Family Tree Welborn » Martha Wooldridge (Osborne) (1688-1757)

Persönliche Daten Martha Wooldridge (Osborne) 

Quellen 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27

Familie von Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)

Sie ist verheiratet mit John Wooldridge.


Marriage
Date: 1704
Place: Henrico, Virginia, United States
Marriage
Date: 1704
Place: Henrico, Virginia, United States,
Marriage
Date: 1705
Place: Chesterfield, Virginia, USA,
Marriage
Date: 1705
Place: Chesterfield, Chesterfield, Virginia, United States,
Marriage
Date: 1704
Place: Henrico County, Virginia, USA,
Marriage
Date: 1704
Place: Chesterfield, Chesterfield, Virginia, United States,
Marriage
Date: 1705
Place: Chesterfield, Chesterfield, Virginia, United States,
Marriage
Date: 30 Oct 1706
Place: Chesterfield, Virginia, USA,
Marriage
Date: 30 Oct 1706
Place: Chesterfield, Chesterfield, Virginia, United States,, , , , , , , ,, , , , , , , ,

Sie haben geheiratet rund 1704 in Henrico County, Virginia.Quellen 30, 31


Kind(er):

  1. John Wooldridge  ± 1705-1783
  2. Thomas Wooldridge  ± 1707-1762
  3. Edward Mologe Wooldridge  ± 1711-± 1808 
  4. Mary Wooldridge  1715-1789
  5. Robert Wooldridge  ± 1719-1794 
  6. William Wooldridge  1728-1798 


Notizen bei Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)



Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)
Gender:
Female
Birth:
1688
Fauquier, Virginia
Death:
1757 (68-69)
Chesterfield County, Virginia, United States
Place of Burial:
Butler County, Kentucky, United States

Immediate Family:
Daughter of Edward Osborne, III and Tabitha Osborne (Platt)

Wife of John ·Äòthe blacksmith·Äô Wooldridge

Mother of John Wooldridge, Jr.; Thomas Wooldridge; Capt William Harrison Wooldridge; Edward Wooldridge; Robert Wooldridge; and Mary Trabue (Wooldridge)

Sister of Tabitha Cheatham (Osborne); Edward Osborne, IV; Keziah Osborne and Elizabeth Osborne

https://www.geni.com/people/Martha-Wooldridge/6000000002824533611

Martha Wooldridge is your 7th great grandmother.
You¬â€ 
¬â€ ¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Geneva Allene Welborn¬â€ 
your mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Alice Elmyra Smith¬â€ 
her mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Nellie Mary Henley¬â€ 
her mother¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ John Merrit Wooldridge¬â€ 
her father¬â€ ·ÜíMerritt Wooldridge¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Chesley Wooldridge¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Edward Wooldridge, Jr.¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Edward Wooldridge¬â€ 
his father¬â€ ·Üí¬â€ Martha Wooldridge¬â€ 
his mother

https://www.geni.com/people/Martha-Wooldridge/6000000002824533611

Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)
Gender:
Female
Birth:
1688¬â€ 
Fauquier, Virginia¬â€ 
Death:
1757¬â€ (69)¬â€ 
Chesterfield, Virginia¬â€ 
Place of Burial:
Butler County, Kentucky, United States
Immediate Family:
Daughter of¬â€ Edward Osborne, III¬â€ and¬â€ Tabitha Osborne¬â€ 
Wife of¬â€ John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge¬â€ 
Mother of¬â€ John Wooldridge, Jr.;¬â€ Edward Wooldridge;¬â€ Robert Wooldridge;¬â€ Thomas Wooldridge;¬â€ Mary Trabue; and¬â€ Capt. William Wooldridge¬â€ ¬´ less¬â€ 
Sister of¬â€ Tabitha Cheatham, widow Branch;¬â€ Edward Osborne, IV;¬â€ Keziah Osborne¬â€ and¬â€ Elizabeth Osborne¬â€ 

Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)
Gender: Female
Birth: 1688 Fauquier, Virginia
Death: 1757 (69) Henrico, Virginia
Daughter of Edward Osborne, III and Tabitha Osborne (Platt)
Wife of John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge
Mother of
Edward Mologe Wooldridge
Robert Wooldridge
John Wooldridge, Jr.
Thomas Wooldridge
Mary Trabue
Capt. William Wooldridge
Sister of Tabitha Cheatham Branch; Edward Osborne, IV and Agnes Goode
Half sister of Edward Osborne

https://www.geni.com/people/Martha-Wooldridge/6000000002824533611

John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge is your 7th great grandfather.
You ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn Smith your mother
·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith Henley her mother
·Üí Nellie Mary Henley Wooldridge her mother
·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge her father
·Üí Merritt Wooldridge his father
·Üí Chesley Wooldridge his father
·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr. his father
·Üí Edward Mologe Wooldridge his father
·Üí John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge his father Martha Osborne his wife

Martha Platt Wooldridge is your 7th great grandmother.
You ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn Smith your mother
·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith Henley her mother
·Üí Nellie Mary Henley Wooldridge her mother
·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge her father
·Üí Merritt Wooldridge his father
·Üí Chesley Wooldridge his father
·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr. his father
·Üí Edward Mologe Wooldridge his father
·Üí Martha Platt Wooldridge Osborne his mother John Wooldridge her husband

[ or ]

Martha Wooldridge is your 7th great grandfather's wife.
You ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn Smith your mother
·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith Henley her mother
·Üí Nellie Mary Henley Wooldridge
her mother ·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge her father
·Üí Merritt Wooldridge his father
·Üí Chesley Wooldridge his father
·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr. his father
·Üí Edward Mologe Wooldridge his father
·Üí John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge his father
·Üí Martha Wooldridge Osborne his wife

Martha Osborne Wooldridge
Birth:¬â€  1688
Fauquier County
Virginia, USA
Death:¬â€  1757 Henrico County Virginia,

She was the son of Edward Osborne.
She married John Wooldridge, Sr., The Immigrant
in 1704.¬â€ 
¬â€ 
Family links:¬â€ 
¬â€ Parents:
¬â€ ¬â€ Edward Osborne (1646 - 1757)
¬â€ ¬â€ Tabitha Platt Osborne (1660 - 1692)
¬â€ 
¬â€ Spouse: ¬â€ ¬â€ John Wooldridge (1678 - 1757)*

Burial: Chesterfield
Chesterfield
Chesterfield County
Virginia, USA

https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=176119892

source: THE OSBORNES and related families - JONES, WORSHAM, FOWLKES, ROBERTSON & GAYLE
by Elizabeth J. "Betty" Harrell 1983

Thomas Osborne arrived at Jamestown in the Colony of Virginia on November 4, 1619. He was then probably in his late 30s and had apparently left behind his wife and children. The 3-month voyage on board the Bona Nova had taken him via the West Indies, and per the records of the London Company, all passengers arrived lusty and in good health.[l] Thomas succeeded in his new home, and by 1625 was the lieutenant in charge of the College Lands and the representative from his area to the House of Burgesses in Jamestown. Later, he was promoted to the rank of captain and was granted the large Coxendale plantation, which was to be the home of the Osbornes for at least the next five generations. He died sometime prior to 1642, probably in his early 60s.

Children of Thomas Osborne:
THOMAS2OSBORNE (ca.l610-ca.l666)
Son:
EDWARD OSBORNE
Edward Osborne, if the son of Thomas Osborne, was born probably in the 1610s in England, where he apparently spent his teenage years. By 1636 he had joined his presumed father in Virginia.
Edward Osborne acquired the capital needed to transport himself and seven other people to the Virginia Colony and on June 2, 1636, was patented 400 acres in Henrico County across the James River from the plantation of his presumed father. Per the patent, Edward's land was bordered on the southwest by the great swamp, on the west by the James River, on the north by the land toward the falls, and on the east by the woods.
THOMAS OSBORNE (cl610s-cl650s) of Coxendale (also called Fearing), was probably born in England around 1610.[3] By 1637, he had joined his father in Henrico (now Chesterfield) County, in the Colony of Virginia, where he prospered and increased the Osborne landholdings before his relatively early death, probably in the 1650s.
As a young adult, Thomas Osborne acquired the needed capital to transport himself and nine other people to Virginia, which enabled him on June 16, 1637, to receive a patent for 500 acres. The tract, named "Batchelers bancke" on the patent, was described as being bounded on the west and south by Fearing, on the north by the woods, and on the east by the James River.
Thomas2Osborne married; however, the name of his wife is not known. The marriage most likely occurred after his arrival in Virginia, since no wife was named as a head-right. She was probably a daughter of one of the landowners in the area. At the death of his father, about 1636-42, Thomas and his wife probably moved into the old home on Fearing. About 1641 son Thomas3Osborne was born,
Thomas Osborne may have been the Thomas Osborne who in 1623 was living "in the Maine" near Jamestown and/or the 18-year-old Thomas Osborne who in 1624/1625 was one of the governor's men living in Pashehaighs. The latter person would have been about the right age.
Thomas Osborne , son of Captain Thomas Osborne followed five years later by son Edward Osborne. The names of the daughters, if any, are not known; however, one of them may have married a Turpin.
In 1642 Thomas Osborne increased his landholding by patenting 400 acres. The land, as described on the patent, was at the head of Coxendale and bounded on the west-northwest by the land of Christopher Branch (Kingsland), north-northeast by Mr. Osborne's land called Fearing and south-southwest into the woods, being 200 poles in breadth from the head of Proctor Creek toward the land called Mount My Lady (Malady) and a full mile into the woods. He was entitled to the land for having transported eight more people to the colony.
Thomas2Osborne, who had undoubtedly heard his father talk of the Indian Massacre of 1622, witnessed the massacre on April 18, 1644, which resulted in the death of many colonists. Henrico County, being on the frontier, was especially vulnerable.
The Motherland was also having troubles; in 1648 King Charles I was beheaded. For the next twelve years Cromwell and Parliament ran England. Many pro-king cavaliers fled to Virginia, which was the last British colony to submit. In 1660 the Virginians warmly welcomed King Charles II to the throne.
Thomas2Osborne undoubtedly prospered in the tobacco trade and kept in contact with relatives and friends in England; however, the few surviving records provide little information. He died in the late 1650s or early 1660s; at least by 1666, when land, which he had left to his son Thomas and which his son had subsequently sold, was sold again.[6] He apparently distributed his land between his sons Thomas and Edward (whose lands adjoined and were later described as being divided by Garden Creek and adjacent to Matthew Turpin) and may also have left land to a Mr. Turpin.

Son EDWARD OSBORNE:
Edward Osborne (ca. l646-1697) m1st 1694 Mrs. Elizabeth (Shippy) Brown.
Edward Osborne, son of Thomas2Osborne, was born about 1646. Although the records provide no positive proof that he was a son, there is little doubt, since his land was adjoining that of proved- son Thomas3Osborne, implying an inheritance split. In 1679 he and Thomas30sborne, listed together, were the only Osbornes on the Henrico County tithes list.
Edward Osborne, as the younger son, did not receive the formal education that his brother Thomas--* Osborne received, for Edward signed his documents with his mark "EO", whereas his brother signed his full name.
Edward Osborne married twice. By his first wife, whose name is not known, he had three children: Tabitha Osborne, Martha Osborne, and Edward Osborne.
Edward Osborne apparently was a kind, helpful man, aiding people in need. He handled the estate and funeral of a Mr. Whitman, who died at Edward's home in 1689, leaving no will nor relations. He also cared for Gilbert Platt who in 1692 left Edward most of his estate in consideration of the trouble and care Edward had given him in his sickness. Gilbert Platt also left a bed to Tabitha Osborne, but only 10 shillings to his wife Mary Platt.
In 1688 with brother Thomas3Osborne, nephew Thomas^Osborne and John Goode, Edward witnessed the will of Matthew Turpin, a possible nephew, and in 1691 with brother Thomas3Osborne, Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Tanner, Edward was appointed by the court to appraise the estate of John Cole.
Óøº In 1694 Edward Osborne found a seaman floating in the James River and had to testify in court. By so doing, Edward's age has been preserved for posterity, for the clerk recorded with the deposition that Edward was then about age 48. Also testifying were Mr. Thomas Edwards, age about 25, and Mr. John Pattison, age about 58. [13]
That same year, Edward Osborne married second Mrs. Elizabeth (Shippy) Brown; their marriage license was issued June 15, 1694.[14] Elizabeth was the daughter of Thomas and Martha Shippy (her mother later married Edward Stratton.)[15] Elizabeth's first husband, Jeremiah Brown, who had a plantation at Varina and was the keeper of the county ferry, had died in 1690.[16] Edward assumed his wife's problems and in 1695 tried to collect from John Higley E1200 of tobacco due her former husband for three years rent.[17]
In 1695 Edward Osborne's eldest daughter, Tabitha, married their neighbor Benjamin Branch, the 30-year-old bachelor of Kingsland immediately north of the Osbornes. Benjamin's grandfather Christopher Branch had settled in the area about the same time as Capt. Thomas Osborne.[18]
The following year, in June of 1696, Edward increased his landholdings by purchasing from his nephew Thomas^Osborne 200 acres of the Coxendale tract. Per the deed the boundary of the 200 acres ran from the mouth of Garden Creek up the creek on the east side to the bridge built by Edward Osborne, then along Edward's line to Matthew Turpin's line, then along Turpin's line to the James River, then down the river to the said creek. [19]
Edward Osborne had not much longer to live. On June 6, 1696, he wrote his will stating that he was sick and weak. He died the following year at about the age of 51. He left to his son Edward all the land (not described in the will) and Negroes Moll and Tom and left to his daughter Martha livestock and miscellaneous items. These two children were to be cared for by Benjamin Branch until Edward was age 19 and Martha age 16. Benjamin Branch was also appointed executor. Samuel Branch, Martha Osborne, and Joseph Tanner witnessed the will which was probated in court on April 1, 1697.
Children of Edward Osborne:
1-Tabitha Osborne (ca. 1677-by 1720) ml 1695 Benjamin Branch (1665-1705), son of Christopher Branch (1627-1665) and grandson of Christopher & Mary Branch of Kingsland[21]; m2 by 1707 Thomas Cheatham ( -1720)
2-Martha Osborne ( - )
3-Edward Osborne (cl689-1724) m Agnes Branch, dau. Of Thomas Branch [24]. She m2 cl726 John Worsham, son of John2 & Phoebee Worsham.[25] In 1707, at age 18, Ed chose Thomas Branch as his guar- dian in place of Tabitha & Thomas Cheatham [26]. After his death, his widow Agnes in 1726 per an agreement before her marriage to John Worsham left Negroes to sons William and Joseph Osborne. In 1765 son Edward Osborne received part of the estate of his uncle Thomas Branch.

Children of John Wooldridge and Martha Osborne are:

i. John2 Wooldridge, Jr.,
b. 1705, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1783, Chesterfield Co., Va..

ii. Thomas Wooldridge,
b. 1707, Henrico County, Virginia; d. May 1762, Cumberland Co., Virginia.

iii. William Wooldridge,Sr,
b. 1709, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1798, Elbert County, Georgia.

iv. Edward Mologe Wooldridge,
b. 1711, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1808, Chesterfield Co., Va..

v. Mary Wooldridge,
b. 1715, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1789, Chesterfield Co., Va..

vi. Robert Wooldridge,
b. 1719, Henrico County, Virginia; d. July 1794, Chesterfield Co., Va..

1 NAME /WOOLDRIDGE/
2 SOUR S64
3 PAGE page 5.

date estimated on marriage in 1704 to John Wooldridge Sr.

Martha Osborne was the daughter of Edward Osborne and Tabitha Platt. Her father, Edward Osborne, was the son of Thomas Osborne II and Martha Goode. She married John Wooldridge I in Chesterfield Co., VA after his emancipation in 1704/1705.

'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
The Martha Osborne information came from Holly Ann Burt and the Henrico Co., VA
Wills and Abstracts- 1680-1822. William Wooldridge's will is available for viewing, if you can go to the County Clerk: it was too delicate to copy anymore.

