CONTENTS:
(Clickable hyperlinks if viewing online)
George TRUITT (and wives Frances GRAVES and Alice
WATSON)
George TRUITT Jr. (and wife Eleanor MEREDITH)
James TRUITT (and wife Mary RILEY)
John TRUITT (and wife Elizabeth GRAY)
Samuel TRUITT (and wife Jennet PORTER)
Samuel TRUITT Jr. (and wife Mary COLLINS)
The TRUITT branch of our family descends from George TRUITT,
who was born in England in about 1617 and who migrated to Virginia. George
actually has two links to our family, because his Great-Grandson by his first
wife married his Great-Great-Granddaughter by his second wife – a
marriage of "Half Second Cousins Once Removed"! See the following:
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES
(abt 1621 - 5 Aug 1691)
George TRUITT Jr.
(abt 1647 - Nov 1721) & Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Samuel TRUITT
(abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) & Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Samuel TRUITT Jr.
(abt 1725 - May 1801) & Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
*(Mary COLLINS and husband Samuel TRUITT were "Half
2C1R", see continuation below)
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Alice WATSON (abt
1629 - aft 1663)
James TRUITT (abt
1661 - 30 May 1718) & Mary RILEY (abt 1666 - aft 1696)
Mary TRUITT
(abt 1685 - 1730) & Andrew COLLINS (abt 1685 - 1729)
Andrew COLLINS Jr. (abt 1712 - 1773) & Elizabeth (abt 1712 - )
Mary COLLINS
(28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836) & Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801)
John TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON
(1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester
ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen ARNEY (1861 - 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 - 1936)
Linnie Ellen
MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
(Actually, there is some uncertainty about which of George's
sons (George Jr., Henry, or James) led down to our family on the first path
above. This one shows "George / George / Samuel / Samuel", and it
does seem to be the best documented. However some researchers think it should
be "George / Henry / George / Samuel", and others think it is
"George / James / Samuel / Samuel". That's what happens when a family
frequently reuses favorite names!)
In this examination of the TRUITT family, my primary source
has been
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~wegroves/truitt-family-history.htm
This site is described as:
Truitt Family History: 1066 to 1995
Compiled by Dr. William E. Groves, Ph.D.
Chapel Hill, NC
Last updated June 28, 2001
This is a VERY lengthy discussion of the family, and their
connections to the events of their times. Much of it is interesting reading for
any history buff. I have extracted only a small part of it as it relates to
specific ancestors.
Dr. Groves also maintains a genealogy at
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bgroves2&id=I1
and I have used that as an additional source of family
connections.
(All of the following is taken from Dr. Groves' "Truitt Family History 1066 to 1995".)
Over the years there
have been many variations of the spelling of the name Truitt including Trewett,
Trewhitt, Trewit, Truet, Truett, Trueitt, Truhyt, Truit, Truite, Trut, Tryut,
Tyrwhitt, Trehitt, Treuit, Treuvit, Trewit, Truwhitt, Truehott, Trewhitt, and
Truhitt. The spelling Trewhitt may be the true origin of the name, which means
a place of "dry resinous wood", and a specific location associated
with this name is that of High and Low Trewhitt, a Township in the Parish of
Rothbury, County of Northumberland, England. High Trewhitt still can be found
on a map of England. It is located northwest of Newcastle-upon-Tyne on the
northeast coast of England.
Ancient Origins:
From family tradition
it is believed that originally the Truitts were inhabitants of France and some
of them were soldiers in the army of William the Conqueror when he came to
England about 1066 AD. Mention also is made that some Truitts came to England
at a much later date because of their religion, being members of the French
Huguenots, and thus they left France when they were victims of persecution.
The first of the
ancient "Truitt" family found upon record is Tructe or Truitte, a
person of some rank in distinction, contemporary with King David I. Tructe, or
his immediate forebears, came to Scotland from England with Edgar Aethling in
the reign of Malcolm Canmore, 1066 AD, and established residence on two burton
farms from which they eventually derived the name Burton. Surnames were rarely
present before that time.
Society of Friends, the
Quakers:
The Truitts were Quakers, and
events that impacted the Quakers would have been extremely important to them.
The family founder, George Truitt, was one of their earliest converts.
Quakerism arose in Great
Britain out of the religious ferment of the mid-17th century. It represents the
extreme left wing of the Puritan movement. George Fox, its founder, was the son
of a Leicestershire weaver and of a mother whom he described as "of the
stock of the martyrs." At the age of 19 Fox became disillusioned with the
way in which professing Christians were failing to live up to the standards
they preached and for four years he traveled from one group of sectarians to
another in search of spiritual help. In 1647 his Journal says "When all my
hopes in them and in all men were gone, so I had nothing outwardly to help me,
nor could I tell what to do then. Oh then I heard a voice which said 'There is
one, even Christ Jesus, that can speak to thy condition'."
The year 1643, when Fox left
his home, was also the year of the Solemn League and Covenant, by which
parliament undertook to introduce into England the full presbyterian system,
with its doctrinal rigidity and exacting discipline. In revulsion against this,
a strong body of opinion attached itself to the Independents who favored some
degree of religious liberty. In 1648, many who responded to Fox's message were Independents.
The groups of Seekers "met together, not formally to pray or preach, at
appointed times and places, but waited together in silence, and as anything
rose in any of their minds that they thought savoured of a Divine spring, so
they sometimes spoke." The ready response of various groups in northwest
England about 1652 made Quakerism a significant movement.
The rapid spread of
Quakerism in the north of England was followed by a vigorous expansive movement
throughout the rest of the British Isles and to North America. Between 1655 and
1662 about 60 Quaker missionaries arrived in the New World (including Virginia
and Maryland), where they made converts and established meetings. Sporadic
local persecution gave way to more systematic efforts following Cromwell's
proclamation of February 1655, which noted the "rude and unchristian
disturbance" of ministers practiced by "Quakers and others" and
required they "forbear henceforth all such disorderly practices,"
directing magistrates to proceed against offenders.
