Friday, June 12, 2020

Benjamin Colvard Jr of Albemarle County, Virginia, Introduction to the Calvert/Colvard/Colbert Families Part 3

In 1755, Peter Jefferson and Joshua Fry showed their homes - but not the community at Charlottesville - on their map of Virginia Source: Library of Congress, A map of the most inhabited part of Virginia containing the whole province of Maryland with part of Pensilvania, New Jersey and North Carolina (by Joshua Fry and Peter Jefferson, 1755


I chose this map because it was created by Thomas Jefferson's father Peter Jefferson and it marks in red  "Shadwell" the birth place of Thomas Jefferson called "The Punch Bowl Tract" and the Rivanna River where Thomas Jefferson enjoyed fishing with Burwell Colbert. 

Benjamin Colvard Jr., of Albemarle County and his family

By Richard A. Colbert Calvert Genealogy Group

(Not for redistribution) Please ask the author for permission to republish- use attribution, and link to original material.

     Like his father Benjamin Colvard Sr.,  Ben junior made a living as a carpenter/cabinet maker.  He lived in a town adjacent to the town of Charlottesville next to the carpentry shop he inherited from his father.  The carpentry shop was located next to the tavern owned by John Jouett. 

     John “Jack” Jouett is known as the “Paul Revere of the South” for the night ride he took in 1781 to warn both Thomas Jefferson, then the governor of Virginia, and members of the Virginia legislature who were staying with Jefferson at Monticello, that a cavalry of British soldiers had been sent to capture them.  Jefferson and all the members of the Virginia legislature escaped. 

     Before the British cavalry had been sent to Monticello to arrest Thomas Jefferson and the Virginia legislature, they attacked the Governor’s mansion and took Jefferson’s slave and housekeeper Betty Brown as a prisoner.  While a prisoner of the British, Betty Brown gave birth to her son Wormley Hughes at their encampment at Wormley creek.  

     At the age of 12 or 13, Ben Colvard Jr started working at his father’s carpentry shop and at 16 became the apprentice carpenter- joiner of Joseph Neilson, Thomas Jefferson’s building contractor.  That was in 1778.

     Thomas Jefferson had hired Neilson to build his new two-story, eight-room house on top of Monticello.  This new house was of Italian design and was to replace the one Jefferson and his family currently lived in, a one-room brick building with a fireplace.  Jefferson had built it in 1768 when he was a bachelor.  Back then it suited his purposes. But now with a wife and growing family, it was woefully inadequate. 
     [The house Benjamin Colvard Jr helped build was the original family home. Built between 1790 and 1809 the house was partly torn down, expanded and rebuilt to look like the Monticello plantation we see today.  Whether or not Benjamin helped in the second construction of Monticello is unknown.]

   During the two years Benjamin Jr worked at Monticello (1778-1779), he lived with other carpenters and tradesmen in a stone building on Mulberry Row.  While working there he met Betty Brown.  She was the daughter of Elizabeth Hemings, the matriarch of the Hemings clan. 

     [Monticello’s Section Menu: Workshop for joined and turned woodwork ca 1774- ca 1830.  “A chimney foundation is all that remains of the joiner’s shop, which Jefferson described as 57 feet by 18 feet, the underpinning and chimney of stone and the walls and roof of wood.”  From about 1775, free and enslaved workmen produced some of the finest architectural woodwork in Virginia as well as carriages and furniture in this workshop. “There is nothing superior in the U.S., said Jefferson.]

     Among the names of hired “artisans” who worked at Monticello were: Joseph Neilson, joiner, 1775-1779 and Benjamin Colvard, carpenter/joiner, 1778-1779.  Among those who were described as “enslaved joiners” John Hemings 1798-1831, Eston Hemings 1822-1827, Madison Hemings 1819-1827.

     Betty Brown was born 1759 and was the property of a successful lawyer and slave trader by the name of John Wayles.  Wayles lived at his plantation called “The Forest’" which was near the town of Williamsburg.  On January 1, 1772 Thomas Jefferson married John Wayles daughter, the widow Martha (Wayles) Skelton and, as a wedding present, John Wayles gave Betty Brown to Jefferson.  Her job was to look after Martha and eventually her children.  Betty was only 12 years old when she was taken from her mother and siblings. 

