The Daveiss - Hess Family: From Powhatan to the Present
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The Daveiss - Hess Family - Turner Publishing
Introduction
Without the extensive research done by Lillian Gardiner and her late husband, Laurence, this book could never have been started much less completed to this point.
During their years of travel throughout the United States (for Laurence’s work) they spent many hours in cemeteries, courthouses and going through private papers shared by relatives.
Laurence had always been interested in genealogy and in order to occupy herself while he read dusty old tomes,
Lil started helping him, and caught the bug
herself. The two put together exhaustive research on both families and we are so fortunate to be recipients of their tireless efforts.
Lil also spent time looking up ancestors in England, Scotland and Germany. On one of her ansearching
trips her luggage was stolen and although she didn’t care about her clothes, she gladly paid the hefty ransom to have her genealogy notes returned.
Another relative to whom we owe much is the late Colonel M.J. Kelley of Owensboro, Kentucky and Pittstown, New Jersey. Colonel Kelley had done a great deal of research on our mutual Davis line in Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee and was very generous with his information.
To you family members who have graciously shared your knowledge of our history and ancestry we extend our sincere appreciation. You have greatly added to the interest of this book.
If any errors are noted, please forgive us and send corrections to Marian.
Descendants of Chief Powhatan
Generation No. 1
1. Chief¹ Powhatan was born abt. 1550 in Virginia, and died April 1618 in Richmond, Virginia. He married Queen Winganuska.
Notes for Chief Powhatan:
Powhatan! The very name evokes a sense of mystery and awe, coming from the dim mists of our nation’s infancy. As young people, we thought of this man only in the background of stories of early settlers, of Pocahontas, of John Smith—but there was so much more to this great leader who was the only Emperor
this country ever had—and was our family’s earliest native ancestor.
Unfortunately, much of the information regarding the earlier inhabitants of this land is no longer emphasized and the authors feel it important to Powhatan and his descendents to tell his story the best we can from the sketchy facts available. Several accounts of Powhatan’s life and family come from various early settlers and historians, similar but not exactly alike. Somewhere therein lies the truth.
Powhatan inherited, from his mother, the title of Chief of eight small Indian tribes [1], and by shrewd cunning and superior talents established his authority over at least thirty tribes, eventually commanding over eight thousand warriors. His confederacy controlled Chesapeake Bay and its tributary rivers. This corresponds to Eastern Virginia, most of Maryland and Delaware. [2] Each tribe had its own village with houses built of bark over wooden frames. Along with other crops they planted corn, and tobacco; they hunted and fished. Every few years as the land became depleted, they would abandon the old village and build a few miles away.
Early historian, William Strachey, said Powhatan was referred to as Emperor—or King [English translation of the Indian term]. He took the name Powhatan in his youth from the area then called by that name, where he was born about 1550 near Balcony Falls on the James River in Virginia. The inhabitants, especially his neighboring chiefs, still called him Powhatan as an adult. His own people called him Ottaniack, and sometimes Mamanatowick [which means great King
] [3]; but his proper name with which he was saluted personally was Wahunsenacawh.
Powhatan was not a young man when the English came. I am very old, and I have seen many generations of my people,
he told Captain John Smith. Yet he was still an impressive figure. Captain Smith described him thus: a tall well proportioned man with a sour
look. Later, on better acquaintance, Smith changed sour
to grave, majestic countenance,
and said he looked almost like a god. His head somewhat gray, his beard so thin it seemed not at all, his age near sixty, of a very able and hardy body.
