USA > Virginia > Some prominent Virginia families, Volume IV > Part 4
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In York County Records (September 26, 1698) there is an eject- ment suit brought by Thomas Buckner and Sarah (Morgan). his wife, David Alexander and Anne (Morgan), his wife, the said Sarah and Anne being daughters of Francis Morgan, about land acquired by his father (Francis) Morgan, who was a Justice of York County. In the act in Hening's Statutes, docking the entail of John Smith, of "Purton," property (Hening's Statutes, V, p. 399) Samuel Buckner and David Alexander are named as trustees.
This David Alexander was a brother of Anne Alexander, who married John Smith. of "Purton." and afterwards Col. Henry Willis.
In 1770 Morgan Alexander, of Gloucester, son of David Alex- ander, was a student at William and Mary College.
Among the most attractive belles of the period were two cousins of the Washington family. Mildred Washington and Mildred Howell, and Ann Alexander, who was their mutual friend and neighbor. They were gay and social and therefore very popular with the beaux. One of these beaux, Henry Willis (b. 1691-2; d. Sept. 14, 1740), was a youth of impetuous character and deter- mined will. He courted all three girls at the same time, and so impartial was he in his attentions that they all three laughed at him, declaring that he did not know his own mind. and turned his pretensions into ridicule. Whereupon he vowed that he would not rest until he had married all three of them.
In due process of time Ann Alexander married John Smith. of
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"Purton." Mildred Howell married John Brown, and Mildred Washington married Roger Gregory.
John Smith, of "Purton," was the first to die, and Henry Willis, as soon as he dared, came over and laid siege to the widow, and they were married November 2, 1714. Ann (Alexander) Willis, the widow of Smith, died about 1726, having borne to Henry Willis six children :
I. Mary Willis, b. Aug. 6, 1716. Married (1733) Hancock Lee.
II. Francis Willis, b. Oct. 12, 1718.
III. David Willis, b. Dec. 17. 1720.
IV. Henry Willis, b. Sept. 22, 1722. Married (1742) Eliza- beth Gregory.
V. John Willis, b. Aug. 17, 1724. Married Elizabeth Mad- ison.
VI. Robert Willis, b. March 12, 1726.
Mildred Howell was the next of the three girls to lose her husband, and Henry Willis immediately laid siege to the widow Brown, whom he married October 30, 1726. She died October 17, 1732, having borne to Henry Willis three children :
I. John Willis, b. July 16, 1728.
II. Elizabeth Willis, b. 1729.
III. Ann Willis, b. Sept. 4. 1731.
(Willis, Volume II. Chapter IX.)
Elizabeth Smith, daughter of Capt. John Smith, of "Purton," and Mary Warner, was born May 25, 1690, and married Henry Harrison, April 1, 1:08. No issue.
(More about Harrison Family, Volume II, Chapter XV.)
Philip Smith, youngest son and child of John Smith, of "Pur- ton," and Mary Warner, was born June 1. 1695, and died in 1743. He married (February 19, 1711) Mary Mathews, daughter of Baldwin Mathews, Justice of York County, grandson of Governor Samuel Mathews. Philip Smith was vestryman, Petsworth Parish, 1714-1722. His brother, Augustine Smith, was vestryman in 1724 until 1733. when he declined reelection. Philip Smith died June 4, 1743. He inherited "Fleet's Bay" estate in Northumberland County. Philip Smith and Mary Mathews had issue :
I. Mary Smith. Married, first, Jesse Ball ; married, second, John Lee, of Cabin Point.
II. Mildred Smith.
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
III. Elizabeth Smith. Married James Talbot. of Bedford County.
IV. Sarah Smith.
V. Jane Smith.
VI. Susanna Smith. Married John Lee, of Maryland.
VII. Baldwin Mathews Smith. Married Fannie Burgess.
There is a marriage contract recorded in Northumberland County between Philip Smith and the widow Hannah Sharpleigh, dated September 16, 1742. On July 11. 1743, the will of Philip Smith was proved. He gave €200 to each of his daughters and the residue of his estate to his son, Baldwin Mathews. He made his brother, Augustine Warner Smith, his nephew, James Smith, and his son, Baldwin Mathews Smith, his executors.