     Betty Brown became the first member of the Hemings family to live at Monticello and, as it turned out, the last member of the Hemings family to leave. 

     Two years later 1773, John Wayles died and Jefferson not only inherited The Forest and all of Wayles’ slaves, but also all of his debts.  To pay off these debts Jefferson sold off The Forest and most, but not all, of the field-hand slaves.  He kept members of the Hern family and took them to Monticello.  

     David Hern was a highly skilled woodworker and for over fifty years worked at Monticello as a carpenter, wagoner, and miller.  For at least two years, 1791-1792, and possibly more.  David Hern was hired out by Benjamin Colvard Jr., to work at his carpentry shop in Charlottesville.  Whether Benjamin Colvard Jr and David Hern built cabinets for Jefferson’s Monticello plantation at this time is unknown. [Those Who Labor for My Happiness: Slavery at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello,” by Lucia Stanton p 135.]

     Jefferson also kept Elizabeth Hemings and all of her descendants at the behest of his wife.  Besides being the father of Jefferson’s wife, John Wayles was also the father of six of Elizabeth Hemings children: Robert, James, Thenia, Critta, Peter and Sally Hemings. They were Martha (Wayles) Jefferson’s half-siblings. 

     During the time Benjamin Colvard Jr worked at Monticello between 1778 and 1779 a romance blossomed between him and Betty Brown.  And between the years 1783 and 1800 they had six children: Burwell Colbert, Brown Colbert, Melinda Colbert, Robert Colbert, Edwin Colbert and Mary Colbert.  It is believed they may have had another son while Benjamin Jr., was still living at Monticello.  Betty Brown had a son named Billy (William) who died in 1778.  At the time of his death Billy was only a few months old. 

     Burwell Colbert, the oldest living son of Ben Colvard Jr and Betty Brown was born December 24, 1783. At the age of ten Burwell was given his first pair of shoes (as was the custom for all slaves to obtain shoes at age ten at Monticello), and at eleven he worked at Jefferson’s nail factory.  He was thirteen when Jefferson became vice-president, and seventeen when Jefferson became president.  During that time Burwell also worked in the main house and performed duties as a body servant and served food to Jefferson’s guests at dinner time.  Records show that the average number of people who ate at Monticello at dinner time was between fifteen and twenty every day. 

     In his spare time, Burwell learned to paint and became a glazier (cut glass and set it in windows).

     Burwell’s sister Melinda, married John Freeman, Jefferson’s butler at the White House in Washington DC.  After John and Melinda (Colbert) Freeman gained their freedom, they spent the rest of their lives in Washington DC and fought for the freedom of all slaves. 

     His brothers Robert and Edwin were sold by Jefferson.  Later both Robert and Edwin ran away from their new masters and were never caught. 

     Burwell’s brother Brown obtained his freedom and that of his wife and children and moved to Liberia along with their sister Mary in 1832.  Mary, Brown and his wife and all their children (except for their son Burwell) died in Liberia of malaria within a year of their arrival. 

     At the age of seventeen Burwell became Thomas Jefferson’s butler, valet, and personal servant at Monticello.  After President Thomas Jefferson left the White House in 1809, Burwell was his constant companion and was standing next to Jefferson when he died July 4, 1826.  In his last will and testament Thomas Jefferson gave Burwell his freedom, 300 in cash, a log cabin on an acre of land, and a job at the University of Virginia.  During his lifetime, the only slaves Thomas Jefferson ever freed were either Hemings or Colbert’s. 

     Burwell Colbert was married twice.  His first wife was his half 1st cousin Critta Hemings born 1783 died 1819 the daughter of Elizabeth Hemings’ daughter Nancy Hemings born 1761 died after 1827. 

     Burwell and Critta had four known daughters: Susan Colbert, Emily Colbert, Martha Anne Colbert, and Thenia Colbert.  Critta died in 1819 while Burwell was with Thomas Jefferson at his Bedford county plantation called “ Poplar Forest”. 

