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Isaac Hollingsworth

Male 1722 - 1759  (37 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Isaac Hollingsworth was born on 22 Feb 1722 in Hopewell MM, Frederick Co, Virginia (son of Abraham Hollingsworth and Ann Robinson(?)); died on 12 Sep 1759 in Fairfax Co, Virginia.

    Isaac married Rachel Parkins in 1748 in Frederick Co, Virginia. Rachel was born on 3 May 1724 in Hopewell MM, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 10 Sep 1805 in Fairfax Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Abraham Hollingsworth was born on 9 May 1749 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 29 Nov 1777 in Newberry Co, South Carolina.
    2. Lydia Hollingsworth was born on 27 Oct 1752 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died after 1775 in of, Loudoun Co, Virgnia.
    3. Ann Hollingsworth was born on 6 Dec 1751 in of, Frederick Co, Virginia; died after 1800.
    4. Jonah Hollingsworth was born on 24 Feb 1754 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died in 1801.
    5. Phebe Hollingsworth was born on 20 Mar 1757 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 25 Nov 1822 in Virginia.
    6. Mary Hollingsworth was born on 3 Dec 1758 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 11 Sep 1814 in of, Frederick Co, Virginia.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Abraham Hollingsworth was born on 18 Jan 1686 in New Castle Co, Delaware (son of Valentine Thomas Hollingsworth and Margaret Calvert); died before 1 Nov 1748 in Frederick Co, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 1729, Abrams Delight (now Frederick Co), Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 28 May 1742, Orange Co, Virginia; road orders

    Notes:

    Residence:
    Frederick County was created from western Orange County by the House of Burgesses on December 21, 1738

    Frederick County was created from western Orange County by the House of Burgesses on December 21, 1738
    http://www.co.frederick.va.us/history.aspx

    Other-Begin:
    Orange Road Orders
    28 May 1742, O.S. p. 157
    Abraham Hollingsworth and James Carter having returnd that they had laid of & viewed the road petitioned for James Wood Gent from James Codys to Isaac Perkins’s Mill and Jeremy Smith and Robert Heatton that they had marked a road from the said Perkins’s Mill to Kerseys fferry Its ordered that the said roads be cleared according as the Viewers have laid of the said roads and that Joseph Edwards and Phillip Babb be hereby appointed Overseers from perkins’s Mill & George Hogg & Wm Kersey be hereby appointed Overseers from Perkins’s Mill to the sd Kerseys fferry and that all the tithables/: within four Miles:/ be equally divided between the said Overseers according to the length of ground to work on ye Same And its further ordered that the said Overseers with the tithables so divided cause the said roads each Overseer in his precinct to
    be cleared & bridges were wanting to be made according to Law.

    Abraham married Ann Robinson(?) about 1715. Ann was born about 1686; died on 5 Apr 1749 in Frederick Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Ann Robinson(?) was born about 1686; died on 5 Apr 1749 in Frederick Co, Virginia.
    Children:
    1. George Hollingsworth was born in 1712 in Virginia; died after 1770 in Frederick Co, Virginia.
    2. Margaret Hollingsworth was born in 1715.
    3. Lydia Hollingsworth was born in 1718 in Cecil Co, Maryland; died after 1760 in Frederick Co, Virginia; was buried in Hopewell Meeting Burying Ground, Frederick Co, Virginia.
    4. 1. Isaac Hollingsworth was born on 22 Feb 1722 in Hopewell MM, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 12 Sep 1759 in Fairfax Co, Virginia.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Valentine Thomas Hollingsworth was born on 1 Mar 1661 in Co Armagh, Ireland (son of Valentine Hollingsworth, Sr. (Immigrant) and Ann Ree (Rea)); died in 1733 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia.

    Valentine married Margaret Calvert in 1685 in Salem Co, New Jersey. Margaret was born on 24 Jun 1661 in Co Armagh, Ireland; died after 1700. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Margaret Calvert was born on 24 Jun 1661 in Co Armagh, Ireland; died after 1700.
    Children:
    1. 2. Abraham Hollingsworth was born on 18 Jan 1686 in New Castle Co, Delaware; died before 1 Nov 1748 in Frederick Co, Virginia.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Valentine Hollingsworth, Sr. (Immigrant) was born in Jun 1632 in Co Armagh, Ireland; died between 1711 and 1720 in Newark, New Castle Co, Delaware.

