M(a)cDonald Family Site - black Jewish YAHYA family line 3 » George Nicholas Haile, Il (1656-1730)

Personal data George Nicholas Haile, Il 

Sources 1, 2, 3
  • He was born on April 8, 1656 in Lancaster County, Virginia Colony, Colonial America.

    Waarschuwing Attention: Was older than 65 years (66) when child (John Hale (born Haile)) was born (??-??-1722).

  • Profession: a celebrated barrister in England.
  • He died on March 29, 1730 in St Pauls Parish, Baltimore, MD, he was 73 years old.
  • He is buried in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States.
  • A child of Nicholas Peter i Haile, and Mary Virginia Travers

Household of George Nicholas Haile, Il

He is married to Frances Broad Garrett.

They got married about 1700 at Baltimore County, Province of MD.

Spouse: Frances Haile (born Garrett)

Child(ren):

  1. Nicholas Haile, Jr.  1702-1760 
  2. Nicholas Peter Haile  1702-1750 
  3. Joseph Haile  1703-1770
  4. Mary Hale  1703-1734
  5. John H. Hale  1706-1798 
  6. Sarah Hale  1707-????
  7. Hannah Hale  1709-1769
  8. Francis Hale  1712-1713
  9. George Samuel Haile  1712-1788 
  10. Sabbiner Hale  ± 1714-1764
  11. Anne Haile  1716-1802
  12. Richard Hale  1716-1784
  13. Neale Hale  1718-1796
  14. Henry Hale  1721-± 1775

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Timeline George Nicholas Haile, Il

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Ancestors (and descendant) of George Nicholas Haile, Il

George Nicholas Haile, Il
1656-1730

± 1700
Joseph Haile
1703-1770
Mary Hale
1703-1734
John H. Hale
1706-1798
Sarah Hale
1707-????
Hannah Hale
1709-1769
Francis Hale
1712-1713
Sabbiner Hale
± 1714-1764
Anne Haile
1716-1802
Richard Hale
1716-1784
Neale Hale
1718-1796
Henry Hale
1721-± 1775

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Sources

  1. Geni World Family Tree
    Nicholas Haile, Il<br>Gender: Male<br>Alias name: Nicholas Hale<br>Birth: Apr 8 1656 - Lancaster County, Virginia Colony, Colonial America<br>Occupation: a celebrated barrister in England<br>Marriage: Spouse: Frances Haile (born Garrett) - Circa 1700 - Baltimore County, Province of Maryland, Colonial America<br>Death: Mar 29 1730 - Baltimore, Baltimore County, Province of Maryland, Colonial America<br>Father: Nicholas Haile<br>Mother: Mary Haile (born unknown)<br>Wife: Frances Haile (born Garrett)<br>Children: Mary Boring (born Hale), Millicent Merryman (born Hale), Hannah Green (born Hale), John H. Hale, Sarah Bowman (born Hale), Francis Hale, Joseph Haile, <;a>George Haile, Sabina Cole (born Hale), Richard Hale, Anne Carter (born Haile), Neale Hale, Henry Hale, John Hale (born Haile), Nicholas Haile, Jr.<br>Siblings: George Haile, Richard Haile, of Virginia;, Mary Merryman (born Haile), Joseph Hale, John Hale, Elizabeth Penick (born Hale)
    The Geni World Family Tree is found on http://www.geni.com" target="_blank">www.Geni.com. Geni is owned and operated by MyHeritage.
  2. Mcdonald Family Site, dr. Wilton Mcdonald II, Esq., via https://www.myheritage.com/person-900164...
    Added by confirming a Smart Match

