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George Sparks

Male Abt 1788 - 1843  (~ 55 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  George Sparks was born about 1788 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina (son of Solomon Sparks, Jr and Charity Snider); died in 1843 in Wells Co, Indiana.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Solomon Sparks, Jr was born in 1757 in Salisbury, Rowan Co, North Carolina (son of Solomon* Sparks, Sr and Sarah* Thompson (?)); died after 28 Dec 1817 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Will: 28 Dec 1817, Wilkes Co, North Carolina

    Notes:

    Will:
    In the nuncupative will of his father dated December 28, 1817, Joseph and his brother, Jonathan, were referred to as Solomon's two youngest sons, and because each of his four oldest sons had received certain gifts either when they had come of age or had been married, Solomon directed that Jonathan and Joseph each receive the following: "One horse, bridle and saddle, one cow and calf, one sow and pigs, and one feather bed and furniture." ("Furniture" in this sense meant the bedding, etc. to go with a feather bed.) As noted earlier, Solomon died within a few days of his making his will.

    http://www.sparksfamilytree.net/ghtout/npr445.html
    SQ p 5311-5314

    Solomon married Charity Snider in 1785 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina. Charity was born in 1759 in North Carolina; died in 1828 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Charity Snider was born in 1759 in North Carolina; died in 1828 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    Children:
    1. 1. George Sparks was born about 1788 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina; died in 1843 in Wells Co, Indiana.
    2. Solomon Sparks was born about 1792 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina; died on 28 Apr 1854 in Rock Creek Twp, Indiana.
    3. William Sparks was born after 1792 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina; died after 1793.
    4. Samuel Sparks was born about 1793 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina; died in 1858 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    5. Jonathan Sparks was born about 1800 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina; died after 1801.
    6. Joseph Sparks was born about 1803 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina; died after 1860 in of, Huntington Co, Indiana.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Solomon* Sparks, Sr was born in 1725 in Queen Anne's Co, Maryland (son of Joseph* Sparks, Sr and Mary (..) Sparks, (2nd wife?)); died in 1790 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: Rowan Co, North Carolina
    • Property: 20 Mar 1750, "Cold Friday," Linganore Creek, Frederick Co, Maryland; patented
    • Residence: 1753, Rowan Co, North Carolina
    • Property: 20 Jun 1753, "Cold Creek"; sold to Matthew Howard

    Notes:

    In Frederick Co, Maryland, on June 20, 1753, a Mathew Howard, son of Gideon Howard, purchased land from Solomon SPARKS of that county, "Cold Friday" on the draft of the Linganore called Beaver Dam Branch. Sarah, wife of Solomon Sparks, cond to the conveyance.
    They moved to Rowan Co, NC, where he had obtained a land grant of 250 acres on the west side of the Yadkin River near Salisbury. They moved to what was Surry Co, NC, in 1772--now Swan Creek in Yadkin Co.

    http://sparksfamilytree.net/family_tree/wga96.html#I22337

    SPARKS QUARTLY, December 1955, Whole No. 12, p. 97:

    THE GENEALOGY OF JOHN SPARKS REVOLUTIONARY WAR PENSIONER OF WILKES COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA


    " As John Sparks (359) stated in his pension application (SQ 94), he was born on the 25th of February, 1753, near Salisbury, Rowan County,North Carolina , and removed with his father to what is now Wilkes (then Surry) County, North Carolina about the year 1772. John Sparks did not identify his father in his application, but other records prove that his name was Solomon Sparks (356). Surry County was formed from Rowan County in 1770, and the Surry tax lists for 1771 and 1772 have been preserved. On the 1771 tax list, Solomon Sparks is listed, with 3 polls, and William Sparks (???) with 1 poll; Will Sparks(199) and son Matthew(334), 2 polls; James Sparks, 1 poll; and Solomon Sparks (356), with sons Joseph (365) and John (359), 3 polls.


    "Solomon Sparks lived in Maryland before settling in North Carolina and was very probably the son of Joseph Sparks (344) who died intestate in Frederick County, Maryland in 1749.


    "On the 20th of March 1750, Solomon Sparks patented 93 acres in Frederick County, Maryland, and gave his land the descriptive name of "Cold Friday". This land was located on Beaver Dam Branch, a tributary of Linganore Creek. On the 20th of June, 1753, Solomon Sparks and his wife , Sarah, sold these 93 acres for 34 Pounds, to Mathew Howard. Solomon is disignated in this deed as a "farmer".


    "If Solomon Sparks and his wife Sarah were living in Frederick County, Maryland, as late as June 20, 1753, as this deed would indicate , then their son John, born February 25, 1753, was born in Frederick County, Maryland, rather than in Rowan County, North Carolina, and was carried to North Carolina as a babe in arms. Although we cannot be sure of the exact date, it is reasonably certain that Solomon Sparks removed with his family some time in 1753 to near Salisbury, Rowan County, N.C. (Rowan County was formed April 12, 1753, from Anson County.)


    "The following description of Salisbury is found in a letter written on November 24, 1755, by Governor Arthur Dobbs: "The Yadkin here (Trading Ford) is a large beautiful river where is a ferry. It is near 300 yards over, it was at this time fordable scarce coming to the horses bellies. At 6 miles distance I arrived at Salisbury the County town of Rowan, the town is but just laid out, the Court House build and 7 or 8 log houses erected."


