- Prince William Co VA Bond Book 1732-1847
September 24th 1754 (1-11)
Know all Men by these Presents, that We Robert Marshall, Thomas Marshall, John Peyton Jr., John Simmons, and Scarlet Madden are held and firmly bound to Thomas Harrison and John Wright, Gent. Justices of the Court of Prince William County, now sitting, in the sum of five hundred pounds current money, To the Payment whereof well and truly to be made to the said Justices, and their Successors, we bind ourselves, and each of us, our and each of our Heirs, Executors and Administrators, jointly and severally, firmly by these Presents. Sealed with our Seals, this twenty fourth day of September in the Year of our Lord One Thousand Seven Hundred and fifty four and in the
XXVII Year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord GEORGE, the Second.
The Condition of this Obligation is such, That if the above bound Robert Marshall and Thomas Marshall administrators of the Goods, Chattels, and Credits of Robert Marshall deceased, do make, or cause to be made, a true and perfect Inventory of all and singular the Goods, Chattels, and Credits of the said Deceased, which have, or shall come to the Hands, Possession, or Knowledge of them the said Robert Marshall and Thomas Marshall or into the Hands and Possession of any other Person or Persons for them in hand the same so made, do exhibit or cause to be exhibited into the County Court of Prince William as such Time as he shall be thereunto required by the said Court, and the same Goods, Chattels, and Credits, and all other the Goods, Chattels, and Credits of the said Deceased, at the Time of his Death which at any Time after, shall come to the Hands, or Possession of the said Robert Marshall and Thomas Marshall or into the Hands, or Possession of any other Person or Persons for them do well and truly administer according to Law: And further do make a just and true Account of their Actings and Doings therein, when thereto required by the said Court, and all the Rest and Residue of the said Goods, Chattels, and Credits, which shall be found remaining upon the said Administrators Account, the same being first examined and allowed by the Justices of the Court for the Time being, shall deliver and pay unto such Person or Persons respectively; as the said Justices by their Order or Judgment shall direct, pursuant to the Laws in that Case made and provided and if it shall hereafter appear, that any Last Will and Testament was made by the said Deceased, and the Executor or Executors therein named, do exhibit the same into the said Court, making Request to have it allowed and approved accordingly, if the said Robert Marshall and Thomas Marshall being thereunto required, do render and deliver up their Letters of Administration, Approbation of such Testament being first had and made in the said Court: Then this Obligation to be void and of none Effect, or else to remain in full Force and Virtue.
Sealed, and delivered, in presence of the Court
Robert Marshall SEAL
Thomas Marshall SEAL
John Peyton SEAL
John Simons SEAL
Scarlet Madden SEAL
Robert Marshall, Thomas Marshall, John Peyton, John Simons, and Scarlet Madden acknowledged the within bond as their acts and deeds in Prince William County Court the 25th day of March 1754 and was then recorded.
Teste - John Graham, Clerk
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=mrmarsha&id=I75240
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Notes |
- From:
Subject: Parents of Margaret OREAR and Scarlet MADDEN
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 1997 14:54:59 -0500 (EST)
My fifth great grandparents were Scarlet Madden and Margaret Orear. I do not know when they married, but I do know that they lived in Prince William County, Va, and that they had married before 26 June 1749 at which time Scarlet leased 200 acres of land from George Brent for the natural lives of
Scarlet, his wife, Margaret, and their son, George, or the survivor of them.
Scarlet died in Prince William County in 1796. Margaret was still living in 1800 when she sold the 200 acres of land that had been acquired in 1749.
I have had no success identifying with certainty the parents of either Scarlet or Margaret. I have theorized that Scarlet was a son of John Madden, who received a 576-acre grant of land near Goose Run in Prince William County from Lord Fairfax on 6 April 1730. The land was adjacent to land owned by John and Daniel Orear, who had patented their 400-acre tract on 11 August 1711, when the area was part of Stafford County. It seems likely that either John Orear or Daniel Orear was the father of Margaret Orear, but I have not been able to identify her father with any certainty.
