Family Tree Welborn » William II Bynum Baynham (1724-1781)

Données personnelles William II Bynum Baynham 

Source 1Les sources 2, 3, 4
  • Il est né en l'an 1724 dans Isle of Wight County, Province of Virginia, Colonial America.

    Waarschuwing Attention: Avait plus de 65 ans (113) lors de la naissance (??-??-1837) de l'enfant (Tapley Bynum).

    Waarschuwing Attention: Avait plus de 65 ans (115) lors de la naissance (10 septembre 1839) de l'enfant (Charity Bynum).

    Waarschuwing Attention: Avait plus de 65 ans (89) lors de la naissance (??-??-1813) de l'enfant (Sarah Nancy Bynum).

  • Alternative: Il est né en l'an 1763 dans Orange, North Carolina, USA.
  • Résidant:
  • Il est décédé en l'an 1781 dans Pendleton, Anderson County, South Carolina, il avait 57 ans.

    Fout Attention: Etait déja décédé (??-??-1781) 9 mois avant la naissance (??-??-1837) de l'enfant (Tapley Bynum).

    Fout Attention: Etait déja décédé (??-??-1781) 9 mois avant la naissance (10 septembre 1839) de l'enfant (Charity Bynum).

    Fout Attention: Etait déja décédé (??-??-1781) 9 mois avant la naissance (??-??-1813) de l'enfant (Sarah Nancy Bynum).

  • Alternative: Il est décédé le 25 février 1858 dans Jones Co., Mississippi.
  • Un enfant de William I Bynum Baynham et Mary Bynum (Fort)
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 8 septembre 2023.

Famille de William II Bynum Baynham

Waarschuwing Attention: Conjoint (Judith Welch) est 86 ans plus jeune.

(1) Il est marié avec Mary Bynum (Crocker).

Ils se sont mariés le 13 janvier 1762 à Southampton County, Virginia, il avait 38 ans.


Enfant(s):



(2) Il est marié avec Sarah.

Ils se sont mariés


Enfant(s):

  1. Tapley Bynum  1837-1864
  2. Elizabeth Bynum  ± 1839-????
  3. Charity Bynum  1839-????


(3) Il est marié avec Judith Welch.

Ils se sont mariés.


Enfant(s):

  1. Sarah Nancy Bynum  1813-1887


Notes par William II Bynum Baynham



William Bynum, II
Gender:
Male
Birth:
1724
Isle of Wight County, Province of Virginia, Colonial America
Death:
1781 (56-57)
Pendleton, Anderson County, South Carolina, United States
Immediate Family:
Son of William Bynum, I and Mary Bynum (Fort)

Husband of Mary Bynum (Crocker)

Father of Isaac Newton Bynum; John Bynum; William Bynum, III; Jesse A. Bynum; Benjamin Bynum; and Rebecca Powell (Bynum)

Brother of Jesse Bynum; Drury Bynum; James Bynum; Mary Fort Bell (Bynum); Benjamin Bynum; Abigail Bynum; Michael Bynum; Luke Bynum; Celia Colia Bynum; Isaac Bynum; Ann Bynum and Rebecca Bynum

Half brother of Drury Bynum; Benjamin Bynum; Abigail Bynum; Michael Bynum and Celia Colia Bynum

https://www.geni.com/people/William-Bynum-II/6000000001931980647

William Bynum, II is your 6th great grandfather.
You
¬â€  ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Emma Corine Welborn (Bombard)
his mother ·Üí Emma Elizabeth Free / Bombard (Davis)
her mother ·Üí Nancy Isabelle Davis (Bynum)
her mother ·Üí Robert Bynum
her father ·Üí Mark Bynum
his father ·Üí William Bynum, III
his father ·Üí William Bynum, II
his father

https://www.geni.com/people/William-Bynum-II/6000000001931980647

-----------------------------------
Virginia, U.S., Compiled Marriages, 1660-1800
Name:William Bynum
Spouse:Mary Crocker
Marriage Date:13 Jan 1762
Marriage Location:Southampton County, Virginia
Source Information:
Dodd, Jordan. Virginia, U.S., Compiled Marriages, 1660-1800 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 1997.

