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Est 1610 - Yes, date unknown
Est 1620 - Yes, date unknown
Birth |
Est 1620 |
Died |
Yes, date unknown |
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Family 1 |
William Debnam, b. Est 1610 [1] |
Children |
+ | 1. Katherine Debnam, b. Est 1638, Rappahannock River in Old Rappahannock /Essex/Caroline, Co., Colonial Virginia |
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Family 2 |
Reverend Charles Grymes, b. Est 1612, Ightham, Kent England (living in Glouchester and York Co., Virginia Colony) |
Children |
+ | 1. John 'of Brandon' Grymes, b. 1660, Middlesex Co., Virginia Colony |
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Est 1638 - Yes, date unknown
Birth |
Est 1638 |
Rappahannock River in Old Rappahannock /Essex/Caroline, Co., Colonial Virginia |
Died |
Yes, date unknown |
|
Father |
William Debnam, b. Est 1610 |
Mother |
Katherine Jennings/Jenings, b. Est 1620 |
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Family |
Robert Taliaferro, b. Est 1626, Glouchester Co., Virginia Colony |
Married |
By 1658 |
Children |
+ | 1. Charles Taliaferro, b. Est 1685 |
| 2. John 'The Ranger' Taliaferro, b. Est 1656, Rappahannock River in Old Rappahannock /Essex/Caroline, Co., Colonial Virginia |
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Name |
William Debnam |
Born |
Est 1610 |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
Yes, date unknown |
Person ID |
I18092 |
My Reynolds Line |
Last Modified |
18 Apr 2017 |
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Sources |
- [S122] Genealogy. com, http://www.genealogy.com/forum/surnames/topics/debnam/137/.
William Debnam first appears in extant Virginia records on 6 May 1636 as a headright for Captain (later Colonel) Christopher Calthorpe of ?Thropland,? one of the wealthy and influential men of Charles River/York County, proving Debnam?s arrival from England by that date. William Debnam?s own land in Charles River/York County lay in New Poquoson Parish and he held title to land there at the time of his death. By 1642 he was in possession of land on the Ware River, Mobjack Bay, Gloucester County, and received a Mobjack Bay patent in 1652, totaling 2,100 acres, this perhaps being merely a confirmation of his earlier holdings there. William Debnam died in 1657 in Gloucester County. He and Katherine Debnam had four known children: Katherine, William, Ann, and Mary, as follows. They became the ancestors of many distinguished families in Virginia and other states, families often characterized by habitual intermarriage among their established connections.
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