     While at Poplar Forest, Burwell became violently ill and almost died.  According to Jefferson’s granddaughter Ellen Randolph Coolidge, “I never saw anybody more uneasy than Grandpapa, and his constant anxiety by convincing me still more of his extraordinary value of Burwell, increased my own fears and feelings to a degree that surprised even me.”  While Burwell was sick, Jefferson insisted only he and Burwell’s cousin John Hemings were to watch over him. They stayed with him night and day and gave him warm baths and “by the temporary relief it procured, enabled Burwell to stand against the violence.”  

     It was only after Burwell recovered from his sickness that he learned that his wife Critta was dead and that Jefferson’s granddaughters were plotting to take his daughters away from him.  In a letter written by Ellen Randolph Coolidge (daughter of Thomas Mann Randolph Jr and Martha “Patsy” Wayles Jefferson) she wrote that Burwell was “overwhelmed with grief” when he learned of his wife’s death.  However, in letters that Ellen wrote to her sisters she went on to say:

     “I have been recollecting that some time ago, when I was lamenting very seriously that I had not secured on of her [Critta’s] elder children Mama promised I should have any one of them not disposed of.  Susan and Emily I believe Cornelia and yourself had taken at the time, I think I pitched on little Martha as subject to no prior claims.  I hope with all my heart that is the case, for I am more than ever anxious to have it in my power to befriend, and educate as well as I can, one of these children, and if I remember right Martha is a little sprightly black-eyed girl, whom I have often noticed with pleasure.  I think her poor mother would have liked this disposition of her.  I believe she preferred me to the rest of the family.  If, however , Mary or any of the rest of you would have a prior claim then Mama’s promise will hold good for little Theana.”

     Ellen Randolph Coolidge was also one of the most vocal members of the Jefferson family who insisted Sally Hemings children were not Thomas Jefferson’s.

     Jefferson’s grandchildren did eventually acquire all of Burwell and Critta’s children and they were scattered to all parts of Virginia and elsewhere. One daughter was taken to Alabama and never heard from again. 

    Burwell’s second wife was Elizabeth Battles, daughter of Shadrock Battles.  It was said of Shadrock Battles that he was a free African who forged papers for slaves to use to obtain their freedom. 

     Burwell and Elizabeth married December of 1835 in Albemarle county, Virginia and their witness was Ira Garrett. Burwell and Elizabeth had three children: Sarah, Caroline and Melinda Colbert.  They are listed in the 1850 Albemarle county, Virginia census along with Burwell’s half-brother Wormley Hughes.

     After Thomas Jefferson died in 1826, the plantations Monticello and Poplar Forest and all of Jefferson’s slaves were sold to pay his debts, including Wormley Hughes children,  Wormley spent the rest of his life trying to raise enough money to free them. 

     While attending the auction at Monticello, Burwell Colbert bought a mule for $30 and a miniature portrait that he kept on the fireplace mantle of the cabin Jefferson had given him. 

    Although several slaves were sold, Monticello and the land around it was not.  No one was willing to pay the price Martha Randolph asked.  Monticello was finally purchased in 1831 at a price far below market value.  During the five years Monticello was up for sale, Burwell Colbert’s mother Betty Brown lived there.  When Burwell came to visit, he opened all of Monticello's doors and windows to air it out, and then cleaned each room himself. 

Burwell Colbert died 1860.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Benjamin Colvard Jr of Albemarle County, Virginia, Introduction to the Calvert/Colvard/Cobert Families Part 2

Figure 2. Detail from Fry and Jefferson’s "Carte de la Virginie et du Maryland," 1755, showing "Sowels Pt.," annotated with an arrow to locate Sewells Point. (Library of Congress)

I chose this map because of the relationship to Thomas Jefferson's father Peter Jefferson who created the map above.  The map shows the location of "York town" where Benjamin Colvard Sr was born.

Benjamin Colvard Sr (1730-1786) and his Family 

By Richard A. Colbert Calvert Genealogy Group

(Not for redistribution) Please ask the author for permission to republish- use attribution, and link to original material.

