Name: William
MCGLASSON
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Birth: abt
1733 Glasgow,
Lanarkshire, Scotland
Death: 1776 Buckingham
Co., VA
William
MCGLASSON (abt 1733 - 1776)
Matthew
MCGLASSON (3 Jan 1756 - 30 Jun 1834) & Elizabeth CUNNINGHAM
Nancy Martha MCGLASSON (abt 1786 - 1846) & Robert VERMILLION (26 Mar
1785 - 1846)
Martha Louise VERMILLION (4 May 1827 (1826?) - 27 Mar 1904) & Newton
Eli COFFEY (1823 - 1890)
William COFFEY (27 Oct 1848 - 16 Mar 1896) & Malcena BARBRE (28 Mar
1855 - 12 May 1920)
Newton COFFEY (23 Sep 1875 - 26 May 1969) & Adelia Gertrude ROBINSON
(1878 - 1973)
Leo Newton COFFEY (22 Jul 1901 - 26 Oct 1998) & Elsie Maureen WALKER
(1903 - 1983)
Misc. Notes
ANCESTRY.COM FOR RENNER, MCGLASSON,
ET AL:
Name: William Sr. MCGLASSON
*
Sex: M
*
Birth: 1734 in Glasgow, Scotland
*
Death: 1776 in Buckingham County, Virginia
*
Event: 1 1773 Tithables:McGlasson, William (3) Matthew and James
*
Event: 2 1773 Tithables:Harris, John - William McGlasson, Overseer
*
Event: 3 1774 Tithables:McGlasson, Matthew (1)
*
Event: 4 1774 Tithables:McGlasson, William (2) and James
*
Event: 5 1774 1774, Tithables: Harris, John and William McGlasson
*
Reference Number: 613
*
Note:
Notes
for William McGlasson Sr.:
From
Marguerite Ward:
William
was brought from Scotland to Virginia and was apprenticed as a carpenter in
Richmond, Virginia. He later moved to Buckingham County, Virginia, married and
had three sons. He died the year the Revolutionary War began in 1776.
Marguerite Ward: Also said William Sr. was born about 1733. My information said
about 1705.
Notes
for William McGlasson Sr. from Tony Popp:
William
Sr., my eight -great grandfather, is the furthest back my McGlasson ancestry
has been positively traced. According to family legend, he was kidnapped by an
Englishman and brought to Richmond, Virginia as a lad sometime before 1753. He
was probably an indentured servant who worked as an apprenticed carpenter to pay
for his passage to America. His family may have been from Aberdeen, Scotland.
I
also found a James McGlasson in 1753 land records in Virginia. Because William
Sr.'s son, James would not have been old enough to own land, this was probably
a brother of William's. By the 1750's William Sr. moved to Albemarle County,
which became Buckingham County, VA. He and his family belonged to the Tillotson
Parish Angelican Church there.
William
Sr. was a slave owner. I have not been able to find who William Sr's wife was.
William's
sons, Matthew and James, served in the Virgina Infantry in the American
Revolutionary War. James was also a minister. James moved to Amelia County,
Virginia and died in Prince Edward County, Virginia. Matthew moved to Adair
County, Kentucky about 1810 to claim land granted to him for his service in the
war. He and James served in the infantry during the war.
This
above information found on web sight www.geocities.com/Silicon
Valley/Heights/3652/SKA.HTM.
Notes: Robert Lee McGlasson wrote in
his book "OUR FAMILY''
in
regards to William McGlasson Sr.
"William
McGlasson Sr., was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1734. We have no information on
either of his parents' names nor the names of siblings, if any.
As
a young lad he was taken by an Englishman from Scotland to the Virginia Colony.
The tradition is that he was "kidnapped' by said 'Englishman'; suggesting
that he was subject to the practice euphemistically called 'impressment' of
seaman so common at the time. We have no precise date for his arrival in
Virginia but the Battle of Culloden in Scotland in 1746 which 'wiped out most
of the McGlassons there' suggests that it was probably in this time frame; he
would have been ca. 12 years of age. Considering the practice of the time, it
is likely that he would have been indentured for some period of time to work
out his passage.
At
some early point, William was apprenticed to a carpenter in Richmond, Virginia.
How long he stayed there is not known; we do know that he later moved to
Buckingham County where he married and raised a family of at least three
children. His three known children were all boys: William,II or William, Jr.
(b.?/?/?; d. ?/?/1776), Matthew, our patriarch (b.1/3/1756; d.6/30/1834) and
James (b.?/?/?; d.12/6/1801). Considering the much larger normal size for
families of McGlassons and others in that time, it is possible that there were
other children but we have no record of their names.