    "The Sparkses settled in the Forks of the Yadkin, less than ten miles north of Salisbury, in what is now Davie County, North Carolina .Solomon Sparks obtained a land grant in 1761, for 25O acres in Rowan County, on the west side of the Yadkin River, opposite the mouth of Muddy Creek. In 1762 he obtained a grant for 290 acres on the south side of the Yadkin River, which adjoined his other land. In 1763 Solomon sold 130 and 3/4 acres to Jonas Sparks (354), and 159 and 1/ 4 acres to Valentine Vanhouser. According to the statement made by John Sparks in his pension application, Solomon Sparks and his family removed from Rowan County to "what is now Wilkes (then Surry) County, North Carolina, about the year 1772." In 1787, as residents of Surry County, North Carolina,Solomon and Sarah Sparks sold 160 acres in Rowan County to Zephemiah Harris, and in 1788 they sold 170 (?) acres in Rowan County to Jonas Sparks. Solomon and Sarah Sparks disappear from North Carolina records after 1788. Solomon does not appear on the 1790 census, and there is nowill, no intestate record, and no record of Solomon and Sarah Sparks buying or selling land in Surry or Wilkes Counties, although when the Surry-Wilkes County Line wa s surveyed in 1778 it mentioned the plantation of Solomon Sparks. (Here follows a full copy of the description of the dividing line between Surry Co. and Wilkes Co.)


    "Thus Solomon Sparks lived just south of the village of Swan Creek in the western part of Surry (now Yadkin) County, North Carolina, with land in Wilkes as well as in Surry. Around 1800 the Sparkses and their connections owned land for several miles along the Surry (now Yadkin)-Wilkes County line and there are still many descendants in that area today.


    "It is believed that Solomon and Sarah Sparks were both deceased by 1800, or possibly by 1790. Since neither of them left a will, and no family Bible or other record has been located, it has been difficult to ascertain the names of the children of this couple. However, a power of attorney recorded in Wilkes County, North Carolina, Court Minutes, on Tuesday, August 4, 18O1, gives what we feel certain is a listing of at least eight of the children of Solomon and Sarah Sparks. (Here follows a copy of the power of attorney. The article continues as to Solomon and Sarah's son John Sparks, for which see his notes.)"




    **********


    THE SPARKS QUARTERLY, June 1959, Whole No. 26; DESCENDANTS OF SOLOMON SPARKS, JR. (DIED 1817) & AND HIS WIFE CHARITY OF WILKES COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA, Page 382:


    "In an article by William Perry Johnson entitled "The Genealogy of John Sparks, Revolutionary War Pensioner of Wilkes County, North Carolina," which appeared in the QUARTERLY of December, 1955 (Vol. III,No. 4, p p. 97-104), the data were summarized which have been gleaned thus far on the life of Solomon Sparks, early settler in Wilkes County, North Carolina. In his article, Mr. Johnson pointed out that Solomon Sparks was probably born in Frederick County, Maryland, and that he was probably a son of Joseph Sparks who died in Frederick County, Maryland,in 1749. Solomon Sparks, with his wife Sarah, and family moved fromFrederick County, Maryland, to near Salisbury, Rowan County (now DavieCounty), North Carolina, sometime during the year 1753. They settled in the forks of the Yadkin River where Solomon obtained a land grant of 250 acres in 1761 near the mouth of Muddy Creek. About 1772 they moved from Rowan County to what is now Wilkes (then a part of Surry) County, North Carolina.


    "The last record we have of Solomon and Sarah Sparks is dated 1788 when they sold land which they still owned in Rowan County to Jonas Sparks. (Jonas Sparks was probably a brother of Solomon and accompanied Daniel Boone to Kentucky in 1773...")

    **********

    THE SPARKS QUARTERLY, September, 1967, Whole No. 59, p 1082,

    DESCENDANTS OF SOLOMON AND SARAH SPARKS, OF MARYLAND AND NORTH CAROLINA
    THROUGH THEIR SON, REUBEN SPARKS (ca. 1755-1840)

    "Solomon Sparks was born in Maryland about 1725. It is probable that he was a son of Joseph Sparks who died intestate in Frederick County , Maryland, in 1749. (Solomon named one of his sons Joseph, probably for his father.) Sometime before 1750, Solomon Sparks married Sarah -----.

    "On March 20, 1750, Solomon Sparks patented 93 acres of land in Frederick County, Maryland, and gave this tract the descriptive name of Cold Friday. This land was located on Beaver Dam Branch, a tributary of Linganore Creek. On June 20, 1753, Solomon Sparks and his wife Sarah, sold this tract of 93 acres for 35 pounds to Mathew Howard. Solomon is designated in this deed as a "farmer."

    "Sometime in 1753, probably soon after selling this tract of land , Solomon Sparks moved from Frederick County, Maryland, to near Salisbury, Rowan County, North Carolina. (Rowan County was formed on April 12, 1753 from Anson County.) Solomon and Sarah Sparks were among the first settlers in that area of North Carolina. Two years after their arrival, Governor Arthur Dobbs visited Salisbury and wrote the following description on November 24, 1755: "The Yadkin here (Trading Ford ) is a large beautiful river where there is a ferry. It is near 300 yards over, it was at this time fordable scarce coming to the horses' bellies. At 6 miles distance I arrived at Salisbury the County town of Rowan, the town is but just laid out, the Court House built and 7 or 8 log Houses erected." (From THE COLONIAL RECORDS OF NORTH CAROLINA, Vol. 5, page 355.)

    "Solomon Sparks settled in the Forks of the Yadkin, less than ten miles north of Salisbury, in what is now Davie County, North Carolina. In 1761, he obtained a land grant for 250 acres in Rowan County, on the west side of the Yadkin River, opposite the mouth of Muddy Creek. In 1762, he obtained a grant for 290 acres on the south side of the Yadkin River, which adjoined his other grant.

