Family Tree Welborn » Dr. John Woodson of Flowerdew Hundred (± 1586-± 1644)

Données personnelles Dr. John Woodson of Flowerdew Hundred 

  • Il est né environ 1586 dans Dorchester, Devon, England.
  • Il est décédé environ 18 avril 1644 dans Fleur de Hundred, Prince George County, Virginia (Killed by Indians).
  • Il est enterré dans Fleur De Hundred, Prince George, Virginia.
  • Un enfant de Alexander Woodson (Woodsonne) et fnu Wife of Alexander Woodson LNU
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 2 novembre 2022.

Famille de Dr. John Woodson of Flowerdew Hundred

Il est marié avec Sarah Woodson (Johnson).

Ils se sont mariés


Enfant(s):



Notes par Dr. John Woodson of Flowerdew Hundred



Dr. John Woodson
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1586
Dorchester, Devon, England (United Kingdom)
Death:
April 18, 1644 (53-62)
Fleur de Hundred, Henrico County , Virginia Colony, Colonial America (Killed by Indians)
Place of Burial:
Fleur De Hundred,, Prince George, Virginia, United States

Immediate Family:
Husband of Sarah Johnson (unknown)

Father of John "Washtub" Woodson; Col. Robert Woodson and Deborah Woodson

Immigration:
May of 1619 to Jamestown on The George

https://www.geni.com/people/Dr-John-Woodson-of-Flowerdew-Hundred/6000000006788800910

Dr. John Woodson, of Flowerdew Hundred 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 Agnes Laforce Wooldridge (LaFrance)
his mother ·Üí William Bailey Laforce
her father ·Üí Agnes Laforce (Mosby)
his mother ·Üí Jacob Mosby
her father ·Üí Sarah Mosby (Woodson)
his mother ·Üí Col. Robert Woodson
her father ·Üí Dr. John Woodson, of Flowerdew Hundred
his father

Disconnected as child of Dr. Alexander Woodson (Woodsonne)

Graduated in 1604 from Oxford University. the Oxford graduation record commonly ascribed to Dr. John names him the son of "Mr. Woodson, gent. of Bristol."

Disputed Origins
·ÄúThe "Dr. Alexander Connection" is very, very iffy. Why would Dr. Alexander Woodson (Woodsonne) be listed as he is in the Oxford Alumni book and no reference made between Dr. John Woodson, of Flowerdew Hundred and him when that was standard procedure? I think the only rational and honest thing to do is to admit that John and Sarah Johnson (unknown) are pretty much brick walls unless and until something legitimate can be found to justify anything written about them.·Äù

·ÄúThe "Dr. Alexander Connection" is very, very iffy. Why would Dr. Alexander Woodson (Woodsonne) be listed as he is in the Oxford Alumni book and no reference made between Dr. John Woodson, of Flowerdew Hundred and him when that was standard procedure? I think the only rational and honest thing to do is to admit that John and Sarah Johnson (unknown) are pretty much brick walls unless and until something legitimate can be found to justify anything written about them.·Äù

Biography
John Woodson is listed as head of household and Sarah Woodson is listed as his wife in the muster for Peirseys hundred (Jan. 1, 1624/1625). The same muster also gives their ship (the George) and their date of arrival (1619). No children are listed.

Dr. John Woodson is a Qualifying Ancestor of the Jamestowne Society. link
Widow: Sarah
Children: John, Robert & Deborah Woodson
http://rootsandall.blogspot.com/2014/07/ancestor-spotlight-dr-john-...

The Woodson Family
http://www.jcsisle.com/woodson.html
" On May 23, 1609, the London Company was granted a new charter which gave them all the land two hundred miles north and south of Point Comfort and extending from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans, the distance being entirely unknown to the King or any of the Company.

During the year 1609, the London Company fitted out nine ships with five hundred emigrants and a great quantity of supplies of all kinds needed by the Colonists in Jamestown, Virginia. Within the next year a great many of these people died, so that at the close of 1610 there were less than one hundred white persons alive at Jamestown.

The council at London had appointed Lord De la War, governor of South Virginia, and he arrived at Jamestown in the summer of 1610 with a considerable number of emigrants and a large cargo of supplies. He immediately assumed charge of colonial affairs. The charter was amended from time to time and new governors frequently appointed, as the terms of service were usually of short duration, owing to resignation, death or other causes of removal.

Emigrants were constantly being sent over from England to Virginia until the white population increased to about one thousand in 1617. The office of governor had changed hands often, sometimes being occupied by men of no talent for leadership; at other times by men of marked executive ability.

When Governor Dale returned to England in 1618, Sir George Yeardley was appointed to succeed him. The colony at that time numbered nearly two thousand men of high character. Many of these men, owing to the law of primogeniture, lived at home under a great disadvantage, and could accomplish something for themselves, only by going to some part of the world where that law was not operative in its strictest construction.

On the 29th day of January, 1619, the ship George sailed from England and landed the following April at Jamestown, Virginia, nearly a year before the more famous ship, the Mayflower, came to Plymouth's shore. This vessel brought the new governor, Sir George Yeardley and about one hundred passengers; among whom were Dr. John Woodson, of Dorsetshire, and his wife Sarah, whom he had married in Devonshire. Tradition has it that her maiden name was Winston, but no documentation has been found to prove this. Dr. Woodson came in the capacity of surgeon to a company of soldiers who were sent over for the protection of the colonist against the Indians.
It was during the administration of Governor Yeardley that the settlements were divided into eleven burroughs, each of which was allowed two representatives. These representatives were called burgesses, and when assembled, constituted the house of burgess·Äôs, which, with the governor and council, formed the general assembly or colonial government. This general assembly convened at Jamestown, June 19, 1619, and was the first legislative assembly to perform its functions in Virginia.

Dr. John Woodson was a man of high character and of great value to the colony. He was born about 1586, in Devonshire, England, matriculated at St. Johns' College [part of Cambridge University], March 1, 1604, at the age of eighteen. Like other gentlemen of his time, he, no doubt had a desire to see the new country in which the Virginia Company of London had planted their colony a dozen years previously, so at the age of thirty-three he, with his wife, Sarah, embarked on the ship George.

