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Before 1663 to Before 1711
The
following information was obtained from the efforts of Kirke Wilson, San
Francisco, California
in 1991, in his work: A Most Healthful and Pleasant Situation: The
Simpson Family in Maryland, 1688 - 1760.
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The Simpson Family in
Maryland
Simpson
was a common family name in 17th century England and Scotland and
several
Simpsons were
among the early settlers of Maryland. Between 1646 and 1680, 31
people
named Simpson arrived in Maryland. Of these, 26 were men and 5
were women.
The first
Simpson recorded in Maryland was Anslowe
who immigrated in 1646 and died
in Maryland
about 1649. The other
thirty Simpsons, the largest number of whom arrived
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during the 1660s, included 21 who were transported and
became indentured servants,
four who were servants of other immigrants, four who
immigrated, like Anslowe Simpson,
paying their own transportation as well as one indentured
servant brought from Virginia
and
one sailor. The five women named Simpson arrived in Maryland between
1664 and
1680. They all appear to have been unmarried at the time
they were transported and
presumably
all had to work as indentured servants to repay the expenses of their
transportation.50
It is possible that one of the 26 male Simpsons
was an ancestor of the
Simpson
family that lived in Old Baltimore County in the 1690s but no connection
between
the later Simpsons and the earlier arrivals has been establish
The first record of Richard Simpson is in Old Baltimore County,
Maryland in the
late
1680s. Fragmentary early
records show a Thomas Simpson living on property called
Jacob's
Point on the south side of South River in November 1676. Simpson paid
rent of
5
1/4 shillings for the 21 acre property owned by James Smith.52
The name Thomas was
commonly
used among the Maryland Simpsons and there was a long association
between
Simpson
and Smith families in Maryland but there is no evidence linking the
Jacob's
Point
Simpson of 1676 with the Richard Simpson family. Among the thirty-one
Simpsons
who
arrived in Maryland between 1646 and 1680, three were named Thomas.
These
included
one who arrived as a servant in 1649 or 1650. He may have been the
Thomas
Simpson
who arrived in St. Marys County in July 1649. The other two were
"transported"
and arrived in Maryland in 1651 and 1673. Any of the three could have
been the
Thomas Simpson at Jacobs Point in 1676.53
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In July 1688, Richard Simpson (c.
1663-1711) had 53 acres surveyed in Old
Baltimore
County. Called "Simson's
Choice", the land was at the head of Swan Creek
and
was subject to
a quitrent
of 2 shillings 1 1/2 pence. Richard Simpson's
Swan Creek
property
was occupied by "Emmanuel Smith's orphans" at the time of the
1688 survey.54
Swan
Creek is located in what is now Harford
County, Maryland approximately thirty
miles
northeast of Baltimore.55
The small creek drains a suburban area southwest
of
Havre
de Grace and
forms a sheltered cove in Chesapeake
Bay at the northeastern
corner
of Aberdeen Proving Ground. While the upper part of Swan Creek flows
through
a
steep and rocky area, the lower three miles of the creek flows through
fertile and
rolling
countryside near the bay.56
Baltimore County of
1692 had a population of approximately 500 families
scattered
along a forty mile shoreline and inland up to four miles. To govern this
large
but
thinly-populated community
of shoreline farms, the county was divided in 1692 into
three
parishes and five hundreds. St. George's Parish, was established about
1671 in the
eastern
part of Baltimore County. One of thirty original parishes of Maryland,
St.
George's
comprised the area along Chesapeake Bay from Bush River on the southwest
to
the Susquehanna
River on the Northeast and North to the boundary of the colony in
what is now
Pennsylvania.57 Spesutia
Hundred was the area northeast of Gunpowder
River to the
Susquehanna River and "as farre
as the County extends."58
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The
original parish church was called Spesutie
and was built of wood in about
1671 near Red Lion Branch of Delph
Creek at a place called "Gravelly" about a half
mile
southwest of Michaelsville.
