Family Tree Welborn » Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn (± 1660-1731)

Persoonlijke gegevens Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn 

Bronnen 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, 28, 29, 30, 31

Gezin van Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn

Hij is getrouwd met Elizabeth (Mitchell) Stookes ? DeMoss ?.


Marriage
Date: 28 Apr 1712
Place: Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England
Marriage
Place: Maryland, USA
Marriage
Date: 1700
Place: Maryland, United States
Marriage
Date: 1710
Place: Maryland, United States
Marriage
Place: Hartford, Maryland, United States
Marriage
Place: Maryland, United States
Marriage
Place: Maryland
Marriage
Date: Bet. 1694-1722
Marriage
Date: Abt. 1703
Place: Chester County, Pennsylvania Colony, Kingdom of Great Britain

Marriage
Place: Maryland, United States
Marriage
Date: Abt. 1703
Place: Chester County, Pennsylvania Colony, Kingdom of Great Britain
Marriage
Date: 1710
Place: Maryland, United States
Marriage
Date: 1710
Place: Maryland, USA,,,

Zij zijn getrouwd op 28 april 1712 te Maryland Colony, America.Bronnen 16, 29


Kind(eren):

  1. Thomas Mitchell  1700-1761
  2. Elizabeth WILBOURNE  ± 1700-1776 
  3. Thomas WILBOURNE  1701-< 1746 
  4. Ann Welborn  1711-1784 
  5. William WELBORN  1713-> 1772 


Notities over Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn



The surname has had various spellings.
Beware: There were Welborns also in Massachussetts and Virginia.
·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî

Edward Welborn
Gender: Male
Birth: August 20, 1682 Caenby, Lincolnshire, England (This is presumptive!)
Death: June 24, 1731 (48) St. George's Parish, Baltimore County, Maryland
Immediate Family:

Husband of Elizabeth Welborn (unknown)

Father of Thomas Welborn; Elizabeth Wood (Welborn); Ann Welborn and William Welborn

DNA Markers: R1b1a2a1a1b5a R-BY61463

Edward Welborn is your 7th great grandfather.
Marvin Loyd Welborn ¬â€ 
·Üí Marvin "Toad" Henry Welborn, Jr. his father
·Üí Heny Marvin Welborn, Sr. his father
·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn his father
·Üí (GM) Younger Welborn, II his father
·Üí William "Billy" Welborn his father
·Üí Aaron Welborn, Sr. his father
·Üí James Welborn his father
·Üí William Welborn his father
·Üí Edward Welborn his father

https://www.geni.com/people/Edward-Welborn/6000000006514588694

Edward Welbourn (Wilbourne)
Gender: Male
Birth: August 20, 1660¬â€  Caenby, Lincolnshire, England, United Kingdom
Death: June 24, 1731¬â€ (70)¬â€  Harford County, Maryland, United States
Place of Burial: St George's Parish, Maryland
Immediate Family:
Husband of¬â€ Elizabeth Mitchell¬â€ 
Father of¬â€ Samuel Wilbourne;¬â€ Ann Jethro;¬â€ William Welborn;¬â€ Thomas SR Welborn;¬â€ Elizabeth Woods; and¬â€ Richard Wilburn¬â€ 

DNA Markers: R-M269 R1b1a2a1a1b5a
·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî
Edward Wilbourne
Gender: Male
Birth: 1663¬â€  Lincolnshire, England,
Death: February 16, 1739¬â€ (76)¬â€  Chester, Delaware County, Pennsylvania,
Immediate Family:
Husband of¬â€ Francis Wilbourne¬â€ 
Father of¬â€ Edward Welborn¬â€ 

DNA Markers: R-M269 ¬â€  R1b1a2a1a1b5a
¬â€ ¬â€ 
CF: https://www.geni.com/people/Edward-Wilbourne/6000000083771482509

Genealogy:
o Edward Welborn (1660-1731) & Elizabeth Mitchell (ca. 1700-)
- > William Welborn (1713-1782) & Ann Crabtree (1714-1756)
- > James Welborn (1736-1811) & Mary Isabelle Teague (1742-1821)
- > Aaron Welborn (1760-1843) & Elizabeth Younger (1762-1836)
- > William ·ÄúBilly Welborn (1797-1867) & Sarah Elizabeth Bryant (1807-1880)
- > G.M. Younger Welborn (1824-1900) & Sarah E. Dykes (1833-1865)
- > Calhoun H. Welborn (1856-1915) & Francis "Fannie" Pernerviane Davis (1863-1958)
- > Henry Marvin Welborn Sr. (1886-1968) & Emma Corine Bombard (1899-2000)
- > Henry Marvin ·ÄúToad·Äù Welborn Jr. (1922-1999) & Geneva Allene Smith (1927-2004)
- > Marvin Loyd Welborn (1949)
==================================================

Name: Edward /Willburn/
Edward WELBORN Birth: Abt 1660 of Maryland or Delaware Death: 24 Jul 1731 St George's Parish, Baltimore, Maryland
Marriage: Elizabeth Mitchell (LNU) widowed
Father: Edward WELBORN ?
Mother: Mrs. Edward WELBORN
Spouse: Elizabeth MITCHELL Birth: Chr: Nov 1683 Woodbury, Litchfield, Connecticut Death: 1731 of Baltimore, Maryland
Father: John MITCHELL
Mother: Elizabeth KNELL
Children / Marriage

1 Thomas WELBORN Birth: 1701 Birmingham, Chester, Pennsylvania Death: 2 Mar 1746 Prince George's, Maryland
Thomas Welborn married Martha Margaret HAYNES Marr: 7 Jan 1723 Lancaster, Virginia

2 Elizabeth WELBORN Birth: Abt 1703 Birmingham, Chester, Pennsylvania Death:
Isaac WOOD
Elizabeth Welborn Marr: Abt 1721 of Baltimore, Maryland

3 Ann WELBORN Birth: Abt 1710 Baltimore, Maryland Death:
Ann Welborn married John RYAN Marr: 1731/48 of Baltimore, Maryland

4 William WELBORN Birth: 21 Jan 1713 Baltimore, Maryland Death: Aft 17 Apr 1782 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
William Welborn married Ann CRABTREE Marr: 21 Jan 1731 St George's Parish, Baltimore,

Sources: Welborns and Related Families with Roots in North and South Carolina (1994) Descendants of Edward Welborn (1660-1731) online
St. George's Parish Registers - Will of Edward Wilbourne, Baltimore County, Maryland, dated 23 January 1731, Maryland Calendar of Wills, Volume 6, p.180 Baltimore County, Maryland Deed Records, Volume 1727-1757, p.2
Patent Series of the Maryland Land Office, Volume 50, Cert. #557 Baltimore County, Maryland Deeds Liber B.B. No. 1, p.70-72
Settlers of Maryland, 1679-1783, p.720
Settlers of Maryland 1701-1730, p.171
Internet IGI (Jul 2006) Index to Old Rights in Bucks and Chester Counties,Pennsylvania, 1682-1761 (FHL#986,897)
Abstracts of Chester County,Pennsylvania Land Records, 1681-1730, Vol 1, pg 114 Records of the Courts of Chester County,Pennsylvania, Vol 2, pgs 114, 119, 149, & 161 Ancestral File - Version 4.19 - nil \par Internet IGI 2006, (May)}
·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî·Äî

http://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/welborn/1775/

=========================================
Edward Welborn Maryland

By Cecelia McCullough March 11, 2005 at 08:53:55
In reply to: Re: Edward Welborn Maryland James Wilburn 3/11/05

Here is some information on our Edward Wellborn. Let me hear from you again Please. Cecelia

Cecelia, here are a few facts concerning the two Edwards. Remember that we had only two grandfathers by this name. There were other men also named Edward, but we had these two.

The first Edward's birthdate is unknown, but we do have the year of his death from two different documents. He is our first proven ancestor.

Edward Wilbourn WELBORN was in Chester County, Pennsylvania before 1701. He was a blacksmith, as found in church records. He did some work on the church building. He married a widow, Elizabeth Mitchell who had a son by the name of Thomas Mitchell.

About 1711, they moved to Baltimore County, Maryland. Edward died there in 1731. His death date was recorded in the church records of St. George's Parish. The Church of England was the established religion, and operated under the authority of the Crown. According to law, the parish priest had to keep written records of births, baptisms, marriages, and deaths that took place in his parish.

Many of those old books have been preserved. The Maryland Historical Society has a copy of the St. George Parish Parish Register. So this is one documented source of Edward 's death date. The parson wrote that Edward Wilbourn died in 1731.

Edward Wilbourne [Notice an ·Äòe·Äô has been added] wrote his Will on 23 Jan 1730/31, and it was brought into court and recorded on 3 Mar 1730. Now these years might seem confusing. The court clerk should have written the date as 3 Mar 1730/31. Back then they used a different calendar, and March 3rd was in the last month of the old year. If I remember correctly, March 25th was New Year's Day.

Named in Edward's will were his wife Elizabeth; sons William and Thomas Wilbourne; daughters Elizabeth Wood and Ann Wilbourne.

We descended from Thomas Wilbourne, born about 1701. Thomas settled in Old Frederick County, Virginia, where he died in 1746.His wife was Margaret. I am inclined to believe that Margaret was a Morgan. This has not been proven, but there is some indirect evidence which gives support to the possibility.

Thomas and Margaret had a son named Edward, born about 1725 or 1727. He was the second Edward in our direct line. This is the Edward who eventually settled and died in Georgia. He spelled his name Welborn in North Carolina and Georgia records. This Edward died 29 Dec 1804, in Greene County, Georgia, where he was living in the home of his son David. David spelled his name with one l, while all his sons used a double l.

The first court record in Old Frederick County, Virginia, of Edward was in a deed, which made reference to him as a chain carrier for a surveyor. He was witness to a deed dated 10 June 1748. He purchased land from Benjamin Hines 3 Oct 1751.

Edward's wife was Martha. She was probably a Curtis. Again, there is no direct evidence to prove this, but some indirect evidence exists. They left Old Frederick County, Virginia, and were found next in Orange County, North Carolina, where he was appointed to serve as a constable in 1754.

Edward later moved his family to South Carolina. He received a land grant of 200 acres in Granville County, 3 July 1772. The land had been surveyed by Samuel Curtis. I have a photo print of the document from the SC Department of Archives & History. When and how Edward disposed of this land is unknown.

In Sept 1821, David Welborn went into court in Madison, Morgan County, Georgia and told the court that he was the son of Edward Welborn, and that the said Edward was in the year 1776 a citizen of Wilkes County, Georgia. David's reason was to give testimony of depredations by Creek Indians, and how they took nearly everything that belonged to his father Edward during the years 1777-1780, and that the property was never recovered. What the Indians could not use they destroyed. Among the items taken were 13 horses, 25 head of cattle, his blacksmith and gunsmith tools, and whatever else Edward and thirteen year old David could grab and throw into the wagon as they fled during a raid. During the first raid only Edward and David were at home, and they had to flee for their lives, one driving the wagon and other mounted and leading a string of the other horses. The Indians overtook them. David did not give every detail, but they barely escaped with their lives. They both must have ridden away on the same horse on to the Broad River where a temporary breastwork had been made for the protection of several families. The Welborn family was inside the fort - Amos was born there - when another of several raids took place. David testified to the court that he saw a party of Creek Indians & very narrowly escaped from them. (He must have been outside the fort.) Again the Creeks took more of Edward's horses.

All of this is on record in Morgan County. I got the documented papers from the Georgia State Archives.

You can keep the two Edwards straight if remember that the first died in Maryland, 1731. The second Edward died in Georgia, 1804.

http://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/welborn/1775/
=============================


Genealogy:
o Edward Welborn (1660-1731) & Elizabeth Mitchell (ca. 1700-)
- > William Welborn (1713-1782) & Ann Crabtree (1714-1756)
- > James Welborn (1736-1811) & Mary Isabelle Teague (1742-1821)
- > Aaron Welborn (1760-1843) & Elizabeth Younger (1762-1836)
- > William ·ÄúBilly Welborn (1797-1867) & Sarah Elizabeth Bryant (1807-1880)
- > G.M. Younger Welborn (1824-1900) & Sarah E. Dykes (1833-1865)
- > Calhoun H. Welborn (1856-1915) & Francis "Fannie" Pernerviane Davis (1863-1958)
- > Henry Marvin Welborn Sr. (1886-1968) & Emma Corine Bombard (1899-2000)
- > Henry Marvin ·ÄúToad·Äù Welborn Jr. (1922-1999) & Geneva Allene Smith (1927-2004)
- > Marvin Loyd Welborn (1949)
==================================================

