Hij is getrouwd met Anna Mary Nn.
Zij zijn getrouwd rond 1779 te probably Loudoun Co., Virginia.
Kind(eren):
Isaac MONTANYE, the son of Joseph Montanye and his wife Maria Covert of Roxbury, Morris County, New Jersey, moved to Loudoun County, Virginia, in the summer of 1780. It seems likely that he left Morris County earlier, since he was not listed there for the 1779 and 1780 tax lists, as reported by Kenn Stryker-Rodda. He was not on the tax list of Loudoun County in the spring of 1780, but he had acquired land by the early spring of 1781. He settled in Shelburne Parish, which was in the southwestern portion of Loudoun County. He continued to be taxed there through 1785, when he had two horses and four cows.
On 12 December 1785 his widow appeared in court as "Anna Mary Montanye, widow and relict of Isaac Montanye dec'd" to obtain the letters of administration of his estate, with James Craig and Thomas Mount as her securities for the bond. On 12 June 1786 the inventory and appraisal of the estate of Isaac Montanye dec'd was returned to court and ; recorded. In addition to his widow, others were mentioned in the settlement of the estate, most notable was a note due from his brothers Abraham and Bergon Montawney from 9 October 1782. Isaac and Charles Vanwhy, who had cash in hand, were probably sons of his sister Jane Vanwey.[Inventory Book C:210-211]
In May 1786 Mary Montony was taxed for one horse and two cows in the same district where Isaac had been. She was again listed in 1787 and that was the last time she appeared using that name. Two of Isaac's children were bound out in October 1788. It was ordered that "the Overseers of the Poor bind according to law Joseph Montawney, eight years old, to David Reese who is to learn him the trade of a millwright"; the next entry was for the Overseers of the Poor to bind Bergon Montawney to Nicholas Merrill. ; The youngest son, Isaac, born in 1785, was clearly too young to be taken from his mother. As there is no further mention in the court records of those two older boys, they must have satisfactorily completed their indentures.
After their bind orders, there is no further mention of Joseph or Burr Montanye in the Loudoun County records until their marriages. Burr Montonyn entered into a marriage bond on 9 November 1802 to wed Charity Oldacre in Fauquier County, VA. In Loudoun County, VA, a bond was recorded on 17 December 1803 for the marriage of Joseph Montaney to Mary Hilburn [Milburn].
Mary Montony/Montanye bought 25 acres from William Sudduth in May 1787 [Loudoun County Deed Book Q:212]; this land lay on the NW Fork of Goose Creek and was very near the Loudoun/Fauquier County line.
Given that Isaac and Anna Mary's eldest son was born in 1780, this clearly suggests that Isaac and Mary were married before their arrival in Loudoun County. Anna Mary's parentage might be found in Northampton County, PA. There may have been more than one reason why Isaac and Anna Mary 's son Burr [short for Bergon] moved later in life to Smithfield Twp., of Northampton County, PA.
While no out-conveyance of the Sudduth land is indexed under Mary Montanye's name, a search of the land taxes and deed books shows that in 1791 James and Mary Jack sold to Joseph Carr, a Merchant, "a certain tract of land which Mary Montony bought of William Sudduth containing 25 acres". ; This seems to clearly suggest that the widowed Anna Mary Montanye married James Jack, probably in late 1787 or early 1788, since Mary was not taxed in 1788 but James Jack was. About 1805 James Jack moved to Harrison County, West Virginia, and in 1817 to Monongalia County, West Virginia. The 1830 Census shows James Jack, age 80-90, and his wife, age 70-80. There is no way of knowing for sure if this wife was Anna Mary Montoney, but the assumption is made that she was still living in 1830.
Isaac Montanye | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Anna Mary Nn |
July 3, 1743. Mantanie, Joseph and Marya--Isack.