Boone, George III

Male 1666 - 1744  (78 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Boone, George III was born on 19 Mar 1666 in Saint Mary Magdelene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England; was christened on 19 Mar 1666 in Saint Mary Magdelene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England (son of Boone, George II and Uppey, Sarah); died on 27 Jul 1744 in Exeter, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried after 27 Jul 1744 in Exeter, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FSID: LTK4-8WW
    • Occupation: Weaver

    Notes:

    --1666 born in England
    --son of George Boone II and Sarah Uppey
    --married Mary Maugridge, daughter of John and Mary Milton
    --Quaker; weaver by trade
    --immigrated from England to The Colonies after some of his children had already immigrated
    --Daniel Boone's paternal grandfather
    --Josiah Noah Boone's grandfather

    GEORGE BOONE III

    (suffix is in historical writing; just keeps them somewhat straight, but probably isn't accurate as there was a longer line of George Boones)

    George Boone, III, the son of George Boone II and Sarah Uppey, was born at Stoak, near Exeter, (AKA Stoke Canon, a hamlet), in Devonshire, England in 1666.

    He married Mary Maugridge, daughter of John and Mary Milton Maugridge of Bradnich, Devonshire, England.

    They were members of the Society of Friends (Quakers) in Callumpton, Devonshire, from which Meeting they took a letter of recommendation to the Society of Friends in America.

    They had at least nine children: George Boone IV, Sarah Boone, Squire Boone, Mary Boone, John Boone who never married, Joseph Boone, Benjamin Boone, James Boone and Samuel Boone.

    George Boone, III was a weaver by trade. He and Mary were part of the Gwynedd Meeting Quakers.

    In 1712 his children, George Jr, Sarah, and Squire traveled to Pennsylvania to check out the land. On August, 17, 1717, about five years later, George III and Mary and their children still living at home, left Bradnich, Devonshire, England, a town eight miles from Exeter, 177 miles from London, and traveled to Bristol, where they sailed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, arriving about two months later on October 10, 1717.

    They initially stayed in Abington for a few months, then in 1718, moved to North Wales and lived there for two years. In 1720, they moved to Oley, Exeter Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania, at "the western edge of European settlement in southeastern Pennsylvania. Before the 1750s this frontier was one of the most peaceful in all of North America, though, to be sure, European colonialism had introduced terrible turmoil into Indian societies. As a result of first Swedish, then Dutch, then subsequently English colonization, the native peoples of the Susquehanna and Delaware river region were devastated by imported diseases, reducing their village populations by as much as 90 percent by the eighteenth century. Commercial trade reoriented native economic life and introduced cutthroat competition among colonists and Indians alike for access to valuable fur-bearing regions and merchant centers."

    In Pennsylvania, Quaker authorities did not establish militia and negotiated with Indians over the title to land, and promised "the full and free privileges and Immunities of all the Said Laws as any other Inhabitants," to the indigenous population.

    In 1728 at Manatawny, a party of Shawnees got into a fight with some local settlers who refused them food. One Indian was wounded. The Boones and their community, ten miles away, anticipated trouble. George Boone III, the local magistrate, sent a message to the colonial governor asking for help, "in order to defend our frontiers . . . Our Inhabitants are Generally fled . . . there remains about 20 men with me to guard my mill, where I have about 1,000 bushels of wheat and flour, and we are resolved to defend ourselves to ye last Extremity."

    Later a dozen Shawnees, tried to get food from a few frightened families in the area. About 20 locals pursued them and two of the settlers were wounded. There was no further trouble. Under increased European population pressures, Shawnees, Delawares, and other Indians began moving west. "A steady stream of Indians, however, continued to pass along the Perkiomen Path, which cut directly through the Boone neighborhood."

    In Oley, PA George III served for many years as Justice of the Peace. When he became too old to continue, his oldest son, George Jr. took over, and became the Justice of the Peace.

    In 1741, the Oley Township was split and the the section of the Oley Township where the Boone's lived was renamed Exeter, in honor of their English origins. --compiled from various sources including previous life sketch and Hazel Atterbury Spraker, "The Boone Family" A genealogical history of the descendants of George and Mary Boone," (1922); and Original Boone Family Genealogy by James Boone March 21st, 1788.

