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Errata from the History of the Colony and Ancient Dominion of Virginia by James Campbell
"On a Sunday morning, in the summer of 1675, a herdsman, named Robert Hen, together with an Indian, was slain in Stafford County, by a party of the hostile tribe of Doegs, and the victims were found by the people on their way to church."
"Colonel Mason and Captain Brent, with some militia, pursued the offenders about twenty miles up the river, and then across into Maryland, and, coming upon two parties of armed warriors, slaughtered indiscriminately a number of them and of the Susquehannocks, a friendly tribe. These latter, recently expelled from their own country, at the head of the Chesapeake Bay, by the Senecas, a tribe of the Five Nations, now sought refuge in a fort of the Piscataways, a friendly tribe near the head of the Potomac, supposed to be near the spot where now stands the City of Washington. In a short time several Marylanders were murdered by the savages, and some Virginians in the County of Stafford. The fort on the north bank of the Piscataway consisted of high earth-works having flankers pierced with loop-holes, and surrounded by a ditch. This again was encircled by a row of tall trees from five to eight inches in diameter, set three feet in the earth and six inches apart, and wattled in such a manner as to protect those within, and, at the same time, to afford them apertures for shooting through. It was probably an old fort erected by Maryland as a protection to the frontier, but latterly unoccupied. The Susquehannocks, to the number of one hundred warriors, with their old men, women, and children, entrenched themselves in this stronghold. Toward the end of September they were besieged by a thousand men from Virginia and Maryland, united in a joint expedition, at the instance of the latter. The Marylanders were commanded by Major Thomas Truman, the Virginians by Colonel John Washington. John Washington had emigrated from Yorkshire, England, to Virginia in 1657, and purchased lands in Westmoreland. Not long after, being, as has been conjectured, a surveyor, he made a location of lands, which, however, was set aside until the Indians, to whom these lands had been assigned, should vacate them. In the year 1667 he was a member of the house of burgesses."
"The author of this account, whose initials are T. M., says of himself, that he lived in Northumberland County, on the lower part of the Potomac, where he was a merchant; but he had a plantation, servants, cattle, etc., in Stafford County, on the upper part of that river; and that he was elected a burgess from Stafford in 1676, Colonel Mason being his colleague. T. M., perhaps, was Thomas Matthews, son of Colonel Samuel Matthews, some time governor. He owned lands acquired from the Wicocomoco Indians in Northumberland, and it is probable that his son, Thomas Matthews, came into possession of them. He appears to have lived at a place called Cherry Point, probably on the Potomac, in 1681."
"In May, 1684, Robert Beverley was found guilty of high [338]misdemeanors, but judgment being respited, and the prisoner asking pardon on his bended knees, was released, upon giving security for his good behavior. His counsel was William Fitzhugh, of Stafford County, a lawyer of reputation, and a planter. Beverley was charged with having led the people to believe that there would be a "cessation" of the tobacco crop in 1680, and such appears to have been the general impression in the summer of that year. The abject terms in which he now sued for pardon form a singular contrast to his former constancy; and it is curious to find the loyal Beverley, the strenuous partisan of Berkley, now the victim of the tyranny which he had formerly defended with so much energy and success."
Images of Wills and Estates
Miscellaneous Wills and Estates
- Index to Stafford County Wills (1722-1729)
- Clement, Edward (LWT) 1733
- Elzey, Margaret, deceased (1730) (Image)
- Fudd, Michael (Inventory) ca 1733
- Grigsby, Charles, LWT (1740) (image)
- Grigsby, John, LWT (1728) (image)
- Johnson, Booford, estate, inventory (1740) (image)
- Mauzy, Peter, orphan (image)
Informational
Stafford County Probate Records
Stafford County was created in 1665. Pictured is Ferry Farm, the plantation where George Washington grew up.
Maps
Marriages to 1699
Marriages published in The Genealogy Magazine: A Journal of American and British Ancestry.
