Home | What's New | Photos | Histories | Sources | Reports | Calendar | Cemeteries | Headstones | Statistics | Surnames
Print Bookmark

John Doak Hanna

Male Bef 1756 - Aft 1793  (~ 38 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Less detail
Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Doak Hanna was born before 1756 (son of John Hanna and Martha Doak); died after 1793 in of, Surry Co, North Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Property: 13 Jun 1778, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Other-Begin: 1794, Surry Co, North Carolina; exr father's will

    Notes:

    Birth:
    American Genealogical-Biographical Index (AGBI)
    about John Doak Hannah Name: John Doak Hannah
    Birth Date: 1750 ***
    Birthplace: North Carolina
    Volume: 71
    Page Number: 477
    Reference: Heads of fams. at the first U.S. census. NC. By U.S. Bureau of the Census. Washington, 1908. (292p.):183

    *** if 1750 is correct, then seems to be born too early to be child of Martha Doak and John Hannah.



    Property:
    William Porter of Montgomery Co, VA to John Hannah for L100, 200 acres on West fork Tarrarat River on Stewarts Creek.
    wit: William Porter, William (x) Wharton, Joseph (x) Porter.

    John Hannah and wife Martha (x) sold John Doak Hannah that property 13 Jun 1778.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Hanna was born about 1726 in of, Virginia; died between Apr 1793 and Feb 1794 in Surry Co, North Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: Bef 1760, Rowan Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1768, Rowan Co, North Carolina; tax list
    • Other-Begin: 1775, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Property: 13 Jun 1778, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1780, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1782, Surry Co, North Carolina; tax list
    • Property: 1 Apr 1783, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1785, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1786, Surry Co, North Carolina; tax list
    • Census: 1790, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Property: 4 May 1790, Surry Co, North Carolina
    • Will: 15 Apr 1793, Surry Co, North Carolina; written

    Notes:

    The ancestors of John Hanna of Guilford County immigrated to Pennsylvania from Scotland. John?s father moved to Virginia from Pennsylvania, and John Hanna continued the tradition by migrating on to North Carolina.

    Though no proof has been found, it is believed that he married Martha Doak of Guilford County. John got a Granville grant for 700 acres on Beaver Creek. Some of this land was sold to their son Robert, but John and Martha still lived on the land as late as 1776 [Guilford Co. Deeds, 1:170, 419; 4:17].

    John Hanna's residence was given as Surry County, North Carolina, when he bought two tracts of land from William Porter in June, 1778. This property was on Stewart Creek on the Tararat River in Surry County. John and Martha sold one of these tracts to their son John Doak Hanna on the same day [Surry Co. Deeds, A:254-7]. On the 15th of April 1793, John sold all his remaining land on the Tarrarat River to the same son [Surry Co. Deeds, F:96-8].

    The same date is on John Hanna's Surry County will, brought in for probate less than a year later during the February court term, 1794 [Surry Co. Wills, A:13]. John's will names:

    wife (unnamed)

    Sons: Robert, John Doak, Roddy, James (to have half of my Cumberland land), William (to have half of my Cumberland land), Samuel

    daughters: Mary Doak, Martha Thomas, Margaret Doak

    from Guilford County, North Carolina, Genealogical Society Journal article, ?The Hanna / Hannah / Hanner Family by Betty H. Case.

    http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~heplerroberts/ui15.htm



    Residence:
    John Hanna was in Rowan Co. prior to 1760 when he is listed as a neighboring landowner of John Forbush on Beaverdam branch of Amamance & Haw Rivers.

    Residence:
    tax list of Robert Donnell shows John Hannah and Robert Hannah.

    Other-Begin:
    estate of John Miller, deceased, returned by William Hannah, adm. Mentioned are John Hannah, William Hannah, Barnabas Fair, Peter Lowork, George Holdsbrook, Richard Linville, Joshua Hannah, James Bond, George Pierce, REuben Knight, Henry Cook, William Pierce, Aaron Linwell (Linville?) James Halbrook, James Cook, George Comers, Moses Linwell (Linville), Cornelius Cook. Rec May Ct. 1775.


