Sunday, December 10, 2023

Update

It's been some time since I posted anything new, life seems to have gotten in the way. Getting old really does slow you down and makes it that much harder to keep up with everything.

Maggie and I are comfortable in our home here in Hampton, twenty miles south of Atlanta. Thanksgiving is behind us and Christmas is just around the corner. 

Four score and one years on this skinny body has taken it's toll. But, like the little ever ready bunny, it does keep on ticking, even if a bit slower now.

I don't know how much longer I will be around or able to continue the blog, I'll try to see if one of my kids wants to pick it up, if not I'll look to others to continue the effort.

Sunday, January 31, 2016

1604 Parish Records



From the original (photo copy above) documents, St Botolph Parish, Aldgate, London, April Anno 1604:


"Thomas Rockhould and Parnell Trott were maried the twelft day"


Our Robert Rockhould was born about 1605 (best guess), his son's name Thomas could well have been after his Grandfather.


While I have nothing other than speculation and name association to base my opinion on, I think I may have found my Ninth Great Grandparents.


Thursday, January 14, 2016

Henry Pettit, my 4th GGF:

Twelve year old Henry Pettit, my  4th GGF (my maternal GM’s line) stood in his father’s stead as a soldier in the Revolutionary War.  He is well documented in pension records and history books, but I find most interesting his own personal account of his war time activities as he recounted then in his 1832 application for his pension (Rev War Pension File W5528)


The following is a personal account of his service in the Revolutionary War.


Henry Pettit
(Revolutionary War Pension File W5528)            
           To the best of my recollection in the year 1776, my father was then living in South Carolina 96 [District 96], now Spartanburg District on Lawson Forks of the Pacolet.  We was called on to build a fort known as Wofford Fort.  I then volunteered myself in place of my father who was at work on the Fort.  Col. William Wofford was Commander of the Fort. I was under the command of Capt. James Wood.  This service began about the 1st of June and lasted to the 1st of November.  About that time the families generally went home.  This service was possibly in endeavoring to keep the Tories and Indians from Embodying.  We had many a chase after them. 
          My next service was when Ferguson and Dunlap marched their army through South Carolina into North Carolina.  On their passage they was met by the Americans at Brown Oats Field.  There was several killed.  I was sent from that place with an express to Col. McDowell to reinforce.  We pursued them, after being reinforced, to Musgroves Mill on the [unclear] River where we overtook them and defeated them in this service sweep under Capt. James Smith and Col. John Thomas, Commander.  We all returned home.           
          I was then placed under captain Henry White.  We scouted through the upper part of South Carolina to the border of North Carolina.  We took a good many Tory prisoners on our arrays in the neighborhood.  We was ordered on to meet the Main Army at Shier’s Ferry under General Sumter.  When we came to that place, they was in sight of us, that is the British and Tories.           
          There was some fighting across the River.  From that Post we was ordered on to Black Stock where we had a severe Battle.  Gen. Sumter was wounded at that Place.  The volunteer part of the Army pursued after them under Col. Lacy to the mouth of Tyger (?) River where we overtook a Party and had an engagement.  We went on down the river some distance and crossed to the east side.  In passing up the Country, we took a good many prisoners.  We came on the Main Army and gave the prisoners up to them.  I was then under Capt. Trammel and Dickson.  We was ordered on then to join General Morgan.  We joined him at the Grindle Shoals on the Pacolet.  We scouted on and met him again at Licketty.  We then kept with the army after the Battle of Cowpens.           
          In that Battle, I was wounded in my thigh which injured me very much.  At this time, as soon as I was able, I enlisted in the ten months service under Captain William Smith, first under Col. Thomas, then under the command of Col. Middleton.  We was marched to the Country below Columbia, kept in continual movements from one point to another from the Savannah to the Congaree and near to Charleston.  We had many skirmages, they had the better of us and sometimes we paid them back in their own caves.  We joined the Main Army some few days before the Battle of Eutaw Springs.  I was placed as one of the guards of the Baggage Waggons on that day.  If I could have had a choice, I would have been in the battle in preference of my station.  After the battle we was ordered up the country, {and} turned to Orangeburg.  We had a scrimmage near Orangeburg with some of their Rangers.  We had to give the ground to them.  We met another party above Orangeburg where we had an engagement.  They fled to the Swamp.  We pursued them and they escaped to Charleston.                
          About that time the British began to leave their Country Posts and take to their stronghold in Charleston.  We followed on after them occasionally annoying them, to the 4 Holes where we made a stand for a few weeks to search the swamps between the 4 Holes and the Cyrees.  From there we was at Round S and then on the Near Macon’s Bridge from there to headquarters.           
          We heard of the capture of Cornwallis and our times that we enlisted for was expired and we returned home.
          In fact, for me to undertake to give in detail my service during the Revolutionary War is not in my power, but one thing I do know well is that from sometime after the summer of 1776 to the end of the war, I was engaged in the Defense of my Country.  I then lived in the hottest part of the Tory Country on the Indian Boundary and a great place for the British to assemble.  We that belonged to the Liberty Party was compelled to be in readiness at all times. 


