"The first child of the marriage was a son, born on March 28, 1674, and named after his father, William. Three daughters followed in due course, Susan, Mary, Ursula. All of the children were sent to England for their education." It goes on to state, "Mary came back to marry James Duke."
A doctoral dissertation entitled "William Byrd of Westover: Adult Learner" by Suzanne Steffen Caswell, v.1 page 66 (footnote), submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1992, disagrees with the assertion Mary (Byrd) Duke was sent to England for her education. She writes,
"William Byrd I never mentioned in his letters that she was sent to England." She goes on to write that, "…her parents may have wished to keep her with them and supervise her education."
Mary Byrd was married circa 1700-1704 to James Duke, of James City County and Charles City County, Virginia. James Duke served as sheriff of James City County in 1719 (see The Letterbook of John Custis IV 1717-1742, edited by Josephine Little Zuppan, page 50).
She is mentioned by her brother, William Byrd II, in his diary in an entry dated, May 4, 1711: "My sister Duke and Colonel Epes came and stayed to dinner. I ate pork and peas for dinner. In the afternoon my sister went home…." (The Great American Gentleman: William Byrd of Westover in Virginia His Secret Diary for the Years 1709-1712, Edited by Louis B. Wright and Marion Tinling, page 148).
"The London Diary, 1717-1721, and Other Writings" makes several references to James Duke and his wife, Mary (Byrd) Duke. They were the guests of William Byrd at Westover on September 17th and 19th in 1720 (pages 451-452). Byrd mentions seeing James Duke on November 14, 1720 at which time Duke told him (page 474), "…my sister and her fireside were well." He references his sister, Mary Duke, on April 6, 1721 (page 515).
The destruction of Charles City County and James City County records resulted in many researchers in the past mistakenly attributing Mary (Byrd) Duke as being part of their family, but the publication of William Byrd II's diaries showed that she was, in fact, the wife of James Duke, of James City County and Charles City County. She was in no way connected to the family of John Rogers (1680-1762), of King and Queen County, Virginia. She was never his wife and she was not the mother of Ann Rogers, the mother of George Rogers Clark. Aside from the fact that Mary's husband, James Duke, is identified in her brother's diaries, the wife of John Rogers, of King and Queen County is identified as having children as late as 1737, when Mary Byrd (born 1683) would have been in her mid-fifties. Furthermore, James Duke, who is known to be the husband of Mary Byrd, was alive at a time when John Rogers' children were being born. The family of John Rogers is an entirely different family and unconnected to the family of William Byrd and Mary (Horsmanden) Byrd. In a similar vein, the attempt to link Mary (Byrd) Duke to the William Duke whose family settled in North Carolina and who was an ancestor of the Duke tobacco family has been disproven by DNA testing.
Mary (Byrd) Duke's exact date of death is unknown, but based on what is known, we may conclude she likely died sometime between 1725 and 1739. The destruction of Charles City County and James City County records makes it very difficult to ascertain an exact date of death. The identification of the Westover Plantation Cemetery as her place of burial is based on an untitled, unpublished manuscript on file at the Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection in Knoxville, Tennessee.
For a more detailed discussion of the family of James Duke and Mary (Byrd) Duke, please see "An Account of Some Descendants of James and Mary (Byrd) Duke, of Charles City County, Virginia" found online here:
https://www.ancestry.com/boards/surnames.duke/2268/mb.ashx
"The first child of the marriage was a son, born on March 28, 1674, and named after his father, William. Three daughters followed in due course, Susan, Mary, Ursula. All of the children were sent to England for their education." It goes on to state, "Mary came back to marry James Duke."
A doctoral dissertation entitled "William Byrd of Westover: Adult Learner" by Suzanne Steffen Caswell, v.1 page 66 (footnote), submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1992, disagrees with the assertion Mary (Byrd) Duke was sent to England for her education. She writes,
"William Byrd I never mentioned in his letters that she was sent to England." She goes on to write that, "…her parents may have wished to keep her with them and supervise her education."
Mary Byrd was married circa 1700-1704 to James Duke, of James City County and Charles City County, Virginia. James Duke served as sheriff of James City County in 1719 (see The Letterbook of John Custis IV 1717-1742, edited by Josephine Little Zuppan, page 50).
She is mentioned by her brother, William Byrd II, in his diary in an entry dated, May 4, 1711: "My sister Duke and Colonel Epes came and stayed to dinner. I ate pork and peas for dinner. In the afternoon my sister went home…." (The Great American Gentleman: William Byrd of Westover in Virginia His Secret Diary for the Years 1709-1712, Edited by Louis B. Wright and Marion Tinling, page 148).
"The London Diary, 1717-1721, and Other Writings" makes several references to James Duke and his wife, Mary (Byrd) Duke. They were the guests of William Byrd at Westover on September 17th and 19th in 1720 (pages 451-452). Byrd mentions seeing James Duke on November 14, 1720 at which time Duke told him (page 474), "…my sister and her fireside were well." He references his sister, Mary Duke, on April 6, 1721 (page 515).
The destruction of Charles City County and James City County records resulted in many researchers in the past mistakenly attributing Mary (Byrd) Duke as being part of their family, but the publication of William Byrd II's diaries showed that she was, in fact, the wife of James Duke, of James City County and Charles City County. She was in no way connected to the family of John Rogers (1680-1762), of King and Queen County, Virginia. She was never his wife and she was not the mother of Ann Rogers, the mother of George Rogers Clark. Aside from the fact that Mary's husband, James Duke, is identified in her brother's diaries, the wife of John Rogers, of King and Queen County is identified as having children as late as 1737, when Mary Byrd (born 1683) would have been in her mid-fifties. Furthermore, James Duke, who is known to be the husband of Mary Byrd, was alive at a time when John Rogers' children were being born. The family of John Rogers is an entirely different family and unconnected to the family of William Byrd and Mary (Horsmanden) Byrd. In a similar vein, the attempt to link Mary (Byrd) Duke to the William Duke whose family settled in North Carolina and who was an ancestor of the Duke tobacco family has been disproven by DNA testing.
Mary (Byrd) Duke's exact date of death is unknown, but based on what is known, we may conclude she likely died sometime between 1725 and 1739. The destruction of Charles City County and James City County records makes it very difficult to ascertain an exact date of death. The identification of the Westover Plantation Cemetery as her place of burial is based on an untitled, unpublished manuscript on file at the Calvin M. McClung Historical Collection in Knoxville, Tennessee.
For a more detailed discussion of the family of James Duke and Mary (Byrd) Duke, please see "An Account of Some Descendants of James and Mary (Byrd) Duke, of Charles City County, Virginia" found online here:
https://www.ancestry.com/boards/surnames.duke/2268/mb.ashx
Gravesite Details
She has no surviving grave marker.
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