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Name |
Mary Kilpatrick |
Gender |
Female |
Person ID |
I67753 |
Devin Timber |
Last Modified |
20 Jan 2012 |
Family |
Thomas Carter, III, b. c 1728, Goochland, Albemarle Co., Virginia |
Children |
+ | 1. Thomas Carter, IV, b. 19 Jun 1753, Goochland, Albemarle Co., Virginia |
| 2. Jessee Carter, b. 4 Mar 1756, Goochland, Albemarle Co., Virginia |
| 3. Abraham Carter, b. 9 Apr 1758, Prob Goochland, Virginia |
| 4. Charles T. Carter, b. c 1759, Prob Goochland, Virginia |
| 5. Judith Carter, b. c 1752, Prob Goochland, Virginia |
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Last Modified |
21 Jan 2012 |
Family ID |
F22663 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Sources |
- [S67727] Mary Frances Reynolds Eggleston.
The Thomas of Goochland Clan
ID - Name(s): 33429 Baynes Carter
Nick-Title: - Patriot
Born ca. 1747-- Goochland Co VA
Died: 1788-- Henry Co VA
Burial:
Occupation:
Religion:
Bio Mother: 33426 1. Susannah Baynes? 2. Mary Carrol?
Bio Father: 32806 Thomas of Goochland Carter Jr. dna
Legal Mother:
Legal Father:
ID Sibling(s):
33427 Thomas of Goochland Carter III
34757 Rebecca MacGuire ne(e) Carter
33430 Susanna Jackson ne(e) Carter
33431 Mary Dawson Carter
33432 Judith m. Charles Carter
33428 John of Ballows Carter
33433 Patriot Josiah Carter dna
ID Spouse(s) - Marriage Dates: ID Children: (Those in italics are stepchildren)
35535 Martha Unknown (ca. 1770-- Henry Co VA) 35534 Jesse Carter
35618 Baynes Carter Jr.
Narratives relating to this person:
Pictures relating to this person:
Personal Biography (in addition to the Narratives):
Rebecca Reuben Dyer 703 350 2053 Pentagon Chapter, NSDAR Necostin Chapter, NSCDXVIIC
My Line:
Rebecca R. Dyer
LaVinia Susan Carter Dyer ......... 1914 from census
William German Carter II ...... April 1882 from census
John Quincey Carter ...... 1852 from census [Wm. German I 1868]
Jerman W. Carter ..... 1822 from census [German - back to Henry]
Baynes Carter ..... 1797 from census
Jesse Carter, Patrick Co VA [Patrick from Henry] ..... 1775 but census sez 1780
Baynes Carter, migrated to Henry Co VA ..... adjust to 1747 except ***
Thos Carter II ..... revised to 1697
Thos Carter, arrived in 1713, headright of Abraham Micheaux
[This under discussion - there should have been family with him].
Dan Wallace notes the order of the children in the will of Thomas Jr. - since the bible of Josiah prove his birth at 10 Feb 1745, we should use 1747 for birth of Baynes, and not the first revision of 1738 (Certainly earlier than 1756 as used by this writer - who was using 1705 for date of birth for Thomas Jr.).
25 Aug 2010 - after all of the above: "In Goochland Co, VA, in Sept 1769, Bains [sic] Carter cast his vote for 2 members of the House of Burgesses. To vote he would have had to be 21. Therefore his birth year would have been at least 1748. Goochland Co Historical Society Magazine, Vol 34, 2002, p17".
From: Rebecca R. Dyer (CDXVIIC) To: zieman3@comcast.net
Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2010 6:57 AM Subject: Thos Carter, Giles Carter, Baynes Carter
[This is Thomas "Sr." of Goochland - not alleging any connection to the Barford. However .... the paper work on the one or two descendants leaves a lot to be desired ... and ... it's only one or two tests each].
"Thos & Giles could not be brothers. They have two entirely different haplogroups".
Baynes Carter, Patriot - (ca 1756 - ca 1788). Rebecca is the source of the following:
"Baynes Carter was born to Thomas Carter Jr. (ca 1705 - ca 1760) and his wife Mary on their plantation in Goochland (formerly Henrico) County, Virginia, about 1756. The inventory and appraisal of the estate of Baynes Carter, recorded in Henry County, Virginia, shows that he died prior to 11 August 1788 at about 32 years of age.
"Will of Thomas Carter Written Feb. 14, 1760 Probated April 19, 1763 - Goochland County, Virginia
"Thomas Carter Jr.'s Last Will and Testament was written 14 February 1760 and was recorded in Goochland County on 19 April 1763. If his sons were named in chronological order, his oldest would have been Thomas [III], then John, then Josiah, then Baynes. In his Will, Thomas Carter refers to his ?Youngest sons, that is to say John Carter, Josiar [sic] Carter, and Baynes Carter.? He also refers to his wife Mary Carter. Mary may have been Mary Kilpatrick based on the 1751 marriage recorded in the Douglas Register for Thomas Carter to Mary Kilpatrick.
