Jump to content

William Farrar (settler)

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Farrar
Member of the Council of Virginia
In office
1626–1632
Personal details
BornApril 1583
Croxton, Lincolnshire, England
Diedc. 1637 (aged 53–54)
Virginia
SpouseCecily Jordan
Occupationplanter and politician

William Farrar (April 1583 – c. 1637) was a planter, lawyer, real estate investor and politician in colonial Virginia who served on the Virginia Governor's Council. A subscriber to the third charter of the Virginia Company, Farrar immigrated to the colony from England in 1618. After surviving the Jamestown massacre of 1622, Farrar moved to Jordan's Journey. In the following year, Farrar became involved in North America's first breach of promise case when he proposed to Samuel Jordan's widow, Cecily, who was allegedly engaged to another man. In 1624, the case was dropped, and Farrar and Cecily married.

In March 1626, Farrar was appointed to the Council of Virginia where he advised the royal governor of Colonial Jamestown. Later that year he was named a commissioner (i.e., magistrate) for the monthly courts of the colony's "upper parts", with jurisdiction over Charles City and the City of Henrico. In these roles, Farrar voiced the early planters' interest as the colony transitioned from being managed by the Virginia Company and became a royal colony under Charles I of England.

Farrar was also on the Council when it arrested Governor John Harvey for misgovernance and forced his temporary return to England. By the time of his death around 1637, Farrar had sold off his remaining assets in England and established rights to a 2000 acre patent on Farrar's Island, located on a curl of the James River, which was claimed by his son William Farrar Jr.

The arms of William Farrar's father, John Farrar of Croxton and London, Esquire[1]

Background

[edit]

William Farrar was born before April 28, 1583,[2] the date of his christening, in Croxton, Lincolnshire, England.[3] He was the 3rd son of John Farrar of Croxton[1] and London, Esquire, a wealthy merchant and landowner with various holdings in West Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, and Hertfordshire,[4] and Cecily Kelke, an heiress [5] and direct descendant of Edward III of England.[6] The nineteenth century historian of Virginia, Alexander Brown, states that while in England, William Farrar received an education in law.[note 1][9]

Relation to the Virginia Company and immigration to the New World

[edit]
Facsimile cover of "Nova Britannia", a tract from Farrar's time used to recruit people to Virginia.

When Farrar went to Virginia, it was still part of the Virginia Company of London, a joint-stock company, sanctioned by Royal Charter.[10] Farrar was a subscriber to the Third Charter of the Virginia Company,[11] where his name appears as "William Ferrers".[12] His subscription consisted of three shares that were bought for a total of £37 10s (equivalent to about $13,500 today).[note 2][9] Farrar also had family interests in the Virginia Company as two of his second cousins,[7] the brothers John Ferrar and Nicholas Ferrar, played key roles in the managing the company's interests.[14]: 60

Farrar left London on Neptune[15]: 209 on March 16, 1617/18 [note 3][16] along with Virginia's governor, Thomas West, Baron De La Warr. De La Warr had been commissioned by the Virginia Company to return to the colony with fresh people and supplies to help it achieve political and economic stability,[17]: 375–384 but he died en route.[18] When Farrar arrived in August 1618,[15]: 209 news of the governor's death threw Jamestown into turmoil, Deputy Governor Samuel Argall, who was already unpopular with many colonists, was accused of mismanagement and the unauthorized misappropriation of Neptune's passengers and cargo.[19] After a prolonged series of accusations from both the Virginia Company and colonists against Argall's governing, he finally stepped down in April 1619.[20]

In June 1619, the Virginia Company instructed that 40 indentured servants be put at the disposal of Farrar when they arrived in Virginia.[note 4][21]: 145[22]: 290  The payment for the cost of transporting these colonists would have resulted in a 2000 acre headright at 50 acres a head.[23] However, Garland never arrived in Jamestown because it was damaged in a hurricane while en route.[24] Instead of proceeding to Virginia, the Garland's captain, William Wye left the remaining passengers in Bermuda and sailed the repaired ship directly back to England.[14]: 325

As his personal headright, Farrar received a land patent for 100 acres on the Appomattox River close to where it flows into the James River, near what is now known as Hopewell, Virginia.[25]: 554 In the meantime, the resultant legal suits between Wye and the Virginia Company regarding the financial responsibility for the Garland fiasco were not resolved until the end of 1622,[21]: 701–702 [24] when Farrar had already quit residence at his patent as a result of the Powhatan surprise attack of 1621/22.

