William MATHEWS

Male 1755 - 1845  (90 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  William MATHEWS was born in 1755 in Greenbriar County, Virginia (son of RS Moses MATHEWS and Sarah FINDLEY); died in 1845 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in Mathews Family Graveyard, Lincoln County, Georgia.

    William married Alice GAITHER in Lincoln County, Georgia. Alice was born about 1770; died in 1818 in Lincoln County, Georgia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Female MATHEWS was born about 1812.
    2. Female MATHEWS was born about 1813.
    3. JohnSr MATHEWS was born about 1814; died about 1882.
    4. Philip MATHEWS was born about 1815.
    5. James MATHEWS was born about 1816.
    6. Edward Gaither MATHEWS was born on 24 Feb 1817 in Wilkes County, Georgia; died on 18 Oct 1903 in Meriwether County, Georgia; was buried in Mathews Cemetery, Meriwether County, Georgia.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  RS Moses MATHEWS was born in 1725 in Halifax County, Virginia (son of Issac Edward MATHEWS and Mary MATHEWS); died in 1806 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in buried in a churchyard near his home in Lincoln County, Georgia.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ from James Ham & Family at<>

    Moses Mathews was a gunsmith and maker of fine guns.
    From: "A Genealogical History of the Mathews Family from a Remote Period to the Present Time" as compiled by Dr. James C. Mathews (now deceased), Greenville, Georgia. "Moses Mathews was born in Virginia in 1725. In 1753/54 he married Sarah Finley. Their first child James was born in Virginia in 1755. He moved his wife and firstborn to Winfield County, South Carolina and settled on the Broad River near Winsboro. In 1760/61 he bought a tract of land where he later built a gun shop where he could repair and manufacture guns. During the Revolutionary War his shop became a Government shop for the Colonial Government. He made and repaired guns for General Sumpter's command. Just before the end of the war his home was raided by the Tories. His stock of horses was stolen and his home, gun shop, his shop books, accounts, and family records were burned. He may not have been fully paid for his services and for materials furnished during the war. There is an account against the Government for $18,000.00 which was never fully paid. The only payment he ever received was a land grant of several hundred acres in then Wilkes County, (now Lincoln County) Georgia. In 1784 he was granted 270 acres on Lloyd's Creek. He built a home here with his family where he conducted a large farming interest until his death in 1806. He was one of the wealthiest men in Georgia in his day. He and his wife, along with other family members, are buried in a churchyard near his home.
    From "Roster of Revolutionary Soldiers in Georgia" compiled by Mrs. Howard H. McCall, published by the Georgia Society Daughters of the American Revolution, 1968: "Moses Mathews, b. Halifax Co., Va., 1725; d. Wilkes Co., Ga.1806. Was a Rev. Sol.; served as a gunsmith in Gen. Sumpter's S.C. Regiment; received grant of land in Ga. for his service. Mar. in Va.,Sarah Findley."

    NOTE 2./ Will of Moses Mathews is as follows: March 13, 1806, Crawford County, Georgia
    <>

    "In the name of God Amen: I Moses Mathews of the State of Georgia and county of Lincoln being weak of body but of sound mind and perfect memory and knowing the uncertainty of life and the certainty of death do constitute this my last Will and Testament in manner and form following.
    ITEM. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Sally Mathews my house and land on the North side of Loyds Creek, two Negroe fellows named Bob and Pompey and two Negroe women named Denna and Jane for her comfort during her natural life to be disposed of at the discretion of my executors and two honest hearts of her choice and after her decease the above named Negro Bob to devolve to my son James Mathews and the above named Negroe Pompey to my daughter Polly Ware,wife of Nicholas Ware. I give to my son Jesse one Negroe woman named Jane after my wife's death.
    ITEM. I give and bequeath to Sally Smith the wife of Henry Smith, one Negroe boy named Jack. I give my son William one girl Hannah.
    ITEM. I give and bequeath to my son Phillip Mathews one Negroe fellow named Will.
    ITEM. I give and bequeath to my son Moses Mathews five hundred dollars to be paid after his mother's decease or sooner if circumstances will admit the money to be raised by the hire of two Negroes named Jack and Will and all the money made over and above supporting my wife Sally Mathews yearly to go towards the payment of the above mentioned five hundred dollars till paid with all the livestock that can be spared by discretion of the here in after mentioned executors.
    ITEM. I will and bequeath to my son Moses one feather bed of furniture.
    ITEM. I will and bequeath that all my lands should be equally divided among my three sons Moses, William and Jesse Mathews agreeable to quantity and quality.
    ITEM. I will that my wife should live peaceable on the plantation whereby she now lives during her life. ITEM. I will and bequeath that after the death of my wife Sally Mathews that all the stock that may be on this plantation may be sold with all the household furniture and all my tools and the money to be equally divided between James and Phillip Mathews, Sally Smith and Polly Ware. I will that Bob and Pompey should be hired after the death of my wife and the money go towards the payment of the within five hundred dollars. I do hereby constitute and appoint my sons James Mathews and Nicholas Ware Executors to this my last Will and Testament. In Witness where of I have set my hand and this 13th day of March and in the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Six. Signed Sealed and Delivered Moses Mathews Assigns and Acknowledges in the Presence of Benjamin Samuel Issac Essy William Griffin. The Original Will as has been proven in Open Court William Harper C.C.O.

