Category Archives: Virginia Pryors

Affluent Pryor Families in Virginia

Recently I found myself  grouping Pryors by affluence. The Pryor families in Colonial and early-American Virginia were similar to other well- known figures like Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. In the 1700’s and early 1800’s land was a measure of wealth. Heads of families saw themselves as yeoman farmers, gentry. Education was prized and the affluent Pryor families patronized universities. The affluent Pryors served their country during the American Revolution and the War of 1812, holding the rank of Major, Colonel, and General.

Col. Samuel Pryor b. 1698 > John Pryor b. 1743 > Richard Pryor and Ann Bland> Theodorick  Pryor > Roger A Pryor. Nancy Bland who married Richard Pryor was the grand-daughter of a president of William and Mary College (William Yates).  Theodorick Pryor attended Hamden Sydney College.  One biography of Theodorick Pryor states that he met with Jefferson Davis several times.  Roger A Pryor, the son of Theodorick Pryor was a member of congress, Civil War general,  and a judge in NY state after the Civil War. Theodorick’s brother, Richard Pryor was a trustee of Spring Hill Male Academy.

Col. Samuel Pryor b. 1698 > John Pryor b. 1743 > Luke Pryor & Ann Batte Lane> Luke  Pryor  b. 1820 & John Benjamin Pryor. Luke Pryor was a US Senator and his brother John Benjamin Pryor was a noted race horse trainer for affluent Adam Lewis Bingaman (member of the MS house of representative and senate).

Col. Samuel Pryor b. 1698 > John Pryor b. 1743 > Richard Pryor and Ann Bland > Philip Pryor > Samuel B Pryor and Charles R. Pryor. Richard Bland was a member of the first Continental Congress. His daughter Ann Bland married John Pryor, a son of Col. Samuel Pryor of Goochland Co., VA.  Their son Philip settled in Brunswick Co., VA and was the father of Samuel B. Pryor who was a cadet in the first class at Virginia Military Institute (VMI), attended Hamden Sydney College and became the first mayor of Dallas, TX. Samuel’s brother, Charles R. Pryor, was the editor of the Dallas Herald, held a medical degree from the University of Virginia and was the Secretary of State for the Confederate State of Texas.

Christopher Pryor b. 1745 – d. 1803, John C. (Clayton) Pryor was a governor of William and Mary College; he sat on the Board of Visitors from 1816 to 1837.

Brazure  Williams Pryor b. 1775-1794 Served as a Brigadere General in the War of 1812. Member of the Virginia House of Delegates.  He also hosted General Lafayette on his return to the US in 1824. Customs Collector at the Port of Norfolk. Bazure was the grandson of Brazure Williams and possibly the son of a Samuel Pryor who was named as Williams’ son-in-law in his will.

David Pryor b. 1738 and Susan Ballow of Amherst Co.> Their daughter Mitchie Pryor married Randolph Jefferson the brother of President Thomas Jefferson.  Their son Nicholas B. Pryor wrote to Thomas Jefferson in 1813 requesting a military appointment and later became a county commissioner in Nashville. Nicholas’ sons were lawyers and postmasters, and his daughters married well (Emily married James Dibrell who was a physician).

Major John Pryor who married Ann Beverly Whiting. He served in the American Revolution and resided in Richmond, Va from the time of his marriage in 1807. A Randolph cousin of Thomas Jefferson’s lived in their household. He was wealthy enough to own a pleasure park and owned race horses.

The Pryors and Their Jeffersonian Connections

You’d think a Jeffersonian connection, especially when it to an American President, a  founding father, would be documented and easy to trace. It’s not so easy when it comes to the Pryors and their connection to Thomas Jefferson.  Jefferson was born in 1743 in Albemarle County. Jefferson is probably a good reflection of how the affluent Pryors lived in colonial and early-American times. He saw himself as a yeoman farmer, an educated gentleman. These are three Pryors who had a connection to our third president.

Mitchie Pryor born about 1759 her Jeffersonian connection was through marriage to  John Randolph Jefferson born 1755. John was the brother of the third US President, Thomas Jefferson.  John and Thomas were sons of Jane Randolph, from a prominent Virginia family.  The Jeffersons owned land in Albemarle County (President Jefferson’s home Monticello is located near Charlottesville in the same county). Mitchie is reportedly a daughter of David Pryor and Susannah Ballow of Buckingham Co., VA.  Upon David Pryor’s death in 1804, Susannah moved to Nashville, TN with her son Nicholas Ballow Pryor, her daughter Mitchie (who remarried to Josiah Johnson in 1819 in Nashville), her son John C. Pryor who settled in Franklin, TN, another son Leonard Pryor who died in Sumner Co. in 1830, and her son Zachariah B. who also settled in Nashville.

