Family Tree Welborn » Captain Thomas I Osborne of Coxendale (± 1580-1642)

Persoonlijke gegevens Captain Thomas I Osborne of Coxendale 

Bronnen 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
  • Hij is geboren rond 1580 in Crixie, Kent, England.Bron 11
  • Geïmmigreerd november 1619 vanuit Ship: Bona Nova, Jamestown, Henrico, Virginia.Bron 13
  • Woonachtig:
  • (Arrival) in het jaar 1619 in Virginia.Bron 1
  • (Arrival) in het jaar 1619 in Virginia.Bron 11
  • Hij is overleden tussen 1638 en 1642 in Coxendale (now Chester), Henrico County (now Chesterfield County), Virginia.
  • Een kind van Osborne
  • Een kind van OSBORNE
  • Een kind van John II Osborne en Jane Smyth
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 4 juli 2022.

Gezin van Captain Thomas I Osborne of Coxendale

(1) Hij is getrouwd met Jane Smyth.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 21 september 1607 te England.


Kind(eren):

  1. Adria Osborne  1601-1626
  2. John Osborne  1608-1650
  3. Thomas II Osborne  1609-1661 
  4. Marie Osborne  1615-????
  5. Judith Osborne  1617-????


(2) Hij is getrouwd met Anne Burt.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 21 september 1607 te Hurstpierpoint, Sussex, England.


Kind(eren):

  1. Joane Osborne  1580-1633
  2. Jane Osborne  1622-1665


(3) Hij is getrouwd met Anne Harris.

Zij zijn getrouwd.


Kind(eren):

  1. Joane Osborne  1580-1633


Kind(eren):

  1. Thomas II Osborne  1609-1661 


(5) Hij is getrouwd met Joan Osborne Smith (Burt).

Zij zijn getrouwd.


Kind(eren):

  1. Thomas II Osborne  1609-1661 


Notities over Captain Thomas I Osborne of Coxendale



Capt. Thomas Osborne of Coxendale
Thomas Osborne, I
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1585
Crixie, Kent, England (United Kingdom)
Death:
between 1638 and 1642 (48-61)
Coxendale (now Chester?), Henrico County (now Chesterfield County?), Virginia
Immediate Family:
Son of John Osborne, II and Jane Smyth

Husband of wife of Thomas Osborne

Father of Thomas Osborne, II and Edward Osborne

Brother of Edward Osborne, I; Alice Osborne; William Osborne; Joane Osborne; John Osborne; and Nycholas Osborne

https://www.geni.com/people/Capt-Thomas-Osborne-of-Coxendale/6000000007097406594

Capt. Thomas Osborne of Coxendale is your 10th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn (Smith)
your mother ·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith (Henley)
her mother ·Üí Nellie Mary Henley (Wooldridge)
her mother ·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge
her father ·Üí Merritt Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Chesley Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr.
his father ·Üí Edward Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Martha Wooldridge (Osborne)
his mother ·Üí Edward Osborne, III
her father ·Üí Thomas Osborne, II
his father ·Üí Capt. Thomas Osborne of Coxendale
his father

Descendants of Thomas Osborne, Lieutenant

From: Paul & Dorothy Tobler ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
Subject: Re: Muster of Thomas Osborne
Date: Tue, 27 Feb 2001 10:04:41 -0600
In-Reply-To: <01ae01c0a0b3$68972560$(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)>

Glen:

This is what I show for him.
----------------------------------

Descendants of Thomas Osborne, Lieutenant

Generation No. 1

1. THOMAS1 OSBORNE, LIEUTENANT1 was born Abt. 1577 in Of Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England, and died Aft. 1626 in College Land, Henrico, VA. He married .

More About THOMAS OSBORNE, LIEUTENANT:
1: 1624, Muster/Census of VA (he is alive then), listed as LT in muster
2: 1625, Muster/Census of VA (he is alive then), listed as LT in muster
Immigrated: November 1619, Ship "Bona Nova" to VA
Lived location: Bet. 1624 - 1626, College Land, Henrico Co., VA

Children of THOMAS OSBORNE and are:
2. i. EDWARD2 OSBORNE, SR., b. 16 January 1595/96, Maybe Little Hadham, Hertford, England?; d. Henrico Co., VA?.
3. ii. JOANE OSBORNE, b. 1601, Maybe Little Hadham, Hertford, England?; d. Bet. 1635 - 1638, Henrico Co., VA.
iii. ADRIA-AGNIS OSBORNE2, b. 25 April 1602, Maybe Little Hadham, Hertford, England?3,4; d. Bef. September 1626, Neck of Land,
Charles City County, VA.

More About ADRIA-AGNIS OSBORNE:
Aka (Facts Pg): Adria Osborne or Gurganey
Cause of Death: Apparently complications of childbirth
Immigrated: 1621, On Marmaduke (father Capt Thomas OSBORNE)5

4. iv. THOMAS OSBORNE, CAPTAIN, b. 1607, Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England; d. Coxendale, Henrico Co., VA.

Generation No. 2

2. EDWARD2 OSBORNE, SR. (THOMAS1)6 was born 16 January 1595/96 in Maybe Little Hadham, Hertford, England?, and died in Henrico Co., VA?. He married .

More About EDWARD OSBORNE, SR.:
1: 1625, Not found in Muster of VA

Child of EDWARD OSBORNE and is:
i. THOMAS3 OSBORNE, SR.6, b. 1650, Henrico Co., VA6; d. Bet. 20 October 1691 - 01 June 1692, Henrico Co., VA; m. (1) , Abt. 1667, Henrico Co., VA; d. Henrico Co., VA; m. (2) MARTHA GRIGG7,8,9, Bet. 1689 - 1690, Martha's 2nd marriage Henrico Co., VA; b. Abt. 1656, Bermuda Hundred, VA (widow of John Branch & widow of Osborne); d. Unknown.

More About MARTHA GRIGG:
1: Direct ancestor of wife of Joseph Hiram Tobler
Aka (Facts Pg): Martha Griegg.

3. JOANE2 OSBORNE (THOMAS1)10,11,12,13 was born 1601 in Maybe Little Hadham, Hertford, England?, and died Bet. 1635 - 1638 in Henrico Co., VA. She married GENTLEMAN THOMAS HARRIS, CAPT.14,15,16,17,18 11 September
1626 in England/Henrico Co., VA?19, son of THOMAS HARRIS and MARGARET MIDDLETON. He was born 1586 in Of Henricus (2)20,21, and died 1658 in Longfield later Curles Plantation, Henrico Co., VA22,23,24,25.

More About JOANE OSBORNE:
1: 1625, Not found in Muster of VA
Aka (Facts Pg): Joane Osborne or Gurganey

More About GENTLEMAN THOMAS HARRIS, CAPT.:
1: Direct ancestor of wife of Joseph Hiram Tobler
2: 10 February 1610/11, Signs receipt to the Will of Folk Lee, ( mariner of Stepney, London, England) being a beneficiary26
3: Owned about 2500 acres (Longfield, Diggs 100, Neck of Land & Curles
4: 1625, Muster/Census of VA (he is alive then)
Deed: 11 November 1635, Land grant from Capt. John West, Governor of 750 Acres in Henrico Co., VA
Immigrated: May 1611, The ship "Prosperous" (departed Land's End, County Cornwall on 10 Mar 161127
Lived location: 1623, Muster lists him at "Ye Neck O'Land" in Charles City Co., VA (Bermuda 100)
Moved: 1626, To Longfield, later Curles
Occupation: Investor in Virginia Company; member House of Burgess28
Property: 11 March 1634/35, 750 acres upon land of Edward Virgany (Gurganey) & 100 acres due as an ancient Planter in time of Sir Thomas Dale
(Henrico Co. Patent #1, page 304 & Nugent Page 35)29

Child of JOANE OSBORNE and THOMAS HARRIS is:
i. WILLIAM3 HARRIS, MAJOR30,31,32, b. 1629, Charles City, Henrico Co., VA (4); d. Bet. 20 April 1678 - 01 February 1678/79, killed in Indian battle close to Richmond, VA (today); m. (1) LUCY STEWART, Abt. 1649, Hanover Co., VA; b. 1629; d. Bet. 1660 - 1670; m. (2) ALICE STEWART?33, Abt. 1668, Charles City? (widow of Wm Harris); b. Abt. 1648,
Unknown; d. Bet. 1697 - 1700, New Kent, Hanover Co., VA?.

More About WILLIAM HARRIS, MAJOR:
Military: December 1656, Appointed Major of Henrico & Charles City Regiment
Occupation: Justice of henrico, Member House Burgesses, 1652/1653/1656/1658
Property: 17 March 1674/75, deed from Wm Harris s/o Thomas to Roger Green for 820 acres of Curles

More About ALICE STEWART?:
1: Named as 2nd wife of Wm Harris by Dr. Malcolm H. Harris
2: Also found VA Historical Mag. Vol 4, pg 79 as 2nd wife of Wm Harris
Moved: 1683, New Kent County with sons William and Edward.

4. THOMAS2 OSBORNE, CAPTAIN (THOMAS1) was born 1607 in Cranfield, Bedfordshire, England, and died in Coxendale, Henrico Co., VA. He married .

Children of THOMAS OSBORNE and are:
i. THOMAS3 OSBORNE34, b. 1641, Coxendale, Henrico Co., VA34; d. 1692, Henrico Co., VA34; m. MARTHA JONES34, Abt. 1666, Henrico Co., VA; b. Abt. 1648, Henrico Co., VA; d. Aft. 1693, Henrico Co., VA.
ii. EDWARD OSBORNE35,36,37, b. 1646, Henrico Co., VA38; d. 1697, Henrico Co., VA; m. TABITHA PLATT39, 1676, Henrico Co., VA; b. 1660, Henrico Co., VA40; d. 1692, Henrico Co., VA40.
iii. MARGARET OSBORNE41, b. 1649, Coxdale, Henrico Co., VA; d. 03 July 1708, Henrico Co., VA; m. THOMAS LOCKETT41, Abt. 1667, Henrico Co., VA; b. Abt. 1645, Bristol Parish, Prince George Co., VA; d. 27 March 1686,
Henrico Co., VA.

Endnotes

1. Vol 11 WFT 2735, indicates occupation as Ship's Captain.
2. Vol 8 WFT 3447.
3. Vol 8 WFT 3447, born 1598 England.
4. Barbara McCormick ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) 314 Tanbridge Rd., Wilmington, NC 28405, says born abt 1593 d/o Capt OSBORNE (HUH?).
5. Vol 8 WFT 3447.
6. Vol 11 WFT 2735.
7. Vol 4 WFT 3409.
8. Vol 12 WFT 2932.
9. David Butts ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) BUTN7KA , Wilmington, NC 28402.
10. Vol 9 WFT 3383, indicates name: Joane Gurganey.
11. Vol 4 WFT 3409, name: Adria or Adry Gurganey.
12. Vol 12 WFT 3755, name indicated: Adna GURGANEY.
13. Wurts' Magna Charta, Chapter 254 pg 2209 indicates Joane Osborne.
14. Vol 9 WFT 3383.
15. Ellis R. Brockman ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) 505 Kane, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858 (517) 772-5054.
16. Vol 6 WFT 508.
17. Vol 8 WFT 3447.
18. Thomas Harris 1586-1658 by Malcolm H. Harris M.D. of May 1962, page 11 indicates Thomas Harris is s/o Sir Wm Harris which is in error & page 12 indicates inherited 1,500£ from father & 400£ from brother Wm (not correct).
19. Vol 8 WFT 3447, indicates md 11 Sep 1626.
20. Vol 10 WFT 1747.
21. Ellis R. Brockman ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) 505 Kane, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858 (517) 772-5054.
22. Vol 10 WFT 1747, Dickey & Trower, Harris, a Genealogical Family History of 1980and Va Historical Magazine, Vol 7, p 83-84.
23. Barbara McCormick ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) 314 Tanbridge Rd., Wilmington, NC 28405, indicates died: 10 Jun 1679 at Essex, England (HUH?).
24. Ellis R. Brockman ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) 505 Kane, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858 (517) 772-5054.
25. Spire-Hagge-Fisher, chapter 293 pg 2779 indicates died 1658.
26. Thomas Harris 1586-1658 by Malcolm H. Harris M.D. of May 1962, pg 12.
27. Ellis R. Brockman ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) 505 Kane, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858 (517) 772-5054, indicates The ship "Discovery" (in 1624 Thomas indicates he arrived on ship "Prosperous" May 1611).
28. Vol 8 WFT 3447.
29. Thomas Harris 1586-1658 by Malcolm H. Harris M.D. of May 1962.
30. Adventures of Purse & Person, pg 357, He Married (1) ____ and (2) Alice_____whose (2) husband, George Alves (died 1734, of New Kent County, in a suit, April 1683, concerning her son's indenture, is named as having married the "relict of Major William Harris deceased. Alice took her sons to New Kent County.
31. Thomas Harris 1586-1658 by Malcolm H. Harris M.D. of May 1962.
32. 1629 Major William Harris (4) 1678 by Malcolm H. Harris, M.D.
33. Adventures of Purse & Person, pg 357, April 1683 concerning her son's indenture, is named as having married the "relict of Major William Harris deceased. Alice took her sons to New Kent County.
34. William Wilkins ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))@worldconnect.
35. Vol 11 WFT 2735.
36. Georgia Ellison((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))@worldconnect.
37. Jean Ray Marshalek ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))@worldconnect, indicates father is Thomas b. 1607.
38. Vol 11 WFT 2735.
39. Georgia Ellison((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))@worldconnect.
40. Louis Reitzammer ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)) GenServ.
41. William Wilkins ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))@worldconnect.
=================