    "By the early 1760's, Solomon Sparks had been joined in North Carolina by several of his close relatives from Frederick County, Maryland: Matthew Sparks [256], son of William Sample Sparks who was a cousin of Solomon], William Sample Sparks [201], son of William Sparks who was brother of Solomon's father, Joseph and, thus, was Solomon's cousin, Jonas Sparks [354], brother of Solomon, and James Sparks [355], brother of Matthew and another first cousin once removed of Solomon].

    "In 1763, Solomon Sparks sold a portion of his land on the Yadkin to Jonas Sparks, who was probably (actually) his brother, and another portion to Valentine Vanhouser. According to a statement made by John Sparks , son of Solomon, when applying for a Revolutionary War pension in 1832, Solomon Sparks and his family moved from the Forks of the Yadkin to what is now Wilkes County (then Surry County), North Carolina, in 1772. When the dividing line between Wilkes and Surry counties was surveyed in 1778, it was found that the like cut through Solomon's plantation, but according to the Court Minutes, his house was on the Surry side. Thus , Solomon Sparks lived just south of the present village of Swan Creek in the western part of what is now Yadkin County, North Carolina.

    "By 1800, Solomon and Sarah sparks had both died. Neither of them left a will, nor has a family Bible record been found listing the names of their children. However, a document recorded in the Wilkes County Court Records reveals the names of those still living in the Wilkes County area in 1801. It is a Letter of Attorney dated July 31, 1801, from John Sparks, Reuben Sparks, Solomon Sparks, Jr., Mary Jacks, Hannah Denny, Susannah Johns on, and Joseph Sparks to Abel Sparks, all being children of Solomon Spark s. We know from his application for a pension that John Sparks, son of Solo mon, was born in 1753; it seems probable that he was the oldest son.

    "Assuming that the other children were listed in the Letter of Attorney in the order of their birth, we may speculate on their birth dates as follows: [here is a list of the eight children of Solomon and Sarah Sparks].

    **********

    THE SPARKS QUARTERLY, June 1991, Whole No. 154, p. 3777:

    WILLIAM SPARKS, ca .1725-1801/02

    "We know that Solomon Sparks, older brother of Jonas, and close neighbor of William Sparks in Surry County, remained openly loyal to the British Crown. This is graphically revealed in an application for a Revolutionary War Pension application by one George Parks, dated April 10, 1833. Congress had passed legislation in 1832 providing pensions for all surviving Revolutionary War soldiers whether or not they were in financial need, and Parks was one of those who applied. Like many of his fellow veterans, however, Parks could find no documentary proof of his service, which was required by the War Department before a pension could be issued. What veterans with this problem often did, besides seeking affidavits from others who remembered their service, was to try to recall in as much detail as possible the events during the war in which they had been participants. This George Parks did in his application. He recalled that at the time of the Revolution, he had lived in that part of Surry County, North Carolina, that was cut off to form Wilkes County in 1777 and that in 1779, he thought "in the fall season," he had enlisted in a "Company of Minute Men" for a period of eighteen months . It was the primary mission of this company, which was commanded by Captain William Lenore, to find men in their neighborhood who belonged to Tory military units. Some they would hang when they captured them, while others were whipped "nearly to death." They also punished civilians who were judged to be Loyalists, but less severely.

    "One of the incidents recalled by Parks had involved "Old Solomon Sparks," whom he described as "a celebrated Tory." He and several other men from Captain Lenore's Company were determined to punish Solomon for his Tory sentiments, but they knew that he was aware of this danger and was usually armed. In order to entice him out of his house unarmed, Parks reca lled how he and his comrades had "employed a Whig from a distant neighborhood and a stranger to said Old Tory, to decoy him out of his house without his gun under the pretence of being a traveller & inquiring the Road." Parks stated that the stranger "succeeded admirably" and that Solomon had, indeed, stepped outside his house unarmed to point the way for the stranger.

    "The soldiers, who had been hiding, then grabbed Solomon. "He fought bravely without arms," Parks admitted with a certain degree of admiration, and in the fracas, Solomon had "considerably injured this applicant by kicking him." The soldiers had succeeded in overpowering Solomon Sparks, however, and "he was sent down the Yadkin in a Canoe...tied hand and foot, on his back. " Although Solomon's plight must have been quite precarious, Parks recalled that "he repeatedly hallowed 'hurra for King George'," as he floated helplessly downstream. (See Park's Revolutionary War Pension File, W27456; BLWt. 53670-150-55 at the National Archives.)

    "Who finally rescued Solomon Sparks we do not know, but he did survive his ordeal for he was still living in 1788 when he sold to his brother, Jonas, the last of his land in the Forks of the Yadkin."