     After Benjamin’s father William Calvert died in 1744, the court ruled that the widow Temperance Calvert was not able to financially support her four children and they were taken away from her.  Benjamin was bound out in November 1745 to George Klienhoff.  [Weisinger, Benjamin B, III, Henrico Court Order Book 1737- 174, p 35.]

     In March of 1750 both Benjamin and his mother Temperance Calvert took Kleinhoff to court and swore that Benjamin was 21 years old and by law could no longer be bound to Kleinhoff.  Kleinhoff later withdrew the complaint and Benjamin was freed from his bondage.

     After he became free, Benjamin Colvard Sr., married a woman named Susanna LNU and he made his living as a carpenter/cabinet maker.  There is a possibility that Susanna’s maiden name was Waddle /Waddill.  Benjamin and Susanna had a daughter named Temperance who married George Bruce and they named one of their sons Waddle Bruce.  The name Charles Waddle also appeared on a deed that Benjamin Colvard witnessed in Chesterfield county, Virginia on April 25, 1752, and again in a lawsuit that was brought by Peter Royston against Charles Waddill, John Robins, and Benjamin Calvort which was later dismissed in November 1753. [Chesterfield Court Orders, 1749-1759, #0030908, pp 370, 377, 378 & 414.]

     Benjamin and Susanna Colvard had five children all born in Albemarle county:1) William born  ca 1750,  died before November 6, 1795 (never married); 2) Temperance born ca 1751 married George Bruce, died in Kentucky; 3) Benjamin Jr born ca 1762 married Mary “Polly” George & had concubine Betty Brown died ca 1800; 4) Elizabeth  married Charles Ashley of Amherst county, Virginia died of smallpox; 5) Alexander born ca 1761 married : Susanna Spralding on November 8, 1783 [Marriages in Albemarle County, Virginia Papers of the Albemarle county, Historical Society, Vol VI, p 57]

    In the early 1770’s two of Benjamin’s brothers, William Jr. and John Butterworth Colvard left Virginia and moved to Wilkes/Surry county, North Carolina with their families. 

     George Bruce and Alexander Colvard and their families moved from Albemarle county, Virginia to Kentucky in 1806.  George Bruce died testate in Fayette county, Kentucky in 1808.  George Bruce and his wife Temperance had daughters Helby Bruce, Parmelia Bruce and Polly Bruce who married Grant. Their sons were Warren, Waddle and Benjamin. Executor’s of George Bruce’s estate were Samuel Blair and Temperance Bruce. Witnesses were Alexander Colvard and James Gibson. 

     Both Benjamin Colvard Sr and his son Benjamin Colvard Jr made their livings as carpenters and both volunteered to serve in the American Revolution.  In addition Benjamin Sr’s oldest son William signed an “Oath of Allegiance” in Albemarle county, in 1777 along with Thomas Jefferson, Randolph Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson’s brother), John Marks (stepfather of Meriwether Lewis, the explorer), Charles Ashley (married to Temperance Colvard), and David Meriwether. 

     On July 3rd, 1781, Major Pryor informed Col Davies that “Mr Ben: Colvard, whom he had sent to the Lead mines for more lead, had procured six thousand pounds  - 1800 lbs sent to Bedford county.  The remainder was sent to Staunton, Augusta county.”

     His son Benjamin Colvard Jr enlisted in the Army of the Revolution on September 1, 1780 in Chesterfield county, under the command of Capt John Scott:

    “Ben Colvard Age 18, Size 5 ft 7 ½ inches, Trade- Joiner. Where born -Virginia, County -Albemarle, Hair- Bk, Eyes- Gray, Complexion - dark.”

     [Question: Was Benjamin Colvard Jr’s mother Susanna a mulatto?]