At 05:49 AM 2/27/01 -0600, you wrote:
Many have tried to place Thomas Osborne as the father-in-law of Capt. Thomas Harris of VA. To my knowledge, no one has provided documentation to place him as the father of Adria (first wife) or of Joane (2nd wife).

Here is the information listed:

THE MUSTER OF THE INHABITANTS OF THE COLLEGE-LAND IN VIRGINIA TAKEN THE 23TH OF JANUARY 1624.

[*Note: This is listed as being in Henrico Co., VA--gg]

Lieutennt Thomas Osborne arrived in the BONA NOVA November 1619.

Source:
ADVENTURERS OF PURSE AND PERSON: VIRGINIA 1607-1624/5. Rev. and ed. by Virginia M. Meyer and John Frederick Dorman. 3rd ed. [Richmond, VA?]: Order of First Families of Virginia, 1607-1624/5, 1987, p. 7.
*Note also, this listing of musters originally appeared in Hotten's list of early immigrants (I don't have the exact bibliographical information in front of me.)

>==============================
>Ancestry.com Genealogical Databases
>http://www.ancestry.com/rd/rwlist2.asp
>Search over 2500 databases with one easy query!
http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/HARRIS-VA/2001-02/0983289881

http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/HARRIS-VA/2001-02/0983289881


Capt. Thomas Osborne of Coxendale is your 10th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
your mother ·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith
her mother ·Üí Nellie Mary Henley
her mother ·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge
her father ·Üí Merritt Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Chesley Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr.
his father ·Üí Edward Mologe Wooldridge
his father ·Üí Martha Wooldridge
his mother ·Üí Edward Osborne, III
her father ·Üí Thomas Osborne, II
his father ·Üí Capt. Thomas Osborne of Coxendale
his father

https://www.geni.com/people/Capt-Thomas-Osborne-of-Coxendale/6000000007097406594

Thomas Osborne, I
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1576
Crixie, Kent, England
Death:
1642 (65)
Coxendale (now Chester?), Henrico County (now Chesterfield County?), Virginia
Immediate Family:
Son of John Osborne, II and Jane Smyth
Husband of Ann Osborne and Joan Smith
Father of Thomas Osborne, II and Edward Osborne, Il
Brother of Edward Osborne; Alice Osborne; William Osborn; Joane Osborne; John Osborne; and Nycholas Osborne ¬´ less
Half brother of Thomas Osborne

