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Descendants of EDWARD I OF ENGLAND
Generation No. 1
1. EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND He married (1) MARGUERITE DE FRANCE. He married (2)
ALIANORE DE CASTILLE.
Notes for EDWARD I OF ENGLAND:
King of England
Ref: Carr's Dictionary of English Kings, Consorts, Pretenders, Usurpers,
unnatural Claimants & royal Athelings.
Edward I, (Longshanks, Malleus Scortorum) d. 1307 aged 67, of a violent flux.
He was unusually tall and had curly hair, sparkling black eyes, one drooping
eyelid and a stammer. His first wife, Eleanor of castile, bore 15 children
and inspired an astonishing progress of memorial crosses, built whilst he
was enjoying a second wife, 42 years his junior. This choleric man banished
the Jews, planned several new towns, stole the Stone of Scone, subdued Wales
and, at death's approach, still consumed with a lifelong antipathy against
Scotsmen ordered that, after his heart had been despatched to Jerusalem, his
bones must be borne before an invading army.
Descendants of EDWARD I OF ENGLAND
LLOYD and WHARTON
Susanna LLOYD was born about 1738 and died 24 Oct 1772. She married Thomas
WHARTON (WHARTON-COLLINS) , 4 Nov 1762 in Philadelphia, PA. He was born June
12, 1732 in Aberdeen, Scotland, and died August 1790 in Halifax, NS. He married
second, Mary HINTON (about 1748-1793), daughter of John HINTON and Sarah SHARSWOOD
who were married 1747 at Christ Church, which is now the Episcopal Church
on 2nd St. between Market St. and Arch St. in Philadelphia.
Children of Thomas WHARTON COLLINS and Mary HINTON are: Sarah, Thomas, William,
Martha, Maria, Lydia, and John.
My ancestor is William WHARTON COLLINS (1778-1816) who drowned in Lake Pontchartrain,
LA. He married Ann CORRAN in Liverpool, England, 1802.
In the article, "Family of George Thomas Wharton Collins" by Mrs.
W. F. Collins, it is mentioned that Thomas Wharton Collins was working in
Philadelphia as an assistant to General Mifflin (who later became governor
of PA) . Thomas Wharton Collins was arrested in 1775 on charges of being a
member of a Tory "redcoat" organization. He was accused of conspiring
with a Mr. Molesworth 'to spike the guns on Fort Island'. He wrote a letter
denying these charges. According to the article, he was in prison for 13 years
(1775-1788) , during the time when his children were born. I would like to
find a document verifying the date of his release from prison (it may have
been 1778, not 1788) . He is said to have left Philadelphia for Halifax, Nova
Scotia in 1788, where he died two years later. His second wife went to New
York where she died in1793.
Thomas Wharton Collins and Mary Hinton were married in 1773 at St.
Paul's Church, Philadelphia, PA by the Reverend William White, who in
1779 was at Christ Church. In front of the present-day Episcopal Church
on 2nd St. is a photo of Reverend William White.
No children of Thomas Wharton Collins and Susanna Lloyd are mentioned in
the article. He had a sister, Sarah.
Thomas LLOYD and Susanna KEARNEY married 23 Mar 1734 in Philadelphia, PA.
Thomas WHARTON (1691-1746) m. (1) unknown and (2) unknown COLLINS.
He was the son of James CAMPBELL of Burnbank and Boquhon (about 1659 of
Argyll, Scotland-) and Mary WHARTON (about 1677-), married in 1690. He
married second, Margaret LESLIE.
Archibald CAMPBELL (1629-1685) , 9th Earl of Argyll, and Mary STUART. He
and his father were both beheaded (by King Charles II and King James II) .
Mary Stuart CAMPBELL was a descendant of King James V of Scotland, King Henry
VII of England, and King Edward IV of England.
Lucretia Delphine Collins (27 Nov 1854-6 Jul 1930), descendant of Thomas
Wharton Collins (12 Jun 17320Aug 1790) and (2) Mary HINTON (about 1748-1793),
married Dr. W. B. SCARBOROUGH (1854-1903), 13 children.
Child of EDWARD ENGLAND and MARGUERITE DE FRANCE is:
2. i. THOMAS OF2 NORFOLK.
Child of EDWARD ENGLAND and ALIANORE DE CASTILLE is:
3. ii. JOAN OF2 ENGLAND.
Generation No. 2
2. THOMAS OF2 NORFOLK (EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) He
married ALICE DE HALES.
Notes for THOMAS OF NORFOLK:
Earl of Norfolk
Child of THOMAS NORFOLK and ALICE DE HALES is:
4. i. MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK.
3. JOAN OF2 ENGLAND (EDWARD I OF1) She married GILBERT DE CLARE.
Notes for GILBERT DE CLARE:
Earl of Gloucester
Child of JOAN ENGLAND and GILBERT DE CLARE is:
5. i. ALIANOR3 DE CLARE.
Generation No. 3
4. MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK (THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I
OF1 ENGLAND) She married JOHN DE SEGRAVE.
Notes for JOHN DE SEGRAVE:
4th Lord Segrave
Child of MARGARET NORFOLK and JOHN DE SEGRAVE is:
6. i. ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE.
5. ALIANOR3 DE CLARE (JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) She married HUGH LE
DESPENSER.
Notes for HUGH LE DESPENSER:
Lord le Despenser
Child of ALIANOR DE CLARE and HUGH LE DESPENSER is:
7. i. ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER.
Generation No. 4
6. ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE (MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK,
THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) She married JOHN DE MOWBRAY.
Notes for JOHN DE MOWBRAY:
4th Lord Mowbray
Child of ELIZABETH DE SEGRAGVE and JOHN DE MOWBRAY is:
8. i. JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY.
7. ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER (ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1)
She married RICHARD FITZ ALAN.
Notes for RICHARD FITZ ALAN:
Earl of Arundel
Child of ISABEL LE DESPENSER and RICHARD ALAN is:
9. i. EDMUND FITZ5 ALAN.
Generation No. 5
8. JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY (ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET
OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) She married THOMAS GRAY.
Notes for THOMAS GRAY:
Knt.
Child of JOAN DE MOWBRAY and THOMAS GRAY is:
10. i. SIR JOHN6 GREY, b. Aft. 1384; d. 22 Mar 1420/21.
9. EDMUND FITZ5 ALAN (ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND,
EDWARD I OF1) He married SIBYL DE MONTAGU.
Notes for EDMUND FITZ ALAN:
Knt.
Child of EDMUND ALAN and SIBYL DE MONTAGU is:
11. i. PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN.
Generation No. 6
10. SIR JOHN6 GREY (JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4
DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born
Aft. 1384, and died 22 Mar 1420/21. He married JOANE CHARLETON, daughter of
EDWARD CHERLETON and ALIANOR DE HOLAND. She was born ABT 1400, and died 17
Sep 1425.
Notes for SIR JOHN GREY:
Created Earl of Thankerville in 1418.
Ref. "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century
Colonists", by David Faris, p 168
John Grey, Knt, K.G., younger son, was born after 1384. He fought at the battle
of Agincourt on 25 Oct. 1415. On 31 Jan 1418/9 he was granted the comte' of
Tancarville in Normandy, in tail male. he was married to Joan Charleton, elder
daughter and co-heiress of Edward Cherleton, Knt, 5th Lord Cherleton, of Powis,
co. Montgomery, by his first wife, Alianor, eldest daughter of Thomas de holand,
Earl of Kent (descendant of King Edward I). She was born about 1400 (aged
twenty-one in 1421), and inherited the Lordship of Powis. Sir John Grey was
slain at the battle of Bauge in Anjou on 22 Mar 1420/1. His widow died on
17 Sep. 1425.
Notes for JOANE CHARLETON:
Inherited the Lordship of Powis
Child of SIR GREY and JOANE CHARLETON is:
12. i. HENRY7 GREY, b. ABT 1418; d. 13 Jan 1449/50.
11. PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN (EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE,
JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) She married RICHARD CERGEAUX.
Notes for RICHARD CERGEAUX:
Knt.
Children of PHILIPPE ALAN and RICHARD CERGEAUX are:
13. i. ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, b. ABT 1378; d. 21 Aug 1414.
ii. RICHARD CERGEAUX, d. 1306, Norton, co. Oxford,.
Notes for RICHARD CERGEAUX:
died receiving Chipping Norton, Co. Oxford, and property in Cornwall
Generation No. 7
12. HENRY7 GREY (SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY,
ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND)
was born ABT 1418, and died 13 Jan 1449/50. He married ANTIGONE PLANTAGENET
Aft. 03 Jan 1434/35, daughter of HUMPHREY PLANTAGENET and ELEANOR COBHAM.
She was born 1428.
Notes for HENRY GREY:
Ref. "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris, p 168.
Knt., Earl of Tancarville in Normandy, was born
about 1418 (aged one and a half and more at his father's death). He was married
after 3 Jan. 1434/5 to Antigone of Gloucester, base-born daughter of Humphrey,
Duke of Gloucester (son of King Henry Iv). She was born before 1428. Sir Henry
Grey died on 13 Jan. 1449/50. His widow was married for the second time to
Jean D'Amancier , Seigneur d'Amancier.
Notes for ANTIGONE PLANTAGENET:
illegitimate daughter of Humphrey Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester and son
of Henry IV (d. 1413) and Mary Bohun. Antigone was probably dau. of Humphrey's
2nd wife Eleanor Cobham.
Child of HENRY GREY and ANTIGONE PLANTAGENET is:
14. i. ELIZABETH8 GREY, b. ABT 1440; d. Aft. 1501, Shropshire.
13. ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX (PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER,
ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) was born ABT 1378, and
died 21 Aug 1414. She married WILLIAM DE MARNEY ABT Jul 1388. He was born
ABT 1370.
Notes for ELIZABETH CERGEAUX:
Ref Book: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists",
By David Faris
Elizabeth Cergeaux, elder daughter and co-heiress,
was born about 1378 (aged twenty-one in 1399), and was sister and co-heiress
of Richard Cergeaux (died 1306) receiving Chipping Norton, co. Oxford, and
property in Cornwall. She was married about July 1388 to William De Marney,
Knt., of Layer Marney, Essex, and Kingsey, co. Buckingham, MP for Essex and,
Hertfordshire, son and heir of Robert de Marney, Knt., of Layer Marney, by
his second wife Alice, daughter of Richard Lacer, of Bromley, Kent. He was
born about 1370. They had two sons and two daughters. She predeceased her
husband. "Sir William de Marny, knt., Leyr Marny, Essex" died testate
(P.C.C., 29 Marche, codicil 31 Marche) on 21 Aug. 1414.
Notes for WILLIAM DE MARNEY:
Knt., of Layer Marney, Essex, and Kingsey, co. Buckingham, M.P. for Essex,
Sheriff of Cornwall, and of Essex and Hertfordshire, son and heir of Robert
de Marney, Knt., of Layer Marney, by his second wife Alice, daughter of Richard
Lacer, of Bromley, Kent. He was born about 1370. They had two sons and two
daughters. She predeceased her husband. "Sir William de Marny, knt. Leyr
Marny, Essex" died testate on 21 Aug. 1414, and was buried at Layer Marney.
Child of ELIZABETH CERGEAUX and WILLIAM DE MARNEY is:
15. i. ANNE8 DE MARNEY, d. buried at East Horndon, Essex.
Generation No. 8
14. ELIZABETH8 GREY (HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5
DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD
I OF1 ENGLAND) was born ABT 1440, and died Aft. 1501 in Shropshire. She married
SIR ROGER KYNASTON 1465, son of GRUFFUDD AP JOHN KYNASTON. He was born ABT
1430, and died 1495.
Notes for ELIZABETH GREY:
Ref. "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris, p 169.
Elizabeth Gray, was born about 1440. She was married for the first time to
________ ________. She was married for the second time in 1465 to roger Kynaston,
Knt., of Middle, co. Salop, Constable of Harlech Castle, Sheriff of Shropshire,
son of Gruffudd ap John Kynaston, of Stokes, co. Salop, by Margred ferch John
Hord, of Walford, co. Salop. He was born about 1430, and had been married
previously to Elizabeth, widow of "Richard Lord Strange of Knockin"
(died 1450), and daughter of "Lord Cobham, of Sterborough", and
had one son Thomas. His first wife died in 1453. Roger and elizabeth had two
sons and six daughters. Sir Roger Kynaston died in 1495/6. His widwo died
in Shropshire after 1501.
Notes for SIR ROGER KYNASTON:
Knt., of Middle, Co. Salop, Constable of Harlech Castle, Sheriff of Shropshire
Children of ELIZABETH GREY and SIR KYNASTON are:
16. i. HUMPHREY9 KYNASTON, b. Of Marton in Middle, co. Salop,; d. ABT May
1534.
ii. JANE KYNASTON.
iii. MARY KYNASTON.
15. ANNE8 DE MARNEY (ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5,
ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) died
in buried at East Horndon, Essex. She married THOMAS TYRELL, son of JOHN TYRRELL
and ALICE COGGESHALL. He died 1476 in buried at East Horndon, Essex.
Notes for ANNE DE MARNEY:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.146
Anne De Marney, was married to Thomas Tyrell, Knt., of Heron, Esses, son and
heir of John Tyrell, Knt., of Heron, by Alice, daughter and heiress of William
Coggeshall, Knt., of Codham Hall. They had four sons and one duaghter.
