Graves Pack's second wife, Sarah, was such an interesting Colonial Williamsburg lady that she merits a page all of her own.
If you examine Sarah Packe's Web page, it will become obvious as to why this lineage is uncertain.
An article in the William and Mary Quarterly states that Mary and Graves had but one child who died in infancy. Graves, Justice of the Peace in York co. later married a Sarah. It was noted that they had one son, Graves, who died at the age of 18 in a boating accident.
The following information about Samuel Pack and his son, Samuel Pack, Jr. was copied from MY PACK FAMILY GENEALOGY by Carol Pack Urban:
"...Samuel wandered into this region from Tidewater, Virginia and in 1763 was trapping with Swope and Pitman on New River. A son was Samuel, Jr. who settled on that stream. The Packs were large slave holders and owned much of New River Bottom from the mouth of the Greenbrier up to and around the mouth of the Bluestone. Source: A History of Monroe County, West Virginia by Oren F. Morton, p388. (Condensed version.)
The ancestor of Samuel Pack (Jr) was a hunter and trapper with Swope and Pitman, and the first heard of him was at the mouth of Indian, and discovering Indian signs, went to the settlements to inform the settlers, and reached there too late but it led to and resulted in the fight of Capt. Paul with the Indians at the island at the mouth of Indian known as Turkey Creek; this in 1763. (This ancestor was his father, Samuel Pack, Sr.) Source: History of Summers County, West Virginia by Judge James H. Miller, p447, 1st ed 1908, repr 1981. (Condensed version.)
"A HISTORY OF MIDDLE NEW RIVER SETTLEMENTS AND CONTIGUOUS TERRITORIES" by
DAVID E. JOHNSTON, author of
"FOUR YEARS A SOLDIER," (Published in 1906 by Standard PTG. & Pub. Co. in Huntington, W. Va..) states:
Also, please see Libby's Genealogy, the Web site of my seventh cousin, Libby Preston.
Isaac Glass Young is the nephew of my 5x great-grandfather, Robert Young, Jr..
Their daughter, Frances Louise Young, was my maternal grandmother.
"A TRIBUTE
published in the pages of
THE BLUEFIELD DAILY TELEGRAPH
BLUEFIELD, WEST VIRGINIA
NOV 14 1966
Memorial Obituary
Entered into Eternal Rest
Saturday, Nov. 12, 1966
MRS. FRANCES YOUNG
Mrs. Frances Young, 47 of Lerona, died Saturday night at her home. Death was attributed to natural causes.
She was born at Bellepoint, and was a member of Bellpoint Methodist Church. She was the wife of Zed Young.
Additional survivors include four daughters, Mrs. Marjorie Keats of St. Johns, Newfoundland, Mrs. Neba Blakenship of Athens and Mary and Nancy Young of Lerona; three sons, Melvin, William Lee and Jerry Ray Young of Lerona; five sisters, Mrs. Norma Lilly of Radford, Mrs. Glenna Bennett of Morgantown, Mr. Irene Meador of Speedway and Mrs. Doyle Cook and Mrs....abeth Allen of Hinton.
Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Rocky Mount Church at Pipestem, with burial to follow in Farley Cemetery.
Friends may call at Bailey Funeral Home of Princeton after noon Monday."
"...Isaac is a Patriot through taking the Oath of Allegiance and his sons Joseph and John, along with their Uncle James, all served as Privates in the American Revolution...." He is a patriot ancestor from a proven DAR line.
"Jonathan Wiseman[, grandson of Isaac Wiseman,] was an early Baptist minister around Castalian Springs. His father, John Wiseman, was also an early Baptist minister. The [Jonathan Wiseman] Bible is in the possession of Eugenia Rawlins, a granddaughter of Elizabeth Ann and James Monroe Spillman, who resides in Lancaster, Texas." Records from it are available on the World Wide web.
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