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Elizabeth (Guess) Trigg (1684 - aft. 1709)

Elizabeth Trigg formerly Guess aka Queen, Guest
Born in Middlesex, Colony of Virginiamap
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of — married 14 Dec 1705 (to Mar 1709) in Christchurch, Middlesex County, Colony of Virginiamap
Died after after age 25 in Middlesex County, Colony of Virginiamap
Problems/Questions Profile manager: Angela Trigg private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 23 Mar 2017
This page has been accessed 199 times.

Biography

Elizabeth was born in 1684. Elizabeth Guess ... She passed away after birth of Elizabeth around March 1709.

Research Notes

  • Warning: Check the data.
    • A mother's death date (Guess-384 died Mar 1709) should not be before one of her children's birth dates (Trigg-388 born 27 Mar 1709) .

Sources


See also:

  • The Parish Register of Christ Church, Middlesex County, Va., from 1653 to 1812 Issue 1 of Parish record series; Contributor: National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia; Publisher: W. E. Jones, Printer, 1897; Length: 341 pages; Section: Marriages D C 1–1704. 1–Viz.; Page: 80; Quote: Abraham Trigg and Eliza Guess ye 14th of December 1705.
  • The Parish Register of Christ Church, Middlesex County, Va., from 1653 to 1812 Issue 1 of Parish record series; Contributor: National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia; Publisher: W. E. Jones, Printer, 1897; Length: 341 pages; Section: Christenings; Page: 68; Quote: Mary ye Daughter of Abraham Trigg & Elizabeth his wife was Bap. ye same day 1706. (The same day from prior line is May 9, 1706.)
  • The Parish Register of Christ Church, Middlesex County, Va., from 1653 to 1812 Issue 1 of Parish record series; Contributor: National Society of the Colonial Dames of America in the Commonwealth of Virginia; Publisher: W. E. Jones, Printer, 1897; Length: 341 pages; Section: Christenings; Page: 72; Quote: Elizabeth Ye Daughter of Abraham Trigg & Elizabeth his Wife was Baptized March Ye 27th Anno Domi 1709.
  • Marriages of Some Virginia Residents 1607–1800, Volume II, I-Z; Editor: Dorothy Ford Wulfeck; Page: 95; Quote: TRIGG, Abraham, son of Daniel, m. (1) 14 Dec., 1705, Elizabeth Queen; m. (2) 11 Jan., 1710, Judith Clarke. Christ Church, pp. 80, 82; 27V164.
  • The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Volume 27; Edited by Philip Alexander Bruce, William Glover.
    • Page 164; Quote: (re Dan. & Stephen Trigg) The Trigg family first appears in Virginia in Middlesex County in the latter part of the Seventeenth Century. The register of Christ Church parish there shows that Daniel Trigg and Susan his wife had issue: Abraham, baptised May 4, 1684; Sarah baptised Dec. 26, 1686. There may have been other children. Thomas Kidd and Alice Trigg were married Sept. 18, 1690. A Daniel Trigg died Aug. 13, 1716. Whether he was the Daniel above, or his grandson could probably be ascertained by are examination of the Middlesex records. Abraham2 Trigg (son of Daniel) married 1st Dec. 14, 1705, Elizabeth Guest, 2d, Judith Clarke on Jan. 11, 1710. Issue (1st M.) 3. Mary, baptised March 9, 1706; 4. Elizabeth, baptised May 29, 1790; (2d M.) 5. Susannah, baptised March 1, 1711; 6. Daniel3 baptised June 24, 1713; 7. William3, baptised May 18, 1716; 8. Abraham3, born April 14, 1719. About 1750 the family began its westward movement going to King and Queen and Spotsylvania. Daniel Trigg witnessed a deed in Spotsylvania in 1752, and on Oct. 1, 1759 bought 500 acres in the same county £80. Daniel, William and Mary Trigg were witnesses to a deed in Spotsylvania 1764. Daniel Trigg died intestate and on March 6, 1769, Mary Trigg, his widow, qualified as his administrator. And on Sept. 