Sometime in 1620 a vessel landed at Jamestown, having on board about twenty negro captives whom the Dutch skipper had kidnapped somewhere on the coast of Africa. These were sold to the colonist as slaves and found to be quite profitable in the cultivation of tobacco which was the staple crop at that time.

Dr. John Woodson, at this time or shortly afterwards, bought six of these Africans who were registered in 1623 as part of his household, but no names were given. It was also during this year, 1620, that the London Company sent over about one hundred maids, respectable young women possessed of no wealth but of irreproachable character, who desired to seek their fortunes in the new world. The young men of the colony eagerly sought their hands in marriage.

Dr. John Woodson located at Fleur de Hundred, or, as it was sometimes called, Piersey's Hundred, some thirty miles above Jamestown on the south side of the James River in what is now Prince George County. He and his wife, Sarah, and their six negro slaves were registered at Fleur de Hundred in February 1623 Their two sons John and Robert were probably born at Fleur De Hundred. John was born in 1632 and Robert in 1634. There was also a daughter named Deborah.

The colonist lived in constant dread of an Indian uprising against them. There had never been any real peace or confidence between the two races since the great massacre of 1622. On 18, April 1644, the Indians made a sudden attack upon the settlements and killed about three hundred of the colonists. The following account is family tradition and has been passed down through many generations.
When the Indians attacked in April of 1644, Dr. Woodson was among those killed. He was returning home from seeing a patient and he was massacred by the Indians within sight of his home. Sarah managed to hold off the Indians along with a man named Col. Thomas Ligon, b. 1586 Madresfield, England, the cousin of Sir William Berkeley, Royal Governor of Virginia. He served in the House of Burgesses 1644-1645, was a Justice for Charles City County 1657 and was Lt. Col. Militia, Henrico County during the Indian wars. Sarah gave Col. Ligon her husband's gun and set about to find a weapon for herself. Looking for a place to hide the children, she spied a tub nearby; it was the only thing large enough to conceal a boy of ten. She placed John under the tub, and then managed to securely hide Robert in the potato pit.

While Col. Ligon found a tree notch to brace the eight-foot muzzle-loading gun, Sarah was back in the house. Two Indians who were in the process of descending inside the chimney met her. She disabled the first with a pot of boiling water and felled the second with a roasting pit. (The reader must accept this account as given, no explanation has been offered as to why the Indians would risk a smoking chimney with a hot fire at the bottom. There has been no account of where little Deborah was hidden during the attack). Col. Ligon had, in the meantime, killed seven Indians as they approached the house. It was not until after the Indians had fled that Sarah and Col. Ligon found that her husband had been killed.

Mrs. Venable, of Chicago, gave the eight-foot muzzle-loading gun to the Virginia Historical Society in 1927. She was a direct descendant of the Virginia Woodson·Äôs and felt that the prized relic should be back home in Virginia. The gun bears the name "Collicot" and is said to predate 1625. It is protected carefully from moisture and scarring by the use of a protective blanket. Whether the details of the massacre are exactly as related, the gun stands as a stark testimony of the event and the times.
There is apparently no record of whether John and Sarah Woodson were then living at Peircey's Hundred or whether they had already settled on the north side of the James at "Curles". The Indians under the Powhatan Confederation attacked the English settlements on the outlying plantations, under the leadership of Chief Opechancanough. Under the new governor, Sir William Berkeley, the colonists retaliated decisively and captured the chief. Berkeley also imposed a treaty that brought a guarded peace for a generation.

Due to the loss of a great many of the ancient records of Virginia, there is no further record of Sarah and her children. The presence of John and Robert Woodson in "Curles" in 1679 is certainly compatible with the time frame of the preceding events. Robert gave a deposition in June 1680 in which he described himself as being "aged about 46 years". He would have then been born in 1634. It is believed that his brother, John, was the eldest. The surname of Woodson is uncommon enough to believe that they were the same family.

There is additional information about the lives of John and Sarah that has been handed down for generations. The Woodson Genealogy, written by Charles Woodson (II), son of Charles and Mary Pleasants Woodson was given to Sarah Bates, the daughter of Thomas Fleming Bates while she was visiting her Uncle Charles. It is thought that Charles (I) the son of Tarleton wrote a part of the genealogy. It was this information that Dr. R.A. Brock used to write his booklet "Descendants of John Woodson of Dorcetshire, England", in 1888. The book originally sold for fifty cents a copy. It was this booklet that has been used as a source material frequently since. Charles Woodson (I) was born about 1711; his father, Tarleton Woodson, born in the 1680's, died in 1763; Tarleton's father died in 1715, but a short time after the death of his father, Robert. It would seem that Charles Woodson (I) would have had an excellent opportunity to learn from his ancestors. His account not only supplied details of the lives of John and Sarah, but the link between them and John and Robert, who were living at "Curles" in 1679.
Later information seems to indicate that Sarah married again, which would surely have been reasonable. There may have been other children, which also seems logical, given the fact that John and Sarah were married before 1620. There is also supposition that there were two Sarah Woodson·Äôs, the first one that came over from England with John and died here, and then another marriage to a Sarah who was the mother of John and Robert. A volume of Henrico County miscellaneous court records, 1650-1807, has been assembled from loose papers from the county records. An inventory for the estate of Sarah Johnson was recorded. It was, in effect, both a nuncupative will and an inventory of her possessions. She was identified as Sarah Johnson, widow, deceased and the date it was recorded was 17 January 1660.