My guess is that William returned to Chesterfield/Henrico Co., VA when his parents were aging and needed care, thus you have some children born in other states and some later children born in VA. The dates coincide.2 SOUR S510

http://members.aol.com/DonnieRam/homepage/osborne.htm

Harv Hopkins-Garriss
Nancy Hopkins-Garriss

Descendants of Thomas Osborne

* 1 Thomas Osborne Fact 1: a Captain Fact 2: Abt 1624 Took over the Coxendale Tract after the 16222 Indian massacre
* ........ 2 Edward Osborne
* ................... 3 Martha (Osborne?) b: Abt 1688 d: Aft 1757
* ...................... +John Sr. the immigrant Wooldridge b: Abt 1678 d: 1757 Fact 1: Immigrated to VA. indentured to Kennon family Fact 2: March 1698/99 1st of 4 petitions to Mrs. Eliza Kennon for indenture wages
* ............................. 4 John Jr. [1] Wooldridge b: Abt 1705 in Henrico County, VA d: 1783
* ................................. +Elizabeth Branch m: 1731 in Henrico County, VA Fact 1: died after 1755
* ............................. *2nd Wife of John Jr. [1] Wooldridge:
* ................................. +Margaret m: Abt 1761 d: 1783 in Chesterfield County, VA
* ............................. 4 Thomas (Sr.) [2] Wooldridge b: Abt 1707 in Henrico County, VA d: May 1762 Fact 1: 1732 Patented 400 acres in Goochland with brother edward Fact 2: 1745 Patented add. 300 acres in Goochland, where he later lived---
* ................................. +a Watkins or Hatcher? m: 1735 d: 1762 in Cumberland, County VA
* ............................. 4 William (Sr.) [3] Wooldridge b: Abt 1709 in Henrico County, VA d: 1798 in Elbert County, Georgia Fact 1: 1757 father's executor & legatee of the blacksmith tools Fact 2: 1736 May have started farming on 100 acres of John Roberts, on which he paid tax
* ................................. +unknown m: 1738
* ............................. *2nd Wife of William (Sr.) [3] Wooldridge:
* ................................. +Sarah Flournoy m: 1750 in Chesterfield County, VA
* ............................. 4 Edward (Mologe/Wologe?) (Sr) [4] Wooldridge b: Abt 1711 in Henrico County, VA d: 1808 in Chesterfield County, VA Fact 1: oldest living of his generation Fact 2: 1732 Patentened land in Goochland with brother Thomas
* ................................. +Mary Flournoy m: 1745
* ............................. 4 Mary [5] Wooldridge b: Abt 1715 d: 1789 in Chesterfield County, VA
* ................................. +Jacob Trabue b: 1705 m: 1732 d: 1767
* ............................. 4 Robert [6] Wooldridge b: Abt 1719 d: July 1794 Fact 1: 1745 May be the one who built Midlothian
* ................................. +[1] Magdalene Salle b: 1718 d: August 1794
* ............................. *2nd Wife of Robert [6] Wooldridge:
* ................................. +[1] Magdalene Salle b: 1718 m: 1738 d: August 1794

http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&db=bferris&id=I48636

ferris
Entries: 57990 Updated: 2005-11-05 18:01:24 UTC (Sat) Contact: William R. Ferris, Jr. (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

1 John Osborne b: ABT 1517
2 John Osborne b: ABT 1547
+ Jane or Joane Smyth b: ABT 1547
3 Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1580 d: 1637/1642
+ Anne Burt b: ABT 1583 d: 22 Oct 1621
4 Joane Osborne b: 1601
+ Capt Thomas Harris b: 1586 d: 1658
5 Thomas Harris Jr. b: 1627
5 William Harris b: 1629
6 Thomas Harris b: ABT 1665
+ Sarah d: AFT 9 Nov 1719
7 Thomas Harris b: ABT 1680 d: 1728
+ Rachel Maddox b: 1680 d: 1756/1757
8 Thomas Harris b: 27 Mar 1699
8 Sarah Harris b: 8 Oct 1701
8 Rachell Harris b: 21 Feb 1704
8 James Harris b: 27 Oct 1706
8 Jemima Harris b: 10 Oct 1709
8 Ruth Harris b: 23 Aug 1712
8 Rebecca Harris b: 23 Aug 1712 d: 1772
+ James Wilson Perry b: ABT 1708 d: 1771
9 James Owen Perry
9 Ruth Perry b: 1732
9 Charles Perry
9 Ann Perry
9 Martha Perry
9 Eleanor Perry
9 Rachel Perry b: 1738 d: 1819
+ John West b: 1738 d: 1791
10 Thomas West b: 1758
10 Reason West b: 31 May 1760
10 Rebecca West b: 23 Sep 1762
10 Simeon West b: 23 Dec 1763 d: 10 Jun 1835
+ Elizabeth Hopkins b: ABT 1770 d: 17 Jan 1847
10 William West b: 29 May 1765
10 Pricilla West b: 1766
10 Sarah West b: 1767
+ Robert Eades
10 Margaret West b: 1769
10 Martha West b: 1771
+ Maureen Duvall
10 John West b: 1773
10 Benjamin West b: 1775
10 Roger West b: 1775
9 Elizabeth Perry
9 Rebecca Perry b: ABT 1740 d: BEF 1786
+ Alexander Offutt
9 Margaret Perry
8 Samuel Harris b: 1713 d: 1720
8 Benjamin Harris b: 1714
8 Richard Harris b: 8 Jan 1716
8 Sarah Harris b: 5 Apr 1719
5 Robert Harris b: 1630 d: 1701
+ Mary Claiborne b: 1630 d: 1669
6 Thomas Harris b: 1665
6 Capt. William Harris b: 1669 d: 1730
+ Temprence Overton b: 2 Mar 1678 d: 10 Feb 1709
7 Elizabeth Harris b: 2 Nov 1698
5 Mathew Harris
4 Capt. Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1610 d: ABT 1650
+ Jane or Joan Simmons b: ABT 1613 d: 18 Mar 1696
5 Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1641 d: 1692
+ Sisely Bailey
6 Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1660 d: Jul 1733
+ Martha Jones b: ABT 1665 d: BEF 1731
7 Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1690 d: 1755
+ Ann Worsham b: 1696
8 Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1705 d: Apr 1737
+ Mary Margaret Jones d: AFT 14 May 1742
9 Margaret Osborne
+ Thomas Bland
9 Ann Osborne b: 18 Mar 1728/1729
+ John Randolph b: 1720/1724 d: 11 Sep 1789
10 Sarah Randolph (unm.) b: 1746 d: 1837
10 Thompson Randolph b: 1746 d: 1819
+ Ann Bayliss
+ Hannah Taylor
10 Elizabeth "Betsy" Randolph b: 1748
+ John Wright
10 Mary Ann Randolph b: 1750
+ Charles Purcell
10 Mildred Randolph b: 1754 d: 16 Aug 1852
+ Judge Peter Oliver
10 Margaret (Peggy) Randolph b: Apr 1755 d: 19 Apr 1855
+ George Purcell d: 1805
+ William Chandler
10 William Randolph b: ABT 1756 d: 2 Aug 1792
+ Eleanor
10 Thomas Osborne Randolph d: 1816
+ Mary Bland
10 Nancy Randolph d: 1795
+ Mr. Tyler
10 John Randolph d: 26 Dec 1822
10 Frances "Frankie" Randolph b: 8 Jun 1764
+ Samuel James d: 7 Jul 1806
8 Edward Osborne
+ Frances
7 Mary Osborne
7 Martha Osborne
7 Edward Osborne
7 Sisely Osborne
7 Elizabeth Osborne

http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&db=wilkins_morgan&id=I520

Wilkins & Morgan Family Lines
Entries: 1030 Updated: Thu Nov 9 23:23:45 2000 Contact: William J. Wilkins (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

1 Thomas OSBORNE b: 1584 d: 1637/1642
+ b: ABT 1580
2 Edward OSBORNE b: ABT 1610 d: ABT 1666
2 Captain Thomas OSBORNE b: 1615 d: 1650/1660
+ b: 1619
3 Thomas OSBORNE b: 1641 d: 1692
+ Martha JONES b: ABT 1645
4 Martha OSBORNE b: ABT 1662
+ Thomas LOCKETT b: ABT 1673 d: ABT 1745
5 Thomas LOCKETT b: ABT 1700 d: ABT 1774/1775
+ Eliza Judith TOWNS
6 Stephen LOCKETT b: 14 NOV 1733
+ Mary CLAY b: 22 SEP 1742
7 Osborne LOCKETT b: 20 MAY 1769
+ Agnes Branch SCOTT b: 10 FEB 1784
8 Lucy Towns LOCKETT b: 9 FEB 1816 d: 5 JUN 1876
+ Samuel Watkins VAUGHAN
9 Pattie Scott VAUGHAN b: 27 SEP 1849 d: 24 JUN 1923
+ R. Hester WALTON b: 22 AUG 1843
10 Lily Louise WALTON b: 1880 d: 1948
+ William Walton BONDURANT b: 1876
5 Joel LOCKETT b: ABT 1702 d: ABT 1769
5 Gideon LOCKETT b: ABT 1704 d: ABT 1808
5 LOCKETT b: ABT 1706
5 Lucy LOCKETT
5 Hannah LOCKETT
4 John OSBORNE b: ABT 1667
4 Thomas OSBORNE b: ABT 1669 d: 1730
+ Ann WORSHAM
5 Thomas OSBORNE
5 Reps OSBORNE
5 Martha OSBORNE b: BEF 1730
+ William HARRIS b: ABT 1728
4 Mary OSBORNE b: ABT 1691
+ Benjamin BRANCH b: ABT 1690
5 Benjamin BRANCH b: ABT 1730
+ Mary GOODE
4 Edward OSBORNE
4 Sisely OSBORNE
4 Elizabeth OSBORNE
3 Edward OSBORNE b: 1646 d: 1695
+ Tabitha PLATT
4 Tabitha OSBORNE b: ABT 1677
+ Benjamin BRANCH b: 1665 d: 1706
5 Benjamin BRANCH b: ABT 1690
+ Mary OSBORNE b: ABT 1691
6 Benjamin BRANCH b: ABT 1730
+ Mary GOODE
4 Martha OSBORNE b: 1688 d: ABT 1757
+ John WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1678 d: ABT 1757
5 John WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1705 d: 1783
+ Elizabeth BRANCH b: 1710 d: 1750
6 Richard WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1731 d: 1782
+ Elizabeth
6 John WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1733 d: 1782
+ FARLEY
6 Mary WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1735 d: 1780
6 William WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1740 d: 1817
6 Frances WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1745
+ John WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1735 d: 1771
6 Elizabeth WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1750
+ Margaret
6 Edmond WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1748 d: 1791
+ Elizabeth WATKINS b: 1755 d: 1791
7 Edmond WOOLDRIDGE
7 Samuel C. WOOLDRIDGE
7 Phoebe WOOLDRIDGE
7 Nancy WOOLDRIDGE
+ Stewart WILKINS
8 George WILKINS d: 1844
+ Frances (Fannie) WILSON b: 1800 d: 1863
9 James Hensley WILKINS b: 25 JAN 1843 d: 22 MAY 1931
+ Martha NEW b: 26 JAN 1845 d: 18 NOV 1924
10 William New WILKINS b: 29 MAY 1867 d: 28 JUL 1932
+ Mary Ellen STEED b: 1868
10 Lillian Belle WILKINS b: 20 NOV 1865 d: 9 JAN 1963
+ Frank Owen HANNAWALD b: 15 JUL 1860 d: 27 MAR 1930
10 James Francis (Frank) WILKINS b: 17 OCT 1869 d: 18 FEB 1967
10 David Harvey WILKINS b: 18 NOV 1872 d: 12 OCT 1962
10 Harriet (Hattie) WILKINS b: 8 AUG 1876 d: 24 JUN 1969
10 George Whitfield (Whit) WILKINS b: 8 AUG 1876 d: 5 MAR 1961
10 Dollie Alice WILKINS b: 29 MAR 1879 d: 17 FEB 1961
+ UNKNOWN SKINNER
10 Estella (Stella) WILKINS b: 2 APR 1881 d: 7 AUG 1959
+ Len T. COLE
10 Walter Fay WILKINS b: 9 FEB 1884 d: 21 APR 1946
10 Baby WILKINS b: 7 FEB 1886 d: 13 FEB 1886
9 David WILKINS
9 Stewart WILKINS
9 George WILKINS
9 S. W. (Southey) WILKINS
9 Catharine WILKINS
9 Virginia WILKINS
+ Madison L. JOHNSON
7 John Watkins WOOLDRIDGE
7 Powhatan WOOLDRIDGE
6 Verlinche WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1750 d: 1834
6 Phebe WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1752 d: 1792
6 Robert WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1754 d: 1801
6 Thomas WOOLDRIDGE b: 1756 d: 1840
6 Martha WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1762
6 Hannah WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1765
5 Thomas WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1707 d: MAY 1762
+ d: 1762
6 John WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1735 d: 1771
+ Elizabeth b: ABT 1750
7 Daniel WOOLDRIDGE
+ Frances WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1745
6 Frances WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1740
6 Mary WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1743
6 Elizabeth WOOLDRIDGE b: 11 JUN 1744 d: 7 NOV 1818
6 Thomas WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1748 d: 1830
6 Henry WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1751 d: 1823
6 Martha WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1756
6 Daniel WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1758 d: 1821
6 Joseph WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1761 d: 1835
5 William WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1709 d: ABT 1798
+
6 Richard WOOLDRIDGE b: 1738 d: 1828
6 William WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1740 d: 1816
+ Sarah FLOURNOY b: 1735 d: MAY 1806
6 Gibson WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1750 d: OCT 1816
+ Lucy Elizabeth HUDSPETH
+ Mrs. Leah Pool
6 Thomas WOOLDRIDGE b: 1756 d: 1836
+ Keziah DAVIS
+ Martha EASTER
6 Edward WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1760 d: 1828
+ Sarah VINING
6 Sarah Flournoy WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1765 d: 1849
+ David HUDSPETH
6 Martha (Patty) WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1770
+ Joseph T. DAVIS b: 1758
7 Thomas W. DAVIS b: 1791
7 Absolom DAVIS b: 1793
7 William DAVIS b: 1796
7 Sarah F. DAVIS b: 1798
6 Sally Flournoy WOOLDRIDGE b: 1760
5 Edward WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1711 d: 10 OCT 1808
+ Mary FLOURNOY b: 1724
6 WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1743 d: 1778
+ William HANCOCK d: 1826
6 Edward WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1745 d: 1807
+ Mary SIMPSON d: SEP 1810
6 Simon WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1747 d: 29 JAN 1830
+ Lucy GILES b: 1770
6 William WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1750 d: 1823
+ Frances CLAY b: 1759 d: 1798
+ Mary TRENT b: 1785 d: 1823
6 Josiah WOOLDRIDGE b: 5 NOV 1755 d: 15 NOV 1837
6 Hannah WOOLDRIDGE b: 10 NOV 1761 d: AFT 1813
5 Mary WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1715 d: ABT 1789
+ Jacob TRABUE b: 1705 d: 1767
6 Joseph TRABUE b: 4 JAN 1733 d: 1757
6 Jean (John) TRABUE b: 28 AUG 1735 d: ABT 1791
6 David TRABUE b: 10 OCT 1737 d: 1769
6 William TRABUE b: 23 MAR 1739 d: BEF 1767
6 Elizabeth TRABUE b: 24 MAR 1742 d: BEF 1767
6 Marie TRABUE b: 29 OCT 1744
6 Joshua TRABUE b: 4 SEP 1747 d: ABT 1774
6 Thomas TRABUE b: 10 MAY 1752
6 Daniel (River Daniel) TRABUE b: 14 AUG 1753
5 Robert WOOLDRIDGE b: 1718 d: JUL 1794
+ Magdalene SALLE b: 1718 d: AUG 1794
6 Thomas WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1740 d: 1813
6 Abraham WOOLDRIDGE d: BEF 1784
6 Elisha WOOLDRIDGE b: 16 JUL 1752 d: 12 FEB 1813
6 Robert WOOLDRIDGE b: ABT 1754 d: 1805
6 William WOOLDRIDGE b: 1756 d: 1830
4 Edward OSBORNE b: ABT 1689 d: ABT 1724
3 Margaret OSBORNE b: 1649 d: 3 JUL 1708
+ Thomas LOCKETT b: ABT 1645 d: 27 MAR 1686
4 Benjamin LOCKETT b: 1669 d: 1729
+ Winnifred PRIDE b: ABT 1672 d: 25 NOV 1729
5 Debora LOCKETT b: 1694
5 Martha LOCKETT b: 1710 d: 1774
+ Francis WALTHALL b: ABT 1706
5 Benjamin LOCKETT b: ABT 1714
5 Jane LOCKETT b: ABT 1716
5 William LOCKETT b: ABT 1718 d: 1756
5 Francis LOCKETT b: ABT 1720
4 Susan (Susannah) LOCKETT b: 1671 d: 1727
+ William GRIGG b: 1666 d: ABT 1726
5 William GRIGG b: 1689 d: 13 SEP 1726
+ Elizabeth MITCHELL b: ABT 1693 d: 26 APR 1726
6 Abner GRIGG b: 1712
+ Mary FORD b: ABT 1716
7 Jesse GRIGG b: 1732 d: 1800
+ Martha ELAM b: ABT 1765
7 William GRIGG b: ABT 1734
7 Frederick GRIGG b: ABT 1736
7 Abner GRIGG b: ABT 1738
6 Jesse GRIGG b: 1714
6 Burwell GRIGG b: 1716 d: 1756
6 Lewis GRIGG b: 1718 d: 1787
6 Susannah GRIGG b: 11 JUN 1720 d: 1787
5 James GRIGG b: 1693 d: BEF 20 SEP 1764
5 Peter GRIGG b: ABT 1695
5 Sarah GRIGG b: 1702
4 Thomas LOCKETT b: ABT 1673 d: ABT 1745
+ Martha OSBORNE b: ABT 1662
5 Thomas LOCKETT b: ABT 1700 d: ABT 1774/1775
+ Eliza Judith TOWNS
6 Stephen LOCKETT b: 14 NOV 1733
+ Mary CLAY b: 22 SEP 1742
7 Osborne LOCKETT b: 20 MAY 1769
+ Agnes Branch SCOTT b: 10 FEB 1784
8 Lucy Towns LOCKETT b: 9 FEB 1816 d: 5 JUN 1876
+ Samuel Watkins VAUGHAN
9 Pattie Scott VAUGHAN b: 27 SEP 1849 d: 24 JUN 1923
+ R. Hester WALTON b: 22 AUG 1843
10 Lily Louise WALTON b: 1880 d: 1948
+ William Walton BONDURANT b: 1876
5 Joel LOCKETT b: ABT 1702 d: ABT 1769
5 Gideon LOCKETT b: ABT 1704 d: ABT 1808
5 LOCKETT b: ABT 1706
5 Lucy LOCKETT
5 Hannah LOCKETT
4 James LOCKETT b: 1675 d: 1708/1709
4 Elizabeth LOCKETT b: 1677 d: 1708
4 Mary LOCKETT b: 1679
2 Joane OSBORNE b: ABT 1600
+ HARRIS

Martha Wooldridge (born Osborne)
Gender: Female
Birth: 1688 Fauquier, Virginia
Marriage: Spouse: John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge Circa 1703 Henrico, Virginia
Death: 1757 Henrico, Virginia
Father: Edward Osborne, III
Mother: Tabitha Osborne (born Platt)

Husband: John 'Blacksmith' Wooldridge
Children:
1. Edward Mologe Wooldridge
2. Mary Trabue (born Wooldridge)
3. Robert Wooldridge
4. John Wooldridge, Jr.
5. Thomas Wooldridge
6. William Harrison Wooldridge

Siblings:
Tabitha Cheatham Branch (born Osborne)
Edward Osborne, IV
https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40000-44767168/martha-wooldridge-born-osborne-in-geni-world-family-tree

notes on Martha Osborne (abt. 1680 - 1757)

Born about 1680 in Coxendale Plantation, Henricus, Virginia, United States
Daughter of Edward Osborne and Tabitha (Platt) Osborne
Sister of Tabitha (Osborne) Cheatham and Edward Osborne Jr.
Wife of John Wooldridge Sr ·Äî married 1705 in Chesterfield, Chesterfield, Virginia, United States
Mother of John Wooldridge Jr
Died 1757 in Chesterfield, Chesterfield, Virginia

https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Osborne-3145

Sources
·Ä¢Dorman, John Frederick. Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5: Families G-P. 4th ed. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub., 2012.

