Eagle's Nest
 




The Powell Family in America

Source: Historical Sketches of the Campbell, Pilcher & Kindred Families; pp. 415-427

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The Powell name was originally spelled "Powle". In the early part of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, the son of Powle of Mendehall, England, married Agnes, daughter of John Webb, Esquire, and it is believed that from this union came the descendents of the American family of Powells.

The Powells in America are said to be descendants of the Royal family of Wales, coming from one of the younger sons of one of the old kings of Wales. (I have found no documentation to support this theory).

The castle Madoc Brecon, in the county of Brechnoc, Wales, was the home of the Virginia branch of the family before immigrating to America. Three of the family were judges on King's Bench in England.

The first mention of the name in connection with America was Sgt. Major Anthony Powell, who was killed at St. Augustine in 1586, in the expedition of Sir Frances Drake against the Spaniards.

One Captain John Powell was the first Governor of the Isle of Barbados under English rule. The Powells were among the earliest and wealthiest ship owners and commanders in the colonies. One Anthony Powell was military commander of Sir Walter Raleigh's colonists who landed in America in 1583 at Roanoke Island, where Raleigh was built. Powell's Point on the coast was named in his honor.

Captain Nathaniel Powell, who came to Jamestown, Virginia colony in 1607, wrote much of John Smith's History of Virginia, and it was he who made the first map of Virginia, sending it back to England, where it is now preserved in the British Museum. (See Brown's Genesis of the U.S., pp. 596, 791-816).

The land upon which Williamsburg, Virginia was built was first deeded to Benjamin Powell by the King of England.

Captains William and Nathaniel Powell had large grants of land from the Crown, which they located in the colony of Virginia. At one time the whole county of York, Virginia, was owned by the Powells. William and Nathaniel were both officers in the English Army. They came with Captain John Smith to the English possessions in America, and settled Jamestown in 1607, the first permanent settlement. William Powell was one of the Incorporators of the 2nd Virginia Charter in 1607.

The name of Captain Nathaniel Powell is one of the most prominent in Captain John Smith's History.

In 1618 Captain Nathaniel Powell was Governor of Virginia for a short time. He was appointed a member of the council in 1621. Nathaniel married Miss Tracy, daughter of William Tracy, and granddaughter of Sir John Tracy. The family was massacred by Opechancanough, at Powell's Brooke, on 22 March 1622, near Flower de Hundred, on Nathaniel's Plantation. Twelve in all were massacred. The Indians "haggled their bodies, and cut off Nathaniel's head to express their utmost height of scorn and cruelty."

William Powell was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1619. Shortly after the massacre in 1622, Sir George Yeardly, Captain William Powell, and Captain Richard Butler each took a company and joined forces to avenge the deaths of their friends and relatives. They destroyed everything they could find, and returned to Jamestown, where they stayed a month, quartered at Kecoughtan. (See Smith's "History of Virginia", pp. 24, 212, 594)

Captain William Powell and all of his family were murdered in the terrible massacre of 1623, when so many of the Colonists lost their lives. It was thought that one of his sons, George, escaped, but he was not heard from afterwards; and, because no heir appeared to inherit the estate, his lands were returned to Governor Berkley, who deeded it to Captain Henry Bishop in 1646.

In 1626, Thomas Powell, (the eldest brother of Nathaniel) and his brothers and sisters then living in England, petitioned the government in regard to William's estate; they stated that William Powell, who had gotten possession of all of Nathaniel's estate in Virginia, was no relation. How they decided this is not recorded, but in 1653 George, Richard and Maud Powell, supposed to have been neice and nephews of Nathaniel, petitioned for the property, which would indicate that Nathaniel and William left no lineal descendants in Virginia or elsewhere.

Captain John Powell is mentioned as one of the first leading adventurers to Barbados.

One William Powell left two sons, Cuthbert and Thomas, who were living in Lancaster County, Virginia in 1660. They were the ancestors of the Powells of Lancaster and Loudon Counties.

John Powell, born in Virginia, was a minder of the Virginia House of Burgesses in 1633 for the District from Waters Creek to Marie's Mount.

Another John Powell was a member of the House of Burgess from Elizabeth City in 1657-60, 1663, 1666-67.

Sir Stephen Powell, a brother of Captain Nathaniel Powell, was one of the six judges of Chancery of the King's Bench, London, England. He was a member of the Virginia Company in 1619. His son, Captain John Powell, who, with his cousin, John Powell, came to Virginia in 1622.

William Powell came to America from England and settled in Somerset, Maryland in 1620. He later moved to Louden County, Virginia, where he left descendants. He was a younger brother of Captain John Powell; therefore, a son of Sir Stephen Powell of England. Both Captain John Powell and his cousin of the same name, left large families.

