Pass auf: War jünger als 16 Jahre (2), als Kind (Elizabth Lewis) geboren wurde (24. November 1672).
Pass auf: Verheiratet (??-??-1645) vor Geburt (30. November 1669).
Pass auf: Alter bei der Heirat (??-??-1645) war unter 16 Jahre (0).
Pass auf: Wife (Elizabeth Isabelle (Warner) Lewis (George Washington's Aunt) William the Conqueror & Magna Carta Lineage) ist die Mutter.
(1) Er ist verheiratet mit Elizabeth Isabella Warner.
Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1645 in Henrico, Virginia, USA.
Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1684 in VA, er war 14 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1684 in Warner Hall, Gloucester, Virginia, Verenigde Staten, er war 14 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet rund 1687 in Warner Hall, Gloucester, Virginia, United States. Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1689 in Gloucester, Colony of Virginia, British Colonial America, er war 19 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1690 in VA, er war 20 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1690 in Warner Hall, Gloucester, Virginia Colony, er war 20 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet am 4. Januar 1695 in Barnstable, Massachusetts Colony, er war 25 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet am 4. Januar 1695 in Barnstable, Massachusetts, er war 25 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1700 in Gloucester, Virginia, United States, er war 30 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet im Jahr 1714 in Gloucester, Gloucester, Virginia, United States, er war 44 Jahre alt. Sie haben geheiratet rund 1718 in Warner Hall, Gloucester, Virginia, United States.Kind(er):
(2) Er hat eine Beziehung mit Elizabeth Isabelle (Warner) Lewis (George Washington's Aunt) William the Conqueror & Magna Carta Lineage.
Kind(er):
Kind(er):
Col. John Lewis, II (November 30, 1669 - November 14, 1725)Col. John Lewis, the son of John and Isabella Lewis, married Elizabeth Warner (1672-1720), the daughter of Col. Augustine Warner and Mildred Reade Warner. The Lewises lived at “Warner Hall,” the home of his wife’s family, in the Tidewater of Virginia and had a total of fourteen children – the names of eight being preserved. Presumably, the others died in infancy or childhood. A surviving son, Col. Robert Lewis of “Belvoir,” Albemarle County, married Jane Meriwether in 1702.
Col. Lewis’ family immigrated to America from Wales. He was a member of the King’s Council in the Colony of Virginia in 1715. His wife’s family came to Virginia before 1630 and her father, Augustine Warner, returned to England as a boy to be educated, matriculating at the Merchant Taylor School, London, at eleven years of age. John Lewis’ mother-in-law, Mildred Reade Warner, was part of a distinguished family as well. Her father came to America in 1637, was Secretary to the Colony of Virginia in 1640, and became a Burgess and a Colonel of Militia. (Anderson, pp. 19-21)
These families – Lewis, Reade, Warner – were not of yeoman stock. The great majority of Virginia’s upper elite came from families in the upper ranks of English society. Of the 152 Virginians who held top offices (e.g., Secretary of Colony, member of King’s council) in the late 17th and early 18th century, at least sixteen were connected to aristocratic families and 101 were the sons of baronets, knights and rural gentry (the gentry family names included Bathurst, Carter, Peachy, Randolph, Reade, Warner, Woodhouse – all names that appear in Meriwether and Lewis family lineage). The migration of the Royalist (so-called because of their loyalty to King Charles I) elite to Virginia was strenuously encouraged by the Royal Governor, Sir William Berkeley. When they arrived, he promoted them to high office, granted them large estates and created the ruling oligarchy that ran the colony for many generations. (Fisher, pp. 214-216)
John Lewis IIFielding Lewis' grandfather
Excerpted from Lewis of Warner Hall by Merrow Egerton Sorley
"Councilor" John Lewis inherited from his father the Chemokins estate in St. Peter's Parish, New Kent Co., VA. His father had made this estate his principal place of residence and it was also the first home of Col. John and Elizabeth Warner Lewis after their marriage about 1692. At a meeting of the Vestry on January 5, 1695, John Lewis was elected a Vestryman for St. Peter's Parish and his name appears as such at no less than 14 Vestry meetings between this date and June, 1791. By 1702, John Lewis had "departed this county", presumably making the move to Warner Hall, which his wife, Elizabeth Warner, inherited at the death of her brother Robert.
Councilor John Lewis was perhaps the wealthiest Virginian of his day. His land holdings included 2,000 acres in Abingdon Parish, Gloucester, 300 acres in York County, 2,600 acres in New Kent County, and several grants in King and Queen County, the largest of which was for 10,100 acres. The 2,600 acres in New Kent County represents the exact size of the Chemokins estate. He held a commission in the Virginia militia as some of the baptismal records of his children refer to him as Capt. John Lewis. He rose to Colonel Commandant of the militia of Gloucester County and most of the records of the 18th century accord him that title.
In 1704, Col. John Lewis was appointed a member of the Council along with his brother-in-law, John Smith of "Purton". He continued on the Council for the rest of his life. The end of his life in 1725/6 marks the end of an era in the Lewis history. Thenceforward, the history of the entire family is not so closely bound up with the vicinity of Warner Hall. While many of its members continued to reside in this home and nearby localities for several generations, descendants moved over the whole of Virginia and, eventually, throughout the southern states.
Elizabeth WarnerShe brought into the Lewis family not only the ancestral lines of Martiau, Reade, and Warner, but also the ownership of Warner Hall itself. She had 14 children in all, with the names of nine being known. Their baptismal records are in the Abingdon Parish Register.