Subject: Re: [WELBORN] Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of MD
Date: Fri, 09 Jan 2009 03:02:24 -0000
Author: tinkwelborn1
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.welborn/385.1.1.1.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
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Well, I can't seem to contribute to this conversation. When I try to paste my notes, I get an Invalid data response. I suspect because I have web and email addresses embedded. I have first treated superscripted footnoting. Let's see if this fixes my problem.....Nope. So now let me eliminate all web and email addresses....
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thought I'd ''throw'' some notes I've collected out here. Firstly, I couldn't paste this info on the boards for some reason, therefore I've decided to email it to each of you. I've not had the time (yet) to mull over your questions with these notes and the notes you've provided. Hopefully, I'll be able to sit down this weekend and digest them. But here these are, in the interim.
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St. George Parish Register, Baltimore, Maryland indicates Edward Wilbourn died June the 24th 1731. Page 265, f.101.
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Gene Welborn's Welborns and Related Families, page 5, notes: "Edward Welborn was in Maryland in the late 1600s and is the first Welborn that can be tied to the Welborns that settled in the Pendleton District, South Carolina, in the late 1700s. The first known record of Edward Welborn is his will in 1730 and the record of his death, June 21, 1731, as recorded in the St. George's Parish Register, Baltimore County, Maryland.
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980513, Ruckersville, VA. Marvin Welborn. The following is extracted from the opus of Mrs. Ann Beason Gahan, Comp., "Wilbourn Genealogy," 22 July 1986, revised 22 March 1993. N.p. She has written: Edward Wilborn (d. 24 Jan. 1730/31, St. Georges Parish Reg., p. 265 of transcript, but p. 101 of "original" register in Hall of Records, Annapolis).2 SOUR S34
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WILL OF EDWARD WILBOURNE
(Colonial Wills, Baltimore County, MD, 1730, 20-154)
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In the Name of God Amen the twenty-third of January Anno Domini one Thousand seven hundred and Thirty: Thirty one, I Edward Wilbourne of Baltimore County in the province of Maryland being Sick and weak in body but of shound and perfect Memory thanks be to Almight God for so great a blessing do for the better Settlement of Temporal affairs when it may please God to call me hence make and publish this my las will and Testament in manner following Nigh.
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Imprimis, I give unto my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne my dwelling plantation with as much land as shall amount to Fifty Acres during her natural life and after her docoase, I give the same to my daughter Ann Wilbourne her her heirs and assigns forever.
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Item: I give unto my son William Wilbourne the remaining part of my Land him his heirs and assigns forever.
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Item: My will is that the great Swamp which runs through my land be a dovision between my Wife's part of the land and my son William's part.
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Item: I give unto my son Thomas Wilbourne one year old Steer to him and his heirs forever.
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Item: My will is that my son William Wilbourne shall have all my Smiths Tools provided he first pays my Executor the sum of two Thousand pounds
of Tobacco otherwise the said Tools to be praised with my personall Estate.
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Item: I give unto my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne a Third part of my clear personall Estate after legacys and all other lawfull demands against it are discharged.
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Item: All the Rest and residue of my personall Estate I give to my three children namely, Elizabeth Wood, William Wilbourne and Ann Wilbourne to be equally divided amongst them. Share and Share alike.
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Lastly, I confirm and appoint my loving wife Eliza Wilbourne my full and whole Executer of this my last will and testament in witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal on day and year first written.
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Signed sealed and published in presence of us whose names are underwritten and enforce thereunto at his request.
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Edwad Willbourne (Seal)
.
his
John X Coale
.
his
John X Daevley
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Michl Webster
ဦဦဦဦဦဦဦဦဦဦဦဦ
Notes on Edward Wilbourne
11:38 PM 12/15/98
Re: Edward Wilbourne/Elizabeth Mitchell
Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 04, 1998 at 02:19:02:
In Reply to: Re: Edward Wilbourne/Elizabeth Mitchell posted by Marvin Welborn on December 01, 1998 at 19:50:13:
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Edward Wilbourn was in Chester County, Pennsylvania and had a land grant there. These records put him in Chester Co., PA for all the children to be born. All his records put him there until 1712 when a deed speaks of the "late Edward Wilbourn" I took this to mean deceased but the archivist said about 1/2 the time it just meant he moved on which is the case of our Edward Wilbourn, Blacksmith. In this month·Äôs The Frontiersmen newsletter on the Wellborn family I have a 4 page worksheet on Edward Wilbourn with all his court records from 1699 on. Proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.
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On September 8, 1731 in the Baltimore Co., MD probate of the estate papers of Edward Wilbourn his widow relinquished the administration of the estate to her SONS THOMAS WILBOURN AND THOMAS MITCHELL. She was a widow when Edward married her. The Mitchell records can be found with the Wilbourns in Baltimore Co., MD and on down.
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Edward Wibourn was a thief and the county of Chester Co., PA made him wear a " Roman T" and repay double the cost of the 14 yards of material he stole and receive 10 lashes on his bare back. 1707 indictment of grand jury. This original record and others appear in the newsletter.
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Edward was a blacksmith and that trade was an appreniced trade so we should be able to find the name of his father by finding the court record where his age and father are as all blacksmiths were recorded as being apprenticed to a blacksmith to learn the trade.
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I have reason to believe The maiden name of Elizabeth Mitchell may have been DeMoss. We need to all check this family out.
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The early Brooke family of Prince Georges Co. namely Thomas Brooke, Jr. and George Frazier fit into the Wilbourn family somehow too.
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Edward Wilbourn lived in Birmingham and Concord townships in Chester Co., PA before moving to Deer Creek, MD. The very first record of Edward in MD is August 4, 1719. He was paid from the estate of George Wells for blacksmith work. There is no court proof of Edward Wilbourn ever having a 1680 land-grant in Baltimore Co., MD. The Patent PL #6 folder 276 Baltimore Co., MD now Harford Co., MD is where you will find the land-grant. Read it for yourself. It plainly states that he received on the "22 day of May 1722 " "one hundred acres of Land within our said Province by virtue of a Warrt." It was " given under our greater seal at arms this tenth day of July Seventeen hundred and twenty five"
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We need to all resort to the court records and stop repeating all the errors of the hearsay and past assumptions.
.
Carolyn Wellborn Haskins
=============================================
Re: Thomas Welbourne, Captain
Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 04, 1998 at 02:51:29:
In Reply to: Re: Thomas Welbourne, Captain posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on September 25, 1998 at 12:43:47:
.
Captain Thomas Welburne, of Accomack Co., VA line is a different line from the Edward Wibourn line of Chester Co., PA/Baltimore Co., MD.

Captain Thomas is not the father of these Wellborns. As in my posting on the other forum, I will point out that the Accomack Co., VA Welburnes moved into NC via Northhampton Co., NC and Thomas Welbunre and his wife Margaret who were there in early 1750's.
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Daniel III of Accomack Co., VA and William later move into Halifax Co., NC. The deed records state that this Thomas was a gentleman from Gloucester Co., VA.
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The Edward Wilbourn line of MD moved into the Piedmont area of NC by 1754 when the first record there is my Edward Wellborn born circa 1727 already owns land and is a constable in the Orange Co., Court records. He later in 1772 has a Royal land-grant in SC and then by 1774 is into GA in what later became Wilkes Co., GA and dies in Greene Co., GA.
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You will find the Edward Wilbourn family in Old Frederick Co., VA now Berkeley Co., WVA. and in Frederick Co., MD records in 1750's.
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Carolyn Wellborn Haskins
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WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology
Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 04, 1998 at 22:32:13:
In Reply to: WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology posted by PHIL M WELBORN on November 26, 1998 at 14:31:33:
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The English Version of the Montforts, The Wellesbournes, and the Hughenden Effigies. "They say that they are 16th century fakes and that the effigies at the Hughenden Church are crude in extreme. They stand in the east end of the Chapel. The stones are mounted upright against the wall and are probably original mediaeval tombstones defaced with the meaningless heraldry of the Wellesbourne family, and the recumbent figures are believed to have been placed in the church at the same time in an attempt to establish a pedigree for the "nouveau riche" family living in Brands House, which was at that time the Manor House of the parish. The Wellesbournes, one of whom married a Miss Mountford, claimed descent from Simon de Montfort, on the grounds that they came originally from Wellesbourne in Warwickshire, and that this manor was owned by the sixth son of Earl Simon.
.
Unfortunately for their claim, Earl Simon had five sons, not six, all of whom died without issue and one daughter who died in childbirth. The manor of Wellesbourne was owned by the Montforts de Beaudesert, who are no relation to Earl Simon.
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An alternative claim is that Richard de Wellesbourne said to be an illegitimate son of Earl Simon (or that Earl Simon was Richard's illegitimate son) was an ancestor of the wealthy Wellesbournes of Hughenden. Richard is said to have assumed his wife's Coat of Arms on returning from a crusade. This claim also will not stand examination.

Earl Simon's parentage is well established and quite regular. Earl Simon was a man of strict morals, most unlikely to have an illegitimate son. Heraldry is an exact science. A knight cannot change his arms as the whim takes him.
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The third claim made by the Wellesbournes was that Richard was an illegitimate brother of Earl Simon. If so, the family kept their secret well for three centuries. The Wellesbourne claim is the only suggestion we have of the existence of Richard. The main charge on the arms of the effigies is of a griffin, or in some cases a lion, with a child in its claws. This device occurs in Italian, but not in English heraldry. It is thought that the Wellesbournes made their supposed ancestor Richard into the chief character of one of the popular novels at the time. In one of these, Sir Isumbras took his wife and three children on a crusade. At a swollen river Sir Isumbras swam across with on child, but while he was fetching the second a lion carried off the first. The knight continued with his planned crossing but a leopard took the second and a unicorn the third. The knight and his lady
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Re: WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology
Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 09, 1998 at 06:59:56:
In Reply to: Re: WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology posted by Vikky Wilburn Anders on December 08, 1998 at 19:25:35:
.
Hello Vikki,
Please don't think the Welburnes in Virginia were the only Wilbourns in America in the 1600's. Boston, Mass is full of Welbourns by 1650. So is Hartford , Conn.
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We have all gotten so blinded by the books of half-truths that we are not searching anymore but depend on the old stories to seek our lineage. I truly believe we should get beyond Accomack Co., VA and the surrounding area and research the records. Wonder how many of you have one record in your files on Thomas of Suffolk Co., MASS or Mercy or any of that family. Lots, more than in Accomack Co., VA Welbourns. They may have been here when the Mayflower arrived. All in Mass.
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How many of you have searched the Delaware records. Captain Thomas Welburne of Accomack, William Welburne, and John Welburne, Jonathan Waterland (who was captain of the ship "Friendship" that Captain Thomas did business to England with) and Robert Beverly who later was one of the important men in VA history had a land grant in March 16, 1676/7 in Horre Kill District. 2531 acres that the chief surveyor changed the names on and put in his friends names on the survey. Good 'ole Cap't Thomas took him to court and won. Captain Thomas said in this court that he intended to bring "some families" in to settle the land. I refer you to "The Duke of York Record" an authorized transcript from Official Archives of the State of Delaware 1646 to 1679 printed by the General Assembly of the State of Delaware. He probably did transport the early Welburnes. A William Wilbourne owned 25 acres of land in New Norfolk in 1637. Robert Welbourn was transport by John Bayles in MD in 1662 Matthew Welbourne was transported by Charles Grimes in 1653. Hugh Welburne appears on the tax list with Thomas Wilburne in 1675 in Accomack Co., VA. A Thomas and John Welbourne were transported by Capt Thomas Wilburne in Accomack Co., VA in 1678. We know he did the transporting as he received land on Fox Island in VA. BUT all this while Mass and Conn is full of Wilbourns that spell their name like Edward Wilbourn. Hmmm. Let's post their descendants. Anyone know who Stephen was or John or the rest of them.
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Wilbourns had big families and in the Civil War lots of Welbourns in the Union Army.
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Who had them??? Let give ourselves a new years project.
Carolyn Wellborn Haskins2 SOUR S471
3 PAGE
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and.....
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Edward Wilbourn, Jr.
.Born: Abt 1660/1680, Maryland
.Marriage: Elizabeth _____ about 1700 in Chester Co., Pennsylvania
.Died: Jun 24, 1731, St. George Parish, Baltimore (now Harford) Co., Maryland about age 70.
General Notes: Richard Sims: ?? In the 1711 deed, it refers to the late Edward Wilbourn: ?? bounded by land of Nathaniel Newlin, James Chipers and the late Edward Wilbourn. ?? This may refer to Edward having died, or having moved to another location. I have assumed it means having moved (to Baltimore Co., MD), and that Edward's father is unknown.
.
??----------
??sbgone:?
Edward Wilbourn, Sr? 1640-1710 ? Edward Wilbourn, Sr?? Born in England ? Lived in Chester County, Pa. ? An Edward Wilbourn was referred to as the late in a 1711 deed. ??---?? Children: Edward?? Edward Wilbourn, Jr / Elizabeth? 1660/1680 - ? Edward Wilbourn, Jr?? Born about 1660/1680 in Md or Delaware ?? Received a land grant in Chester County, Pa. in 1701. ?? Owned 94 acres of land in Pa. where he lived until 1712. ?? The town of Chester Co., Pa indicted him in 1707. ?? Lived in Birmingham and Concord Townships in Chester Co., Pa, later in Delaware County. ?? Moved to Deer Creek, Md., which was a post village in Harford County, Md. ?? A blacksmith. On Aug 4, 1719 he was paid from the estate of George Wells for blacksmith work in Md. ?? Later was in Baltimore County, MD where there are records in St. John's and St. George Parishes. ?? No court proof of him having a 1680 land-grant in Baltimore Co., Md. Patent PL #6 folder Baltimore Co., Md now Harford Co, Md is where you will find the land-grant!

It states that he received on the 22 day of May 1722 one hundred acres of land within our said Province by virtue of a Warrt. given July 10 1725. ?? Died in Baltimore Co., Md ?? Check Martinsville, WVA Historical Society for land grants ?? Some of his line can be found in Lancaster County, PA in later 1700's ?? Answers to Edward Wilbourn's family lie in the counties of Berkeley County, W Va, Hampshire Co., W Va, Orange and Frederick Co., MD, Baltimore Co., MD and Chester Co., PA, Horre Kill District Delaware, Sommerset and St. Marys Co., MD ???