    Property:
    William Porter of Montgomery Co, VA to John Hannah for L100, 200 acres on West fork Tarrarat River on Stewarts Creek.
    wit: William Porter, William (x) Wharton, Joseph (x) Porter.

    John Hannah and wife Martha (x) sold John Doak Hannah that property 13 Jun 1778.

    John Hannah retained the 336 acres on Tarrarat River adj Andrew Bailey, Morrison and Harrison that he had bought on the same date.


    Residence:
    U.S. Census Reconstructed Records, 1660-1820
    Name: John Hanna
    Gender: M (Male)
    State: North Carolina
    County: Surry County
    Residence Year: 1780
    Household Remarks: Name on a petition, 28 Jan 1779?, to the House of Assembly from inhabitants of Surry Co. seeking redress for the way titles for vacant lands are obtained. The whole purchase money had to be ?paid at t... (snip)


    Residence:
    Surry Co. Tax list 1782 shows John Hannah with 200 acres.

    Property:
    Surry County N.C. Wills
    1 Apr 1783, James Matthews & wife Mary to John Flemming for L100 VA money, 300 acres on Stewarts Creek.


    Residence:
    Surry Co, 1785 tax list of Capt Humphris shows John Hanna with 200 acres, 1 wp; Samuel Hanna with 2 wp, 4 bp.

    Residence:
    North Carolina Census, 1790-1890
    about John Hanna Name: John Hanna
    State: NC
    County: Surry County
    Township: Humphres District
    Year: 1786
    Record Type: State or colonial census
    Page: 002
    Database: NC Early Census Index

    1786 tax list John Hanna has 500 acres.

    Census:
    1790 Surry Co, North Carolina
    Name: John Hannah
    Home in 1790 (City, County, State): Surry, North Carolina
    Free White Persons - Males - Under 16: 2
    Free White Persons - Males - 16 and over: 3
    Free White Persons - Females: 5
    Number of Household Members: 10

    same page with Alexander Doak



    Property:
    Surry County N.C. Wills
    4 May 1790 James Matthews & wife Mary to John Flemming for L200 VA mney, 192 acres Stewarts Creek adj John Hanna and Andrew Bailey. Edmond & Mordecai Fleming served in the War of 1812 from Surry Co. Surry Co. Minutes of the Court of P &QS.


    Will:
    Surry County N.C. Wills, 1771-1827: Annotated Genealogical Abstracts; pg 98
    Will of John Hanna, 15 Apr 1793. Sons: Robert, John Doak, Roddy, Samuel, James & William. Daus: Mary Doak, Martha Thomas, Margaret Doak each to have a store gown. Exrs: wf & son John Doak Hanna. Wit: Thomas Burris, Robert Hamock, Nathaniel Doak. Prvd by Robert Hammock. Rec. Feb Ct. 1794.

    John married Martha Doak about 1746. Martha (daughter of John Doak, (Immigrant) and Mary Wilson(?)) was born about 1740; died after 1793 in North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Martha Doak was born about 1740 (daughter of John Doak, (Immigrant) and Mary Wilson(?)); died after 1793 in North Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Research Notes: 3 Apr 2013

    Notes:

    Research Notes:
    Found a reference that Robert Hanna, son of John Hanna & Martha Doak -- (I know his wife is not confirmed as a Doak, but...) -- bought land from John Doak in Almance. Which John?
    After studying it out, I think we have/had John Hanna married to the wrong Martha Doak. It makes more sense if he married Martha dau of Imm John and not dau of Imm Dave.

    So, I've switched the Marthas. However neither Martha's ages fit.
    After I went through this, I realized that this is the Martha (David) we discussed before - that she might not be dau of David. Either way, ages don't work; and I'm thinking maybe we don't have these imm. kids born early enough. - unless she's not a Doak; but it looks like she is with the other things.

    Anyway forget the age for a minute.
    my reasons....