The hostility of parliament
found expression in the Quaker Act of 1662. Under this and other acts about
15,000 Quakers suffered various legal sentences, until widespread persecution
was ended by the Toleration Act of 1689.
The holders of the Quaker
faith were the first dissenters from the Established Church of England to
attempt to gain a foothold in Virginia. However, the going was hard for them,
as the government was not only unfriendly to non-conformists, but also actually
passed laws for their prosecution. In spite of these difficulties, shortly
after the middle of the seventeenth century Quakers were on the Eastern Shore
in considerable numbers.
They were an earnest,
proselytizing group, and their zeal led them into many conflicts with the authorities,
both Church and State, and as early as 1654 the Quakers refused to pay the
Church of England parish tithes. There may have been other earlier Quaker
missionaries, but the County records prove that William Robinson was on the
Eastern Shore in that capacity in 1658, when he was arrested and sent across
the [Chesapeake] bay for trial. In addition, many local people who had harbored
or entertained him were fined or otherwise punished.
In 1660 the Virginia Assembly
passed a strict law against Quakers, describing them as "an unreasonable
and turbulent sort of people, who daily gather together unlawful assemblies of
people, teaching lies, false visions, prophecies, and doctrines tending to
disturb the peace, disorganize Society, and destroy all law, government, and
religion."
Though various
experiments in church government had been made by the Seeker groups, and
conferences or "general meetings" were arranged in both England and
the New World, it was not until 1667-69 that any regular system of government
was established in the Quaker community. During these years monthly meetings
were established and grouped in County quarterly meetings, and these in turn
were subordinate to a yearly meeting established in London. Fox wrote to
America recommending that Quakers there do the same, and in 1671 he and 12
other Quakers crossed the Atlantic and spent nearly two years traveling among
Quaker groups, establishing meetings for church affairs as well as
"publishing truth" in evangelistic work. Yearly meetings were established
in Maryland in 1672 and in Virginia in 1696.
With regard to any
chance of finding Truitt tombstones, it is interesting to note that in 1729 the
Quakers resolved against "the vanity and superstition of creating
monuments and entombing the dead with singular notes or marks of distinction,
which is but worldly pomp and grandeur, for no encomium nor pompous interment
can add worth to the deceased". Therefore, they ordered that the erection
of tombstones over the graves of Friends should stop, and that the tombstones
already so placed should be removed.
Family Movements:
Early history
indicates all Truitts in America descended from George (I) Truitt, who came to
America from England about 1640. He is listed in Virginia Immigrants, Volume 5,
State Land Office 20, in 1652. He initially settled in Northampton County,
Virginia, but later moved to Accomack County. He was a Quaker and leading
spirit among the people of that faith on the Eastern Shore of Virginia and
Maryland. He was a prominent citizen of considerable means. George and his
family were persecuted for their religious beliefs. So about the time of his
death in 1670 and to escape persecution, some family members moved to an area
of Somerset County, Maryland, which later became Worcester County (and still
later Wicomico County) while others moved into southern Delaware, which later
became Sussex County
Name: George TRUITT
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1617 England
Death: Oct 1670 Accomac, VA
Other
spouses: Alice WATSON
George
TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES (abt 1621 - abt 1650)
George TRUITT Jr.
(abt 1647 - Nov 1721) & Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Samuel TRUITT
(abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) & Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Samuel TRUITT
Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801) & Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
John
TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON
(1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann
BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen
ARNEY (24 Apr 1861 - 9 Sep 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 - 1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie
Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Misc. Notes
For an
excellent (and very lengthy) series of notes on the Truitt family, see
http://freepages.history.rootsweb.com/~wegroves/truitt-family-history.htm
This site
contains
Truitt
Family History: 1066 to 1995
Compiled by
Dr. William E. Groves, Ph.D.
Chapel Hill,
NC
Last updated
June 28, 2001
Dr. Groves
also maintains a genealogy at
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bgroves2&id=I1
Unless
advised otherwise, the following is taken from the above sources:
In 1640
George Truitt immigrated to Accomack County, Virginia, from England. He was
sponsored Christopher Kirke, who may also have been the captain of the ship on
which he sailed. As of this date Virginia had about 8000 inhabitants while
Maryland had about 1000 persons, and of this total of 9000 more than
three-quarters were recently imported servants. In the early days travel was
exclusively on foot or in canoes, as the first horse did not appear until 1642.
Of course there were no roads until a later period. The hard-beaten paths
through the shady pinewoods and along the shores of the creeks comprised the
sole overland thoroughfares.
George was a
Quaker, or became one shortly after he arrived in Virginia.
For the
transport of four persons, on July 24 (1651) George (I) Truitt (spelled
Truhett) was granted a patent for 200 acres of land in Northampton County,
Virginia (tract N30). Known today as Old Plantation Neck, the Western Part,
this land was on the bayside north of Fleet island. In 1628 this tract of 200
acres was first patented to Captain Thomas Graves, but it is not known when he
first came to the Eastern Shore (although he was there in 1625). Neither of Graves' sons remained to claim the
land and in 1651 a patent was granted to George Truitt. (George is believed to
have married one of Graves’ daughters, Frances.)
During March
of 1652, 116 people of Northampton County signed the following pledge:
"Wee whose Names are subscribed; doe hereby Engage and promise to bee true
and faithful to the Commonwealth of England as it is nowe Established without
King or House of Lords." The name of George (I) Truitt is not among the
signers (probably because he was a Quaker and thereby refused to pledge
allegiance to the King).