Noted events in his life were:.. Alt. Birth, Abt 1660/1680, Delaware.
. Residence: Chester Co., Pennsylvania.
. Land Patent: 94 acres: Pennsylvania.
. Land Patent, 1701, Chester Co., Pennsylvania.
. Court, 1703, Chester Co., Pennsylvania. There being a bastard child brought from the house of John Martin of Concord, the Court having endeavored to find the reputed father thereof but cannot ordered that the said child be called John Thornly and that Edward Willburn keep said John three months and be paid six shillings per week out of the county stock.

. Court, May 30, 1704, Chester Co., Pennsylvania. We whose names are here subscribed being ordered by the last court to view and lay out a Road from Brandywine Creek ...(text omitted)....to Naaman's Creek Mill as far as it will fall in this county. Do certify that we did lay out the said Road on the fifth day of the 1. month 1704. Beginning at......then continuing in the old road across the land of the said Chalfant and Esward Wilburns then to a marked tree ....

. Petition, Mar 19, 1705/06, Chester Co., Pennsylvania. A petition was presented to Council March 19, 1705/6. Edward Wilburn was one of the signers. ? "The Humble petetion of the Inhabitants to the tonw and County of Chester and others, humbly showeth: That whereas, by ye Laws of this Government, ye sole power of laying out of the Queen's Road is lodged in the Governor and Council; and wheas the Town of Chester is daily improving, and In time may become a great place, and very adantageous to the Propriatour, but forasmuch as most of the People of that place conerned In the Improvement is must discouraged for want of a direct Road from thence to Phladelphia, wee, you Petitioners, whose names are hereunto subscribed, do beg the Governor and Councill that an ord'r may be granted to fitt and proper persons to lay out the Queen's Road on as direct a Line as can be from Darby, to answer the bridge on Chester Creek, and our petitioners in duty bound will every pray."
. Court: Indicted, 1707, Chester Co., Pennsylvania.

. Occupation: Blacksmith, 1707, Birmingham Twp., Chester Co., Pennsylvania.
. Deed, Sep 10, 1709, Chester Co., Pennsylvania. Deed. On 10 Sep 1709 James Chevers of Concord, yeoman, to Isaac Taylor of Thronbury, yeoman. James Chevers for L27 grants to Isaac Taylor his plantation, reputed to be in the manor of Rock Land but now annexed to Concord, bounded by the Birmingham line, land of Edward Wilburn & Magus Tate, containing 100 acres,.....

. Deed, Sep 10, 1711, Chester Co., Pennsylvania. Deed. On 10 Sep 1711 John Willis of Thornbury, yeoman, to Thomas Smith of county of Chester, fashonr. Whereas the original patent was greated to Francis Chads 16 Feb 1701 for 100 acres, lying in the manor of Rockland, joining the township of Concord, bounded by land of Nathaniel Newlin, James Chipers and the late Edward Wilbourn. Francis Chads by deed dated 19 Apr 1708 granted to John Willis.....

. Occupation: Blacksmith, Aug 4, 1719, Maryland. Aug 4 1719 he was paid from the estate of George Wells for blacksmith work.

. Residence: Deer Creek, St. George Parish, Baltimore (now Harford) Co., Maryland.
. Land Patent: Grant of 100 acres, May 22, 1722, Baltimore (now Harford) Co., Maryland. No court proof of him having a 1680 land-grant in Baltimore Co., Md. Patent PL #6 folder Baltimore Co., Md now Harford Co, Md is where you will find the land-grant. It states that he received on the 22 day of May 1722 one hundred acres of land within our said Province by virtue of a Warrt. given July 10 1725.
. Will, Mar 3, 1729/30, Baltimore (now Harford) Co., Maryland. Colonial Will #20-154

. Probate: St. George Parish, Baltimore (now Harford) Co., Maryland. St George's Parish Register, Baltimore Maryland, Baltimore County Maryland, Maryland Probate Records, Frederick County Virginia, Probate Records, Maryland, Calendar of Wills, Volume 6, page 180.

. Probate: Frederick Co., Virginia. St George's Parish Register, Baltimore Maryland, Baltimore County Maryland, Maryland Probate Records, Frederick County Virginia, Probate Records, Maryland, Calendar of Wills, Volume 6, page 180.

. Probate, Sep 8, 1731, Baltimore (now Harford) Co., Maryland. The widow Elizabeth Wilbourn relinquished the administration in favor of her sons Thomas Wilbourn and Thomas Mitchell.?
. Alt. Death, Between 1709 and 1711, Chester Co., Pennsylvania.
.
Edward married Elizabeth _____ about 1700 in Chester Co., Pennsylvania. (Elizabeth _____ was born about 1680 in Harford Co., Maryland .)
Noted events in their marriage were: .. Alt. Marriage, 1710, Maryland.
.
Sources:
.
1 - Carolyn Wellborn Haskins (GenForum).
2 - Gene Welborn, Welborns and Related Families With Roots In North and South Carolina (1994, Greenwood South Carolina).
3 - Larry D. Kingsley. Descendant of James Welborn & Mary Isabella Teague Welborn
4 - Susan (http://wolves.dsc.k12.ar.us/cyberace/sbgone/gen/fam2/wilbourn/edward.htm).
5 - Joe Welborn, Desc report of Edward WELBORN (c 1660 - 1731) compiled by Joe Welborn.
6 - Edward Wilbourn indictment, 1707 Chester Co., Pennsylvania. Chester.S.S. - At a court of Quarter Sessions held at Chester for the aid County of Chester the 25 day of November Anno Dom 1707 -? The Court being opened the constables was called appeared - The Grand Jury being called and qualified received their charge and went forth and returned with their indictments as followeth viz-? Indictment of: The Grand Inquest for our Lady the Queen upon their paths Edwd Wilbourn.: and solemn affirmations do present that Edwd. Wilbourn late of Birmingham Township Chester County blacksmith the 1. day of October in the 6. year of our Reign of Queen Anne over England at the Township of Concord in the county of Chester aforesaid nine yards of lining cloth of the value of 40 shillings of the goods and chattels of John Hannum Yeoman then and there being found then and there did feloniously take steal and carry away against the peace of said Lady the Queen the crown and dignity and also agains·Äôt the form of an act of assembly of this Province in that case made and provided - Indorsed the 27 of the 9. month 1707 - We the Grand Jury find this bill to be a true bill - Michll Blunston foreman - Edward Wilbourn being called to the bar pleads guilty - the court gives Judgment that the said Edward shall make double satisfaction and be whipt with ten lashes on his bare back and wear a Roman T according to law & pay the costs.
7 - Wendy Roberts-Craft, WorldConnect: Some Noteworthy Southern Genealogies
8 - Ann Beason Gahan.
.
....and then to include This Conversation....
.
From: WELBORN Marvin
Date: January 5, 2009 6:14:49 PM EST
Subject: Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of MD
.
....a conversation...
.
Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of MD
GordonBonnet29 Posted: 6 Jul 2007 7:29AMSurnames: Welborn, Wilbourne, Stookes
Hi...
I just bumped into a mysterious bit of information about my ancestor, Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of Maryland, who m. Elizabeth ___. The site states that Edward was born in England in 1682, his wife was Elizabeth Stookes, and that he was the son of Edward Welborn and Alse ___ who lived in Chester Co, PA (where the elder Edward allegedly died in 1701).
Does anyone know if this information has any documentation at all? I've never seen any hard evidence of this, but if it's correct, it adds another generation to what I have and gets me back to England.
Can anyone help?
cheers,
Gordon Bonnet
Trumansburg NY
.
Re: Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of MD
tinkwelborn1 Posted: 3 Jan 2009 9:46PMSurnames:
It would get All of Us descended from Edward Wilbourne back to England.
I've seen similar info, but I haven't seen any verifiable documentation -- only citations to other family trees. Until we have some factual stuff, we should take this as clues.
Marvin Loyd Welborn (purportedly 7th great-grandchild of Mr. Wilbourne).
.
Re: Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of MD
Chemteach60 Posted: 5 Jan 2009 4:30PM Surnames:
Edward Wilbourn born c 1655 died between 24 June 1730 and 8 September 1731 in St. George Parish, Baltimore County, Maryland.
He signed his Will on 24 January 1729 and Bond was posted for settlement Edward Wilbourn Will--signed 24 June 1730. Names wife, Elizabeth. The administrated bond was posted 8 September 1731 by Thomas Wilbourne with Thomas Mitchell. The widow, Elizabeth, having given administration in favor of her son Thomas Mitchell. The deceased named: Thomas, William, Anne and Elizabeth .n 8 September 1731.
Edward married Elizabeth [Mitchell]--her maiden name may have been DeMoss...she had son, Thomas Mitchell when she married Edward. The four children of Edward are named above.
William was born 21 January 1705 and married Ann Crabtree. I descend from their son, William who married Hepzabeth Stearns. This William was born in St. George Parish, Baltimore County, Maryland and died 24 august 1791 in Wilkes County, Georgia. He sojourned for a period of time in North Carolina and his son, General James Wellborn, remained in North Carolina and is buried in Wilkes County, near the town of Wilkesboro on the "home plantation property" ...his gravesite and family cemetery destroyed by development....James's wife, Rebecca Montgomery Wellborn is buried in Marshall County, Mississippi.
Hope this helps clarify information on this family.
The information you stated does not appear to agree with my documented evidence.
.
Re: Edward Welborn/Wilbourne of MD
GordonBonnet29 Posted: 5 Jan 2009 4:46PMSurnames: Wilbourne, Welborn, Mitchell, Teague
I agree that this information doesn't jibe with what I found; in the intervening years I've found nothing that supports what was on that website, so I suspect it was incorrect. I still don't know what its source was.
What evidence do you have that suggests that Elizabeth was a DeMoss?
While I'm on the subject of Elizabeth, I have a question (actually a series of questions) about her. You seem to have researched the family extensively, so I'm curious as to what you'll think.
The usual way of assembling Edward Wilbourne's family is that he lived in Chester Co., PA until some time after 1707, the year in which he is on record as having gotten in trouble with the law in Chester Co; after that he came to Harford (then Baltimore County, bought some land, had a prosperous blacksmith business and died there in 1731. As you state, he married Elizabeth ___, widow of a Mitchell; she'd had one known child, Thomas Mitchell, by her first husband. (This relationship is proven by a document in which the administration of the estate is relinquished by Elizabeth to "her sons Thomas Welborn and Thomas Mitchell;" and this Thomas Mitchell is usually identified as the Thomas Mitchell who married Ann Teague, about whom more below.)
The problem is, the dates don't add up; or else I'm not seeing something clearly here. The Thomas Mitchell who m. Ann Teague, who is supposedly Elizabeth's son, was in Harford County by 1700 (by his own statement); this is confirmed by the fact that he's on the tax lists for Spesutia Hundred in 1703. He is on record as having stated his age in 1730 (he said he was 46), allowing us to calculate his birth year as 1684. Therefore, in 1700, the year he came to Harford Co., he was 16 years old and presumably was accompanied by his parents (or his mother, if she was already a widow).
Now, here's the rub. Elizabeth and Thomas Wilbourne, eldest children of Edward, were born ca. 1700 and ca. 1702, respectively. (These are approximate dates but can't be off by much, as the two were _documented_ as married in 1721 and 1723, respectively.) This requires Elizabeth to be in two places at once -- in Chester County PA, where Edward was still living at the time, and in Harford County with her only son by her first marriage, Thomas Mitchell.
You might argue that Thomas, being at that point an older teenager, would have been capable of living on his own, or was living with relatives, and that his mother could well have been back in Chester County with her second husband. However, that's not the only problem. Thomas Mitchell was born in 1684. This means that Elizabeth was born in 1664 at the latest. Edward Wilbourne's youngest child, William, has a documented birthdate of 1712. At that point, Elizabeth, Thomas Mitchell's mother, would have been _at the youngest_ 48 years old! It's not impossible, but it certainly would be unusual.
All of this is leading me to believe that there were multiple marriages here, but whatever I do, I can't seem to make the pieces fit.
Here's what we know:
1) Thomas Mitchell (b. 1684) and Thomas Wilbourne (b. 1702) were half-brothers, both children of Elizabeth (__) (Mitchell) Wilbourne. Elizabeth was still alive in 1731 when she relinquished administration of her husband's estate to these two sons.
2) Edward Wilbourne is documented as living in Chester County until 1707. His first mention in Harford County is in 1719.
3) Thomas Mitchell made a statement of his age and the number of years he'd lived in Harford County. His birth year (1684) is calculated from that statement, and if it's off, it's only by a year or two. His year of moving to Maryland, from that document, is 1700, and this is substantiated by his appearance on the Spesutia Hundred tax lists in 1703.
4) There is a large gap between the births of Edward Wilbourne's two oldest children (Elizabeth (1700) and Thomas (1702)) and his two youngest (Ann (1711) and William (1712)). This may not mean anything, but makes me suspicious of a second marriage. But if so, how could Thomas' mother Elizabeth still be alive in 1731? Divorce was rare enough in those days that it surely would have shown up in the records.
The only other possibilities I can think of is that (1) the Thomas Mitchell who received administration from Elizabeth Wilbourne wasn't the same Thomas b. ca. 1684. But I don't really see any other Thomas in Harford County that it could have been! Or (2) the Edward Wilbourne in Chester County isn't the same man as the Edward Wilbourne who settled in Harford County (maybe they were father/son?).
Can you help with this confusion? I suspect there's something I'm not seeing clearly here, and maybe other eyes will be able to discern what's going on.
cheers,
Gordon Bonnet
Trumansburg NY
.
Best regards,
Marvin Loyd Welborn
http://newsarch.rootsweb.com/th/read/WELBORN/2009-01/1231470144
.
Author: chemteach
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.welborn/385.1.1.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
I do not believe the Edward in Chester County [the one who got in trouble] is the same Edward in Maryland.
Several of us researching this line several years ago came to that conclusion due to the dates, etc.
.
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2009 21:46:20 -0000
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Author: GordonBonnet29
Surnames: Wilbourne, Welborn, Mitchell, Teague
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.welborn/385.1.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
.
I agree that this information doesn't jibe with what I found; in the intervening years I've found nothing that supports what was on that website, so I suspect it was incorrect. I still don't know what its source was.
.
What evidence do you have that suggests that Elizabeth was a DeMoss?
.
While I'm on the subject of Elizabeth, I have a question (actually a series of questions) about her. You seem to have researched the family extensively, so I'm curious as to what you'll think.
.
The usual way of assembling Edward Wilbourne's family is that he lived in Chester Co., PA until some time after 1707, the year in which he is on record as having gotten in trouble with the law in Chester Co; after that he came to Harford (then Baltimore) County, bought some land, had a prosperous blacksmith business and died there in 1731. As you state, he married Elizabeth ___, widow of a Mitchell; she'd had one known child, Thomas Mitchell, by her first husband. (This relationship is proven by a document in which the administration of the estate is relinquished by Elizabeth to "her sons Thomas Welborn and Thomas Mitchell;" and this Thomas Mitchell is usually identified as the Thomas Mitchell who married Ann Teague, about whom more below.)
.
The problem is, the dates don't add up; or else I'm not seeing something clearly here. The Thomas Mitchell who m. Ann Teague, who is supposedly Elizabeth's son, was in Harford County by 1700 (by his own statement); this is confirmed by the fact that he's on the tax lists for Spesutia Hundred in 1703. He is on record as having stated his age in 1730 (he said he was 46), allowing us to calculate his birth year as 1684. Therefore, in 1700, the year he came to Harford Co., he was 16 years old and presumably was accompanied by his parents (or his mother, if she was already a widow).
.
Now, here's the rub. Elizabeth and Thomas Wilbourne, eldest children of Edward, were born ca. 1700 and ca. 1702, respectively. (These are approximate dates but can't be off by much, as the two were _documented_ as married in 1721 and 1723, respectively.) This requires Elizabeth to be in two places at once -- in Chester County PA, where Edward was still living at the time, and in Harford County with her only son by her first marriage, Thomas Mitchell.
.
You might argue that Thomas, being at that point an older teenager, would have been capable of living on his own, or was living with relatives, and that his mother could well have been back in Chester County with her second husband. However, that's not the only problem. Thomas Mitchell was born in 1684. This means that Elizabeth was born in 1664 at the latest. Edward Wilbourne's youngest child, William, has a documented birthdate of 1712. At that point, Elizabeth, Thomas Mitchell's mother, would have been _at the youngest_ 48 years old! It's not impossible, but it certainly would be unusual.
.
All of this is leading me to believe that there were multiple marriages here, but whatever I do, I can't seem to make the pieces fit. Here's what we know:
.
1) Thomas Mitchell (b. 1684) and Thomas Wilbourne (b. 1702) were half-brothers, both children of Elizabeth (__) (Mitchell) Wilbourne. Elizabeth was still alive in 1731 when she relinquished administration of her husband's estate to these two sons.
.
2) Edward Wilbourne is documented as living in Chester County until 1707. His first mention in Harford County is in 1719.
.
3) Thomas Mitchell made a statement of his age and the number of years he'd lived in Harford County. His birth year (1684) is calculated from that statement, and if it's off, it's only by a year or two. His year of moving to Maryland, from that document, is 1700, and this is substantiated by his appearance on the Spesutia Hundred tax lists in 1703.
.
4) There is a large gap between the births of Edward Wilbourne's two oldest children (Elizabeth (1700) and Thomas (1702)) and his two youngest (Ann (1711) and William (1712)). This may not mean anything, but makes me suspicious of a second marriage. But if so, how could Thomas' mother Elizabeth still be alive in 1731? Divorce was rare enough in those days that it surely would have shown up in the records.
.
The only other possibilities I can think of is that (1) the Thomas Mitchell who received administration from Elizabeth Wilbourne wasn't the same Thomas b. ca. 1684. But I don't really see any other Thomas in Harford County that it could have been! Or (2) the Edward Wilbourne in Chester County isn't the same man as the Edward Wilbourne who settled in Harford County (maybe they were father/son?).
Can you help with this confusion? I suspect there's something I'm not seeing clearly here, and maybe other eyes will be able to discern what's going on.
cheers,
Gordon Bonnet
Trumansburg NY
.
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2009 21:30:41 -0000
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Author: xxRebecca60owens
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.welborn/385.1.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
Edward Wilbourn born c 1655 died between 24 June 1730 and 8 September 1731 in St. George Parish, Baltimore County, Maryland.
He signed his Will on 24 January 1729 and Bond was posted for settlement Edward Wilbourn Will--signed 24 June 1730. Names wife, Elizabeth. The administrated bond was posted 8 September 1731 by Thomas Wilbourne with Thomas Mitchell. The widow, Elizabeth having given administration in favor of her son Thomas Mitchell. The deceased named: Thomas, William, Anne and Elizabeth.n 8 September 1731.
Edward married Elizabeth [Mitchell]--her maiden name may have been DeMoss...she had son, Thomas Mitchell when she married Edward. The four children of Edward are named above.
William was born 21 January 1705 and married Ann Crabtree. I descend from their son, William who married Hepzabeth Stearns. This William was born in St. George Parish, Baltimore County, Maryland and died 24 august 1791 in wilkes County, Georgia. He sojourned for a period of time in North Carolina and his son, General James Wellborn, remained in North Carolina and is buried in Wilkes County, near the town of Wilkesboro on the "home plantation property"...his gravesite and family cemetery destroyed by development....James's wife, Rebecca Montgomery Wellborn is buried in Marshall County, Mississippi.
Hope this helps clarify information on this family.
The information you stated does not appear to agree with my documented evidence.
.
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2009 02:46:01 -0000
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list.
Author: tinkwelborn1
Surnames:
Classification: queries
Message Board URL:
http://boards.rootsweb.com/surnames.welborn/385.1/mb.ashx
Message Board Post:
It would get All of Us descended from Edward Wilbourne back to England.
I've seen similar info, but I haven't seen any verifiable documentation -- only citations to other family trees. Until we have some factual stuff, we should take this as clues.
Marvin Loyd Welborn (purportedly 7th great-grandchild of Mr. Wilbourne).
========================================================

