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Samuel Bryan

Male 1756 - 1837  (80 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Samuel Bryan was born on 6 May 1756 in Rowan Co, North Carolina (son of William "Billy" Bryan and Mary Boone); died on 4 Mar 1837 in Southport, Marion Co, Indiana.

    Samuel married Mary Isabel Hunt on 5 Oct 1775 in Rowan Co, North Carolina. Mary was born on 9 Apr 1759 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 9 Aug 1842 in Southport, Marion Co, Indiana. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Hampton Bryan was born on 13 May 1795 in Grants Lick, Campbell Co, Kentucky; died on 19 Sep 1844 in Grants Lick, Campbell Co, Kentucky.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William "Billy" Bryan was born on 7 Mar 1733 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania (son of Morgan Bryan and Martha Strode); died on 7 May 1780 in Bryan Settlement, Elkhorn Creek, Fayette Co, Kentucky.

    Notes:

    Killed by Indians

    James Bryan, Morgan Bryan, Jr., and William Bryan accompanied Daniel Boone on his ill fated attempt to colonize Kentucky in 1773.

    William married Mary Boone in 1755 in Rowan Co, North Carolina. Mary (daughter of Squire Boone, I and Sarah Morgan) was born on 14 Nov 1736; died in 1819. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Boone was born on 14 Nov 1736 (daughter of Squire Boone, I and Sarah Morgan); died in 1819.
    Children:
    1. 1. Samuel Bryan was born on 6 May 1756 in Rowan Co, North Carolina; died on 4 Mar 1837 in Southport, Marion Co, Indiana.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Morgan Bryan was born in 1671 in Denmark (son of Francis Bryan, III and Sarah Brinker); died on 3 Apr 1763 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    Morgan Bryan, born in Denmark in 1671, Morgan was named for his grandmother and was 12 years old when he moved with his family to Ireland, land of his father's birth. He lived in Ireland for the next 12 years and as a young man of 24 migrated o Pennsylvania in 1695 with his brother William, two years after the death of their father. They first seettled in Chester County and lived here for many years. They might have made contact with their many uncles and aunts who had been in Virginia since 1650, but we have no evidence that they did.

    Morgan marrtied Martha Strode. She was reported to have been born in Holland about 1678 (a date we question) and her father was probably Edward Strode, a descendant of a famous English family. Edward was a Protestant exile in Holland and was married in France to a Huguenot. It is believed that edward and his wife died at sea on their way to America and that young Martha together with two brothers, Geremiah and Samuel were bound out until they were of age. This event probably occurred before 24 September 1697 because the will of Edward's father on that date refers to his son as deceased. The marriage date of Morgan and Martha is in question. Once source states 1695 when she would have bene 17, which supposedly was two years before she arrived in Pennsylvania, and another source states 1719, when she would have bene 41, too old to have later had nine children. Since the first child was born about 1719, it is our guess that the birthdate given is too early by at least ten years. It must also be noted that if Morgan's birthdate is correct, he would have been 48 years old when his first child was orn. This is possible, and Martha also could have been his second wife.

    Eight of their nine children were born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, and as a member of the New Garden Quaker community, Morgan had been a successful trader with the Conestoga Indians.

    In 1730, Quakers in Pennsylvania formed a Company under the leadership of Morgan Bryan and Alexander Ross for the purpose of making settlements in Maryland and Virginia. Permission was then gained from the quaker Meeting of Chester County to build a meeting house in Virginia. On 28 October 1730, Governor Gooch of Virginia granted a right to survey and lay out 100,000 acres west of the Opeckon River (just north of present day Winchester, Frederick, County). In 1734, Morgan led a group of Quakers in the building the "Hopewell Monthly Meeting" of Frederick. This settlement flourished for many years at Frederick Town, later named Winchester. Here, where their last child was born, the family lived for over ten years, and son Joseph was first married.

    1734 petition for two more meeting houses (Presbyterian) one near Morgan Bryan's home; (this petition was signed by James Cole and William Rentfroe)

    Sometime about 1745/46 Morgan moved with his wife and eight children up the Shenandoah Valley to the Big Lick at the head of the Roanoke River where land was more plentiful. His oldest son, Joseph, who by now had a family of his own, stayed in Winchester. The family did not like this new area in Roanoke County and in the fall of 1748 they all moved again to the Forks of the Yadkin in North Carolina. Morgan's brother William who had always lived close by up to this point decided to stay in Roanoke County Virginia where he presumably died.