    Imm John was in Almance, not Imm Dave

    Robert Hanna, son of John Hanna & Martha, bought land 1785 in Almance from John Doak. Only John in Almance and had any connection to any Martha is imm John's son John Jr., meaning Robert Hanna bought from his uncle, mother's brother.

    William Doak (Ann Stuart) will gave place to the Hannas. No reason if Martha dau of Dave. They were only cousins. But if dau of John, then John Hanna his bro-in-law.

    John Hanna believed to have married Martha Doak of Guilford - Dave's Martha was of VA. John's Martha was of Guilford

    Imm John Doak not in NC till c1750. Robert Hanna (1st born) was on NC tax list 1768; so, Robert had to be b at least by 1747. It looks like Martha had to be 2nd wife and not mother of all the Hanna children. In fact, his kids seem to be from two "sets."

    John Hanna on same pg with Alexander Doak in 1790; surry Co. That Alexander Doak m John Hanna's dau Margt. and is David's son Alexander, which would make it look like Martha of imm David's family; but everything makes more sense if she's of imm John's family.

    Notes:

    Reasoning of estimated dates for this family:
    Hanna kids:
    will listed an order of males, then females
    Robert first, and since he was on tax list by 1768, he had to be over 21 - so born bef 1747.

    Age given for James, he's listed as 5th son.
    going from his given b.d., increments of 2 yrs
    to preceding named sons puts John bef 1756
    leaving a 10 yr gap between 1st, Robert and 2nd John

    Put girls in that 10 yr gap

    means oldest bef 1747; so m c 1746
    Martha and John Hanna b abt 1726 - Martha could be 4 yrs younger, marrying at 16, but that puts her 1726-1730
    if 1726, last child b at her age 41

    Children:
    1. Robert Hanna, Sr. was born before 1747; died before May 1819 in Guilford Co, North Carolina.
    2. Mary Doak Hanna was born about 1749; died before 1810 in of, Wythe Co, Virginia.
    3. Martha Hanna was born about 1751; died after 1793 in of, Surry Co, North Carolina.
    4. 1. John Doak Hanna was born before 1756; died after 1793 in of, Surry Co, North Carolina.
    5. Roderick "Roddy" Hanna, Sr. was born about 1755 in Guilford Co, North Carolina; died after 1810 in of, Guilford Co, North Carolina.
    6. Margaret Hanna was born on 4 Mar 1762 in Whthe Co, Virginia; died on 24 Aug 1840 in Rose Hill, Johnson Co, Missouri; was buried in Strange Cem, Rose Hill, Johnson Co, Missouri.
    7. Samuel Hanna was born about 1763 in North Carolina or Virginia; died in Dec 1834 in Maury Co, Tennessee; was buried in Matthews Cem, Southport, Maury Co, Tennessee.
    8. James Abner Hanna was born on 15 Jun 1765 in Surry Co, North Carolina; died on 29 Mar 1833 in Sumner Co, Tennessee; was buried in Bethpage Cem, Bethpage, Sumner Co, Tennessee.
    9. William Hanna was born about 1767; died after 1793 in of, Surry Co, North Carolina.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  John Doak, (Immigrant) was born before 1710 in Co Antrim (prob), Ulster, Ireland (son of Robert* Doak, (immigrant) and Margaret* (..) Doak); died between Feb 1770 and Mar 1770 in Alamance Co, North Carolina.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Other-Begin: Between 1733 and 1734, Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania; jury service
    • Residence: Bef 1737, Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania
    • Residence: Abt 1738, Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Property: Bef 1741, Beverley Manor, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Other-Begin: 17 Apr 1746, Augusta Co, Virginia
    • Property: Nov 1747, Beverly Manor, Augusta Co, Virginia; sells
    • Other-Begin: Between 1748 and 1749, Lunenburg Co, Virginia; tax lists
    • Residence: Aft 1750, Rowan Co (later Guilford Co) North Carolina
    • Property: 1759, Granville, Rowan Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1759, Rowan Co, North Carolina
    • Property: 1761, Granville, Rowan Co, North Carolina
    • Residence: 1761, Rowan Co, North Carolina; tax list
    • Other-Begin: Abt 1765, Regulation Movement, North Carolina; joined
    • Residence: Bef 1769, Alamance Co, North Carolina
    • Other-Begin: Dec 1769, Alamance Co, North Carolina

