Sally's
great-great-great-great-great-great Grandparents:
John Moore bef 1680 - bef 1732
| his parents
of Nansemond County, Virginia
This is my working hypothesis - the way I see it as of this moment!!
This John Moore may be son of the William Moore
that pat on a branch of the Nansemond River on 6 Dec 1652. The pat of
Richard and John Snders and Henry Plumpton on 20 Oct 1689 ; one refers to
the neighbor Thomas Mason and the other to the location by "William
Moore's ancient patent of 300 acres."
1732 John Moore sold his brother William Moore (current owner 1734) 110
acres in Fork of Southern Branch of Nansemond River in Upper Parish which John Moore
father to John & Wm. willed to sd. John. Southside Virginian Vol V page 11.
Others
think perhaps this John Moore is the son of another John
Moore.
Children of John Moore:
1. Edward Moore died bef 1757
married [Mary] Margaret "Elizabeth" Bonner
dau of
Thomas Bonner and wife Elizabeth
a. Ruth Moore
b. Mary Moore
married Robert Rogers
of Beaufort
2. Arthur Moore
married Esther Bonner
3. * William Moore ca 1705 - 1771
married Sarah Lawrence
4. Moses Moore died April 1802
married Susanna
1802. will of Moses Moore, April 2, 1802. May Court 1802. Wife:
Susanna, lend
120 Acres South Side of Tyancokey Swamp, also 1 negro, for widowhood;
stock cattle, tools, furniture and $5. Son: George, $1 silver beside that
already given him. William, son of George, and wife Elizabeth, $100
silver. Sons: Hartwell, Joseph, Moses, Mark, John, $100 silver each. All
land divided between latter 4 sons. Daughters: Nancy, Elizabeth, Rebecca,
Esther, $24 each. Executors are LaMon Ruffin, Simeon Horn, Dempsey
Jenkins, Mark Dillard. Witnesses are H. Haywood, Ethelred Ruffin, Samuel
Handby. Abstracts of Edgecombe County Wills, Page 231.
a. George Moore
married Elizabeth
i. William Moore
b. Hartwell Moore
c. Joseph Moore
d. Moses Moore died bef Feb Ct 1818
e. Mark Moore
f. John Moore
g. Nancy Moore
h. Elizabeth Moore
i. Rebecca Moore
j. Esther Moore
?5. Joseph Moore
?6. John Moore
7 Nov 1700 John Moore patented 481 acres adj. William Hunter.
1704 Rents Llist--Nansemond county VA: Edw'd Moore 250; Tho 200; Jno 200;
Rich'd 250; James 400; John 100
20 Oct 1704 John Moore patented 95 acres adj John King.

15 July 1717 John Moore patented 150 acres adj. Adam Raby.


Southside Virginian Vol V #1 Jan 87 Nansemond county Records by L. H. Hart After the
destruction of Nansemond County records by fire at the house of Christopher Jackson, Clerk
of Court, in April 1734, a commission was appointed to include William Wright and 11
others. They were to examine old legal instruments brought in to be rerecorded and take
any necessary depositions to prove the validity of these items. Two reports containing
abstracts of the rerecorded items are among the Colonial Records at the Public Records
Office.
Reel 86 (c.0. 412/24) 1729 or 30--Edward Moore bought of William Moore land whereon
said Edward now lives.
Bertie Co NC B 76 William Moore late of Nansemond Co to Henry Barfield Nov 20, 1725 10
pds for 220 A William son & heir of Richard Moore late of Nansemond Co dec land at
Ahosky Marsh adj Leonard Langston. . .
e-mail from Mike Copeland: Sept 06
Hello Sally, my name is Michael Copeland (Moore) and we have corresponded
before and I wanted to share some information with you and get your response
and hopefully your insight on the material. First, in doing the land deed
records I have found a distinct relationship in the land records that would
suggest the following relationships:
EDWARD MOORE and ARTHUR MOORE are brothers. Each married a Bonner daughter
and Arthur Moore witnessed the will of Thomas Bonner that names his daughter
ESTHER MOORE.
After the death of EDWARD MOORE his daughters Ruth Moore and Mary Moore
begin to sell off his land and the selling of the land is witnessed by
WILLIAM LAWRENCE who is the brother of Sarah Lawrence, the wife of WILLIAM
MOORE.
This would make EDWARD, ARTHUR, and WILLIAM MOORE brothers.
Then I found the following records: Arthur Moore and Moses Bonner are
witnesses to a slave transaction by Thomas Bonner and James Byrum.
Moses Bonner is the brother of Arthur's wife Esther Moore and the son of
Thomas Bonner. The only transaction that I have come across with ARTHUR
MOORE and MOSES MOORE is in 1759 when both men witness a deed between
William Bird and Joseph Farmer in Bertie County. It would seem reasonable
enough then that Moses Moore and Moses Bonner share their first name either
because Moses Bonner is named for Arthur's Brother or visa versa--either
way, I am of the opinion that MOSES MOORE is a brother to ARTHUR MOORE.
I have another reason for placing MOSES MOORE as a brother to EDWARD, ARTHUR
and WILLIAM MOORE. Moses Moore has a son Moses Moore, Jr. who has a daughter
Tabitha Moore who eventually marries Lawrence Moore of Anson County.
It has long been a family tradition that Tabitha married her "first
cousin." Now I didn't take stock in that opinion and decided to just
let the research take it wherever it was going and we just have
to see what happened next. If WILLIAM MOORE and MOSES MOORE are brothers,
which I think they are, then the family line does produce the opportunity
for first cousin to marry.
Which brings me to the next item.
On your website I see that you have Laurence Moore as the son of Lawrence
Moore, Sr. Our research produced a sworn statement of the grandson of
Lawrence Moore, Jr. in which he says that he was named for his great
grandfather JAMES MOORE and he signed and dated the statement as James
Moore. I have no reason to doubt the authenticity of the statement. In that
case then Laurence Moore as the son of James Moore would have been named for
his brother Lawrence and for his mother's maiden name. On the 1790 Census he
does not use nor does he sign any papers with the "Jr."at the end
of his name. So, I think it is very probable that Lawrence Moore of Anson
County is the son of James Moore and not Lawrence Moore.
Well, this is what I have been able to put together so far--I am now
working on JOSEPH MOORE of Edgecombe County, NC and I wonder if you have any
ideas on his placement in the family structure. There is a possibility that
he too is one of the missing brothers, but for now, as
I have worked it out, I am fairly confident that John Moore of Nansemond
County, Virgina had at least four sons (if not five, possibly Joseph) and
they are as stated above: EDWARD, ARTHUR, WILLIAM and MOSES MOORE.
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