Saturday, September 19, 2020

Notebooks - Dad's Families No. 7 - Part 2


Branthover, W.R. Revolutionary War Soldiers Buried in Franklin County, Vermont, Georgia, VT: Georgia Historical Society, nd

Rowland Powell b. ca. 1750, d. 1838, bur. Troy Street Cemetery, Tombstone (old) RP 37. Tombstone (new) Rowland Powell died 1838, Revolutionary War Veteran and his wife Mary Janes 1753-1813.  Military Record: Served in Capt. Joshua Hazen's Company, Col. Wood's Regt., which marched to the alarm at Brookfield, Oct. 1780.


Draper, Cecil. A Branch of the Draper Family, Denver, CO: Draper, 1969.

References:
1. James Draper, the first of this branch of the family thus far identified with certainty, was probably born in Delaware, or rather in one of "the three counties upon the Delaware," as the area was then called, most likely in either Sussex or Kent County, at a guess about 1746 to 1748. He died in Washington County, Pennsylvania, after 21 Sept. 1782, the date of the later of two militia rolls in which he was listed, and before 18 Sept. 1784, the earliest date shown on any paper in his estate.  He was probably buried in what is now Morris Township in Washington County, possibly in the Upper Ten Mile Presbyterian Church Cemetery. . . . No Draper monument has been found, however, in this or in any of four other cemeteries in the area, Bethel, Old Concord, Mt. Zion and Lower Ten Mile, he last located at Amity. James Draper was very likely a descendant of the Alexander Draper who was born in Bolton parish, Lancashire, England, in 1629 or 1630, and who, with his first wife, Catherine, and his servant, Edmund Furlong, arrived in Maryland not later than 1660, from whence he moved, not later than 1677, to what is now Sussex County, Delaware.  Alexander Draper, in turn is thought to have been a descendant of John and Jennet (Bowker) Draper who lived in Bolton in Lancashire during the mid-1500's. 

[James is not our ancestor.  He is a contemporary of our Thomas Draper and could possibly be a sibling if this line turns out to be ours.  

Notes to the above:  

  • From 1681 until 1776, the area which is now Delaware was under the proprietorship of William Penn and his three sons, and therefore a part of the colony of Pennsylvania.
  • Militia lists - Pennsylvania Archives, 6th Series, II, 8, 12; Rec. Pennsylvania Comp. Gen.
  • Washington County Orphans' Court, D-5-1786 

Draper, Thomas. The Drapers in America, New York: John Polhemus Printing Company,  1892.

Drapers of Pulaski County, VA. - Draper's Valley, Va., was named after John Draper, Sr., the first white man who settled in that section of the country, about 1765-6. He was b. within the limits of Philadelphia, and was the son of George Draper and Ellen Harden, who came from Ireland. George Draper moved from there to Pattonsburgh on the James River, Va. He went from there to survey some lands in Western Virginia, and was never heard from again; he was thought to have been killed by the Indians. His wife and two children then moved to a place in Montgomery County, Va., called Draper's Meadows.

Children: 
  • John. Moved on his father's death to Draper's Valley, Va.
  • Mary. m. Col. Ingles, and settled at Ingles Ferry, 20 miles east of Draper's Valley. 
[As far as I can tell, we do not descend from this family.]

Drapers of Virginia - Descendants of Thomas Draper - This branch of the Drapers it is impossible to locate correctly, except that it is known that 2. Thomas Draper, who is supposed to have been a son of 1. Peter and Hannah Draper, was of Virginia. Whether Thomas immigrated from England to Virginia, or his father was the emigrant, it is impossible to state. We know, however, that Thomas married Lucy Coleman, and that they moved from Virginia to South Carolina about 1760. Lucy Coleman had a siser whose name was Frances.  . . . 

2. Thomas. (1. Peter?) son of Peter & Hannah Draper m. Lucy Coleman about 175-.

Children:

  • Sarah b. VA Oct. 6, 1758
  • William b. SC Apr. 6, 1761 d. infancy
  • Anna b. SC Aug. 26, 1763
  • James b. SC Feb. 5, 1766
  • Thomas b. SC Sep 15, 1768
  • Philip b. SC June 14, 1771 

[This is definitely not our line.]