Mary, the eldest daughter and child of Philip Smith and Mary Mathews, married John Lee, of Cabin Point, eldest son of Henry Lee and his wife, Mary Bland (great-aunt of John Randolph, of Roanoke), who were married about 1723-4. She was born August 21, 1704. Henry Lee was born about 1691; d. between June 23 and August 25, 1147. He was the fifth son of Richard Lee and Letitia Corbin, his wife.
Elizabeth Smith, the third daughter and child of Philip Smith, is supposed to have been married to James Talbot, of Bedford County, Md., who died in 1770. He was a lieutenant in the French and Indian War. They had issue :
I. Johan Talbot.
II. Mary Talbot.
III. Elizabeth Talbot.
IV. James Smith Talbot.
V. John Talbot.
VI. Martha Talbot.
VII. Wellerden Talbot.
VIII. Sarah Talbot.
Susanna Smith, the sixth child, and daughter of Philip Smith, of "Fleet's Bay," and Mary Mathews, married John Lee. of Maryland. They had two sons, Hancock Lee and Philip P. Lee. Hancock succeeded his father as clerk of Essex County. and held the position until 1792, when he was succeeded by his brother Philip P .. who continued in the position until 1814.
John Lee, of Maryland, and Susanna, daughter of Philip Smith,
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of "Fleet's Bay," were the parents of Col. Philip Lee, of "Nomini." who settled in Essex County on an estate he called "Smithfield," and married (about 1787) Mary Jaquelin Smith, daughter of Rev. Thomas Smith, of Cople Parish, and Mary Smith, his wife, of Shooter's Hill.
MATHEWS.
The pioneer of this family was Samuel Mathews, who came to Virginia on the ship Southampton in 1622, and, with his relatives and servants, settled on the south side of the James in the Indian district of Tappahanna, opposite to Jamestown. He was at dif- ferent times Councillor, Commandant of the Fort at Old Point, and Governor, dying in 1859-60, while holding the latter office. (Hot- ten's Emigrants ; Hening's Statutes.)
He married twice at least. The last wife was the widow of Abraham Piersey, who died about 1638, leaving "the best estate that ever was known in Virginia." (Sainsbury Manuscripts.) In 1648 a newswriter announced that Mathews married the daughter of Sir Thomas Hinton (Force's Tracts). The will of Robert Nicholson (1651) leaves legacies to the two sons of Gov. Samuel Mathews, Samuel and Francis.
Samuel Mathews2 (Samuel1), Lieutenant-Colonel in 1655, member Council (Hening, I, 408) ; was therefore a son by the first wife. He died about the same time as his father. N. B. : Reference (Hening, II, p. 14) to the "orphan heir of Col. Mathews." He had issue John3, whose guardian (till 1:61, when she died) was Mrs. Anna Bernard. Col. John Smith, of "Purton," was associated with Mrs. Bernard in the guardianship. After Mrs. Bernard's death Col. Peter Jenings was guardian, and in 1679 William Cole, Esq., was guardian. John Mathews arrived at age before 1682 (Quarterly, III, p. 173). The Mathews resi- dence was at "Blunt Point," Warwick County, at mouth of Deep Creek.
John3 (Samuel2, Samuel1) married (before 1683-4) Elizabeth, "heiress of Michael Tavenor," and had issue Samuel, who as lawful son and heir of Capt. John Mathews, of King and Queen County, gave a power to Nicholas Brent, of "Woodstock," to sell any part of 5,211 acres of land in Stafford County. (Deed in Stafford, August 17, 1702.)
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
Samuel+ (John3, Samuel", Samuel1) married several times. In Essex records, 1720, there is a bond dated 1:06 from Samuel Mathews, of St. Stephen's parish, King and Queen County, to Major George Braxton for the benefit of Elizabeth Mary Mathews5, "whom I had by my deceased wife." In Samuel Mathews' will (November 16, 1:18), proved in Richmond County. he refers to this bond as "executed" from him "the day I was married to Katherine Dunstall when I was very much in drink." By his first marriage he also had John, died s. p., Baldwin, died s. p. By his second marriage he had no issue. He married. third, Margaret (who survived him, and she married William Shrime). Issue by third marriage, Francis. died s. p. Still-born child, un- named.
