Abraham FIELD

Birth:
15 Oct 1661
St. Marks Parish, Culpeper, Virginia
Marriage:
Abt 1705
Culpeper, Virginia
Sources:
Field Genealogy, Vol I, by Frederick Clifton Pierce Historian and Genealogist
NewFamilySearch.org, December 2011
Notes:
                   DEATH:
    Will Date: 2 Jul 1774; Will Proven: 18 Sep 1775

NOTES:
    1. Abraham's wife parents owned a farm on James River, Virginia.
    2.  Abraham was elected vestryman by the freeholders and housekeepers of the Great Fork Church in 1744, and served until hi s death, in 1774.
    3.  He had a son, John, who represented Culpeper in the House of Burgess in 1765.
    4.   He was the Col. John Field, who served in Braddock's war, and who fell fighting gallantly at the head of his regiment, at Point Pleasant.
    5.  Abraham six sons all migrated to Kentucky, between 1780 and 1784 and most of their descendants live there.
    6. Abraham Field Sr. had a large family by two wives and held ownership of considerable land.
    7.  Abraham's Will, dated 2 July 1774, proven in court 18 September 1775, lists 4 sons, 3 daughters, and 2 grandsons as belonging to his first marriage.  One of the 2 grandsons is named Abraham.  The will names the second wife as Eleanah.
                  
Eleanor BYRD
Birth:
Abt 1690
of Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
Bef 1775
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
1708
St. Mark's Parish, Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
10 Oct 1774
Louisa, Virginia
Marr:
Abt 1742
 
Notes:
                   NAME:
    Major John FIELD
DEATH:
    Died at the Battle of Point Pleasant, Louisa County, Virginia
OCCUPATION:
    Farmer



He was in Hanover Co., VA., before 1747, where he was living when he purchased a plantation from Thomas and Eleanor Kimbow/Kimbrough in St. Martin’s Parish, Louisa Co., VA. (Louisa County was formed in 1742; and Albemarle County, where some of his children settled, was formed in 1744). (The two counties swapped land).
12 Apr 1773; from James Smith of Louisa Co., VA.
In Louise Co VA by 1768; died there and left a will  dated 17 Jan 1789, proven 12 Oct 1789.
Patriot during the Revolutionary War.
1782 Census: Single with 9 slaves. Sold 4 slaves to his son-in-law on 9 Jun 1788.
Majie says she thinks he is a descendant of Henry Field, jr.,  b 1611 in ENG. Henry Jr  immigrated to VA  in 1635.
Majie's earliest  proven FIELD ancestor.

