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Daniel Thompson Boisseau

Male 1793 - 1873  (80 years)


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

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Daniel Thompson Boisseau was born 13 Feb 1793, Prince Edward County, Virginia (son of John Boisseau and Nancy Elizabeth Carter); died 26 May 1873, Simpson Co., Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County, Kentucky.

    Daniel married Mildred Wade Haskins 2 Feb 1820. Mildred (daughter of Edward Haskins and Lucy Carter) was born 1799, Prince Edward County, Virginia; died 1847, Simpson Co., Kentucky. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Lucy Mildred Boisseau was born 16 Feb 1825, Simpson Co., Kentucky; died 15 Dec 1902, Dyersburg, Tennessee ; was buried , Fairview Cemetery, Dyer County, Tennessee.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Boisseau was born 14 Mar 1764, Dinwiddie County, Virginia (son of James Boisseau and Anna Fitzpatrick); died 1848, Simpson Co., Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County, Kentucky.

    Notes:

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2006/jul/21/20060721-090027-7182r/?page=all

    A list of famous Civil War battles often includes Gettysburg, Shiloh, Antietam and Manassas; it never includes the battle at the Boisseau farm.

    In terms of significance, however, few individual battles in the war had more immediate and sweeping consequences than the April 2, 1865, fight southwest of Petersburg, Va. In fact, following on the heels of a Confederate disaster at Five Forks, the dramatic Union charge at Boisseau farm led directly to the fall of Richmond and Gen. Robert E. Lee?s surrender at Appomattox.
    The ?battle? of Petersburg was actually a 10-month siege between June 1864 and April 1865 that consisted of hundreds of smaller and larger clashes between Federal and Confederate soldiers. Some historians have calculated that as many as 80,000 casualties occurred during the siege operations.

    Some individual battles during the siege made national headlines: the Crater, Fort Stedman and Chaffin?s Farm. The greater part of the common soldier?s time during the siege, however, was spent digging earthworks and keeping his head down to avoid sharpshooters.

    The landscape along the siege lines between Richmond and Petersburg was stripped of trees, the soil was dug up and piled into revetments and earthworks, and then the dirt was shoveled up again to repair damage done after almost daily artillery exchanges. An elaborate network of zigzagging trenches and dugout shelters evolved over time. Homes and farms along the siege line were incorporated into the network.

    One such farm was the Boisseau plantation, located in Dinwiddie County southwest of Petersburg. Its highlight was Tudor Hall, an elegant Georgian and Federal two-story house built in 1812.

    The Boisseau farm had prospered before the war. For many years, hogsheads of tobacco were rolled down the nearby Boydton Plank Road to the busy warehouses in Petersburg, where inspectors graded, bought and sold tobacco. The war, however, visited hard times on owner Joseph Boisseau?s family, and by mid-1864, the success of the prewar years was a fleeting memory.

    In August, when Ulysses S. Grant?s Union forces cut the Weldon Railroad south of Tudor Hall and Lee?s Confederates were forced to extend the Petersburg siege lines farther west to Hatcher?s Run to protect vulnerable wagon routes and the remaining rail lines, Confederate trenches were constructed directly through and around the Boisseau farm.

    The situation was not conducive to family life. In early October, the Boisseaus moved out and the Rebels moved in. In a county where the vote to secede had been 804-to-1 in favor and where Joseph Boisseau had served actively in the pro-Confederate civil defense force, he had little choice but to turn over everything he had that could aid the war effort. This included allowing Brig. Gen. Samuel McGowan to set up his brigade headquarters in Tudor Hall.

    McGowan had steadily moved up in the ranks during the war and was noted for his bravery under fire. Born in South Carolina to Irish immigrants, he had been variously a successful lawyer, soldier and member of the South Carolina House of Representatives before the war. He kept the men of his brigade busy, assigning teams of 200 to 300 a day to work on the entrenchments and artillery revetments.

    According to one aide, these Confederate earthworks simply could not be taken. ?They could scarcely be stormed, on account of the ditch and the brush abatis in front.? In places, the combination of a ditch in front and the earthwork behind created a 15- to 20-foot differential in height, or practically a sheer wall.

    McGowan?s men worked constantly to add new obstructions and strengthen the works The weakness was not in the works; the problem was that there was as much as 20 feet between each soldier in Lee?s stretched and thinned ranks.

    When McGowan wasn?t busy with administrative duties, he played whist and recited Shakespeare. His men enjoyed a relatively quiet stretch of roughly five months while the drama of the siege was played out on other parts of the 40-mile line, such as the Crater, Fort Harrison and other areas that were often out of earshot and sometimes out of mind.

    In February 1865, the men passed a resolution vowing to continue the war no matter what happened, and McGowan followed with a stirring speech. Little did they know that their impregnable works soon would be the stage for a dramatic, siege-lifting, war-ending assault.

    Across from McGowan, Union Gens. Horatio G. Wright (VI Corps) and John G. Parke (IX Corps) were busy in late March. In conjunction with Grant?s spring offensive, they massed troops, supplies and ammunition in preparation for an all-out assault on the section of the Confederate line in front of them.