    Notes:

    In Captain John Christian's Company with brother, Sam, 1742, Augusta Co.
    John Doage, farmer, to Richard Burton, 400 acres on James River on west side of Blue Ridge patented to John, 12 January 1746 (Chalkley, vol. III, p. 266. Said to have land in Surry County, NC and lived in Guilford County, North Carolina.
    His daughter was named Thankful, and was born before 30 June 1743, date of her baptism at South Mountain, meeting house 16 miles southwest of Tinkling. She married Major William Hall and lived in Surry County, NC several years before the Rution. Her husband was a member of Provincial Congress from Surry County in 1776. They moved about 1779 to Upper East TN, then New River, VA area called Hall's Bottom and lived there five years. Given land in Sumner County, TN in 1784 for Revolutionary service. Major Hall killed by the Indians on 6 August 1786.
    -------------

    from Ralph Doak:
    Lancaster Co, PA, deed (ref) executed, referring to boundaries of the land being sold as lands held by "... Stewart and John Doak deceased" That John Doak may or may not be the John Doak of this entry but no grave has been found for John or his wife Mary in NC.



    Property:
    Samuel Doak (Beverley Manor SW, 647 acres, 1741, adjoining land of John Doak (no date or acres listed) and David Doak (100 acres acquired in 1765) and Samuel and David Doak (220 acres acquired in 1806). Samuel Doak was the brother of David Doak, listed above and son of Samuel Doak, Sr. (b. abt. 1670, Ulster, Ireland) and his wife Elizabeth.

    http://www.werelate.org/wiki/Early_Settlers_of_Augusta_County,_Virginia_-_Surnames_A-E

    Other-Begin:
    Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia
    Volume I
    COUNTY COURT JUDGEMENTS
    AUGUSTA COUNTY.

    Patrick Hays vs. Samuel Doak.--Defendant brother of John Doak.
    17th April, 1746.

    http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~chalkley/volume_1/judge292.htm

    note: who's who:
    Patrick Hays, prob father of Patrick Hays who
    married Jean Brown.
    Jean Brown's bro Wm Brown
    m Jane Doak (b 1741)
    Jane Doak (c1741) d/o Samuel Doak c1716 & Jean Mitchell (c1717)
    Samuel Doak c1716 brother of John Doak (c1703)
    sons of James Samuel Doak & Elizabeth and
    brothers of Ann* Doak, wife of George* Breckenridge.
    ~ss

    Property:
    Nov 1747
    Sells additional tract of Beverly Patent land granted to him in 174?


    Other-Begin:
    On tax/tithe lists for Lunenburg Co, VA - as John "Dough" in 1748


    Property:
    Survey of Granville grant land in Rowan Co, NC, on his behalf
    1759 & 1761


    Residence:
    On Rowan Co, NC, tax lists - with 2 taxables in 1759 but with Roberd Jeames named in 1761


    Property:
    Survey of Granville grant land in Rowan Co, NC, on his behalf
    1759 & 1761


    Residence:
    John on Rowan Co, NC, tax lists - with 2 taxables in 1759 but with Roberd & Jeames named in 1761

    Other-Begin:
    First of a series of transactions in which John Doak settles his affairs in such a way as to obviate the need for him to make a will, Dec 1769


    Died:
    John Doak, referred to as deceased in deed executed 1769 in Lancaster Co, PA (per Ralph Doak)

    ----
    From: Ralph
    Date: 07/31/16 02:16:52
    To: lumoto1@gmail.com
    Subject: Proposed Change: John Doak, (Immigrant) (I370)

    Proposed Change: John Doak, (Immigrant) (I370)
    Tree: Roots
    Link: http://sherrysharp.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I370&tree=Roots

    Description: 1. John Doak died Feb/Mar 1770, and NOT by Dec 1769!
    Ralph
    ralphdoak@gmail.com

    John married Mary Wilson(?) about 1730 in Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania. Mary was born about 1710; died after 1755. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Mary Wilson(?) was born about 1710; died after 1755.

