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GEN Abraham Wood

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GEN Abraham Wood

Birth
Leeds, Metropolitan Borough of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
Death
1 Aug 1681 (aged 70)
Charles City, Charles City County, Virginia, USA
Burial
Westover, Charles City County, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Major General Abraham Wood was born 14 August 1610 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England the son of Edward Francis and Marie Chadwick Wood.
____________________________
Footprints in Time 14 Dec 2004,
Abraham 10 came to the US in 1628 aboard the Margaret and John.
Wood, Abraham . . . . . -- Age 10 in Virginia Muster, February 4, 1624/5
Abraham Wood was brought to Virginia as a child of ten and in later years became a Major General of militia, the greatest Indian trader of his time, and a leader in promoting Western exploration.
Here was a homeless orphan who overcame tremendous odds, acquired great wealth, achieved political prestige, won great fame as a scout, explorer, soldier and public servant, rendered acceptable service as a Burgess from two different shires, gave a good account of himself as he sat among the elders of the land, and left a fine heritage and a name of which they could be proud indeed.
_______________________
Time Trail, West Virginia September Programs
September 1, 1671: Batts & Fallam expedition
The explorers who discovered the New River in 1671 weren't the first Europeans to reach the outer edges of what has become West Virginia. But the discovery gave England the clout it needed to lay claim to the entire Ohio Valley. The expedition was undertaken at the behest of Major General Abraham Wood, an Englishman interested in developing the western fur trade. He had been directed by the colonial governor of Virginia, Sir William Berkeley, to mount the expedition. The leader of the mission, Captain Thomas Batts, was accompanied by an Indian guide, an indentured servant, Thomas Wood, and Robert Fallam, who kept a journal of the trip. The group left Fort Henry along the Appomattox River near present-day Petersburg, Virginia, on September 1. Within two weeks, it had reached Swope's Knob in what is now Monroe County in southeastern West Virginia. Batts and Fallam's discovery of the New River a day later was significant because they were the first Europeans to lay claim to a westward flowing river. The expedition continued along the New River for 3 days until it reached Peters Falls near the Virginia-West Virginia border. In the ensuing years, fur traders and explorers continued to penetrate western Virginia's wilderness but it was the Batts and Fallam expedition that allowed England to compete with France over control of the Ohio Valley. The French claimed the famous explorer La Salle had reached the Ohio country in 1669, two years before Batts and Fallam discovered the New River. The dispute brewed for nearly 100 years until the British defeated the French in the French and Indian War and established control over present-day West Virginia.
According to Massey Families in America by Judge Frank A. Massey, Abraham came to Virginia about 1620 as an orphan 12 years old, a bond-servant for his passage. However, another source states that he was a child aboard a British ship, the Margaret and John, with his parents when it was attacked by a Spanish man of war. His parents were killed, and it is possible that without other family, he indentured himself until he was of age. He is listed as one of the inhabitants of James City Co. in 1624, one of the earliest census records. When Fort Henry was built about 1645 as a protection from the Indians, he was the first commanding officer. Abraham was loyal to Gov. Berkeley during Bacon's Rebellion, (others on our line took the opposite side and participated in the rebellion, which was an expedition Berkeley opposed against Indian attackers) and held the commission of Major General during this period. He was a Justice in Charles City in 1655, Colonel of a regiment from Charles City and Henrico in 1656. He also served on the House of Burgesses, and was on the Governor's Council from 1657 to
1671. He advanced himself pretty well for a penniless orphan boy. The name of his wife is not known, but she had one daughter Margaret, who married Peter Jones, who succeeded him as commandant at Fort Henry.
____________________________________________________
Abraham Wood
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abraham Wood (1610–1682), sometimes referred to as "General" or "Colonel" Wood, was an English fur trader (specifically the beaver and deerskin trades) and explorer of 17th century colonial Virginia. Wood's base of operations was Fort Henry at the falls of the Appomattox in present-day Petersburg. Wood also was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, a member of the Virginia Governor's Council and a high-ranking militia officer.
Abraham Wood came to Virginia as a 10-year-old boy in 1620.[1] As a passenger on the English ship "Margaret and John", Abraham Wood was one of the few survivors when the ship was attacked by two Spanish vessels in the West Indies, and turned to the Virginia colonies.[2] By 1625, he was employed by Captain Samuel Mathews (Governor) and was living at Jamestown.[1]
Abraham Wood represented Henrico County in the House of Burgesses from 1644 to 1646 and Charles City County from 1652 and 1656. He was a justice of Charles City County in 1655.[1] Also in 1655, he was appointed to a committee to review Virginia's laws.[1] He was elected to the Virginia Governor's Council on March 13, 1657–68 and actively served until at least 1671, and according to correspondence, keeping his seat as late as 1676. Fort Henry was built in 1646 to mark the legal frontier between the white settlers and the Native Americans, and was near the Appomattoc Indian tribe with whom Abraham Wood traded. It was the only point in Virginia at which Indians could be authorized to cross eastward into white territory, or whites westward into Indian territory, from 1646 until around 1691. This circumstance gave Wood, who commanded the fort and privately owned the adjoining lands, a considerable advantage over his competitors in the "Indian trade".