    On March 25, many of the advanced Rebel rifle pits were captured and held ? an ominous sign had the Confederates paid more attention. Near the end of March, McGowan?s brigade was shifted west and participated in Gen. George Pickett?s ill-starred Five Forks? movements.

    A few of Brig. Gen. James H. Lane?s depleted regiments filled the earthworks at Boisseau farm, but the line was substantially thinned by the shift. The 37th North Carolina covered the section closest to Tudor Hall with just two cannon, and the men spaced up to 10 paces apart. Sometimes, the next man in line was out of immediate eyesight.

    Following the Rebel disaster at Five Forks on April 1, Grant ordered an immediate attack on the siege lines in the Boisseau farm sector. Gen. George Meade directed Wright and Parke to assault the enemy at 4 the next morning following a massive artillery barrage.

    Thousands of men who normally were within easy line of sight of the Confederates hunkered down silently that dark night, threatened with gag and buck if they so much as sneezed. The Union soldiers could hear their Rebel counterparts several hundred yards away on sentinel duty, discussing news of the war and rumors of battles. Still, this sector of the front had been quiet for so long that they remained relatively unsuspecting.

    In the middle of the night, an artillery barrage of epic proportions erupted and left no doubt about what was coming. What little Confederate artillery responded was quickly overwhelmed. After more than three hours of ?softening up,? the cannon went silent, and the Union soldiers rose silently, bayonets attached, but without percussion caps on their rifles, which meant that they could not fire and would be forced to climb over the earthworks before loading.

    The thin and demoralized Rebels still remaining ? probably many fewer than 3,000 along this stretch of line ? shot sporadically, fighting tenaciously in small pockets (including around Tudor Hall itself) but gradually were forced to fall back toward Petersburg when the deluge of Union soldiers inevitably crawled over and through their works.

    The significance of this successful attack, inevitable or not, was that it represented the first real piercing of Lee?s Petersburg line. Grant had been attempting unsuccessfully for almost a year to penetrate Lee?s defenses. He had resorted to repeated attempts to outflank Lee, which, though stretching Rebel resources, hadn?t broken the opposing army. Even the men who breached the wall in the early morning twilight little suspected the tremendous impact of their actions.

    The consequences, however, were rapid and profound. The entire 40-mile Confederate siege line began to unravel from Boisseau farm northward. Lee could not bring any reserves to fill the gap. Within hours, the Union flag would be flying over the Capitol in Richmond, and within a few days, the war itself would all but end with Lee?s surrender.

    History, however, seems to have forgotten where the 10-month siege was broken and where Confederate hopes were dashed permanently. The surviving earthworks where the breakthrough occurred are protected and can be visited at Pamplin Park in Petersburg.

    When Eliza BOISSEAU was born in 1808 in Logan, Kentucky, her father, Sergeant, was 44, and her mother, Nancy, was 43. She married James Theodorick "Thee" CARTER and they had two children together. She then married Cary Ashley P. Foster and they had eight children together. She died in 1862 in Christian, Kentucky, at the age of 54.

    John married Nancy Elizabeth Carter 11 Jul 1786, Prince Edward Co., Virginia. Nancy (daughter of Waddill Carter and Mildred "Millie" Wade) was born 1765, Prince Edward County, Virginia; died 11 May 1849, Simpson County, Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County,Kentucky. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Nancy Elizabeth Carter was born 1765, Prince Edward County, Virginia (daughter of Waddill Carter and Mildred "Millie" Wade); died 11 May 1849, Simpson County, Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County,Kentucky.

    Notes:

    http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tnlincol/geneal/carter2.txt


    PRINCE EDWARD CO.

    POLLY CARTER & THOMAS COLLIER 30 Oct. 1789 Marriage
    Bond
    NANCY CARTER & JOHN BOISSEAU 11 July 1786 Marriage
    Bond
    MARY CARTER & JOHN BARNETT 30 JJan. 1783
    ANN CARTER & ABEL BLANKENSHIP 13 July 1791
    THRODRICK CARTER JR. & JUDITH CUNNINGHAM 16 Apr..
    1764
    THOMAS CARTER & SARAH MARTIN 28 May 1764 Marriage
    Bond
    RICHARD CARTER & SUSANNAH BIGGER 29 Dec. 1772
    Minister return

    FRANCIS CARTER (BLW), died 7/26/1875, Prince Edward co.;
    married (1) MARTHA K. FARMER (2) AMELIA HATCHETT (3)
    5/11/1842 SARAH JANE LEIGH (P), Prince Edward co., she died
    10/29/1898, Rice Deepot, Prince Edward co., LNR Green Bay,
    Prince Edward co. 1879.
    Ref: Wardell p.75

    GEORGE (P,BLW), died before 7/5/1883, LNR P.O. Box, Prospect,
    Prince Edward co. 1871
    Ref: Wardell

    THEODORE/THEODORICK/THEODORIC CARTER (P,BLW),
    died 6/29/1873, Prince Edward co.; married (1) MARTHA BADWIN,
    (2) ELIZABETH BAKER (3) 7/15/1838 JULIA A. MORGAN (P),
    Prince Edward co.; She died 8/17/1898. LNR Pamplin, Appomattox
    co., VA 1871.
    Ref: Wardell p. 76