http://www.familycentral.net/index/family.cfm?ref1=5396:3968&ref2=5396:3995
Edward Welborn - Elizabeth Mitchell
.
Edward Welborn was born at of Maryland or Delaware Abt 1675. His parents were Edward Welborn and Mrs. Edward Welborn.
He married Elizabeth Mitchell Abt 1699 . Elizabeth Mitchell was christened at Woodbury, Litchfield, Connecticut Nov 1683 daughter of John Mitchell and Elizabeth Knell .
They were the parents of 4 children:
1. Thomas Welborn born 1701.
2. Elizabeth Welborn born Abt 1703.
3. Ann Welborn born Abt 1710.
4. William Welborn born 21 Jan 1713.
Edward Welborn died 24 Jul 1731 at St George's Parish, Baltimore, Maryland .
.
Edward WELBORN (1ST)
Birth: Abt 1650 of England
Death: Bef 16 Feb 1701 Birmingham, Chester, Pennsylvania
Marriage: Abt 1674 of England
CHILDREN:
1 Edward WELBORN
Birth: Abt 1675 of Maryland or Delaware
Death: 24 Jul 1731 St George's Parish, Baltimore, Maryland
======================================================
.
Edward WELBORN (2ND)
Birth: Abt 1675 of Maryland or Delaware
Death: 24 Jul 1731 St George's Parish, Baltimore, Maryland
Marriage: Abt 1699
Father: Edward WELBORN
Mother: Mrs. Edward WELBORN
Spouse: Elizabeth MITCHELL
Birth: ?
Chr: Nov 1683 Woodbury, Litchfield, Connecticut
Death: 1731/48 of Baltimore, Maryland
Father: John MITCHELL
Mother: Elizabeth KNELL
Children:
1 Thomas WELBORN
Birth: 1701 Birmingham, Chester, Pennsylvania
Death: 2 Mar 1746 Prince George's, Maryland
Martha Margaret HAYNES¬â€ WELBORN
Marr: 7 Jan 1723 Lancaster, Virginia
2 Elizabeth WELBORN WOOD
Birth: Abt 1703 Birmingham, Chester, Pennsylvania
Death: ?
Isaac WOOD¬â€ 
Marr: Abt 1721 of Baltimore, Maryland¬â€ 
3 Ann WELBORN RYAN
Birth: Abt 1710 Baltimore, Maryland
Death: ?
John RYAN¬â€ 
Marr: 1731/48 of Baltimore, Maryland¬â€ 
4 William WELBORN
Birth: 21 Jan 1713 Baltimore, Maryland
Death: Aft 17 Apr 1782 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Ann CRABTREE¬â€ WELBORN
Marr: 21 Jan 1731 St George's Parish, Baltimore,¬â€ 
========================================================
.
http://www.familycentral.net/index/family.cfm?ref1=5396:4484&ref2=5396:4483
William Welborn - Ann Crabtree
.
William Welborn - Ann Crabtree