     On February 11, 1786, Benjamin Colvard Sr wrote his last will and testament: 

     In the name of God Amen, I Benjamin Colvard of the county of Albemarle and parish of Fredericksville (sic) do constitute and appoint this to be my last will and testament - Item my will and desire is that all my just debts be duly paid- Item I give to my grandson Benjamin Bashford Colvard one bed and furniture now in the possession of George Bruce my son-in law -Item all the remainder of Estate Real and Personal I lend unto my loving wife Susanna Colvard during her natural life and after her demise I desire all the same may be sold and the money arriving therefrom to be equally divided among my three sons William, Benjamin and Alexander Colvard to them and their heirs forever and lastly I appoint George Nicholas , Nicholas Lewis and Hudson Martin executors of my last will and testament whereof I have set my hand & seal of this Eleventh day of February 1786.  Benja Colvard [will has original signature]

Signed Sealed and published & declared in the presences of Jesse Payne, Wm Day, Nicholas Meriwether Lewis Jr., Stephen Hughes. 

     Benjamin Colvard’s grandson Benjamin Bashford Colvard, may be tied to the family of Alexander Bashford of Accomack county, Virginia.  Christopher Calvert’s property at Onancock Creek (A71 was sold in 1680 and became the town of Onancock which was subdivided into 37 lots.  Both the Bashford family and the Snead family (John Snead represented John Butterworth in 1732) owned lots in the town. 

     Regarding witnesses of Benjamin Colvard’s will:

#1 Footnote: Jesse Payne was the 5th Great-grandfather of President Barack Obama.

#2 Footnote: Jesse Payne was the son of George Washington Payne and Agatha George.

#3 Footnote: Jesse Payne’s mother Agatha George was 1) the daughter of James George and 2) the sister of Mary “Polly” George who married Benjamin Colvard Jr on October 21, 1788 in Goochland county, Virginia.

     Benjamin Colvard Jr and his wife Mary had one child.  Her name was Elizabeth.  Elizabeth’s mother died sometimes in 1797 and her grandfather James George, became Elizabeth’s legal guardian.  Before Mary (George) Colvard died, her husband Benjamin Colvard Jr., was already the father of four of Betty Brown’s children, Burwell, Brown, Melinda and Edwin Colbert.  Two more children Robert and Mary Colbert were born after Mary (George) Colvard died. 

#4 Footnote: Stephen Hughes was the father of Wormley Hughes, Burwell Colbert’s half-brother.  Wormley’s mother was Betty Brown.

#5 Footnote: Three of Temperance Calvert’s sons--Benjamin, William Jr., and John Butterworth Colvard- had daughters and grand daughters named after her, The one exception: Thomas Colvard/Colbert of North Carolina my 4th Great-grandfather. 

     Benjamin Colvard Sr’s daughter, Temperance Colvard, married George Bruce and Temperance’s brother Alexander Colvard were land speculators who bought and sold land together with Hastings Marks who was the husband of Anna Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson’s youngest sister.  George Bruce and Alexander Colvard also owned land adjacent to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello plantation. 

     On April 14, 1791, Nicholas Lewis and his wife Molly gave land to their son Nicholas Meriwether Lewis….”Beginning at the land above Secretary’s ford Rivannah River contiguous to the town of Charlotteville on a boundary as followeth beginning at the river above Secretary’s ford on Thomas Jefferson’s line thence….near a stump near a spring on Edward Carter’s line...to John Jouetts line thence along the said line of Bruce and Colvard to the road leading from Charlottesville to Secretary’s ford...to the bank of Moore’s creek.” [Albemarle Land Property 1789-1795. #0030228, 14 April 1791, pp 177-178]

     Thomas Jefferson loved to fish and one of his favorite fishing spots was below the dam on the Rivannah River.  There, Jefferson and his servant Burwell Colbert would fish from fishing poles that Thomas Jefferson had bought from Burwell’s father Benjamin Colvard Jr.

     I am also a member of the Jefferson-Hemings-Wayles-Eppes DNA Project.  Although I am not a direct ancestor of Benjamin Colvard Sr., I do descend from his brother Thomas Colvard/Colbert.   Administrators of this DNA project  are Cece Moore (The Genetic Detective) and co-administrator Shannon Christmas.

The Calvert Genealogy Group Website HERE, The Calvert Genealogy Facebook Group HERE, The Calvert FTDNA Surname YDNA project HERE. 