- Washington, John to Mary Townsbe date: 15 Mar 1692
Images of Wills 1699 to 1709
- Jenkins, David
- King, William
- Littlejohn, Oliver
- Mann, James
- Martin, Richard
- Matheny, William
- Pickett, Joyce
- Richardson, William
- Taylor, Edward
- Thomson, William
- Vandagesteel, Giles
- Waller, William
- Williams, Anthony
- Withers, John (Captain)
- Wood, William
- Alexander, Robert
- Ashton, James, estate
- Beath, Peter
- Benson, Hugh
- Bland, James
- Brent, George
- Brewton, John
- Buckner, Philip
- Cornwall, Ann
- Enno, George
- Farlow, Ann
- Fitzhugh, William
- Harman, Christopher
- Harwood, William
- Harvey, John
Images of Wills 1729 to 1748
- Grigsby, Thomas
- Higgerson, John
- Hore, Elias
- Howard, John
- Hurst, John
- Jeffrice, Thomas
- Joanes, John
- Jones, Susan
- Keen, Matthew
- Massey, Dodd
- Masters, Thomas
- Mealy, Daniel
- Mees, Mary
- Ponton, Edward
- Powel, Grace
- Scott, Alexander
- Scott, William
- Seaton, James
- Todd, Richard
- Warner, John
- Waugh, John
- Waugh, Joseph
- Wheeler, John
- Wigginton, William
- Withers, James
- Barrow, Abraham
- Bayles, John
- Boles, Thomas
- Brent, William
- Burras, Mary
- Butler, James
- Cave, William
- Chadwell, John
- Chalmers, John
- Claiborne, Thomas
- Collinsworth, Mary
- Cooke, John
- Cosby, George
- Counts, Joseph
- Craford, John
- Croftrodge, Thomas
- Crowley, George
- Denny, James
- Derrick, Mattox
- Duncan, Thomas
- Ellit, Charles
- Fowke, Chandler
- French, Hugh
- Grant, Ann
- Gregg, Lucy
- Grigsby, John
Images of Stafford County Wills 1748 to 1763
- Hood, Rino
- Johnson, John
- Mathews, William
- Mauzy, Peter
- McCarty, Cornelius
- McGill, Sarah
- Minor, John
- Murray, Anthony
- Nelson, Henry Sr.
- Parkridge, Eleanor
- Patton, William
- Pearson, Hannah
- Persons, Ann
- Peyton, John
- Rhodes, John
- Rigsby, Alexander
- Robinson, Henry
- Rogers, John
- Simpson, John
- Stuart, David
- Smith, John R.
- Sturdy, Robert
- Sudderth, James
- Sudderth, Robert
- Thomas, Benjamin
- Thornberry, Samuel
- Thornton, Anthony
- Todd, Hayward
- Travors, Rawleigh
- Walker, William
- Waller, Charles
- Waller, Susannah
- Washington, Henry
- Washington, John
- Waugh, James
- Waugh, Mary
- Whitecotton, Sarah
- Williams, George
- Williams, Jennett
- Williams, Thomas
- Alexander, Philip
- Allan, George
- Anderson, John S.
- Barbee, Thomas
- Baxter, William
- Bosholl, Edward
- Brent, Charles
- Brout, Hannah
- Brown, John
- Buckner, John
- Burge, Edward
- Carter, William
- Chambers, Daniel
- Chapman, Taylor
- Chinn, Rawleigh
- Clifton, Burdit
- Colclough, Rachel
- Conway, Sarah
- Cook, Fravors
- Dade, Cadwallader
- Dade, Townshend
- Dade, Laughton
- Denaugh, Morrice
- Durrcom, Benjamin
- Eaves, Thomas
- Edwards, Ignatius
- Findley, Mary
- Fitzhugh, Henry
- Fletcher, George
- Foley, John
- French, Daniel
- Grady, Patrick
- Grafford, Mary
- Grigg, Nathan
- Grigsby, James
- Grigsby, Jane
- Hampton, William
- Harper, Thomas
- Herod, John
- Hinson, Charles