Galloupe, C.W. Letter to Mrs. Wead, Boston, MA, April 16, 1896. 

My dear Mrs. Wead: -   

I send you with this, the portion of the Gallop Genealogy which relates to your own particular barnch, which I beg you to accept.

In relation to the name of Galloupe I am afraid to say that the change in the spelling, so far as the oupe is concerned, probably arose inadvertently in my own family. You may not know, that, in England the name was spelled Gollop and is now spelled in that way, by the family, (George Tilly Gollop,) who are now and have been for several centuries in possession of Strode, the old Gollop estate. While it is spelled Gollop by one branch in England it is spelled Gallop by another branch and the Harleian Soc., the undoubted authority, give it as Gallop, including both branches, back to the original trunk. I have many interesting accounts but they are too long and tedious to write here. 

 When the second John settled in New London, Conn. he spelled his name Gallop, but the succeeding generations finally settled upon Gallup; - this was an innovation, as, until that time, the name had never been spelled Gallup either in this country or in England and it is not recorded with that spelling, so far as I know, any where in England and never has been. 

The change to oupe came about as follows: - my father, who was somewhat of a careless man in his writing, frequently spelled his name in signing documents Galuop and, as Selectman of Beverly and the incumbent of other offices, it was so often recorded in that manner that it became the recognized spelling of our family name. When I first came to Boston, (in 1843) to make my permanent abiding place, I spelled my name as my father had done, and, as for many years I was the only one in the Directory of that name, my names was universally pronounced in that manner, and I was only known by the name of Galloup. The spelling naturally followed the pronunciation and the name was pronounced Galloupe, only, by all who knew me and I was compelled to add the e. Nearly all the other branches throughout the State adopted the spelling and the name is now, in this vicinity, better known as Galloupe than Gallop much to my regret. I am afraid it is now too extensively in use ever to be changed. 

This, I think, is the origin of the present name of Galloupe; - the name was however, very frequently spelled and pronounced Galloop many years ago. Benadam Gallop, who never emigrated from Boston, spelled and pronounced his name Galloop more than a century ago. The house in which he lived in Hull St., Boston, is still known as the Galloupe House and is one of the interesting historical houses, as it was the head-quarters of General Gage during the Battle of Bunker Hill. 

I once wrote to Mr. Edward McDonald the sexton of Copp's Hill Cemetery who has the care of the house, or, has at least written about it and who is supposed to be on of the authorities, and told him that he was mistaken in the pronunciation of the name and that it should be called the Gallop House. He wrote in reply that the house had been called the Galloupe house for more than seventy-five years as proved by the records.  

Some time after this correspondence, I had occasion to look over the Boston Records and I found that from 1764 to 1768 Benadam's name is recorded and spelled by the authorities of the town as Galloop. He was the owner and occupant of the Galloupe House.

In a letter dated Boston, July 2, 1632; written by Gov. John Winthrop to the Rev. John White of Dorchester, England, Gov. Winthrop referring to John Gallop in the same letter spells the name Gallop, Galloppe

I have written you a long dissertation upon the name but you would hardly be likely to get the information from any one else.

I have the name John de Galope back during the time of Henry the 4th as belonging to Normandy, and, also that of a Spanish Knight back during the crusades as Sir Knight Galopo, so you see there were lots of them. 

I have written these matters out somewhat in detail and made a long letter, but I have enough of the family History to take up much longer time that I would like to give it. 

Very truly yours,

C.W. Galloupe 


Holland, Harriet. Genealogy Notes, nd

Mom, dad and I met our cousin in Harriet Holland when we visited Richford, Vermont about 1986. She was volunteering at the local historical society.  We told her we were looking for Lathrops and Cynthia (Powell) Lathrop.  She gave us some books to look at and then disappeared.  Harriet came back in a few minutes with her genealogy notebooks and laid out Cynthia's whole family history for us and let us make some photocopies. 