Original data: Dodd, Jordan, comp.. Virginia Marriages to 1800. Electronic transcription of marriage records held by the individual counties in Virginia
-----------------------------------

Virginia, U.S., Land, Marriage, and Probate Records, 1639-1850
Name:William Bynum
Date:5 Nov 1743
Location: Isle of Wight
Notes:This probate record was extracted from microfilmed copies of the original Will Book.
Remarks:Simon Everitt. Leg.-son Joseph; son Simon; grandson Amos Williams; to Catherine Due; daughter Patience Turner; daughter Sarah Turner. Exs., sons Joseph and Simon Turner.
Description:Witness
Book:5-49
Prove date:12 Mar 1746
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. Virginia, U.S., Land, Marriage, and Probate Records, 1639-1850 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2004.

Original data:
Chalkley, Lyman. Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia, 1745-1800. Extracted from the Original Court Records of Augusta County. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1965. Originally published in 1912.

Crozier, William Armstrong, ed. Virginia County Records - Spotsylvania County Records, 1721-1800. Being transcriptions from the original files at the County Court House of wills, deeds, administrators' and guardians' bonds, marriage licenses, and lists of revolutionary pensioners. New York, NY: Fox, Duffield & Co., 1905.

----------------------------------

==========
Origin of the Name ·ÄúBynum·Äù
https://genfiles.com/bynum/origin-of-the-name-bynum/

