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Our Family History and Ancestry Bernethy-Eby-Scribner-Hord
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Abt 1650 -
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Name |
James Deatherage |
Born |
Abt 1650 |
England |
Gender |
Male |
Died |
England |
Person ID |
I618845487 |
Eby/Aebi and Bernethy Family |
Last Modified |
13 Aug 2012 |
Family |
Unknown Etherage |
Children |
| 1. Thomas Deatherage |
+ | 2. William Deatherage, b. 1685, London, England , d. 1780, Orange County, Virginia (Age 95 years) |
| 3. John Deatherage, b. 1716, England , d. 1777 (Age 61 years) |
| 4. George Deatherage, b. 1740, England , d. 1770, North Carolina (Age 30 years) |
| 5. James Deatherage |
| 6. Charity Deatherage |
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Last Modified |
13 Aug 2012 |
Family ID |
F547419589 |
Group Sheet |
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Notes |
- A large part of the information contained in this Family-Tree database was provided by: Mr. George E. Deatherage XI 9211 216th S.W. Edmonds, Washington 98020. George has written that the Deatherage name came about by combing the names of D'Aith and Etherage. He goes on to write that one D'Aith came to England from Flanders in the train of William the Conqueror in the year 1066. The Etherage ancestor came from France a few years later, and upon the marriage of their descendants, the name Deatherage was derived. In the reign of Edward VI, William D'Aith married Ann Vaugh of Erith, and their son was Thomas D'Aith. Thomas married Joan Head and their son was Thomas II. Thomas II married Mary Barton and their son was James Deatherage. James Deatherage had six children: Thomas (who inherited the family estate and remained in England), James, George, William, John, and Charity (who died at the age of eighteen). It is said that the sons William, John and George came to the New World in 1655. DRD NOTE: "The date 1655 can't be correct because William wasn't born until 1685. The 1655 date can't be correct or there is a missing generation before William. The ancestry of William is uncertain. There is more than one story about the ancestry of William and I have chosen just one of those stories for this accounting. William settled in Culpeper County, now called Rappahannock County Virginia, And his two brothers soon migrated to North Carolina. The Deatherage Estate in Virginia was in the family name from 1735 to 1954, some 219 years. On Saturday, October 23, 1954 it was sold at Public Auction to settle the estate. This historic dwelling, was constructed in two parts, the first of stone in 1754 and the second of brick in 185
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