    "Morgan Bryan, the first to travel this way, had to take the wheels off his wagon and carry it piecemeal to the top, and had been three months on the journey from the Shanidore [Shenandoah] to the Etkin [Yadkin]." http://www.americanhistory.com/history/COSW/COSW02.mgi

    As some of the earliest settlers in this part of the Yadkin River Valley, Morgan, Martha and eight of their children selected the choice pieces of land in an area that was afterward called "The Bryan Settlement." Their nearest neighbors were about 60 miles away. The Bryans claimed large acreages in Rowan County, parts of which are now in Wilkes County, and some 5000 areas in the northeast section of what is now Davie County, from Dutchman
    s Creek into Farmington, Smiths Grove, and the Bend of the River sections of the county.

    Morgan lived here for the rest of his life surrounded by his family. Martha died first, the date and place require explanation. Most early biographers of the family state that Martha Strode Bryan died in Virginia in 1747, but in teh Bryan Papers deposited by the Rev. John D. Shane with the Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia, is the following:

    Martha Bryan died August 24, 1762
    Allenor Bryan died Oct 21, 1772
    Morgan Bryan died Apr 3, 1763, Easter Sunday

    These records given to Lyman Draper are a part of the "Shane Collection: Bryan Family Papers; MS/SH18/B84, Item 2." This document is more likely to reflect the true record of Martha's death since Morgan Bryan did die 3 April 1763 in Rowan County, North Carolina at age 92 and left a will dated 28 March, recorded in Will Book A, Page 13 as follows:

    "I Morgan Bryan of Rowan County living in perfect mind and memory, blessed be God for his mercies, so dispose of my worledly estate as follows, vis. first, I give and bequeath unto my beloved son Thomas Bryan my mansion house and plantation, also my part of a Negro boy named Jack, also my wagon and wagon horse called Black and the necessaries belonging to the wagon and my plow and utensils thereunto. Two brood mares, viz. a mare called Brown Dent and her yeard and her colt, a cow called Josie and her calf and one called Brown and her calf; also my bed and furniture after my decease reserving a sufficient living for me from the land while I live. Second, I give and beqeueath unto my beloved daughter Elinor Linville all my wife's wearing apparel. I give and bequeath unto my granddaughter Mary Forbes my great pot and five shillings Sterling. Eight pounds proclamatin to my beloved sone James Bryan. I reserve for my funeral charages and sickness. I give and bequeath Joseph, Samuel, Morgan, John William, James and Thomas and my daughter Elinor Linville all the rest of my real and personal estate to be equally divided amongst them, together with that part of my estate which they have already received. I do nominate and appoint my beloved sons John Bryan and William Bryan to be Executors ratifyng and confirming this and no other to be my last will and testament, whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this March 28, 1763.

    Morgan Bryan"

    Signed, Sealed, Published and Pronounced by the testator in presence of us - Morgan Bryan Jr., Anthony Heaverloe, Mary (X) Forbes: Proved July Court 1763.


    -----------------------------------

    Morgan Bryan was also discussed in the historic records of Alexander Ross (see the Individual Page for Alexander Ross in this file):
    Alexander was taxed from 1718-1730 in West Nottingham Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. He and Morgan Bryan petitioned the Council of the Colony of Virginia on 28 October 1730 that there were 100 families desirous of settling in Virginia and requested 100,000 acres on the west and north side of "Opeckon" to the North Mountain and along the River Cohongarooton (Potomac River). With the advice of the Council, the Governor gave permission to Ross and Bryan to take up the 100,000 acres; patents would be granted, providing that the 100 families were present and dwelling upon the land within two years.
    ...

    Alexander (b. 1682 c.) sold a 214-acre section of patent land . . . to Joseph Bryan on 12 April 1744. (son of Morgan Bryan)
    ...

    Frederick County, Virginia, Hopewell Friends History [database online], Orem, UT: Ancestry.com, 1997:

    In the State Land Office at Richmond are to be found recorded in Book 16, pages 315-415, inclusive, the patents issued to the settlers who came to the Shenandoah Valley under authority of the Orders in Council made to Alexander Ross and Morgan Bryan. All bear date of November 12, 1735, and recite that the grantee is one of the seventy families brought in by them, and excepting location and acreage, are alike in wording and conditions, and are signed by William Gooch, Lieutenant-Governor of the Colony at that time. . . .