William Welborn was born at Baltimore, Maryland 21 Jan 1713. His parents were Edward Welborn and Elizabeth Mitchell.
He married Ann Crabtree 21 Jan 1731 at St George's Parish, Baltimore, Maryland .
Ann Crabtree was born at Kingsville, Baltimore, Maryland 15 Jan 1714 daughter of William Crabtree and Jane E. Halstead .
They were the parents of 7 children:
1.Jane Sellars Welborn born 28 Jan 1732.
2.William Welborn born 25 Oct 1734.
3.James Welborn born 18 Aug 1736.
4.Isaac Welborn born Abt 1738.
5.Nancy Anna Welborn born Abt 1741.
6.Thomas Welborn born Abt 1745.
7.John Welborn born 7 Nov 1754.
.
William Welborn died Aft 17 Apr 1782 at Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina .
Ann Crabtree died Aft 1755 at Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina .
CHILDREN:
1 Jane Sellars WELBORN SPURGEON
Birth: 28 Jan 1732 Deer Creek, Baltimore, Maryland
Death: 3 Aug 1803
William Albertus SPURGEON¬â€ 
Marr: Jul 1753 of North Carolina¬â€ 
2 William WELBORN
Birth: 25 Oct 1734 Deer Creek, Baltimore, Maryland
Death: 11 Feb 1792 Wilkes, Georgia
Hepzibah STEARNS¬â€ 
Marr: 1757 Wilkes, Georgia¬â€ 
3 James WELBORN
Birth: 18 Aug 1736 Deer Creek, Baltimore, Maryland
Death: 11 Aug 1811 Barren, Kentucky
Mary Isabella TEAGUE¬â€ WELBORN
Marr: Abt 1756 Barren, Kentucky¬â€ 
4 Isaac WELBORN
Birth: Abt 1738 of Prince George's, Maryland
Death: 1798
Marr: ?
5 Nancy Anna WELBORN HARMAN
Birth: Abt 1741 of Prince George's, Maryland
Death: ?
Heinrich HARMAN¬â€ 
Marr: Abt 1759 of Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North¬â€ 
6 Thomas WELBORN
Birth: Abt 1745 Prince George's, Maryland
Death: ?
Marr: ?
7 John WELBORN
Birth: 7 Nov 1754 Frederick, Maryland
Death: ?
Marr: ?
==================================================
.
James Welborn - Mary Isabella Teague
http://www.familycentral.net/index/family.cfm?ref1=5396:4481&ref2=5396:4482
James Welborn was born at Deer Creek, Baltimore, Maryland 18 Aug 1736. His parents were William Welborn and Ann Crabtree.
He married Mary Isabella Teague Abt 1756 at Barren, Kentucky. Mary Isabella Teague was born at Frederick, Virginia 1740/42 .
They were the parents of 14 children:
1.Moses Welborn born 4 Jul 1759.
2.Aaron Welborn born 13 Oct 1760.
3.William Welborn born 28 Sep 1761.
4.James Welborn born 17 Aug 1764.
5.Isaac Welborn born 1766.
6.Gideon Welborn born 1767.
7.Elizabeth Anna Welborn born 1 Feb 1769.
8.Samuel Welborn born 1770.
9.Mary Ruth Welborn born 1774.
10.Anna Welborn born 1 Nov 1776.
11.Caroline Wilborn born 1 Nov 1776.
12.Joshua Welborn born 6 Sep 1780.
13.Moses Welborn born 4 Jul 1783.
14.John W. Welborn born 4 Sep 1786.
.
James Welborn died 11 Aug 1811 at Barren, Kentucky .
Mary Isabella Teague died 1821 at Monroe, Kentucky .
.
James WELBORN
Birth: 18 Aug 1736 Deer Creek, Baltimore, Maryland
Death: 11 Aug 1811 Barren, Kentucky
Marriage: Abt 1756 Barren, Kentucky
Father: William WELBORN
Mother: Ann CRABTREE
Mary Isabella TEAGUE WELBORN
Birth: 1740/42 Frederick, Virginia
Death: 1821 Monroe, Kentucky
CHILDREN:
1 Moses WELBORN
Birth: 4 Jul 1759 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: Nov 1782 Surrey, North Carolina
Martha TEAGUE¬â€  WELBORN
Marr: Abt 1777 Rowan, North Carolina¬â€ 
2 Aaron WELBORN
Birth: 13 Oct 1760 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 6 Oct 1843 Anderson, South Carolina
Elizabeth YOUNGER¬â€  WELBORN (sister of Rebecca Elizabeth YOUNGER¬â€  WELBORN)
Marr: Abt 1781/82 Rowan, North Carolina¬â€ 
3 William WELBORN
Birth: 28 Sep 1761 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 28 Dec 1841 Guilford, North Carolina
Rachel PAYNE¬â€  WELBORN
Marr: 7 Nov 1807 Rowan, North Carolina¬â€ 
4 James WELBORN
Birth: 17 Aug 1764 Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 2 Aug 1841 (wd), St Francois, Missouri
Rebecca Elizabeth YOUNGER¬â€  WELBORN (sister of Elizabeth YOUNGER¬â€  WELBORN)
Marr: 1785 Chatham, North Carolina¬â€ 
5 Isaac WELBORN
Birth: 1766 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 1854 St Francois, Missouri
Sarah TEAGUE¬â€  WELBORN
Marr: Abt 1790 Rowan, North Carolina¬â€ 
6 Gideon WELBORN
(ancestor of Ann B. Gahan)
Birth: 1767 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 18 May 1818 Barren, Kentucky
Tabitha ¬â€  WELBORN
Marr: Abt 1789
7 Elizabeth Anna WELBORN PICKETT
Birth: 1 Feb 1769 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 1843 Davidson, North Carolina
William PICKETT¬â€ 
Marr: 5 Apr 1792 Rowan, North Carolina¬â€ 
8 Samuel WELBORN
Birth: 1770 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: Jul 1812 of Barren, Kentucky
Margaret BURKE¬â€  WELBORN
Marr: 14 Dec 1797 Logan, Kentucky¬â€ 
9 Mary Ruth WELBORN WILSON
(ancestor of Barrack Obama)
Birth: 1774 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: Aft 1840 Coffeen, Montgomery, Illinois
John WILSON¬â€ 
Marr: Abt 1795 North Carolina¬â€ 
10 Anna WELBORN
Birth: 1 Nov 1776 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 27 Nov 1865 Wilson Creek, Grayson, Illinois
Marr: ?
11 Caroline WILBORN PERKINS
Birth: 1 Nov 1776 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 27 Nov 1865
PERKINS¬â€ 
Marr: North Carolina¬â€ 
12 Joshua WELBORN
Birth: 6 Sep 1780 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: Bef 1857/60 Monroe, Kentucky
Rachel SMITH¬â€  WELBORN
Marr: 1798/1800 Stokes, North Carolina¬â€ 
13 Moses WELBORN
Birth: 4 Jul 1783 Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 11 Jun 1851 Owensville, Gibson, Indiana
Deborah CHIPMAN¬â€ WELBORN
Marr: 25 Jan 1807 Rowan, North Carolina¬â€ 
14 John W. WELBORN
Birth: 4 Sep 1786
Abbotts Creek, Rowan, North Carolina
Death: 28 Jul 1824 Davidson, North Carolina
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Early Welborn Family History
Our Welborn family heritage has its known roots in the early history of Maryland back into the 1600s.¬â€  Courtesy of Ann Beason Gahan, (August 6, 1923 - December 2, 2015) we know as far back as Edward Wilbourne, whose will contained this spelling of the family name.¬â€  He was born ca 1660.¬â€  Some records suggest he was born in Maryland. ¬â€  Others suggest he was born in England.¬â€  He is believed to have died 24 June 1731 in St. George's Parish, Baltimore Co., Maryland, where his will was probated.
Edward's son, William, was born 21 January 1712/1713 in Harford Co., Maryland.¬â€  William married Ann Crabtree 21 January 1730/1731 in St. George's Parish, Baltimore Co., Maryland. ¬â€  He died aft. 1772 in Rowan Co., North Carolina.
William's son, James, was born 18 August 1736 in St. George's Parish, Baltimore Co., Maryland.¬â€  James was married to Mary Isabella Teague ca 1756 in Rowan Co., North Carolina.¬â€  Courtesy of Ann's Gahan's research into the records of Barren Co., Kentucky, we know James wrote his will on 13 Feb 1811; on 27 Apr 1811, he witnessed a land conveyance of property to James Swift, grandson, mentioned in his will.¬â€  His will was probated at the Aug 1811 court.¬â€  So, James passed away in Barren Co., Kentucky, sometime between 27 Apr and Aug 1811.¬â€  [many people incorrectly use the probate record as his date of death.]
At this time, we know very little about these early Welborn families.
James' son, Moses II, was born 4 July 1783 in Rowan Co., North Carolina.¬â€  As was fairly common in those days, Moses is believed to have been named for an older brother, who had died shortly before his birth.¬â€  Thus, we have Moses and Moses II as sons of James Welborn.¬â€  Moses married Deborah Chipman, daughter of John Chipman and Mary Harris, 25 January 1807 in Guilford Co., North Carolina.¬â€  In marrying into the Chipman family, we begin to find more information about their history.
The following insight comes from Judi Reed, a Chipman descendant, who graciously posted her research information on World Connect [one of the author's favorite Web sites]:
.
Excerpt from The Chipman Family book:
.
John Chipman, elder son of Perez Chipman was born in Kent Co., Del.,March 24, 1761; died April 19, 1834. Moved to North Carolina about 1785. A farmer, living at Deep River, N.C. He was a man of prominence and considerable wealth. In 1784, he married Mary Harris, who died July 21, 1834.
.
Source: GUILFORD COUNTY--------The Nicholites of Jamestown and Deep River by Jack Perdue
context taken from pages 80 - 83
.
In the 1770's there was a migration of people into the Deep River section of Guilford County, these people belonged to an obscure sect known as Nicholites. Prominent families in the area who were Nicholites were the Chipmans, Charleses, Horneys, Standleys, and the Wheelers.
.
The Nicholite movement was founded by Joseph Nichols about 1760. He lived in Delaware near the Maryland border. Nichols had not been a religious person and spent his free time partying with his friends. During one of these escapades, one of Nichols' best friends became ill and died. This experience so shook Nichols that he began preaching to his friends of the light that he had come to believe shown in the understanding of man and to obedience to an "Inward Director." The area in which Nichols and his friends lived was populated by Quakers. This movement was greatly influenced by and had many similarities to the Society of Friends. They may have taken a stand against slavery even before the Quakers did. They did not believe in paid ministers; all marriages, births, and deaths were to be recorded. Marriages were performed in the same manner as Quakers and marriage to a non-Nicholite would cause one to be disowned from the meeting. Nicholites, like Quakers, did not believe in fighting and suffered many hardships because of this believe during the Revolution. Nicholites even referred to each other as Friends and were often called by others, "New Quakers".
.
One major difference between Quakers and Nicholites was evident however. While Quakers were great believers in education and operated schools for that purpose, Nicholites saw evil in too much education and seldom had their children taught beyond the ability to read and write. Many of them lacked even this basic education.
.
Nicholites, apparently influenced by Quakers John Woolman, believed in austerity and plainness to the extreme. Following the example and the preaching of their founder, they were exceedingly plain in dress. The women wore bonnets and the men, hats of undyed or natural, white wool. They objected to dyeing cloth. They did not even approve of mixing colors which were natural, such as black and while wool or black wool and cotton; and they refused to wear black leather or to blacken their shoes. This austerity extended to their logic in all aspects of life. They refused to grow flowers in their gardens or around their houses as ornamentation, and they preferred the simplest type of furniture--stools and benches were used rather than chairs. Their usual mode of travel was by foot, but when the distance was great, they went on horseback or in light carts.
.
The Nicholites of the Delaware began to decline and merge into the Society of Friends in the 1790's and by 1800 the movement for all intents and purposes, no longer existed. It probably lasted about a decade longer in the Deep River-Jamestown area of Guilford County, North Carolina. Shortly after the outbreak of the American Revolution, a group of Nicholites largely from Delaware, migrated to North Carolina where they settled in the southwestern corner of Guilford County.
Since we have no recorded history, to date, from which to draw, we can only speculate about the lives of Moses and Deborah.¬â€  We do not know if Deborah was still a practicing Nicholite upon her marriage to Moses.¬â€  We don't know if Moses subscribed to these doctrines either.¬â€  From this history, we see that the "movement" was declining in practice, so perhaps it had little effect on this couple, although it certainly must have on Deborah's father, John.¬â€  We do know they did not remain in the area, but emigrated to Indiana.¬â€  Before leaving, however, they had a number of children, among them our John Chipman Welborn, the firstborn of the family, born 4 January 1808 in Rowan Co., North Carolina.
We have the following brief insight into the Welborn family, which emigrated to Posey county, Indiana, courtesy of Marlys from Missouri, a distant Welborn cousin.¬â€  This is a biographical sketch of Joseph F. Welborn, younger brother of our John:
.
JOSEPH F. WELBORN
.
"Among the representative men of Posey County not one has identified himself with its material growth more creditably than Joseph F. Welborn; not one is there who has labored with greater zeal to the end that the County might reach a position second to none in the great State of Indiana; not one is there who can lay claim to a more emulative spirit of public improvement than he. Indeed, we feel that he is entitled to a position that has been reached by few, when we consider the extent of his sacrifices of time and contributions of money to promote the best interests of his fellow citizens. He has always kept in view the prosperity of the County and has been a public bene-factor in every sense. Mr. Welborn was born in Guilford County, North Carolina, August 6, 1818, and in I833 emigrated with his family to Mt. Vernon, where his father for five years worked at the trade of wagon-making, while his son Joseph cultivated a small farm in the vicinity until he was twentv-one years of age, when he removed to Robinson Township and engaged in stock-raising and farming with eminent success. He paid particular attention to fine stock and acquired the reputation of being an excellent judge of horses and hogs. In 1844 he married Miss Nancy Mills, whose father, David Mills, ¬â€ was one of the early settlers of the County and who was a man of considerable prominence in his day. Her brother, Felix Mills, was ¬â€ elected Sheriff several times and also filled the position of County~: Treasurer, discharging the duties of those offices with great efficiency and rare ability. In 1856 Mr. Welborn leased his farm and removed to Mt. Vernon, where he associated hinself with the late Wm. J. Lowry, with whom he engaged very extensively in the grain and pork-packing¬â€  business until 1872, when the firm was dissolved by mutual consent. In that year, in company with Charles A. Parke, E. T. Sullivan, and S. M. Leavenworth, he organized the Mt. Vernon Banking Company, of which he was chosen President, from which he retired 1877, leaving the institution on the highway of prosperity. In 1858, he was elected County Treasurer for two years, during which time he showed much executive ability and great business capacity. He was prominently identified with the organization of the Mt. Vernon and Grayville Railroad Company, of which he was President until its consolidation with the Chicago and Illinois Southern Railway Company. In 1876 the nominee of the Democratic County Convention for Representative in the Legislature and was elected by a handsome majority the regular election of that year. He served in the capacity of Legislator two years with honor to himself and credit to the County. He was for fifteen years Chairman of the Democratic Central Committee,and was also a Delegate to the National Convention held Chicago, in 1864, when George B. McClellan was nominated as the Democratic candidate for the Presidency of the United States. In 1881, he the actively participated in securing an appropriation of money and the right of way to aid the E. & T. H. R. R. in the¬â€  construction its line through the County to Mt. Vernon, contributing not only time, but money for the success of the movement. A half century hence the name of Joseph F. Welborn will be mentioned with a feeling of greater veneration than it is now perhaps. It will be written in connection with emulative deeds and acts which perpetuate memory through the ages.
.
[Note: From the book, "History and Directory of Posey County 1882"¬â€  by W. P. Leonard]
We have the following additional supporting information about the Welborn family's move to Indiana, courtesy of Joe Welborn, descendant of our John's brother, James Henry Welborn:
.
"... story about Moses and family coming from North Carolina to Mount Vernon, Posey County Indiana to build wagons. He came at the request of his cousins Jesse Y and his brother John Welborn who founded a church and a farm near the village of Upton. Jesse Y came by way of Hopkinsville Kentucky where he married Elizabeth Warren Crabtree on 23 Aug 1814. JY Welborn was elected to the state legislature in 1828. He and his wife had 9 children, William, James, Enoch, were doctors, George Y. was a poet and author and 2 daughters, one of whom was the mother of Lt. Col. William Walker and Major Jesse Walker in the Civil War.
This story about how Moses came to move to Indiana is further supported by some information written by a Maj. G. W. Kimball, coming to us courtesy of Ann Beason Gahan:
.
I do not know how many years ago, Major G. W. Kimball wrote quite an extensive article on Jesse York Welborn in which he stated:
.
"At some time during the residence of Jesse and John Welborn in and about Mt. Vernon, Jesse Y. interceded with one of the name Moses Welborn, then back in North Carolina, to come to this community on the Ohio River to build wagons much needed by the settlers, the type being North Carolina 'Pararie Schooner,' ribbed on the sides, high in front and rear ends. ¬â€  Arrangements were made and Moses Welborn came, with his family.¬â€  A log house, cabin fashion, stood on the lot opposite the present¬â€  Elks Home and the Masonic Hall, known as the William Fogas property, at Fourth and Walnut streets.¬â€  At some time in the career of the Moses Welborn wagon shop, he took sick from so-called 'Milk-Sick' it is stated by one of the early biographers.¬â€  The disease 'Milk-Sick' was from an unknown cause among the community at large and spread well into neighboring localities.¬â€  Here Moses Welborn died, leaving his widowed wife, who mourned sadly at the untimely fate of her husband.
.
As she wept bitterly her young child of tender age leaned upon the widowed mother and exclaimed 'Don't cry, mother, I will take care of you,' and he did.¬â€  That ¬â€  determined lad grew up to be the Honorable Joseph F. Welborn, and became the owner of that property and spent his life on that spot of ground upon which was built a magnificent home for that day, besides which he owned much other valuable property.¬â€  From the Moses Welborn branch of the Welborn family, many distinctive men have come to the front in Southwestern, Indiana, whose origin was from the sturdy pioneers from North Carolina, whose destinies with the vision of Jesse Y. Welborn in the Welborn migrations early in the century, to the Territory.¬â€  There has been no attempt to copy from any of the early history of the men who figured as pioneers, but rather from personal knowledge not hitherto written of the subject and subjects of this sketch of some of this ¬â€  distinctive family characteristics."
It is Ann's belief that our Welborn family's emigration to Indiana passed through Kentucky, where his mother lived in Barren county.
Whatever the fate of the extended Welborn family in Indiana, our Moses passed away, of the aforementioned "milk-sick" disease, on 11 July 1851 in Owensville, Gibson Co., Indiana.¬â€  His son and our ancestor, John, had already left the area.¬â€  We find him on the first "expanded" version of the U. S. Census records on 28 October 1850 in Lafayette Co., Missouri.¬â€  John's mother, Deborah, upon losing her husband, Moses, apparently moved to join her firstborn son and his family, as they were in Texas by 1860 and she died there at Pilot Point, Denton Co. on 17 September 1871.
To continue with our Welborn family history, please follow the links to the biographical information on our ancestor, Moses Welborn's son, John Chipman.
Author: Roger L. Roberson, Jr. ¬â€  ·Ä¢ ¬â€  Last updated: 11 January 2003
http://www.robtyn.us/genealogy/welborn/welborn_early_family.htm
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St. George Parish Register, Baltimore, Maryland indicates Edward Wilbourn
died June the 24th 1731. Page 265, f.101.