Any information that might help in identifying the parents of Margaret or Scarlet would be greatly appreciated.
A. E. (Tony) Collier 32 Revonah Circle Stamford, CT 06905 (203) 348-9554
Tony--
I have come across a reference to an Orear/Madden connection before via another O'Rear researcher, Mrs. Mildred Waddell. Mildred is descended from Mary O'Rear (dau. of John Orear who came to GA), who m. Jesse Brantley in 1797 in Hancock Co., GA. However, Mildred has done a *great deal* of research on early Orears in NC and VA and has discovered
"missing" females that were not previously included in Edward O'Rear's privately printed O'Rear Sketchbook. Mildred also lives near Salt Lake City and does extensive research at the LDS library there. She is quite elderly and is not on-line, but she is still quite the avid researcher and answers letters promptly. Her address:
Mrs. Mildred Waddell
P.O. Box 454
Coalville, UT 84017
I've pulled from my files a couple of letters that Mildred wrote me in 1990 about the Maddens, etc., and it appears that at that time even she was having difficulty straightening things out. Various information had been submitted to the LDS temple without documentation and different family history books cited different relationships--some without references. Here are some abstracts of what Mildred included about the Madden family:
1. a copy of a family group sheet on the family of John Orear (b. ca. 1712 Prince Wm. Co., VA--son of Esther Rennoe, d. ca. 1805) and wife Malinda Madden (b. ca. 1722) of Prince Wm. Co., VA. Ch listed for this couple: Jeremiah (m. Nancy Catlett), Mary Ann (m. James Chamberlayne), Benjamin (m. Mary Catlett), John (m. Sarah Davis), Elizabeth, Margaret
(b. 13 Feb 1753) m. Benjamin Jameson, Jesse m. Melinda Holton, Daniel m. Ann Luckett, William m. Annie Calk, Enoch m. Hannah Rennoe. [I have more detailed information on birthdates, etc. on these ch.--DS] This was submitted by Norma Y. Ericksen in the 1950s to Salt Lake. At that time she resided in Los Angeles and cited as her source "research
records of Lee Orear, p. 1."
Note: Ed O'Rear's Sketchbook attributes the above children to John Orear (b. Stafford Co., VA 1713, d. Prince Wm. Co., VA 1805) and Miss --?-- Renno, dau. of Francis Rennoe.
2. a copy of Scarlett Madden's will, naming wife Margaret, granddau. Betsy Madden, and "rest of estate to be divided between Elizabeth Glasscock, Frances Reno, Peggy Cox, Franny Newman (each a child's part), John Posey Newman, and Kesia Stone 1 s (share?) each. Exec: wife, Daniel Oraire, Enoch Orear; Wit: John Prosser, Jesse Barron, John Barron.
3. copy of Fanny Shute's will (Prince Wm. Co., VA 3 May 1784) where she names sister Peggy Madden, Niece Fanny Newman, legatees--George Madden's 2 daus. Sucky and Betsy Madden, Sister Frances Reno. Exec: Father Scarlet Madden and Wm. Orear. Wit: Daniel Orear, Enoch, Elizabeth.
Note from Mildred: Daniel, Enoch, and Eliz. Orear appear to be the ch. of John & Malinda (Madden) O'Rear according the family group sheet enclosed.
4. There is some question as to whether there is one or two Margaret Orears during this time period in Prince Wm. Co., VA. A book on the Glasscock family ("The Glas(s)cock/Glassco Saga") states the following on p. 163 in the Additions and Corrections section:
"Proof that Margaret, wife of John [I assume this means John
Glasscock--DS] was Margaret O'Rear is in King George Co., VA Deed Bk 7-6-1733. She was the dau. of John and Mary O'Rear: 'John and Margaret Glasscock sell land that Margaret had inherited from her parents, John and Mary Orea (Orear)' "
Note from DS (me): This John and Mary (Lawson?) Orea/Orear were the parents of 1) Daniel Larson (Lawson?) Orear (b. Stafford Co., VA 1710, d. 1736 Prince Wm. Co., VA) who m. Esther Thorne, dau. of Wm. Thorne and 2) John Orear (m. to Miss Rennoe (Ed Orear) or Malinda Madden (family group sheet referred to above), and 3) Margaret m. John Glasscock.
