Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Capps Family of Norfolk and Jamestown -- A Sea Venture



This post pertains to my maternal family line and so departs from the usual subject of the Calvert/McGowan kin. I hope my  siblings and our Brugman, Schlunz and Bennett cousins will find this post a treat.

Mattie Capps, married Ervin Randall in 1884 joining together the two oldest of our American family lines. Ervin's ancestor, Elizabeth Brown Randall, and possibly her husband, John Randall, came to Massachusetts about ten years after the Mayflower landed. Mattie's ancestors, William and Catherine Jernagin Capps, nearly failed to arrive at all. When they did, it was 1610 and the place was Jamestown, Virginia. But instead of finding a settlement of 500 countrymen, the new arrivals found 60 survivors of the bitter winter historians call "the starving time."



Out of England


William Capps was from Norfolk, England. He married Catherine Jernagin (alternately Jerningham) in Norwich, England at St. Michael at Plea on the 11th of December in 1596. Their five children were Henry, Frances, Willoughby, Anne, and William. It is not clear whether the other children travelled with their parents or stayed in England. William was born in the colony in 1612 and others may also have been. The Capps were in the famous flotilla of ships, called the “third provisioning” led by the ill-fated Sea Venture. The flotilla was to bring 500 new settlers and provisions to Jamestown.

The Sea Venture

Most researchers agree that William and Catherine were on the Sea Venture itself. When a tremendous hurricane separated the ships, seven made it to Jamestown, one went down and the Sea Venture wrecked off the coast of Bermuda.  The 150 survivors spent nine months on the island  building two ships, the Patience and Deliverance, from the wreckage of the Sea Venture and cedar wood found on the island. Aboard these ships they sailed on to Virginia and found the remnants of the decimated colony. With no other hope in sight, the Patience and Deliverance took on the survivors and set sail for England. Before they made the open sea, they were met by the “fourth provisioning,” led by Thomas West, Baron De La Warr. The reinforcements allowed the colonists to stay in Virginia and begin again to build the colony.

Keocoughtan

William and Catherine settled in the place where the Jamestown English first met the native Americans, Kecoughtan, now Hampton, Virginia. In the summer of 1610 the new governor, Thomas Gates, led colonists to massacre many of the indigenous Kechoughtans living in the village and drive the rest to seek refuge among the Powhatans. William began to clear land and set up his plantation.In 1612, Catherine gave birth to William Capps, our first American-born ancestor.

Politics
The Virginia colony established its House of Burgesses in 1619. It was the first representative legislative assembly in the colonies. William Capps was sent to represent Kecoughtan, one of the eleven settlements gathered in the assembly. One of his concerns there was to have the name of the village changed from Kecoughtan to the less native and more English name of Elizabeth City, a goal he accomplished.


Ancient Planter
The year 1619 saw the first official division of land in the Virginia colony. It was determined that the settlers who had arrived before 1616 and stayed deserved special recognition. They were designated “ancient planters.” This erstwhile title went to planters such as William Capps who had paid their own passage to the colony, owned at least one share in the Virginia Company and had developed land for planting. The reward was 100 acres for each share owned. I don’t know how many shares Capps owned at the time. Beyond the land bonus, ancient planters and their descendants were deemed exempt from paying taxes or going to war.


Massacre
The family scarcely had time to enjoy their bounty in land and William's status as burgess before tragedy stuck the colony and the family. United Indian groups attacked in 1622 and massacred 347 settlers. Catherine Capps has been named as one of the dead.


Discontent
William found himself critical of the Virginia government and especially of governor George Yeardly and expressed his dissatisfaction regularly. He was also litigious, often seeking redress in the courts or legislature. He sued to be compensated for land seized by the Virginia Company. He sued to be awarded passage of five men in compensation for the land. He petitioned to be allowed to build guest houses for incoming settlers. Capps joined others in asking the English government to pay higher prices for tobacco. He sought recognition as an Indian fighter and asked the English to send more armed men to wage war against local tribes.


Councillor and Complainer to the Crown

William Capps was appointed to an advisory council called the Virginia Council. Its purpose was to advise the Virginia governors on issues important to planters. It served as an upper house to the colonial legislature and acted as the highest judicial authority. In this position Capps continued his criticism of the Virginia government. He sought permission to travel to England and was denied. Our ancestor went anyway and won enough influence with the tobacco-hating King Charles that the ruler granted Capps rights to develop salt works to extract salt from sea water on the Eastern Shore.

