Date
|
Parcel
|
1659/01/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
Southbee
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Cedar
Point
|
200
|
Old:1:26
|
Deed
|
January
3, 1659: Nicholas Mace, planter of Fishing Creek Hundred in Little
Choptank River in Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, buys
for 3,500 pounds of tobacco from William Southbee, planter of Milows
River in Talbritt (Talbot) County, a parcel called Cedar
Point, lying on the Eastern Shore on the South side of Little
Choptank River on the East side of Fishing Creek in Dorchester County
within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked cedar and
running North East and by North one hundred perches to a marked red oak
and bounded on the East by a line drawn South East and by East from the
said red oak for three hundred and twenty perches, on the South by a
line drawn South West and by South from the end of the South East and
by East line one hundred perches to a marked cedar by a cove, on the
West by a line drawn North West and by West down the said creek for
three hundred and twenty perches to the first marked cedar, on the
North with the said river, containing two hundred acres. Cedar Point is now in the possession of
Nicholas Mace and was purchased by William Southby (Southbee) from John
Gary of the Cliffs in Calvert County. Witnesses: Thomas Wall and
John Faucett; Steven Gary acted as William Southbee's attorney; Edward
Sauvage is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1663/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Baxter
|
|
Cedar Point
|
150
|
PR:6:256
|
Patent
|
1663:
Cedar
Point - 150 acres - Thomas Baxter - Patent - PR 6, p.256
There are five parcels named Cedar Point;
Cedar Point-I is the only one that a Mace bought or sold;
The others are: Cedar Point-I; Cedar
Point-III; Cedar
Point-IV; Cedar
Point-V.
|
1664/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Gary
|
|
Cedar Point
|
200
|
PR:7:199
|
Patent
|
1664: Cedar
Point - 200 acres - John Gary Patent - PR 7, p.199
There are five
parcels named Cedar Point; this is the only one that a Mace bought or
sold;
The others are: Cedar Point-II; Cedar Point-III; Cedar Point-IV; Cedar Point-V.
|
1664/07/28 |
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Peter Sharp
|
|
Fishing Creek Point
|
150
|
7:176
|
Patent
|
1664:
Fishing
Creek Point - 150 acres - Peter Sharp - Patent Record 7, p.176 |
1664/07/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Peter
Sharpe & wife Judeth Sharpe
|
Nicholas
Mace & Edward Taylor
|
Fishing
Creek
|
150
|
Old:1:74
|
Patent
Assignment
|
On
the back side of a patent for Peter Sharpe for one hundred and fifty
acres of land called Fishing Creek
[Point] bearing date July 28, 1664, was written this following
assignment: I, Peter Sharpe, with the advice and consent of my wife,
have bargained and sold unto Edward Taylor and Nicholas Mace all my
right and title to this land to enjoy and possess forever. Witnesses:
John Barber, Symon Cyncoe, and Charles Calvert. [Note: the following entry enables the plat to be drawn -
GL,III, ed.]
|
1664/10/20
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
William
Hill
|
Fishing
Creek
|
150
|
Old:1:79
|
Bond
|
October 20, 1664: Nicholas Mace, planter
of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, executes a bond for
1,000 pounds of tobacco to William Mace to secure his full and lawful
conveyance of the tract called
Fishing Creek [Point] to
William Hill. Witnesses: Henry Trippe and Edward Sauvage.
|
1664/10/20
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
William
Hill
|
Fishing
Creek
|
150
|
Old:1:75
|
Deed
|
October
20, 1664: Nicholas Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province
of Maryland, sells for 4,000 pounds of tobacco to William Hill, also
planter of Dorchester County, a 150 acre parcel called Fishing Creek [Point] that was granted
unto Peter Sharpe, planter, by the name of Color Sharpe, lying on the
Eastern Shore and on the South side of Little Choptank River and on the
West side of a creek called Fishing Creek within the following metes
and bounds: Beginning at a marked cedar and bounded on the North by a
line drawn East and by North from the said cedar for fifty perches to a
marked white oak, on the East by a line drawn South East and by South
from the said oak for four hundred and eighty perches to a marked pins
upon a point, on the South by a line drawn West and by North from the
said pine fifty perches to a marked white oak, on the West by a line
drawn North West and by North from the end of the West and by North
line four hundred and eighty perches to the fist marked cedar,
containing one hundred and fifty acres. Witnesses: Henry Trippe and
Edward Sauvage.
|
1667/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William Merchant & James Mossley
|
|
Cedar Point
|
100
|
|
Certificate
|
1667:
Cedar
Point - 100 acres - William Merchant & James Mossley
There are five parcels named Cedar
Point; Cedar Point-I is the only one that a Mace bought or sold;
The others are: Cedar
Point-I; Cedar Point-II; Cedar
Point-IV; Cedar
Point-V.
|
1670/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Gary
|
|
The Head Range
|
150
|
14:179
|
Patent
|
1670:
The
Head Range - 150 acres - John Gary - Patent - PR 14, p.179
There are two
tracts called The Head Range; the other one is by Peter Stokes.
|
1670/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Stephen Carey
|
|
Cedar Point
|
100
|
14:128
|
Patent
|
1670:
Cedar
Point - 100 acres - Stephen Carey - Patent - PR 14, p.128
There are five parcels named Cedar Point;
Cedar Point-I is the only one that a Mace bought or sold;
The others are: Cedar
Point-I; Cedar Point-II; Cedar Point-III; Cedar
Point-V.
|
1671/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Stephen Garey
|
|
Cornwall
|
100
|
15:225
|
Patent
|
1671:
Cornwall
- 100 acres - 1671 - Stephen Garey - Patent - PR 15, p.225
There are two
tracts called Cornwall (Cornwell) - the second
is a resurvey of this one.
|
1675/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edward Taylor
|
|
Cedar Point
|
50
|
19:70
|
Patent
|
1675:
Cedar
Point - 50 acres - Edward Taylor - Patent, PR 19, p.70
There are five parcels named Cedar Point;
Cedar Point-I is the only one that a Mace bought or sold;
The others are: Cedar
Point-I; Cedar
Point-II; Cedar
Point-III; Cedar Point-IV.
|
1680/03/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Howard
Taylor
|
Fishing
Creek
|
[not
stated]
|
Old:4:200
|
Deed
|
March
1, 1680: Nicholas Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland sells for [an undisclosed amount] to Howard Taylor, also
planter of Dorchester County, the land [Fishing
Creek Point] formerly bought from Peter Sharpe, lying in Fishing
Creek within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked
cedar and running East and by North fifty perches to a marked oak,
thence South East and by South to a small red oak by Fishing Creek,
then West and by South the parallel line to the best [first ? - GL,III,
ed.] line with a row of trees marked on the divisional line. Witnesses:
Benjamin Hunt and William Smithson, who is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1681/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Henry Aldred
|
|
Diss (Dess)
|
17
|
CB:2:349
|
Patent
|
1681:
Diss
(Dess) - 17 acres - Henry Aldred Patent, PR CB No.2, p.349
|
1682/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Peter Stokes
|
|
The Head Range
|
100
|
CB:3:117
|
Patent
|
1682:
The
Head Range - 100 acres - Peter Stokes - Patent, PR CB No.3
p.117
There are two
tracts called The Head Range; the other one is by John Gary.
|
1684/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Anthony Thompsaon
|
|
White Haven
|
50
|
IB&IL:C:152
|
Patent
|
1684:
White
Haven - 50 Acres - Anthony Thompson - Patent PR IB & IL
No.C, p.152
There are two
patents named White Haven; the second is
a resurvey of this one.
|
1692/09/05
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John
Harwood
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Head Range
|
150
|
Old:5:7
|
Deed
|
September
5, 1692: Nicholas Mace, planter of Fishing Creek in Little Choptank
River in Dorchester County Maryland, buys from John Harwood, carpenter,
also of Dorchester County, for 4,500 pounds of tobacco that John Gary
(Garie) of Calvert County paid in his lifetime, all that parcel called Head Range lying in Dorchester County on
Little Choptank River at the head of Gatters Creek and contained within
the following metes and Bounds: Beginning at a marked oak at the head
of the Western branch of Gatters Creek and running South South East for
a breadth of seventy five perches to a marked oak and from the said oak
East North East three hundred and twenty perches to a marked hickory,
and from the said hickory by a line drawn North North West seventy five
perches to an oak and from thence to the [first] bounded tree,
containing one hundred and fifty acres. Witnesses: Alexander A. Fisher
and Benjamin Hunt and Justices of the Peace Henry Trippe and Jacob
Lockerman.
|
1695/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Anthony Thompson
|
|
Green Bank
|
25
|
BB:3:474
|
Patent
|
1695:
Green
Bank - 25 acres - Anthony Thompson - Patent - PR BB No.3, p.474
Addition to Green Bank is a resurvey
of this tract.
|
1695/10/10
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas Massey and
Josias Massey
|
|
The
Outlett
|
110
|
C:3:581
|
Patent
|
October 10,
1695: Nicholas Mase & Josias Mase Patent - Patent Record C No.3,
p.581. Nicholas and Josias Massey
patent 110 acres, called The Outlett, out of a 1,000 acre tract granted
to John Taylor the previous year. Courses: Beginning at a
bounded red oak and running thence South South East forty perches to
another marked red oak thence South West forty eight perches thence
South South West four hundred perches thence North North West fifty six
perches and thence North North East three hundred and sixty six perches
and from thence by a straight line to the first bound tree, containing
and now laid out for one hundred and ten acres. Acting for the Crown:
Henry Darnall ... [the deed is incomplete - GL,III, ed.]
|
1696/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josias Mace
|
|
Maces Chance
|
28
|
BB:3:263
|
Patent
|
1696: Mace's
Chance - 28 acres - Josias Mace - Patent - PR BB No.3, p.263
|
1703/12/04
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Stephen
Warner
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Cornwell
|
[not
stated]
|
Old:6:25
|
Deed
|
December
4, 1703: Nicholas Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, buys for 2,500 pounds of good merchantable leaf tobacco from
Stephen Warner, also planter of Dorchester County, all that parcel
called Cornwell lying on the East side of
Chesapeake Bay in Dorchester County and contained within the following
metes and bounds: Beginning at the head of Fishing Creek that runs into
Little Choptank River at a marked red oak standing near the head of
Fishing Creek and running thence South South East one hundred perches
to another bounded white oak, and bounded on the South with a line
drawn East North East one hundred and sixty perches, bounded on the
East with a line drawn North North West one hundred perches, bounded on
the North with a line drawn West South West one hundred and sixty
perches until it intercepts parallels with the first bounded tree.
Witnesses: Will. Douse and Nicholas Phillips; Hugh Eccleston is
Dorchester County clerk.
|
1705/05/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Johnson and wife Elizabeth Johnson
|
Josias
Macey
|
Brownes
Rest; and Angels Hole
|
100;
& 150
|
Old:6:64
|
Deed
|
May
7, 1705: Josias Macey (Massey) of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland buys for 3,000 pounds of tobacco from Thomas Johnson and his
wife Elizabeth of Centt (Kent) County one half share or moiety of the
tract called Brownes Rest that is contained within the following metes
and bounds: Beginning for breadth at a marked pine and running thence
East and by South fifty perches to a marked oak standing by a swamp
side, thence North and by East three hundred and twenty perches,
bounding on the North by a line drawn West and by North till it meets
with Tar Bay, binding on the West with Tar Bay, containing one hundred
acres. Also one half share or moiety of a tract called Angels Hole,
contained within the following courses: Beginning at a marked pine tree
standing by a marsh side and running for breadth North East and by East
fifty perches to a marked white oak by a marsh side, bounded on the
North East with a line drawn North West and by North four hundred and
eighty perches, bounded on the North West with a line drawn South West
and by West till it intersects with Tar Bay, and by the said Tar Bay to
the first pine tree, containing one hundred and fifty acres. John
Robson is attorney for Thomas Johnson and his wife Elizabeth.
Witnesses: John Phillips and John Meekins; Hugh Eccleston is Dorchester
County clerk.
|
1712/08/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josiah
Macy and wife Angell Macy
|
Joseph
Gontoy, Senior
|
Catchellers
Hope
|
150
|
Old:6:191
|
Deed
|
August
11, 1712: Josiah Macy (Massey) and wife Angell of Dorchester County in
the Province of Maryland sell for 1,500 pounds of good merchantable
leaf tobacco to Joseph Gontoy, Senior, planter, also of Dorchester
County, all that tract called Catcheller's Hope formerly belonging to
Honey Holt, deceased, lying on the North side of the marsh of Raccoon
Creek that issues out of Blackwater River in the woods in Dorchester
County and is contained within the following metes and bounds:
Beginning at a marked pine lestanding in the murtol swamp near the
aforesaid marsh, and from thence running North East and by East twenty
five perches to another marked pine standing in another myrtle swamp,
thence running North West and by North six hundred and forty perches,
thence running South West and by [West or East ?] fifty perches, thence
running by a straight line to the first marked pine, containing one
hundred and fifty acres. Witnesses: Lewis Griffin and John Wingate;
Jacob Lockerman is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1714/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Henry Fisher
|
|
Priviledge
|
200
|
CE:1:10
|
Patent
|
1714:
Priviledge
- 200 acres Henry Fisher - Patent Record CE 1, p.10
There are three
similarly named tracts: The others are Priviledge
and Privilege.
|
1720/06/12
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace and wife Ann Mace
|
James
Fookes
|
Cedar
Point
|
200
|
Old:2:131
|
Deed
|
June
12, 1720: Nicholas Mace, planter, and his wife Ann of Dorchester County
in the Province of Maryland sell for £70 to James Fookes, shipwright,
also of Dorchester County, the 200 acre tract called
Cedar Point, lying on the Eastern
Shore on the South side of Little Choptank River and on the East side
of Fishing Creek and contained within the following metes and bounds:
Beginning at a marked cedar where now is set up a post of cedar and
running for breadth North East and by North one hundred perches to a
marked red oak, and bounded on the East by a line drawn South East and
by East from the said red oak three hundred and twenty perches, on the
South by a line drawn South West and by South from the end of the South
East and by East line one hundred perches to a marked cedar by a cove,
on the West by a line drawn North West by West down Fishing Creek three
hundred and twenty perches to the first marked cedar, on the North with
the said river, containing two hundred acres, excepting a twenty foot
square of ground for a burying place. Witnesses: Roger Woolford and
Joshua Kennerly.
|
1720/08/14
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josias
Mace & wife Angell Mace
|
William
W. Wrotton and wife Hannah Wrotton
|
Cedar
Point
|
200
|
Old:2:82
|
Power of
Attorney
|
August 14, 1720: Josias Mace & wife
Angell, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland,
grants power of attorney to William W. Wrotton (Wroughton) and wife
Hannah, also planter of Dorchester County, to execute the sale of Cedar Point to Nicholas Mace, Senior, also
of Dorchester County. Witnesses: John Kobson and Roger Woolford; Justin
Good Lockerman is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1720/08/14
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josias
Mace & wife Angell, and William W. Wrotton & wife Hannah Wrotton
|
Nicholas
Mace, Senior
|
Cedar
Point
|
200
|
Old:2:81
|
Deed
|
August 14, 1720: Josias Mace & wife
Angell, and William Wrotton (Wroughton) and his wife Hannah Wrotton,
all planters of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, sell for
£20 and 3,000 pounds of good sound merchantable leaf tobacco to
Nicholas Mace, Senior, also planter of Dorchester County, all the tract
known as Cedar Point, lying on the East
side of Chesapeake Bay on the South side of Little Choptank River and
on the East side of Fishing Creek and contained within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked cedar and running for
breadth North East and by North one hundred perches to a marked red
oak, bounded on the East by a line drawn South East and by East from
the said red oak three hundred and twenty perches, on the South by a
line drawn South West and by South from the end of the South East and
by East line one hundred perches to a marked cedar by a cove, on the
West by a line drawn North West and by West down Fishing Creek for
three hundred and twenty perches to the first marked cedar, on the
north with the said line, containing two hundred acres.