Daughter of:
Edward Osborne
Born about 1645 in Colony of Virginia
Son of Thomas Osborne Jr. and Martha Jones
Brother of Thomas Osborne [half]
Husband of Tabitha (Platt) Osborne ·Äî married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Husband of Elizabeth (Sheppey) Osborne ·Äî married Jun 1694 in Henrico, Colony of Virginia
Father of Tabitha (Osborne) Cheatham, Martha Osborne and Edward Osborne Jr.
Died after 6 Jan 1697 in Colony of Virginia

Biography
Deposed on 14 Oct 1693 that he was about 48 years old.
The name of Edward's first wife is unknown.
Left a will in Henrico County dated 06 Jan 1696/7 - 01 Apr 1697.
Notes
Edward is assumed to have married a Tabitha Platt but Dorman claims that Gilbert Platt's will does not support that and the reference to Tabitha Osborne was to Edward's daughter Tabitha. [1]
"Gilbert Platt was born in England about 1620. Elizabeth Parker, a widow,brought him to Virginia before 1635 to work as a servant. He may have remained in a low capacity for forty years until 1677 when he married the well-to-do widow, Mary Tanner. Gilbert became the guardian of the four Tanner children on 20 August 1677. Mary had an Indian girl named Moll when she got married and gave her to her son-in-law William Ligon [1760] in April 1679. (Henrico county, VA Deeds and Wills 1677-1692, p.87)
Based on an account in the Henrico County records, the marriage of Mary Browne (Tanner) and Gilbert Platt appears to have been unsatisfactory for both. First Gilbert and Mary were in court 'at variance... over a portion of Gilberts own estate which by deed... [he] had made over to her.' Then Gilbert had a run-in with Marys eldest son, Joseph, who threw some sticks in his direction. When Gilbert brought the matter to his wifes attention, she promptly called him a liar. She explained that she had raised her children properly and none could ever be guilty of that conduct. Joseph, overhearing the accusations, charged Gilbert of slandering him and knocked Gilbert out with a 'tobacco stick'. The matter went back to the courts. On 28 March 1681, Gilbert resigned his rights to the plantation and left the presence of his wife and her children for good. (Henrico county, VA Deeds and Wills 1677-1692, p.142)
When Gilbert Platt died in Henrico County in the spring of 1692 (will dated 10 April 1692 , proved 1 June 1692), he left his property to Tabitha Osborne, and her husband, Edward Osborne Sr. because they cared for him when he was sick. To Mary Browne (Tanner) Platt, he left one shilling. Some have concluded that Tabitha Osborne was Gilberts daughter, by a previous marriage. Yet others believe Platt was simply expressing his appreciation for their kindness" [2]

Sources
·Ä¢Dorman, John Frederick. Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5: Families G-P. 4th ed. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub., 2012. p. 738.
·Ä¢Harrell, Elizabeth J. The Osbornes and Related Families: Jones, Worsham, Fowlkes, Robertson & Gayle. Los Altos, Ca.: E.J. Harrell, 1983.
1Purse and Person
2 http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/e/a/Kathy--L-Dean/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0311.html

Thomas Osborne Jr. (abt. 1607)
Capt. Thomas Osborne Jr.
Born about 24 Jan 1607 in Tolleshurst Darcy [uncertain]
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of Martha Jones ·Äî married [date unknown] [location unknown]
Father of Thomas Osborne and Edward Osborne
Died [date unknown] in Colony of Virginia
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Osborne-3062

Biography
Captain Thomas Osborne came to Virginia in November, 1616 (Hotten), and settled at "Coxendale," in the present Chesterfield county about 1625. He also patented land on Procter's creek, Henrico (now in Chesterfield) in 1637; was commissioner (justice) for "the upper parts" in 1631, and member of the House of Burgesses, 1629, 1629-30, 1631-2, and 1632-3. [1]
He had a son who had issue: I. Thomas, of "Coxendale," born 1641, died 1692; married Martha, widow of John Branch, and daughter of Thomas Jones, or Bermuda Hundred. He is frequently referred to in the records of Henrico, as "Mr. Thomas Osborne." His will was proved in Henrice, in May, 1692. He left his son John 200 acres of his plantation at Coxendale, wife Martha the use of his house, &c., for life, and gave his son Thomas the land where said son then lived. In the county levy of 1679 he was assessed with seven tithables, and at his death his personal estate was appraised at L208. 15. 6.; [2] II. Edward, born 1646, died 1697: married Tabitha, daughter of Gilbert Platt. His will was proved in Henrico, April, 1697 ("will of Mr. Edward Osborne"), and gave his daughter Martha personal property, and his son Edward all his lands and remaining personal estate. Appoints his son-in-law [step-son?], Benjamin Branch, guardian of his two children. [3]

Notes
According to Adventurers of Purse and Person, there is no record of the other Thomas Osborne of Jamestown, Lt. Thomas Osborne born in the 1580s and who arrived on the Bona Nova, having a spouse or children. It does appear that this Thomas was only using the suffix of Jr. to disambiguate himself from the other Thomas and was not his son. Much of today's research has conflated these two or has added the younger as the son of the elder.
Capt. Thomas' only known children were Thomas and Edward.

Sources
·Ä¢Dorman, John Frederick. Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5: Families G-P. 4th ed. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub., 2012. p. 736-738.
·Ä¢Harrell, Elizabeth J. The Osbornes and Related Families: Jones, Worsham, Fowlkes, Robertson & Gayle. Los Altos, Ca.: E.J. Harrell, 1983.
1https://books.google.com/books?id=o78RAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA247&lpg=PA247&dq=Tabitha+Platt+Edward+Osborne&source=bl&ots=0LLtSc-l3T&sig=7VgvOwQbP-VVk-NNuSjn2yoZGeI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiMwOvQx8PMAhWMPj4KHdzwAAMQ6AEIJzAC#v=onepage&q=Tabitha%20Platt%20Edward%20Osborne&f=false
2 https://books.google.com/books?id=o78RAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA247&lpg=PA247&dq=Tabitha+Platt+Edward+Osborne&source=bl&ots=0LLtSc-l3T&sig=7VgvOwQbP-VVk-NNuSjn2yoZGeI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiMwOvQx8PMAhWMPj4KHdzwAAMQ6AEIJzAC#v=onepage&q=Tabitha%20Platt%20Edward%20Osborne&f=false
3https://books.google.com/books?id=o78RAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA247&lpg=PA247&dq=Tabitha+Platt+Edward+Osborne&source=bl&ots=0LLtSc-l3T&sig=7VgvOwQbP-VVk-NNuSjn2yoZGeI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiMwOvQx8PMAhWMPj4KHdzwAAMQ6AEIJzAC#v=onepage&q=Tabitha%20Platt%20Edward%20Osborne&f=false

Gilbert Platt (b. 1620)
Gilbert Platt was born 1620 in England.He married Mary Brown.
¬â€ Notes for Gilbert Platt:
Gilbert Platt was born in England about 1620. Elizabeth Parker, a widow,brought him to Virginia before 1635 to work as a servant. He may have remained in a low capacity for forty years until 1677 when he married the well-to-do widow, Mary Tanner. Gilbert became the guardian of the four Tanner children on 20 August 1677. Mary had an Indian girl named Moll when she got married and gave her to her son-in-law William Ligon [1760] in April 1679. (Henrico county, VA Deeds and Wills 1677-1692, p.87)
Based on an account in the Henrico County records, the marriage of Mary Browne (Tanner) and Gilbert Platt appears to have been unsatisfactory for both. First Gilbert and Mary were in court 'at variance... over a portion of Gilberts own estate which by deed... [he] had made over to her.' Then Gilbert had a run-in with Marys eldest son, Joseph, who threw some sticks in his direction. When Gilbert brought the matter to his wifes attention, she promptly called him a liar. She explained that she had raised her children properly and none could ever be guilty of that conduct. Joseph, overhearing the accusations, charged Gilbert of slandering him and knocked Gilbert out with a 'tobacco stick'. The matter went back to the courts. On 28 March 1681, Gilbert resigned his rights to the plantation and left the presence of his wife and her children for good. (Henrico county, VA Deeds and Wills 1677-1692, p.142)
When Gilbert Platt died in Henrico County in the spring of 1692 (will dated 10 April 1692 , proved 1 June 1692), he left his property to Tabitha Osborne, and her husband, Edward Osborne Sr. because they cared for him when he was sick. To Mary Browne (Tanner) Platt, he left one shilling. Some have concluded that Tabitha Osborne was Gilberts daughter, by a previous marriage. Yet others believe Platt was simply expressing his appreciation for their kindness
More About Gilbert Platt:
Record Change: 31 Mar 2005
Children of Gilbert Platt and Mary Brown are:
+Tabitha Platt, b. Abt. 1655, Henrico Co, Va, d. 1692, Henrico Co, Va.
http://www.genealogy.com/ftm/d/e/a/Kathy--L-Dean/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0311.html

Tabitha Platt (b. Abt. 1655, d. 1692)
Tabitha Platt (daughter of Gilbert Platt and Mary Brown) was born Abt. 1655 in Henrico Co, Va, and died 1692 in Henrico Co, Va.She married Edward Osborne, son of Thomas Osborne and MARTHA JONES.
More About Tabitha Platt:
Record Change: 31 Mar 2005
Children of Tabitha Platt and Edward Osborne are:
+Tabitha Osborne, b. 07 Jul 1677, Chesterfield Co, Va, d. 1756, Dale Parish, Chesterfield Co, Va.
http://www.genealogy.com/ftm/d/e/a/Kathy--L-Dean/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0304.html

Tabitha Platt
Spouses, children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
·Ä¢Married in¬â€ 1676, Henrico Co., VA, to Edward Osborne, born about¬â€ 1646 - Henrico Co., VA, Deceased 1¬â€ April¬â€ 1697 - Henrico Co., VA age at death: possibly 51 years old (Parents : Thomas Osborne, Capt. /1610-1650..1660¬â€ &¬â€  ? ?) with
·ó¶ Tabitha Osborne 1677-/1720 ¬â€ married (21 FEB 1706/07), Henrico Co., VA, to Thomas Cheatham 1686-¬â€ with
·ñ™ Tabitha Cheatham 1710-1771¬â€ married to Stephen Beasley 1721-1766¬â€ with :
·ñ™ Tabitha Beasley 1736-1770
·ñ™ Obedience Beasley 1745-
·ñ™
·ñ™ Charles Cheatham 1715-1770¬â€ married in¬â€ 1742 to Obedience Cheatham ca 1715-1770¬â€ with :
·ñ™ William Cheatham 1749-1823
·ñ™
·ñ™ James Cheatham 1717-1785¬â€ married to X Tanner ca 1717-ca 1750¬â€ with :
·ñ™ Archer Cheatham 1743-
·ñ™ David Cheatham 1745-1833
·ñ™ Josiah Cheatham 1747-
·ñ™
·ñ™ Leonard Cheatham 1719-1778¬â€ married to Elizabeth Green ·Ä†1799¬â€ with :
·ñ™ Leonard Cheatham
·ñ™
·ó¶
·ó¶ Martha Osborne 1688-ca 1757 ¬â€ married about¬â€ 1705, Chesterfield Co., VA, to John Woolridge ca 1678-1757¬â€ with
·ñ™ John Woolridge 1705-1783¬â€ married about¬â€ 1731, Henrico Co., VA, to Elizabeth Branch 1706-/1750¬â€ with :
·ñ™ Hannah Woolridge 1761-1797
·ñ™
·ñ™ William Woolridge 1709-1798¬â€ married to Frances Clay
·ñ™ Edward Woolridge ca 1711-1808¬â€ married about¬â€ 1743, Chesterfield Co., VA, to Mary Flournoy 1713-ca 1805¬â€ with :
·ñ™ Josiah Wooldridge 1755-1837

http://gw.geneanet.org/tdowling?lang=en&p=tabitha&n=platt

Osborne of Henrico, Virginia

Capt. Thomas Osborne b abt 1585, England, d 1656, Coxendale, Henrico, VA. The name of his wife is not known.
Children of Thomas Osborne were:
·Ä¢Thomas Osborne b abt 1609.
·Ä¢Edward Osborne b abt 1612.
Thomas Osborne b abt 1609, England, d abt 1657-1662, Coxendale, Henrico, VA. The name of his wife is undetermined.
Children of Thomas Osborne were:
·Ä¢Thomas Osborne b 1641.
·Ä¢Edward Osborne b 1646, Coxendale, Henrico, VA, d 1697; md Tabitha Platt.
Thomas Osborne b 1641, Coxendale, Henrico, VA, d 1692, Henrico, VA. He md (1) Mary(?) Bailey, and (2) Martha Griegg. Mary Bailey was the daughter of Henry Bailey. She was b abt 1644, of Chesterfield, VA.
Child of Thomas Osborne and Mary(?) Bailey was:
Thomas Osborne b 1665, Coxendale, Henrico, VA, d 1733, Coxendale, Henrico, VA. He md Martha Jones bef 24 Feb 1688/89, Henrico, VA, daughter of Thomas Jones and Mary.
Children of Thomas Osborne and Martha Jones were:
·Ä¢Martha Osborne b abt 1689, Henrico, VA, d bef 1731; md Thomas Lockett.
·Ä¢Thomas Osborne b 1690.
·Ä¢John Osborne b abt 1692, Henrico, VA, d 1744; md Edith Harris.
·Ä¢Mary Osborne b abt 1694, Henrico, VA; md Benjamin Branch.
·Ä¢Edward Osborne b abt 1696, Henrico, VA.
·Ä¢Elizabeth Osborne b abt 1698, Henrico, VA, d bef 27 Feb 1730/31.
·Ä¢Sisely Osborne b abt 1700, Henrico, VA.
·Ä¢
Thomas Osborne b 1690, Coxendale, Henrico, VA, d 1755, Charlotte Co., VA. He md Ann Worsham abt 1710, daughter of John Worsham and Phebe.
Children of Thomas Osborne and Ann Worsham were:
·Ä¢John Osborne b 1712.
·Ä¢Thomas Osborne b abt 1715, prob Charlotte, VA, d 1787, Prince Edward, VA; md Elizabeth Hendricks.
·Ä¢Martha Osborne b abt 1718, Charlotte, VA; md William Harris
·Ä¢Reps Osborne b abt 1725, Charlotte, VA, d 1808.
John Osborne b 1712, Charlotte Co., VA, d prob Amelia, VA. He md Mary (Hutcherson?) abt 1740.
Child of John Osborne and Mary was:
William Osborne b 1745, Amelia, VA, d 1799, Halifax, VA. He md Elizabeth abt 1775, Amelia, VA.
Child of William Osborne and Elizabeth was:
Thomas A. Osborne b 1783, prob Halifax, VA, d 22 Jul 1853. He md [1] Sarah Phillips, and [2] Martha Powell 11 Jun 1829, Halifax, VA, daughter of John Powell and Lucy Owen. She was b 1790, d 3 Oct 1878, Halifax, VA.
Children of Thomas A. Osborne and Martha Powell were:
·Ä¢Joseph Allen Osborne b 15 May 1830, Halifax, VA, d 23 Jan 1911; md Frances Rice Patillo.
·Ä¢William Osborne b 18 Jan 1831, Halifax, VA, d 5 May 1864, Richmond, VA.
·Ä¢Susan Ann Osborne b 1834, Halifax, VA, d 10 Dec 1890; md John J. Comer.
·Ä¢Frances Elizabeth Osborne b 1839.
Frances Elizabeth "Fanny" Osborne b 1839, Halifax, VA, d prob Halifax, VA. She md John Shotwell 1859, prob Halifax, VA, son of William Shotwell and Patience Hurt Hubbard.

SOURCES:
Maynard Osborne; JSTOR online subscription to William and Mary Quarterly; GJB; 1850 Halifax County, VA census.
http://www.geneajourney.com/osbrne.html

Martha Osborne Wooldridge
Birth: 1688 Fauquier County, Virginia, USA
Death: 1757 Henrico County, Virginia, USA

She was the son[SIC] of Edward Osborne.
She married John Wooldridge, Sr., The Immigrant in 1704.

