Person:Jacob Dehaven (2)

Jacob DEHAVEN
m. 1736
  1. Hannah "Nancy" DeHaven1737 - 1825
  2. Ann DEHAVENAbt 1741 -
  3. Abraham DEHAVENAbt 1745 -
  4. Jacob DEHAVEN1750 - 1827
  5. Isaac Dehaven1750 - 1833
  6. Rebecca DEHAVENAbt 1752 -
  7. Sarah DEHAVENAbt 1753 -
  8. Mary DEHAVEN1756 -
  9. Elizabeth DEHAVENAbt 1757 -
m. 2 May 1776
m. Abt 1795
m. 12 Jun 1797
Facts and Events
Name Jacob DEHAVEN
Gender Male
Birth[1] 1750 , Montgomery, Pennsylvania, USA
Marriage 2 May 1776 Frederick, Frederick, Maryland, USAto Mary Ann Sinclair
Marriage Abt 1795 , Grayson, Virginiato Drucilla _____
Marriage 12 Jun 1797 , Loudon, Virginia, USAto Nancy Bell
Death[2][3] 19 Feb 1827 , Scott, Kentucky, USA
Reference Number 1BRB-Q2N (Ancestral File)
Reference Number DEHA0015

Evangelical Lutheran Church,

References
  1. International Genealogical Index
    Call # 1903920.
  2. Shelley T. Riherd. Riherd Family. (published 1996)
    p. 261.

    Abraham's son Jacob, married Mary Sinclair and was married a second time to Nancy Bell. Jacob had 12 daughters and two sons. He died in Scott County, Kentucky where his will was probated. It is believed that Jacob's second wife, Nancy Bell, was a daughter of Charles Bell who purchased the land in Loudon County which was inherited from their father by Jesse, Isaac, and Abraham, Jr. Jacob and Nancy Bell were married in Loudon Co., Virginia, on June 12, 1797.

  3. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Ancestral File (TM). (July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996).
  4.   Shelley T. Riherd. Riherd Family. (published 1996)
    pg 261.

    Abraham died in early 1771 as his will which was written on September 13, 1770, was probated on April 8, 1771. The will disposed of 328 acres of land, athat being the total area acquired by the two 1767 deeds. As Abraham was a British Colonial soldier, his death in 1771 spared him the probable frustration he would have experienced when the Colonies left England in the revolution.
    The will of Abraham DeHaven is recorded in Will Book A, p. 298, in Loudon County Records. It leaves his new house with 21 acres, household goods, a mare, and two cows to this wife, Rebecca. The other land was divided to his sons: Jesse, Jacob, Abraham Jr., and Isaac. Other bequests were to daughters: Rebecca, Sarah, Elizabeth, Hannah, and Ann.

  5.   The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Ancestral File (TM). (July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996).
  6.   The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Ancestral File (TM). (July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996).
  7.   Shelley T. Riherd. Riherd Family. (published 1996)
    pg 261,263.

    Abraham died in early 1771 as his will which was written on September 13, 1770, was probated on April 8, 1771. The will disposed of 328 acres of land, athat being the total area acquired by the two 1767 deeds. As Abraham was a British Colonial soldier, his death in 1771 spared him the probable frustration he would have experienced when the Colonies left England in the revolution.
    The will of Abraham DeHaven is recorded in Will Book A, p. 298, in Loudon County Records. It leaves his new house with 21 acres, household goods, a mare, and two cows to this wife, Rebecca. The other land was divided to his sons: Jesse, Jacob, Abraham Jr., and Isaac. Other bequests were to daughters: Rebecca, Sarah, Elizabeth, Hannah, and Ann.