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Benjamin Colvard Jr. of Albemarle County, Virginia, Introduction to the Calvert/Colvard/Colbert Families

Onacock, Accomack County, Virginia Atlas 1895


Benjamin Colvard Jr., of Albemarle County, Virginia Part 1 of 3 parts Benjamin Colvard Jr Mulberry Row, Monticello, Albermarle County, Virginia.

By Richard A. Colbert Calvert Genealogy Group

(Not for redistribution) Please ask the author for permission to republish- use attribution, and link to original material.


The history of Benjamin Colvard Jr’s family in America begins with his 2nd GG grandparents Christopher Calvert and Elinor Odait of Accomack county, Virginia.  

     Christopher Calvert was a Quaker, he was born between 1610-1615 and was transported to Accomack county, Virginia in 1635 by William Bibby. [ Susie Ames, “Accomack -Northampton County, Virginia, Court Records, 1632-1640” p 85.]

     Christopher’s wife Elinor Odait, was transported to Accomack county, fourteen years later on Oct, 5, 1649 along with 16 other passengers by Ralph Barlowe of Southampton, England.  Included in the list of passengers were John Elzy, George Parker (married to Abigail Barlowe), George’s siblings Anne Parker, Robert Parker. [Nell Marion Nugent, “Cavaliers and Pioneers, Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants, 1623-1800 Vol 1, Patent Book No. 2,” p. 185.]

     The courtship between Christopher and Elinor was short and they married soon after Elinor arrived.  A year later the newlyweds acquired land adjacent to George Parker and his wife Abigail.

     “A32. 1652 Patent to Thomas Teagle [Teackle] for 350 acres sold to George Parker and John Elzey and by Elzey assigned to said Parker.”  [ Parker and Elzey were half brothers. Their mother Joan Rishton, married Edward Barlowe of Southampton.]

     “A32. 1653. Patent to Sampson Robins for 700 acres...sold to Teagle [Teackle], who was assigned to Christopher Calvert, who later received the patent in his own name.”  [Ralph T. Whitelaw, “Virginia’s Eastern Shore: A History of Northampton and Accomack Counties, Vol 1,” pp. 695-696.]

     In 1655 Christopher Calvert acquired another patent for 800 acres at section A71 where the town of Onancock is now located. His neighbors were Colonel John West and Daniel Jenifer.  Five years later Christopher had the patent reissued in the names of his two children Charles and Mary.  ( His two youngest children John and George, had not yet been born.)  Apparently Christopher intended giving the 700 acres he acquired in 1653 to his eldest son, Christopher Jr. and 400 acres each to Charles and Mary on Onancock Creek from section A71. [Ralph T. Whitelaw, VES, Vol 1, pp. 903-934.]
     Between 1650 and 1665 Christopher and Elinor became the parents of five children: Christopher Jr., Charles, Mary, John, and George.  

     Christopher’s son John Calvert was born 1661 and was recorded as the “godson” of Mr Anthony Hodgkins on 4 Sept 1661.  John grew up on the Eastern Shore and made his living, not as a landowner like his older brothers and sister, but as a carpenter.  [Dr Howard Mackey and Marlene A Groves, “Northampton County, Virginia Record Book, Court Cases, Vol 8, 1657-1664, “p182, and JoAnn Riley McKey, “Accomack County, Virginia Court Order Abstracts, 1682-1690, Vol 7,” pp2 53,260,263,]

     John’s name is also recorded in the last will and testament of George Parker [son of George Parker, A32] dated 1708 and probated on 7 July 1713.  In Parker’s will, John Calvert was given a three-year-old heifer and a calf, just what a father needed for a growing family.  {Stratton-Nottingham, Accomack ,County, Virginia, Wills & Administrations, 1663-1800,” p 49 (Will of George Parker Sr),]

     John Calvert’s younger brother George, was also trained as a carpenter. He was indentured to Thomas Hook, a boatright/carpenter on Oct 20, 1680 for five years. [Descendants of Virginia Calvert’s , Ella Foy O’Gorman Book IV, Christopher Calvert of Accomack County, Virginia, p 587.]  What became of George Calvert after October 20, 1680 is unknown.

