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Colleen,
She was Sara Churchill (John3, John2, John1) of the American Plymouth
Churchills. Sarah b. 11 Jun 1750 at Plymouth, MA was the only child
of John3 [CFA 58] and Sarah (Cole) Churchill according to CFA, p. 37.
This line ends.
Bill Churchill
Greenville, Texas
-----Original Message-----
From: Colleen Kitch [SMTP:GuyCol@webtv.net]
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2001 12:55 AM
To: CHURCHILL-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: LEBARON - CHURCHILL marriage 1774 Ma.
WILLIAM LEBARON b. 8 Aug 1751 Plymouth Co., Ma. and d. 23 Oct 1816
Ma.
married on 15 Dec 1774 Plymouth Co., Ma. to SARAH CHURCHILL b. abt
1755
Plymouth Co., Ma. and d. 29 Oct 1796. Children: Priscilla, William,
Elizabeth, Mary, Lucy, William, Sarah.
Source: LDS Ancestral Files
Colleen Kitch
GuyCol(a)webtv.net
WILLIAM LEBARON b. 27 Apr 1786 Ma. and d. 12 Aug 1831 Ma. married on 16
May 1810 Ma. to ELIZABETH LEBARON b. 27 May 1785 Ma.
Children: Thomas Robbins, Sarah Ann, Lucy Gibbs, William Bradford,
Charles Henry, Eliza.
William`s parents said to be Lemuel Lebaron and Elizabeth ALLEN.
Elizabeth`s parents said to be William Lebaron and Sarah CHURCHILL.
I couldn`t post on a LEBARON list because there isn`t one.
Source: LDS Ancestral Files
Colleen Kitch
GuyCol(a)webtv.net
WILLIAM LEBARON b. 8 Aug 1751 Plymouth Co., Ma. and d. 23 Oct 1816 Ma.
married on 15 Dec 1774 Plymouth Co., Ma. to SARAH CHURCHILL b. abt 1755
Plymouth Co., Ma. and d. 29 Oct 1796. Children: Priscilla, William,
Elizabeth, Mary, Lucy, William, Sarah.
Source: LDS Ancestral Files
Colleen Kitch
GuyCol(a)webtv.net
Flora,
With regard to the posting for William & Elizabeth (Armstead)
Churchill, your posting mentioned:
"The arms of the family as represented on a wax seal attached to a
deed of his son, Armistead. . . "
Do you know what was engraved on the seal?
Also, you said "Any help I thank you all."
What do you want in the way of help?
This William really existed and he was really from North Aston, OXON.
Bill Churchill
Armistead Churchill
Spouse: Hannah Harrison
Children: William
1.1 William Churchill
Spouse: Eliza Carter
Spouse Father: Col. Charles Carter
Spouse Mother: Mary Walker
Spouse Notes:
. Elizabeth Carter; m. William Churchill, son of Armistead Churchill and
Hannah Harrison, 1751.
any help I thank you Flora
Husband: William Churchill
Wife: Elizabeth Armistead
Father: John Armistead
Mother: Judith Robinson
Children...
1. F Child: Priscilla Bladen Churchill
Spouse: Robert Carter Jr
Marriage: 1725
2. M Child: Armistead Churchill
Husband's Notes...
Notes:
1. William Churchill b. 1649, North Aston, Oxfordshire, d. 1710, Middlesex
Co., VA, m. (2) 5 Mar 1703, Elizabeth Armistead, b. 16 Feb 1667, Gloucester
Co., VA, d. 16 Nov 1716, Rosegill, Middlesex Co., VA, (daughter of Col. John
and Judith (Robinson) Armistead). William came to Virginia circa 1672,
received land in Middlesex Co.; in 1696 and was a Clerk of the county for
many years. He appears as Sheriff in Middlesex County in 1674 and a member
of the Council in 1705. According to his own disposition and will, he was
born in 1649 in North Aston. The arms of the family as represented on a wax
seal attached to a deed of his son, Armistead, identify him as belonging to
the family of Churchill settled in the Counties of Devon, Somerset and
Dorset, during the reigns of King John, Henry III, and Edward I. The will of
William Churchill bears the date of 18 Nov 1710, and prov.10 Mar 1710/11 in
Middlesex Co., VA. He required his burial to be "without any great doeings,
save a sermon to admonish the living upon the words, 'Set thine house in
order, for thou shalt dye and not live,' in Second Kings, 20 chapter, and
the latter part of the first verse." He gave L100 sterling to the vestry of
Christ Church Parish, for interest of which was to be given to the minister
"for preaching four quarterly sermons against the four reigning vices of
atheism and irreligion, swearing and cursing, fornication and adultery, and
drunkenness, " and the interest of L25 sterling bestowed on the clerk for
attending to said sermons. To the poor of the parish of Christ Church, in
London, he gave L10 sterling, and the same amount to the poor of North Aston
in Oxfordshire the place of his nativity. To his wife, Elizabeth, he gave a
gold watch and L1,000 sterling and her part of his negroes for life, and
after her death, to his son, Armistead; he gave her besides "my new calash I
expect out of England." To his daughter, Priscilla, L1,000 sterling, and to
his daughter, Elizabeth, L100, leaving his wife to advance her fortune out
of her own. To Armistead Churchill, his son and heir, he gave the bulk of
his estate in Virginia and England and made executors of his wife, his son
and daughters, his kinsmen Nicholas and John Goodwin, of London, his
"son-in-law" (step-son) Ralph Wormeley,and overseers of his will his
brothers, Mr. William Armistead and Mr. Harry Armistead and friends, Mr.
Nathaniel Burwell, Mr. John Holloway and Mr. John Clayton. Elizabeth'swill
was proved 1 Jan 1716. It names my brother Mr. Henry Armistead."
Any help I thank you all Flora
This came in on another list and I thought it important enough to VietNam vets and family to pass it on.
Dog Tags Found In Viet Nam
On a recent "Today Show" there was a story about two men who went to Hanoi on a business trip. The men encountered a guy selling old GI dog tags from US servicemen who were killed during the Viet Nam War. They were disgusted by the thought of this man profiting from the sale of these tags.
Upon returning to the U.S., they decided to go back to Viet Nam and purchase ALL the dog tags. They did so, paying 19 cents per tag! They brought home several hundred tags. The plan is to return the tags to surviving family members, when they can find them. The process has already begun with one set being turned over to a grieving Mom on July 4th, (coincidentally, it was on her birthday)!
These two men have set up a website,
http://www.founddogtags.com
listing the names of all those whose tags they purchased.
If you lost friends, family, or know of someone who lost a loved one in Viet Nam, I suggest you check out this website. If you recognize a name, there's an e-mail address to contact these two men and to help in their efforts to return the dogtag to it's rightful survivor. I'm sure a family member would be eternally grateful to have such an important item returned. Please help by checking this website. And please send the website address to everyone you know. The more people who see the lists, the greater the chance of returning ALL the tags to those who lost loved ones in Viet Nam!
The discovery of these tags after so many years from servicemen dead, missing and in some cases still alive is mindboggling when you consider the emotions that will be reignited. I leave you to your own thoughts on this one.