    Notes:

    Researcher Turner Matthews supplied info that Mary was indeed Mary Wilson - Mary Paisley Wilson.
    b 1750 Philadelphia
    d 3 Jul 183 Beechgrove, Coffee Co, Tennessee

    there are some researchers who are not sure she was Mary Wilson; so -- needs more verification/research.
    ~ss

    Children:
    1. Robert Doak was born before 1735 in Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania or Augusta Co, Virginia; died before Nov 1796 in Guilford Co, North Carolina.
    2. Captain James Wilson Doak, Sr. was born before 1740 in Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania or Augusta Co, Virginia; died on 3 Feb 1806 in Guilford Co, North Carolina; was buried in Alamance Presbyterian Church Cem, Greensboro, Guilford Co, North Carolina.
    3. 3. Martha Doak was born about 1740; died after 1793 in North Carolina.
    4. John Doak, Jr. was born before 1743 in Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania or Augusta Co, Virginia; died after 1790 in of, Guilford Co, North Carolina.
    5. Thankful Doak, (dau of John or Samuel?) was born on 6 Jun 1743 in Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia; was christened on 30 Jun 1743 in Fishersville, Tinkling Spring, Augusta Co, Virginia; died after 1790 in Bledsoe Lick, Sumner Co, Tennessee; was buried in Hall Family Cem, Sumner Co, Tennessee.
    6. William Doak was born in 1747 in Augusta Co, Virginia; died before Nov 1807 in Guilford Co, North Carolina.
    7. Mary Doak was born on 30 Jun 1749 in Lunenburg Co, Virginia; was christened in Lunenburg Co, Virginia; died on 7 Mar 1833 in Southport, Maury Co, Tennessee; was buried in Matthews Cem, Southport, Maury Co, Tennessee.
    8. Elizabeth Doak was born about 1751 in Guilford Co, North Carolina; died after 1793.
    9. Josiah David Doak was born about 1753 in Guilford Co, North Carolina; died after 1780.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Robert* Doak, (immigrant) was born about 1670 in Ballynure, Co Antrim, Ulster, Ireland; died in 1753 in Augusta Co, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Immigration: 3 Nov 1718, The Elizabeth, Boston, Suffolk Co, Massachusetts; warned out
    • Residence: 1728, Lancaster Co, Pennsylvania
    • Emigration: Bef 1738, Ulster, Northern Ireland

    Notes:

    (Also spelled Doach, Doage, Doack)

    "The most likely number of immigrant Doak brothers was four (David, John, Robert & Samuel) together with perhaps three sisters: definitely 'the original Thankful Doak', and, probably, also Ann & Mary. A brother Nathaniel and a sister Julia are to be discounted - they appear to have made their entrance courtesy of one Janie P C French, vol 6 (Doak) in a series entitled Notable Southern Families. To be polite, that should have been published by, say, Balderdash, Bunkum & Claptrap (under license from Hogwash Inc) - it's probably the single 'greatest' source of conventionally-published misinformation concerning Doak genealogy, and there is regrettably strong competition for that 'accolade'.

    "The year of immigration is a seriously-vexed question: 1704 is a perennial favourite but arises from a mistaken reading of a source which never offered that date as anything other than speculative. 1740, which some have quite seriously preferred as a 'typo' revision of 1704, is demonstrably too late, probably by at least 12 years (see below), although it is by no means certain that the Doaks and the Mitchells arrived in America even in the same year, let alone on the same ship.