Family links:
Parents:
Edward Osborne (1646 - 1757)
Tabitha Platt Osborne (1660 - 1692)

Spouse:
John Wooldridge (1678 - 1757)*

Burial:
Chesterfield
Chesterfield
Chesterfield County
Virginia, USA

https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=176119892

John Wooldridge
Birth: 1678
East Sussex, England
Death: 1757
Henrico County
Virginia, USA

***Children of John Wooldridge and Martha Osborne are:
2. i. John2 Wooldridge, Jr., b. 1705, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1783, Chesterfield Co., Va..
3. ii. Thomas Wooldridge, b. 1707, Henrico County, Virginia; d. May 1762, Cumberland Co., Virginia.
4. iii. William Wooldridge,Sr, b. 1709, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1798, Elbert County, Georgia.
5. iv. Edward Mologe Wooldridge, b. 1711, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1808, Chesterfield Co., Va..
6. v. Mary Wooldridge, b. 1715, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1789, Chesterfield Co., Va..
7. vi. Robert Wooldridge, b. 1719, Henrico County, Virginia; d. July 1794, Chesterfield Co., Va..
****************************************
***Notes for John Wooldridge:
John Wooldridge came to America from either the Lothian region of Scotland or England. He arrived in the 1690's as an indentured servant to Richard Kennon, who was improving Brick House (still standing and being restored as a museum) at Conjurer's Neck on Swift Creek off the Appomatox River in Virginia. He worked as a blacksmith after his emancipation. In 1712, John Wooldridge bought his first land, 100 acres on the south side of the James River. In 1736 John bought 650 acres on the Buckingham Road from Henry Cary. About 1745 the Wooldridges built the first section of the family home, Midlothian. Midlothian eventually became a successful tobacco plantation and future generations developed the coal interests, cresting further wealth.
***

***Sycamores A BEAUTIFUL TWO STORY HOUSE....WOULDN'T DOWNLOAD.
built maybe around 1745
;>added this on 25 Mar 2012
Category Type:Portrait / Family Photo
Home of John the Immigrant Wooldridge and descendants. This was his last home. Sometimes called Midlothian, more often The Sycamores. Now operated as Crab Louis restaurant. In this picture the center is original, the right wing added by his son, the left wing is a modern addition for the restaurant. Location: Midlothian Turnpike, Midlothian, Richmond, Virginia.
************************************************
John Wooldridge was born Abt. 1678 in England, and died 1757 in Henrico County, Virginia. He married Martha Osborne Abt. 1703 in Henrico County, Virginia. She was born Abt. 1680 in Fauquier, Virginia, and died Aft. 1757 in Henrico County, Virginia.
Notes for John Wooldridge:
JOHN WOOLDRIDGE (SR.), Immigrant Blacksmith and Planter
(c. 1678-1757)
Though not documented, family legend has it that the Wooldridges are from Scotland. Laurence B. Gardiner found in the Memphis genealogy library a paper on old homes of Shelby County, Tennessee, which says John Wooldridge Elam named his home East Lothian after the county of the settler's ancestors south of the Firth of Forth in Scotland, and that his brothers named their homes West Lothian and South Lothian. In 1982 L. Gardiner and William C. Wooldridge engaged Mrs. Kathleen B. Cory to search births in the surviving parish register of Midlothian, Scotland, for the period 1660-1680, but she found no Wooldridges either there or in her survey of available printed indices to Scottish records of the 17th century, with the exception of a family in Edinburgh (Constantine Wooldridge married Margaret Akinstall, Oct. 24, 1644; Constantine Wooldridge painter married Marjory D. of Patrick Copland mariner, Dec. 18, 1869; George Wooldridge or Woolredge joiner md. Isobel Hart, Nov. 20, 1668.)
In the early 1600's at the same time that Jamestown, Virginia, was being settled, Ulster, Ireland finally capitulated to England, and England brought in colonists from Scotland and England to colonize and subjugate Ulster. Presbyterian, they still had to pay taxes to the Church of England (in Scotland they paid taxes to the Church of Scotland) which was Anglican. They could not hold political office, have certain jobs, paid extra taxes, and suffered other discriminations. so, in the late 1600's, these Presbyterian Scots-Irish began to immigrate to the New World.
A blacksmith in Ireland did quite well. He would have done the smithing work for about 200 families, covering about an 1800-acre area. All hardware needs would have been supplied by him--he would have been the local Walmart, making all metal kitchen utensils, nails, hinges, wheel hubs, keys, locks, farming tools, and so on. As an economic example, if a housewife needed a spatula, it would have cost her about a month's egg and butter money -- the money she used to run her house. Smithing was a full-time job --12 to 16 hours a day, 6 days a week. A blacksmith had no time nor financial need for farming.
John Wooldridge (Sr.) was born about 1678 and immigrated from Scotland, Ireland or England (probably from Scotland) to Virginia in the New World probably in the 1690's as an indentured servant to Richard Kennon in Henrico County. In March 1699 he petitioned against his mistress, Mrs. Elizabeth Kennon, "for wages according to Indenture." The petition was held through three subsequent sessions. The 1699 petition suggests an artisan's contract for passage -- John was a blacksmith -- as wages were more characteristic of artisans than agricultural indentures.
The Kennon establishment, Conjurer's Neck, stood on the Appomattox River about five miles from present-day Petersburg. Richard Kennon was among the newer class of merchants settling in Chesterfield County. His dwelling, known as "Brick House", erected at Conjurors Neck in 1685 is believed to be the oldest house still standing in Chesterfield. Conjuror's Neck is a peninsula formed by the junction of Swift Creek and the Appomattox River. Tradition says the name was given the area because it was the dwelling place of a famous Appomatucks Indian medicine man when the first white man came to Chesterfield. Richard Kennon died in 1696 and his widow, Elizabeth Bolling Kennon, ran the estate.
In 1685 a great pow-wow with the Eastern Indian tribes had been held in Albany, New York. Two of the few remaining local Appomatucks were included among the Virginia delegates to confirm the articles of peace. There were frequent acts of violence in later years, but the old fear of Indians had subsided.
Law enforcement, however, was a major concern. The pillory and whipping post were used for petty offenders and a ducking stool was available at Varina. For hog stealing in 1690, the penalty was to stand in the pillory for two hours with ears fastened to the beam by nails and then cut loose with a knife, the resulting mutilation being a sort of "Beware" notice. Branding in the hand for theft was a common punishment. Death was the penalty for horse stealing. John Stower was appointed constable for the large area from Falling Creek upwards to the present Powhatan line, taking in all of Midlothia.
John Wooldridge (Sr.) worked as a blacksmith after his emancipation, staying the the Conjuror's neck area. He married Martha Osborne, (daughter of Edward Osborne) about 1704 or 1705 of the more established Osborne family, and began to raise a family. Captain Thomas Osborne came to Virginia in 1616 and took over the Coxendale tract abandoned after the 1622 Indian massacre there, and patented additional land on Proctors Creek where years later a town bearing his name was started. John (Jr.) was born about 1705, named after his father. Thomas (Sr.) was born about 1707, named after his maternal great-grandfather. William (Sr.) was born about 1709. Edward (Sr.) was born about 1711, named after his maternal grandfather. Despite his growing family, John was able to save money -- blacksmiths were scarce and were able to demand high wages for their work.
The winter of 1709-1710 was a hard one -- the whole colony was swept by disease. And in 1711 tension arose when there were rumors of an impending invasion by a French fleet. William Byrd, !!, as county lieutenant, made plans for defense, double called for after a planned Indian raid was also reported to him. The following spring the Govenor of North Carolina issued a call for 200 volunteers from Virginia for help against a planned Indian uprising. Twenty-six Young men from Chesterfield County responded, but by the time they reached Nottoway, word came that everything was okay.
On March 1, 1712, John bought his first land, 100 acres on the South side of the James River, from Bartholomew Stovall for five shillings. The land was bounded by Hugh Ligon and Edward Stratton.
His family continued to grow, and in 1715 his daughter, Mary, was born. Robert was born in 1719.
In 1725, John Sr. patented two 400-acre tracts, close to the boundaries of the Huguenot settlement that had been established in Manikin in 1700 near the present Chesterfield-Powhatan border. The first tract lay on the South side of the James River adjoining the lands Of Gilbert Gee and Mrs. Hannah Tullet. The second tract lay on the South side of Swift Creek on the Henrico Beaver Ponds. These patents began the Wooldridge coal interests. He gave the second tract to John Jr., who came of age about that time, as his own plantation.
In September 1729, John Sr. elevated his station, being thereafter called Mr. Wooldridge, dropping the assignation, blacksmith. He sold his old 100-acre tract, where he had lived, to Joseph Goode for 25 pounds and moved west to his Manikin land, bringing him closer to the Huguenot settlement than he was then ready to deal with. he was very unhappy when his daughter Mary later married a Huguenot.
Up to the opening of the eighteenth century the imaginary boundary between the English settlements and the Indian lands was a line from the falls of the Appomattox River to the Manakin village on the James at the mouth of Bernards Creek. But on the far frontier of Virginia aggressive French forces with bloodthirsty Indian allies posed such a threat that a buffer was deemed desirable. Consequently a large tract of the wilderness was set aside for a new type of immigrant -- the peaceful religious refugees from France known as Huguenots. Approximately 100,000 acres of land in the old haunts of the Manakins were made available for the placement of families exiled from their French homes by religious persecution.
By the end of 1700, 800 Huguenots had settled in Virginia. While the Huguenots were Protestants and nominally under control of the Church of England, even their religious thought was alien to that of their neighbors in many respects. Radically different farming methods were brought by them, and they showed no inclination to adopt the pattern set by the affluent planters below the falls or to slip into the habits of the small inland farmers. English homes of the period wee often one and a half story homes (to avoid the tax on two-story homes) with a central hall and door. The Huguenot homes omitted the central hall (to save heat?) and used "double doors" -- an outside door to each room. Yet the adaptability of the Huguenots is evidenced as they left no dialect or accent as a heritage, contrary to the French in Canada or Louisiana, neither did they leave any distinctly French architecture. Soon there were intermarriages and in a remarkably short time little differences in nationalities was seen.
Each of the refugee families was assigned 133 acres, and to encourage them in becoming permanently settled they were exempted by the Burgesses from all taxation for seven years, Later extended another year. Upon application i person to a distributing station at Bermuda Hundred, each of the French families were eligible to receive a bushel of Indian meal monthly to tide it over until crops could be made. The necessary monthly travel between the French settlement and Bermuda Hundred converted the old Indian trails into something resembling roads and even encouraged settlers to move into the no longer isolated interior. The manakins had been reduced to about 30 bowman and apparently were willing to leave their old hunting grounds peacefully. In 1711 Abraham Salle was one of those who moved south and received a large grant in Chesterfield. Salle's eldest daughter, Magdalene, later married John's youngest son.
Although the move brought with it many good things, wolves during this period were a constant menace to the scattered residents of Chesterfield County. Bounties were being paid at each term of court for wolf heads and many young Chesterfield men became especially proficient in hunting down and slaying the wild beasts as a partial livelihood.
About 1731, his eldest son, John, Jr., married Elizabeth Branch. Like his father, John married into one of the older and more prominent Virginia families. Christopher Branch had settled in Chesterfield County in the 1620's, and in 1624 his son was listed as the only Virginia born child in Chesterfield County. John Sr., soon became a grandfather with the birth of Richard Wooldridge.
About 1732 his daughter, Mary, married Jacob Trabue, another at least occasional blacksmith who became interested in coal, but one of the strange thinking and acting Huguenots. John Sr. objected, declaring to the couple that he would give them no help or inheritance. In 1732 sons, Thomas and Edward patented land in Goochland.
On Jan. 4, 1733, grandson Joseph Trabue was born to daughter Mary Wooldridge Trabue. About 1733 another grandson, John Wooldridge, III, was born to his son John, Jr.
The area increased in importance at this time. In 1733, William Byrd, II, recorded in his diary plans to lay out two new cities, one north of the James River at Shaccos to become Richmond, and the other south of the Appomattox River near Blanford, to become Petersburg. He considered these points natural places for trade. In 1737 Major William Mayo finally surveyed the Richmond site.
In 1734, John, Jr. bought 300 acres of the Beaver Ponds land on Swift Creek, between the two proposed cities.
About 1735, a granddaughter, Mary Wooldridge, was born to his son John Jr., and about this time son Thomas married and gave him another John Wooldridge grandson. Again the Wooldridges married into an older and more prominent family, although it is not certain that it is the Hatcher girl he married. William Hatcher had received a grant of 1050 acres between Swift Creek and the Appomattox River around 1635. On Aug. 28, 1735, son Jean/John Trabue was born to daughter Mary Wooldridge Trabue.
In 1736, John Sr. bought 650 acres on the Buckingham road from Henry Cary for 32 pounds 10 shillings. The land seemingly adjoins his 1725 patent. In 1736 John Sr. had two or three hands and John Jr. one, but sons William and Thomas had none. In 1736, when John Sr. was about 58 years old, he owed quit rents on 800 acres. His son William paid on an additional 100 acres owned by John Roberts, and John Jr. paid on 300 acres just purchased from Samuel Burton. About this time his son William started farming on his own on 100 acres of John Roberts. William married his first wife in the late 30's.
On Oct. 10, 1737, daughter Mary presented him with another grandson, David Trabue.
In 1738, grandson Richard Wooldridge, by son William, was born, and about 1740 grandson William Jr., was born. On March 22, 1739 grandson William Trabue was born to Daughter Mary Wooldridge Trabue.
About 1740 son Thomas gave him another grandchild, Frances Wooldridge. On March 24, 1742 granddaughter Elizabeth Trabue was born to daughter Mary W. Trabue. In 1743 Mary Wooldridge was born to son Thomas, and on June 11, 1744, Thomas presented him with granddaughter Elizabeth. Mary W. Trabue gave him granddaughter Marie Trabue. Before 1744, perhaps about 1738, son Robert, about 18, married Magdalene Salle, said to be an old girl. About 1740, son Robert gave him grandson Colonel Thomas Wooldridge. Another son, Abraham? was born to son Robert in the 1740's.
About 1745 the Wooldridge family built the first section of the family home, Midlothian, alongside an old Indian trail, then called Buckingham Road, now
known as Midlothian Turnpike. This part of the house, now known as the East Wing, was a one-and-a-half story house with a central hall, outside chimneys, and had steep winding stairs leading to two small loft rooms lit by dormers. A porch stretched across the length of the front of the House. In the latter part of the century, soon after the Revolution, the West Wing was added. This part of the house was also built as a two-over-two but the second story had a gambrel roof, the only such roof in the village, allowing more headroom upstairs. Midlothian has a long history of hospitality to travelers, continuing in some fashion even today as Crab Louis Restaurant, where the owners proudly point out its Wooldridge origins. Midlothia was renamed "The Sycamores" in the late 1800's by the then owners John J. Jewett and his wife Nancy Jones, who purchased it in 1875.
About 1745 granddaughter Frances Wooldridge was born to son John Jr., and grandson Edward Wooldridge, Jr. was born to son Edward.
John Sr. continued to add to his estate, purchasing in 1747, 314 acres "on the French line", South side of the James beginning at John Tillets on the north side of Falling Creek thence on Wooldridge's old line to John Roberts and Richard Dean, thence to Dean's old line to Oak cornered on Ffrench parish thence to French road. John Sr. made his first will in 1747 at about the age of 69, when his holdings peaked at 1,764 acres, including 400 acres long in the possession of his son, John, Jr. Also about 1747, grandson Simon Wooldridge was born to son Edward. On Sept. 4, 1747, daughter Mary W. Trabue gave him grandson Joshua Trabue.
John Sr. had finally become reconciled to his French Huguenot children-in-law and Mary's marriage. According to William Lacy, "About the year '46 John Wooldridger Sr. sent for me to write his will and told me then, when Jacob Trabue married his daughter, he was much dissatisfied with the match, and he then made a resolve never to make Jacob Trabue the better for anything he was worth, but after he found Trabue to be a good husband, he was sorry for his rash romise and had concluded to let his daughter have theuse of a Negro girl named Hannah and her increase during his daughter's life and after her death to her son Joseph Trabue. [He said] 'I will make my grandson equal to my other sons in everything exceptlandk' and so I wrote his will." The will is dated April 20, 1747, and was rewritten in 1757.
From this period, if not earlier, John Sr. and his sons were directing their energies to growing tobacco, working their holdings personally with the help of some slave labor. Together, the family mastered the demands of growing tobacco. Virgin fields had to be cleared before cultivation. The trunks of trees were girdled, forcing the trees to die. Ropes were then attached to thebranches of the dead trees to pull them down. On rainy days, when the danger of fire spreading out of control was at a minimum, the fields would be burned. Plows had to then break through rooty topsoil, and the fields kept cultivated. After harvesting, the leafe had to be processed, and long sheds for drying the leaf had to be built. Oaken hogsheads had to be built or bought. When the crop was harvested and cured, it had to be transported for sale. Ten pounds of tobacco was worth about one shilling.
Small amounts of cotton and wool were also produced in Chesterfield for domestic use although spinning and weaving were technically forbidden in Virginia by British law -- the colonies were meant to consume to enrich the mother country, and all raw goods were by law to be shipped to England for manufacture. The finished products were then to be shipped back to the colonies for purchase. The women took the cleaned c
JOHN WOOLDRIDGE, BLACKSMITH (by Laurence B. Gardiner & William C. Wooldridge 822 W. 52nd St., Norfolk, VA 23508
In the Henrico County Court for March 1699, the "petn of John Woldredg against his Mistriss Mrs. Eliza Kennon for wages according to Indenture" was presented, then held through the subsequent three sessions.
The petitioner sued in his own name (later Robert Hyde of York County became his lawyer) and he was probably near 21 in 1699.
[Henrico Colonial Records 3:260, 265, 277, 280, Virginia
State Library.)
[It seems unlikely he was much over 21, as he lived until 1757, and an indenture often expired with the youth's 21st birthday. Richard Hofstadter, AMERICA AT 1750 (New York 1971], pp 49-50, For Hyde see WILLIAM AND MARY QUARTERLY (hereafter WMQ), lst Sr. 6(1897-98):126; 14(1905-06):148
The suit is the first record of a new man in that part of Virginia,
1. JOHN WOOLDRIDGE (ca.1678-1757), blacksmith, farmer, and founder of a long-lived and far spread family.
Eighteenth-century Virginia produced, besides statesmen and presidents, a vigorous population of such farmers. They and their families filled up the Piedmont, fought the Revolution, and furnished both inspiration and audience for a generation of republican political discourse. They were the yeoman of the Jeffersonian ideal. Where did they come from and where did they go? What made them different? These small farmers, perhaps 90% of the total, are familiar only in the aggregate (3) Looking at several generations of a single family adds the insight of concrete detail to tables and averages.
(3) Thomas Jefferson Wertenbacker, THE PLANTERS OF COLONIAL VIRGINIA (princeton 1922), pp 53-55. Thomas Jefferson's own family originated in southside Henrico; the progress of the southside farmers provides a backdrop for his thinking.]
John Wooldridge probably came to Virginia as a young man;
a headright was claimed for him by another member of the Kennon family years later, and the 1699 reference to wages, according to indenture suggests an artisan's contract for passage. (4)
He was thus part of, or at most a generation removed from, the high tide of immigration to the colony after 1650 (5) as a result of which thousands of former servants, their terms completed, faced life on their own in Virginia by the turn of the century. (6) While this background may have implied a family of middling stations in Britain, (7) in Virginia it meant starting from the bottom. But indented service or apprenticeship could be an opportunity: it apparently gave John a trade and a degree of literacy, and did not make him meek; he comes into the records demanding his due.
Without land, John plied his trade and saved his money. Not until March 1, 1712, when he was in his 30's did he buy his first 100 acres, from Bartholomew Stovall, for five shillings. (Henrico Deeds and Orders, 1710-14, p. 199, Va. State Library.) Before that, however, he was well set enough to marry, at about the age of 27. No record of his marriage survives, but the date is approximated from the dates of birth of the children beginning about 1705, the sons listed in apparent order in Wooldridge's will. His wife, Martha, (1688--after 1757), named in the will, may have been the daughter of Edward Osborne, whose 1696 will names daughter Martha. The couple's association with families like the Osbornes, Wards, and Branches points to a connection with people who had been resident much earlier in Virginia and who had already made places for themselves, although their original prominence was going into eclipse. In short, John Wooldridge seems to have made a good marriage, not into the local leadership but at least into solidly established clans.
Wooldridge was a blacksmith and had much to offer in his own right. Lamentations over the scarcity of blacksmiths and the high prices they exacted suggest a master of the trade would have no trouble making a living. Smithing in turn brought him in contact in a small way with coal, for that was the fuel used.
A colony of Huguenots came to Virginia in 1700, taking up land at Manakin at the western fringe of settlement on the south side of the James River. In 1701 coal was found in the area, as the story goes by a Huguenot youth in search of a fowl he had brought down with his gun. He clambered into a brushy declivity and happened on the black rocks. William Byrd patented land including a "cole mine" within the grant of the French refugees in 1704, and Abraham Salle, a leader of the settlement, patented land by "the cole it road" in 1715. A contemporary wrote in about 1708 that the Manakin mine was "us'd by the Smiths, for their Forges." If not already there, John Wooldridge soon joined the ranks of these "Smiths." Perhaps attracted by the coal, looking westwardly, he patented two 400 acre tracts in 1725 (Patent Book 12:366, 370, Virginia State Library) close up to the boundaries of the Huguenot settlement, near the present Chesterfield-Powhatan border.
Coal in the region preserved its early reputation for smithing, and perhaps a strategic location near good quality coal fostered Wooldridge's success. Certainly it was plentiful; on land he later held in the same area, wagon wheels turned it up in their ruts. There may have been a natural transition from the blacksmith's casual collection of coal for his fire to open pit mining of coal for sale. Johns son Robert was involved in one early commercial coal development: John Pankey advertised in the Virginia Gazette to sell pit coal from Robert Wooldridge's pits lying at Warwick on the James River (Virginia Gazette, Nov. 11, 1780). The business continued in the family until well into the nineteenth century. Except for William Byrd's activities, not a great deal is known abut the earliest commercial coal developments in Virginia, and the link between the blacksmith father of the early eighteenth century and the mine operator son of the late eighteenth is suggestive.
After taking a few years to seat his new Manakin lands, Wooldridge sold his old 100 acre tract, "land where Wooldridge lately dwelt," to Joseph Goode for 25 pounds in September 1729 (Henrico Deeds and Wills 1725-37, 1:246, VA State Library). The short move west brought closer connections to the Manakin Huguenots than Wooldridge was ready for. About 1732 his daughter Mary married Jacob Trabue, another at least occasional blacksmith who became interested in coal. Wooldridge objected. According to William Lacy, "About the year '46 John Wooldridge Sr. sent for me to write his will and told me then, when Jacob Trabue married his daughter he was much dissatisfied with the match and he then made a resolve never to make Jacob Trabue the better for anything he was worth, but after he found Trabue to be a good husband he was sorry for his rash promise and had concluded to let his daughter have the use of a Negro girl named Hannah and her increase during his daughter's life and after her death to her son Joseph Trabue. (He said) I will make my grandson equal to my other sons in everything except land, and so I wrote his will." Another will was drawn in 1757, then changed by insertion. The changes made it questionable; it was finally order to be probated on May 5, 1759, after the Justices heard "arguments of the counsel on both sides."
Though not recorded in Chesterfield, the original will along
with related depositions by John Wooldridge (Jr.), John Roberts, William Lacy, and Agness Lacy age 19 are in the Chesterfield County loose or "dead" papers, now in the Virginia State Library in Richmond. it is dated April 20, 1757, and is witnessed by Agness, Elizabeth and William Lacy. The change may have been
occasioned by the death of Joseph Trabue by 1757, and substitution of Joshua Trabue. John Wooldridge Sr. died between May 31 and Oct. 7, 1757 when his will was offered for probate. The order of depositions and the 1759 probate order are in Chesterfield OB 2:352, 364, 525
The real beneficiary was a lawyer, John Fleming, who entered in his fee book for October 1757 the sum of 10 shillings for advice on a will and in May 1759 the sum of 12 shillings sixpence for "arguing the matter of Wooldridge will" for Jacob Trabue.
In all, four of John's six children married Huguenots, and there followed other associations with the Huguenot outpost. John's youngest son Robert was godfather to his nephew William Trabue in 1739; about 1738 he had married Magdalene Salle, granddaughter of Abraham Salle. Edward Wooldridge married Mary Flournoy and was godfather to his nephew David Trabue in 1737; William married Sarah Flournoy and served as godfather to his niece Marie Trabue seven years later.
In 1736 Wooldridge bought 650 acres for 32 pounds 10 shillings, on the Buckingham road, seemingly adjoining his 1725 patent, from Henry Cary (of which 400 were given to his son Edward in 1753); in 1747 he patented 314 more acres, described as "on the French line" in his will.
From this period if not earlier he and his sons were directing their energies to the sovereign weed tobacco. They worked their holdings personally. In 1736 John Sr. may have had two or three hands and John Jr., one, but William and Thomas had none. The initial capital could have come from smithing, and Wooldridge did not necessarily give up the trade altogether when he started farming; he bequeathed his blacksmith tools to his son William. Nevertheless, after1729 he no longer styled "blacksmith," and by the time he died he was in the eyes of some "Mr." Wooldridge, a more honorific title then than now. The family home was named "Midlothian," perhaps (or perhaps not) In memory of a distant origin in lowland Scotland.
The movement from servant to artisan to planter bears witness to he opportunities in 18th century Virginia for people who started with nothing. Progress took time and longevity helped. Wooldridge was 33 before he owned his first acre and when the tax collector came in 1736, about 56 old, he owed quit rents on 800 acres owned by John Roberts, and John Wooldridge Jr. paid on 300 just purchased from Samuel Burton. Not until 1747, at the age of 69, did his holdings peak at 1764 acres, including 400 long in the possession of his son John.
But if progress was slow, it was attainable and probably commonplace. Success for a man of this epoch, to be sure, did not mean advancing from humble origins to a position of political leadership. Wooldridge did not rise socially in relation to his peers; they all rose together. The freedmen of 1700 became the yeoman of 1750, numerous, landed, and prosperous in relation to anything they had known before. Wooldridge's family in its beginnings in the latter half of the seventeenth century could not have been called prosperous, but everyone in it meets that description for most of the eighteenth century.
Men who had, as they saw it, raised themselves from servitude to landed proprietors and established their sons on lands of their own may well have transmitted to their families a strong loyalty to the society in which they had succeeded. The Virginia economy was based on an agricultural laboring class which had made its way to prosperity by a half-century of tenacity and hard work. Such men are self-confident and resourceful. when England began to tighten the reins, she would find the Virginia yeoman, who might not seem to have much stake in the struggle, among the most refractory of the colonists. by then John Wooldridge was dead, but 16 of his 24 grandsons, including one* who had looked after him in the last years of his life and been rewarded with a 250 acre legacy, in one way or another took part on the side of the colonies, the majority in active service, and at least two more were too old for active service.
*Richard Wooldridge appeared with the old man on a 1756 Chesterfield tithe list, Virginia State Library, and is remembered in his will.
As a militiaman in Lincoln County, Kentucky, he is on a 1782 payroll for an expedition against the Shannese Indians under George Rogers Clark. Ill.. Dept. Papers, Virginia State Library.
John Wooldridge Sr.'s will is in the Chesterfield County loose or "dead" papers preserved in the Virginia State Library.
John Wooldridge, Sr. Will proved by James Duyprey, George Smith, Benjamin Watkins. Inventory July 25, 1783.
Chesterfield OB 6:452, 460; WB 3:389, 395.