    MyHeritage family tree

    Family site: Mcdonald Family Site

    Family tree: 758304851-1
  3. FamilySearch Family Tree
    Nicholas Peter Haile II<br>Also known as: Nicholas Hale<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: 1656 - Lancaster, Virginia, British Colonial America<br>Marriage: Spouse: Frances Broad Garrett - 1701 - Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland, British Colonial America<br>Death: Mar 29 1730 - Baltimore, Baltimore, Maryland, British Colonial America<br>Burial: Baltimore County, Maryland, United States<br>Parents: Nicholas Peter Haile I, Mary Virginia Haile (born Travers)<br>Wife: Frances Broad Haile (born Garrett)<br>Children: Nicholas Peter Haile III, Mary Boring (born Haile), Joseph Haile, John H Hale, Hannah Haile, Millisant Merryman (born Haile), George Haile I, Sabbiner Hale, <a>Anne Carter (born Haile), Sabina Haile, Neale Haile, Henry Haile<br>Siblings: Richard Haile, Mary Haile, George Haile, Francis Haile, John Haile, Audrey Haile, Joseph Haile<br>  Additional information: LifeSketch:Nicholas Haile was born about 1628 in England, either Kent or Herfordshire. [1] He was transported to Virginia before 1645. His name as a "transportee" was used to acquire grants of land in early Virginia by at least three different persons. He had sufficient funds to purchase in 1652 an interest in a large tract of land which he patented in subsequent years. Nicholas also transported to Virginia at his own expense as many as a dozen bonded servants which he used to obtain land patents. [2] 1702 and lived on the North side of the Patapsco River.rginia before November 8, 1671 when records show Mary Haile as executrix for the estate of Nicholas Haile, her husband, deceased. He died intestate so only the administration of his estate is available. His will was proved 18 Apr. 1730 in Baltimore. name they were looking for. Maude Crowe published the records, and many other people copied them out of Crowe's book, Descendants from First Families of Maryland and Virginia (1978). But actually Crowe did not connect anyone in Jamestown with any Haile "descendants" I have been able to discover.* While the name does indeed turn up in the James River colony (1620), the earliest of the family I am able to trace belongs to a subsequent generation, north of the James. Still, Jamestown's wretched experience at the beginning of the seventeenth century may have a place in these pages. The disasters there were closely evaluated by later, more successful English who came up the Virginia rivers, as well as by the Scots Irish who came down out of Pennsylvania. And of course the Jamestown survivors intermarried among the later Virginia population.straight to the family's earliest demonstrable American forebears.e, and flamboyant personalities. Among the latter, Sir Walter Raleigh continued an effort initiated by his brother to establish a colony on Roanoke Island in 1585. So far as is known, the 117 men, women and children Raleigh left there had all perished before the next ship's call, in 1591. But the stretch of land which he named Virginia, after his queen, became part of her estate. In that feudal world, the monarch would enfeof her royal domain to loyal subjects. They exercised her absolute authority abroad as at home.erstanding of sovereignty. More typical of absolutist Europe was her successor, James I (1566-1625), one of the strongest advocates of the divine right of kings. He understood his reign in the context of dynastic rivalry, especially with the Hapsburg hegemony in the Holy Roman Empire including the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain. From our point of view, this is the James who commissioned the Authorized Bible that bears his name, as does the river where in 1606 he granted the Virginia Company a charter for settlements. Jamestown was established on the James River in the subsequent year. These plantations were nearly as disastrous as had been the Roanoke attempt. Three quarters of all who shipped out of England over the next fourteen years for Virginia became victims of starvation, disease, and Indian depredations--or were lost at sea. Yet conditions in England were such that incentive to emigrate remained strong. Although thousands of emigrants had perished by 1620, hundreds, even thousands more were coming every year. Most of them came as indentured servants, but many were refugees from the severe punishments under English law, or even convicts; the vast majority were malnourished boys and very young men. The goings on in Virginia seldom attracted attention among European monarchs.o, and eventually ores. They were encouraged to cultivate silk. Europe obtained this cherished material from China, and the greatest hope for Virginia lay in the expectation that China would be found not too far beyond the Appalachians. The most immediate profit came from a plant cultivated by the Indians and immediately beloved throughout Europe, tobacco. King James not only abominated it but wrote his most eloquent tract against its use. Children are still delighted by the account of how a faithful servant of Sir Walter Raleigh, upon glancing at a couch whence smoke was arising, dashed a bucket of water over his lordship.ime including marriageable girls. Among the indentured servants sent in this year were the first Negroes (slavery laws did not yet exist). In 1622, the recently friendly Indians coordinated a surprise attack whereby hundreds of colonists up and down the river were all massacred at the same moment. This calamity was followed in 1623 by an epidemic of the plague. The failed Virginia Company was dissolved in 1625. Virginia was made a royal colony.'s retinue was a 13-year-old boy named George Hall or George Hale. This is the boy whom Maude Crowe (p. 1) connects with the name George Haile on a document of sale for 300 acres up in Northumberland County, some thirty-odd years later. Crowe does not trace or demonstrate any such coincidence. Actually, Crowe overlooked another servant in Jamestown named Thomas Haile. In the 1624 / 25 Jamestown Muster we find not only George Hale / Hall in the James Citty Hundred, age 13 when he arrived on the Supply in 1620, but also this Thomas Haile in the West & Sherley Hundred, age 20 when he arrived on the George in 1623.e her credit, as when they routinely advance her dubious guess about George as if it were a fact, yet remain silent (as Crowe is) about Thomas. in Hertfordshire (Kings Warden), married to a Rose Bond (1573-1648). They are said to be parents of a George (b. abt. 1602) and a Thomas (b. abt. 1605). According to this particular web site, William's son George turns up in America to sire Crowe's American Hailes. The prosperous region of Hertfordshire, just north of London, did indeed have an old and prominent family of Hales. William Hale was among three Protestants burnt at the stake there in 1554. Richard Hale of Kings Warden founded the Richard Hale School in 1617. It survives to this day. There is obviously no way to deny that this Hertfordshire family could indeed be the progenitors of the Virginia Hailes. But the George who Crowe finds came to Jamestown, like the Thomas Haile whom she did not find, clearly belonged to a servant class. To associate them with the illustrious Richard of the Richard Hale School seems difficult. Genealogists sometimes conclude that the name they have found is the very one they were looking for. Perhaps so, but can the documented name be linked to specific progeny? If not, then an American genealogist may sire her own English ancestors.nts survived along the James River until the first Jamestown census. They were commonly called hundreds after the old Roman fashion, but contained scarcely more than a score or so men, and maybe no women at all. Beyond mere survival, their task was to produce profitable exports for England. Land by royal grant or headright (about 50 acres per head) was available to anyone paying for passage across the Atlantic. Labor, the main cost of a plantation, was commonly obtained by indenture in return for passage. Both George Hale / Hall and Thomas Haile were indentured servants. Thomas Haile came over on the Abigail in 1623, which also brought Governor Wyatt's wife (it is the boat suspected of bringing the plague to Jamestown). A Thomas Haile also appears in 1689 as signatory to a Somerset, Maryland allegiance to the new monarchs William and Mary. By that date, the Jamestown Thomas would have been eighty-five. A connection is conceivable between one of these Jamestown fellows from the1620s and the continuous line of Hailes which Crowe does carefully trace after mid-century from Virginia and Maryland down to our Tennessee forebears at Flynn's Lick. Absent evidence for such a connection, however, we cannot even count those two servant boys among Jamestown's lucky survivors, much less imagine them to be direct progenitors of the family name when it appears some thirty years later, north of the Rappahannock River.Pamunkey. To the south, below the Blackwater River, a tributary of the Chowan, lay swampland. The neck north of the Rappahannock was still prohibited.
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Historical events