In 1653 he
was convicted of fornication, which probably occurred because his Quaker
marriage was not recognized by Virginia, and therefore, according to the
government, he was living with an unmarried woman. (See notes with wife Alice for additional
details.)
It is
thought that in the 1654/5 period George (I) Truitt paid for the transport of
Alice Watson from England to America, and shortly thereafter they were married.
On March 24,
1655, George (I) Truitt (spelled Truett) received a patent for 300 acres in
tract A29 at Nandua Creek for the transport of 6 persons.
(NOTE: These
transported persons would be indentured servants, and George would have been
entitled to some years of service from them, and often would receive a grant of
land as added incentive. (Fred Coffey))
In 1660, for
the transport of 10 persons, George (I) Truitt (spelled Trewett) on November 3
received a patent for 500 acres in tract A61 on the lower end of the neck on
the south side of Nandua Creek. However, apparently that much land was not available
and a later record reduced this to 350 acres.
SPECULATION
AS TO CAUSE OF DEATH IN 1670: Due to an epidemic of smallpox during the next
few years following 1666, the mortality was great. It is thought that a
stricken seaman, the cause of whose illness was at first unknown, imported the
germs of the fatal malady. Large numbers of whites died during the plague, and
the disease became general among the Indians, who had been driven together upon
reservations in remote sections of the peninsula. Panic-stricken, the Indians
sought relief among the whites, thus spreading the disease with the most
disastrous effects. At last the epidemic abated, having ravaged the land for
several years, but not until the population had been seriously reduced and
numbers of the best citizens had perished. As a Quaker, George Truitt was
respected by the Indians and in their time of distress they may have sought him
out for help, which may have led to his death perhaps from smallpox.
When George
Truitt made his will in 1670 he specified that his sons Henry and George were
to hold the legacies for all the other children because they were under 18. He
names children in this order: Jane, Dorothy, James, Susannah, John and
Elizabeth. Thus six of his children were under 18. Assuming this to be the
order of birth, Jane would have been born about 1653-54, and James WAS born in
1659. The two youngest, John and Elizabeth, were "of age" in 1681 -
could be age 18 or 21 - so both were born 1660 or soon thereafter.
Beginning in
1689, or maybe earlier, all of the surviving children of George Truitt moved
into Somerset County, Maryland.
OTHER
SOURCES:
Will of George Truitt:
Accomack Co,
VA , dated 7/10/1670, probated 10/16/1670. To son Henry, land at Onancock; son
James, 200 acres Muddy Creek and 50 acres of marsh; son George, (200 acres of)
land adjoining James and 50 acres marsh; son John, (200 acres of) land at Muddy
Creek and 50 acres of marsh; son Job, 100 acres called Peninsula or Turitt's
Hill Choice and 50 acres adjoining John and 100 acres marsh. To the rest:
household goods, etc. estate to be managed by sons George and Henry until all
children reach 18 years of age.
On 3/24/1655
George Truett patented 300 acres at Nandua Creek in Northampton County for the
transport of 6 persons, including Alice Watson.
On 1/26/1656
(OS), George Truett witnessed the will of Wackawamp, The Great Emperor of the
Eastern Shore. (Memo: This will transcript can be found online, Google
"Wackawamp".)
On 11/3/1660
he obtained a 500 ac land grant at Anancock in Northampton County, VA.
On
11/13/1660 George Truett and John Wise were cited to oversee the estate of
Anthony Jenden. (Memo: Anthony
Jenden was a negro, signed his will with an “X”. The will refers to “my friends
John Wise and George Truitt”.)
George
Truett and Alice Truett (her mark "R") witnessed a deed in Accomac
co. He wrote his will on 7/10/1670, and it was enetered for probate on
10/16/1670 in Accomac County (Folio 168,Deeds and Wills 1664-1671, Accomac
County, Virginia). [V. Skinner,11/11/96]
In 1663 Geo
Truitt, age 46, was mentioned in a deposition (Houston: "Colonial
Residents of Accomac").
Spouse (First Wife): Frances
GRAVES
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1621 Accomac, VA
Death: abt 1650 Northampton, VA
Father: Thomas GRAVES (-~1636)
Mother: Katherine (CROSHAW?)
Misc. Notes
There is
some doubt about this wife of George TRUITT. Many sources claim the name was
Frances PEDDINGTON (or PENNINGTON). The following source seems the best
informed:
Truitt
Family History: 1066 to 1995
Compiled by
Dr. William E. Groves, Ph.D.
Chapel Hill,
NC
Last updated
June 28, 2001
“Current
thinking is that in the early 1640s George married Frances Graves, orphan of
Thomas Graves, deceased, whose guardian may have been Henry Pennington (spelled
Pedenden) of Nuswattocks Creek.
“The first
reference to Frances Graves I found was "At a Corte held in Accomacke the
sixth day of May Anno 1639". Henry Pennington, as the attorney, guardian
or perhaps even stepfather, reported "Received by me Henry Pennington the
sum of one hundred pounds of tobacco and a cowe calf for the use of ffrancis
Graves that is in full satisfaction for a parcel of land that Henry Wilson
bought that did belong unto ffrancis Graves, the cowe calf and tobacco being paid
by Alice Wilson, and received the twenty eighth day of December 1638".
"I say received by me, Henry Pennington" [Northampton County
Virginia, Book 1, p182].
“This is
followed several years later by the fairly well known reference: "Att a
Monthly cott held in Northampton the 28th Day of November Ano 1642" Argoll
Yardley, Esquire, Captain William Stone, et al ... "A certificate granted
unto ffras Graves, Orphant of Captain Thomas Graves, deceased"
[Northampton County, Virginia, Book 2:113-116]. By this date Frances Graves
would be 21 years of age, as I understand she would need to be, to receive
property in hew own name as an unmarried woman. Captain William Stone, one of
those present at the Court was the brother-in-law of Frances Graves, he having
been married to her sister Verlinda some years earlier.
