Paul Bunch

Male 1658 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Paul Bunch was born 1658, Virginia, USA (son of John Bunch, I); died , USA.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 10776

    Notes:

    Paul Heinegg..http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Brooks_Byrd.htm

    Paul1 Bunch, born say 1658, bought 150 acres in King William County near Sweet Hall Road from John Claiborne on 29 July 1695. He purchased a "Mulatto Servant Man" named John Russell from John West, Gentleman, of St. John's Parish, King William County, on 27 January 1700/1 and on the same day assigned his rights to Russell unto Eliza Bunch. He witnessed (making his mark "P") the St. John's Parish, King William County deed of John Claiborne on 20 May 1704. A "Mullatto" boy named Thomas Russell was valued at 5 pounds in the 17 January 1706/7 inventory of the estate of William Claiborne, Gentleman [Record Book 1, 1702-7, 129-30, 172-5, 402; Book 2, 1702-6, 109]. Paul Bunch was taxed on 150 acres in the King William County, Virginia Quit Rent Roll in 1704 [des Cognets, English Duplicates of Lost Virginia Records, 157]. On 11 July 1719 he was living in the part of New Kent County that later became Hanover County when Gilbert Gibson patented land adjoining his [Patents 10:437]. He received a patent for 400 acres on both sides of Black Haw Swamp in Hanover County on 9 July 1724 [Patents 12:28-9]. He patented 265 acres in North Carolina on the south side of the Roanoke River adjoining Quankey Pocosin and Gideon Gibson on 1 January 1725/6, and he bought a further 300 acres adjoining this land from Thomas Wilkins [Halifax County DB 8:283].

    He made a Chowan County will (making his mark) on 16 November 1726 which was probated on 10 March 1726/7. He left his son John Bunch the land that they were both then living on as well as slave Dick; left Fortune Holdbee, apparently his common-law wife, his land (adjoining John Bunch) and slave Frank during her lifetime as long as she remained single, to descend to her daughters Keziah and Jemima after her death or marriage. And he gave "Eliza Bunch one Shilling Sterling and my Daughter Russell I give one Shilling Sterling" (apparently identical to his daughter Elizabeth Russell). He left Keziah Holdbee a "Mullatto" slave named Peg in the care of her mother until she reached age eighteen and left slave Betty to Jemima Holdbee in the care of her mother until she reached age eighteen. He gave Joseph Meacham the land on the Roanoke River (in Halifax County, North Carolina) he had purchased from Thomas Wilkins as well as slaves named Moll, Fortune and Rose. He gave 100 acres and two cows and calves to Thomas Holdbee. He divided his household goods, livestock and slave Daw between Joseph Meacham and Fortune Holdbee and appointed Fortune and Meacham as his executors [Secretary of State Record of Wills, 1722-1735, SS 876, 3:138-9]. (A Joseph and a Paul Micham were heads of "other free" Halifax County, North Carolina households. She the Micham/ Mitcham family history). Fortune Holdebee sold her land, the "plantation where I now live...formerly Paul Bunches," on 5 July 1727 [Bertie DB B:276] and received a patent for 640 acres in New Hanover County in August 1735 [Saunders, Colonial Records of North Carolina, III:52].

    The May 1734 Bertie court minutes referred to Keziah as "an orphan Child Entitled to a considerable Estate...(by the will of Paul Bunch) bound to Capt. Thos. Bryant till the age of Thirty one contrary to law," and the August 1735 Bertie County court minutes referred to the estate of "a Mulatto woman, Keziah Holdebee, and three children [Haun, Bertie County Court Minutes, I:135, 154]. Paul1 Bunch had the following children:

    i. John4, born say 1692.

    ii. Elizabeth Russell, a daughter, received 1 shilling by her father's will.

    iii. ?Joseph Meacham.

    iv. ?Keziah Holdebee.

    v. ?Jemima Holdebee.

    Paul married F. Holdbee. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth Bunch was born 1675, Virginia, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Bunch, I was born 1632, Virginia, USA (son of John Punch and Mary Spears); died , USA.

    Other Events:

    • Paternal DNA: E1b1a8a
    • Reference Number: 10774

    Notes:

    Paul Heinegg..http://www.freeafricanamericans.com/Brooks_Byrd.htm

    John1 Bunch, born say 1632, was granted a non-suit in York County court on 17 November 1658 [Deeds, Orders, Wills, 1657-1662, 41]. He received a patent for 450 acres on both sides of Rickahock path adjoining Richard Barnhouse's land in New Kent County on 18 March 1662 [Patents 5:152]. The DNA of his descendants is the E1b1a8a haplotype which indicates they descend from a West African man, so he was probably the son of a white woman by a slave. One theory is that he was the child of John Punch, a "negro" who ran away with two white servants in 1640 [McIlwaine, Minutes of the Council, 1622-1632, 466-7]. The DNA testing also indicates that his mixed-race descendants in Virginia and the Carolinas were related [Anastasia Harman, Ancestry.com Lead Family Historian, Natalie D. Cottrill, Paul C. Reed and Joseph Shumway, Obama Bunch Descendancy,
    He was apparently the ancestor of

    i. Paul1, born say 1658.

    ii. John2. born say 1660.

    iii. Henry1, born say 1690.

    Children:
    1. Unconfirmed Bunch was born 1670; died , USA.
    2. 1. Paul Bunch was born 1658, Virginia, USA; died , USA.
    3. John Bunch was born 1660, Virginia, USA.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  John Punch died , USA.

    Other Events:

    • Paternal DNA: E1b1a8a
    • Reference Number: 10775

    Notes:



    John Punch (fl. 1630s, living 1640) was an enslaved African who lived in the Colony of Virginia. Thought to have been an indentured servant, Punch attempted to escape to Maryland and was sentenced in July 1640 by the Virginia Governor's Council to serve as a slave for the remainder of his life. Two European men who ran away with him were sentenced to longer indentures but not the permanent loss of their freedom. For this reason, historians consider John Punch the "first official slave in the English colonies, and his case as the "first legal sanctioning of lifelong slavery in the Chesapeake. Historians also consider this to be one of the first legal distinctions between Europeans and Africans made in the colony, and a key milestone in the development of the institution of slavery in the United States.

    John married Mary Spears. Mary died , USA. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Mary Spears died , USA.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 10782

    Children:
    1. 2. John Bunch, I was born 1632, Virginia, USA; died , USA.