|
|
|
Support our Research and Buy Cool Stuff! East Coast Allred Family Association Tales of a Traveling Genealogist
|
back to Latest Research News main page Allred/
Smith/ Pemberton Connections By:
Dawnell Griffin The search for our Allred ancestry continues, and I would like to
express appreciation to all those who have contributed and who are in the
process of joining this effort to extend our ancestral lines.
While Family History and Genealogical research can at times be
discouraging, we can be grateful for the progress that has been made towards
our goal of identifying our progenitors and in correcting some mistakes that
have long been propagated. It is obvious to those of us who are engaged in this effort, that
mistakes will continue to be made, but “the last word,” is the one we have
most recently discovered. Having said that much, I will attempt to present at least a portion of
the documentation we do now have and to make a few statements that may give
some satisfaction, at least until we are of a better opinion. In other words,
though we do not have absolute proof, the records we do have are sufficient
for us to promote our hypothesis. I would like to begin by giving some background information on the
Parish of Eccles, in Lancashire, England. In 1864 there was printed a
manuscript of the Ancient Parish Church of Eccles, in which it was
stated that “Eccles” was a derivative of Ecclesia, or the Latin word for
church. The advowson was originally the gift of the Barton family, lords of
the manor of Barton-upon-Irwell. At the dissolution of the Monasteries in
1539, the advowson[1]
was vested in the crown, where apparently it remains to this day. It appears that there were four chantries founded in Eccles Church,
three of them by the Booths of Barton and the fourth by Sir Geoffrey Massey of
Worsley. In 1849, it was stated
that “formerly the churchyard was more confined.
One early head stone over the remains of Jane Holden read: Here lies Jone’s [John’s] wife Jane, As it is very plain; And after will come Jone, As sure as this is stone. And so, I am certain, he did. Concerning
the Glebe, there was a vicar’s acre, in 1663, two new fields on the east
side of Mr. Valentine’s land of Beancliffe, the barn field, the kiln croft,[2] the hemp croft, the Jackson croft, and the
Christ Croft. There was one orchard, two gardens, the vicarage house with
fifteen rooms including the kitchen, the parlour, the great parlour, the
buttery, the milk-house etc. There
was a cow-house, a vicarage barn with four bays, one little hen house and a
swine stye. Rent due the vicarage in that year was exacted from Robert Hobson, James
Nailor, Elizabeth Lowe, Ann Wallwork, Richard Parren, Giles Seddon, William
Smith, Lawrence Hampson, Ralph Bayley, Richard Nicholas, Thomas Sharples and
John Nicholas. The Stipend [the vicar’s wages] was payable at the Annunciation of the
Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Michael the Archangel by even portions of a little
over 16 pounds per year. Robert
Hartley was the vicar. This information becomes increasingly more valuable when we realize that
the Parish Clerk was Thomas Smith, who was possibly one of our direct line
ancestors. Thomas Smith was born about 1591, probably in Eccles, Lancashire,
England. The minutes of the vestry meetings give mention of Thomas Smith. 17th July, 1622. - It was consented, covenanted and agreed
unto, by the Right Worshipful and Worshipful of the parish of Eccles, with the
Vicar and Churchwardens for the time being, whose names are hereafter
specified, on behalf of the whole parish, on the one party, and Thomas Smith,
parish clerk, of the same parish, on the other party as followeth: Imprimis. that the said Thomas Smith, or whosoever shall be clerk for
the time being, shall from time to time and at all times from henceforth, when
need shall require, collect and gather throughout the whole parish all such
sums of money as shall be requisite and expedient for the buying of bread and
wine for the several communions when and as often as they shall be warned and
appointed. Item. That the Clerk, shall do all such services as have been accustomed
to be done by the parish clerk, or [as] shall be by law required. Every cottage throughout the parish was to pay a penny a year to the
clerk. If they refused, or did not pay within the 14 days allotted for
payment, then it was the duty of the Parish Clerk to report their names to the
church wardens, who in turn made it a matter of recourse according to law.
The only notation made during the tenure of Thomas Smith ( in this
printed account) was that on the 4th of April, 1639, Dorothy, the
widow of Richard Brereton, Esquire, died.
Thomas did not live long enough to serve under the iron hand of Cromwell
and the Commonwealth, when four magistrates published the banns of marriage
and those marriages were performed by justices instead of clergymen.
Thomas Smith was married to Ann Smith on the 23rd of
February, 1611 in Eccles Parish. They were the parents of at least eight
identified children. Two of those
children, that we know of, died young. At least Margaret, Ellen, Alice, and
John lived to adulthood.
