| Ralph Shelton Sr. resided in the Southern Colonies in North America before 1776. Join: US Southern Colonies Project Discuss: southern_colonies |
Please be careful with merges and updates. There has been a lot of confusion around Ralph Sheltons. There were several of them in Virginia, and they all seemed to use similar names for their children. Add to that, their wives were all named "Mary".
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Despite a common supposition, Ralph Shelton was definitely not the son of Peter Chilton (not Shelton) and Susanna Jackson . See the Research Notes for discussion of this issue.
Ralph Shelton spent his adult life in Middlesex County, Virginia as a planter.
In his last Will, dated 10 March 1733, he mentioned his son Ralph, Thomas Crispin, his daughter Elizabeth Davis, and his wife Mary. He stated that in case his son Thomas should die, he wished his sons Ralph and Crispin would take care of Thomas’ children. Thomas died five years later.
Ralph died on 17 March 1733 in Middlesex County, Virginia at age 48.[1]
After Ralph’s death his widow married William Clark (Clock). Mentioned in her last Will, were her sons Crispin Shelton, John Shelton, Benjamin Shelton, James Shelton, Ralph Shelton, Daniel Shelton, grandchildren Reuben Shelton and Patience Catesby Blakey, and daughter Elizabeth Davis.
The following is from the book "Ralph Shelton of Middlesex County, Virginia" by Kenyon Stevenson, 1955. Corrections added by Margaret Alford, 2002:
1. On 10 October 1702, Thomas Meriwether had recorded in the Essex Court OrderBook this entry:" Certificate according to Act of Assembly is granted to Tho. Meriwether for the importation of seven persons into this colony by name Sarah Eaton, Richd Cullen, Ralph Sheldon, (name illegible), Mary Millner, Isaac Bayly, Edw Cartwright." This is the first appearance in the Virginia of Ralph Shelton of Middlesex County. There is no indication of Ralph' s parentage or age, actual date of importation or place from which he came.
2. In 1708, six years after his importation to Middlesex, Ralph Shelton, signing his name Ralph Shelteon, was a witness to Thomas Meriwether' s last Will. He was also a beneficiary of the Will, which read: "I give unto Ralph Shelton & his heires forever the Sixty five acres of Land Grantedto me by Patent joyning to the Land of Rice Jones, John Lohees (Toslees?) & the Land formerly belonging to Capt. Edward Thomas." This 65-acre tract appears to be one granted to Meriwether on 2 May 1706, described in patent as follows: " Sixty five acres of Land part of a patent of four hundred and fifty acres in Essex formerly Rapp County bounded as follows (Vizt) beginning at a decayed walnut and a great mulberry tree marked by it (at the upper extent of a devident of Land belonging unto John Jones, orphan) standing by the Dragon swamp side in the point of an old field just below the mouth of a great branch and running thence North East by sd Jones. land . . . to a red Oake in John Masses' Line thence . . . to the main run of the Dragon swamp . . .sd Land formerly granted Edward Thomas Gent by patent dated 20th of October 1691, and by him deserted and since granted sd Meriwether by order of the genll Court dated 25th of October 1705.
3. The Will and Patent descriptions place this land on the Essex-Middlesex boundary line. This location is further indicated by a description of Middlesex County written 14 April 1700, which reads in part, . ." said County is bounded on the head with the lower part of the land of John Jones dec' d which runs up from Rappahannock River on the upper part of Cock' s Bay next above ye land of James Blaise and so crossing the Ridge along the land of Thomas Tosley including the same from the outline of Thomas Toseley' s land down a great Branch dividing the land of Edward Thomas dec' d and the land of Rice Jones dec' d, including the said Rice Jones dec' s Land to the dragon swamp.