Move to Jordan's Journey and marriage

[edit]
Matthäus Merian's engraving of the Powhatan surprise attack of 1622, in which 10 people at Farrar's patent were killed.

In 1621/1622, the Powhatan launched a surprise attack on the colony. Ten settlers on Farrar's land on the Appomattox River were killed.[21]: 566 However, Farrar survived and got to Samuel Jordan's settlement at Beggars Bush,[26] part of the plantation known as Jordan's Journey. After the attack, William Farrar stayed at Jordan's Journey,[22]: 290–291 which had become a fortified rallying place for the survivors.[27]

Samuel Jordan died before June 1623.[28]: 46 Sometime afterward, Farrar proposed marriage to Jordan's pregnant widow, Cecily, which involved him in the first breach of promise suit filed in North America.[9]: 891[29] Reverend Greville Pooley claimed he had first proposed marriage three or four days after Samuel Jordan had died and Cecily had accepted.[25] However, Cecily denied his proposal and accepted Farrar's, which resulted in Pooley filing the suit.[30] The case continued for almost two years. During the suit, Alexander Brown suggests that Farrar may have acted as Cecily's legal representative.[9] Eventually, Pooley signed an agreement in January 1624/5 that acquitted Cecily Jordan of her alleged former promises.[31]: 42

Even as the case was ongoing, William Farrar and Cecily Jordan continued to work together at Jordan's Journey. In November 1623, Farrar was bonded to execute Samuel Jordan's will regarding the management of his estate and Cecily Jordan was warranted to put down the security to guarantee Farrar's bondage.[31]: 8 During this time, "Farrar assumed the role of plantation 'commander' or 'head of hundred'"[32]: 10  for Jordan's Journey. A year later, the Jamestown muster of 1624/25 lists "fferrar William mr & Mrs. Jordan"[sic] as sharing the head of a Jordan's Journey household with three daughters and ten manservants.[15]: 209–210 During this time, Jordan's Journey prospered.[33]: 67–68 By May 1625 Farrar and Jordan were finally married, as it was then that Farrar was released from his bond to Jordan's estate.[31]: 57They had three children together: Cecily (born 1625), William (birth year uncertain),[note 5] and John (born around 1632).[2][35]

Roles in the royal colony

[edit]

On March 14, 1625/6, William Farrar was appointed councillor to the Council of Virginia by Charles I of England.[36] Farrar held this position, which entitled him as an esquire of Virginia,[37] until at least 1635 when Governor John Harvey was deported.[28]: 212–213

Seal of "His Majesties Council of Virginia", [17] the symbol of Farrar and the other councillors' role in Virginia's governance.

Farrar became a councillor during a period of uncertainty for the colonists.[22]: 13,  35 The 1619 Great Charter of the Virginia Company had established self-governance through the Virginia Assembly, but James I dissolved the charter in 1624, and put the colony under direct royal authority. Just before James I died in March 1625, Charles I announced his intention to be the sole factor of his royal colonies.[38] To this end, he commissioned a new structure, consisting of a governor, Sir George Yeardley, and 13 councillors, including William Farrar, to govern the royal colony on behalf of the Crown's interest.[36] Because the assembly was not included in the commission, the Council was the only legal body representing the interests of the Virginia planters.[39]: 180 This state of affairs continued until the petitions of the colonists allowed the continuance of the House of Burgesses and the re-convention of the Virginia Assembly in 1628.[40] The Council also functioned as the highest court in Virginia and as the advisory board to the governor regarding the creation of legislative acts. Just as importantly, the members of the Council could determine the fate of the governor. Farrar was on the Council when it elected John Pott as governor in 1628.[39]: 182 He was also on the Council [41] when it temporarily deported Governor Harvey in 1635.[42][43] Harvey's silencing of Farrar when he questioned the governor's proceedings with the council initiated the protest that eventually led to the governor's arrest and expulsion.[44]

In August 1626, Gov. Yeardley appointed Farrar as commissioner (i.e., magistrate) of the "Upper Partes"[sic] which lies along the James River upstream from Piersey's Hundred having jurisdiction over Charles City and the City of Henrico. Farrar was the head commissioner of six commissioners appointed: he was the one given the right of final judgement when present and allowed the discretion to hold monthly courts at either Jordan's Journey or Shirley Hundred.[31]: 106 When his commission was renewed by Governor Sir John Harvey in 1632, it also mandated that the court could only be in session when Farrar was present.[45]: 168