Elizabeth5 (Samuel+, John3, Samnel2, Samuel1) married Mose- ley Battaley, and in 1751 her son, Samuel Battaley, of Spottsyl- vania, was heir-at-law to his mother, "the only surviving heir-at- law of her father. Samuel Mathews." Deed recorded in King George, conveying 2,000 acres in Richmond County patented in 1654 by Lieutenant-Colonel Samuel Mathews, which descended to his grandson Samuel, who made his will November 16, 1718. (Quarterly, V, p. 277.)
Francis2 (Samuel1), Captain, Justice York County. He died February 16, 1674-5. He had issue: Francis, who died March 10, 16:0-1; Elizabeth, d. August 26, 1671; Mary. d. February 29, 1673: Baldwin. a child born dead in 16:5. umamed.
Baldwin3 ( Francis2. Samuel1). b. 1620: d. 123. In 1682 William Cole, Esq .. and Capt. John Mathews were trustees of Baldwin Mathews. "orphan of Capt. Francis Mathews." Samuel Mathews, of King and Queen, in his will. proved in Richmond County in 1718. refers to Baldwin Mathews and Dudley Digges as kinsmen. He was sworn Justice for York County in 1694 and remained such for many years. He had two daughters. One became the wife of Samuel Timson, and had a daughter. Mary Timson, who received a moiety of her grandfather's estate. and married Thomas Buckner. of Gloucester. The other daughter. Mary Mathews, on February 9. 1:11, married Philip Smith. of "Fleet's Bay." Northumberland County, and had Baldwin Mathews Smith, who married Fannie Burgess. (Quarterly. IV. p. 185.)
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Baldwin Mathews Smith and Fannie Burgess, his wife, had issue :
1. Philip Smith. Student William and Mary College.
II. Edward Smith. Student William and Mary College.,
There is in Westmoreland County a deed mnade ( March 2, 1782) from Elizabeth Smith, relict of Philip Smith. of Washington parish. to John Angustine Washington, in behalf of her three children :
I. Baldwin Bushrod Smith.
II. Frances Burgess Smith.
III. Hannah Bushrod Smith.
Frances Burgess Smith married Rev. John Mathews, of Essex son of John Mathews, of Mathews County. They had issue :
I. John Mathews.
II. William B. Mathews.
III. Thomas Mathews.
IV. Philip Smith Mathews. V. Virginia Mathews. -
VI. Mollie Mathews.
VII. Fanny Burgess Mathews.
John had two sons, Baldwin S. and Ryburn.
William B., Clerk Essex County, died October, 1830. Was twice married: first, married Lucinda Wright, daughter of Edward Wright, of King and Queen County; second. married Maria Jameson Garnett Wood, daughter of Carter Wood, of Essex County, and Susan Garnett. Children by second marriage :
I. John Carter Mathews. d. unmarried.
II. William B. Mathews, d. unmarried.
III. Philip Sweet Mathews. d. unmarried.
IV. Thomas Ryburn Mathews, d. unmarried.
James Madison Mathews. Esq .. attorney-at-law. Rich- mond : Reporter Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia ; author "Civil and Criminal Digests of the Laws of Virginia" and "Guide to Commissioners in Chancery." He married Ellen H. Bagby. of Lynchburg. Va .. daughter of George Bagby, and only sister of the late distinguished writer and author, Dr. George W. Bagby. Their children :
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
I. William B. Mathews, attorney-at-law, Washington, D. C., graduate Columbian University, author "Mathews' Forms of Pleading," and editor National Domain.
II. George B. Mathews, a distinguished artist. of Washington, D. C.
III. Cornelia C. Mathews, wife of John Adolphus Flemer, of U. S. Geodetic and Coast Survey.
IV. Ellen G. Mathews.
V. Maria Virginia Mathews.
VI. Philip Smith Mathews.
VII. James M. Mathews. Jr.
VIII. Luey Gray Mathews.
IX. Temple Harrison Mathews.
Thomas Mathews, son of Frances Burgess Smith and Rev. John Mathews. died unmarried.