Several exploration parties were dispatched from Fort Henry by Wood during these years, including one undertaken by Wood himself in 1650, which explored the upper reaches of the James River and Roanoke River. In August 1650, Abraham Wood and Edward Bland used the Great Indian Warpath, penetrating the Carolina region southwest of the Roanoke River and discovering westward flowing rivers.[3][4] Daniel Coxe mentions that "Parts of this Country were discovered by the English long before the French had the least knowledge... Colonel Wood of Virginia... from the years 1654 to 1664 discovered at several times several branches of the great rivers Ohio and Mesechaceba."[5]
The first English expeditions to reach the southern Appalachian Mountains were also sent out by Wood. In 1671, explorers Thomas Wood, Thomas Batts (Batte) and Robert Fallam reached the New River Valley and the New River.[6] "Batts was a grandson of Robert Batts, vicar master of University College, Oxford, and possible relation to Nathaniel Batts, first permanent settler in North Carolina and Governor of Roanoke Island. Nathaniel by 1655 had a busy Indian trade from his home on Albemarle Sound. Thomas Wood may have been Abraham's son. Robert Fallam is a question mark. The journal[7] he kept of their experience shows him to be a literate, educated man."[8] The New River was named Wood's River after Abraham Wood, although in time it became better known as the New River. Batts and Fallam are generally credited with being the first Europeans to enter within the present-day borders of West Virginia.
In 1673 Wood sent his friend James Needham and his indentured servant Gabriel Arthur on an expedition to find an outlet to the Pacific Ocean. Shortly after their departure Needham and Arthur encountered a group of Tomahitan Indians, who offered to conduct the men to their town across the mountains (Wood 1990, p. 33).[9] After reaching the Tomahitan town Needham returned to Fort Henry to report to Wood. While en route back to the Tomahitan town Needham was killed by a member of the trading party with whom he was traveling (Wood 1990, pp. 36–38). Shortly thereafter, Arthur was almost killed by a mob in the Tomahitan settlement, but was saved and then adopted by the town's headman (Wood 1990, p. 38). Arthur lived with the Tomahitans for almost a year, accompanying them on war and trading expeditions as far south as Spanish Florida (Wood 1990, p. 39) and as far north as the Ohio River (Wood 1990, pp. 40–41).
Wood was appointed colonel of a militia regiment in Henrico and Charles City counties in 1655.[1] Later, he was appointed major general but lost this position in 1676 after Bacon's Rebellion either because of infirmity or political differences with Governor William Berkeley.[1]
By 1676 Wood had given his place as commander and chief trader to his son-in-law, Peter Jones, for whom Petersburg, Virginia was eventually named. In 1676, Governor Berkeley wrote that Maj. Gen. Wood of the council kept to his house through infirmity.[1] By March 1678–79, he was strong enough to negotiate with the Native Americans and to arrange for the chief men of hostile tribes to meet in Jamestown.[1]
Wood retired to patent more plantation land in 1680 west of the fort, in what had been Appomattoc territory, notwithstanding it being disallowed by the House of Burgesses.
Abraham Wood died some time between 1681 and 1686,[1] possibly in 1682.
____________________________
Known Children:
1. Mary Elizabeth Wood 1631 - 1678 Md George Archer Died Henrico County, Virginia. 5 Children: John, Elizabeth, Margaret, George, Jr, and Anne Archer.
2. Sara Elizabeth Wood 1632 -1676 Md Thomas Harris. One Known Child: Elizabeth Ann Harris 1658-1729 Md Joseph Royall, III.
3. Abraham Wood, Jr 1638 - 1655
4. Thomas Wood 1640 - 1718 Died Henrico County, Virginia
5. Margaret Wood 1641 - 1718 Md Major Peter Jones . 4 Known Children:
(1) Captain Peter Jones, Jr, Md Mary Batte ; (2) Mary Jones Md Joshua Wynne; (3) Lt. Abraham Wood Jones Md Martha Batte, (4) William Jones Md Martha Ledbiter
6. Anne Wood 1643-1701
7. Mary Wood 1656 - 1708 Md Major Thomas Chamberlain. 1 known Child: Brian who Md Ann Bennett. Died Henrico County, Virginia
Major General Abraham Wood was born 14 August 1610 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England the son of Edward Francis and Marie Chadwick Wood.