    Notes:

    Irish Quaker Immigration into Pennsylvania [database online], Orem, UT: Ancestry.com, 1998:

    VALENTINE HOLLINGSWORTH, wife Ann, and children came over to Pennsylvania in 1682, from Balleniskcrannell, Parish of Sego, County Armagh, Ireland, and settled in New Castle County on Delaware.

    HENRY HOLLINGSWORTH, son of Valentine, came over from Ireland in 1683, in the Ship Lion, as an indented servant to Robert Turner. . . .

    The records of this family in Ireland are from the registers of Lurgan Meeting, County Armagh. There is, of course, no foundation for the tradition that Valentine Hollingsworth married Catharine, daughter of Henry Cornish, High Sheriff of London, who was executed in 1685. It is probable that the Hollingsworths went over from England to Ireland with other planters early in the seventeenth century, but there is no proof to show that they came from Cheshire, as stated by some historians of the family. For an extended record of descendants of Valentine Hollingsworth see Hollingsworth Genealogical Memoranda, by William B. Hollingsworth (Baltimore, 1884); also see McFarlan-Stern Genealogy, 6-11, 56-60, History of Chester County, 605. . . .

    VALENTINE HOLLINGSWORTH, son of Henry Hollingsworth, of Belleniskcrannell, Parish of Segoe, County Armagh, Ireland, and Catharine, his wife, was born at Belleniskcrannel, about the sixth month in the yeare 1632; was married 4 Mo. 7, 1655, to Ann Ree, daughter of Nicholas Ree, of Tanderagee, County Armagh, She was born about 1628, at Tanderagee, and died 2 Mo. 1, 1671. He then was married a second time, 4 Mo. 12, 1672, to Ann Calvert, daughter of Thomas Calvert, of Dromgora, Parish of Segoe, County Armagh, and Jane his wife. . . .

    William Stockdale gives the following account of Hollingsworth's persecutions for tithes:

    1671, County Armagh, Valentine Hollingsworth had taken from him for Tithe, by Thomas Ashbrook Tithmonger twenty nine stooks of Barly, and three stooks and a half of Oats, all worth one pound one shilling; 1672, Valentine Hollingsworth for Tithe by Edward O'Maghan, 26 stooks wheat. 3 car-loads Hey, 26 stooks of Oats, 26 stooks of Barley, Value £2, 18s; 1673, corn and hay, valued at £2; 1674, wheat, hay, oats, barley, valued at £3 4s. . . .

    In 1682, Valentine Hollingsworth and his family, accompanied by his son-in-law, Thomas Connaway, and by John Musgrave, an indented servant, sailed from Belfast for the Delaware, and, as we have already stated, settled on a large plantation of nearly a thousand acres on Shelpot Creek in Brandywine Hundred, New Castle County, about five miles northeast of the present city of Wilmington. He was prominently identified with the affairs of Friends, the early meetings being held at his house. In 1687, he gave unto ffriends for a burying place half an Acre of land for yt purpose. A meeting-house was afterward built on this plot and the meeting known as Newark, from the name of the plantation, which in the original survey was called New Worke. Valentine Hollingsworth was appointed a Justice of the Peace for New Castle County, in 1685, and represented the county in the Assembly in 1682-3, 1687, 1688, 1689, 1695, and 1700. He died subsequent to 1710, and his wife Ann died 8 Mo. 17, 1697. They were interred in Friends' ground at Newark.

    The children of Valentine Hollingsworth by his first wife, Ann Ree, were as follows:

    1. Mary Hollingsworth, born 1 Mo. 25, 1656, at Belleniskcrannell, married, first, 4 Mo. 28, 1682, at the house of Francis Robson, Parish of Segoe, County Armagh, to Thomas Conway or Connaway, of Parish of Lisburn, County Antrim. They came to the Delaware with her father in 1682, and settled near him in New Castle County. Thomas Connaway died 11 Mo. 30, 1688-9, and his widow, in 1693, married, secondly, Randal Malin, widower, of Upper Providence, now Delaware County (originally of Great Barrum, Cheshire, England). Randal Malin became a Quaker minister and in 1727 removed with his wife and family within the limits of Goshen Monthly Meeting.