"Sir thomas Tyrell knyght of Esthornedon Essex" died testate in
1476. They were buried at East Horndon, Essex.
Notes for THOMAS TYRELL:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.146
Knt., of Heron, Essex
Had four sons and one daughter
"Sir thomas Tyrell knyght of Esthornedon Essex" died testate in
1476. They were buried at East Horndon, Essex.
Children of ANNE DE MARNEY and THOMAS TYRELL are:
i. ROBERT9 TYRRELL, m. CHRISTIAN HARTSHORN.
17. ii. HUMPHREY TYRRELL.
Generation No. 9
16. HUMPHREY9 KYNASTON (ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7,
SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK,
THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born in Of Marton in Middle, co. Salop,,
and died ABT May 1534. He married ELSBETH KYFFIN, daughter of MAREDUDD (LNU).
Notes for HUMPHREY KYNASTON:
Ref. "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris, p 169.
Humphrey Kynaston, of Marton in Middle, co. Salop,
Constable of Middle Castle, first son by second marriage, was married for
the first time to Margred Ferch William, daughter of William ap Griffith ap
Robin, and had one son and one daughter. He was married for the second time
to Elsbeth Ferch Maredudd ap Hywel (or Elizabeth Kyffin, daughter of Maredudd
ap Hywel ap Maurice of Glascoed, ap Ivan Gethyn of Gartheyr, by Tomasin ferch
Richard. they had three sons and two daughters. The will of Humphrey Kynaston
was dated 1 May 1534 and proved 16 Jan. 1534/5.
Notes for ELSBETH KYFFIN:
Elsbeth fetch Maredudd ap Hywel
Child of HUMPHREY KYNASTON and ELSBETH KYFFIN is:
18. i. MARGARET10 KYNASTON.
17. HUMPHREY9 TYRRELL (ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6
ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND,
EDWARD I OF1) He married (1) ELIZABETH WALWIN. He married (2) ISABEL HELION.
Notes for HUMPHREY TYRRELL:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.146.
Huphrey Tyrell, Gent., of Little Warley, Essex,
third son, was married for the first time to Isabel Helion, daughter and heiress
of John Helion, Esq., of Belchamps Walter, Essex. They had five daughters.
He was married for the second time to Elizabeth Walwin, duaghter of John Walwin,
Esq., and had issue.
Child of HUMPHREY TYRRELL and ISABEL HELION is:
19. i. ANNE10 TYRRELL, d. 1534, Buried at Wethersfield.
Generation No. 10
18. MARGARET10 KYNASTON (HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8
GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET
OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) She married JOHN LLOYD, son
of IEVAN LLOYD.
Notes for MARGARET KYNASTON:
Margaret Kynaston, was married to John Ap Ieuan ab Owain, of Dyffryn, son
of Ieuan ab Owain ap Ieuan Deg, by Gwenhwyuar ferch Maredudd Llwyd, of Meifod.
Notes for JOHN LLOYD:
John (Lloyd) ap Ienan ab Owain
Child of MARGARET KYNASTON and JOHN LLOYD is:
20. i. HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE.
19. ANNE10 TYRRELL (HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE
FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2
ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) died 1534 in Buried at Wethersfield. She married ROGER
WENTWORTH. He died 09 Aug 1539 in Buried at Wethersfield.
Notes for ANNE TYRRELL:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris
Anne Tyrell, heiress to her mother Isabel, was married to Roger Wentworth,
Knt., of Cobham Hall, Wethersfield and Gosfield, Essex, jure uxoris, Sheriff
of Essex and Hertfordshire, son of Henry Wentworth, of Cobham Hall (of Magna
Charta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne), by Elizabeth, daughter
of Henry Howard, of Terrington Howards, Norfolk (of Magna Charta Surety descent
and descendant of Charlemagne). They had four sons and two daughters.
Notes for ROGER WENTWORTH:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris
Knt., of Cobham Hall, Wethersfield and Gosfield,
Essex, jure uxoris, Sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire, son of Henry Wentworth,
of Cobham Hall (of Magna Charta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne),
by Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Howard, of Terrington Howards, Norfolk (of
Magna Charta Surety descent and descendant of Charlemagne). They had four
sons and two daughters.
Child of ANNE TYRRELL and ROGER WENTWORTH is:
21. i. MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, d. Aft. 1532.
Generation No. 11
20. HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE (MARGARET10 KYNASTON,
HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4
DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) He married
MAWD PRYCE, daughter of OLIVER PRYCE.
Notes for HUMPHREY LLOYD, WYNNE:
Ref. "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris, p 169
Humphrey Wynne, of Duffryn in Meifod, co. Montgomery, was married to Mawd
Ferch Oliver AP Thomas Pryce, daughter of Oliver ap Thomas Pryce, of Newtown,
co. Montgomery, by Catrin Ferch Morus of Llangedwyn in Mochnant is Rhaiadr
Notes for MAWD PRYCE:
Mawd fetch Oliver ap Thomas Pryce
Child of HUMPHREY LLOYD and MAWD PRYCE is:
22. i. CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE.
21. MARGERY11 WENTWORTH (ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7
CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3
DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) died Aft. 1532. She married JOHN
BERNEY, son of JOHN BERNEY and ELIZABETH MUNDEFORD. He died 27 Oct 1536.
Notes for MARGERY WENTWORTH:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris
Margery Wentworth, was married to John Berney, son of John Berney of Reedham,
Norfolk, by Elizabeth, daughter of Osbert Mundeford, Esq., of Hockford. He
had been married previously to Alice, daughter of Richard Southwell, of Woodrising,
Norfolk. John & Margery had two sons. Margery was living in 1532.
Notes for JOHN BERNEY:
John and Margery had 2 sons.
Child of MARGERY WENTWORTH and JOHN BERNEY is:
23. i. JOHN12 BERNEY, b. ABT 1518; d. 1557.
Generation No. 12
22. CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE (HUMPHREY11
LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR
JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS
OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) She married JOHN LLOYD ABT 1612, son of DAFYDD
LLOYD and ALES LLOYD. He was born 1575, and died ABT 25 May 1636 in buried
at Meifod.
Notes for CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD WYNNE:
Ref. "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris, p 170
Catrin (or Katherine) Wynne, daughter and co-heiress,
was married about 1612 to her cousin John Lloyd, Gent., of Dolobran Hall in
Meiford, co. Montgomery, Wales, son of Dafydd Llwyd, of Dolobran, by Ales,
daughter of Dafydd Llwyd of Llanarmon Mynydd Mawr, Esq. He was born in 1575,
and resided at Coedcowryd. John Lloyd, Gent., was buried at Meifod on 25 May
1636.
Notes for JOHN LLOYD:
Gent., of Dolobran Hall in Meiford, co. Montgomery, Wales
resided at Coedcowryd
Child of CATRIN WYNNE and JOHN LLOYD is:
24. i. CHARLES13 LLOYD, b. 1613, Dolobran Hall, Montgomery, Wales; d. 17 Jan
1650/51.
23. JOHN12 BERNEY (MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE
MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE
DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) was born ABT
1518, and died 1557. He married (1) MARGARET READ, daughter of WILLIAM READ.
He married (2) ALICE FERRER ABT 1552.
Notes for JOHN BERNEY:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.147
Esq. of Reedham, Norfolk, son and heir, was born about 1518 (aged eighteen
at father's death). He was married for the first time to Margaret Read, daughter
of William Read, of Beecles, Sussolk. They had two sons and one daughter.
He was married for the second time in 1552 to Alice Ferrer, relict of William
Sydnor, Esq., and daughter of Robert Ferrer, Esq. John Berney, Esq., died
testate in 1557.
Child of JOHN BERNEY and MARGARET READ is:
25. i. HENRY13 BERNEY, d. 1584, Buried at Reedham, England.
Generation No. 13
24. CHARLES13 LLOYD (CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12
WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8
GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET
OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 1613 in Dolobran Hall,
Montgomery, Wales, and died 17 Jan 1650/51. He married ELIZABETH STANLEY,
daughter of THOMAS STANLEY. She was born ABT 1616 in Knockyn, Salop, England.
Notes for CHARLES LLOYD:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.170
Esq., of Dolobran Hall, son and heir, was born in 1613. He was married to
Elizabeth Stanley, daughter of Thomas Stanley, of Knockin, Co. Salop. They
had three sons. He built a Friends meeting house near Dolobran Hall about
1660. Charles Lloyd, Esq., was buried in Meivod parish on 17 Aug. 1657 (will
dated 17 June 1651.)
Notes for ELIZABETH STANLEY:
Descendant of the Earls of Derby
Children of CHARLES LLOYD and ELIZABETH STANLEY are:
i. CHARLES14 LLOYD, b. 09 Dec 1637, of Dolobran, Montgomery, Wales; d. 26
Nov 1698; m. (1) ANN LAWRENCE; m. (2) SARAH ELIZABETH LORT, 11 Nov 1661.
Notes for CHARLES LLOYD:
joined Society of Friends 1662
ii. JOHN LLOYD, b. 1638; m. JANE GRESHAM.
Notes for JOHN LLOYD:
John born 1638, of Jesus College, Oxford, grad. MD., Clerk in Chancery; married
Jane gresham. Three Children.
iii. ELIZABETH LLOYD, b. 1639; m. HENRY PARRY; b. of Penamser, co. Merioneth.
26. iv. THOMAS LLOYD, b. 17 Feb 1640/41, Dolobran, Montgomeryshire, Wales;
d. 10 Sep 1694, Philadelphia, PA.
25. HENRY13 BERNEY (JOHN12, MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9,
ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4
LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) died 1584
in Buried at Reedham, England. He married ALICE APPLETON, daughter of ROGER
APPLETON.
Notes for HENRY BERNEY:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.147
Henry Berney Esq., of Park Hall in Reedham, son
and heir, was married to Alice Appleton, daughter of Roger Appleton, Esq.,
of Dartford, Kent (descendant of King Edward I), by his wife Agnes, daughter
of Walter Clarke, Gent., of Hadleighk, Suffolk. "Henry Berney, esquier,
Readeham, Norfolk" died testate in 1584
Child of HENRY BERNEY and ALICE APPLETON is:
27. i. THOMAS14 BERNEY, d. 1616.
Generation No. 14
26. THOMAS14 LLOYD (CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE)
LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8
GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET
OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 17 Feb 1640/41 in
Dolobran, Montgomeryshire, Wales, and died 10 Sep 1694 in Philadelphia, PA.
He married (1) MARY JONES 09 Sep 1665 in at Friends 'Meeting in Shrosphire,
Wales. He married (2) PATIENCE (GARDINER) STORY ABT 1684. She died 26 Apr
1724.
Notes for THOMAS LLOYD:
Immigrated to PA in 1683
Ref: "Colonial & Revolutionary Families
of PA", John W. Jordan, Vol. 1, 1911, GPC 1978 reprint
LLOYD FAMILY
Thomas Lloyd, Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania, 1684-88, and 1690-93, though
a consistent member of the Society of Friends and a typical representative
of that good old Quaker stock of solid respectability and sterling worth without
the ostentation of pomp and display, whose home life lent such a peculiar
charm of social life of the City of Brotherly Love, in Colonial days, was
nevertheless of royal descent,and traced his ancestry on both maternal and
paternal lines back to Edward I., of England, and on more remote paternal
lines back through a long line of princes of ancient Britain. The surname
of Lloyd had its original with Owen, son of Ievan Teg, otherwise, "Evan
the Handsome", whose family had owned and occupied Dolobran, Wales, since
1496, and like all the old Welsh families traced its ancestry back to the
Dark Ages. Owen Lloyd married Katherine Vaughn, and his brother, David Lloyd,
of Dolobran, married Eva, daughter of David Goch Esq., and David Lloyd, son
of David and Eva, had son John Lloyd, grandfather of Governor Lloyd, who married
Catharine, daughter of Humphrey Lloyd Wyn, whose father John Lloyd, was a
son of Ievan Lloyd and grandson of Owen Lloyd and Katherine Vaughn. John Lloyd,
grandfather of Catharine, married Margaret Kynaston, who was a lineal descendant
of Edward I., through the following line: Jane, "the fair maid of Kent,"
granddaughter of Edward I., and daughter of Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent,
married (first Sir Thomas Holland, who was thereupon made Earl of Kent, and
(second) Edward, the Black Prince, becoming by the second marriage the mother
of Richard II. Her eldest son, Sir Thomas Holland, who succeeded his father
of Earl of Kent and was later Marshall of England, had a daughter Eleanor
who married (first) roger Mortimer, Earl of March, from which marriage descended
Edward IV., and (second) Edward Cherleton , Lord of Powys, by whom she had
a daughter Joane, who married Sir John Grey, who in 1418, was created Earl
of Tankerville. Henry Grey, Earl of Tankerville, son of Sir John and Joane,
married Antigone, daughter of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester who was a son of
Henry IV., and had a duaghter Elizabeth, who married Roger Kynaston Esq.,
and their son, Humphrey Kynaston, was the father of Margaret Kynaston, who
married John Lloyd, as above noted, and whose granddaughter Catharine married
another John Lloyd, the grandfather of Thomas Lloyd of PA.