Witnesses: John Kobson and Roger Woolford; Justin Good Lockerman is
Dorchester County clerk.
|
1721/08/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Joseph
Woodward & wife Mary Woodward
|
Nicholas
Mace, Junior
|
Dess
|
17
|
Old:8:28
|
Deed
|
August 7, 1721: Nicholas Mace, Junior,
planter of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, buys for £4
from Joseph Woodward and his wife Mary, also planter of Dorchester
County, all that tract called Dess,
lying on the East side of Chesapeake Bay at the head of Short Beaver
Dam Branch that comes out of Southys Beaver Dam Branch that issues out
of Blackwater River in Dorchester County and which is contained within
the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked oak standing in
the woods near the head of said branch, and from thence running Est
South East twenty eight perches to another marked oak, thence running
South South West one hundred perches, thence running West North West
twenty eight perches, thence running with a straight line to the first
specified marked oak, containing seventeen acres, and recorded by
certificate dated November 11, 1720 in the Land Office at St. Maries.
Witnesses: John Brannock, Junior, Edmond Mace, and Leonard Milburne;
Jacob Lockerman is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1723/07/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace and wife Ann Mace
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Head
Range, Comsock, & Outlet
|
[not
stated]
|
Old:8:55a
|
Deed
|
July 15, 1723: Nicholas Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, grants to his son Thomas
Mace, born of my wife Ann Massey, after my decease and my wife Ann
Mace's decease, all that part of two tracts of land called Head Range and Comsock being that part
towards my dwelling house and where my dwelling house now stands:
Beginning at a white oak marked with six notches being the division
tree of the aforesaid lands, thence running from the white oak South
South East one hundred perches into the woods, the aforesaid division
tree standing on the East side of a cove that runs up between Nicholas
Mace's and the branches standing near the head of the cove and that
part of land on the North East side of the division line, that part
which I give to my son Thomas Mace; also the one moiety of another
tract called Outlet also to have
liberty to occupy or build upon the one half part of the above said
lands, such half part as the aforesaid Nicholas Mace shall in
reasonable equity think fit during the natural life of the aforesaid
Nicholas Mace. Witnesses: Benjamin Labronsse, Rebecca Mills and Roger
Wollford.
|
1726/09/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josias Mace
|
|
Maces Purchase
|
174
|
PL:6:337
|
Patent
|
September
27, 1726: Mace's
Purchase - 174 acres - Josias Mace - Patent - PR PL No.6,
p.337
Images
are available here.
|
1727/08/22
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Angela
Mace
|
Mary Mace
and Susanna Mace
|
Browns
Rest & Angels Hole
|
100 &
150
|
Old:8:162a
|
Deed of
Gift
|
August 22,
1727: Angela (Angell) Mace, new widow of Josias Mace of Dorchester
County in the Province of Maryland and daughter of Thomas Brown, late
of Dorchester County, also deceased, gives outright to her daughters
Mary Mace and Susanna Mace one half share or moiety of that 100 acre
tract lying at the head of Tar Bay called Browns Rest as well as
another one half share or moiety in the tract lying adjacent called
Angels Hole, containing 150 acres. The gift carries with it the
stipulation that the daughters are only to have use of the land to
dwell upon until they marry and that any construction thereon to be
sufficient only for a dwelling house and small garden. Witnesses: Roger
Wollford (Dorchester County clerk) and Josias Mace (obviously signed
before his death - GL,III,ed.)
|
1730/04/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
John
Mace, Elizabeth Mace, Ann Mace Sharshane, and Thomas Mace
|
slaves
Tanfill and Janny
|
[none]
|
Old:8:410
|
Deed of
Gift
|
April 7,
1730: Nicholas Mace of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland
gives to his son John Mace and daughter Elizabeth Mace one slave called
Tanfill; should Elizabeth Mace marry, John Mace and his heirs of his
body lawfully begotten to get her share of the slave Tanfill; likewise,
one slave called Janny shall go to my daughter Ann Mace Sharshane and
to the heirs of her body lawfully begotten; only the first child of the
aforesaid woman slave shall go to my son Thomas Mace and the second to
my daughter Ann Mace Sharshane; and all the aforesaid slaves shall
remain and be for the use of my loving wife during her life and that
she may have the work and occupation of them also during her life and
then to go as above mentioned. Witnesses: Richard Cormack, Thomas
Brannock, Junior, and Tobias Pollard.
|
1732/02/14
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Stevens
|
|
Stevens Gift
|
475
|
Pat. cert. 2819
|
Patent
|
February
14, 1732: Steven's Gift - 475 Acres - John Stevens - Patent - PL:8:748
|
1732/12/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Mace
|
|
Maces Back Range
|
100
|
PL:8:701
|
Patent
|
December
6, 1732: Mace's
Back Range - 100 acres - Thomas Mace - Patent - PR PL No.8, p.701
Images are available here.
This Mace's Back Range has since been resurveyed
but not renamed.
|
1733/08/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Ann Mace
|
Thomas
Parker
|
Tobacco
crop
|
[none]
|
Old:9:117
|
Deed
|
August
28, 1733: Ann Mace, widow of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, sells for 2,000 pounds of tobacco to Thomas Parker, merchant
of Dorchester County, all her tobacco crop as well as tobacco stored on
her land. Witnesses: Thomas Novell and Ephraim [illegible].
|
1737/11/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edward Marders
|
|
Hobs Kindness
|
100
|
Pat. cert.1471
|
Patent
|
November
11, 1737: Hobs Kindness - Edward Marders, 100 Acres - Patented
Certificates 1471
Images are available here.
|
1741/01/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edward
Mardon
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Hobs
Kindness
|
100
|
Old:10:221
|
Power of
Attorney & Deed
|
January
27, 1741: Edward Mardon, planter, initially of Dorchester County in the
Province of Maryland and now of North Carolina, grants power of
attorney to his friend Thomas Mace, also planter, of Dorchester County
for the purpose of conveyance of his lands called Hobs Kindness for £25 to John Smith
of Dorchester County, the metes and bounds of which are: Located at the
East side of Chesapeake Bay and beginning at a marked red oak, the
starting close by the mouth of a small branch that issues out of the
North side of the North East branch of Coattses Creek and about four
perches of the upper boundary of a tract called Jamses Park, then
running North West one hundred and twenty seven perches, then North one
hundred and forty two perches, then South fifty eight degrees East
eighty perches, then South East one hundred and seventy perches, then
by a straight line drawn to the said marked red oak, [containing] one
hundred acres [All
of the original patented tract - GL,III, ed.]. Witnesses: Thomas
Nonott and William Murray.
|
1743/06/18
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josias
Mace
|
Joseph
Shinton & Lewis Griffith
|
Wards
Chance & Maces Purchase
|
28 &
118
|
Old:11:124
|
Deed
|
June
18, 1743: Josias Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, sells for £100 to Joseph Shinton & Lewis Griffith,
planters, also of Dorchester County, all that tract called Ward's
Chance that lies in Dorchester County on a Beaver Dam Branch called
Southoy's Dam or Hodson's Branch that issues from Blackwater River and
which is contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at
a bounded poplar standing a little below the going over of the said
dam, then running South by East twenty six perches, then West by South
fifty perches, then South East and by South eight perches, then South
and by West forty perches, then North West and by North eight perches,
West and by South two degrees West fifty perches, then West North West
twelve perches, then North and by West twenty six perches to the said
Beaver Dam Branch, then by a straight line to the first tree,
containing twenty eight acres. Also all that tract called Mace's Purchase that is located
on the East side of the aforesaid dam or branch called Southoy's Dam
alias Hodson's Branch, binding with the East side of the said branch
and to be laid out according to the patent of the said land, containing
one hundred and eighteen acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace J.
Eccleston and Benjamin Keene.
|
1744/12/24
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
George North
|
|
North Range
|
100
|
Pat. cert.2235
|
Patent
|
December
24, 1744: North
Range George North, 100 Acres - Patented Certificates 2235
|
1746/11/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Tootell
|
|
Tootells Venture
|
370
|
PT:2:242
|
Patent
|
1746:
Tootells
Venture - 370 acres - John Tootell - Patent - PR PT No.2, p.
242
Images
are available here.
|
1747/04/02
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William Byns
|
|
Forrest Range
|
140
|
Pat. cert.1127
|
Patent
|
April
2, 1747: Forrest Range William Byns, 140 Acres - Patented Certificates
1127
Images
are available here.
|
1747/04/16
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Henry Ennalls
|
|
Ennalls Forrest of Friendship
|
510
|
BT&BY:3:382
|
Patent
|
1747: Ennalls
Forrest of Friendship - 510 acres - Henry Ennalls - Patent - PR BT
& BY No.3, p.382
Images
are available here.
|
1747/10/17
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Bartholomew Ennalls
|
|
Ennalls Addition
|
100
|
|
Patent
|
October
17, 1747: Ennalls Addition, Bartholomew Ennalls, 100 Acres
Images
are available here.
|
1748/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Peter Stokes
|
|
The Honorable Division
|
487
|
TI:4:46
|
Patent
|
1748:
Honorable
Division, The - 487 acres Peter Stokes - Patent Record TI 4, p.46
|
1748/09/29
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
D. William Murray
|
|
Blackford
|
642
|
Pat Cert.502
|
Patent
|
September
29, 1748: Blackford - Dr. William Murray, 642 Acres - Patented
Certificate 502.
Images are available here.
|
1752/06/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Mace
|
Mason
Shehawn
|
Goods and
chattels
|
[none]
|
Old:14:621
|
Bill of
Sale to Secure a Debt
|
June
15, 1752: John Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, for 1,809 pounds of tobacco and £34 8/-to him paid by Mason
Shehawn became security to Doctor William Murray, and for which sum as
security to indemnify the said Mason Shehawn, I, John Mace, do sell,
make over and deliver unto Mason Shehawn the following articles: One
cow and calf, one cow, two steers three years old, one steer t,wo years
old, one bull, one heifer two years old marked with a cross, [illegible
animal] ... slit in left ear, two horses, one called Fox, the other
Friendship, Fox branded with I, Friendship with a pot hook, two
blacknut [illegible] tables, seven pewter dishes, fourteen pewter
plates, four pewter basins, three feather beds & furniture, three
iron pots and two chests iron bound, four ewes and lambs, one ram, all
the goods and several living creatures, etc. All these goods and
animals to remain as security with Jon Mace unless Mason Shehawn pays
the associated debt within one year from this date, in which case the
sale becomes null and void. Witness: Justice of the Peace William
Murray.
|
1752/09/15 |
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Mace
|
|
Cornwell
|
300
|
Pat. cert.811
|
Patent
|
September
15, 1752: Cornwell, Thomas Mace, 300 Acres. Patented Certificate 811
|
1753/08/10
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Samuel Fountain
|
|
Addition to Chance
|
60
|
Pat. cert.95
|
Patent
|
August 10, 1753: Addition to
Chance - Samuel Fountain, 60 Acres - Patented Certificate 95
Images are available here.
This tract was later resurveyed and greatly enlarged, also as Addition to Chance.
|
1754/02/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Mace
and wife Mary Mace
|
Jean
Fishwick
|
Cornwell
& Head Range
|
74
|
Old:15:32
|
Deed
|
February 7, 1754: John Mace and his wife
Mary of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland sell for £53 5/-
to Jean Fishwick, daughter of the late William Fishwick, who made the
payment before his death, the two tracts called Cornwell and Head
Range lying at the head of Fishing Creek in Dorchester County and
which are included within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at
a marked pine tree being the first bounded tree of Cornwell and running
thence South South East one hundred and ten perches, then East North
East ninety four perches, then North North West ninety nine perches to
a marked white oak, being a division tree between the aforesaid John
Mace and Thomas Mace, thence running North twenty eight degrees East
thirty perches, then South fifty seven degrees West fifty four perches,
then North sixty degrees West forty four perches, then West South West
eight perches to the beginning tree of Head Range, then South twenty
two degrees West forty perches to the first beginning, containing
seventy four acres. [Afterwards comes some legal language involved in
this transaction, perhaps due to the early demise of William Fishwick -
GL,III, ed.] Witnesses: Justices of the Peace William Murray and J.
