Sunday, June 23, 2024

#52 Ancestors 2024 Week 34 Member of the Club: The Society of the Ark and the Dove


In 1632, King Charles I made a generous grant of nearly nine million acres of land to Cecil Calvert, the son of Charles' faithful servant, George Calvert, Baron Baltimore. He called the grant Maryland, in honor of his queen, Henrietta Maria. On the 22 of November 1633, two ships--the Ark (a 400-ton merchant ship) and the Dove (a 40-ton pinnace)--set sail from the Isle of Wight carrying 140 colonists and their equipment and supplies to the new colony and Province of Maryland.  On the 25th of March 1634, the colonists landed at St. Clements Island on the north shore of the Potomac River where they planted a large cross, and Father Andrew White celebrated Mass in Thanksgiving for their safe arrival. 

And thus was Maryland born. 


That first landing was later commemorated as "Maryland Day," with band music and patriotic speeches throughout the state.  In 1910, the descendants of those pioneer Marylanders, headed by George Norbert Mackenzie, gathered in Baltimore to found The Society of the Ark and the Dove and honor the important part those early settlers played in the development of Maryland and the United States. 

The Mission Statement of the Society states that its purpose is "to perpetuate the memory of the first families of Maryland and to provide opportunities for fellowship for all those who trace their descent from Lord Baltimore and from those who came on the Ark and the Dove in 1634 to settle the Proprietary Province of Maryland."  The Society encourages research in early Maryland history and supports institutions such as the St. Clement's Island-Potomac River Museum, Historic St. Mary's City, and the Maryland Center for History and Culture (formerly the Maryland Historical Society). 

Along with a number of my cousins, I am a member of the Society, being descended from two of those original Adventurers, as they are known: Governor Leonard Calvert (son of George Calvert, Baron Baltimore) and Governor Thomas Greene. 

Since I have previously written about my 9X-great grandfather, Leonard Calvert, I want to focus here on my ancestry through Governor Greene. As it happens, both my mother and my father are descended from Governor Greene.

Thomas Greene was born about 1609 in Bobbing, Kent, England, the son of Sir Thomas Greene and Lady Margaret Webb. As indicated above, the Catholic Greene was a passenger on the Ark in 1634, and like many of the other passengers was looking for freedom to practice his religion, in addition to the lure of land holding.  On landing in Maryland, Greene married fellow passenger Ann Cox, one of the few women on board. This may even have been the first official marriage in Maryland. Thomas and Ann had two sons--Thomas and Leonard--before Ann's death about 1638.  

Thomas married secondly about 1643 Winifred Seybourne and had two sons with her: Robert and Francis, my 8X-great grandfather. After Greene's death, Winifred married Robert Clarke. 

The map at the left shows Thomas Greene's holding in St. Mary's City although he had other property including a plantation named Bobbing, after his home in England. 

Greene served in the General Assembly from 1637 to 1650. In 1647, on his deathbed, Governor Leonard Calvert appointed Thomas Greene to take over as Governor, an office which he held for a year. 

Thomas Greene died in St. Mary's County in 1652.

Thomas's son Francis, born about 1648, married Elizabeth Giles in Charles County MD. They had children: Leonard, Verlinda, Francis, Clare (my 7X-great grandmother) and Giles, all born at Green's Inheritance. Francis died in Charles County in 1708 leaving a will which named his wife and children. 

Clare Green, born about 1681, married Jacob Clements, and had children with him: Edward, Jacob, Walter, John, Charles, Francis (my 6x-great grandfather), Martha, Clare, Elizabeth and Jane. Jacob Clements died in Charles County MD in 1755, leaving a will.  Clare was still living after Jacob's death. 

Francis Clements, born about 1699, married Elizabeth Sanders about 1720 in Charles County MD. They had children: Henrietta (my 5x-great grandmother), George, John, Francis, Thomas, Henry, Mary, 
Martha, Priscilla, Benedicta and Elizabeth. Francis Clements died in 1758, leaving a will. 

Henrietta Clements, born about 1721 in Charles County MD, married Thomas Dyer, the son of Patrick Dyer and Comfort Barnes, in 1738 in Prince George's County MD. They had children: Edward, Francis Clements (my 4x-great grandfather), Giles Greene, Elizabeth, Jeremiah, Henry, Walter, George, and Thomas. Henrietta Clements Dyer died in Prince George's County MD in 1777.

Francis Clements Dyer, born at Stone Hill in 1746, married Ann Clarkson, the daughter of Thomas Clarkson and Sarah Blandford, in Prince George's County MD in 1774.  They had children: John Ethelred, William Clarkson, Margaretta, James Corbin, Loretta, Maria, Ann Eliza (my 3x-great grandmother on my father’s side), and Sarah Ann (also my 3x-great grandmother on my mother’s side). Francis Clements Dyer died in Prince George's County MD in 1808.