As settlement moved inland from the bay shore,
Spesutia church was rebuilt in 1718 at a new location about four
miles away on donated
land
along the Old Post Road near the town of Ferryman.59
In 1726, St. George's
Parish
acquired 200 acres on Swan Creek to serve as a parish glebe. The Rector
of the
parish
described the land in 1851,
...it was located on
"Swan Creek" and is now the most productive land in
Harford
County.60
The
glebe land was neglected and subsequently sold. Richard Simpson
was a resident of
St.
George's Parish and Spesutia Hundred but there is no evidence that he or
his family
were
active members of Spesutia Church.61
Richard Simpson married
twice. With his first wife, whose name is not known, he
had
a son, Richard, Jr,
born sometime before 1690.62
By 1690, Richard Simpson had
married
Anne Gilbert
(c.l670-c.l715), the daughter of Spesutia Hundred neighbors
Thomas
and Elizabeth Gilbert. In 1691, Richard and Anne
Simpson had their first child,
a
son Thomas, born November 5, 1691 "near to Susquehanna
River" in St. George's
Parish,
Old Baltimore County.63
The Susquehanna River flows into Chesapeake
Bay at
Havre
de Grace and
is today the boundary between Harford County and Cecil County.
The city of
Havre de Grace, originally known as Harmer's
Town, was first laid out at the
time of the
Revolutionary War on land that slopes gently into Chesapeake Bay.
Godfrey
Harmer
owned land in the area in 1659, when he sold a parcel to Thomas Stockett.
In
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1688, Stockett
sold his land to Jacob Looten.
John Stokes bought the Looten
land in
1713, and by 1734 had acquired 619 acres, including a
property known as "Symson's
Hazard.'164
William Simpson,
one of the sons of Richard Simpson,
had sold the 100-acre
"Simpson's
Hazard" in 1726.65
Robert Young Stokes, a great-grandson of John Stokes,
laid out and named the city of Havre de
Grace in 1781. The city was
destroyed by
British troops May 3, 1813, as part of the War of 1812.
Richard Simpson and his
family were residents of Spesutia
Hundred when the
first tax lists were prepared in 1692. He appears as Richard "Sympson"
in the 1692 list,
one of 128 taxables.66
At the time, there were 51 households in Spesutia Hundred
including
nine households with a total of twenty-eight slaves and forty-two
households
without
slaves.67 In
1695, Richard Simpson was living on 150 acres of land called
"Gilbert
Adventure" owned by his father-in-law Thomas Gilbert for which he
paid an
annual
quitrent of 6
shillings.68
Although Richard Simpson and his family were farming
in
Old Baltimore County at the end of the seventeenth century when slaves
were
replacing
other forms of labor, there is no record that they owned any slaves
during the
period
between 1692 and 1706. Richard Simpson continued to live in Spesutia
Hundred
until
at least 1706.69
Thomas Gilbert, Sr.
and his son Thomas, Junior were taxpayers in
Spesutia
Hundred from before 1699 to 1706.70
Richard and Anne
Simpson had at least ten children born between 1691 and 1707
in Old
Baltimore, County. The
first four children, those born between 1691 and 1697,
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were registered as having been born on or near the Susquehanna
River. Since the births
were registered in St. George's Parish, the Simpson
family was likely to have been living
near the mouth of the river in the general vicinity of
present-day Havre de
Grace. Since
the Simpson births over a six year period are listed
together in the parish records, it is
likely that Richard Simpson and his family were not members
of the church and may
have lived several miles away.71
By 1698, Richard and Anne
Simpson appear to have
left the land near the Susquehanna River and returned to the
Swan Creek property. In
September 1698, their fifth child was born, "at the
head of Swan Creek" and Richard
Simpson was listed as "of Swan Creek."72
By 1699, the Richard
Simpson family appears to have returned to "the Bay Side
near
to the mouth of the Susquehanna River" for the birth of their sixth
child.73 The
same
"bay side" designation is
used to describe the location of the Emanuell
Smith
family.74
In 1708, the Richard Simpson family listed seven living children in the
St.