Ermalls; Charles Dickenson is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1755/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Hurley
|
|
Priviledge
|
25
|
BC&GS:4:54
|
Patent
|
1755:
Priviledge
- 25 acres - John Hurley, Patent Record PR BC & GS No.4, p.54
There are three
similarly named tracts: The others are Priviledge and Privilege.
|
1756/12/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josiah
Mace, Junior
|
Josiah
Mace, Senior
|
[none
mentioned]
|
[not
stated]
|
Old:16:50
|
Land
Valuation
|
December 1, 1756: Josiah Mace, Junior,
orphaned son of the late Josiah Mace, Senior, requests that the land he
inherited be evaluated and a guardian selected for him. Thomas Jones
and Roger Jones were selected to perform the valuation, and Josiah Mace
selected Henry Wales, tailor, to be his guardian. The premises in
question were accordingly visited and an inventory made: A rotten
fence, one log house, rotten, covering another old house 15 by 10
[feet] not worth repairing, twenty five apple trees; we therefore think
and order that Henry Wales pay the orphaned Josiah Mace three hundred
and fifty pounds of tobacco yearly and every year, beginning from
December 1, 1757, and likewise deliver him, the said orphan, the
aforesaid land and all rents and arrears of rents due his part of the
said land and to leave them in the same repair as the houses, excepted
as it is at this time and to liberty to clear three acres of land with
liberty to cut rail timber for the use of the plantation, and to be
left on the plantation [until] the orphan arrive at the age of twenty
one. [signed] Thomas Jones .... Roger Jones. Memorandum: Thomas Jones
and Roger Jones were duly qualified by John Jones on December 1, 1756
under law to perform the valuation.
|
1763/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas Mace
|
|
Tinian
|
30
|
BC&GS:24:88
|
Patent
|
1763: Tinian
- 30 acres - Nicholas Mace - Patent Record PR BC & GS No.24,
p.88
The patent is here: BC &GS 22, p.455
|
1764/05/05
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Mace
|
|
Maces Back Range
|
427
|
BC&GS:24:255
|
Patent
|
1764: Mace's
Back Range - 427 acres - Thomas Mace - Patent - PR BC &
GS No.24, p.255
Images
are available here.
This Mace's Back Range is a resurvey of the earlier one of the same name.
|
1764/06/24
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Absalom Thompson
|
|
White Haven
|
177
|
BC&GS:28:381
|
Patent
|
1764:
White
Haven - 177 acres - Absalom Thompson - Patent - PR BC &
GS No.28, p.381
Images
are available here.
There are two patents named White Haven; this one is a resurvey of the first one.
|
1764/09/29
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William Barwick
|
|
Addition to Chance
|
216
|
Pat. cert.96
|
Patent
|
September 29, 1764: Addition to
Chance - William Barwick, 216 Acres - Patented Certificate 96
Images are available here.
This seems to be a resurvey of an earlier tract, also called Addition to Chance.
|
1765/06/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Josias
Mace & wife Anna Mace
|
Jonathan
Wood
|
Maces
Purchase & Outlet
|
54 &
55
|
Old:20:83
|
Deed
|
June 11, 1765: Josias Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, sells for £111 to
Jonathan Wood, shipwright, also of Dorchester County, 54 acres of the
tract called Mace's Purchase
that lies on the West side of Hodson's Branch and 55 acres of the tract
called Outlet that was formerly
taken up between Josias Mace, the grandfather of the present Josias
Mace, and Nicholas Mace, the brother of Josias Mace, the grandfather,
as by the Last Will and Testament of Josias Mace the grandfather.
Acting for the Crown: as witnesses: Justices of the Peace Dan Sullivan
and Thomas White; Charles Dickinson is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1766/06/13
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Leven
Woolford & wife Mary Woolford
|
Josias
Mace
|
Grace
|
60
|
Old:21:7
|
Deed
|
June
13, 1766: Josias Mace of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland
buys for £60 from Leven Woolford and his wife Mary, also of Dorchester
County, the tract called Grace, lying in Dorchester County and which is
included within the following metes and bounds: Beginning from a marked
pine, a bounded tree of the aforesaid land standing at the head of
[three illegible words] North West and by West eighty two perches, then
North East and by East half a point Easterly ten perches, then North
forty two degrees West forty five perches, and from thence begin the
lands bargained and sold and running the following courses: North
seventy four degrees East one hundred and fifty eight perches, then
North thirty three degrees West seventy one perches, then South seventy
four degrees West eighty four perches, then East and by South thirty
five perches, then South six degrees West seventy six perches, then
South seventy four degrees East twelve perches, then with a straight
line to the beginning, containing sixty acres. Witnesses: Justices of
the Peace Benjamin Keene and Daniel Sullivan; Charles Dickinson is
Dorchester County clerk.
|
1766/09/09
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Mace, Senior
|
Edmond
Mace
|
Dess,
Maces Back Range, & Cornwell
|
17; 284;
& 76
|
Old:21:121
|
Deed
|
September 9, 1766: Thomas Mace, [Senior]
planter of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, sells for £10
to Edmond Mace, son of the aforesaid Thomas Mace, all the 17 acre tract
of land called Dess, lying on the East
side of Chesapeake Bay in Dorchester County at the head of a short
Beaver Dam Branch that comes out of Southey's Beaver Dam Branch that
issues out of Blackwater River within the following metes and Bounds:
Beginning at a marked oak standing in the woods near the head of the
said branch and running according to the original metes and bounds as
mentioned in the patent of Dess, containing seventeen acres; also a
part of another tract called Mace's
Back Range containing two hundred and eighty four acres; and a part
of the tract called Cornwell
containing seventy six acres; the said [last] two parts of the
aforesaid two tracts of land lying to the Eastward and Southward of a
line beginning at a marked gum standing in Hodson's Branch, then
running up that branch North eight degrees East fifty three perches,
then North forty degrees East forty perches to another marked gum, then
North ten degrees West one hundred and seventy perches to a marked red
oak, then East South East fifty four perches, which said two parts of
[the last] two tracts are contiguous to and adjoining each other,
containing three hundred and sixty acres. Witnesses: Justices of the
Peace Dan. Sullivan and John Campbell; Charles Dickinson is Dorchester
County clerk.
|
1766/09/09
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Mace, Senior
|
John Mace
|
Maces
Back Range, Cornwell & Outlet
|
66; 25
& 21
|
Old:21:120
|
Deed
|
September
9, 1766: Thomas Mace, [Senior] planter of Dorchester County in the
Province of Maryland, sells for £10 to John Mace, son of the aforesaid
Thomas Mace, a 66 acre portion of the tract called Mace's Back Range, 25 acres of the
tract called Cornwell, and 21 acres
of the tract called Outlet, all
lying contiguous to and adjoining each other in Dorchester County, and
to the West of a line drawn North from a marked maple standing by the
[side] of a branch called Hodson's Branch, being a division line
between Thomas Mace, son of the said Thomas Mace, and John Mace, to a
marked gum one hundred and ninety perches, then South seventy five
degrees West one hundred and twelve perches to a marked white oak
standing on the West side of the aforesaid tract called Outlet, being a
division line between Nicholas Mace and the said John Mace.
|
1766/09/09
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Mace, Senior
|
Thomas
Mace, Junior
|
Maces
Back Range & Cornwell
|
77 &
61
|
Old:21:117
|
Deed
|
September
9, 1766: Thomas Mace, [Senior] planter of Dorchester County in the
Province of Maryland, sells for £10 to Thomas Mace [Junior] son of the
aforesaid Thomas Mace, all that 77 acre parcel called Mace's Back Range, and a 61 acre
part of the parcel called Cornwell,
both lying in Dorchester County, adjoining and contiguous to each
other, within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked gum
standing in Hodson's Branch, then running up the said branch North
eight degrees East fifty three perches, then North forty degrees East
forty perches to another marked gum, then North ten degrees West one
hundred and seventy perches, then West South West ninety four perches
to [yet another] marked gum standing at the end of a division line
between John Mace and the said Thomas Mace, the younger, and from
thence South one hundred and ninety perches to a marked maple standing
on the side of the said branch, containing by implication one hundred
and thirty eight acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Dan. Sullivan
and John Campbell; Charles Dickinson is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1772/10/02
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Mace, Sen.
|
John Mace
|
Cornwell
& Outlett
|
2.0
|
Old:26:21
|
Deed
|
October 2,
1772: Thomas Mace, Senior, of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, sells for £2 to John Mace, also of Dorchester County, parts
of the tracts called Cornwell and Outlett, which are contained within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked gum being the
division tree between Thomas Mace, Junior, and the said John Mace and
running from thence with a straight line to a cedar post standing in
the head of a gut [?] which is the head of the Church Creek and which
Gut is to the Westward of the dwelling house of Thomas Mace, Senior,
and from the said post two perches wide back o the beginning gum tree,
containing two acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John
Goldsborough and James Tootell; Henry Dickinson is Dorchester County
clerk.
|
1774/08/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
[same]
|
Cornwell
|
[not
stated]
|
Old:27:304
|
Commission
|
August 11, 1774: Nicholas Mace asks for
and is granted a commission to reestablish the boundaries of his tract
called Cornwell; the commission is
composed of the substantial and capable landowners: Thomas Jones,
Stevens Woolford, John Anderson, and Arthur Whitely. D.Sprigg is
Dorchester County clerk. Thomas Jones and Stevens Woolford took over
this task and obtained the following depositions: (1) Absalom Thompson,
age about sixty one, described the stump of a tree that he had heard
from James Busick that is was Mace's boundary, but that the stump was
marked instead of the first boundary which stood near by; (2) James
Busick, age about fifty two, stated that the aforesaid stump was the
boundary of Cornwell as he had heard directly from Nicholas Mace and
Thomas Mace; and also that he heard John Mace also describe the stump
as the boundary of Cornwell; (3) Colman Mace, age about forty three,
said that he heard his father and many others say that the stump in
question was marked for the first boundary of Cornwell; and (4) Absalom
Thompson - again - now at another stump - said that John Mace took him
to this place and told him that this white oak was the original
boundary. Accordingly, the commissioners put down new cedar posts
at the positions of the two original boundary trees.
|
1779/03/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edmond
Mace
|
Thomas
Colsten
|
Maces
Back Range
|
75 & 5
|
JCH:1:174
|
Deed
|
March
15, 1779: Edmund (Edmond) Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the
Province of Maryland, sells for £60 to Thomas Colsten, carpenter, also
of Dorchester County, (1) a 75 acre part of the tract called Mace's Back Range, lying in
Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a
marked red oak standing at the end of one hundred and seventeen perches
on the North sixty degrees West line, it being the forty second course
of the aforesaid tract, and from thence running North seventeen degrees
East one hundred and forty one perches, then South thirty four degrees
East one hundred and fifty perches, then South South West seventy two
perches, then to the aforesaid first beginning, containing seventy five
acres. (2) Another part of the same tract which is contained within the
following courses: Beginning at a marked poplar, it being the original
boundary or beginning of a tract of land called Blackford, and from thence running South
fifty eight degrees West thirty five perches, then North twenty degrees
East eighteen perches, then North fifty seven degrees West ten perches,
then North eight degrees East twenty six perches, then East twelve
perches, then with a straight line to the beginning, containing five
acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Benjamin Keene and Henry Lake.
|
1780/03/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Callendar
|
John Mace
|
Tootells
Venture
|
18
|
JCH:1:314
|
Deed
|
March
7, 1780: John Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, buys for eighteen pounds in gold from Thomas Callendar, also
of Dorchester County, all that 18 acre part of a tract called Tootell's Venture, lying upon a branch of
Blackwater River called Hodsons Branch in Dorchester County, lying
between a tract called Mace's
Purchase and another tract called Mace's
Back Range, beginning at a marked post standing near the land
called Mace's Purchase and which is contained within the following metes and
bounds: Beginning at the said post and running thence South and by West
eighty eight perches with the land called Mace's Purchase, then North
east one hundred and forty four perches to the land called Mace's Back
Range, then North seventy degrees West thirty two perches, then South
South West to the said marked post, containing eighteen acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and Henry Lake.
|
1780/03/17
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nehemiah
Vickars and wife Nancy Vickars
|
John Mace
|
Head Range
|
9
|
JCH:1:311
|
Deed
|
March 17, 1780: John Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland buys for three pounds in
gold from Nehemiah Vickars and his wife Nancy, planter, also of
Dorchester County, a 9 acre portion of that part of a tract called Head Range that lies in Dorchester County
on the West side of a cove that runs up between Nicholas Mace's and
James Besick's commonly called the Indian Gut, and which is contained
within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked post put
down in the room of the first boundary of the aforesaid tract and
thence running East North East twenty perches, then South sixty degrees
East twenty five perches, then North fifty seven degrees East fifty
four perches, then South twenty eight degrees West eleven perches, then
North forty seven degrees East eighteen perches, then North twenty
degrees East ten perches, then North forty four degrees East nine
perches, and from thence with a straight line to the beginning,
containing nine acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Henry Lake and
Thomas Jones.
Thence
follows this statement: We hereby certify that the within named John
Mace acted for and on our parts and behalf in carrying on the lawsuit
against a certain James Busick whereby we recovered a judgment for the
within bargained and sold land and premises out of Dorchester County
Court by virtue of a a lease of ejectment brought against the said
James Busick on May 10, 1774, he the said John Mace paying the sixpence
of the said suit for us. In witness whereof we have set our hands the
day and year aforesaid.