Date of birth has also been (erroneously?) reported to be 1580.
came to Virginia about 1611
From Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography: "Osborne, Captain Thomas, came to Virginia in November, 1616, and settled at Coxendale, in the present Chesterfield county, about 1625. He also patented land on Proctor's creek, Henrico county (now Chesterfield); was a commissioner (justice) for the 'upper parts' in 1631, and member of the house of burgesses, 1629, 1629-30, 1631-32, 1632-33."
From page 247 of Decisions of Virginia General Court: "Came to Virginia in November 1616 and settled at Coxendale in 1625. He also patented land on Proctor's creek, Henrico in 1637; was commissioner (justice) for "the upper parts" in 1631, and member of the House of Burgesses, 1629, 1629-1630, 1631-2, 1632-3."
From Osborne of Henrico, Virginia: "Lieutenant Thomas Osborne arrived in Jamestown aboard the Bona Nova late in 1619; no family members are known to have accompanied him at this time. Whether his wife had previously died in England is not known, but her name has never appeared in any of the extant colonial Virginia records. He was selected by the London Company in England to serve as the leader of the military contingent in the settlement of College Land, a large area of land near Henricus City. The latter was the second permanent settlement in Virginia, the first, of course, being Jamestown. He appears in the two early lists of inhabitants, dated February 1623/24, and January 1224/25, as a resident of "Colledge Land."
"After the March 1622 attack by the Indians, where roughly one-third of those settlers between Jamestown and Henricus City were killed, Lieut. Thomas Osborne lead a retaliatory attack; from this point onward, he appears in the records as Captain Thomas Osborne. From 1625-1633 he served in the House of Burgesses and, having been granted a large tract of land known as Coxendale, settled there around 1625. The first town in Coxendale, Gatesville, was later named Osbornes and became an important inspection, storage, and shipping center for tobacco well into the late 19th century. He lived his entire life in Coxendale (that part which is now Chesterfield County), and the succeeding four generations of his namesake also made Coxendale their home."
From http://www.osborne-origins.org/linkrecs/eaa.htm#Thomas-4135: "The first reference to Lt. Thomas Osborne is his arrival in Virginia in November 1619 on the ship Bona Nova. He was 35, making his birth year about 1584 in England. He is probably the first Osborne to arrive in America and is probably of the Sir Edward Osborne family of London, but no proof yet exists. He came to Virginia as part of a group sent by the London Company to set up a College at Henrico for the purpose of educating the Indians and others. After leading a counterattack on the Indians after the 1622 raid, he was promoted to Captain and is mostly known as Captain Thomas Osborne of Henrico, VA. He patented land on the James River just north of Henricus, VA, which became known as Coxendale, where his family lived for five generations before beginning their migration south into NC and SC. There is still a Coxendale Road in Chester, VA which leads to the general vicinity of the old Coxendale plantation. There are many known living descendants of Captain Thomas Osborne, identified by both documented records and dna tests."
Date of death has also been (erroneously?) reported to be 1637 and circa 1656.
Place of death has also been (erroneously?) reported to be Henrico, Henrico County, Virginia.
links
http://home.triad.rr.com/wesleyhudson/gp2295.htm#head3
FamilySearch AFNs: 9LQ1-WL, KWPX-DJ, 1CLG-NFP
Entered by Marvin Loyd Welborn, 10th Great-Grandson: Source: THE OSBORNES and related families - JONES, WORSHAM, FOWLKES, ROBERTSON & GAYLE by Elizabeth J. "Betty" Harrell 1983
Chapter 1 THOMAS OSBORNE (ca. 1580s?-1638/42)
Thomas Osborne arrived at Jamestown in the Colony of Virginia on November 4, 1619. He was then probably in his late 30s and had apparently left behind his wife and children. The 3-month voyage on board the Bona Nova had taken him via the West Indies, and per the records of the London Company, all passengers arrived lusty and in good health.[l] Thomas succeeded in his new home, and by 1625 was the lieutenant in charge of the College Lands and the representative from his area to the House of Burgesses in Jamestown. Later, he was promoted to the rank of captain and was granted the large Coxendale plantation, which was to be the home of the Osbornes for at least the next five generations. He died sometime prior to 1642, probably in his early 60s.
Jamestown, the capital of the colony, had been founded by the London Company in 1607, under a charter granted by King James I of England. During the first twelve years the small colony had suffered many hardships but by 1619 the future looked promising. That summer the first elected delegates to the new House of Burgesses had met at Jamestown. Also that year, 8 ships had arrived bringing a total of 1261 people, which almost doubled the population of the colony.
Among the new comers were 90 marriageable maidens, 100 boys and girls to serve as apprentices, tradesmen from European countries, indentured servants, and the first Negroes. With Thomas on the Bona Nova and possibly in his charge were 50 men who had been sent by the London Company to be tenants at the new College Lands.[2]
The College Lands were located about 40 miles up the James River from Jamestown at Henrico (or Henricus) City. The town, named for Prince Henry, had been founded by Deputy Governor Thomas Dale eight years earlier as an alternative capital. It was located at the neck of a peninsula called Henrico (now Farras) Island formed by one of the many curves of the James River. [Map 2] Immediately upstream lay another neck of land called Coxendale, where Dale grazed the livestock and fenced off 100 acres for the glebe (church) land. The town never prospered; settlement instead concentrated in the Bermuda Hundred area founded a few years later by Dale a short distance down the river near the mouth of the Appomattox River. In 1618 Henrico City was designated by the London Company to be the site for a college for the education of the Indians. Ten thousand acres on the northeast side of the river were allocated for the use of the college and the Coxendale area on the south side of the river was set aside to be worked by tenants brought over by the company. The tenants were to receive one-half of the products of their labor; the other half was to go toward the support of the tutors and scholars and the buildings of the college.[3]
For several years Thomas1Osborne worked at the College Lands, slowly becoming accustomed to the hot, humid summers, cold winters and dense forests of his new home. He was learning the ways of the apparently peaceful natives when suddenly at 8:00 a.m. on Good Friday morning March 22, 1621/22* the Indians attacked simultaneously throughout the colony. One third of the colonists were massacred. At least seventeen died at the College Lands. At the plantations northwest of the college, thirteen died at Thomas Sheffield's plantation, including Sheffield and his wife, and twenty-one died at Capt. Berkeley's plantation at Falling Creek where ironworks had recently been established. Mrs. Proctor, * For an explanation of combined dates, see page x. whose land was just north of Coxendale and whose husband was in London, was able successfully to hold off the Indians.[4]
The governor ordered all survivors to move into the Jamestown area for protection. Some protested, notably Mrs.Proctor. On April 20, 1622, Captain Roger Smith, who a week earlier had evacuated the neighboring Charles City area, was given, as stated in the court records, "absolute power over Henricus Island and Coxendale and (ordered) to use all vigilance for the safe bringing away of the people, cattle and goods and to charge and command upon point of death to obey him. "[5] Thomas 1-Osborne and the other survivers of the College Lands obeyed and took up temporary residence at Mr. Evan's plantation near Jamestown on the south side of the river. [6]
In 1624, King James I dissolved the London Company and made Virginia a crown colony. He died soon afterwards and was succeeded by his son Charles I; eldest son Henry, for whom Henrico was named, had predeceased him.
Thomas Osborne returned to the College Lands and in 1625, as seen in the muster taken on January 23, 1624/25, was the lieutenant in charge. This muster also showed that at that time he had three servants: Daniel Sherley, age 30, who had arrived on the Bona Nova with Thomas; Peter Jorden, age 22, who had arrived in 1620 on the London Merchant; and Richard Davis, age 16, who had arrived in 1620 on the Jonathan.[7]
After the massacre, the attitude of the English toward the Indians changed, and the plans for the college were dropped (the name, however, was used to describe the area for several more years). Retaliation raids were made, one of which was led by Lieutenant Thomas^Osborne in 1627. As recorded in the minutes of the court at Jamestown on July 4, 1627: [8]
It was "thought fitt that we should draw out partyes from all our plantations and goe uppon the Indians and cutt downe their corne, and further that we should sett uppon them all in one day, viz: the first of August next. The plantations of the neck of land and the Colledge to goe uppon the Tanx Powhattans....Commanders appointed for these services are these, viz: For Tanx Powhattans, Left. Thos. Osborne in chief, Thomas Harris second."
The results of the raid are not known; however, he was soon promoted to captain. [9]
Thomas Osborne gained the respect of his neighbors and in 1625 was elected to represent his area at the House of Burgesses in Jamestown. He also served from 1629 to 1633 and possibly longer (the 1634-1638 records are lost). The area he represented in 1633 included Henrico, Arrowhattocks, Neck of Land and Curies; the name College Lands dropped from use about 1632.[10]
Since his arrival, not only had Thomas^Osborne acquired title and position but also enough wealth to pay for the transportation of twenty people to the colonies, which enabled him in 1634 to be granted the 1000 acres (50 acres/person) of Coxendale. The land, which had probably been Thomas' home for a number of years and which he called "Fearing", was officially patented to him on February 6,1637, and was described as being bounded on the north by Proctor Creek, east by the James River, west by the woods and south by Henrico Island. On April 26, 1638, the land was (re)surveyed and found to actually contain only 800 acres . [11] (In 1692, however, it was still described as 1000 acres.[12]) Henrico County (whose records prior to 1677 are lost), was the westernmost county and in 1634 included land on both sides of the James River. It was separated from Charles City County by Turkey Island Creek on the north side of the river and by the Appomattox River on the south side. The county seat, where Thomas transacted business and attended the parish church, was at Varina, a few miles down the river from Coxendale. (Acentury later, in 1749, the area of Henrico County south of the James River became Chesterfield County.) At some point, probably in the early 1630s, Captain Thomas-'-Osborne's son Thomas Osborne Jr. and presumed son Edward Osborne arrived in the colony and patented land nearby. Son Thomas Osborne Jr. in 1637 received 500 acres adjoining Coxendale [13] and presumed son Edward Osborne in 1636 was granted 400 acres across the river north of Coxendale.[14]. Thomas's wife,whose name is not known, apparently died in England. Her name does not appear in the few surviving colonial records nor is she included in the list of headrights submitted by Captain Thomas or his sons to patent land.
The last known record of Thomas Osborne was on July 4, 1637, when, as Captain Thomas Osborne, he and Captain William Perry, both serving as over- seers of the will of John Smith, were ordered by the court to sell Smith's land in James City County.
[15] Thomas had died by 1642 when a patent shows his land Fearing in possession of Mr. Thomas Osborne, undoubtedly his son Thomas2Osborne, since the title captain was not used.[16] He may have died as early as 1638, if the (re)survey of his land that year was needed to settle his estate.
Children of Thomas Osborne: THOMAS2OSBORNE (ca. 1610s?-1666) P- 7 Edward Osborne (ca. 1610s?- )(presumed) P- 5 Presumed Son EDWARD OSBORNE: Edward Osborne, if the son of Thomas Osborne, was born probably in the 1610s [17] in England, where he apparently spent his teenage years. By 1636 he had joined his presumed father in Virginia.[18] Edward Osborne acquired the capital needed to transport himself and seven other people to the Virginia Colony and on June 2, 1636, was patented 400 acres in Henrico County across the James River from the plantation of his presumed father. Per the patent, Edward's land was bordered on the southwest by the great swamp, on the west by the James River, on the north by the land toward the falls, and on the east by the woods. [19]
Nothing further is known about this Edward or his children, if he had any. He may have returned to England, or been killed in the massacre of 1644, or simply died without heirs. The only Osbornes of the next generation living in Henrico County were Thomas1Osborne, proved son of Thomas2Osborne, and Edward Osborne, who lived on land adjoining Thomas1Osborne, thus probably a brother.
THOMAS OSBORNE (ca.1610s-ca.1650s) of Coxendale (also called Fearing), was probably born in England around 1610.[3] By 1637, he had joined his father in Henrico (now Chesterfield) County, in the Colony of Virginia, where he prospered and increased the Osborne landholdings before his relatively early death, probably in the 1650s. As a young adult, Thomas Osborne acquired the needed capital to transport himself and nine other people to Virginia, which enabled him on June 16, 1637, to receive a patent for 500 acres. The tract, named "Batchelers bancke" on the patent, was described as being bounded on the west and south by Fearing, on the north by the woods, and on the east by the James River.[4] Thomas2Osborne married; however, the name of his wife is not known. The marriage most likely occurred after his arrival in Virginia, since no wife was named as a head-right. She was probably a daughter of one of the landowners in the area. At the death of his father, about 1636-42, Thomas2Osborne and his wife probably moved into the old home on Fearing. About 1641 son Thomas3Osborne was born, ·Äî2·Äî Thomas Osborne may have been the Thomas Osborne who in 1623 was living "in the Maine" near Jamestown [1] and/or the 18-year-old Thomas Osborne who in 1624/1625 was one of the governor's men living in Pashehaighs. [2] The latter person would have been about the right age. Thomas Osborne , son of Captain Thomas Osborne followed five years later by son Edward Osborne. The names of the daughters, if any, are not known; however, one of them may have married a Turpin. In 1642 Thomas Osborne increased his landholding by patenting 400 acres. The land, as described on the patent, was at the head of Coxendale and bounded on the west-northwest by the land of Christopher Branch (Kingsland), north-northeast by Mr. Osborne's land called Fearing and south-southwest into the woods, being 200 poles in breadth from the head of Proctor Creek toward the land called Mount My Lady (Malady) and a full mile into the woods. He was entitled to the land for having transported eight more people to the colony. [5] Thomas2Osborne, who had undoubtedly heard his father talk of the Indian Massacre of 1622, witnessed the massacre on April 18, 1644, which resulted in the death of many colonists. Henrico County, being on the frontier, was especially vulnerable.
The Motherland was also having troubles; in 1648 King Charles I was beheaded. For the next twelve years Cromwell and Parliament ran England. Many pro-king cavaliers fled to Virginia, which was the last British colony to submit. In 1660 the Virginians warmly welcomed King Charles II to the throne.
Thomas2Osborne undoubtedly prospered in the tobacco trade and kept in contact with relatives and friends in England; however, the few surviving records provide little information. He died in the late 1650s or early 1660s; at least by 1666, when land, which he had left to his son Thomas and which his son had subsequently sold, was sold again.[6] He apparently distributed his land between his sons Thomas and Edward (whose lands adjoined and were later described as being divided by Garden Creek and adjacent to Matthew Turpin) and may also have left land to a Mr. Turpin.
Children of Thomas Osborne: THOMAS3OSBORNE (ca.1641-1692) ml 1688 Mrs. Martha ( ) Branch 2 THOMAS OSBORNE ; m2 ; m2 ?(daughter) Osborne ( - ) m Mr. Turpin
Son EDWARD OSBORNE: Edward Osborne (ca.1646-1697) ml 1694 Mrs. Elizabeth (Shippy) Brown. Edward Osborne, son of Thomas2Osborne, was born about 1646. [7] Although the records provide no positive proof that he was a son, there is little doubt, since his land was adjoining that of proved-son Thomas3Osborne, implying an inheritance split. In 1679 he and Thomas30sborne, listed together, were the only Osbornes on the Henrico County tithes list. [8] Edward Osborne, as the younger son, did not receive the formal education that his brother Thomas--* Osborne received, for Edward signed his documents with his mark "EO", whereas his brother signed his full name.
Edward Osborne married twice. By his first wife, whose name is not known, he had three children: Tabitha, Martha and Edward Osborne.
Edward Osborne apparently was a kind, helpful man, aiding people in need. He handled the estate and funeral of a Mr. Whitman, who died at Edward's home in 1689, leaving no will nor relations.[9] He also cared for Gilbert Platt who in 1692 left Edward most of his estate in consideration of the trouble and care Edward had given him in his sickness. Gilbert Platt also left a bed to Tabitha Osborne, but only 10 shillings to his wife Mary Platt.[10] In 1688 with brother Thomas3Osborne, nephew Thomas^Osborne and John Goode, Edward witnessed the will of Matthew Turpin, a possible nephew [11], and in 1691 with brother Thomas3Osborne, Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Tanner, Edward was appointed by the court to appraise the estate of John Cole. [12]
Chapter 2(Continued) Son EDWARD OSBORNE: In 1694 Edward Osborne found a seaman floating in the James River and had to testify in court. By so doing, Edward's age has been preserved for posterity, for the clerk recorded with the deposition that Edward was then about age 48. Also testifying were Mr. Thomas Edwards, age about 25, and Mr. John Pattison, age about 58. [13] That same year, Edward Osborne married second Mrs. Elizabeth (Shippy) Brown; their marriage license was issued June 15, 1694.[14] Elizabeth was the daughter of Thomas and Martha Shippy (her mother later married Edward Stratton.)[15] Elizabeth's first husband, Jeremiah Brown, who had a plantation at Varina and was the keeper of the county ferry, had died in 1690.[16] Edward assumed his wife's problems and in 1695 tried to collect from John Higley E1200 of tobacco due her former husband for three years rent.[17]
In 1695 Edward Osborne's eldest daughter, Tabitha, married their neighbor Benjamin Branch, the 30-year-old bachelor of Kingsland immediately north of the Osbornes. Benjamin's grandfather Christopher Branch had settled in the area about the same time as Capt. Thomas Osborne.[18]
The following year, in June of 1696, Edward increased his landholdings by purchasing from his nephew Thomas^Osborne 200 acres of the Coxendale tract. Per the deed the boundary of the 200 acres ran from the mouth of Garden Creek up the creek on the east side to the bridge built by Edward Osborne, then along Edward's line to Matthew Turpin's line, then along Turpin's line to the James River, then down the river to the said creek. [19]
Edward Osborne had not much longer to live. On June 6, 1696, he wrote his will stating that he was sick and weak. He died the following year at about the age of 51. He left to his son Edward all the land (not described in the will) and Negroes Moll and Tom and left to his daughter Martha Osborne livestock and miscellaneous items. These two children were to be cared for by Benjamin Branch until Edward was age 19 and Martha age 16. Benjamin Branch was also appointed executor. Samuel Branch, Martha Osborne, and Joseph Tanner witnessed the will which was probated in court on April 1, 1697. [20]
Children of Edward Osborne: 1-TabithaOsborne (ca.1677-ca.1720) m 1st 1695 Benjamin Branch (1665-1705), son of Christopher Branch (1627-1665) and grandson of Chrisopher & Mary Branch of Kingsland[21]; m 2nd by 1707 Thomas Cheatham ( -1720) [22] Children: [23] Benjamin Branch (cl696- ) m 1st Mary Osborne, dau. of Thomas & Martha (Jones) Osborne; m 2nd Obedience Turpin. [page 29] 2-Martha Osborne ( - ) 3-Edward Osborne (ca.1689-1724) m Agnes Branch, dau. Of Thomas Branch [24]. She m 2nd ca.1726 John Worsham, son of John2 & Phoebee Worsham.[25]
NOTES 1. John Camden Hotten, ed.. The Original List of Persons of Quality 1600-1700 (1874), p.201 (Muster of Jan. 23, 1624/25). Susan Myra Kingsbury, ed.. The Records of the Virginia Company of London (1933) Vol.Ill (1607-1622) , p.246. 2. Virginius Dabney, Virginia, The New Dominion (1971), pp.28-34. Kingsbury, p.226. 3. Francis Earle Lutz, Chesterfield, An Old Virginia County (1954),pp.22-35. 4. Same, p.36. Hotten, p.169 (List of Living S Dead, Feb. 16, 1623). 5. Kingsbury, pp.608,611. 6. H.R. Mcllwaine, ed., The Executive Journal of the Council of Colonial Virginia (1928), pp.60,64. 7. Hotton, p.201. 8. Mcllwaine, p.151. 9. Possibly promoted in 1628 and at least by 1631/32, but sources have not been confirmed by author. 10. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The General Assembly of Virginia 1619-1978 (1978),pp.6-12. 11. Virginia Patent Book 1, p.519. Nell Marion Nugent, Cavaliers and Pioneers, p.80. 12. VA Patent Bk.8,p.215. 13.VA Patent Bk.l, p.512. Nugent,p.78. 14. VA Patent Bk.l, p.358. Nugent, p.41. 15. Nugent, p.61. 16.VAPatent Bk.l,p.836. Nugent,p.137. 17. Date estimated. 18. Edward was not on Musters of 1623/24 or 24/25. Hotten, pp.169,201. 19.VA Patent Bk.l, p.358. Nugent, p.41. Chapter 2: THOMAS2OSBORNE 1. John Camden Hotten, ed., The Original List of Persons of Quality 1600-1700 (1874),p.177. 2. Same, p.219. 3. Date estimated. 4. Virginia Patent Book 1, p.512. Nell Marion Nugent, Cavaliers and Pioneers (1963), p.78 (Thomas Osborne Jr.). 5.VA Patent Bk.l, p.836. Nugent,p.137. 6. Nugent, p.136 (VA Pat. Bk.6, p.484). 7. Henrico County Record Book 1688-1697, p.49. 8. Henrico Co. Bk.1677-1692, p.103. 9. Henrico Co. Bk.1678-1693, pp.321,337. 10. Same, p.315. 11. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.41. 12. Henrico Co. Bk.1678-1693, p.388. 13. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.49. 14. Same, p.552. 15. Same, p.622 (Martha Stratton's will). 16.Same, p.179 (Jeremiah Brown's will). Henrico Co. Bk. 1678-1693, p.298 (keeper of the ferry). 17. Henrico Co. Bk. 1694-1701, p.3/; Bk. 1688-1697, pp.576-577. 18. Annie Lash Jester, Adventurers of Purse and Person (1964), pp.100-103. 19. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.634. 20. Same, p.707. 21. Jester, pp.100-103.


