George Fawdon

George Fawdon
Member Virginia House of Burgesses
In office
1646–1653
Personal details
Born ca 1600
England
Died ca 1654/1655 (Aged about 54)
Isle of Wight County, Virginia
Spouse(s) (1) ? (2)? Ann
Children Hester
Residence Isle of Wight County, Virginia
Occupation Planter, Burgess,
County Justice, Militia Officer
Military service
Service/branch Isle of Wight County, Virginia militia
Years of service before 16541654/1655
Rank Major

George Fawdon (ca 1600 ca 1654/1655), also spelled in various sources as George Fawden, George Fawder, George Fadoin, George Faudon, George Fawdoune, George Faudown, George Fawdowne, and George Fowden,[1] was an early Virginia colonist, landowner, militia officer, county court clerk, county clerk justice and legislative representative (politician). He served at least two terms as a burgess in the Virginia House of Burgesses in the 1640s and 1650s representing Isle of Wight County, Virginia.

Early life

George Fawdon was probably born in England about 1600.[2] No definitive information about Fawdon's early life has been found.[3][4]

The earliest definite official record of George Fawdon's presence in the Virginia colony is from a court in James City, Virginia on February 8, 1627 (/1628) which ordered "that George Fawdon, Thomas Sawyer & Wassell Weblin shall have leave to goe & live at Warosquoyacke."[5][6] Warrosquoyacke was one of the several spellings of the area that became Isle of Wight County, Virginia in 1637.[7] Warwicksqueake is another. On September 29, 1629, Justinian Cooper and wife deeded land there to Wassall Weblin and George Fawdon.[5][8][9] Weblin and Fawdon assigned the land to Robert Sabine on February 25, 1630.[9] Because of later grants of land abutting Fawdon's land along the Nansemond River, another grant of land to Fawdon was made but no abstract of the transaction was found in the references.

Several sources state that George Fawdon's daughter, Hester, married John George's son, Isaac.[2] This suggests that Fawdon was married in or about 1630 since Isaac and Hester were married in 1654.[2] Since no record or mention of Fawdon's first wife has been found, direct support for this earlier marriage for Fawdon and for the fact that Isaac George's wife was his daughter can be found only through a gift of land from Fawdon to Isaac George in 1654.[2][10]

Fawdon's name, variously spelled, appears in several Virginia land patents: Grant to Richard Bennett of 2000 acres on the Nansemond River adjoining George Fawdon, June 26, 1635;[11] Grant to William Clark of 250 acres of land in Warrosquoyacke County, Virginia, on the south side of Nansemond River, adjoining George Fawder (Fawdon);[12] Grant to Thomas Butler of 1,000 acres of land in Warrosquoyacke County on the Small River, falling into Nansemond Bay, on the back side of land of George Fawdon and John Parrott on July 11, 1635;[13] Grant of 150 acres on the south side of the Nansemond River adjacent to the land of George Fawdon, July 14, 1635.[14]

George Fawdon received a 200-acre patent for land on the south branch of the Elizabeth River adjoining John Yates on June 6, 1639.[15] Viewers of tobacco from Red Point to the head of Pagan Point Creek appointed in 1639-1640 were Joseph Salmon, John Miles and George Fawdon.[16]

George Fawdon and Thomas Carter witnessed a deed from Justinian Cooper to John George on March 16, 1642.[17] On June 10, 1647, George Fawdon, Anthony Jones, and Thomas Wombrell witnessed a deed from James Roche to Henry Pitt in Chuckatuck, Isle of Wight County.[18] George Fawdon, William Underwood and James Taylor, were appointed overseers of the will of Captain John Upton.[19]

Virginia House of Burgesses, court justice, militia

In 1646 and in 1653,[2][20] George Fawdon represented Isle of Wight County in the Virginia House of Burgesses.[21][22]

George Fawdon is listed as a justice of the local court in the Isle of Wight County Records for 1646 with eight others including John George.[23][24] Since no names are listed between 1646 and 1666, George Fawdon may have served on the court during some or all of the years from 1646 until his death in 1654/1655. Fawdon was also listed as County Court Clerk in 1646 with James Bagnall, and in 1653 with five others.[25]

George Fawdon also served as an officer in the local militia. He was listed as "Major" in several records.[10][26]

Late life

On April 10, 1654, Major George Fawdon gave to Isaac George, son of then Major John George 1,000 acres of land, if he lived to 21, but if he died before then, the land was to return to Major Fawdon.[10] This strongly suggested to Grant family biographer Mary Grant that Hester Fawdon, wife of Isaac George, was the daughter of George Fawdon because there would be little other reason for Fawdon to make such a gift.[2] No record of mention of an earlier wife of George Fawdon has been found, but since Fawdon was married to Anne Smith within a year of his death, she could not have been the mother of Hester Fawdon.[2]