4, she qualified as guardian of William, Nancy, and James Trigg, infant orphans of Daniel Trigg. The will of John Trigg was dated Feb. 17, 1776 and proved in Spotsylvania May 21, 1778. His legatees were his sister Ann Carter and his brother Thomas Trigg. He states that his brother William Trigg, who was then his father's administrator had not given him his part of the estate. There is in Spotsylvania a deed in regard to certain slaves between William Trigg of Spotsylvania, of the 1st part; James Trigg of King and Queen of the second part, and Mary Trigg, widow, of Spotsylvania guardian of Thomas Trigg, of the 3d part: These were probably the widow and some of the children of Daniel.
    • Page 165 and repeated on 325; Quote: Among later generations have been: Connally F. Trigg, born at Abingdon, March 8, 1810, who removed to Tennessee in 1858, and who, on July 2, 1862, was appointed U. S. Circuit and District Judge for Tenn., and died near Bristol April 25, 1880. Connally F. Trigg born at Abingdon, Sept. 18, 1841, M. C., 1885–1887, and Daniel Trigg (son of Dr. Daniel Trigg and his wife Ann Mumford, daughter of Dr. Alexander Tompkins) who entered the Naval Academy, resigned in 1861, and entered the U. S. Navy, where he rose to the rank of Lieutenant. He was a member of the House of Delegates from Washington County, 1882. This account of the family from Southwestern Virginia was gather from rather vague information and there may be errors.
    • Page 324; Quote: Trigg of Spotsylvania. William Trigg was administrator of James Trigg 1786. In the will of Clement Montague, of Spotsylvania, he makes bequests to his daughter Elizabeth, wife of Jonathan Carpenter, and to the children she had by her former husband James Trigg, except her son William Trigg. William Trigg and his wife Ann, of Spotsylvania, made deeds in 1777 and July 2, 1786. They were living in that County in 1799. Daniel Trigg and Sall Abbott were married in Spotsylvania Nov. 15, 1799. There is not sufficient documentary evidence at hand to show whether the Triggs of Southwestern Virginia removed directly from Middlesex, from Spotsylvania or from King and Queen. Several traditional accounts are vague, and in some respects incorrect. One account states that Abraham Trigg came from Cornwell to Spotsylvania County, Va. (a county which did not then exist) in 1700. This was evidently intended for Abraham2 above. He is stated to have had a son Abraham, who married Susan Johns (??? Johns-2608 ???) and to have had a son William Trigg of Botetourt and Bedford, who married Mary Johns. Another account gives the same two generations, Abraham and his son William. The will of William Trigg was dated Sept. 15, 1772, and proved in Bedford Feb. 22, 1773. His legatees were his wife Mary, and children Abraham, Stephen, John, William, Daniel, Mary, Lackey and Sarah. William and Mary Trigg had issue: 1. Abraham, commanded a company of Militia which fought at the battle of "The Shallow Ford of Yadkin" in 1780; M. C. 1797–1809; 2. Stephen, Justice of Botetourt 1770, of Fincastle, 1772; Burgess for Fincastle at session of June 1775, and of Convention of July 1775. He commanded a company in Dunmore's War, removed in 1779 to Kentucky Co., which he represented in the Legislature 1780, and was killed at the battle of Blue Lick, Aug. 19, 1782. He married Mary, daughter of Col. William Christian. 3. John, Captain in Bedford Militia during the Revolution, and M. C. May 1797–May 17, 1804, when he died; 4. William, commissioned Lt. Col. Bedford Militia, Dec. 28, 1778; married Sarah _______, and had seven children; 5. Daniel, born Aug. 14, 1749, appointed Captain Montgomery Co. Militia April 2, 1777, married 1st Ann Smith (?). 2d Lucy Booker.




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