    NOTE 3./
    Wilkes County was created in 1777 as one of the original 11 counties of Georgia.
    The original Wilkes (in some old records Wilks) County included all of the area now in Lincoln, Elbert, and Wilkes Counties; most of Oglethorpe,, Madison, Taliaferro and Warren Counties; half of Hart County, and parts of Clarke, Glascock, Greene Hancock , and McDuffie Counties, and of course present day Wilkes County. The County seat of Wilkes County is Washington.

    NOTE 4./
    DAR Patriot Lookup: Reference Code RFTYZXK:
    Matthews Sr., Moses
    Birth: VA 1725
    Service: SC
    Rank: Civil Service
    Death: GA 1806
    Patriot Pensioned: No Widow Pensioned: No
    Children Pensioned: No Heirs Pensioned: No
    Spouse: (1) Sarah Findley

    RS married Sarah FINDLEY in 1748 in Halifax County, Virginia. Sarah was born in 1728 in Virginia; died after 1806 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in buried in a churchyard near his home in Lincoln County, Georgia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah FINDLEY was born in 1728 in Virginia; died after 1806 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in buried in a churchyard near his home in Lincoln County, Georgia.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ Wilkes County was created in 1777 as one of the original 11 counties of Georgia.
    The original Wilkes (in some old records Wilks) County included all of the area now in Lincoln, Elbert, and Wilkes Counties; most of Oglethorpe,, Madison, Taliaferro and Warren Counties; half of Hart County, and parts of Clarke, Glascock, Greene Hancock , and McDuffie Counties, and of course present day Wilkes County. The County seat of Wilkes County is Washington.

    Children:
    1. Rev JamesSr Newton MATHEWS was born on 15 Oct 1750 in Greenbrier County, Virginia; died on 05 Sep 1828 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in Mathews Fam. Cem, Lincoln Co., Georgia.
    2. MosesJr MATHEWS was born about 1753 in Buckingham County, Virginia; died about 1833 in Roanoke, Stewart County, Georgia; was buried in Wesley Chapel, Georgia.
    3. 1. William MATHEWS was born in 1755 in Greenbriar County, Virginia; died in 1845 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in Mathews Family Graveyard, Lincoln County, Georgia.
    4. RS Philip MATHEWS was born in 1760 in Buckingham County, Virginia; died in 1847 in Roberts, Crawford County, Georgia; was buried in Providence Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery Crawford Co, GA.
    5. Jesse MATHEWS was born about 1764 in Wilkes County, Georgia; died about 1866 in Crawford County, Georgia.
    6. SarahSally MATHEWS was born in 1766 in Wilkes County, Georgia.
    7. Mary "Polly" MATHEWS was born in 1768 in Wilkes County, Georgia; died in Sep 1802 in Augusta County, Georgia.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Issac Edward MATHEWS was born about 1700 in King and Queen County, Virginia (son of Thomas MATHEWS and UNKNOWN); died on 19 Sep 1769 in Halifax County, North Carolina.

