, later with her children Emmor and Rebecca.15 She died in Somerton and was buried at William Penn cemetery in Somerton.16 Children: Watson, Elmira, Annie Rebecca, William Emmor, Rachel.17

Warren, b. ab. 1821, d. 1898, m. Rachel Richardson, had five children, kept the Brick Hotel in Newtown.18 Rachel died in 1866 at the age of 46, of consumption. In 1870 Warren was a hotel keeper, and later a bartender.19 He died of cirrhosis of the liver in 1898, living on the Oxford Pike at Neshaminy Falls, Bucks County. He is buried at William Penn cemetery with his wife.20 Children: Owen, Evan, Elizabeth, Lafayette, Fanny.

Owen, b. 1824, d. 1898, m. Rachel –. The last name of his wife is not known; some Ancestry trees give it as Ridge.21 He worked as a hotel keeper in Somerton, later farmed in Buckingham. Later in life Owen and Rachel lived with their nephew Augustus Willett on a farm in Bensalem. He died in 1898 and is buried at William Penn cemetery. His wife died before him.22 Children: Warren, Louisa, Ellen, Franklin, Annadell, William, Benjamin, Owen.23

Emaline, b. 1825, m. Jacob Van Horn in 1848; they named two of their children Evan and Rachel. Jacob was a farmer, first in Southampton next door to Evan and Rachel, later in Warminster, Bucks County.24 Emaline died in 1907 in Abington.25 Children: Evan, Rachel, Mary.

Rebecca, b. 1828, d. 1905, did not marry; lived with relatives, first with her parents, then her nephew Augustus Willett, later her brother-in-law William Willard (probably keeping house for him after her sister died). Rebecca died in 1905 and is buried at William Penn cemetery.26

Elizabeth, b. 1831, d. 1903, m. Charles Willett in 1850 in Bensalem. Charles was a farmer in Bensalem, who served as a county commissioner and served a term in the state legislature (like his father-in-law Evan Groom). Charles died in 1875 from pneumonia.27 Elizabeth died in 1903. Their son Augustus Willett was a farmer who in 1880 was supporting his widowed mother Elizabeth, his two younger sisters, his wife, his little daughter Lillie, his uncle Owen Groom, and aunt Rebecca.28 Augustus died at age 39 of consumption.29 Children of Elizabeth and Charles: Augustus, Elizabeth, Emma.

Evan Jerome, b. 1833, d. 1921, m. Mary Louisa Carter in 1856, later married Elizabeth Anderson.30 He became a doctor and lived in Bristol, Bucks County.31 He was active in the community. In 1873 he was invited, with other leading men of the town of Bristol, to meet to form an association to promote the interests of the town, especially by attracting manufacturers to settle there. They agreed that the town needed to provide inducements such as waterworks, and needed to deal with issues such as the police, the “speed of the trains”, and the “blowing of the locomotive whistles”.32 Evan died in 1921 and was buried in Bristol Cemetery.33 Children of Evan and Mary: Rebecca, Ellen, Ellerslie, Albert, Rachel (adopted). He left a will naming his wife Elizabeth, although she died before him, his son, adopted daughter, daughter-in-law and a grandson.

Franklin H., b. 1835, m. Harriet Plumly in 1858. He was a stone mason. They lived in Southampton, where their neighbors in 1870 were also stone masons.34 Frank died in 1901; Harriet died in 1920. Child of Frank and Harriet: Elwood.

Ellen, b. ab. 1840, d. 1898, m. William Willard35. William was a sawyer. They lived in Moreland, always close to other relatives or with relatives living with them. After Ellen died, Rebecca Groom kept house for William.36 Ellen and William apparently had no children.