Ann Eliza Dyer, born in 1791, married John Hilleary Gwynn, the son of Bennett Gwynn and Susanna Hilleary, in Prince George's County MD 8 February 1820.  They had children: Susan Ann Maria, Margaret Emily, Bennett Francis, Ann Eliza, Celestia, Harriett Clotilda, John Dyer, and Andrew Jackson (my 2x-great grandfather), about whom I have previously written. Ann Eliza Gwynn Dyer died in 1855. John Hilleary Gwynn died in 1857. Both are buried in St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery in Piscataway, Prince George's County MD.

Sarah Ann Dyer, born in 1793, married John Gwynn Summers, in a double ceremony with her sister on 8 February 1820.  They had children: Anna Maria, John Francis (my 2x-great grandfather), Cecelia Isabella, Christiana, and Priscilla. Sarah Ann Dyer Summers and John Francis Summers both died in Prince George's County in 1873. Both are buried in Old St.Peter's Cemetery in Waldorf, Charles County MD. 




Wednesday, June 19, 2024

#52 Ancestors 2024 Week 42 Full House: Alexander Penn Hill


 The topic of Full House could cover a lot of families in my ancestry, but for this blog, I'm going to focus on a line I haven't written about before: the family of my 2X-great grandfather, Alexander Penn Hill of Prince George's County MD.

Alexander Penn Hill was the second of five children of Joseph Benedict Hill and Sarah Darnall Heiskell, born 12 October 1823 at his father's estate, Prospect Hill, in Prince George's County MD. He was the grandson of Revolutionary War patriot, Captain Henry Darnall Hill, Jr. 

Alexander married Mary Elizabeth Childs, the daughter of Samuel Childs and Elizabeth Ann Lamar, 26 April 1845 in Prince George's County MD.  By the time of the 1850 Census, Alexander and Mary Eliza, living next to Alexander's parents, had three children: Sarah Elizabeth (1846), Samuel Childs (1848) and Joseph Benedict (1850). The Census also showed 11 enslaved people in Alexander's household, ranging in age from 90 to 8 years old. 

The 1860 Census showed the Hills living in the Brandywine District of Prince George's County with eight children: Sarah (14), Samuel (12), Joseph (10), Peter (8), Mary (6), Alexander (4), Ann, my great-grandmother and namesake (1) and Alfred (2). Alexander Hill was a planter. 

Although he shows up on the Army's draft records in 1863 in Prince George's County, I have no record that he ever served in the military. 

In 1864, Alexander administered his father's estate and inherited part of Prospect Hill, which he named Moss Side

In 1870, the 48-year-old farmer was living in the Nottingham District, with six of his children: Joseph (19), Mary (16), Regina Ann (12), Alexander (10), Emily (8), and Robert E. Lee (6). His real estate was valued at $2525. 

In the 1880 Census, Alexander, farmer and planter, age 58, was again shown in the Brandywine District with his wife and four children: Mary (23) with a note that she suffered from "nervous prostration," Emily (17), Alexander (19) clerk in a store, Robert E.L. (15) attending school. 

Mary Elizabeth Childs Hill died in Prince George's County 7 August 1885. 

Although the 1890 Census record is missing, the 1890 Directory for the District of Columbia shows Alexander Hill with a business at 1338 F Street NW and an occupation of "real estate." 

Alexander Penn Hill died of pneumonia in the District at the home of his son, Peter Henry Hill, 12 December 1898, at the age of 75. He was a devout Catholic. 








Both Alexander and Mary Elizabeth Hill are buried at St. Ignatius Cemetery in Oxon Hill. 













Children of Alexander Penn Hill and Mary Elizabeth Childs:

1. Sarah Elizabeth Hill (1846-1935). Married Thomas Sprigg Blandford in 1865 and had six children with him: Alexander Hill, Elenora, Bertha Blandine, Richard Gantt, Caroline, and Thomas Sprigg.

2. Samuel Childs Hill (1848-1928).  Married first Lillian Bowie in 1874 and had nine children with her: William Alexander, Ann Bowie, Samuel Childs, Lillie May, Lillie May, Ellen Ann, Peter Henry Heiskell, Rosa Bowie, and William Bowie. He married secondly Emma in 1895. He was a real estate broker in the District. In 1893, he received a patent for an improvement in railroad spikes. 



3. Joseph Benedict Hill (1850-ca. 1930). Married Mary MNU about 1879 and had one son with her, Richard S. Hill.  In 1930, the widowed Joseph Benedict Hill was living at the John Dickson Memorial Home in the District of Columbia. 