After 1619, settlers could purchase the cost of transporting white indentured servants from England to the New World as a contract that could be redeemed as a headright, and these headright contracts could be used for speculation[46] by being sold, bought,[47] or bartered.[48] William Farrar was one of the settlers involved in this activity.[49] For example, he is listed in patents as selling headrights to the settler William Andrewes around 1628[50]: 13 and surrendering land to Nathan Martin for the transport of servants in 1636.[50]: 41

Sale of inheritance

[edit]

When William Farrar's father, John the elder, died sometime before May 1628, he willed his various landholdings in Hertfordshire to William. In addition, John Farrar also stipulated that William and his family receive a £20 annuity from his older brother from rents in Halifax Parish, Yorkshire and that William receive £50 upon his return to England.[4] In 1631, William Farrar returned to England to claim his inheritance.[22] He then sold the assets from his inheritance to his brothers, including his annuity for £240 and his landholdings for £200, for a total of £440 (equivalent to about $158,000 today)[51] and returned to Virginia.

Death and Farrar's Island legacy

[edit]
Approximate extent of William Farrar's 2000-acre 1637 land grant in green with boundary descriptions from patent in blue[52]

At the time of his death sometime before June 11, 1637, Farrar was described as being "of Henrico",[50] one of eight shires established in Virginia three years previously.[45]: 224 By the time of his death, he had established his headright to a 2000 acre land patent at a site that included Dutch Gap and the former settlement of Henrico. The payment for the cost of transporting these colonists would have resulted in a 2000 acre headright at 50 acres a head.[23] However, Garland never arrived in Jamestown because it was damaged in a hurricane while en route.[24] Instead of proceeding to Virginia, the Garland's captain, William Wye left the remaining passengers in Bermuda and sailed the repaired ship directly back to England.[14]: 325 who were named in the patent.[note 6] After Farrar's death, the headright was repatented to his oldest son,[53] his namesake who was about twelve years old at the time, by John Harvey, who had returned from England and resumed his role as colony's governor.[54]

The patent covered a peninsula formed by meander loop, or curl,[55] of the James River subsequently known as Farrar's Island, describing it as abutting the glebe lands of Varina in the east, and extending to the James River in the south, the end of the island (i.e., peninsula) in the west, and "to the woods" in the north.[50] Farrar's Island remained with the Farrar family until 1727 when his great-grandson William Farrar IV sold it to Thomas Randolph.[56][57]