    These patents were issued under the seal of the colony and were grants from the Crown, free of any obligation of feudal services to the Fairfax family, who claimed the land as lords proprietors of the Northern Neck of Virginia. The sixth Lord Fairfax, who later established his home at Greenway Court near Winchester, instituted many suits against early settlers in the Shenandoah Valley, but it does not appear that any Friend who claimed under Ross and Bryan was ever ejected from his land.

    Although it is specifically stated that seventy families have been "by them brought in to our said Colony and settled upon the Lands in the said Order mentioned," only thirty-six patents issued to thirty-four grantees have been found. The names of these grantees are here given, together with sundry information gathered from the minutes of various Friends' meetings, from the records of the counties of Orange and Frederick in Virginia, and Chester County, Pennsylvania.
    ...
    The Frederick County records show but one conveyance (from Alexander Ross) &, (Deed Book 1, page 75), and that is to Joseph Bryan, son of his partner Morgan Bryan, to whom he sells 214 acres on April 13, 1744. No other sales appear in the records, and as he bought no additional land, he could hardly be considered a speculator in land, as some have claimed.
    ...
    The identity of all 70 families who settled in Frederick County, VA by 1735, in the geographic area of the Bryan-Ross land order, is unknown to the compiler. However, each person listed below was a grantee in at least one patent dated November 12, 1735 to real estate in this area:
    7. Bryan, Morgan, Sr.

    (5) Following is a listing, in page number order in VA Patent Book 16, of the 40 patents which were executed and delivered on November 12, 1935 to members of the "70 families" who settled in Frederick County, VA by 1735, in the geographic area of the Bryan-Ross land order:

    1. Pp. 315-318, Morgan Bryan, 400 acres
    2. Pp. 318-320, Morgan Bryan, 264 acres

    18. Pp. 356-359, Morgan Bryan, 450 acres
    29. Pp. 390-382, Morgan Bryan, 1,020 acres

    7. Bryan, Morgan, Sr. - By most accounts, Morgan Bryan was born in Denmark, about 1671, of English-Irish parentage, and came to America from northern Ireland in 1695 at the age of 24 years. The earliest known record on Bryan is the listing of his name on a 1719 tax roll in Chester County, PA. The migration pattern of the Bryan family was from Chester County, PA to VA.

    Morgan married Martha Strode in 1719 in Chester, Pennsylvania. Martha was born in 1678 in Holland; died on 29 Aug 1762 in Bryans Station, Rowan Co, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Martha Strode was born in 1678 in Holland; died on 29 Aug 1762 in Bryans Station, Rowan Co, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    "The family of Strode, which is stated to derive from the Dukes of Bretagne, was founded in England by one of the soldiers of the Conquest, Sir Warinus de la Strode, Lord of Strode, in Dorsetshire, whose immediate successors enjoyed large estats in the counties of Dorset and Somerset England to the eight of whom in direct line we pass."

    There is much written about Colonel William Strode as he was one of five who condemned and ordered the execution of Charles I of England. That seems to be the reason that his family would turn up abroad, as the Restoration would have been unsafe for them had they remained in England. Colonel Strode was buried in Westminster Abbey.

    From: Some Boone Descendants, St. Charles District (MO), by Lillian Hays Oliver.

    Children:
    1. Joseph Bryan, Sr was born in 1720 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1805 in Floyd's Ford, Shelby Co, Kentucky.
    2. Samuel Bryan, Col was born in 1721 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1800.
    3. James Bryan was born on 3 Apr 1732 in Virginia or Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died on 18 Aug 1807 in St.Charles Co, Missouri.
    4. Eleanor (Ellender)^ Bryan was born in 1722 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died on 21 Oct 1772 in Rowan Co, North Carolina or Kentucky.
    5. Morgan Bryan, II was born on 20 May 1728 in Shenandoah Valley, Opequon Creek, Frederick Co, Virginia; died in Jul 1804 in Bourbon Co, Kentucky.
    6. 2. William "Billy" Bryan was born on 7 Mar 1733 in Chester Co, Pennsylvania; died on 7 May 1780 in Bryan Settlement, Elkhorn Creek, Fayette Co, Kentucky.