Charles wanted to develop industries other than tobacco growing in Virginia and Capps played into that desire. Once source said that Capps started an altercation with the settlers on the Eastern Shore and the animosity prevented William from continuing the project. Another source says he did develop a profitable salt works.


A Biographical Sketch

A biographical sketch of William Capps* appears in Lyon Gardiner Tyler’s “Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography”

“During many years Capps took an active part in the affairs of the colony. On Jan. 26, 1621, the company granted him a patent for land in consideration of his undertaking to transport 100 persons to Virginia, and on Feb. 22, upon his humble request, the court (of the Virginia Company) ordered a certificate to be drawn up by the secretary to testify to the good esteem in which he was held, "as well in the Colony of Virginia, and may appear by the rewards of his good service under them, as also of what ability he is reported to be there in respect of the great supplys [sic] he had sent there." On May 2, it was ordered that he should receive as a reward "five men's passage free at the Company's charge, in consideration of his many years service of the Company in Virginia, with the hazard of his live among the Indians." "Upon October 7, 1622," "Mr. William Capps, an ancient planter in Virginia," made the following requests of the company: (1), that Sir William Newce be required to deliver him the five men for whose transportation he had paid that gentleman thirty pounds here in town (London); (2), that Sir George Yeardley restore him a chest of goods he detained from him; (3), that he might have satisfaction for that land in Virginia taken from him by Yeardley. Two letters written by Capps in 1623, one to John Ferrar, and the other to Dr. Wynston, are preserved among the Duke of Manchester's manuscripts. The first of these letters has been published in full in "Virginia Vetusta." The writer seems to have been zealous for the welfare of the colony, but was evidently of a grumbling and fault-finding disposition. One fact connected with him should not be omitted. After the revocation of the charter in 1624 there was no regular general assembly of representatives of the people. The Virginia authorities sent over a memorial in 1627 on the subject, and by William Capps, who was in England, King Charles sent instructions allowing a general assembly and urging the cultivation of staple commodities, as heretofore they had depended too much "upon smoke." To Capps was given the privilege of erecting salt works. He arrived in Virginia Feb. 22, 1628 and on the 26th of the next month the colonial assembly met. He was a member of the council in 1627.” [Page 99]

Family

What is known of William Capps’ family life is little. He married again after Catherine’s death to a Frances with whom he had a second family. Young William married a woman called Margaret (possibly Woodhouse). When widowed she married Dennis Dawley. Margaret and William’s son Henry named his son Dennis after Dawley. Dennis was Mattie Capps’ third great grandfather. The Capps descendants lived in Virginia and North Carolina for centuries and many still do. The first of our line to head to the Midwest was Dennis’ grandson, Dempsey after whom Bill Randall was named.

When I began my genealogy research I was afraid to find Indian killers and slave owners among our ancestors. Some of the New England Yankee ancestors held a few slaves or bought shares of ships transporting human trade. The Capps family helped build the system of wage bondage in the colonies and when that did not prove practical for large tobacco farming they began, as did most planters, to trade in slaves. The family owned large tobacco farms, held significant real estate and shipping interests and bought and sold enslaved Africans as laborers and commodities. Make of this what you will. It is hard to imagine, but unfortunately a sad fact of American history.

There is much more to the Capps story. The College of William and Mary library is a good source of Jamestown and Capps history. It can be easily accessed online. I have scarcely mentioned the generations that followed William. If I begin to talk of them this blog will never end. But I hope you have had a look at our first ancestor, the irascible William Capps.


*"Encyclopedia of Virginia Biography," Lyon Gardiner Tyler
**"Virginia immigrants and adventurers, 1607-1635: a biographical dictionary," Martha W. McCartney
Photo: The marker stands at the sight of Capps Point in Hampton, Virginia. It was later called Little England. This was the original homestead of William and Catherine Capps.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The Swarm


