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William Emory (abt. 1731 - abt. 1770)

William Emory aka Amory
Born about in Lincolnshire, Englandmap
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married about 1748 in Cherokee Nation, East, Tennesseemap
Husband of — married 1768 [location unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died about at about age 38 in Charleston, South Carolinamap [uncertain]
Profile last modified | Created 5 May 2011
This page has been accessed 8,137 times.
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Due to his relations with the Cherokee, as well as much disputed information about his relations, this profile is being co-managed and protected by WikiTree's Native Americans project.

Biography

William Emory was born in Lincolnshire, England, the son of John and Sarah (Wilson) Amory. Parish records from the village of Great Hale, a few miles from Boston, record the births of four children, "John son of John , Sarah bap 30 Oct 1727 Great Hale; Sarah d of John and Sarah bap 8 Sept 1730 Great Hale; William s of John and Sarah bap 15 Sept 1731 Great Hale; James s John and Sarah bap 19 sept 1732 Great Hale; James s John and Sarah bur 27 May 1737 Great Hale." [1] In 1737 John, Sarah, and their three children emigrated to America. "John Amory, his wife, three children and two menservants (he has a grant of 150 acres and is recommended to the Trustees as understanding surveying in case there should be any occasion for his assistance), he brings over a circumferenter and case of instruments; if he should be found useful and fit to be employed, he has a copy of the terms made with Rosse…" [2] In 1738 the family moved to South Carolina, and within a few years of their arrival, John and Sarah became engaged in trade with the Cherokee. [3] William joined in the trading business and by about 1750 he partnered with “Mary” Grant, the daughter of trader Ludovic Grant and his Cherokee wife who lived in the Cherokee town of Tomatly. William and Mary are believed to be the parents of three daughters, Elizabeth, Mary, and Susannah Emory. [4] William is also believed to be the father of a son, Will, by an unknown Cherokee woman and is believed by some to have fathered Creek children as well.

William married a woman named Sarah Cantle about 1768. She owned a great deal of property, outlined in a four-page prenuptial agreement signed in November 18, 1768. [5] Sarah and William were not married very long. Sarah's 1769 will left all her property in trust for her "loving Husband William Amory." [6]

According to an unsourced article he died in 1770. [7]

Research Notes

The following birth, often attached to this William, is for a different person: "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:V5L9-BVB : 11 February 2018, William Emery, 12 Mar 1728); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 873,642.

There are also unsourced claims that William was the father of

Sources

  1. "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J331-984 : 11 February 2018, Wm Amory, 15 Sep 1731); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 504,232.
  2. Calendar of State papers , Colonial America and West Indies. digitized at Oct. 10
  3. Shadburn, Don & Strange, John. Upon Our Ruins, Cottonpatch Press, Cumming, GA. 2012. p. 480
  4. Starr, Emmet. History of the Cherokee Indians. Oklahoma Yesterday Publications edition, Tulsa, OK. 1979. p. 305
  5. South Carolina Wills and Related Probate Matters, South Carolina Probate Court (Charleston County), South Carolina, Wills etc., 1760-1771. p. 97 Digitized at FamilySearch prenup
  6. Abstracts of Wills of South Carolina, transcript at Ancestry.com Sarah
  7. Shadburn, Upon Our Ruins, pp. 480-4
  8. Unknown author, "William Emory, packhorseman, British soldier ," Tennessee Local History Network and Tennessee Local History Project, undated, link; while some sources cited for other claims, no direct evidence supplied to support Abraham (and Drury) as sons of William Emory.
  9. Bob Hembree's "Roots-Branches-Leaves" 28th ed. Sept. 2000.
  10. Lawrence Petrisky, "William Emory of the Cherokee," Geneology.Com Discussion Forum, January 22, 2004 at 12:24:18, link
  11. Bob Hembree, "Roots-Branches-Leaves," vol 28, Sept. 2000.

