Genealogy Richard Remmé, The Hague, Netherlands » William Gregg (± 1642-????)

Persoonlijke gegevens William Gregg 

Bron 1Bronnen 2, 3
  • Hij is geboren rond 1642 in Glenarm Barony, Coast of Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland.Bronnen 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
  • Hij werd gedoopt in Glenarm Barony, Coast of Co. Antrim, Northern Ireland.Bron 2
    Glen Orchy, Argyll, Scotland
  • Geëmigreerd oktober 1682.Bron 2
  • Geïmmigreerd voor 1685.Bron 2
  • Woonachtig:
    • (Religion) : Quaker.Bron 2
    • Hij is overleden.
    • Hij is begraven op 1 juli 1687 in Strand Millas, New Castle Co, Delaware, Verenigde Staten.Bronnen 7, 8
    • Een kind van William Gregg en Mary Grace James
    • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 4 december 2022.

    Gezin van William Gregg


    Notities over William Gregg

    [Norvan L. Johnson.ged]

    Possibly from Toberhead, Antrim Co., Ireland Oct. 1682 left southern Ireland for William Penn's Colony, possibly on a ship called " Calidonia" 1683 granted 200 acres of land, located in Christiana Hundred bordering the Pennsylvania line and lying between the Brandywine and Red Clay Creeks, on the west side of Brandywine Creek near the present sight of Centerville.  March 11,1685 400 acre tract in Christiana Hundred, Newcastle Co., Delaware surveyed to him. (called Rockland Manor also sur. 5-11-1685 &4-23-1692)

    Descendants said to include- William Gregg who introduced cotton mills in South Carolina, Josiah Gregg- Santa Fe trader, explorer and author, and Gen. John Gregg- famous brigadier under Robert E. Lee in 1864.
    BIOGRAPHY: The Greggs, deeply imbued with spiritual piety, were most receptable to the teachings of William Penn when he visited Waterford, Ireland in 1678 and converted many Scottish settlers to the Society of Friends.  So the Gregs became Penn Quakers.

    BIOGRAPHY: As a devout adherent William Gregg was a member of a colonial Friend group which left southern Ireland after October 1623, possibly in the ship "Caledonia" with William Hoge.  He had with him the silver-studded ivory-headed cane inherited as next to the oldest son from his father, William Greg, who left Glenarm Barony, County Antrim, after May 1653.  By this time the cane had become an heirloom whose story he recited many times to his children just as it was the custom for his ancestors to retain a bard whose duty was to sing the exploits of the Greg ancestral line.  Charles A. Gregg, Fredericktown, Ohio, now is the proud hereditary owner of the cane.

    BIOGRAPHY: The ship of Friends landed at Upland, now Chester, Pennsylvania, 1682.  No doubt married relatives came with William Gregg besides his wife and four small children.  Sedate and reserved in appearance they later made their way down the Delaware River to settle that part of Christiana Hundred bordering the Pennsylvania line and lying between Brandywine and Red Clay Creeks on the west side of Brandywine Creek near the present site of Centerville.  The surface is elevated and broken with generally fertile soil.  In this northern part was one of William Penn's principal manors, Rockland Manor, in which William Gregg was granted 200 acres in 1683 and a warrant for 400 acres on January 26, 1684.  (Conrad's History of Delaware. Vol. 2, p. 462).  Here he built a log cabin on a location which he called Strand Millas.  It adjoined the lands of Mattias Defosse on Squirrel Creek, who died May 1708, had wife Sarah.  Other neighbors were Henry Hollingsworth, Thomas Hollingsworth, Thomas Woolasten, George Hog, William Hoge, John Hussy, William Dixon.

    BIOGRAPHY: William Gregg's family of a wife, a young daughter, and three young sons was well cared for and also entertained by his stories of the clan Greg's fortunes and misfortunes.  These stories were never forgotten by his children who passed them on to the next generation.  He was most congenial in his home.

    BIOGRAPHY: The earliest monthly meetings of the Quakers on west side of the Delaware River was organized at New Castle about 1681 and held in a private house until 1687 when the meetings were changed to a log meeting house on the grounds given by Valentine Hollingsworth.

