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Sarah Ann Davenport (maybe Clark?)

Female Abt 1696 - 1782  (~ 86 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Sarah Ann Davenport (maybe Clark?) was born about 1696 in Pamunkey Neck, King and Queen Co, Virginia (daughter of Davis* Davenport and Ann* Woodruff); died on 15 Aug 1782 in St. George Parish, Spotsylvania Co, Virginia.

    Notes:

    Graves, Ann Davenport [daughter of Davis, wife of Thomas Graves] participation in the Revolutionary War: Provisioner, Continental and State Troops, Spotsylvania County. [Ann died concurrent with the end of the War in 1782, at or near 88 years, per Graves Bible record.]

    Of Ann's fourteen children and multitudinous grandsons there were many who served Virginia during the Revolution in the Continental Line, State Troops, and/or County Militias, in public offices or as providers of food, fodder, guns, and such other supplies required to keep soldiers in the field. No attempt has been made to identify descendants of Thomas Graves and Ann Davenport by their Revolutionary postures, and such a task has not been undertaken by Graves genealogists to our knowledge except as to individual lines in qualifying for memberships in the DAR or SAR.

    Source: The Pamunkey Davenports.
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=caswellcounty&id=I2588

    According to Graves Family Assoc:
    His (Thomas Graves) wife Ann (or Anne or Sarah Ann) has generally been thought to be a Davenport, daughter of William Davenport and Anne Woodruff, but Mrs. Hiden thought she was more likely a Clark, or of that family connection. Mrs. Taylor says she was born before 1696. She lived until 1782, and during the Revolution she furnished supplies to the Continental troops.

    Sarah married Thomas Graves about 1721 in King William Co, Virginia. Thomas was born in 1691 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died on 6 Jun 1767 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900
    Name: Thomas Graves
    Gender: male
    Birth Place: VA
    Birth Year: 1691
    Spouse Name: Ann Davenport
    Spouse Birth Place: VA
    Spouse Birth Year: 1696

    Children:
    1. Thomas Graves was born about 1721 in King William Co, Virginia; died on 19 Nov 1801 in Fayette Co, Kentucky.
    2. William Graves was born about 1722 in King William Co, Virginia; died before Aug 1790 in Henry Co, Virginia.
    3. Solomon Graves was born about 1723 in King William Co, Virginia; died before 17 Feb 1785 in Sussex Co, Virginia.
    4. Richard Graves was born about 1725 in of, Hanover Co, Virginia; died after 1788 in Fayette Co, Kentucky.
    5. Rice Graves was born in 1729 in St. George, Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died on 11 Aug 1814 in Louisa, Louisa Co, Virginia.
    6. David Graves was born about 1731 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died about Feb 1808 in Shelby Co, Kentucky.
    7. Nancy Graves was born about 1733 in Orange Co, North Carolina; died about 1809 in Wilkes Co, Georgia.
    8. Rosanna Graves was born about 1735 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died after 1760.
    9. Louisa Graves was born about 1739 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died after 1760.
    10. Susanna Graves was born before 1740 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died before 1802.
    11. Robert Graves was born about 1741 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died after 1770.
    12. Jonathan Graves was born about 1743 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died about 1768 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia.
    13. Mary Graves was born about 1745 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died after 1770.
    14. Elizabeth Graves was born about 1757 in Spotsylvania Co, Virginia; died after 1760.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Davis* Davenport was born about 1660 in Parmunkey, King William Co, Virginia; died before 1735 in King William Co, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Residence: 30 Mar 1704, King William Co, Virginia

    Notes:

    Karen Marie Paramore
    6915 Rash Court
    Granbury, TX 76049
    817-326-2135
    kparam@itexas.net
    http://www.familytreemaker.com/users/p/a/r/Karen-M-Paramore/GENE0001-0001. html
    __________________
    THE DAVENPORTS (Deavenports)
    The Davenport name was one of the earliest surnames in Britian, dating back to the conquest of William I when he awarded them land titles. Actually, Davenport is an English place named from Davenport, Cheshire, England. Various Davenports ented America, as early as the 1600s. The early history pertaining to this line of Davenports is unclear at this time. By 20 July 1639, a Lancelot Davenport was granted land in James City, Virginia. Furthermore, on 10 December 1668, a Jno Davenport was transported to New Kent County, Virginia. In 1677 and 1683, Richard and Edward also were transported to the same county. By 1701, Susannah, George, William, and other Davenports were also being transported to this area. Davis or David Davenport (16 ) was located in King William County, Virginia on the 1704 Quit Rent Rolls where he leased 200 acres of land. One of his children, Martin Davenport, Sr., also leased 100 acres of land in the same county and time period.