  3. 6.  Squire Boone, I was born on 25 Nov 1696 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England (son of George Boone, III and Mary Milton Maugridge); died on 2 Jan 1765 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Davie Co, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    Squire Boone came to America in 1713 when he was 18 with a brother and a sister. The three were sent by their father, George Boone of the town of Bradninch, near Exeter, England. The Boones were members of the Society of Friends. The wento the town of Abington, twelve miles north of Philadelphia. (From the book, DANIEL BOONE, by John Mack Faragher in 1992.
    (WFT V 2, 3979)

    -----------

    Squire Boone was born in Bradninch, Exeter, Devonshire, England to George Boone III & Mary Milton Maugridge; he had the following siblings: George Boone IV, Sarah Boone Stover, Mary Boone b. in 1694 d. 1696; Mary Boone b. 1699 d. 1744, John Boone, Joseph Boone, Benjamin Boone, James Boone, & Samuel Boone.

    Squire married Sarah Morgan 23 July 1720 at the Gwynned Meeting of Quakers, Berks Co, Pennsylvania. Squire died 2 January 1765 and Sarah died 1777; both buried at Mocksville, North Carolina.

    They had the following children: Sarah Cassandra, Israel Boone (buried at Joppa Cem.), Samuel, Jonathan, Elizabeth Boone Grant, Daniel Boone (famous pioneer), Jacob, Mary Boone Bryan, George W., Edward, Nathaniel, Squire Boone Jr., and Hannah Boone Stewart Pennington.

    Squire had accompanied his brother George, and his sister, Sarah, to America ahead of their parents.
    (findagrave http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=8318855 )

    Squire married Sarah Morgan on 23 Jul 1720 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania. Sarah (daughter of Edward Morgan, (immigrant) and Margaret Elizabeth Jarman (?)) was born in 1700 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1777 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Sarah Morgan was born in 1700 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania (daughter of Edward Morgan, (immigrant) and Margaret Elizabeth Jarman (?)); died in 1777 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina.
    Children:
    1. Sarah Cassandra Boone was born on 7 Jun 1724 in New Britain Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1815 in Estill Co, Kentucky.
    2. Israel Boone was born on 20 May 1726 in New Britain Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 26 Jun 1756 in Yadkin Valley, North Carolina.
    3. Samuel Boone, Sr was born on 31 May 1728 in New Britain Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1808 in Fayette Co, Kentucky.
    4. Jonathan Boone was born on 6 Dec 1730 in New Britain Twp, Bucks Co, Pennsylvania; died about 1808 in Mt.Carmel, Wabash Co, Illinois.
    5. Elizabeth Boone was born on 16 Feb 1732 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 25 Feb 1825 in Fayette, Kentucky.
    6. Daniel Boone, (the explorer) was born on 2 Nov 1734 in Upper Schuylkill River Valley, Pennsylania; died on 26 Sep 1820 in Charritte Village, St.Charles Co, Missouri.
    7. 3. Mary Boone was born on 14 Nov 1736; died in 1819.
    8. George Boone was born on 13 Jan 1739 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 14 Nov 1820 in Kentucky.
    9. Edward "Ned" Boone was born on 30 Nov 1740 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 6 Oct 1780 in Boonesboro (Blue Licks), Kentucky.
    10. Squire Boone, II was born on 5 Oct 1744 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died in Aug 1815; was buried in Squire Boone Caverns, Mauckport, Harrison Co, Indiana.
    11. Hannah Boone was born on 24 Aug 1746 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; died on 4 Sep 1828.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Francis Bryan, III was born in 1630 in Co Clare, Ireland (son of William Smith Bryan and Catherine Morgan); died in 1693 in Belfast, Co Antrim, Ulster, Ireland.

    Notes:

    Francis Bryan III was born in 1630. Most researchers indicate that he was born in Gloucester, Virginia, but his appears to be in error since both of his parents lived in Ireland until 1650. Francis III no doubt saw the new world for the firt time at about age 20 when the Bryan family was exiled to the Virginia Colony.

    We know nothing about the life of Francis in Virginia, but with the end of the Commonwealth and the reestablishment of the Monarchy under Charles II in 1660, he no doubt felt that it was safe to return to Ireland. Thus, in 1667 after 17 years in Virginia, he left for Ireland with the intent of reclaiming his father's estates. He was 37 years old at this time which gives rise to the possibility that he couldhave been married a first time in Virginia.