Capt. Thomas Osborne I
Gender: Male
Birth: 1576 Crixie, Kent, England
Death: 1642 (65) Coxendale (now Chester?), Henrico County (now Chesterfield County?), Virginia
Immediate Family:
Son of John Osborne, II and Jane Smyth
Husband of Ann Osborne and Joan Smith
Father of Thomas Osborne, II and Edward Osborne, Il
Brother of Edward Osborne; Alice Osborne; William Osborn; Joane Osborne; John Osborne; and Nycholas Osborne ¬´ less
https://www.geni.com/people/Capt-Thomas-Osborne-of-Coxendale/6000000007097406594

Thomas Osborne is my 10th Great Grandfather:
You ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn Smith your mother
·Üí Alice Elmyra Smith Henley her mother
·Üí Nellie Mary Henley Wooldridge her mother
·Üí John Merrit Wooldridge her father
·Üí Merritt Wooldridge his father
·Üí Chesley Wooldridge his father
·Üí Edward Wooldridge, Jr. his father
·Üí Mary Wooldridge Flournoy his mother
·Üí Edward Mologe Wooldridge her husband
·Üí Martha Wooldridge his mother
·Üí Edward Osborne, III her father
·Üí Thomas Osborne, II his father
·Üí Capt. Thomas Osborne of Coxendale his father

CPT Thomas Osborne, I
Birth:¬â€  1576 Kent, England
Death:¬â€  1642, Varina, Henrico County, Virginia,

Captain Thomas Osborne I
came to the Virginia Colony¬â€ on the Bona Nova 1619
¬â€ 
Family links:¬â€ 
¬â€ Parents:
¬â€ ¬â€ John Osborne (1543 - 1616)
¬â€ 
¬â€ Children:
¬â€ ¬â€ Thomas Osborne (1609 - 1661)*
¬â€ 
*Calculated relationship
¬â€ 
Burial:
Henrico Parish Church Cemetery
Varina
Henrico County
Virginia, USA

https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=176122318

08 February 1997. The following I have extracted (copied) from Chapter1,
of Elizabeth J. Harrell's book, "The Osbornes," 1983, LOC nbr CS 71.O814.
I received this book from Interlibrary Loan, from the Virginia State
Library and Archives (VSLA) on 02 Februrary 1997, at the Greene County
Martha Jefferson Library Branch. MLW. Chapter 1. Thomas Osborne:
(c1580s?-6138/42). Thomas Osborne arrived in Jamestown in the Colony of
Virginia on November 4, 1619. He was then probably in his late 30s and
had apparently left behind his wife and children. The 3-month voyage on
board the Bona Nova had taken him via the West Indies, and per the
records of the London Company, all passengers arrived lusty and in good
health. [ John Camden Hotten, ed., "The Original List of Persons of
Quality 1600-1700" (1874), p.201 (muster of Jan. 23, 1624/25). Susan Myra
Kingsbury, ed., "The Records of the Virginia Company of London" (1933)
Vol. III (1607-1622), p.246.] Thomas succeeded in his new home, and by
1625 was the lieutenant in charge of the College Lands and the
representative from his area to the House of Burgesses in Jamestown.
Later, he was promoted to the rank of captain and was granted the large
Coxendale plantation, which was to be the home of the Osbornes for at
least the next five generations. He died sometime prior to 1642,
probably in his early 60s. [Elizabeth J. Harrell, p.1.] Spouse: Unknown
to the author. Last known record: 4 July 1637, Captain Thomas Osborne and
Captain Willima Perry serving as overseers of the will of John Smith,
ordered by the court to sell Smith's land in James City County. By 1642,
Captain Thomas Osborne had died, when a patent shows his land Fearing
(Coxendale) in possession of Mr. Thomas Osborne (son). Captain Thomas
Osborne may have died as early as 1638. Children: Thomas Osborne
(ca1610s?-by1666) p.7. Edward Osborne (ca 1610? - ?) p.5. Both sons came
to Virginia much later than their father, presumably after their mother's
death in England. Both Thomas and Edward Osborne acquired land adjacent
to Captain Thomas Osborne's.

The Bona Nova

Voyages are listed at ship name on Ship List

November, 1619 The Bona Nova, from London, arrived at Virginia

Ship and Passenger Information:

Passengers from the Port of London on the Bona Nova to Virginia:

Barry, William (Sgt.). . -- See name in Virginia Muster, February 7,
1624/5
Brocke, John . . . . . . -- Age 19 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Calder, Thomas . . . . . -- Age 24 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Claxon, John . . . . . . -- See name in Virginia Muster, February 4,
1624/5
Crowder, Mr. Hugh . . . -- See name in Virginia Muster, February 4,
1624/5
Dickson, Stephen . . . . -- Age 25 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Evands, William . . . . -- Age 23 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Gaskoyne, Thomas . . . . -- Age 34 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Goodman, Robart . . . . -- Age 24 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Gyffith, Ambrose . . . . -- Age 33 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Hattfild, Joseph . . . . -- Age 24 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Hill, Francis . . . . . -- Age 22 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Hobson, Edward . . . . . -- See name in Virginia Muster, January 23,
1624/5
Levett, George . . . . . -- Age 29 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Mansfeild, David . . . . -- See name in Virginia Muster, February 4,
1624/5
Morris, John . . . . . . -- Age 24 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Osborne, Ralph . . . . . -- Age 22 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Osborne, Thomas (Lt.). . -- See name in Virginia Muster, January 23,
1624/5
Rimwell, Adam . . . . . -- Age 24 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Rookines, William . . . -- Age 26 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Seirson, Cutbert . . . . -- Age 22 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Sherley, Daniell . . . . -- Age 30 in Virginia Muster, January 23, 1624/5
Smith, Susanna . . . . . -- See name in Virginia Muster, February 4,
1624/5
(Her husband, John, arrived on the Elsabeth in 1611)
Vaghan, John . . . . . . -- Age 23 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5
Weldon, William . . . . -- See name in Virginia Muster, January 23,
1624/5
Wynwill, Christopher . . -- Age 26 in Virginia Muster, February 7, 1624/5

http://www.primenet.com/~langford/spls/619va001.htm#Bona_Nova
30July1998, MLW.

Muster of the inhabitants of Virginia settlements, January 22 & 23,
1624/5

Sources: "Hotten's Lists" and "Adventurers of Purse and Person"
(Use browser "Bookmark" or "Back" to return to this page.)
Other information is available at the main page for Virginia
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------
Settlers living at Colledge Land, Henrico, in Virginia

Baugh, Thomas . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Supply (No date given)
Branch, Christopher . . . -- Arrived on the London Merchant (No date
given)
(wife) Branch, Mary . . . -- Arrived on the London Merchant (No date
given)
(son) Branch, Thomas . . 9 months
Browninge, William . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
Campion, Robert . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
Davis, Richard . . . . . . 16 Arrived on the Jonathan in 1620
Edlow, Mathew . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Neptune in 1618
Hobson, Edward . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova in 1619
Jorden, Peeter . . . . . . 22 Arrived on the London Merchant in 1620
Lapworth, Robert . . . . . -- Arrived on the Abigail (No date given)
Moore, Leonard . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
Moyses, Theoder . . . . . -- Arrived on the London Merchant (No date
given)
Osborne, Thomas . . . . . -- Lieutenant, Arrived on the Bona Nova in
1619
Parker, Thomas . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Neptune (No date given)
Price, William . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Starr (No date given)
Raughton, Ezekiah . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
(wife) Raughton, Margrett -- Arrived in the Warwick (No date given)
Sherley, Daniell . . . . . 30 Arrived on the Bona Nova in 1619
Watson, John . . . . . . . -- Arrived on the William & Thomas (No date
given)
Weldon, William . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova in 1619
Wilton, Francis . . . . . -- Arrived on the Jonathan (No date given)

http://www.primenet.com/~langford/places/va625001.htm#Muster
30July1998.

http://members.aol.com/verious/osbgen/f35.htm#R4135
14 September 1998

Thomas OSBORNE-4135

Born: 1610/1620 [1]
Died: 1650/1660 [1]

Marr:

Children

1.Thomas OSBORNE-1095 ;Born: ca 1641 [1] ;Died: 1692 Henrico Co.,VA[2]
Marr: [1]
Marr: Martha -4096
2.Edward OSBORNE-4136 ;Born: ca 1645 [1] ;Died: 1697 Henrico Co.,VA[3]
Marr: [1]
Marr: 1694 Elizabeth SHIPPY-4159

Notes:

1."The Osbornes", Elizabeth J. Harrell
2.Will of Thomas Osborne-1095; Henrico Co., VA Wills and Deeds 1688-1697
3.Will of Edward Osborne-4136; Henrico Co., VA Wills and Deeds 1688-1697


Notes ~ Martha Osborne (1680 - 1757)

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

Chapter 1
THOMAS OSBORNE (ca. 1580s?-1638/42)

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

Jamestown, the capital of the colony, had been founded by the London Company in 1607, under a charter granted by King James I of England. During the first twelve years the small colony had suffered many hardships but by 1619 the future looked promising. That summer the first elected delegates to the new House of Burgesses had met at Jamestown. Also that year, 8 ships had arrived bringing a total of 1261 people, which almost doubled the population of the colony.