    Notes:

    LDS AFN: P50J-K6
    The will of Isaac Mathis is will number 38, page 225, Will Book #1, 1758-1774 in Halifax County, North Carolina. In it he mentions his son Samuel, son Reaps, sons Robert and Peter, wife Mary, and Thomas, Jean, Isaac, Mary, Sarah, and daughter Susanna Humphris. It has son Isaac and son-in-law Samuel Davis as executors. It does not mention son Moses but if he was the eldest he had already moved to South Carolina so would not necessarily be mentioned.

    From "The History of Gwinnett County, Georgia":

    "The Mathews family," according to C. H. Ward, genealogist, "has a history dating back to Sir Ivan, 12th Lord of Cardigan, of Oril College, Oxford, England who married Cecily, daughter of Sir Robert de Clare, who was the second son of Richard, 4th Earl of Hertford and his wife Amecia, sister of Isabel, wife of King John of England, and a descendant of Adelaide, sister of William the Conqueror. Sir Mathew, son of Sir Ivan, born about 1360, was knighted during the reign of Richard II (1382-1399) and his descendants are those who bear the name of Mathews in any of its varied forms."
    "Captain, General, Governor Samuel Mathews, third son of Archbishop Tobias Mathews of Oxford, came to Virginia in 1622. Mary Mathews, daughter of Captain Samuel Mathews of Virginia, married Isaac Mathews, a grest-grandson of John Mathews of Milton and their son, Thomas Mathews, born in Virginia in 1726, came to South Carolina in 1767 and died there in 1831."

    Isaac Edward Mathews and his wife Mary Mathews were distant cousins; Gov. Mathews was an ancestor of Mary. Their lineage converges in Sir Mathew ap Evan, Knight, b. 1368, Llandaff Court, Glamorgan, Wales, d. 1419, Glamorgan, Wales, married to Jenet Fleming. Their son Sir Dafydd Mathew, Knight, married to Gwendoline Hebert, is the direct ancestor of Isaac. His brother Sir Robert Mathew, married to Alice Thomas, is the direct ancestor of Mary.

    Issac married Mary MATHEWS about 1723 in King & Queen County, Virginia. Mary (daughter of Captain Samuel MATHEWS and Elizabeth BRAXTON) was born in 1702 in Richmond County, Virginia; died on 10 Sep 1782 in Old Charles City, South Carolina. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary MATHEWS was born in 1702 in Richmond County, Virginia (daughter of Captain Samuel MATHEWS and Elizabeth BRAXTON); died on 10 Sep 1782 in Old Charles City, South Carolina.

    Notes:

    Samuel((4)) (John((3)), Samuel((2)), Samuel((1))) married several times. In Essex records, 1720, there is a bond dated 1706 from Samuel Mathews, of St. Stephen's parish, King and Queen County, to Major George Braxton for the benefit of Elizabeth Mary Mathews((5)), "whom I had by my deceased wife." In Samuel Mathews' will (November 16, 1718), proved in Richmond County, he refers to this bond as "executed" from him "the day I was married to Katherine Dunstall when I was very much in drink." By his first marriage he also had John, died s. p., Baldwin, died s. p.

    Children:
    1. Reap MATHEWS was born in 1723 in Halifax, Virginia; died in 1790.
    2. 2. RS Moses MATHEWS was born in 1725 in Halifax County, Virginia; died in 1806 in Wilkes (now Lincoln) County, Georgia; was buried in buried in a churchyard near his home in Lincoln County, Georgia.
    3. Thomas MATHEWS was born in 1726 in Halifax County, Virginia; died on 27 Jan 1786 in Laurens County, South Carolina.
    4. Samuel MATHEWS was born about 1728 in Halifax, Virginia; died before Feb 1797 in Halifax, North Carolina.
    5. Robert MATHEWS was born about 1732 in Halifax, Virginia.
    6. Peter MATHEWS was born about 1734 in Halifax, Virginia.
    7. Sarah MATHEWS was born about 1734 in Halifax, Virginia.
    8. Susannah MATHEWS was born about 1736 in Halifax, Virginia.
    9. IssacJr Edward MATHEWS was born about 1738 in Halifax County, Virginia; died on 25 Mar 1791 in Edgefield District,South Carolina; was buried in Old Calhoun Cem., Calhoun Settlement, South Carolina.
    10. Jean MATHEWS was born about 1740 in Halifax, Virginia.
    11. MaryJr MATHEWS was born about 1742 in Halifax, Virginia.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Thomas MATHEWS was born about 1670 in England (son of Captain John MATHEWS and Mary PLUMLEY); died after 1700 in Halifax County, Virginia.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./

    The Great Plague struck England in the summer of 1665.