Mayflower Ancestry - Harriet (Davis) Holland

  1. Wm. Bradford b. 1589, d. 1657 m. Alice Southworth
  2. Maj. Wm. Bradford (1624-1703) m. (--?--) Wiswall [we now know this is incorrect] 
  3. Joseph Bradford (1674-1747) m. Anne Fitch (1675-1715)
  4. Irene Bradford b. 1715 m. Jonathan Janes b. 1713
  5. Mary Janes (1753-1813) m. Rowland Powell (1751-1838)
  6. Anna Powell m. Daniel Miller - 3/5/1801
  7. Martha Miller (1802-1871) m. Cyrus Davis (1797-1875)
  8. T. Jefferson Davis (1839-1914) m. Juliette Stanhope (1851-1924)
  9. Madison Davis (1899-1919) m. Myrtle Monteith (1895-
  10. Harriet Davis (1918- ) m. Philip Holland (1902-1964)

Mayflower Ancestry - Dorothy (Landers) Holcomb

  1. William Bradford (1589-1657) m. Alice Southworth
  2. Maj. William Bradford (1624-1703) m. Mary Fitch Wiswall (1643- ) [again, this is incorrect]
  3. Joseph Bradford (1675-1747) m. Anne Fitch (1675-1715
  4. Irene Bradford (1715- ) m. Jonathan Janes (1713- )
  5. Mary Janes (1753-1813) m. Rowland Powell (1751-1838)
  6. Prosper Powell (1795-1881) m. Mary Goff (1790-1868)
  7. Sarah Jane Powell (1816-1896) m. Wilson Arnold (1816-1874)
  8. Emma Jane Arnold (1852-1928) m. George Saunders (1833-1916)
  9. Lottie Emma Saunders (1899-1976) m. George Belanger (1893-1960)
  10. Edna Mae Belanger (1917- ) m. Harold Landers (1910 - )
  11. Dorothy Frances Landers m. Charles Holcomb

Mary Janes Ahnentafel  

  1.  Mary Janes b. 28 Apr 1755, d. 1813 Richford, Vt. m. ca. 1773 Rowland Powell b. 16 Nov 1751, d. 1838 Richford, Vt.
  2. Jonathan Janes b. 1715 Lebanon, Ct. m. 18 Mar 1736
  3. Irene Bradford b. 17 Oct 1715
  4. William Janes b. 1692, d. Lebanon, Ct., m. 5 Jun 1712
  5. Abigail Loomis b. 10 Aug 1691
  6. Joseph Bradford b. 1674, d. 16 Jan 1747 New London, Ct., m. 5 Oct. 1698
  7. Anne Fitch b. 1675, d. 1715
  8. Abel Janes b. 1644, d. 1718 Northampton, m. 1679
  9. Mary Judd bapt. 22 Jul 1660 Farmington, Ct. d. 1735
  10. Josiah Loomis b. 17 Feb 1660, d. 20 Oct 1735 m. 23 Oct 1683
  11. Mary Rockwell b. 18 Jan 1662, d. 2 Apr 1738
  12. William Bradford b. 17 Jun 1624 Plymouth, Mass., d. 1704, Plymouth, Mass. m. 1673
  13. Mary Fitch Wiswall - [incorrect]
  14. Rev. James Fitch b. 24 Dec 1622 Bocking, England, d. 1702 Lebanon, Ct. m. Oct 1661 
  15. Priscilla Mason b. 1641
  16. William Janes b. 1610, d. 1690 Northampton, m. 1662
  17. Hannah (Bascom) Broughton [2nd wife, not our grandmother] b. ca. 1639, d. Mar 1681
  18. William Judd b. 1636, d. 1690 m. 30 Mar 1658 
  19. Mary Steele b. 1657, d. 27 Oct 1718
  20. Nathaniel Loomis b. 1626, d. 1688 m. 1653
  21. Elizabeth Moore b. 1638, d. 1728
  22. Samuel Rockwell b. 28 Mar 1631, d. 1711 Windsor, Ct. m. 7 Apr 1660
  23. Mary Norton (of Guilford, Ct.)
  24. William Bradford b. 1590, d. 1657 m. 1623
  25. Alice (Carpenter) Southworth b. 1590, d. 1670
  26. Thomas Fitch b. 1612, d. 1704 Norwalk, Ct. m. 1632 [incorrect]
  27. Anne Stacey [incorrect]
  28. Thomas Fitch b. ca. 1590, d. 1645 England, m. 8 Aug 1611
  29. Annie Pew
  30. Major John Mason b. 1600, d. 1672 m. 1639
  31. Anne Peck b. 1619, d. 1672