[4] Early historians such as Strachey, Beverly, Kegley and others all commented that Powhatan, Opechancanough, Pocahontas and Cleopatra looked different
from the other Indians. It was said that his father had come from the West Indies, run out by the Spanish. [5] This West Indian heritage could account for the different appearance. Our cousin, the late M.J. Kelley, managed to obtain copies of paintings of Powhatan, Opechancanough; the wedding of Pocahontas to John Rolfe and the Coronation
of Powhatan, showing his wife, Queen Winganuska, daughter Pocahontas, daughter Cleopatra, etc. and commented that it was plain to see the difference, especially in the women. The Indians, themselves, said that Opechancanough was not one of them,
but had come a long way from the south. [6]
Captain Christopher Newport served the London directors of the New Colony as Admiral in charge of transporting men and women to Virginia, and bringing back valuable cargo, and was commander of the Original fleet in 1607. On the occasion of the Second Supply, he sailed from England with, not only fresh commodities for the New Colony, but with presents from King James to Powhatan. He carried orders to crown Powhatan Emperor
of all the Indians [thereby making him subject to England and thus validating ownership of the land for England]. [7]
Captain John Smith delivered the invitation to Powhatan to come be crowned, and receive presents. Powhatan’s reply: If your King have sent me presents, I also am a King and this is my land. Eight daies will I stay to receave. Your Father [Capt. Newport] is to come to me, not I to him, nor yet to your fort neither will I bite at such baite.
There were many instances of trickery and crafty deceit between Powhatan and the newcomers, especially Capt. Smith. It seemed that he and Powhatan were in a constant battle of the wills, so it is no wonder that Powhatan was reluctant to place himself in the power of the Whites at their fort. Powhatan won this round; the English delivered to him at his Capital, Werowocomoco, a tin pitcher and basin, a bed complete with mattress, and a copper crown, which he refused to kneel to receive. He neither knowing the majestie nor meaning of a crowne, nor bending of the knee, indured so many perswasions, examples and instructions, as tired them all. At last, by leaning hard on his [Powhatan’s] stooped shoulders, Captain Newport put the crowne on his head. Then remembering himself to congratulate their kindnesse, Powhatan gave Captain Newport his mantle and his old shoes.
[8]
Powhatan maintained a treasure house watched over by guards at each of the four corners: one dressed to represent a giant, one dressed as a bear, one as a wolf and the fourth like a leopard. [You can’t help wondering where they had ever seen a leopard in Virginia.] The building was sixty feet long and one can indulge in flights of fancy as to what treasures
were kept there. Perhaps ceremonial pipes, his wonderful war bonnet of eagles feathers, bows, arrows, shell and bone jewelry—and one writer suggests it probably housed some of the very finest scalps. [9]
Wahunsenacawh, the mighty Werowance
who ruled over Attanoughkomouck of Virginia was a great man in his time and place. He might sometimes appear naive in the eyes of the English, but his was not the simplicity of a child or of low mentality. Remember the English colonists almost starved to death in a land of plenty, something Powhatan would never have done. He was merely a man confronted with the unfamiliar, the-to him-inexplicable. Indeed, he was a man of the highest intelligence. He had to be. The historian, Meade, said of him, the noblest and most powerful of the native chiefs of North America who by his superior wisdom and aptitude had established his authority over all the tribes from the James River to the Potomac, from Kicquotan at Hampton, to the Falls at James River, with the exception of the Chickahominy,
who were ruled by priests and their assistants called cawcawwassoughes
- [this from Capt. Smith]. Captain Newport wrote, Keeping peace among his Algonquins, fighting the Sioux and the Iroquois, reading the minds -- and forestalling the actions of any among his chiefs [capable of treachery to further their own secret ambitions] was no job for a weakling or a fool.
His territory was vast and required someone very shrewd and intelligent to maintain it as a cohesive confederacy. I too am a King!
he said, and indeed his royal
blood figures prominently in the genealogy of many of this nation’s outstanding citizens, both male and female. The Emperor
Powhatan died in 1618 near Richmond, Virginia.