Birth Surety:2  Taken from Field Genealogy, Vol I  by Frederick Clifton Pierce Historian and Genealogist. John Field was a Col. John Field who was born in Culpeper county, Virginia and married Anna Rogers Clark, sister of Gen. George Rogers Clark, the celebrated solider.  General Clark was born near Monticello, Albermarle county, Va., but spent his early life in Caroline county, and enjoyed some educational advantages from a noted Scotch trader, Donald Robertson, in King and Queen county. Richard Rogers lived some time in Albermarle, owning the estates known as Franklin Place , Wilton and River Bend.  He married a sister of the Rev. Thornton Rogers, of Albemarle, a lineal descendant of Giles Rogers, who emigrated from Worcestershire, England, to King and Queen county, Virginia, late in the seventeenth century.  His son John married Mary Byrd, the sister of Col. William Byrd, who obtained a grant of 7351 acres of land from Sir William Berkley , governor of the colony, on March 15 1675.  "beginning at the mouth of Shoccoe's Creek," as the deed specifies, being the present site of Richmond, Va.  This John and Mary Rogers came to Albemarle, and were the grandparents of Mrs. Anna Clarke Field and Gen. George Rogers Clarke, the famous hero of the Revolutionary war.  From his son Byrd Rogers have descended quite a number of preachers. John Field, when of proper age to obtain better advantages of education , was sent to England, where after a college course, he obtained office as ensign in the British army, in which capacity he continued until by promotion he was made full colonel of a regiment. About 1760, perhaps, his company was ordered with General Brad Braddock's defeat, in which General Braddock was killed, the command devolving upon Col. George Washington,  the colonel of Virgini a Volunteers, and saved the remnant of the army, eventually falling back to Fredericksburg. Afterwards Colonel Field was ordered to northwest Virginia to repel the invading enemy.  Afte r a march across the trackless wilderness through the Allegheny mountains he descended the Kanawha to its junction with the Ohio-now Point Pleasant.  There he built a fort, in which  his regiment and Colonel Lewis' regiment of Virginia Volunteers were subsequently attacked by numerous army of French and Indians.  In this bloody engagement Colonel Field was killed by the Indians under Cornstalk. Col. Field married Anna Clark, of Virginia, eldest sister of Gen. George Rogers Clark, and was his guardian in minority.  He was of large frame and splendid figure, six feet and four inches high, dark hair and eyes and of great endurance.  He left four daughters, Mary, Ann Elizabeth and Judith, who married Slaughter, Hill, Kelly and Dulany. It is stated also that Col. John Field, who was a lieutenant under Washington, in Braddo ck's campaign, and commanded the Virginia troops at the battle of Point Pleasant, on the Ohio river, where he defeated the French and Indians, for which his heirs were granted a large tract of land in now Bourbone county, Kentucky, by the Governor Lord Fairfax. Among other things John Field's Will states: Item  I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Anna Five Negroes, viz,: Jack and his son James, Moll, Suck and Bridgett for her to enjoy her natural life and at her disposal so that it is a our decedent I also lend all the lands on the south side of Mountain Run for her Peaceably to enjoy until my son Larkin comes of age at which time he is to have possession of the lands I purchased of my brother Daniel and my Nephew Abram Field.
Item   I give and bequeath to my daughter Elizabeth Slaughter eight Negroes, viz:   Sara h, Phill, Sydda, Kate, Kick, Daniel, and Lewis together with the increase of the said Negroe s since she has had them in possession.  ---- Item   I give and bequeath to my son John Field and his heirs and assigns forever the following slaves.:   Harry, Frank, Will, Tom, Hannah, Austin and Lewis, also my lands on the north side of Mountain Run.
Item   I give and bequeath to my daughter Anna Field and her heirs and assigns forever five Negroes viz."   Lucy, Rachael, Milly and Adam and Nell Item   I give and bequeath to my grandson John Field slaughter and his heirs forever one Negro boy named Sam.
Item    I give and bequeath to my grand-daughter Milley Slaughter and her heirs foreve r one small track of land lying on the Rapidan River called Carrafare.
Item    Whereas my son Ezekiel Field is unhappily missing and the certainty of his being dead or alive not known.  But should it please the Almighty God that he is among the living , I give and Bequeath to him and his heirs and assigns forever all my lands and stocks at th e Mountains and all my lands on the Great Thankaway together with the following slaves:--Will , Dinah, Bett, Harry, June, Joe Jacob, Isaac, Ailick, Easter, and Judy.  -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------ ------------------------------- Information copied from Encarta 98 Encyclopedia  "Clark, George Rogers (1752-1818), American soldier and frontiersman, who commanded importan t victories over British troops in the Northwest Territory during the American Revolution (17 75-1783). The brother of famed explorer William Clark, he was born near Charlottesville, Virginia. With little education, he became a surveyor while still a young man. Clark was living i n Kentucky, then part of the Virginia Colony, when the American Revolution began. He convince d the colonial government of Virginia to send aid to Kentucky settlers who were under attack from Native Americans. The British, who were supplying these Native Americans with weapons , were trying to gain control of all land west of the Appalachian Mountains. In 1777 Clark was made a lieutenant colonel in the Virginia militia. He led an expedition of 175 men against the British in the Illinois country, where he quickly captured the British forts at Kaskaskia and Cahokia (now in Illinois) and Vincennes (now in Indiana) during the summer of 1778. The British retook Vincennes, but Clark returned on a forced march of 290 km (180 Mi) to recapture the fort in February 1779. He prevented the British from reestablishing control in the region, and in 1782 he overwhelmed the Shawnee at Chillicothe (now in Ohio). His conquests allowed the United States to claim the region after the war and to develop it as the Northwest Territory after 1787. Clark later supervised the settlement of the Northwest. He completed his Memoirs in 1791 and eventually retired to his sister's home in Kentucky." Copied from Encarta 98  In 1755 the British general Edward Braddock was sent to America to take Fort Duquesne. In July, however, near the fort, a French and Native American force badly defeated Braddock's British regulars and colonial troops. The British won a small victory in Nova Scotia and repulsed an attack by French and Native American forces in New York at the Battle of Lake George i n 1755, but these were their last victories until 1758. Meanwhile, the British government sought to impose central control on the war effort in America and to compel the colonists to pay for the campaigns against Canada; these measures only alienated the Americans. For the Anglo-Americans the years (1755-1757), therefore, were distinguished by defeats and friction between British and colonial soldiers, while the French and their Native American allies won battle after battle. The expanding Northwest Territory, which was made up of the present-day states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota, was far from the markets for its gr ain and cattle. It needed such internal improvements for survival, and so supported the North east's demands for high tariffs. In return, the Northeast supported most federally financed improvements in the Northwest Copied from Encarta 98.
Clark, William (1770-1838), American explorer, Native American agent, and frontier politician , who served as co-leader, with Meriwether Lewis, of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804-180 6), the first overland exploration of the American West and Pacific Northwest. Clark was born in Caroline County, Virginia. In 1784 the Clark family moved to the Kentucky frontier, establishing a plantation called Mulberry Hill near present-day Louisville. Clark followed the powerful examples of his brothers Jonathan and George Rogers Clark, both of whom made military life the path to success. In 1789 William joined a militia company and soon became an infantry officer in the army of General Anthony Wayne. During service in the Indian wars in the Ohio Valley, Clark gained a reputation for leadership and courage. He met Meriwether Lewis at this time when Lewis served briefly in Clark's rifle company. Under General Wayne, Clark took part in the Battle of Fallen Timbers (near what is now Toledo, Ohio) in A ugust 1794, which destroyed the power of the Native Americans in Ohio. Clark also grew to b e an experienced frontier diplomat, earning Wayne's praise for a dangerous scouting mission i n 1796. When debts incurred by George threatened Clark family lands in Kentucky and Indiana , William resigned his commission and spent the next eight years defending family interests. In June 1803 Lewis asked Clark to join him as co-leader on a government-sponsored expedition through the Louisiana Territory to the Pacific Ocean. Clark was promised a captain's commission to match Lewis's rank, but bureaucratic confusion made him a lieutenant. Despite this, both Lewis and U.S. President Thomas Jefferson, who commissioned the expedition, always considered Clark an equal partner in command. As commanding officers on the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Lewis and Clark informally divided leadership responsibilities. Clark was the expedition's map maker. Years of frontier experience had taught him to understand and record intricate terrain-land, rivers, and mountains. Clark's army experience also prepared him to be the expedition's most able negotiator and diplomat, a role he played in many meetings with Native Americans. The expedition to the Pacific made Clark both famous and influential. For the rest of his life he played a key role as a federal Native American agent and territorial Copied from Encarta 98