Interestingly, after John Orear Sr. died, his widow Mary m. Wm. Thorne--her son's father-in-law. Mary and Wm. then had Susannah Thorne, who m. into the Rennoe/Reno family. But I digress...
Regarding the above, Mildred was trying to determine if Margaret was one person who married a Glasscock and later a Madden, or if there were two Margarets (note the Glasscock reference in Scarlet Madden's will).
The IGI lists a John Glasscock/Margaret Orear marriage in 1723 in Lancaster, VA. There is also a vague reference to the marriage of a Scarlet Madden in VA (no co. listed) with Margaret Orear 17??.
My experience with Mildred's research is that she thoroughly continues to see a problem through, so I have no doubt that she has collected additional material at this time. I also have two microfilms of Ed O'Rear's research that I bought from the KY State Archives, so when time permits, I'll look up Maddens along with some other items I've made a list of. There is no index to the microfilms, so looking through them
is pretty time consuming--albeit interesting.
I really haven't answered your question as to whom Scarlett and Margaret's parents are, except to say that Margaret O'Rear Madden possibly may have previously been married to John Glasscock; if so, then she is the dau. of John Orear and wife Mary (Larson?).
I hope I haven't just confused things further, and I will sort through my O'Rear notebooks to see if I have additional information. Back in the mid-1980s I briefly corresponded with a Mrs. Eva Genty in MO who was descended from Margaret Orear Glasscock. Perhaps she would be able to provide additional information, although as I recall her primary source was the Glasscock book. Also, hopefully someone else on the list has more information on this family.
Donna Sarchet
1807 Ennis
Plainview, TX 79072
(806) 293-2282
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Posted by: Laura Pack (ID *****5561) Date: September 27, 2002 at 18:00:37 In Reply to: Will of Scarlett Madden - Virginia 1788 by Wade Glascock
I have a Melinda Madden Reno who md my ancestor John Orear c 1743 in VA. John Orear was b Prince William C, VA c 1713. He d c 1805. I also have Margaret, sister of John, who md John Glascock c 1730 VA. Your names and dates seem to coincide with mine. Does this info help? L.S.Pack
- SCARLETT MADDIN
==========================================
------------------------------------------
War of 1812 Service Records
Name: Scarlett Maddin
Company: 4 REGIMENT VIRGINIA MILITIA.
Rank - Induction: PRIVATE
Rank - Discharge: PRIVATE
Roll Box: 130
Roll Exct: 602
=======
Looking for info on Scarlett Madden. Will dated 9 Jan 1788, proved 1796 Prince William (Fauquier) C., VA.
Md #2 Margaret Orear (md #1John Glascock). Daughter Elizabeth Madden b 1748 Pr William C.,VA, md Peter Glascock Jr.
Scarlett's will refers to other children not of Margaret Orear marriage.....Frances Madden Reno, Peggy Madden Cox, Franny Madden Newman.....who was their mother?
Any info helpful. Thank you.
-----
In Reply to: SCARLETT MADDEN will 1788, proved 1796 VA-wives? chn? by Laura Pack of 2993
I too am working on the Scarlett MADDEN problem. My information is that the Scarlett Madden who died sometime between 9 January 1788, when he signed his will, and 5 September 1796, when the will was probated in Prince William County, VA, married a woman named Margaret, surname unknown. They had two children: George and Fanny. Their birthdates are unknown but George died in 1792 when the inventory of his estate was returned and recorded. Fanny left a will recorded in 1783/84 mentioning her father and her brother's children Sukey and Betty Madden.
George MADDEN married Kezia FRENCH, daughter of William FRENCH and Winifred HALL. They had two children, Sukey, who died young, and Elizabeth who married Richard STONE, son of Valentine STONE and Mary EVANS on 21 October 1796 in Madison County, KY. Meanwhile, Kezia French Madden married Valentine Stone, as her second husband and his second wife. One date given for this second marriage is ?about 1785?, although the earliest birthdate for their several children is 1789.