    First, it should be understood that many epidemic diseases are constantly present in the population, with some years of significant mortality and others of only scattered occurrence. For example, the
    bubonic plague had already had noticeable outbreaks in London in 1630, 1636, and 1647, but few years were without any plague deaths. Thus, you should not dismiss a cause of death from a disease you
    usually associate with epidemics as erroneous just because it wasn't during a major outbreak.

    One of the supporting conditions of epidemics is, of course, population density. For example, the London of this period was densely populated. The one square mile within the walls of "the City"
    contained over 600,000 people. 69,596 of the 97,306 deaths in 1665 were attributed to plague, occurring in the latter half of the year. The plague continued through 1666, and some estimates say that almost
    20 percent of the population died.

    Epidemiologists are still debating why epidemics are often characterized by sudden onset and equally sudden cessation. When reading church burial registers, the genealogist may realize that the
    typical handful of entries each month has suddenly multiplied many times over, as I saw in the London register I was reading for 1665. Even when no causes of death are given, chances are that you are
    seeing the results of an epidemic, which you may want to research.

    For London, the plague basically ended when in September 1666 a fire began in a baker's shop in Pudding Lane near London Bridge. It spread westward along the Thames and northward through the City, traveling easily through the wood-timbered houses overhanging the maze of narrow streets. London burned for four days, literally to the ground in much of the city. The flea-infested rats that carried the plague were either killed or driven away. The plague also faded away outside the city soon after, typical of a plague cycle.

    Thomas married UNKNOWN. was born about 1678 in England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  UNKNOWN was born about 1678 in England.
    Children:
    1. 4. Issac Edward MATHEWS was born about 1700 in King and Queen County, Virginia; died on 19 Sep 1769 in Halifax County, North Carolina.

  3. 10.  Captain Samuel MATHEWS was born in 1685 in St. Stephens Parish, King & Queen County, Virginia (son of Captain John MATHEWS and Elizabeth TAVENOR); died in 1718 in Richmond County, Virginia.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./
    Samuel((4)) (John((3)), Samuel((2)), Samuel((1))) <> Samuel ((4)) married several times. In Essex records, 1720, there is a bond dated 1706 from Samuel Mathews, of St. Stephen's parish, King and Queen County, to Major George Braxton for the benefit of Elizabeth Mary Mathews((5)), "whom I had by my deceased wife." In Samuel Mathews' will (November 16, 1718), proved in Richmond County, he refers to this bond as "executed" from him "the day I was married to Katherine Dunstall when I was very much in drink." By his first marriage he also had John, died s. p., Baldwin, died s. p. By his second marriage he had no issue. He married, third, Margaret (who survived him, and she married William Shrime). Issue by third marriage, Francis, died s. p. Still-born child, unnamed.

    Elizabeth((5)) (Samuel((4)), John((3)), Samuel((2)), Samuel((1))) married Moseley Battaley, and in 1751 her son, Samuel Battaley, of Spottsylvania, was heir-at-law to his mother, "the only surviving heir-at-law of her father, Samuel Mathews." Deed recorded in King George, conveying 2,000 acres in Richmond County patented in 1654 by Lieutenant-Colonel Samuel Mathews, which descended to his grandson Samuel, who made his will November 16, 1718. (Quarterly, V, p. 277.)

    Captain married Elizabeth BRAXTON about 1700 in King & Queen County, Virginia. Elizabeth (daughter of George BRAXTON and Elizabeth PAULIN) was born in 1685 in Virginia; died in 1706 in Richmond County, Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Elizabeth BRAXTON was born in 1685 in Virginia (daughter of George BRAXTON and Elizabeth PAULIN); died in 1706 in Richmond County, Virginia.
    Children:
    1. 5. Mary MATHEWS was born in 1702 in Richmond County, Virginia; died on 10 Sep 1782 in Old Charles City, South Carolina.
    2. Elizabeth MATHEWS was born about 1703 in Virginia; died in 1750 in Virginia.