    The presence of Francis III in Ireland was anything but welcomed by English officials, and in particular by those now in possession of his father's lands. He was so threatened that he fled to Denmark, which had become a haven for persecuted protestants whose cause had been championed by the Duth Prince of Orange. Francis III soon married Sarah Brinker, a cousin of the Prince of Orange, and their first son, Morgan Bryan, was born in Denmark. He was finally permitted to return to Ireland in 1683.

    Here a little background history will help to understand the future moveemtns of Francis and his family. The Dutch Prince William of Orange married Princess Mary, daughter of King James II of England and though her father was Roman Catholic, she embraced the Protestant cause. The three year rein of James II was one of turmoil and William of Orange and Mary were invited by the protestant controlled Parliament to assume the Throne. One 5 November 1688 William landed at Brixham, Devon, with a sizable army and quickly advanced to London and took the Throne on Christmas Day, and forced James II into exile in France. They officially became King William III and Queen Mary II in February 1689. The deposed King James II did not accept his fate and with the help of the Franch managed to raise a Catholic Irish army. King William's army met the forces of James Ii at the Boyne River about 25 miles north of Dublin and here took place the historic "Battle of the Boyne" on 11 July 1690 where the forces of James II were soundly defeated. Francis Bryan III was a standard bearer to King William in that battle.

    Francis died in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1694, the Country of his birth, and spent much of his adult life fighting to restore his lost heritage. A descendant of the leading families of both England and Ireland, he began his life as a defendant of the Roman Catholic Church and ended as a staunch Protestant. He had lived 31 years in Ireland, 17 years in Virginia, and 15 years in Denmark.

    Francis married Sarah Brinker about 1670. Sarah was born about 1645; died after 1686. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Sarah Brinker was born about 1645; died after 1686.
    Children:
    1. 4. Morgan Bryan was born in 1671 in Denmark; died on 3 Apr 1763 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina.
    2. William Bryan was born in 1685 in Ireland; died in 1789.

  3. 12.  George Boone, III was born in 1666 in Stoak, near Exeter, Devonshire, England; died on 7 Aug 1744 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; was buried in Exeter Friends Cem, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.

    Notes:

    GRANDFATHER OF DANIEL BOONE [There are no grave markers as the Quakers did not believe in them.]

    from the Boone Genealogy as written by James Boone, March 21st, 1788 - now in the archives of the Wisconsin Historical Society:
    George Boone, III, (son of George & Sarah Boone) was born at STOAK (a village near the city of Exeter) in A.D. 1666, being a Weaver; his Wife's Maiden Name was MARY MAUGRIDGE, who was born in BRADNINCH (eight Miles from the City of Exeter) in the Year 1669, being a Daughter of John Maugridge & Mary his Wife whose Maiden Name was MILTON. They (the said George & Mary Boone) had nine Children that lived to be Men and Women: namely, George, Sarah, Squire, Mary, John, Joseph, Benjamin, James & Samuel, having each of them several children, excepting John was was never married. The said George and Mary Boone with their Family, came from the Town of Bradninch in Devonshire, Old-England (which is a Town at 8 miles Distance from the city of Exeter, and 177 measured Miles Westward from London); they left Bradninch the 17 Aug. 1717, and went to Bristol where they took Shipping, and arrived at Philadelphia in 1717 September 19, Old-Stile, or October 10th New-Stile; three of their Children, to wit, George, Sarah & Squire they sent in a few Years before. From Philadelphia they went to Abingdon, and staid a few Months there; thence to North-Wales, and liv'd about 2 Years there; then to Oley in the same County of Philadelphia, where Sarah (being married) had moved to some Time before. This last Place of their Residence (since the Divisions made in the Township of Oley & County of Philadelphia) is called the Township of Exeter in the County of Berks: It was called Exeter, because they came from a Place near the City of Exeter. And, He the said George Boone the Third, died on the Sixth Day of the Week, near 8 o'clock in the morning, on the 27th of July 1744, aged 78 years; and Mary hi wife died on the 2d Day of the Week, on the 2d of February 1740-1, aged 72 years; and were decently interred in Friends Burying-Ground, in the said Township of Exeter. When he died, he left 8 Children, 52 Grand-Children, and 10 Great-Grand-Children, LIVING, in all 70, being as many Persons as the House of Jacob which came into EGYPT.
    (bio by: Alice Huitt Preston)