    ---------------------
    Note bef 1660 According to John Scott Davenport of the Pamunkey Davenports website: 'The major problem relative to identification of Pamunkey Davenport ancestry before Davis Davenport today lies in the family having emerged from a Seventeenth Century record limbo of an Indian reservation into a Twentieth Century Virginia records void. The [... early] records of New Kent, King & Queen, King William, Caroline, and Hanover counties, crucial to Pamunkey Davenport identification, have largely been destroyed by courthouse fires of one sort or another. ... Yet we know, by Virginia Patent records, that there was a Davenport presence (female) in the Pamunkey Neck as early as 1650, ... that as soon as the Neck ceased to be Indian in 1701 and King William County was created, there was a Davenport Path of some antiquity noted in several surveys, and that Davis and his son Martin were listed as small acreage freeholders (land owners) there in 1704. ... [T]he evidence is that Davis Davenport and his son Martin, whose presence in the Neck are proven, were of the pioneer yeomanry, who achieved by their own labor, and not of the Cavalier, great planter aristocracy who had indentured servants and slaves to do their work.'

    Birth c 1660 Davis Davenport was born c 1660. According to John Scott Davenport's Pamunkey Davenport Chronicles (see website: http://www.pamunkeydavenport.com/ The two Davenports appearing by Time and Place in Virginia records most likely to have been Davis' immigrant parent were apparently single women, namely Hannah, transportee of 1650, or Anne, transportee of 1658. ... As uncomfortable as the thought might be -- although the America of the Twenty-First Century is more amenable in its judgmental morality to accepting such a possibility -- the Pamunkey Davenports may descend from a female immigrant ancestor, whose son became the patriarch of a family bearing the Davenport surname although his father may have had the surname of Davis. ... The possibility that Davis Davenport was the bastard child of either Hannah Davenport or Anne Davenport, given the lack of a male parental candidate, is real. If Martin was age 21 in 1704 (his appearance on a Quit Rent List was prima facie evidence that he was an adult), he was born 1683 or before. If Davis is accorded the same minimum of 21 years of age (25 years is accepted in formal genealogical estimates) before fathering Martin, then Davis himself was born c1662 or before. This scenario would fit Anne of 1758 comfortably. Assume older ages for both Davis and Martin, and the scenario would fit Hannah comfortably. The problem with both of the most viable male candidates for the honor of having been Davis' father is that each appears in the records uncomfortably late for either of the Davis-Martin age scenarios of John Davenport in 1668, Richard in 1677. Labored rationalization is required to force a fit for either. ...[T]he practice of giving bastard sons their fathers' surnames as given names also existed -- particularly where the father acknowledged the child. Hence, Davis Davenport, if born out of wedlock, may well have had a Davis father (there were a number of Davis possibilities early in or near the Neck in proximity to Hannah and Anne). ... We would note that Graves Family descendants claim Anne Davenport, born c1696, and who married Thomas Graves, as their matriarch, and believe and claim that Anne was a daughter of Davis Davenport. (Thomas Graves and his wife Anne play major roles in the Pamunkey Davenport chronology that follows.). Then too, Anne Davenport, transportee of 1758, was associated with land no more than four miles from where Davis Davenport first appeared in Virginia records thirty-eight years later (1696). The Bar Sinister scenario is speculative, but must be advanced as one hypothesis of Pamunkey Davenport origin.1'
    http://www.pamunkeybakers.com/p18.htm

    Residence:
    Davis Davenport was listed on the 1704 Quit Rent Rolls for King William County VA, assessed for 200 acres

    Davis* married Ann* Woodruff about 1680. Ann* was born about 1660; died after 1710. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Ann* Woodruff was born about 1660; died after 1710.
    Children:
    1. Martin* Davenport, Sr was born in 1680 in Pamunkey Neck, King William Co, Virginia; died before 2 Oct 1735 in Hanover Co, Virginia.
    2. 1. Sarah Ann Davenport (maybe Clark?) was born about 1696 in Pamunkey Neck, King and Queen Co, Virginia; died on 15 Aug 1782 in St. George Parish, Spotsylvania Co, Virginia.