Sunday, February 1, 2015

Early Land Records, Virginia Colony

Digging through the Virginia Library on-line http://www.lva.virginia.gov/public/using_collections.asp#_guides
 I found some land records:

19 August 1637 (image 001_0462) Patent land grant of 250 acres to Robert Rockwell for transporting his wife, children and servant.  Robert Rockwell, Sarah Rockwell, Mary Rockwell, Thomasin Rockwell and Mary Mayor.

This indicates to me that Robert Senior had previously arrived as the grant did not state "for the transportation into this colony of himself and..."  Additionally, in spite of the grant stating, "his wife, children and servant", I think that the "Thomasin" just might be Robert's mother.

20 July 1639 (image 01_0682) Patent land grant of 250 acres to Robert Rockwell for transporting Thomas Rockwell, Mary Roo and three others that I cannot read.

To me this Thomas, who it seems was very young at the time. would not have traveled out of the colony and returned two years later.  I believe Thomas was left behind when the rest of the family traveled in 1637.  This is why I think the 1637 Thomasin is the mother, not the son.

16 October 1645 (image 02_0069 and image 02_0070)  Land survey of 250 acres due of patent granted 16 November 1638.

I have yet to find the patent that this survey is for.  Nor can I find the land survey for the 1637 or the 1639 grants.  Historically the grants were often sold before the land was claimed and those transactions are indexed under the name that is the owner of the grant, not necessarily the same person to who the grant was issued.






I can email these images to anyone who might want them, I realize it's a bit hard to read here.  Send me your email via a PM on Facebook.

Friday, January 23, 2015

About the Search

Europe , through the thirteen and fourteen hundreds, was conflict upon conflict.  The English kings were constantly trying to uphold their positions and standing.  The French, the Scots, the Irish, the Welch, and others were all warring against the Kings at some time or another.  The Kings were fighting with the nobles, the nobles with the peasants, the clergy with the faithful and the unfaithful.  It was not a very calm, friendly environment.

The fifteen hundreds brought a different kind of war, one pitting the church against the crown, and the followers of the various emerging protestant churchs against the crown and "church".  The thirty years of the civil war created some strong rifts between those who supported the "church" and those who felt that there was a god given right to life, liberty, and happiness, and to worship in the manner that they felt was right for them.

Robert Rock* (name as on earliest found documentation) was born probably between 1600 and 1605.  He was likely born in England but could have been born in the Netherlands.  While no documentation, there is sketchy information that his father was one Richard Rockwell who died about 1621 in Fitzhead, Somerset, England.  Richard was the son of William Rockwell and Marion Wyke (or Pyke or Kyne); he married Thomazine Littlejohn in Fitzhead, September 1593.  This Thomazine could be the Thomasin that arrived in Virginia in 1637 under the sponsorship of Robert.  It appears that Robert's son Thomas arrived in Virginia a little later than the initial arrival of the other members of the family.
* Appears to be "Rockwell" on the land warrant; many read it as Rockhould.