They have become so many: Capps and Kemballs, Swains and Cranes, Goodyears and Goodales. Wilkens and Wells, Randalls and Tuthills and Wallace and West—a four-hundred year swirl.
Ancestors are in my head like glimpses of faces in clouds. I can catch them on paper for a moment; names and dates, father of, mother of, spouse. Today though they all swarm and swim.
I have traced, with some accuracy, the direct lines. I know the grandfathers and grandmothers from Hattie and Vince, Peggy and Bill back to the first of their people to wade ashore. Every few generations I can’t find the surname of a grandmother, but mostly I know the names and places. Some of them jump off the pages of history, some are footnotes and some are forgotten. They came and settled, or settled in, brand new towns in five states between 1610 and the Revolution.
I do not know if the great number of very early colonial ancestors in our tree is unusual in American genealogy. I have heard that 53% of Americans had ancestors here in colonial times. We have family lines that were in the colonies for several generations before the Revolution. We have a string of ancestors who fought in the War of Independence. They represented militias in North Carolina, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey. We have ancestors who came well-provisioned and from solidly upper class families. We also had ancestors who arrived with very empty bellies and no prospects whatsoever.
When I started to write our genealogy, I thought I would write the chronology of each line, but it is impractical. You wind up with something like the ‘begats’, fun to memorize but deathly dull unless you know the stories attached to each person.
So this post is meant to give a scant overview of the main family lines relevant to when, where and under what circumstances they arrived. After that I can start to share some of the stories I have turned up.
Hattie Mae McGowan’s parents were Grace Swain and Elmer McGowan
Vince Calvert’s parents were Agnes Shrum and John Doak Calvert
William Dempsey Randall’s parents were Mattie Capps and Ervin Randall
Margaret Nora Dugan’s parents were Ellen Mary O’Callaghan and Patrick Henry Dugan
Here are the first immigrants in each line in their order of arrival.
William and Catherine Capps from England in 1610 to Jamestown, Virginia on the Sea Venture.
Elizabeth Randall (possibly a widow) from England to Watertown, Massachusetts before 1630.
Tys Barentsen Swaim (later Swain) and Scytje Cornelise Swaim came from the Netherlands to settle in New York City (Staten Island) in 1659.
Johan and Ana Maria Schramm (later Shrum) came from Germany in 1737 and settled in Pennsylvania.
The McGowans arrived before 1800 but probably in the mid-18th century from Northern Ireland or Scotland to settle in western Pennsylvania.
Thomas and Martha Calvert came in 1848 from Belfast and settled in Erie, Pennsylvania and later went to Wisconsin.
John Dugan arrived from Ireland in 1847 in New York City.
Ellen Mary O’Callaghan arrived from Ireland in 1892 in New York City.

The profiles of the families who arrived in the 17th century are of course similar. The Virginians (Capps) were not religious dissidents, but Anglicans and more interested in Virginia land and rumored gold than in religion. The New Englanders, the largest group of our immigrant ancestors, were religious dissidents and in some cases extremely radical. They were Randalls and associated families and also families who married into the Swains and Shrums. The Mid-Atlantic area was home to the Shrums who settled in Pennsylvania around the same time as the McGowans. While the McGowans stayed in western Pennsylvania until after the Civil War, the Shrums went to North Carolina in their second generation. One generation later they went to the Mississippi River Valley and settled Cape Girardeau. They was our first family on the River. The Virginians stayed in that state and in North Carolina until they left for Ohio and Illinois before 1820.
The latest comers in our tree were the Presbyterian Northern-Irish Calverts and the Catholic Dugans who came after the Famine. Ellen Mary O’Callaghan from Cork was the last immigrant ancestor and, possibly, the only one on either side who came through Ellis Island.
The New Englanders who arrived before the English Civil War took advantage of the English invitation to colonize New England in trade for religious autonomy. Those English who came after the English civil war often left under the cover of night. They include three men of Cromwell's men who stood guard over the execution of Charles I and a daughter of a man executed as a regicide of that king. (These people were ancestors of Grace Swain through both her paternal grandmother and her maternal grandmother.) The New Englanders founded towns in Massachusetts and Connecticut primarily between 1630 and 1640. Some of these were Watertown Massachusetts, Southold, New York, Saybrook, Milford, and New Haven Connecticut and Elizabeth and Caldwell, New Jersey.
That is the overview with the briefest facts, but it is the treasure of stories that I want to share with you. Here are some that I have planned. I hope they will tempt you.
William Capps and the Salt Mine
Mrs. Capps and the Raid
Mathias Swain and the Pirates
Big Shots
The Salem Incident
The Regicides
I’m a Tuthill?
Loyals and Rebels
Blues and Grays
Editha’s Letters and Polly’s Divorce.
Nicholas and John Shooting Wolves
Buttons
Moses' Corn
... and a few more.

The photograph is of the home of Nicholas and Editha Shrum, Vince Calvert's grandparents. It is in Saverton, Missouri. It was taken in 1983 and is courtesy of a Shrum cousin, Linda Thompson.