Among the new comers were 90 marriageable maidens, 100 boys and girls to serve as apprentices, tradesmen from European countries, indentured servants, and the first Negroes. With Thomas on the Bona Nova and possibly in his charge were 50 men who had been sent by the London Company to be tenants at the new College Lands.[2]

The College Lands were located about 40 miles up the James River from Jamestown at Henrico (or Henricus) City. The town, named for Prince Henry, had been founded by Deputy Governor Thomas Dale eight years earlier as an alternative capital. It was located at the neck of a peninsula called Henrico (now Farras) Island formed by one of the many curves of the James River. [Map 2] Immediately upstream lay another neck of land called Coxendale, where Dale grazed the livestock and fenced off 100 acres for the glebe (church) land. The town never prospered; settlement instead concentrated in the Bermuda Hundred area founded a few years later by Dale a short distance down the river near the mouth of the Appomattox River. In 1618 Henrico City was designated by the London Company to be the site for a college for the education of the Indians. Ten thousand acres on the northeast side of the river were allocated for the use of the college and the Coxendale area on the south side of the river was set aside to be worked by tenants brought over by the company. The tenants were to receive one-half of the products of their labor; the other half was to go toward the support of the tutors and scholars and the buildings of the college.[3]

For several years Thomas1Osborne worked at the College Lands, slowly becoming accustomed to the hot, humid summers, cold winters and dense forests of his new home. He was learning the ways of the apparently peaceful natives when suddenly at 8:00 a.m. on Good Friday morning March 22, 1621/22* the Indians attacked simultaneously throughout the colony. One third of the colonists were massacred. At least seventeen died at the College Lands. At the plantations northwest of the college, thirteen died at Thomas Sheffield's plantation, including Sheffield and his wife, and twenty-one died at Capt. Berkeley's plantation at Falling Creek where ironworks had recently been established. Mrs. Proctor, * For an explanation of combined dates, see page x. whose land was just north of Coxendale and whose husband was in London, was able successfully to hold off the Indians.[4]

The governor ordered all survivors to move into the Jamestown area for protection. Some protested, notably Mrs.Proctor. On April 20, 1622, Captain Roger Smith, who a week earlier had evacuated the neighboring Charles City area, was given, as stated in the court records, "absolute power over Henricus Island and Coxendale and (ordered) to use all vigilance for the safe bringing away of the people, cattle and goods and to charge and command upon point of death to obey him. "[5] Thomas 1-Osborne and the other survivers of the College Lands obeyed and took up temporary residence at Mr. Evan's plantation near Jamestown on the south side of the river. [6]

In 1624, King James I dissolved the London Company and made Virginia a crown colony. He died soon afterwards and was succeeded by his son Charles I; eldest son Henry, for whom Henrico was named, had predeceased him.

Thomas Osborne returned to the College Lands and in 1625, as seen in the muster taken on January 23, 1624/25, was the lieutenant in charge. This muster also showed that at that time he had three servants: Daniel Sherley, age 30, who had arrived on the Bona Nova with Thomas; Peter Jorden, age 22, who had arrived in 1620 on the London Merchant; and Richard Davis, age 16, who had arrived in 1620 on the Jonathan.[7]

After the massacre, the attitude of the English toward the Indians changed, and the plans for the college were dropped (the name, however, was used to describe the area for several more years). Retaliation raids were made, one of which was led by Lieutenant Thomas^Osborne in 1627. As recorded in the minutes of the court at Jamestown on July 4, 1627: [8]

It was "thought fitt that we should draw out partyes from all our plantations and goe uppon the Indians and cutt downe their corne, and further that we should sett uppon them all in one day, viz: the first of August next. The plantations of the neck of land and the Colledge to goe uppon the Tanx Powhattans....Commanders appointed for these services are these, viz: For Tanx Powhattans, Left. Thos. Osborne in chief, Thomas Harris second."

The results of the raid are not known; however, he was soon promoted to captain. [9]

Thomas Osborne gained the respect of his neighbors and in 1625 was elected to represent his area at the House of Burgesses in Jamestown. He also served from 1629 to 1633 and possibly longer (the 1634-1638 records are lost). The area he represented in 1633 included Henrico, Arrowhattocks, Neck of Land and Curies; the name College Lands dropped from use about 1632.[10]

Since his arrival, not only had Thomas^Osborne acquired title and position but also enough wealth to pay for the transportation of twenty people to the colonies, which enabled him in 1634 to be granted the 1000 acres (50 acres/person) of Coxendale. The land, which had probably been Thomas' home for a number of years and which he called "Fearing", was officially patented to him on February 6,1637, and was described as being bounded on the north by Proctor Creek, east by the James River, west by the woods and south by Henrico Island. On April 26, 1638, the land was (re)surveyed and found to actually contain only 800 acres . [11] (In 1692, however, it was still described as 1000 acres.[12])
Henrico County (whose records prior to 1677 are lost), was the westernmost county and in 1634 included land on both sides of the James River. It was separated from Charles City County by Turkey Island Creek on the north side of the river and by the Appomattox River on the south side. The county seat, where Thomas transacted business and attended the parish church, was at Varina, a few miles down the river from Coxendale. (Acentury later, in 1749, the area of Henrico County south of the James River became Chesterfield County.)
At some point, probably in the early 1630s, Captain Thomas-'-Osborne's son Thomas Osborne Jr. and presumed son Edward Osborne arrived in the colony and patented land nearby. Son Thomas Osborne Jr. in 1637 received 500 acres adjoining Coxendale [13] and presumed son Edward Osborne in 1636 was granted 400 acres across the river north of Coxendale.[14]. Thomas's wife,whose name is not known, apparently died in England. Her name does not appear in the few surviving colonial records nor is she included in the list of headrights submitted by Captain Thomas or his sons to patent land.

The last known record of Thomas Osborne was on July 4, 1637, when, as Captain Thomas Osborne, he and Captain William Perry, both serving as over- seers of the will of John Smith, were ordered by the court to sell Smith's land in James City County.

[15] Thomas had died by 1642 when a patent shows his land Fearing in possession of Mr. Thomas Osborne, undoubtedly his son Thomas2Osborne, since the title captain was not used.[16] He may have died as early as 1638, if the (re)survey of his land that year was needed to settle his estate.

Children of Thomas Osborne:
THOMAS2OSBORNE (ca. 1610s?-1666) P- 7 Edward Osborne (ca. 1610s?- )(presumed) P- 5
Presumed Son EDWARD OSBORNE:
Edward Osborne, if the son of Thomas Osborne, was born probably in the 1610s [17] in England, where he apparently spent his teenage years. By 1636 he had joined his presumed father in Virginia.[18]
Edward Osborne acquired the capital needed to transport himself and seven other people to the Virginia Colony and on June 2, 1636, was patented 400 acres in Henrico County across the James River from the plantation of his presumed father. Per the patent, Edward's land was bordered on the southwest by the great swamp, on the west by the James River, on the north by the land toward the falls, and on the east by the woods. [19]

Nothing further is known about this Edward or his children, if he had any. He may have returned to England, or been killed in the massacre of 1644, or simply died without heirs. The only Osbornes of the next generation living in Henrico County were Thomas1Osborne, proved son of Thomas2Osborne, and Edward Osborne, who lived on land adjoining Thomas1Osborne, thus probably a brother.

THOMAS OSBORNE (ca.1610s-ca.1650s) of Coxendale (also called Fearing), was probably born in England around 1610.[3] By 1637, he had joined his father in Henrico (now Chesterfield) County, in the Colony of Virginia, where he prospered and increased the Osborne landholdings before his relatively early death, probably in the 1650s.
As a young adult, Thomas Osborne acquired the needed capital to transport himself and nine other people to Virginia, which enabled him on June 16, 1637, to receive a patent for 500 acres. The tract, named "Batchelers bancke" on the patent, was described as being bounded on the west and south by Fearing, on the north by the woods, and on the east by the James River.[4]
Thomas2Osborne married; however, the name of his wife is not known. The marriage most likely occurred after his arrival in Virginia, since no wife was named as a head-right. She was probably a daughter of one of the landowners in the area. At the death of his father, about 1636-42, Thomas2Osborne and his wife probably moved into the old home on Fearing. About 1641 son Thomas3Osborne was born, ·Äî2·Äî Thomas Osborne may have been the Thomas Osborne who in 1623 was living "in the Maine" near Jamestown [1] and/or the 18-year-old Thomas Osborne who in 1624/1625 was one of the governor's men living in Pashehaighs. [2] The latter person would have been about the right age.
Thomas Osborne , son of Captain Thomas Osborne followed five years later by son Edward Osborne. The names of the daughters, if any, are not known; however, one of them may have married a Turpin.
In 1642 Thomas Osborne increased his landholding by patenting 400 acres. The land, as described on the patent, was at the head of Coxendale and bounded on the west-northwest by the land of Christopher Branch (Kingsland), north-northeast by Mr. Osborne's land called Fearing and south-southwest into the woods, being 200 poles in breadth from the head of Proctor Creek toward the land called Mount My Lady (Malady) and a full mile into the woods. He was entitled to the land for having transported eight more people to the colony. [5] Thomas2Osborne, who had undoubtedly heard his father talk of the Indian Massacre of 1622, witnessed the massacre on April 18, 1644, which resulted in the death of many colonists. Henrico County, being on the frontier, was especially vulnerable.

The Motherland was also having troubles; in 1648 King Charles I was beheaded. For the next twelve years Cromwell and Parliament ran England. Many pro-king cavaliers fled to Virginia, which was the last British colony to submit. In 1660 the Virginians warmly welcomed King Charles II to the throne.

Thomas2Osborne undoubtedly prospered in the tobacco trade and kept in contact with relatives and friends in England; however, the few surviving records provide little information. He died in the late 1650s or early 1660s; at least by 1666, when land, which he had left to his son Thomas and which his son had subsequently sold, was sold again.[6] He apparently distributed his land between his sons Thomas and Edward (whose lands adjoined and were later described as being divided by Garden Creek and adjacent to Matthew Turpin) and may also have left land to a Mr. Turpin.

Children of Thomas Osborne:
THOMAS3OSBORNE (ca.1641-1692) ml 1688 Mrs. Martha ( ) Branch
2 THOMAS OSBORNE
; m2
; m2 ?(daughter) Osborne ( - ) m Mr. Turpin

Son EDWARD OSBORNE:
Edward Osborne (ca.1646-1697) ml 1694 Mrs. Elizabeth (Shippy) Brown.
Edward Osborne, son of Thomas2Osborne, was born about 1646. [7] Although the records provide no positive proof that he was a son, there is little doubt, since his land was adjoining that of proved-son Thomas3Osborne, implying an inheritance split. In 1679 he and Thomas30sborne, listed together, were the only Osbornes on the Henrico County tithes list. [8] Edward Osborne, as the younger son, did not receive the formal education that his brother Thomas--* Osborne received, for Edward signed his documents with his mark "EO", whereas his brother signed his full name.

Edward Osborne married twice. By his first wife, whose name is not known, he had three children: Tabitha, Martha and Edward Osborne.