The inventory leaves little doubt that Sarah Woodson married a second time to a Mr. Dunwell, and a third time to a Mr. Johnson. Her three husbands all dying before her. It seems unlikely that both John and Robert would have been involved in her affairs, and thus the disposition of her estate, had they not been her sons. Deborah may have been still under twenty-one at the time of her mother's death since Sarah was concerned about providing for her maintenance. Even though a daughter named Sarah was not mentioned as being one of the children that Sarah hid during the fight with the Indians, she could have been pregnant at the time, delivering the child after her husband's death.
Children of John Woodson and Sarah Winston Woodson:
1. John Woodson2 b. 1632 m. 2nd Sarah Browne, d. 1684.
2. Robert Woodson b. 1634 m. Elizabeth Ferris, d. ca. 1707.
Robert Woodson, last known to be living in 1707, Henrico Co., VA. when he made a deed to his grandson, William and Joseph Lewis. He married Elizabeth Ferris, daughter of Richard Ferris, of Henrico, with whom, among others, received a patent, 21, October 1687, for 1785 acres at White Oak Swamp in Varina Parish, in that county. This man was the direct ancestor of Jesse Woodson James, and his brother, Alexander Franklin "Frank" James, the famous James Boys.
Robert2 Woodson married Elizabeth Ferris: son Benjamin3 Woodson, married Sarah Porter; their son Robert4 Woodson (d. 1748/50) married Rebecca Pryor. Their daughter Elizabeth married Shadrach Mims (1734-1777) and became the mother of Elizabeth Mims (b. 1769) who married Robert Poor (1763-1801), a cornet in the American Revolutionary War. Their daughter in turn, Mary Poor, (died 1825) married John James (1775-1827), son of William and Mary (Hinds) James of Goochland County, Virginia. Their son Robert Sallee James, who died in the Gold Rush area of California, married Zerelda Cole and they had sons Frank James and Jesse James. (See: Background of a Bandit, by Joan M. Beamis and William E. Pullen (1971).

Jesse Woodson James, the bandit, married his cousin Zerelda "Zee" Amanda Mims. She was also a descendant of Elizabeth Woodson Mims, who married Robert Poor.
3. Deborah (mentioned in mothers will)."
This information remains the work & property of its author, name unknown to me, who posted it at http://www.jcsisle.com/woodson.html. Our use here is historical and informational, with full acknowledgement and my personal gratitude to the researcher. _______________________________________________
The following story was sent by William Stephen Woodson:
(please excuse any prejudicial remarks)
"There are many stories told about these Woodson, like the one about Dr. John Woodson and his family in April 1644. There was an Indian uprising during which the savages made a sudden attack on Fleur de Hundred. Dr. Woodson, returning from visiting his patients was killed as he returned home. His wife and two children were alone in the house with the exception of an old schoolmaster. Their only weapon was a huge old- fashioned gun which the schoolmaster used so effectively that at the first fire he killed three Indians and at the second, two. Meanwhile two Indians tried to come down the chimney to the house. Mrs. Woodson seized a pot of boiling water from the fire and scalded the first; she snatched up the iron spit from the fireplace and with it brained the second. The howling savages began to retreat, but the schoolmaster fired a last shot, killing two more of the enemy.
Then the mother called the two little boys from their hiding places: the ten-year old had been concealed under a large wash tub and the twelve-year old crawled out from a hole in which potatoes were stored in winter.
Even today when there is a gathering of Woodsons, a favorite question is, 'Are you a wash-tub Woodson or a potato-hole?'
In the early part of the 16th century, one of Dr. Woodson's ancestors was granted a coat of arms by Henry VIII; along with this privilege came the right 'to bear arms.' Nothing was said about his wife's right, though!" Info:
"John Woodson, from Dorsetshire, his wife from Devonshire, came to Virginia with Sir John Harvey, as surgeon to a company of soldiers in the year 1625"
"John Woodson came to Virginia in the George, which left England January 29, 1619, bearing the new Governor, Sir George Yardley, and about one hundred passengers" (Genealogies of Virginia Families, From the William and Mary Quarterly Historical Magazine, Volume V, Thompson-Yates (and Appendix), Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1982)
Arrived in Virginia on ship "George" in 1619. Survivor of Indian massacre, March 22, 1622 Killed in Indian massacre, April 18, 1644 within site of his own home, (Virginia Genealogist, Vol. 20, 1976, p3-8)
Flower de Hundred, sometimes called Peirsey's Hundred was on the south side of the James River. Curls (or Curles) was a plantation on the north side of the James River, above Flower de Hundred. (Genealogies of Virginia Families, From the William and Mary Quarterly Historical Magazine, Volume V, Thompson-Yates (and Appendix), Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1982)

While no record evidence has so far been discovered to that effect it is doubtless a fact that Robert and John Woodson, Senior , of Henrico County , the two brothers from whom the Virginia Woodsons descend,* were sons or grandsons of John and Sarah Woodson of Flower de Hundred . Robert Woodson was born circa 1634 . The date of John Woodson 's birth is not now known. There are no remaining Henrico County records prior to 1677 (though Henrico County was one of the original eight shires of 1632 ), and the first mention that we have of the Woodsons in Henrico is in June, 1679 , when there was entered "An Account of ye Severall Fortye Tytheables Ordered by this Worll Court to fitt out men, horse, etc., according to Act: viz.:

_________________________________________

John Woodson is listed as head of household and Sarah Woodson is listed as his wife in the muster for Peirseys hundred (Jan. 1, 1624/1625). The same muster also gives their ship (the George) and their date of arrival (1619). No children are listed.