In modern times, Farrar's Island is part of the Dutch Gap Conservation Area and Henricus Historical Park, both administered by Chesterfield County, Virginia.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Brown may be referring to William Ferrar, a younger brother of John and Nicholas Ferrar. Farrar was mistakenly identified as William Ferrar until the twentieth century.[7] The brother of Nicholas and John was born around 1590, went to Cambridge, studied law at Middle Temple in London and became a barrister in 1618.[8]
  2. ^ For another comparison of the share's value, the entire annual wages of a skilled journeyman in London around 1588 was authorized to be between £4 and £10. [13]
  3. ^ Dual dating is given because the English new year did not begin until March 25 during Farrar's lifetime. See article on Old Style and New Style Dates for details.
  4. ^ It's unclear that Farrar was the intended recipient. William Ferrar, brother of John and Nicholas Ferrar, William Ferrar also went to Virginia in 1619, but died at sea or shortly after his arrival.[8]
  5. ^ William Farrar II's godfather was Captain Thomas Pawlett of Westover,[34] who also arrived in Virginia in 1618 on the Neptune[15]: 207
  6. ^ At least seven of the names of the patents were those of people listed as living with Farrar and Jordan in the Muster of 1624/1625,[49]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Bannerman, W. Bruce, ed. (1899). The Visitations of the County of Surrey: Made and Taken in the Years 1530 by Thomas Benolte, Clarenceux King of Arms; 1572 by Robert Cooke, Clarenceux King of Arms; and 1623 by Samuel Thomson, Windsor Herald and Augustin Vincent, Rouge Croix Pursuivant, Marshals and Deputies to William Camden, Clarenceux King of Arms. London: Ye Wardour. pp. 157–158. Free access icon
  2. ^ a b Dorman, John Frederick, ed. (2004). Adventurers of Purse and Person, Virginia, 1607–1624/5: Families A-F (Volume 1) (4th. ed.). Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing. pp. 926–928. ISBN 978-0806317441.
  3. ^ "Croxton Parish Records- Marriages, Baptisms & Burials (1583)". Lincs to the Past, Lincolnshire Archives. December 28, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Farrer, Thomas C. F (1936). Farrer (and Some Variants) Wills and Administrations : So Far Discovered by Me in England and Wales, and the Isle of Man Down to A.D. 1800. Dorking, England: Tanner and Son. pp. 126–128. Free access icon
  5. ^ Richardson, Douglas. Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval families. Vol. 2 (2 ed.). Scotts Valley, CA: CreateSpace. p. 30. ISBN 9781461045137.
  6. ^ "So, turns out the Fanning sisters are royals". Elle Australia. May 28, 2014. Archived from the original on October 30, 2019. Retrieved March 22, 2020. Free access icon
  7. ^ a b Cook, Mrs. Henry Lowell; Bulkley, Louis C. (1942). Torrence, Clayton (ed.). "English Ancestry of William Farrar (1594-C.1637), of Henrico County, Virginia". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 50 (4): 350–359. JSTOR 4245205. Limited access icon (registration required)
  8. ^ a b Ransome, David R. (2000). "John Ferrar of Little Gidding" (PDF). Records of Huntingdonshire. 3 (8). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 2, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d Brown, Alexander (1890). The Genesis of the United States, Vol 2. Boston, MA Houghton, Mifflin. p. 691. Free access icon
  10. ^ Wolfe, Brenden (November 16, 2016). "Virginia Company of London". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. Archived from the original on August 13, 2018. Retrieved November 5, 2018. Free access icon
  11. ^ Kolp, John, ed. (June 26, 2014). "Primary Resource: Third Charter of Virginia (1612)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities. Archived from the original on May 22, 2017. Retrieved November 7, 2018. Free access icon
  12. ^ Bemiss, Samuel M., ed. (1957). "Third Charter". The Three Charters of the Virginia Company of London with Seven Related Documents. Williamsburg, VA: Virginia 350th Anniversary Celebration Corporation. p. 7. Free access icon
  13. ^ Aughterson, Kate, ed. (1998). The English Renaissance: An Anthology of Sources and Documents. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 201–202. ISBN 9780415271158.
  14. ^ a b c Kingsbury, Susan M., ed. (1906). The Records of the Virginia Company of London. Vol. 1. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. Free access icon
  15. ^ a b c d Hotten, John Camden (1874). "Musters of the Inhabitants of Virginia, 1624/25". The Original Lists of Persons of Quality, Emigrants, Religious Exiles, Political Rebels, Serving Men Sold for a Term of Years; Apprentices; Children stolen; Maidens Pressed; and Others Who Went from Great Britain to the American Plantations, 1600-1700. New York, NY: Empire State Book. pp. 201–274. Free access icon
  16. ^ Kolb, Avery E. (1980). "Early passengers to Virginia: When did they really arrive?". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 88 (4): 401–414. JSTOR 4248428. Limited access icon (registration required)