    Notes for George Boone III
    George and his wife, Mary, emigrated to America from Brandnich, Devonshire, England. They arrived in Philadelphia, PA 10 Oct 1717. They settled in the Town of Exeter, Berks Co., PA. George was a weaver. There is a boulder marking the site of George and Mary home in Berks Co. The inscription reads: "House built in 1733 by George Boone. Grandfather of Daniel Boone. Site of George Boone house. Built of logs about 1720. "Historical Society of Berks County"
    Arrival: October 10, 1717, arrived Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Emigration: August 17, 1717, Sailed from Bristol, England_Occupation: Tanner and weaver_Property: Settled in Exeter, Pennsylvania_Religion: Quaker

    George married Maugridge, Mary on 16 Aug 1689 in Bradninch, Devon, England. Mary was born on 23 Sep 1668 in Bradninch, Devon, England; was christened on 23 Dec 1669 in St Disen's Church, Bradninch, Devon, England; died on 2 Feb 1741 in Exeter, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried after 2 Feb 1741 in Exeter Friends Cemetery, Exeter, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Boone, Squire Sr was born on 25 Nov 1696 in Bradninch, Devon, England; was christened on 25 Dec 1696 in St Disen's Church, Bradninch, Devon, England; died on 2 Jan 1765 in Salisbury, Rowan, North Carolina, USA; was buried in 1765 in Mocksville, Davie, North Carolina, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Boone, George II was born in 1636 in Exeter, Devon, England; died on 31 May 1696 in Exeter, Devon, England; was buried on 31 May 1696 in St Mary Magdalene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FSID: LB2R-3PK
    • Occupation: Blacksmith in Exeter

    Notes:


    George and Sarah Boone had three children that can be documented in the records of St. Mary Magdalene Church in Stoke Canon Parish, Exeter, Devon, England. The church is about 5 miles north of the town of Exeter.

    The documented children:
    Henry died when about 4 months old.
    George came to America in 1717.
    John died about age 20.

    George, Sarah, Henry, and John are buried at St. Mary Magdelene Church. There is no evidence of any other children.

    George married Uppey, Sarah. Sarah was born in 1628 in England; died on 5 Feb 1708 in Stoke Canon, Devon, England; was buried on 5 Feb 1708 in Saint Mary Magdelene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Uppey, Sarah was born in 1628 in England; died on 5 Feb 1708 in Stoke Canon, Devon, England; was buried on 5 Feb 1708 in Saint Mary Magdelene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FSID: L52F-F48

    Notes:

    Maiden name on the headstone "Upper"; also known as "Uppey"

    Documents owned by the Boone Society:
    George Boone was buried ye thirty first of May 1696
    Sarah Boon "wido" was buried ye 5th of February 1708 and she died aged 80 years, and never had an aching Bone, or decay'd Tooth."

    The Boone Society has not been able to find the marriage or birth records for George Boone II and his wife Sarah, and cannot confirm her maiden name of Uppey."

    Source: The Boone Society, Aug. 2012

    Burial here per:

    "The ecclesiastical parish of Stoke Canon is a small community only about five miles north of Exeter, County of Devon in England. Also known as St. Mary Magdalene, this is the church in which George Boone I and Sarah (Uppey/Opie) Boone baptized three of their children, Henry in 1663, George (II) in 1666, and John in 1673. Henry and John both were buried there; Henry at age four months, and John at age 20. George (I) and Sarah were buried there also; George I in 1696 and Sarah in 1708. No tombstones exist today for this family.

    The Boone Society's English Research Committee has copies of the above mentioned baptism and burial records."

    Children:
    1. 1. Boone, George III was born on 19 Mar 1666 in Saint Mary Magdelene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England; was christened on 19 Mar 1666 in Saint Mary Magdelene, Stoke Canon, Devon, England; died on 27 Jul 1744 in Exeter, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried after 27 Jul 1744 in Exeter, Berks, Pennsylvania, USA.