“In his
book, Virginia's Eastern Shore, Whitelaw calls this tract of land N30. It is
also under discussion in 1645 in "The deposition of Henry Peddenden
(Pennington) taken in open Cot. This deponent said that ffrancis Trewett being
sick at this deponent's house desired this deponent that her husband, George
Trewett, might sell her land at the old Plantation, whereupon this deponent
answered saying: Do you know what you desire? And she replied saying: Yes, father,
the land is myne and he is my husband and I desire that he might do with it as
he pleaseth for there is not any man hath to do with it but himselfe"
[Northampton County, Virginia, Book 3:p3].
(MEMO: See
notes with her father Thomas Graves for additional detail (and issues) related
to Frances. As will be seen, some sources have claimed Francis/Frances was a
SON of Thomas Graves, not a daughter. However DNA analysis now supports the
“daughter” theory.)
Children
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES
(abt 1621 - abt 1650)
Henry TRUITT (1643
- 1676)
George TRUITT Jr. (abt 1647 - Nov 1721) &
Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Marriage: abt 1651 Accomac, VA
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Spouse (2nd Wife): Alice WATSON
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1629 England
Death: aft 1663 Accomac, VA
Father: John WATSON (1605-)
Mother: Elizabeth (~1607-)
George
TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Alice WATSON (abt 1629 - aft 1663)
James TRUITT* (abt
1661 - 30 May 1718) & Mary RILEY (abt 1666 - aft 1696)
Mary TRUITT
(abt 1685 - 1730) & Andrew COLLINS (abt 1685 - 1729)
Andrew
COLLINS Jr. (abt 1712 - 1773) & Elizabeth (abt 1712 - )
Mary
COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836) & Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May
1801)
John TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7
Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22
Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON (1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester
ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen
ARNEY (24 Apr 1861 - 9 Sep 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 -1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Misc. Notes
She came
from England to Accomack Co., Virginia, in 1652, on the same boat as her
husband. She may have been a sister of George Watson, who died in Accomack Co.
in 1674. (NOTE: Most sources claim that Alice was the second wife of George,
and that he brought her to Virginia separately at a later date. See notes with
George.)
It appears
that George was brought into court in January 1653, for having sexual relations
with his wife before their marriage: “Where as George Truhett is presented to
the court by the jury of inquest for incontinence with his wife before marriage
and hath made his humble submission to the court (imploring their favorable
consure) its therefore ordered that the said George Truhett be fined two
hundred pounds of tobacco, pay court charges and put in security for payment
there of at the next crop.” (Northampton County VA = Orders, Deeds & Wills
1651-1654 - Boox IV transcribed by Frank V. Walczk.)
(Interpretation
by Bob Truitt: “George and Alice, while married in the Quaker fashion, were not
about to be married by a Church of England cleric as the law required. Again
Alice’s Quakerism, whom the “upper” class had trouble with, brought Alice to
Court. The Quakers would not bow or curtsy to a “better” person when they met
them, but non-quakers would. Also remember that George, along with other
Northampton county Quakers, was part of the first religious persecution trial
in America.”)
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Children
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Alice WATSON (abt
1629 - aft 1663)
Jane TRUITT (abt
1652 - abt 1670)
Dorothy TRUITT
(abt 1655 - 1708)
John TRUITT (abt
1657 - 7 May 1722)
James TRUITT*
(abt 1661 - 30 May 1718) & Mary RILEY (abt 1666 - aft 1696)
James TRUITT* (abt
1661 - 30 May 1718) & Sarah RILEY (1669 - 1716)
Elizabeth TRUITT
(1660 - abt 1729)
Susannah TRUITT
(abt 1668 - aft 1670)
Job TRUITT (abt
1675 - 1 Apr 1730)
Name: George TRUITT Jr.
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1647 Muddy Creek Plantation,
Accomac, VA
Death: Nov 1721 Somerset later Worcester, MD
Father: George TRUITT (~1617-1670)
Mother: Frances GRAVES (~1621-~1650)
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES (abt 1621 - abt 1650)
George TRUITT Jr. (abt 1647 - Nov 1721)
& Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Samuel TRUITT
(abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) & Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Samuel
TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801) & Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
John
TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON
(1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann
BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen
ARNEY (24 Apr 1861 - 9 Sep 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 - 1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie
Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Misc. Notes
SOURCE:
Truitt
Family History: 1066 to 1995
Compiled by
Dr. William E. Groves, Ph.D.
Chapel Hill,
NC
It is not
know when George (Jr.) Truitt was born or whether his mother was Frances
(Graves/Peddenden) Truitt or Alice (Watson) Truitt. However, because he was
married by 1672, it seems probable his mother was Frances and that he was born
before 1655, when George (I) Truitt is thought to have married Alice Watson.
George (Jr) Truitt probably was born at Muddy Creek Plantation, Accomack
County, Virginia.
On October
9, 1672, a patent for 100 acres in tract N123 on the south side of Occohannock
Creek at the Northampton/Accomack County line just northeast of the current
city of Exmore, Virginia, was issued to George and Eleanor (spelled Elianor)
Truitt (spelled Trewett). This land originally had been deeded to Eleanor
(spelled Ellynor) in 1656 by her mother, Ellinor Meredith (widow of Phillip),
effective upon the mother's death
In 1679
George Truitt (spelled Trewet) and five other men, as trustees, purchased one
acre of land in the extreme northwest corner of tract A112. This is the
historic site of the Guilford Quaker Meetinghouse.
The Quakers
first assembled in a ten-foot building in Northampton County, Virginia.