    "1718 is one strong contender, with a ship called the Elizabeth having become almost Ark-like as the fons et origo for all the immigrant Doaks - but, according to one deafeningly-trumpeted hypothesis, only if the parents are Robert & Margaret rather than James & Elizabeth ... or Samuel & unknown, or unknown & the Widow Doak, or James-Samuel (desperation setting in there, I've always suspected) and so on and so on, ad nauseam almost ad infinitum - hey, guys, relax, will youse ... there's nothing at all wrong about not being sure until you really can be, OK? Bit of a downer about the 'and perhaps we never will be sure', bit, admittedly, but if that's the way it is, to my mind those as-yet-unidentified ancestors deserve the honesty of uncertainty rather than to be 'honoured' by demeaning delusional squabbles among a bunch of gamblers.

    "[minor outbreak of fulmination ends]

    "Samuel Doak and Jane Mitchell almost certainly married in Lancaster Co, PA, not long before they set out for the Shendandoah Valley - and the same applies to Samuel's brother-in-law John Finley and Samuel's sister, Elizabeth Thankful Doak. Lancaster Co was until 1728 part of Chester Co and the 1728 petition which brought about the creation of Lancaster Co was signed by Thomas Mitchell (Jane's father, who died in 1734) and a James Doke, who may have been father of the immigrant Doak brothers. There is a will surviving for Thomas Mitchell which provides corroboration as to the identification of both Jane and her mother but, alas, no such record regarding James."

    http://www.cwcfamily.org/idl/robtdoak.htm
    (Ralph Doak)

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

    "Bible Records & Marriage Bonds" gives James and Elizabeth Doak as parents of the immigrant Doaks; Thankful born on ship coming over, about 1704.


    French in "Notable Southern Families" gives father as Samuel; arrival date as about 1740 (to Northern Neck). Says Samuel Doak received grant in Beverly Manor 23 September 1741.

    ----------------
    Rootsweb tree of Carmen J. Finley, Ph.D., C.G.
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=finleyc&id=I1441

    ID: I1441
    Name: Samuel Doak
    Sex: M
    Birth: Abt 1690 in Antrim,Ulster,Ireland
    Death: in Antrim,Ulster,Ireland
    Note:

    !Acklen in "Bible Records & Marriage Bonds" gives James and Elizabeth Doak as parents of the immigrant Doaks; Thankful born on ship coming over, about 1704. French in "Notable Southern Families gives father as Samuel; arrival date as about 1740. Says Samuel Doak received grant in Beverly Manor 23 September 1741.

    --------------
    From: Ralph Doak
    Date: 10/17/16 10:49:01
    To: Doak List
    Subject: Londonderry, Ulster, 1719

    Thanks to the unwelcoming Selectmen, we know that Robert Doak(e) was, along with 29 others, 'warned out' from Boston, MA, on November 3rd 1719

    The names were not arbitrarily selected - they were 'heads of household' travelling on the ship 'Elizabeth' from Londonderry in Ulster and all were labelled 'farmers'

    All were also probably labelled 'pox-riddled' to boot, as a Massachusetts Resolve dated November 4th makes clear - the 'Elizabeth' was carrying smallpox in addition to its passengers, and treatment for said infestation required more than Spectacle Island and the established 'pest-house' could provide - hence that Resolve dated November 4th 1719

    We do not know the nature of the treatment and nor do we know the fate of the party headed by Robert Doak(e), but we do know that he and two sons, James and John, were in 1720 granted land at Nutfield, later Londonderry, NH, and that Robert, a weaver, and his wife Margaret, sold their Londonderry, NH, land to John Campbell of Boston, MA, in December 1725 ... or, perhaps, in December 1724, when John Doak, then of Donegal, PA, sold his half-share of 60 acres at Londonderry, NH, to his brother James, then ALSO of Donegal, PA

    Donegal, PA, was then in Chester County, PA, but in 1729 it became part of Lancaster County, PA - we have access, courtesy of the State of Pennsylvania archives, to a copy of the petition, signed it seems by one 'Jas Doke'