Powell Family

  1. Rowland Powell m. Isabelle Button
  2. Rowland Powell b. 2/9/1657 d. 7/1712 m. Elizabeth Truman
  3. Rowland Powell b. about 1690 m. Mary Tilden Jan. 12, 1718
  4. Rowland Powell b. June 9, 1731, d. 1801 Hartford, Vermont m. Mary Richardson - Dec. 5, 1750
  5. Rowland Powell b. Nov. 16, 1751, d. 1838 Richford, Vermont m. Mary Janes about 1773, b. 4/28/1752, d. 1813 (descendant of Gov. Bradford).  Settled in Richford, Vt. in 1798.

Children: 

  • Bradford (1775-1820)
  • John (1777-1849)
  • Horatio
  • Anna m. Daniel Miller in 1801
  • Lucy m. Elisha SMith
  • Chester
  • Mary (Polly) (1787-1850) m. Daniel Janes, Jr.
  • Elfreda
  • Horace
  • Prosper b. 9/7/1795
  • Cynthia 

Taken from The Descendants of Daniel & Eunice Davis with Records of Related Families, compiled by Leon E. Gibson, Richford, Vermont, 1941.

Sources:  

  • Janes Genealogy - Genealogy of the Janes Family pp. 116, 141, 154
  • Joseph Bradford - History of Montville . . .  1640-1896 compiled by Henry A. Baker. Hartford, Conn., 1896, p. 294
  • Mary Judd - Connecticut, p. 217
  • Major John Mason - Saybrook pp. 147-148
    • Norwich - New London, p. 751
    • Windsor - Hartford County, p. 366
  • Rev. James Fitch - Connecticut, p. 343
    • Norwich - New London County, p. 750
    • Saybrook, p. 148
  • Families of the Pilgrims: William Bradford. Compiled by Hubert Kinney. Published by Mass. Society of Mayflower
  • Histories & Genealogies of the Powells of America. Compiled by Charles S. Powell, St. Petersburg, Fla., 1935, p. 34
  • Powell Family - Descendants of Daniel Davis & Eunice Squires with Records of Related Families, by Leon E. Gibson, Richford, Vt., 1941
  • The Mary & John: A Story of the Founders of Dorchester, Mass, 1630. Compiled by Maude Pinney Kohns, c. 1971, pp. 23, 24, 49, 67, 73.
  • Descendants of Governor William Bradford by Ruth Hall, 1951, p. 472
  • Families of the Pilgrims - Richard Warren, by Mass. Society of Mayflower

Leffingwell, Albert & Charles Leffingwell. The Leffingwell Record, Aurora, NY: Leffingwell Publishing Company, 1897.

Parsons, Gerald. John Gallop/Gollop of Bridport, Dorsetshire, England & Boston, Massachusetts, The American Genealogist, Vol. 68, No. 1, January 1993.

More than thirty years ago in the pages of this journal, John Dorrance Morrell published an article entitled Gallup Origin in England (TAG 36 [196]:108-9). The author listed the Gollop entries from the parish register of St. Mary's Church in Bridport, county Dorset, England, as they appeared in a copy at the Society of Genealogists in London. In 1990, I examined the original register in the Dorset County Record Office in Dorchester and discovered some errors and omissions in the London copy. Later I sent my copy of the Gallop entries to my searcher in Dorset, Miss Daphne A. Hills, and asked her to check to be sure that I had copied them correctly and had not missed any entries. Following are the Gollop and Brushett entries which appear in the earliest existing register for St. Mary's Church in Bridport (Dorset County Record Office No. PE/BT:RE1/1). The spine of this volume reads Bridport/Register/1600-1639.