Nehemiah Vickers
|
1783/07/05
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
George
Robinson
|
Dwelling
Plantation
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:2-4:169
|
Deed of
Lease
|
July
5, 1783: Nicholas Mace, Senior, [implying that there is a Nicholas
Mace, III, son of Nicholas Mace, Jr., who is now the senior Nicholas -
GL,III, ed.] planter of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland,
leases for 40/- per year to George Robinson, schoolmaster of Dorchester
County, part of the Dwelling Plantation lying in Dorchester County at
the head of Fishing Creek and enclosed within the following metes and
bounds: Beginning at the Westward end of an orchard lying on the North
side of the road leading through the said plantation, and thence
running and binding with the said road and creek as far as the said
Nicholas Mace's Land extends or to the division line between him and
the plantation where John Ross now lives, together with the right to
cut firewood or lumber for building or fencing improvements and to
graze three horses, four cattle, ten sheep in any of the pastures
belonging to the said Nicholas Mace and to range hogs in the woods, for
a term of twelve years. George Robinson is to be allowed a reasonable
sum to be determined by indifferent men, less a deductible of £10
pounds, for improvements made over the course of his twelve year term.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and Thomas F. Eccleston.
|
1783/11/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Colsto, Jr.
|
|
Colstons First Purchase
|
130
|
Pat. cert.777
|
Patent
|
November 15,
1783: Colstons First Purchase, Thomas Colston, Jr., 130 Acres. Patented
Certificate 777
Images
are available here.
|
1784/03/24
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Colsten
|
|
Middle Ground
|
112
|
Pat. cert. 2066
|
Patent
|
March
24, 1784: Middle Ground, Thomas Colsten, 112 Acres. Patented
Certificate 2066
Images
are available here.
|
1784/05/25
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Colston, Jr.
|
|
Colsten Lane
|
200
|
Pat. cert.779
|
Patent
|
May
25, 1784: Colsten Lane, Thomas Colston, Jr., 200 Acres - Patented
Certificate 779
Images are available here.
|
1784/05/25
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Edmond
Mace
|
Colstens
First Purchase
|
3.0
|
NH:2-4:367
|
Deed
|
May
25, 1784: Edmond Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland, buys for £3 from Thomas Colsten (Colston), carpenter, also of
Dorchester County, 3.0 acres of that tract called Colsten's First Purchase
that is contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a
marked red oak standing at the end of one hundred and seventeen perches
on the North sixty degrees West line, it being the fortieth second
course of Mace's Back Range, and
from thence running North sixty degrees West forty eight perches, then
South seventeen degrees West nine perches, then South sixty degrees
East forty eight perches, then to the aforesaid first beginning,
containing three acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Benjamin Keene
and Thomas Jones.
|
1784/05/25
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Thompson
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Old White
Haven and Addition to White Haven
|
18
|
NH:2-4:323
|
Deed
|
May 25, 1784: Thomas Thompson
and his wife Priscilla of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
sell for £15 to Thomas Colsten (Colston), carpenter, also of Dorchester
County, parts of the tract called Old White
Haven as well as the tract called Addition to White Haven,
lying in Dorchester County on the North side of Fishing Creek and
contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning from the out
lines of said parts of the aforesaid tracts at a marked cedar post
which is standing on the home line of a tract called Head
Range and at the water side, and from thence running North four
degrees West eighteen perches, then East North East twenty four
perches, then South East five perches, then East North East one hundred
and three perches, then North seven degrees East eighty eight perches,
then South eighty degrees East nine perches to a tract called Tinian, then South seven degrees West
seventy three perches, then South thirty seven degrees East seventeen
perches, then South South East seventy six perches, then West South
West six perches, then North North West seventy one perches, then to
the aforesaid first specified beginning, containing eighteen acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Benjamin Keene and Thomas Jones.
|
1784/05/25
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edmond
Mace, Junior, and wife Mary Mace
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Maces
Back Range (two parcels)
|
1.0 &
4.0
|
NH:2-4:320
|
Deed
|
May
25, 1784: Edmond (Edmund) Mace, Junior, and his wife Mary of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland sell for £3 to Thomas Colsten
(Colston), carpenter, also of Dorchester County: (1) A 1.0 acre portion
of the parcel called Mace's Back
Range, lying in Dorchester County, and which is included within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked post standing at the
end of the third course of Mace's Back Range (it being the North eighty
four degrees West line) and running thence South ten degrees East
eighteen perches, then South thirty degrees East thirty four perches,
then South fifty eight degrees West thirty five perches, then North
twenty degrees East eighteen perches, then North fifty seven degrees
West ten perches, then North eight degrees East forty four perches,
then to the aforesaid place of beginning, containing one acre; (2)
Another portion, 4.0 acres, of Mace's Back Range which is included
within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked post
standing at the end of the second course of the tract called Dess, and from thence running North
eighty two degrees East thirty two perches, then South South West fifty
six perches, then West North West thirty two perches, then to the
aforesaid beginning, containing four acres. Witnesses: Justices of the
Peace Benjamin Keene and Thomas Jones.
|
1784/09/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Kallendar
|
George
Williams
|
Dwelling
Plantation
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:2-4:479
|
Deed of
Lease
|
September
11, 1784: Thomas Kallendar, shipwright of Dorchester County and State
of Maryland, leases for £8 10/- yearly rent to George Williams, also of
Dorchester County, a parcel whose lease George Robinson assigned to
Thomas Kallendar and which lease was given to George Robinson by
Nicholas Massey, said lease bearing the date of April 8, 1783, and
running thence for a term of twelve years. The parcel under lease
is contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning next to
the orchard of the aforesaid Nicholas Mace and as far towards the head
of the cove as the bottom of the valley between Sawyard Point and the
hill where the cedar stands between the said point and the orchard of
the said Nicholas Mace, that is to say, the whole part of the lot
therein contained, together with the right to cut firewood or lumber
for building or fencing improvements and to graze three horses, four
cattle, ten sheep in any of the pastures belonging to the said Nicholas
Mace, for the term of twelve years. The rent is to be paid in gold or
silver or in Spanish milled dollars, estimating them at 5/- 6p each, or
in Half Joes (Johannes) at £3 each. [There is additional language
requiring sufficient notice and security if the parcel is leased to
someone else - GL,III, ed.] Witnesses: Bartholomew Warren and William
Meddiss (Medes). There follows the deposition of Edmund Brannock
of Dorchester County, age about seventy two, regarding the forefathers
of Nicholas Mace, Senior: This Nicholas Mace, Senior, was son to Thomas
Mace, deceased, who was son to Nicholas Mace, deceased, who claimed
land near Town Point in Dorchester County, and that in those times they
were called by the name Massey; and further the deponent saith not on
September 19,1784. Witness: Thomas Jones.
|
1784/09/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace, Senior
|
James
Mace and Louden (Lowden) Mace
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:2-4:484
|
Deed
|
September 27, 1784: Nicholas Mace,
Senior, planter of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sells
for 5/- to James Mace, son of the aforesaid Nicholas Mace and for 5/-
Louden (Lowden) Mace, the son of the aforesaid James Mace and grandson
of the aforesaid Nicholas Mace, for the natural life of James Mace, and
after his demise, to Loudon Mace forever, all those lands to the
Northward, Eastward, Southward and Westward of the several lines and
courses mentioned in the deed from Nicholas Mace, Senior, to his son,
Nicholas Mace, Junior, dated the same day as these presents [i.e. Liber NH No.2-4, Folio 481 - GL,III, ed.]
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and Thomas F. Eccleston.
|
1784/09/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace, Senior
|
Nicholas
Mace, Junior
|
Cornwell,
Head Range, and Outlett
|
66.5
|
NH:2-4:481
|
Deed
|
September
27, 1784: Nicholas Mace, Senior, planter of Dorchester County in the
State of Maryland, sells for £10 to his son. Nicholas, Mace, Junior,
also of Dorchester County, 66-1/2 acres in two tracts lying in
Dorchester County known as Cornwell
and Head Range as well as another tract
called Outlett, which said parts of
the aforesaid tracts are contiguous and adjacent to each other, and are
contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked
white oak standing on the South side of a gut called Indian Gut, it
being a division formerly between Thomas Mace and John Mace, deceased,
then running South South East one hundred and eight perches to the east
North East line of Cornwell, then with the said line East North East
twenty four perches, then South South West sixty two perches, then
North seventy five degrees East fifty seven perches, then North North
East forty perches, then North twenty two degrees West one hundred and
thirty one perches, then North seventy degrees East twenty perches with
the main road to the creek, then binding with the said creek North
thirty degrees West forty perches, then binding with the creek and
Indian Gut to the first beginning, containing sixty six and a half
acres.Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and Thomas F.
Eccleston.
|
1784/10/19
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Colsten
|
|
Addition to Green Bank
|
62.5+
|
Pat. cert.150
|
Patent
|
October
19, 1784: Addition To Green Bank, Thomas Colsten, 62 1/2 Acres, 24
Perches. Patented Certificate 150
Images
are available here.
This is a resurvey of the tract called Green
Bank.
|
1785/02/25
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Colsten
|
|
Privilege
|
14
|
Pat. cert.2478
|
Patent
|
February 25, 1785:
Privilege, Thomas Colsten, 14 Acres. Patented Certificate 2478
Images
are available here.
Of the three tracts called Priviledge (Privilege) this one lies between
Outlett and Cornwall (Cornwell).
|
1785/10/12
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
Thomas
Mace
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:5-8:214
|
Lease
|
October 12, 1785: James Mace of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland leases for £5 yearly rent to Thomas
Mace, also of Dorchester County, all that lot or part of land whereon
Edward Mills now lives and rented of the said James Mace on Fishing
Creek, along with the liberty to cut firewood and timber for fencing
and building or repairing the said lot. The term of the lease is seven
years, starting January 1, 1786. Witnesses: Bartholomew Ennalls, James
Bryan, and William Medes (Meddiss).
|
1785/10/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Kallendar
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:5-8:267
|
Assignment
of Lease
|
October
15, 1785: Thomas Kallendar states: I hereby certify that I do assign
all my right, title, claim and interest of in and to a lease, that is
assigned to me by George Robinson, to Nicholas Mace ... during the said
term and that Nicholas Mace shall have all the profits and advantages
arising from the said lease. Witness: John Williams.
|
1785/10/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
George
Robinson
|
Thomas
Kallendar
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:5-8:266
|
Deed of
Lease
|
October
15, 1785: Be it remembered that the deed of lease from Nicholas Mace to
George Robinson, already recorded in Liber NH
No.2 folio 169, was again presented [today] with the following
assignment thereon written: George Robinson, for and in consideration
of £65 in specie to be paid before June 1, 1786 by Thomas Kallendar,
hereby conveys all liberties to the said land, excepting that liberty
to cut timber for building on the lot of land mentioned in the lease,
for the term of years therein mentioned, Thomas Kallendar paying the
yearly rent of 40/- to Nicholas Mace. Witnesses: Bartholomew Warren and
John Warren.
|
1786/02/14
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
James Dail
|
Head Range
|
2
|
NH:5-8:287
|
Deed of
Lease
|
February
14, 1786: James Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland, leases for £50 [one-time payment - GL,III, ed.] to Jamed
Dail, blacksmith of Dorchester county, all that part of a tract called Head Range lying at the head of Fishing
Creek in Dorchester County, formerly in the possession of Robert Ewing
and now in the possession of James Dail, that is enclosed within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning at the upper bridge, which is
erected over Fishing Creek, and from thence running to the lower bridge
across the said creek, then running with and bounded by the said creek
according to several meanders and courses thereof by the two aforesaid
bridges, and by the main road which runs between the said bridges,
estimated to contain two acres. James Dail is to have free use of the
land, including the liberty to cut timber for use on the land and to
pasture one horse and one cow & calf, for the period ending
December 1, 1796. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Edward Noel and
Joseph Richardson.
|
1786/02/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Head
Range vs. White Haven
|
18
|
NH:5-8:304
|
Deed of
Release
|
February
27, 1786: James Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland, for the sum of £5 to him in hand paid acknowledges to Thomas
Colsten (Colston), carpenter of Dorchester County, regarding disputes
over the courses and bounds of James Mace's tract called Head Range, lying in Dorchester County on
Fishing Creek, that the home course of Head Range formerly and
anciently did run on the same plave where a cedar post marked with
twelve notches now stands, which cedar post was set down by the water
side by Thomas Thompson and the aforesaid Thomas Colsten (Colston) as
the beginning of eighteen acres of land, part of a tract called White Haven, which was lately conveyed
by Thomas Thompson to Thomas Colsten, and which cedar post stands in
the aforesaid home line of Head Range near the edge of the water and at
the end of a line drawn South thirty eight degrees West twenty five
perches and about four feet from the East corner of a store house
lately built by and belonging to Archibald Patison, and also at the end
of a line drawn South thirty degrees West thirteen perches and five
feet from the South West corner of the dwelling house lately built by
the aforesaid Thomas Colsten wherein Col. Thomas Woolford now lives.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Benjamin Keene and Thomas Jones.
|
1786/02/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Colston and wife Elizabeth Colston
|
Archibald
Patison
|
Colstens
First Purchase and Middle Ground (as one)
|
100
|
NH:5-8:312
|
Deed
|
February 28, 1786: Thomas Colsten
(Colston), carpenter, and his wife Elizabeth of Dorchester County in
the State of Maryland sell for £112 10/- to Archibald Patison,
merchant, also of Dorchester County, the tract called Colston's First Purchase,
lying in Dorchester County as well as the tract called Middle Ground, also in Dorchester
County, and contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning
at a bounded white gum standing on the East side of the main road that
runs from Fishing Creek to Blackwater Bridge, it being the original
boundary of the tract called Middle Ground, and from thence running
South seventeen degrees West seventy perches, then North forty four
degrees east one hundred and fifty perches, then South eighty two
degrees East sixty perches, then North seventy degrees West ninety one
perches, then North twenty degrees East twenty seven perches, then West
nine perches, then South twenty degrees West two hundred and ten
perches, thence by a straight line to the beginning, containing one
hundred acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Benjamin Keene and
Thomas Jones.
|
1786/02/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Thompson and wife Priscilla Thompson
|
Thomas
Colston
|
White
Haven (a.k.a. Old White Haven) and Addition to White Haven
|
18 &
1.0
|
NH:5-8:309
|
Deed
|
February
28, 1786: Thomas Thompson, planter, and his wife Priscilla of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sell for £5 to Thomas
Colsten (Colston), carpenter, also of Dorchester County: (1) 18 acres
of the parcels called White Haven
(a.k.a. Old White Haven) and Addition
to White Haven, lying on the North side of Fishing Creek in
Dorchester County, which are both contained within the following metes
and bounds: Beginning at a cedar post marked with twelve notches
standing on the East side of Fishing Creek and near the edge of the
water and in the home line of a tract called Head
Range, it being the same cedar post mentioned and described in a
deed from James Mace to the aforesaid Thomas Colsten bearing the date
of May 14, 1784, and from the aforesaid cedar post running North four
degrees West eighteen perches, then East North East twenty four
perches, then South East five perches, then East North East one hundred
and seven perches, then North seven degrees East eighty six perches,
then South eighty degrees East nine perches until it intersects the
land of James Mace called Tynian (Tinian),
then binding with that land South seven degrees West seventy three
perches, then South thirty seven degrees East seventeen perches, then
South South East seventy six perches, then West South West six perches
to the land called Head Range, then with Head Range North North West
seventy five perches, then still binding with Head Range to the
aforesaid beginning, containing eighteen acres; and (2) Also, a 1.0
acre portion of the same tracts which are included within the following
metes and bounds: Beginning at the same before-mentioned cedar post,
and running thence West South West one perch, then North sixteen
degrees West twenty five perches, then North sixty five degrees East
fifteen perches, then South thirty one degrees East ten perches, then
West South West nine perches, then with a straight line to the
aforesaid beginning, containing one acre. Witnesses: Justices of the
Peace Benjamin Keene and Thomas Jones.