    WILSON CARTER (BLW), died 7/30/1858, Prince Edward co., VA;
    married 9/11/1851 MARY S. TAYLOR (P), Prince Edward co. She
    died c 1887. LNR Prince Edward co., VA 1882.
    Ref: Wardell p. 77

    The DAR Record that says Elizabeth Carter b 1787 (supposedly a daughter of Waddill Carter and Mildred Wade) is shown born two years after her father Waddill died. There is a mistake here. Nancy Elizabeth Carter, d/o Waddill & Mildred Wade Carter is thought to be born in 1765, which would put her the right age to have married John Boisseau. There are other Waddill Carters in the Halifax Virginia and Caswell Co., NC area, which are situated very close to one-another. Unless there is a second daughter of Waddill and Mildred Wade Carter whose name is Elizabeth, I cannot agree with the DAR record until further evidence is established. The records of the DAR are being investigated.


    Died:
    (Simpson, KY Circuit Court book 1, File 110 - Eliza Boisseau and her second husband Cary Foster sued Daniel T. Boisseau for Nancy's care. The case lists her death date.)

    Notes:

    Married:
    Children
    Susan BOISSEAU
    Mildred BOISSEAU b: 1787 in Virginia
    Nancy BOISSEAU b: ABT. 1790
    Lucy C. BOISSEAU b: 1790 in Virginia
    Daniel Thompson BOISSEAU b: 13 FEB 1793 in Virginia
    Benjamin Waddell BOISSEAU b: 1795 in Virginia
    Robert BOISSEAU b: 1799 in Virginia
    Eliza BOISSEAU b: 1810 in Kentucky

    Children:
    1. Benjamin Waddle Boisseau was born 1802, Bowling Green, Simpson Co., Kentucky; died 1863, Jackson County, Missouri; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Pittsville, Johnson County, Missouri.
    2. Elizabeth 'Eliza' Boisseau was born Abt 1808, Logan County, Kentucky; died 1865, Christian Co., Kentucky.
    3. 1. Daniel Thompson Boisseau was born 13 Feb 1793, Prince Edward County, Virginia; died 26 May 1873, Simpson Co., Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County, Kentucky.
    4. Private


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  James Boisseau was born 1736, Petersburg, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia (son of Private and Mary Rebecca Holt); died 1785, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia.

    Notes:

    Died:
    Chancery Record 1789 shows wife Mary d/o Joseph Watkins, exec. of James Boisseau's estate.

    James married Anna Fitzpatrick Abt 1758, Colonial Virginia. Anna was born 1740, Bucks Co., Pennsylvania; died 1797, Chesterfield Co., Virginia. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Anna Fitzpatrick was born 1740, Bucks Co., Pennsylvania; died 1797, Chesterfield Co., Virginia.

    Notes:

    Name:
    D/O Peter Fitzpatrick died 1797 Chesterfield Co., VA

    Notes:

    Married:
    Children
    Daniel Fitzpatrick BOISSEAU b: 4 MAR 1760 in Virginia
    James BOISSEAU b: 13 NOV 1761 in Virginia
    John BOISSEAU b: 14 NOV 1764 in Dinwiddie County, Virginia
    Mary Holt BOISSEAU b: 1765 in Virginia
    Lucy BOISSEAU b: 1767 in Virginia
    Benjamin BOISSEAU b: 1769 in Virginia
    Anner BOISSEAU b: 1771 in Virginia
    Peter BOISSEAU b: 1773 in Virginia
    Susanna "Susan" BOISSEAU b: 1777 in Dinwiddie County, Virginia
    Patrick BOISSEAU b: 1778 in Virginia
    David BOISSEAU b: 1780 in Virginia

    Children:
    1. 2. John Boisseau was born 14 Mar 1764, Dinwiddie County, Virginia; died 1848, Simpson Co., Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County, Kentucky.
    2. Benjamin Boisseau was born 28 Feb 1753, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; died 1820, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia.
    3. James W. Boisseau was born Abt 1844, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; died Feb 1904, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia.

  3. 6.  Waddill CarterWaddill Carter was born Abt 1743, Prince Edward Co., Virginia (son of Theodorick3 dna Carter, Jr. and Anne Waddill); died 1782, Prince Edward Co., Virginia.

    Notes:

    Nancy Waddill Carter (who married Thompson) had a brother, Waddill Carter. I have a copy of Waddill Carter's will from 1782, in which he mentions his "young son John." I am suspecting (but have not proven) that this John may be my long lost John Carter for whom I have spent years searching.