Marriages: 

  •  1609 5 Nov. Robert Tucker & Joane Brushett [from Bartelot transcript]
  • 1617[/8] 19 Jan. John Gollop & Christabell Brushett
  • 1625[/6] 30 Jan. Henry Stevens & Abigail Gollop
  • 1628 27 March Roger Gollop & Julian Browne
  • 1637 10 Oct Thomas Cartar & Joane Gollop

Baptisms:

  • 1615 27 Aug. Robart, son of Laurence Gollop
  • 1617 7 Dec. Anne, daughter of Laurence Gollop
  • 1618 20 Sept. Joan, daughter of John Golloppe
  • 1620 18 April Martha, daughter of Mr. Thomas Gollop
  • 1620 12 Nov. Zacheus, son of Laurence Golloppe
  • 1620[/1] 25 Jan. John, son of John Gollippe
  • 1622 4 Aug. Ralphe, son of Mr. Thomas Gollop
  • 1622, 4 Aug. William son of John Gollop
  • 1625 27 July Francis, son of John Gollop
  • 1628 2 Aug. Marie, daughter of Mr. Roger Gollop
  • 1629 16 Aug. Samuel & Nathanael, sons of John Gollop
  • 1629[/30] 21 March Thomas, son of Mr. Roger Gollop
  • 1630 11 July John, son of John Gollop

Burials:

  • 1617 23 Nov. Edward, son of William Gallooke
  • 1622 14 Aug. Ralphe, son of Mr. Thomas Gollop
  • 1625 18 Nov. Francis, son of John Gollop
  • 1626 30 Sept. John, son of Laurence Gollop

There were only two entries for the surname Brushett, including that for Christabell, so it would appear that these two women came from some other parish. I had Miss Hills check the second Bridport Parish Register for any mention of John Gollop, but she found no further entries. 

The most startling discovery was the baptism of a son on 11 July 1630, nearly four months after John Gollop/Gallop had supposedly sailed on the Mary & John for New England. We know from a letter which John Winthrop wrote from Boston to the Rev. John White of Dorchester, Dorset, on 4 July 1632, that Christabell did not come to New England with her husband and was not inclined to join him there. Winthrop wrote: "I have muche difficultye to keepe John Galloppe heere by reason his wife will not come. I mervayle at the womans weaknesse, that she will live miserably with her children there, when she might live comfortably heere with her husband. I praye perswade and further her comminge by all meanes: if she will come let her have the remainder of his wages, if not, let it be bestowed to bringe over his children, for so he desires: it would be above 40£ losse to him to come for her" (Winthrop Papers, Vol. 3, 1631-1637 [Boston, 1943], 87-88).

It is possible that John Gallop did not sail for New England until 1631; but if so, why did he and Christabell name a second son John when the eldest son, who was living as we shall see, was named John? If John Gallop did sail in 1630, it appears that Christabell did not come with him because she was pregnant. Also, she was probably apprehensive about making such a voyage. We can deduce this from the Winthrop letter. It is my theory that John Jr. sailed with his father and that Christabell named her newborn son John thinking she would never see her husband and eldest son again. Regardless of the reason or reasons, this son must have died young, for John Gallop called Samuel and Nathaniel his "two youngest Sonns" in his will dated 20 December 1649. He also mentioned his wife, without naming her, his son John, and his daughter Joane and her sons, John and Joseph Joy. (Suffolk Co., Mass., Probates 1:308.) The will of Christovell Gallop, dated 24 July 1655, mentions her son John and his wife Hannah, her daughter Joan Joy, and her sons Samuel and Nathaniel Gallop (Suffolk Probates 1:136). As John Gallop Jr. married Hannah Lake and had a daughter Hannah born in Boston on 14 August 1644 (NEHGR 8[1854]:38), he has o be the John baptized on 25 January 1620/1.