Considering the interchanging of the Rockhould, Rockhold, Rockholt, Rockwell names over the years, it is not a long stretch.  History tells us many Puritans were not willing to convert to the religious ilk's of the English royals and some left England for the Netherlands in the early 1600s, before any real colonization  of America.  This leads me to believe that Robert and maybe Samuel Greniffe did relocate to the Netherlands and then at a later date on to Virginia.

Robert married Sarah Greniffe about 1633, probably in the Netherlands where sons Robert Junior and Thomas, and daughter Mary were born.  The family immigrated first to Virginia colony around 1637, as reflected in land records of the time.  Daughter Ann and son John were born in Virginia.  The family relocated to Maryland colony around 1649.

Robert was an armourer (gunsmith) by trade but the family became very successful farmers with several hundred acres, mostly in tobacco.  All of the first generation, Robert Jr., his siblings and their wives died in Maryland.  Their descendents moved eventually to the corners of the new world, as it grew.  Today there are relatives found with three variations of the family name; Rockhold, and Rockholt as well as Rockwell.  The family Rockwell does not always trace back to Robert, there is a separate line of the Rockwell family originating in Massachusetts  around the same time Robert came to Virginia.  Could the two lines be connected?  Very well could be but I have not found a solid connection yet.

I favor the idea our Robert, who could be the son of Richard Rockwell of Fitzhead,  was a brother or cousin of William Rockwell, father of the New England Rockwell family.  If, and it's a very big if, Robert left England under penalty of arrest (which could have occured over even a trivial matter) he would have changed his name since the arrest warrent would have followed him to the colony.  I support this idea with the documentation of the use of Rockwell by a few of the second generation individuals.  Also, I have found some information regarding the history of the name itself:  "Rockwell, formally Rockholt; from old English, hroc (rook) + holt (wood), of Buckinghamshire and Somerset".

I thought I had a good lead on another Rockhould family in England, around the time Robert would have left, but it turned out to be a Rockwell that was indexed as Rockhould.  I have also found some Rockholts in Sweden, I have yet to gain any contact with them but I am trying.  There are also some Rockholt's in Germany,  I have not found anything that would tie our family to Germany.There is not a lot of documentation existing that allows us to trace the family forward from Robert's arrival in Virginia until we begin to get extensive data in the America of the mid 1800's.  Some land records and  a few probates of wills along with a very few surviving family bibles are about all we have that can be considered reliable.  The early histories of Virginia and Maryland contain some information on the early families, the Rockhould/hold/holts, the Todds, the Warfords, the Dorseys, the Richardsons and others are often presented in totally different lights in the various histories.  It seems that there just might have been a little bias towards some and against the others.

Until 1850, when the United States census began to list all members of the household by name, it is a very difficult task to piece together the lineage from one generation to the next.  Even after 1850 it can be imposable.  The 1890 census was destroyed leaving twenty years, from the 1880 census to the 1900 census, with very little information to work with.  Also, early records were often made with names spelled wrong, children visiting with family  members were sometimes recorded as son or daughter of the head of household when in fact they were a niece or nephew.  Orphans and step children were often misidentified.

The children of Alfred Rockhold/holt and Elizabeth Sisk, who accompanied Elizabeth to California, are good examples.  They are identified with the surname of their stepfather on one census.  As both Rockhold and Rockholt  they emerged into adulthood.  Alfred's second wife, Elizabeth Presley, was only identified as Elizabeth on the census records and was thought to be the same  person as Elizabeth Sisk until the marriage document for her and Alfred was found.  It probably is even a leap of faith to believe that the two Elizabeths were the wife of our Alfred, I think it's a reasonable assumption considering everything that has been found.