See also:

  • Genealogy of Old and New Cherokee Indian Families by George Morrison Bell, Sr. (E99.CS B39) 1972, Leonard Printing Company of Bartlesville, OK, page 162:
"William Emory, an Englishman, born ca 1720, married Mary Grant. . . . She was born ca 1727 in the Cherokee Nation East, Tennessee. She was 1/2 Cherokee. They both died and were buried in the Cherokee Nation East. . . . They were the parents of three daughters who were 1/4 Cherokee.
1. Mary Emory, born ca 1747 In the Cherokee Nation East, Tennessee. Her (1m) was to Rim Fawling. Her (2m) was to Ezekiel Buffington. Her (3m) consort husband Joseph Martin Jr.
2. Elizabeth Emory, born ca 1749 in the Cherokee Nation East, Tennessee. (1m) Robert Due. Her (2m) was to John Rogers. Both Due and Rogers were Englishmen.
3. Susannah Emory, born ca 1751 in the Cherokee Nation East, Tennessee. (1m) Captain John Stuart, a Scotsman. Her (2m) was to Richard Fields, Sr., an Englishman. Her (3m) was to Joseph Martin Jr., an Englishman."
  • Unknown author, "William Emory, packhorseman, British soldier ," Tennessee Local History Network and Tennessee Local History Project, undated, link; while some sources cited for other claims, no direct evidence supplied to support Abraham (and Drury) as sons of William Emory.
  • Find A Grave: Memorial #61965025 for William Emory, Sr (1726–Jul 1770)




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Comments: 27

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I have not checked this, but there is a post on genforum that said that William was born around 1726, christened 20 Oct 1728 at Alford, Lincolnshire, and christened again by a Wilson family bishop at Great Gale/Little Hale, Lincoln, ENG on 15 Sep 1731. This birthdate would fit better with his children's births.
posted by Sheila Stahl
John Amory and Sarah Wilson were married in 1726, their first child was baptized in 1727. People are combining two families to make their theories work.
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
I'm having trouble with William's birthdate (1731) and his daughter Mary's birthdate (1746). I doubt that he had a child at age 14 but I don't know which of the dates might be wrong.
posted by Sheila Stahl
edited by Sheila Stahl
William's 1731 baptism date is sourced. Mary's birth year is not.
posted by Jillaine Smith
Edited daughter's birth years and "marriage" year. Other than William, no one in this family group has a documented year of birth or death. Cherokee women at this time often began having children about age 16.
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
I've never seen that name. I did not add her to the Record.
I did not add her either. I have no record of her in my data base.
posted by Tim (Moore) Schaeffer
Someone else needs to answer that. I didn't add that wife.
posted by Sheila Stahl
What, please, besides a Find-a-grave memorial, is the source for William's white wife Sarah?
posted by Jillaine Smith
I don't find any evidence for a son "Robert." John and Sarah immigrated with two sons, John and William.
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
There is also a William christened in Great and Little Hale in 1731 - "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:J331-984 : 11 February 2018, Wm Amory, 15 Sep 1731); citing , index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City; FHL microfilm 504,232.
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
These seem more likely for the correct records for the Amory family:

Have a look on Freereg https://www.freereg.org.uk/ John son of John , Sarah bap 30 Oct 1727 Great Hale Sarah d of John and Sarah bap 8 Sept 1730 Great Hale William s of John and Sarah bap 15 Sept 1731 Great Hale James s John and Sarah bap 19 sept 1732 Great Hale James s John and Sarah bur 27 May 1737 Great Hale

posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
I didn't add that, but it looks like it needs to be deleted.
posted by Sheila Stahl
The birthdate and location are for a different William. The Alford one died and was buried in November 23, 1728.
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
Why is this a rejected match? Clearly a duplicate of Emory-13
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
Then let's resolve the differences before the merge.
posted by Sheila Stahl
Emory-102 and Emory-13 appear to represent the same person because: These are clearly meant to be the same man. Differences can becresolved after merge. There was only one William Emory, son of John Amory, husband of “Mary” Grant.
posted by Kathie (Parks) Forbes
Emory-102 and Emory-13 are not ready to be merged because: too many differences that need to be rectified.
posted by Sheila Stahl
Emory-102 and Emory-13 appear to represent the same person because: duplicate
posted by LaMyra Morton

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