Carney & Wehofer Family
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Elizabeth Ann SPEIGHT

Elizabeth Ann SPEIGHT

Female 1712 - 1770  (58 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Elizabeth Ann SPEIGHT was born in 1712 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA (daughter of John Thomas SPEIGHT and Elizabeth (Powell)); died in 1770.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: MT72-X26
    • _UID: 52101910D481477186466B67C77FCB165D5C


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Thomas SPEIGHT was born in 1687 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA (son of William SPEIGHT and Elizabeth TAYLOR); died in 1738 in Somerton Creek, Virginia.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G3WQ-Q9R
    • _UID: 5D5CF05E0E0C421D8C93E38B8C9C8038ED89

    Notes:

    John Speight and brother William Speight were the executors of William Powell's will dated 13 Sep 1747, pr 12 Nov 1747.

    John married Elizabeth (Powell) in 1708 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA. Elizabeth was born about 1690 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA; died about 1755 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth (Powell) was born about 1690 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA; died about 1755 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G3WQ-Q9G
    • _UID: D583316FAA634D278C0272072CE98B3959DF

    Children:
    1. 1. Elizabeth Ann SPEIGHT was born in 1712 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA; died in 1770.
    2. Moses SPEIGHT was born about 1713 in Isle of Wight, Virginia, British Colonial America; and died.
    3. William SPEIGHT was born in 1715 in Isle of Wight, Virginia, British Colonial America; died on 1 May 1774 in Swift Creek Township, Wake, North Carolina, British Colonial America.
    4. John SPEIGHT was born in 1715 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA; died about 1765 in Compass Creek, Edgecombe, North Carolina.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  William SPEIGHT was born in 1653 in Speights Run, Nansemond, Virginia, British Colonial America (son of Francis SPEIGHT and Elizbeth O'ROURKE); died on 26 Mar 1719 in Speights Bridge, Greene, North Carolina.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: G3PK-J6W
    • Name: William SPEIGHT
    • _UID: 6796C57B1FD44B68949C6C4508C9BFEA3E0D

    Notes:

    Cannot prove correct "John Speight" father... at this time.

    William Speight, son of John Speight, was born about 1665 at Speights Run, Virginia. When William was about eighteen years old his family moved to Somerton Creek (now Pittmantown), Virginia. In 1686 he left home and settled in nearby Isle of Wight County, Virginia. William worked for Henry Southen as a cooper (barrel maker). William was the first Speight with the occupation as a barrel maker and not a planter. William married and had one son, John. William and his family lived in Isle of Wight County for about five years. William and his brother, Francis lived a short distance from each other then in 1691 the Speight families played "musical chairs" with their land. William left the Isle of Wight County and returned to the manor house that his father had left him at Somerton Creek. His brother, Francis, went to the Speights Run plantation, father, John, left Somerton Creek and went to Sunbury, where he and his wife lived at the old home place of our immigrant ancestor, Francis. William continued to expand his land holdings at the Somerton Creek farm. Between 1701 and 1711 he had acquired five hundred and fifteen acres and eleven indentured servants. When William's brother, Francis, died the courts appointed William as guardian of his nineteen-year-old nephew, Moses Speight.

    In 1728 the legislatures of Virginia and North Carolina commissioned a surveying team to lay off the line. William Byrd of Virginia and Colonel Edward Moseley of Edenton were appointed Surveyor Generals. Mr. Byrd published his famous book, William's Byrd's Histories of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North Carolina mentioned William Speight and his cousin, Thomas. In 1733 when Colonel Moseley published a map of North Carolina, William's plantation was divided, leaving his house and orchard in Virginia and his tobacco house in North Carolina. This is how William became known as State Line William. William resided at the Somerton Creek plantation in Virginia until his death in 1735. The grave of William and his wife have not been identified, but most likely they were buried on the Somerton Creek farm.