The above information is based on Katherine Cox Gottshalk?s ?Ashton-Hall-Leasure-French Families of Virginia,? in ?Family Records?, vol. 1, submitted by May Stone to support her application for membership in the DAR (see pages 98 and 113-123).
Obviously the above information presents some problems. A marriage date in the 1780s for Valentine Stone and Kezia French Madden is in conflict with a deathdate of 1792 for George Madden (unless Kezia simply ran off with Valentine, for which there is no evidence). One clue is that Fanny Madden?s 1783/84 will, which did not mention her brother George, may have been written after his death. Moreover, while I have not yet had an opportunity to view the Prince William County probate records, in an index the name of George Madden appears in Prince William County Wills, Pt. 2 1734-1920 in Will Book G, page 163 for 1782 and in the Final Accounts on page 321 for 1786. As the 1792 date is only when the inventory of his estate was completed and may in fact be erroneous, probably George Madden died prior to 1783/84, in which case a ca. 1785 date for Kezia?s second marriage would be plausible -- especially as she had at least one surviving daughter to raise.
Returning to the problem of Scarlett Madden, on the Internet I have seen several genealogies that have him married to Margaret OREAR/O?REAR. One genealogy states that Margaret was born 1701 in Prince William County and died 1780 at Atoka in Fauquier County, VA. She married first in 1728 John GLASSCOCK who was born 14January 1698 in Fauquier County. His death date is uncertain. Scarlett Madden was her second husband. Their only child of this union listed in these genealogies is Elizabeth MADDEN, born 1748, who married Peter GLASSCOCK and died 1815 in Rowan County, NC.
These genealogies, of course, raise the interesting problem of whether Scarlett Madden and Margaret Orear Glasscock had other children besides Elizabeth, namely Sukey and the Elizabeth Madden who married Richard Stone. Since the Gottschalk genealogy and those on the Internet were focused on tracing different lines of descent from Scarlett Madden, that could explain why neither genealogy dealt with the other children.
Another possible explanation is that there were two Scarlett Maddens, both residing in Prince William County and both marrying women named Margaret. Elizabeth Madden Glasscock was the offspring of one Scarlett and George and Fanny the children of the second. So far I have found nothing to support such an explanation.
I have no information regarding the other possible children mentioned in your posted message.
I plan to continue my researches into the Scarlett Madden family and will let you know if I find anything additional to the above. Please let me know if you come up with anything that might be helpful in explaining these discrepancies.
http://www.jenforum.net/madden/messages/2207.html
_____________
http://boards.ancestry.com/thread.aspx?mv=flat&m=96&p=surnames.glascock
GLASCOCKS MOVE TO THE
OLD NORTH STATE
Written by Rev. Lawrence A. Glassco
At the end of the Revolutionary War in 1781, Peter Glascock was 67 years old.
In the 1782 Fauquier tax list he had 11 slaves (or 8 slaves -- one record is probably of old Peter and the other of his son Peter Jr.). He and his first wife, Jane, had raised nine children, and he had seven more children by his second wife, Mary (probably Mary Rector). His youngest daughter, argaret, was only about seven at the end of the war and the rest of his second set of children ranged upward in age to Spencer, who was about 20.
We know that at least two of his older sons, Peter Jr., and Jesse, had fought in the North Carolina militia during the war. They and their brother Spencer are listed in the Rowan County tax list of 1778. Further, their cousin Gregory also
entered 400 acres on the south side of Dutchman's Creek in 1778. (On August 7, 1774, a Jane Glasscock became a member of the Dutchman's Creek Baptist Church. I assume that she was the second wife of this Gregory; thus he had apparently moved to Rowan County by 1774.).
It was probably through the efforts of some of these relatives that old Peter decided to move south after the cessation of hostilities. So shortly after the tax lists for 1782 were made up in Fauquier County, Peter and his family moved down the Shenandoah Valley from Virginia to somewhat comparable piedmont terrain in Rowan County (now Davie County) North Carolina.