However, by 1683 there was standing near Guilford Creek in Accomack County a
small Meetinghouse. At this time the owners of the remainder of tract A112
confirmed with George Truitt and five other trustees the conveyance of an acre
of land "where now there is a small house standing by the name of The Meetinghouse.
The People of God commonly called Quakers shall have right and privilege from
time-to- time to meet upon said ground and in the aforesaid Meetinghouse and
there at pleasure to meet and bury their dead." A later deed for the
balance of the patent definitely placed the lot on the branch of Guilford Creek
in the extreme northwest corner of the tract.
In 1685
George and Eleanor (spelled Elinor) (Meredith) Truitt sold 50 acres of marsh
and 400 acres of tract A110 (Virginia). From here George and Eleanor probably
moved to Somerset County, Maryland. The area where they probably settled was
about five miles northeast of Snow Hill, Maryland. It was called Bogerternorton
(also spelled Pockerternorton, Poccatynprton, Pockytanorton, and Pocatinorton).
The name Bogerternorton is thought to have been the Indian's corruption of the
Spanish name Boca del Norte, which may have been applied to this area by
Verrazano in 1524. The name of the Pocomoke River, which is in this area,
derives from the Indian name Pocquemoke that means "place of shell fish,
clams, etc"
In 1689 On
May 1 George Truitt obtained 140 acres of land called "Truitt's
Purchase" in Somerset County, Maryland. In July George (<GeoI) Truitt
purchased a 600-acre part of the "Mulberry Grove" tract situated just
south of the headwaters of the Pocomoke River and about 6 miles northeast of
Snow Hill and he proceeded to settle and make his home there. The Mulberry
Grove area seems to have been the center of the "Bogerternorton
Meeting" and George was indeed the great benefactor of this Meeting.
In 1690
George Johnson, the elder, was one of the most influential Quakers remaining on
the Eastern Shore of Virginia. In his will, dated December 27 he speaks of his
dwelling house as being at Muddy Creek, "alias Guilford Creek." Among
the overseers of his will was George Truitt.
1698: In his
own sloop, Thomas Evernden brought Thomas Chalkley, the celebrated Quaker
missionary preacher, across the Chesapeake Bay for a visit to Somerset County
where Chalkley visited George Truitt and his brother near the head of the
Pocomoke River. In his "Journal" Chalkley says: "We went to
George Truit's at whose house we had a meeting. This Friend and I went to an
Indian town not far from his house, because I had a desire to see these people,
having never seen any of them before. When we came to the town they were kind
to us, spoke well of Friends and said they would not cheat them, as others did.
From George Truit's in Maryland we went down to Virginia and afterwards I had a
meeting at George Truit's brother's." This was the Askiminokonson (also
spelled Askiminiconson) Indian Town near the head of the Pocomoke River, on the
north side, and was only a short distance from George Truitt's home place,
"Mulberry Grove", on the south side of the river. After a brief trip
to Accomack and Northampton counties in Virginia, Chalkley returned for a
meeting at "George Truit's brother's (James) house".
Bogerternorton
became the Mulberry Grove Meeting, still at George Truitt's place, in 1699.
(George Truitt gave land for a Meetinghouse site and burying ground at Mulberry
Grove. This site has been maintained intact on Mulberry Grove, now the grounds
of the former Worcester County High School at Five Mile Branch near Snow Hill,
although grave markers, never popular among Quakers, and remnants of a one-time
structure are not discernible.)
In 1704 the
Court recorded that "the house of George Truitt (spelled Trewetts) upon
Pocomoke was upon petition, approved for the people called Quakers to worship
God in pursuant to an act of Parliament and the good Lawes of the
Province"
In 1721
George Truitt, a planter, died in Somerset County, Virginia, and his Will was
proven November 21. Presumably he was buried in the Quaker cemetery mentioned
in the next paragraph
His family
was as follows:
Wife:
Eleanor Meredith
Sons:
George, Samuel, and Philip
Daughters:
Sarah, Tabitha, Mary, Susannah, and Elizabeth [Shannonhouse].
To the
Quakers he left one acre for a burying ground and Meetinghouse where the
burying ground now is. We do not know what he left his wife. To his son George
he left 300 acres of "Mulberry Grove" and 100 acres of "Truitt's
Harbor." To his son Samuel he left 300 acres of "Hoggsden" (on
the north side of the Pocomoke River) or to his son George. To his grandson
Philip he left 300 acres of "Mulberry Grove." To his daughter Sarah
Mumford he left 140 acres of "Truitt's Purchase" during life, but at
her death it was to go to her son George. To his grandson George (the son of
Philip who was deceased) he left 95 acres of "Truitt's Harbor"
adjacent to his son-in-law James Mumford's property. To his grandson William he
left 95 acres of the same tract. To his daughters Susannah, Tabitha, Mary
Shahannais, and Elizabeth Davis, and sons George and Samuel he left ?.
Spouse: Eleanor
MEREDITH
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1646 Acccomac, VA
Death: Jun 1732 Mulberry Grove, Somerset, MD
Father: Philip MEREDITH (~1622-)
Mother: Eleanor (~1624-)
Misc. Notes
First
marriage was to a George JOHNSON.
Will of
Eleanor Truitt - Maryland Calendar of Wills, Vol.VI, p.226, dated 4/20/1732,
probated 6/21/1732: To sons George and Samuel; daughters Susannah Nicholson,
Sarah Mumford, Tabitha Parker; grandaughter Sarah Nicholson. Execs: sons George
and Samuel.