Charles Lloyd, of Dolobran, Montgomeryshire, Wales, son of John and Catherine,
and father Governor Thomas Lloyd, was born at Dolobran, in 1613. He was a
magistrate of Montgomeryshire, and had emblazoned on a panel at Dolobran,
his coat-of-arms, with fifteen quarterings, impaled with the armes of his
wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Stanley, of Knockden, and a descendant
of the Earls of Derby. The paternal or Lloyd arms were "azure, a chevron
between three cocks argent", and the different quarterings show the descent
of Governor Lloyd from the ancient male lines of the Lords of Powys, the cherletons,
Greys and Kynastons. The first quarter of the maternal arms in the shield
of the Earls of Derby, differenced with a crescent charged with a crescent,
which indicates that Thomas Stanley was descended from a second son of a second
son.
Issue of Charles and Elizabeth (Stanley)Lloyd, of Dolobran:
Charles, inherited Dolobran, and was ancestor of the Lloyd who founded Lloyd's
Banking House, in London;
John, was a clerk in chancery;
Thomas, came to Pennsylvania, in 1683;
Elizabeth, m. Henry Parry, of Penamser, Merionethshire, Wales.
Thomas Lloyd was born at Dolobran, Montgomeryshire, Wales about the year 1640,
and was sent to Jesus college, Oxford, where he graduated with the degree
of Bachelor of Arts, January 29, 1661. both he and his elder brother, Charles,
with several others of the gentry of Montgomeryshire, became converted to
the faith of the Society of Friends, under the teaching of George Fox in 1663,
and both were imprisoned in 1664, and continued nominally prisoners until
1672, when Charles II., by letters patent, dispensed with the laws inflicting
punishment for religious offences, when according to Besse, Charles Lloyd,
Thomas Lloyd and others "were discharged from Montgomery Gaol."
Thomas Lloyd seems, however, to have enjoyed a nominal liberty during at least
a portion of this period, as it covers the date of his marriage, and his wife
was permitted to visit him while in prison. Thomas Lloyd was a physician while
residing in Wales, and had a large practice. Belonging as he did to the gentry
class, and being a man of high intellectual ability, he exercised a wide influence
in matters of state, though of the proscribed sect religiously. According
to "The Friend", it was at his solicitation that Parliament was
induced to abolish the long unused writ "de heretico comburendo",
with the operation of which the Friends were threatened. He was tendered high
place and influence if he would renouce his religion, but adhered to the faith.
In 1681 he and his brother Charles held a public disputation at the town hall
of Llanwilling, with Right Rev. William Lloyd, Bishop of Asaph, one of the
noted prelates whom James II. committed to the Tower.
Thomas Lloyd and his wife and children embarked from London for Pennsylvania,
June 10, 1683, on board the same ship with Francis Daniel Pastorius, the "Sage
of Germantown," then on his way to take possession of the lands purchased
by the Frankfort Company of William Penn, on which was planted the first German
Colony in PA. Lloyd and the distinguished German scholar discoursed in Latin
and discussed religious and political questions on the voyage, and cemented
a friendship that continued through life. They arrived at Philadelphia 6 mo.
(August) 20, 1683. On December 2, 1683, William Penn appointed Thomas Lloyd
Master of rolls, the office having been created by the Assembly at the request
of Penn, its object being to keep an exact record of the laws enacted for
the Province, as well as a record of transfers of real estate and other legal
documents. Thomas Lloyd was elected a member of the Governor's Council, qualified
on 1 mo. 20, 1684, and was elected its president. Before sailing for Englnad,
in August of the same year, William Penn executed a commission to his Council
to act as Governor in his absence, made Thomas Lloyd Keeper of the Great Seal
of the Province, and made him, with James claypoole and Robert Turner, Commissioners
of Property, with authority to grant warrants of survey and issue patents
to purchasers of land. The commission, vesting the governing power in Council,
terminated in 1688, and through Lloyd desired to be relieved from office,
Penn's commission arrived 12 mo. 9, 1687/8, vesting the powers of Deputy Governor
in Thomas Lloyd, Robert Turner, John Simcock, Arthur Cooke and John Eckley,
and this arrangement continued for ten months, when Penn, having offered Lloyd
the Lieutenant Governorship, on his declination of the honor, appointed Capt.
John Blackwell, then in New England, the Lieutenant Governor, Thomas Lloyd
still retaining the positions of Master of Rolls and Keeper of the Great Seal.
The administration of Blackwell was far from satisfactory to the Friends,
and there was considerable clash between him and Lloyd as Keeper of the Seal,
so that when Thomas Lloyd was returned as a member of the Council by Bucks
county in March, 1687, Blackwell presented articles of impeachment against
him, and failing to eject him from the Council, adjourned that body from time
to time whenever Lloyd was present. On Penn's return Blackwell resigned, and
on 11 mo. 2, 1689/90, the Council accepted Penn's ultimatum that the whole
Council act as the governing body, elected Thomas Lloyd its president, and
made him, as Keeper of the Seal, a member of the county court, ex-officio.
He was later commissioned Lieutenant Governor and served until the arrival
of Governor Fletcher, when he was offered the second place in the government,
but declined. Thomas Lloyd died September 10, 1694, after eleven years residence
in PA, during eight of which he had served as her chief executive. He was
twice married, His first wife, Mary Jones, whom he married 9 mo. 9, 1665,
at the Friends' Meeting in Shropshire, Wales, died in PA, and he married (second)
Patience Story, a widow of New York, who survived him.
Notes for PATIENCE (GARDINER) STORY:
widow of New York
Children of THOMAS LLOYD and MARY JONES are:
i. HANNAH15 LLOYD, b. 21 Sep 1666; m. (1) JOHN DELAVAL; m. (2) RICHARD HILL.
Notes for JOHN DELAVAL:
Provincial Councillor 1692
Notes for RICHARD HILL:
Provincial Councillor 1704-28
ii. RACHEL LLOYD, b. 20 Jan 1666/67; m. SAMUEL
PRESTON.
Notes for SAMUEL PRESTON:
Provincial Councillor, 1714-43
iii. MORDECAI LLOYD, b. 07 Dec 1669; d. 1694,
lost at sea.
iv. JOHN LLOYD, b. 03 Feb 1670/71; d. 1692, s.p. at Jamacia.
v. MARY LLOYD, b. 27 Mar 1674; d. 1735; m. ISAAC NORRIS.
Notes for ISAAC NORRIS:
Provincial Councillor, 1709-34, Speaker of Assembly, etc.
28. vi. THOMAS LLOYD, b. 15 Sep 1675; d. 1718.
29. vii. ELIZABETH LLOYD, b. 01 Mar 1676/77; d. 22 Jul 1704.
viii. MARGARET LLOYD, b. 05 Feb 1679/80; d. 13 Sep 1693.
ix. DEBORAH LLOYD, b. 01 Mar 1681/82; m. MORDECAI MOORE.
x. SAMUEL LLOYD, b. 1684, Philadelphia, PA; d. died young.
27. THOMAS14 BERNEY (HENRY13, JOHN12, MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL,
HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND
FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I
OF1) died 1616. He married JULIANA GAWDY.
Notes for THOMAS BERNEY:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.147
Knt. of Park Hall in Reedham, son and heir, Sheriff of Norfolk, was married
to Juliana Gawdy, daughter of Thomas Gawdy, Knt., of Redenhall, Norfolk, Justice
of the Common Pleas. Sir Thomas Berney died intestate in 1616.
Child of THOMAS BERNEY and JULIANA GAWDY is:
30. i. FRANCES15 BERNEY, d. 01 Jul 1667, buried at Southacre, Norfolk, England.
Generation No. 15
28. THOMAS15 LLOYD (THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN
(KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9,
ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE,
MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 15 Sep 1675,
and died 1718. He married SARAH YOUNG. She was born 1676, and died in Philidelphia,
PA.
Notes for THOMAS LLOYD:
Stayed in England
Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania and President
of the Council from 1684 to 1693. He was a graduate of Jesus College, Oxford
and had studied medicine.
Ref: "Colonial & Revolutionary Families
of PA", John W. Jordan, Vol. 1, 1911, GPC 1978 reprint
Thomas Lloyd, son of Governor Thomas and Mary
(Jones) Lloyd, born in Great Britain, September 15, 1675, was a merchant of
Goodmansfield, London, and died there prior to 12 mo. 17, 1717, at which date
his widow obtained a certificate from London Meeting to Philadelphia. She
was Sarah Young, born November 2, 1676, and died in Philadelphia.
Notes for SARAH YOUNG:
Immigrated in 1718 with son Thomas where she died in Phil.
Children of THOMAS LLOYD and SARAH YOUNG are:
31. i. THOMAS16 LLOYD, b. London, England; d. 04 May 1754.
ii. PETER LLOYD, b. London, England; d. 16 Feb 1744/45; m. MERCY MASTERS,
1729.
Notes for PETER LLOYD:
Born in London, came from Bristol, Englnad, to Philadelphia, 1718, Common
Councilman 1729-44 merchant.
iii. MARY LLOYD, d. 17 Sep 1775.
iv. JOHN LLOYD, d. s.p., Philadelphia.
v. MORDECAI LLOYD, b. 06 Sep 1708; m. HANNAH FISHBOURNE.
vi. ANNE LLOYD, m. JOHN MATHEWS.
vii. CHARLES LLOYD, d. 08 Jun 1745.
29. ELIZABETH15 LLOYD (THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE,
HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY,
HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3
NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 01 Mar 1676/77, and died
22 Jul 1704. She married DANIEL ZACHARY 09 Apr 1700.
Child of ELIZABETH LLOYD and DANIEL ZACHARY is:
i. LLOYD16 ZACHARY, b. 1701.
Notes for LLOYD ZACHARY:
First physician of Pennsylvania Hospital
30. FRANCES15 BERNEY (THOMAS14, HENRY13, JOHN12,
MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7
CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3
DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) died 01 Jul 1667 in buried at Southacre,
Norfolk, England. She married EDWARD BARKHAM 31 Jul 1622 in Tottenham, Middlesex,
England, son of EDWARD BARKHAM and JANE CROUCH. He was born ABT 1595, and
died 02 Aug 1667 in his house at Tottenham, buried at Southacre, Norfolk,
England.
Notes for FRANCES BERNEY:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.146
Married at Tottenham, Middlesex, on 31 July 1622 to Edward Barkham, Knt of
Tottenham, M.P. for Boston, Sheriff of Norfolk, son and heir of Edward Barkham,
Knt., Draper of London, member of the Virginia Company, M.P. for Boston, by
Jane, daughter of John Crouch, of Cornbury, Co. Hertford. He was born about
1595. They had 2 sons and 8 daughters. He was created a Baronet on 26 June
1623. She died on 1 July 1667. Sir Edward Barkham died testate four weeks
later at his house at Tottenham on 2 Aug. 1667. They were buried at Southacre,
Norfolk.
Notes for EDWARD BARKHAM:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.146
Knt of Tottenham, M.P. for Boston, Sheriff of Norfolk, son and heir of Edward
Barkham, Knt., Draper of London, member of the Virgfinia
Had 2 sons and 8 daughters
He was created a Baronet on 26 June 1623
Child of FRANCES BERNEY and EDWARD BARKHAM is:
32. i. MARGARET16 BARKHAM.
Generation No. 16
31. THOMAS16 LLOYD (THOMAS15, THOMAS14, CHARLES13,
CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON,
HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4
DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born
in London, England, and died 04 May 1754. He married SUSANNA KEARNEY 23 Mar
1733/34 in Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, PA (Source: An article in, "Family
of George Thomas Wharton Collins" by Mrs W. F. Collins.), daughter of
PHILLIP KEARNEY. She died 10 Feb 1739/40.
Notes for THOMAS LLOYD:
of Philadelphia, PA
Ref: "Colonial & Revolutionary Families
of PA", John W. Jordan, Vol. 1, 1911, GPC 1978 reprint
Thomas Lloyd, second son of Thomas and Sarah
(Young)Lloyd, born in London England, Came to Phgiladelphia with his mother,
in 1718, married, 12mo. 23, 1734, at Philadelphia Monthly Meeting, Susannah,
widow of Dr. Edward Owen and daughter of Philip Kearney, of Philadelphia,
by his wife, Rebecca daughter of Lionel Britain, who came from Almy, Bucks
county, England, and settled in Bucks county in 1680, removing later to Philadelphia,
where he died in 1721. thomas Lloyd was a prominent merchant of Philadelphia,
and died there, May 4, 1754.
Children of THOMAS LLOYD and SUSANNA KEARNEY are:
33. i. NICHOLAS WALAND17 LLOYD.
ii. SARAH LLOYD, d. 09 Aug 1788; m. WILLIAM MOORE, 13 Dec 1757; d. 1793.
iii. SUSANNAH LLOYD, b. 1738; d. 24 Oct 1772; m. THOMAS WHARTON-COLLINS, 02
Nov 1762, Philadelphia, PA; b. 12 Jun 1732, Aberdeen, Scotland; d. Aug 1790,
Halifax, NS.
Notes for THOMAS WHARTON-COLLINS:
In the article, "Family of George Thomas Warton Collins" by Mrs.