    Here is what I know of my family (taken from a family ledger owned by William below and court records):

    John Carter 25 March 1775 - 17 December 1852 married 21 March 1821 Oney Pollard 3 Sept. 1790 - after 1850
    His children were:
    1. William R. Carter 16 Sept. 1809 - 7 Feb. 1886 married 4 Feb. 1846 Mary Elizabeth Pollard 1 May 1829 - 1878
    2. Beverly Atwood Carter 3 July 1813 - 17 Sept. 1862 at the
    Battle of Sharpsburg (unmarried)
    3. Mary Elizabeth Carter 21 July 1821 - after 1880 married James Davis 16 Jan. 1799 - 8 Sept. 1845

    My John Carter first shows up on Amelia County Census
    Records in 1820. There is a John Carter on the 1810 Census in Prince Edward who is described as being married and with one infant son (which would match my John's description). It is clear to me that John was married to another woman before he married Oney Pollard in Amelia in 1821, since all three of his children were born before then.
    I have been somewhat hung up on the middle name of one of John's sons: Atwood. There are not many Atwoods in Virginia at this time. They seem to either be in Culpepper County (and they all move to present day West Virginia) or in Prince Edward County. Although I have not been able to find intermarriage between the Carters and the Atwoods, I have made this link: James Atwood dies in PEC in 1771. His will is witnessed by James Wade and Charles Wade. James and Charles Wade are the father and brother of Mildred Wade, who married Waddill Carter around 1765 in PEC. The name Atwood is too obscure (unlike say "Franklin") for there not to have been anyone to have known somebody of that name. -Peyton Carter on GenForum

    Waddell Carter was in Rev War. died 1782 P.E.Co Va. His widow married 2nd Robert Anderson 19 April 1790 P.E.Co Va. Waddell's dau Mildred married Anderson Wade 1799 P.E.Co. Va. Anderson Wade b. 1772 Goochland (he married 2nd Eliz Cox 1808 Montgomery Co Va. Anderson Wade was son of John Utley Wade b. 1739 Goochland & Alice Woodrum dau of John Woodrum & Mary in Goochland. Alice Woodrum was sister of Mary Woodrum married Benjamin Weaver (Weaver's live in Fluvanna Co 1782 next to my Richard Chandler & Eliz

    Samuel Carter who was named as one of the trustees was a son of Theodrick (Second) and Anne Carter. Samuel's brother Waddill married Mildred, a daughter of James Wade, who was also named as one of the trustees for widening the river.
    GILES CARTER OF VIRGINIA, by Gen. Wm. G. H. Carter, p 109:
    p 79 -Married in Prince Edward Co., VA, and lived there
    until his death.
    p 47 - Waddill was bequeathed land in his father's 1777 will.
    p 80 -Will executed 6 Apr 1782, probated Jul 1782; Witnesses: Ro. Lawson, John Morton, Tho. Charlton, &
    Abraham Venable;
    Executors: brother Samuel, father-in-law James Wade, friend
    Francis Watkins;
    Heirs: wife Mildred, three under-age sons & two or more
    unnamed daughters.

    CARTER FAMILY GENEALOGY FORUM, Peyton Carter Mildred Wade married Waddill Carter c.1765. They had five children together: 1. James Carter 2. Theodrick Carter 3.
    Elizabeth Carter 4. Mildred Wade Carter, who married Anderson Wade in 1799 (See note from Carol Clemmer) 5. John Carter. Waddill died in 1782 and Mildred remarried in 1790 to Robert Anderson. Apparently, Robert Anderson died in 1802 and Mildred Anderson remarried AGAIN to Joseph Lewis in 1803 (as detailed in Anderson's estate papers).

    From http://www.virginians.com/t.htm?7076 Waddill Carter married Mildred, likely Mildred Wade. Virginia reimbursed Carter for bacon and beef he provided during the Revolution. Milley was head of a household of nine whites in Prince Edward County in 1785. She married second Robert Anderson 19 April (bond) 1790, and third, Charles Joseph Lewis 9 October 1803.
    Known Children -- Lucy, Nancy, Mildred Wade, Mary, Elizabeth, Samuel

    The Boisseaus forefathers, who were Huguenots, came down to Montauban,, Franceto assist carrying on the Protestant University In 1705 a parish in Prine George County, probably Martin Branden Parish, Rev James died before 1915, leaving a widow, Sarah, who died in 1715, and a son Capt James Boisseau Capt James was a vestryman of Bristol Parish, Prine George County, Va in 1722. He resigned the post Nov 22, 1768. Capt James married Mary, believed to be the daughter of Rev Joseph Holt. Their son, James Boisseau od Dinwiddie County born May 22, 1735, married Anner Fitzpatrick, daughter of Peter Fitzpatrick. Anner and James were the parents of John, born March 14, 1764 John stated on his Revolutionary pension application that his birthday was recorded by his father, James in a book, that was sold at his fathers sale The book was bought by James Sweet of Dinwiddie County. John Boisseau married Nancy Carter July 11, 1786. NANCY WAS THE DAUGHTER OF wADDEL cARTER AND mILDRED wADE , daughter of James Wade John Boisseau moved to Kentucky in 1806,in the part of Logan Co,that became Simpson Co in 1819. John and Nancy were the parents of Daniel T Boisseau 1793-1873, born in Prince Edward Co, Va,married Feb 3, 1820, Mildred Wade Haskins 1799-1845. Mildred is buried on the Eldon Hall farm of Franklin Ky Daniel T married Susan E Robey, 1820-1897 brn in Rutherford Co Tenn Both are buried in Big Spring Cumberland Presby Cemetery. Daniel and Susan were the parents of Dora C Boisseau, 1860-1937. Dora married Robert Alexander Evans Jr 1851-1919 of Middleton Ky. Evans was the son of Walter W Evans and Susan Catherine Harris. They are buried in Franklin Cemetery.
    Jean Carter Wilson