Peter wrote his will in 1783 in North Carolina. It was when this will was discovered in North Carolina in the 1950's that all of Peter's sixteen children were finally accounted for and the genealogical charting of this large branch of
the family began to be possible. Apparently old Peter died shortly after his will was written, in 1784.
His will divided his plantation of 320 acres as follows: (1) "120 acres of land where I now live including the plantation" to his wife Mary; (2) "100 acres of land
part of the same tract I live on to be laid off on that side of the land adjoining Cedar Creek" to his son Charles; and (3) "100 acres of land to be laid off on that side the land on Dutchman's Creek" to his son Moses.
Unfortunately, diligent search of old maps and land records of Rowan County does not give any further information about the exact location of Peter's plantation. There are dozens of records of the Glascock's land holdings of Peter's many descendants in Rowan County in the following years, but as in Northern Virginia, no records have apparently survived of Peter's property.
Now we turn our attention to three of Peter's sons, Jesse, Peter, and Gregory, who served in the North Carolina militia, and who decided to make North Carolina their home after the war ended.
Jesse Glascock was born ca. 1748 in Loudoun County, Virginia and remained there for a time. In 1778 he & his brothers Gregory & Peter are listed in the tax lists of Rowan County, North Carolina. There he volunteered to serve in the North Carolina militia when Cornwallis invaded the south & his pay voucher is in the North Carolina records. Family tradition relates that while in the militia he fought at the Battle of King's Mountain, South Carolina in 1780.
At about the close of the war he apparently returned to Loudoun County, Virginia, & was married to a Miss Adams (said to be related to the President) for his first son was born in Loudoun County in 1781. In 1782 his father moved to
North Carolina & settled on Dutchman's Creek in Rowan County. However Jesse is shown on the 1782 Loudoun tax list with 1 white poll and 1 Negro slave. He received only 1 shilling in his father's 1783 North Carolina will. (Most of the property went to Peter's 2nd wife & her children in North Carolina, while the children of his first wife back in Virginia received 1 shilling each. Perhaps they had received an inheritance from him earlier, or when he married the 2nd wife, as was often the custom.).
In 1791 the Loudoun Court ordered Amos Dunham to pay Jesse 25 pounds of tobacco for service as a witness. In 1795 he was again a witness in Loudoun Court. Then in 1801 his son Enoch migrated from Loudoun County to Kentucky. His father & family followed, probably a few years later, and in 1810 he is listed in the Hardin County, Kentucky, census -- age over 45, wife 26-45, 1 son 26-45 & 1 daughter 10-16. (The children are probably his younger children Abraham & Faner.) His older sons Enoch and Peter are listed in the Breckenridge County census of 1810.
Peter Glascock, Jr. was born ca. 1744 & went to Rowan County, North Carolina at the time his father moved there. He married Elizabeth Madden, daughter of Scarlett Madden (and probably granddaughter of John Madden & Bridget (Helm). The Rowan census shows Peter the head of a family of 12 whites, comprised of 3 males over 16, 4 males under 16 & 5 females. Peter Sr.'s 1783 will specified that his son Peter was to share in the division of his Negroes, live stock & other estate at the death of his wife, Mary. In 1798 Peter had a state land grant on Howard's Branch of Dutchman's Creek and another in 1799. In 1801 he deeded
part of this land to Scarlet Glascock.
Gregory Glascock was born 21 Jan 1732. He moved to Rowan County, North Carolina and died there in 1790, will proved 1790. He is probably the "Trusty friend" of Peter's 1783 will. He married (1) ca. 1753-1755 a Rector or Fishback.
and (2) Jane ----. He had a grant of 400 acres on the South side of Dutchman's Creek in Rowan County. He had large grants of land in Kentucky, possibly as a result of Revolutionary service. He remained all his life in Rowan County and died there in 1790.