Miss Hills obtained for me from the Public Record Office in London photocopies of eight wills for Gollops of Dorset, but these documents made no mention of the Gollops of Bridport. No wills for the Bridport Gollops were found, and no other records needed to determine John Gallop's parentage and/or his relationship to the other Gollops in Bridport were located. Thus the family of John Gallop is as follows:

John Gallop/Gollop, mariner, resided in Bridport, county Dorset, England, where he married in St. Mary's Church on 19 January 1617/8 Christabell Brushett. He came to New England in 1630 supposedly on the Mary & John, or possibly in 1631, and died in Boston, Massachusetts, "(11) 1649," ie., January 1649/50 (NEGHR 9[1885]:167). Christabell Gallop came to New England about 1633 and died in Boston on "27:7:55," i.e., 27 September 1655 (NEGHR 10[1856]:219). John Gallop became a freeman on 1 April 1634 (Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, ed. Records of the Governor & Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England, 5 vols. in 6 [Boston, 1853-54], 1:368), having been admitted to the First Church of Boston on "The 5th of the 11th Moneth 1633," i.e., 5 January 1633/4 (Richard D. Pierce, ed., The Records of the First Church in Boston, 1630-1868, Col. Soc. Mass. Pubs., 39-41 [Boston, 1961], hereafter Boston 1st Ch. Recs., 39:17). "Christovell Gallopp the wife of our brother John Gallopp" was admitted "The 22th of the fourth Moneth 1634," i.e. 22 June 1634 (Boston 1st Ch. Recs., 39:18). 

St. Mary's Church, Bridport, Dorset

Children (GALLOP) of John & Christabell (Brushett), all bp. St. Mary's Church, Bridport, co. Dorset:

  1. Joan bp. 20 Sept. 1618, d. Hingham, Mass., 20 March 1690; m. ca. 1637 Thomas Joy (Selim Walker McArthur, McArthur-Barnes Ancestral Lines[Portland, Maine, 1964], 122-23; Helen Bourne Joy Lee, The Joy Genealogy [Essex, Conn., 1968], 1-3, 49).
  2. John bp. 25 Jan. 1620/1, killed 19 Dec. 1675 in the Narragansett Swamp Fight in King Philip's War (NEHGR 37[1883]:185, 40[1886]:87); m. ca. 1643 Hannah Lake, dau. of John Lake of North Benfield, co. Essex, England, and Margaret (Reade) Lake, who immigrated to Ipswich, Mass. (NEHGR 84[1930]:304-16; Walter Goodwin Davis, Ancestry of Bethia Harris [Portland, Maine, 1934], 47-56; Louis Effingham De Forest, Ancestry of William Seaman Bainbridge [Oxford, 1950], 104-9).
  3. William bp. 4 Aug. 1622, prob. d.y. as not mentioned in the wills of his father and mother.
  4. Francis bp. 27 July 1625, bur. Bridport 18 Nov. 1625.
  5. Samuel bp. 16 Aug. 1629; m. Boston, Mass., 20 Jan. 1650/1 Mary Phillips (NEHGR 10[1856]:222), whose origin is unknown.
  6. Nathaniel bp. 16 Aug. 1629 (perhaps a twin to Samuel); m. Boston 11 June 1652 Margaret Eveley, apparently a dau. of  Sylvester Eveleth of Boston and Gloucester, Mass. (NEHGR 10[1856]:222, 134[1980]:302).
  7. John (again) bp. 11 July 1630, d.y. as not mentioned in the wills of his father and mother. 


Powell, Charles. Histories & Genealogies of the Powells of America, St. Petersburg, FL: Powell, 1935.

Generation I - Rowland Powell, arrived in Gloucester, Mass., sometime after 1650, m. Isabel Button. They had: 

  • Rowland (twin) b. Feb. 9, 1657
  • unnamed daughter (twin) b. Feb. 9, 1657
  •  Mary b. May 7, 1660
  • Stephen b. March 9, 1662

Generation 2 - Rowland Powell b. Feb. 9, 1657, d. June 1712 at Lebanon, Conn.

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