 

  1. Evan is assumed to be their son, based on his inclusion in the will of Phebe’s father Thomas, written in 1803, proved in 1805. However, Evan is not listed in the Orphan’s Court record for the estate of John Groom, presumably an oversight on the part of the clerk. (Bucks County Orphan’s Court records, #2002, multiple entries 1812-1813)
  2. Who was the Elizabeth Groom, born in 1799, who married James Worthington, lived in Southampton next door to one of the sons of Evan Groom, and named two of her sons Warren and Evan? It is tempting to place her as an older sister of Evan’s, but she is not listed as a child of Phebe Cooper Groom in the will of Phebe’s father in 1805.
  3. In 1834, according to Davis in his History of Bucks County, when the first high school was built in Attleborough, the mason work was provided by “Evan Groom and Hazel Scott, of Southampton, for sixty-two cents a perch”. Attleborough later became Langhorne. 
  4. Bucks County Intelligence Marriages to 1860, Bucks County Historical Society, Spruance Library. “Emeline Groom, daughter of Captain Groom”, married Jacob Vanhorn in April 1848. They were married by Alfred Earle, a Baptist minister.
  5. W. W. H. Davis, History of Bucks County, 1876.
  6. Doylestown Democrat Deaths, Bucks County Historical Society, Spruance Library, 20 February 1872.
  7. Bucks County deeds, book 52, p. 312.
  8. Bucks County deeds; Bucks County probate records
  9. For example, in an 1836 deed from Isaac Ridge, Bucks County deeds, Book 98, p. 412.
  10. J. H. Battle, History of Bucks County, 1887, p. 70.
  11. The Republican Compiler, 11 Sept 1854, online at Penn State Digital Newspapers. A list of Representatives on the Wilkes University Election Statistics Project listed his name as Ryan Groom, but this seems unlikely. There is no known Ryan Groom in Bucks County at the time.
  12. His death was noted in the journal of Lydia Ann Cleaver, Diary 1854-1883, on microfilm at Family History Centers. She said he died of dropsy and that his wife had died the year before.
  13. Philadelphia Death Certificate, on FamilySearch. His son Evan J. was a doctor and signed the death certificate.
  14. Bucks County Probate records, file #13102, at the Spruance Library.
  15. Census records 1850-1900; Bucks County deeds.
  16. Philadelphia Death Certificate, named as Lydia Ann Worthington, b. 3/17/1818, d. 1/8/1908, age 89, died of “LaGrippe”, doctor in Bustleton, father Evan Groom, mother Rachel Randall, residence Bustleton Avenue in Somerton, 35th ward, buried from Bustleton Avenue at William Penn.
  17. My grandmother, Helen Worthington Tyson, remembered these children; they were her grandfather (Watson), great-uncle and great-aunts.
  18. Rachel’s last name is from Ancestry trees, no evidence given.
  19. Federal census records, 1870, 1880.
  20. Philadelphia Death Certificate.
  21. There was a large Ridge family in lower Bucks County, descended from William Ridge and Mary Walmsley, married about 1725.
  22. Philadelphia Death Certificate.
  23. Federal census records 1860-1880.
  24. Federal census records 1860-1880.
  25. Philadelphia County Death Certificate.
  26. Records of William Penn cemetery online, at USGWArchives.net for Philadelphia cemeteries.
  27. Bucks County Gazette, 8 April 1875, at Bucks County Historical Society, Spruance Library.
  28. Federal census 1880.
  29. Philadelphia Death Certificate.
  30. Mary Louisa was the daughter of Thomas T. Carter and Melvina Worthington.
  31. He was president of the Bucks County Medical Society in 1902.
  32. Bucks County Gazette, 30 October 1873.
  33. Hatboro Public Spirit, 26 February 1921, Bucks County Historical Society.
  34. Their neighbors in the 1870 census were William Worthington, John Tomlinson, and George Vansant.
  35. Bucks County Gazette, March 24, 1898. She was buried at William Penn Cemetery.
  36. Federal census, 1870, 1880, 1900.