On the 18th of January, 1638, Ann Smith died. A year later, Thomas was married to Mary, widow of Adam
Leaver. Mary had at least one son by her previous marriage, Alexander Leaver,
born about 1634. By Thomas, she
had three children, Mary, Eleanor and Thomas.
Only Mary appears to have survived her father. In 1648, Thomas wrote his will in which he designated himself as the
‘parish clerke of the church of Eccles in the countie of Lancaster.’
He desired to be buried in the ‘churchyarde of Eccles’ at the
discretion of his wife, children and friends. He mentioned that he held land
in a messuage tenement or cottage with ‘housinge, edifices, buildinges,
yardes, gardens, backyards’ etc. [original spellings], that he held by lease
from his landlord, Richard Edge. If his wife, Mary, kept herself unmarried and if she continued to live
seven years then she was to have her full one third part of his estate. If
perchance, she acted in an “unchast” manner then he assigned his son John
Smith to assume the responsibility of seeing that the legacies designated in
his will, were to be distributed. At the time of his death, Thomas held an estate in two pieces of land
one called highest Smithkye and the other the higher end of the ‘Broome
Back’ containing two acres. Both these pieces of ground lay within Eccles
parish. The latter he had by grant from the executors of John Gooden, who had
been deceased for six years. Mary
was to maintain the use of this property to her profit until such time as she
deceased or was re-married. Thomas forgave the debt of his daughter Ellen, the wife of George
Alderofte, in the amount of four pounds.
With that bequest she was to buy her apparel and other necessaries. (I
assume for the purpose of attending his funeral.) In addition he left a legacy to his son John, and daughters Alice and
Mary Smith. He gave his sister, Jane Davy five shillings and he bequeathed to
Alexander Leaver, his step-son, five pounds. Witnesses to his will were John
Tongs, vicar of Eccles and Richard Worseley.
The will was probated in 1649. Thomas Smith’s daughter, Margaret, seems to have been out of favor
with her father, having given birth to an illegitimate daughter, Ellen
Pemberton, ten years earlier, in 1638. Mary Smith, Thomas Smith’s wife, appears to have pursued what her
former husband termed ‘unchast’ behavior as she was married a third time.
According to her step-son, John Smith’s will, Mary was married to
Ellice [Ellis] Hulton after the death of her second husband.
On the 16th of Nov 1656, John Smith, Inn holder and son of
Thomas Smith (clerk of Eccles Parish), wrote his will.
He stated that he held a lease from his “kinde and Lovinge Landlord
Richard Edge of Ollenforest in Worseley in the said countie of Lancaster
yeoman for and duringe the tearme of the lief and lyves naturall of me the
said John Smyth and of Mary nowe wief of Ellice Hulton and formerlie the wief
of Thomas Smyth deceased my late father and the longer lyver of me and her the
said Mary for and under the yearelie rent of tenne shillinges payable at
Christmas & midsomer by even portions.” At the time of the writing of his will, apparently John’s wife,
Margaret, was expecting a child. Having no way of knowing whether it was a son
or daughter, he nevertheless made provision for the child that was soon to be
born. John Smith and Margaret Newton were married the 5th of
October, 1650, but apparently either they had no previous children, or they
had failed to survive. Further
research pending. Ellen Pemberton, was born the 25th of Mar 1638, in Eccles
Parish, Lancashire, England. The
parish record states that she was the illegitimate daughter of John Pemberton
and Margaret Smith. Having searched the Eccles Parish registers for clues as
to the parentage of Margaret Smith, it seems likely at this point that she was
the daughter of Thomas and Ann Smith of Eccles Parish, the same who was the
parish clerk from 1622 and who died. 6 Feb 1648. Had he lived, Thomas would
have been even more displeased with a grandchild who turned her back on the
Anglican Church and associated herself with a group of people who called
themselves Quakers or Friends and refused to pay homage to the Church of
England in either manner or stipend. John Allred and Ellen Pemberton were married in about 1659. They were
the parents of nine children. In 1892 Walter K. Watkins wrote a book he entitled, The Pemberton
Family, in which he states that the family of that name derived its name
from the chapelry of that name in the parish of Wigan, in the hundred of West
Derby, county of Lancaster, England. According to the English Surnames Series Vol. IV the Surnames of
Lancashire, by Richard McKinley, Pemberton is a village within the parish of
Wigan which was first noted in 1201, and is considered to be British in
origin. “The surname or bye-name de Pemberton or de Penberton, derived from
the place-name, has first been found in the early 13th century.” The first man identified in the first half of the 13th
century was Adam de Pemberton who was a landowner at Pemberton. Ralph de
Pemberton, who was deceased by 1236 held land at Pemberton.