    BIOGRAPHY: In 1686 William Gregg gave 5 shillings "toward a public stock for ye relief of ye friends in necessity" with Cornelius Empson, Edward Blake.  Valentine Hollingsworth, John Richardson, Robert Turner, and Thomas Snelling.  He was one of the Friends who in the winter of 1687 was granted permission to hold their meetings in the winter months on Christiana side instead of going to the Brandywine Hundred Meeting at Neward "by reason of the dangerousness of ye ford" they must cross.  When about forty-five he died and was buried on his own plantation at his home of Strand Millas on July 1, 1687.  His four children were successfully reared by the mother, relatives, and friends, as the oldest child John was only nineteen when the father died.  The children lived in their own home Strand Millas and kept possession of their father's land.

    BIOGRAPHY: Taken from the Web pages of; Lynn F. Lusby at; http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/l/u/s/Lynn-F-Lusby/GENE5-0001.htm l

    BIOGRAPHY: ----------------------------------------------

    BIOGRAPHY: According to 'The Quaker Greggs' William came to America with his wife and children aboard the 'Caledonia' sometime after 1678, landing at Delaware.  The book states that William was part of a group of Quakers who left southern Ireland in 1682 with William Hoge, the ship, probably the 'Caledonia' landing at Upland in 1682.  He purchased 200 acres near Rockland Manor in Christiana Hundred in 1683 and another 400 acres in 1684.  On this land, he built a log cabin which he called Strand Millas.

    BIOGRAPHY: Immigration of Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania, page 129, gives 1687 as immigration date:  "About 1687, the brothers George and Michael Harlan, from Parish of Donnahlong, County Down . . . , William Gregg, probably from the north of Ireland; William Dixon or Dixson, from Parish of Segoe, County Armagh, and other friends settled on the west side of Brandywine Creek, in Christiana Hundred, New Castle Co., near the present village of Centerville, and became the founders of what later was known as Centre Meeting."  Must be wrong.  See entry for 1685.

    BIOGRAPHY: TEXT Footnote:  "William Gregg settled on a tract of 400 acres of land in Christiana Hundred, New Castle Co., surveyed to him 3 Mo. 11, 1685.  He died 'ye 1st ofo ye 7th month and was buried on his own plantation 1687.'"

    BIOGRAPHY: Neighbors: Henry and Thomas Hollingsworth, Thomas Woolasten, George Hog, William Hoge, John Hussy, William Dixon. (Quaker Greggs, pp. 26-28)

    BIOGRAPHY: Immigration of the Irish Quakers into Pennsylvania 1682-1750 With Their Early History in Ireland Newark or Kennett Monthly Meeting Of Chester Co., PA, and New Castle Co., Delaware. Established in 1686.

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    Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van William Gregg

    William Gregg
    1616-1672
    Mary Grace James
    1619-± 1688

    William Gregg
    ± 1642-????


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    Bronnen

    1. "John D Newport," supplied by Newport, Updated: 2015-04-28; copy held by [RESEARCHER & CONTACT INFORMATION FOR PRIVATE USE]\., rootsweb : John. D. Newport, compiled by John D. Newport [(E-ADDRESS) FOR PRIVATE USE Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States of America
    2. Hardin Clay Roots, Norvan L. Johnson, Date of Import: May 31, 2007 / RootsWeb's WorldConnect
    3. Boddie, 17th Century Isle of Wight Co., Virginia, Database online.
      Record for William Gregg
      / www.ancestry.com
    4. World Family Tree, Tree #1229 / Brøderbund Software
    5. Seventeenth Century Colonial Ancestors, Mary Louise M. Hutton
    6. Ancestral File (TM) / Family History Library, SLC
    7. Immigrant Ancestors
    8. Quaker Greggs: the descendants of William Gregg, the Friend immigrant to Delaware, 1682, Kendall, Hazel May Middleton, p. 24
      QUAY 3

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    Over de familienaam Gregg

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    Richard Remmé, "Genealogy Richard Remmé, The Hague, Netherlands", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-richard-remme/I533511.php : benaderd 28 april 2024), "William Gregg (± 1642-????)".