There are a number of other records of Glascocks living in the area before 1800. Some of the early ones include:
1774 -- Jane Glasscock joined Dutchman's Creek Baptist Church
1778 -- George Glasscock lived on Dutchman's Creek.
1778 -- Peter Glasscock entered 200 acres on Elijah's (Elisha's) Creek, a
tributary of Dutchman's Creek.
1778 -- Gregory Glascock's 400 acres on south side of Dutchman's Creek
adjoin Christopher Booe, Hugh Montgomery and Henry Railsback.
1778 -- Gregory, Jesse and Peter listed as taxable persons in Capt. Johnson's District.
1783 -- Peter's will filed. Has his signature "Glasscock"
1784 -- Will of Peter Glasscock proved by Oliver Hendren, Basil Gaither and Stephen Noland. "On the resignation of Gregory Glasscock, letters issued to Mary and Spencer Glasscock."
1784 -- Peter Glasscock ordered to oversee the road from Dutchman's Creek to Elisha Creek with hands of the adjacent and to build a bridge over Dutchman's Creek. (Must be Peter.)
1794 -- Mary, widow of deceased Peter Glasscock of Rowan County, North Carolina to their sons William, Wharton and Elijah. Wits. Basil Gaither & Thos. Prather.
1797 -- Spencer Glascock to Charles Glascock of Fauquier County, Virginia 100 acres of land on waters of Dutchman's Creek left to Charles by his father's will, adjoining Spencer.
1804 Spencer Glascock (then living in Tennessee) sold 127 acres on both sides of Dutchman's Creek adjoining Gregory.
So it appears that at least some members of the family had migrated south to North Carolina before or during the war. The route was down the Shenandoah Valley between the mountains -- a natural migration route. From the records, it
is apparent that Glasscocks, Adamses and several other families from the Piedmont in northern Fauquier County may have gone south at about the same time. Some of them retrned to the north -- as did Jesse to live after the war --
while others stayed in the south.
__________________
http://www.tmgtips.com/OrearWeb/p58.htm
Margaret O'Rear and Margaret O'Rear may be the same person; These are probably not the same person, but this Tag is here to allow easy switch between the persons who have the same name and are often confused. Margaret O'Rear was born circa 1701 at Brenttown, Virginia.4,5,6 An unknown person gave 100 acres more or less in Stafford County to Margaret O'Rear after the death of her parents, John O'Rea and Mary Peck, at Richmond County, Virginia, on 10 May 1708.7 Margaret O'Rear was born circa 1709 at Virginia.1,8 She married (?) Young circa 1720.9 Margaret O'Rear witnessed the death of (?) Young before 1728.10 Margaret O'Rear married John Glasscock in 1728 at Virginia.1,11 Margaret O'Rear and John Glasscock with Mary Peck and William Thorn sold 100 acres of land in Stafford County (and held in trust for Margaret) to Cornelius McCarty in 1733 at King George County, Virginia. Margaret O'Rear and John Glasscock sold land (about 112 acres) on Hungar Run to the vestry of Leeds Parish in 1773 at Fauquier County, Virginia.12 Margaret O'Rear and John Glasscock sold land to William Berry (633 acres) on Bull Run Mountain and a branch of Fornication Run in 1773 at Fauquier County, Virginia.12 Margaret O'Rear died between 1773 and 1780 at Virginia. She witnessed the will of John Glasscock in 1780 at Fauquier County, Virginia.12 Margaret O'Rear witnessed the will of Capt. Scarlette Madden on 9 January 1788 at Prince William County, Virginia; Lagatees:
-- Each of the following to receive a child' part of the estate
Elizabeth Glasscock
Frances Reno
Peggy (Margaret) Cox
Franny (Frances Newman
-- Granddaughter, Betsey Madden, to reveive 50 pouinds
-- Each of the following to receive one English Shilling
John Posey Newman
Kesia Stone
-- Wife, Margaret Madden, to receive 1/3 part of estate
Executors:
Wife
Daniel Orear
Enoch Orear
Signed:
Scarlett Madden
Wit:
John Prosser
Jesse Barorn
John Barron.9,13
Margaret O'Rear witnessed the probate of of the estate of Capt. Scarlette Madden on 5 September 1796 at Prince William County, Virginia.9 Enoch O'Rear and Margaret O'Rear in 1798 at Fauquier County, Virginia, filed suit against Travis Coppage as executors of the estate of Capt. Scarlette Madden.14
--
Peter Glasscock Jr.1
M, #18200, b. circa 1744
Peter Glasscock Jr. was born circa 1744.1 He married Elizabeth Madden, daughter of Capt. Scarlette Madden and Margaret O'Rear, before 1766.2 Peter Glasscock Jr. or an unknown person circa 1786 probably owned the land and laid out the town of Paris, Virginia.3
Family Elizabeth Madden b. 1748, d. b 1803
Child ?Madden Glasscock4 b. c 1766
Citations
1.[S187] Letter, Mrs. Eleanor Mathews to Dennis O'Rear, 1995, 1995.