    In 1749, Solomon Sparks signed a petition, with others, for the establishment of a road from their new church in the Linganore Creek area of Frederick County to "Baltimoretown" and "Annapolistown." See PIONEERS OF OLD MONOCACY, The Early Settlement of Frederick County, Maryland, 1721-1743, Grace L. Tracey & John P. Dern, pg 102-3.

    http://www.sparksfamilytree.net/ghtout/npr561.html#H02936


    Residence:
    "If Solomon Sparks and his wife Sarah were living in Frederick County, Maryland, as late as June 20, 1753, as this deed would indicate , then their son John, born February 25, 1753, was born in Frederick County, Maryland, rather than in Rowan County, North Carolina, and was carried to North Carolina as a babe in arms. Although we cannot be sure of the exact date, it is reasonably certain that Solomon Sparks removed with his family some time in 1753 to near Salisbury, Rowan County, N.C. (Rowan County was formed April 12,1753, from Anson County.)

    http://www.sparksfamilytree.net/ghtout/npr561.html#H02936

    Solomon* married Sarah* Thompson (?) in 1752 in Frederick Co, Maryland. Sarah* was born in 1730 in Frederick, Frederick Co, Maryland; died on 23 Aug 1831 in Carroll Co, Tennessee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Sarah* Thompson (?) was born in 1730 in Frederick, Frederick Co, Maryland; died on 23 Aug 1831 in Carroll Co, Tennessee.
    Children:
    1. Joseph* Sparks was born in 1753 in Frederick Co, Maryland; died in 1820 in Franklin Co, Tennessee.
    2. John Wesley Sparks, Sr was born on 25 Feb 1753 in Rowan Co, North Carolina, or Frederick Co, Maryland; died in 1840 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    3. Reuben Sparks was born about 1755 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 13 Jul 1840 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    4. 2. Solomon Sparks, Jr was born in 1757 in Salisbury, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died after 28 Dec 1817 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    5. Mary Sparks was born about 1759; died after 1780.
    6. Hannah Sparks was born about 1761 in Salisbury, Rowan Co, North Carolina; died in Jul 1822 in Surry Co, North Carolina.
    7. Susannah Sparks was born about 1763; died after 1785.
    8. Abel Sparks was born on 8 Jan 1767 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died in 1823 in Georgia.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Joseph* Sparks, Sr was born about 1690 in Talbot Co, Maryland (son of William* Sparks, Sr (immigrant) and Mrs. Mary* (..) Sparks, (immigrant)); died before May 1749 in Monocacy Area, Frederick Co, Maryland.

    Notes:

    "William Sparks, Jr. had three brothers who, along with himself, were named in their father's will of June 1709. They were George Sparks, born about 1679; John Sparks, born about 1684; and Joseph Sparks, born about 1689 . The elder William Sparks also mentioned a deceased daughter in his will, who had married man named Hynson.

    http://home.inu.net/sadie/sparksancestry.htm

    --

    Joseph Sparks, youngest son of William Sparks, Sr. who died in 1709.]

    "Joseph Sparks, son of William and Mary ( ----- ) Sparks, was born about 1690 in Talbot County, Maryland. He was not "of age" (that is, age 21 years) when his father made his will on June 21, 1709, in Queen Annes County. From his father, he inherited (along with his brother, William Sparks, Jr.) a share of two tracts of land in Queen Annes County called "Hills Adventure" and "Sparks Outlet." The inherited tracts, located on Island Creek, were also to be shared with another brother, John Sparks, if he (John) became dispossessed of another legacy of land left to him by his father. In addition, the will specified that in the event that Joseph Sparks died before coming of age, his share of the land was to go to his brother, William Sparks, Jr. Joseph was also given one yearling heifer under the terms of his father's will.

    "The legacy of land (referred to in the paragraph, above) which William Sparks, Sr. had given by his will to his son, John Sparks, was a 249-acre tract called "Highgate" or more completely "Harden & Highgate." William Sparks, Sr. had purchased the land on February 2, 1707, from John and Elizabeth Hamer for 22,000 pounds of tobacco; however, there seemed to have been doubt as to whether Hamer had the right to sell this land. In the event that it was found that Hamer had no right to sell it, William Sparks asked his heirs to return the land to Hamer and then for them to make provision for John to share equally in the land which he (William, Sr.) had given to his sons, William, Jr. and Joseph.

    "Apparently the title to "Harden & Highgate" was not clear, and on March 15, 1716, William Sparks, Jr. and John Sparks returned the land to Hamer. It also seems apparent that in the exchange of the various tracts of land, Joseph Sparks was given a portion (100 acres) of a 250-acre tract of land called "Sparks Choice" to replace his equity in the two tracts of land ("Sparks Outlet" and "Hills Adventure") willed to him and his brother, William, Jr., by their father.

    "Three years later, on March 21, 1719, Joseph Sparks (designated in the deed as "planter") sold his share (100 acres) of "Sparks Choice" to Augustine Thompson. The consideration was 3,000 pounds of tobacco. John Whittington and James Earle witnessed the transaction, and Joseph Sparks conveyed the land by signing the deed by mark. Since he conveyed the land by himself, it seems obvious that he had no wife at that time. (Augustine Thompson was mentioned a number of times in land transactions of the Sparks brothers; he was obviously a neighbor and a fellow member of St. Lukels Parish Church in Queen Annes County. The parish register shows his marriage to Elizabeth Ball on November 17, 1729. He died there on February 26, 1738, according to the register.)

    "We have found no record pertaining to Joseph Sparks during the period from 1719 to 1738. From the estimated ages of some of his children, we assume that he was married about 1725, probably when he was about 35 years old. His wife's name was Mary, but we have not learned her maiden name. Apparently, she and Joseph continued to live in Queen Annes County after their marriage, and it was there that a son, William Sparks, was born to them on April 27, 1738. He was baptized on June 4, 1738, according to an early register of St. Luke's Parish in Queen Annes County. (There is a possibility that Mary was the second wife of Joseph Sparks. This possibility will be discussed more fully later in this article.)