W. F. Collins, it is mentioned that Thomas Wharton Collins was working in
Philadelphia as an assistant to General Mifflin (who later became Governor
of PA). Thomas Wharton Collins was arrested in 1775 on charges of being a
member of a Tory "redcoat" organization. He was accused of conspiring
with a Mr. Molesworth 'to spike the guns on Fort Island'. He wrote a letter
denying these charges. According to the article, he was in prison for 13 years
(1775-1788), during the time when his children were born. I would like to
find a document verifying the date of his release from prison (it may have
been 1778, not 1788). He is said to have left Philadelphia for Halifax, Nova
Scotia in 1788, where he died two years later. His second wife went to New
York where she died in 1793.
Thomas Wharton Collins and Mary Hinton were married
in 1773 at St. Paul's Church, Philadelphia, PA by the Reverend William White,
who in 1779 was at Christ Church. In front of the present-day Episcopal Church
on 2nd St. is a photo of Reverend William White.
No children of Thomas Wharton Collins and Susanna Lloyd are mentioned in the
article. He had a sister, Sarah.
32. MARGARET16 BARKHAM (FRANCES15 BERNEY, THOMAS14, HENRY13, JOHN12, MARGERY11
WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX,
PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE,
JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) She married EDMUND JENNINGS, son of JONATHAN
JENNINGS and ELIZABETH PARKER. He was born ABT 30 Nov 1626.
Notes for EDMUND JENNINGS:
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century Colonists", by
David Faris p.147
Knt., of Ripon, West Riding, Co. York, Son of
Jonathan Jennings, of Ripon, By Elizabeth,Daughter and co-heiress of Giles
Parker, of Newby, co. York. He was baptised at Farnham, West Riding, co. York,
on 30 Nov. 1626. He represented Ripon in the Parliaments of 1660, 1661, 1678
and 1680, and was Sheriffof the City of York in 1675
Children of MARGARET BARKHAM and EDMUND JENNINGS are:
34. i. EDMUND17 JENINGS, b. ABT 1659; d. 22 Nov 1713, London, England.
ii. JONATHAN JENNINGS, b. ABT 1655.
Notes for JONATHAN JENNINGS:
M.P. for Ripon 1695-1701, died unmarried
iii. WILLIAM JENNINGS, b. ABT 1658; d. 1707.
Notes for WILLIAM JENNINGS:
died unmarried
iv. PETER JENNINGS, b. 1664.
Notes for PETER JENNINGS:
Died unmarried
v. ANNE JENNINGS, d. 10 May 1691.
35. vi. ELIZABETH JENNINGS.
vii. MARY JENNINGS, d. died in infancy.
Generation No. 17
33. NICHOLAS WALAND17 LLOYD (THOMAS16, THOMAS15,
THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE,
MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5
DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD
I OF1 ENGLAND) He married SARAH HARPER, daughter of JOHN HARPER and SARAH
WELLS. She was born 16 Apr 1755 in Philadelphia PA, and died 10 Nov 1779.
Notes for NICHOLAS WALAND LLOYD:
For more info. about Nicholas Lloyd see notes of John Lloyd
One source has middle name as Waland
of Philadelphia
Married Sarah Harper of Alexandria against everybody's
wishes. He was "dissipated"
Religion: dropped from the Society of Friends
for marrying out of the Meeting and removed to Baltimore, MD
Notes for SARAH HARPER:
See John Lloyd ( 11/16/1775 ) for reference:
- A lady who had the distinction of being one of the 29 children of the shipbuilder
John Harper, of - Philadelphia and Alexandria.
Her father strongly disapproved of her marriage
and after her death raised her son as his own.
Sarah died when her son John was born or in his
infancy.
Child of NICHOLAS LLOYD and SARAH HARPER is:
36. i. JOHN HARPER18 LLOYD, b. 16 Nov 1775, Alexandria, VA; d. 22 Jul 1854,
Alexandria, VA.
34. EDMUND17 JENINGS (MARGARET16 BARKHAM, FRANCES15 BERNEY, THOMAS14, HENRY13,
JOHN12, MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7
CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3
DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) was born ABT 1659, and died 22 Nov
1713 in London, England. He married FRANCES CORBIN, daughter of HENRY CORBIN
and ALICE ELTONHEAD.
Notes for EDMUND JENINGS:
of Rippon, Yorkshire, in England
Governor of VA
Ref: "Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth-Century
Colonists", by David Faris p.147
Emigrated to Virginia in 1680, colonel of a troop of horse and commander of
the York County, Virginia, militia 1698 member of the Council 1691-1726, Attorney
General 1684-91, Secretary of the Colony 1702-12, 1720-22, acting Governor
of Virginia 1706-10, resided "Ripon Hall", York County, Virginia,
died 5 Dec. 1727.
Children of EDMUND JENINGS and FRANCES CORBIN are:
37. i. FRANCES18 JENINGS.
ii. ARIANA JENNINGS.
iii. ELIZABETH JENNINGS, m. ROBERT PORTEUS.
iv. EDMUND JENNINGS, m. ARIANA (VANDERHEYDEN) BORDLEY.
Notes for EDMUND JENNINGS:
Secretary of the Province of Maryland.
Issue.
35. ELIZABETH17 JENNINGS (MARGARET16 BARKHAM,
FRANCES15 BERNEY, THOMAS14, HENRY13, JOHN12, MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL,
HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND
FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I
OF1) She married ROGER BECKWITH.
Notes for ROGER BECKWITH:
Knt., of Aldsborough, co. York, created Baronet by King Charles II 15 April
1681, shot himself Dec 6, 1700.
Child of ELIZABETH JENNINGS and ROGER BECKWITH is:
i. MARMADUKE18 BECKWITH, b. 1687; d. 1780.
Notes for MARMADUKE BECKWITH:
Marmaduke Beckwith, Knt, born 1687, died 1780, Clerk of Richmond County, Virginia
Generation No. 18
36. JOHN HARPER18 LLOYD (NICHOLAS WALAND17, THOMAS16,
THOMAS15, THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11
LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR
JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS
OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 16 Nov 1775 in Alexandria, VA, and died
22 Jul 1854 in Alexandria, VA. He married (1) REBECCA JANNEY 30 Nov 1798,
daughter of JOSEPH JANNEY and HANNAH JONES. She was born 14 Aug 1776 in Quaker
village of Waterford in Loudoun Co, VA, and died 1819 in buried in Christ
Church cemetery off wilkes Street. He married (2) ANNE HARRIOTTE LEE 02 Nov
1820 in Ellersley, Loudoun County, VA, daughter of EDMUND LEE and SARAH LEE.
She was born 06 Mar 1799, and died 10 Sep 1863.
Notes for JOHN HARPER LLOYD:
This comes from, "A Profile of JOHN LLOYD - - Alexandria Merchant and
Businessman", 1775-1854; T. Michael Miller, Alexandria Library, Lloyd
House, June 1984.
ANCESTORY
Born on the 16th of November, 1775, John Lloyd was the only son of Nicolas
Warne Lloyd and Sarah harper of Philadelphia.(1) His maternal grandfather
was the famous Capt. John Harper (1728-1804) of Revolutionary war fame. Capt.
Harper, a Quaker, who was born in Philadelphia in 1728 was married twice.
His first wife was Sarah Wells of Pennsylvania by whom he had 20 children.
Upon her death, Mary Cunningham, a widow and daughter of John Reynolds of
Winchester became his spouse. By her, he had nine children. It is thought
that Capt. Harper was residing in Alexandria by 1773. Insurance records definitely
place him at 209 Prince Street in 1796. Although a Quaker, Capt. Harper was
instrumental in securing gunpowder from Philadelphia for the Prince William
and Fairfax County militias during the revolution. After the war, he carried
on an extensive merchantile and trading business at his wharf at Prince and
Union Street. He later constructed a large number of homes for many of his
children on the north side of the 100 block of Prince Street commonly referred
to as Captain's row. Capt. Harper died in 1804, age seventy-six and was buried
in the Old Presbyterian Metting House cemetery.(2)
On his paternal side, John Lloyd's ancestory
can be traced back to Edward the First, King of England (1239-1307). His great-great
grandfather, was Thomas Lloyd (b. 1640; d. 1694) Deputy Governor of Pennsylvania
and President of the Council from 1684 to 1693. He was a graduate of Jesus
College, Oxford and had studied medicine.(3)
John's grandfather, Thomas Lloyd (d. 1754) of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania married Susanna Owen, widow of Dr. Edward Owen
on May 31, 1734.(4) They had a son named Nicholas Waland Lloyd who was John
Lloyd's father. Nicholas was dropped from the Society of Friends for marrying
out of the Meeting and removed to Baltimore, Maryland. (5) Little else is
known about Nicholas or his life in Philadelphia or Baltimore. He married
Sarah Harper, a daughter of Capt. John Harper and family tradition states
that Lloyd was "dissipated". Their union did not have the blessing
of the Harper family. As an only child, John Lloyd's parents died when he
was young and he was raised by his grandfather, Capt. John Harper, a stern
disciplanarian. Harper supposedly never forgave his daughter for running away
with Nicholas Lloyd and thus never spoke to John about his father's background.
FORMATIVE YEARS -
John Lloyd, as a charge of his grandfather, must have been familiar with the
sights and sounds of the busy seaport of Alexandria in the 1770's and 80's.
No doubt, he was influenced by his grandfather's business acumen and insight.
Lloyd first emerges from the shadowy pages of
the past as an entry in the 1796 Alexandria tax records.(6) This document
asserts that he rented a lot on Duke Street from Joseph Coleman that year.
In 1797, John Lloyd advertised in the "Alexandria Advertiser Times"
for a runaway apprentice:
3 Pence Reward
Ran Away from the subscriber, on the 8th instant
an apprentice boy, named John Hilliar; about 14 years of age: his parents
live in or near Leesburg, and it is supposed that he is not far from them.
The above reward will be given for him without thanks.(7)
On November 30, 1798, John married Rebecca Janney,
daughter of Joseph and Hannah (Jones) Janney of Pennsylvania. She was born
in Alexandria on August 14, 1776.(8) As a result of marrying out side her
religion, Rebecca was dismissed form the Fairfax Quaker Assembly on May 25,
1799 but was later re-instated on September 23, 1809.(9) During their nineteen
years of marriage, John and Rebecca sired eight children. These included the
following offspring:
Nicholas Waln Lloyd, born: 28 October 1801; died young.
Horatio Nelson Lloyd, born: 2 January 1804. died
unmarried in Mississippi, 13 March 1860
Selina Lloyd, Born: 30 September 1807; died:
4 August 1871; married 28 September 1830,Charles Levin Powell - 7 children
Alfred Lloyd, born: 1811, died: age one year
Richard Henry Lloyd, born: 15 July 1815; died:
24 February 1883; married (1) Mary Fife - one child, married (2) Elizabeth
Jenkins, 5 children - Home - "Balmont", Now St. Agnes School.
Frederick Lloyd, born: October 1817; died: 28
November, 1868; merried 1852 - Lucy Lee Powell, daughter of Alfred Harrison
Powell - no issue.
(Notes of Mahlon Hopkins Janney, 1812 K street,
N.W. Washington, D.C. 20006, 1956. 28 August 1966, age 85; son of Mahlon Hopkins
& ... Jameson Janney. Buried St. Paul's Cemetery, Alexandria, Virginia.
*Children of John Janney and Eliza Armistead
Selden Lloyd
Mary Bowles - died young
Rebecca Janney married Rev. Henry Melville Jackson
- one son - died young
John Janney Lloyd, Jr. - married Ella Hubard
- 5 children
Nellie Selden Lloyd, born: 3 March 1853, died:
15 March 1931; married August 8, 1876, George Uhler, born: 9 January 1849;
died: 11 December 1925. They had Katharine Griffith, John Lloyd**, and Nellie
Selden Uhler**
Eliza Fontaine Lloyd, married: (1) Rowland D.
Burks - daughter Eliza Fontaine Lloyd, (2) Clarence Woolfolk - son, clarence
Alexander Woolfolk, married: Zoe ..., no issue.
Arthur Selden Lloyd, married: 30 June 1880, Elizabeth
Robertson Blackford, died: March 1932; He was born at "Mt. Ida,"
Alexandria County, Virginia 3 May 1857, died: 22 July 1936 at Stanford, County.
There were six children: Arthur - died young, Mary robertson married Rev.
Edmund Pendleton Dandridge - 2 children, Elizabeth and Edmund: Elizabeth Blackford
married Charles j. Symington, died: 5 November 1958, - 4 children: Gay Blackford
married Rev. Churchill Gibson in 1913, was born 1888, died: 5 October 1960
- 4 children: John died: 1922 of World War I wounds, unmarried; Rebecca married
Gavin Hadden - he died 195_, she 7 December 1964, issue 5 children.
**Eliza Armistead Selden Uhler married Thomas
anderson Sommers - issue 2; son & Rebecca Lloyd Uhler married Charles
Calvert Smoot, III, issue 4; 3 daughters & 1 son - John Lloyd Uhler married
Bertha Marr Stevenson - issue 1 daughter - died young; Katherine Griffith
Uhler - unmarried.