Another great question is whether or not Elizabeth Presley was Presley by birth or by marriage.  Some of the Presley family attest the name to marriage to one John Presley, but no marriage documents have been proven, and there just doesn't seem to be any good evidence to support the idea.  While there is good evidence of a single Elizabeth, in the area, of the right age to marry Alfred, there is just no good evidence that the two young Presley boys living with Alfred and Elizabeth were not hers by a previous marriage.  While they could well be her nephews, there is nothing to prove that they are.

Duplicate names, especially the more common given names of the family, such as William, Alfred, and Robert often create questionability.  In one case I have identified three individuals with the same name, near the same age in Tennessee in 1860.  As the family increased in numbers, as the years went by, it becomes even a greater problem.  Until the early 1900's death certificates did not exist, and births were only recorded in church records and family bibles.  In the few instances where state/colony records were kept they were mostly kept only long enough to prepare an "indexed record".  These records are often filled with errors in transcription from the originals.

The Mormon church has done extensive work in transcribing and indexing historical records.  The federal and many state census records, old military records and extensive collections of family trees are made available on the web site "ancestry.com".  For anyone looking into the family lineage the cost of subscription to "ancestry" is money well spent.  While several of us, descendents of Robert, are working to research and document the family line we can always use and request that you provide us with any information that you might have available.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Family History (at least what I have found)

History And Origin of surname “ROCKHOLT”

Variant of German Rockolt, a variant of Rocholt, or Rocholl; thought to be from variants of a Germanic personal name composed of the elements hrok ‘prudance’, ‘care’ + wald ‘rule’, and by others to be of Slavic origin.

From all I have been able to determine, our ancestors immigrated to America from England, maybe through the Netherlands. While there is great evidence of German movement into England prior to the 1600’s, there is little recorded history from which information can be gathered. The early family was mostly protestant or puritan, and as such were surely victims of religious persecution, probably the cause of their immigration. Some of the wives of the earliest found American Rockholts were of Welch and Scottish birth, leading me to believe that the early Rockholts did associate with English settlers.

Virginia Colony seems to be the earliest settling, in the 1600’s. From there they moved into Maryland and down into Tennessee. Many of the family men worked on the railroads in the 1800’s, into the Carolinas, Georgia and Alabama, eventually scattering across the expanding nation, While there is today a large number of Rockholts in Tennessee, they are also concentrated in Texas, Arkansas and California.

Variants of the name, be they the result of intentional or unintentional change, have been found while researching the family genealogy. While today our line spells the family name “ROCKHOLT”, it appears also as Rockhold or Rockhould, and Rockwell. Where only a single use of alternate spelling was found, I retained the more prevalent spelling. Where there were several instances of alternate spellings, I have included both, listing the less prevalent in parenthesis.

I must acknowledge the assistance that I received from family members, both close and distant. They have proven to be a valuable asset, providing both leads and photographs. A special thanks to a schoolmate of mine, Glenda Fox Boyajan, she was such a great help in researching documentation from various sources.

Information contained in this genealogical tree has been collected from census records, birth and death certificates, marriage license filings, military records, bible entries, newspaper articles, obituaries and burial records, and in a few instances from personal history.

There can never be a complete, totally accurate genealogy, there are new events occurring, births, deaths, marriages and divorces which need to be included. There is also the matter of interpretation; choices that I have made, when there exists such extreme differences that it is unclear exactly what the correct information is. The listing of Grandfather Rockholt as Walter William, and not William Walter, was a matter of choice. While I found significant reference for William Walter or William W., and little for Walter William, and the fact that all of the personal reference was “WW Rockholt”, my memory of the time that he spent with my family is that he was “Walter”, and that is what I used for my decision to list him as Walter William. When Grand dad died and his grandson Tommy was handling the final arrangements, he too knew Grand dad as Walter William and that is what is on his death certificate and tombstone. [Note: I have since discovered documentation that allowed me to see where Grand dad, in his own hand, did sign as “William W. Rockholt”, and changed my listing on the family tree.]