    "Joseph Sparks had a nephew, William Sample Sparks, who was a son (probably the eldest son) of Joseph's brother, William Sparks, Jr. There were only a few years difference in the ages of Joseph and William Sample Sparks, probably ten at the most, and there appears to have been a close personal friendship as well as the family relationship between them. This bond apparently was handed down to other members of their families whose lives also became entwined for several generations.

    "One of the first indications of a close friendship between Joseph and William Sample is shown by their departures from Queen Annes County. William Sample Sparks left the county prior to 1736, as related by Dr. Russell E. Bidlack on page 3487 of the December 1989 issue of the QUARTERLY. Joseph followed his nephew some time after the birth of his (Joseph's) son in 1738. He probably used a ferry at Kent Island to cross Chesapeake Bay to the community of Annapolis and then moved westward, with the aid of a horse-drawn cart, to the general area of Pipe Creeks (Big and Little) where he settled near his nephew. (See the map of this area in Frederick County, Maryland, on page 3488 of the QUARTERLY of December 1989.)

    "Joseph Sparks died in the spring of 1749. He was a relatively young man and was probably stricken suddenly since he apparently had no opportunity to make a will. He left his wife, Mary, with a household of children, probably ranging in ages from a few years to adulthood.

    "The Frederick County Court appointed Mary Sparks, widow of Joseph, to be administratrix of his estate and designated two neighbors, Joseph Wood and William Carmack, to take an inventory of his property. As recorded on pages 22-23 of the Frederick County Inventory Book A, No. 1, the inventory amounted to nearly 85 pounds. It was presented to the court on June 21, 1749, by Mary Sparks. A transcription follows:

    Inventory of Joseph Sparks - Frederick County, Maryland, 1749
    Liber A #1 Folio 22-23
    An inventory of the Goods and Chattels Rights and Credits of Joseph Sparks, Late of Frederick County, Deceased, viz:
    £ S d

    To his Wearing Apparil @ 1 10 0
    To three old feather Beds and some bed Cloaths
    and three old bed steds @ 10 0 0
    To some putor and some Earthin Ware @ 1 10 0
    To three Iron Potts and two Pott Hooks @ 2 15 0
    To one Iron Kittle and one Iron Skillet @ 0 10 0
    To one Washing Tub, three pailes and
    some wooden ware @ 0 10 0
    To one old Chest and old Wooden Lumber @ 0 15 0
    To three Books, one pr Wool Cards and
    one Glass Bottle @ 0 10 0
    To some wool and Two Bells @ 2 5 0
    To thirteen head of Cattle, young and old @ 24 0 0
    To two Horses, one mare and one
    two-year Horse Colt @ 18 0 0
    To fifteen head of Sheep, young and old @ 5 2 6
    To fourty four head of Swine, young
    and old @ 10 0 0
    To one plow, plowshares and colter
    and three cleavises @ 1 10 0
    To one old Loom, one old Woollen Wheel
    and two old Linnen Wheels @ 1 15 0
    To one old Saddle and Bridle and two
    Green Hides @ 1 0 0
    To two old Axes, two Iron Wedges, one
    frow and one iron Pott @ 1 5 0
    To a Pair of old Stilyards, two old Weeding
    Hoes and some old Iron @ 1 0 0
    To a old Cart and a short Iron Chain @ 1 0 0
    ==============================[marked out]===========
    To Cash Received for furr belonging to
    ye Deceased @ 1 2 4

    Total 84 19 10

    Appraised by us the Subscribers this first day of May 1749,

    Witness our hands--

    [signed] Jos. Wood
    11 William Carmack

    Creditors Duvalt X Young Creditor to the state of
    Joseph Sparks one pound and for
    [signed] Osborn Sprigg

    Kinn William Sample Sparks his mark +
    Rachell Sparks her mark \

    "On the 21st of June 1749, Mary Sparks admrx of Joseph Sparks, late of Frederick County Deceased, made Oath on the Holy Evangelists of Almighty God that the within Inventory is a Just and perfect one of all and Singular the Goods and Chattels of the said Deceased that came to her hands and possession at the time of the making thereof; that what hath since or shall hereafter come to her hands possession or knowledge, she will return in an Additional Inventory; that she knows of no concealment of any part or parcel thereof by any person or persons whomsoever; that if she shall hereafter discover any concealment or suspect any to be, she will acquaint the Commissary General for the time being or his Deputy with such discovery or Cause of Suspicion that it may be enquired into; and that she will well and Truly give an Account of all and Every Part of the Deceaseds Personal Estate that shall come to her hands, posession or knowledge.
    Sworn before me, [signed] John Darnall, Depy Comy Fredk County.

    Account of Joseph Sparks -- Frederick County, Maryland, 1749
    Liber 24 Folio 214
    The account of Mary Sparks admintx of Joseph Sparks, Decd. The said
    Accountant chargeth herself Debtor with the amount of her Decd Husbands
    Estate as pr Inventory amounting to in Current money And humbly prays allowance for the following payments & disbursements pr
    Payd Mr. Dudley Digges for his father John Digges as Pounds Shill. Pence
    pr acct proved & Receipt appears the acct not proved
    in time but she knows it to be justly due 1 8 1
    Payd David Young as pr receipt appears and acct
    proved 1 0 4
    Payd Osborn Sprigg Sheriff as pr acct proved &
    receipt appears Tobo 563 lbs. which at 12 s 6 per
    centum is at 4 shillings cash 3 14 4
    Payd Robert Gorman pr receipt appears & she
    declares to be just due 0 8 0
    Payd Daniel Brook as pr account proved & receipt
    appears 0 2 6
    Payd Jos. Wood for appraising her husbands Estate
    as pr receipt 0 5 0
    Payd William Carmack for Do as pr receipt 0 5 0
    Payd John Hamilton as pr receipt & she declares to
    be justly due 0 7 0
    To Drawing & stating this account 0 5 0
    To my Commission on 7 pds. 15 sh. 3 pence 0 14 1
    ____________________
    8 9 4

    "Nov. 20th 1749. Came the above named Mary Sparks admintx afsd before me the subscriber Deputy Comsary the County afsd & made oath on the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God that the above account is just & true which after examination is passed & allowed pr me.
    [signed] John Darnall, Depty Comy.