     John Calvert and his wife had a son named William who became a blacksmith. [George Parker Sr. and George Parker Jr. were both blacksmiths.]

     Around 1725, William Calvert became friends with a mariner (sailor) who had jumped ship in the Onancock harbor in 1724 and was living in the home of Jonathan Chambers. His name was John Butterworth. 

     Why William Calvert and John Butterworth became friends is up for speculation. May be it was a case of opposites attract.  Whatever the reason, they chose to remain close friends and William named one of his sons after him. 

     In 1689 Colonel John West, George Parker Sr and Christopher Calvert’s neighbor, leased an unspecified acreage for 99 years to Mrs Frances Chambers and her children John, Jonathan, Annabella and Fillechar.  Jonathan had survived his other siblings and by the early 1720s lived on the land alone.  [Ralph T. Whitelaw, “VES, Vol 2,” p 956]

     After jumping ship John Butterworth met Jonathan Chambers, perhaps at a local tavern, and moved into his house. 

    On 4 January 1725 both John Butterworth and Jonathan Chambers were sued by Thomas English for non-payment of a loan for 50 shillings.  The court ordered that Chamber’s home be attached for payment of the debt and court cost. [ Accomack County, Virginia Court Order Abstracts, 1724-1731, Vol 15 p 91, by JoAnn Riley McKey.]

     In 1725 John Butterworth was also sued by John West, the son of Colonel John West who had leased the land to Jonathan Chamber’s mother in 1689, for non-payment of a debt, [ACVCOA, Vol 15, p 67.]

     At the same time John Butterworth was being sued in Accomack county, Thomas Robins married Temperance LNU (Davis?) in York county.  Soon after they married Thomas Robins wrote his last will and testament on August 5, 1725, and nine months later after that on May 15, 1726, records show that Thomas and Temperance had been issued a license to operate an ordinary/tavern in York county.  One month later on June 20, 1726, Thomas and Temperance Robins became the guardians of John Davis, orphan of William Davis. [ Margaret Colvard Simpson  & Margaret Lee Lindsey, “The History of William Colvard...and their Descendants in America,” p 3.]

     Thomas Robins died three years later. In his will, probated June 16, 1729, Thomas gave to his brother Richard, one shilling, to brother John, one shilling, to brother William, one shilling, to brother George, one shilling; to his sister Ann, one shilling and to his:

     “Dear and loving wife, Temperance Robins, all my estate real and personal and she to be the sole executrix.” [York county, Virginia Wills Book, 16 June 1729, #0034409 Part 2, p 604.]

     On that same day, June 16, 1729, Temperance Robins was granted a license to operate an ordinary/ inn in York Town.  [Ibid. p 600]

     Two months later Elizabeth Davis, orphan of William Davis and the sister of John Davis, asked to be bound to Temperance Robins until she reached the age of eighteen.  In exchange for Elizabeth Davis’ servitude, the widow Temperance LNU Robins was to give Elizabeth a violin. 

     [Could Temperance be the oldest daughter of William Davis and sister of both John and Elizabeth Davis?]

     Sometime after June 16, 1729 but before November 16, 1730, William Calvert of Accomack county, Virginia sailed to York county to see his friend John Butterworth. Butterworth had previously married a woman named Demaris in Accomack county, and afterwards moved to York county, where they operated an ordinary/tavern. 

     There, William Calvert met the widow Temperance Robins, and after a whirlwind romance, they married. We know they married before November 16, 1730 because both William Calvert and his wife Temperance were sued on that date by Robert Bovis of York county, for money that Temperance’s late husband, Thomas Robins, owed him.

     “In the action upon the case between Robert Bovis plt and William Colvert and Temperance his wife and executrix of Thomas Robins deceased…”  The jury found for the plaintiff Robert Bovis, and fined William and Temperance Robins Calvert L5 plus court cost. [ York county, Virginia, Book 17, p 98.]

     It was also around this time, 1730 that William and Temperance Calvert’s first son was born Benjamin Calvert/Colvard, was born. 