(Ref. Seldens of Virginia and Allied Families,
mary Selden Kennedy, 1911 - 2 Volumes - Frank Allaben Gen. Co. and Obit. notices)
Rebecca LLoyd died in 1819 and was interred in Christ Church cemetery off
Wilkes Street. One year - later John married into the famous Lee family of
Virginia. His bride was Ann Harriott Lee, eldest daughter of Edmund Lee, lawyer
and former mayor of Alexandria. They were married at Ellersley, Loudoun, County,
Virginia by Rev. Norris on November 9, 1820.(10) Anne Harriott was born March
6, 1799, and was the first cousin of Robert E. Lee. John Lloyd had six children
by Ann and they were:
Edmund Jennings Lloyd - born; August 27, 1822;
died: October 1, 1889. According to the 1880 census Edmund owned the Lloyd
House during that time frame. he never married and his occupation is listed
as "gentleman."
Obituary
"...He was a captain in the commissary department of the Confederate
service during the war." (Civil War) Alexandria Gazette, 10/2/1889, p.
3.
Rebecca Lloyd - born: June 7, 1824; died: July
17, 1873. She married Dr. John Prosser Tabb of Gloucester county, Virginia
and had 5 children: John, Matilda Prosser, John Lloyd, John Prosser, and Rebecca
Lloyd Tabb.
Anne Harriotte - Born: January 7, 1826; died:
June 23, 1888. Anne married the Rev. John Stearns and had four children: Mary
who married William Hoge; John, Rebecca, who married William Hastings; and
Lawrence Stearns. Recently, Mrs. Byron White donated som 700 letters of Anne
Harriotte Stearns to the Lloyd House manuscript collection. (1984)
George Francis Lloyd - born: October 28, 1828;
died: October 1866. He married Mary Pindle Hammond and sired three children:
Nelson, who married a Miss Morris; Nannie, who married Robert Hare Delafield;
Francis Frederick, who married a Miss Taylor.
Jean Charlotte Washington Lloyd* - born: 1842;
died: ? She married Capt. Philip Tabb yeatman, C.S.S., in 1867. Yeatman was
living at 220 N. Washington Street (Lloyd House) in 1895-96 according to Richmond's
Alexandria Directory. He was a captain in the 26th Virginia Infantry (Wise's
Brigade) during the Civil War. Yeatman was born November 28, 1829 and died
March 18, 1897. Interment took place in christ Church Cemetery. After the
Civil War, Philip was a clerk with an unidentified company in Alexandria.
During the Yeatman occupancy of the Lloyd House, the United Daughters of the
Confederacy was formed there in 1895. Jean Charlotte Yeatman must have been
one of its charter members.
Mary Lee Lloyd* - born: 18__; died: 19__, Mary
Lloyd was probably the last member of the family to occupy 220 N. Washington
Street and the last member of the Lee family to reside in the structure.
(The above material is liberally quoted from E.J.
Lee, "Lees of Virginia", P. 381. *Indicates the members of the Lloyd
family probably born at 220 North Washington Street.)
RESIDENCES
During his lifetime, John Lloyd resided in several Alexandria locales. Tax
records and newspaper advertisements are useful tools in determining many
of these sites.
In 1797, Lloyd is listed as renting a house and
office from Jacob Leah valued at $400.(11) From 1801 to 1821, insurance maps
and tax assessment records place him on South Fairfax Street approximately
where the current Burke and Herbert parking lot is now situated. He first
rented and later purchased several buildings on the 100 block of South Fairfax
Street. these included a three story dwelling house, warehouse, carriage house
and stable. (See Appendix A) Initially these structures belonged to Eleanor
Doll and George Cooke. They owed John Lloyd $100, 000 which they failed to
pay. On the 20th of December 1815, lloyd purchased the above mentioned structures
for $5,000 on an unexpired lease from the Bank of the Potomac. In 1826, many
of these buildings were put up for sale:
Public Sale
On Monday the first day of January next, at 10 o'clock A.M. the subscriber
will offer at Public Sale, on the premises, that valuable
Lot of Ground and Improvements
Fronting on Fairfax and Water streets, between
King and Prince streets, now in the tenure of Wm. F. Thornton, and lately
occupied by John Lloyd. The lot fronts on Fairfax and Water streets 26 feet
5 inches on the former and 24 feet nine inches on the later. It extends northwardly
to Swift's Alley on which it binds 60 feet.
The improvements consist of a three story Brick
Dwelling House and Store on Fairfax Street, a Brick Stable and Carriage House,
and a three story Brick Warehouse on the Alley.
The above sale will be made under the authority
of a deed of trust from Geo. Janney to the subscriber.
Terms cash.
R.J. Taylor, Trustee(13)
609 Oronoko Street - 1821 - 1823
Just after John Lloyd married Anne Harriott Lee,
He and his new bride moved into this Lee home. Formerly it had been owned
by John Hopkins, Richmond banker, who married Cornelia Lee, daughter of William
Lee of Greenspring. No doubt, Harriott wanted to be close to her Lee relatives
on the corner - her father, Edmund J. Lee resided across the street at 428
North Washington Street; the Kendalls who were her cousins lived at 429 North
Washington Street (Lee-Fendall House) and Robert E. Lee and his mother Ann
rented 607 Oronoko.
It is not positively known where John Lloyd domiciled
from 1823 until 1833. Possibly, he lived at Salisbury, his farm in Fairfax
County. (see page 13). In 1832, however, he bought the dwelling at 220 North
Washington Street.
220 North Washington Street
Upon the death of the widow Hooe, 220 North Washington
Street was auctioned off. Benjamin Hallowell, Quaker schoolmaster, had previously
conducted a school there. He had hoped to purchase the property but was outbid
by John Lloyd who paid $3,450 for the site.(14) In a 1832 real estate advertisement,
the house was described as "a spacious brick dwelling now occupied and
used as the 'Alexandria Boarding School' by B. Hallowell."(15) The residence
was not formally conveyed to Lloyd until March 11, 1835. For the next 19 years,
he would reside here with his family until his death in 1854. The home would
remain in the Lloyd family until 1918.
CIVIC AFFAIRS
Unfortunately, there is not available a wealth of information to flesh out
the character of John Lloyd. A guage of his civic mindedness, however, can
be measured by the number of social organizations in which he participated.
WASHINGTON SOCIETY
The February 27, 1819, edition of the Alexandria Gazett mentioned that John
Lloyd was a member of the Washington Society. This association was formed
in 1800 shortly after the death of George Washington. composed of some of
the most influencial patricians of Alexandria, its goals were to perpetuate
the memory of the America's first President and to raise funds for the Washington
Free school. Each year on the 22nd of February and the 4th of July, the society
would lead a parade to the Presbyterian church for an edifying oration. Then
after the speech, the membership would retire to a tavern for festivities.
Notable orators who spoke before the society included: Richard Bland Lee,
Francis Scott Key, Chief Justice John Marshall.(16) Other members included:
William Fitzhugh, Dr. E.C. Dick, Wm. Herbert, Jacob Hoffman, Anthony C.Cazenove,
Edmund J. Lee, Lewis Hipkins, Philip R. Fendall, Geo. Washington Parke custis,
General Light Horse Harry Lee, John Marshall.
ALEXANDRIA ACADEMY
Established in 1786, the Alexandria Academy was a seminal keystone in the
educational heritage of Alexandria. It is located on the southside of the
600 block of Wolfe Street. Three stories high, the first contained the English
school, the second, the language school and on the third was situated the
Free School established by George Washington's annual contribution of L 50.
Robert E. Lee as well as the renown artist John Gadsby Chapman attended school
in this building. It later reverted to private hands circa 1853 when Edward
Powell bought it. The school is thought to have been the oldest free school
established in Virginia, if not the United States. John Lloyd was a trustee
of this venerable Alexandria institution in 1833(17). It is obviously that
Lloyd was concerned with the quality of education in the community and tried
to assist the underpriviledged.
BUSINESS AND REAL ESTATE TRANSACTION
Although John Lloyd was civic minded, it was also necessary for him to provide
food, clothing, shelter and to manage the financial affairs of his family.
To this end, he was constantly engaged in several business enterprises during
his lifetime.
The 1799 Alexandria city census listed his occupation
in that year as a "hatter" who had 3 apprentices working for him.(18)
Perhaps, his shop was situated in the complex of buildings he rented on South
Fairfax Street. Later, he expanded his commercial activities and became a
full fledge commercial merchant. In November, 1807, he ran the following advertisement
in the Gazette:
JOHN LLOYD
has received from the William and John and the George from Liverpool a general
assortment of
FALL GOODS
Which are for sale on the usual terms.(19)
Later, in 1816, it was reported that John Lloyd:
Offers for sale by the piece or package, a general and well selected assortment
of seasonable
BRITISH DRY GOODS
imported by the latest arrival, in well assorted packages and will be at the
unusual low advance, and on credit.(20)
Besides being a commercial merchant, Lloyd was
also engaged in other business affairs. For instance in 1824, 1825, and 1827,
he was elected one of the directors of the bank of the Potomac.(21) Established
in 1804, this was the second bank to be organized in Alexandria and the Dirstict
of Columbia. It was headquartered in a beautiful four story brick structure
located at 415 Prince Street. When foreign trade was high in Alexandria, this
bank met a real need for capital.
Like many wealthy Alexandria merchants, John
Lloyd owned extensive tracts of real estate both in and outside of town. One
transaction which involved five houses on the east side of South Washington
Street is particulary noteworthy because these group of buildings still bear
the appellation "Lloyd's Row." the history of this row can be traced
to June 26, 1814, when Jonathan Scholfield, merchand, indemnified Andrew Scholfield,
lumber merchant, against the responsibility for endorsing several notes of
the firm Scholfield and Scott. In order to accomplish this, Jonathan conveyed
to Robert J. Taylor, a prominant Alexandria lawyer, in TRUST, a lot of ground
on the North side of Duke and on the East side of the 200 block of South Washington
Street containing 5, 3 story brick tenements.(22) Taylor auctioned off the
properties to Lloyd on October 1816. Scholfield was also indebted to John
Lloyd for a sum of $18,000. In a deed signed on May 1, 1816, Lloyd agreed
to assume Scholfields $14,325.95 debt at the Union Bank together with a note
for $4,105.03. In turn, Scholfield conveyed to him 2,633 shares of stock in
the bank to cover the assumption.(23) After Scholfield defaulted, Lloyd purchased
the 5 brick houses from Robert J. Taylor on October 29, 1816: 3 tenements
for $1,625; middle tenement for $825 and the most southern tenement at $1,936.
These houses remained in the Lloyd family for many years and were rented to
a variety of individuals. An assortment of real estate advertisements concerning
them from the "Alexandria Gazette" appear below:
TO RENT
A commodious 3 story brick dwelling house on Washington street lately occupied
by Mr. John Jackson...
J. Lloyd Gazette 1/1/1820
...The 3 story brick House on Washington street,
a pleasant and healthy situation at present occupied by Mrs. Jacobs.
Gazette 9/21/1827, p.2.
The dwelling houses, lately occupied by Mr. James
C. Berry and Mr. Jonathan Janney, a pleasant and healthy situation on Washington
street.
Gazette 5/21/1828, p. 3.
The three story brick dewlling house on Washington
street, at present occupied by Mr. Caruisi.
Gazette 10/13/1831
FOR RENT
The building lately occupied by Mrs. Porter as a Boarding School for young
ladies at the intersection of Washington and Duke streets which from their
locality and arrangement are considered admirably adapted for the purpose.
Should they not shortly be taken together they will be rented separately.
...
John Lloyd Gazette 8/12/1834, p. 3
...Two or three of the 3 story brick dwelling
houses in the row, on Washington street will be rented immediately . . .
Gazette 5/25/1840, p. 3
FOR RENT
The 2 and 3 story brick dwelling houses on Washington street near the Lyceum,
lately occupied by Mr. John Douglass and Mr. E.S. Hough.
Gazette 11/12/1844, p. 3
FOR RENT
The house on Washington Street in Lloyd's Row, now occupied by Mr. Perry.
...
Gazette 2/28/1854, p. 3.
Lloyd's Row almost went up in flames in 1852
when a young white girl set fire to one of the dwellings on the block. It
was reported that:
An attempt was made yesterday to fire one of
the block of buildings on Washington Street, known as Lloyd's Row. The fire
was kindled in the cellar of the house, so as to communicate with the wood,
but was fortunately discovered before it made much progress.(24)
A small white girl, employed as a domestic in
a family, in town, has within the last few days, confessed to the perpetration
of a number of pretty larcencies, in the house where she is employed - stealing
rings, small sums of money, and finally ended in making the attempt to set
fire to the dwelling in Lloyd's row, to which reference was made a day or
two ago. The girl had false keys, and represents that she was induced to commence
her depredations by communications with the gypsies who recently passed through
this place.(25)
Indebted to William Fowle for $2,040 in 1838,
Lloyd pledged one of the houses on the row as security. If he had failed to
pay off his incumbrance, the property could have been sold at public auction.(26)
Since it wasn't, it is an indicaction that the debt was paid.
CARLYLE HOUSE
Another historic property which John Lloyd owned and rented was the Carlyle
House. John Carlyle was a prominent Scottish merchant, trustee and early founder
of the town of Alexandria. he started construction of this lovely Georgian
Mansion on North Fairfax Street between Cameron and King in 1750. Long a town
landmark, the Carlyle House has been associated with many important events
in Alexandria's history. Most notable was the meeting of Royal Governors and
General Edward Braddock who met there in 1755 to plan the campaign against
the French in the Ohio valley. By 1780, the home had been inherited by Carlyle's
grandson John Carlyle Herbert. He later removed to Maryland and the structure
and grounds were conveyed to a group of Alexandria businessmen to repay a
debt owed by Herbert's brother - Thomas. (27) One of these businessmen was
John Lloyd.
