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Thomas Turner (1715 - 1774)

Thomas Turner
Born in Spotsylvania, Virginiamap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married [date unknown] [location unknown]
[children unknown]
Died at about age 59 in Spotsylvania, Virginiamap
Profile last modified | Created 31 May 2011
This page has been accessed 304 times.

Biography

Thomas Turner Jr. the son of Thomas Turner and Martha Taliaferro was born about 1715 in Spotsylvania, Spotsylvania Virginia. He passed away about 1774 in Spotsylvania, Virginia

He married Mary Taliaferro in 1735 in St. Mary's Parish, Caroline County, Virginia. Mary, born 1720 in St. Mary's Parish, Virginia, was the daughter of Charles Taliaferro and Sarah Thornton .

Thomas Turner Jr. and Mary Taliaferro had a least one known child:

Sarah Turner b. Abt 1737, Spotsylvania County, Virginia d. Aft 1782, Caroline County, Virginia.

In 1749 Thomas Turner Jr, his wife, Mary Taliaferro, sister-in-law Sarah Taliaferro and her husband Francis Conway sold 570 acres the Taliaferro sisters received as a gift from their Grandfather Charles Taliaferro in his will. The land was sold to a merchant by the name of John Allan of Fredericksburg for 120 currency. This deed confirms the family relationships between the two couples.

The deed reads as follows:

Nov. 7, 1749. Thomas Turner, Junr., Gent., and Mary, his wife, of Spts. County, and Francis Conway, Gent., and Sarah, his wife, of Caroline County, to John Allan of Fredericksburg, Mercht. Whereas Charles Taliaferro, the Elder, late of the Co. of Caroline, died, seized and possessed of a tract of land in a place called Motts, and by his last will and testament, dated March 2, 1734, bequeathed the same to his granddaughters, Mary and Sarah Taliaferro, the sd. Mary intermarried with Thomas Turner, Junr., and the sd. Sarah intermarried with sd. Francis Conway, etc., sd. parties for 120 curr. sell the 570 a. to the sd. Allan, etc. No witnesses. Nov. 7, 1749.[1]

Thomas Turner Jr. the son of Thomas Turner and Martha Taliaferro was born about 1715 in Spotsylvania, Spotsylvania Virginia. He passed away about 1774 in Spotsylvania, Virginia

He married Mary Taliaferro in 1735 in St. Mary's Parish, Caroline County, Virginia. Mary, born 1720 in St. Mary's Parish, Virginia, was the daughter of Charles Taliaferro and Sarah Thornton .

Thomas Turner Jr. and Mary Taliaferro had a least one known child:

Sarah Turner b. Abt 1737, Spotsylvania County, Virginia d. Aft 1782, Caroline County, Virginia.

In 1749 Thomas Turner Jr, his wife, Mary Taliaferro, sister-in-law Sarah Taliaferro and her husband Francis Conway sold 570 acres the Taliaferro sisters received as a gift from their Grandfather Charles Taliaferro in his will. The land was sold to a merchant by the name of John Allan of Fredericksburg for 120 currency. This deed confirms the family relationships between the two couples.

Letter to B. Franklin from T. Turner:

To Benjamin Franklin from Thomas Turner, 7 September 1754 From Thomas Turner9

als: Historical Society of Pennsylvania

River Virga.1 Septr. 7th. 1754.

Sir

At the Request of Col. Charles Carter2 I send you our Governors proroguing Speech.3 He and I came home last night late from the Assembly and having this Opportunity he was unwilling to lose it.

By the Speech it must appear to those who are unacquainted with our unhappy Difference, that We have refused to do any Thing for our Country in this Time of Danger. That is so far from being the case, that tho the Forces are now provided with three Months Wages and Provisions We chearfully voted Twenty Thousand Pounds. And to settle amicably our old affair of the Pistole Fee on all Patents issuing from the Secretaries office we proposed to fall into any Measure he would point out to Us, but without the least Hopes of Success. He lays heavy Charges against Us in his Speech, such as We think we do not deserve. When the Truth comes to be known We hope the World will much more blame him than Us who rather than give up a private Pike [pique] and Resentment refused to have so large a Sum. I am so hurried by this Bearer that I am obliged to conclude and am Sir your unknown humble Servant,

Thos. Turner

To Benjamin Franklin Esquire.

Endorsed: Thomas Turner to Ben Franklyn with the Govr of Virginias Proroguing Speech 8ber 17544 [Note numbering follows the Franklin Papers source.]

9. Thomas Turner (d. 1758) of Walsingham, member of the Virginia House of Burgesses; clerk of King George Co., 1723–42; justice of the peace, 1742; vestryman of Hanover parish, King George Co., 1723. Va. Mag. Hist. Biog., xx(1912), 439–40.

1. The Rappahannock.

2. Charles Carter of Cleve in King George Co., member of the House of Burgesses, 1736–64. See above, iii, 285 n.

3. Governor Dinwiddie’s speech (Turner’s copy of which is still attached to his letter in Hist. Soc. Pa.) rebuked the Burgesses for making “only an unavailing Flourish of Words” while leaving the French and Indians “at full Liberty to perpetrate their destructive and unjust designs,” and charged that the House “absolutely” denied subsistence to the independent companies raised by the King’s authority and now employed in defense of the colony—“a Thing unprecedented in any of his Majesties Dominions, where they have been employed in their Defence from Incursions or threatned Invasions.”