***Children of John Wooldridge and Martha Osborne are:
2. i. John2 Wooldridge, Jr., b. 1705, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1783, Chesterfield Co., Va..
3. ii. Thomas Wooldridge, b. 1707, Henrico County, Virginia; d. May 1762, Cumberland Co., Virginia.
4. iii. William Wooldridge,Sr, b. 1709, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1798, Elbert County, Georgia.
5. iv. Edward Mologe Wooldridge, b. 1711, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1808, Chesterfield Co., Va..
6. v. Mary Wooldridge, b. 1715, Henrico County, Virginia; d. 1789, Chesterfield Co., Va..
7. vi. Robert Wooldridge, b. 1719, Henrico County, Virginia; d. July 1794, Chesterfield Co., Va..
***

***Excerpt from "Ancestors of Kenneth Robert Klamm"
Excerpt from "Ancestors of Kenneth Robert Klamm", found at the link:

*** John Wooldridge, born Abt. 1678 in Sussex, England or Lothian region of Scotland; died Abt. 1757 in Virginia. He married 433. Martha Osborne Abt. 1705.

433. Martha Osborne, born Abt. 1688; died Abt. 1757. She was the daughter of 866. Edward Osborne and 867. Tabitha Platt.

***Notes for John Wooldridge:
John Wooldridge came to America from either the Lothian region of Scotland or England. He arrived in the 1690's as an indentured servant to Richard Kennon, who was improving Brick House (still standing and being restored as a museum) at Conjurer's Neck on Swift Creek off the Appomatox River in Virginia. He worked as a blacksmith after his emancipation. In 1712, John Wooldridge bought his first land, 100 acres on the south side of the James River. In 1736 John bought 650 acres on the Buckingham Road from Henry Cary. About 1745 the Wooldridges built the first section of the family home, Midlothian. Midlothian eventually became a successful tobacco plantation and future generations developed the coal interests, cresting further wealth.
***

***Sycamores A BEAUTIFUL TWO STORY HOUSE....WOULDN'T DOWNLOAD.
built maybe around 1745
;>added this on 25 Mar 2012
Category Type:Portrait / Family Photo
Home of John the Immigrant Wooldridge and descendants. This was his last home. Sometimes called Midlothian, more often The Sycamores. Now operated as Crab Louis restaurant. In this picture the center is original, the right wing added by his son, the left wing is a modern addition for the restaurant. Location: Midlothian Turnpike, Midlothian, Richmond, Virginia.
***

Family links:
Spouse:
Martha Osborne Wooldridge (1680 - 1757)

Children:
William Wooldridge (1709 - 1798)*
Edward Mologe Wooldridge (1711 - 1808)*

Burial:
Renfrow Family Cemetery
Butler County
Kentucky, USA

https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=120905012

Edward Mologe Wooldridge
Birth: 1711 Henrico County, Virginia, USA
Death: Oct. 10, 1808 Chesterfield County, Virginia, USA

Family links:
Parents:
John Wooldridge (1678 - 1757)
Martha Osborne Wooldridge (1680 - 1757)

Spouse:
Mary Flournoy (1713 - 1807)*

Children:
Simon Wooldridge (1747 - 1830)*

Siblings:
John Wooldridge (1705 - 1783)**
William Wooldridge (1709 - 1798)*
Edward Mologe Wooldridge (1711 - 1808)

*Calculated relationship
**Half-sibling

Burial: Unknown
https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=133674319

1 NAME /WOOLDRIDGE/
2 SOUR S64
3 PAGE page 5.

date estimated on marriage in 1704 to John Wooldridge Sr.

Martha Osborne was the daughter of Edward Osborne and Tabitha Platt.
Her father, Edward Osborne, was the son of Thomas Osborne II and Martha
Goode. She married John Wooldridge I in Chesterfield Co., VA after his
emancipation in 1704/1705.

'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
'''''
The Martha Osborne information came from Holly Ann Burt and the Henrico
Co., VA
Wills and Abstracts- 1680-1822. William Wooldridge's will is available
for
viewing, if you can go to the County Clerk: it was too delicate to copy
anymore.
My guess is that William returned to Chesterfield/Henrico Co., VA when
his parents
were aging and needed care, thus you have some children born in other
states and
some later children born in VA. The dates coincide.2 SOUR S510

Haben Sie Ergänzungen, Korrekturen oder Fragen im Zusammenhang mit Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)?
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Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)

(Martha ?) Jones ?
± 1609-1653
Gilbert Platt
± 1620-1692
Edward (III) Osborne
± 1646-± 1697

Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)
1688-1757

± 1704
John Wooldridge
± 1705-1783
Thomas Wooldridge
± 1707-1762
Robert Wooldridge
± 1719-1794

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Quellen

  1. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1459264065&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  2. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1715083772&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  3. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=38349000550&indiv=try
    Record for John "the Blacksmith" Wooldridge
    http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=0&pid=3327
  4. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1151659688&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  5. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=27784889912&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  6. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=24069358133&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  7. Find A Grave
  8. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1084464357&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  9. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1953414150&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  10. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=1524962155&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne Wooldridge
  11. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1603420127&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  12. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1129258844&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  13. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1084413367&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  14. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=158988006&indiv=try
    Record for John Wooldridge
  15. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=329287546&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne - Wooldridge
  16. Find A Grave

    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=FindAGraveUS&h=76340202&indiv=try
    Record for John Wooldridge
    1,60525::76340202
  17. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=19368569012&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  18. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1459258999&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  19. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=34341982356&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  20. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-184041673&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  21. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=253791929&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne - Wooldridge
  22. Find A Grave

    1,60525::76342065
  23. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1151659689&indiv=try
    Record for John Wooldridge
  24. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1881720926&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  25. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1129171284&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  26. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1391732648&indiv=try
    Record for Martha Osborne
  27. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-1934990492&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Osborne
  28. Ancestry.com, http://www.Ancestry.com
  29. Author, 1989
  30. Authors, 121 Riverside Drive; Suffolk,VA 23435, 1989
  31. Posted by Sandy Joyner on July 15, 1998 at 15:23:53:

    I am descended from the following: John (the immigrant), Edward, Simon,
    Josiah who m. Keziah Nichols, John H. who m. Elizabeth A. Stephens, Anne
    Elizabeth who m. Wm. Gurley Huey in Obion Co., TN. Anne Eliz. is my Great
    Great Grandmother. On my web site I have pictures of the "Parade That
    Goes Nowhere". These pictures show the statues that were carved in Italy
    shipped to America to be placed around the grave of my GGreat Uncle Col.
    Henry Wooldridge. He is the only one buried there! The gravesite is such
    a unique thing to see that the Chamber of Commerce has printed out a
    brochure that one can obtain from them that shows pictures of this
    unusual site and tells the story of how it came about and other
    interesting tidbits about it. You are welcome to visit my site to see for
    yourself. Col. Henry Wooldridge never married and evidently was quite
    eccentric!! My web page is at:

    http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Estates/5690/my.html

    Will be glad to share what I have on the Wooldridge line. Sandy Joyner

    (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
    http://www.genforum.com/wooldridge/messages/26.html

    =============================================

    From: "Jim & Sandy Joyner" ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
    To: "Marvin Welborn" ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
    Subject: RE: John Wooldridge Sr. Fam Hist Rpt.
    Date: Sat, 22 Aug 1998 11:52:16 -0500
    Message-ID: <000001bdcded$38585c20$(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)-s-desk>
    MIME-Version: 1.0
    Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
    ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€ boundary="----=_NextPart_000_0001_01BDCDC3.4F89F540"
    X-Priority: 3 (Normal)
    X-MSMail-Priority: Normal
    X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook 8.5, Build 4.71.2232.26
    Importance: Normal
    In-Reply-To: ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
    X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V4.72.3110.3
    X-UIDL: 4294967195
    Status: U


    Yes it came through just fine, but will keep it as a file to view since
    it is 185 pages long in MS Word. My file is not quite that long. You have
    a lot more than I do it seems.


    Attached is my .rtf file. Let me know if it comes through o.k. for you
    also. Thanks for the info. I will scan through it when I can. I am
    unable to sit at computer for long stretches. Have a back problem that I
    hope will be fixed on Aug. 31. If you find anything in my database that
    is certainly incorrect, please bring it to my attention in case I do not
    see it. I do want my info to be as correct as possible.


    I can scan the page of the Williamsburg document with the Flournoy name
    on it if you would like and send it via e-mail. Let me know if you would
    be interested or not.


    Sandy Joyner
    Visit my site for Free Victorian Graphics
    http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Estates/5690



    -----Original Message-----
    From: Marvin Welborn [mailto:(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)]
    Sent: Saturday, August 22, 1998 9:21 AM
    To: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
    Subject: John Wooldridge Sr. Fam Hist Rpt.



    Sandy,


    Here's a Family History Report from John Wooldridge (Sr.) and Martha
    Osborne.¬â€  I'm sending two: the one just mentioned, and one from Laurent
    Flournoy and Gabrielle Mellin.¬â€  Both are RTF files.¬â€  Please let me know
    if you receive them okay.


    Posting from Sandy Joyner:

    FIRST GENERATION

    1. John Wooldridge Sr. was born about 1678. He died about 1757.

    John Wooldridge Sr. and Martha Osborne? had the following children:

    +2 i. John Wooldridge Jr..
    +3 ii. Thomas Wooldridge.
    +4 iii. William Wooldridge.
    +5 iv. Edward Wooldridge.
    +6 v. Mary Wooldridge.
    +7 vi. Robert Wooldridge.



    SECOND GENERATION

    2. John Wooldridge Jr. was born in 1705. He died in 1783.

    He was married to Elizabeth Branch in 1731. John Wooldridge Jr. and
    Elizabeth Branch had the following children:

    8 i. Richard Wooldridge was born about 1731. He died about 1782.
    9 ii. John Wooldridge was born about 1733. He died about 1782.
    10 iii. Mary Wooldridge was born about 1735.
    11 iv. William Wooldridge was born about 1740. He died about 1817.
    12 v. Elizabeth Wooldridge was born about 1750. She died in 1780.
    13 vi. Female? Wooldridge was born about 1745.
    14 vii. Edmond Wooldridge was born about 1748. He died about 1791.
    15 viii. Virilinche Wooldridge was born about 1750.
    16 ix. Phebe Wooldridge was born about 1752.
    17 x. Robert Wooldridge was born about 1754. He died about 1801.
    18 xi. Thomas Wooldridge was born about 1756. He died about 1840.
    19 xii. Martha Wooldridge was born about 1762.
    20 xiii. Hanna Wooldridge was born about 1765.

    3. Thomas Wooldridge was born in 1707. He died in May 1762.

    He was married to Mrs. Thomas (Wooldridge) in 1735. Thomas Wooldridge
    and Mrs. Thomas (Wooldridge) had the following children:

    21 i. John Wooldridge was born about 1735. He died about 1771.
    22 ii. Frances Wooldridge was born about 1740.
    +23 iii. Mary Wooldridge.
    +24 iv. Elizabeth Wooldridge.
    +25 v. Thomas Wooldridge.
    +26 vi. Henry Wooldridge.
    +27 vii. Martha Wooldridge.
    28 viii. Daniel Wooldridge was born about 1758. He died about 1821.
    +29 ix. Joseph Wooldridge.

    4. William Wooldridge was born in 1709. He died in 1798.

    William Wooldridge and Mrs. Wm. (Wooldridge) had the following
    children:

    +30 i. Richard Wooldridge.

    He was married to Sarah Flournoy (daughter of Francis Flournoy and Mary
    Gibson) in 1750 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. William Wooldridge and Sarah
    Flournoy had the following children:

    31 i. Richard Wooldridge was born about 1738. He died about 1828.
    +32 ii. William Wooldridge.
    +33 iii. Gibson Wooldridge.
    +34 iv. Thomas Wooldridge.
    +35 v. Edward Wooldridge.
    +36 vi. Sarah Flournoy Wooldridge.
    +37 vii. Martha Wooldridge.