Edward Osborne apparently was a kind, helpful man, aiding people in need. He handled the estate and funeral of a Mr. Whitman, who died at Edward's home in 1689, leaving no will nor relations.[9] He also cared for Gilbert Platt who in 1692 left Edward most of his estate in consideration of the trouble and care Edward had given him in his sickness. Gilbert Platt also left a bed to Tabitha Osborne, but only 10 shillings to his wife Mary Platt.[10] In 1688 with brother Thomas3Osborne, nephew Thomas^Osborne and John Goode, Edward witnessed the will of Matthew Turpin, a possible nephew [11], and in 1691 with brother Thomas3Osborne, Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Tanner, Edward was appointed by the court to appraise the estate of John Cole. [12]

Chapter 2(Continued) Son EDWARD OSBORNE:
In 1694 Edward Osborne found a seaman floating in the James River and had to testify in court. By so doing, Edward's age has been preserved for posterity, for the clerk recorded with the deposition that Edward was then about age 48. Also testifying were Mr. Thomas Edwards, age about 25, and Mr. John Pattison, age about 58. [13] That same year, Edward Osborne married second Mrs. Elizabeth (Shippy) Brown; their marriage license was issued June 15, 1694.[14] Elizabeth was the daughter of Thomas and Martha Shippy (her mother later married Edward Stratton.)[15] Elizabeth's first husband, Jeremiah Brown, who had a plantation at Varina and was the keeper of the county ferry, had died in 1690.[16] Edward assumed his wife's problems and in 1695 tried to collect from John Higley E1200 of tobacco due her former husband for three years rent.[17]

In 1695 Edward Osborne's eldest daughter, Tabitha, married their neighbor Benjamin Branch, the 30-year-old bachelor of Kingsland immediately north of the Osbornes. Benjamin's grandfather Christopher Branch had settled in the area about the same time as Capt. Thomas Osborne.[18]

The following year, in June of 1696, Edward increased his landholdings by purchasing from his nephew Thomas^Osborne 200 acres of the Coxendale tract. Per the deed the boundary of the 200 acres ran from the mouth of Garden Creek up the creek on the east side to the bridge built by Edward Osborne, then along Edward's line to Matthew Turpin's line, then along Turpin's line to the James River, then down the river to the said creek. [19]

Edward Osborne had not much longer to live. On June 6, 1696, he wrote his will stating that he was sick and weak. He died the following year at about the age of 51. He left to his son Edward all the land (not described in the will) and Negroes Moll and Tom and left to his daughter Martha Osborne livestock and miscellaneous items. These two children were to be cared for by Benjamin Branch until Edward was age 19 and Martha age 16. Benjamin Branch was also appointed executor. Samuel Branch, Martha Osborne, and Joseph Tanner witnessed the will which was probated in court on April 1, 1697. [20]

Children of Edward Osborne:
1-TabithaOsborne (ca.1677-ca.1720) m 1st 1695 Benjamin Branch (1665-1705), son of Christopher Branch (1627-1665) and grandson of Chrisopher & Mary Branch of Kingsland[21]; m 2nd by 1707 Thomas Cheatham ( -1720) [22]
Children: [23]
Benjamin Branch (cl696- ) m 1st Mary Osborne, dau. of Thomas & Martha (Jones) Osborne; m 2nd Obedience Turpin. [page 29]
2-Martha Osborne ( - )
3-Edward Osborne (ca.1689-1724) m Agnes Branch, dau. Of Thomas Branch [24]. She m 2nd ca.1726 John Worsham, son of John2 & Phoebee Worsham.[25]

NOTES
1. John Camden Hotten, ed.. The Original List of Persons of Quality 1600-1700 (1874), p.201 (Muster of Jan. 23, 1624/25). Susan Myra Kingsbury, ed.. The Records of the Virginia Company of London (1933) Vol.Ill (1607-1622) , p.246.
2. Virginius Dabney, Virginia, The New Dominion (1971), pp.28-34. Kingsbury, p.226.
3. Francis Earle Lutz, Chesterfield, An Old Virginia County (1954),pp.22-35.
4. Same, p.36. Hotten, p.169 (List of Living S Dead, Feb. 16, 1623).
5. Kingsbury, pp.608,611.
6. H.R. Mcllwaine, ed., The Executive Journal of the Council of Colonial Virginia (1928), pp.60,64.
7. Hotton, p.201.
8. Mcllwaine, p.151.
9. Possibly promoted in 1628 and at least by 1631/32, but sources have not been confirmed by author.
10. Cynthia Miller Leonard, The General Assembly of Virginia 1619-1978 (1978),pp.6-12.
11. Virginia Patent Book 1, p.519. Nell Marion Nugent, Cavaliers and Pioneers, p.80.
12. VA Patent Bk.8,p.215.
13.VA Patent Bk.l, p.512. Nugent,p.78.
14. VA Patent Bk.l, p.358. Nugent, p.41.
15. Nugent, p.61.
16.VAPatent Bk.l,p.836. Nugent,p.137.
17. Date estimated.
18. Edward was not on Musters of 1623/24 or 24/25. Hotten, pp.169,201. 19.VA Patent Bk.l, p.358. Nugent, p.41.
Chapter 2: THOMAS2OSBORNE
1. John Camden Hotten, ed., The Original List of Persons of Quality 1600-1700 (1874),p.177.
2. Same, p.219.
3. Date estimated.
4. Virginia Patent Book 1, p.512. Nell Marion Nugent, Cavaliers and Pioneers (1963), p.78 (Thomas Osborne Jr.).
5.VA Patent Bk.l, p.836. Nugent,p.137.
6. Nugent, p.136 (VA Pat. Bk.6, p.484).
7. Henrico County Record Book 1688-1697, p.49. 8. Henrico Co. Bk.1677-1692, p.103.
9. Henrico Co. Bk.1678-1693, pp.321,337. 10. Same, p.315.
11. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.41.
12. Henrico Co. Bk.1678-1693, p.388.
13. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.49.
14. Same, p.552.
15. Same, p.622 (Martha Stratton's will).
16.Same, p.179 (Jeremiah Brown's will). Henrico Co. Bk. 1678-1693, p.298 (keeper of the ferry).
17. Henrico Co. Bk. 1694-1701, p.3/; Bk. 1688-1697, pp.576-577.
18. Annie Lash Jester, Adventurers of Purse and Person (1964), pp.100-103. 19. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.634.
20. Same, p.707.
21. Jester, pp.100-103.

NOTES
(Continued) Chapter 2:
22. Henrico Co. Bk.1707-1719, p.l (married ca. 1707); Bk.1725-37, p.36 (Thomas Cheatham's will).
23. James Branch Cabell, Branchiana (1907), p.133.
24. Henrico Co. Bk.1719-1724, p.359 (Agnes admin, of estate in 1724). William and Mary Quarterly, Series 1, Vol 25, p.66.
25. Henrico Co. Bk.1725-1737, p.62 (marriage agreement).
26. Henrico Co. Bk.1707-1719, p.l.
27. Henrico Co. Bk.1725-1737, p.62.
28. Chesterfield Co. Will Bk.l, p.535.
29.Henrico Co.Bk.1748-1750,p.35. Virginia Magazine, Vol.3, pp.281, 393-400. Chesterfield Co.Will Bk.3,p.260.
30. Chesterfield Co. Will Bk.3, p.380.
31. G. Brown Goode, Virginia Cousins (John Goode of Whitby)(1887).
32. Amelia Co. Marriage Records.
33. William D. Liggon, Jr., The Liggon Family and Connections (1948) p.361. William and Mary Quarterly, Series 1, Vol.25, p.202.
34. Amelia Co. Deed Bk.l, p.305.
35. Amelia Co. Deed Bk.3, p.411 S Bk.16, p.189. Frances Slaughter Bell papers; no source given.
36. Bell papers; no source given.
37. Amelia Co. Deed Bk.2,p.255.
38. Bell papers; no source given.
39. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.41. (Matthew Turpin"s will)
40. Nugent, p.317.
41. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.310 (Thomas3Osborne's will).
42. Henrico Co. Bk.1677-1739, p.107.
43. William and Mary Quarterly, Series 1, Vol.25, p.91. Henrico Co. Bk. 1688-1697, p.97 (Marriage licence Oct 1688). 44. Henrico Co. Bk.1688-1697, p.41.

___________________
Sources

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

Martha Osborne Wooldridge
Birth: 1680
(Fauquier County ? This cannot be correct) Virginia,
Death: 1757
Henrico County, Virginia,

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

Family links:
Spouse: John Wooldridge (1678 - 1757)*

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

Burial:
Renfrow Family Cemetery
Butler County
Kentucky, ***This CANNOT be right! ***
Plot: Uknown cem.

Will of Edward Osborne:
Name: Edward Osborne Sr 1 2 3 4
Sex: M
Birth: Henrico 1646 in Coxendale Plantation, Chester, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA 5 3 6 4
Will: 06 JUN 1696 3
Probate: Recorded 01 APR 1697 3
Death: 1696 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 7
Name: Edward Osborne 8 9 10 6
Birth: ABT 1650 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 7
Birth: ABT 1655 1
Death: 1695 5
Death: ABT 1697 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 3 4
Death: 1697 6
Note:
[Genealogy of the Lysell and McIlvaney Families.FTW]

John W. Pritchett writes: "Edward Osborne [O.1.2] (c.1646 -1697) was less educated than his brother and signed with his mark 'EO.' We do not know the name of Edward's first wife. Some have speculated that she was Tabitha, possibly a daughter of Gilbert Platt and a first wife. Gilbert married Mary Tanner, the widow of Joseph Tanner and left property to Edward and Tabitha Osborne in his 1692-will because they had cared for him in his old age. More likely Gilbert had no children and Edward and Tabitha were just his generous neighbors. Further the care-giver Tabitha was likely Edward's daughter.

Edward married second Elizabeth Sheppey. Their marriage license was issued 15 June (license) 1694.

"Edward died in Henrico County (will dated 6 June 1696 , recorded 1 April 1697). He left his son Edward all of his land and two 'Negroes.' Daughter Martha received livestock and sundry items. Capt. Thomas Branch became the guardian for Edward Jr. according to an estate account record in Henrico County of 1 December 1707."

"In 1694 Edward Osborne found a seaman floating in the James River and had to testify in court. By so doing, Edward's age was recorded at about age 48 thus placing his year of birth at about 1646.
(Henrico Co., VA Book 1688-1697, p. 49)"

Henrico Co., VA Will Book 3, pg. 707 - 1688-97 as transcribed in "Yesterday When It Is Past" by Rose Chambers Goode McCullough, pg. 88-89:
"In the name of God Armen, I Edward Osborne of Henrico County in the Parish of Varina being sick and weak in my body but in health in mind thanks be to all Mighty God, do make and appoint this my last will and Testament. First I bequeathe my sould to God who gave it me and my body to be burried according to the Descresion of my Executor whom I shall appoint and after my just debts paid I give and bequeath my Estate in manner and forme as followeth, Secondly I give and bequeath unto my son Edward Osborne all my land in generall to him and his heirs forever and one negro woman named Moll with her increase excepting the first child she bringeth, I give to my daughter Martha Osborne; and one negro boy to my son Edward aforesaid and Three cows ahorne six years old and one heefier of three years old to (two) steers of three years old apiece and two feather beds and furniture and one square muscled gun with a french lock, and my little gunn and two young sows with pigg and one pot of two gallons and a half both iron potts with hoods and one pair of running iron racks and my best chest with lock and key, and two horses, one of seven years old and the other three, and three large and two small deep puter dishes and ten plates of peuter and four Ewes and two new calf-skin chairs and one brass skimmer and Ladle and one collar hanes and cart saddle such Estate and land I appoint him to be possest with at the age of nineteen years old. Thirdly I give and bequeathe unto my daugher Martha Osborne two cows and a heifer of two years old and one steer and one feather bed and old Rigg and blanket half worn one great chest with lock and key. Fourthly and lastly I appoint my Son-in-Law Benjamin Branch my whole and full Executor committing the tuition of my two children Edward & Martha to him the said Branch and his wife till such time as they come of age, the said Edward at nineteen and their estates above paid to them. In witness that this is my last will and testament I have hereunto set my hand this sixth day of January one thousand six hundred and ninety six in the present of
Sam Branch
Martha Osborne
Joseph Tanner
signed: Edward E O Osborne
This will was probated in April 1697
Note: The E O in the signature stand for 'his mark'"
...x

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=john_d_newport&id=I10122&style=TABLE
-------------------

ancestral listing:

1 Thomas Harris Captain b: 19 DEC 1585 d: 1658
+ Audrey Hoare b: 25 AUG 1604 c: 28 AUG 1604 d: BEF 1635
2 Mary Harris b: 1625 d: BEF 01 FEB 1703/04
+ Gilbert Platt b: ABT 1621 d: MAY 1692
3 Tabitha Platt b: ABT 1655 d: 1692
+ Edward Osborne Sr b: 1646 d: 1696
4 Tabitha Osborne b: 06 FEB 1675 d: AFT 1719
+ Thomas Cheatham Jr b: ABT 1678 d: AFT 1756
5 Edward Cheatham b: ABT 1709 d: BEF 1756
5 Thomas III Cheatham b: ABT 1711 d: 1770
+ Ann Pride d: BEF 1770
6 Thomas Cheatham Jr
6 Josiah Cheatham
5 Francis Cheatham b: ABT 1713
5 Charles Cheatham b: 1720
5 Tabitha Cheatham b: ABT 1720
+ Josiah Hatcher b: 1693 d: AFT 12 NOV 1761
6 Thomas Hatcher b: 1742 d: 17 JUL 1797
+ Sarah Porter b: 07 FEB 1744 d: 1782
+ Lucy Curd b: ABT 1756
6 Martha Hatcher b: ABT 1746
6 Josiah Hatcher b: ABT 1750 d: OCT 1800
6 Phoebe Hatcher b: ABT 1752
6 Henry Hatcher b: 07 MAY 1755 d: 19 JUL 1836
6 Gideon Hatcher b: ABT 1756
6 Daniel Hatcher b: ABT 1758
6 Seth Hatcher b: 13 JAN 1760 d: BEF JAN 1813
6 William Hatcher b: ABT 1762 d: BEF 25 NOV 1815
5 Leonard Cheatham
5 James Cheatham
+ Benjamin Branch b: ABT 1680
5 Benjamin Branch b: ABT 1700
4 Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1680 d: ABT 1741
4 Peter Osborne b: ABT 1680
4 Martha Osborne b: ABT 1681 d: AFT 1759
4 Edward Osborne Jr b: ABT 1689 d: ABT 1724
4 John Osborne b: ABT 1690
4 Frances Osborne b: ABT 1690
+ Thomas Ligon Jr. b: BEF 11 JAN 1623/24 c: 11 JAN 1623/24 d: BET 10 JAN 1674/75 AND 16 MAR 1675/76
3 Johan Mary Ligon b: 1653 d: 07 NOV 1726
3 Richard Ligon b: 1657 d: 04 APR 1723
+ Mary Worsham b: 1657 d: 20 JUN 1737
4 Matthew Ligon b: 1699
+ Elizabeth Anderson b: 1702
5 Richard Ligon b: 1720 d: BEF 18 FEB 1779
+ Anne Ward b: ABT 1740
6 Leonard Seth Ligon b: 01 APR 1762 d: BEF 20 SEP 1809
+ Jeanette Mayo b: 24 MAY 1773 d: BEF 03 FEB 1862
4 Henry Lygon
4 Sarah Lygon
4 Mary Lygon
3 Mathew Ligon b: 1659 d: BEF 01 MAY 1689
3 William Ligon b: 1660 d: 11 AUG 1689
+ Mary Tanner
4 William Ligon d: BEF 1764
+ Elizabeth Batte
4 Thomas Ligon b: ABT 1680
+ Elizabeth Worsham
4 Mary Phoebe Ligon b: ABT 1685
4 Joseph Ligon b: ABT 1687 d: 17 NOV 1751
+ Judith
+ E Lucretia
3 Hugh Lygon b: 1661 d: 1704
3 Mary Lygon b: 1663 d: 1686
3 Thomas Lygon 3rd b: 1678
2 William Harris Major b: ABT 1629 d: AFT 01 FEB 1677/78
+ Alice WifeofWilliam Harris
3 William Harris b: ABT 1672 d: ABT 1743
3 Edward Harris
+ Joane WidowofWilliam Vincent b: 1582 d: AFT 1639

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=DESC&db=john%5Fd%5Fnewport&id=I11026
------------------------------

"When Gilbert Platt died in Henrico County in the spring of 1692 (will dated 10 April 1692 , proved 1 June 1692), he left his property to Tabitha Osborne, and her husband, Edward Osborne Sr. because they cared for him when he was sick. To Mary Browne (Tanner) Platt, he left one shilling. Some have concluded that Tabitha Osborne was Gilbert's daughter, by a previous marriage. Yet others believe Platt was simply expressing his appreciation for their kindness."

"Tabitha is not listed in her husband's will which was written in 1696 so it is assumed that she was dead by this time."

...x
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=john%5Fd%5Fnewport&id=I15163
------------------------------------

Name: Edward Osborne Jr 1
Sex: M
Birth: ABT 1689 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 2 3
Death: ABT 1724 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 2 3
Birth: ABT 1679 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 1
Death: 1732
Name: Edward H. Osborne
Name: Edward Osborne 3 4
Note:
[Genealogy of the Lysell and McIlvaney Families.FTW]

Wanda Brooks posts the following: "According to his father's will, Edward was less than 19 years old when his father wrote his will in 1696 so he was born after 1677. According to a petition he filed in Henrico Co. Court Order 1707-1719, pg. 1 Edward was 18 years old at that time. This petition was supposedly filed in 1707 (see below) placing his birth year at 1689.

"'Edward Osborne having by his petition to this court humbly set forth that he being at the age of eighteen years by law--hath liberty to choose his Guardian and praying that he may be permitted to do the same. And that Thomas Chetham, Jr. and Tabitha his wife who unjustly possess his estate may be ordered to pay and deliver the same to such persons as the said Edward makes choice of Mr. Tho. Branch who is approved by the Court and ordered that the aforesaid Chetham and Tabitha his wife do pay and deliver unto the aforesaid Thomas Branch what estate they have in their hands belonging to the aforesaid Edward Osborne in the presence of Major William Farrow and Captain Thomas Jefferson, who are advised to make report of their proceeding terms to the next court.' As transcribed in 'Yesterday When It Is Past' by Rose Chambers goode McCullough, pg. 90."

"Henrico County Will and Deed 1706-1709, pg. 68
Accounts of estate of Edward Osborne, delivered to Thomas Branch, as guardian of said Osborne.
Signed by William Farrar and Thomas Jefferson
Dec. 1, 1707"

...x

.

Father: Edward Osborne Sr b: 1646 in Coxendale Plantation, Chester, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA
Mother: Tabitha Platt b: ABT 1655 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=john%5Fd%5Fnewport&id=I11079
____________________

Name: Edward Osborne Sr 1 2 3 4
Sex: M
Birth: Henrico 1646 in Coxendale Plantation, Chester, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA 5 3 6 4
Will: 06 JUN 1696 3
Probate: Recorded 01 APR 1697 3
Death: 1696 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 7
Name: Edward Osborne 8 9 10 6
Birth: ABT 1650 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 7
Birth: ABT 1655 1
Death: 1695 5
Death: ABT 1697 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 3 4
Death: 1697 6
Note:
[Genealogy of the Lysell and McIlvaney Families.FTW]

John W. Pritchett writes: "Edward Osborne [O.1.2] (c.1646 -1697) was less educated than his brother and signed with his mark 'EO.' We do not know the name of Edward's first wife. Some have speculated that she was Tabitha, possibly a daughter of Gilbert Platt and a first wife. Gilbert married Mary Tanner, the widow of Joseph Tanner and left property to Edward and Tabitha Osborne in his 1692-will because they had cared for him in his old age. More likely Gilbert had no children and Edward and Tabitha were just his generous neighbors. Further the care-giver Tabitha was likely Edward's daughter.

Edward married second Elizabeth Sheppey. Their marriage license was issued 15 June (license) 1694.

"Edward died in Henrico County (will dated 6 June 1696 , recorded 1 April 1697). He left his son Edward all of his land and two 'Negroes.' Daughter Martha received livestock and sundry items. Capt. Thomas Branch became the guardian for Edward Jr. according to an estate account record in Henrico County of 1 December 1707."

"In 1694 Edward Osborne found a seaman floating in the James River and had to testify in court. By so doing, Edward's age was recorded at about age 48 thus placing his year of birth at about 1646.
(Henrico Co., VA Book 1688-1697, p. 49)"

Henrico Co., VA Will Book 3, pg. 707 - 1688-97 as transcribed in "Yesterday When It Is Past" by Rose Chambers Goode McCullough, pg. 88-89:
"In the name of God Armen, I Edward Osborne of Henrico County in the Parish of Varina being sick and weak in my body but in health in mind thanks be to all Mighty God, do make and appoint this my last will and Testament. First I bequeathe my sould to God who gave it me and my body to be burried according to the Descresion of my Executor whom I shall appoint and after my just debts paid I give and bequeath my Estate in manner and forme as followeth, Secondly I give and bequeath unto my son Edward Osborne all my land in generall to him and his heirs forever and one negro woman named Moll with her increase excepting the first child she bringeth, I give to my daughter Martha Osborne; and one negro boy to my son Edward aforesaid and Three cows ahorne six years old and one heefier of three years old to (two) steers of three years old apiece and two feather beds and furniture and one square muscled gun with a french lock, and my little gunn and two young sows with pigg and one pot of two gallons and a half both iron potts with hoods and one pair of running iron racks and my best chest with lock and key, and two horses, one of seven years old and the other three, and three large and two small deep puter dishes and ten plates of peuter and four Ewes and two new calf-skin chairs and one brass skimmer and Ladle and one collar hanes and cart saddle such Estate and land I appoint him to be possest with at the age of nineteen years old. Thirdly I give and bequeathe unto my daugher Martha Osborne two cows and a heifer of two years old and one steer and one feather bed and old Rigg and blanket half worn one great chest with lock and key. Fourthly and lastly I appoint my Son-in-Law Benjamin Branch my whole and full Executor committing the tuition of my two children Edward & Martha to him the said Branch and his wife till such time as they come of age, the said Edward at nineteen and their estates above paid to them. In witness that this is my last will and testament I have hereunto set my hand this sixth day of January one thousand six hundred and ninety six in the present of
Sam Branch
Martha Osborne
Joseph Tanner
signed: Edward E O Osborne
This will was probated in April 1697
Note: The E O in the signature stand for 'his mark'"

...x

Father: Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1609 in England
Mother: Martha WifeofThomas Osborne

Marriage 1 Tabitha Platt b: ABT 1655 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA
Married: Henrico ABT 1668 in Coxendale Plantation, Chester, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA 5
Married: ABT 1675 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 7
Children
Has Children Tabitha Osborne b: 06 FEB 1675 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA
Has No Children Thomas Osborne b: ABT 1680
Has No Children Peter Osborne b: ABT 1680
Has No Children Martha Osborne b: ABT 1681 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA
Has No Children Edward Osborne Jr b: ABT 1689 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA
Has No Children John Osborne b: ABT 1690
Has No Children Frances Osborne b: ABT 1690

Marriage 2 Elizabeth Sheppey b: ABT 1655 in Virginia, USA
Marriage License: 15 JUN 1694 3 4

Sources:
Title: Grant Pinnix
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:
Source Medium: Internet

Page: Date of Import: Oct 20, 2006
Title: Andy Duller
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:

Text: Date of Import: Oct 30, 2006
Author: Mike Lysell
Title: Genealogy of the Lysell and McIlvaney Families.FTW
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:

Text: Date of Import: 5 Sep 2011
Author: Jean Meaney
Title: Rawlings Venable Elam Davis
Note:
TYPE Web SiteDATE Jul 21, 2008
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Title: IGI (International Genealogical Index)
Publication: Name: www.familysearch.org;
Repository:
Name: Family History Library, SLC

Page: Date of Import: May 22, 2007
Title: Richard Medders
Text: Date of Import: 7 Sep 2011
Title: John Luddy Burke, Jr
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:
(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Text: Date of Import: Oct 30, 2006
Title: Pedigree Resource File
Repository:
Name: Family History Library, SLC

Note:

Page: 51492-042899183651
Title: Pedigree Resource File
Repository:
Name: Family History Library, SLC

Note:

Page: 1422518-0320102230241
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Title: IGI (International Genealogical Index)
Publication: Name: www.familysearch.org;
Repository:
Name: Family History Library, SLC

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=john%5Fd%5Fnewport&id=I10122
____________________

Name: Martha Osborne 1 2 3 4 5
Sex: F
Birth: ABT 1681 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 1
Ancestral File #: 8LDX-JC
Death: AFT 1759 in Chesterfield Co, Virginia, USA 6 4 5
Birth: ABT 1691
Birth: ABT 1680 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA 7 5
Note:
[Genealogy of the Lysell and McIlvaney Families.FTW]

John W. Pritchett writes: "Martha Osborne (c.1662) married possibly John Wooldridge. John Wooldridge, an Henrico County blacksmith, named sons Edward and Thomas, presumably after Martha's father and grandfather. Further, 'one great chest' Martha inherited from her father may be identical to 'one large pine chest' Wooldridge left to his son Edward."