[We now know it was Thomas III - brother to Baynes - who married Kilpatrick; the early reliance on this date of marriage is what threw all early genealogies off. Please note how the revised dating "allows" for the birth of Josiah in 1745 - an impossibility under the old dating].
*** Baynes has to be at least 18 *** there is no provision for guardianship ***
*** But Josiah was born 1744/1745 according to his bible - in worst case ***
*** you would not / could not ..... leave real property to a thirteen year old ***
" In the name of God Amen, February 14th, 1760:
?To my Dear beloved son Baynes Carter the land I now live on containing 225 acres with my house and plantation also one middle sized Rone mare with a white spot in her face. . .she and her increase forever also one new man's saddle and bridle.?
"Beginning in the early 1770's, there was a migration of families from the Goochland County and surrounding area to southwest Virginia. Descendants of these families (Carter, Atkins(on), Dillon, Callaway, Tatum, Anthony, Bowman, Stoval, and others) can still be found in the beautiful and remote hills of Patrick and Henry Counties today. Baynes Carter and his brothers Josiah and John, third generation Carters, were among the early settlers who made their way south and west for better opportunities and more productive land.
"A 1773 Goochland County deed shows Baynes Carter and his widowed mother Mary, now of Pittsylvania County, selling their home place to Samuel Coleman Morris. Beginning a year or so prior to the sale of the Goochland County home place, Baynes, Josiah and John had begun to leave records in Pittsylvania, Bedford and Henry Counties.
"In August of 1774, records show that Baynes Carter, about age 18 or 19, received pay for 82 days service under Captain Abraham Penn in the conflict between the Colony of Virginia and the Native Americans of the Ohio Valley. This conflict, Dunmore?s War, was named for the Royal Governor of Virginia, Lord Dunmore, who organized a large militia to ultimately prevent the Delaware, Mingo, and Shawnee from settling or hunting south of the Ohio River. John Carter, an elder brother of Baynes, served in this conflict as well.
"Just three years later, Baynes Carter (age 22) and his brother Josiah, along with other citizens of Henry County, Virginia, were called upon to renounce their allegiance to Great Britain and swear their allegiance to the Commonwealth of Virginia. Their signatures appear on the on 30 August 1777 list of Edmond Lyne, Esquire. This demonstrates that both men supported the impending Revolution and qualifies their descendants for membership in the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution. Josiah is also recorded in the Virginia Publick Claims for Henry County as being reimbursed for provisions supporting the war:
"Monday, 06 May 1782: 5s-6 for 3 diets, 1 bu corn, 1 peck do. furnished Hugh Armstrong on march to General Greene with county lead; 4s-6 for 150 bundles fodder furnished Jacob Gore quarter master Genl. 1st Regt, Light Dragoons; 10s for 4 bu corn meal furnished a guard with British prisoners on march from the southward to Winchester; 12s for 3 bu rye for 4 teams on return from Charlotte in North Carolina to Peytonsburg by cert. from Wm. McCraw ADQM.
"Friday, 24 May 1782: 42s for a saddle impressed for hospital at Henry Courthouse & lost.
"Few records have surfaced on Baynes Carter but we know that he purchased ?sundries? at the estate sale of John Hail in Pittsylvania County (Inventory recorded 26 September 1774). He also served as a guard for his county in 1777: ?Henry County Levy is made to Baines [sic] Carter, guarding, same 5 days.? On 21 July 1778, Henry County deeds show Josiah Carter conveying and selling to his brother Baynes 89 ? acres of land crossing Little Reedy Creek and Reed Creek to the mouth of said creek on Smith River. Over the next few years, several other Henry County land transactions are recorded concerning Baynes Carter. In 1780, Josiah Carter transferred some of his Reedy Creek property to his brother Baynes due to damages sustained by Baynes resulting from a grist mill operation. [This land is located near the present-day intersection of Route 220 and State Route 57 between Bassett and Collinsville, Virginia. Josiah Carter?s grist mill was still standing there as of 1920.] About the time Josiah Carter transferred the Reedy Creek property to his brother Baynes, Josiah, along with a contingent of other Henry County, Virginia, families, migrated farther south to the state of Georgia.
"It?s not until a land transaction on 24 June 1784 that we learn Baynes Carter has a wife: Baynes Carter and his wife Martha sell 221 ? acres of land on Reed Creek to George Hairston*. To date no marriage record or bond has been found and Martha?s surname remains unknown, but other records conclude that Baynes and Martha had been married at least 10 years by this time. In 1788, just a few years after the sale of the 221 ? acres of land, Baynes Carter passed away, leaving a widow and a son Jesse, age 13.**"
"Baynes Carter stayed in VA. His SON Baynes went to GA." -- Rebecca Dyer, February 24, 2006
Sources for this person:
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