  17. ^ a b Brown, Alexander (1890). Genesis of the United States, Vol. 1. New York: Houghton, Mifflin. p. 57. Free access icon
  18. ^ Billings, Warren M. (October 27, 2013). "Thomas West, twelfth baron De La Warr (1576–1618)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. Retrieved December 21, 2018. Free access icon
  19. ^ Coldham, Peter Wilson (1979). "The voyage of the Neptune to Virginia 1618-1619, and the Disposition of its cargo". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 87 (1): 30–67. JSTOR 4248277. Limited access icon (registration required)
  20. ^ Fausz, J. Frederick (July 8, 2013). "Samuel Argall (bap. 1580-1626)". Encyclopedia Virginia: Virginia Humanities. Archived from the original on January 15, 2019. Retrieved January 15, 2019. Free access icon
  21. ^ a b c Kingsbury, Susan Myra, ed. (1933). Records of the Virginia Company of London. Vol. 3. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. Free access icon
  22. ^ a b c d McCartney, Martha W. (2007). Virginia Immigrants and Adventurers, 1607-1635. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing. ISBN 9780806317748.
  23. ^ a b Wolfe, Brendan; McCartney, Martha (October 28, 2015). "Indentured Servants in Colonial Virginia". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities. Archived from the original on December 13, 2018. Retrieved January 16, 2019. Free access icon
  24. ^ a b c Coldham, Peter Wilson (2002). English Adventurers and Emigrants, 1609-1660: Abstracts of Examinations in the High Court of Admiralty with Reference to Colonial America. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing. pp. 5–6. ISBN 9780806310824.
  25. ^ a b Kingsbury, Susan M., ed. (1935). The Records of the Virginia Company of London. Vol. 4. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. Free access icon
  26. ^ Morgan, Tim; Luccketti, Nicholas; Straube, Beverly; Bessey, S. Fiona; Loomis, Annette; Hodges, Charles (1995). Archaeological Excavations at Jordan's Point: Sites 44PG151, 44PG300, 44PG302, 44PG303, 44PG315, 44PG333. Richmond, VA: Virginia Department of Historic Resources. p. 4. doi:10.6067/XCV8H41QBZ. Free access icon (registration required)
  27. ^ Smith, John (1910) [1624]. "The Generall Historie of Virginia, the Fourth Booke". In Arber, Edward (ed.). Travels and Works of Captain John Smith. Vol. Part II. Edinburgh, Scotland: John Grant. p. 584. Free access icon
  28. ^ a b Sainsbury, W. Noel, ed. (1860). Calendar of State Papers Colonial, America and West Indies: Volume 1, 1574-1660. London, England: Longman, Green Longman & Roberts. Free access icon
  29. ^ Stanard, Mary Newton (1928). Story of Virginia's First Century. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott. pp. 180-181. Free access icon
  30. ^ Starrett, Vincent (March 3, 1958). "America's First Breach of Promise Case". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved November 27, 2018. Free access icon
  31. ^ a b c d McIlwaine, H. R., ed. (1924). Minutes of the Council and General Court of Colonial Virginia 1622-1632, 1670-1676 with Notes and Excerpts from Original Council and General Court Records into 1683, Now Lost. Richmond, VA: Virginia State Library. Free access icon
  32. ^ McLearen, Douglas C.; Mouer, L. Daniel; Boyd, Donna M.; Owsley, Douglas W.; Compton, Bertita (1993). Jordan's Journey: A Preliminary Report on the 1992 Excavations at Archaeological Sites 44PG302, 44PG303, and 44PG315. Richmond, VA: Virginia Commonwealth University Archaeological Research Center. doi:10.6067/XCV81J98NK. Free access icon (registration required)
  33. ^ Hatch, Charles E. (1957). The First Seventeen Years: Virginia, 1607-1624. Williamsburg, VA: Jamestown 350th Anniversary Celebration Corp. p. 68. Free access icon
  34. ^ Tyler, Lyon G. (1896). "Title of Westover". The William and Mary Quarterly. 4 (3): 152. doi:10.2307/1914946. JSTOR 1914946.
  35. ^ McCartney, Martha W. (2012). Jamestown People to 1800. Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing. pp. 155–156. ISBN 9780806318721.
  36. ^ a b Stanard, William G., ed. (1906). "Commission to Governor Yeardley and Council, March 14 1625-6". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 13 (3): 298–302. JSTOR 4242747.
  37. ^ Bruce, Phillip A. (1907). Social Life of Virginia in the Seventeenth Century: An Inquiry into the Origin of the Higher Planting Class, Together with an Account of the Habits, Customs, and Diversions of the People. Richmond, VA: Whittet & Shepperson. pp. 121–123. Free access icon
  38. ^ Bancroft, George (1888). History of the United States of America, Vol. I. New York, NY: D. Appleton. p. 135. Free access icon
  39. ^ a b Campbell, Charles (1860). History of Colony and Ancient Dominion of Virginia. J.Philadelphia, PA: B. Lippincott. Free access icon
  40. ^ Brown, Alexander (1898). The First Republic in America. Boston, MA: Houghton, Mifflin. pp. 645–648. Free access icon
  41. ^ Brown, Alexander (1901). English Politics in Early Virginia History. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin. p. 100. Free access icon
