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- Published on Friday, 04 June 2010 03:30
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- Published on Wednesday, 10 September 2008 02:20
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This is a reprint of an article from the printed edition of The FIG Tree News, August 1998
By Tony Popp
Below is the information on Tony Popp's Fenton line:
William Fenton, one of my wife's fifth-great grandfathers was the Irish immigrant of this line. He probably immigrated to America between 1810 and 1820. His sons, John, Samuel, and William were born in Ireland, according to later censuses. In 1820, William lived in Moorefield, Clark County, Ohio. His wife had died between 1810-1820. William was probably a farmer, like his sons.
In 1780, a John Fenton owned 2000 acres on Sinking Creek in Greenbrier County, West Virginia and was shown in land transactions at least up through 1798. In 1782, two John Fentons and one John Finton were recorded on the Greenbrier tax list. In 1797, a William Fenton was on the tax list and was on it again in 1809 along with wife Nancy Humphreys.
Early Fenton marriages in Greenbrier included William and Nancy Humphreys in 1795, John and Mary Ann Faires on 6-14-1781, Elizabeth and William Donalson on 3-28-1818, and Robert and Ann White on 7-11-1833. It is quite possible that these were relatives of Williams.
By 1825, his son John and John's wife, as well as his other two sons, had moved to Greenbrier. William Fenton in 1820 is the only census record for any year in which a Fenton was recorded in Clark County. Note that in the same year, no Fenton was recorded in Greenbrier County. The 1830 census shows his sons William and John in Springfield, Clark County by themselves and John's wife and children in Greenbrier, West Virginia.
The Fenton name was often spelled as "Finton" in early times. Following is the family of William Fenton:
William Fenton (~1775/1820-1830) married ? (~1760/1820-1830)John (~1795-1800/1870s) married Margaret Fenton (1800-1801/1880+) on 5-29-1823Samuel (1798-1804/1880s) married Elizabeth Dunbar on 11-13-1839William F. (~1810/1850s) married Jane ?Elizabeth? (1794-1801/1818+) married William Donalson on 3-28-1818female (1794-1804/1820+)female (1794-1804/1820+)Robert? (1810-1812/1833+) married Ann White on 7-11-1833John Fenton, son of William, was a farmer born in Ireland. His wife was from West Virginia. Her parents were from Ireland. They were married in Clark County, Ohio. They lived in Greenbrier County, West Virginia as early as 1825 and probably moved there with his brothers after his fathers death in Clark County, Ohio. This was probably so they could live near family, as there were Fentons in Greenbrier since 1780 and no other records of Fenton in Clark County, Ohio.The Clark County marriage record lists "Fenton" as the last name for both John and Margaret, so it is quite possible they were first cousins. The 1830 census shows John and brother William living by themselves in Springfield, Clark County, Ohio, and John's wife and children living in Greenbriar, West Virginia. This was probably because John and his brother were attending to some business or land they and/or their father previously had owned there.
By 1840, John lived in Wolf Creek Township, Monroe County, West Virginia, and brothers William and Samuel lived nearby. Descendents of John's daughter, Margaret, claim that the family had French ancestry. John's daughters, Rebecca and Nancy, appeared to have been spinster twins who never married and stayed at home. There is presently a Fenton Glass Company in the same locality in West Virginia.
Following is the family of John Fenton:
John Fenton (1795-1800/1870s) married Margaret Fenton (1800-1801/1880+) on 5-29-1823Margaret Jane (7-19-1825/7-21-1901) married James Lemon on 2-4-1853Rebecca A. (.Becca.) (1828/1880+), singleNancy E. (1828/1880+), singleMartha L. (1830-1831/1870+)William (1833-1834/1850+)Mary Ellen ("Mattie") (1837-1838/1880+) married Joseph Parkins on 12-31-1863If you have information that might connect to Tony.s line, he can reached via the Internet at the following e-mail address:
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- Published on Monday, 08 September 2008 00:20
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This is a reprint of an article from the printed edition of The FIG Tree News, February 1998
By John W. S. Moore
My Fenton history begins with Richard and Michael Fenton (both born in the late 1600s), from Co. Wicklow, who were cousins (presumably their fathers' were brothers), possibly descended from Sir Jeffrey Fenton, Knight.
Michael Fenton married Comfort Barrington (daughter of Thomas). Michael died in 1729, Ballenclea, Co,. Wicklow, leaving his estate to his wife and children, Margaret, Richard(1), Percy(2), Ann, William and George(3), and to his cousin Richard Fenton and sister (wife of Robert Biker, of Dublin).