George Randall and Rachel Ridge

George Randall lived in Bensalem, Bucks County, in the late 1700s and early 1800s. He worked as a shoemaker and owned only about ten acres of land. George’s parentage is uncertain, although he probably fits into the Randall family that starts with the immigrant Nicholas Randall who owned land in Bucks County starting in 1684. The third generation after Nicholas is not well documented, and George of Bensalem could fit there.1

In April 1791 George Randall of Bensalem bought 1½ acres from Rachel Briggs, widow, adjoining Nicholas Vansant, Thomas Worthington, Abraham Larue, and other land of Rachel Briggs.2 About 1794 George married Rachel Ridge, daughter of Thomas Ridge and Rachel Duncan. There is no known church record for their marriage; they were not married in a Quaker meeting, although Rachel’s Ridge and Duncan families were originally Quaker.

In 1799 and 1800 George was taxed in Bensalem as a shoemaker.3 Bensalem was bustling at the time. There were nine carpenters, suggesting that there was work building houses. There were weavers, tailors and shoemakers, five tavern keepers and three shopkeepers.4 By 1800 George and Rachel had four daughters, and by 1810 they had five daughters and two sons.5 George and Rachel had eight known children in all, seven daughters and a son. One son was George.6 Another son must have died young.7 The daughters all married except one, and most had children. George may not have been wealthy, but he and Rachel successfully married off six daughters. They owned about ten acres in Bensalem at the time of George’s death, adjoining John Tomlinson and Nicholas Vansant. Part of this was the small lot that George bought from Rachel Briggs; the rest was his wife’s share of her father’s estate, conveyed to her in 1710.8 Since this was not sufficient for farming, he made his living as a shoemaker.

The daughters all married except one and most had children. The son George may have been feeble-minded and is not known to have married. The children seem to have been close-knit. One daughter did not marry and lived first with one sister and later with a niece and nephew. The son George was living with one of his sisters in 1850. Two of the sons-in-law served as administrators of the estates of George and Rachel, and one of them bought the land, keeping it in the family.

George died in 1836, leaving no will. His estate was not probated until April 1841, after Rachel died.9 The implication is that the family wanted to keep her in the house, and delayed probate until her death. Evan Groom, husband of Rachel Randall, one of the daughters, served as the administrator. On April 26, 1841, probably just eleven days after Rachel died, Evan came into Bucks County Orphans Court to petition for a sale of the house and lot in Bensalem owned by George, to pay George’s debts.10  Why was Evan in such a hurry to sell the land, and why were George’s debts still unsettled five years after he died? Evan was the wealthiest of the sons-in-law, with land valued at $20,000 in 1860. It is plausible that the debt was actually money he loaned to George, a debt that he did not attempt to collect until the real estate could be sold. It is hard to imagine anyone outside of the family waiting so long for a repayment.

The Orphans Court ruled that the land could be sold, and at the September term Evan reported that he gave public notice and sold the tract of 1 ½ acres in Bensalem, to John Tomlinson for $315, as John was the highest and best bidder. On September 20, the court affirmed the sale.11 On the same day, the inventory was filed, showing a meager value of $10.65, with a bed, kitchenware and other small goods.12 Three years later Evan filed the final estate account, showing real estate tax paid on the $315.13, Book 11, p. 113.]

At the same time that Evan Groom was settling the estate of George Randall, another son-in-law Hazel Scott was settling the estate of Rachel. In the April term 1842, he petitioned the Orphans Court to ratify an agreement he had made with Rachel in 1837, for him to buy a tract of 8¾ acres in Bensalem from her, for $550 and for yearly payments to her. The agreement was made in 1837, but a deed was never signed, and he wanted clear title to the land. She had signed the agreement by mark.14  In the petition to the court Hazel Scott listed her heirs: George Randall, Rachel intermarried with Evan Groom, Mary intermarried with William Tomlinson, Esther intermarried with Joseph Vansant, Elizabeth intermarried with Jesse Mood, Ann intermarried with Elexander S. Rutherford, Grace Randall, Sarah (Hazel’s wife). The account for Rachel’s estate was not filed until February 1848, by the administrator Franklin Vansant. It showed a total of $550.00, the amount that Scott had paid for the land, as her only asset. She must have lived on the yearly payments Scott made to her.