On April 8, 1831, Lloyd sold the dwelling house
and other structures on the property to Orlando morse for $2,300. the deed
read:
...Beginning on Fairfax Street at the house formerly
occupied by Wm. Herbert as an office thence South on Fairfax Street to the
said house formerly occupied by Herbert as a kitchen. ....
Morse owed Lloyd several thousand dollars and
he immediately placed the house in a trust held by Edmund J. Lee and R.J.
Taylor in order to cover the debt.(29) Apparently, Morse was unable to fulfill
his financial obligation because the property reverted back to John Lloyd
on June 25, 1834. (30)
As early as December 1833, however, Lloyd had been trying to rent or sell
the Carlyle House:
FOR RENT - JOHN LLOYD
...The commodious Stone Dwelling House on Fairfax street, near the Bank of
Alexandria, formerly the residence of William Herbert, Esq. The House last
mentioned, with the large and valuable lot, will be sold on reasonable terms.
...
Not successful in selling the property, Lloyd
offered the structure as a possible site for the new city and county courthouse
to be constructed in Alexandria in 1838. this proposal was rejected and Lloyd
continued to lease the premises to a number of renters until it was sold to
James Green, a noted Alexandria furniture manufacture, in 1848.(32)
FAUQUIER AND ALEXANDRIA TURNPIKE COMPANY
Planned and incorporated in 1808 by Alexandria merchants, this turnpike was
constructed as an all weather road between Alexandria and farmland in Fauquier
and Culpeper county. It was completed in December 1827 at approximately $2,000
a mile but failed to make a profit for its investors. The Virginia State Board
of Public Works authorized $30,000 to be raised by a lottery in 1828 for improvements
and repairs. John Lloyd was a director of the turnpike Company as early as
February 1825 and continued to serve in that capacity as least until 1832.(33)
SALISBURY
To provide foodstuffs and agricultural produce for his family, John Lloyd
owned several farms in Fairfax County. One of these was called Salisbury and
was located on the "old road from Alexandria to Aldie and (was) about
equidistant (2 miles) from the Little River Turnpike and Fauquier Turnpike
roads."(34) When the Salisbury farm was offered for sale in 1827, a thorough
description of the estate was enclosed:
FOR RENT OR FOR SALE: SALISBURY,
A valuable farm of 1300 acres, 8 miles from Alexandria Georgetown and Washington,
in a pleasant neighborhood in the upper part of Fairfax County Virginia.
Nearly one half of this tract is in wood, the
remainder is cleared and well fenced, and the last two years sufficiently
demonstrate, that by the use of plaster, is susceptible of great and rapid
improvement. The land is admirably adapted for grass, is well watered and
unusually healthy. About 100 acres of meadow land are now cleared, and as
much more, at least, remains to be cleared. The Orchards are very large, young
and productive.
There is a commodious dwelling House, with a
large Garden, Dairy, Ice House, and every other necessary out building; together
with a Pump, affording delightful water, and a never failing Spring. The Stables
are extensive, the Barn capacious, and the Cyder House with a complete cyder
mill and screw press, substantially made and conveniently arranged. The whole
is in a good state of repair.
The farm is abundantly stocked with horses, oxen,
hogs, cattle and sheep - the last constisting of a flock of about 300, mostly
marionoes; wagons, carts, and every impliment of husbandry necessary for its
cultivation.
... I have also several small Farms, within 10
or 12 miles of Alexandria, Geogretown, or Washington, on the Little River
Turnpike Road, which would be rented to suitable tenants for a number of years
on accomodating terms.
JOHN LLOYD
Salisbury, 5th April, 1827. (35)
No doubt, Salisbury, would have also served as a lovely retreat for the Lloyd
family during the hot, torpid Virginia summers. Perhaps, Lloyd resided here
from 1824 to 1832. its close proximity to the Fauquier Turnpike would have
been extremely advantagous for him to ship vegetables and cereal grains to
the prot of Alexandria. As a director of the Fauguier Turnpike Company, he
was in a key position to see that the road adjacent to Salisbury was properly
maintained.
FINANCIAL LOSSES
During the tragic fire of 1827 which destroyed over $100,000 worth of real
estate in Alexandria, John Lloyd lost several commercial buildings, Noticable
were: "a frame house occupied by Mr. Laughlin Masters as shoemaker; a
frame warehouse owned jointly with Mordecai Miller and occupied by George
Hill, tinner and coppersmith;... A two story frame house...occupied by Richard
Horwell, suspender manufacture."(36) Many of these structures were located
on Prince and Fairfax Streets where the most extensive damage occured. Fortunately,
several of the buildings were insured.
1799 Census says he was a hatter
FAMILY AFFAIRS - FINAL DAYS
After a long and prosperous life, John Lloyd died on July 22, 1854. In his
will he directed that all his debts be paid and be bequeathed all his estate,
real and personal to wife Anne Harriott. This was to be utilized for her support
and that of Jane or Mary while they remained unmarried. If Anne remarried
his estate would be divided into as "Many equal parts as may be necessary...
two of said parts to Edmund J. Lee of Shepherdstown, Virginia to be held in
trust for the use of Anne (Lloyd) wife of Rev. J. Stearns..."
"Two other equal parts were devised to Jane,
and two equal parts to Mary Lloyd ..."
After John Lloyd's death, Anne, his wife, continued
to reside at Lloyd House, 220 North Washington Street until the early 1860's
when the Civil War forced her to emigrate to Gloucester Virginia where she
died on September 9, 1863, at the home of Dr. John P. Tabb after a brief illness
of two days. Her body was returned to Alexandria after the Civil War and interred
beside that of her beloved husband in Christ Church cemetery on Wilkes Street.
Lloyd House remained in the family until 1918.
*****FOOTNOTES AND MORE INFORMATION UNDER ANNE
HARRIOTTE LEE, JOHN LLOYD'S WIFE
Notes for REBECCA JANNEY:
See John Lloyd ( 11/16/1775 ) for reference:
Religion: was dismissed from the Fairfax Quaker
Assembly on May 25, 1799 but was later re-instated on September 23, 1809
A copy of a letter from Mr. Hopkins states: Rebecca's
birth as 1774. My sister Rebecca Hopkins Hammer in Gloucester, VA, has a sampler
(below) on her wall done by Rebecca Janney in 1784 "in her tenth year."
You have Rebecca born in 1776, which is obviously incorrect.
Rebecca Janney came from the old Quaker village
of Waterford in Loudoun County and was a sister of an important Alexandria
merchant, John Janney, through whom she and John Lloyd must surley have become
acquainted. Rebecca was the sister also of Hannah Janney, who married Samuel
Hopkins of Anne Arundel County, Maryland, and was the mother of Johns Hopkins
and his brothers and sisters.
In 1784 as a little girl of ten, Rebecca wrote
a verse that reads as follows:
Few are thy days, a full of woe,
O man of woman born;
Thy doom is written, dust thou are,
And shalt to dust return.
Determined are the days they fly
Successive o'er thy head;
The Numbered hour is on the wing
That lays thee with the dead.
Notes for ANNE HARRIOTTE LEE:
Relationships:
- Grandaughter of Richard Henry Lee
- 1st cousin of Robert E. Lee
****-CONTINUED from notes about John Lloyd (ran out of space under his name)
FOOTNOTES
1. COLONIAL FAMILIES OF THE U.S. OF AMERICA, ed. George Norbury, (Baltimore:
Genealogical Publishing Co., 1966), p. 317
2. Gay Montague Moore, SEAPORT IN ALEXANDRIA, (Richmond, Virginia: Garrett-Massie,
Inc.), p. 160-161.
3. James Parke, GENEALOGICAL NOTES RELATING TO PHILADELPHIA...1898, Library
of Congress, CS 71.L792, p. 12
4. IBID., p. 19
5. Alexander C. Zabriskie, ARTHUR SELDEN LLOYD, (NY: Morehouse - Gorham Co.,
1942), p. 3.
6. Alexandria 1796 Tax records, Alexandria Library Lloyd House, microfilm
role No. #1
7. ALEXANDRIA ADVERTISER TIMES, August 24, 1797, p. 3
8. William Wade Hinshaw, ed., ENCYCLOPEDIA OF AMERICA QUAKER GENEALOGY, (Baltimore:
Genealogical Publishing Co., 1973), Vol. VI, p. 521.
9. IBID., p. 527, 528
10. MARRIAGE AND DEATH NOTICES FROM THE NATIONAL INTELLIGENCER, 1800 TO 1850,
Alexandria Library, Lloyd House, microfilm No. 00064.
11. Alexandria tax records 1797, Alexandria Library, Lloyd House, microfilm
reel no. 00027.
12. Alexandria Deed Book Z, p. 450
13. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, October 2, 1826, p. 3.
14. Alexandria Deed Book, D3, p. 165.
15. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, August 12, 1834, p. 3.
16. Robert G. Whitton, "The Washington Society of Alexandria," ALEXANDRIA
HISTORY, Vol. IV, p. 5
17. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, April 20, 1833, p. 3.; Ethelyn Cox, STREET BY STREET,
(Alexandria, Va.: Historic Alexandria Foundation, 1976), p. 182.
18. Alexandria City Census, 1799, Alexandria Library, Lloyd House, microfilm
no. 00025
19. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, November 12, 1807.
20. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, October 22, 1816, p. 2.
21. IBID., November 4, 1824, p. 3; November 5, 1827
22. Alexandria Deed Book, E2, p. 50
23. Alexandria Deed Book, C2, p. 277
24. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, May 4, 1852, p. 3
25. IBID., May 6, 1852, p. 3.
26. Alexandria Deed Book, X2, p. 541.
27. Fauber garbee, Inc. Architects, RESTORATION OF THE JOHN CARLYLE HOUSE
ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA, (Forest, VA., 1980), P. III-5. Courtesy of Carylyle
House Historic Park.
28. Alexandria Deed Book, S2, p. 644
29. Fauber Garbee, Inc., OP. CIT. p. B-2.
30. IBID.
31. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, December 20, 1833, p. 3.
32. Fauber Garbee, Inc.,iNC., p. B-3.
33. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, February 12, 1825, p. 2; May 7, 1832, p. 3: Nan Netherton,
Donald Sweig, et al. eds FAIRFAX COUNTY, VIRGINIA - A HISTORY, (Fairfax, VA.:
Fairfax Board of Supervisors, 1978), p. 198
34. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, April 6, 1827
35. IBID.
36. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE, January 23, 1827, p. 2.
37 Will of John lloyd, Alexandria Will Book, 6, p. 369.
This information came from "The Powell and
Llolyd Families of Alexandria, Virginia", by Frank Snowden Hopkins. A
Family History of the Maternal Ancestors of my Mother, Selina Lloyd Hopbern
Hopkins, of Gloucester, Virginia, a Descendant of the Alexandria Merchants
Cuthbert Powell (1775-1849 and John Lloyd (1775-1854).
This history is compiled from genealogical materials inherited and collected
by my mother during her long life from 1878 to 1970. Of special note are the
following documents: The Family Tree of Col. Leven Powell's Line of the Powells
of Virginia, compiled by Rosalie Noland Ball, a Powell descendant; the Journal
of Cuthbert Powell, written in 1796-97; a biographic sketch of Cuthbert Powell,
written by his daughter, Ellen Douglas Powell Gray; historical notes prepared
by Rebecca C. Powell (1831-1921) on her Peyton, Harrison, Simms, Douglas,
Van Buskirk, and Lloyd ancestors; a genealogy of the Janny family prepared
by the Rev. S. Janey Hutton in 1970; an account of the family of John Harper
(1728-1804) of Philadelphia and Alexandria, grandfather of John Lloyd and
father of 29 surviving children, prepared by his descendant Mollie Powell
from the Harper family Bible; excerpts from many old family letters; excerpts
from the letters of Mrs. Robert E Lee to her schoolmate Selina Lloyd; and
my mother's reminiscences of the Powell and Lloyd relatives she knwo during
the after her school days in Alexandria in the 1890s.
John Lloyd was an almost exact contemporary of Cuthbert Powell, a fellow merchant
whom he must have known well. They were born the same year, 1775; Cuthbert
lived until 1849, John Lloyd until 1854. John came to Alexandria as an infant
from Philadelphia.
John's mother, Sarah, died when he was born or in his infancy. John was brought
up in the Harper family, and we do not know whether Nicholas also died early
or whether he just remained in Philadelphia when the Harper family moved to
Alexandria about 1776 and took his son with them.
We have no details on John's business career, but he obviously was a successful
merchant who did well in the business life of his growingf city. He bought
the imposing home on North Washington Street which is known today as the John
Lloyd House, and left a comfortable estate to be divided among his children,
some of whom continued to live in houses he passed on to them. Born in 1775,
John Lloyd was 29 when his prominent grandfather died, and surely must have
got off to a good start by virtue of his family circumstances.
John Lloyd married twice. His first wife was Rebecca Janny, by whom he had
several sons and Selina Lloyd (1807-71). His second wife was Harriotte Lee,
who produced several more children, including Rebecca Lloyd who married Dr.