Descendants of Dr. Alexander Woodson

This information was provided by Garrett Tucker. You may contact him at (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Generation No. 1
1. DR. ALEXANDER1 WOODSON was born Abt. 1554 in Bristol, Devonshire England, and died Bef. May 08, 1618 in Bristol, Devonshire England. He married UNKNOWN UNKNOWN.
More About DR. ALEXANDER WOODSON: Burial: 1618, St.Michaels Churchyard, Bristol, Devonshire England Record Change: November 30, 2003
More About UNKNOWN UNKNOWN: Record Change: November 30, 2003
Child of DR. WOODSON and UNKNOWN UNKNOWN is: 2. i. DR. JOHN2 WOODSON, b. 1586, Dorsetshire, England; d. April 18, 1644, Prince George County, VA.
Generation No. 2
2. DR. JOHN2 WOODSON (DR. ALEXANDER1) was born 1586 in Dorsetshire, England, and died April 18, 1644 in Prince George County, VA. He married SARAH WINSTON 1619 in Dorsetshire, England. She was born 1590 in Devonshire, England, and died January 17, 1659/60 in Prince George County, VA.
Notes for DR. JOHN WOODSON: BIOGRAPHY: John went to school at St. Johns College, Oxford, England and graduated a Doctor in 1604. He became a Surgeon working for Sir George yeardley. Just after their Marriage, John and Sarah came to America aboard the Ship "George", leaving England on 29 January 1619. John and Sarah accompanied Sir George Yeardley, newly appointed Governor to the Colonies and his Wife.
More About DR. JOHN WOODSON: Burial: April 1644, Prince George County, VA Record Change: December 06, 2003
Notes for SARAH WINSTON: BIOGRAPHY: *Daughter of Isaac Winston and Mary Dabney.*
More About SARAH WINSTON: Record Change: December 06, 2003
Children of DR. WOODSON and SARAH WINSTON are: 3. i. JOHN3 WOODSON, b. 1632, Prince George County, VA; d. August 1684, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA. 4. ii. COL. ROBERT WOODSON, b. 1634, Fleur De Hundred, Prince George, VA; d. Aft. October 01, 1707, Varina Parish, Henrico CO.VA. iii. DEBORAH WOODSON, b. 1640.
More About DEBORAH WOODSON: Record Change: December 01, 2003
Generation No. 3
3. JOHN3 WOODSON (DR. JOHN2, DR. ALEXANDER1) was born 1632 in Prince George County, VA, and died August 1684 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA. He married (1) MARY PLEASANTS Abt. 1654 in Henrico CO.VA. She was born 1633 in Of Curles Plantation. He married (2) SARAH BROWN Abt. 1677. She was born 1632.
More About JOHN WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
More About MARY PLEASANTS: Record Change: December 12, 2003
More About SARAH BROWN: Record Change: December 12, 2003
Children of JOHN WOODSON and MARY PLEASANTS are: 5. i. JOHN4 WOODSON III, b. 1655, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA; d. 1700, Henrico CO.VA. 6. ii. MARY JANE WOODSON, b. Abt. 1657, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA; d. Bef. August 01, 1710. iii. ROBERT WOODSON, b. Abt. 1664.
More About ROBERT WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
4. COL. ROBERT3 WOODSON (DR. JOHN2, DR. ALEXANDER1) was born 1634 in Fleur De Hundred, Prince George, VA, and died Aft. October 01, 1707 in Varina Parish, Henrico CO.VA. He married SARAH ELIZABETH FERRIS 1656 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA, daughter of RICHARD FERRIS ' OF CURLES and SARAH HAMBLETON. She was born 1636 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA, and died 1689 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA.
More About COL. ROBERT WOODSON: Record Change: November 30, 2003
More About SARAH ELIZABETH FERRIS: Record Change: November 30, 2003
Children of COL. WOODSON and SARAH FERRIS are: 7. i. MARY4 WOODSON, b. Virginia; d. January 15, 1744/45, Virginia. ii. AGNES WOODSON.
More About AGNES WOODSON: Record Change: December 07, 2003
iii. STEPHEN WOODSON.
More About STEPHEN WOODSON: Record Change: December 07, 2003
8. iv. JOHN WOODSON, b. 1658, Fleur De Hundred, Prince George, VA; d. Henrico CO.VA. 9. v. COL. ROBERTWOODSON, JR, b. 1660; d. February 1719/20, Henrico CO.VA. 10. vi. RICHARD WOODSON, b. 1662, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA; d. Abt. 1729. 11. vii. JOSEPH WOODSON, b. 1664, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA; d. October 15, 1734, Goochland County, Virginia. 12. viii. BENJAMIN WOODSON, b. August 21, 1666, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA; d. 1723, Henrico CO.VA. 13. ix. SARAH WOODSON, b. 1668. x. ELIZABETH WOODSON, b. 1670; m. UNKNOWN LEWIS.
More About ELIZABETH WOODSON: Record Change: December 01, 2003
More About UNKNOWN LEWIS: Record Change: December 01, 2003
xi. JUDITH WOODSON, b. 1673; m. UNKNOWN CANNON.
More About JUDITH WOODSON: Record Change: December 01, 2003
More About UNKNOWN CANNON: Record Change: December 01, 2003
Generation No. 4
5. JOHN4 WOODSON III (JOHN3 WOODSON, DR. JOHN2, DR. ALEXANDER1) was born 1655 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA, and died 1700 in Henrico CO.VA. He married MARY TUCKER Abt. 1677. She was born 1660 in Henrico CO.VA, and died Aft. 1710 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA.
More About JOHN WOODSON III: Record Change: December 12, 2003
More About MARY TUCKER: Record Change: December 12, 2003
Children of JOHN WOODSON III and MARY TUCKER are: i. JANE5 WOODSON.
More About JANE WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
ii. SAMUEL WOODSON.
More About SAMUEL WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
iii. BENJAMIN WOODSON.
More About BENJAMIN WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
iv. JOSEPH WOODSON, b. Abt. 1680.
More About JOSEPH WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
v. MARY WOODSON, b. 1686, Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA.
More About MARY WOODSON: Record Change: December 12, 2003
6. MARY JANE4 WOODSON (JOHN3, DR. JOHN2, DR. ALEXANDER1) was born Abt. 1657 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA, and died Bef. August 01, 1710. She married JOSEPH WOODSON March 27, 1701 in Henrico Meeting House, son of COL. WOODSON and SARAH FERRIS. He was born 1664 in Curles Plantation, Henrico CO.VA, and died October 15, 1734 in Goochland County, Virginia.
More About MARY JANE WOODSON: Record Change: December 11, 2003
More About JOSEPH WOODSON: Record Change: December 11, 2003
Children of MARY WOODSON and JOSEPH WOODSON are: i. JOHN5 WOODSON, b. Abt. 1704; d. Abt. 1727.
More About JOHN WOODSON: Record Change: December 11, 2003
ii. MARY WOODSON, b. Abt. 1706; m. STEPHEN WOODSON.
More About MARY WOODSON: Record Change: December 11, 2003
More About STEPHEN WOODSON: Record Change: December 11, 2003
iii. JOSEPH WOODSON, b. Abt. 1709.
More About JOSEPH WOODSON: Record Change: December 11, 2003
14. iv. JUDITH WOODSON, b. 1712; d. 1738. 15. v. MARTHA WOODSON, b. 1716, Goochland County, Virginia. vi. TUCKER WOODSON, b. Abt. 1720, Virginia; d. September 21, 1796, Goochland County, Virginia; m. (1) SARAH HUGHES; m. (2) MARY NETHERLAND.
http://genforum.genealogy.com/woodson/messages/1443.html