    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7232409

    George married Mary Milton Maugridge on 16 Aug 1689 in Brandich, Devonshire, England. Mary (daughter of John Maugridge and Mary Milton) was born on 23 Sep 1669 in Bradnich, near Exeter, Devonshire, England; died on 2 Feb 1741 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; was buried in Exeter Friends Cem, Berks Co, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Mary Milton Maugridge was born on 23 Sep 1669 in Bradnich, near Exeter, Devonshire, England (daughter of John Maugridge and Mary Milton); died on 2 Feb 1741 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; was buried in Exeter Friends Cem, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    Children:
    1. George Boone, IV was born on 24 Jul 1690 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England; died on 20 Nov 1753 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; was buried in Exeter Friends Cem, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    2. Sarah Boone was born on 18 Feb 1692; died before 1738 in Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    3. 6. Squire Boone, I was born on 25 Nov 1696 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England; died on 2 Jan 1765 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Davie Co, North Carolina.
    4. Mary Boone was born on 23 Sep 1699 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England; died on 16 Jan 1774 in Rowan Co, North Carolina.
    5. John Boone was born on 14 Jan 1702 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England; died on 10 Oct 1785 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    6. Joseph Boone, Sr. was born on 5 Apr 1704 in Devonshire, England; died on 30 Jan 1776 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania; was buried in Exeter Friends Cem, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    7. Benjamin Boone was born on 16 Jul 1706 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England; died on 14 Oct 1762 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    8. James Boone, Sr was born on 18 Jul 1709 in Bradnich, Devonshire, England; died on 1 Sep 1785 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.
    9. Samuel Boone, Sr was born about 1711 in Devonshire, England; died on 6 Aug 1745 in Exeter Twp, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.

  5. 14.  Edward Morgan, (immigrant) was born about 1650 in Llantarnam, Wales; died after 1734 in Gwynedd, Berks Co, Pennsylvania.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Research Notes: 5 Dec 2011; ancestors

    Notes:

    THE MORGAN LOG HOUSE -- This 1695 medieval, 2 1/2 story log house, the only one of its kind still surviving in America, was built by grandparents of Daniel Boone, the frontiersman, and forebears of General Daniel Morgan famed Revolutionary War raider." In this house the American roots of a distinguished family tree were planted. Besides Morgan offspring, Rittenhouse, Morris, Roberts, Lloyd, Robeson and Hanks are family names on its branches. The latter being ancestors of Abraham Lincoln, Lowell Thomas, the explorer, broadcaster-author, is a descendant. Eminent local Morgans include Walter L. Morgan, a pioneer in the mutual fund industry, founder of the Willington Fund and Wellington Mgt. Co., manager of 14 Vanguard funds. This cabin erected on an 800 acre site by well-to-do Welch Quaker Edward Morgan. Near Gwynedd, PA, site of historic William Penn Inn, The Morgan House adjoins Valley Force road and Allentown Road. The latter was the escape route taken by those escorting the Liberty Bell to be hidden in Allentown's Zion Church. Morgan House is open to the public on Saturdays and Sundays from 1-5 p.m. Tel: (215) 368-2480. Edward Morgan's son, Morgan, had built a house on 197 acres of the original 800 acres in 1718.

    Edward Morgan and Elizabeth, his wife, both free, arrived at Philadelphia in the same ship (The Morning Star) from Liverpool, in the 9th month 1683 (20th 9th month)." (Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol 8, page 329).

    The ancestry of Edward Morgan, progenitor of the Morgan family of Montgomery County, Penn., and grandfather of explorer Daniel Boone & Edward Boone, is still a matter of speculation. One of the most objective analyses of the identity and family of Edward Morgan was made some fifty years ago by Mrs. Hazel Atterbury Spraker, in her book, THE BOONE FAMILY. Excerpts from this source are as follows:

    "There is an early record which states that "Edward Morgan and Elizabeth his wife, both free, arrived at Philadelphia in the same ship (The Morning Star) from Liverpool, in the 9th month 1683 (20th 9th month)." (Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol.8,page 329)

    "Another Edward Morgan, recorded in Radnor Monthly Meeting, was born in Merionithshire, Wales, 25 August 1679; was a son of Cadwalader Morgan, and came to Pennsylvania with his parents."

