Person:Henry Beckwith (4)

Watchers
m. Abt 1618
  1. Henry Beckwith1619 - 1717
m. 1675
  1. Henry Beckwith1678 - 1756
Facts and Events
Name Henry Beckwith
Gender Male
Birth? 1619 Jamestown, James City, Virginia, United States
Marriage 1675 to Elizabeth N. Skinner
Death? 17 Aug 1717 Dorchester County, Maryland, USA
Burial[1] Cedar Grove Cemetery, Dorchester County, Maryland, USA
Probate[1] 27 Oct 1717 Dorchester County, Maryland, USA
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Henry "Virtual" Beckwith, in Find A Grave.

    Received land grant from Lord Baltimore for "transporting himself" from Virginia (in 1669). From "The Beckwiths 1891" by Paul Beckwith.
    The will of Henry Beckwith was made in 1717 and proven on 27 OCT 1717 in Dorchester County, Maryland Colony.

  2.   Beckwith, Paul (Paul Edmond). The Beckwiths. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1977).

    John Beckwith, third son of Thomas of Clint, mar-
    ried the daughter of Thomas Radcliff of Mulgrave, and
    was succeeded by his only son, Robert Beckwith of
    Broxholme, in the 8th year of the reign of Edward
    4th. He, in his turn, was succeeded by an only son,
    John, who inherited the Manors of Clint and Thorp,
    and lived in the 8th year of the reign of King Edward
    the 4th; he left an only son, Robert Beckwith of Clint
    and Thorp, whose will was dated Oct. 16th, 1536,
    and proved Mch. 24th, 1537; he married Jennet and
    had issue. Robert, the eldest son, died young; Marma-
    duke of Dacre and Clint, the second son, sold the
    Manor of Clint that had been in the family since 1226,
    and bought the Manors of Featherstone and Acton,
    Yorkshire; he married twice; by his first wife, Ann,
    daughter of Dynley of Bramhope, had eleven children;
    Thomas, the eldest, inherited Acton and married Fran-

    The Beckwiths. 17

    ces, daughter and heiress of William Frost of Acton;
    he had three sons, Thomas, the eldest, of Acton, to
    whom we will presently return; William, the second
    son, was baptized at Featherstone Castle in 1571, emi-
    grated to America in 1607, landing at Jamestown, Va.,
    with Captain John Smith from the ship "Phoenix;"
    he married in 1616, and had but the one son (and a
    daughter), Henry who was born about 1619, and who
    settled in Dorchester Co., Maryland, there founded a
    family, many of whose members have been prominent
    in the political, civil and military history of that county,
    and whose descendants are still living on the old
    homestead.