Family Tree Welborn » Lawrence (I) Hampton (± 1570-± 1612)

Données personnelles Lawrence (I) Hampton 

  • Il est né environ 1570 dans Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England.
  • Il est décédé environ 11 novembre 1612 dans Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England.
  • Il est enterré dans Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England.
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 29 juin 2023.

Famille de Lawrence (I) Hampton

Il est marié avec Sarah Hampton (Garrett).

Ils se sont mariés.


Enfant(s):

  1. William Hampton  ± 1592-± 1652 


Notes par Lawrence (I) Hampton


Lawrence Hampton, Sr. is your 12th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn (Smith)
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith (Jackson), R1b1a2a1a1b
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith (Lee)
his mother ·Üí William "Will" M Lee
her father ·Üí Martha Lee (Collier)
his mother ·Üí Lucinda Collier (France)
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth France (Heiskell)
her mother ·Üí Margaret Heiskell (Hampton)
her mother ·Üí George Hampton
her father ·Üí William Hampton
his father ·Üí Capt. John Hampton
his father ·Üí Rev. Thomas Hampton
his father ·Üí William Hampton
his father ·Üí Lawrence Hampton, Sr.
his father

https://www.geni.com/people/Lawrence-Hampton-Sr/6000000009379554267

Lawrence Hampton, Sr.
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1570
Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Death:
November 11, 1612 (41-42)
Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Place of Burial:
Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Immediate Family:
Husband of Sarah Hampton (Garrett)

Father of John Hampton; William Hampton; Richard Hampton; Ann Hampton; Cassandra Hampton; Elizabeth Hampton; Laurence Hampton, Jr. and Philadelphia Hampton

==

There are many websites already devoted to the origins of the Hampton·Äôs. Our originator was supposedly Richard Gervais de Hampton, born about 1430, and his wife Maud, of Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England. But I am going to start with our immigrant ancestor, William.
William Hampton, born ca May 1590/92, christened 28 May 1592 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England, ·ÄúHeritage of Stokes County, NC·Äù states ·Äúhe was the eldest son of Laurence Hampton, Sr. and his second wife. Laurence had two children by his first wife (John and Cassandra) and six by his second wife (William, Ann, Richard, Elizabeth, Laurence and Philadelphia). William Hampton, the first generation Hampton in this country, came at the age of 29 to Jamestown, VA aboard the ship Bona Nova in the fall of 1620 when the colony had about 1,200 people. He had been a wool merchant in London and probably came at the bidding of his uncle, Thomas Hampton. Thomas had been an original stockholder in the "London Company" which in 1607 sent a group of English settlers to Virginia to establish a colony. This was strictly a business venture and land in the colony was available through stock investments, to the settlers. William later paid the passage of his wife Joan and their three children, William, Jr., Grace and Elizabeth. They arrived in 1621 on the ship Abigail; a cousin, John Hampton also arrived on the Abigail. His first property was at old Point Comfort, near Mobjack Bay in Gloucester Co. VA, then Isle of Wight Co., then Eastermont River, where he built a plantation named "Hampfield" after 1651. He was a wool merchant, buying wool from other Virginians and shipping it to his brother Laurence Hampton in London, who was a merchant tailor.
William and Joan/Joane had the following known children:
1) William, Jr. HAMPTON (b.Bet. 1615-1617-MIddlesex,England)
| sp: UNKNOWN
2) Grace HAMPTON (b.Abt 1618-England)
3) Elizabeth HAMPTON (b.England)
4) Rev. THOMAS HAMPTON (b.16 Apr 1623-Elizabeth City County,Virginia d.Oct 1690-James City County,Virignia (age 67)) sp: Unknown (note: his relationship to the emigrant and name of his oldest son is had in the old Deed for Hampfield in 1745.)
http://oursoutherncousins.com/hampton.html