    The tax list of 1726-7, for the year ending on March 24th 1727, for Chester Co, PA, includes John Doak 'and Mother' in a section headed 'Donegal rate' ... but that is the ONLY surviving record of Mother Doak in PA, although it is possible that she was named Margaret and was the wife, or by then perhaps the widow, of Robert Doak(e), 'warned out' from Boston, MA, November 3rd 1719 by Selectman John Mar(r)ian

    From Lancaster Co, PA, we have surviving records of John and Samuel Doak, and from the court in Augusta Co, VA, in 1746 we have evidence that John and Samuel Doak were brothers

    Our dna evidence confirms that 3 Doak lines come from John, Samuel, and David (i) Doak (1710-87), all of which trio can be placed in Augusta Co, VA, in the 1740s ... and both John and Samuel can also be shown in Lancaster Co, PA, in the 1730s

    According to one 'scholar', we are blighted with the unwholesome taint of Welsh ancestry, but my x4gtgdfather John Doak mayhap be to blame there - he settled at last and died in 1770 at Bleating House, Bleating Creek, Rowan County, North Carolina

    We are sure our ancestors arrived in America from 'the North of Ireland' - the anciente province of ULSTER - and, probably, that Scotland was 'home' before Ulster came a'calling them

    We are certain that a weaver named Robert Doak(e), his wife Margaret, and sons James and John, arrived at Nutfield, later Londonderry, NH, in time to be granted land there in 1720

    We are also certain that Robert Doak(e) was a passenger on the 'Elizabeth', captain/sailing-master Robert Homes, which sailed to 'Hull and Boston' in time to be 'warned out' by the puritanical inhospitality of John Mar(r)ian, Selectman of Boston, MA, from Londonderry in Ulster, Ireland, late in July or early in August of 1719 ... and I very strongly suspect Robert Doak(e) of having been father to James, John, Samuel, David, Thankful, Ann, and perhaps also Mary ..... and my own x5greatgrandfather
    Ralph


    From: Ralph Doak
    Date: 10/24/2016 5:39:49 PM
    To: Sherry
    Subject: The Patriarch

    Robart Doake, weaver

    Sailed into 'Hull and Boston', MA, on 3 November 1719 on the 'Elizabeth' with wife Margarett, sons James, John, Samuel, and David, also daughters Thankful, Ann, and perhaps a Mary
    Ralph

    Immigration:
    Robert Doak arrived Nov 1718 with his family, but was "Warned Out" and had to leave. He went 40 miles north/west to Londonderry to farm.
    http://fragilethings.fr.yuku.com/topic/2430/Map-of-Boston-1772#.WBCNkWWECcQ (see attached)

    From: Ralph Doak
    Date: 10/24/2016 5:39:49 PM
    To: Sherry
    Subject: The Patriarch

    Robart Doake, weaver
    Sailed into 'Hull and Boston', MA, on 3 November 1719 on the 'Elizabeth' with wife Margarett, sons James, John, Samuel, and David, also daughters Thankful, Ann, and perhaps a Mary
    Ralph

    ---------
    Robert Doak(e) was, along with 29 others, 'warned out' from Boston, MA, on November 3rd 1719

    The names were not arbitrarily selected - they were 'heads of household' travelling on the ship 'Elizabeth' from Londonderry in Ulster and all were labelled 'farmers'

    All were also probably labelled 'pox-riddled' to boot, as a Massachusetts Resolve dated November 4th makes clear - the 'Elizabeth' was carrying smallpox in addition to its passengers, and treatment for said infestation required more than Spectacle Island and the established 'pest-house' could provide - hence that Resolve dated November 4th 1719.
    Ralph

    Residence:
    Lancaster Co was until 1728 part of Chester Co and the 1728 petition which brought about the creation of Lancaster Co was signed by Thomas Mitchell (Jane's father, who died in 1734) and a James Doke, who may have been father of the immigrant Doak brothers.
    (Ralph Doak)


    Emigration:
    from Ralph Doak (2/7/2013)
    The Doaks of Augusta Co, VA

    We (f)actually know very little of the prior activities in America of the Doak siblings who came into the Shenandoah valley ca 1738.

