Several decades ago I recall joining my brother Dennis Terry in the family history search. He interviewed, surveyed cemeteries, communicated with people far and wide.
At the time, several people were busy collecting primary document information from sources in Montgomery and Botetourt Co., Va. Snippets of old letters (1850's and collected by Jed Terry into The Terry Family Letters found in major research libraries) gave us clues to connections, travels, kin and etc.
As they all combined many discoveries were made and many assumptions as to relationships. Now, as DNA presents additional information, some of those assumptions will need to shift.
Recently some bad data has flooded the Terry lines, and just about any line from the regions, as people attempt to "connect" their dead ends and brick walls.
I suggest that we take everything back to the beginning. Start at those brick walls, gather all the data, and then look at things from a different perspective.
Looking at Virginia as a whole, with its revolving county development that confuses "newbies", it is clear that the coastal area developed first and fastest. Ships came to ports, sailed down the coast, and used the massive rivers dumping into the sea as highways deeper in country. Most of that region was settled by English, Scots-Irish and people migrating into the area from New Jersey as land was opened or awarded. Some came down from New York and the New England regions, following the shore or using the King's Highway.
TERRY AREA 1
The areas of Pittsylvania, Halifax, Orange, Louden, Fairfax, Essex, Spotsylvania, Lunenburg. etc. was home to a large group of Terry. Most trees cite their start in the area with one James Terry, b 1666, Lunenburg Co., VA (however, Lunenburg did not exist then so it was probably Charles City or the future such location since it was formed as the original location from which Lunenburg would later emerge.). This man would have a son Benjamin Terry (see a tree with a collection of notes associated with it at James TERRY 1666-1744 (objgenealogy.com).
James Terry 1666-1744
sons:
- James 1690-1767 (lives and dies in Va)
- Benjamin 1700-1771
- Stephen 1702- d.1769, South Carolina
- Joseph 1707-1785 (Va)
- Champness 1720 Pittsylvania Co., Va. d. 1758 Louisa Co., Va
- Nathaniel 1725-1778 Halifax Co., Va.
*Benjamin 1700-1771 had children: Joseph b in Halifax; Nathaniel b 1724 ; Sarah b 1730; Benjamin M. b 1730;a Levinia b. 1740?
Benjamin's son Nathaniel , ca 1724 died in 1780 and had son Robert, b 1776 in Halifax Co., Va.
Many of the children of the James Terry 1666-1744 drifted into South Carolina, North Carolina in the same way a later generation would drift into Kentucky, Alabama, or other southern locations.
From results of various Terry men a large number of Terrys in those areas appear to show a large number are members of DNA Haplogroup I-01.
Now, combined with careful evidence building, and research, it is possible that a more precise tree for the Terry's of Eastern and Central Virginia, and elsewhere, might be constructed. As more of this group track and add their DNA to ongoing studies great leaps may be possible and truth found.
TERRY AREA 2
Augusta County in Virginia began as this huge area that encompassed regions now identified with about three states. As people settled these areas, smaller sections appeared. Into the general region of Botetourt County in 1744 appeared two men never listed on records in the region until then (along with many others of course). What brought Jasper Terry and William Terry to the estate sale on the Monahan place is a guess.
Jasper Terry, believed to be a cousin of William Terry based on one theory and a father or brother in another end up sticking around the region. They remain, from documentary evidence of early records, in the area of Botetourt Co. and the future Montgomery Co. until William dies in about 1792 (based on a court document).
A word about the theories. One theory suggests that Jasper Terry was a cousin. This merges with a Jasper Terry, b c1715 in Bucks Co., Va who married in 1736 there a Mary Hart. Note, the Jasper left in Bucks Co. Pa is a probable uncle of this Jasper Hart. Mary Hart came from a historic and active Quaker family. Shortly after their marriage Jasper Terry, along with his in-laws including Thomas, Miles, Aaron, Silas, and John Hart lived and worked in the area (road building, surveying, etc.). Since Mary Hart Terry's father, and several brothers?, migrated to Union Co., South Carolina where it is believed Thomas Hart died c 1790's, it is possible that Jasper and Mary Hart Terry migrated that was as well. Since it is believed that this Jasper and Mary Hart Terry had only one son, Joseph, who was raised by his Uncle John Terry in Bucks Co., PA, it is also possible they may have died in Virginia and that would have resulted in his son being sent back to relatives to be raised or fostered. What is known is that the largest cluster of Terry's in Bucks Co., PA fall into the DNA haplogroup of I-02. There is an earlier Jasper there as well and many of the names familiar to later Terry's can be found as well. An interesting essay or two can be found on them at "Five Generations of Terry's of Buck Co., PA" at 29deadpeople.com, as well that explores the descendances of the line of that Bucks Co. Thomas Terry to Southold, Long Island and the arrival of three Terry me (relatives) from England in 1635.
Aligned with this theory is that , as cousins, William might be the William Terry who married in 1756 in Philadelphia one Eleanor Holmes. She is mentioned, always as Eleanor Terry (wife of William) in Quaker records of the time in Pennsylvania. There is a later mention of a William Terry but it is in the early 1800's and may constitute a son. William (spouse of Eleanor), seemingly disappears, and while divorce was uncommon it did happen. I do not believe this is the same man, but another "cousin?" He appears to have disappeared about 1760 (as Eleanor turns up as the only figure in records in 1760-1761). If, however, the William Terry who married a Rachel Manson in 1759 at Christ Church in Philadelphia is the same man in Botetourt Co., Va (and in over thirty years of people searching a William and Rachel to match the Botetourt couple mentioned in court documents, no one has found a marriage matching the names to suggest otherwise) then he married Eleanor in 1756 (fathered Wm and another child) and then married Rachel in 1759. Note, both marriages are outside the Quaker Meeting model and held in Presbyterian churches too. Also, if Eleanor did not die, then the children joining William in Virginia becomes harder to explain. So, for those reasons I suspect this is yet another cousin amid the larger Bucks Co., Pa group.