SOURCE: http://kueber.us/p1219.htm#i24370
William Hampton moved to Virginia before his 30th birthday. When a muster was taken of the inhabitants of the colony in January of 1624, William and his wife, Joane were listed in the muster of Edward Waters at Elizabeth City. William was said to be 40 and Joane 25. Joane and children came to Virginia in 1621 on the Abigail. They also were recorded in William's own muster in Elizabeth City, with his age given as 34, indicating that Waters had recorded the first muster and William his own. He was said to have arrived on the Bona Nova (ship) in 1621. William and Joane had a house, five barrels of corn, 200 ct. fish, plus eight pieces (guns), a pound of powder and 20 pounds of lead. The dual record enabled Waters to receive credit for transporting William and William was later able to patent land for transporting nine person, including Willi Hampton, Grace Hampton, Elizabeth Hampton and Alice Curtice, children; Virginia meyer and John F. Dorman. Adventures of Purse and Person, 1987, Page 60, 67; Land Patent Book 1, pt II, p. 752.
By 1627, he had leased 50 acres at Buck Roe "on a creek parting the land from James Bonall and John Henry, and east upon a creek parting the same from Point Comfort Island" (ibid). That he is the William Hampton of Twickenham is revealed by his brother Laurence's will, proved in Twickenham 9 November 1627. Laurence, Jr. left legacies to his wife and to his sibliings: 10 Pounds (English Money) to William "when he returns from Virgnia, but if he dies the money is to go to sister Philadelphia;" another 20 Pounds to Philadelphia and a bequest to sister Ann and her husband Henry Rand. William by now a tobacco planter, continued to expand his land holdings. In March 1632 he patented 50 acres at Buck Roe, laying easterly upon the creek parting Point Comfort Island, alongside James Bonall and John Hayney (Land Patent Book 1, pt I, page 153). In 1634 he executed a 100 year lease on another 100 acres adjoining Bonall (ibid), and in December 1640 he patented 550 acres for himself, Joane and nine headrights, located between Nutmeg Quarter and Poquoson Forest, north and west of Buck Roe (Land Patent Book 1, pt II, page 752). Then on 25 March 1651 he patented an additional 700 acres on the easter side of the East River "in Mockjack [Mobjack] Bay," claiming fourteen headrights, including his sister Philadelphia (Land Patent Book 2, page 311). This property, located near present day Mathews Courthouse, he named "Hampfield." He died soon thereafter. His will was written 5 September 1652 (the record of this will survives in a deed made by his great-great-grandson John Hampton II in Caroline County in 1743.
Why did William Hampton migrate to Virginia? Probably because a relative, Thomas Hampton of London, was a stockholder in the Virginia Company in 1612, investing another 25 Pounds in 1620. When the company was chartered in 1606, Sir William Wade, son of Armigal Wade of Yorkshire, was appointed to oversee its affairs. Thomas's relationship to William Hampton is unknown, as is that of Sir William to the Wades who were in Virginia with the Hamptons, but a John Hampton, indentity also unknown, but perhaps William's older brother, lived nearby at Buck Roe in 1627. There is also a Reverend Thomas Hampton who came to Kecoughtan Parish as a minister (the peninsula on which Elizabeth City was created had been home to the Kecoughtan Indians). Kecoughtan church had been built in 1613 and was rebuilt in 1624 when the parish was renamed, Elizabeth City. In 1637 Reverend Thomas moved to Nansemond Parish in Upper Norfolk County, pantenting 1,000 acres on the Nansemond River, but by 1639 he had become the rector of James City parish and moved to Jamestown Island. Following this he became the minister of York-Hampton Parish, where he d.s.p. 5 January 1648 and for want ofheirs, his property was escheated.
It is believed that the Reverend Thomas was instrumental in sending William's son Thomas to England to study for the clergy. When the older Reverend Thomas died, the younger Thomas succeeded him as minister of York-Hampton Parish. Thomas Jr. was born 16 April 1623, after the family's arrival in Virginia (entry in a bible given to him on his 65th birthday that has been passed down to his descendants; Joseph L. Miller, The Virginia Hamptons, Howard Hampton Papers, Southwest Collection, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas).1

