Debbie,
Could I get back to you on that? This Kay/Keie/etc. family were in Isle
of Wight County Virginia although their father, Thomas, was a Burgess in
Warwick (now Newport News). I do not understand how the mother got land
in her name, etc. They were both "ancient planters."
And please remind me! My email is Mothra(a)woh.rr.com
Martha
Debbie Freeman wrote:
Hello,
The surname caught my eye.
Do you know if there is a connection to this Elizabeth Key or Kaye and a
James Kay born about 1634 and probably died about 1679, who married a Sarah
Iveson?
Thank You,
Debbie Freeman
Previous message:
Elizabeth Key or Kaye was born in 1630 to an unnamed black slave mother and
Thomas Key, a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses.
Key represented pre-Revolutionary Warwick County (today's Newport News), but
his wife lived across the James River in Isle of Wight County, where she
owned considerable property.
The Keys were English-born and likely considered "ancient planters,"
Pioneers, who had come to Virginia before 1616, remained for three years,
paid their own passage and survived the Indian massacre of 1622.
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