    Died:
    Date of Will Probate July Court, 1782

    Waddill married Mildred "Millie" Wade Abt 1760. Mildred (daughter of James Wade, Jr. and Mary 'Polly' Dickerson/Dickenson) was born Abt 1743, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died 24 Oct 1803, Prince Edward County, Virginia. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Mildred "Millie" Wade was born Abt 1743, Prince Edward Co., Virginia (daughter of James Wade, Jr. and Mary 'Polly' Dickerson/Dickenson); died 24 Oct 1803, Prince Edward County, Virginia.

    Notes:

    Mildred WADE
    Married: ABT 1765
    Children

    James CARTER
    Theodrick CARTER
    John CARTER
    Elizabeth CARTER
    Mildred Wade CARTER b: ABT 1780
    Lucy CARTER
    Nancy CARTER
    Mary CARTER
    Samuel CARTER



    Name:
    Mildred Wade first married Waddill Carter. She married secondly, after his death, Robert Anderson. He died shortly afterwards and she married 3rd, Joseph Lewis. The dispute over the ownership of her 1st husband's Still is because she disregarded the part ownership of the Still of her husband's brother, Samuel Carter. When the judge orders the Still sold, Mildred and her husband Joseph Lewis purchase the Still, and pay Samuel for his part of the Brandy produced for 8-10 + years that it has been under her control. - mfe

    Notes:

    Married:
    John Bigger testified in the Chancery case, that "about the beginning of the War in America with Great Britan that Theodorick Carter Sen. and Waddill Carter bought in partnership a Still of a certain Henry Coldwell; as he this diplomat well remembers to have heard the Sen. Theodorick and Waddill Carter often say; and this deponant further saith that the fivalays understood that the said Still was used in partnership by the said Theodorick and Waddill Carter as their joint property and this informant often saw the said Still at the said Theorodick Carters and since the death of the said Theodorick Carter, he frequently saw the said Still at Samuel Carters, the plaintiff and he this deponent further saith that he always understood from the said Samuel Carter and said Waddill Carter both that it was their joint property and was kept by them alternately."
    [John Bigger also names his son as James Bigger]

    Children:
    1. 3. Nancy Elizabeth Carter was born 1765, Prince Edward County, Virginia; died 11 May 1849, Simpson County, Kentucky; was buried , Boisseau Cemetery, Simpson County,Kentucky.
    2. Mildred Wade 'Millie' Carter was born Abt 1780, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    3. Lucy Carter was born Abt 1768, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. Dr. James T. Carter was born 3 May 1769, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Bef 1835, Goochland Co., VA.
    5. Theodorick/Theodore Carter was born Est 1775, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died 1873, Prince Edward County, Virginia.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Private

    Private married Mary Rebecca Holt. Mary was born Est 1710, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Mary Rebecca Holt was born Est 1710, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    Children:
    1. 4. James Boisseau was born 1736, Petersburg, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; died 1785, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia.
    2. Mary H. [Holt] Boisseau was born Abt 1738, Dinwiddie Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.

  3. 12.  Theodorick3 dna Carter, Jr. was born Abt 1697, Goochland County, Virginia (son of Theodorick2 Carter and Elizabeth Webb); died 1777, Prince Edward County, Virginia.

    Notes:

    Theodrick Carter, II and Anne Waddill were the parents of Nancy Waddill Carter. Anne Waddill was baptized January 24, 1713, according to the register of St. Peter's parish, which encompassed New Kent County. Her parents were William and Sarah Dennis Waddill. William was elected vestryman of St. Peter's, on June 1, 1704, and served in
    this capacity for at least thirty-five years. The author James Branch Cabell,a descendant of John Waddill, discussed the Waddills in his book "The Majors and Their Marriages." Theodrick Carter and Anne Waddill lived for a time in New Kent County. According to the register of St. Peter's parish, their first child John was baptized on October 30, 1737. Theodrick appeared in the Amelia County tithables list of June 10, 1747 in John Nash's district (this area became part of Prince Edward County in 1754); he is absent from the list Nash compiled for the same district on June 10, 1745. He must therefore have migrated from New
    Kent County to present-day Prince Edward County sometime between these two dates. Nancy was born June 15, 1749, probably at her father's estate "Hickory Hill" (also known as "Hickory Grove"). According to tradition, the house was built around 1750; however, it may have been built three years earlier, since we know that Theodrick was living in John Nash's tax district on June 10, 1747.
    John Wood's 1820 map of Prince Edward County shows the location of Hickory Hill. Two miles west of Hampden-Sydney College is the notation "Capt. Carter's." Captain Carter was Samuel Carter, Nancy's brother. Samuel inherited Hickory Hill from his father in 1777. Destroyed by fire in 1933, Hickory Hill was described four years later in the Works Projects Administration survey of Prince Edward County homes: [Hickory Hill] was not a show place except for its splendid boxwood and cedar hedge and lovely gardens. It was a plain frame house, or rather two houses connected by a little square room. The first of these traditions says it was built in 1750, a story and a half with small rooms except for one large reception room, which was beautifully paneled, and with one side of carved oak. The other part of the house was built by William H. Venable, when he bought the plantation in 1853 from Edward Carter [Samuel's son]. Mr. Venable built a large, square, two-story frame building, with large rooms and ample halls. The many outbuildings around the mansion house made the place quite a little settlement. The large grove of hickories flanking it on the south gave the place its name.
    Nancy's father was one of Prince Edward County's most prominent planters. He purchased 975 acres in old Amelia County on September 20, 1748, and bought and sold other parcels of land up to the time of his death. A member of the Anglican church, Theodrick offered 300 acres of land to St. Patrick's parish for its use as a glebe, or plot of land granted to the local clergyman as part of his benefice during his tenure of office.