    5. Edward Wooldridge was born in 1711 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. He died
    in 1808 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. Edward Wooldridge (#13) "The
    Descendents of Josiah & Keziah Nichols Wooldridge", Wright W. Frost,
    Kingsport Press, Inc. - Knoxville, Tennessee, pp. 33-35 - Copyright by
    Wright W. Frost 1973.

    He was married to Mary Flournoy (daughter of Francis Flournoy and Mary
    Baugh) in 1747. Edward Wooldridge and Mary Flournoy had the following
    children:

    +38 i. Daughter Wooldridge.
    +39 ii. Edward Wooldridge.
    +40 iii. Simon Wooldridge.
    41 iv. William Wooldridge was born about 1750.
    +42 v. Josiah Wooldridge.
    +43 vi. Hannah Wooldridge.

    6. Mary Wooldridge was born about 1715. She died about 1789.

    She was married to Jacob Trabue in 1732. Jacob Trabue was born about
    1705. He died in Oct 1767. Mary Wooldridge and Jacob Trabue had the
    following children:

    44 i. Joseph Trabue was born on 4 Jan 1733. He died about 1757 in
    Chesterfield Co., Va..
    45 ii. Jean Trabue was born on 28 Aug 1735. She died about 1791.
    +46 iii. David Trabue.
    47 iv. William Trabue was born on 23 Mar 1739. He died in 1767.
    48 v. Elizabeth Trabue was born on 24 Mar 1742. She died in 1767.
    49 vi. Marie Trabue was born on 29 Oct 1744.
    50 vii. Joshua Trabue was born on 4 Sep 1747. He died about 1774.
    51 viii. Thomas Trabue was born on 10 May 1752.
    52 ix. Daniel Trabue was born on 14 Aug 1753. He died on 2 Feb 1819 in
    Chesterfield Co., Va..

    7. Robert Wooldridge was born about 1719. He died about 1794.

    He was married to Magdalene Salle (daughter of Abraham Salle Jr. and Mrs.
    Abraham (Salle Jr.) in 1744. Robert Wooldridge and Magdalene Salle had
    the following children:

    +53 i. Elisha Wooldridge.
    +54 ii. Thomas Wooldridge.
    55 iii. Abraham? Wooldridge died in 1784.
    56 iv. Robert Wooldridge was born about 1754. He died about 1805 in
    Chesterfield Co., Va..
    +57 v. William Wooldridge.



    THIRD GENERATION

    23. Mary Wooldridge was born about 1743 in Buckingham Co., Virginia.
    She died about 1809 in Buckingham Co., Virginia.

    She was married to Nicholas Robertson II (son of Nicholas Robertson I and
    Mrs. (Robertson) in 1769 in Buckingham Co., Virginia. Nicholas Robertson
    II was born about 1740 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. He died in 1808 in
    Buckingham Co., Virginia. Mary Wooldridge and Nicholas Robertson II had
    the following children:

    +58 i. Jeffrey Robertson.
    59 ii. John Robertson was born about 1744 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    60 iii. Frances B. "Fannie" Robertson was born about 1748 in
    Chesterfield Co., Va..
    61 iv. Nicholas Robertson III. was born on 12 Apr 1776 in Chesterfield
    Co., Va..
    62 v. Mary Robertson.

    24. Elizabeth Wooldridge was born on 11 Jun 1744 in Buckingham Co.,
    Virginia. She died on 7 Nov 1818 in Bedford, Virginia.

    She was married to Joseph Dickerson on 6 Mar 1769. Joseph Dickerson was
    born on 11 Apr 1742. He died on 16 Sep 1818 in Bedford. Elizabeth
    Wooldridge and Joseph Dickerson had the following children:

    63 i. Edna Dickerson was born on 15 Sep 1770.
    64 ii. William Dickerson was born on 7 Jan 1772.
    +65 iii. Nancy Dickerson.
    66 iv. Sally Dickerson was born on 15 Sep 1776 in Bedford, Virginia.
    67 v. Pleasant Dickerson was born on 15 Apr 1785 in Bedford, Virginia.

    25. Thomas Wooldridge was born about 1748. He died about 1830 in
    Buckingham, Virginia.

    He was married to Ann Povall on 25 Apr 1774 in Cumberland, Virginia.
    Thomas Wooldridge and Ann Povall had the following children:

    68 i. George Wooldridge.
    69 ii. Charles Wooldridge.
    70 iii. Polly Wooldridge.
    71 iv. Betsy Wooldridge.
    72 v. Thomas P. Wooldridge.

    26. Henry Wooldridge was born about 1751. He died about 1823 in
    Buckingham, Virginia.

    Henry Wooldridge and Mrs. Henry (Wooldridge) had the following
    children:

    73 i. Daniel Wooldridge.
    74 ii. Anderson Wooldridge.

    27. Martha Wooldridge was born about 1756.

    Martha Wooldridge and Thomas Cheatham had the following children:

    75 i. Sally Cheatham.
    76 ii. Elizabeth Cheatham.
    77 iii. Martha Cheatham.
    78 iv. Ann Cheatham.
    79 v. Matthew Cheatham.
    80 vi. Thomas Cheatham.

    29. Joseph Wooldridge was born about 1761. He died about 1835 in
    Buckingham Co., Va.. Joseph Wooldridge was given a military warrant for
    1782-1793 for 100 ac Warrant #4552, 3 years soldier Virginia line, 26 Nov
    1793.

    Joseph Wooldridge and Sarah (Wooldridge) had the following children:

    81 i. Francis Marion Wooldridge.
    82 ii. Powhatan Wooldridge.
    83 iii. John Henry Wooldridge.
    84 iv. Joe Wooldridge.
    85 v. Celia Wooldridge.
    86 vi. Edmund Wooldridge.
    87 vii. Anderson Wooldridge.

    30. Richard Wooldridge was born in 1738. He died in 1828 in Russell
    County, Kentucky.

    He was married to Jane Roberts about 1764. Richard Wooldridge and Jane
    Roberts had the following children:

    88 i. James Wooldridge.
    89 ii. Fanny Wooldridge.
    90 iii. John Wooldridge.
    91 iv. Elizabeth Wooldridge.
    92 v. William Wooldridge.
    93 vi. Richard Wooldridge.
    94 vii. Mary Wooldridge.
    95 viii. Sarah Wooldridge.
    96 ix. Martha Wooldridge.
    97 x. Jesse Wooldridge.
    98 xi. Jane Wooldridge.

    32. William Wooldridge was born about 1740. He died about 1816 in
    Wilson County, Tennessee.

    He was married to Martha Hudspeth about 1976. Martha Hudspeth died in
    1830 in Wilson County, Tennessee. William Wooldridge and Martha Hudspeth
    had the following children:

    99 i. Samuel Wooldridge.
    100 ii. Mary Wooldridge.
    101 iii. Thomas Wooldridge.
    102 iv. Sarah Wooldridge.
    103 v. Martha Wooldridge.
    104 vi. Fanny Wooldridge.
    105 vii. Phoebe Wooldridge.

    33. Gibson Wooldridge was born about 1750. He died in Oct 1816 in
    Abbeville, S. Carolina. Gibson Wooldridge: John Wooldridge,"Blacksmith", Laurence B. Gardiner & William C. Wooldridge, same as
    above, page 40 copyrighted 1980 & 1989. 107. Lucy Hudspeth, see not 106.
    National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, PATRIOT INDEX
    (Washington 1966), p. 762. Del- egates to Georgia Constitutional
    Convention, HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS of the JOSEPH HALBERSHAM CHAPTER DAR
    (n.p. 1902), 1:302. Will of Gibson Wooldridge, October 24, 1816, recorded
    November 2, 1816, in Willie P. Young, ed., ABSTRACTS of OLD NINETY-SIX
    and ABBEVILLE DISTRICT WILLS and BONDS (Abbeville 1950), p. 348.

    He was married to Lucy Hudspeth about 1775. Gibson Wooldridge and Lucy
    Hudspeth had the following children:

    106 i. John Wooldridge.
    107 ii. Thomas Wooldridge.
    108 iii. Robert Wooldridge.
    109 iv. William Wooldridge.
    110 v. Mary Ann Wooldridge.
    111 vi. Lucy Wooldridge.
    112 vii. Saray Flournoy Wooldridge.
    113 viii. Elizabeth Wooldridge.

    34. Thomas Wooldridge was born about 1752. He died in 1830 in Alabama.

    He was married to Cheriah Davis about 1782. Thomas Wooldridge and
    Cheriah Davis had the following children:

    114 i. Absolum Davis Wooldridge.
    115 ii. William Wooldridge.
    116 iii. Sarah Wooldridge.
    117 iv. Penina Wooldridge.
    118 v. Cinthy Wooldridge.
    119 vi. Pamelia Emily Wooldridge.
    120 vii. Thomas D. Wooldridge.

    He was married to Mrs. Martha Easter Aycock about 1807. Thomas
    Wooldridge and Mrs. Martha Easter Aycock had the following children:

    121 i. Augustus B. Wooldridge.
    122 ii. Teressa Wooldridge.

    35. Edward Wooldridge was born about 1760. He died about 1828 in Trigg
    County, Kentucky.

    He was married to Sarah Vining? about 1790. Edward Wooldridge and Sarah
    Vining? had the following children:

    123 i. Edward Wooldridge.
    124 ii. Anna Wooldridge.
    125 iii. Mildred Wooldridge.
    126 iv. Martha Wooldridge.
    127 v. John Wooldridge.

    36. Sarah Flournoy Wooldridge was born about 1765. She died about 1849
    in St. Landry Parish, La..

    She was married to David Hudspeth about 1785. David Hudspeth was born on
    7 Feb 1762 in Granville County, N.C.. Sarah Flournoy Wooldridge and
    David Hudspeth had the following children:

    128 i. George Washington Hudspeth.
    129 ii. James Green Hudspeth.
    130 iii. John Hudspeth.
    131 iv. Daniel Hudspeth.
    132 v. David Hudspeth.
    133 vi. Sarah Hudspeth.
    134 vii. Martha Hudspeth.
    135 viii. Emma Hudspeth.

    37. Martha Wooldridge was born about 1770. She died in 1804 in Georgia.

    She was married to Joseph T. Davis about 1789 in Elbert County, Georgia.
    Martha Wooldridge and Joseph T. Davis had the following children:

    136 i. Thomas W. Davis.
    137 ii. William Davis.
    138 iii. Absolom Davis.
    139 iv. Sarah F. Davis.

    38. Daughter Wooldridge was born about 1743. She died in 1778.

    She was married to William Hancock about 1760. William Hancock died in
    1826 in Woodford County, Ky.. Daughter Wooldridge and William Hancock
    had the following children:

    140 i. Obediah Hancock.
    141 ii. Hannah Hancock.
    142 iii. Edna or Ellen Hancock.
    143 iv. Teney Hancock.
    144 v. William Hancock.

    39. Edward Wooldridge was born about 1745. He died in 1807 in
    Chesterfield Co., Va..

    He was married to Mary Simpson on 1 Nov 1777 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    Mary Simpson died in Sep 1810. Edward Wooldridge and Mary Simpson had
    the following children:

    145 i. Sally Wooldridge.
    146 ii. Edward Wooldridge.
    147 iii. Chesley Wooldridge.
    148 iv. Green Wooldridge.
    149 v. Martin Wooldridge.
    150 vi. Simon Wooldridge.
    151 vii. Althea Wooldridge.
    152 viii. David Wooldridge.
    153 ix. Mary "Polly" Wooldridge.
    154 x. Thomas J. Wooldridge.
    155 xi. Merit Wooldridge.
    156 xii. Caroline Lavinia Wooldridge.

    40. Simon Wooldridge was born in 1750 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. He died
    on 29 Jan 1830 in Prince Edward Co., Va.. Simon Wooldridge (#27) "The
    Descendents of Josiah & Keziah Nichols Wooldridge", Wright W. Frost,
    Kingsport Press, Inc.- Knoxville, Tennessee, pp. 35-37 - Copyright by
    Wright W. Frost 1973.

    Simon Wooldridge and Rhoda Maxey? had the following children:

    157 i. Ralph Wooldridge was born about 1775 in Prince Edward Co., Va..
    He died about 1809 in Prince Edward Co., Va..
    +158 ii. Josiah Wooldridge.
    159 iii. Robert Wooldridge was born about 1780 in Prince Edward Co.,
    Va..
    160 iv. William Ferdinand Wooldridge was born about 1782 in Prince
    Edward Co., Va.. He died in Jul 1825 in Williamson Co., Tenn.. William
    Ferdinand Wooldridge: Taken from Williamson County, Tennessee Will Book,
    Vol. I., 1825-1830 AGLL Microfilm # V202-91 for Tennessee County Records,
    Bible, Family, and tombstone Records; 1716-1937 Page 31 of microfilmed
    record; pages 36 & 37 of actual records: William F. Wooldridge dec. Will,
    July term - 1825: In the name of God, Amen. I, William F. Wooldridge, in
    sound mind have this day made my last will and testament - I give and
    bequeth unto my brother, Edward Wooldridge, one tract of land lying and
    being the County of Campbell containing one hundred and fifty five acres
    more or less, after paying my just debts in that Country (sp). I also
    give and bequeth unto my beloved wife Susan, all the perishable property
    and household and kitchen furniture and plantation utensils, also my
    negro man Robert during her life, and after her death to my brother
    Edward. Given my hand and seal this 25 Dec 1824. William F. Wooldridge
    (Seal) Teste Jas. Harrison J. H. Wooldridge
    161 v. Nancy Wooldridge was born about 1784 in Prince Edward Co., Va..
    162 vi. Edward Nathanial Wooldridge was born on 8 Feb 1786 in Prince
    Edward Co., Va.. He died about 1950.
    163 vii. Rhoda Wooldridge was born about 1788 in Prince Edward Co., Va..

    Lucy Giles died in 1770. Simon Wooldridge and Lucy Giles had the
    following children:

    164 i. Mary Wooldridge was born about 1790 in Prince Edward Co., Va..
    She died about 1864.

    42. Josiah Wooldridge was born on 5 Nov 1755 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    He died on 15 Nov 1837 in Todd County, Kentucky. Josiah Wooldridge: John
    Wooldridge, "Blacksmith", Laurence B. Gardiner & William C. Wooldridge,
    Same as above, Copyrighted 1980, 1989. page 47. The children are named in
    his widow's pension file, W22686, National Archives, WAshington, which
    also gives her dates and includes a bible record. Trabue informatin also
    appears on pp. 41, 161 Supply Claim Index, Virginia State Library

    He was married to Martha Trabue on 18 Feb 1785 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    Martha Trabue was born on 4 May 1764 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. She died
    on 29 Dec 1843 in Montgomery Co., Illinois. Josiah Wooldridge and Martha
    Trabue had the following children:

    +165 i. Levi Wooldridge.

    43. Hannah Wooldridge was born on 10 Nov 1761 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    She died in 1813.

    Elisha Wooldridge (son of Robert Wooldridge and Magdalene Salle) was born
    on 16 Jul 1752 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. He died on 12 Feb 1813 in
    Woodford Co., Kentucky. Hannah Wooldridge and Elisha Wooldridge had the
    following children:

    166 i. Isaac Wooldridge.
    167 ii. John Wooldridge.
    168 iii. Sally Wooldridge.
    169 iv. Nancy Wooldridge.
    170 v. Robert Wooldridge.
    171 vi. William Wooldridge.
    172 vii. Caroline Wooldridge.
    173 viii. Isham Wooldridge.
    174 ix. Martha Wooldridge.

    46. David Trabue was born on 10 Oct 1737. He died in 1769 in
    Chesterfield Co., Va..

    He was married to Mary Sallee on 7 May 1760 in Goochland Co., Va.. Mary
    Sallee was born on 10 Jan 1741. She died in 1815. David Trabue and Mary
    Sallee had the following children:

    175 i. Joseph Trabue.
    176 ii. David Trabue.

    53. Elisha Wooldridge was born on 16 Jul 1752 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    He died on 12 Feb 1813 in Woodford Co., Kentucky.

    Hannah Wooldridge (daughter of Edward Wooldridge and Mary Flournoy) was
    born on 10 Nov 1761 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. She died in 1813. Elisha
    Wooldridge and Hannah Wooldridge had the following children:

    166 i. Isaac Wooldridge.
    167 ii. John Wooldridge.
    168 iii. Sally Wooldridge.
    169 iv. Nancy Wooldridge.
    170 v. Robert Wooldridge.
    171 vi. William Wooldridge.
    172 vii. Caroline Wooldridge.
    173 viii. Isham Wooldridge.
    174 ix. Martha Wooldridge.

    54. Thomas Wooldridge was born about 1740. He died about 1813 in
    Powhatan Co., Va..

    He was married to Mary Bass on 5 Oct 1771 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    Thomas Wooldridge and Mary Bass had the following children:

    177 i. Rhoda Wooldridge.
    178 ii. Archibald Wooldridge.
    179 iii. Thomas Wooldridge.
    180 iv. Caroline Wooldridge.

    57. William Wooldridge was born about 1756 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. He
    died in Feb 1830 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. William Wooldridge: John
    Wooldridge, "Blacksmith", Laurence B. Gardiner & William C. Wooldridge,
    Page 54. Ref. No. (216) William & Mildred's gravestones are in a family
    plot in back of a school building in the immediate vicinity of present
    day Midlothian, as are some of their children's. See Chesterfield WB
    11:626, 13:547, for distribution of estate of William Wooldridge. See
    note 132 for possible Revolutionary service of William Wooldridge.

    Mildred Logwood was born about 1757. She died on 18 Dec 1830. William
    Wooldridge and Mildred Logwood had the following children:

    181 i. Abraham Salle Wooldridge.
    182 ii. Archibald Logwood Wooldridge.
    183 iii. Charlotte T. Wooldridge.
    184 iv. Jane A. Wooldridge.
    185 v. Frederick W. G. A. Wooldridge.