    William married Elizabeth TAYLOR in Perquimans, North Carolina. Elizabeth was born on 16 Oct 1654 in Rappahannock, Virginia, British Colonial America; died about 1730 in Sunbury, Gates, North Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elizabeth TAYLOR was born on 16 Oct 1654 in Rappahannock, Virginia, British Colonial America; died about 1730 in Sunbury, Gates, North Carolina.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: GZ59-C9J
    • _UID: 29C7FA8FC9DD4FD39AFC31DA4A5390445335

    Children:
    1. Honorable Thomas SPEIGHT, Esquire was born in 1670 in Perquimans, North Carolina; died in 1737 in Perquimans, North Carolina.
    2. Thomas C SPEIGHT was born in 1674 in Sunbury, Gates, North Carolina; died on 9 Apr 1737 in Perquimans, North Carolina.
    3. William Francis SPEIGHT was born in 1674 in Chowan, North Carolina; died on 16 Jan 1749 in North Carolina.
    4. Elizabeth SPEIGHT was born in 1678 in North Carolina; died in 1740.
    5. Francis C SPEIGHT was born in 1684 in Probably Chowan County, North Carolina; died in 1749 in Sunbury, probably Chowan County (now Gates County) North Carolina.
    6. 2. John Thomas SPEIGHT was born in 1687 in Isle Of Wight, Virginia, Colonial USA; died in 1738 in Somerton Creek, Virginia.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Francis SPEIGHT was born in 1614 in London, Middlesex, England; died in Apr 1684 in Sommerton Creek, (now Pittmantown), Virginia.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: LBCQ-S2X
    • _UID: E8E22A157EBD48A6835BE0532CCFF472A4B3

    Notes:

    Arrived 1635 according to Passenger List Index COLDHAM, PETER WILSON. The Complete Book of Emigrants.

    Francis Speight was born in 1614 in England. His parentage is unknown. He is our immigrant ancestor coming to America in 1635 at the age of twenty-one. Almost all Speight's in America (except the family of North Carolina Governor Richard Dobbs Speight whose line died out when his son went childless) descend from Francis Speight. He sailed from Gravesend, England aboard the ship, "Thomas and John", captained by Richard Lambard. Before the ship left the English port, a minister would have certificated that the Virginia bound passengers conformed to doctrine and practices of The Church of England, followed by an oath of allegiance to King James I.

    It is anyone's guess as to what Francis might have been thinking and feeling the day he boarded the ship for America. He was leaving kin and friends. Sailing to America in the early 1600s was anything but a pleasant voyage. They usually did not leave on schedule because they had to wait for a favorable wind and a rising tide to get under way. This was before they had a steam-tug to pull the ship out to sea. The ships were crowded, cold, drafty, and damp. Passengers would have squeezed into any available space not taken up by the crew, cargo, baggage, and farm animals. The ships were never designed for passengers. Crossing the Atlantic was always a dreadful passage with most of the passengers getting sick. There was also the possibility that the ship would not make the voyage. Although the sailing vessels were well constructed and made of sturdy material, they were no matches for the fierce storms of the Atlantic. If the ship made the voyage one out of five passengers died en route. Living conditions were deplorable. The passengers ate poorly. They would have cooked a communal meal in a large cast iron pot. When the sea was rough, meals could not be cooked because of the danger of fire aboard the ship. For days they would eat raw food. Francis would have packed necessities for insuring his survival in the New World in a sea trunk.

    He arrived at Jamestown, Virginia on June 16, 1635 after two and half months at sea with one hundred and three other passengers. Just twenty-eight years after the founding of Jamestown. Jamestown was commonly regarded as the first permanent English settlement in what is now the United States. Francis was among fifteen people indentured to Puritan leader William Eyres for seven years working on Chuckatuck Creek Plantation in what is now Suffolk, Virginia.. Indentured servants worked out their loans for passage money to America (known as a temporary white slave). If you were an indentured servant it was not the person, but the work of the servant that was owned by the master. That was a large different than a black slave being owned by their master. In the 1600s three-quarters of all English colonists served as indentured servants. Half of them died before their service was completed. One quarter remained poor afterward and the other quarter achieved a degree of prosperity. As a whole, women fared somewhat better than men. A female servant who had completed her service could easily find a husband. Francis was the first and only indentured servant of the Speight Family and the first one to have indentured servants working for him.