    "The older children of the large family of Joseph Sparks had reached maturity
    by the time of their father's death, and some of them were married and had already begun to establish families of their own. They had also heard stories of the cheap, fertile lands available to setters in the western sections of the American colonies where no quitrents were charged. It is obvious that they were impatient for a final settlement and distribution of their share of their father's personal estate. Apparently their impatience was expressed to the Frederick County Court in the spring or early summer of 1750. When the Court convened at its regular August term, the justices approved the following memorandum:

    "August 1750. Page 64. Memorandum this day towit:

    "The twenty-second day of August Anno Dom Seventeen Hundred and Fifty: Mary Sparks, Col. Henry Munday and Thomas Wilson (Toms Creek) of Frederick County entered into and executed a certain writing obligatory in One Hundred and Fifty Three Pounds, one Shilling, current money, to be paid unto Solomon, Joseph, Charles, Jonas, Jonathan, William, George, Merum, Mary, Ann, Rebecca and Sarah Sparks on Condition that the above bounden Mary Sparks, or some person on her behalf, shall and do well and truly satisfy and pay unto the above named Solomon, Joseph, Charles, Jonas, Jonathan, William, George, Merum, Mary, Ann, Rebecca and Sarah Sparks, their executors, administrators, assigns or lawful guardian or guardians their respective parts or portions of Joseph Sparks, deceased, his estate according to Acts of Assembly in such cases made and provided.

    "[It should be noted in the above document that the figure of 153 pounds and one shilling current money referred to the amount of the bond agreed to by Mary Sparks, Col. Munday, and Thomas Wilson to assure compliance with this court order; this was not the amount of Joseph Sparks's estate.]

    "The apparent impatience of at least some of Joseph Sparks's children to obtain their share of their father's estate may only suggest that they were making immediate plans to leave Frederick County. On the other hand, their action could suggest some sort of alienation between them and Mary Sparks, Joseph's widow. One wonders whether, perhaps, Mary could have been a second wife and thus the step-mother of Joseph's oldest children. We know that there was a considerable spread in the ages of Joseph's children, with the son named William (who had been baptized in Queen Annes County in 1738) only about 11 years old when his father died. Might the reason Joseph had no wife to co-sign his deed in 1719 have been that he was even then a widower?

    "A widow left with small children was not usually required to distribute immediately her late husband's estate among his heirs in instances where he had left no will. Furthermore, there was not a great deal to divide among twelve children. Joseph owned no land at the time of his death, and the estimated value of his personal property came to only 84 pounds, 19 shillings, and 10 pence. The payment of debts and the costs of probating the estate (8 pounds, 9 shillings, and 4 pence) further reduced this total to 76 pounds, 10 shillings, and 6 pence. In the absence of a will, the law provided that a widow should receive one third of her late husband's estate. Assuming that there had been a public sale and that the articles inventoried brought the amounts estimated to be their value by the appraisers of the estate, this would would have left slightly over 51 pounds in "current money" to be divided by 12, resulting in 4 pounds and 5 shillings per child. When, for example, we compare this figure with the appraised value of Joseph's mare and two-year-old colt, which was 24 pounds, we realize how relatively little only 4 pounds and 5 shillings could purchase. Considering, also, in what a difficult strait this distribution must have left Mary, we can find, perhaps, the children's action to be more understandable if Mary were their stepmother rather than their mother. There is also the possibility, of course, that the older children of Joseph Sparks expected his widow to marry again rather soon. We have no information regarding a second marriage of Mary Sparks, but we are aware that youthful widows did often marry a second time rather quickly.

    "The two men appointed to prepare the inventory of the estate left by Joseph Sparks (Joseph Wood and William Carmack) were chosen from among his neighbors, as was the custom. To perform such service, it was not only necessary that they be men who were known to be good judges of property values, but they also had to be able to write in a clear hand. Wood and Carmack were each paid five shillings for their service on this occasion.

    "Joseph Wood, whose wife's name was Mary, was known as "Joseph Wood of Linganore" to distinguish him from another Frederick County resident known as "Joseph Wood of Israells Creek." Joseph Wood of Linganore had acquired a tract of land in 1748 which he named "Wood's Lot." It was located a half-mile from present day Unionville according to PIONEERS OF OLD MONOCACY, THE EARLY SETTLEMENT OF FREDERICK COUNTY, MARYLAND, 1721-1743, by Grace L. Tracey and John P. Dern, published in 1987. It is noted on page 103 of this book that "some of the buildings built by Wood [on "Wood's Lot"] were still standing in 1956, on Wilbur Baker's farm.11 At a meeting of the Frederick County Court in November 1751, "Joseph Wood of Linganore was appointed overseer of the Middle
    Part of the Road from Thomas Beatty's to Baltimore." (See p. 88 of THIS WAS
    THE LIFE, EXCERPTS FROM THE JUDGMENT RECORDS OF FREDERICK COUNTY,
    MARYLAND, 1748-1765, by Millard Rice, 1979.)