Philip Mathews, son of Frances Burgess Smith and Rev. John Mathews, died unmarried.
Virginia Mathews, daughter of Frances Burgess Smith and Rev. John Mathews, married Dr. William Baynham, an eminent sur- geon who for several years was assistant demonstrator of anatomy in Saint Thomas' Hospital, London, England.
Mollie Mathews, daughter of Frances Burgess Smith and Rev. John Mathews, married Dr. Alexander Somervail. a celebrated physician, and died s. p.
Fannie Burgess Mathews, daughter of Frances Burgess Smith and Dr. John Mathews. married James Roy Micon. Their chil- dren are all dead.
I. James Roy Micon, Jr .. Clerk Essex County for fifty years.
II. William B. Micou.
III. Nellie Micou.
IV. Nancy Micou.
V. Betsy Micou.
James Roy Micou, Jr., married Ellen Harvie Jones, of Essex County.
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CARVER.
John Carver was a merchant of Gloucester. He also served as factor or business agent for his customers. Among the records have been found :
Receipt for surveying lands for Madame Warner, 1690, being Mr. Car- ver's account for measuring Mrs. Warner's lands by order of the General Court, 2,189 acres or very near thereabouts, etc .*
Received of Mr. John Carver in full hereof, Nov. 15, 1690.
(Signed) JAMES MINGE, Surveyor.
Know all men by these presents, that I, John Carver, in Gloucester County, in Virginia, do by these presents, out of my love and affection I have for my son, William Carver, and upon the consideration of his being joined in matrimony to Dionesia Bayley, by the will and appoint of Almighty God, do give him and his heirs forever the one-half of the seat of land he now lives upon, with portion of housing plantation and fencing, and one-half of the stock of cattle and hogs now belonging to it, and one mare and colt, a bay horse, and the household goods there belonging, and two negroes and one negro boy named Robin, and man. and Jack, and to be in possession of all of which at the time of his marriage as above said, and I do further give the remainder of said land at my decease or de- parture out of this, all of which premises above mentioned I do promise and oblige myself to make an acknowledgment of the same in court, to be there recorded after the time of their marriage when demanded, as witness my hand this 15th day of May, 1694-5.
JOHN CARVER.
Conquest Wyalt, Richard Bayley, George Seaton.
At the court held for Gloucester County, the 16th day of December, 1696. This day came into court John Carver, who presented and acknowl- edged the above deed unto William Carver, upon whose motion the same is admitted to record and is recorded.
P. BEVERLY, CI. Cor.
It is probable that John Carver, merchant, was the son or possi- bly nephew of Captain William Carver, mariner, who located in Gloucester. He was a neighbor and friend of Nathaniel Bacon, and when Bacon, defying the interdict of the Royal Governor, Sir William Berkeley, started on his expedition against the Indians,
*Augustine Warner Smith. "Shooter's Hill," Middlesex County, Va., born at "Purton," Gloucester County, June 16, 1689; date of death not recorded. Married (Nov. 9, 1711) Sarah, daughter of Johu Carver, of Gloucester County, April 25, 1694; d. March 12, 1726.
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
the old sea captain, Carver, "resolved to adventure his old bones" in the cause of his friend.
Captain Carver had charge of the Naval force of Bacon, con- sisting of four vessels, one of which carried four guns. He was consequently a "Fleet Captain" or Commodore. At the start they had but two vessels, but seized another belonging to Captain Larimore, a friend of Berkeley and a regular trader, and later captured another, making a fleet of four vessels, three of which were used as transports and the fourth carrying four guns for fighting purposes.
During the absence of Carver, who had been lured under a guarantee of personal safety from and to his vessel that he might visit and endeavor to explain the situation to Gov. Berkeley, Cap- tain Larimore surprised Bland, who had been left in charge of the vessels, and by means of armed boats captured him, his force, and the four vessels without firing a gun to alarm Carver, who anticipated no such misfortune. Consequently, when Carver boarded his flagship after returning from his visit to Governor Berkeley, he found his vessels in the hands of his enemies, and he himself was taken prisoner.