____________________________
Footprints in Time 14 Dec 2004,
Abraham 10 came to the US in 1628 aboard the Margaret and John.
Wood, Abraham . . . . . -- Age 10 in Virginia Muster, February 4, 1624/5
Abraham Wood was brought to Virginia as a child of ten and in later years became a Major General of militia, the greatest Indian trader of his time, and a leader in promoting Western exploration.
Here was a homeless orphan who overcame tremendous odds, acquired great wealth, achieved political prestige, won great fame as a scout, explorer, soldier and public servant, rendered acceptable service as a Burgess from two different shires, gave a good account of himself as he sat among the elders of the land, and left a fine heritage and a name of which they could be proud indeed.
_______________________
Time Trail, West Virginia September Programs
September 1, 1671: Batts & Fallam expedition
The explorers who discovered the New River in 1671 weren't the first Europeans to reach the outer edges of what has become West Virginia. But the discovery gave England the clout it needed to lay claim to the entire Ohio Valley. The expedition was undertaken at the behest of Major General Abraham Wood, an Englishman interested in developing the western fur trade. He had been directed by the colonial governor of Virginia, Sir William Berkeley, to mount the expedition. The leader of the mission, Captain Thomas Batts, was accompanied by an Indian guide, an indentured servant, Thomas Wood, and Robert Fallam, who kept a journal of the trip. The group left Fort Henry along the Appomattox River near present-day Petersburg, Virginia, on September 1. Within two weeks, it had reached Swope's Knob in what is now Monroe County in southeastern West Virginia. Batts and Fallam's discovery of the New River a day later was significant because they were the first Europeans to lay claim to a westward flowing river. The expedition continued along the New River for 3 days until it reached Peters Falls near the Virginia-West Virginia border. In the ensuing years, fur traders and explorers continued to penetrate western Virginia's wilderness but it was the Batts and Fallam expedition that allowed England to compete with France over control of the Ohio Valley. The French claimed the famous explorer La Salle had reached the Ohio country in 1669, two years before Batts and Fallam discovered the New River. The dispute brewed for nearly 100 years until the British defeated the French in the French and Indian War and established control over present-day West Virginia.
According to Massey Families in America by Judge Frank A. Massey, Abraham came to Virginia about 1620 as an orphan 12 years old, a bond-servant for his passage. However, another source states that he was a child aboard a British ship, the Margaret and John, with his parents when it was attacked by a Spanish man of war. His parents were killed, and it is possible that without other family, he indentured himself until he was of age. He is listed as one of the inhabitants of James City Co. in 1624, one of the earliest census records. When Fort Henry was built about 1645 as a protection from the Indians, he was the first commanding officer. Abraham was loyal to Gov. Berkeley during Bacon's Rebellion, (others on our line took the opposite side and participated in the rebellion, which was an expedition Berkeley opposed against Indian attackers) and held the commission of Major General during this period. He was a Justice in Charles City in 1655, Colonel of a regiment from Charles City and Henrico in 1656. He also served on the House of Burgesses, and was on the Governor's Council from 1657 to
1671. He advanced himself pretty well for a penniless orphan boy. The name of his wife is not known, but she had one daughter Margaret, who married Peter Jones, who succeeded him as commandant at Fort Henry.
____________________________________________________
Abraham Wood
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abraham Wood (1610–1682), sometimes referred to as "General" or "Colonel" Wood, was an English fur trader (specifically the beaver and deerskin trades) and explorer of 17th century colonial Virginia. Wood's base of operations was Fort Henry at the falls of the Appomattox in present-day Petersburg. Wood also was a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, a member of the Virginia Governor's Council and a high-ranking militia officer.
Abraham Wood came to Virginia as a 10-year-old boy in 1620.[1] As a passenger on the English ship "Margaret and John", Abraham Wood was one of the few survivors when the ship was attacked by two Spanish vessels in the West Indies, and turned to the Virginia colonies.[2] By 1625, he was employed by Captain Samuel Mathews (Governor) and was living at Jamestown.[1]
Abraham Wood represented Henrico County in the House of Burgesses from 1644 to 1646 and Charles City County from 1652 and 1656. He was a justice of Charles City County in 1655.[1] Also in 1655, he was appointed to a committee to review Virginia's laws.[1] He was elected to the Virginia Governor's Council on March 13, 1657–68 and actively served until at least 1671, and according to correspondence, keeping his seat as late as 1676. Fort Henry was built in 1646 to mark the legal frontier between the white settlers and the Native Americans, and was near the Appomattoc Indian tribe with whom Abraham Wood traded. It was the only point in Virginia at which Indians could be authorized to cross eastward into white territory, or whites westward into Indian territory, from 1646 until around 1691. This circumstance gave Wood, who commanded the fort and privately owned the adjoining lands, a considerable advantage over his competitors in the "Indian trade".
