Let op: Was ouder dan 60 jaar (63) toen kind (Robert Graye (MD) Proctor) werd geboren (??-??-1650).
Let op: Was al overleden (4 februari 1623) bij geboorte (??-??-1650) van kind (Robert Graye (MD) Proctor).
Zij is getrouwd met JOHN GRAYE (VA) PROCTOR.
Zij zijn getrouwd.
Kind(eren):
ANCESTOR OF MARILYN MAAS (WATTS) THROUGH MOTHER
Allis Graye Proctor
Birth: 1587 Greater London, England
Death: 4 Feb 1627 (aged 39Å40) Jamestown, James City County, Virginia, USA
Burial: Jamestown Fort James Cemetery, Jamestown, James City County, Virginia, USA
Memorial #: 105720920
Bio: Alice "Allis" Graye was born abt 1587 in London, England, United Kingdom. Allis was the daughter of William Graye (1564-1607) and Elizabeth Larye Graye (1561-1600).
Alice married John Graye Proctor (1583-1628) in London, England in 1610. He was the son of John Nicholas Proctor (1557-1600) and Alles Graye Proctor (1561-1600).
John Graye and Alice Graye Proctor were the parents of the following known children: William Proctor, John Proctor, Robert Proctor, Daughter Proctor, George Proctor and Richard Proctor.
Proctor, Allis wife of John Proctor Location:Paces Paines, James City Ship Of Entry:George Date Arived:1621 Census:1624-02-04
Mrs. Proctor, a gentlewoman of an heroic spirit (Jamestown 1622) - "One Mrs. Proctor, a gentlewoman of an heroic spirit, defended her plantation a month, till the officers of the Colony obliged her to abandon it, when she left, the savages burnt her house down."
Heroines of Virginia: From the William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine Volume XV 1907 pg. 39 HEROINES OF VIRGINIA:
5. Alice Proctor, who lived on Proctor's creek near Richmond, and who, in 1622, defended her plantation against savages with great bravery. She is referred to as "Mistress Proctor, a proper, civill, modest gentlewoman." She afterwards refused to obey the order of the council to abandon her house for a safer location at Jamestown, and would not retire till the officers threatened to burn it down. She was widow of John Proctor.
Proper gentlewoman: Mrs. Alice Proctor, a proper gentlewoman, defended her place with great bravery in 1622 and refused to abandon her house and would not leave till officers threatened to burn it down." Tyler's Narratives That John Proctor was in England at the time of the Massacre is shown by the records of the Virginia Company, for on the 17th of July 1622, while present as a stockholder at a court held on that day, was appointed on a committee to devise the best ways and means for aiding the Colonists in their distress. At a meeting held April 30, 1623, he stated he lived "near 14 years in Virginia." In May 1625 he was granted 200 acres on S. Side of James River in Surry. This grant was eveidently located at Pace's Paines where he was living at the time of the Muster previously shown. Va. Co. Rec., Vol. II, pp. 94, 385, 440, 457, 466.
There is a video on youtube about Mrs. Alice Proctor and the Indian attack at the colony of Jamestown, VA in 1622. Here is the link to this 2 minute video:
ALICE LOUISA (DE GRAYE) GRAY | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
JOHN GRAYE (VA) PROCTOR |
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