Children of George and Rachel:15

Mary, b. about 1795, m. William Tomlinson, son of John Tomlinson and Sarah Worthington, in 1824.16 They were married by the justice Benjamin Crispin. In 1850 they were living in Bensalem with their children Sarah, age 19, Mary, 17, and John Comly, 14. William was working as a mason.17 George Randall, age 42, an “idiot” was also living with them, probably a younger brother of Mary’s. They were next door to John Tomlinson, his father, and close to Vansant relatives. In 1860 W. W. Tomlinson was living in Bensalem, working as a day laborer, with daughters Sarah and Mary, but his wife was gone.18 Note that William was a mason, like his brother-in-law Hazel Scott. Children: Sarah, Mary, John C.

Grace, b. about 1797, d. 1892, did not marry, lived with relatives.  In 1860 she was living with two widowed sisters, Ann Rutherford and Elizabeth Mood, in Oakford, Southampton, adjoining Bensalem.19 In 1870 she was living with Rachel and Evan Groom, described as a servant.20 In 1880 she was living with Thomas and Rachel Yerkes; Rachel Scott Yerkes was a daughter of Sarah Scott and therefore Grace’s niece. Grace died in 1892 and was buried at William Penn Cemetery.21

Rachel, b. March 1, 1799, d. Aug 4, 1871, m. Evan Groom about 1815. He was the son of John Groom and Phoebe Cooper. Like Rachel, Evan was descended from Quaker families but was no longer a Quaker himself. They lived in Southampton and raised a family of nine children. Evan served in the militia as a young man and was elected to the state legislature to represent Bucks County.  In 1860 Evan’s farm in Southampton was valued at $20,000.22 Rachel died in 1871; Evan died in 1872; they are buried together at William Penn Cemetery.23 Children: Lydia Ann, Warren, Owen, Emaline, Rebecca, Elizabeth, Dr Evan J, Franklin, Ellen.

Elizabeth, b. 1800, d. 1892, married Jesse Mood about 1823. He was a farmer. In 1850 they were living in Southampton, next door to their nephew Warren Groom and his wife Rachel. Jesse died in 1852, and left a will.24 They apparently had no surviving children. In 1860 Elizabeth was living with her two widowed sisters, Grace and Ann, along with two children of Ann’s, Emily and George Rutherford.25 In 1860 Elizabeth and Grace were taxed for a piece of land in Southampton.26 In 1870 Elizabeth was still living with Ann, both living with William Rutherford, a stone mason (another son of Ann).27 In 1880 Elizabeth was living on the Bustleton Pike, Philadelphia County, boarding with Edward and Elizabeth Tomlinson.28 Elizabeth died in 1892 and is buried at William Penn Cemetery.29

Esther, b. 1803, d. 1886, married Joseph Vansant. They were living in Southampton in 1850 with daughters Hannah and Amanda.30 Their nephew William Rutherford, age 9, was living with them. Joseph was a farmer. They were still there from 1860 through 1880.31 In 1870 Joseph was listed as a carpenter. In 1880 they were living with Hannah and Joseph Reyser, probably a granddaughter and her husband. Joseph died in 1882 of “debility”; Esther died in January, 1886. They are buried together at William Penn Cemetery.32 Children:33 Hannah, Amanda, Silas.