(1) Iss. from marriage to Ann, Michael and Mary (wife of Mathew Hudson). Richard Fenton, of Shelton, Co. Wicklow, died in 1769. Had freehold lands at Ballings and lease at/on Knocknamuran.(2) Iss. from marriage, Elizabeth, Comfort and Mary (known)(3) Iss. from marriage, Michael and Comfort (known)Richard Fenton, gentleman of Knockinargan1, Co. Wicklow died in 1757, leaving his estate to his wife Margaret, who was afflicted in some way (lost her speech), who lived with George and Hannah Fenton (of unknown relationship, living at Knockinargan, son possibly). He left money to his sister, Margery Scott (widow of Francis Scott of Sligo) and his brother William Fenton2, and William's son (his nephew) Thomas Fenton, both of Sligo. He also left money to the children of (cousin?) Michael and Comfort Fenton, Richard3, Percy4, Ann, William and George,
1Also had leases at Buschfield and Ballyooghan.2William Fenton (b. c1690s - 1700) of Dromore, Co. Sligo, is my 6th great-grandfather. And if he is the great-great-great-grandson of Sir Jeffrey Fenton, then I would be Sir Jeffrey Fenton.s 11th great-grandson.3Residing Balluitliane (spelling?), c1755.4Merchant, residing Dublin, c1755. William Fenton (& Roger Dowd) obtained a lease in Dromore, in 1727, from Matthew Ormsby. In 1739 William took a lease of 21 years on 80 acres at Dromore1, again from Matthew Ormsby, and renewed it in 1760 with Thomas Ormsby. William and his son Thomas were Executors on Richard Fenton.s will, but William died before 1757, leaving just Thomas. In 1766 the lease at Dromore was renewed by Thomas Fenton from Robert Brown. In 1777 Michael Fenton died leaving his estate to his brother Thomas, who by then had married (to Catherine ?).1Presumably this is where Dromore House is situated.
Thomas and Catherine Fenton had several children, John, Abraham, Michael and possibly Elizabeth. Thomas Fenton of Dromore1, died in 1788 and Catherine in 1807, Castletown, Easky.
1Had farms at Cushfield, Nackara and Cloarma.
John Fenton who appears to have inherited Dromore House, married Catherine Jane Jones. Their known son was Captain John Fenton R.N. (J.P.) born 1785. Catherine died in 1797, after which (I feel) John Fenton Snr. married Eliza Ann Spence in 1798 (Dublin?), and had at least two more children, George Spence Fenton and Margaretta N. Fenton (Mrs. J. Blackman)1. John Fenton Snr. died in sometime before 1826, which is the year his son took control of Dromore House. Both he and his son, Capt. John Fenton R.N. retired to Dublin, where presumably the family had a townhouse.
1Dr Jervis and Margaretta N. Blackman, my 3rd great-grandparents. Abraham and Michael Fenton married two Rea sisters. Rebecca Rea (2nd daughter of John Rea, of Radooney, Co. Sligo) married Abraham in 1784. Catherine Rea married Michael Fenton of Castletown, Easky. Catherine and Michael Fenton.s 2nd son, Thomas Fenton is famous for his duel with Major John Hillas. Their 5th son was George Fenton and they also had a daughter named Catherine.
Elizabeth Fenton (possibly the daughter of Thomas and Catherine Fenton) married John Motherwell, Sheriff of Ballycote, in 1786, and had a large family, 11 of whom reached maturity. Their son, John Fenton Motherwell1, a Solicitor, married Miss Elizabeth(?). Some years after his death, Elizabeth emigrated to Australia in 1864, to be near her mother-in-law's family (the Fentons) and her brother-in-law's family (the Motherwells), who had established themselves in Australia.
1John Fenton Motherwell died 26/8/1854 and was said to be aged 49yrs.
As for a connection with Sir Jeffry Fenton1, Knight of Dublin, there is no clear lineage. Sir Jeffry Fenton died in 1608, leaving his property to his son, Sir William Fenton, Knight, of Mitchelstown, Co. Cork and his daughter, Lady Katherine Boyle (wife of Sir Richard Boyle). He also left money to his brothers, Harry Fenton and James Fenton, and to his sister Mrs Parsons and her children (his nephews), Edward, William, Laurence and Fenton Parsons.
