Notes |
- Virginia Gleanings in England on Ancestry.com
Pembroke, 3.
Edward Lockey, of York county, Va., brother of John Lockey, grocer, of London, died without issue in the parish of St. Catherine Cree Church, London, in 1667, In his will, dated in that year, he bequeathed that "Morgan's Plantation," in York county, to his "cousin" Isaac Collier, Jr., son of Isaac Collier, Sr., and the reversion of two other plantations. Isaac Collier, Jr., was dead in 1671. In 1675 was recorded in York county the inventory of the estate of Isaac Coliler. The will of Isaac Clooer, Sr., was proved in York May 24, 1688, and names his children Charles, Abraham, Thomas and Sarah. In 1693, Thomas Collier (who was dead in 1704), sold Morgan's Plantation, styling himself "brother and heir of Isaac Collier, dec'd"
Tyler Quarterly magazine
In 1667, while in the parish of St. Catherine Creechurch, London, he died without issue, and left a large estate to collaterals. By his will which is on record in York County he gave a plantation called Morgan's plantation, to his nephew, Isaac Collier, son of Isaac Collier, Sr.; he gave Read's plantation to his wife for life, and then to the said Isaac Collier, Jr., as also to him a plantation of three hundred and twenty acres at Mattapony, in King William County, bought of John Madison. There were also certain legacies to said Isaac Collier, Jr., and to the three daughters of his nephew Edward Lockey, Mary, Ann and Judith Lockey, and to William Carter, son of Francis Carter.
His house was two stories and half high. Therre was a porch oand on the first floor a hall, a chamber and "a dark room used as a bed room." The second story was a chamber over the hall and a room over the chamber below. An attic, it is supposed, occupied the half story. Then there was a kitchen, a storeroom and a shed. He had plate consisting of "two tankards, one bole, one salt cellar, three sack cups and one dram cup." He had 108 head of catle, 11 horses, 10 white servants and three negroes.
|