1619 U.S. and International Marriage Record Name: John Woodson Gender: Male - Birth Year: 1586 Spouse Name: Sarah Winston Spouse Birth Year: 1590 Marriage Year: 1619

1619 Passenger and Immigration Lists Index Name: John Woodson Year: 1619 Place: Virginia Source Publication Code: 9448 Primary Immigrant: Woodson, John Annotation: In the years from 1925 to 1942, Frederick A. Virkus edited seven volumes with the title, The Abridged Compendium of American Genealogy, published in Chicago by the Institute of American Genealogy. Each volume has a section in the main body of the work, co Source Bibliography: VIRKUS, FREDERICK A., editor. Immigrant Ancestors: A List of 2,500 Immigrants to America before 1750. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1964. 75p. Repr. 1986. Page: 75

1624 Virginia Census, 1607-1890 about John Woodson Name: John Woodson State: VA County: Flowerdew Hundred Township: Virginia Pioneer Year: 1624 Database: VA Early Census Index

1619 Roll of Honor James Town, Virginia Added by helenclack1 on 11 Mar 2008 ~ ~ From "America's first Families-Ancestor Roll Of Honor" Dr John Woodson, Virginia (1586-1644)

Dr. John Woodson, the emigrant ancestor of this family, was among the founders of the Virginia Colony. He came to Virginia in the ship "George" which sailed on January 29, 1619 and arrived in Jamestown, Virginia on April 16, 1619 as surgeon to a company of British soldiers.
A native of Dorsetshire. An Oxford student in 1608. He brought with him his wife, Sarah. They settled at Fleur de Hundred, where their sons, John and Robert, were born. Fleur de Hundred, now known as "Flowerdew" Hundred, is probably named after Temperance Flowerdew, wife of Sir George Yeardley, Virginia's first govenor, who came to Virginia in 1619 on the same ship as the Woodsons.
The Yeardley's owned the plantation and 1624, sold it to Abraham Piersey. Flowerdew Hundred had a representative in the first House of Burgesses in 1619 and when the counties were established in 1634, it was part of Charles City County and in 1702, was included in the new Prince Geroge County. Presently, Flowerdew Hundred Foundation, 1716 Flowerdew Rd., Hopewell, Virginia 23860, owns and maintains the plantation as a Public Trust.
Sarah Woodson was a brave pioneer woman. In the absence of her husband during the Indian Uprising of April 18, 1644, aided by Thomas Ligon, she resisted and attack by the Indians, killing nine. She loaded the gun while Ligon fired, and hearing a noise up the chimney, she threw the bed upon the coals, the stifling smoke bringing two Indians down, whom she dispatched. Her sons, in the potato hole, were saved.
Over the years, this story has been passed on from one Woodson generation to the next, and as passed among the various families has varied a bit in details, but not in Sarah's bravery in defending her children. jhendrix80added this on 1 Oct 2010 helenclack1originally submitted this to Woodson Family Tree on 11

Life and Times of Dr. John Woodson Note: Brderbund WFT Vol. 4, Ed. 1, Tree #1649]