    By her first husband, Thomas Connaway, she had three children: (1) Elizabeth, b. 7 Mo. 9, 1687, m. 1st Charles Booth, 1705, and 2d, Thomas Babb, in 1720; Ann, born about 1688, m. Philip Taylor, 6 Mo. 10, 1705; Sarah b. about 1689, m. 3 Mo., 1710, to John Yearsley, b. in England about 1685, son of John and Elizabeth. By her second, Randal Malin, she had three children: Hannah, b. 1 Mo. 7, 1695-6, m. Daniel Williamson, Jr., about 1716; Rachel, b. 5 Mo. 24, 1702, m. John Cain or Cane, 9 Mo. 7, 1722; and Katharine, who married Tate, in 1721. . . .

    2. Henry Hollingsworth, b. 9 Mo. 7, 1658, at Belleniskcrannell, is thought to have come over to Pennsylvania as a redemptioner to Robert Turner, in 1683. Subsequently he lived for a time with his father in New Castle County. In 1688, he returned to Ireland for a wife and on 6 Mo. 22d of that year was married to Lydia Atkinson, of Parish of Segoe, County Armagh, whom he shortly after brought to Pennsylvania. For a number of years he was Deputy Surveyor of Chester County. In 1695, he resided in Chester, and was Sheriff of the County. He also represented New Castle County in the Provincial Assembly. In 1700, and for some time after he was Clerk of the Courts, and Coroner of Chester County. He removed to Elkton, Md., about 1712, in which year he was appointed (3 Mo. 9 by Lord Baltimore) Surveyor of Cecil County. His manuscript commonplace book, which is a medley of receipts, poetry, astrology, alchemy, chemistry, some of which is in Latin, is in the collection of the Hon. Samuel W. Pennypacker, of Philadelphia. He died 2 Mo. or 3 Mo. 1721. His children were: Ruth, m. George Simpson, 12 Mo. 24, 1706; Stephen, who m. Ann, was a Magistrate in Cecil County, Md., in 1730, removing subsequently to Virginia, where, in 1734, he obtained a grant of 472 acres of land on the west side of the Shenandoah River, in Orange County; Zebulon, b. 1696, d. Cecil County, 8 Mo. 8, 1763, m. 4 Mo. 18, 1727, Ann, daughter of Col. Francis Mauldin; Catharine m. Dawson, of Kent County, Md.; Abigail, m. Richard Dobson, in 1720; and Mary.

    3. Thomas Hollingsworth, b. 3 Mo., 1661, at Belleniskcrannell, d. 1732-3, in Winchester, Va. He resided for a time in Rockland Manor, New Castle County but later removed to Winchester, Va. His first wife Margaret (by whom he had one son Abram, born 1 Mo. 19, 1686), died in 8 Mo. 1687. He then married 1 Mo. 31, 1692, Grace Cook, of Concord. Children by second wife: Elizabeth, b. 11 Mo. 8, 1694, m. Stroud, in 1718; Hannah, b. 1 Mo. 17, 1697, m. William Dixon, in 1718; Thomas, b. 12 Mo. 23, 1698, m. Judith Lampley in 1723; Jacob, b. 1 Mo, 4, 1704, m. Rachel Chandler, 1729; Sarah, b. 8 Mo. 7, 1706, m. John Dixon, in 1724; Joseph, b. 3 Mo. 11, 1709, m. Martha Houghton, in 1730, and removed to Virginia; Grace, b. 3 Mo, 9, 1712. . . .

