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Many online trees, without citing sources, say that he was born in 1645 in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, to LUCY IVERSON, and JOHN FITZ ROGERS.
John Rogers and son, John Aduston ROGERS, witnessed the will of Alice Beale 24 Sep 1702 in York Co., VA
John Rogers married AGNES ADDUSTON (various spellings) in 1670.[citation needed]
He died on March 15, 1715, at the age of 70.[citation needed]
They had six children in 13 years, including:[citation needed]
The first of these makes it clear that his sons, like he, were taking no chances about losing their inheritance. They did not merely give the name Adduston to one son; both the father and the sons also made certain there was an Adduston to spare in the event that something happened to their firstborn of the name. Thus, on 23 Jun 1703, the elder John executed a deed of gift, as follows:[1]
From this document it can be determined that Adduston Rogers, son of John and Agnes Rogers, had married and was the father of three children--John Adduston, Elizabeth, and Adduston--none of whom had attained sixteen years by June 1703.
Added 2017 - http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/ROGERS/1996-07/0837493999
Planter...in or about the year of our Lord 1683 did then mortgage to one Edward Jones of Bruton Parish in the County of York ffactor to Alderman Richard Booth of London, Merchant, six negroes and their increase for the payment of a Debt due to the said Alderman of one hundred thirty five pounds Sterl....of which sd. sum I...have made payment of sums of money to Edward Jones...Now so it is I the sd. John Rogers being much in years & weak of body do hereby Constitute ordain and appoint my Loveing and trusty son John Adduston Rogers of Charles Parish in the County of York Planter my true & lawfull attorney...to arrest Sue prosecute & implead any person or persons whatsoever interested or concerned in or with any of the sd. Negroes & upon Not Deliver...into Prison to Cast or out of Prison to release as my said Attorney shall see fitt."
In the above instrument, Rogers attests to his advanced years and faltering health; however, he did live at least three years more, and in that time executed another document that also reflects his personal values and the strength of his attachment to this family. On 15 March 1714/15 he deeded to the son, John Adduston Rogers, all his negroes, personal estate, or lands "in the Colony of Virginia or elsewhere," adding the phrase "which are now in ye hand and possession of other men unjustly detained." In exchange, the son was to keep him in suitable circumstances for the balance of his life. (It should be remembered that it was the eldest son named Adduston who would inherit the entailed property from the estate of the maternal grandfather; it was therefore proper that John Rogers should leave his own accumulated properties to his second son.) According to the terms of this donation:
for Ever...all my personal Estate that I now Enjoy (and) all my lawfull Debts; funeral Expenses ;& ye like to be thereout honestly paid & discharged...still reserving unto myself what Crops my two Newgroes Tom & Barnaby shall make upon my Plantation or elsewhere for my maintenance ...upon this consideration that my sd son, Jno. Adduston Rogers do keep & maintain me...during my natural life with good & wholesome meat & drink, warm & decent apparel & lodging, a good fire in cold weather, Necessarys suitable & convenient to my old age and at seasonable times a cup of good liquor to drink with a friend & after my decease to bury my body decently in a Christian burial."
The final act of the aging John Rogers contains one other provision that helps in the identification and reconstruction of his family:
Five days after the execution of this document, it was acknowledged--under his power of attorney--by one John Pond; apparently Rogers was unable to appear at the courthouse personally--probably due to illness and age. Nothing further appears in the York County records on this man; while residents of upper York also did business in the adjacent counties of James City and Gloucester, the records of those counties for this period are no longer extant.
Known children of Agnes Adeustone by her first husband, (--?--) Dixon, were as follows:
sister Elizabeth in the will of their maternal grandfather, suggesting that she was the elder--in which case she should have been born some two years before the 1668 date estimated below for the sister. Agnes was still alive at the time of the 1678 will but has not been traced after that date.
Goffe, Gentleman, of New Kent executed a provisional deed of gift to his son William Goffe who "intended" to marry "Elizabeth Dixon daughter-in-law (stepdaughter) to John Rogers." In the event of that marriage, he was to give the son 500 acres in Gloucester County; and in the event of William's subsequent death, the widowed Elizabeth was to be allowed to remain on that property until and unless she remarried. That 1685 document, witnessed by Rogers and his wife Agnes, was recorded in 1691; presumably Elizabeth had married Goffe by then. She has not been traced past this point."
Known children of Agnes Adeustone by her second husband, John Rogers, were as follows:
1706, he married Jane (--?--), widow of Henry Andrews who died in York County in 1705/06, leaving an estate but no will. The terms of the deed of gift executed by John Adduston's father in 1715 suggest that the marriage to Jane had produced no children; and there is no record elsewhere of any such offspring. On 16 January 1713, John Adduston sold a tract of 170 acres in Charles Parish "which said land was ye land late of Henry Andrews & from him escheated and by Pattent bearing date ye 12trh December 1710...granted to ye sd John Adduston Rogers."
to this John Adduston Rogers, and there is no indication in the land records as to whether he and Jane remained in York County. As seen below, his brother George settled in Britain; and it is entirely possible that John Adduston and Jane may have left the Virginia colony also.)
No further information.
Parish. George left the colony and settled at Braintree, county Essex, England; but he kept in touch with his Virginia family and did not fail to place his own claim to the estate of his deceased brother William in 1742.
between 16 May and 17 December 1739, the dates his will was written and proved.
Like the younger sons of many planters, William went into trade; in doing so, he may have been the most materially successful member of his family. During the fifty-five years or so of his life, Captain William Rogers of Yorktown and Williamsburg--merchant, warehouseman, shipper, and gentleman--accumulated a sizable estate in land, town lots, slaves, and personal property. Extant issues of the Virginia Gazette allude to various activities of his in advertisements for "a single young Man, that is qualified to be an Overseer" or for a buyer/renter for the former "Bristol Store...a large, commodious house with two lotts, a garden, Coach house, stable and other outhouses and conveniences. At his death in 1739, William left four children:
(a) Susanna, who had previously married Captain Thomas Reynolds of London and Virginia, a merchant-mariner of means. Susanna's will, written in 1767, was proved in York County on 18 April 1768.
(b) Sarah, an unmarried minor at the time of her father's will, who subsequently wed a merchant also--William Montgomery, the younger, of Camberwell in the Parish of Saint Mary Lambeth, county Surry, England.
(c) Hannah Rogers, an unmarried minor at the time of her father's will, in which she was bequeathed three slave men--including a Barnaby (cf. the 1714/15 deed of gift executed by her grandfather John Rogers).
(d) William Rogers, a minor in 1739, was entrusted by his father to the care of his mother "until he attain to the age of twenty one years." Within a year, the young William had reached an age at which he was considered competent to tend business, as on 20 March 1740 his father's estate was charged for "his son's expenses going over the River to settle with Noyal." William, Jr., did not long survive his father; on 20 June 1743, his uncle George--from England--laid claim to the estate of Captain William Rogers, stating that the only son and heir to the land had died intestate before 9 February 1742.
Theodosia (--?--) Rogers, the widow of Captain William who was dispossessed of further inheritance by her brother-in-law George and then by her son-in-law Reynolds, drafted her own will on 7 March 1752, leaving her entire personal estate to her daughter Sarah's husband, William Montgomery, who apparently was living at that time in York County as a merchant.
John Rogers is presumed to carry DNA based on test results from other relatives in the family tree: R1b1a2a1a1b4[2]
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Categories: Virginia Project Needs Research | Virginia Colonists
Author Hotten, John Camden, 1832-1873. https://archive.org/stream/originallistsofp00hottuoft
I have also found information on an earlier John Rogers from Virginia in 1678 as a young man.