|
1786/02/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Thompson and wife Priscilla Thompson
|
Archibald
Patison
|
White
Haven
|
3.25
|
NH:5-8:306
|
Deed
|
February 28, 1786: Thomas
Thompson and his wife Priscilla of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland sell for £9 15/- to Archibald Patison, also of Dorchester
County, 3-1/4 acres of that part of a tract called
White Haven, lying on the East
side of Fishing Creek in Dorchester County and contained within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning at the end of the third course of
the first parcel mentioned to be conveyed in a deed from the aforesaid
Thomas Thompson and wife to Thomas Colsten (Colston), the said third
course being the South East five perches course, bearing equal date
with this present deed, and from thence running North West with the
said third course reversed five perches and ten feet, then East North
East one hundred and twelve perches and until it intersects the fifth
course (being North seven degrees East eighty six perches) of the said
parcel as as conveyed to aforesaid Thomas Thompson and wife to Thomas
Colsten, then South seven degrees West six perches with the aforesaid
fifth course reversed to the end thereof, then binding with the East
North East line of the aforesaid parcel conveyed by Thomas Thompson and
wife to Thomas Colsten reversed to the aforesaid beginning, containing
three and a quarter acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Benjamin
Keene and Thomas Jones.
|
1786/05/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Head Range
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:5-8:411
|
Deed of
Lease
|
May 3, 1786: James Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, leases for £5 yearly to
Thomas Mace, also planter of Dorchester County, the
same parcel called Head Range previously leased, and on which
Edward Mills now lives, lying on Fishing Creek; the previous contract
is hereby cancelled as James Mace is indebted to Thomas Mace to the
extent of £60 pounds; and the present lease now enables James to reduce
his debt at the same rate as the [phantom] £5 yearly rate, extended
yearly as long as it takes to clear said debt. Witnesses: Justices of
the Peace Thomas Jones and James Shaw.
|
1786/06/13
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Mace
|
|
Head Range
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:5-8:428
|
Commission
|
June 13, 1786: John Mace of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland petitions the Justices of Dorchester
County to set up a commission to reestablish the boundaries of his
tract called Head Range, lying in
Dorchester County. The commissioners are John Bromwell, Moses LeCompte,
Richard Patison, Stenens Woolford, all gentlemen of Dorchester County.
John Dickinson, gentleman, is Presiding Judge of Dorchester County
Court; N. Hammond is Dorchester County clerk. Moses LeCompte and
Richard Patison were subsequently certified and sworn by Justice of the
Peace Thomas Jones on Arpil 15, 1786. Depositions were taken: (1)
Edmond Mace, age about fifty six, stated that about twenty years ago he
saw Jonathan Partridge (Patridge) reverse the home course of Head Range
down to the water side, and there he set his compass; and when he, the
deponent, sighted through the compass along the home course, reversed,
across the creek and it struck a cedar bush on the opposite shore,
which place is the same or near the place he now shows the
commissioners; and the deponent further saith that Jonathan Partridge
was at the time of his running the reverse course of Head Range, a
sworn surveyor; and the deponent further saith that about thirty three
years ago he, the deponent, was requested by his uncle, John Mace, to
lay off part of the aforesaid Head Range that he, the aforesaid John
Mace, sold to James Busick that he began at the first bounder of Head
Range and run in the reverse home course to the main road and then
began to lay off the aforesaid part that was sold to Busick in the
following manner: Ninety four perches on the said reversed home course
from the main road, then down to the Indian Cove, then up the said cove
to the main road, then with the road to the beginning, which part has
been since recovered of James Busick by the heirs of the aforesaid John
Mace; and further the deponent saith not on June 10, 1786. Witnesses;
Moses LeCompte and Richard Pattison, Junior. (2) Thomas Mace, age about
fifty two, states that about thirty five or six years ago he, the
deponent, was sitting on the post that now standing where the deponent
now stands; and the deponent saith that it was settled by four
freeholders by the consent of all concerned parties, being James
Busick, Absalom Thompson, Thomas Mace, & John Mace; and further the
deponent saith that the same post now standing where the deponent
stands his uncle John Mace and Absalom Thompson showed him the same
place and told him it was the first bounder of Head Range; and since
that about five or six years ago he, the deponent, heard James Busick
acknowledge the same post to be the first bounder of Head Range; and
the deponent further saith that when the aforesaid post was put down,
he saw the roots of the tree dug up; and this deponent further saith
that about twenty years ago he, the deponent, saw Jonathan Partridge
run the home course, reversed down to the water and then set up his
compass and sighted across the creek the same course, and it struck a
bush, which place he now shows to the commissioners; and the deponent
further saith that about the same time Absalom Thompson showed the
deponent the place where the line ran between him, the said Thompson,
and the deponent's father Thomas Mace, which place is the same he now
shows to the commissioners, but he does not recollect that he heard
Thompson say what land that was a line of; and the deponent further
saith that the aforesaid Jonathan Partridge was at the time of his
running the reverse course of the Head Range, a sworn surveyor; and the
deponent further saith that about forty years ago he saw William
Grantham sight the home course of Head Range reversed from the first
bounder and it struck about four feet to the North of a pine on the
East side of the creek, which place he now shows to the commissioners;
and further, the deponent saith not on June 10, 1786. Witnesses: Moses
LeCompte and Richard Pattison, Junior. The commissioners, after due
deliberations, then stuck down a barrel stave so as to stand at the
distance of ten feet from a cedar bush standing on the East side of
Church Creek and about forty feet to the Southward of a large pine
standing near the water's edge and a little to the Eastward of the
house where Col. Thomas Woolford now lives; and to commemorate the
place where the bush stood as mentioned in Thomas Mace's deposition to
be in the home line of Head Range, the commissioners have caused a
barrel stave to be stuck down, which stave stands five feet to the
Northward of the place shown by Edmund (Edmond) Mace as aforesaid; so
stated on June 10, 1786.
[Signed] Moses LeCompte
Richard Pattison, Junior.
|
1786/07/17
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Cornwell,
Head Range & Outlett
|
66.5
|
NH:9:3
|
Deed
|
July 17, 1786: Nicholas Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, buys for £10 from James
Mace, also planter of Dorchester County, 66-1/2 acres from parts of
three land parcels: Part of Cornwell,
part of Head Range, and part of Outlett, all lying together in
Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a
marked white oak standing on the South side of a gut called Indian Gut,
it being a division formerly between Thomas Mace and John Mace,
deceased, then running South South East one hundred and eight perches
to the East North East line of Cornwell, then with the said line East
North East twenty four perches, then South South West sixty two
perches, then North seventy five degrees East fifty seven perches, then
North North East forty perches, then North twenty two degrees West one
hundred and thirty one perches, then North seventy degrees East twenty
perches with the main road to the creek, then binding with the saud
creek North thirty degrees West forty perches, then binding with the
creek and Indian Gut to the first beginning, containing sixty six and a
half acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and Benjamin
Keene.
|
1786/07/24
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
Thomas
Colsten
|
slave Step
|
[none]
|
NH:9:13
|
Bill of
Sale
|
July 24, 1786: James Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, sells for £10 to Thomas
Colsten, carpenter, also of Dorchester County, the slave named Step.
Witnesses: Thomas Mace, William Medes, and Justice of the Peace Thomas
Jones.
|
1786/08/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Head Range
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:9:36
|
Deed
|
August 28, 1786: Thomas Mace, planter of
Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland, assigns for £60 to
Thomas Colston (Colsten), also planter of Dorchester County, land which
Thomas Mace had leased from James Mace and on which Edward Mills
resided as tenant farmer on Fishing Creek, paying rent of £5 per year,
and which Thomas Mace is now conveying to Thomas Colston, that is, the
right to lease the land and to collect the aforesaid rent. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace John Dickinson and Thomas Jones.
|
1787/01/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James
Mace and wife Isabella Mace
|
Thomas
Lockerman
|
Cornwell
and Head Range
|
[not
stated]
|
NH:9:153
|
Deed
|
January 15,
1787: James Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland, sells for £135 to Thomas Lockerman, gentleman, also of
Dorchester County, all the parts of the tracts called Cornwell and Head
Range as well as all his other lands and premises on which Thomas
Mace, father to James Mace, lately dwelt and which lie near Fishing
Creek in Dorchester County to the Northward, Eastward, Southward and
Westward of the several lines, bounds and courses mention in the deed
of sale dated September 15, 1784, for the use of his son, Nicholas
Mace, the younger. Witnesses: Thomas Jones and R. Griffith.
|
1787/02/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Nicholas
Mace and wife Alefair (Alesair) Mace
|
Thomas
Lockerman
|
Cornwell,
Head Range and Outlett
|
66.5
|
NH:9:201
|
Deed
|
February 6,
1787: Nicholas Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland sells for £133 to Thomas Lockerman, also of Dorchester County,
66-1/2 acres of the tracts called Cornwell,
Head Range and Outlett, all lying together in
Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a
marked white oak standing on the South side of a gut called Indian Gut,
it being a division formerly between Thomas Mace and John Mace,
deceased, then running South South East one hundred and eight perches
to the East North East line of Cornwell, then with the said line East
North East twenty four perches, then South South West sixty two
perches, then North seventy five degrees East fifty seven perches, then
North North East forty perches, then North twenty two degrees West one
hundred and thirty one perches, then North seventy degrees East twenty
perches with the main road to the creek, then binding with the creek
and Indian Gut to the first beginning, containing sixty six and a half
acres. Witnesses: Joseph Daffin and R. Stevens.
|
1787/04/16
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Thompson
|
|
Addition to White Haven
|
185.5
|
Pat. cert.329
|
Patent
|
April 16, 1787:
Addition To White Haven, Thomas Thompson, 185 1/2 Acres. Patented
Certificate 329
Images
are available here.
This is a resurvey of the first
& second tracts called White
Haven.
|
1787/09/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
slave,
Phillis
|
[none]
|
NH:9:349
|
Bill of
Sale
|
September 6, 1787: James Mace of Dorchester
County in the Province of Maryland sells for £15 to Nicholas Mace, also
of Dorchester County, the slave Philes (Phillis). Witness: Justice of
the Peace John Smoot.
|
1787/09/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
William
Meddice (Medis)
|
slave, Jin
|
[none]
|
NH:9:349
|
Bill of
Sale
|
September
7, 1787: James Mace of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland
sells for £28 to William Meddice (Medes) his slave girl Jin. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and Edward Wright.
|
1790/03/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
Claridge
|
William
Mace and wife Mary Mace
|
Goods and
chattels
|
[none]
|
HD:2:549
|
Bill of
Sale
|
March 11, 1790: William Mace and his wife
Mary of Dorchester County in the Province of Maryland buy £18 6/- for
from William Claridge, planter of Dorchester County, two gray mares,
one black colt, one cow & calf, two heifers, four head of sheep,
one cupboard, two beds & furniture, one loom, six pewter plates,
three pewter dishes, and two sows with pig. Witnesses: Justice of the
Peace Thomas Jones; and Edmund Mace, and Thomas Mace.
|
1791/12/13
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
Mace
|
Edmond
Mace
|
Cornwell
|
9.75
|
HD:3:374
|
Deed
|
December 13,
1791: William Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the Province of
Maryland sells for £20 to Edmond Mace, also planter of Dorchester
County, all that 9-3/4 acre parcel called Cornwell lying in Dorchester County
within the following metes and bounds: Beginning for the out bounds at
the end of a line drawn South fifty perches from a bounder red oak
standing at the end of a division between old Edmond Mace and Thomas
Mace his brother, and from thence running East eighty three perches,
then South eighteen degrees East twenty perches, then West eighty nine
perches, then by a [straight] line to the first beginning, containing
nine and three quarter acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas
Jones and Solomon Birckhead.
|
1791/12/13
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Colston
|
William
Mace
|
Addition
to Green Bank
|
9.75
|
HD:3:371
|
Deed
|
December
13, 1791: Thomas Colston (Colsten), carpernter of Dorchester County in
the Province of Maryland sells for £20 to William Mace, planter, also
of Dorchester County, 9-3/4 acres of the tract called Addition to Green Bank lying in
Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds: Beginning for
the out bounds at the end of the thirty fourth courses of the tract
called Mace's Back Range where
stands a bounded sassafras post, and from thence running South twenty
degrees East thirty perches, then South East twenty perches, then South
five degrees East forty perches, then North eighty three degrees West
twelve perches, then north five degrees West sixteen perches, then
North West twenty perches, then North twenty degrees West thirty
perches, then North forty degrees West thirteen perches, then by a
[straight] line to the first beginning, containing nine and three
quarter acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and
Solomon Birckhead.
|
1791/12/13
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edmond
Mace
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Maces
Back Range
|
9
|
HD:3:369
|
Deed
|
December
13, 1791: Edmond Mace, son of Edmond Mace of Dorchester County in the
Province of Maryland, sells for £20 to Thomas Colsten (Colston),
carpenter, also of Dorchester County, all that 9 acre parcel called Mace's Back Range lying in
Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds: Beginning for
the out bounds at the end of the thirty fourth courses of a tract of
land called Mace's Back Range on which stands a bounder sassafras post,
and from thence running North forty [degrees] West eighty perches, then
North North West sixteen perches, then East by South forty four
perches, then by a [straight] line to the first beginning, containing
nine acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Solomon Birckhead and
Thomas Jones.
|
1792/12/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Griffith
|
|
Griffiths Last Adventure
|
700.75
|
IC:H:193
|
Patent
|
December
3, 1792: Griffiths Last Adventure, John Griffith, 700 3/4 Acres -
Patented Certificates 1291 and Patent
Record IC H, p.193
Images are available here.
|
1793/11/09
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Colsten (Colston)
|
John Mace
|
Tootells
Venture (Lot No.6)
|
5.75
|
HD:6:178
|
Deed
|
November
9, 1793: Thomas Colsten (Colston) of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland, trustee to the insolvent Thomas Kallendar, sells for £21 12/-
8p to John Mace, planter, also of Dorchester County, the 5-3/4 acre
tract called Tootell's Venture (Lot
No.6) contained in the following metes and bounds: Beginning at the end
of the fifteenth course, and from thence running South South West one
hundred and ninety seven perches, then West and by North four and a
half perches, then North North East one hundred and eighty six perches,
then by a [straight] line to the first beginning, containing five and
three quarter acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and
John Stevens.