2.[S187] Letter, Mrs. Eleanor Mathews to Dennis O'Rear, 1995, 1995, giving ca.1770.
3.[S1921] Charles Harrison Mann, Liberty Hill Story, p. 9.
4.[S1473] Dave Conover, "Margaret ORear Young...," e-mail to Lee H. Hoffman, 6 Jan 2004.
Elizabeth Madden1
F, #18201, b. 1748, d. before 1803
Elizabeth Madden|b. 1748\nd. b 1803|p58.htm#i18201|Capt. Scarlette Madden|b. b 1729\nd. b 1796|p59.htm#i18202|Margaret O'Rear|b. 1731\nd. a 1798|p208.htm#i49418|||||||Daniel (Lanson) O'Rear|b. c 1710\nd. b 25 Apr 1737|p1.htm#i72|Esther (?)|b. c 1715\nd. bt 1737 - 1742|p1.htm#i73|
Father Capt. Scarlette Madden1 b. b 1729, d. b 1796
Mother Margaret O'Rear2 b. 1731, d. a 1798
Elizabeth Madden was born in 1748.3 She married Peter Glasscock Jr. before 1766.4 Elizabeth Madden witnessed the will of Capt. Scarlette Madden on 9 January 1788 at Prince William County, Virginia; Lagatees:
-- Each of the following to receive a child' part of the estate
Elizabeth Glasscock
Frances Reno
Peggy (Margaret) Cox
Franny (Frances Newman
-- Granddaughter, Betsey Madden, to reveive 50 pouinds
-- Each of the following to receive one English Shilling
John Posey Newman
Kesia Stone
-- Wife, Margaret Madden, to receive 1/3 part of estate
Executors:
Wife
Daniel Orear
Enoch Orear
Signed:
Scarlett Madden
Wit:
John Prosser
Jesse Barorn
John Barron.5,6
Elizabeth Madden died before 1803 at Surry County, North Carolina.7
Family Peter Glasscock Jr. b. c 1744
Child ?Madden Glasscock5 b. c 1766
Citations
1.[S187] Letter, Mrs. Eleanor Mathews to Dennis O'Rear, 1995, 1995.
2.[S138] Estimated Information.
3.[S1474] Dave Conover, "Margaret ORear Young...," e-mail to Lee H. Hoffman, 11 Jan 2004.
4.[S187] Letter, Mrs. Eleanor Mathews to Dennis O'Rear, 1995, 1995, giving ca.1770.
5.[S1473] Dave Conover, "Margaret ORear Young...," e-mail to Lee H. Hoffman, 6 Jan 2004.
6.[S1636] Wade Glascock, Will of Scarlett Madden - Virginia 1788 in "Will - Scarlett Madden," listserve message 28 May 2001.
7.[S2189] Dinald L. Wilson, "Fanny Shute and Family," e-mail to Leigh Reneau, 10 Dec 2004.
Compiler: Lee Hoffman, 410 Nevada Ave., Mt. Sterling, KY 40353
file showing Scarlett, and Margaret ORear and daughter; m Peter Glasscock and children1:
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=iajames&id=I3075
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