4. Ralph Shelton married about 1707, either in Essex or Middlesex, a wife Mary, whose surname had been guessed to be Crispin. No record of the marriage or suggestion of a maiden surname has been discovered. Births of the three oldest children :. Thomas, about 1707, Ralph, about 1709, and Elisabeth, about 1711, are not in the Christ Church Register, where all the other births are recorded. There were 11 children in all, as follows:
Ralph Shelton lived only four years after the birth of his son Daniel. His last Will, badly damaged in the old Middlesex Will Book, was dated March **, 1733. Some of the provisions still legible on the torn pages are: "My Son Ralph Shelton should have my land . .. .___zabeth Davis twenty five Shillings to buy her __. ._____ Ralph Shelton one cow and calf.. .___m** son Thomas Shelton should take care of my children, and if in case y son Thomas should Die, my Desire is that my Children should be left to the ____ of my other two Sons, Ralph and Crispin.. Appoint my Loving wife Mary Shelton and my son Thomas to (be executors of my) Last will and Testament." The witnesses were William Buford, Thomas Clarke, Henry Buford and Abraham _____.
5. The Will was presented in Court 2 April 1734 and proved by oaths of Henry Beauford and Thomas Clark. Thomas Buford, John Jones, John Clark and Garrit Daniel were sworn to appraise the estate. Inventory and appraisement were presented to the court on 2 July 1734. After this there are no further entries in the Middlesex Court Orders or other county records regarding Ralph Shelton. His widow, Mary, remarried to a Clark, perhaps Thomas or Peter, and as Mary Clark made her last Will in Nottaway Parish of Amelia County on 30 June 1750. A Middlesex deed dated 5 October 1757 by Mary Clark and Peter Clark of County Middlesex to John Lamboth transfers 150 acres beginning at a deep bottom between Edward Bristow and William Bristow' s line, thence along Elizabeth Smith' s line to main run of the Dragon Swamp &
1. Essex Co. Deeds & Wills Vo. 10, (1699-1702) Page 133. 2. Virginia Land Office Patent Book 9 (1697-1706), page 727. 3. Virginia Mag. Vol. 12, Page 285. 4. Middlesex County Will Book (1734), pages 418-419. 5. Middlesex Deed Book 1754-67, part 1, page ___.
Ralph Shelton's origins and his parents have been the subject of significant dispute. This is discussed at the following website: Our First Known SHELTON Family in America.
It has been commonly supposed that Ralph Shelton emigrated from England, based on an assumption in his 1955 genealogy. There is no evidence to support this, and Ralph could have easily come from Maryland, where there was an early Shelton family with a Meriweather connection:
1. Thomas Meriwether, the man who imported Ralph Shelton to Virginia, was the brother of Francis Meriwether who married Mary Bathurst, according to a Meriwether Society website that is no longer available or archived.
2. The aunt of this Mary Bathurst was another Mary Bathurst who married a James Shelton (son of Thomas of Cecil County, Maryland), who had sons Reuben, Daniel and Thomas[2], and Ralph Shelton of Middlesex County also had sons Reuben, Daniel, Thomas, and James. (Daniel and especially Reuben are rather uncommon names.) This and the Bathurst connection would seem to indicate a close family connection between the early Maryland Sheltons and Ralph Shelton of Middlesex County, Virginia.
From the redacted email address mailing list for the surname SHELTON, comes this interesting thought from one of the members, January (her 1997 E-mail address was redacted email address): ".......am researching the Meriwethers and in touch with the Meriwether Society. They have the theory that Ralph was a Skelton and that Thomas married his sister, Susannah. They base this on the fact that everyone in Thomas's will were family named as brother, sister, nephew; except for Ralph. They think that is the reason Thomas imported Ralph. That and the fact that Thomas bequeathed to Ralph in his will 65 acres. Dr.Frank Shelton has another area to explore. In the mentioned will of Thomas he asks to sell his tobacco and to pay his debts to Messr. Micajah Perry, London merchant. Dr.Frank thinks if we knew more of Mr. Perry and his type of trade it would lead to more clues as to Ralph's parents."