ID: I58586

Name: ***William Hampton 1
Sex: M
Birth: ABT 28 MAY 1592 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Death: AFT 5 SEP 1652 in Hampfield, Gloucester County, Virginia
Note:
He arrived in Virginia prior to 1624 when he was listed in the Muster of 1624/5 of Edward Waters.
He arrived in the ship Bona Nona in 1620.
(Adventurers of Purse and Person, Dorman, 1987, page 60.)
//////////////////////
He is a qualifying member for the Jamestowne Society.
//////////////////////
Gloucester County was formed from York County, Virginia in 1651, and represents the northern part of York County. Va.
Father: ***Lawrence Hampton , Sr. b: 1558 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Marriage 1 Joane
Married: ABT 1620 in Middlesex, England
Children
William Hampton b: 1618 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Grace Hampton b: 1619 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
Elizabeth Hampton b: 1620 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England
***Thomas Hampton , Sr. b: 15 APR 1623 in Elizabeth City County, Virginia
Sources:
Title: The Venturers by Maynard, pages 1-9.

Immigrated from England and landed in Jamestown, Virginia aboard the Bono Novo in 1620, lived on 700-acre estate, Hampfield, in Gloucester Co., Virginia.

William Hampton, born ca May 1590/92, christened 28 May 1592 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England, ·ÄúHeritage of Stokes County, NC·Äù states ·Äúhe was the eldest son of Laurence Hampton, Sr. and his second wife. Laurence had two children by his first wife (John and Cassandra) and six by his second wife (William, Ann, Richard, Elizabeth, Laurence and Philadelphia). William Hampton, the first generation Hampton in this country, came at the age of 29 to Jamestown, VA aboard the ship Bona Nova in the fall of 1620 when the colony had about 1,200 people. He had been a wool merchant in London and probably came at the bidding of his uncle, Thomas Hampton. Thomas had been an original stockholder in the "London Company" which in 1607 sent a group of English settlers to Virginia to establish a colony. This was strictly a business venture and land in the colony was available through stock investments, to the settlers. William later paid the passage of his wife Joan and their three children, William, Jr., Grace and Elizabeth. They arrived in 1621 on the ship Abigail; a cousin, John Hampton also arrived on the Abigail. His first property was at old Point Comfort, near Mobjack Bay in Gloucester Co. VA, then Isle of Wight Co., then Eastermont River, where he built a plantation named "Hampfield" after 1651. He was a wool merchant, buying wool from other Virginians and shipping it to his brother Laurence Hampton in London, who was a merchant tailor.

William and Joan/Joane had the following known children:
1) William, Jr. HAMPTON (b.Bet. 1615-1617-MIddlesex,England)
2) Grace HAMPTON (b.Abt 1618-England)
3) Elizabeth HAMPTON (b.England)
4) Rev. THOMAS HAMPTON (b.-Elizabeth City County,Virginia d.Oct 1690-James City County,Virignia (age 67)) sp: Unknown