A timeline of William's life as recorded in early records of the area indicate that in
1744 - Appeared at an Estate sale with Jasper Terry
1750- Named a constable for the area of Botetourt
1753 - Named as a neighbor in relations to a will being probated
24 Nov 1753 - busy "Surveying and building roads" in the area of Augusta, Virginia, British Colonial America. Along with Jasper Terry, Miles Hart, Aaron Hart, Wm Graham, etc.
c 1755- [Assumed birth date of son William Jr]
Also of note, is a trace that indicates in those early Quaker records regarding Eleanor that perhaps she married outside the society (and its processes); that often meant a spouse was not an adherent.
Intriguingly, there are several lines (one is the Clement Terry line of Bucks Co., Pa) that indicates at the time William b1724 would have been seeking a wife, others before him in Terry groups had stepped outside the "proper" order of things to marry in "public" or in a civil ceremony. Thus, there is record of some weddings at the historic Presbyterian churches of Philadelphia of those who, as in one case in particular, two months after the civil ceremony at another church they had a proper Quaker one at the local meeting house. An important element in accepting Eleanor Holmes as the first wife of this William would be to discover how Quakers viewed divorce. If a woman did not marry in the Meeting House is it possible her marriage could be overlooked or set aside (something the Catholic Church does) if she herself was upstanding and faithful to the tenets of the Meeting? There appears to be some indication of this in records.
Also, note on the DNA related to this grouping. Several descendants of John Terry who married Esther Brown have had their DNA tested and the results place them in that same I-02 haplogroup. See an informative article on the Y-DNA of the Buck's Co., Pa group related to Virginia at Addendum 1. Analysis of Y-DNA markers – 29deadpeople and explore the links provided to names at the Terry Family DNA results at Test Results at Terry - Results | FamilyTreeDNA and the classic chart at FamilyTreeDNA - TERRY Y-Chromosome DNA Surname Project
TERRY UNKNOWNS
A. In that central and SW Virginia area of Wm Terry and Rachel can be found another Jasper Terry. (Or the same and no familiar connection between Wm and Jasper of 1744). This one is identified by the presumed name of his spouse as "Jasper and Mary Morrison Terry.
They had at least one son Josiah who married a Mary Lloyd.
This Josiah had children (more but these are the only ones I am listing) Jasper Morrison Terry and Aaron Burr Terry.
This family group, from the previously mentioned sources, had haplogroups in opposition to those of the other groups - a G-02. Other research indicates this group too may have come out of New Jersey very early but more data is needed to be sure of migration; not enough have added their DNA to the mix to determine more.
B. The "Two Jasper Terry's". Many trees have added these two together to be either the son of William and Rachel Terry I-02 or part of the Jasper Terry G-02 group of Terry-Morrison. Lately, some trees show they are connecting people and lines identified from I-01, I-02 and G-02!
Here is my take on the situation. Most trees say that this Jasper Terry who died in 1819 in Montgomery Co., Va had two wives and the first was named "Ruth" and the second "Margaret" (presumed Snidow married name). This is based on land records of the 1793 to 1804 mentioning a "Jasper and wife Ruth." The will of this man, however, merely says "Margaret Terry" and calls his step-daughter Susannah Snidow/Snido (from that it has been assumed that was Margaret's married name but it could also be Susannah's married name! A large group of that name are in the same area). So a pre-marriage name of Margaret Snidow is an assumption until documentary evidence appears to clarify the situation and the dates.
The major problem is that for this man to be the same husband to both Ruth and Margaret, the time line does not line up based on working assumptions. For "Jasper Terry and wife Ruth" to be together as couple in 1793-1809 time period, Ruth had to die before 1819. The will of 1819 of Jasper Terry appears to imply the wife would survive him.No death or cemetery has been found related to his or her death or that of a first wife. At that late date, a record seems expected if he had mothered Elisha, Silas, Jonathan, William, Karon-Happuck, Keziah, and Jemima and then remarried Margaret and then died in 1819. The children were grown and married. Yet no marriage records survive just as no death records survive to verify any of that.
Two, given the names of the three daughters - blessings after a time of trial- (the loss of a beloved first wife?) it seems probable that Margaret was the mother of the girls (born after hardship of war, loss of a spouse, something else? Some dark night of the soul?) and a first wife mother of the boys. Only as records or DNA from those who hail from the genes of Silas, Elijah, Jonathan and William is analyzed can an answer be suggested.I assume that this Jasper-Margaret may link to the G-02 group and that any descendants of the "Jasper and Ruth" may prove to be of the I-02 group. Thus proving these are two distinct family units.
Who knows? The presumed descendants of this Jasper (Elisha , Silas, Jonathan, William ) should be encouraged to have their DNA done and thus help to clarify the lines of tangled tree called TERRY.Hopefully, this will encourage people to begin a new discussion about what they assume to know or claim about the Terry Trees in Virginia. Each one played strong roles in the formation of the state, the nation and the family groups they birthed. May we do as much in the lives we are given.
Happy hunting!