[1] Colonel M.J. Kelley, family historian
Thomas Nimo, Virginia Notes,
p. 162, entry of April 1614
[2] William Strachey, Historical Jamestown Narratives, Eyewitness Accounts of the Virginia Colony, the First Decade
[3] Hugh Watson, Climbing Your Family Tree,
article - Historical Rarities, Sunday, July 27, 1958
Captain John Smith’s America,
edited by John Lankford Harper and Row
[4] Ibid
[5] Thomas Nimo, Virginia Notes,
p. 162, entry of 1614
[6] William Stith, History of Virginia,
republished 1865, p. 133-135
[7] Captain John Smith’s America
[8] Narratives of Early Virginia, 1606—1625,
edited by L.G. Tyler, Pres. of Wm. and Mary College, p. 154, 155
[9] Rose Chambers Goode McCullough, Yesterday When It Is Past,
p. 327
Although no relation of ours, mention should be made of Captain John Smith who played such a vital role in the establishment of Virginia and the Colonies.
The epitaph over his grave in St Sepulchre’s Church, London, begins:
"Here lies one conquer’d that hath conquer’d Kings,
Subdu’d large Territories, and done things
Which to the world impossible would seeme,
But the truth is held in more esteeme." [1]
Smith was one of the first Englishmen to see the new land as more than a get-rich-quick scheme; to fall in love with it and to see its potential. Beyond the forests and Indian fields he envisioned growing towns and cities; thriving trade and commerce. To him America was the setting for a new civilization.
He busied himself collecting information on the several Indian tribes, their languages, customs and fighting strength. He noted topography of the land and coastline, later publishing his observations and a map, which remained useful throughout the Colonial period. [2] It was he who gave New England its name.
Through his map [the best made to that date] and his writings of the region he indirectly assisted both Pilgrims and Puritans. [3] Much of our information of that time comes from these writings.
Captain Smith was personally acquainted with Chief Powhatan, Pocahontas [as you know], John Rolfe, Cleopatra, Opechancanough and all our Indian predecessors of that era. He lived among them and knew their ways. He, Powhatan and Opechancanough were constantly trying to outwit each other. It took cunning on both sides to stay afloat in this on-going battle of wills.
Left: Through trade and by stealth Powhatan acquired several hundred swords. Found by a Civil War relic collector in Henrico County, where Powhatan and his immediate followers lived during the latter years of his life, this broadsword may have been one such Indian trophy. Surviving length 19 1/4 inches. Right: John Smith trading with Indians in New England; detail from a de Bry engraving. The proffered knife is drawn with sufficient accuracy to show what appears to be the mark of the London Cutter’s Company on its blade.
[1] True Travels and Works of Captain John Smith, edited by Arber, Edinburg 1910, Vol. 11, p. 971
[2] Ibid. p. 384
[3] Captain John Smith’s America [selections from his writings] edited by John Lankford
Children of Chief Powhatan and Queen Winganuska are:
Left: Captain John Smith. Right: This print of Pocahontas in European attire, worn while she visited England with her husband John Rolfe in 1616, is hut one of many unusual contemporary drawings in the publication, Virginia 1584-1607,
edited by Alan Smith.
Generation No. 2
2. Pocahontas² (Chief¹ Powhatan) was born abt. 1595, and died in Gravesend, England. She married John Rolfe 1614 in Jamestown, Virginia. He was born 1585 in England, and died in Virginia.
Notes for Pocahontas:
Powhatan had 10 wives, 20 sons and 11 daughters. His last and most favorite wife, Queen Winganuska, a noted beauty, was the mother of the famous Pocahontas and OUR ancestress, Cleopatra. Let us emphasize that we are NOT direct descendents of Pocahontas, but of her younger sister, Cleopatra. [It is believed that the Indians would never have heard of the name Cleopatra and that it was suggested by the English, perhaps even by John Rolfe as a fitting English
name for his wife’s little sister.]
We are quite happy, however, to claim Pocahontas as Aunt
and her descendents as distinguished cousins. Let us make a few remarks regarding Pocahontas, as her son, Thomas, figures prominently in our verification of Cleopatra. We quote from an article from the Cobb County, Georgia Genealogical Society, Inc. by Geraldine Hartshorn Wheeler:
Is There a Princess in Your Past?