Bland being a man of position and having powerful friends, was released on his parole, but Carver was tried, condemned, and executed on the gibbet, and his "old bones" rattled in their chains on the shore of the Accomac, where his vessels had been anchored.
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CHAPTER III
WASHINGTON.
Of Washington we can say nihil nisi bonum. He belonged to that fortunate middle class, the English landed gentry, who, neither very rich nor very poor, neither in high responsible posi- tions which imperil the heads of the holders nor, on the other hand, of that degraded serfdom which groan under the heels of their oppressors, or which, more despicable, are but the tools and servitors of the powerful.
First known about the middle of the thirteenth century, the name was taken from a manor given to William, previously of Hertburn manor, and therefore called William de Hertburn, and who exchanged Hertburn for Wessyngton, whence he became known as William de Wessyngton, which gradually changed to its present form of Washington.
Few of William de Wessyington's (1261-1224, time he was so called) descendants attained such eminence in the public esteem as to give perpetuity to their deeds or their character. Several, however, received the honor of knighthood and there may be counted among them prelates, soldiers, scholars, lawyers, and others who were well known to their contemporaries and occupy niches in the temple of fame.
John de Wessyngton was elected Prior of Durham, Dec. 5, 1416. He wrote a tract, "De Juribus et Possessionibus Ecclesia' Dunelm," to prove that the priests of Durham were, from the beginning of the establishment, abbots.
Prior Wessyngton presided thirty years and died 1446. The inscription on his tomb has been completely destroyed.
Among the soldiers, Col. Sir Henry Washington is favorably spoken of by Clarendon, who says concerning his actions at the capture of Bristol in 1643:
Though a division led by Lord Grandison was beaten off, Lord Grandison himself being hurt, and another being led by Col. Belamis likewise having no better fate, Col. Washington, with a lesser force, finding a place in the
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
curtain between the places assailed by the other two, which he judged to be weaker than the rest. entered with his force and quickly made room for the Horse to follow. ("History of the Rebellion," Book VII. )
Col. Sir Henry Washington later (1646) distinguished himself in the defense of Worcester against the parliamentary forces The governor, Lord Ashly, having been captured and confined at War- wick, Sir Henry Washington was made Governor and Colonel Com- mandant in his place, and he, by his wisdom, firmness, and courage secured much more favorable terms than were at first intended.
The last entry in the Herald's College was in 1618, at which time Henry Washington was named as son and heir of William Washington of Packington, in the County of Leicester, probably nephew to John and Laurence Washington, who emigrated to Virginia.
For the most part an investigation of the history of the Wash- ington family shows that the various heads of families were sub- stantial, landing proprietors, living on their estates as gentlemen should do and held in good repute among the higher class of agriculturists. Monuments in churches and records of the transfers of property show that many of them had a goodly share of the wealth of this world, and were able to enjoy the comforts of life.
The earliest mention of the migration of the Washington family from Durham was in 1532, although the Washington manor ceased to be held by the male line in 1400. The last William de Wessyngton had a daughter Dionesia who married Sir William Tempest of Studley. (Shuster's History of Durham. Vol. II. p. 40.)
In the Visitation of Northampton in 1618 are found signatures of Alburn Wassington and Robert Wassington. These persons were uncles of John and Laurence Washington who emigrated to Virginia.
The direct line of the ancestry of the brothers John and Laurence is traced to Whitfield, Lancaster County, 1450.
Whitaker, in his "History of Northamptonshire," says of the Parish Church at Warton : "The tower appears to be cotemporary with the restoration of the church and on the north side of it are the arms of Washington, an old family of considerable property within the parish, whence it may be inferred that one of the name
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SOME PROMINENT
either built the tower or was at least a considerable benefactor in the work."
In 1552 Laurence, son of John Washington of Warton, was Mayor of Northampton. His mother was a daughter of Robert Kilson, of Warton, and sister to Sir Thomas Kilson, Alderman of London.
Upon the confiscation of the monasteries in 1538 the manor of Sulgrave near Northampton, which had belonged to the Priory of St. Andrew, was acquired by the crown, and the following year the manor and other property was granted to Laurence Wash- ington.