The various branches of the Baynham and Bynum families of America eventually developed legends that the name, and the family itself, originated variously in Wales, Scotland, England, and Ireland.¬â€  All of the immigrants mentioned herein, and all other colonial immigrants of the name who can be identified, were certainly English.
However, the name itself is of Welsh derivation, taking the Baynham and other forms in fifteenth century England among families of Welsh origin.¬â€ ¬â€  Many English surnames were formed from Welsh given names by prefixing the patronymic ·Äúab·Äù(before vowels) or ·Äúap·Äù (before consonants).¬â€  Eventually, the vowel was dropped and, for example, ap Hugh became Pugh, ab Owen became Bowen, and ap Rhys became Price.
One of the most common Welsh given names was Ennian (or, in more modern times, Enyon or Enion).¬â€ ¬â€  With the patronymic prefix ·Äúab·Äù, this name produced a great many English surnames. The Origin of English Surnames notes that ab Enyon ·Äúsurvives as Ennion, Eynon, Inions, Anyan, Onians, Onions, and Hennion and, compounded with ap or ab, as Pinnion, Beynon, Benian, Benyan, and Binyon·Ä¶ In 1455 in Worcestershire and in 1486 in Gloucestershire this acquired a pseudo-topographical form Baynham which still survives.·Äù1¬â€  A companion book by the same author gives the same derivation, adding that ·Äúin spite of appearance, Baynham is not local in origin.·Äù2 ¬â€  All authorities on English surnames seem to reject the notion that Baynham and its variants were derived from a place name.
T. E. Morris, in ·ÄúWelsh Surnames in the Border Counties of Wales·Äù, writes that ·ÄúEynon and Beynon have undergone curious changes in England, producing such divergent variants as Haynes and Onions and Baines, Baynham and Beniams·Ä¶ Baynham is an old Gloucestershire and Herefordshire surname.¬â€  The son of one Robert ap Eignon was Robert Baynham·Ä¶ Thomas Baynham was married in 1437, hence this is an early instance of the name.¬â€  Another even earlier instance of Baynham as a surname is [1421 in Herefordshire].¬â€  Thomas Baynham was the High Sheriff of Gloucestershire in 1476,¬â€  Laurence Bynion or Benyon or Benion or Bygnion was at the University of Oxford in 1581·Ä¶·Äù3 ¬â€  Note that all the referenced English counties border South Wales.¬â€  The same book lists Baynham, Banham, Beynon, Benniam and similar variants as originating in these border counties.¬â€  It does not list any version of Bynum at all.¬â€ ¬â€  Morris further notes that, in these particular surnames, ·Äúthe vowels are interchanged at will.·Äù4¬â€  Pronunciation of Baynham and its variants, as we know from contemporary poems that presumably rhymed, would have at times been pretty close to ·Äúbye-nom·Äù.¬â€ 5
The 1901 The Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames repeats the same Welsh origin and calls Baynham ·Äúa Gloucestershire surname: ·Äú·Ä¶Robert ap Eignon had for his son Robert Baynham, of Chorewall in the forest of Dean.¬â€  Henceforward the family were so known·Ä¶ The name looks wonderfully English and local, but, as shown, is not so.¬â€  Beynon, Binyon, and Benyon are other forms·Ä¶·Äù6
The National Library of Wales, located in the charmingly-named town of Aberystwyth,¬â€  kindly provided two gentlemen to discuss this further some years ago.¬â€  While referring to the above authors, they added the observation that the Welsh patronymic produced different forms even within Wales.¬â€  For example, ab Enyon¬â€  tended to became Bennion and variations in North Wales, but Beynon in South Wales.¬â€  These gentlemen also pointed out that the Welsh use of patronymics continued well into the 19th century, so it is clear that derived surnames like Baynham developed outside Wales in the adjoining English border counties.¬â€  It is true, however, that in the last century or two, variants like Baynam, Beynom, and Bynom have occasionally appeared in South Wales as well as in the border counties.
The Visitation of the County of Gloucestershire Taken in the Year 1623, referenced by some of the authors above, contains a lengthy genealogy that begins with one Raffe ap Eignon of Gloucestershire¬â€  Several generations later, roughly in the year 1400, his descendents had adopted Baynham as the surname.¬â€  There follows eight generations of Baynhams, through the early 1600s.¬â€  (Alas, there is no evidence of a relationship with any of the Virginia Baynhams.)¬â€  The Knights of England lists four knights of this name, all spelled ·ÄúBaynham·Äù, three of whom are in the genealogy of Raffe ap Eignon.7
It seems clear, then, that ·ÄúBaynham·Äù was the dominant form of the name in the seventeenth century and that the Baynham immigrants to America (like most of that period) came from the southwestern counties or from the vicinity of London.
Surnames of the Earliest Immigrants