    FOURTH GENERATION

    58. Jeffrey Robertson was born on 1 Jan 1770 in Chesterfield Co., Va..
    He died on 25 Oct 1852 in Bedford, Virginia.

    He was married to Nancy Dickerson (daughter of Joseph Dickerson and
    Elizabeth Wooldridge) on 9 Jan 1792 in Bedford, Virginia. Nancy
    Dickerson was born on 29 Oct 1773 in Buckingham Co., Va.. Jeffrey
    Robertson and Nancy Dickerson had the following children:

    +186 i. Janet (Jannet) Robertson.
    187 ii. Mills Robertson was born on 11 Nov 1796 in Bedford, Virginia.
    188 iii. John J. Robertson was born on 21 Nov 1798 in Bedford, Virginia.
    189 iv. Jeffrey G. Robertson was born on 1 Jul 1803 in Bedford,
    Virginia.
    190 v. Thomas W. Robertson was born on 6 Jun 1805 in Bedford, Virginia.
    191 vi. Polly M. Robertson was born on 5 Dec 1810 in Bedford, Virginia.

    65. Nancy Dickerson was born on 29 Oct 1773 in Buckingham Co., Va..

    She was married to Jeffrey Robertson (son of Nicholas Robertson II and
    Mary Wooldridge) on 9 Jan 1792 in Bedford, Virginia. Jeffrey Robertson
    was born on 1 Jan 1770 in Chesterfield Co., Va.. He died on 25 Oct 1852
    in Bedford, Virginia. Nancy Dickerson and Jeffrey Robertson had the
    following children:

    +186 i. Janet (Jannet) Robertson.
    187 ii. Mills Robertson.
    188 iii. John J. Robertson.
    189 iv. Jeffrey G. Robertson.
    190 v. Thomas W. Robertson.
    191 vi. Polly M. Robertson.

    158. Josiah Wooldridge was born in 1788 in Prince Edward Co., Va.. He
    died in 1825 in Williamson Co., Tenn.. Josiah Wooldridge (#32) "The
    Descendents of Josiah & Keziah Nichols Wooldridge", Wright W. Frost,
    Kingsport Press, Inc.- Knoxville, Tennessee, pp. 37-42 - Copyright by
    Wright W. Frost 1973. Williamson County, Tennessee Will Book, Vol. I.
    1825-1830 Josiah Wooldridge deceased Inventory, April term 1825. A true
    inventory of the personalty estate of Josiah Wooldridge deceased returned
    by Kesiah Wooldridge adminstratrix, or all that came to her knowledge,
    April 7, 1825. One negro man Charles, age about 45 years, one negro man
    Jim aged about 26 years, one negro woman Delila age 22 years old, one
    negro boy William age 3 years old, one negro boy Jackson age 2 years old,
    one negro boy Reuben age about 17 years, one negro boy Adam age 12 years,
    1 cuboard, 1 table, 2 jars, 1 trunk, 1 desk, 6 chairs, 1 table, 4 beds,
    and furniture, 1 bedstead, 1 loom, 1 saw & auger, 2 tools of old iron, 1
    funnel, 2 brass locks, 3 pair cards, 1 bell, 1 pr. candle moulds, 1 log
    chain, 1 bull tongue, ploughing (sp) utensils, 1 pr stillyards, 2 mens
    saddle, 2 barrels, 1 oven, puter dish, 4 axes, 1 gun, some corn, 45 hogs,
    52 geese, 3 cows, calves, 7 gotes (sp), 4 still, 3 ploughs (sp), 2 guns,
    shot, 1 scyth and cradle, 2 stacks of rye, 3 sheep, 1 grinestone. Keziah
    Wooldridge, administrix The state of Tennessee, Williamson County Court.
    April term 1825 - An Inventory of the estate of Josiah Wooldridge
    deceased is produced in open court and ordered to be recorded.

    He was married to Keziah Nichols (daughter of John Nichols and Sarah
    Stout) on 12 Aug 1806. Keziah Nichols was born on 6 Jul 1790 in Davidson
    County, Tenn.. She died on 11 Jan 1846 in Graves County, Kentucky.
    Josiah Wooldridge and Keziah Nichols had the following children:

    +192 i. John H. Wooldridge.
    +193 ii. Narcissa Wooldridge.
    +194 iii. William Ferdinand Wooldridge.
    195 iv. Alfred Nichols Wooldridge was born in 1813 in Williamson Co.,
    Tenn.. He died about 1959 in Alabama.
    +196 v. Susan H. Wooldridge.
    197 vi. Josiah Wooldridge Jr. was born about 1817 in Williamson Co.,
    Tenn.. He died on 8 Aug 1852.
    +198 vii. Minerva E. Wooldridge.
    199 viii. Henry G. Wooldridge was born on 29 Jan 1822. He died on 30
    May 1899 in Mayfield, Kentucky.

    165. Levi Wooldridge was born on 8 Oct 1793 in Woodford Co., Kentucky.
    He died in 1880.

    He was married to Henrietta Phipps about 1820 in White County, Illinois.
    Henrietta Phipps died in 1850. Levi Wooldridge and Henrietta Phipps had
    the following children:

    +200 i. Josiah Wooldridge.



    FIFTH GENERATION

    186. Janet (Jannet) Robertson was born on 28 Dec 1792 in Bedford,
    Virginia. She died on 6 Aug 1875 in Bedford, Virginia.

    She was married to Stephen Goggin III (son of Stephen Goggin Jr. and
    Rachel Moorman) on 29 Dec 1808. Stephen Goggin III was born on 8 Apr
    1789 in Bedford, Virginia. He died on 29 Jan 1872 in Bedford, Virginia.
    Janet (Jannet) Robertson and Stephen Goggin III had the following
    children:

    201 i. Jeffrey R. Goggin was born in Bedford, Virginia.
    +202 ii. Thomas Clark Goggin.
    203 iii. Francis H. Goggin.
    204 iv. John M. Goggin.
    205 v. Mary A. Goggin.
    206 vi. Pleasant M. Goggin.
    207 vii. Auville R. Goggin.
    208 viii. Elizabeth Ann Goggin.

    192. John H. Wooldridge was born in 1807 in Williamson Co., Tenn.. He
    died on 13 Feb 1844 in Maury County, Tenn.. John H. Wooldridge
    (1807-1844) was the first child of Josiah and Keziah Nichols Wooldridge,
    of Williamson County, Tennessee. The inscription on the base of the
    statue erected to him by his brother Henry G. Wooldridge in the Maplewood
    Cemetery, Mayfield, Kentucky, is "JOHN H. WOOLDRIDGE, BORN IN WILLIAMSON
    CO. TENN. IN 1807, DIED IN MURRAY COUNTY, TENN." Although the exact
    death date is not known, it was before the May 1844 Term of Maury County,
    Tennessee Court, when Franklin Armstead Polk, a neighbor thought to have
    been a brother-in-law of the deceased, qualified as administrator for the
    estate of John H. Wooldridge (Maury County Court Minutes Book 8,
    1840-1845, p. 424). On July 6, 1826, John H. Wooldridge had married
    Elizabeth A. Stephens daughter of John and Mary Stephens and sister of
    Paralee T. Stephens, who later married his brother Alfred N. Wooldridge.
    Williamson County Marriages, 1799-1837, p. 276). Her tombstone in Maple
    Hill Cemetery, Huntsville, Alabama, provides the information that she was
    the wife of John H. Wooldridge, the daughter of John and Mary Stephens,
    and died January 3, 1859. By the summer of 1970 this monument had been
    broken into three parts and left lying on the ground. Others on the plot
    had been destroyed and later were removed by the cemetery caretakers.
    John H. Wooldridge appears to have initiated, or at least to have been on
    of the first participants in, the movement of the Wooldridge and Stephens
    families from Williamson to Maury County. As early as November 26, 1831,
    he was recorded as a resident of Maury County in a trust deed which he
    executed in favor of A. O. P. Nicholson. Maury County Deed Book Q, p. 30.
    On February 13, 1839, he purchased from Thomas and Jacob Rogers for $170
    a tract of 60 acres "on the north side of Duck River on waters of
    Rutherford Creek". Maury County Deed Book W, p. 25. On May 28, 1843, he
    is on record as having sold for $200 a Negro girl named Tippy, age 14, to
    F. A. Polk, who a year later became his administrator Maury County Deed
    Book Z p. 591. The exact location of the above-mentioned farm has not
    been determined; but it appears to have been southeast of the present
    Carters Creek Community, probably near what is no known as Darks Mill It
    was on this farm that the widow seems to have been living when the 1850
    Census Report was taken; and he probably was buried in one of the old
    cemeteries within this general area without an inscribed marker to
    identify his grave, or at least with one which has escaped the notice of
    those who have published lists of tombstone inscriptions in Maury County.
    In 1850 Censes Report for Maury County, John H. Wooldridge's widow was
    listed as Elizabeth Wooldridge, head of her household (No. 224 in
    District 21), age 40, with children as follows: Ann, 16; David, 14;
    Paralee, 12; and Elizabeth, 6. The marriage of the parents on July 6
    1826, creates the likelihood of three or more children who had already
    left home, married, or died in infancy. This assumption is confirmed in
    part in the settlement of Elizabeth A. Wooldridge's estate by her
    administrator and son-in-law William J. Studdart. Madison County,
    Alabama, Probate Records, Case N. 2259. The date when Elizabeth A.
    Stephens Wooldridge left Maury County, Tennessee, is not certain; but the
    move apparently took place some time after September 2, 1852, when James
    Akins deeded to her 92 acres previously sold to her son-in-law William J.
    Studdart for $900 with title bond to Elizabeth A. Wooldridge on the
    understanding that she was to fix up the graveyard and home place (Maury
    County Deeds, Volume 2 G p. 168). The reason for her removal to
    Huntsville, Alabama, cannot be determined by records made available to
    the writer; but it is probable that it was influenced by an earler move
    by the families of her two Studdart sons-in-law, though no record of of
    this has come to the attention of the writer. Even though her son David
    Hinds Wooldridge testified in his application for Confederate pension
    that he had lived in Tennessee all of his life, the records of the
    settlement of her estate place, place all of Elizabeth A. Wooldridge's
    children in Madison County, Alabama, except her daughter Anne Elizabeth
    Wooldridge Huey, wife of William G. Huey, in Tennessee. Two of the
    daughters, Paralee and Susan, married in Madison County, Alabama, within
    a little over two years after her death. It should be noted that, if
    David Hinds Wooldridge, her only son, was in fact a resident of Madison
    County at the time of her death and during the settlement of her estate,
    it was not for an extended period. He married in Gibson County,
    Tennessee, on January 29, 1860. As pointed out earlier, Elizabeth A.
    Wooldridge died January 3, 1859. On June 6 of that same year, when
    William J. Studdart listed her heir she had seven living children
    (Madison County Minutes Book 7, pp. 16 and 17).

    The biography was taken from Wright W. Frost's Book, "The Descendants of
    Josiah and Keziah Nichols Wooldridge and Their Ancestors", pp. 53 and 54.
    John H. Wooldridge (#34) "The Descendents of Josiah & Keziah Nichols
    Wooldridge", Wright W. Frost, Kingsport Press, Inc. - Knoxville,
    Tennessee, pp. 43, 53-54 - Copyright by Wright W. Frost 1973. John H.
    Wooldridge (#34) "They Passed This Way", "Maury County, Tennessee Death
    Records; P. Lightfoot & E. B. Shackleford" , p. 221. Id. Record #454:
    John H. Wooldridge died in Maury Co., TN. on Feb. 13, 1844 of apoplexy.
    NOTES: Tennessee Democrat, Feb. 15, 1844; Died in the county on the 13th
    of apoplexy; wife & children survive.

    He was married to Elizabeth A. Stephens (daughter of John Stephens and
    Mary (Stephens) on 6 Jul 1826 in Williamson Co., Tenn.. Elizabeth A.
    Stephens was born on 8 Mar 1807 in Williamson Co., Tenn.. She died on 3
    Jan 1859 in Huntsville, Alabama. John H. Wooldridge and Elizabeth A.
    Stephens had the following children:

    209 i. M. K. Wooldridge was born about 1827.
    +210 ii. Narcissa C. Wooldridge.
    +211 iii. Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge.
    212 iv. David Hinds Wooldridge was born on 6 Jan 1836 in Maury County,
    Tennessee. He died on 4 Oct 1914 in Nashville, Tennessee. David Hinds
    Wooldridge: Source of death date: Death Certificate-"Davidson County
    Records"; Volume No. 11; page 195 for the year 1914. It shows his age at
    death to be 78 years old. Died of Gastritus due to removal of prostate
    gland. Dr. Lucius E. Burch was attending physician. The informant of his
    death was Mrs. R. Ira Huley or Huey of Gleason, Tennessee which is near
    Middleton, Tennessee. He died at 9:30 a.m.
    213 v. Paralee T. Wooldridge was born about 1838 in Maury County,
    Tennessee.
    214 vi. Henrietta S. Wooldridge was born on 14 Jan 1847 in Maury County,
    Tennessee. She died on 4 Mar 1876.
    215 vii. Elizabeth "Bettie" Wooldridge died on 30 Oct in Jackson,
    Tennessee. She was born about 1844.

    193. Narcissa Wooldridge was born on 7 Mar 1809 in Williamson Co.,
    Tenn.. She died on 6 Jun 1892 in Graves Co., Kentucky.

    She was married to William J. Berryman on 24 Feb 1829 in Williamson
    County, Tenn.. William J. Berryman died in 1844 in Williamson Co.,
    Tenn.. Narcissa Wooldridge and William J. Berryman had the following
    children:

    216 i. Josiah Berryman was born about 1832.
    217 ii. Narcissa Berryman was born about 1834.
    218 iii. John Berryman was born about 1838.
    219 iv. William Henry Berryman was born on 12 Dec 1843. He died on 25
    Jan 1908.

    194. William Ferdinand Wooldridge was born on 1 Oct 1811 in Williamson
    Co., Tenn.. He died on 1 Nov 1879 in Graves County, Kentucky.

    He was married to Matilda Loving Pirtle (daughter of George Pirtle and
    Nancy Moore) on 10 Jul 1835 in Davidson County, Tenn.. Matilda Loving
    Pirtle was born on 2 Feb 1816. She died on 28 Mar 1881 in Fulton,
    Kentucky. William Ferdinand Wooldridge and Matilda Loving Pirtle had the
    following children:

    220 i. Nancy Keziah Wooldridge was born on 22 Jul 1836 in Kentucky. She
    died in 1887.
    221 ii. Amanda Minerva Wooldridge was born on 30 Aug 1838. She died on
    29 Sep 1878.
    222 iii. Susan Rosanah Wooldridge was born on 24 May 1841.
    223 iv. George Washington Wooldridge was born on 6 Dec 1846. He died on
    24 Feb 1899 in Sedalia, Graves Co., Ky..
    +224 v. William Henry Wooldridge.
    225 vi. John Nichols Wooldridge was born on 15 May 1844. He died on 3
    Mar 1864.
    +226 vii. Matilda Elizabeth Wooldridge.
    +227 viii. Josiah Alfred Wooldridge.
    +228 ix. Lou Ammie Wooldridge.

    196. Susan H. Wooldridge was born about 1815. She died in 1850.

    She was married to John H. Neely (son of John Neely and Susannah Evans)
    on 6 Jun 1833 in Williamson Co., Tenn.. John H. Neely died about 1845.
    Susan H. Wooldridge and John H. Neely had the following children:

    +229 i. William J. Neely.
    +230 ii. S. K. or Tennessee Neely.
    231 iii. Susan M. Neely was born about 1838.

    198. Minerva E. Wooldridge was born in 1820. Minerva E. Wooldridge,
    "The Descendents of Josiah and Keziah Nichols Wooldridge, "Marriage Book
    W-2", Wright W. Frost, Knoxville, TN., page 83. She married her first
    cousin and efforts to identify the parents of this John Nichols were
    unsucessful. This information obtained from the above book. John Nichols
    was still identified as the son of Alfred and Rebecca Ford Nichols.

    She was married to John Nichols on 2 May 1840 in Maury County, Tennessee.
    Minerva E. Wooldridge and John Nichols had the following children:

    232 i. M. Nichols was born in 1844 in Tennessee.
    233 ii. S. Nichols was born in 1858 in Kentucky.
    234 iii. James Hill Nichols was born in 1834 in Tennessee.

    200. Josiah Wooldridge was born in 1824 in Kentucky.

    He was married to Louisa Ascue on 25 Mar 1849 in Pike County, Illinois.
    Josiah Wooldridge and Louisa Ascue had the following children:

    +235 i. Thomas Wooldridge.



    SIXTH GENERATION

    202. Thomas Clark Goggin was born on 12 Jan 1815 in Bedford, Virginia.
    He died on 19 Apr 1895.

    He was married to Elizabeth Jane Johnson (daughter of Thomas Johnson and
    Sarah "Sally" Dickerson) on 4 Dec 1838. Elizabeth Jane Johnson was born
    on 24 Mar 1819 in Bedford, Virginia. Thomas Clark Goggin and Elizabeth
    Jane Johnson had the following children:

    236 i. Thomas Stephen Goggin.
    +237 ii. Sarah Jane Goggin.
    238 iii. Martha Frances Goggin.
    239 iv. William J. Goggin was born in Bedford, Virginia.
    240 v. James O. L. Goggin was born in Bedford, Virginia.

    210. Narcissa C. Wooldridge was born about 1830.

    She was married to Joseph B. Studdart on 6 Dec 1848 in Maury County,
    Tennessee. Narcissa C. Wooldridge and Joseph B. Studdart had the
    following children:

    241 i. Priscilla Studdart.

    211. Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge was born on 24 Apr 1833 in Maury County,
    Tennessee. She died on 31 Dec 1912 in Obion County, Tennessee. Anne
    Elizabeth Wooldridge (#42) "Obion County, Tennessee 1880 Census". The
    following is how it is shown in the 1880 census for Obion County,
    Tennessee: William G. Huey, Farmer, 47 yrs. b. TN. Anne E., (wife) 47
    yrs. b. TN. Ola (dau.) 16 yrs. b. TN. Robert Lee (son) 14 yrs. b. TN.
    David B. (son) 12 yrs. b. TN. Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge (#42) "Huey
    Family Bible", Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge. The above bible's contents was
    reprinted in "Ansearchin News", Vol. 19, No. 3, July-September, 1972,
    page 112, Tennessee Genealogical Society, Memphis, Tennessee. Contributed
    by Mrs. H. P. Leeper. It belonged to Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge, second
    wife of William Gurley Huey. : Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge (#42) "Obion
    County, Tennessee Census I"District #6 - Page 24 - Line 15-June 12,
    1880. This is a copy taken from the microfilm copy of the 1880 Census of
    the United States: Page 24: Wm. G. Huey-w/m 66-Head-farmer Anne E.-w/f 47
    Ola-w/f 16 Robert L.-w/m14 David B.-w/m12 William-w/m 9. Anne Elizabeth
    Wooldridge (#42) Maury County Marriages 1852-1867, Byran & Barbara
    Sistler, Page 19. Nashville Archives book reference #F443 .n4557. Copy of
    page made.