Other names which occur until the 1300's were William, John, Hugh,
Roger, and Henry. William de
Pemberton was the son of Adam who had at least sons, William, John and Hugh.
The article states that by the year 1350 the surname had become
widespread and that the 16th and 17th centuries there
were numerous Pembertons listed in the registers of Walton on the Hill,
Childwall, West Derby and in Liverpool. One family of Pemberton held land at
Aspull during the late 16th and 17th centuries and in
Winwick parish to the south of Wigan. The name was also common in Halsall
parish but by the time the 1642 Protestation Returns for Salford Hundred were
brought in, there were only three persons named Pemberton on the list.
Therefore, states McKinley, “Outside West Derby Hundred the surname seems to
have uncommon in the 17th century....Pemberton as a surname after
being in its early history largely confined to the Wigan area, spread during
the 14th century to the townships around Liverpool.” It is to Wigan that we look for our first link to the Pemberton family
and our first claim to accuracy is a connection to the family of William
Pemberton who was born in about 1580, presumably in Wigan, Lancashire,
England. He was married to Ann
[last name not known] on the 10th of December 1602.
It has been printed in various sources that William and Ann were the
parents of children Ralph, Ellin, Margery and Alice, however, it is our claim
that the Ellin so referred to in these many sources, was in fact, Ellin the
daughter of John Pemberton and Margaret Smith, referred to above.
It is much more likely that Ralph and John Pemberton were brothers as
per following documents. Not only are there various Pemberton family lines in England, but there
are several different lines in the New World as well. There has never been any proof, for example, to connect the
Pembertons of Pennsylvania with the Pembertons of Massachusetts. We do know that Ralph Pemberton, son of William and Ann, was a
practicing Quaker, as was his surviving son, Phineas Pemberton. Ralph Pemberton was born 3rd of January, 1610 in Aspull,
Wigan Parish, Lancashire, England. He
was married to Margaret Seddon on the 2nd of September, 1648, the
same year that Thomas Smith, clerk of the parish of Eccles left his will.
Margaret Seddon was the daughter of Thomas Seddon and Margaret Newton.
If there is a connection between this Margaret Newton and the Margaret
Newton who married John Smith, I have not yet discovered it. We have record of only two children for Ralph and Margaret Seddon
Pemberton, Phineas born the 20th of January 1650, and Joseph.
Apparently Phineas was the only child of this couple to survive. Joseph
Pemberton died on the 3rd of August 1655.
He was three years old. Ellin or Ellen Pemberton, appears to be the only surviving child of John
Pemberton and Margaret Smith. That
would appear to be another reason for these two first cousins, Phineas and
Ellen, to have established a
familial relationship, in addition to the fact that were both staunch
proponents of the Quaker Faith that flourished in during the time period in
which they were growing to maturity. Persecution of those who professed to be of the people called Quakers,
appears to have begun in the year 1654 when John Lawson, a shopkeeper in
Lancaster, was set in the stocks for four hours. The year following Ellin’s marriage to John Allred, she was arrested
and jailed for attending Quaker Meetings.
Her husband, John, was arrested the following year, 1661, for the same
offense. In 1660, Soldiers with drawn swords and cocked pistols came to the
meeting of the Quakers in the Lancaster District and arrested approximately 30
people. One of those arrested at Wray in Lancaster County, was William
Edmondson. William was born in 1627 in Westmoreland but because of his journey
to Ireland in 1652 where he conducted business in Lurgan, he was referred to
as “the Quaker apostle of Ireland.” In Manchester John Abraham, Isaac Mosse, Abraham Garside,
Jonathan Bradshaw, John Burgess, Mary Ridgway, Mary Poole,
Elizabeth Owen, and Elizabeth Fletcher were arrested and committed to prison.
Arrested 10 Feb 1660 for attending Quaker Meetings were Richard Madder,
Ed Dawson, Nehemiah Pool, Arther Walker, Hannah Taylor, Mary Mosse,
and Ellen Allred. There can be no question that Ellen Allred was acquainted
with the Quaker members of the Manchester MM. William Edmondson settled in West Nottingham, Chester County
Pennsylvania and is the progenitor of the Edmondson family of that county as
well as those who settled in Cecil County, Maryland, York, and Allegheny
Counties, Pennsylvania. [For further information on this family, contact this
author.] In 1663, George Fox and Margaret Fell were committed to the Lancaster
Castle. Both were noted Quaker preachers. Alice Pemberton, in 1664, was committed to the House of Correction for
three months, for attending Quaker worship. (Besse’s Suffering, 1., p. 315)
It is purported that this is Alice, daughter of William and Ann Pemberton, and
a sister to Ralph and John Pemberton. The following year, Phineas Pemberton
moved to Manchester when he was just fifteen years old. In 1666, James Harrison was imprisoned in the Castle of Chester,
incident to his having attended meetings held by the Quakers.