On a brass plate in the Parish Church of Sulgrave, August 15, 1793, the following inscription was legible: "Here lyeth buried the bodies of Laurence Washington, Gent., and Anne, his wife, by whom he had four sons and seven daughters, which Laurence died 19th day of February, A. D., 1589, and Anne deceased 6th day of October, A. D., 1564."
In 30 Henry VIII (1538-9), the manor of Sulgrave, parcel of the dissolved priory of St. Andrew, with all the lands in Sulgrave and Woodford and certain lands in Stotesbury and Cotter, near Northampton, late belonging to the said priory and all lands in Sulgrave late belonging to the dissolved priories of the Canons, Ashley and Catesby, were granted to Laurence Washington, of Northampton, Gent., who died, seized, in 26 Elizabeth (1583-4), leaving Robert, his son and heir, aged forty years, who jointly with his eldest son, Laurence Washington, sold the manor of Sulgrave, 8 James (1610), to his nephew Laurence Makepeace, of the Inner Temple, London, Esq., Gent.
Laurence Washington, after the sale of his estate, retired to Brighton.
His second and fourth sons, John and Laurence Washington, emigrated to Virginia in 1656.
GENEALOGY.
John Washington1, of Whitfield, Co. Lancaster, England, 1450, had, among other children :
I. John Washington, of Whitfield.
II. Robert Washington, of Warton.
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VIRGINIA FAMILIES
Robert Washington2 (John1), of Warton, Co. Lancaster, Eng- land, married and had among other children :
I. John Washington, of Warton. Married Margaret, daugh- ter of Robert Kelson, of Warton, sister of Sir Thomas Kelson, Alderman of London.
II. Thomas Washington.
III. Ellen Washington. Married Samuel Mason, of Warton. John Washington3 (Robert2, John1) married Margaret Kelson and had children :
I. Lawrence Washington+, Esq., of Gray's Inn, Middlesex, Mayor of Northampton, 1532-1545; grantee of "Sul- grave," 30 Henry VIII, 1538-9; d. Feb. 19, 26 Eliza- betlı (1583-4).
II. Laurence Washington+, of Sulgrave. Married, first, Eliza- beth, daughter of Wm. Gough, of Northampton; d. s. p .; second, Anne, daughter of Robert Pargiter, Gent., of Gretworth; d. Oct. 7, 1564.
Laurence Washington4 (John3, Robert2, John1), of Sulgrave, married, second, Anne Pargiter, and had by her four sons and seven daughters. Their eldest son :
Robert Washington5 (Laurence+, John3, Robert2, John1) of Sulgrave had seven sons and seven daughters. His eldest son, Sir William Washington, of Packington, married the half-sister of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, and was the father of the Sir Henry Washington who distinguished himself at Bristol and Worcester.
Laurence+ Washington's second son, Laurence Washington, of Garsden, County Wilts. His granddaughter, Elizabeth Washington, only child and heiress, married Robert Shirley, Baron Ferrars of Chartley, afterwards Earl Ferrars and Viscount Tamworth. She died 1693. The family names were merged in their son Washington Shirley, second Earl Ferrars.
Robert Washington5, of Sulgrave, married, first, Eliza, daughter of Walter Light, of Radway, Warwickshire; second, Anne Fisher, of Hanslope, Buckinghamshire, about 1601.
Robert Washington3 married Elizabeth Light, and had issue :
Laurence Washington ( Robert5, Laurence+, John", Robert2, John1). Married Margaret, daughter of William Butler, of Tighes. County Surry. Married (at Ashton, August 3, 1583) Laurence
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Washington", d. December 13 and was buried at Brighton, Decem- ber 15, 1616. Laurence Washington married Margaret Butler and had issne :
I. Sir William Washington ?.
II. John Washington", of South Cave. Yorkshire, England ; emigrated to Virginia in 1656 and married there several times.
III. Richard Washington7.
IV. Laurence Washington7, student at Oxford, 1622; emi- grated to Virginia 1656 at the same time as his brother John.
V. Thomas Washington7.
VI. George Washington7.
VII. Gregory Washington7, b. Jan. 17, 1607.
There were two daughters also, Martha and Mary Washington.
WASHINGTONS IN AMERICA.
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