Sir Jeffry Fenton's son, Sir William Fenton, Knight, married Dame Margaret(?). They had two children (known), Sir Maurice Fenton, Knight, Baronet of Mitchelstown, Co. Cork, who married Dame Elizabeth(?), and Lady Katherine Fenton (only daughter), who married John King, Lord Baron of Kingston. Sir Maurice and Dame Elizabeth had two children, William*** and Margaret, before he died in 1664. Following the grandfather's death in 1671, the children were entrusted to their aunt and uncle, Lady Katherine and John King, Baron of Kingston Fenton2.
1Sir Jeffry Fenton, Knight, also had farms at Rathkenny, dwelling house in Dublin and had the Lordship of Clontaff.2Iss. Robert, John (known)Though there is no link between ***William Fenton (b. c1650 or thereabouts) he could possibly be the grandfather of cousins, Richard and Michael Fenton mentioned brother William Fenton of Sligo was said to be a Scottish gent, so this may eliminate any direct lineage with Sir Jeffry Fenton.
This information has only recently been put together from a selection wills and historical records (there are many) on the Fentons, sent to me from Ireland.
If you would like to contact John, he can be reached at either of the following addresses:
John MooreP.O. Box 1575Southport QLD 4215AustraliaOr via e-mail at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.- Details
- Published on Monday, 08 September 2008 01:07
- Written by Administrator
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This is a reprint of an article from the printed edition of The FIG Tree News, February 1998
By Kathleen D. Fenton
Once more this spring, Larry and I were privileged to be able to spend several marvelous weeks in beautiful, friendly, Ireland. While we did not find any data directly bearing on our Fenton family in Urney, County Tyrone, we did find some Fenton data that we thought might be of help to other researchers; some of it might even, some day, prove to be for the Urney line.
First, though, I.d like to make a correction to my article .The Fenton Family of Urney, County Tyrone,. published in Volume 2, Issue 4, and subsequent issues. On page 1 of Issue 4, I indicated the following:
William Sr. died at Brimfield, Hampden County, Massachusetts, before February 27, 1784. On that date, William Jr. conveyed to his son John 80 acres of land in South Brinfield, .the same being on the right of my honored father, late of Brimfield..
Chester Fenton has been kind enough to supply us with a complete copy of that deed (we had been relying on an abstract). In the deed, the phrase .honored father. seems to refer not to William Jr..s father, William Fenton Sr., but to William Jr..s father-in-law, Joshua Shaw: .... the same being part of a recent division lot of land ... originally laid out upon the right of my honorable Father Joshua Shaws right late of Brimfield, died December .... So, while William Sr. may indeed have followed (or accompanied) his eldest son from Rutland to Brimfield after the death of son Samuel, we have no proof of his presence there or his death date.
Now for our information on Irish Fentons. We were searching for information on the family of Urney, Urney Park, Strabane and Omagh, all in County Tyrone. At Strabane district council office, we located two marriage records:
1) February 8, 1853 at Strabane, in the parish of Leckpatrick [one of 2 Strabane Presbyterian Congregationals], County Tyrone, the marriage of Robert M.Leister [probably McLeister], bachelor, a clerk in Lifford, son of Daniel M.Leister, farmer, and of Catherine Fenton, spinster of Lifford, daughter of William Fenton, gentleman. Marriage performed by W.A. Russell. Both Robert M.Leister and Catherine Fenton signed, and as witnesses, Robert Fenton and James Baird signed.
2) May 7, 1850 at Strabane, in the parish of Leckpatrick, County Tyrone, the marriage of Mathew Fairman, bachelor, farmer of ?Turnerville?, son of ____ Fairman, farmer, and Eliza Fenton, spinster of Lifford, daughter of William Fenton, gentleman. Marriage performed by W.A. Russell; again, both the bride and groom signed their names, and as witnesses, Robert Fenton and James Graham.