Gene Welborn's Welborns and Related Families, page 5, notes: "Edward
Welborn was in Maryland in the late 1600s and is the first Welborn that
can be tied to the Welborns that settled in the Pendleton District, South
Carolina, in the late 1700s. The first known record of Edward Welborn is
his will in 1730 and the record of his death, June 21, 1731, as recorded
in the St. George's Parish Register, Baltimore County, Maryland.

980513, Ruckersville, VA. Marvin Welborn. The following is extracted
from the opus of Mrs. Ann Beason Gahan, Comp., "Wilbourn Genealogy," 22
July 1986, revised 22 March 1993. N.p. She has written: Edward Wilborn
(d. 24 Jan. 1730/31, St. Georges Parish Reg., p. 265 of transcript, but
p. 101 of "original" register in Hall of Records, Annapolis).2 SOUR S34

WILL OF EDWARD WILBOURNE
(Colonial Wills, Baltimore County, MD, 1730, 20-154)

In the Name of God Amen the twenty-third of January Anno Domini one
Thousand seven hundred and Thirty: Thirty one, I Edward Wilbourne of
Baltimore County in the province of Maryland being Sick and weak in body
but of shound and perfect Memory thanks be to Almight God for so great a
blessing do for the better Settlement of Temporal affairs when it may
please God to call me hence make and publish this my las will and
Testament in manner following Nigh.

Imprimis, I give unto my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne my dwelling
plantation with as much land as shall amount to Fifty Acres during her
natural life and after her docoase, I give the same to my daughter Ann
Wilbourne her her heirs and assigns forever.

Item: I give unto my son William Wilbourne the remaining part of my Land
him his heirs and assigns forever.

Item: My will is that the great Swamp which runs through my land be a
dovision between my Wife's part of the land and my son William's part.

Item: I give unto my son Thomas Wilbourne one year old Steer to him and
his heirs forever.

Item: My will is that my son William Wilbourne shall have all my Smiths
Tools provided he first pays my Executor the sum of two Thousand pounds
of Tobacco otherwise the said Tools to be praised with my personall
Estate.

Item: I give unto my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne a Third part of my
clear personall Estate after legacys and all other lawfull demands
against it are discharged.

Item: All the Rest and residue of my personall Estate I give to my three
children namely, Elizabeth Wood, William Wilbourne and Ann Wilbourne to
be equally divided amongst them. Share and Share alike.

Lastly, I confirm and appoint my loving wife Eliza Wilbourne my full and
whole Executer of this my last will and testament in witness whereof I
have hereunto set my hand and seal on day and year first written.

Signed sealed and published in presence of us whose names are
underwritten and enforce thereunto at his request.

Edwad Willbourne (Seal)

his
John X Coale

his
John X Daevley

Michl Webster

Notes on Edward Wilbourne
11:38 PM 12/15/98

Re: Edward Wilbourne/Elizabeth Mitchell

Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 04, 1998 at 02:19:02:
(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)

In Reply to: Re: Edward Wilbourne/Elizabeth Mitchell posted by Marvin
Welborn on December 01, 1998 at 19:50:13:

Edward Wilbourn was in Chester Co., PA and had a land grant there. These
records put him in Chester Co., PA for all the children to be born. All
his records put him there until 1712 when a deed speaks of the "late
Edward Wilbourn" I took this to mean deceased but the archivist said
about 1/2 the time it just meant he moved on which is the case of our
Edward Wilbourn, Blacksmith. In this months The Frontiersmen newsletter
on the Wellborn family I have a 4 page worksheet on Edward Wilbourn with
all his court records from 1699 on. Proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.

On September 8, 1731 in the Baltimore Co., MD probate of the estate
papers of Edward Wilbourn his widow relinquished the administration of
the estate to her SONS THOMAS WILBOURN AND THOMAS MITCHELL. She was a
widow when Edward married her. The Mitchell records can be found with the
Wilbourns in Baltimore Co., MD and on down.

Edward Wibourn was a thief and the county of Chester Co., PA made him
wear a " Roman T" and repay double the cost of the 14 yards of material
he stole and receive 10 lashes on his bare back. 1707 indictment of
grand jury. This original record and others appear in the newsletter.

Edward was a blacksmith and that trade was an appreniced trade so we
should be able to find the name of his father by finding the court record
where his age and father are as all blacksmiths were recorded as being
apprenticed to a blacksmith to learn the trade.

I have reason to believe The maiden name of Elizabeth Mitchell may have
been DeMoss. We need to all check this family out.

The early Brooke family of Prince Georges Co. namely Thomas Brooke, Jr.
and George Frazier fit into the Wilbourn family somehow too.

Edward Wilbourn lived in Birmingham and Concord townships in Chester Co.,
PA before moving to Deer Creek, MD. The very first record of Edward in
MD is August 4, 1719. He was paid from the estate of George Wells for
blacksmith work. There is no court proof of Edward Wilbourn ever having a
1680 landgrant in Baltimore Co., MD. The Patent PL #6 folder 276
Baltimore Co., MD now Harford Co., MD is where you will find the
landgrant. Read it for yourself. It plainly states that he received on
the "22 day of May 1722 " "one hundred acres of Land within our said
Province by virtue of a Warrt." It was " given under our greater seal at
arms this tenth day of July Seventeen hundred and twenty five"

We need to all resort to the court records and stop repeating all the
errors of the hearsay and past assumptions.

Carolyn Wellborn Haskins

http://genforum.familytreemaker.com/welborn/messages/285.html
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Re: Thomas Welbourne, Captain

Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 04, 1998 at 02:51:29:

In Reply to: Re: Thomas Welbourne, Captain posted by Carolyn Wellborn
Haskins on September 25, 1998 at 12:43:47:

Captain Thomas Welburne, of Accomack Co., VA line is a different line
from the Edward Wibourn line of Chester Co., PA/Baltimore Co., MD.
Captain Thomas is not the father of these Wellborns. As in my posting on
the other forum, I will point out that the Accomack Co., VA Welburnes
moved into NC via Northhampton Co., NC and Thomas Welbunre and his wife
Margaret who were there in early 1750's.

Daniel III of Accomack Co., VA and William later move into Halifax Co.,
NC. The deed records state that this Thomas was a gentleman from
Gloucester Co., VA.

The Edward Wilbourn line of MD moved into the Piedmont area of NC by 1754
when the first record there is my Edward Wellborn born circa 1727 already
owns land and is a constable in the Orange Co., Court records. He later
in 1772 has a Royal landgrant in SC and then by 1774 is into GA in what
later became Wilkes Co., GA and dies in Greene Co., GA.

You will find the Edward Wilbourn family in Old Frederick Co., VA now
Berkeley Co., WVA. and in Frederick Co., MD records in 1750's.

Carolyn Wellborn Haskins

http://genforum.familytreemaker.com/welborn/messages/286.html
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WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology

Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 04, 1998 at 22:32:13:

In Reply to: WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology posted by PHIL M WELBORN on
November 26, 1998 at 14:31:33:

The English Version of the Montforts, The Wellesbournes, and the
Hughenden Effigies. "They say that they are 16th century fakes and that
the effigies at the Hughenden Church are crude in extreme. They stand in
the east end of the Chapel. The stones are mounted upright against the
wall and are probably original mediaeval toombstones defaced with the
meaningless heraldry of the Wellesbourne family, and the recumbent
figures are believed to have been placed in the church at the same time
in an attempt to establish a pedigree for the "nouveau riche" family
living in Brands House, which was at that time the Manor House of the
parish. The Wellesbournes, one of whom married a Miss Mountford, claimed
descent from Simon de Montfort, on the grounds that they came originally
from Wellesbourne in Warwickshire, and that this manor was owned by the
sixth son of Earl Simon.

Unfortunately for their claim, Earl Simon had five sons, not six, all of
whom died without issue and one daughter who died in childbirth. The
manor of Wellesbourne was owned by the Montforts de Beaudesert, who are
no relation to Earl Simon.

An alternative claim is that Richard de Wellesbourne said to be an
illegitimate son of Earl Simon (or that Earl Simon was Richard's
illegimate son) was an ancestor of the wealthy Wellesbournes of
Hughenden. Richard is said to have assumed his wife's Coat of Arms on
returning from a crusade. This claim also will not stand examination.
Earl Simon's parentage is well established and quite regular. Earl Simon
was a man of strict morals, most unlikely to have an illegitimate son.
Heraldry is an exact science. A knight cannot change his arms as the
whim takes him.

The third claim made by the Wellesbournes was that Richard was an
illegitimate brother of Earl Simon. If so, the family kept their secret
well for three centuries. The Wellesbourne claim is the only suggestion
we have of the existence of Richard. The main charge on the arms of the
effigies is of a griffin, or in some cases a lion, with a child in its
claws. This device occurs in Italian, but not in English heraldry. It
is thought that the Wellesbournes made their supposed ancestor Richard
into the chief character of one of the popular novels at the time. In
one of these, Sir Isumbras took his wife and three children on a crusade.
At a swollen river Sir Isumbras swam across with on child, but while he
was fetching the second a lion carried off the first. The knight
continued with his planned crossing but a leopard took the second and a
unicorn the third. The knight and his lady

http://genforum.familytreemaker.com/welborn/messages/287.html
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Re: WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology

http://genforum.familytreemaker.com/welborn/messages/304.html
Posted by Carolyn Wellborn Haskins on December 09, 1998 at 06:59:56:

In Reply to: Re: WELBORN_The Origin/Etymology posted by Vikky Wilburn
Anders on December 08, 1998 at 19:25:35:

Hello Vikki,
Please don't think the Welburnes in Virginia were the only Wilbourns in
America in the 1600's. Boston, Mass is full of Welbourns by 1650. So is
Hartford , Conn.

We have all gotten so blinded by the books of half-truths that we are not
searching anymore but depend on the old stories to seek our lineage. I
truly believe we should get beyond Accomack Co., VA and the surrounding
area and research the records. Wonder how many of you have one record in
your files on Thomas of Suffolk Co., MASS or Mercy or any of that family.
Lots, more than in Accomack Co., VA Welbourns. They may have been here
when the Mayflower arrived. All in Mass.

How many of you have searched the Deleware records. Captain Thomas
Welburne of Accomack, William Welburne, and John Welburne, Jonathan
Waterland (who was captain of the ship "Friendship" that Captain Thomas
did business to England with) and Robert Beverly who later was one of the
important men in VA history had a land grant in March 16, 1676/7 in Horre
Kill District. 2531 acres that the chief surveyor changed the names on
and put in his friends names on the survey. Good 'ole Cap't Thomas took
him to court and won. Captain Thomas said in this court that he intended
to bring "some families" in to settle the land. I refer you to "The Duke
of York Record" an authorized transcript from Official Archives of the
State of Delaware 1646 to 1679 printed by the General Assembly of the
State of Delaware. He probably did transport the early Welburnes. A
William Wilbourne owned 25 acres of land in New Norfolk in 1637. Robert
Welbourn was transport by John Bayles in MD in 1662 Matthew Welbourne was
transported by Charles Grimes in 1653. Hugh Welburne appears on the tax
list with Thomas Wilburne in 1675 in Accomack Co., VA. A Thomas and John
Welbourne were transported by Capt Thomas Wilburne in Accomack Co., VA in
1678. We know he did the transporting as he received land on Fox Island
in VA. BUT all this while Mass and Conn is full of Wilbourns that spell
their name like Edward Wilbourn. Hmmm. Let's post their descendants.
Anyone know who Stephen was or John or the rest of them.