    4. Catharine Hollingsworth, b. 5 Mo., 1663, at Belleniskcranmell; d. 6 Mo. 29, 1746; m. 11 Mo. 2, 1688, George Robinson, who was born in the north of Ireland, about 1666, came to the Delaware in 1687, and died 9 Mo. 8, 1738. Their children were: Mary, m. Thomas Jacobs, 8 Mo, 13, 1710; Ann, m. Jonathan Ogden, in 1720; Valentine, m. Elizabeth Booth, in 1740. . . .

    The children of Valentine Hollingsworth by his second wife, Ann Calvert, were:

    5. Samuel Hollingsworth, b. 1 Mo. 27, 1673, at Belleniskcrannell; d. 1748; m. in 1701, Hannah Harlan, daughter of George and Elizabeth Harlan. He lived in Birmingham Township and held several important public offices. In 1729 and 1738, he was appointed Justice of the Peace for Chester County. From 1725 to 1728 he represented the county in the Provincial Assembly. Children: Enoch, m. 1st Joanna Crowley, 10 Mo. 23, 1725, 2d Elizabeth Chads, widow of William Pyle; John, m. Mary Reed, in 1732; Samuel, m. Barbara Shewin, in 1738, and died in 1751; George; Elizabeth, m. Henry Green, in 1734.

    6. Enoch Hollingsworth, b. 6 Mo. 7, 1675, at Belleniskcrannel; died in New Castle County, 8 Mo. 24, 1687.

    7. Valentine Hollingsworth, b. 11 Mo. 12, 1677, at Belleniskcrannell; d. 1757; m. in 1713, Elizabeth Heald.

    8. Ann Hollingsworth, b. 10 Mo. 28, 1680, at Belleniskcrannell; m. James Thompson in 1700.

    9. John Hollingsworth, b. 2 Mo. 19, 1684, in New Castle County; d. in 1722; m. Catherine Tyler, in 1706.

    10. Joseph Hollingsworth, b. 5 M. 10, 1686, in New Castle County.

    11. Enoch Hollingsworth, buried 9 Mo. 26, 1690. . . .

    (2) According to the Northern Ireland Place-Name Project , the Irish town in which the HOLLINGSWORTHs lived is now named Ballymacrandal.

    (3) Note by compiler: Some of the records relating to Valentine HOLLINGSWORTH and his descendants use "Quaker dates." See the following discussion in Berry, Ellen Thomas and Berry, David Allen, Our Quaker Ancestors: Finding Them in Quaker Records, Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1987, p. 67:

    Quakers . . . did not use names for days of the week or months of the year since most of these names were derived from the names of pagan gods. A date such as August 19, 1748 will never be found. Rather it would be written ?19th da 6th mo 1748.? Sometimes this will be written as 6mo 19da 1748. Why 6th month since August is the 8th month? The Quakers, along with everyone else in the American Colonies and England, did not begin using the Gregorian calendar until 1752. Under the Julian calendar the year began on March 25th; March was the first month and February the twelfth month. This is something of a problem when an event occurred in the months of January, February or up to March 25th, for then the date is given as 1748/1749.

    (3) Stewart, J. Adger, Descendants of Valentine Hollingsworth, Sr., John P. Morton Company Inc., Louisville, KY: 1925, pp. 1-2:

    [Note by compiler: The author of this book transcribed some dates incorrectly; e.g., he transcribed "4 Mo. 7, 1655" as "April 7, 1655," rather than "June 7, 1655." See the note on "Quaker dates," set forth above.]

    VALENTINE HOLLINGSWORTH, SR.

    THE original immigrant ancestor of the American family of Hollingsworth was a member of the Society of Friends, and many of his descendants adhere to that faith. He was the son of Henry Hollingsworth of Belleniskcrannel, Parish of Legoe, County Armagh, Ireland, and of Catherine, his wife, was born at Belleniskcrannel "about the year 1632," and was married April 7, 1655, to Ann Ree, daughter of Nicholas Ree of Tanderagee, County Armagh. She was born about 1628, at Tanderagee, and died February 1, 1671. He then married, April 12, 1672, Ann Calvert, daughter of Thomas Calvert, of Dromgora, Parish of Segoe, County Armagh, and of Jane, his wife.