The explanation of the Assembly’s conduct goes back to 1753, when Governor Dinwiddie levied a fee of one pistole on every land patent—about a thousand were lying uncompleted in the Land Office. The Assembly denounced this “Unusual Demand” as “illegal and arbitrary, contrary to the Charters of this Colony,” drafted a memorial to the King, and sent Attorney General Peyton Randolph (DAB) to England to secure a reversal of the governor’s action; whereupon Dinwiddie prorogued the Assembly and suspended Randolph from his post. When the House reconvened, Aug. 22, 1754, they had to deal with problems of frontier defense, made more urgent by the defeat and surrender of Washington’s force at Fort Necessity the month before. A bill for £20,000 was prepared, to which a clause was attached to pay Randolph £2500 for his services (which had been successful) as the Assembly’s agent in the pistole fee affair. This provision, which the Assembly refused to eliminate, made the bill unacceptable to the Council as well as to Dinwiddie, with the result that on September 4 he prorogued the Assembly until October 17. Glenn C. Smith, “The Affair of the Pistole Fee, Virginia, 1752–55,” Va. Mag. Hist. and Biog., xlviii (1940), 209–21; Louis K. Koontz, Robert Dinwiddie (Glendale, Calif., 1941), pp. 201–25; Robert A. Brock, ed., The Official Records of Robert Dinwiddie (Richmond, Va., 1883–84), i, 291–6, 302–3. For Dinwiddie’s reports and expressions of apprehension to his fellow governors, see ibid., pp. 303–13.

4. The endorsement is not in bf’s hand; it looks like Richard Peters’.


The deed reads as follows:

Nov. 7, 1749. Thomas Turner, Junr., Gent., and Mary, his wife, of Spts. County, and Francis Conway, Gent., and Sarah, his wife, of Caroline County, to John Allan of Fredericksburg, Mercht. Whereas Charles Taliaferro, the Elder, late of the Co. of Caroline, died, seized and possessed of a tract of land in a place called Motts, and by his last will and testament, dated March 2, 1734, bequeathed the same to his granddaughters, Mary and Sarah Taliaferro, the sd. Mary intermarried with Thomas Turner, Junr., and the sd. Sarah intermarried with sd. Francis Conway, etc., sd. parties for 120 curr. sell the 570 a. to the sd. Allan, etc. No witnesses. Nov. 7, 1749.[2]

Letter from G. Washington to T. Turner

From George Washington to Thomas Turner, 25 April 1778 To Thomas Turner

[Valley Forge] April 25th 1778.

Sir,

Altho^ I am not much accustomed to accept presents, I cannot refuse one offered in such polite terms as accompanied the Pistols & furniture you were so obliging as to send me by Captn Fauntleroy. They are very elegant, & deserve my best thanks, which are offered with much sincerity. The favourable Sentiments you are pleased to entertain of me, & the obliging and flattering manner in which they are expressed add to the obligation1 & I am Sir Yr Most Obedt & Most H: Ser.

G. W——n

ADfS, DLC:GW; Varick transcript, DLC:GW. This letter was apparently transmitted with GW’s letter to George Lewis of 3 May.

1. See Turner to GW, 22 Mar. 1778. On the draft GW first wrote and then struck out the words “which you have confered on.”


Sources

  1. 1742-1751 Spotsylvania County, Virginia Deed Book D<[William Armstrong Crozier]; book Page 181
  2. 1742-1751 Spotsylvania County, Virginia Deed Book D<[William Armstrong Crozier]; book Page 181
  • Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties. Thomas Turner Male 1715 - Abt 1774 (59 years)

Turner Genealogy https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I23667&tree=Tree1

  • Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties. Thomas Turner Male 1715 - Abt 1774 (59 years)

Turner Genealogy https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I23667&tree=Tree1





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Comments: 10

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Turner-10224 and Turner-2038 do not represent the same person because: Different parents, nothing in common
posted by Neal Parker
Turner-6715 and Turner-2038 are not ready to be merged because: not enough info
Turner-6715 and Turner-2038 do not represent the same person because: Minimal information. Nothing in common except name.
posted by Neal Parker
Turner-5584 and Turner-2038 are not ready to be merged because: Not enough info
Turner-5584 and Turner-2038 do not represent the same person because: One is 18th century; the other is modern
posted by Neal Parker
Turner-3282 and Turner-2038 are not ready to be merged because: Not enough info
Turner-3282 and Turner-2038 do not represent the same person because: Nothing in common except name
posted by Neal Parker
Turner-11672 and Turner-2038 are not ready to be merged because: Not enough info
Turner-11672 and Turner-2038 do not represent the same person because: Nothing in common except name
posted by Neal Parker
Turner-19731 and Turner-2038 appear to represent the same person because: birthdates are the same
posted by Debbie (Costa) Garcia

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