There is a tradition before 1776 that Seymour, James, Nathaniel, and Lucas Powell, brothers, had an estrangement which resulted in two of the brothers going south, and Lucas moving to Amherst County, Virginia. The occasion for the separation was a visit Lucas paid to the Royal Governor, when he placed his hat under his arm and made the Governor a very profound obeisance. His brothers construed this as a lack of Colonial patriotism. One of the brothers was a Royalist during the Revolution, and returned to Wales, his old family home. After two generations, his descendants emigrated to America. Major Powell, who was head of the Bureau of Ethology in Washington in the 1890's was descended from this branch.

In 1775, Lucas Powell was elected a member of the County Committee of Amherst, Virginia.

The Powell's, during Colonial days, were all Church of England people.

[p.421] Ambrose Powell married Mary Bledsoe, daughter of George Bledsoe of Maryland. His eill is dated 1704. His son, William Powell, was living near Williamsburg, Virginia in 1694. He married 1st, Jane Seymore. They had five sons:

  1. Seymore
  2. James
  3. Nathaniel
  4. Lucas, and
  5. Levin

His son Lucas (#4) married Elizabeth Edwards and had seven children. She died in 1774. He then married Mrs. Cowper (nee: Roe), from Chesterfield County, Virginia. She had two sons and five daughters when she married Lucas, but three of her stepsons married her daughters.

Another of the Powell brothers married Sally Cowper, cousin of the above.

Children of Lucas and Elizabeth Edwards were:

  1. Elizabeth, born 1755; married Thomas Hawkins. They had ten children:
    1. John
    2. Lucas
    3. Powell
    4. Rebecca
    5. Thomas
    6. William
    7. Nathaniel
    8. Peggy
    9. Eliza
    10. Young

  2. Mildred, married 19 Jul 1780, Captain Richard Taliaferro
  3. Rebecca, born 25 Sep 1769 at Warren, VA; married 14 Dec 1786, John Thompson, who was born in Antrim County, Ireland in Dec 1755 & died 25 Jul 1863 in Nelson County, VA

  4. Nathaniel, married Elizabeth Cowper and had eight children:
    1. Mildred
    2. Rebecca
    3. Harriet
    4. Mary
    5. Sophia
    6. Norbourne
    7. Seymore
    8. Lucas

  5. William, married Mary Cowper and had six children:
    1. Charles
    2. Amelia
    3. Courtney
    4. Lucas
    5. William
    6. Nathaniel

  6. Benjamin, who married Jane Cowper and had six children:
    1. Rebecca
    2. Elizabeth
    3. Sally
    4. Benjamin
    5. Frederick
    6. Abraham

  7. Seymore, married Sally Cowper in 1795. She died in 1798. They had:
    1. Goode
    2. Roe

My Powells have been very elusive. Mary Powell was the wife of Jacob F. Harley, my ggg-grandfather. Census records give her place of birth as Pennsylvania. Her Obituary states that she was 76 years of age at the time of her death, on 18 January 1880, placing her birth 1804/05. Through the kindness of a volunteer through Random Acts of Genealogical Kindness I was finally able to obtain her date of birth from her grave marker, which in turn led me to her parents, Peter and Christine Powell of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. I am forever indebted to her for finding a missing link I have searched for for many years.

Peter was son of Edward and Mary [Keller] Powell. Peter was born 3 February 1783. He married Christine POWEEL on 10 January 1804 at Lampeter, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Peter died on 19 May 1813 at Lampeter, leaving a wife and four young children:

  1. Mary, b. 11 December 1804; c. 7 April 1805; m. Jacob HARLEY before 1825 in Pennsylvania; d. 19 January 1880 in Fremont, Sandusky, Ohio; buried 20 January 1880 in Rising Sun, Wood, Ohio.

  2. Daniel, b. in April 1807; m. Catherine W. ___ about 1815; d. 23 December 1858 in Lancaster, Lancaster, Pennsylvnia. His occupation is listed as 'road agent' on the 1850 census, and father of Eliza J, Zephniah I, and Susan.

  3. Eliza, b. 19 March 1809; married John Geist; d. 9 March 1844 in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, mother of nine children.

  4. Peter, Jr, b. 16 February 1813; d. 20 Dec 1819 in Lancaster, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, at the age of six.

Other Powells are in my family history as well. My 6th g-grandfather, Ebenezer Garland, was married to Abigail Powell, daughter of Thomas Powell, born about 1656 in Stratham, New Hampshire. Thomas was son of Robert Powell, born 1636 in England and Mary Moore, born 1638 in England.


For additional information on William & Nathaniel Powell of Jamestown visit: http://www.linkline.com/personal/xymox/roh/powell.htm

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Web Author: Dianne Elizabeth, © 1999
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Web Site: Eagle's Nest, Created July 17th, 1999
Page Title: Powell Family History
Page Created: June 3rd, 2001
Revised: November 16th, 2008
URL: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~eaglesnest/Surname/Martin/powell.html