Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Info found in the Memorials of the Discovery and early settlement of the Bermudas"

Found Here. Land that William Bullock owned.
Found Here. Land owned by a Stephen Painter.
Captain Stephen Bullock and his story with Elzabeth Carter Found here . Turn the page and it mentions
        Stephen Bullock.
Disputement over shipping of tobacco. William Bullock and wife Patience Bullock Mentioned here.
Petition to the King signed by John Painter found here
Councils reply to company mentioning Stephen Painter here
Petitions to the state council from Stephen Painter found here
Republican or puritan party reappearance of Stephen Painter found here
Signed Proclamation by William Bullock here
Man being sued, Stephen Paynter mentioned here
A petition by Capt Stephen Paynter here and on the next page
Captain Stephen Paynter summoned to trail 2 Nov 1656 found here
June 15-17 1658 Captain Stephen Paynter resigned as Sheriffe here
Sept 15 1658 Captain Stephen Paynter Fidelity to Commonwealth. Also, mention on the next page. Also found here.
January 1658, Capt. Stephen Paynter at the city council found here.
Notes at bottom of page Stephen Paynter owned a "Still house" where he made strong drinks found here
Palmeto trees were used to create this strong drink. The tall ones worked best and they would distill it. This created a problem because many of the trees were getting cut down and they were not being replaced info found here on page 28.
Captain Stephen Paynter part of the council during the witch trials found here
more witch trials here pg 607 and here pg 609 and here pg 627
William Bullock land he owned as part of the Warwick tribe pg 696 here
Captain Stephen Paynter land he owned as part of the Southampton Tribe found here pg 704
Info. saying Captain Stephen Bullock married his cousin Mary(marie) Paynter.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Mary Bullocks Pedigree chart

Pedigree Chart found here.