    After his seven-year term as an indentured slave, on May 23, 1642 Francis received fifty acres of wilderness land from Mr. Eyres in Indian Branch (now Lake Prince in Suffolk, Virginia). This meant that Francis had saved enough money for the legal fees, tools, seed, and livestock needed to become a planter (which then meant farmer). Indian Branch was an important waterway. Flat bottom boats transported hogsheads of tobacco to market. Francis married in 1642 shortly after his land was deeded to him. Francis' first priority would have been building shelter and digging a well for his family. The family house would have been a thatched roof hut. Its roof was made by bundling reeds from a nearby swamp. "Cottages" had an end-hooded chimney and a hard packed dirt floor. In the English tradition they were called cottages not cabins or huts. In the spring of 1643 the Speights were blessed with their first child, John. In 1644 the Opechancanough Indians attempted to run the colonists from their land, killing almost five hundred colonists, but the population had grown too large for them to succeed.

    After eight years at Indian Branch, Francis and his family moved eight miles south through wilderness to land located on Old Major's Creek and Mill Creek, which was later named Speights Run, which made up the head waters of the Nansemond River. The journey would have been a tedious, tiresome, and dangerous one. There were no roads, dangerous Indians. Again Francis' first priority would have been to build shelter and to dig a well for his family. In 1650 Francis Speight and James Arrorke jointing patented fifty acres on the north side of Speights Run. In 1653 Francis and his wife had their second child, William. In 1654 at the age of forty, Francis, his wife, and two sons made their final move to a three hundred acre tobacco farm in Sunbury, North Carolina. This land was located on higher ground bordering a stream (present day Raynor Swamp) that connects with Bennett's Creek, which flows into the Chowan River. Locating near the waterway was necessary for transporting the half-ton tobacco packed hogsheads. For the third time Francis would have to build shelter for his family. One of the reasons for moving would have been to obtain fresh land as tobacco quickly depleted the soil.

    Life for Francis and his family was not easy. They had to be strong. Routine tasks of plowing, planting, tool sharpening, baking, mending, washing clothes, grinding corn, milking cows, butchering meat, brewing beer (water was usually contaminated), and other backbreaking efforts required to keep a Virginia plantation together. Raising tobacco was a very labor-intensive job (picking suckers, worms, and insects from the tobacco plants). The fields were cleared and barns built. From sunup to sundown, each family member worked at tasks necessary to survive. Later in 1654 Francis acquired six indentured servants. This group consisted of five males, Abraham Standford, James Prouce, Alexander Dunbarr, John Jackson, Thomas Lightoll and one female, Mary Wells. With the arrival of help, work began on a large house. Mrs. Speight and Mary Wells would have had their hands full feeding eight adults and two children plus all the other daily tasks.

    Francis still owned the land at Speights Run and in 1664 he gave that land to his oldest son, John who would be known as "John of Speights Run". Since the land had been left uncultivated for ten years it was ready once again for growing tobacco.

    By 1682 Francis was a widower and closed his house at Sunbury. He went north and patented five hundred acres of land on Somerton Creek (now Pittmantown), Virginia where he lived until his death. At this location he had ten indentured servants, Eliza White, John Harris, Walter Price, William Booker, Hum Green, Edward Harris, Richard Catach, Jane Catach, Thomas, Frost, and Richard Jones. This was the largest and last piece of land owned by Francis. In the winter of 1684 Francis died at the age of seventy. The burial place of Francis is unknown. He could be buried in Pittmantown, the place he spent his last two years or more likely he was taken back to Sunbury where he would be laid to rest beside his beloved wife on their plantation.

    Francis married Elizbeth O'ROURKE. Elizbeth died in 1682. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Elizbeth O'ROURKE died in 1682.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch ID: L4GY-TNN
    • _UID: BB1291CA00284C8CAC54328416BF3A8D7A8C

    Children:
    1. 4. William SPEIGHT was born in 1653 in Speights Run, Nansemond, Virginia, British Colonial America; died on 26 Mar 1719 in Speights Bridge, Greene, North Carolina.