4. Peter Henry Hill (1852-1893). He married Nora Mary Young in 1873 at Gisborough Manor and had nine children with her: Nora May, Rosalie Clifton, Ignatius Fenwick, Clementina Carroll, Theresa, Louise, Peter Henry, Margaret Mary and Elizabeth Livingston.  He was a broker for a flour mill. 

5.  Mary Hester (Mamie) Hill (1854-1904.  She never married.  She is buried at St. Ignatius with her parents.

6. Alfred Hill (1857-?).  Shown in Alexander Hill household in 1860.  No further information. Probably died young.

7. Mary Regina Ann Hill (1858-1932).  My great-grandmother, for whom I was named. She married John Kostka Summers (about whom I have previously written) at Holy Rosary Church in Cheltenham, Prince George's County MD 28 October 1878 and had fifteen children with him: John Lamar, John Kostka, Emily Louise, Alexander Hill, Joseph Mary, Mary Joseph (twins), Eliza Mary, Regina Agnes, Gretchen, Mildred Elizabeth, Dorothy Lucile, Paul Francis (my grandfather), Olin Jerome, Emily Ruth, and Michael Jerome. 

AP Hill Jr.

8. Alexander Penn Hill Jr. (1860-1915). He married Mary Katherine Munro in the District of Columbia in 1883.  They had no children.  He moved to Seattle WA about 1900 where he was an insurance salesman.  He died by suicide. 




9.Emily Riddle Hill (1862-1959).  She married George Washington Young in 1887 at Rosaryville Chapel, Prince George's County and moved to Milwaukee WI shortly after.  They had six children with him: Robert Lee, Joseph Casanave, Joseph Nicholas, Parke George, George Washington, and Johanna Howle.  George Washington Young was a well-known patent attorney who helped patent the Evinrude outboard, and the Harley-Davidson motorcycle among other things. 

10. Robert E. Lee Hill (1864-1934). He never married.  He worked as a farm manager for his cousin, Jesse Heiskell in Prince George's County.  He is buried at St. Ignatius with his parents. 



Thursday, June 13, 2024

#52 Ancestors 2024 Week 36 "We Don't Talk About It" : The Sisters I never knew

 When anyone asks about my birth family, I would normally say that I am the oldest of six siblings, three girls and three boys.  But actually, that is not the whole story.  There were two more sisters, born 6 November 1955, died the same day--Catherine and Elizabeth Scrivener.  Of course, I never met these sisters, but they have always been part of the family even if not always acknowledged. It wasn't that we didn't want to acknowledge them, just that they didn't really seem part of our lives since we never actually met them. My mother, however, certainly never forgot them.  

I was seven and in the second grade when Catherine and Elizabeth were born.  My younger sisters were four and two respectively.  What I remember about that time was that my mother was away from home, and I was sent to stay with my grandmother Scrivener, having no idea of the sad story taking place at Mercy Hospital in Baltimore. My sisters were sent to stay with one of our Aunts and Uncles. My memory of that mainly revolves around my grandmother making cinnamon toast for breakfast, a treat I have always been fond of. I'm sure no one wanted to burden my seven-year-old self with the death of my siblings, so it was just never discussed. 

Catherine and Elizabeth were baptized at the hospital and buried with their great-grandparents--Frank and Louise Gwynn Scrivener--at New Cathedral Cemetery. 

Although I had little knowledge or curiosity about these sisters when I was a child, as an adult, I often wondered what happened to them in the next life, in which I firmly believe.  Would they grow up?  Would they stay as infants?  Would they be pure spirits?  I like to think they have looked kindly on their siblings and offered support to us in living our lives here even if we remained oblivious to them.  

Although the twins were buried in Baltimore, we later moved from the city to a more rural location and my mother was anxious to move these daughters to the cemetery where my father was buried and where she would later be buried.  We finally did get the permits in order and moved the tiny coffins to a new resting place at Our Lady of the Fields where they lie next to their parents. 


Many years after the death of these twins, I was pregnant with twins, and it was then that I discovered some of the depth of my mother's feeling about these children.  My mother had driven me to my appointment with my obstetrician where he announced that I was going to have twins. (Keeping in mind that sonograms were not routine at the time, this announcement came some seven or eight months into my pregnancy and took everyone by surprise.)  When my mother heard that, she left me sitting in the waiting room and insisted on seeing my doctor. She was extremely worried that my twins would suffer the same fate as hers.  My doctor reassured her that the twins were quite healthy and not at risk.  (In fact, they weighed in at a hefty close-to-eight-pounds each.) 

While I don't have any actual pictures of these sisters, I did make a collage in honor of these sisters waiting for me in eternity. I imagine meeting these bright spirits at some future date.