This is a good theory, worth exploring, and might well explain just why Thomas Meriwether gave Ralph Shelton the 65 acre legacy in his 1708/9 Will. NOTE: This SHELTON research is confusing for several reasons. There was another Ralph SHELTON, a younger man than our ancestor, who was of King William County. He married Mary Pollard. The two Ralph Sheltons lived, according to Jan, on opposite sides of the Dragon Swamp and were about 15 years apart in age. This was established by a bond for 200 pounds in King William County dated 30 September 1703, entered into by Joseph Bickley of King and Queen County with Major John Waller, (see notes below regarding Crispen Shelton's children), King William Co., to cover two years schooling for Ralph Shelton, son of Mrs. Sarah Gissage, whom Bickley contemplated marrying soon. A good article on "the two Ralphs" can be found at Brian Eddy's helpful website (outdated URL - if you know about his new URL, please let me know). In correspondence from Katherine Snow redacted email address 2/2000, she wrote that the marriage of Ralph Shelton (supposedly b. c1698, while our Ralph SHELTON was b. 1685) and Mary Pollard occurred on 5 December 1721, which certainly would exclude Mary ? Crisp/Crispen? from being the same person as Mary Pollard. I have not researched the SHELTON/POLLARD connection, so I cannot say for certain if this is all true.
It is unknown who the parents of Ralph Shelton were at this time. Some researchers would like to believe that Ralph was the son of Peter Shelton and his wife Susannah Jaxon/Jackson, but it appears this assumption is incorrect after all the evidence is viewed. Kenneth Shelton, who wrote "The Shelton Trek Across Kentucky", (LIBRARY of CONGRESS Call #CS71.S545 1987a), said on page 7 of his book that he believed Ralph Shelton was not a son to Peter Shelton. He believed that Peter was actually a CHILTON. Although Peter CHILTON (1664-1718) did live in Middlesex Co., Virginia, he left a Will which did not name a Ralph Shelton as a son, and all of Peter Chilton's children are noted in the Christ Church Parish Register (no Ralph was listed there). Ralph Shelton, by English primogenitor law, would have been included in this Will if he was the first born son, and by law, would have inherited Peter Chilton's 100 acres of land had he been the son as claimed by some researchers. Why would Ralph SHELTON b. 1685, be "imported" if this supposed father, Peter Shelton/Chilton, was already residing in America, as documents prove? There may have been a connection between Peter and Ralph, but it apparently was not as father and son. The following is another comprehensive message regarding this issue. It was also posted to the redacted email address SHELTON mailing list: Subject: Chilton vs. Shelton, Date: 7 June 1999, From: redacted email address To:redacted email address "Dr. Frank H. Shelton wrote a pamphlet: Sheltons in the Christ Church Parish Register-in Virginia, copyright 1985. He descends from Ralph & Mary, through their first son Thomas. Source of his information is "The Parish Register of Christ Church Parish of Middlesex Co., Virginia, From 1653-1812" published by the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the State of Virginia, Richmond: Wm Ellis Jones, Steam Book And Job Printer - 1897. Also, Essex Co. Court Records. I quote the following. "There are records for Peter Chelton (and descendants) in the Christ Church Parish Register from 1685 when Peter Chilton married Susan Jaxon until 1725 when Abby was born to ZebuIon & Mary Chelton. Over this period of 38 years and three generations it was always Chilton/Chelton. There was never any mixing of the Shelton and Chelton names over a period of many years in the Christ Church Parish Register. There is only one exception to this fact: unaccountably on page 54 "Peter ye sone of Peter & Susanna Shelton baptz ye 15th November 1687" does a Shelton enter into the Chilton's records and never a Chilton in the Shelton's records of Christ Church Parish. The above Parish Register records indicate the following concerning the Peter Chilton family: Peter Chilton 1st married in 1684 Susanhah Jackson and by her had William and Peter (Jr) - 1687. Peter Chilton then married 2nd Abigail and by her had Henry - 1691, Thomas and Zebulon. Peter Chilton died October 1718 and his widow Abigail Chelton married Robert Holderness a short time later - Feb 1719."......"I think that Dr. Frank Shelton provides the most compelling evdence, backed up by direct research, that Peter was not a Shelton. Also that he could not have been the father of Ralph. Regards, Wayne Shelton
Read more on the SHELTON/MERIWETHER connections here at Glen Shelton's page.