     In November of 1732 John Butterworth and his wife Demaris returned to Accomack county.  It is possible that William and Temperance Calvert returned with them.  

     On November 7, 1732, in Accomack county, courthouse, John Butterworth ”of York Hampshire parish in the town of York” appointed his lawyer John Snead of Accomack county, to collect any monies owed him from “several persons inhabiting in the county of Northampton and Accomack, on the Eastern Shore.”  [JoAnn Riley McKey, “Accomack County, Virginia Court Order Abstracts, 1724-1732, Vol 16,” pp 8, 80, 123, 268, 276, and 285.]

     Addendum further information of John Butterworths relationship to the Calvert family.  Joseph Calvert who purchased land on Plumtree Island in North Carolina in 1720  Was an Indian trader and the father of James Colbert of the Chickasaw Colberts’. Joseph died ca 1731 . His wife Dorothy Calvert, traveled to York county, Virginia with her son James in 1732 to sue John Gibbs for money he owed Joseph.  It turns out that John Gibbs lived at the tavern/ inn of JOHN BUTTERWORTH and his wife Demaris.  During the trial John Gibbs died and John Butterworth became the executor of his estate.  John Butterworth paid Dorothy Calvert the money John Gibbs owed Joseph Calvert. 

     Between 1732 and 1736, William and Temperance Calvert/Colvard had two more sons born in York county: William Jr. and Thomas. 

     Records also show that sometime before December 1736, William and Temperance Calvert decided to leave York town and settle in Henrico county, Virginia. 

     On June 12, 1737, William Calvert, blacksmith, was hired by Michael Holland to work for him     .  [Fleet, Beverly, Virginia Colonial Abstracts, Henrico County, Southside. Reprint Ed. Vol 3, pp 287 and 371.]

     
    Twenty years later William and Temperance’s son William Colvard Jr married Mercy Holland, daughter of Michael Holland and Elizabeth Pleasants, in 1757. [Both the Holland and Pleasants families were Quakers.]

     William and Temperance’s fourth son was born ca 1744 and named after their friend John Butterworth.  Sadly John Butterworth Calvert/Colvard was born about the sametime his father William Calvert died.  Temperance was granted administration of her husband’s estate in Henrico court in May 1744 and Archibald Cary was her security. [Archibald Cary was Thomas Jefferson’s close friend and a distant cousin.]

     In November 1745 the court of Henrico county, granted a license to Temperance Calvert to keep an ordinary at “Col Richard Randolph’s ferry at Warwick.”  [Richard Randolph was also a close friend and distant cousin of Thomas Jefferson’s.] 

     John Robins, the brother of Temperance’s first husband Thomas Robins, also had a license to operate an ordinary in Warwick.  In addition, the court had appointed him to be the legal guardian of Temperance’s son Thomas Calvert.  Robins raised Thomas as his own son and when Thomas became 21 in 1756, John Robins paid his poll tax in Chesterfield county, Virginia.  Soon afterwards both John Robins and Thomas Calvert disappeared from Virginia but reappeared in 1757 in Edgecombe/Halifax county, North Carolina. 

     Apparently, William and Temperance’s son Thomas Calvert/Colvard was my 4th Great-grandfather. [ I have an exact Y-DNA 67 marker match with the male descendants of both John Butterworth Colvard and William Colvard Jr. I also have autosomal dna matches with the descendants of their older brother Benjamin Colvard Sr.]   

     The Calvert surname Y-DNA project has five participants for this Calvert/Colbert/Colvard subgroup. There are two more matches to non surname carrying FTDNA Y-DNA participants who aren’t members of our Calvert surname group who also match these five participants. One of those matches list their oldest known ancestor William Calvert born ca 1782 died 1848, 0 distance match at 37 markers. These Calvert’s haplogroup R-M269. Richard A Colbert refined his test haplogroup R- Z16502 is 4100 years to 3700 years old. 

The Calvert Genealogy Group Website HERE, The Calvert Genealogy Facebook Group HERE, The Calvert FTDNA Surname YDNA project HERE.