Genealogy | Native American | DNA | About Us
Tell A Friend! New! FTM 2010

Genealogy Records

Genealogy
Biographies
Cemetery Records
Census Records
DNA
Family Tree Search
History Books Online
Military Records
Native American Records
Surnames
Vital Records
World Genealogy

US Genealogy

Alabama Genealogy
Alaska Genealogy
Arizona Genealogy
Arkansas Genealogy
California Genealogy
Colorado Genealogy
Connecticut Genealogy
Delaware Genealogy
Florida Genealogy
Georgia Genealogy
Hawaii Genealogy
Idaho Genealogy
Illinois Genealogy
Indiana Genealogy
Iowa Genealogy
Kansas Genealogy
Kentucky Genealogy
Louisiana Genealogy
Maine Genealogy
Maryland Genealogy
Massachusetts Genealogy
Michigan Genealogy
Minnesota Genealogy
Mississippi Genealogy
Missouri Genealogy
Montana Genealogy
Nebraska Genealogy
Nevada Genealogy
New Hampshire Genealogy
New Jersey Genealogy
New Mexico Genealogy
New York Genealogy
North Carolina Genealogy
North Dakota Genealogy
Ohio Genealogy
Oklahoma Genealogy
Oregon Genealogy
Pennsylvania Genealogy
Rhode Island Genealogy
South Carolina Genealogy
South Dakota Genealogy
Tennessee Genealogy
Texas Genealogy
Utah Genealogy
Vermont Genealogy
Virginia Genealogy
Washington Genealogy
West Virginia Genealogy
Wisconsin Genealogy
Wyoming Genealogy

Free Charts

Correspondence Record
Family Group Chart
Family Tree Chart
Free Census Forms
Research Calendar
Research Extract
Source Summary

 

Andrew Hunter

The following data is extracted from Hunter Family History.

(Reference 23)


ANDREW HUNTER: of County Londonberry, Ireland, was born in 1640, and it was the family tradition that his birthplace was the ancestral home of the Hunters of Hunterston in Scot land. His son, Hugh, married Isabella Semple, and their son, David Hunter, lived in York County, Pennsylvania. He married Martha McIlhenny in 1745. He was a Captain of a York County Company in the French and Indian War, and a member of the expedition against Fort Duquesne. Capt. Hunter mysteriously disappeared in the summer of 1776, and his family never saw or heard from him again. His fate was not known until nearly a century afterward, when on the destruction of an old house in a valley of Virginia by Union Soldiers, a paper was discovered concerning him. It was given to his great-grandson, Captain David Hunter Strother, and was found to be a writ of habeas corpus, issued in the name of "George III Rex," by authority of the Governor of Virginia, Lord Dunmore, directing the sheriff of Berkeley County to bring the body of David Hunter to the capitol at Williamsburg. Captain Hunter was a patriot, and Lord Dunmore, last of the English Governors of Virginia, was notorious for his cruelties and injustice to the colonists. Captain David Hunter bore the arms of the family of Calderwood, Scotland, "Vert, three dogs of the chase courant argent collared or; on a chief of the second as many hunting horns of the first, stringed gules. Crest: A greyhound sejant argent collared or. Motto: Cursum perficio." The descendants of this line of the family are distinguished in the annals of Virginia, and allied with the Washington, Dandbridge Spotswood, and many other historic families.
Among early immigrants to New England were four of the name, as shown by the following ship record: "These under written names are to be transported to N. England imbarqued in the Blessing from the Ministers and Justices of their conformitie in Religion and that they are no subsedymen.

Christian Hunter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Eliz. Hunter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Tho. Hunter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Wm. Hunter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11."

Source: Hunter Family History

  Go Back  

 

Genealogy Websites

Other Websites

Special Offers

Family Tree Maker 2010

Get the New FTM 2010 software for 20% off! Use the link above!!!

Access Genealogy is the largest free genealogy website not owned by Ancestry.com. As such, it relies on the revenue from commercial genealogy companies such as Ancestry and Footnote to pay for the server and other expenses related to producing and warehousing such a large collection of data. If you're considering joining either of these programs, why not join from our pages, and help support free genealogy online!

Copyright 1999-2009, by Access Genealogy.com
A project by Webified Development