Dr. John Woodson was born in the year 1586 in Devonshire, England. He married Sarah Winston, who was born in the year of 1590, also in Devonshire, England.
Dr. John Woodson came to Jamestown as a surgeon with Sir George Yeardly. The young couple embarked on the ship, George, January 29, 1619 and landed in Jamestown, Virginia in April 1619. (This was one year before the Pilgrims landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts. on the Mayflower.)
ANN clean this up from here forward - you have done it up to here..
Dr. John Woodson located at Flowerdew Hundred (also called Fleur de Hundred, Flour De Hundred, or Piersey's Hundred), which is on the south side of the James River some thirty miles above Jamestown, in what is now Prince George County.
Two Woodson sons were born at Flowerdew Hundred; John born in 1632 and Robert born in 1637. In 1632, Dr. Woodson was listed as the Surgeon of the Flour De Hundred Colony in Virginia.
On April 19, 1644, Dr. Woodson was killed in sight of his house by Indians, who had called him out apparently to see the sick. After killing him, they attacked his home which was successfully defended by his wife and a shoemaker named Ligon. Ligon killed seven of the Indians with and old muzzleloading gun eight feet long, now one of the prized possessions of the Virginia Historical Society. Mrs. Sarah Woodson killed two Indians who came down the chimney; One with boiling water and one with a roasting spit. The boys , John and Robert, were concealed during the attack under a tub and in a potato pit, respectively.
The Indians were led by Chief Opechancano, who was the son of Powhaten and had killed 300 settlers on April 18, the day before. Opechancano had also led the Massacres of 1622 at Martin's Hundred. Several weeks later Opechancano was captured by the colonists and executed. The Indians were permanently driven out of that part of Virginia as a result of the uprisings of 1644.
Dr. John Woodson is the progenitor of the Woodson Family in America. Among his descendants are Dolley Todd Madison, wife of President James Madison and the famous outlaw Jesse Woodson James. Graduated from St. John's College, Oxford, 1604; came to Virginia in the "George", 1619. Dr. John Woodson attended Cambridge. Sarah was a Quaker, and rather than make her give up her religion, he immigrated with her to the colonies.
Dr. John Woodson's father died in Bristol, England. John was his fourth son. "John Woodson came to Virginia in the George, which left England January 29, 16 19, bearing the new Governor, Sir George Yardley, and about one hundred passengers"
(Genealogies of Virginia Families , From the William and Mary Quarterly Historical Magazine , Volume V, Thompson-Yates (and Appendix), Baltimore, Genea logical Publishing Co., Inc, 1982).
Arrived in Virginia on ship "George" in 1619.
Survivor of Indian massacre, March 22, 1622. Killed in Indian massacre, April 18, 1644 within site of his own home, (Virginia Genealogist, Vol. 20, 197 6, p3-8)
Flower de Hundred, sometimes called Peirsey's Hundred was on the south side of the James River.
Curls (or Curles) was a plantation on the north side of the James River, above Flower de Hundred. (Genealogies of Virginia Familie s, From the William and Mary Quarterly Historical Magazine , Volume V, Thompson-Yates (and Appendix), Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1982)
The following story was sent by William Stephen Woodson: (please excuse any prejudicial remarks) "There are many stories told about these Woodson, like the one about Dr. John Woodson and his family in April 1644.
There was an Indian uprising during which the savages made a sudden attack on Fleur de Hundred. Dr. Woodson, returning from visiting his patients was killed as he returned home. His wife and two children were alone in th e house with the exception of an old schoolmaster. Their only weapon was a huge old-fashioned gun which the schoolmaster used so effectively that at the first fire he killed three Indians and at the second, two. Meanwhile two Indians tried to come down the chimney to the house. Mrs. Woodson seized a pot of boiling water from the fire and scalded the first; she snatched up the iron spit from the fireplace and with it brained the second. The howling savages began to retreat, but the schoolmaster fired a last shot, killing two more of the enemy. Then the mother called the two little boys from their hiding places: the ten-year old had been concealed under a large wash tub and the twelve-year old crawled out from a hole in which potatoes were stored in winter. Even today when there is a gathering of Woodsons, a favorite question is, 'Are you a wash-tub Woodson or a potato-hole?'
In the early part of the 16th century, one of Dr. Woodson's ancestors was granted a coat of arms by Henry VIII; along with this privilege came the right 'to bear arms.' Nothing was said about his wife's right, though!"
From "Adventurers of Purse and Person": JOHN WOODSON and his wife Sarah came to VA, 1619, in the George and settled at Flower dew Hundred, known by Feb. 1624/5, when the muster was taken, as Peirsey's Hundred. They had been fellow passengers on the ship with Governor Sir George Yeardley and his wife Temperance Flowerdew, Lady Yeardley. No further documentary evidence has been found relating to them until 1660. a family account written about 1785 by Charles Woodson (1711-~1 795), son of Tarleton Woodson, however, survives and supplies details which link the first generations of Woodsons and Robert Woodson, John Woodson, Senr., and John Woodson, Junr." who were among the tithables at Curles, 1679.
Tradition states that John Woodson was killed in the Indian massacre of 18 April 1644. His children were very young and Mrs. Sarah Woodson soon remarried (2) ___ Dunwell, who died leaving her with a daughter Elizabeth, and (3) ___ Johnson. As a widow again she left a combination inventory and nuncupative will which was recorded 17 Jan 1660/1. This made bequests to John Woodson, Robert Woodson, Deborah Woodson (apparently under age) and Elizabeth Dunwell (under age). John Woodson was the implied executor. The family record of 1785, with no evidence to the contrary presented during two centuries, has posited this descent: issue: John, Robert, Deborah, left a cow and a feather bed by her mother, not mentioned in the 1785 account.
"Woodsons and Their Connections", Henry Morton WOODSON, 1915 excerpts from that book. ---Lorraine ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
"1604-5 1 March, St. Johns, JOHN WOODSONNE; Bristol, gent. f. matriculated age 18". Meaning that our Dr. John Woodson graduated from St. Johns College in Bristol England in 1604 (before coming to America in 1619).
"On the 29th day of January, 1619, the Ship 'George' sailed from England and in the following April landed at James town, Virginia. This vessel brought the new governor, Sir George Yeardley and about one hundred passengers; among whom were Dr. John Woodson, of Dorsetshire, and his wife Sara , whom he married in Devonshire. Dr. John Woodson came in the capacity of surgeon to a company of soldiers who were sent over for the better protection of the colonists; for the Indians about this time were scowling and seemed disposed to resent further encroachments of the white man.
Dr. John Woodson was a man of high character and of great value to the young colony. He was born 1586, in Devonshire, England. Like other young gentlemen of his time, he, no doubt had a desire to see the new country in which the Virginia Company of London had planted their colony a dozen years previously: so at the age of 33 he, with his young wife, Sara, embarked on the ship George and landed at Jamestown, Apr. 16 19.
Sometime in 1620 a black looking vessel landed at James town, having on board about 20 negro captives whom the Dutch skipper had kidnapped somewhere on the coast of Africa. These were sold to the colonists as slaves and found to be quite profitable in the cultivation of tobacco which was the staple crop at that time. Dr. John Woodson, at this time or shortly afterwards, bought six of these Africans who were registered in 1623 as part of his household, and simply as Negars, without giving them any names.
"Dr. John Woodson located at Fleur de Hundred, or, as it was sometimes called, Piersey's Hundred, some 30 miles above Jamestown on the south side of James River in what is now Prince George County. He and his wife, and their 6 negro slaves were registered at Fleur de Hundred in Feb. 1623. It was, no doubt, at this place that their two sons, John and Robert, was born.
"March 1622 was the first attack by indians made on the Jamestown colony killing hundreds. The colonists retaliated and drove the indians deeper into the wilderness.
"Twenty two years had passed and the fire of revenge was still smouldering in the heart of the bloodthirsty chief, Opechankano, who had matured another scheme for slaughtering the whites.
"On the 18th day of April 1644, the Indians made a sudden attack upon the settlements and killed about 300 of the colonists before they were repulsed. "At this time Dr. John Woodson's two sons, John and Roberts, were respectively 12 and 10 years of age. "There is a cherished family tradition that, on the day of this second massacre, Dr. John Woodson, while returning from visiting a patient, was killed by the Indians in sight of his home. The Indians then attacked the house which was barred against them and defended by his wife, Sara and a man named Ligon (a shoemaker) who happened to be there at the moment. The only weapon they had was an old time gun which Ligon handled with deadly effect.
At the first fire he killed 3 Indians, and two at the second shot. In the meantime 2 Indians essayed to come down through the chimney; but the brave Sara scalded one of them to death with a pot of boiling water which stood on the fire: then seizing the iron roasting spit with both hands , she brained the other Indian, killing him instantly. "The howling mob on the outside took fright and fled; but Ligon fired the 3rd time and killed 2 more, making 9 in all. "At the first alarm, Mrs. Woodson had hidden her two boys, one under a large washtub and the other in a hole where they were accustomed to keep potatoes during the winter, hoping in this way to save them in the event the Indians succeeded in entering the rude log cabin in which they lived. "From this circumstance, for several generations, the descendants of one of these boys was called "Tub Woodsons" and those of the other were designated as "Potato Hole Woodsons." "The old gun which rendered such valuable service on that dreadful 18th day of April, 1644, is still in the possession of the descendants of the late Charles Woodson, of Prince Edward County.
Mr. C. W. Venable, late of that county, writing of it says: 'The gun is, by exact measurement, seven feet six inches in length, and the bore is so large that I can easily put my whole thumb into it. when first made it was 8 feet long, but on account of some injury it was sent to England to be repaired and the gunsmith cut off 6 inches of the barrell.'
"As if to commemorate his bravery on this historic occation, the name of Ligon was rudely carved upon the stock. The gun is now (1915) in the possession of Mr. Wm. V. Wilson, a prominant lawyer of Lynchburg, VA." The gun has been proved to have been made in the 1700's.