Children
George TRUITT Jr. (abt 1647 - Nov 1721) & Eleanor
MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Sarah TRUITT (abt
1669 - )
George TRUITT (abt
1671 - Jun 1746)
Tabitha TRUITT
(abt 1671 - 4 Oct 1745)
Susannah TRUITT
(abt 1673 - )
Philip TRUITT (abt
1676 - bef 20 May 1718)
Mary TRUITT (abt
1677 - 10 Jun 1689)
Elizabeth TRUITT
(abt 1679 - )
Samuel TRUITT (abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) &
Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Name: James TRUITT
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1661 Muddy Creek Plantation,
Accomac, VA
Death: 30 May 1718 Somerset, MD
Father: George TRUITT (~1617-1670)
Mother: Alice WATSON (~1629->1663)
Other
spouses: Mary RILEY
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Alice WATSON (abt 1629 - aft 1663)
James TRUITT* (abt 1661 - 30 May 1718)
& Mary RILEY (abt 1666 - aft 1696)
Mary TRUITT
(abt 1685 - 1730) & Andrew COLLINS (abt 1685 - 1729)
Andrew
COLLINS Jr. (abt 1712 - 1773) & Elizabeth (abt 1712 - )
Mary
COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836) & Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May
1801)
John TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7
Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May
1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON (1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester
ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen
ARNEY (24 Apr 1861 - 9 Sep 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 -1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Misc. Notes
Truitt
Family History: 1066 to 1995
Compiled by
Dr. William E. Groves, Ph.D.
Chapel Hill,
NC
In 1684
James Truitt (spelled Trewett) sold the remaining 200 acres of his land in
tract A110 to his brother, George Truitt. James then may have moved to the
Broad Creek Hundred area of Sussex County, Delaware, after the sale. However,
because of the Maryland/Delaware border dispute, James' family and heirs may
have been considered to be living in Maryland until 1775 when the dispute and
the boundary line were settled.
SOURCE:
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bgroves2&id=I137
Some
colonial residents of Accomac County, Virginia
According to
deposition, in October 1682 James Truitt was age 23. By the middle of the 18th
century at the latest, Quaker meetings no longer were held in Worcester County,
MD. His Will was probated in 1718.
-------
He probably
moved to Nanticoke Hundred about 1753. James' lands were carried in Worcester
County Debt Books until 1761; ended up in Sussex County, DE.
SOURCES:
- "Stow
Family and Allied Branches," pp.396-405
- Will of
James Truitt:, probated 5/30/1718 in Somerset Co, MD, states:
Son James to
keep my younger sons on the plantation until they reach 18 years of age.
- Deed of
Gift: Somerset Co, MD, 1714-15: James Truitt to his children by Sarah Riley -
named as above - to all of whom he gives stock.
- Excrusus:
Collins - Andrew Collins of Somerset Co, MD, who married Mary Truitt, was born
1710 and died 1773 (Will dated 5/15/1773, probated 6/18/1773). Andrew and Mary
had issue: Mary (1734-1836), died Fleming Co, KY. She married Samuel Truitt;
John Collins, married Jane Hall.
After the
death of Mary, James married her sister Sarah. Sarah was still living on
3/18/1715 when James wrote his will, but she died before his will was probated
on 5/30/1718.
He made his
will in Somerset Co. Md. March 8th 1715. Probated May 30 1718. Excerpt from
will--To wife Sarah-- To two elder daughters Sarah Mumfordand Mary Collins---To
daughter Tabitha Kellum. The remainder to my fivesons. Exec. James, and he to
bring up the youngest sons on the Plantation until the age of 18.
Ref.S.1761
Institute of American Genealogy has "Stowe Family" by J.D.Stowe,
Baltimore
Md. "Truitt Family" p. 415-426
HIS WILL:
In the name
of God, Amen, I, James Truitt Senr., of Somerset Co., in the Province of
Maryland, being weakly, but of perfect sence and memory, but know not how soon
it may please Almighty God to call me out of this world, to his blessed mercy,
Do make this my last Will and Testament, in manner and form following:
Then I
bequeath my Soul to my blessed redeemer and Saviour, Jesus Christ, to enjoy the
true happiness which all men hope for my body I committ to he earth from whence
I came and to be buried in a decent like manner.
Then I give
and bequeath unto my true and beloved wife, Sarah Truett, one sorrell horse for
her proper use during her life and i give unto my said wife, two feather beds
and what covering was with them and two cows and calves and the remaining part
of my chattles to be equally divided amongst my five sons and youngest
daughter, excepting one cow and calf that I give to my daughter, Tabitha Kellum
after my decease and all the remaining part of my sheep and hogs to run opon
the Plantation to my said wife and five sons and youngest daughter and all my
moveable and household stuff to be equally divided amongst my five sons and
youngest daughter and I ordain my son, James Truitt to keep all my young sons,
upon my Plantation till they come at the age of eighteen years, then I ordain
my son James to be my whole and sole executor of this my last Will and
Testament, in witness of my hand and seal, this 28th. day of Marc, seventeen
hundred and fifteen.
In presence
of us: James Truett
Richard
Pennewell. mark.
John Webb.
Item: I give
unto my two eldest daughters, Sarah Munfour and Mary Collings, each to them,
twelve pence, after my decease. - The aforegoing Will was then endorsed.
Probated,
May 30, 1718 - Samuel Hopkins, Depty Com.
Marriage: abt 1681 Accomac, VA
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Spouse: Mary
RILEY
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1666 Accomac, VA
Death: aft 1696 Somerset, MD
Father: Thomas RILEY (1635-1697)
Mother: Sarah WEBB (1637-)
James TRUITT (abt 1661 - 30 May 1718) & Mary RILEY (abt
1666 - aft 1696)
Mary TRUITT
(abt 1685 - 1730) & Andrew COLLINS (abt 1685 - 1729)
Tabitha TRUITT
(abt 1687 - )
Sarah TRUITT (abt
1694 - )
James TRUITT (aft 1696 - abt 25 Jul 1775)
James TRUITT (abt 1661 - 30 May 1718) & Sarah RILEY
(1669 - 1716)
Riley TRUITT (abt
1695 - bef 1718)
John TRUITT (abt
1697 - 1749)
Thomas TRUITT (abt
1699 - abt 6 Mar 1764)
George TRUITT (abt
1701 - aft 1775)
Elizabeth TRUITT (abt 1703 - 1780)
Name: Samuel TRUITT
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1686 Bogerternorton Hundred,
Worcester, MD
Death: 9 Dec 1756 Cedar Creek Hundred, Sussex, DE
Father: George TRUITT Jr.