  42. ^ Bruce, Philip A., ed. (1894). "Mutiny in Virginia, 1635". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 1 (4): 419. Free access icon
  43. ^ Tarter, Brent (March 13, 2017). "Sir John Harvey (ca. 1581 or 1582–by 1650)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. Archived from the original on December 21, 2018. Retrieved January 16, 2019. Free access icon
  44. ^ Osgood, Herbert L. (1907). "Beginnings of Royal Government in Virginia". The American Colonies in the Seventeenth Century, Volume III: Imperial Control. Beginning of the System of Royal Provinces. New York, NY: Macmillan. p. 100. Free access icon
  45. ^ a b Hening, William Waller, ed. (1809). The Statutes at Large; Being a Collection of All the Laws of Virginia, from the First Session of the Legislature, in the year 1619. Published Pursuant to an Act of the General Assembly of Virginia. Richmond, VA: Samuel Pleasants, Jr., printer to the common wealth. p. 168. Free access icon
  46. ^ Morgan, Edmund (1972). "Headrights and Head Counts: A Review Article". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 80 (3): 361–371. JSTOR 4247736. Limited access icon (registration required)
  47. ^ Galenson, David W. (1984). "The rise and fall of indentured servitude in the Americas: An economic analysis". The Journal of Economic History. 44 (1): 10. doi:10.1017/S002205070003134X. JSTOR 2120553. S2CID 154682898. Limited access icon (registration required)
  48. ^ Morgan, Edmund (1971). "The First American Boom: Virginia 1618 to 1630". The William and Mary Quarterly. 28 (2): 197. doi:10.2307/1917308. JSTOR 1917308. Limited access icon (registration required)
  49. ^ a b Southall, James P. C. (1943). "Links in a Chain". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 51 (4): 386. JSTOR 4245260.Limited access icon (registration required)
  50. ^ a b c d Nugent, Nell Marion (1934). "Patent Book No. 1". Cavaliers and Pioneers, a Calendar of Land Grants 1623-1800. Vol. 1. Richmond, VA: Dietz Press. Free access icon
  51. ^ Sale of William Farrar's Inheritance”recorded at the Public Record Office: London, Calendar of Close Rolls. Vol 54/2904, cited in Holmes, Alvahn (1972). The Farrar's Island Family and its English Ancestry. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press. p. 31. OCLC 499544604.
  52. ^ Bannister, Thomas T. (1996). "Mapping 17th Century Patents on the North Side of James River, Between Varina and World's End in Henrico County". Archived from the original on May 16, 2020. Retrieved May 16, 2020. accompanied by map, Patents in Southeast Henrico Co (Map). Archived from the original on May 16, 2020. Retrieved May 16, 2020. Free access icon
  53. ^ McCartney, Martha W. (2011). Jordan's Point, Virginia: Archaeology in Perspective, Prehistoric to Modern Times. University of Virginia Press.
  54. ^ Tarter, Brent (1984). "Sir John Harvey: Royal Governor of Virginia, 1628–1639". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 125 (1): 23. JSTOR 26322580. Limited access icon (registration required)
  55. ^ McJimsey, George Davis (1940). "Topographical Terms in Virginia (II)". American Speech. 15 (2): 169. doi:10.2307/486821. JSTOR 486821. (registration required) Limited access icon (registration required)
  56. ^ Stanard, William G. (1901). "Farrar Family". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 9 (2): 203. JSTOR 4242430.
  57. ^ Bannister, Thomas T. (2002). "Appendix C. Records of the Farrar Patent Lands". Archived from the original on November 15, 2018. accompanied by map, Partition of Wm. Farrar's 1637 Patent (Map). Archived from the original on May 16, 2020. Free access icon

Further reading

[edit]
  • Holmes, Alvahn (1972). The Farrar's Island Family and its English Ancestry. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press. OCLC 499544604.
  • Stanard, William G., ed. (1900-1902) The "Farrar Family" Excursus in The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
    • "The Farrar Family". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 7 (3): 319–322. 1900. JSTOR 4242269.,
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 7 (4): 432–434. 1900. JSTOR 4242292.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 8 (1): 97–98. 1900. JSTOR 4242320.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 8 (2): 206–209. 1900. JSTOR 4242337.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 8 (4): 424–427. 1901. JSTOR 4242386.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 9 (2): 203–205. 1901. JSTOR 4242430.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 9 (3): 322–324. 1902. JSTOR 4242449.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 10 (1): 86–87. 1902. JSTOR 4242488.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 10 (2): 206–207. 1902. JSTOR 4242519.
    • "The Farrar Family (Continued)". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 10 (3): 308–310. 1902. JSTOR 4242543..

(Note: The Vol. 7(4) entry in the excursus is incorrect on William Farrar's lineage. See "Torrence et al., 1942". The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. 50 (4): 350–359. 1942. JSTOR 4245205. referenced above.)