The surnames of the two earliest seventeenth century Virginia immigrants, John Baynham of Jamestown and Alexander Baynham of Westmoreland County (both of whom are discussed in Chapter 1) are most often recorded as ·ÄúBaynham·Äù.¬â€  This is surely due to the fact that both were literate and could sign their own names.¬â€  What copies of signatures we can find for them are rendered as ·ÄúBaynham·Äù.¬â€  The clerks who wrote their names into the records were perhaps either familiar with their signatures or were told how to spell the name.¬â€  However, the names of both men were sometimes¬â€  recorded as Baynam, Bainham, Baineham, and even Banum and Beanum.
A century later there came to Caroline County, Virginia another literate immigrant, William Baynham (also see Chapter 1) who, along with his descendants, consistently signed as ·ÄúBaynham·Äù, though the rendering of the surname by clerks on occasion exhibited nearly as much imagination.¬â€  The descendants of this immigrant, essentially all of whom were literate, continued to use the ·ÄúBaynham·Äù name in later generations.
Transformation of the Name in America
Two non-literate immigrants of the 17th century perhaps were named ·ÄúBaynham·Äù as well, though because neither was literate, the name was recorded by clerks in a different form.¬â€  These two immigrants were George Baynam of Maryland (see Chapter 1) and John Bynum of Surry County, Virginia (see Chapter 2).¬â€  Neither of these two men could read or write and so we have no example of a signature.¬â€ ¬â€  Their illiteracy undoubtedly contributed to the transmutation of their surnames.¬â€  In the case of the former, the surname was recorded as both Baynam and Banum but his descendants generally adopted Bainum and variants when they became literate.
John ·ÄúBynum·Äù of Surry County ·Äì 11 different spellings
John Bynum, who arrived in Surry County by 1663, is the progenitor of the large American Bynum family.¬â€  Neither he nor his sons were literate.¬â€  Lacking the ability to spell his own name, we find it recorded by numerous clerks in what appears to be a more or less phonetic rendering of ·ÄúBaynham·Äù.¬â€ ¬â€  John Baynham·Äôs name appears some 37 times in Surry County records, in eleven different versions ·Äì in order of frequency: Byneham, Bynham, Bynam, Bineham, Binam, Bynom, Bayneham, Binnom, Binham, Benham, and Benom.¬â€ ¬â€  Note that his name was never spelled ·ÄúBynum·Äù during his lifetime.¬â€ ¬â€  The ·ÄúBynum·Äù form of the name was rarely found, in fact, until his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, having learned to write, employed it as the preferred form.¬â€  While some styled themselves as Bineham and other variants, the great majority of the descendants of this man had adopted Bynum by the nineteenth century.
The name Bynum is thus a uniquely American name, used almost exclusively by the descendants of a single immigrant.¬â€  It is also a relatively unusual name. The first census of the United States in 1790 lists a total of 24 households headed by persons of the name (by one spelling or another) ·Äì one each in Massachusetts and Maryland, five in Virginia, fourteen in North Carolina and three in South Carolina.¬â€  At the same time, the name was virtually non-existent in England; only a handful of references pre-1790 can be found.
How do we determine the original surname of the Surry immigrant?¬â€  The answer, unfortunately, is that we cannot be absolutely certain.¬â€  But there are several good reasons to conclude that his name was actually ·ÄúBaynham·Äù or one of its close variants:
·Ä¢The form in which the immigrant·Äôs name is most often recorded by clerks (Byneham and variants) appears to be a phonetic form of Baynham, which would have been pronounced, roughly, as ·ÄúBynum.·Äù8¬â€ ¬â€  Indeed, his name is recorded on at least one occasion as Bayneham.¬â€  Among the other variations of his name, as recorded by the Surry County clerks, such as Benham and Benom, are mentioned in the above-referenced works as surnames with the same derivation as Baynham.
·Ä¢As Morris noted, families who used Baynham sometimes appear in early records as Bynion, Beynham, and other variants, and the same root name evolved in South Wales and the English border counties into Bynom.9¬â€ ¬â€  The name Bynom and Beynham seem more than coincidently similar to Bynum.¬â€  In fact, of those foreign-born immigrants named Bynam, Bynom, and Bynum appearing in the U.S. censuses of the mid-1800s, essentially all were Welsh.
·Ä¢The name Byneham and its variants is completely ignored by the authorities quoted above.¬â€  That is, the name in that form was almost entirely unknown in England (but see below)¬â€  Thus the odds are that the Surry immigrant·Äôs name was a phonetic rendering of some other name unusual enough that the clerks of Surry County were unfamiliar with it.¬â€  The surname that best fits that description is ·ÄúBaynham·Äù or one of its variants. ¬â€ I¬â€  also note that a similar transformation may have taken place in England a century or two later, when the English censuses of the mid-19th century recorded numerous households in southwestern England with similar surnames.10 ¬â€  As the National Library of Wales pointed out, both South Wales and the English border counties developed the forms Baynam, Beynom, and Bynom from the same root name by the early 19th century.