Wilbourns had big families and in the Civil War lots of Welbourns in the
Union Army.

Who had them??? Let give ourselves a new years project.

Carolyn Wellborn Haskins2 SOUR S471
3 PAGE http://genforum.familytreemaker.com/welborn/messages/285.html

U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s
NameEdward Willburn
Arrival Year1722
Arrival PlaceMaryland
Primary ImmigrantWillburn, Edward
Source Publication Code1243
AnnotationDate and place of mention in land survey. County and name of land purchased are provided. Original records are contained in Land Office Registers, indexed starting on page vii of the introduction.
Source BibliographyCOLDHAM, PETER WILSON. Settlers Of Maryland 1679 - 1783. Consolidated Edition. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 2002.
Household Members (Name)
Edward Willburn
Source Citation
Place: Maryland; Year: 1722; Page Number: 720
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S. and Canada, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc, 2010.
Original data: Filby, P. William, ed. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2012.
-------------------------

Northamptonshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1532-1812
NameEdward Wilborne
GenderMale
Register TypeBishops Transcripts
Spouse
Elizabeth Wilborne
Child
Edward Wilborne
Source Citation
Northamptonshire Record Office; Northampton, England; Register Type: Bishops Transcripts
Source Information
Ancestry.com. Northamptonshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1532-1812 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: Northamptonshire Anglican Parish Registers and Bishop·Äôs Transcripts. Textual records. Northamptonshire Record Office, Northampton, England.
--------------------------

England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980
NameEdward Welborne
GenderMale
Child
Edward Welborne
Source Information
Ancestry.com. England & Wales, Christening Index, 1530-1980 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2008.
Original data: Genealogical Society of Utah. British Isles Vital Records Index, 2nd Edition. Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, copyright 2002. Used by permission.
--------------------

North Carolina, U.S., Death Certificates, 1909-1976
NameE M Wellborn
GenderMale
Spouse
Frances Wellborn
Child
William S Wellborn
Search for E M True in North Carolina Wills & Probates collection
Source Citation
North Carolina State Archives; Raleigh, North Carolina; North Carolina Death Certificates
Source Information
Ancestry.com. North Carolina, U.S., Death Certificates, 1909-1976 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007.
Original data: North Carolina State Board of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics. North Carolina Death Certificates. Microfilm S.123. Rolls 19-242, 280, 313-682, 1040-1297. North Carolina State Archives, Raleigh, North Carolina.
----------------------

U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current
NameEdward Welborn II
GenderMale
Birth Date1663
Birth PlaceBarrowby, South Kesteven District, Lincolnshire, England
Death Date22 Mar 1722
Death PlaceWest Rasen, West Lindsey District, Lincolnshire, England
CemeterySaint George's Episcopal Church Cemetery
Burial or Cremation PlacePerryman, Harford County, Maryland, United States of America
Has Bio?Y
Children
Edward Welborn
Richard Welborn
URL
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/155426310/edward-welborn
Source Information
Ancestry.com. U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.
Original data: Find a Grave. Find a Grave®. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi.
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England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
NameEdward Wellborn
GenderMale
Baptism Date2 Mar 1662
Baptism PlaceMuston,Leicester,England
Father
Edward Wellborn
Mother
Francis
FHL Film Number0194542 IT 1
Source Information
Ancestry.com. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
------------------------

England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
NameEdward Wellborn
GenderMale
Baptism Date2 Mar 1662
Baptism PlaceMuston,Leicester,England
Father
Edward Wellborn
Mother
Francis
FHL Film Number0194542 IT 1
Source Information
Ancestry.com. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
---------------------------

{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\cocoartf1504\cocoasubrtf810{\fonttbl\f0\fswiss\fcharset0 Helvetica;}{\colortbl;\red255\green255\blue255;}{\*\expandedcolortbl;;}\pard\tx560\tx1120\tx1680\tx2240\tx2800\tx3360\tx3920\tx4480\tx5040\tx5600\tx6160\tx6720\pardirnatural\partightenfactor0\f0\fs24 \cf0 Notes on Edward Welborn (1660) \par \par Edward Welbourn B: ABT 1660 Maryland/Delaware D: 24 JUN 1731 Hartford Co., Maryland \par \par Elizabeth Mitchell B: ABT 1680 \par \par Children \par \par Elizabeth Welborn Daughter ABT 1700 \par \par Thomas Welborn Son 1701Chester Co., Pennsylvania \par 1746 Old Frederick Co. Virginia \par \par William Welborn Son 21 JAN 1712/13 Harford Co., Maryland Rowan Co., North Carolina \par \par Ann Welborn Daughter BEF 1713 \par \par Pennsylvania Records of Edward Wilbourn \par \par Early Pennsylvania Land Records: Minutes of the Board of Property of the Province of Pennsylvania. William Henry Egle. 1976?. Minute Book G. \par \par "Edward Wilburn of Concord, Blacksmith, Requests a grant of 94 acres of Vacant Land in the County of Chester, bounded by James Chevers, Widdow Budd and John Chaffan, within the manor of Rocklands, but without Newcastle Line , for which he agrees to pay twent-five pounds within Six Months." "Signed a War't to Edw;d Wilburn for 94 Acres Ordered 21st Ult. \par \par Records of the Courts of Chester County, Pennsylvania Vol 2 (Also have the original records from the court.) 1703 Page 111 \par \par "There being a bastard child brought from the house of John Martin of Concord, the Court having endeavored to find the reputed father thereof by cannot ordered that the said child be called John Thornly and that Edward Willburn keep said John three months and be paid six shillings per week out of the county stock. \par \par 1703 Road a No 15 Road from Brandywine to Naman's Mill "1704" Mentions Edward Wilburn's land. 1706 Page 143 - Edmund Willborn-agreed - On Jury Duty \par \par 1707 Page 155 Indictment of: The Grand Inquest for our Lady the Queen upon their paths Edward Wilbourn: and solemn affirmations do present that Edward Wilbourn Late of Birmingham Township Chester County Blacksmithe the 1 day of October in the 6 year of our Reign of Queen Anne over England at the Township of Concord in the county of Chester aforesaid nine yards of lining cloth of the value of 40 shillings of the goods and chattels of John Hannum Yoeman then and there being found then and there did feloniously take steal and carry away against the peace of said Lady the Queen the crown and dignity and also against the form of an act of assembly of this Province in that case made and provided-Indorsed the 27 of the 9 month 1707 We the Grand Jury find this bill to be a true bill-Michll Blunston foreman-Edward Wilbourn being called to the bar pleads guilty-the court gives Judgement that the said Edward shall make double satisfaction and be whipt with ten lashes on his bare back and wear a Roman T according to law pay the costs. \par \par My Note:The town of Chester had a pair of stocks and a whipping post built in 1703 . A Roman T was of various colors. One mentioned is yellow. One blue one was described as being "no less than 4 inches long each way and one inch broad." It was to be Blue in Edward's case. The "T" for thief. In old Roman Empire the branding would have been on the thumbs for all to see and was permanent. \par \par Two later deeds that I have copies mention the land of the late Edward Wilbourn. The archivist in PA told me that about one-half of the time this means deceased and about one-half of the time it means he moved as is the case of Edward Wilbourn. He moved to Baltimore Co., MD circa 1711. Chester County, Pennsylvania Land Records 1729-1745 On Sept 10, 1709 Deed of James Chevers of Concord, yeoman to Isaac Taylor of Thornbury, surveyor. Mentions the Birmingham township line, land of Edward Wilbourne. !758-1765 Deed Mentions On July 24, 1758 William Smith of Concord, yeoman Hannah his wife to James Logan of the City of Philadelphia.... the land of the late Edward Wilbourn. I would like to point out that the trade of blacksmith was an apprenticed trade. Somewhere we all should be able to find Edward Wilbourn's teacher and his record from the court records as the boys were recorded in court as being bound to a person to appretice for a trade from a certain age to a certain age. This record would give us Edward's birthday year. Earliest record In Baltimore County Maryland of Edward Wilbourne. Abstracts of the Administration Accounts of the Prerogative Court Libers 1-5 1718-1724 Estate of George Wells. Payment to Edward Willbourn August 4, 1719. \par \par Edward left a will. Baltimore Co., MD Proven References: January 23, 1731 Book 20 Pge 154 Administration Bond posted September 8, 1731 the widow Elizabeth Welborne having relinquished administration to her sons Thomas Mitchell and Thomas Wilbourne. " In the name of God, Amen, the Twenty third of January Anno Dam one thousand seven hundred and thirty one, I, Edward Wilbourne of Baltimore County in the province of Maryland being sick and weak in body but of sound and perfect memory thanks be to Almighty God for so great a blessing do for the better settlement of temporal affairs when it may please God to call me hence make and publish this my last will and testament in manner following , viz: Imprimis, I give unto my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne my dwelling plantation with as much land as shall amount to fifty acres during her natural life and after her decease, I give the same to my daughter Ann Wilbourne, her heirs and assigns forever. Item: I give unto my son William Wilbourne the remaining part of my land to him and his heirs and assigns forever. Item: My will is that the great swamp which runs through my land be a division between my wife's part of the land and my son William's part. \par \par Item: I give unto my son Thomas Wilbourne one year old steer to him and his heirs forever. Item: My will is that my son William Wilbourne shall have all my Smith Tools provided he first pay my executor the sum of two thousand pounds of tobacco otherwise the said tools to be praised with my personal estate. \par \par Item: I give unto my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne a third part of my clear personal estate after legacys and all other lawful demands against it are discharged. \par \par Item: All the rest and residue of my personall estate I give to my three children namly, Elizabeth Wood, William Wilbourne and Ann Wilbourne to be equally divided amonget them, shear and shear alike. Lastly, I confirm and appoint my loving wife Elizabeth Wilbourne my full and whole executor of this my last will and testament in witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal on this day and year first written. Signed, sealed and published in the presence of us whose names are under written as witnesses thereunto at his request. Signed Edward Wilbourne Witness: John (X) Coale John (X) Daevley Mitch Webster \par \par Baltimore County Court; 3rd March 1730 came Michael Webster one of the subscribing evidences to the foregoing will and made his solemn affirmation that he saw the testator, Edward Willbourne, sign and seal and heard him publish and declare the same to be his last will and testament, and that at the time of his so doing he was to the best of his knowledge of sound and disposing mind, and memory and that he subscribed the said will in the presence of the said testator and at the same time (he) saw Jno. Cole, one of the subscribing evidences sign the said will in the presence of said testator before. Tho. Sheredine, \par \par County Clerk (or Deputy CC) Baltimore County \par \par Baltimore County Court; 3 March 1730, came John Danley one of the subscribing evidences to the aforegoing will and made oath on the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God that he saw the testator, Edward Willbourne sign, seal and heard him publish and declare the same to be his last will and testament and that at the time of his so doing he was to the best of his knowledge of sound and disposing mind and memory and that he subscribed the said will in the presence of said testator and that at the same time he saw John Coale, one of the subscribing evidences sign the said will in the presence of the said testator. Sworn to before, Tho. Sheredine, County Clerk, Baltimore County \par \par Edward Wilbourne lived in Spesutia Hundred. On Deer Creek. Baltimore Co., Md. Later Harford Co., MD. Patents PL#6 folder 276 Baltimore Co., MD now Harford Co., MD Charles Know ye that for and in consideration that Edwd Willburne of Baltimore County in our said Province of Maryland hath due unto him one hundred acres of Land within our said Province by virtue of a Warrt. that quantity granted him the Twenty second day of May Seventeen hundred twenty two appears in our land office upon such conditions terms as are expressed in our conditions of Plantations of our said province bearing date the fifth day of April Sixteen hundred and Eight and remaining upon record in our said province together with such alteration as in is made by our further conditions bearing date the fourth day of December Sixteen hundred ninety Six together also with the alterations made by our jurisdiction bearing date at London the twelfth day of September Seventeen hundred twelve and registered in our land office of our said Province Joe Doe therefore grant unto him the said Edward Willburne all that tract or parcele of land called Willburn Venture lying in the County aforesaid beginning at abounded poplar tree and abounded hickory said poplar being abounded tree of a parcele of Land called Quillas Inheritance running thence south west by west one hundred forty perches thence south east by south one hundred twenty perches thence north east by east one hundred forty perches thence with a straight line to the said bounded tree and laid out for one hundred acres of land more or less according to the Certificate of Survey thereof taken and returned unto our land office bearing date the twent second day of October Seventeen hundred twenty two there remaining together with all rights profits and benefits privileges thereunto belonging (Royall mines excepted). To have hold the same unto him the said Edward Willburne his heirs and assigns forever to beholden of us our heirs as of our manner of Baltimore in free Common soccage by fealty only for all manner of services yielding and paying therefore yearly unto us and our heirs at our receipt at St. Marys at the two most usual feasts of the year (viz) the feast of the Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary and St. Michael the Arch Angele by even equal portions of the rent of four shillings in silver of gold or the full value thereof in such comodities as we our heirs or such officer or officers as shall be appointed by us and our heirs from time to time to collect receive the same shall accept in discharge thereof at the choice of us and our heirs or such officer or officers aforesaid provided that if the said sum for a fine for alienation shall not be paid unto us and our heirs or such officer or officers afore said before such alienation the said alienation enters upon record either in the provincial or county court where the same parcel of land lyeth within one month next after such alienation then the said alienation shall be void and of no effect. Given under our greater seal at arms this tenth day of July Seventeen hundred and twenty five witnefs our trusy and well beloved Richart Tilghman, Esq. Chancellor and keeper of our said greaater seal of our said province of Maryland. \par \par Richard Tilghman Esq. Great Seal \par \par Abstracts of Baltimore County Land Commisions 1727-1762: Deposition of Robert West, Sr. 28 October 1732, age about 63; " About __years ago Edward Wheelbourne, now deceased, showed him the bounded tree of Thomas Brown's land." Deposition of William Wheelbourne, 28 October 1732, age about 24; " About 7-8 years ago his father, Edward Wheelbourne, deceased, showed him the bounded tree." Deposition of Thomas Wheelbourne, 28 October 1732, age about 31; "Same as his brother William." \par \par A Strange Entry in Baltimore Co., MD records: "Margaret Wilbourn , daughter of Margaret Wilboourn, age 9 next "12 tide" in Aug 1730 was bound to Bethia Calvert to age 16." In 1776 Sarah Wilbourn age 45 and Mary Wilbourn age 14 and free Negro Ben Gallow lived in Spesutia Lower Hundred. in Harford Co., MD. \par \par 1730 Vestry Records St. Johns & St. Georges Parish Harford Co., MD. By Ed Wilborn's acct. for Smiths work for the church. (Section 257) Libers 6-10 1724-1731 \par \par Estate of James Preston November 6, 1730. Payment made to Edward Willbourne Abstracts of the Administration Accounts of the Prerogative Court of Maryland \par \par Libers 11-15 1731-1737 by V. L. Skinner Estate of Ralph Dandy March 15, 1731. Payment made to Edward Willbourne. Libers 6-10 1724-1731 Estate of James Preston November 6, 1730. Payment made to Edward Willbourne. \par \par RECORDS IN ST. GEORGE'S PARISH BALTIMORE CO., MARYLAND Now Harford County , Maryland Page 256 William Welborn married to Ann Crabtree January the 21st 1731. Page 264 Thomas Wilbourn son of Thomas Wilbourn and Margaret his wife was born January the 18th 1730. Page 265 Edward Welbourn Died Jan 24th 1730-31 Page 271 January 28th 1732 Then was born Jane Wilborn Daughter of William Wilborn Ann his wife. Page 276 October the 25th 1734 Then was Born William Welborn Son of William and Ann his wife. Page 292 August the 18th Then was bourn James Welbourn son of William Welborn and Ann his Wife.}