Prosser Tabb of "Elmington" in Gloucester County and was the ancestor
of several Gloucester families.
John Lloyd's home is preserved as one of the historic homes of Alexandria,
a handsome brick house of the principal north-south street of the city. The
address is 220 North Washington Street. It was in this house that Robert E
Lee learned in 1861 of his appointment by the Virginia State Legislature to
command the Army of Virginia. He was on his way home form Christ Church to
his home at Arlington (now the Custis mansion in Arlington Nathional Cemetery)
when the news caught up with him. He had resigned from the United States Army
the day before.
The Lloyd House, as it is known, was built in 1793 by James Hooe, and was
purchased by John Lloyd in 1832 after the death of the builder's widow. it
remained in the Lloyd family for nearly a centurn and was one of my mother's
most vivgid memories from her school years in Alexandria, 1892-94, when her
mother's relatives still lived there. The house is described in my book "as
one of the most pleasing examples of Georgian domestic architecture in the
city rich in that idiom of design." The description given speaks of the
interior trim as dating from the Federal period, while the exterior is mid-Georgian
- a rectangular brick structure with handsome windows, roof trim, and chimneys,
and a distinguished pedimented doorway. The white stone lintels and keystones
which frame the windows are particularly noted. The brick walls were laid
in Flemish bond, the most popular brick work style until after 1820.
The Oldest of the children of John Lloyd by his two wives was John Janny Lloyd,
born about 1803, from whom came many descendants. Among the most prominent
of these was Bishop Arthur Selden Lloyd. The second Lloyd son was Dr. Nelson
Lloyd, a lifelong bachelor. The third child was Selina, born in 1807, who
married Charles Leven Powell about 1830 and produced two sons and four daughters.
It was her daughter, the Selina called Nina (1842-1918), who married the Rev.
Sewell S. Hepburn in 1871.
After Selina Lloyd came several other sons, but the record I have is not entirely
clear which ones were of the first marriage and which of the second. Their
names were Richard, married (1) Mary Fife, (2) Elizabeth Jenkins; Edmund,
did not marry; Francis, married Mary Hammond; and Frederick, married Lucy
Powell. Frederick's tombstone says that he was born in 1828, the youngest
son of John Lloyd and Rebecca Janney.
Several of the Lloyd sons migrated westward. Richard, Francis, and Frederick
were in Henry, Illinois in the 1850s, and provided the reason why Charles
Leven Powell and wife Selina also moved to Henry and Lived there for several
years before returning to Virginia in 1856 or thereabouts. They were engaged
in mercantile careers.
See Reference at beginning of notes:
Mother's Recollections of the Lloyds
Mother left a written memorandum reporting on
her Lloyd relatives. Some of them she knew first in her Alexandria school
years, 1892-94; others she met or got better acquainted with in the years
before her marriage in 1900 when she was sent visiting relatives as a young
lady encouraged to widen her social opportunities. Undoubtedly her mother,
our Grandma Hepburn, wanted her to meet marriageable young men who would be
better prospects than most of those she knew in Hanover County, an area devastated
and impoverished by the bloody fighting of 1861-65. For example, Mother used
to tell us she was visiting Cousin Lizzie Crenshaw in Washington when the
U.S.S. Maine blew up in Havana harbor in 1898, precipitationg the Spanish-American
War.
In her school years Mother used sometimes to
visit the John Lloyd House, then occupied by her Great-aunt Minnie Lloyd and
her sister Great-aunt Jeanie and her husband Philip Yeatman. When Uncle Philip
died in 1897, both sisters went into deep mourning, for Aunt Minnie said,
"Sister is broken-hearted." After that Mother never saw either of
them when they were not dressed in black. Mother recalls that when she went
to the Lloyd House to see them, she would ring the front door bell, whereupon
an upstairs window would open and a voice would call out, "Who is it?"
When Mother would identify herself, Aunt Minnie or Aunt Jeanie would lower
a small basket on a string, containing the front door key, and Mother would
let herself in.
NOTE: Dorothy Langley (Hoge) Kenzie remembers her father Phil Hoge telling
her the same story.
It was dark and gloomy house, and the two old
ladies seemed to live mostly in their bedrooms, Mother wrote. "after
Aunt Jeanies's........The recollections continue to go on, but this is the
last page we have.
_________
LLOYD HOUSE HOME PAGE
Lloyd House, 220 Washington Street, Alexandria, VA 22314, 703-838-4577
The Lloyd House is the Alexandria Library's historic research branch. It contains
the early collections of the Alexandria Library Company; extensive materials
on Alexandria and Virginia history; original documents and maps; and a strong
collection of genealogy materials. The branch is located in a 1797 Georgian
style house.
LLOYD HOUSE
One of Alexandria's finest examples of late Georgian architecture, Lloyd House
was built in 1797 by John Wise, who also built Gadsby's Tavern.
In the early 1800's, Charles Lee, Attorney General in the Washington and Adams
administrations, lived here as did Jacob Hoffman, mayor of Alexandria. Benjamin
Hallowell, tutor of Robert E. Lee, moved his school into the home's large
rooms in 1826.
John Lloyd, a wealthy merchant, bought the house at an auction in 1832. His
wife, Anne Harriotte Lee, was a first cousin of Robert E Lee and frequently
entertained Lee in the house.
The house was owned by the Lloyd family until 1918, when it was purchased
by William Albert Smoot, a lumber dealer and mayor of Alexandria. The Smoot
family owned Lloyd House until 1942. During World War II it became a rooming
house for WAVES who worked at the Torpedo Factory.
The Lloyd House is owned by the Alexandria Historical Restoration and Preservation
Commission.
"Historic Alex. VA Street by Street",
by Ethlyn Cux, p. 176
Built around 1798 by John Wise. In 1802 Wise's tenant was James Marshall,
who was an Assistant Judge of the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia
1801-1803. James' brother John was appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States in 1801, and may have visited here when traveling
to and from Washington, D.C. In 1810 Wise sold the house to Jacob Hoffman,
who was mayor of Alexandria February 1803-February 1804. In 1825 the widow
of James H. Hooe became the owner, and the following spring rented the house
to Benjamin Hallowell. Hallowell made interior alterations and established
his school here. In 1832 John Lloyd, whose wife was a daughter of Edmund Jennings
Lee, bought it at auction.
Family memoirs say that on the Sunday before Lee traveled to Richmond to assume
command of the armed forces of Virginia, he attended services at Christ Church
and called here, and at the home of Cassius Lee, now 428 North Washington.
Dr. Joseph Packard of the Episcopal Seminary, whose wife was a grand-daughter
of Charles Lee, was living here when President Lincoln was assassinated. The
next morning Federal soldiers called and demanded that crape be put on the
front door. That night a large stone was hurled through a front window. The
Lloyd family owned the house until 1918. Twice saved from demolition by the
Historic Alexandria Foundation. In 1969 purchased by funds contributed by
the Hoge Foundation, Federal, State and City governments, and conveyed to
the Alexandria Historical Restoration and Preservation Commission. To be used
by the Alexandria Library as a repository of books and documents relating
to Virginia and Alexandria history.
*****End of John Lloyd's notes*****
Children of JOHN LLOYD and REBECCA JANNEY are:
i. ARTHUR SHELDEN19 LLOYD.
Notes for ARTHUR SHELDEN LLOYD:
was a Bishop
38. ii. JOHN JANNEY LLOYD, b. 08 Mar 1800; d. 22 May 1871, Alexandria, VA.
iii. NICHOLAS WALN LLOYD, b. 28 Oct 1801; d. Died young.
iv. HORATIO NELSON LLOYD, b. 02 Jan 1804; d. 13 Mar 1860, Mississippi.
Notes for HORATIO NELSON LLOYD:
Died unmarried in Mississippi
39. v. SELINA LLOYD, b. 30 Sep 1808; d. 04 Aug
1871.
vi. ALFRED LLOYD, b. Sep 1811; d. 1812, Died age one year.
vii. RICHARD HENRY LLOYD, b. 15 Jul 1815; d. 24 Feb 1883; m. (1) MARY FIFE;
m. (2) ELIZABETH JENKINS.
Notes for RICHARD HENRY LLOYD:
Had one child with first wife, Mary Fife - 5 children with second wife, Elizabeth
Jenkins
Home - "Belmont", later St. Agnes School
viii. FREDERICK LLOYD, b. Oct 1817; d. 28 Nov 1868; m. LUCY LEE POWELL.
Notes for FREDERICK LLOYD:
Tombstone says that he was born in 1828, the youngest son of John Lloyd and
Rebecca Janney
Children of JOHN LLOYD and ANNE LEE are:
40. ix. FRANCIS19 LLOYD.
x. MINNIE LLOYD.
Notes for MINNIE LLOYD:
MINNIE LLOYD OCCUPIED THE LLOYD HOUSE IN ALEX. WITH MRS YEATMAN. MINNIE WAS
A COUSIN OF GEN. ROBERT E. LEE - AND WAS IN THE LLOYD HOUSE WHERE HE WAS NOTIFIED
OF HIS COMMAND OF VA. FORCES - IN APRIL 1861.
xi. NELSON LLOYD.
Notes for NELSON LLOYD:
The second Lloyd son.
Was a Doctor.
A lifelong bachelor.
xii. EDMUND JENNINGS LLOYD, b. 27 Aug 1822; d. 01 Oct 1889.
Notes for EDMUND JENNINGS LLOYD:
Marital status: never married
Military service: He was a captain in the commissary department of the Confederate
service during the war
According to the 1880 census Edmund owned the
Lloyd House (220 N. Washington Street, Alexandria, VA) during that time frame.
The Lloyd family owned the house until 1918. It was scheduled for demolition
in 1956 when it was saved by Wyoming geologist Robert New. Threatedned again
in 1968, it was purchased for restoration with funding from the Hoge Foundation,
federal, state and local government and private donations. (source: Alexandria
Library)
41. xiii. REBECCA LLOYD, b. 07 Jun 1824, Alexandria,
VA; d. 17 Jul 1862, "Ditchly" Gloucester Co, VA.
42. xiv. ANN HARRIOTTE LLOYD, b. 07 Jan 1826; d. 23 Jun 1888.
43. xv. GEORGE FRANCIS LLOYD, b. 28 Oct 1828; d. 01 Oct 1866.
xvi. JEAN CHARLOTTE WASHINGTON LLOYD, b. 28 Apr 1831; m. PHILIP TABB YEATMAN,
1867; b. 28 Nov 1829; d. 18 Mar 1897, Alexandria, VA.
Notes for JEAN CHARLOTTE WASHINGTON LLOYD:
During the Yeatman occupancy of the Lloyd House, the United Daughters of the
Confederacy was formed there in 1895.
Notes for PHILIP TABB YEATMAN:
C.S.A.
He was a captain in the 26th Virginia Infantry (Wise's Brigade) during the
Civil War.
After the Civil War, Philip was a clerk with an unidentified company in Alexandria.
During the Yeatman occupancy of the Lloyd House (1895-96), the United Daughters
of the Confederacy was formed there in 1895.
xvii. MARY LEE LLOYD, b. 23 Jul 1835.
Notes for MARY LEE LLOYD:
See John Lloyd ( 11/16/1775 ) for reference:
"Minnie"
The last Lloyd to live in the John Lloyd House on North Washington Street
37. FRANCES18 JENINGS (EDMUND17, MARGARET16 BARKHAM, FRANCES15 BERNEY, THOMAS14,
HENRY13, JOHN12, MARGERY11 WENTWORTH, ANNE10 TYRRELL, HUMPHREY9, ANNE8 DE
MARNEY, ELIZABETH7 CERGEAUX, PHILIPPE FITZ6 ALAN, EDMUND FITZ5, ISABEL4 LE
DESPENSER, ALIANOR3 DE CLARE, JOAN OF2 ENGLAND, EDWARD I OF1) She married
CHARLES GRYMES, son of JOHN GRYMES and ALICE TOWNLEY. He was born 1697, and
died 26 Apr 1734.
Notes for CHARLES GRYMES:
Charles Grymes lived at "Morattico," in Richmond county: he was
born about 1697 and deceased at the date of the marriage of his daughter,
Lucy, with Henry Lee. Was Sheriff of Richmond county and a member of the Council
in 1724-5.
Children of FRANCES JENINGS and CHARLES GRYMES are:
44. i. LUCY19 GRYMES, b. 26 Apr 1734, Richmond Co VA; d. 1792.
45. ii. FRANCES GRYMES, b. 19 Nov 1717, at Morattico.
Generation No. 19
38. JOHN JANNEY19 LLOYD (JOHN HARPER18, NICHOLAS
WALAND17, THOMAS16, THOMAS15, THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12
WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8
GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET
OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 08 Mar 1800, and died
22 May 1871 in Alexandria, VA. He married ELIZA ARMISTEAD SELDEN 16 Oct 1845,
daughter of WILSON SELDEN and MARY ALEXANDER. She was born 24 Mar 1820 in
"Exeter", Loudoun Co., Virginia,, and died 07 Jun 1870.
Notes for JOHN JANNEY LLOYD:
The oldest son of John Lloyd
Had 8 children
Home "Mt. Ida" - now St. Mary's Academy.