·Ä¢Finally, I would point out that the vast majority of immigrants to Virginia in the early and mid seventeenth century originated in either the southeastern counties (where Baynham originated) or the metropolitan area of London.¬â€  Thus it seems plausible that the Surry immigrant·Äôs name would have been prevalent on one of those areas.
There is an alternative explanation for the Bynum surname which, upon inspection, seems so unlikely that we can safely consider it implausible.¬â€  Some researchers have noted that a priory named Binham existed in early Norfolk County in northeastern England.11¬â€ ¬â€  Spelled ·ÄúBinneham·Äù in the 1086 Domesday Book, it eventually became known as ·ÄúBinham.·Äù¬â€  (There was also a town in Nottinghamshire called Bingheha, which eventually became spelled Bingham, then Byneham in the Vale.¬â€  However, all English surname authorities reject the idea that any surname developed from this place name.)¬â€ ¬â€  While it is possible that a similar sprang from the place called ·ÄúBinham·Äù, the reverse is also possible, for Reaney mentions Binham (Bineham) as a Norfolk surname among ·ÄúSurnames of Norwich Immigrants 1285-1350.·Äù12
If such a surname did develop in eastern England it was exceedingly rare compared to those of the southwest and west.¬â€  In fact, the surname Binham and Bineham does not appear to have survived in eastern England.¬â€  A search of English records of the 16th century uncovers only a few persons of that name, most of them in the southwest.¬â€  By the1851 English census not a single person of that name was enumerated, though many similar names existed in the western counties.¬â€  The 1861 English census listed no families in the vicinity of Norfolk named Binham, Bineham, Byneham, or similar, but several of that name in the west and southwest.¬â€  Thus it appears that the name in that form had an origin outside of Norfolk, more akin to Beynham, Beynom, and Bynom, than to the priory of Binham.¬â€ ¬â€  In any event, an origin in eastern England for the Surry County immigrant is considerably less likely than an origin in the southwestern counties.
Variations on the Name in Surry County, Virginia
To clearly illustrate that Bynum developed as a uniquely American name, I·Äôve noted below the distribution of the spellings of the name found in all 101 Surry County, Virginia records from the first occurrence in 1663 through 1700.¬â€  These citations were for the first two generations of the family in Surry, none of whom could sign their own names.¬â€  It seems obvious from this table that the clerks and magistrates wrote the name phonetically.
50 times as Bineham or Byneham
30 times as Binham or Bynham
13 times as Binam or Bynam
4 times as Binnom or Bynom
2 times as Binum or Bynum
once each as Bayneham and Benom
1P. H. Reaney, The Origin of English Surnames (London, 1967), pp318-319. [·Ü©]
2P. H. Reaney, A Dictionary of British Surnames (London, 1958), p32. [·Ü©]
3T. E. Morris, ·ÄúWelsh Surnames in the Border Counties of Wales·Äù, Y Cymmrodor, Volume XLIII (London, 1932), p108 and pp157-159. [·Ü©]
4T. E. Morris, p158. [·Ü©]
5Per the helpful staff at the National Library of Wales.¬â€  See also Bill Bryson·Äôs The Mother Tongue (William Morrow, New York, 1990) for a very readable summary of English pronunciation in the 17th century. [·Ü©]
6Charles W. E. Bardsley, The Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames (London, 1901), p86. [·Ü©]
7William Arthur Shaw, The Knights of England (London, 1906), Volume II, p18, 41, 58, and 98. [·Ü©]
8Helpful gentlemen at both the National Library of Wales and the British Museum assured me in 1979 that the pronunciation was probably ·Äúbye·Äù for ·Äúbay·Äù.¬â€ ¬â€ ¬â€  It helps to recall that pronunciation of English vowels was often considerably different a few hundred years ago.¬â€  Several books on early English pronunciation, especially H. L. Menken¬â€  and Bill Bryson, make the same point. [·Ü©]
9Morris, pp158-159. [·Ü©]
10The form Bynum and variants appears very rarely in English records.¬â€  For example, the 1861 English census lists only 5 households rendered as Bynam, Binam, Bynom, Bynum, and the like but lists 90 households rendered as Baynham and Baynam.¬â€  ¬â€ As another example, Pallot·Äôs Marriage Index for 1780-1837 lists no persons named Bynum and similar, but 34 named Baynham.¬â€  Among such seventeenth century records as could be found, the Bynum form of the name appears to have been essentially nonexistent in England. [·Ü©]
11Its history is described in considerable detail by Francis Blomefield, An Essay Towards a Topographical History of the County of Norfolk, Vol. IX, (London, 1808). [·Ü©]
12P. H. Rainey, The Origin of English Surnames (London, 1967), pp334-335. [·Ü©]