Sarah, b. 1805, d. 1888, m. Hazel Scott in 1827. They were married by Isaac Hicks, Justice of the Peace. They were living in Southampton in 1850, where he was a stone mason. Scott is supposed to have done the mason work on the high school in Langhorne with his brother-in-law Evan Groom.34 In 1860 Sarah and Hazel were still in Southampton with some of their children. Hazel was listed as a farmer. Hazel died in 1869 of consumption. By then he was working as a storekeeper.35 The inventory of his estate was taken in July 1869; it showed a horse and wagon, a few household goods not taken by the widow, and other sundries. The balance of his estate was doubtful store bills (might not be recovered) of $176 and the fixtures and goods of the store of $499.36 In 1870 Sarah was living in Southampton with her son George and his wife Louisa. George was listed as a broom manufacturer; maybe he made the brooms that Hazel (and George’s cousin Benjamin Worthington) sold in their store.37 In 1880 she was still in Southampton, boarding with Rachel and Thomas Yerkes, her daughter and son-in-law.38 Her sister Grace was boarding there too. Sarah died in 1888 of pneumonia; she is buried at William Penn with Hazel.39 Children of Hazel and Sarah: Randall, Eveline, Elizabeth, Rachel, Mary Ellen, George40

George, b. about 1808, named in the list of heirs in 1842, no further record. Is he the George Randall, age 42, described as an “idiot”, living with Mary and William Tomlinson in 1850?

Ann, b. ab. 1815, m. Alexander Rutherford. Alexander was named in the list of heirs in 1842 but was probably dead by 1850. By 1860 Ann was widowed, living in Southampton with her widowed sister Elizabeth Mood. In 1870 Ann and Elizabeth were living with Ann’s son William, a stone mason.41 Ann died in 1892, at the age of 78, and was buried at William Penn Cemetery.42 Known children: William, Emily George.43