(~1647-1721)
Mother: Eleanor MEREDITH (~1646-1732)
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES (abt 1621 - abt 1650)
George TRUITT Jr. (abt 1647 - Nov 1721) & Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Samuel TRUITT (abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756)
& Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801)
& Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
John
TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON
(1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann
BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen ARNEY (24 Apr 1861 - 9 Sep
1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 - 1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie
Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Spouse: Jennet
PORTER
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1693 Accomac, VA
Children
Samuel TRUITT (abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) & Jennet PORTER
(abt 1693 - )
Samuel TRUITT
Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801) & Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
Jehu TRUITT (abt 1723 - aft 2 Jan 1760)
Name: Samuel TRUITT Jr.
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1725 Mulberry Grove, Worcester, MD
Death: May 1801 Surry Co., North Carolina
Father: Samuel TRUITT (~1686-1756)
Mother: Jennet PORTER (~1693-)
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES (abt 1621 - abt 1650)
George TRUITT Jr. (abt 1647 - Nov 1721) & Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Samuel TRUITT (abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) & Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801)
& Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
John
TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy
Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778 - 19 Oct
1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON
(1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann
BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen
ARNEY (24 Apr 1861 - 9 Sep 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 - 1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie
Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Misc. Notes
NOTES BELOW
EXTRACTED FROM:
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bgroves2&id=I374
From: L. M.
Grubbs, "Martin and Allied Families"
Moved to
Surrey Co, NC, in 1793. Marie Monson was a descendant of this SamuelTruitt. All
13 children were born in Sussex Co, DE; eldest in 1753, youngest in 1780.
Samuel was a British sympathizer; strong Loyalist during the Revolution. In
1780 the sons (John, Collins, Jesse and George) were all accused of treason
(Del Arch, V3, pp.1287-1301, 1331). After Samuel died, his widow and some of
the children moved to KY.
From the
research work of Reverend William Jefferson Gammon (1876-1967) and Ada Mildred
Truitt (1913-1976); received Jul 2000.
Samuel was
considered a Tory during the Revolutionary War. He did not fight for either
side and did not permit his sons to fight. Mildred says she had records of
their examinations for treason -- they were cleared of that -- but she suspects
that is why they left DE and went to NC.
Mildred says
she had records of buying and selling land in DE, NC and KY-- also some census
records, wills, etc. Samuel died in NC.
1800 CENSUS,
NORTH CAROLINA, SURRY COUNTY:
There are
several Truitt families in Surry County, and the names of several of the family
heads seem to fit Samuel’s family. We find families for Samuel, Collans, Joseph
and Saragath.
In 1801
Samuel Truitt died in Surrey County, NC. His family was as follows:
Wife: Mary
Collins
Sons:
Collins, John, Jesse, George, William, Samuel, Joseph and SaxegothaTruitt
Daus: Sally,
Elizabeth, Mary, Jane and Rachel Truitt
Marriage: 1750 Sussex, DE
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Spouse: Mary
COLLINS
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: 28 Apr 1734 Sussex, DE
Death: 21 Jan 1836 Fleming, KY
Burial: Fletcher’s
Chapel, Fleming Co., KY
Father: Andrew COLLINS Jr.
(~1712-1773)
Mother: Elizabeth (~1712-)
Misc. Notes
SOURCE
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tommyexc&id=I14196
REPORTED
FOLLOWING:
After
Samuels death in North Carolina, Mary and some of her children left for
Kentucky in 1804. Some of the family had already gone. Mary died in Fleming
Co., Kentucky at the age of 101 years.
Her
obituary:
"Departed
from this life in Fleming Co., KY. 21 Jan 1836, Mary Truitt, at the advanced
age of 101 years. The subject of this brief memoir was born in the state of
Delaware and reared in the Protestant Episcopal Church, but in 1790 she joined
the Methodist Society under the ministry of the Rev. Joseph Cromwell. In 1793
in company with her family she moved to North Carolina and from there in 1804
to Kentucky.
Sister
Truitt was an example of true piety to all who knew her, reared her family of
twelve children in the nurture and admonition of the lord. Some of them have
gone to eternity!"
1810 CENSUS,
KENTUCKY, FLEMING CO, FLEMINGSBURG:
Mary Truitt
is found as head of household, with two daughters age 16-25 living with her.
Other members of her family live nearby.
1820 CENSUS,
KENTUCKY, FLEMING CO, FLEMING TWP:
Mary Truitt
is still found as head of household (her age would be 84). There are four free
whites in the household. Relationships are unclear, but a good guess might be
that she lives with a married daughter, son-in-law, and a grandson age 16-26.
Of the people in the household, one is engaged in agriculture and one engaged
in manufacture. And the family has one male slave, age over 45.
1830 CENSUS,
KENTUCKY, FLEMING CO., WESTERN DISTRICT:
This census
provides a more detailed age breakdown than most. Mary is in the “90-100” age
bracket (her actual age would have been 94), and lives with one other female in
the “50-60” bracket (her daughter Jane would fit this age). They own one male
slave in the “55-100” age bracket.