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn

Francis Tennell
± 1638-± 1670
Alys
-1750

Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn
± 1660-1731

1712
Thomas WILBOURNE
1701-< 1746
Ann Welborn
1711-1784
William WELBORN
1713-> 1772

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Visualiseer een andere verwantschap

Bronnen

  1. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=worldmarr_ga&h=1323242&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Birth date: 1680 Birth place: MD
  2. England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
  3. General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934

    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=c5515561-9d57-4c68-8777-a6d1bdaa81c9&tid=108978476&pid=776
    jpg
    U.S., Civil War Pension Index: General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934
  4. Ancestry.com, http://www.Ancestry.com
  5. R-M269 (Y-DNA)
  6. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=18962788238&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Welborn
  7. Northamptonshire Record Office; Northampton, England; Register Type: Bishops Transcripts
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=32cfd44b-6f92-445a-a06c-38c8479945ba&tid=108978476&pid=3959
    jpg
    Northamptonshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1532-1812
  8. Find A Grave

    1,60525::118282095
  9. Ancestry.com, http://www.Ancestry.com
  10. Will books; Author: Maryland. Prerogative Court; Probate Place: Maryland
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=b05e07b7-595f-46ab-aaa8-2fb5c01e05d8&tid=108978476&pid=776
    jpg
    Maryland, Wills and Probate Records, 1604-1878
  11. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=-655229319&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Wilbourn
  12. Ancestry.com, http://www.Ancestry.com
  13. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pili354&h=4336425&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Arrival date: 1722 Arrival place: Maryland
  14. Find A Grave

  15. Following Confirmed Positive Variants Y haplogroups from DNA testing labs of familytreedna.com.
    Testing date Nov 2020 - June 2021


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-M207
    M207,
    CTS2913,
    CTS3229,
    CTS3622,
    CTS8311,
    F47,
    F82,
    FGC205,
    FGC207,
    FGC280,
    L747,
    P224,
    P227,
    P229,
    P232,
    P280,
    P285,
    PF5868,
    PF5953,
    PF6006,
    Y438,
    Y439,
    Y441,
    Y469,


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-M173
    M173,
    BY84126,
    CTS8116,
    FGC194,
    FGC198,
    M306,
    M682,
    M694,
    M812,
    MF16853,
    P225,
    P231,
    P233,
    P234,
    P236,
    P238,
    P242,
    P245,
    P286,
    P294,
    PF5997,
    Y290,
    YSC0000288

    Positive Variants haplogroup R-M343
    M343,
    FGC58,
    FGC66,
    L278,
    M415,
    PF5466,
    PF6246,
    PF6250,
    PF6270,
    PF6272,
    PF67,
    Y104,
    Y96,
    YSC0000075


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-L754
    L754,
    CTS3063,
    CTS4244,
    L761,
    L774,
    PF6249,
    PF6263,
    PF6271,
    Y418,
    YSC0000224

    Positive Variants haplogroup R-L389
    L389,
    L388


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-P297
    P297,
    CTS11985,
    CTS5082,
    CTS7904,
    L502,
    L585,
    L752,
    PF6091,
    PF6463,
    PF6498,
    PF6506,
    PF6524,
    Y107,
    Y94,
    Y97,
    YSC0000269


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-M269
    M269,
    CTS10149,
    CTS10834,
    CTS12478,
    CTS1421,
    CTS2466,
    CTS2664,
    CTS3575,
    CTS623,
    CTS6532,
    CTS6832,
    CTS8627,
    CTS894,
    FGC40,
    FGC76,
    L1348,
    L1351,
    L150,
    L265,
    L407,
    L479,
    L482,
    L483,
    L500,
    L749,
    L753,
    L757,
    L762,
    L773,
    PF6265,
    PF6399,
    PF6402,
    PF6407,
    PF6409,
    PF6410,
    PF6411,
    PF6413,
    PF6417,
    PF6425,
    PF6426,
    PF6428,
    PF6429,
    PF6430,
    PF6432,
    PF6434,
    PF6435,
    PF6437,
    PF6438,
    PF6441,
    PF6443,
    PF6444,
    PF6448,
    PF6452,
    PF6469,
    PF6470,
    PF6477,
    PF6479,
    PF6494,
    PF6495,
    PF6500,
    PF6503,
    PF6504,
    PF6507,
    PF6508,
    PF6509,
    PF6520,
    PF6525,
    s3,
    Y103,
    Y106,
    Y95,
    Z8140,
    Z8141,
    Z8145

    Positive Variants haplogroup R-L23
    L23,
    L478,
    PF6404



    Positive Variants haplogroup R-L51
    L51,
    PF6414,
    PF6535


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-P310
    P310,
    CTS10353,
    CTS7650,
    L52,
    P311,
    YSC0000082

    Positive Variants haplogroup R-L151
    L151,
    L11,
    YSC0000191

    Positive Variants haplogroup R-P312
    P312,
    CTS12684

    Positive haplogroup R-Z195
    Positive haplogroup R-ZS312
    Positive haplogroup R-Z267
    Positive Variants haplogroup R-SRY2627
    SRY2627,
    CTS4716,
    Z201,
    Z204



    Positive Variants haplogroup R-Z200
    Z200,
    Z269

    Positive Variants haplogroup R-Z202
    Z202,
    Z203,
    Z264,
    Z266

    Positive haplogroup R-Z205
    Positive haplogroup R-CTS606
    Positive Variants haplogroup R-BY84635
    BY84635,
    F25757,
    FT160909


    Positive Variants haplogroup R-BY61463
    BY61463,
    BY103033,
    BY105904,
    BY107846,
    BY113654,
    BY118359,
    BY119044,
    BY129264,
    BY129907,
    BY130721,
    BY134356,
    BY136611,
    BY139184,
    BY143035,
    BY145465,
    BY220192,
    BY45871,
    BY67718,
    BY68950,
    BY72346,
    BY77298,
    BY91357,
    FGC32557,
    Y36605
  16. England, Marriages, 1538·Äì1973. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.

    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=FS1EnglandMarriages&h=34360607&indiv=try
    Record for Elizabeth Stookes
  17. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=984966608&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Wilbourne
  18. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=FindAGraveUS&h=127940638&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Welborn
  19. R1b1a2a1a1b5a R-M269 (Y-DNA)
  20. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=300037674240&indiv=try
    Record for Edward C WELBORNE
  21. Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 1998;
  22. North Carolina County, District and Probate Courts.

    Record of Wills, 1771-1963; Author: North Carolina. Superior Court (Surry County); Probate Place: Surry, North Carolina
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=7bd3c445-7bab-4a9d-9774-f1721fdc6f70&tid=108978476&pid=3959
    jpg
    North Carolina, Wills and Probate Records, 1665-1998
  23. Will books; Author: Maryland. Prerogative Court; Probate Place: Maryland
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=9e19c8ca-be2a-4d19-81ac-4c38f6cefb2e&tid=108978476&pid=3959
    jpg
    Maryland, Wills and Probate Records, 1604-1878
  24. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=3da3e602-9c9a-4939-a128-0c7d0d9938a9&tid=108978476&pid=3959
    jpg
    North Carolina, Land Grant Files, 1693-1960
  25. Find A Grave. Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi.
  26. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=260024454104&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Welborne
  27. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=WorldMarr_ga&h=1323242&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Wilborn
  28. Find A Grave

    1,60541::1043288
  29. England, Marriages, 1538·Äì1973
  30. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pubmembertrees&h=12598541622&indiv=try
    Record for Edward Welborne
  31. England, Marriages, 1538·Äì1973

    1,9852::19910025
  32. Find A Grave
  33. Family Sheet, Edward Wilbourne. 1 April 1987. Prepared by, Mrs. Ann Beason Gahan.
  34. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=44903ee7-cd06-42be-839a-478ae528fde3&tid=108978476&pid=3959
    jpg
    image
  35. Ann B. Gahan
  36. Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1968
  37. 1994
  38. William Wilborn married to Ann Crabtree January the 21st 1731. Page 256,
    f.92

    Thomas Wilbourn Son of Thomas Wilbourn and Margaret his Wife was Born
    January the 18th 1730. (p.264, f.101).

    Edward Wilbourn Died June the 24th 1731 (p.265, f.101).

    January 28th 1732. Then was Born Jane Wilborn Daughter of William
    Wilborn & Ann his Wife. (p.271, f.108).

    Decembr. 16th 1733. Then was Born Martha Wilbourn Daughter of Thomas
    Wilborn & Margaret his Wife. (p.271, f.108).

    Octobr the 25th 1734. Then was Born William Wilborn Son of William
    Wilborn and Ann his Wife. (p.276, f. ).

    August the 18th 1736. Then was Born james Wilbourn Son of William
    Wilbourn and Ann his Wife. (p. 292, f. 129).

    (Note: Thomas died without a will in Frederick County, VA, before 2 Dec
    1746, when his widow, Margaret, gave bond as administratrix of his
    estate.)

    Vestry Record of St. John's P.E. Church, Baltimore Co., MD:
    Edward Wilborn: a/c for Smith's work for church.

Historische gebeurtenissen

  • Stadhouder Prins Willem III (Huis van Oranje) was van 1672 tot 1702 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genoemd)
  • In het jaar 1682: Bron: Wikipedia
    • 26 januari » Het deltagebied van Zuidwest-Nederland en Vlaanderen wordt getroffen door de stormvloed van 1682.
    • 6 mei » Koning Lodewijk XIV neemt zijn intrek in het Kasteel van Versailles, dat daardoor het regeringscentrum van Frankrijk wordt.
    • 29 september » Willem Doudijns, Theodorus van der Schuer, Daniël Mijtens, Robert Duval en Augustinus Terwesten richten de 'Haagsche Teeken-Academie' (nu: Koninklijke Academie van Beeldende Kunsten) op in Den Haag, de eerste kunstacademie in Nederland.
  • De temperatuur op 28 april 1712 lag rond de 15,0 °C. Bron: KNMI
  • Van 1702 tot 1747 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Tweede Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • In het jaar 1712: Bron: Wikipedia
    • 29 februari » In Zweden wordt 29 februari gevolgd door 30 februari.
    • 18 mei » Paus Clemens XI creëert achttien nieuwe kardinalen, onder wie de in 1986 heilig verklaarde Italiaanse theoloog Giuseppe Maria Tomasi.
    • 22 mei » Heiligverklaring van paus Pius V.
    • 20 december » Slag bij Gadebusch tijdens de Grote Noordse Oorlog.
  • De temperatuur op 16 februari 1739 lag rond de 3,0 °C. Er was 4 mm neerslagDe wind kwam overheersend uit het noord-noord-westen. Typering van het weer: sneeuw. Bron: KNMI
  • Van 1702 tot 1747 kende Nederland (ookwel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden) zijn Tweede Stadhouderloze Tijdperk.
  • In het jaar 1739: Bron: Wikipedia
    • 1 januari » Bouveteiland wordt ontdekt door de Franse ontdekkingsreiziger Jean-Baptiste Charles Bouvet de Lozier.
    • 20 maart » Nadir Sjah maakt tijdens zijn militaire campagne tegen het Mogolrijk in India de Pauwentroon buit.


Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn


Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I3958.php : benaderd 14 mei 2024), "Edward Welborne Welborn Wilbourne Wilbourne Welborn Wilborn Willborn (± 1660-1731)".