  1. Normally a man having children born between 1795 and 1815 would be born about 1765 to 1770, marrying around 25 to 30. There is no George in the known Randall family tree born in that time. The only known candidate, as opposed to hypothetical people, is the George, son of John Randall and Elizabeth Shaw, born about 1752. However, he was probably a generation too old to fit here. He may have married Sarah Brooks in 1774 at the Southampton Baptist Church; there are no records of children for George and Sarah. If George does fit into the known Randall family, it is probably as a descendant of George Randall, son of Nicholas and Elizabeth, who married Elizabeth Doane, and married second Mary Comly Harding.With Elizabeth, he had a son John who married Elizabeth Shaw and had a son George, who is probably too old to be the Bensalem man. With Mary, George had two sons: Jacob and George. Little is known of Jacob and George. They each could have had a son George born around 1770. More research will be needed to settle this question, and there may not be any conclusive records.
  2. Rachel Briggs was twice widowed. Born Rachel Walton, she first married William Groom Jr, who died in 1760. The next year she married Edmund Briggs and was disowned by Abington Meeting for the marriage.
  3. Bucks County Tax Records 1782-1860, on Ancestry.
  4. Bucks County tax list 1799, on Ancestry, Image 10.
  5. 1800 census, Bucks County, Bensalem; 1810 census, Bucks County, Bensalem. The numbers and ages of people in the family for 1800 require Elizabeth to be born very soon after the birth of her sister Rachel, and the numbers for 1810 are missing one daughter and include an extra son. It is difficult to interpret these numbers, except to say that George was definitely living in Bensalem at the time and having a family of (mostly) daughters.
  6. 1850 census, when a George Randall, age 42, an “idiot”, was living with Mary Randall and her husband William Tomlinson.
  7. He was in the census of 1810, but not in the list of heirs when George and Rachel died.
  8. Bucks County deeds, book 68, p. 374.
  9. She died on April 15, 1841. (Bucks County Orphans Court record, April 1842,  File #5401, on Ancestry, Image 500-01) George died in 1836 or 1837, according to Orphans Court documents.
  10. Bucks County Orphans Court records, Vol. 10, p. 246, File #5754 (on Ancestry, Image 416)
  11. Bucks County Orphans Court records, Vol. 10, page 285, File #5254 (on Ancestry, Image 438)
  12. Bucks County Estate File #7618.
  13. Bucks County Estate File #7618, Orphans Court File #5256 [sic
  14. Bucks County Orphans Court records, File #5401. The 8¾ acres had been conveyed to her in 1810 by the intermediary Ezra Townsend of Bensalem. (Bucks County deeds, Book 68, p. 374).
  15. These children were named as children of Rachel in an Orphans Court record, when Hazel Scott, the administrator of Rachel’s estate, communicated a rule of the court to his sisters and brothers-in-law.
  16. Sarah was a daughter of Joseph Worthington and Esther Carver, and a granddaughter of John Worthington and Mary Walmsley, the immigrants.
  17. 1850 census, Bucks County, Bensalem, Image 7.
  18. A James Carter, age 32 was living there with two young children; was he a widowed son-in-law?. 1860 census, Bucks County, Bensalem, Image 6.
  19. 1860 census, Bucks County, Southampton, Image 35. Grace’s name was written as Grace Rutherford and her sister Ann as Ann Randall. A user-submitted correction, with which I agree, notes that Grace was actually Grace Randall, “single sister of Ann Randall Rutherford”.
  20. 1850 census, Bucks County, Southampton, Image 1
  21. Pennsylvania Town and Church Records on Ancestry. Grace is not listed in the database of William Penn burials on the USGWArchives.
  22. 1850 census, Bucks County, Southampton, Image 1.
  23. They are buried in Plot C97, along with their son Owen and his wife Rachel. Their son Warren also married a woman named Rachel, but she is buried in plot H122. Burials at William Penn Cemetery, Philadelphia, on USGWArchives.net for Philadelphia County.
  24. Bucks County wills, #9164. He named his wife but no children.
  25. 1860 census, Southampton, Bucks County, Image 35.
  26. Bucks County tax records 1782-1860, Southampton, on Ancestry, Image 16.
  27. 1870 census, Southampton, Image 35, indexed as Wood.
  28. 1880 census, Philadelphia County, District 461, Image 8.
  29. William Penn Cemetery records on USGWArchives. Her age was given as 92, and the cause of death as old age. She was buried in plot E56, in the same plot as Randall Scott, son of George and Louisa Scott. Hazel and Sarah Scott were in the adjoining plot E57.
  30. 1850 census, Bensalem, Image 1.
  31. 1860 census, Bensalem; 1870 census, Bensalem, Image 61 (indexed as Bedminster); 1880 census Bensalem, Image 8.
  32. William Penn Cemetery records on USGWArchives. They are in plot E27, with their son Silas and his wife Mary. Silas and Mary lived nearby on the boundary of Bensalem and Southampton.
  33. There may be other children as well.
  34. The Langhorne high school reference is from Davis, History of Bucks County.
  35. He was buried in plot E57 at William Penn Cemetery; the record listed him as a storekeeper in Bucks County.
  36. Estate file of Hazel Scott, Bucks County Courthouse.
  37. 1870 census, Southampton, Image 35.
  38. 1880 census, Southampton, Image 15.
  39. William Penn cemetery records.
  40. Randall might be the Randall Scott who died in Somerton in 1898 (Phila. County Death Certificates). Elizabeth married a Tomlinson and died in 1914. George married a woman named Louisa.
  41. 1870 census, Southampton, Image 35.
  42. William Penn Cemetery records. She is in plot D56. Alexander is not there.
  43. There may be other children. These are from census records.

Patrick Malone and Hannah Beale

Patrick Malone was not part of the Quaker immigration of 1682 and 1683; he came late to Bucks County.1 He appears in the Pennsylvania records around 1742, when he was married in Buckingham, Bucks County.2 His wife was Hannah Beale, daughter of Alexander Beale and Sarah Bowman. Patrick and Hannah bought a farm in Buckingham in 1745 near Forest Grove. Forest Grove lay at the intersection of Lower Mountain Road and Forest Grove Road; Patrick’s farm was apparently near the intersection.3

Patrick may not have been a Quaker, although he was surrounded by them in Buckingham. He and Hannah were not married at Buckingham Meeting and the births of their children were not recorded there. Furthermore in 1768 their son John was received by request into membership with Buckingham Meeting, showing that he was not a birthright member.4 If Patrick was not a Quaker he may have immigrated for economic reasons rather than religious persecution. In 1773 Patrick and John were witnesses for the will of Elizabeth Welding; she was Hannah’s aunt.

