1. | Polly Mary Albin was born on 24 Mar 1807 in Ohio (daughter of James Albin and Barbara Hoover); died on 31 Aug 1889 in Indiana. Polly married Frank Kirkpatrick on 31 Mar 1826 in Guernsey County, Ohio. Frank and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart] |
2. | James Albin was born about 1758 in Virginia (son of William Wilkinson Albin and Mary Bruce); died about 1827 in Guernsey County, Ohio; was buried about 1827 in Hopewell Cemetery, Pleasant City, Guernsey Co, Ohio. Other Events and Attributes:
Notes: James Albin was a soldier of Virginia in the Continental Lines (sic) of the American Revolution. His first wife was a Maryland women. They had four chidren. Barbara Hoover was his second wife. His fifth child was William Albin (our ancester) who married Nancy Clark. - Mary Y. Mainetti, 1970 James married Barbara Hoover about 1789 in Hampshire County, Virginia. Barbara was born about 1758 in Maryland; died about 1854 in Noble County, Ohio; was buried about 1854 in Hopewell Cemetery, Pleasant City, Guernsey Co, Ohio. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart] |
3. | Barbara Hoover was born about 1758 in Maryland; died about 1854 in Noble County, Ohio; was buried about 1854 in Hopewell Cemetery, Pleasant City, Guernsey Co, Ohio. Other Events and Attributes:
Notes: _TODO:
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4. | William Wilkinson Albin was born est 1717 in Ireland; died on 2 Jun 1765 in Frederick Co, Virginia; was buried about Jun 1765 in Mt Pleasant Meeting House Cemetery, Frederick Co, Virginia. Notes: William was the son of Robert Albin and Sarah Cansey, also from Ireland and they are buried there. William was an orphan and only five years of age when he came to this country. He was raised in Chester Co., PA and when about 21 years old he went to Virginia with two of his cousins. Estimated time was 1739. He was married in 1744 to Mary Bruce, who was born in Scotland and Christened June 3, 1715 at Portsoy, Fordyce Parish, Banff, Scotland. She was brought to this country at the age of 9, lived in PA and also moved to Virginia where she met William. The first record of William found in Frederick Co.., was in 1745 when he declared himself titheable. Land records indicate that he applied for warrants for a total for 1,078 acres from lord Fairfax, just north of red Bud, and west of the Opeckon. Of William's original 1,078 acres he retained only 189 acres, law suits filed by Wiliam and others were common at that time. Another serious problem were the Indian uprisings. In 1764, William Albin, John Parrell and Joseph Parrell, were appointed by the Frederick Co. Court to view the ground leading from the Lew Neill's Mill to the town of Winchester and make their report. Whereupon it is ordered that a road be opened, this by then said of, and that the titheables two miles and half on each side thereof. William, like many of his neighbors and Quaker freinds, paid their filing fees to obtain warrants from Fairfax. No doubt their experiences had conditioned them to expect that it as futile to try to win against the English nobility. William 1717 S/O Robert and Sarah Cansey Albin S/O James and Anne Margaret Yoeman Albin S/O Robert and Sarah Blackbourn Albin S/O Robert Albin and Xpian Hunt Albin - The Virginia Albins : the history of the Albin family out of old Frederick County : immigrants, Mary Bruce and William Albin and their descendants who migrated westward with the opening of new territories carving a civilization out of a wilderness / by Ethel Winifred Albin. William married Mary Bruce about 1738 in Spotsylvania, Frederick Co, Virginia. Mary (daughter of John Robert Bruce and Sarah Caroline Parnell) was born on 3 Jul 1715 in Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; died before 1765 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; was buried in Mt Pleasant Meeting House Cemetery, Frederick Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart] |
5. | Mary Bruce was born on 3 Jul 1715 in Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland (daughter of John Robert Bruce and Sarah Caroline Parnell); died before 1765 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; was buried in Mt Pleasant Meeting House Cemetery, Frederick Co, Virginia. Notes: In a SAR application this person was identified as Mary Burns. Notes: Married:
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10. | John Robert Bruce was born about 1690 in Fordyce, Aberdeenshire, Scotland; died on 23 Sep 1748 in Brucetown, Frederick Co, Virginia. Notes: John brought his family to America after 1727. He immigrated about 1730 to Chester Co, Pennsylvania. He may have lived for some time in southeastern PA. During the 1730's, the offer of patented land to settlers in the lower Shenandoah Valley, near the Opequon, attracted many Scots and Scot-Irish. Patents were issued under the seal of the Colony of Virginia and were grants from the Crown, free of any obligation of feudal services to the Fairfax family, who claimed the land as lords/proprietors of the Northern Neck of Virginia. [6] In "JB of the Shenandoah"; there is the following: among the 70 grantees receiving patents on 12 Nov 1735 were many Irish families (the Albins of County Meath, the Neills of County Lurgan; the Calverts from County Dromgora) as well as John Bruce who settled his family in the Winchester, Frederick County, Virginia area between 1731 and 1735, under guidance of Joist Hite's son.