U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications Name: Doctor John Woodson SAR Membership: 97711 Birth Date: 1586 Death Date: 1644 Spouse: Sarah Woodson Children: Robert Woodson

Source: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=3196-1373&id=I19910

http://www.juch.org/woodson/pafg01.asp

Some Descendants of "Dr." John Woodson First Generation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. "Dr." John Woodson 1, 2 was born in 1586 in Dorchester, Devonshire, ENG. He died 3 on 18 Apr 1644 in Fleur de Hundred, Prince George Co., VA.
[Brderbund WFT Vol. 4, Ed. 1, Tree #1649] Dr. John Woodson was born in the year 1586 in Devonshire, England. He married Sarah Winston who was born in the year of 1590, also in Devonshire, England. Dr. John Woodson came to Jamestown as a surgeon with Sir George Yeardly. The young couple embarked on the ship GEORGE, January 29, 1619 and landed in Jamestown, Virginia in April 1619. (This was one year before the Pilgrims landed in Plymouth, Mass. on the Mayflower.)
Dr. John Woodson located at Flowerdew Hundred (also called Fleur de Hundred, Flour De Hundred, or Piersey's Hundred), which is on the south side of the James River some thirty miles above Jamestown, in what is now Prince George County. Two Woodson sons were born at Flowerdew Hundred; John born in 1632 and Robert born in 1637.
In 1632, Dr. Woodson was listed as the Surgeon of the Flour De Hundred Colony in Virginia. On April 19, 1644, Dr. Woodson was killed in sight of his house by Indians, who had called him out apparently to see the sick. After killing him, they attacked his home which was successfully defended by his wife and a shoemaker named Ligon. Ligon killed seven of the Indians with and old muzzleloading gun eight feet long, now one of the prized possessions of the Virginia Historical Society. Mrs. Sarah Woodson killed two Indians who came down the chimney; One with boiling water and one with a roasting spit. The boys, John and Robert, were concealed during the attack under a tub and in a potato pit, respectively.
The Indians were led by Chief Opechancano, who was the son of Powhaten and had killed 300 settlers on April 18, the day before. Opechancano had also led the Massacres of 1622 at Martin's Hundred. Several weeks later Opechancano was captured by the colonists and executed. The Indians were permanently driven out of that part of Virginia as a result of the uprisings of 1644.
Dr. John Woodson is the progenitor of the Woodson Family in America. Among his descendants are Dolley Todd Madison, wife of President James Madison and the famous outlaw Jesse Woodson James.
Graduated from St. John's College, Oxford, 1604; came to Virginia in the "George", 1619.
Dr. John Woodson attended Cambridge. Sarah was a Quaker, and rather than make her give up her religion, he immigrated with her to the colonies.
Dr. John Woodson's father died in Bristol, England. John was his fourth son.
"John Woodson came to Virginia in the George, which left England January 29, 1619, bearing the new Governor, Sir George Yardley, and about one hundred passengers" (Genealogies of Virginia Families, From the William and Mary Quarterly Historical Magazine, Volume V, Thompson-Yates (and Appendix), Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1982).
Arrived in Virginia on ship "George" in 1619. Survivor of Indian massacre, March 22, 1622. Killed in Indian massacre, April 18, 1644 within site of his own home, (Virginia Genealogist, Vol. 20, 1976, p3-8)
Flower de Hundred, sometimes called Peirsey's Hundred was on the south side of the James River. Curls (or Curles) was a plantation on the north side of the James River, above Flower de Hundred. (Genealogies of Virginia Families, From the William and Mary Quarterly Historical Magazine, Volume V, Thompson-Yates (and Appendix), Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc, 1982)
The following story was sent by William Stephen Woodson: (please excuse any prejudicial remarks)
"There are many stories told about these Woodson, like the one about Dr. John Woodson and his family in April 1644. There was an Indian uprising during which the savages made a sudden attack on Fleur de Hundred. Dr. Woodson, returning from visiting his patients was killed as he returned home. His wife and two children were alone in the house with the exception of an old schoolmaster. Their only weapon was a huge old-fashioned gun which the schoolmaster used so effectively that at the first fire he killed three Indians and at the second, two. Meanwhile two Indians tried to come down the chimney to the house. Mrs. Woodson seized a pot of boiling water from the fire and scalded the first; she snatched up the iron spit from the fireplace and with it brained the second. The howling savages began to retreat, but the schoolmaster fired a last shot, killing two more of the enemy.
Then the mother called the two little boys from their hiding places: the ten-year old had been concealed under a large wash tub and the twelve-year old crawled out from a hole in which potatoes were stored in winter.
Even today when there is a gathering of Woodsons, a favorite question is, 'Are you a wash-tub Woodson or a potato-hole?'
In the early part of the 16th century, one of Dr. Woodson's ancestors was granted a coat of arms by Henry VIII; along with this privilege came the right 'to bear arms.' Nothing was said about his wife's right, though!"
From "Adventurers of Purse and Person": JOHN WOODSON and his wife Sarah came to VA, 1619, in the George and settled at Flowerdew Hundred, known by Feb. 1624/5, when the muster was taken, as Peirsey's Hundred. They had been fellow passengers on the ship with Governor Sir George Yeardley and his wife Temperance Flowerdew, Lady Yeardley. No further documentary evidence has been found relating to them until 1660. a family account written about 1785 by Charles Woodson (1711-~1795), son of Tarleton Woodson, however, survives and supplies details which link the first generations of Woodsons and Robert Woodson, John Woodson, Senr., and John Woodson, Junr." who were among the tithables at Curles, 1679.