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Children
Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801) & Mary COLLINS
(28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
John TRUITT (2
Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Sarah TRUITT (25
Jun 1755 - )
Collins TRUITT (19
Feb 1757 - 11 Jun 1802)
Jesse TRUITT (3
Mar 1759 - Nov 1827)
George TRUITT (18
Apr 1761 - 9 Mar 1843)
Elizabeth TRUITT
(13 May 1763 - 23 Jun 1823)
William TRUITT (21
Oct 1765 - 30 Apr 1830)
Mary TRUITT (26
Oct 1767 - 1830)
Samuel TRUITT (23
Sep 1769 - Aug 1857)
Joseph TRUITT (12
Jan 1772 - 12 Feb 1855)
Jane TRUITT (24
Jan 1774 - 20 Oct 1848)
Saxegotha TRUITT
(17 Oct 1776 - Sep 1848)
Rachel TRUITT (15 Jan 1780 - 13 Oct 1786)
Name: John TRUITT
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: 2 Oct 1753 Sussex, DE
Death: 7 Nov 1821 Near Dayton, Montgomery, OH
Father: Samuel TRUITT Jr.
(~1725-1801)
Mother: Mary COLLINS (1734-1836)
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Frances GRAVES
(abt 1621 - 5 Aug 1691)
George TRUITT Jr.
(abt 1647 - Nov 1721) & Eleanor MEREDITH (abt 1646 - Jun 1732)
Samuel TRUITT
(abt 1686 - 9 Dec 1756) & Jennet PORTER (abt 1693 - )
Samuel TRUITT Jr.
(abt 1725 - May 1801) & Mary COLLINS (28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836)
George TRUITT (abt 1617 - Oct 1670) & Alice WATSON (abt
1629 - aft 1663)
James TRUITT (abt
1661 - 30 May 1718) & Mary RILEY (abt 1666 - aft 1696)
Mary TRUITT
(abt 1685 - 1730) & Andrew COLLINS (abt 1685 - 1729)
Andrew COLLINS Jr. (abt 1712 - 1773) & Elizabeth (abt 1712 - )
Mary COLLINS
(28 Apr 1734 - 21 Jan 1836) & Samuel TRUITT Jr. (abt 1725 - May 1801)
John TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821)
& Elizabeth GRAY (abt 1757 - )
Nancy Martha TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778
- 19 Oct 1848)
John ARNEY* (26 May 1816 - 22 Oct 1881) & Margaret Brown GRAFTON
(1818 - 1854)
Jacob Sylvester
ARNEY* (23 Mar 1839 - 13 Feb 1927) & Linia Ann BARNES (1840 - 1880)
Mary Ellen ARNEY (1861 - 1935) & Joshua Newton MACHLAN (1859 - 1936)
Linnie
Ellen MACHLAN* (1884 - 1974) & Everett Elmer WALKER (1882 - 1948)
Elsie Maureen WALKER (1903 - 1983) & Leo Newton COFFEY (1901 - 1998)
Misc. Notes
DATA SOURCE
ANCESTRY.COM, “THE TRUITT FAMILY”
http://awt.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bgroves2&id=I313
"John,
his father and brothers were Tories in Revolutionary War -- all went to N.C.
about 1792 to 1796; some moved on to Ky and Ohio about 1800 -- after that some
moved on West. I have found no data on John's son, Samuel, except that he was
listed by relatives in old letters, manuscripts, etc.
Susan and
Wm. Stewart were said to have lived 2 miles East of Urbana, Ohio and be buried
there - no other data on them; no other data on Peggy and Mr. Harmon."
As I have
read through Mildred Truitt's notes, she apparently did some original research
on her line of the Truitt family. She also borrowed and copied some of the
research of the late Reverend W. J. Gammon.
--------
From the
research work of Reverend William Jefferson Gammon (1876-1967) and Ada Mildred
Truitt (1913-1976); received Jul 2000
Mildred says
John died Oct 9, 1821 in Illinois.
--------
Place of
death was near Dayton, OH or in IL.
SURRY
COUNTY, NC:
Above note
says John and rest of family went to NC in about 1792. However there is a John
TRUITT recorded in the Surry County Court Minutes for 11 Nov 1789, buying land.
(His father is reported as dying in Surry County, so this is probably the
correct John Truitt.)
1790 CENSUS,
NORTH CAROLINA, STOKES COUNTY:
(Memo:
Stokes was split off from Surry County in 1789.) We find listed a John TREWETT
in the Stokes census. In addition to himself, there are two sons under age 16
(that would fit Thomas and Samuel). There are 3 females (wife and two
daughters, not quite enough daughters?). They have one slave.
NOTE: John
Trewitt, and his son Thomas Trewitt, paid the poll tax in Champaign County,
Ohio, in 1811. Tax was also paid by John’s son-in-law Jacob Arney.
Marriage: abt 1775 Worcester, MD
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Spouse: Elizabeth
GRAY
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Birth: abt 1757 Sussex, DE
—————————————————————————————————————————————
Children
John TRUITT (2 Oct 1753 - 7 Nov 1821) & Elizabeth GRAY
(abt 1757 - )
Polly TRUITT (20
Sep 1776 - )
Thomas TRUITT (8
Dec 1778 - 8 Jul 1850)
Nancy Martha
TRUITT (Feb 1781 - Feb 1819) & Jacob ARNEY (18 Mar 1778 - 19 Oct 1848)
Hannah TRUITT (6
Jul 1783 - )
Samuel TRUITT (abt
1785 - )
Sallie TRUITT (10
May 1787 - 1860)
Elizabeth TRUITT
(5 Aug 1790 - )
Susan TRUITT (6
Mar 1792 - )
Jane TRUITT (1 Oct
1794 - 14 Feb 1868)
John Wesley TRUITT
(5 Apr 1797 - aft 1852)
Peggy Hester TRUITT (20 Feb 1800 - )