"Exeter" burned 1931
Children of JOHN LLOYD and ELIZA SELDEN are:
i. MARY BOWLES20 LLOYD, d. Died age one year.
ii. REBECCA JANNEY LLOYD, m. HENRY MELVILLE JACKSON.
Notes for REBECCA JANNEY LLOYD:
One son - died young
Notes for HENRY MELVILLE JACKSON:
Rev.
iii. JOHN JANNEY LLOYD, m. ELLA HUBARD.
Notes for JOHN JANNEY LLOYD:
5 children
iv. NELLIE SELDEN LLOYD, b. 03 Mar 1853; d. 15 Mar 1931; m. GEORGE UHLER,
08 Aug 1876; b. 09 Jan 1849; d. 11 Dec 1925.
Notes for NELLIE SELDEN LLOYD:
Five children
v. ELIZA FONTAINE LLOYD, m. (1) ROWLAND D. BURKS; m. (2) CLARENCE WOOLFOLK.
vi. ARTHUR SELDEN LLOYD, b. 03 May 1857, "Mt. Ida", Alexandria County,
VA; d. 22 Jul 1936, Stanford, County; m. ELIZABETH ROBERTSON BLACKFORD, 30
Jun 1880; d. Mar 1932.
Notes for ARTHUR SELDEN LLOYD:
"Arthur Selden Lloyd, Missionary-Statesman and Pastor", by Alexander
C. Zabriskie
Chap. 1
Arthur Selden Lloyd was descended from the best families of two colonies.
On his father's side his ancestors were PA Quakers. The first American Lloyd
was Thomas Lloyd, who came to Philadelphia from Dolobran Hall, Monmouthshire,
Wales, in 1683 and was deputy governor of the Colony, 1691-1694. Miss Betticher's
researches have shown with considerable certainty that he was descended from
the Welsh Kings of Dyfed in South Wales and, through his great-great-grandmother,
Margaret Kynaston, from the English King Edward I and the royal French house
of Capet. One of this man's sons, Thomas Jr., remained in England; but his
son, Thomas III, followed his grandfather to Philadelphia. The latter's son,
Nicolas Waln, was dropped from the Society of Friends for marrying out of
Meeting, and probably because of that, moved to Baltimore. His son John married
Miss Janney, sister-in-law of the Johns Hopkins for whom the university is
named. John's son, John Janney, born March 8, 1800, married Miss Eliza Armistead
Selden in Christ Church, Alexandria, October 16, 1845. Of this couple Arthur
Selden was the sixth child.
39. SELINA19 LLOYD (JOHN HARPER18, NICHOLAS WALAND17,
THOMAS16, THOMAS15, THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE,
HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE, MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY,
HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5 DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3
NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 30 Sep 1808, and died
04 Aug 1871. She married CHARLES LEVEN POWELL 28 Sep 1830, son of CUTHBERT
POWELL. He was born 1804, and died 1896.
Notes for SELINA LLOYD:
See John Lloyd for reference:
Had 2 sons & 4 daughters.
One of the daughters was named Selina called Nina (1842-1918) married the
Rev. Sewell S Hepburn in 1871.
A schoolmate of Mrs Robert E Lee letters between them are on file see "The
Powell and Lloyd families of Alexandria Vierginia by Frank Snowden Hopkins,
1988
Child of SELINA LLOYD and CHARLES POWELL is:
i. SELINA20 POWELL, b. 1842; d. 1918; m. SEWELL STAVELY HEPBURN, 13 Apr 1871,
Alexandria, VA; b. 09 Jun 1845, Hannibal, MO; d. 04 Nov 1932, Christ Church
I.U. Worton Md. Keny County.
Notes for SELINA POWELL:
Known as Nina
Notes for SEWELL STAVELY HEPBURN:
A minister
40. FRANCIS19 LLOYD (JOHN HARPER18, NICHOLAS WALAND17, THOMAS16, THOMAS15,
THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE,
MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5
DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD
I OF1 ENGLAND) He married MARY PINDLE HAMMOND.
Children of FRANCIS LLOYD and MARY HAMMOND are:
i. NELSON20 LLOYD, m. MARY MORRIS.
ii. NANNIE S LLOYD, m. (1) ROBERT H DELAFIELD; m. (2) JOHN T DORSY.
iii. FRANCIS F LLOYD, m. IDA TAYLOR.
iv. PHILIPPA WYCHE LLOYD.
41. REBECCA19 LLOYD (JOHN HARPER18, NICHOLAS WALAND17, THOMAS16, THOMAS15,
THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE,
MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5
DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD
I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 07 Jun 1824 in Alexandria, VA, and died 17 Jul 1862
in "Ditchly" Gloucester Co, VA. She married JOHN PROSSER TABB 02
May 1844.
Notes for REBECCA LLOYD:
"ELMINGTON" HOUSE IN GLOUCESTER WAS GIVEN TO REBECCA AS A WEDDING
PRESENT WHEN SHE MARRIED PROSSER TABB - PRESENT FROM THE TABBS.
Notes for JOHN PROSSER TABB:
Has title Dr. was of Gloucester County, Virginia
Children of REBECCA LLOYD and JOHN TABB are:
i. JOHN PROSSER20 TABB, m. ELEANOR MCKENZIE.
ii. JOHN LLOYD TABB, m. SUSAN SELDEN.
iii. MATILDA PROSSER TABB, m. (1) JUDITH COLEMAN; m. (2) MARY JAMES.
iv. REBECCA LLOYD TABB, m. SAMUEL BRENT.
Notes for SAMUEL BRENT:
Judge
v. JOHN TABB, m. JOHN T PERRIN.
42. ANN HARRIOTTE19 LLOYD (JOHN HARPER18, NICHOLAS WALAND17, THOMAS16, THOMAS15,
THOMAS14, CHARLES13, CATRIN (KATHERINE) LLOYD12 WYNNE, HUMPHREY11 LLOYD, WYNNE,
MARGARET10 KYNASTON, HUMPHREY9, ELIZABETH8 GREY, HENRY7, SIR JOHN6, JOAN5
DE MOWBRAY, ELIZABETH4 DE SEGRAGVE, MARGARET OF3 NORFOLK, THOMAS OF2, EDWARD
I OF1 ENGLAND) was born 07 Jan 1826, and died 23 Jun 1888. She married JOHN
STEARNS 19 Jul 1848, son of JOHN STEARNS and SARAH KETCHUM. He was born 14
Oct 1812 (Source: "Genealogy and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns,
and Their Descendants, " by Mrs. Avis Stearns Van Wagenen), and died
11 Nov 1864.
Notes for JOHN STEARNS:
Was a M.D. before he went into ministry. He resigned and went to a church
in Spotswood, CT - died 6 months later leaving his wife with 5 babies.
Ref: Book "Genealogies of the Families and
Descendants of this Early Settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts, including
Waltham and Weston; to which is appended the Early History of the Town.",
by Henry Bon, MD, Vol II.
Obtained an academical education at Dr. Muhlenburg's
School, Flushing; M.D., Jeff Med. Coll., 1837. After practicing medicine a
short time in NY, he turned his attention to theology; graduated at the Epis.
Theol. Seminary, near Alexandria, in 1846, and is now (1848) rector of a church
in Syosset, Queen's Co., NY.
Ref: Book: "Genealogy and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns, and
Their Descendants, " by Mrs. Avis Stearns Van Wagenen, p. 145.
Rev. John Stearns, M.D. (6430), b., Oct. 14, 1812,
son of Dr. John and Sarah (Ketchum) Stearns, of New York City; obtained and
academic education at Dr. Muhlenburg's School, Flushing, NY; M.D. Jef. Med.
Coll., 1837; after practicing medicine a short time in Philadelphia, PA.,
he entered the Theological Seminary at Alexandria, VA., and studied for the
ministry of the Protestant Episcopal Church. He was a skillful physician and
would have achieved eminence in that profession, but felt called to the ministry,
and for many years, occupied a foremost place in the councils of the church.
He entered the ministry as assistant to Dr. Stephen H. Ty6ng, D.D., Rector
of St. George's Church, New York City, and was the intimate friend of Bishop
Paddock, of Washington, and Bishop Williams, of Conn. He took charge of St.
Peter's Church, Brooklyn, NY; of Christ Church, Stratford, Conn.; of St. Stephen's
Church, Pittsfield, Mass; St. Peter's Church, Spotswood, NJ., where he died
Nov. 11, 1864. "He was an elpquent preacher and a faithful minister of
God." He married July 19, 1848, Anne Harriotte Lloyd, of Alexandria,
VA, born Jan. 7, 1826, who died, June 23, 1888. Her great-grandfather was
Richard Henry Lee, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence,
and Gen. Robert E. Lee, Commander of the Southern Army during the Civil War,
was her first cousin on her mother's side. Her son, John Lloyd Stearns, has
in his possession, the Cincinnati Plate, which Richard Henry Lee took as a
souvenir of the entertainment given by George Washington, when the 'Order
of the Cincinnati' was formed." They had five children.
Children of ANN LLOYD and JOHN STEARNS are:
i. HARRIOTTE LEE20 STEARNS, b. 01 May 1849, Alexandria, VA (Source: "Genealogy
and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns, and Their Descendants, "
by Mrs. Avis Stearns Van Wagenen); d. 16 Jul 1851, Brooklyn, NY (Source: "Genealogy
and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns, and Their Descendants, "
by Mrs. Avis Stearns Van Wagenen).
ii. MARY BARLOW STEARNS, b. 27 Nov 1850, Brooklyn NY (Source: "Genealogy
and Memoirs of Charles and Nathaniel Stearns, and Their Descendants, "
by Mrs. Avis Stearns Van Wagenen); d. 12 Jan 1925, Elizabeth NJ; m. WILLIAM
SCOFIELD HOGE, 28 Jan 1874, Lincoln M.H. VA (Source: "The Hoge, Nichols
and Related Families - Biographical/Historical - A Sequential Arrangement
of Genealogical Data", by William D. Nichols, 4578 Rain Park Drive, Fairview
Park, OH 44126, Sept. 1969); b. 18 Feb 1847, Pleasent Valley Farm, near Hamilton
VA (Source: "The Hoge, Nichols and Related Families - Biographical/Historical
- A Sequential Arrangement of Genealogical Data", by William D. Nichols,
4578 Rain Park Drive, Fairview Park, OH 44126, Sept. 1969); d. 15 Aug 1920,
Buck Hill Falls PA.
Notes for MARY BARLOW STEARNS:
- May have been born Nov. 27, 1850
- Descendant of Richard Henry Lee of VA
- Member D.A.R. Chapter 202 "Mary Washington"
Ref. Lee of VA by E.J. Lee
___________________________
It is from Mary Stearns that the connection to the Lee's of Virginia comes.
Therefore the following are added here.
Copied from Richard Henry Lee's Family Bible.
Richard Henry Lee and Ann Aylett were married
December 3, 1757.
Thomas Lee, the son of Richard Henry Lee and Anne,
his wife, was born on Sunday the 20th day of October 1757 at 11 o'clock at
night and was christened by the Rev. Mr. Charks Rose the 26th day of November
1738. His sponsore were Alkinton, the honorable Col. Philip Ludwell Lee, Ganin
Covborn, Esq. Miss Alice Lee, Mrs. Alkenton and Miss Mary Aylett.
Ludwell Lee, son of R.H. Lee and Anne, his wife,
was born on Monday the 13th of October 176? at 12 o'clock in the night and
was christened by the Rev. M.C. Rose on Sunday the 26th of October 1760. His
proxies - Miss Richard Lee Esq., Doctor Arthur Lee and Miss Elizasbeth Steptor.
Mary Lee, daughter of Richard Henry Lee and Anne,
his wife, was born Saturday the 28th of July 1764 in the night. She was christened
by the Rev. Mr. Archibald Cambell March 11th, 1765 and her proxies were Frances
Lightfoot Lee Esq., Mr. Joseph Lane and James Davenport with Mrs Elizabeth
Steptor, Miss Betty Washington and Miss Booth.
Anne Lee, daughter of Richard Henry Lee and Anne,
his wife, was born the 1st day of December 1770 and was christened the 6th
of January 1771. Her sponsors were Frances Lightfoot Lee Esq., Dr. Steqtor,
Mrs. Richard Lee and Miss Sarah Gaskins. She was christened by Rev. Mr. Thomas
Smith.
Henrietta Lee, daughter of R. H. Lee and Anne,
his wife, was born the 10th day of December 1773 and was christened the ??
day of January 1774. Her sponsors were Capt. John Lee, Richard Lee, George
Lee, Frances Steptor Esqr., Miss Elizabeth Gaskins, Miss ??? Lee and Miss
Mary Lee.
Sarah Lee, daughter of Richard Henry Lee and Anne,
his wife, was born the 27th of November 1775 and was christened by the Rev.
Mr. Thomas Smith. Her proxies were Thomas Ludwell Lee, Henry Lee Esqrs., MIss
Elizabeth Lee, Miss Mary Lee, Miss Nancy Lee, Miss Hannah Lee.
Cassius Lee, son of Richard Henry Lee and Anne,
his wife, was born at 3 o'clock at night the 18 day of August 1779. Christened
October 10, 1779. Proxies the Rev. Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Armstead, Miss Alice Lee
of Maryland, Miss Nancy Lee of Chantilly and Miss Furann.
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