My Family Tree: on ancestry.com rockholt (mrockh)
Family Group Page: on Facebook: Rockholt Family Search
My Search Blog: http://michaelrockholt.blogspot.com/

I am always looking for additional members of the family and additions to the information I have listed, and of course, identification of any errors that might exist in the tree that I have developed. Specific reference identification or actual scans of the source documents will be included, when provided. Feel free to contact me:

Michael David Rockholt

Thursday, September 4, 2014

A distant cousin, James Boatwright; 1833-1896

James Boatwright, cousin to my 2nd Great Grandfather Joshua Boatwright, was a prominent South Carolinian and it seems he was an awful lucky survivor of the Civil War. The following is from, "The Confederate Veteran, February 1900" (A newspaper dedicated to and for, the Confederate Veteran).


Boatwright,-James, Captain-Text: p.88  Confederate Veteran February 1900.-

We record the death of Capt. James Boatwright, Company B, Fourteenth South Carolina Regiment, McGowan's Brigade, of Ridge Spring, Edgefield County, S. C. He was born in Columbia, S. C., January 18, 1833, and died September 13, 1896. His grandfather Boatwright, for whom he was named, was one of the earliest settlers of Columbia, and one of its wealthiest and most prominent citizens. To his mother's people were granted in colonial times most of the Ridge lands of Edgefield County, S. C. His great grandfather Watson was an officer in the revolutionary war, and was buried with military honors. An uncle of Capt. Boatwright's uniformed a company of Hampton's Legion, C. S. A. It was originally known as the Watson Guards. Capt. Boatwright was well educated. He was a cadet at the South Carolina Military Academy at Charleston. At the age of twenty seven years he left his wife and child on a lonely, isolated plantation and went as lieutenant. In the battle of Ox Hill, Va., the captain was wounded and resigned, when Lieut. Boatwright became captain. He had many narrow escapes from death. His first service was on the coast of South Carolina. The  Yankee gunboats were shelling  Port Royal. He was standing in the road and saw the shell coming. Fully expecting to be killed, he turned sidewise, the shell passed him, blackening and bruising his limbs and tearing off the skirt of his new jeans coat, the cloth of which had been woven on his mother's plantation. This shell killed four men. Capt. Boatwright saw hard service in Virginia. At Spottsylvania during the battle a man was lying with his head against Capt. Boatwright's knee, when a cannonball took the man's head off, leaving Capt. Boatwright spattered with his blood and brains. Among the hard fought battles he passed through were the Wilderness, Fredericksburg, Cedar Mountain, Bull Run, the second Chancellorsville, Spottsylvania, at Petersburg on both sides of the James River, seven days' fight around Richmond, and the three days' battle at Gettysburg. At the battle of Gettysburg Capt. Boatwright's company went in with fifty four men, and after the three days' battle reported eight men for duty. The company had sixteen men killed on the field of battle, and every officer wounded except Capt. Boatwright, who was in command of the regiment at the close of the battle. The gallant Gen. Abner Perrin, in his account of the battle of Gettysburg, says: "Capt. James Boatwright was distinguished for uncommonly brave conduct in this battle, as I can testify from personal observation." At the surrender of Lee's army at Appomattox, Va., Capt. Boatwright stuck his sword up in an old stump and made his way home on a black horse which had been captured from the Federal army at Spottsylvania. It belonged then to Dr. Hugo, surgeon of the Fourteenth Regiment. Caesar, the faithful man servant of Capt. Boatwright, considered himself one of "the boys," for many a lark did he go on with them. He ever had an eye to the welfare of "Marse Jimmie." He was twice married, and left seven sons and four daughters. The home life of Capt. Boatwright was beautiful. He loved his home beyond all places on earth, his wife and children constituted his world. He was a man of few words, no pretenses, sincere, and unostentatious. He was to his children a companion and friend. In middle life he enlisted under the banner of the cross in the Protestant Episcopal Church.