Birth year might be about 1747?
Will proved 15 May 1775.
Dwelling: The Field Manor, St. Mark’s Parish, Culpeper Co., VA.
He probably served in Braddock’s War and who fell fighting gallantly at the head of his regiment, at the battle of Point Pleasant.
                  
2
Daniel FIELD
Birth:
1710
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
 
Marr:
 
3
Birth:
1712
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
Marr:
Abt 1751
Culpepper, Virginia 
4
William FIELD
Birth:
1715
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
12 Feb 1799
 
Marr:
 
5
Abner FIELD
Birth:
1717
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
 
Marr:
 
6
Birth:
1720
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
10 Mar 1778
Culpepper, Virginia
Marr:
Abt 1744
Culpepper, Virginia 
Notes:
                   Taken from Field Genealogy, Vol I  by Frederick Clifton Pierce Historian and Genealogist. Lieut. Henry Field was born in Culpeper county, Virginia.  It is thought that his wife died first as she was not mentioned in his Will. Will of Henry Field.-- Legatees, daughters Elizabeth and Judith Field, sister Greenwood. Dated Nov 17, 1777.  Proved in Culpeper, Va., Mar 16 1778 Revolutionary Claims, p. 90. Section I.  Be it enacted, etc., That the secretary of the treasury be and he is hereby authorized and required to pay out of any money in the treasury, not otherwise appropriated, to Francis and Judith Taylor the latter being the child and sole representatives of Henry Field (formerly a lieutenant in the Continental line of the Revolutionary army, and who died while in service) a sum, equal to the half pay of said Field as lieutenant for the term of seven years, in pursuance of the desolation of Congress of twenty-fourt h of August, 1780.  Approval June 30, 1834
                  
7
Birth:
1726
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
Bef 1788
Marr:
Abt 1749
Culpepper, Virginia 
8
Birth:
1730
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
2 Jul 1774
Culpeper, Culpepper, Virginia
Marr:
1744
of Culpeper, Virginia 
9
Birth:
1732
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
Abt 1810
Wythe, Virginia
Notes:
                   Maybe in 1763 she married John Jarvis of Washington Parish? (Ref; The Virginia Genealogist, v. 17, p. 181).
                  
10
Birth:
1734
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
11
Birth:
1736
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
Jul 1822
Louisville, Jefferson, Kentucky
12
Jenny FIELD
Birth:
1738
Culpeper, Virginia
Death:
 
Marr:
 
FamilyCentral Network
Abraham Field - Eleanor Byrd

Abraham Field was born at St. Marks Parish, Culpeper, Virginia 15 Oct 1661. His parents were Abraham Field and Mary Ironmonger.

He married Eleanor Byrd Abt 1705 at Culpeper, Virginia . Eleanor Byrd was born at of Culpeper, Virginia Abt 1690 .

They were the parents of 12 children:
John Field born 1708.
Daniel Field born 1710.
Reuben Field born 1712.
William Field born 1715.
Abner Field born 1717.
Henry Field born 1720.
Daniel Field born 1726.
Judith Agatha Field born 1730.
Elizabeth Field born 1732.
Eleanor Jane Field born 1734.
Abraham Field born 1736.
Jenny Field born 1738.

Eleanor Byrd died Bef 1775 .