    We know even less about their parentage and provenance - in these matters there is essentially just those oral traditions which constitute the minefield known as Doak "family lore" .. at least in polite circles.

    One otherwise worthy antiquarian has even made the assertion that the Doaks are Welsh - marginally preferable to the vile slander that we might be English, but a low blow for a' that

    The imbalance of improbabilities suggests the following:

    The Doaks are of Scots stock, but probably Lalland rather than Hieland - alluring though the notion of my ancestors as Celtic warriors is, and will remain.

    Some Doaks went into the North of Ireland during the Plantation of Ulster and it is from these that the Augusta Co, VA, Doaks descend.

    Where in Ulster did they live before emigrating to America?
    Cos Antrim, Derry & Down have all been nominated for that dubious honour but Antrim has been - and for me remains - the clear favourite for too many years to be cast aside

    -------------------
    "The Mathews (Mathes) Family in America" by I.C. Van Deventer -- Alexander Printing Co., 1925.

    Alexander Mathews came with the Doak family in the Scotch-Irish immigration from Northern Ireland to Pennsylvania,

    James Doak, his wife Elizibeth, and five children, Samual, David, John, Robert and Thankful emigrated from North of Ireland to America, landing in Newcastle, Delaware in 1708 and settled in Chester Co., PA.
    ( strongly disputed)
    -------------------
    from Ralph Doak (2/7/2013):
    One unfortunate aspect:
    Ms Ida Christabelle Van Deventer (pub. 1925) expects readers to believe that the ship landed its illustriously ancestral cargo in America in 1708. So sorry - not - Ms Van-Denter, but that's just not the way it was.

    Only a few groups of Ulster Scots emigrated to America before 1718 and it takes only a few of the few facts we know to show that our 'Doaks of interest' were of the rule rather than of the exception thereto.

    At this point I feel the need to bring up my heavy artillery so, to the sound of elephants tap-dancing, enter William Henry Foote, who in 1846 published a work entitled, for the sake of brevity "Sketches of North Carolina:"

    During the course of this work it is disclosed that Samuel, father of Rev Samuel Doak (1749 - 1840) emigrated 'very young'

    Game over..
    ______________________

    Robert* married Margaret* (..) Doak about 1706 in Ireland. Margaret* was born about 1690 in Co Derry, Ulster, Ireland; died after 1741 in Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Margaret* (..) Doak was born about 1690 in Co Derry, Ulster, Ireland; died after 1741 in Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Emigration: 1740, Co Derry, Ulster, Ireland

    Notes:

    "Elizabeth" as the wife's name is more tradition than proven.

    Children:
    1. 6. John Doak, (Immigrant) was born before 1710 in Co Antrim (prob), Ulster, Ireland; died between Feb 1770 and Mar 1770 in Alamance Co, North Carolina.
    2. Thankful Doak, (Immigrant) was born in 1707; died after 20 Sep 1791 in Staunton, Augusta Co, Virginia.
    3. David Doak, Sr (Immigrant) was born in 1710 in Ulster, Northern Ireland; was christened in 1747 in North Mountain, Augusta Co, Virginia; died before 2 Oct 1787 in Black Lick, Montgomery Co (now Wythe Co), Virginia.
    4. Mary Doak, (Immigrant?) (FFDNA-J?) was born about 1715; died after 1745.
    5. Samuel Doak, Sr. (Immigrant) was born about 1716 in Ballynure, Co Antrim, Ulster, Northern Ireland; died before 19 May 1772 in Augusta Co, Virginia.
    6. James Doak, Sr. (immigrant) was born about 1700 in Ulster Co, Ireland; died after 1770 in of, Londonderry, Rockingham Co, New Hampshire.
    7. Ann* Doak, (Immigrant) was born about 1719 in Co Antrim, Ulster, Ireland; died in 1763 in Beverly Manor, Augusta Co, Virginia.