|
1795/12/21
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Henry
Ennalls and wife Sarah Ennalls
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
[not
named]
|
3.75
|
HD:9:43
|
Deed
|
December
21, 1795: Henry Ennalls of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
sells for £28 2/- 6p to Nicholas Mace, also of Dorchester County, a
3-3/4 acre tract of land laid out by William Barrows: Beginning at a
bounded post standing where the road forks that leads from Cambridge to
New Market and from Cambridge to Transquacken, and running thence South
forty four and a half degrees East ten perches, then South forty six
degrees East twenty eight perches, then South thirty six degrees East
ten perches, then South forty six degrees East two perches, then North
ten perches, then North twenty degrees East fifteen perches, then North
forty two degrees East sixteen perches, then South sixty nine degrees
West eleven perches, then South eighty three degrees West nine perches,
then North eighty six degrees West nineteen perches, then by a straight
line to the first beginning, containing three and three quarter acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Henry Lakes and Sevin Woolford.
|
1796/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Colston
|
|
Sweet Prospect
|
413
|
IC:L:108
|
Patent
|
1796:
Sweet
Prospect - 413 acres Thomas Colston - Patent Record IC L, p.108
|
1796/05/02
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
Mace
|
John Mace
|
Dess,
Maces Back Range, and Cornwell
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:9:314
|
Deed
|
May 2, 1796:
William Mace, planter of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland,
sells for £100 in gold or silver to John Mace, also planter of
Dorchester County, as one tract, formed of the tracts Dess, Mace's
Back Range, and Cornwell, that
lies in Dorchester County upon the Hodson's Branch that issues out of
the Blackwater River, and to the Southward of a division line between
William Mace and his brother Edmund (Edmond) Mace given to him by his
father in his Will, all contiguous and adjoining each other. The sale
is contingent upon the actual payment of the £100 in gold or silver by
April 1, 1800. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John Williams and
Thomas Jones.
|
1797/08/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Lowden
Mace and wife Elizabeth Mace
|
Wingate
Mace
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:12:261
|
Deed
|
August 7,
1797: Lowden (Louden) Mace of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland sells for £400 to Wingate (Wingett) Mace, also of Dorchester
County, all those lands deeded to him by his father Nicholas Mace, in a
deed dated September 15, 1784, said land lying in Dorchester County to
the Northward, Southward, Eastward, and Westward of the several lines
and courses, whereon the said Nicholas Mace formerly lived. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones and John Williams.
|
1798/03/08
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Benjamin
Busick
|
William
Meddis (Medes) & William Mace
|
Goods and
chattels
|
[none]
|
HD:12:560
|
Bill of
Sale
|
March 8, 1798: Benjamin Busick of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland sells for £100 to William
Meddis (Medes) and William Mace, both also of Dorchester County, one
yoke of oxen, one cart, two cows, two yearlings, one mare, twelve hogs,
two beds and furniture, two chests, eight chairs, one loom, one linen
wheel, three iron pots, one tea kettle, one frying pan, two tables, one
crosscut saw, five axes, two chains, one milk house with crockery ware
& pewter, all and singular which said premises are now remaining
standing and being in a certain messuage or tenement situate in
Dorchester County and now in the possession of Benjamin Busick.
Witnesses: Thomas Mace, Junior, Priscilla Gradd and Richard Pattison.
|
1798/03/31
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James Mace
|
|
Head Range
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:14:1
|
Commission
|
March 31, 1798: James Mace of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland petitions to have the boundaries of his
land called Head Range reestablished by
a commission, subsequently chosen from among Thomas Jones, Ezekiel
Vickars, William Vickars, and Roger Woolford. Ultimately, Ezekiel
Vickars and William Vickars were suitably sworn; and then Col. Thomas
Jones and Roger Woolfdord were also sworn. Several depositions were
then taken: (1) Edmond Mace, age about fifty five, stated that about
twenty years ago he was with Jonathan Patridge at the beginning bounds
of Head Range, and there Jonathan reversed the home course of Head
Range and came down to the water side on the said course and then set
his compass as he expected on the same course and asked Edmond, the
deponent, to look through it, and it pointed to a cedar near where the
deponent now stands; and further the deponent states that formerly
there used to be disputes about the division between Abraham Thompson
and Thomas Mace, and that the division fence was often moved on the
aforesaid Thomas Mace, but that he, the deponent, did not know that
ever these movings of the division fence was on the line properly run;
and further the deponent saith not on November 30, 1784. (2) Thomas
Mace, age about fifty one, stated that about thirty five or six years
ago where he, the deponent, now stands, it was settled by four
freeholders by the consent of all concerned parties, that is, James
Busick, Absalom Thompson, Thomas Mace and John Pace; and that further
the deponent states that his uncle, John Mace, and Absalom Thompson
showed him the same place and told him it was the boundary of Head
Range, and since about fifty five or six years ago he, the deponent
heard James Busick acknowledge the same post to be the first boundary
of Head Range; and the deponent further saith that when the aforesaid
post was put down, he saw the roots of the true disch [?] up; and
further the deponent saith not. (3) Solomon Busick, age about fifty
three, stated that about forty years ago he saw Major Henry Ennalles
run from John Mace's boundary which he understood since was the first
boundary of Head Range and run from the said boundary as he understood
with Mr. Mace's line to the place where the deponent now showeth, being
about eight feet from the place shown to the Northward of two persimmon
trees which was generally allowed to stand on Mr. Mace's land; and
further the deponent saith that some time before Major Ennalles run the
before mentioned land he saw Mr. Grantham run at the insistence and
request of his father and Mr. Mace the division line between them and
the course was of there running of the line was that Mr. Mace contended
the division fence stood on him but when they run the line they found
the division fence stood on his father's land; and further the deponent
saith that the line Mr. Grantham run very near agreed with Mr.
Ennalles's running; and further the deponent saith that Mr. Mace before
mentioned was John Mace, the owner of that part of Head Range; and
further the deponent saith that he heard Joshua Busick say he saw
Edmond Mace sight across the creek the division lines between his
father in law and brother that Joshua Busick said he split the
difference; and further the deponent saith that he understood that the
division fence now standing is the half way where formerly the division
line stood and where the line before mentioned runs, and that when he
understood the splitting the difference; and further the deponent saith
that his brother Joshua Busick told him the line that Mr. Patrisdge run
went under the boughs of the holly and the line as he meant was
the line of Mr. Thomson's resurvey; and further the deponent saith not
on December 11, 1784. (4) Philemon Brannok, age twenty eight, stated
that he was born and always resided in this neighborhood and that he
remembers when a fence run near a persimmon tree mentioned in the
deposition of Edmond Mace, but whether the said fence was a division
fence between Mace & Thompson, this deponent cannot undertake to
say, nor does he remember to have heard it called & when the fence
run by the tree before mentioned he believes Mace tended the lands on
the East side of the said fence and he himself has seen the said lands
on the east side of the fence tended in corn by old Nicholas Mace, and
old Mr. Thompson himself and afterward his tenant Joshua Busick used to
tend on the West side of said fence. Old Mr. Thompson got Edmond Mace
to run his lands round and it came down as the fence now stands, and it
was run with a wooden chain & staked out from the woods to the
creek and after this running he believes the fence was moved after and
placed upon the line as staked out, and this was done by the aforesaid
Nicholas Mace and Joshua Busick; he does not know that this was a
division fence, but it was said old Mr. Thompson's line came down to
the place that was stalked out. This deponent was present when the line
was run. After the fence was moved Mace tended the lands on the East
side of the fence and Busick those on the West side of said fence. He
cannot tell how long ago this was, but he might be then twenty years
old or less, and after they had run the said Thompson's land as he hath
before mentioned they went round the head of the creek and sighted from
a post down to the opposite side of the creek. This deponent did not go
with them but remained on the North side of the creek and the line so
sighted run equal with the line on this the North side of the creek.
When Edmond Mace run the lands before mentioned he did it at the
request of Thompson. He believes the line run exactly as the fence now
stands. He saw the fence moved, and it was sit as the stakes now stuck,
at least that part which he saw moved, which was fifteen panels next to
the woods, but he does not know that the whole of the fence was sit as
the stakes were stuck, the line, as they then run it, runs over the
road on the swamp side. And this deponent further saith not on
April 30, 1785. (5) Jemima Busick, age about forty years, stated that
she formerly lived on Absalom Thompson's lands ten years and has been
removed from said lands between seven and eight years. She thinks that
some time between a year or eighteen months after her late husband
Joshua Busick came to live on the lands of the late Mr. Thompson her
husband [illegible] that Mace had some part of White
Haven which he had leased from Thompson in his Mace's possession
insisted that Thompson should have his lands run, and Thompson &
Mace applied to Edmond Mace who was brother to Nicholas Mace and son in
law to Thompson to get him to run his lands. Her husband often said to
her that Edmond Mace did not do Thompson justice for that he did not
give him his right, for he had divided the spoil between them he had
given about half to one and half to the other; on hearing him say so
often, she asked him if Thompson had his right how far he would run in
upon Mace, he answered he would take all that point and run very near
Nicholas Mace's peach orchards and near or under two persimmon trees
which the deponent now shows as those she understood to be meant by her
husband and would come very near or would strike Nicholas Mace's
kitchen and that the line would then run between Nicholas Mace's gate
and where the fence now stands. He also said he wished the two
old men Maces and Thompson would have it settled in their time, for
that after they were gone it would occasion a lawsuit or a war. She has
often understood that the division fence formerly stood near the
persimmon tree mentioned in Edmond Mace's deposition, and she thinks
the fence as it now stands appears to be moved further in upon
Thompson's lands than it stood when she lived here, and it appears to
her to be nearer the persimmon tree, but she does expect it may conceit
on her. That the conversations she mentions to have had with her
husband was at their own house, and he described to her how Thompson's
line ought to run, but he never showed her the place or any of the
places to which it should run, nor were they in sight of them at any
time when the conversations happened. She thinks she so well
acquainted with the lands, having lived on the creek for several years
and on Thompson's lands a year or a year and a half that she could not
have mistaken her husband in the place he described to her, and she
knew of no other persimmon trees near the peach orchard than those she
has shown. Her husband was bred and born and had always lived in this
neighborhood on the place where James Busick now lives. Her husband had
never in any of these conversations told her how he knew that
Thompson's lands run as he described. [And she] does not know that her
husband ever saw Thompson's land run, except when run by Edmond Mace.
After the fence was moved on the running of the lands by Edmond Mace
[she] thinks her husband assisted in putting up the division fence. She
had heard her husband say that he kept up on half that division fence.
Her husband after that, as far as she knows, never tended or used any
of the lands on Mace's side of the fence while she lived on Thompson's
lands. Her husband came in one day after Edmond Mace had made the
division between Nicholas Mace and Thompson and said that Nicholas Mace
had cut down or had ordered someone to cut down a holly tree in which
he had done very wrong, for it was as good as a boundary to Thompson's
lands. It appears to her the holly tree stood about as far to the
eastward of the present division fence as the persimmon tree mentioned
by Edmond Mace stands to the Westward of the said fence. [She]
does not remember of any other holly tree; it was a large spreading
topped tree. [She] understood by her husband that Thompson's lines
[were] near that holly tree and that she understood him was what he
meant when he said it was as good as a boundary. This deponent being
requested to go out and endeavor to show the place having taken a view
of the grounds saith that when she formerly knew the place it was
sometimes tended in corn and sometimes uncultivated, and being now sown
in wheat she cannot show the place where the said tree stood. And this
deponent further saith not on April 3, 1785. (6) Edmond Mace, age about
fifty five, stated that twenty years ago he was present when Jonathan
Patridge sighted the home course of Head Range from the post to the
water; and he, the deponent, has also sighted it himself. [He] knows
where the division fence between Absalom Thompson and Nicholas Mace
formerly stood; and further he saith that the said fence formerly stood
forty three strides further to the Westward than it does now. The
deponent has this day measured the distance by striding it out. [He]
does not know of [how] the said fence came to set where it was or that
it was on the line of Head Range. At the same time when Absalom
Thompson was about to make the resurvey called Addition to White Haven,
this deponent understood that his father Thomas Mace, who held the part
of Head Range now in dispute, and Edmond Brannock both had older
warrants than Mr. Thompson and that his father, whose warrant was the
eldest of them, told Edmond Brannock that unless he would let Thompson
lay his warrant on some of the vacancy, he would lay his own warrant on
it and Absalom Thompson in the presence of this deponent promised
Nicholas Mace, the son of the aforesaid Thomas Mace, that he would let
him have all the lands that lie between where the old division fence
stood and where it now stands, but he understood from Nicholas Mace
afterwards that Thompson would not let him have the lands which he had
promised him. Further, this deponent saith that when a boy he
remembers that the division fence stood sixteen strides still further
Northward and Westward; this was forty years or more ago. After
Thompson left White Haven, the division fence was moved and Jemima
Busick lived on White Haven and has been informed by Joshua Busick that
he helped to keep up the division fence as it now stands. [He] does not
recollect to have ever heard Mr. Thompson say anything about this
division fence as it now stands. He believes the division fence
as it was moved and stood the second way was kept up, and Absalom
Thompson and Thomas Mace who used the lands on one side of the fence
and Mr. Thompson used them on the other. In cross examination
this deponent saith that the time when the agreement was made between
Thompson and Nicholas Mace as before mentioned, this deponent believes
the place where the fence now stands was a part of the vacancy which
Thompson was to let Nicholas Mace have. When Patridge made Thompson's
survey, the cleared land was not staked out, nor was it staked out at
all except where the line was near a tract called Timber Neck.