On October 30, 1654, George Fawdon assigned to Mrs.[27] Anne Smith whom he intended to make his wife, 1500 acres of land in the Upper Parish upon the main river beginning at Job Beasley's adjoining the land of that was formerly John Olivers and adjoining land of Richard Corseys. It was further recorded, March 16, 1654/1655: "All of which the jointure and dowry the nuptials now being celebrated, We the said George and Anne Fawdon, do oblige ourselves never to alter without the consent of our father in law Nathaniel Bacon and our mother Ann his wife, with her brother William Smith."[28] On July 9, 1655, Nathaniel Bacon, administrator of the estate of Major George Fawdon, confirmed "unto all points Isaac George the full contents of this gift."[10][29] This shows Fowden had died by July 9, 1655. Fawdon left no will which might have identified Hester, or other children, and his gift to Isaac George is not easily explained except as a gift to a son-in-law.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. More than one spelling of the name sometimes may be found in a single one of the sources shown in the references. See for example Tyler, Lyon Gardiner. 'Encyclopedia of Virginia biography'. Volume 1. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915. OCLC 2576742. Retrieved August 14, 2012. p. 233.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Grant, Marty. (Marvin A. Grant, Jr.) Major George Fawdon (d 1655) and Ann Smith of Isle of Wight County, Virginia. Retrieved August 14, 2012.
  3. One author states that: On November 1, 1624 George Fawdon (Fedam, Shedam) notified the General Court that he had assisted George Phillmore with writing his will and that the testator had bequeathed him a pig. McCartney, Martha W. 'Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635: A Biographical Dictionary'. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2007. ISBN 978-0-8063-1774-8. p. 292. This conclusion would place Fawdon in Jamestown or its vicinity as early as 1624. John Bennett Boddie refers to the same incident with respect to testimony concerning a missing will. He gives the name of the person assisting George Phillmore as George Fadom and gives no alternate spelling as Fawdon. This and the lack of other references raises doubt about whether Fawdon and Fadom were in fact the same person, as McCartney thinks. Boddie, John Bennett. Southside Virginia Families, Volume 1. Originally published 1955. Reprint: Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2003. ISBN 0-8063-0040-X. p. 51. Dorman, John Frederick 'Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607-1624/5: Families G-P'. Fourth Edition, Volume 2. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2005. ISBN 978-0-8063-1763-2. p. 819 is in accord with Boddie in only giving the name as Fadom.
  4. Boddie, John Bennett, in Boddie, John Bennett. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia. Chicago: Chicago Law Print. Co., 1938. OCLC 5823919. Retrieved August 14, 2012. p. 51 states that Fawdon was a Cavalier who fled England and that he died without heirs. George family biographer Marty Grant, Jr., points out that Fawdon was in Virginia long before the English Civil War and could not have been a Cavalier. Also, since many sources state that Fawdon had a daughter Hester who married a son of John George, and Fawdon gave 1,000 acres of land to Isaac George in 1654, the Boddie statement about Fawdon dying without heirs also seems dubious. Grant, Retrieved August 14, 2012.
  5. 1 2 Stanard, William Glover, ed. 'The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 29' Minutes of the Council, 16221629. Richmond: Virginia Historical Society, 1921. OCLC 1642879. Retrieved August 14, 2012. p. 297.
  6. The first letter of Fawdon was written "ff", apparently a stylized capital "F".
  7. Boddie, John Bennett. Seventeenth Century Isle of Wight County, Virginia. Chicago: Chicago Law Print. Co., 1938. OCLC 5823919. Retrieved August 14, 2012. p. 95.
  8. Several spellings of Weblin's first name also are given in the few records or references that contain his name.
  9. 1 2 Boddie, 1938, p. 530.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Boddie, 1938, p. 528.
  11. Nugent, Nell Marion. Cavaliers and Pioneers: Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents and Grants, 16231800. Abstracts of Virginia Land Patents 16231666, Volume 1. Richmond, VA: Press of the Dietz Printing Company, 1934. p. 23. OCLC 317296057. Virginia Land Patents Book 1, page 186.
  12. Nugent, 1934, p. 24. Virginia Land Patents Book I, page 195.
  13. Nugent, 1934, p. 26. Virginia Land Patents Book I, page 222.
  14. Nugent, 1934, p. 36. Virginia Land Patents Book I, page 329.
  15. Nugent, 1934, p. 111. Virginia Land Patents Book I, Part II, page 660.
  16. Boddie, 1938, p. 172.
  17. Boddie, 1938, p. 529.
  18. Boddie, 1938, p. 513.
  19. Boddie, 1938, p. 519.
  20. Tyler, Lyon Gardiner. Encyclopedia of Virginia biography". Volume 1. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915. OCLC 2576742. Retrieved July 15, 2011. p. 241
  21. Stanard, William G. and Mary Newton Stanard. The Virginia Colonial Register. Albany, NY: Joel Munsell's Sons Publishers, 1902. OCLC 253261475. Retrieved August 14, 2011. pp. 6670
  22. Isle of Wight County Records in William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine, Vol. 7, No. 4 Apr., 1899). pp. 313–314. Retrieved August 14, 2012.
  23. Isle of Wight County Records, 1899, p. 235
  24. Boddie, 1938, p. 704
  25. Boddie, 1938, p. 703
  26. Tyler, 1915, p. 233.
  27. Stanard, 1921, p. 297 points out that "Mrs." was used for "Miss" or "Mistress" at the time.
  28. Boddie, 1938, pp. 528529.
  29. This Nathaniel Bacon is identified as the cousin of Nathaniel Bacon, the rebel of 1676 in "Isle of Wight Records," 1899, p. 233. Also, Bacon was married to the widow Anne Smith, evidently the mother of Fawdon's wife and sister of the first William Bassett of New Kent County. p. 233.

References

Further reading

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