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Family of Edward Finch
(This person
can be viewed within the Melton/Sharp Ancestry Chart by clicking here)
1. EDWARD1
FINCH1 was born Abt. 1689, and died 1745 in Charles City
County, Virginia. He married AGNES BROTHERS2. She died 1771.
Notes for EDWARD FINCH:
Information sources include: Captain Thomas Finch
records of 1880.
Children of EDWARD FINCH and AGNES BROTHERS are:
i. DAUGHTER12 FINCH2,
m. GEORGE MARRABLE2.
ii. WILLIAM FINCH 2,3, d.
November 1772, Charles City County, Virginia;
m. MARY UNKNOWN4.
iii. DAUGHTER2 FINCH4, m. WILLIAM
HOLDCRAFT4.
iv. DAUGHTER3 FINCH4, m. EDWARD
AVERY4.
v. DAUGHTER4 FINCH4, m. BENJAMIN
MARRABLE4.
vi. CAPTAIN ADAM FINCH
5,6,7,8,9,9, b. Abt. 1725, Charles City (or New Kent) Co, VA; d.
Feb1800 - Jan 1881, Charlotte Co, VA; m. MARY THOMPSON10,
Bef. 1755; d. Aft. Feb
12, 1800, VA.
vii. DAUGHTER5 FINCH11, m. WILLIAM
THOMPSON11.
Notes for WILLIAM THOMPSON:
This is a possible lead as to William Thompson, but
there is no real connection to establish it.
William THOMPSON S6217 West Tenn.
#19113 $285/year issued 2 Aug. 1833.
27 Nov.
1832 Franklin
County,
Capt. William THOMPSON aged 79 states he was born in Dobbs
County, N.C., in 1753 or 1754
but has no record of his age. He volunteered in the early part of the war in
the Dobbs County
militia under Col. Richard CASWELL. He was a Dobbs
County resident. A British Man of
War ship was blockading the inlet of Cape Fear, about 40 miles below Wilmington,
and the company marched to that area and remained until it was ascertained that
the British wanted to blockade only, not land. He volunteered again under Capt.
William FELLOW and marched to Bald Head below Wilmington.
After some time he volunteered again under Capt. George MILLER, Lt., AXIUM(?)
and Col. CASWELL. Marched to Moores
Creek
Bridge and had a battle with the
Scotch Tories. The Tories were defeated, their commanders MCCLOUD OR MCCLERD
and MCDONALD were both killed, among others. Only one American, John GRADY, was
killed two were wounded. The prisoners were released upon taking the oath of
allegiance to the United States.
Early in 1779 he enlisted under Capt. Moring and Col. Jonas JOHNSON. Marched
with Col. MCDOWELL'S regiment to Augusta,
Ga.,
and attacked the enemy at Stono on 22
June 1779. The enemy was reinforced from the islands near Charleston
and the Americans under Gen. Lincoln were repulsed. Affiant was then acting as Quartermaster
Willoughby WILLIAMS, the Quartermaster of Col. JOHNSON'S regiment. He encloses
his discharge dated 10 July 1779,
written by Willoughby WILLIAMS, whose widow married the late Gov. MCMINN of
Tennessee.
The handwriting is probably known by the Hon. H.L. WHITE of the U.S. Senate. In
1790 he was appointed captain of the militia under Col. William MCKINNEY. His
commission is attached. He remained in the service until the close of the war
in pursuit of the Tories about the country. The times were so gloomy that many
of the principal men and officers, namely Gov. CASWELL, Col. GLASGOW, Col. COBB
and others fled for refuge west of the mountains, leaving us to defend for
ourselves and the country as best we could. In April 1781 affiant and a small
scouting party were attacked in Duplin County,
N.C.
by a detachment from Lord CORNWALLIS'' army. He was taken prisoner and paroled,
after having been robbed of his mare, saddle and bridle by a sergeant of the
British Dragoons. The mare was valuable; he heard the sergeant say after taking
her that he would not sell for 50 guineas. He resided in Dobbs and
Wayne
Counties, N.C., until 1796 when he
removed to Washington County, Ga.
In 1808 he removed from, there to Wilson County, Tenn. In 1818 he came to this
county. Rev. Robert DOUGAN and Ellis OLDHAM vouch for THOMPSON.
14 June 1852
Thomas FINCH, administrator of the estate of the late William THOMPSON,
appoints Tax W. NEWMAN his attorney. THOMPSON died 1 March 1836.
viii. EVE FINCH11, m. UNKNOWN WATSON11.
ix. BROTHERS FINCH12, m. SARAH
VAUGHN13.
Endnotes
1. Hutton,
Mary Louise Marshall, Seventeenth Century Colonial Ancestors, (National Society of Colonial Dames XVII
Century [1915-1975]), Page 91, listed as a landowner.
2. Sands, John
A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication.
3. Crozier,
William Armstrong, Early Virginia Marriages, pg 37, November 26, 1770, John Lamb and Fanny, daughter
of William Finch.
4. Sands, John
A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication.
5. Hutton,
Mary Louise Marshall, Seventeenth Century Colonial Ancestors, (National Society of Colonial Dames XVII
Century [1915-1975]).
6. Thompson,
Ruby Finch, Finch Families of Dixie:
300 years in the South, (1972).
7. Daughters
of the American Revolution (DAR). Lineage Books.
8. Francis and
Moore, Lost Links, (Genealogical
Publishing Co., Inc Baltimore 1975), page 111, Adam Finch of England,
resided in Charlotte Co. Virginia, on grant of land from George II, King of England. Died 1798; Will recorded
1799. Married and had the following sons (James, Thomas, and Zachariah are
shown).
9. Sands, John
A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication.
10. Sands,
John A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication, Sands show Mary's maiden
name as "Thompson", rather than Thomson.
11. Sands,
John A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication.
12. Sands,
John A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication, Died at an early age
leaving several small children.
13. Sands,
John A., Jr., "Finch," Private publication.