    "William Carmack (1716-1776), the other neighbor who helped prepare the inventory, was a son of Cornelius Carmack who had died in 1748, just a year before Joseph Sparks's death. This family had come to Frederick County from Cecil County, Maryland, prior to 1742. William Carmack's wife's name was Jane. They were living where the town of Liberty now stands when he helped prepare the inventory of Joseph Sparks's property in 1749. (See pp. 103-04 of PIONEERS OF OLD MONOCACY.)

    "It was a requirement in the Province of Maryland that the inventory of an estate be signed not only by the men making the inventory, but also by the two major creditors of the estate and by two "kinn" of the deceased. The "kinn" were supposed to be the closest relatives who were not heirs to the estate, brothers and sisters, as well as brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law, often performing this service. No brothers or sisters were living near Joseph Sparks when he died, however, so a nephew, William Sample Sparks, signed as "kinn," as did also a Rachell Sparks. We believe that Rachell was the wife of William Sample Sparks. Both signed by mark. Joseph's father, William Sparks (died 1709), always signed his name by mark, as did Joseph and his brothers and most of their children. This does not necessarily mean, however, that they could not read. It is interesting to note that among the possessions of Joseph Sparks were three books, even though both he and Mary signed their names by mark.

    "The two chief creditors of Joseph Sparks who signed the inventory were Duvalt Young and Osborn Sprigg. Young signed by mark, which means that someone else wrote his name. Because in the final settling of debts owed by Joseph's estate, Young's name appears as "David Young," we believe that David was his correct name, not "Duvalt," and that he was the David Young identified in PIONEERS OF OLD MONOCACY as one of the early German settlers in Frederick County (p. 350). Why Joseph Sparks owed David Young 1 pound and 4 pence is not known.

    "Osborn Sprigg, the other chief creditor, was identified as "Sheriff" when Mary Sparks paid the 3 pounds, 14 shillings, and 4 pence owed to him. (Tobacco being the chief medium of exchange in colonial Maryland, through documents proving ownership of tobacco stored in warehouses, it is interesting to note that this amount of current money was equivalent to 563 pounds of tobacco.) Osborn Sprigg, son of Thomas, Jr. and Margaret (Mariarte) Sprigg, first acquired a land grant in 1734 in that part of Prince Georges County that was cut off to form Frederick County in 1748. Sprigg was never a resident of Frederick County, but continued to live in that part of Prince Georges County which remained after Frederick was created in 1748. In 1745, he was one of four men elected to represent Prince Georges County in the General Assembly of Maryland. (See THE MARYLAND GAZETTE of April 26, 1748. ) By 1748, he had become High Sheriff of Prince Georges County, which accounts for his title as used by Mary Sparks in paying her husband's debt to him.

    "Osborn Sprigg owned several tracts of land in Frederick County and was thus an absentee landlord. At a meeting of the Frederick County Court in November 1749, the Court contracted with Sprigg "to keep a ferry at the mouth of Monocacy until the end of next November Court." The Court agreed to pay him 7,200 pounds of tobacco for this service. We can be sure, however, that he engaged someone to operate the ferry for him. It was in November 1749 that Mary Sparks paid Osborn Sprigg the amount owed him by her deceased husband, and it was then also that he agreed to operate the ferry at the mouth of the Monocacy River. On January 5, 1750, however, he died. His widow, Rachel Sprigg, was appointed administratrix of his estate. (See THE MARYLAND GAZETTE of January 10, 1750, and April 11, 1750.)

    "Although Joseph Sparks owned no land in Frederick County, the inventory of his personal estate reveals that he owned a considerable amount of livestock, consisting of cattle, horses, sheep, and swine, along with some basic farming machinery. We can only conclude that he occupied land owned by someone else, doubtless paying rent for its use. (In Colonial Maryland, all land was owned by the Lord Proprietor and, although grants were made by his office to individuals, persons obtaining such grants were not only required to pay "caution money" at the time of the acquisition, but also an annual quitrent. When the land was sold to another party, an "alienation flne" was assessed. Such land could be inherited, but in the absence of heirs, it reverted to the Lord Proprietor.)

    "It seems probable that Joseph Sparks had lived on and cultivated land in Frederick County which belonged to Osborn Sprigg, paying him annual rent, which would, then, explain the fact that Sprigg was one of the chief creditors of Joseph Sparks (in the amount of 563 pounds of tobacco, or 3 pounds, 14 shillings, and 4 pence).

    "Perhaps there is a similar explanation for Joseph Sparks's debt to John Digges. As seen in her account of expenditures for the estate, Mary Sparks made a payment from her husband's estate in the amount of 1 pound, 8 shillings, and 1 pence to "Mr. Dudley Digges for his father John Digges."

    "John Digges was both a land investor and a land speculator in Western Maryland. As described in PIONEERS OF OLD MONOCACY (p. 42), Digges "was a man of somewhat doubtful honor"; he sold land on occasion to which he did not have a legal title. As a grandson of Governor Edward Digges of Virginia, John Digges had obtained warrants for thousands of acres of land which he claimed entitled him to most of northern and western Maryland. In 1732, the Maryland Assembly was informed that Digges claimed all the vacant land on the Monocacy and its branches. John Digges died not long after Mary Sparks paid his son, Dudley, the amount owed by Joseph Sparks. The legal tangles left by John Digges continued to embroil his family in disputes, however, and "in 1752 Dudley Digges was killed in a battle between contesting groups."

    "We have not succeeded in identifying Robert Gorman, Daniel Brook, and John Hamilton to whom Mary Sparks paid small amounts from Joseph's estate. They were probably workman from the area who performed such services as digging Joseph's grave and providing a coffin.