GEDCOM Note
Immigration of William Thomas Hampton 1620 (Age 27) Hampfield, Gloucester, Virginia, USA
Note: "The Immigrant:" Set sail from London, England on the "Bona Nova," a 200 ton ship with 120 passengers commanded by Captain John Huddleston in
AFGS
1 CONC y this time of the massacre, ===
AFGS 1 CONC y this time of the massacre, William and family were found living in Elizabeth City, Virginia. This later changed name to Gloucester County, Virginia.
On 25 March 1651, Hampton, age 59, was g
On 25 March 1651, Hampton, age 59, was granted 700 acres on the east side of the Eastermost River below Pudding Swamp (Put-In-Creek,) near the present town of Mathews, Va. where he established Hampfield plantation that sameyear.
Source:
Author: Virginia G Meynard Title: Venturers - The Hampton, Harrison, and Earle Families of Virginia, South Carolina, and Texas Publication Information: Southern Historical Press, Easley, SC, 1981, ISBN 0-89308-241-4 (82-9332,) Library of Congress Card Catalog Number: 81-83640
William and his family settled for a sho
William and his family settled for a short time in Jamestown, then moved a few miles south to Elizabeth City, Virginia. In March 1622 on Friday the 22, a terrible Indian massacre occured which came near to exterminating the entire colony of Jamestown. B
Source: "A History of the Hampton Family of the Southern States, 1586-1916", typescript [214 pages], by Joseph Lyon Miller, M.D., URL: http://swco.ttu.edu/manuscripts/hampton/Howard_Hampton_Guide.html
Life Sketch
Related to The Reverend Andrew Thomas Hampton, William was born in 1592 and died in 1652. Living in the 1500·Äôs it is not a surprise at all that he was a major part of the ·ÄòFamily of Virginia·Äô. His legacy led to several Hampton·Äôs appearing with their name in the ·ÄòFamily of the Virginia·Äô. Adding to his legacy, William is the 10th Great Grandfather of David Arthur. The Hampton blood-line ran strong in the East states, however it was not always that way. In fact William was born in Middlesex, England, United Kingdom. Him and his wife Joan met in England and started their family there. With little information of their life spent in England, a huge step in life they took together was bringing their children to The United States. Joana immigrated with her 3 children roughly around 1621. They arrived in Hampfield, Gloucester, Virginia. Joana made this passage on the ·ÄúAbigail·Äù, a ship that weighed 350 ton and was under the direction of commander and Captain Samuel Each. ·ÄòThe Hampton Family of Virginia·Äô, was an article written in South Carolina and Kentucky by Dr J. L. Miller on November 26, 1911. Because this article was written many years after the death of Joana and William, not much information has been able to be pulled from their past, but this article has their names listed and provides how they are part of this family·Äôs legacy. Their family is referred to as one of the most ·Äúancient·Äù in England. Reverend Thomas Hampton was only the fourth emigrant to Virginia. William Hampton has a long and on going family tree branching out to individuals all across the United States currently. They are continuing the legacy of William Thomas and are living the ·ÄòFamily of Virginia·Äô still today.
GEDCOM Source
GEDCOM data
GEDCOM Source
GEDCOM data
GEDCOM Source
9GW2-44K William Thomas Hampton, "Find A Grave Index" "Find A Grave Index," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q295-K54Y : 15 March 2016), William Thomas Hampton, 1652; Burial, , , ,, ; citing record ID 151536703, Find a Grave, http://www.findagrave.com. https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:Q295-K54Y

William Hampton was born on 28 May 1592 in Twickenham Parish, Middlesex, England. He was the eldest on of Laurence Hampton Sr and his second wife. He immigrated to Jamestown, Virginia, at the age of 29 aboard the ship Bona Nova in the fall of 1620 when the colony had about 1200 people.

He had been a wool merchant in London and probably came at the bidding of his uncle, Thomas Hampton. Thomas had been an original stockholder in the "London Company" which in 1607 sent a group of English settlers to Virginia to establish a colony. This was strictly a business venture and land in the colony was available through stock investments to the settlers.
William later paid the passage on the Abigail for his wife Joan and their three children, William, Jr., Grace and Elizabeth. (A cousin, John Hampton arrived with them).
His first property was at Old Point Comfort in Hampton near Mobjack Bay in Gloucester County, He later lived in Isle of Wight County, After 1752 William built the Hampfield plantation on the Eastermont River in Gloucester County, Virginia.
He continued his career as a wool merchant, buying wool from other Virginians. He shipped it to his brother Laurence Hampton in London, who was a merchant.
He died on 05 September 1652 on Hampfield Plantation, Gloucester County, Virginia.
References
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Jamestown%2C_Virginia_Colony#Bo...
·Äú Hampton, William - aged 34 at muster in Elizabeth City, listed with Joane Hampton.·Äù

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Lawrence (I) Hampton

Lawrence (I) Hampton
± 1570-± 1612


William Hampton
± 1592-± 1652

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