[7] His land adjoined the land owned by the Calverts, Hugh Parrell, William Albin, James Carter and George Hollingsworth.[8] With other families settling in the area, the community became a flourishing little village known as Brucetown (in NE corner of Frederick Co, 8 miles NE of Winchester, near border of Berkley Co, West Virginia. For John to have established credibility among his peers by 1740, he would have had to live in the Winchester area for at least a few years, or to have been their neighbor in a former place of residence. Yet another reason would be that John's two oldest daughters later married into families remaining in Chester and Bucks counties in PA. John Bruce was in Orange County, Virginia by 1735, when the following judgments were recorded: 1. John Bruce vs Francis Williams .For debt 3 pounds, 10 shillings, 8 pence, in tobacco at 12 shillings per ct wt to 588 lbs of tobacco. 2. Summons to Francis Williams,July17, 1735, returned July 17, 1735 by Wm Henderson, DeputySheriff. 3. HenryWillis, Esq vs John Bruce, account with John Bruce, peddler, 1735, for 12 lbs, 12shillings, 53/4 pence. Willis asks damages to 15 lbs. 4. Summons to John Bruce, peddler, May 18, 1736 by Gideon Marr. Judgement.. George Stuart vs John Bruce in 1736. For divers cattle \endash John Bruce detained and for the other animals etc. How did the defendant come by the animals? Between 1737 and 1740, he settled on Opecuon Creek near Winchester, Virginia. This 255-acre tract is located on Turkey Run, a branch of Opequon Creek (headwaters Evan Thomas/Branson Spring). The SE corner of the 255 acres is present-day Bruceville. Frederick County Highway 667 (Braddocks Road/Great Road from Winchester VA to Shepardstown WV) and Highway 672 cross the south and east section of this tract. John was a carpenter, land owner and gristmill operator. By 1740, John Bruce and Mary Littler (George Bruce's mother-in-law) were operating grist mills, sawmills and carding/fulling fills. A landowner and farmer, he operated a grist mill on Turkey Run, Nebraska of Winchester. "The earliest available record of John Bruce of the Shenandoah is 18 Aug 1740 when he, along with Hugh Parell and Robert Calvert, were appointed to appraise the estate of Micah Shepherd. Mention of William McMechan and John Littler as buyers of several articles at the estate sale as well as the names Parrell and Calvert confirm that this John Bruce lived in the Winchester area." On 24 July 1740 he was appointed to make an inventory of the estate of Michael Sheppard, deceased; Hugh Parrell, Robert Calvert and William Glover were delegated also and any three of them were required to form the audit commission.[9] John wrote and signed a will on 4 Nov 1747. John wrote and signed a will on 4 Nov 1747. "At the time John Bruce wrote his will (Will Book 1, page 205), his youngest son and daughter were probably unmarried. Mention in the will of a partially completed house and barn on George's 140 acres could be an indication that George was contemplating marriage at that time. He willed 150 acres ("the plantation I now live on") to his wife, Sarah and son George. His will mentioned daughters Margaret Carter (wife of Richard) and William (son-in-law) and Mary Albin. His will of 4 Nov 1747 was entered 1 Nov 1748 records of Frederick Co, Virginia."[10] He died on 23 Sep 1748 in Brucetown, Frederick Co, Virginia in an epidemic that was rampant in the Winchester area. He had an estate probated on 1 Nov 1748, the same day his will was proven. He had an estate probated on 1 Nov 1748 in Frederick Co, Virginia; he willed 300 acres of land to John James and George Bruce, his sons. James Wood was engaged to survey this land(recorded at the time as 402 acres) on 10 Mar 1735/36. Hugh Parell commissioned another survey on 26 April 1753. [11] Out of this survey, George received 315 acres and James received 310 acres from Lord Fairfax on 12 and 14 April 1760. It goes on to state that his two eldest daughters later married into families remaining in Chester and Bucks counties, Pennsylvania. Those would be Mary Bruce m William Albinc 1737; William probably being from Chester Co, Pennsylvania; Margaret Bruce m Richard Carter before 4 Nov 1747; Richard being from Bucks Co, Pennsylvania. It also states that George Bruce who married Rachel Littler died 1800 Frederick Co, Virginia, and that Anne Bruce b c 1724 Scotland or Ireland m James McCoy c 1747 and that she died 1808 probably Union town, Pennsylvania.[12] John married Sarah Caroline Parnell about 1709 in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Sarah was born about 1690 in Aberdeenshire, Scotland; died on 23 Sep 1748 in Brucetown, Frederick Co, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart] |
11. | Sarah Caroline Parnell was born about 1690 in Aberdeenshire, Scotland; died on 23 Sep 1748 in Brucetown, Frederick Co, Virginia.
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