This deponent saith that when he spoke to his father and brothers
tending the lands up to the division fence as aforesaid, he did not
understand they tended it as being their lands or within their lines,
and he believes that the lands were vacant up to the lines [illegible]
White Haven. This deponent further saith that he believes the lands
from the South West end of the division fence as it now stands up to
the division fence as it formerly stood was vacant land, but [he] does
not know whether it did or did not go nearer to the water than the
persimmon tree, but [he] believes it might go a small matter nearer the
creek. [He] believes the vacancy did not go nearer the creek than the
old lines of the old tract called White Haven. [He] does not remember
he ever saw White Have run until within these few years. He had twenty
years ago frequently sighted the reverse line of Head Range at the
request of his father and none of the sightings ever agreed with the
present division fence; [he] believes they run to the Southward of the
fence, buy he does not know what occasions him to do so. This deponent
further saith that he was some time last Summer summoned as a witness
to his brother Nicholas, to appear upon a land commission to declare
whether he had ever seen the reversed home line of Head range run or
sighted. [He] thinks the lines he has heard his brother say the lands
before mentioned were vacant. Taken & sworn on April 8, 1785. (7)
Edmond Brannock, age about forty four, saith that better than twenty
years ago he accompanied Edmond Mace and Absalom Thompson; Edmond Mace
had been running some vacant land adjoining to White Haven, and after
they had done, Absalom Thompson asked Edmond Mace to plat down the
division line between him, Absalom Thompson, and Nicholas Mace, but
whether he did or not, this deponent does not know. At that time the
division fence stood in further upon Absalom Thompson's land than it
does now, but how much, he does not know. Nor does he know [how]
the division fence came to be moved or why it was moved, nor by whom.
[He] thinks he has heard that the fence was a division fence between
Nicholas Mace and Absalom Thompson and has heard it so talked in the
neighborhood and also from Nicholas Mace, but not from Absalom
Thompson; and as he recollects at the time when the fence [being]
spoken of stood in upon Thompson's lands, he lived in White Haven, but
at the time when it was moved further in to the Eastward &
Southward, he, Thompson, had removed from White Have to Blackwater.
[He] does not know that the fence stood where he mentions because the
line of Head Range run there or not. When the division fence was moved
as aforesaid, it was a good deal talked of in the neighborhood and to
be hard upon Nicholas Mace, though this deponent does not know why it
was moved, only by whom. The fence of which this deponent speaks was
not moved until after the resurvey was made by Thompson, called
Addition to White Haven. [He] has been intimately acquainted with these
lands twenty or thirty years and has always understood that the fence
was a division line between Nicholas Mace and Absalom Thompson; on
being asked from whom he had heard this was a division fence as
aforesaid, he saith he does not recollect any person from whom he heard
it except from Nicholas Mace and his mother, but [he] verily believes
he has heard it from others of the neighbors, but to name any
particular person is not in his power. Taken and sworn on April
8, 1785. (8) Thomas Fitchew, aged about sixty seven, saith that about
forty four years ago he lived with Mr. John Mace, and this deponent
remembers that during the time he lived with the aforesaid Mr. Mace
that he was shown the division line between Mr. John Mace and James
Busick, and that the said line was told to him to be the division
line extended across the Church Creek to a cedar that stood on the
North side of the aforesaid creek, the place now shown, and further the
deponent saith that to the best of his knowledge he had this
information from Mr. James Mace who was the owner of the land adjoining
to the aforesaid division line and on which he than lived; and further
this deponent saith not on July 25, 1785. (9) Thomas Mace, age about
fifty two, saith that about forty years ago he, the deponent, saw
Wiliam Grantham sight the home course of Head Range and that the said
line went near the place now shown; and further the deponent saith that
about twenty odd years ago that Absolom Thompson showed him, the
deponent, near where the deponent now shows, but he, the deponent, does
not know what line it was, and further the deponent saith that about
twenty years ago he saw Mr. Patridge run the home course of Head Range
down to the water and then set his compass and sighted across the creek
and told the deponent it struck a bush, which bush as well as he can
recollect stood near the place he now shows, but he saith he is not
positive. And further the deponent saith that a few months ago a former
commission met on the above mentioned land; he, this deponent, declared
on his oath that at that time he did not know that ever he saw the said
land run at that time, but the deponent since that remembers that he
saw Jonathan Patridge run it. On the question being asked, whether he
now remembers whether his father and Jonathan in particular said it was
the home course of Head Range he was sighting, answered that he does
remember they said it was the home course, and further the deponent
saith at the time that Mr. Patridge sighted the course across the creek
that there was many bushes along the creek side beside the one
mentioned. And further the deponent believes that the said bush might
be standing about fifteen years ago there; and further the deponent
saith not on August 1, 1785. (10) Edmond Mace, age about fifty five,
saith that about twenty years ago he, this deponent, sighted the line
of Head Range reversed, which struck a large pine at the place now
shown; and further this deponent saith that about twenty years ago when
his uncle John Mace sold part of Head Range to James Busick he, the
deponent, laid off the part so sold to the said Busick and that he
began to lay off the said part in the home line of Head Range but does
not remember that he showed the place of beginning to Mr. Barrow, the
surveyor, when he laid down the lands between Elizabeth Meddiss (Medes)
and others and James Busick; and further this deponent believes the
place where he began to lay off the new part of Head Range for the said
Busick was in the true home line of the said Head Range. This deponent
further saith that when Mr. Barrow ran the said line it did not agree
with the line as he, this deponent, ran it, but [instead] ran to the
right hand that he believes that when he came near to the water that he
varied from the line as he ran it above one perch or perhaps better.
And further, this deponent saith not on August 1, 1785. The
commission had met on November 30, 1784, and on several later occasions
to take the above depositions and subsequently set the metes and bounds
of Head Range as follows: We certify that the division fence bears from
the fourth Eastmost corner of the new stone house North sixty three and
a half degrees East nine perches, and from the aforesaid corner of the
aforesaid stone house to where the holly tree stood is thus North
seventy three and three quarter degrees East thirty eight perches, and
from the aforesaid corner of the said stone house to the two persimmon
trees is thus South sixty degrees east fifteen perches; the course and
distance from the Eastmost corner of the aforesaid stone house to a
stake put down at the North side of the peach orchard shown by Jemima
Busick is thus South thirty four degrees East twelve perches. The
course and distance from said corner of said stone house to the
dwelling house is South forty nine degrees West thirteen and a half
perches, and from thence to take the course and distance to the two
persimmon trees standing over the creek the objects bears South sixty
two degrees West then run of South three degrees West seventeen
perches, then the trees bears South seventy five degrees West
[illegible]. [signed] Thomas Jones, Ezekiel Vickars and Roger Woolford.
Witnesses: Thomas Eccleston and William Ennalls; N. Hammond is
Dorchester County clerk.
|
1798/10/22
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Job
Greerwood
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Goods and
chattels
|
[none]
|
HD:14:299
|
Bill of
Sale
|
October
22, 1798: Thomas Mace, Junior, of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland buys for £30 from Job Greerwood, also of Dorchester County,
all the goods, household stuff, implements and furniture herein
mentioned: Two beds and furniture, two iron pots, one dutch oven, six
pewter plates, one pewter dish, eleven pewter spoons, two chests, one
heifer, one hog, half a dozen wicker chairs, and one linen wheel.
Witnesses: Samuel Ellworth, John Morain and Samuel W. Pitt.
|
1799/02/05
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Perry Spencer & Richard Spencer
|
|
Two Brothers
|
771.25
|
IC:A:94
|
Patent
|
February
5, 1799: Two Brothers, Perry Spencer and Richard Spencer, 771 1/4 Acres
- Patented Certificates 3062 and 1797
Patent Record IC A, p.94
Images are available here.
|
1799/05/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Wingate
Mace
|
Samuel
Mace
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:14:568
|
Deed
|
May 6, 1799: Wingate (Wingett) Mace of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland sells for 10/- to his son,
Samuel Mace, also of Dorchester County, all the tracts which were
deeded to him by Loudon (Lowden) Mace of Dorchester County on April 22,
1797. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John Williams and Thomas Jones.
|
1804/03/29
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Abraham
Neild and wife Nancy Neild
|
Thomas
Mace, Junior
|
White
Haven
|
5.5
|
HD:21:87
|
Deed
|
March
29, 1804: Thomas Mace, Junior, of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland buys for £60 from Abraham Neild, also of Dorchester County,
5-1/2 acres of White
Haven, which was purchased by the aforesaid Abraham Neild from John
Webookes, and which lies in Dorchester County near the head of Church
Creek and is contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning
at a marked pine post being a bounder of one Porter or part of said
land which post stands North thirty seven degrees East eleven and a
half perches from the second bounder of the Methodist Meeting House lot
and close on the North West side of the main road that leads from
Church Creek to Cambridge, then running binding with said road North
thirty and a quarter degrees East eighteen perches, then still with
said road North twenty three degrees East seventeen and a quarter
perches, then North seven degrees East twenty two and a quarter
perches, then North eighty degrees West nine perches, then South seven
degrees West nine perches, then South thirty six degrees West forty
three and a half perches to a pine post, one of the aforesaid Porter's
bounders, then with said Porter's land to the first beginning,
containing five and a half acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace
Richard Pattison and John Williams.
|
1805/04/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edmond
Mace and wife Betsey Mace
|
Thomas
Jones
|
Walk,
Tootells Venture, & Maces Back Range
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:21:633
|
Deed
|
April
15, 1805: Edmund (Edmond) Mace of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland sells for £45 to Thomas Jones, Junior, also of Dorchster
County, several tracts of land lying in Dorchester County within the
following metes and bounds: All that tract called the Walk lying on the
West side of Hodsons Branch, beginning at the end of the eighth course
of a tract called Mace's Purchase
and running its courses according to the original patent, and also all
that tract called Tootell's Venture
that lies to the South of a line drawn East by South from the end of
the seventh course of the aforesaid Mace's Purchase to the middle of
Hodsons Branch, then down the middle of said branch until it intersects
a line of said Tootell's Venture, and also all that part of Mace's
Regulation or Mace's Back Range
that lies to the South of a line drawn North seventy four degrees West
from the end of the sixth course of the said Mace's Purchase to a
sassafras post standing in the line of the land called Outlett. The aforesaid expressions are
meant to include all the land lying to the South of said land lines,
containing thirty acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Thomas Jones
and John Williams.
|
1805/04/16
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Edmond
Mace
|
Priviledge
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:21:635
|
Deed
|
April 16, 1805: Edmond Mace of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys for $16.00 from Thomas
Colsten (Colston), also of Dorchester County, all that portion of the
tract called Priviledge which
Thomas Colston has not sold to John Williams as reference to his deed
will more fully and at large appear. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace
Thomas Jones and John Williams.
|
1807/03/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Joseph
Martin & Thomas Colston
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Ennalls's
Addition to Forrest of Friendship
|
11
|
HD:24:158
|
Deed
|
March
27, 1807: Nicholas Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for £46 from Joseph Martin of Talbot County and Thomas Colsten
(Colston) of Dorchester County 11 acres of the lands which Andrew
Skinner Ennalls, late of the City of Baltimore, deceased, held in his
possession and thereafter willed to be sold by his executors Leah Hicks
Ennalls, Joseph Martin & Thomas Colston or the survivors of them.
Leah Hicks Ennalls has since died, and so Joseph Martin & Thomas
Colston are herewith selling to Nicholas Mace all of the tract called Ennalls's Addition to Forrest
of Friendship [or Ennall's
Forrest of Friendship ? - GL,III, ed.] that lie within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning for the out bounds at the end of
the South seventy six degrees West line of John Shenton's Lott and at a
marked stone, and from the said stone running North seventy six degrees
East one hundred and fifty eight perches, then North sixteen and a
quarter degrees West eleven perches, then South seventy six and a half
degrees West one hundred and fifty eight perches to the road, then with
said road to the first place of beginning, containing eleven acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Theodore Marshall and David Higgins.
|
1807/08/31
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Colston
|
Mary
Smith, Margaret Smith Lydia Mace, Sarah Earle, Robert Smith &
Harriett Smith
|
[not
stated]
|
[not
stated]
|
HD:24:346
|
Deed
|
August
31, 1807: Mary Smith, Margaret Smith Lydia Mace, Sarah Earle, Robert
Smith & Harriett Smith, all of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland, buy from Thomas Colsten (Colston), also of Dorchester County,
lands which the said Thomas Colston had sold to Elijah Smith in his
lifetime the lands herein mentioned and had received from Elijah Smith
the conveyance price of £150 on February 27, 1804, and which Tomas
Colston later conveyed to his heirs, apparently illegally. The
present indenture corrects the situation; the lands involved are
contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked
cedar post that stands at the end of the East line of Keen's Outlett,
and from thence running South eighty three degrees East one hundred and
sixty six perches, thence South eight degrees East one hundred and
twenty four perches, thence North eighty three degrees West until a
line that bears South twenty degrees West from the first beginning,
containing one hundred and fifty acres. Witnesses: Justices of the
Peace John Williams and John Stevins.
|
1808/09/19
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Robert
North Carman and wife Sarah Carman
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Ennalls
Ferry, Tates Bank
|
72.5
|
HD:25:264
|
Deed
|
September
19, 1808: Nicholas Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $722.00 from Robert North Carman of Baltimore County, and his
wife Sarah, formerly Sarah Ennalls, the executrix of the Last Will and
Testament, dated July 12, 1791, of
Henry Ennalls, late of Dorchester County, the lands which Henry Ennalls
bequeathed to his wife Sarah Ennalls, including his dwelling Ennalls
Ferry, granary house, and his plantation Tates Bank, and on the advice
of his brother in law Richard Bassett and George Ward now being
conveyed to Nicholas Mace is the 72-1/2 acre tract called Indian Lott,
otherwise called Wear Neeri, the metes and bounds of which are:
Beginning for the out bounds at a marked stone marked with the letters
JC standing in a branch that leads into the shallow creek and at the
edge and South side of Choptank road that leads to Cambridge, and from
the said stone running as follows: South Seventy eight perches, then
North eighty five degrees East one hundred and sixty six perches, then
North fifty degrees east fifty nine perches to a bounded stone, then
North seventy two degrees West ten perches, then North fifty six and a
half degrees West twenty six perches, then North eighty five degrees
West twenty four perches, then South sixty six degrees West thirty
perches, then North eighty eight degrees West twenty four perches, then
North seventy five degrees West sixty four perches, and then to the
place of beginning, containing seventy two and a half acres. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace for Baltimore County Samuel Owings and Thomas
Johnson. Certified by William Gibson, Baltimore County clerk.
|
1816/01/08
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Edward Griffith
|
|
Griffiths Attainment
|
610.5
|
Pat. cert.1285
|
Patent
|
January
8, 1816: Griffiths Attainment, Edward Griffith, 610 1/2 Acres -
Patented Certificate 1285.