    She was married to William Gurley Huey (son of James Huey and Jane
    Walker) on 13 Sep 1854 in Maury County, Tennessee. William Gurley Huey
    was born on 9 Apr 1814 in Tennessee. He died on 24 Oct 1895 in Obion
    County, Tennessee. Anne Elizabeth Wooldridge and William Gurley Huey had
    the following children:

    242 i. Ida Huey was born in Tennessee.
    243 ii. Molly Huey was born in Tennessee.
    244 iii. Ola Huey was born in 1864 in Tennessee.
    245 iv. Robert Lee Huey was born in 1865 in Tennessee. He died in 1942.
    246 v. David Bright Huey was born in Dec 1868 in Tennessee. He died in
    1941.
    +247 vi. William Edward Huey.
    248 vii. Bert Huey was born in Dec 1872 in Tennessee.

    224. William Henry Wooldridge was born on 15 Dec 1848. He died on 3 Jul
    1901.

    He was married to Pearl Elmore (daughter of T. J. Elmore and Mrs.
    (Elmore) in Graves Co., Kentucky?. William Henry Wooldridge and Pearl
    Elmore had the following children:

    249 i. Maybelle Wooldridge was born on 30 Oct 1892. She died in 1971 in
    San Angelo, Texas.
    +250 ii. William Henry Wooldridge Jr..

    226. Matilda Elizabeth Wooldridge was born on 9 Jan 1852. She died on
    10 Sep 1887.

    Matilda Elizabeth Wooldridge and Richard "Buck" Thomas had the
    following children:

    +251 i. Richard Thomas Jr..
    252 ii. Elizabeth Thomas.
    253 iii. Sally Thomas.

    227. Josiah Alfred Wooldridge was born on 13 Feb 1856. He died on 14
    Jul 1908.

    Josiah Alfred Wooldridge and Viola Lockridge had the following
    children:

    254 i. Viola Wooldridge.
    255 ii. Hattie Wooldridge.

    228. Lou Ammie Wooldridge was born on 26 Mar 1858. She died on 10 Jun
    1922.

    She was married to Emmett Critenden Reeds (son of James F. Reeds and
    Juliet (Reeds) on 22 Dec 1875 in Fulton, Kentucky. Emmett Critenden
    Reeds was born on 1 Jun 1848. He died on 22 Jun 1908. Lou Ammie
    Wooldridge and Emmett Critenden Reeds had the following children:

    +256 i. Annie Willie Reeds.
    +257 ii. Maud Robbie Reeds.
    258 iii. Walter Emmett Reeds.

    229. William J. Neely was born about 1834.

    William J. Neely and Mary Toms McMorris had the following children:

    259 i. Charles F. Neely was born about 1857.
    260 ii. William B. Neely was born about 1880.
    261 iii. Jake Thomas Neely was born about 1864.
    262 iv. John Buck Neely was born on 10 Jan 1867 in Arkansas. He died on
    24 Apr 1907.
    263 v. Cora C. Neely was born about 1870 in Tennessee. She died about
    1917.
    264 vi. Minnie Neely was born on 3 Sep 1874 in Graves Co., Kentucky.
    She died on 26 Aug 1917.
    +265 vii. Sada Neely.
    +266 viii. Benjamin L. Neely.
    267 ix. Birdie Neely was born in 1880.

    230. S. K. or Tennessee Neely was born in 1840.

    She was married to Thomas C. Stark in 1854. S. K. or Tennessee Neely and
    Thomas C. Stark had the following children:

    268 i. E. H. Stark.
    269 ii. Sadie Stark.
    270 iii. Susan Stark.
    271 iv. Thomas Stark.
    272 v. George Stark.
    273 vi. King Stark.
    +274 vii. Jeff Stark.

    235. Thomas Wooldridge was born on 17 Mar 1856 in Pike County, Illinois.
    He died on 30 Nov 1947 in McDonough Co., Illinois.

    Mary Elizabeth Flynn was born on 19 Sep 1858. She died on 1 Jan 1921.
    Thomas Wooldridge and Mary Elizabeth Flynn had the following children:

    +275 i. Janie Wooldridge.



    SEVENTH GENERATION

    237. Sarah Jane Goggin was born on 16 Oct 1839 in Bedford, Virginia.
    She died on 4 Dec 1908 in Bedford, Virginia.

    She was married to John Barnett Gardner (son of William F. Gardner and
    Martha Jane Shellhorse) on 13 Mar 1866 in Bedford, Virginia. John
    Barnett Gardner was born on 21 Oct 1840 in Pittsylvania Co., Va.. He
    died on 12 Sep 1927 in Bedford, Virginia. Sarah Jane Goggin and John
    Barnett Gardner had the following children:

    +276 i. Mary Jane Gardner.
    277 ii. Berta C. Gardner was born in Bedford, Virginia.
    278 iii. Lelia Katherine Gardner was born in Bedford, Virginia.
    279 iv. Willie Frances Gardner was born in Bedford, Virginia.
    280 v. Henry F. Gardner.
    281 vi. Carrie F. Gardner was born in Bedford, Virginia.

    247. William Edward Huey was born on 16 Dec 1871 in Tennessee. He died
    on 21 Oct 1960 in Obion County, Tennessee. William Edward Huey (#449)
    "Certified Photostatic Copy of Death Record from Commonwealth of
    Kentucky, Dept. for Human Resources, Frankfort, Ky.; Registrar of Vital
    Statistics". Copy made on 27 of March, 1981 and signed by Omar L.
    Greeman, State Registrar. Record shows mother as Ann Woolridge and father
    as W. G. Huey.

    He was married to Amanda Malinda Miller (daughter of John Lafayette
    Miller and Esther A. Alsup) in Sep 1892. Amanda Malinda Miller was born
    on 19 Jun 1876 in Giles County, Tennessee. She died on 2 Sep 1958 in
    Obion County, Tennessee. William Edward Huey and Amanda Malinda Miller
    had the following children:

    282 i. Terrance Stanfield Huey was born in Aug 1893 in Obion County,
    Tennessee.
    283 ii. Anna Lou Huey was born in 1894 in Obion County, Tennessee. She
    died in 1895 in Obion County, Tennessee.
    284 iii. De Witt Huey was born in Nov 1897 in Obion County, Tennessee.
    He died in 1918 in Florida.
    +285 iv. Esther W. Huey.
    +286 v. Lorece Huey.
    287 vi. John Edward Huey was born in Jul 1905 in Obion County,
    Tennessee.
    288 vii. Ellis Havner Huey was born in Oct 1907 in Obion County,
    Tennessee.
    289 viii. Joe Redginald Huey was born on 8 Aug 1915 in Obion County,
    Tennessee.

    250. William Henry Wooldridge Jr. was born on 21 Aug 1894.

    He was married to Hilda C. Dittmer on 20 Jun 1940. William Henry
    Wooldridge Jr. and Hilda C. Dittmer had the following children:

    +290 i. Pearl Louise Wooldridge.

    251. Richard Thomas Jr. was born on 23 Aug 1878. He died on 27 Sep
    1961.

    Richard Thomas Jr. and Maude McKnight had the following children:

    +291 i. Sarah Thomas.
    292 ii. Margaret Thomas.

    256. Annie Willie Reeds.

    Annie Willie Reeds and Edward Gholson had the following children:

    293 i. Margaret Gholson.
    294 ii. Louise Gholson.
    295 iii. William Gholson.
    296 iv. Walter Reeds Gholson.

    257. Maud Robbie Reeds was born on 20 Jul 1880. She died on 1 Aug 1965.

    James Horman Thetford was born on 23 Mar 1865. He died on 18 Aug 1905.
    Maud Robbie Reeds and James Horman Thetford had the following children:

    297 i. Monette Thetford.

    265. Sada Neely was born about 1876. She died about 1959.

    Sada Neely and Archie Carver had the following children:

    298 i. Alton Neely.

    266. Benjamin L. Neely was born about 1879 in Kentucky.

    Benjamin L. Neely and Mrs. Benjamin (Neely) had the following children:

    299 i. Jackalin Neely.
    +300 ii. Don Neely.

    274. Jeff Stark.

    Jeff Stark and Sarah Williams had the following children:

    301 i. Don Stark.

    275. Janie Wooldridge was born on 27 Apr 1885 in Pike County, Illinois.
    She died on 10 Sep 1978 in Augusta, Hancock, Ill..

    She was married to Fred DeJaynes (son of William DeJaynes and Nancy
    Thomas) on 9 Dec 1901 in Augusta, Hancock, Ill.. Fred DeJaynes was born
    on 7 Apr 1878 in Pike County, Illinois. He died on 27 Oct 1967 in
    Carthage, Hancock, Ill.. Janie Wooldridge and Fred DeJaynes had the
    following children:

    +302 i. Russell Wooldridge DeJaynes.



    EIGHTH GENERATION

    276. Mary Jane Gardner was born on 3 Apr 1869.

    She was married to Joseph Wright Bond (son of Henry Clay Bond and
    Elizabeth Ann Board) on 11 Jun 1890 in Moneta, Virginia. Joseph Wright
    Bond was born on 8 Dec 1858 in Bedford, Virginia. He died on 13 Dec 1922
    in Bedford, Virginia. Mary Jane Gardner and Joseph Wright Bond had the
    following children:

    303 i. Gardner Wright Bond was born on 14 Feb 1893 in Bedford, Virginia.
    He died in Bedford, Virginia.
    +304 ii. Elizabeth Clark Bond.
    305 iii. Sarah Virginia Bond was born in 1904 in Bedford, Virginia.
    306 iv. Mary Katharyn Bond was born on 3 Apr 1907 in Bedford, Virginia.

    285. Esther W. Huey was born in Dec 1898 in Obion County, Tennessee.
    She died in 1980 in Memphis, Tennessee.

    She was married to Millon Youree Toombs.

    286. Lorece Huey was born on 2 Dec 1900 in Troy, Tennessee. She died on
    18 Jul 1980 in Memphis, Tennessee. Lorece Huey (#459) Marriage License
    copy from Obion County, Tennesse records page 57, showing the following:
    A. D. Bradford married Lorece Huey on October 24, 1919 in Obion County,
    Tennessee. They were married by R. E. White, M. G. and the bond was
    returned on October 30, 1919. It was cosigned by T. J. Eastwood. The
    clerk was R. H. Bond. The bond was signed jointly before witnesses on
    October 21, 1919. It was not published.

    She was married to Alfred D. Bradford (son of William W. Bradford and
    Luba M. Stone) on 24 Oct 1919 in Obion County, Tennessee. Alfred D.
    Bradford was born on 12 Jan 1890 in Troy, Tennessee. He died on 29 Apr
    1967 in Memphis, Tennessee. Lorece Huey and Alfred D. Bradford had the
    following children:

    +307 i. Clisty Vernon Bradford.
    +308 ii. Alfred D. Bradford Jr..
    +309 iii. Shirley Ann Bradford.
    310 iv. Marjorie Lee Bradford was born on 3 Oct 1920 in Memphis,
    Tennessee.
    +311 v. Helen Jean Bradford.
    +312 vi. Travis Eugene Bradford.
    313 vii. Jerry Wayne Bradford was born on 21 Sep 1939 in Memphis,
    Tennessee. He died on 25 Oct 1945 in Memphis, Tennessee.
    +314 viii. Janice Marie Bradford.

    290. Pearl Louise Wooldridge.

    Pearl Louise Wooldridge and W. John Pangam had the following children:

    +315 i. William Wooldridge Pangam.

    291. Sarah Thomas.

    Sarah Thomas and Levi M. Williams had the following children:

    316 i. Walter Williams.
    317 ii. Harold Williams.
    318 iii. Sarah Williams.
    319 iv. Donald Williams.
    320 v. Wendell Williams.
    321 vi. Earl Williams.

    300. Don Neely.

    Don Neely and Mrs. Don (Neely) had the following children:

    322 i. Lemon Neely.
    323 ii. Charlie Neely.
    324 iii. Willie Neely.

    302. Russell Wooldridge DeJaynes was born on 27 Jul 1910 in Bowen,
    Hancock Co., Ill.. He died on 8 Aug 1990 in Hamilton, Illinois.

    He was married to Dorothy Evelyn Crossland (daughter of Ken Crossland and
    Anna Keeble) on 13 Jun 1929 in Carthage, Illinois. Dorothy Evelyn
    Crossland was born on 5 Jan 1913 in North Dakota. She died on 24 Nov
    1981 in Quincy, Adams, Illinois. Russell Wooldridge DeJaynes and Dorothy
    Evelyn Crossland had the following children:

    +325 i. Roy Edward DeJaynes.



    NINTH GENERATION

    304. Elizabeth Clark Bond was born on 21 Apr 1895 in Bedford, Virginia.
    She died on 11 Dec 1991 in Bedford, Virginia.

    George Edward Heller (son of George Frederick Heller and Maude Illia
    Parrish) was born on 21 Jan 1891 in Bedford, Virginia. He died on 12 Aug
    1969 in Bedford, Virginia. Elizabeth Clark Bond and George Edward Heller
    had the following children:

    +326 i. Gardner Parrish Heller.
    327 ii. Betty Bond Heller was born on 20 Feb 1928 in Bedford, Virginia.

    307. Clisty Vernon Bradford was born on 12 Feb 1923 in Tennessee.

    He was married to Katrina (Bradford) Unknown.

    308. Alfred D. Bradford Jr. was born on 3 Mar 1936.

    He was married to Elaine (Bradford).

    309. Shirley Ann Bradford was born on 1 Dec 1932.

    She was married to Joe Cooley.

    She was married to Kenneth Smith.

    311. Helen Jean Bradford was born on 25 Oct 1925 in Memphis, Tennessee.
    She died on 30 Jun 1983 in Memphis, Tennessee.

    She was married to John A. Pafford (son of Orville Joseph Pafford and
    Martha Elizabeth Garvey) on 21 Feb 1942 in Hernando, Mississippi. John
    A. Pafford was born on 5 Nov 1919 in Bruceton, Tennessee. He died on 11
    Jul 1975 in Memphis, Tennessee. Helen Jean Bradford and John A. Pafford
    had the following children:

    +328 i. Sandra Lynn Pafford.
    +329 ii. Michael Lee Pafford.
    +330 iii. Pamela Gail Pafford.
    +331 iv. Lisa Claire Pafford.
    +332 v. John A. Pafford Jr..

    312. Travis Eugene Bradford was born on 29 Dec 1929.

    He was married to Elaine (Bradford).

    He was married to Geraldine (Bradford).

    314. Janice Marie Bradford was born on 24 May 1943 in Memphis,
    Tennessee.

    She was married to Jack Arnold in Unknown.

    315. William Wooldridge Pangam.

    William Wooldridge Pangam and Sheryl O'Neil had the following children:

    333 i. Shelley Pangam.
    334 ii. Brandon Pangam.

    325. Roy Edward DeJaynes was born on 19 Sep 1931 in Bowen, Hancock,
    Illinois.

    He was married to Rosalyn Joan Martin on 14 Jun 1950 in Plymouth,
    Illinois. Roy Edward DeJaynes and Rosalyn Joan Martin had the following
    children:

    335 i. Randy Lee DeJaynes was born on 10 Jan 1951 in Macomb, Illinois.



    TENTH GENERATION

    326. Gardner Parrish Heller was born on 20 Dec 1920 in Bedford,
    Virginia.

    He was married to Ann Buford Engart (daughter of Edgar Arlington Engart
    and Patty Hicks Buford) on 21 Oct 1950 in Richmond, Virginia. Ann Buford
    Engart was born on 3 Jan 1924 in Clifton Forge, Virginia. Gardner
    Parrish Heller and Ann Buford Engart had the following children:

    336 i. Buford Bond Heller was born on 17 Jul 1951 in Richmond, Virginia.
    337 ii. Susan DeLauney Heller was born on 4 Feb 1953 in Richmond,
    Virginia.
    338 iii. Frederick Palmer Heller was born on 14 Sep 1956 in Richmond,
    Virginia.
    339 iv. Pamela Stewart Heller was born on 27 Dec 1964 in Richmond,
    Virginia.

    328. Sandra Lynn Pafford was born on 26 Jan 1943 in Memphis, Tennessee.
    Sandra Lynn Pafford: Was elected Secretary in National Honor Society in
    High School. Also belonged to another academic society: The National
    Quill & Scroll Society. This was a honor society for students with high
    grade point averages that worked on their school newspapers or annual
    staffs. Graduated with a 3.8 grade point average.

    She was married to James Fletcher Joyner Jr. (son of James Fletcher
    Joyner Sr. and Edith Elam) on 15 Sep 1962 in West Memphis, Arkansas.
    James Fletcher Joyner Jr. was born on 24 Mar 1943 in Covington,
    Tennessee. Sandra Lynn Pafford and James Fletcher Joyner Jr. had the
    following children:

    +340 i. James Fletcher Joyner III..
    +341 ii. David Bryan Joyner.
    +342 iii. Gregory Eugene Joyner.
    343 iv. Matthew Bradford Joyner was born on 27 Jun 1970 in Memphis,
    Tennessee.

    329. Michael Lee Pafford was born on 15 Nov 1944 in Memphis, Tennessee.

    He was married to Brenda Joyce Bradley. Michael Lee Pafford and Brenda
    Joyce Bradley had the following children:

    +344 i. Robbin Michele Pafford.
    +345 ii. Stephanie Maureen Pafford.
    +346 iii. Kimberly Ann Pafford.

    He was married to Linda Gayle Perrymore.

    330. Pamela Gail Pafford was born in Nov 1950 in Memphis, Tennessee.
    She died in Jul 1988 in Memphis, Tennessee.

    She was married to Ricke Smith.

    331. Lisa Claire Pafford was born on 10 Mar 1958 in Memphis, Tennessee.

    She was married to Richard Cole.

    332. John A. Pafford Jr. was born in Apr 1960 in Memphis, Tennessee.

    He was married to Debra Barbour.

Über den Familiennamen Wooldridge (Osborne)


Die Family Tree Welborn-Veröffentlichung wurde von erstellt.nimm Kontakt auf
Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I3326.php : abgerufen 28. April 2024), "Martha Wooldridge (Osborne) (1688-1757)".