Apparently,
William continued to work as a carpenter and live out his life in Buckingham
County, Virginia. A record of tithables for the years 1773 and 1774 show him
listed there in those years as well as his three sons. In the first of these
years both Matthew and James are shown to be in Williams's household his eldest
son, William II, is living in another household and is identified as
"overseer". The latter had apparently reached maturity by this year.
By
the next year, James is still living in William's household but Matthew, being
18yrs of age, is listed as living in his own household. That these latter
records how no other children suggest that there were none; unless, of course,
some of those later identified as belonging to Matthew were, in fact children
of William and brothers or sisters of Matthew. Stranger things do occur when
one begins to deal with these older, near-mythical records.
Since
neither I nor my major source of information on this first McGlasson patriarch,
Ms. Betty Cochran, have any specific documentation for our account, I will here
digree somewhat from the usual format and provide more detail on the sources of
our information.
What
we have available is a summary account and some family group sheets provided us
by Mrs. Oscar (Alice) McGlasson, 1865 Shore Drive, Beloit, Wisconsin 53511,
(608) 362-4487. She tells us the most of her information cemes from "The
Record of the McGlasson Family, published by a Mr. Joel Hamilton McGlasson,
Gonzales, Texas, in 1899 for his grandchildren. Alice McGlasson tells us that
Mr."Joel" is a great-grandson of William and apparently did have
considerable documenation for his account and handed these'original papers'
down through his daughter-in-law, Mrs. William Fleming McGlasson, to Mr.
Reginard Bertrand McGlasson, Houston, Texas, in 1934. The location of even
existence of these documentary sources today is unkown to the writer.
The
other sources used by Alice in her summary includes Virginia Tithables for
Burned Counties published by Kathleen Booth Williams, and a 'rough copy' of an
Agreement Settling the Estate of George McGlasson, Buckingham County, Virginia,
in 1796. This latter includes a listing of William's children that corresponds
to that in Mr. Joel's account and that inferred from the record of tithables.
And
one other name shows up in these materials as being the source of some additional
research on Matthew McGlasson. She is Ms. Ethal T. Lockhard, 29 Dubois Terrace,
Tuscaloosa, Albama 35401. This lady is identified in the material as "a
decendant of Matthew McGlasson."
I
burden this write up with more than the usual source information simply because
some of these much older source documents may yet exist somewhere and could be
a starting point for some further study of this Scot immigrant patriarch and
his descendants. It should be noted, however, that the materials I have in hand
date from no later than the 1930's. And the older they get the less likely they
will continue to exist and be retrievable.
That
William McGlasson, "ol Bill" as my dad, Lee Pollard McGlasson,
referred tohim one time, is the patriarch of our line and probably all other
McGlassons in the USA is more than just probable; it is more like a near
certainty. Ms. Betty Cochran has noted that most of the McGlasson clan
remaining n Scotland were killed off during the Battle of Culloden, 1746, which
ended the forty-five Rebellion, when pretender Charles Stuart and his Jacobites
were finally defeated by the Ducke of Cumberland; thus leaving few if any other
McGlassons to migrate.
Perhaps
more direct evidence is provided by simple geometric progression analysis. Such
analysis shows convincingly that through the 8+ generations since his time,
ol'Bill could more than have accounted for the ca.467 McGlasson households and
ca. 1,355 McGlassons known to reside in the USA in the early 1980's. Thus,
there is little doubt that our - and probably that of all other McGlassons in
the US - originated with this one patriarch; it would seem that ol'Bill was
'Pappy' to us all!
The
Joel McGlasson genealogy avers that William 'died the year the Revolutionary
War began'. This would be the year 1776 and, if our data on his birth year.
1734, be correct, he would have been a reather youngish 42-yrs. of age when he
died. Perhaps this accounts in part for his family being of relatively small
size. We have no information as to the cause of his death; whether a war
casualty or some other of the many reasons for leaving this life early. Our
data indicate that his eldest son, William II, died the same year as his
father, perhaps these two deaths were from a common cause.
That's
about the limit of our knowledge about this first patriarch. We don't know who
or precisely when he married. We presume but don't know whether he continued as
a carpenter all his life or not. We know he sired three boys but not
whether
there were other children. We have no record of any involvement for him in the
Revolutionary War. But it does seem a rather safe bet that all of our clan in
the USA carry some of ol'Bill's genes in our carcasses!"
Spouses
Unknown::
William MCGLASSON (abt 1733 - 1776)
William Jr. MCGLASSON (abt
1750 - )
James MCGLASSON (abt 1754 -
6 Dec 1801)
Matthew MCGLASSON (3 Jan
1756 - 30 Jun 1834) & Elizabeth CUNNINGHAM
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Fred
Coffey
2604
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TX 77005
713-592-9076 FredCoffey@AOL.COM