...x

Father: Edward Osborne Sr b: 1646 in Coxendale Plantation, Chester, Chesterfield, Virginia, USA
Mother: Tabitha Platt b: ABT 1655 in Henrico Co, Virginia, USA

Sources:
Title: John Luddy Burke, Jr
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:
(XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Text: Date of Import: Oct 30, 2006
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Title: IGI (International Genealogical Index)
Publication: Name: www.familysearch.org;
Repository:
Name: Family History Library, SLC
Title: Pedigree Resource File
Repository:
Name: Family History Library, SLC

Note:

Page: 1422518-0320102230241
Author: Jean Meaney
Title: Rawlings Venable Elam Davis
Note:
TYPE Web SiteDATE Jul 21, 2008
Author: Mike Lysell
Title: Genealogy of the Lysell and McIlvaney Families.FTW
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:

Text: Date of Import: 5 Sep 2011
Title: Nancy Wooldridge
Repository:
Name: RootsWeb's WorldConnect

Note:

Text: Date of Import: May 22, 2007
Author: Wanda Brooks
Title: Brooks, Tanner, Morgan, Lankford and Others (Some Unrelated)
Note:
TYPE Web SiteDATE Sept 10, 2009

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=john%5Fd%5Fnewport&id=I11085
___________________________________

Subject: [BRANCH-L] Martha Griegg-Martha Jones....
Date: Fri, 12 Mar 1999 15:25:24 EST

I received so many emails about the confusion of the wives of John Branch...
Martha Griegg and Martha Jones.....

Thought I would send the info I have researched that sorts out things.....

John Branch..b. abt 1645,d.1688..Henrico, Co., Va....
Henrico Co. Order Bk. 1678-93, page 266, Martha
Jones Branch granted probate 4/2/1688....

m. 1)Martha Griegg (1653-1682)
dau of Capt. Robert Griegg of Henrico Co., whose will, dated 2/10/1702-3,
recorded 8/2/1703, names his granchildren John Cocke, Thomas Edwards, Jr.,
Mary Ward and Edward Branch...and appoints Jane Gower executrix....
Note: Jane Gower is the grandmother of the children mentioned in their
grandfather Griegg's will...Jane Gower was mother of the children's
father, John Branch....Martha Griegg's mother-in-law...and evidently
Griegg had no relatives to appoint...interesting that in-laws would name the
other....

Martha's 1st husband Thomas Edwards, Sr...had son Thomas Edwards Jr.
mentioned in Capt. Robert Griegg's will.....

Child of John Branch and Martha Griegg....
Edward Branch....named in Grandfather Griegg's will.....

Martha Griegg dies in 1682.......
===========
John Branch marries 2)Martha Jones
Note: The info has always been (Branchiana pp32 and 138)
that Martha Jones was daughter of Thomas Jones and Mary ?
of Bermuda 100, Henrico Co., and that her second husband was
Thomas Osborne, (his will dated 2/27/1730, probated 1733) and
third husband, m.1693, Thomas Edwards....

A Thomas Osborne (will probated 1733) did marry
Martha Jones, daughter Thomas Jones of "100" , possibly 4/1685, prior
to 1688 (probate of John Branch), because "Mrs. Martha Osborne" is
named as "sister Martha Osborne" in the will of Repps Jones, Henrico,
will 2/19/1688-9, Henrico Records, probated 8/1/1689. And, she is
mentioned as "daughter Martha Osborne" in will of her mother, Mrs.
Mary Skerme (Ed. Skerme, 2nd. Husband) of Henrico, dated 22/16/1707,
probated 10/5/1710, Henrico Records.

It appears that there are 2 Martha Jones...who married Thomas Osborne
SR and JR.....
Thomas SR will 1691......Thomas JR will 1733.......definitely 2 different
people...two different age ranges.....

Martha Jones (daughter of Thomas Jones of "100") (1) was married to
Thomas Osborne JR, who was of age in father's 1691 will, therefore
had been born as early as 1670 and died about 1733. This Martha Jones
would have been about the same age. Being called "daughter Martha
Osborne" by mother's will 1707-1710 means she was still married to
Thomas Osborne JR.

This shows that Martha Jones, daughter of Thomas Jones of Bermuda100,
was the wife of Thomas Osborne JR during the whole time period covered
that she would have supposedly been married Branch/Osborne/Edwards.

Martha Jones Branch (widow of John Branch) (2) married Thomas Osborne SR
sometime after 4/1688, the date of administration of John Branch's will.
Thomas SR died in 1691, will dated 10/1691...named wife Martha. She was
Thomas JR's stepmother.

Confirmation of this Martha Jones (2) being married to all three of the
husbands
is made by the following Henrico Court Order, 8/1693...
"Mr. Tho. Edwards who married the relict of Mr. Thomas Osborne, SR, who
married the rellict of Mr. John Branch, decd., do appear at next court to be
held and enter security for saving this court harmless." Henrico Records,
Vol. 1677-1739, p. 34.

So, we do have a Martha Jones (2)....surname unknown....who did do all the
things that were credited to her.....she was just not the daughter of Thomas
Jones.

Now, will the real thrice married, mother of Priscilla Branch and Obediance
Branch please show herself in our records!!!

This information came from Genealogies of Virginia Familes, From the Wm. &
Mary College Qtrly Historical Magazine, Vol I, pub. 1982, Genealogical Pub.
Co., Inc. Baltimore.....section called Thomas & Wm. Branch of Henrico and Some
of their Descendants by Wm. Clayton Torrence ....where several pages of
correction notes are made...pages 422-431...

Plus some info from R. Bolling Batte Biographical Index at Library of
Virginia....

Now, the mystery of Martha Griegg/Martha Jones does continue....because of my
curiosity as to whether the Thomas Edwards that Martha Jones #2 married
was the son of Martha Griegg?????????

Don't you love genealogy.....has more mysteries and puzzles......

Anyone else have a mystery or puzzle they are especially plagued by.....????

Donna Clark
http://news.rootsweb.com/th/read/BRANCH/1999-03/0921270324
______________

John Wooldridge (Sr.) worked as a blacksmith after his emancipation, staying the the Conjuror's neck area. He married Martha Osborne, (daughter of Edward Osborne) about 1704 or 1705 of the more established Osborne family, and began to raise a family. Captain Thomas Osborne came to Virginia in 1616 and took over the Coxendale tract abandoned after the 1622 Indian massacre there, and patented additional land on Proctors Creek where years later a town bearing his name was started. John (Jr.) was born about 1705, named after his father. Thomas (Sr.) was born about 1707, named after his maternal great-grandfather. William (Sr.) was born about 1709. Edward (Sr.) was born about 1711, named after his maternal grandfather. Despite his growing family, John was able to save money -- blacksmiths were scarce and were able to demand high wages for their work.
....
Children of John Wooldridge and Martha Osborne are:

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

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

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

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

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

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

http://kykinfolk.com/adair/woolrdgrpt.htm
_____________________________

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Thomas I Osborne

Osborne
> 1550-????

Thomas I Osborne
± 1580-1642

(1) 1607

Jane Smyth
± 1547-1609

Adria Osborne
1601-1626
John Osborne
1608-1650
Marie Osborne
1615-????
(2) 1607

Anne Burt
1583-1621

Joane Osborne
1580-1633
Jane Osborne
1622-1665
(3) 

Anne Harris
1584-1620

Joane Osborne
1580-1633


Onbekend

(4) 

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Visualiseer een andere verwantschap

Bronnen

  1. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pili354&h=4043552&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Arrival date: 1619 Arrival place: Virginia
  2. Reference Number: P215 IN 1/1
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=7e4aae15-1ad1-42c4-94cf-6aa8dbf30449&tid=108978476&pid=6039
    jpg
    Gloucestershire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1813
  3. Northamptonshire Record Office; Northampton, England
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=44ad86c9-a2ee-4a4e-a60e-79beefe6d860&tid=108978476&pid=6297
    jpg
    Norfolk, England, Church of England Baptism, Marriages, and Burials, 1535-1812
  4. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=flhg-compamgenvii&h=189131&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=f1655562-ecde-4baa-bd72-77b72176d8a0&tid=108978476&pid=6297
    jpg
    The Compendium of American Genealogy, Vol. VII
  5. England, Essex Parish Registers, 1538-1900
  6. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=vacen&h=32734286&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Residence date: 1624 Residence place: Colledge Land, VA
  7. Ancestry.com, http://www.Ancestry.com
  8. Reference Number: P215 IN 1/1
    http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=113ec607-a2a5-4548-b474-32f1b395a22b&tid=108978476&pid=6297
    jpg
    Gloucestershire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1813
  9. Find A Grave. Find A Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi.
  10. England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
  11. http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=pili354&h=4044329&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
    Birth date: abt 1584 Birth place: Arrival date: 1619 Arrival place: Virginia
  12. England, Essex Parish Registers, 1538-1900
  13. 30 July 1998
  14. Virginia People


    Muster of the inhabitants of Virginia settlements, January 22 & 23,
    1624/5

    Sources: "Hotten's Lists" and "Adventurers of Purse and Person"
    (Use browser "Bookmark" or "Back" to return to this page.)
    Other information is available at the main page for Virginia
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------
    -------
    Settlers living at Colledge Land, Henrico, in Virginia


    Baugh, Thomas . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Supply (No date given)
    Branch, Christopher . . . -- Arrived on the London Merchant (No date
    given)
    (wife) Branch, Mary . . . -- Arrived on the London Merchant (No date
    given)
    (son) Branch, Thomas . . 9 months
    Browninge, William . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
    Campion, Robert . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
    Davis, Richard . . . . . . 16 Arrived on the Jonathan in 1620
    Edlow, Mathew . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Neptune in 1618
    Hobson, Edward . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova in 1619
    Jorden, Peeter . . . . . . 22 Arrived on the London Merchant in 1620
    Lapworth, Robert . . . . . -- Arrived on the Abigail (No date given)
    Moore, Leonard . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
    Moyses, Theoder . . . . . -- Arrived on the London Merchant (No date
    given)
    Osborne, Thomas . . . . . -- Lieutenant, Arrived on the Bona Nova in
    1619
    Parker, Thomas . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Neptune (No date given)
    Price, William . . . . . . -- Arrived on the Starr (No date given)
    Raughton, Ezekiah . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova (No date given)
    (wife) Raughton, Margrett -- Arrived in the Warwick (No date given)
    Sherley, Daniell . . . . . 30 Arrived on the Bona Nova in 1619
    Watson, John . . . . . . . -- Arrived on the William & Thomas (No date
    given)
    Weldon, William . . . . . -- Arrived on the Bona Nova in 1619
    Wilton, Francis . . . . . -- Arrived on the Jonathan (No date given)

    http://www.primenet.com/~langford/places/va625001.htm#Muster
    30July1998.

Historische gebeurtenissen

  • Stadhouder Prins Maurits (Huis van Oranje) was van 1585 tot 1625 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genoemd)
  • In het jaar 1607: Bron: Wikipedia
    • 10 maart » Susenyos verslaat de gecombineerde legers van Yaqob en Abuna Petros II in de veldslag van Gol in Gojjam, waardoor hij keizer van Ethiopië wordt.
    • 25 maart » De Nederlandse vloot van Jacob van Heemskerck vertrekt uit Nederland voor de uiteindelijk succesvolle Zeeslag bij Gibraltar.
    • 25 april » In de Zeeslag bij Gibraltar vernietigt een Nederlandse vloot de Spaanse.
    • 21 december » Pieter Willemszoon Verhoeff, de held van de Slag bij Gibraltar, vertrekt als admiraal van de VOC naar Nederlands-Indië.

Over de familienaam Osborne

  • Bekijk de informatie die Genealogie Online heeft over de familienaam Osborne.
  • Bekijk de informatie die Open Archieven heeft over Osborne.
  • Bekijk in het Wie (onder)zoekt wie? register wie de familienaam Osborne (onder)zoekt.

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/I6296.php : benaderd 5 mei 2024), "Captain Thomas I Osborne of Coxendale (± 1580-1642)".