Tradition states that John Woodson was killed in the Indian massacre of 18 April 1644. His children were very young and Mrs. Sarah Woodson soon remarried (2) ___ Dunwell, who died leaving her with a daughter Elizabeth, and (3) ___ Johnson. As a widow again she left a combination inventory and nuncupative will which was recorded 17 Jan 1660/1. This made bequests to John Woodson, Robert Woodson, Deborah Woodson (apparently under age) and Elizabeth Dunwell (under age). John Woodson was the implied executor.
The family record of 1785, with no evidence to the contrary presented during two centuries, has posited this descent: issue: John, Robert, Deborah, left a cow and a feather bed by her mother, not mentioned in the 1785 account.
"Woodsons and Their Connections", Henry Morton WOODSON, 1915 excerpts from that book. ---Lorraine ((XXXXX@XXXX.XXX))
"1604-5 1 March, St. Johns, JOHN WOODSONNE; Bristol, gent. f. matriculated age 18". Meaning that our Dr. John Woodson graduated from St. Johns College in Bristol England in 1604 (before coming to America in 1619).
"On the 29th day of January, 1619, the Ship 'George' sailed from England and in the following April landed at Jamestown, Virginia. This vessel brought the new governor, Sir George Yeardley and about one hundred passengers; among whom were Dr. John Woodson, of Dorsetshire, and his wife Sara, whom he married in Devonshire. Dr. John Woodson came in the capacity of surgeon to a company of soldiers who were sent over for the better protection of the colonists; for the Indians about this time were scowling and seemed disposed to resent further encroachments of the white man. Dr. John Woodson was a man of high character and of great value to the young colony. He was born 1586, in Devonshire, England.
Like other young gentlement of his time, he, no doubt had a desire to see the new country in which the Virginia Company of London had planted their colony a dozen years previously: so at the age of 33 he, with his young wife, Sara, embarked on the ship George and landed at Jamestown, Apr. 1619.
Sometime in 1620 a black looking vessel landed at Jamestown, having on board about 20 negro captives whom the Dutch skipper had kidnapped somewhere on the coast of Africa. These were sold to the colonists as slaves and found to be quite profitable in the cultivation of tobacco which was the staple crop at that time.
Dr. John Woodson, at this time or shortly afterwards, bought six of these Africans who were registered in 1623 as part of his household, and simply as Negars, without giving them any names."
Dr. John Woodson located at Fleur de Hundred, or, as it was sometimes called, Piersey's Hundred, some 30 miles above Jamestown on the south side of James River in what is now Prince George County. He and his wife, and their 6 negro slaves were registered at Fleur de Hundred in Feb. 1623. It was, no doubt, at this place that their two sons, John and Robert), was born."
March 1622 was the first attack by indians made on the Jamestown colony killing hundreds. The colonists retaliated and drove the indians deeper into the wilderness. "Twenty two years had passed and the fire of revenge was still smouldering in the heart of the bloodthirsty chief, Opechankano, who had matured another scheme for slaughtering the whites.
"On the 18th day of April 1644, the Indians made a sudden attack upon the settlements and killed about 300 of the colonists before they were repulsed. "At this time Dr. John Woodson's two sons, John and Roberts, were respectively 12 and 10 years of age.
"There is a cherished family tradition that, on the day of this second massacre, Dr. John Woodson, while returning from visiting a patient, was killed by the Indians in sight of his home. The Indians then attacked the house which was barred against them and defended by his wife, Sara and a man named Ligon (a shoemaker) who happened to be there at the moment. The only weapon they had was an old time gun which Ligon handled with deadly effect. At the first fire he killed 3 Indians, and two at the second shot. In the meantime 2 Indians essayed to come down through the chimney; but the brave Sara scalded one of them to death with a pot of boiling water which stood on the fire: then seizing the iron roasting spit with both hands, she brained the other Indian, killing him instantly.
"The howling mob on the outside took fright and fled; but Ligon fired the 3rd time and killed 2 more, making 9 in all.
"At the first alarm, Mrs. Woodson had hidden her two boys, one under a large washtub and the other in a hole where they were accustomed to keep potatoes during the winter, hoping in this way to save them in the event the Indians succeeded in entering the rude log cabin in which they lived.
"From this circumstance, for several generations, the descendants of one of these boys was called "Tub Woodsons" and those of the other were designated as "Potato Hole Woodsons."
"The old gun which rendered such valuable service on that dreadful 18th day of April, 1644, is still in the possession of the descendants of the late Charles Woodson, of Prince Edward County. Mr. C. W. Venable, late of that county, writing of it says: 'The gun is, by exact measurement, seven feet six inches in length, and the bore is so large that I can easily put my whole thumb into it. when first made it was 8 feet long, but on account of some injury it was sent to England to be repaired and the gunsmith cut off 6 inches of the barrell.'
"As if to commemorate his bravery on this historic occation, the name of Ligon was rudely carved upon the stock. The gun is now (1915) in the possession of Mr. Wm. V. Wilson, a prominant lawyer of Lynchburg, VA."
The gun has been proved to have been made in the 1700's.
John married Sarah Winston 1 daughter of Winston in 1619 in Dorsetshire, ENG. Sarah was born in 1590 in Devonshire, ENG. She died in 1660 in Henrico Co., VA.
NOTE: Last name not verified by any legal document.
They had the following children:
+ 2 M i John Woodson Jr. was born in 1632. He died in Sep 1684. + 3 M ii Col. Robert Woodson was born in 1634. He died in 1716.
4 F iii Deborah Woodson was born about 1636.

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de John Woodson

Reginald Woodson
± 1516-1550

John Woodson
± 1586-± 1644



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Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I43171.php : consultée 23 septembre 2024), "Dr. John Woodson of Flowerdew Hundred (± 1586-± 1644)".