  •  This page is only available in Dutch.
    Van 1650 tot 1672 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Eerste Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • In the year 1656: Source: Wikipedia
    • January 23 » Blaise Pascal publishes the first of his Lettres provinciales.
    • July 21 » The Raid on Málaga takes place during the Anglo-Spanish War.
    • July 28 » Second Northern War: Battle of Warsaw begins.
    • July 30 » Swedish forces under the command of King Charles X Gustav defeat the forces of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth at the Battle of Warsaw.
    • October 14 » The US state of Massachusetts enacts the first punitive legislation against the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers).
  • The temperature on March 29, 1730 was about 7.0 °C. There was 66 mm of rainWind direction mainly southwest. Weather type: regen. Source: KNMI
  •  This page is only available in Dutch.
    Van 1702 tot 1747 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Tweede Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • In the year 1730: Source: Wikipedia
    • April 8 » Shearith Israel, the first synagogue in New York City, is dedicated.
    • July 8 » An estimated magnitude 8.7 earthquake causes a tsunami that damages more than 1,000km (620mi) of Chile's coastline.
    • October 1 » Ahmed III is forced to abdicate as the Ottoman sultan.
    • October 22 » Construction of the Ladoga Canal is completed.
    • November 18 » The future Frederick II (known as Frederick the Great), King of Prussia, is granted a royal pardon and released from confinement.


Same birth/death day

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia


About the surname Haile, Il


When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Dr Wilton McDonald- black Hebrew, "M(a)cDonald Family Site - black Jewish YAHYA family line 3", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/mcdonald-family-site/I611446.php : accessed June 16, 2024), "George Nicholas Haile, Il (1656-1730)".