In his will, dated 1784 and proved 1788, 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 deceased. John inherited the plantation of 116 acres and was named executor.5 The others received cash legacies. His wife Hannah had died before him.

The inventory of Patrick’s estate shows a small house, with a front room, back room and “chamber”, and no mention of a barn or outbuildings.6 The front room included the hearth for cooking; the back room and chamber each had a bed. He owned only one mare and two cows, and his estate came to £49.6.8, rather meager for the time.

Children of Patrick and Hannah:

John, b. 1743, d. 18157, m. 1769 Rebecca Good at Buckingham MM. John left a will naming his John and James, daughters Hannah, Alice, Phebe and Rachel.8 Another daughter, the wife of Job Walton, predeceased her father. Rebecca was not mentioned and must have died before her husband. John left the plantation of 117 acres to his son John (the land Patrick had left to John in 1788).

Mary, b. 1745, m. 1765 William Kirk. They lived in Buckingham, where William died in 1821. In his will he named his wife Mary and children Isaac, John and Cynthia. Two others, William and Sarah, died before him.9

Hannah, b. ab. 1747, d. 1811, m. 1774 Benjamin Worthington, son of John Worthington and Mary Walmsley. They were members of Byberry Meeting and lived in Byberry, where Hannah died in 1811 and Benjamin died in 1813. He named all of his living children in his will.10 Children: Mary, Asa, John, James, Benjamin, Mahlon, Hannah, Joshua, Enos, Elizabeth, Martha.

Sarah, b. ab. 1749, d. 3rd month 1777, m. 1774 Joseph Worthington, son of John Worthington and Mary Walmsley. Sarah was Joseph’s second wife; his first wife was Esther Carver. After Sarah died, Joseph married again, to Esther Kimble. He had children with all three of his wives. He owned much land before his death in Buckingham in 1820.

James, b. 1751, d. 1815, Mary Tomlinson. They moved from Horsham Meeting to Goshen Meeting in Chester County in 1799, and lived near West Chester.11 James left a will naming Mary, various nieces and nephews and some Tomlinson relatives. He and Mary apparently had no children.<12

Phebe, b. ab. 1755, d. 1809, m. 1773 John Tomlinson. Phebe was buried at Byberry Meeting in 1809. John died in 1824. They had a large family.

Elizabeth, m. Henry Stirk. They lived in Buckingham and may have had three children.

Ann, b. 1762, m. Samuel Reeder, Buckingham MM in 1792. They may have moved to Ohio.

  1. His origins are not known. His name is Irish, but he does not appear in Albert C. Myers, Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania.
  2. Caroline Worthington in her web gedcom has him born in Bucks County. This is doubtful.
  3. Web page of the Forest Grove Historic District, as of 2019 on LivingPlaces.com.
  4. In addition, when William Kirk married Mary Malone in 1765, they were married by a minister and he had to write an acknowledgment to Wrightstown Meeting. (Miranda S. Roberts, Descendants of John Kirk, 1912, p. 47) Patrick and Hannah were witnesses at the wedding of their son John in 1769 at Buckingham Meeting, but this is not evidence since non-Quakers were able to serve as witnesses.
  5. Bucks County wills, book 5, p. 76.
  6. Bucks County probate records, #2148, Bucks County courthouse.
  7. Joseph Comly’s notes; Rebecca died 1813.
  8. Bucks County wills, book 9. p. 57.
  9. Bucks County wills, book 10, p. 50.
  10. Philadelphia County wills, book 4, p. 287.
  11. Comly’s notes on Byberry.
  12. Chester County will book 1814-5.