2.1.1. William Bynum (c1720 ·Äì ?) He first appears as ·ÄúWilliam Bynum Junr. of Fishing Creek·Äù on 30 December 1745, when he bought an unspecified acreage on the south side of Fishing Creek from William Mearns, with William Bynum Sr. a witness.18
17 Surry County Wills & Deeds Book 7, p632. 18 Halifax County Deed Book 5, p439.

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de William II Bynum Baynham

John I Fort (Forte)
± 1663-± 1725
Mary Bynum (Fort)
1700-± 1793

William II Bynum Baynham
1724-1781

(1) 1762
(2) 

Sarah
????-1843

Tapley Bynum
1837-1864
Elizabeth Bynum
± 1839-????
Charity Bynum
1839-????
(3) 

Judith Welch
1810-1893


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Les sources

  1. Ancestry Family Tree
    http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=108978476&pid=470
  2. 1,8058::2015423
  3. 1,7590::504387
  4. 1,5058::172738

Événements historiques

  • La température le 13 janvier 1762 était d'environ 5,0 °C. Le vent venait principalement de l'/du sud à l'est. Caractérisation du temps: geheel betrokken. Source: KNMI
  • En l'an 1762: Source: Wikipedia
    • 4 janvier » la Grande-Bretagne déclare la guerre à l'Espagne et au royaume de Naples, dans le cadre de la guerre de Sept Ans.
    • 10 mars » supplice et exécution de Jean Calas, bourgeois toulousain sexagénaire de confession protestante condamné sans preuve pour avoir assassiné son fils qui voulait devenir catholique (considéré comme victime de l'intolérance religieuse). Soutenu par Voltaire qui publie un Traité sur la tolérance, la famille , après une entrevue avec le roi, parvient à faire réviser le procès. Jean Calas est réhabilité en 1765.
    • 22 mai » la Suède et la Prusse signent le traité de Hambourg.
    • 6 juin » début de la bataille de La Havane.
    • 9 juillet » avènement de Catherine II au trône de Russie.
    • 24 septembre » bataille navale de Manille (guerre de Sept Ans). Victoire britannique sur les Espagnols.
  • La température le 25 février 1858 était d'environ -9.2 °C. La pression du vent était de 10 kgf/m2 et provenait en majeure partie du est nordest. La pression atmosphérique était de 77 cm de mercure. Le taux d'humidité relative était de 56%. Source: KNMI
  •  Cette page est uniquement disponible en néerlandais.
    De Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden werd in 1794-1795 door de Fransen veroverd onder leiding van bevelhebber Charles Pichegru (geholpen door de Nederlander Herman Willem Daendels); de verovering werd vergemakkelijkt door het dichtvriezen van de Waterlinie; Willem V moest op 18 januari 1795 uitwijken naar Engeland (en van daaruit in 1801 naar Duitsland); de patriotten namen de macht over van de aristocratische regenten en proclameerden de Bataafsche Republiek; op 16 mei 1795 werd het Haags Verdrag gesloten, waarmee ons land een vazalstaat werd van Frankrijk; in 3.1796 kwam er een Nationale Vergadering; in 1798 pleegde Daendels een staatsgreep, die de unitarissen aan de macht bracht; er kwam een nieuwe grondwet, die een Vertegenwoordigend Lichaam (met een Eerste en Tweede Kamer) instelde en als regering een Directoire; in 1799 sloeg Daendels bij Castricum een Brits-Russische invasie af; in 1801 kwam er een nieuwe grondwet; bij de Vrede van Amiens (1802) kreeg ons land van Engeland zijn koloniën terug (behalve Ceylon); na de grondwetswijziging van 1805 kwam er een raadpensionaris als eenhoofdig gezag, namelijk Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck (van 31 oktober 1761 tot 25 maart 1825).
  • Du 1 juillet 1856 au 18 mars 1858 il y avait aux Pays-Bas le cabinet Van der Brugghen avec comme premier ministre Mr. J.L.L. van der Brugghen (protestant).
  • Du 18 mars 1858 au 23 février 1860 il y avait en Hollande le gouvernement Rochussen - Van Bosse avec comme premiers ministres J.J. Rochussen (conservatief-liberaal) et Mr. P.P. van Bosse (liberaal).
  • En l'an 1858: Source: Wikipedia


Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia


Sur le nom de famille Bynum Baynham


La publication Family Tree Welborn a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I470.php : consultée 10 juin 2024), "William II Bynum Baynham (1724-1781)".