    "The children of Joseph Sparks were probably not named in the Memorandum reproduced on pages 3557-58 in the exact order of their births, although we feel fairly certain that Solomon and Joseph were among the oldest of the family. We have found no further record pertaining to any of the five daughters; however, we have been able to follow the lives of all of the seven sons for several years after the settlement of their father's estate. As noted earlier, no further record has been found of Mary Sparks, widow of Joseph.

    Following are the references to Joseph's sons as recorded in THE SPARKS QUARTERLY:

    1. Solomon Sparks married Sarah ------ and they went to Rowan County, North Carolina. See the December 1955 and the December 1989 issues of the QUARTERLY, Whole Nos. 12 and 148, respectively.

    2. Joseph Sparks married Mary McDaniel, and they lived in Frederick County, Maryland, until about 1800 when he went to Bedford County, Pennsylvania. See the March 1955 issue of the QUARTERLY, Whole No. 9; the December 1960 issue, Whole No. 32; the September 1961 issue, Whole No. 35; the September 1986 issue, Whole No. 135; and the December 1986 issue, Whole No. 136.

    3. Charles Sparks married Margaret ------ and they went to Bedford County, Pennsylvania, then on to Washington County. See the June 1963 issue of the QUARTERLY, Whole No. 42.

    4. George Sparks married Mary ------ and they went to Washington County, Pennsylvania. See the June 1963 issue of the QUARTERLY, Whole No. 42.

    5. Jonas Sparks married a woman whose name we have not learned, and they went to Rowan County, North Carolina. See the March 1964 issue of the QUARTERLY, Whole No. 45.

    6. Jonathan Sparks probably went to Rowan County, North Carolina, and was probably the Jonathan Sparks who entered land there in 1761.

    7. William Sparks married Martha Moore, and they went to Washington County, Pennsylvania. See the June 1963 issue of the QUARTERLY, Whole No. 42; the March 1984 issue, Whole No. 125; and the June 1984 issue, Whole No.
    126.

    "Col. Henry Munday who, with Thomas Wilson, entered into the August 1750 obligation of Mary Sparks to divide her husband's estate among his heirs, had obtained his first grants of land in the Monocacy Valley in 1738 near the mouth of Pipe Creek where it flows into the Monocacy River. (See the map on page 3488 of the December 1989 issue of the QUARTERLY, Whole No. 148.) When Frederick County was separated from its parent, Prince Georges County, in 1748, Munday was chosen to be one of the five justices to manage the legal affairs of the new county. He was also an officer in the Maryland Militia. Munday died early in 1751. (See P. 333 of PIONEERS OF OLD MONOCACY.)

    "Thomas Wilson, the other individual named in 1750 to assure that each heir of Joseph Sparks received his/her proper share of the estate, was identified as a resident of Tom's Creek. Tom's Creek flows into the Monocacy River a short distance above the mouth of Pipe Creek. He was appointed one of Frederick County's 21 constables in November 1753.

    There appears an article in This Was The Life by Millard Milburn Rice, published by the Monocacy Book Company, Redwood City, California, 1979, containing excerpts from the Judgment Records of Frederick County, Maryland 1748-1765 as follows:
    The August Court of 1750 met on the third Tuesday and 21st day of August "in the thirty-sixth year of HIs Lordship's Dominion."
    "Memorandum: ....Mary Sparks, Col. Henry Munday and Thomas Wilson (Tom;'s Creek) of Frederick County entered into .... a certain writing obligatory in £153/1/ - current money to be paid unto Solomon, Joseph, Charles, Jonas, Jonathan, William, George, Merum, Mary, Ann, Rebecca and Sarah Sparks" on condition that Mary Sparks [obviously the executrix] pay to the above-mentioned beneficiaries "their respective parts or portions of Joseph Sparks, deceased, his estate, according to Act of Assembly in such cases made and provided."
    http://www.sparksfamilytree.net/ghtout/npr443.html#H02321

    Joseph* married Mary (..) Sparks, (2nd wife?)Queen Anne's Co, Maryland. Mary was born in 1695 in Frederick Co, Maryland; died after 1749 in Frederick Co, Maryland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary (..) Sparks, (2nd wife?) was born in 1695 in Frederick Co, Maryland; died after 1749 in Frederick Co, Maryland.
    Children:
    1. 4. Solomon* Sparks, Sr was born in 1725 in Queen Anne's Co, Maryland; died in 1790 in Wilkes Co, North Carolina.
    2. Charles Sparks was born about 1730 in Frederick Co, Maryland (probably); died about 1771.
    3. Joseph Sparks, Jr was born about 1732 in Frederick Co, Maryland; died after 1800.
    4. Jonas Sparks was born in 1727 in Frederick, Frederick Co, Maryland; died on 11 May 1805 in Rowan Co, North Carolina.
    5. Jonathan Sparks was born about 1736 in Maryland; died after 1761.
    6. William (Sample?) Sparks was born on 27 Apr 1738 in Frederick Co, Maryland (probably); died after 1760 in North Carolina.
    7. George Sparks was born about 1740 in Maryland; died after 1761.
    8. Merum Sparks was born about 1742; died after 1742.
    9. Mary Sparks was born about 1744; died after 1745.
    10. Ann Sparks was born about 1746 in Maryland; died about 1747.
    11. Rebecca Sparks was born about 1748 in Maryland; died after 1749.
    12. Sarah Sparks was born about 1749 in Maryland; died after 1750.