"Although the recent Disney movie portrays Pocahontas as a seductive 18 year old maiden fascinated with John Smith, the truth is that she was an 11 or 12 year old girl when she met the English Captain. It was only when she turned 18 that she became involved with a white man, marrying John Rolfe, an Englishman and a Virginia colonist, in April 1614.
After their marriage, Pocahontas and her new husband traveled to England where the Powhatan Princess was entertained by nobles and royalty. In 1615, she gave birth to a son, Thomas. Two years later, she died at Gravesend, England.
The simple fact is that if people cannot trace their ancestry to Thomas Rolfe of Virginia, they are not her descendents.
We know that Thomas Rolfe of Virginia inherited his father’s Virginia holdings and that he fathered only one child himself, a daughter, Jane Rolfe.
In 1675 that daughter married Col. Robert Bolling of Cobbs Plantation, again the marriage produced only one child, this time a son - John Bolling of Cobbs Plantation.
John Bolling married Mary Kennon and their issue was one son and five daughters.
This fourth generation is what genealogists call the gateway key
to descent from Pocahontas. If you cannot prove your descent from one of these children, you aren’t related. The children were: Major John who married Elizabeth Blair, niece of James Blair, founder of William and Mary College; Jane Bolling who married Col. Richard Randolph of Curies [one of their descendents was Thomas Mann Randolph of Edge Hill, Governor of Virginia and husband of Thomas Jefferson’s daughter, Martha]; Elizabeth Bolling who married Dr. William Gay; Martha Bolling who married Thomas Eldridge; and Anne Bolling who married James Murray of the ancient clan of that name.
Legitimate descendents of Pocahontas include Harry Flood Byrd - a U.S. Senator and Governor of Virginia - and his brother Richard Evelyn Byrd, discoverer of the South Pole.
Mary Ann Harrison, wife of former New York City Mayor, John Lindsey, is a descendent as is Anne Cary Randolph, who married diplomat and U.S. Senator, Governor Morris. Robert E. Lee’s wife, Mary Ann Custis, also could claim Pocahontas as a forbear.
The only descendent of Pocahontas to occupy the White House was Edith Bolling Gait Wilson, the second wife of Woodrow Wilson. She descended from the marriage of John Bolling III and Mary Jefferson, sister of President Thomas Jefferson."
Ralph Hamor, early colonist [Secretary of the Colony 1613—1614, preceding John Rolfe], tells of the wedding of Pocahontas. She and John Rolfe were married in church by the Rev. Richard Buck. Powhatan had sent his old uncle, Opachisco, and two of Pocahontas’ brothers to Jamestown to bear his formal consent and to be present at the wedding. Opachisco, representing her father, gave the bride away, and her two brothers stood beside her. [1]
[1] Thomas Nimo, Virginia Notes,
April 1614, p. 162
Rose C.G. McCullough, Yesterday When It Is Past,
p. 329
Notes for John Rolfe:
The Rolfe family has been in England since Saxon times. "Rolf’ mentioned in Doomsday Book owning 28 caracutes of land at Horsea near Yarmouth. He was one of the many small land owners of Danish or Norwegian extraction left undisturbed by William the Conqueror.
Marguerite Quarles gives the following table of immediate ancestors of John Rolfe of Virginia:
Robert Rolfe———mentioned in the Herald’s Visitation, 1534, had son
Eustace——————1516-1593—married Joanna Jenner in 1560, had son:
John—————————1562-1594—married Dorothy [Dorothea] Mason-1565-1645, had son:
John——————1585——————came to Virginia, married Princess Pocahontas in 1614.
[After the death of his father, John’s mother, Dorothy Mason Rolfe, married Robert Redmayne. They had three sons: Eustace, Edward and Henry.]
Thomas Rolfe-1615—only child of Princess Pocahontas and John Rolfe. [1]
John’s family lived at Heacham Hall, which had been in the Rolfe