See also:
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S > Shelton > Ralph Shelton Sr.
Categories: Shelton Y-STR Group 1 | Virginia Colonists | US Southern Colonies Project Needs Relationship Review
edited by Tony Belcher
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:HTML_and_Inline_CSS
If anyone disagrees, please weigh in. Otherwise, I think we should remove this coding and just place that material in a Research Note. It might be more appropriate to move it a free space page, given the length. If anyone has views on this, please weigh in.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Help:Email_Addresses#Email_Addresses_for_Other_People_on_WikiTree
The material form the unreliable sources can be retained in a section called "Research Notes" because they might be helpful clues for ongoing research, but they should not be in the Biography. I'm correcting the profile in cosmetic fashion at a couple of points -- we don't use "British Colonial America" in WikiTree, there was never such a place. And we only have four major headings -- two mandatory, Biography and Sources, and two optional, Research Notes and Acknowledgements. Anything else is a subheading.
is connected to mother Mary Jane (Crispen) Shelton (abt.1690-1771), but not to father Ralph, Sr. Shelton-52. His father link is to Ralph Shelton (1698-1743) . If this is a "typo" error will a profile manager fix it? Thank you, Leah
Christ Church Parish, Virginia Births, 1653-1812 Christ Church Parish, Virginia Deaths, 1653-1812 U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970 (many times not accurate) Millennium File (many times not accurate)
This source data agrees with the existing wikitree data above, so I'm a little confused by all the controversy noted above but maybe that's old news not removed yet? I am using bio check to correct all my unsourced ancestors, and I'm on 9th generation. I will wait for a response from a fellow Southern colonies project member before proceeding, as I have little experience with PPP.
Minor changes to project-managed profiles can generally be made without contacting the project, but if in doubt contact the project, post in G2G. or in the profile comment section before making a change.
With regard to sources, the Millennium File isn't reliable and I would avoid using it. It's really no different than an unsourced family tree. Certainly the birth and death records are helpful; Find-a-Grave, although not always reliable, still can be used so people can view the memorial. Ditto with SAR applications. Thanks.
Thank you for reaching out to the project before making changes to this profile. It is project protected due to the uncertainty surrounding Ralph Shelton's parentage and origins. Of the sources you have referred to the parish records may be useful and would generaaly be considered reliable for a Pre-1700 profile (if transcribed from, or an image of the original source document). As you have noted Find A Grave, Dar member applications and Millnnium files are frequently unsourced or poorly sourced and in most cases are not considered reliable for Pre-1700 profiles. You could post them in the comments section of this profile to allow other members to review and independently verify them. And I want to thank you for your source contributions on behalf of the Southern Colonies Project.
edited by Carol (Baker) Murray
it is stated here Prior to the Oct. 10, 1702 Middlesex Co, VA County Court Session, Ralph SHELTON was imported to North America, along with six other persons, by Thomas Merriwether (who was granted a headright for this importation): source - Essex County, VA Court Order Book 1699-1702, (Deeds and Wills Vol 10, p. 133). Ralph's surname was spelled SHELDON in this document. Probably, he was at least 18 years of age. There is no evidence that Ralph Shelton served a formal indenture as an indentured servant, since no release or other documents have been located in support of this matter.
I also suggest that instead of putting all your Shelton links here, possible look into a Shelton Name Study or even making a space page where you can collect them and linking that to this page.
Thanks again!
I am reluctant to make changes as project manager since I know all of the profile managers are actively involved. Please take time to improve on this bio a bit.
You do not have to take on the entire thing. The initial dispute section is perfect. I would just organize it and remove redundant material, paraphrase into copied that is not a transcription of a record, and organize it a bit.
Thanks!!
Paula
edited by Carol (Baker) Murray