Person:Thomas Llewellyn (4)

Watchers
Thomas Llewellyn
b.Est 1745
d.Bet 1811 and 1819 North Carolina
  • HThomas LlewellynEst 1745 - Bet 1811 & 1819
  • W.  Susannah (add)
  1. Thomas Llewellyn1771 - Bef 1861
  2. Nancy LewellenAbt 1773 - 1815
Facts and Events
Name Thomas Llewellyn
Alt Name Thomas Lewellen
Alt Name Thomas Lewelling
Gender Male
Birth[1] Est 1745
Marriage to Susannah (add)
Death[1] Bet 1811 and 1819 North Carolina

Records in Virginia

  • August 9, 1765 Thomas and Susannah Lewellen of Loudoun County, Virginia bought 116½ acres of land. Thomas signed his name. Susannah indicated her signature with a mark.
  • March 28, 1772 Thomas Llewellin of Loudoun County and Susannah his wife sold their 116½ acres in Loudoun County.
  • September 13, 1777, Captain Daniel Trigg’s militia company of Montgomery County, VA was formed. In his troop was Thomas Lewallen.
  • 1782, 1784, 1785, and 1786, Thomas Lewellen was enumerated in Company 16 of Botetourt County.
  • November 8, 1785, Thomas Lewelling was charged for not keeping the road in repair from the Bedford Line to Big Lick (now Roanoke).
  • 1785 tax records show that Thomas Lewallen was living in Botetourt, a total of 8 souls living in his house.
  • Botetourt County, VA Marriage Record: Bandy, Richard and Nancy Lewellen, dau. [of] Thomas Lewellen - Sept. 3, 1791. [Worrell, Anne Lowry. Early marriages, wills, and some Revolutionary War records, Botetourt County, Virginia. (Baltimore [Maryland]: Genealogical Pub. Co., c1976), pg. 4].
  • April 26, 1792, Thomas Llewellyn bought 150 acres of land in Rockingham County, North Carolina for 100 pounds Virginia currency.
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 .

    Thomas Llewellyn, Sr. (born abt.1745-1750-died ca.1811-1819)

    On April 26, 1792, Thomas Llewellyn bought 150 acres of land in Rockingham County, North Carolina for 100 pounds Virginia currency. [Rockingham having been carved from Guilford County in 1785.] This is the first record we have of our ancestor in North Carolina. Where did he come from? There are several clues pointing to Virginia: he paid for his land with Virginia money; in the 1860 census his son is listed as having been born in Virginia; and according to an article on Richard Jackson Lewellyn in the History of North Carolina, Volume 4 (c.1919, p.226), Thomas lived most of his life in Virginia.

    https://sites.google.com/site/llewellynfamilyrockinghamnc/home/thomas-llewellyn-sr