Sgt. Nathaniel Pryor is connected to President Jefferson by his participation in the Lewis and Clark Expedition in 1803. Pryor was living the pioneer life in “wild west” which was Louisville, KY before he set off on the trek across the continent.  His father John Pryor was on the 1789 tax list for Jefferson County, KY and probably died before 1791 when orphans Nathaniel and Robert Pryor were bound out to Obadiah Newman.  If the boys were minors in 1791, they were likely born in the late 1770’s or early 1780’s. So how was Nathaniel Pryor living in a fairly remote area tapped for the expedition? While I haven’t made a connection, it should be noted that Meriwether Lewis was selected by President Jefferson to lead the expedition.  Prominent Pryors from Virginia were connected to the Meriwethers and Lewis families: for example Martha “Patsy” Pryor daughter of William Pryor and Elizabeth Hughes married Robert Meriwether and were on the 1850 Census in Goochland County; and Frances Morton who married Dr. Samuel Pryor in 1760 in Goochland County, later married Nicholas Meriwether. One has to wonder if Nathaniel Pryor knew Lewis as a kinsman, neighbor, or comrade on the frontier… or as all of these.

Major John Pryor who married Anne Beverly Whiting (see post Major John Pryor of Richmond, VA & John C Fremont Connection) also had a connection to Jefferson.  The book “Scandal at Bizarre: Rumor and Reputation in Jefferson’s American” tells of Nancy Randolph (remember the President’s mother was a Randolph). When Nancy was a teen it was alleged that she became pregnant out of wedlock, gave birth, and her brother in law had assisted in the murder of the baby. Nancy, a tarnished woman, lived off the generosity of relatives. President Jefferson provided her living accommodations at Monticello in 1799 and again in 1804. By 1807 she was living in Richmond with John Pryor and his wife Anne, described as the proprietors of the pleasure park Haymarket Gardens. Apparently this was no Disneyland and was an area known for drinking, gambling and cockfights.  So were the Maj. and Mrs. Pryor kin of Nancy Randolph? Was Major Pryor an uncle to Mitchie Pryor who married into the Jeffersons?

More on the Elizabeth City, VA Pryors: Brazure Williams Pryor Related to Christopher J D Pryor

The University of North Carolina at Greensboro has a project that is adding valued information to Pryor family trees: Digital Library on American Slavery (library.uncg.edu/slavery_petitions). This project isn’t just for African Americans tracing their ante-bellum ancestors. Because slaves were considered property, white slave owners are named in petitions and lawsuits that involved ownership disputes.

Brazure Williams Pryor was born in 1775 to 1794, possibly the son of a Samuel Pryor. He probably was born closer to 1775 as he served as an officer in the War of 1812.  He died on 21 April 1827. I’ve suspected that Brazure was related to Christopher J D. Pryor b. 1800, as they both hailed from Elizabeth City, VA.

The American Slavery database contains a petition filed by Christopher in Williamsburg, VA in September 1827, “Christopher J. D. Pryor states that Brazure W. Pryor qualified as his guardian.” The petition contends that Brazure sold slaves that were part of Christopher’s estate and he was petitioning for an accounting of the sale from John A. Deneufville, the estate administrator. The court proceeding lingered, ending in 1839.

While it’s unclear how these two men are related, we now can look at them on one “branch” of the Pryor family tree.

Captain Pryor in the Revolutionary War?

I read a story online called “Our Grandmother’s Clock,” published in Catholic World, vol 38, October 1883 to March 1884 issue. It’s written by an adult recollecting their childhood when their grandmother told the story of meeting their grandfather during the American Revolution. Grandpa was a Captain Pryor with General George Washington’s army. It’s frustrating because there’s no author credit given and it’s hard to tell if it’s fact or fiction.  I’ve pulled some names and information from the story and I’m wondering if anyone sees any facts that match their ancestor.

  • Grandmother lived in Virginia as a girl and as an elderly widow she moved in with one of her children and grandchildren in Mt. Airy.
  • The story takes place on a plantation named Mount Airy. I looked in Wikipedia and found that it’s still a private mansion near Richmond, VA.  It was built by John Tayloe.
  • A  publication of a horse pedigree in The American Farmer states a horse named Federalist raised on the estate of John Tayloe, deceased, was sold to Major John Pryor by William Beale Jr. (published April 17, 1829, but the sale possibly occurred 10 to 20 years earlier). The America Stud Book, Vol. 1 states Federalist was bred at Mt. Airy.
  • Her mother’s married name was (Charlotte?) Lottie Randolph and she was (Mary?) Polly Randolph.
  • Captain Pryor was wounded and taken prisoner at Yorktown. He impersonated a British soldier to spy for General Lafayette.
  • This quote from the story indicates that the family moved westward: “This old clock was brought with other less sacred household goods when the spirit of adventure had seized upon grandfather and made him leave the honored borders of old Virginia for a home in the far West.” Where was the “far West?”– Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois?