Mary Bullock's Info

Information found here. Scroll down to Mary Bullock



Notes for Mary or Margaret Bullock:  Wife of Rene de Saint Julien ................................................................................................................................................................... Bullock By all known accounts Rene de Saint Julien (anglicized to Julian) is said to have come to America after the Battle of the Boyne, after stepping in the Island of Bermuda, where he married Mary Bullock. Her name in some records is given as Margaret, but the frequent use of "Mary" in names of a daughter and granddaughters would indicate its correctness. Also, the naming of the oldest son of Rene And Mary "Stephen" lands credence to Mary's being the daughter of Captain Stephen Bullock and Mary, his wife, who was administrator of his Will in 1695. From notes sent by Mrs. F. J. McAllister, 737 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, 60611 to Mrs. Snapp, and from her to me, we find: William Bullock married Patience Paynter, November 01, 1632, according to records taken from Southampton Parish, the eldest in the Islands. Lefroy's Memorials of Bermuda, Volume II, page 460 includes a pamphlet printed 1682 entitled "Public Tryal of the Quakers in Bermuda on May 01, 1678", by Sampson Bond, late preacher of the Gospel in Bermuda. The chief on the Quaker side included William and Patience Paynter, among others. Stephen Bullock, master of a ship from Barbadoes in 1676, was sent to jail for assisting Elizabeth Carter, Quakeress. In Colonial Records of Bermuda, Volume V, page 403 we find "Manura" a servant of Mistress Patience Bullock's marriage to John Darrell, November 15, 1671. Witnesses were Patience & John Bullock, and John Wainwright. Patience Bullock married Nathaniel Field, May 09, 1701. "Witnesses by Marian Bullock" - who could have been Mary, who married Rene Saint Julien. Patience evidently had two daughters, as found in her having to pay 1 shilling for every Sunday's absence from their parish church. It is believed that John, Stephen, and the two daughters were children of William and Patience Bullock. Robert, Earl of Warwick, appointed Mr. Stephen Paynter his agent in Bermuda in these words: "Wheras I have many affairs to be transacted in the Semera Islands which will require the care of a person of fidelity and discretion, I have thought fit and consider well of your qualifications in both these respects." February 13, 1645. In the Story of Bermuda by Hudson Strede we read: "Paynter Vale Plantation was owned by Stephen Paynter." This may still be found in Bermuda. Some of the Bullocks went to Barbadoes, on account of the persecution of Quakers; others remained in Bermuda. Mary Bullock, wife of Rene de Saint Julien, is said to have been a "great lady" of Spanish and Scottish descent, reputed to have been very wealthy and beautiful. Rene is said to have been a giant in stature with red hair, a quick temper, and an indomitable will, a Presbyterian of the strictest form who particularly disliked the Quaker testimony against war and slavery! Their attitudes must sometimes have conflicted. Some of their descendants in North Carolina became Quakers. Descendants of Rene and Mary Bullock Julien include many statesmen, teachers, ministers, lawyers, and doctors from the beginning, as well as some without benefit of education, but all have been people of character." Records from Columbia, South Carolina Office of Historical Commission It is not known for sure if her name was Mary or Margaret or both. From the records of Columbia, South Carolina Historical Commission is taken the following quote. "Mary is said to have been a 'great lady' of Spanish and Scottish descent, reputed to have been very wealthy and beautiful." Also in the same book, "Rene' de St. Julien stopping in Bermuda married Mary Bullock." In land transactions the name most often used is Margaret Julien. Julian Family Julian became a first family of Back Creek Valley when a father and his sons settled near present-day Gainsboro. Patriarch Rene Julian was allegedly born about 1660 in France. After the Edict of Nantes was revoked by Louis XIV in 1685, he went to Holland for a period, and then to England. A family researcher reported that he fought in the Battle of the Boyne River in Ireland in July 1690, he was granted land beyond the Mississippi (River) by King William of England. Family tradition says that he sought to claim his land in America during the 1690s, but stopped first in Bermuda where he met and married Mary Bullock, daughter of a sea captain named Stephen Bullock. Rene and his wife immigrated to South Carolina in 1700, Where they lived until about 1716. Two infant children died in South Carolina, and the Julians decided to search for a more moderate climate. Their next move was to Bohemia Manor in Cecil County, Maryland. When they heard about land openings West of the Blue Ridge Mountains, they joined other pioneer settlers who migrated from Cecil County to Orange County, Virginia, about 1736 or 1737. Rene Julian and four of his sons settled in the vicinity of Gainesboro, above the fork of Back Creek and Hoge's Creek. Rene died circa 1745, which was four years before the Fairfax surveyors developed plats for first settlers on Frederick County lands. Therefore, Rene Julian, Sr. did not receive a Fairfax grant. An entry in Frederick County Court Order Book I, dated October 12, 1744, contains a petition that Rene Julian, Sr. be declared levy free, or waived from paying taxes because he is "Aged and infirm and an Object of Charity." Tradition says that Rene Julian, Sr. was affiliated with the Presbyterian Church, and that he was buried in the Opequon Presbyterian Cemetery at Kernstown. If that is correct, no grave marker has survived to identify his burial plot. Tradition also says that the patriarch disliked the Quaker religion. Had the Julians remained in Back Creek Valley, they would have lived in the center of a Quaker settlement. Children of Rene and Mary (Bullock) Julian were: 1. Stephen Julian was born circa 1702 in South Carolina. He first married Allatha Bouchelle (who died in April 1743), daughter of Samuel and Allatha Bushelle. After her death in April 1743, in Frederick County, Maryland, Stephen married second to Ann Hedges, widow (?) of William Hedges, on July 14, 1743. Stephen staked out land adjoining his brother, John Julian, in Back Creek Valley, in 1754. It is believed that Stephen retained his residence in Prince Georges/Frederick County, Maryland while owning land in Frederick County, Virginia. Stephen was alive in 1770 when his son, Isaac Julian (1741-1839), paid a fee to Fairfax for 31 acres in Back Creek Valley. The record stated that Stephen was "too old and infirm to attend" the settlement, and was represented by his son Isaac. The Fairfax grant was made in the name of Stephen Julian, dated February 27, 1770. At least three sons of Stephen settled in Ohio, and their descendants are documented. 2. George Julian was born in 1706 in Berkeley County, South Carolina, and died September 1781, in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina in Camden District, York County, South Carolina). George came to Frederick County with his family in 1736-1737, and settled a couple of miles Northwest of Gainesboro. His first tract of land was somewhat hilly, and included the site that later became Gainesboro Elementary School. The 400-acre grant was issued by Lord Fairfax, _____2, 1750. George married Martha Denton circa 1727. In December 1758, he sold his land in Frederick County, and resettled in Randolph County, North Carolina, where relatives and other residents of Frederick County had fled the French and Indian War. In 1776, he moved to Mecklenburg County, where he died in 1781. His widowwas to have married second to a Mr. Black. Many of George's descendants were settled in Tennessee by 1815. 3. Rene Julian, Jr. was born circa 1710 and died after 1761. It is believed that he came to Frederick County during the 1730s, and lived near his brothers. Rene, Jr. staked out land adjoining Jesse Julian and George Julian, but did not receive a Fairfax grant. He witnessed a petition in 1750 for Captain Jeremiah Smith to receive personal land from Lord Fairfax. Rene, Jr. was in Frederick County as late as 1761, when he and Jesse Pugh witnessed a land transaction at Forks of Capon, Hampshire County. One source says Rene, Jr. went to South Carolina and Georgia, and served in the Revolutionary War. If this is correct, he would have been 65 years old when the war started and 73 when the war ended. It is very unlikely that a person would have served as a soldier at those ages. Nothing more is known about him at this time. 4. Mary Julian was born in 1712 in South Carolina. She married John Thompson, Jr., son of Colonel John and Judith (Herman) Thompson, on September 19, 1734, in Saint Stephen's Parish, Cecil County, Maryland. They had one son, Samuel Thompson. This family remained in Maryland. 5. Peter Julian was born in 1714, and died in 1806 in Newberry County, South Carolina, of suicide. He owned land at the intersection of Hoge's Creek and present-day U. S. Route 522. Peter first married Mary Bailes (Baels), and secondly to Ann Brothers. Peter had a son, Peter Julian, Jr., who married Ruth Pugh, daughter of Azariah and Hannah (Baels) Pugh. Peter Jr.'s children intermarried with former Back Creek Valley Quaker families, and three of his four sons settled in Ohio about 1810. 6. Isaac Julian was born on December 30, 1716 in Cecil County, Maryland, and died July 8, 1778, in Randolph County, North Carolina. He married Barbara White, daughter of Robert and Margaret (Hoge) White, September 10, 1741, in Frederick County, Virginia. Isaac received a Fairfax grant for 414 acres, January 8, 1752. The land was located along Hoges Creek, near the intersection of U.S. Route 522, adjoining his brother Peter Julian, Isaac sold this farm to James Magill on February 3, 1755. 7. Jacob Julian was born circa 1718, and died March 25, 1747, one day after writing his Will in Prince Georges County, Maryland. He married Catherine Hedges, daughter of Joseph Hedges, on February 2, 1743-1744. Catherine was first married to Thomas Shepherd. After Jacob's death, she married a third time, to Colonel Joseph Wood, September 11, 1749. There is no record of Jacob owning land in Back Creek Valley, nor evidence of living descendants. But Wood was an early and transient name in Back Creek Valley. 8. John Julian was born circa 1720 in Cecil County, Maryland. He came to Frederick County about 1737, and resettled in Randolph County, North Carolina about 1760. In January 1743, he was summoned to be a constable for Captain Jeremiah Smith's precinct in Frederick County but his brother, George Julian, took his place in March 1743. John died sometime between 1762 and 1779, based on a 1779 Frederick County land record stating that his John's widow Elizabeth was married second to (Thomas) Allred.