    Thomas and Nancy Thompson probably named their fourth child in honor of her brother, Samuel Carter. Samuel distinguished himself in the military, in politics, and as a businessman. A member of the 1st Virginia Regiment during the Revolutionary War, he and seven other officers were granted the honor of personally welcoming the Marquis de Lafayette during the great soldier and statesman's visit to Richmond in October, 1824 (Richmond Enquirer, October 29, 1824, page 3). Samuel at various times held the county offices of sheriff, magistrate, and coroner; in 1805-1806 he represented Prince Edward County in the Virginia Assembly. In the late 1790s he was a trustee of a company which improved navigation on the Appomattox River. Later, he became a charter trustee of the Junction Canal Company. In 1825 the company constructed a canal which linked the Appomattox and Little Roanoke rivers. John Wood's map of Prince Edward County shows Samuel's mill at the mid-point of this canal.

    Name:
    Theodorick3 -- Theodorick 3rd generation
    Mary Frances Eggleston [mfeggleston AT gmail.com] Family Finder Kit # 343915
    Sherrel Cavedo [jscave28443 AT yahoo.com] Kit # 277234 Group I1 - 12
    Carter Broach - [broach AT udel.edu] Y-DNA and Family Finder Kit # N17010

    Theodorick3 married Anne Waddill Abt 1732, Halifax County, Virginia. Anne (daughter of William Waddill, Jr. and Sarah Dennis) was born Abt 1713, New Kent County, Colonial Virginia; died 1777, Prob. Prince Edward Co., Virginia. [Group Sheet]


  4. 13.  Anne Waddill was born Abt 1713, New Kent County, Colonial Virginia (daughter of William Waddill, Jr. and Sarah Dennis); died 1777, Prob. Prince Edward Co., Virginia.

    Notes:

    "Thomas Carter married Mary Powell Mar 9 1798 in Halifax she was the daughter of David Powell and Mary Epps. I have Thomas listed as son to Richard Carter and Susannah Bigger, married Dec 29 1772. Richards father was Theodrick Carter born abt. 1713 married 1730 in Prince Edward Co. Va to Anne Waddill daughter of William Waddill Jr. Richard's brothers and sisters were Elizabeth born Sept 26 1736, John Carter born Aug 26 1737 wife Mary. Theodrick married Judith Cunningham. Susanna married Richard Stubblefield, William, Nancy Waddill married Thomas Thompson, Wadill married Mildred Wade, Mary, Sarah married Samuel Love, Samuel married Elizabeth McRobert [2nd Susannah Bibb, d/o John]. I will be showing you the connection of Richard Carter and daughter Mary who married Mastin Powell and there was the other Lemuel Carter that married Martha [Patsy] Powell" Joseph Carter

    Notes:

    Hobsons of Halifax Co., Va.