Several exploration parties were dispatched from Fort Henry by Wood during these years, including one undertaken by Wood himself in 1650, which explored the upper reaches of the James River and Roanoke River. In August 1650, Abraham Wood and Edward Bland used the Great Indian Warpath, penetrating the Carolina region southwest of the Roanoke River and discovering westward flowing rivers.[3][4] Daniel Coxe mentions that "Parts of this Country were discovered by the English long before the French had the least knowledge... Colonel Wood of Virginia... from the years 1654 to 1664 discovered at several times several branches of the great rivers Ohio and Mesechaceba."[5]
The first English expeditions to reach the southern Appalachian Mountains were also sent out by Wood. In 1671, explorers Thomas Wood, Thomas Batts (Batte) and Robert Fallam reached the New River Valley and the New River.[6] "Batts was a grandson of Robert Batts, vicar master of University College, Oxford, and possible relation to Nathaniel Batts, first permanent settler in North Carolina and Governor of Roanoke Island. Nathaniel by 1655 had a busy Indian trade from his home on Albemarle Sound. Thomas Wood may have been Abraham's son. Robert Fallam is a question mark. The journal[7] he kept of their experience shows him to be a literate, educated man."[8] The New River was named Wood's River after Abraham Wood, although in time it became better known as the New River. Batts and Fallam are generally credited with being the first Europeans to enter within the present-day borders of West Virginia.
In 1673 Wood sent his friend James Needham and his indentured servant Gabriel Arthur on an expedition to find an outlet to the Pacific Ocean. Shortly after their departure Needham and Arthur encountered a group of Tomahitan Indians, who offered to conduct the men to their town across the mountains (Wood 1990, p. 33).[9] After reaching the Tomahitan town Needham returned to Fort Henry to report to Wood. While en route back to the Tomahitan town Needham was killed by a member of the trading party with whom he was traveling (Wood 1990, pp. 36–38). Shortly thereafter, Arthur was almost killed by a mob in the Tomahitan settlement, but was saved and then adopted by the town's headman (Wood 1990, p. 38). Arthur lived with the Tomahitans for almost a year, accompanying them on war and trading expeditions as far south as Spanish Florida (Wood 1990, p. 39) and as far north as the Ohio River (Wood 1990, pp. 40–41).
Wood was appointed colonel of a militia regiment in Henrico and Charles City counties in 1655.[1] Later, he was appointed major general but lost this position in 1676 after Bacon's Rebellion either because of infirmity or political differences with Governor William Berkeley.[1]
By 1676 Wood had given his place as commander and chief trader to his son-in-law, Peter Jones, for whom Petersburg, Virginia was eventually named. In 1676, Governor Berkeley wrote that Maj. Gen. Wood of the council kept to his house through infirmity.[1] By March 1678–79, he was strong enough to negotiate with the Native Americans and to arrange for the chief men of hostile tribes to meet in Jamestown.[1]
Wood retired to patent more plantation land in 1680 west of the fort, in what had been Appomattoc territory, notwithstanding it being disallowed by the House of Burgesses.
Abraham Wood died some time between 1681 and 1686,[1] possibly in 1682.
____________________________
Known Children:
1. Mary Elizabeth Wood 1631 - 1678 Md George Archer Died Henrico County, Virginia. 5 Children: John, Elizabeth, Margaret, George, Jr, and Anne Archer.
2. Sara Elizabeth Wood 1632 -1676 Md Thomas Harris. One Known Child: Elizabeth Ann Harris 1658-1729 Md Joseph Royall, III.
3. Abraham Wood, Jr 1638 - 1655
4. Thomas Wood 1640 - 1718 Died Henrico County, Virginia
5. Margaret Wood 1641 - 1718 Md Major Peter Jones . 4 Known Children:
(1) Captain Peter Jones, Jr, Md Mary Batte ; (2) Mary Jones Md Joshua Wynne; (3) Lt. Abraham Wood Jones Md Martha Batte, (4) William Jones Md Martha Ledbiter
6. Anne Wood 1643-1701
7. Mary Wood 1656 - 1708 Md Major Thomas Chamberlain. 1 known Child: Brian who Md Ann Bennett. Died Henrico County, Virginia


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