I dug through my database and looked online, but I can’t figure out who this story is about. The frustrating thing is that if its fiction, the author has dusted it with real names to anchor it somewhat in reality.  My first thought was of Major John Pryor who lived in Richmond and who made the horse trade with John Tayloe. Major Pryor even at one point housed Nancy Randolph, a relative of President Thomas Jefferson who had a tarnished reputation. But he lived at Haymarket Gardens and his wife was a Whiting, not a Randolph and there were no children from their union (hence no grandchildren to tell stories to).  Major Pryor’s second wife was his housekeeper, Elizabeth Quarles Graves, but she remarried and moved to Boston also without children from her marriage to the Major.

So who was Captain Pryor? I suspect that the personas of the Captain and the Major have been melded together in history and in the research of some family historians. I did some searching for a captain rather than the major.

“I do certify that John PRYOR was c—–  (commissioned?) in a Captain Lieutenant in the first Regiment of Artillery on Continental —– the 13th of January 1777 —- in the service until the end of the war. Given under my hand this 29th day of June 1807. Samuel COLEMAN.” [from Revolution Bounty Warrants, Library of Virginia – online Catalog.  The back side of this document states that Captain Pryor was given 4000 acres.]**

A Goochland County will dated 1748 for a Samuel Coleman (obviously not the same Samuel Coleman who survived the American Revolution in the 1770’s) was witnessed by John Pryor, John Right, and Robert L. Woodson.

The Colemans, Pryors, and Woodsons were in Goochland County, VA records in the 1730’s onward. Samuel Coleman married at St. James Northam parish in December 1780. I suspect the John Pryor known by Samuel Coleman was John Pryor son of Col. William Pryor and Sarah Wood. This John Pryor was born in 1759 and was alive at the time of his father’s 1777 will. He was born in Goochland County and baptized at St. James Northam parish. He was the right age to be marriage material at the time of the Revolution.

I think that some of the confusion between Captain Pryor and old Major Pryor who married Anne Whiting comes out of them having close family connections. Major Pryor was a member of the Society of Cincinnati as was Samuel Coleman (the guy who knew Captain Pryor). A John Pryor, who I believe to be Major Pryor, is recorded in the board minutes of Hampden Sydney College in 1804 with Samuel Coleman.

Relying on “Twenty-One Southern Families: Notes and Genealogies,” by Elizabeth Pryor Harper, Capt. John Pryor received 4000 acres on Skaggs Creek in Kentucky. There’s a John Pryor on the 1800 Tax List of Barren Co., KY. John isn’t on Barren Co. records after that but it’s been offered that the John Pryor who was also getting large amounts of land near Louisville was the same person.

So is Capt. Pryor who spied on the British the John Pryor who was in Jefferson Co., KY and is believed to be the father of Nathaniel Pryor? Was Nathaniel Pryor’s mother actually a Randolph? That could explain why he was part of Jefferson’s Lewis and Clark Expedition!

To get to the root of Grandmother’s story it would be really helpful to know who Grandmother was and to know who were her grandchildren!

** Since first writing this post the writer has discovered the identity of the John Pryor who received the 4000 acres of bounty land [<<Read More>>]

Surprising Find in the Pryors of the War of 1812

I’ve been looking at Pryors in the Colonial/Revolutionary Period for about a week. Enough! I had to take a break and take a step backwards.  I decided to go through what’s available on the Pryor men who served in the War of 1812.

The switch the War of 1812 was about as fruitful as Pryor genealogy gets—I found some new information on one of men in my own known family line!  It looks like William G. Pryor who served from Tennessee is the William Pryor who was married to Spicy Taylor. I’m fairly certain it’s the same William as William G served in Joel Parrish’s Company and my William had a deed witnessed  by Joel Parrish in 1829 and both Parrish and William Pryor were counted on the same page of the 1830 Census living in Overton County, TN.

Other than finding out that William Pryor served in the military, this piece of information provided more insight into the story of my Pryors. I now know that William had a middle name. I’ve learned that he was in Tennessee earlier than when his family arrived in the late 1820’s from Virginia (that’s also frustrating because it also means some of the early Pryor documents may be attributed to this William!).  I also have an explanation of why his wife had a gap in having children—he may have been away from Campbell County, VA with the military.

The excepts of the 1812 Records are now online. (go to page) I’ve grouped them where I can show relationships between men or relationships based upon the location from which they served. Click the title of the article to open up comments—always happy to share your observations!