More About M
ARY MARGARET BULLOCK:
Burial: Opequon Cemetery,Frederick Co., Winchester, Virginia
     
Children of R
ENE JULIEN and MARY BULLOCK are:

i. INFANT3 JULIEN, b. Abt. 1696, Berkley County, South Carolina; d. Abt. 1698, Berkley County, South Carolina.


ii. INFANT JULIEN, b. Abt. 1698, Berkley County, South Carolina; d. Abt. 1698, Berkley County, South Carolina.


3. iii. STEPHEN JULIEN, b. 1701, Santee River, Charleston, South Carolina; d. Abt. 1773, Frederick County, Maryland.
4. iv. GEORGE JULIEN, b. March 01, 1709/10, Bohemia Manor, Cecil County, Maryland; d. September 1781, Creek Meeting House, Dorchester, South Carolina.
5. v. CAPTAIN PETER JULIEN, b. 1712, Cecil County, Maryland; d. 1806, Newberry, Newberry County, South Carolina.
6. vi. JOHN JULIEN, b. 1713, Bohemia Manor, Cecil County, Maryland; d. 1787, Randolph County, North Carolina.
7. vii. MARY JULIEN, b. 1714, Cecil County, Maryland; d. 1747, Frederick County, Maryland.
8. viii. ISAAC JULIEN, b. December 13, 1716, St. Ann's Parish, Cecil County, Maryland; d. July 08, 1778, Randolph County, North Carolina.
9. ix. RENE JULIEN, b. 1718, Cecil County, Maryland; d. July 08, 1778, Charleston, South Carolina.
10. x. JACOB JULIEN, b. 1720, Bohemia Mannor, Cecil County, Maryland; d. March 1746/47, Frederick County, Maryland.
xi. RUTH JULIEN, b. 1724, Bohemia Manor, Cecil County, Maryland; d. Grove Hill, Clarke County, Alabama; m. ELIJAH PUGH.