    6163Halifax ob p 14-282 original1790HalifaxHobson
    Benjaminroad handsDouble CreekBenjamin Hobson surveyor of
    Lower Double Creek to Toby Ck, hands Thomas Boyd, Robert Shotwell, James Sureik, John Johns, Presley Dodson, Elisha Dodson, William Watkins, William Couch, Adam Blount, John Lawson, Henry Cook, John Cook, William Claiborne, Joseph Kirby, Richard Kirby, William Boyd, Henry Wall, Mary Carter, Theo Carter Jr, Henry Hobson, Benjamin Hobson, John More, Jonathan Davis, Jesse Davis, William Jordan
    6163Halifax ob p 14-282 original1790HalifaxHobson
    Benjaminroad handsDouble CreekBenjamin Hobson surveyor of
    Lower Double Creek to Toby Ck, hands Thomas Boyd, Robert Shotwell, James Sureik, John Johns, Presley Dodson, Elisha Dodson, William Watkins, William Couch, Adam Blount, John Lawson, Henry Cook, John Cook, William Claiborne,
    Joseph Kirby, Richard Kirby, William Boyd, Henry Wall, Mary Carter, Theo Carter Jr, Henry Hobson, Benjamin Hobson, John More, Jonathan Davis, Jesse Davis, William Jordan 173Halifax Will Book 2, 1783 - 1792 1789Halifax April 28 1789HobsonBenjaminappraiserInventory of
    Thomas Lawson estate with Benjamin Hobson and Samuel Gordon
    4549Halifax deed bk 13-461784Halifax7-JunHobsonHenry
    witnessDanFrom Francis Watkins and Agnes, his wife, of the Co of Prince Edward to William Hobson of the Co of Cumberland for 400# about 366 acres on Dan River in H it being part of a larger tract which was formerly deeded by Hugh Moor to John Watson and by the same Watson to Francis
    WAtkins. The 366 acres is bounded by Carter's line. Signed Frances Watkins. Wit P Carrington, John Bates, William Terry, Drury Vaughan, Henry Hobson, Mathaniel Barksdale Recorded July 15 1784
    4553Halifax deed bk 16-597 1796Halifax10-AprHobsonHenry
    linesDan James Carter of H to Beverley Barksdale of H for 250# about 212 acres in H on the N side of Dan River and bounded by Henry Hobson, the bank of the Dan, William Boyd. Signed James Carter. Wit Henry Cook,
    Champness Terry, Jarrott W. Cook, John Tuck, James Chalmers, ARmistead
    Moore, Alexander Moore, John Echols, Rec June 27 1796
    6163Halifax ob p 14-282 original1790HalifaxHobson
    Henryroad handsDouble CreekBenjamin Hobson surveyor of Lower
    Double Creek to Toby Ck, hands Thomas Boyd, Robert Shotwell, James Sureik,
    John Johns, Presley Dodson, Elisha Dodson, William Watkins, William Couch,
    Adam Blount, John Lawson, Henry Cook, John Cook, William Claiborne, Joseph
    Kirby, Richard Kirby, William Boyd, Henry Wall, Mary Carter, Theo Carter Jr,
    Henry Hobson, Benjamin Hobson, John More, Jonathan Davis, Jesse Davis,
    William Jordan
    10157Ct Ord Bk 1756-17621761Cumberland25-MayHobsonJohn
    securityWyke and Glaister Hunnicutt plt vs Willliam Bradley
    def in case John Hobson, Wiliam Hobson, Josiah Thompson and Robert Moore
    special bail for the def.
    10178Court Ord Bk 1762-17641762Cumberland27-SepHobsonJohn
    defWyke and Glaister Hunnicutt plt vs John Hobson, Wiliam
    Hobson, Josiah Thompson, Robert Moore on a writ of scire facias. Paid Oct
    26th.
    10219Court Ord Bk 1749-17561754Cumberland25-MarHobsonJohn
    witJohn Moore and Wiliam Hudgins jr was recorded, wit Thomas
    Tabb, William Hobson and John Hobson
    2062Robin Wilis ldb 13-1661778Lunenburg13-SepHobsonJohn
    linesMichael McKie and wife Susannah to Robert Estes - see item
    2066Robin Willis ldb 13-2991779Lunenburg29-AugHobsonJohn
    sellerReedy CkJohn Hobson of Dinwiddie Co to Robert Estes, 5
    shillings [gift deed price], 45A on Horsepen Br. of Reedy Creek on Blackwell
    and Long’s line. Wits Joseph Hightower, John Smithson, Benjamin Estes, Jr.
    8636Lunenburg Willl Book 1 by TLC1761Lunenburg18-Sep
    HobsonJohnwitnessWill of William Traylor, son Joel dark bay
    horse when 21, son William land and plantation whereon I now dwell, daughte
    Mary Hood 1 shilling sterling, daughter Ann Moore 1 shilling sterling,
    children and wife Mary, Joel, William Isabella, Agness and Elizabeth land
    called the fleets if I have any right to it to be equally divided among
    them. Wife Mary rst of my estate during her life to maintain my young
    children then to be equally divided among three youngest daughters. Exec
    wife, desire for no appraisement, wit John Hobson, David Deardon, William
    Clift, signed Sept 18 1761, probated Feb 2 1762, John Hobson security.
    2062Robin Wilis ldb 13-1661778Lunenburg13-SepHobson
    JosephlinesMichael McKie and wife Susannah to Robert Estes -
    see item
    4713DB 14 pg 801787Halifax27-FebHobsonNwitness
    County Line ckGeorge Canaldy of Caswell Co NC to Phillip Thomas of the co
    and st aforesaid for 25# about 167 acres in H on he east side of the Country
    Line Cr and bounded by the country line of Va, William Moore, John Lewis
    Byrd. Signed George (x) Canaldy. Wit - H. Haralson, James Moore, John
    Canally, John Coleman, N Hobson, William Powell, Edmond King, recorded Apr ?
    2021Robin Wilis ldb 12-1911772Lunenburg14-MayHobson
    NicholaswitnessFalls CrElisha Estes, Sr. of Lunenburg to
    William Hatchett - see item
    2056Robin Willis ldb 13-921778Lunenburg9-MarHobson
    NicholasbuyerCouches CkRobert and Elisha, execs estate of
    Robert Estes, Sr., dec’d, to Nicholas Hobson, all of Lunenburg, £170, 170A
    on Couches Cr. Signed Robert Estes, Elisha Estes (check again)
    2057Robin Willis dlb 13-931778Lunenburg10-MarHobson
    NicholassellerCouches CkSame tract conveyed by Robert &
    Elisha Estes as exors of father’s will, 170A on Couches Creek, from Nicholas
    Hobson to Elisha Estes, both of Lunenburg, for £5. (check again)
    8326Mormon church contributed records1778Lunenburg
    9-MarHobsonNicholasbuyerCrouches CreekIndenture between
    Robert and Elisha Estes, executors of Robert Estes, the elder, decd, and
    Nicholas Hobson 170 acres on Crouches Creek
    8327Mormon church contributed records1778Lunenburg
    10-MarHobsonNicholassellerCrouches CreekConvey to Hobson to
    Elisha Estes
    8430Mormon Contributed Records1777Hobson
    NicholasCaptWilliam Estes in Capt. Nicholas Hobson's co,
    6th Va regt of Cont. Forces, commanded by Lt. Col. James Hendricks
    10157Ct Ord Bk 1756-17621761Cumberland25-MayHobson
    WilliamsecurityWyke and Glaister Hunnicutt plt vs Willliam
    Bradley def in case John Hobson, Wiliam Hobson, Josiah Thompson and Robert
    Moore special bail for the def.
    10178Court Ord Bk 1762-17641762Cumberland27-SepHobson
    WilliamdefWyke and Glaister Hunnicutt plt vs John Hobson,
    Wiliam Hobson, Josiah Thompson, Robert Moore on a writ of scire facias.
    Paid Oct 26th.
    10219Court Ord Bk 1749-17561754Cumberland25-MarHobson
    WilliamwitJohn Moore and Wiliam Hudgins jr was recorded, wit
    Thomas Tabb, William Hobson and John Hobson
    4549Halifax deed bk 13-461784Halifax7-JunHobsonWilliam
    buyerDanFrom Francis Watkins and Agnes, his wife, of the Co of
    Prince Edward to William Hobson of the Co of Cumberland for 400# about 366
    acres on Dan River in H it being part of a larger tract which was formerly
    deeded by Hugh Moor to John Watson and by the same Watson to Francis
    WAtkins. The 366 acres is bounded by Carter's line. Signed Frances
    Watkins. Wit P Carrington, John Bates, William Terry, Drury Vaughan, Henry
    Hobson, Mathaniel Barksdale Recorded July 15 1784