George
parish register including four sons and three daughters. From the 1708
register,
it
appears likely that Richard and Anne Simpson had a total of ten children
between
1691
and 1707 of whom three had died in infancy.75
At about the same time
that the Simpson family was registering seven children in
the
parish register, Richard Simpson was testifying in the probate of a Swan
Creek
estate.
Thomas Browne,
a planter who died January 24, 1707/8, left his Oakington
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Plantation to his son John
Browne.
Richard Simpson
was one of three neighbors
testifying.76
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Richard Simpson
died in 1711 leaving his widow Anne
Gilbert Simpson
and seven
children
between the ages of two and twenty as well as, Richard, Jr.,
an older son by a
previous
marriage. In his will, dated March 9, 1710/11, he left "...my boy
Richard
Simpson
the sum of twelve pence sterling" and specified:
"...my whole
Estate both Real and personall
be equally divided amongst
my seven Children which
I had by my last wife called Anne and that every
one of them have equall
share alike in both my land and moveable
Estate..."77
Richard
Simpson appointed his son Thomas, then twenty years old, executor of the
estate
and
guardian of the younger children. The will directed Thomas to:
"...keep the small
Children til they come to Age and to be ruled by hime
and to pay them their
equall portion as they shall come of Age."78
By
1715, the widow Simpson was having difficulty supporting herself and her
family.
With
the consent of her son Thomas, the two youngest Simpson children, Anne,
ten years
old,
and Elizabeth, eight, were "bound" to John and Elizabeth Clarke
who raised and
cared for the
girls in exchange for housework.79
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Thomas
Simpson (1691- n.d.)
married twice. With his first wife, Eleanor, he had
a
son Richard born December 26, 1714 in St. George's Parish. On February
13, 1717/18,
in
St. George's Parish, Thomas Simpson married Mary Smith, the daughter of
Emmanuel
Smith. Thomas
and Mary Simpson had seven children between 1718 and 1737 of whom
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one
died in infancy.80
In 1722, Thomas Simpson
and his wife sold 120 acres of land at
Sister's Discovery to Joshua Wood.81
Richard Simpson,
the only child of Thomas
and Eleanor Simpson, married
Elizabeth Reese
and had three sons and three daughters. The oldest of the six children,
Thomas, was born September 23, 1739 in Baltimore County,
Maryland and may have
signed the Watauga
petition 37 years later on the frontier.82
Sometime in the 1750s,
Richard
Simpson and his family left Maryland, where they had lived for three
generations, and moved to the frontier of North Carolina.83
_____________________________________________________________________
From:
http://www.uftree.com/UFT/WebPages/JohnSimpson/SIMPSON/#i5311b
3.
Richard (Sr)3
Simpson (William2,
Richard1)
was born in St. Geo. Parish, Baltimore, Maryland 1663. Richard died 1711
in St. George's, Baltimore Co. Maryland, at 48 years of age.
He
married Anne Gilbert in Baltimore Co., Maryland, Abt 1683. Anne was born
in Baltimore Co., MD 1670. Anne was the daughter of Thomas Gilbert and
Elizabeth. Anne died 1711 in Baltimore Co., MD, at 41 years of age.
Richard
(Sr) Simpson and Anne Gilbert had the following children:
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i. Richard (Jr)4
Simpson was born Abt 1683. Richard died May 1721 in Baltimore Co.,
MD. He married Elizabeth Bef 1720. Elizabeth was
born 1714. |
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iv. Elizabeth Simpson was born in St. George's,
Baltimore Co., MD April 5, 1697. Elizabeth died September 30, 1698
in St. George's, Baltimore Co., MD, at 1 year of age. |
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v. Jonathan Simpson was born in Baltimore Co.,
MD November 12, 1699. Jonathan died before May 1742 in Baltimore
Co., MD. |
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vi. Martha Simpson was born in Baltimore Co., MD
August 27, 1702. She married William Hamby in
St. George's, Baltimore Co., MD, December 25, 1722. William was born
August 24, 1703. |
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