    "A third Edward Morgan is referred to by Thomas Allen Glenn in his Wlesh Founders of Pennsylvania, Vol. 2, page 1, in which it is stated that Edward Morgan of near Bala, Co. Merionithshire, a tailor, had a son named Morgan who removed to Gwynedd, PA, about 1700 and was a freeholder of 800 acres of land in Gwynedd, died in Towamencin, 1727, leaving a wife Dorothy.

    A fourth record of an Edward Morgan is found in a "History of the Family of Morgan, from the year 1089 to Present Times," by James Appleton Morgan, New York (1897-1902). In this it is stated that Edward Morgan was the son of Sir James Morgan, 4th Baronet of Llantarnum, and wife, Lady Alice Hopoton; that Edward came to America with his sister Sarah, wife of Stephen Beasley, married Margaret --- and had a daughter Sarah Morgan who married Squire Boone. No authority is given for this last statement. In this book the ancestry is carried back through many royal lines to as early as the year 605.

    At this late date it seems impossible to determine which, if any of the above Edward Morgans was the father of Sarah, and hence the grandfather of Daniel Boone. Althought his ancestry, his early life and the name of his wife, may always remain in obscurity, we yet have a brief history of the later life and children of Edward of Gwynedd, as given in "Historical Collections of Gwynedd by Howard Jenkins, page 410." This history of Edward Morgan reads as follows:

    "The first settler in Gwynedd or its vicinity named Morgan, was Edward. He seems to have been here as early as 1704, as the road upward through Gwynedd, made in that year, was to go as far as his place. He was a tailor by trade, a Welshman by birth, no doubt, and probably advanced in years when he came. He had lived previously near Philadelphia. In February, 1708, he bought 300 acres of land in what is now Towamencin, of Griffith Jones, merchant, Philadelphia. The tract lay along William John's land, and was therefore on the township line. In 1714 he bought 500 acres more, nearby, of George Claypool of Philadelphia, who, like Griffith Jones,was a speculative holder of Towamencin lands. By 1713 he had apparently moved to Montgomery; in the deed from Claypool he is described as a "yeoman of Montgomery."

    Edward Morgan no doubt had several children. His sons probably received and held the Towamencin lands. In the list of 1734, for that township there appear: Joseph Morgan, 200 acres, Daniel Morgan, 200; John Morgan, 100. In 1727, Morgan Morgan of Towamencind died leaving a will in which he mentions his wife Dorothy, his brothers Joseph, John and William, his two sons Edward and Jesse (both minors), and his niece Elizabeth, John's daughter."

    ------------------
    another study of Edward Morgan here:
    http://wgscroggins.kueber.us/Morgan01%20Edward%20(1670-1732).pdf



    Research Notes:
    Tree at Rootsweb that has these ancestors.
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=rlgabriel-2&id=I6175
    Tree name Gabriel Jones Family
    curious that there are no Loveladys or Bounds

    Edward married Margaret Elizabeth Jarman (?) about 1686 in Gwynedd, Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania. Margaret was born about 1670 in Radnor, Delaware Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1730 in of, Pennsylvania. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Margaret Elizabeth Jarman (?) was born about 1670 in Radnor, Delaware Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1730 in of, Pennsylvania.
    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Morgan was born about 1688; died after 1731.
    2. Edward Morgan, Jr. was born about 1690; died in 1718 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania.
    3. Margaret Morgan was born about 1693 in Montgomery, Co of Pennsylvania; died after 1714.
    4. Daniel Morgan was born in 1691 in Moyamensing, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; died on 6 Jul 1773.
    5. William Morgan was born about 1695; died after 1732 in of, Chester Co, Pennsylvania.
    6. Alice Morgan was born about 1698 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania; died after 1820.
    7. Morgan Morgan was born about 1700 in Towamencin, Gwynedd, Pennsylvania; died in 1727 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania.
    8. 7. Sarah Morgan was born in 1700 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1777 in Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina; was buried in Joppa Cem, Mocksville, Rowan Co, North Carolina.
    9. Jane Morgan (?), (not proven child) was born about 1699; died after 1721.
    10. John Morgan was born about 1702 in Philadelphia Co, Pennsylvania; died after 1725.
    11. Joseph Morgan was born about 1708 in of, Pennsylvania; died after 1748 in Of, Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia.
    12. Hannah* Morgan (?), (dau?) was born on 19 Feb 1713 in Gwynedd, Montgomery Co, Pennsylvania; died in 1773 in North Carolina.
    13. Leah Morgan (?), (not proven child) was born about 1720; died after 1766.