In the data base at the research library of the Ulster-American Folk Park, located between Newtownstewart and Omagh southeast of Strabane, we found the following entry:
Death of William John Fenton, Valpariso [sic], South AmericanSOURCE: The Armagh Guardian, Tuesday, December 21, 1847ARCHIVE: The Central Library, Belfast.... [Intervening data is for the computer log]TRANSCRIPT: Died at Valpariso, South America on the 7th day of August last, Mr. Wm [William?] John Fenton, son of Mr. Wm. [William?] Fenton, Governor of Lifford Gaol, aged 20 years.We were not able to locate any additional data on the Lifford jailer, except for the information that such a post would qualify him to be called "gentleman"; and the information that there was no known Presbyterian church in Lifford, which is in County Donegal, just across the bridge from Strabane in County Tyrone. Probably, therefore, the family attended church in the Strabane parish and may even have maintained their residence in Strabane, as the .Lifford Gaol. would have been only a short stroll across the bridge (or even quicker horse ride) for its Governor. This suggests held property in Strabane, and subsequent generations are know to have resided there. We cannot definitely place William, the Lifford jailer, on our family tree, but we would suggest that he had at least the following children: 1. Robert FENTON, who witnessed the marriages of both Eliza FENTON and Catherine FENTON in 1853.2. William John FENTON, born ca. 1826, son of William FENTON of Lifford; died August 7, 1846, Valparaiso, Chile, aged 20 years.3. Eliza FENTON, at least 18 in 1850 (born by 1832); married May 7, 1850, Lifford, to Mathew FAIRMAN.4. Catherine FENTON, at least 18 in 1853 (born by 1853), married February 8, 1853, Lifford, to Robert McLEISTER.A search of census and land records for Strabane and Lifford, and of the parish of Leckpatrick Presbyterian church (if they exist), might lead to more information on this family - and possibly link to our Urney family. Though most early Irish census records are missing, we believe that the Family History Library may have microfilms of some church records and we will pursue this line of research.
This is far from Urney, but as we walked the streets of Dingle town in search of dinner, after a long day spent touring the lovely Dingle peninsula in southwestern Ireland, we spotted a very nice (and somewhat pricey!) restaurant with a familiar name. Fenton's Restaurant. We were not able to contact the owner, so we don't know his family history, but this is a reminder that the Fenton name is now quite widespread (though still uncommon) in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. We found two Fentons (we are attempting to contact them) in the County Tyrone phone book, both living in the Omagh area, which certainly suggests a possible link to our FENTONs, as we know that descendants still held land in that area about 1815.Not all the FENTONs in Ireland, of course, are Presbyterian or Church of Ireland. In further support of this, we here quote from the preface by James H. Bailey to A Compilation of the Descendants of William Fenton of County Limerick, Ireland and Petersburg, Virginia (1955):The precise origin of the Fenton family of County Limerick, Ireland, and Petersburg, Virginia, cannot be determined unless the researcher undertake a journey to Eire, a trip at this time was out of the question for this writer.
The family must have been derived from one of two stocks - either the Anglo-Irish house of Fenton or the purely Celtic O'Fiontain line. In either event, it is of royal lineage - from William the Conqueror through the English Fentons, or from Con of the Hundred Battles through the Hiberian "Fintons", as the latter were frequently called.The Anglo-Irish family descend from Sir Geoffrey Fenton who has been called "the one humane (English) statesman in Ireland". He was born about 1539 at Fenton in Nottinghamshire, the son of Henry Fenton by Cecily Beaumont, daughter of John Beaumont, of Coeorton in Leicestershire.... His wife, Alice, was the daughter of Dr. Robert Weston, at one time chancellor of Ireland; by her, he had one son, Sir William Fenton, and one daughter, Catherine, who was married on July 25, 1603, to Richard Boyle, first Earl of Cork. Sir William Fenton, only son of Sir Geoffrey, was married in 1614 to an Irish heiress, Margarett .neen. Morris Gibbon, a ward of the Earl of Thomond. From this marriage must have been descended the late eighteenth century Jeremiah Fenton, father of William Fenton the immigrant, if indeed the Petersburg Fentons are of the Anglo-Irish line.
..... However, since Sir Geoffrey and his immediate family were staunchly Protestant, the Petersburg Fentons, in view of their adamant Catholicism, are probably from the purely Celtic group of the same name, although the possibility of the conversion to the Catholic faith of a descendant of William Fenton would, of course, account for the religion of that descendant's posterity. Furthermore, the fact that William Fenton the immigrant came from the same general section of Ireland where the English Fentons had settled may have significance....
To this, since no connection with Sir Geoffrey (or to either of his brothers) has yet been proved for our Urney FENTONs, we would add a third line, possibly Scottish as it was staunchly Presbyterian, of County Tyrone. However, whether descended from Sir Geoffrey's brother James or not, the FENTONs of County Tyrone were there for some time, and at last as late as the early 1800s still had descendants in Urney, Strabane, and between Newtownstewart and Omagh. And if the Lifford jailer should (as seems likely) prove to be of the Urney line, there were descendants there until the 1850s.
If you would like to contact Kathleen about her information or to learn more about her trips, she can be reached at the following address:
Kathleen D. Fenton9459 Sargossa PlaceColumbia, MD 21045- Details
- Published on Sunday, 07 September 2008 18:42
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