    In 1682, Valentine Hollingsworth, Sr., and his family, accompanied by his son-in-law, Thomas Connaway, and by John Musgrave, an indented servant, sailed from Belfast for the Delaware River, arriving a few months after William Penn's arrival in the good ship "Welcome." He settled on a large plantation of nearly a thousand acres on Shelpot Creek in Brandywine Hundred, New Castle (now Del.) Co., about five miles northeast of the present city of Wilmington, and not far from Port Christian, or Christiana of the Swedes. Not long thereafter a monthly meeting was established, the sessions being mainly held at Hollingsworth's House. In 1687 he granted "unto friends for a burying place half an acre of land for ye purpose, there being already friends buried in the spot." The section in question soon became known as the "New Worke" or "New Ark," now the thriving town of Newark, Del. That Valentine Hollingsworth was a man of extraordinary ability and influence is demonstrated from the fact that almost immediately after his arrival in the New World, he was called upon to hold office and participate in public affairs. He was a member of the first Assembly of the Province of Pennsylvania, shortly after William Penn's advent, that of 1682-3; also of the Grand Inquest empaneled October 25, 1683, to consider the famous case of Charles Pickering and others charged with counterfeiting. He served in several subsequent sessions of the Assembly, those of 1687, '88, '95 and 1700, from New Castle County, and was a Justice of the Peace from the same county. He was also a Signer of Penn's Great Charter and a member of the Pro-Provincial Council. He died about 1711. His second wife, Ann Calvert, died August 17, 1697. Both were buried in the old burial ground at Newark, Del., which he had presented to the Friends in 1687.

    ISSUE 1ST MARRIAGE (ANN REE)

    I. Mary-Born January, 1656, at Belleniskcrannel, Ireland. Died 1746. She first married Thomas Conoway, about 1684, who died July 17, 1689, and then Randal Malin, in 1693. . . .

    II. Henry-Born September 7, 1658, at Belleniskcrannel, Ireland. Died at Elkton, Cecil Co., Md., 1721. He married Elizabeth Atkinson, August 22, 1688. . . .

    III. Thomas-Born March, 1661. . . .

    IV. Catherine-Born May, 1663. Died June 29, 1746. Married George Robinson, November 2, 1688. . . .

    ISSUE 2ND MARRIAGE (ANN CALVERT)

    V. Samuel-Born January 27, 1673, in Ireland. Died 1748. Married Hannah Harlan, 1701. More of Samuel later.

    VI. Enoch-Born June 7, 1675. Died young, 1687.

    VII. Valentine, Jr., of Kennett, Pa.-Born November 12, 1677. Died 1757. Married Elizabeth Heald, 1713, Ireland. . . .

    VIII. Ann-Born October 28, 1680, Ireland. Married James Thompson, 1700.

    IX. John-Born February 19, 1684, New Castle Co., Del. Died 1722. Married Catherine Tyler, in 1706.

    X. Joseph-Born May 10, 1686, New Castle Co., Del.

    XI. Enoch again-Born about 1688. Died September 26, 1690.

    http://frostandgilchrist.com/getperson.php?personID=I9867&tree=frostinaz01

    Valentine married Ann Ree (Rea) on 7 Apr 1655 in Lurgan, Co Armagh, Ireland. Ann was born in 1628 in Ballymore, Co Armagh, Ireland; died after 1664 in Co Armagh, Ireland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Ann Ree (Rea) was born in 1628 in Ballymore, Co Armagh, Ireland; died after 1664 in Co Armagh, Ireland.
    Children:
    1. Mary Hollingsworth was born on 25 Mar 1656 in Ireland; died after 1720 in of, Back Creek Valley, Frederick Co, Virginia.
    2. Henry Hollingsworth was born on 7 Sep 1658 in Co Armagh, Ireland; died in 1721 in Elkton, Cecil Co, Maryland.
    3. 4. Valentine Thomas Hollingsworth was born on 1 Mar 1661 in Co Armagh, Ireland; died in 1733 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia.
    4. Catherine Hollingsworth was born in May 1663 in Seagoe, Co Armagh, Ireland; died on 29 Jun 1746 in Newark, New Castle Co, Delaware.