    Children:
    1. William4 of Halifax Carter was born Abt 1733, Colonial Virginia; died Mar 1810, Halifax County, Virginia.
    2. Susannah [Waddill] 'Susan' Carter was born Abt 1735, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown, Rockingham Co., North Carolina.
    3. Elizabeth Carter was born 26 Sep 1736, Henrico Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    4. Captain John C. dna Carter was born 26 Aug 1737, St. Peter's Par., New Kent Co., VA; died 20 Sep 1781, Halifax Co., Virginia.
    5. Private Richard 'Tailor' dna [LVCF-89Q] Carter was born 18 Feb 1743, St Patricks, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died 1 Jan 1796, Halifax Co., Virginia.
    6. 6. Waddill Carter was born Abt 1743, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died 1782, Prince Edward Co., Virginia.
    7. PATRIOT Theodorick4 dna Carter, Jr. was born Abt 1747, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died 13 Jul 1805, Halifax County, Virginia.
    8. Nancy Waddill 'Nanny' Carter was born 15 Jun 1749, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown, Logan Co., Kentucky.
    9. Sarah "Sally" Carter was born Abt 1753, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.
    10. Capt. Samuel Carter was born Abt 1754, Prince Edward Co., Colonial Virginia; died 29 Apr 1830, Prince Edward Co., Virginia.
    11. Mary "Molly" Carter was born Abt 1760, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.

  5. 14.  James Wade, Jr. was born Abt 1697, Hanover Co., VA (son of James Wade, Sr. and Margaret Mrs. James Wade); died 1801, Prince Edward Co., Virginia.

    James married Mary 'Polly' Dickerson/Dickenson Bef 1740. Mary (daughter of Nathaniel Dickerson/Dickinson/Dickenson and Elizabeth Garland) was born Abt 1725, Hanover, Colonial Virginia; died Yes, date unknown. [Group Sheet]


  6. 15.  Mary 'Polly' Dickerson/Dickenson was born Abt 1725, Hanover, Colonial Virginia (daughter of Nathaniel Dickerson/Dickinson/Dickenson and Elizabeth Garland); died Yes, date unknown.

    Notes:

    Name:
    She is the d/o Nathaniel and Elizabeth Garland Dickerson. She married Thomas Spencer too, and her sister, Elizabeth, married Benjamin Terry.

    Children:
    1. Charles Wade was born Est 1745, Amelia Co., Virginia; died 1813, Halifax County, Virginia.
    2. 7. Mildred "Millie" Wade was born Abt 1743, Prince Edward Co., Virginia; died 24 Oct 1803, Prince Edward County, Virginia.
    3. James Wade was born Est 1740, Amelia Co., Colonial Virginia; died Yes, date unknown.