From his prison cell on the 26th of the 8th
months he wrote to his wife: “Most dear and right dearly beloved wife...for thy reverent, courteous
behaviour in gesture and words towards me...a real acknowledgment of thy
spiritual and lively testimony that breaks and tenders my heart, I rest thy
very loving husband.” She wrote back that nothing could separate them.
Two years after that, James and Ann Harrison removed from Cheshire
County to Lancashire, where Phineas Pemberton undoubtedly became acquainted
with their daughter, Phoebe. Phineas Pemberton and Roger Longworth were imprisoned in 1669 in
Lancaster Castle for attendance at religious meetings. Phineas was sixteen
years old. At the age of 20, Phineas was apprenticed
to John Abraham, a grocer in Manchester. That same year, he was, again,
imprisoned in Lancaster castle for refusing to take the oath of allegiance to
the king and for attending Quaker meetings. Phineas Pemberton married Phoebe Harrison on the 1st of
January, 1776 at the house of John Haydock in Coppull, Near Standish in
Lancashire, England. Ralph Pemberton removed
to Radcliffe Bridge. The marriage entry in the minute of the MM read: Phineahas Pemberton of Boulton in the moores in the County of Lancaster
grocer And Phebe Harrison daughter of James Harrison of Boulton aforesaid
tooke oath other in marriage in a publick assembly mett together for that end
and purpose in the house of John Haydock of Coppull in the said County the
first day of the Eleventh month Anno Dom: 1676, In the presence of Ralph
Pemberton Roger Longworth Ann Harrison. Signed: James Harrison, John Abraham,
William Yardley, John Bancroft, Isaac Ashton, Richard Buggan, Elizabeth
Johnson, Elizabeth Hodgson, Elizabeth Haydock with others. The microfilm copy of this document from the FHL in Salt Lake City
appears to be a transcription of the original which is undoubtedly in the CRO
in Lancashire, England. I cannot
help but wonder if some of the “others” would include the names of John
and Ellen [Pemberton] Allred. Finding
the original document is a future project. On the 9th of November, James Harrison was preaching at a
meeting in his own house when the constables came with a warrant from Thomas
Laver and John Kenyon, justices, and made a seizure of leather and other goods
to the value of 10 pounds 19 shillings. Phineas Pemberton and his wife were at
the meeting and had goods taken from him to the value of 4 pounds 25 shilling
4d. At the time, Phineas and Phoebe were living at Stiall-Green, in Cheshire.
It is probable that sometime during this time period, Phineas
wrote the following letter to his father, Ralph: To Father My duty to you rememberd this is to acquaint ... ye ... first day I
& several others were att a meeting att Neamiah Pools & there came in
the wardens & the constable & took us into the town hall & there
kept us all the after noone then after the S... was done there came by Justices so called but there is butt littel justes in them
There was littel done at night so were had afore them one .. other
morning as palbearer here of concell more at ... in the witinus was maid so
either to guide in bond to apeare att the cessions or go to Lancaster aboute
the 3 day of February so my mistress hath a greate desire to see you this
weeke but bee not you troubled att it for I am very well contented....
hands, you to be here this weeke because its is my mistores desire
So with my deare love to Ant & Ellin & the rest of friends
& neighbors I rest your dutyfull son Undoubtedly this is the same Nehemiah Pool with whom Ellen Pemberton
Allred was arrested in 1660, and the Ellen to whom Phineas refers in this
letter. For additional information on this family and a copy of the letter
written by John Allred of Manchester in Lancashire, England to Phineas
Pemberton of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, refer to Issue No. 54 page 3
of the Allred Family Newsletter. To
be continued.... Dawnell H. Griffin [1]
The Advowson was the right to make an ecclesiastical appointment.
In most cases it was the right of the Lord of the Manor to appoint
the local vicar etc. In the
case of Eccles, the Crown retained that right after the dissolution of the
monasteries. [2]
A croft was a small enclosed field, usually adjoining or close to the house.
|
North Carolina Allreds in the 1750's North Carolina History Timeline |