Images are available here.
|
1818/03/26
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Commission
|
William
Colston
|
Lots No's
1-5
|
298, 393,
23, 446 & 304
|
ER:5:72
|
Commission
|
March
26, 1818: William Colsten (Colston) by his attorney Jonah Bayly put
forth a petition to Dorchester County Court to create a Commission to
divide the several tracts lying in Dorchester County that were
amassed by Thomas Colsten in his lifetime and which have since
descended to James Colsten, Thomas Colsten, Elizabeth Colsten, all of
full age, and to Samuel Colsten, an infant under the age of twenty one,
his only children and heirs at law. The Commission so formed includes:
Richard M. Pattison, Thomas Jones, Samuel LeCompte, all gentlemen, who
subsequently took an oath and eventually descided that the lands could
be divided without loss to the heirs. Samuel LeCompte was chosen
to make the division: Lot
No.1 is to begin at the
end of the last course of Sweet
Prospect and run with the home line thereof North by East forty
perches, then North fifty seven degrees West across said land to the
Creek, all that part of said land that lies on the South West side of
the before mentioned line; also the North room on the lower West side
of the old mansion house; the small room on the second floor of said
house; one third part of the kitchen; one third part of all the out
houses and gardens, the orchards lying near the outer gate, with full
ingress and egress to the full enjoyment; for Lot No.2 we lay off for the widow as follows: the
one half of a lot, being part of Addition to White Haven,
distinguished by the yellow shading marked No.2 on the plat, being the
North half, to be laid off in right angles with a privilege of passing
and repassing to and from the County Road, including the back dwelling
house and stable; also that part of The
Honorable Division with the yellow shading marked on the large plat
No.2 containing one hundred and ninety three acres with a privilege of
cutting timber on said land to support the above mentioned Lot houses
and [for] firewood; for Lot
No.3 we lay off for said
widow all those several parts of land being Lot No.3 which lie on the
West side of the County Road [as referred by the annexed plat - hard to
read - GL,III, ed.]; for Lot
No.4 we lay off for the
widow, beginning at a post and stone represented on the plat by blue
letter A standing by Breenwood's gate and running Northerly with the
County Road seventy perches, then across said land North seventy four
degrees West to the branch all those several parts of Lot No.4 which
lie to the Southward of said line down to Lot No.5, represented with
blue shading, also the Northerly room on the lower floor where John
Mace lives, being on said Lot No.4 with one-third privilege of all the
out houses and likewise a privilege to and from the County Road and
full enjoyment of the aforesaid privileges both as to ingress and
regress; and lastly for Lot
No.5 we lay off for the
widow, beginning at a marked pine mentioned in a deed from John Murray
to John Brurwood represented on the plat by red letter F and running
South eighty six degrees West across said land to the branch, all the
several parts of said Lot No.5 which lie to the Southward of said line,
also the Northerly room on the lower floor where Joseph [Reades] lives,
and the one third of the kitchen, and likewise one third of all the out
houses with a privilege of going to and from the County Road and full
enjoyment of the aforesaid apputenances, both as to ingress and
regress. We also then make partition and allotment of the said
land fairly and equally in value between all the interested parties. Lot No.1 being all that parcel called Sweet
Prospect, lying on Church Creek, the late residence of Thomas Colsten
deceased, containing by patent two hundred and ninety eight acres,
which we assign to James Colsten and his heirs forever; Lot No.2, all that parcel called White Haven, or
Addition to White Haven, described and beginning at black W on the
annexed plat and running with the yellow shaded lines round to the
first beginning, as also distinguished by Lot No.2, containing one
hundred and seven acres; also a Lott and several houses thereon on
Church Creek, being a part of Addition to White Haven, known by the
name of the white store according to its metes and bounds,
distinguished also by Lot No.2 with the yellow shaded lines on the same
plat hereunto annexed; also part of a tract called Brannock's Delight
which was conveyed by Samuel Williams to the heirs of Thomas Colsten,
containing fifty acres; also all that parcel called the Honorable
Division, lying on Black Water River, beginning at the black letter S
on the large plat hereunto surveyed and distinguished by the yellow
shaded lines and Lot No.2, containing one hundred and ninety three
acres; and all that tract called Colsten's Puzzle, distinguished on the
large plat hereunto annexed, beginning at the red letter A and marked
Lot No.2 with yellow shaded lines, containing forty three acres with a
right or privilege of a cart way leading from said lot of forty three
acres through the lots hereafter mentioned as Lots No.3 and Lot No.4 to
the County Road so as to injure said lots as little as possible,
containing in all the several parts together three hundred and ninety
three acres, which we assign to Eliza Williams, formerly Eliza Colsten
and her heirs forever; Lot
No.3 being the several
tracts which lie on the North side of the distinguished blue shaded
lines on the large plat hereunto annexed, beginning for said lines as
division of [illegible - probably "red"] MB and running to red letter
C, then to red letter L and so on to red letter E [illegible] blue
shaded lines, except eight and a half acres of land, Colsten's Puzzle,"
distinguished on the plat by 4 containing four acres [illegible] twenty
three acres; and also a lot at the head of Church Creek, being a part
of Addition to White Haven and called the upper lot, distinguished by
the number 3 on the small plat hereunto annexed, all the aforesaid
lands as distinguished by a No.3 on this small plat, all the land
distinguished by the No.3 generally, we assign to Samuel Colsten and
his heirs forever; Lot
No.4 being all the
several tracts which lie to the Northward of the following lines:
beginning at blue letter A and running with the blue shaded line to
blue letter MB, then to letter C as distinguished on the plat hereunto
annexed included within the yellow shaded lines all those several parts
that lie to the Northward and of the before mentioned lines up to Lot
No.3, except the forty three acres as aforesaid assigned to Eliza,
including a small part of said Colsten's Puzzle, being partly detached
from the main body marked No.4, containing four hundred and thirty six
acres; also eight and a half acres, being part of Colsten's Puzzle
distinguished on the plat in a long slippe shaded with yellow marked
No.4; and also all that unimproved lot lying on the head of Church
Creek being part of Addition to White Haven, containing one and three
quarter acres, distinguished on the small plat with yellow shaded lines
marked No.4, all of the lands distinguished generally by a No.4 we
assign to Thomas Colsten and his heirs forever; and Lot No.5 being all the several parcels which lie to
the Southward of the last mentioned divisional lines of Lot No.4,
shaded with blue and yellow on the annexed plat containing two hundred
and seventy four acres as marked No.5, also all that part of a tract
called Tastell's Venture heretofore conveyed by Catharine Colsten to
Thomas Colsten, deceased, said to contain thirty acres, we assign to
William Colsten and his heirs forever. [signed] Richard Mattison,
Samuel LeCompte, and James [illegible]. See plats and certificates in
the original commission. Recorded by Richardson, Dorchester County
clerk.
|
1819/04/26
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William Colston
|
|
Colstens Good Will
|
425
|
Unpat. cert. 307
|
Patent
|
April
26, 1819: Colstens Good Will, William Colston, 425 Acres - Unpatented
Certificate 307
Images are available here.
|
1819/07/19
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Levin
Moore
|
John Mace
|
slave
Cullie Stephens
|
[none]
|
ER:5:561
|
Bill of
Sale
|
July
19, 1819: John Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys
for $340.00 from Levin Moore, also of Dorchester County, the slave boy
Cullie Stephens, age about fourteen or fifteen years. Witness: Justice
of the Peace John Donovan.
|
1820/05/18
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Allison
Mace & Stephen T. Mace
|
John
Williams
|
Head
Range, Cornwell, Brettell & Tinian
|
[not
stated]
|
ER:6:260
|
Deed
|
May
18, 1820: Alley Son (Allison) Mace and Stephen T. Mace of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland sell for $550.00 to John Williams, also
of Dorchester County, all that parcel lying in Dorchester County near
Fishing Creek (a.k.a. Callen Church Creek) which was devised to Allison
Mace and Stephen T. Mace by the Last Will and Testament of Ezechael
(Ezekiel) Mace and which is called Head Range;
also another parcel being conveyed herein is part of a original tract
called called Cornwall;
and a third parcel is part of one called Brettell; and the fourth
parcel is part of the tract called Tinian.
Witnesses: Justice of the Peace William B. Martin and Arthur Rich.
|
1821/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Richard Tubman
|
|
Resolution
|
1,438.5
|
CG:C:347
|
Patent
|
1821: Resolution
- 1438-1/8 acres Richard Tubman - Patent Record CG C, p.347
There are two
of these; the other Resolution is by
Thomas Thomas.
|
1822/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas Thomas
|
|
Resolution
|
312.5
|
CG:C:402
|
Patent
|
1822:
Resolution
- 312.5 acres Thomas Thomas - Patent Record CG C, p.402
There are two
of these; the other Resolution is
by Richard Tubman.
|
1823/12/31
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James
Moore
|
Nicholas
Mace
|
Goods
& chattels
|
[none]
|
ER:9:257
|
Bill of
Sale
|
December
31, 1823: Nicholas Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $23.00 from James Moore, also of Dorchester County, the
following goods and chattels: One covet [sic], one bull, one horse
& cow with calf, one small heifer, one plow, three sheep, two
chests, two beds & furniture, five chairs, one table, all my
crockware & earthen ware, half my knives & forks, one pair sad
irons, one pair shovel & tongs, and one iron pot. Witness: Justice
of the Peace Levin Richardson. It is further stated by James Moore that
the intent of this bill of sale is to secure to Nicholas Mace the sum
of twenty three dollars and no more.
|
1824/11/22
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Stephen
T. Mace
|
Thomas
Lockerman
|
Callie,
Indian Lott & Wear Neck
|
72.5
|
ER:9:491
|
Deed
|
November 22, 1824: Stephen Theodore Mace
of the City of Baltimore in Baltimore Count, State of Maryland, sells
for $9.00 per acre to Thomas Lockerman of Dorchester County the parcels
Callie, Indian Lott and Wear Neck, containing seventy two and a half
acres, and which is the same part of a tract that was sold to Nicholas
Mace and afterwards devised by Nicholas Mace to the said Stephen
Theodore Mace. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace in the City of
Baltimore Thomas W. Griffith and William Clemm; and Samuel Tarnandes;
William Gibson is Baltimore City clerk.
|
1825/09/14
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Capewell Keene
|
|
Keenes Inclosure
|
195
|
Unpat. cert.700
|
Patent
|
September
14, 1825: Keenes
Inclosure Capewell Keene, 195 Acres - Unpatented Certificate 700
|
1828/05/20
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Mace
& wife Mary Mace
|
Noah Dixon
|
Keens
Inclosure & Lot No.Six
|
50
|
ER:11:78
|
Deed
|
May
20, 1828: John Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland sells
for $612.50 to Noah Dixon, also of Dorchester County, the very same
tract called Keens
Inclosure and Lot No.Six which is located in Dorchester County on
and near the County Road near Church Creek, and which was described in
Liber ER No.11, Folio 77. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Isaac F.
Williams and Thomas Jones.
|
1828/05/20
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Noah Dixon
|
John Mace
|
Keens
Inclosure & Lot No.Six
|
50
|
ER:11:77
|
Deed
|
May
20, 1828: John Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys
for $612.50 plus $1.00 from Noah Dixon, trustee appointed by the
Chancery Court of Dorchester County to sell the real estate of M.
Garrison Dixon, late of Dorchester County, consisting of part of the
tract called Keens
Inclosure and Lot No.Six as surveyed by Arthur Bell according to
his plat and certificate dated October 14, 1824, and which is described
as follows: Beginning at the end of the eighth course of the tract
called Keens Inclosure, and from thence running North fifty and three
quarter degrees East thirty four perches, thence North twenty four and
three quarter degrees West ten and a half perches, thence North forty
four degrees East twenty two perches to the divisional line between
Amelia Keene and the aforesaid Garrison Dixon, thence binding with said
line South fifty five and a quarter degrees East seventy two perches to
Martin L. Wright's Lot No.Four, thence reverse the same South twenty
degrees West one hundred and thirty five perches to the eighth course
of the aforesaid Keens Inclosure, thence with the same to the place of
beginning, containing fifty acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace
Isaac F. Williams and Thomas Jones.
|
1832/02/15
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Levin
Richardson
|
John
Mace, et al.
|
[not
named]
|
0.25
|
ER:12:503
|
Deed
|
February
15, 1832: John Mace, William A. Barrow, Thomas C. Jones, Charles U.
Pell, Hugh Neild, and Whitefield Moolford of Dorchester County in the
State of Maryland buy for $5.00 from Levin Richardson, also of
Dorchester County, the tract lying in Dorchester County on the North
side of a well known cart road leading from the County Road to the
timbered land of the said Levin Richardson, generally known as Neild's
Road, the metes and bounds beginning at a post set down [illegible] on
the North side of the cart road, and from thence running West five
perches to another post, then running North eight perches to another
post, then running East five perches to another post, then by a
straight line to the place of beginning, containing one quarter acre
... [for a schoolhouse, it would seem from the largely illegible
remainder of this deed - GL,III, ed.] Witnesses: Whitefield Moolford
& Hugh Neild.
|
1834/04/29
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Henry Page
|
John T.
Mace
|
Lot No.One
|
107
|
ER:14:94
|
Deed
|
April
29, 1834: John T. Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $995.10, through the intermediary Samuel Molray, from Henry
Page, also of Dorchester County, appointed as trustee by the Chancery
Court of Dorchester County to sell and dispose of the real estate of
George Graham, late of Dorchester County, deceased, for the payment of
his debts, Lot No.One, containing one hundred and seven acres, which is
enclosed within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a light
wood post with twelve notches standing on the East side of the Worlds
End Creek, being also a bounder made the beginning bounder of the whole
real estate and noted in the plat by the letter A, and from thence
running the following four courses: binding with said creek North
twenty six degrees East twenty three perches, then North nine and a
quarter degrees East twenty eight perches, then North six degrees West
fourteen perches, then North twenty five degrees East eleven and a half
perches to a locust post with four notches thereon set down on the West
end of the divisional line between John T. Mace and Thomas C. Jones,
John Jones of Col. and Levin Jones of John T.P., and from thence
running with said divisional line reversed South fifty and a half
degrees East one hundred and ninety five perches to a locust post set
down at the West side of the County Road (said post has four notches
thereon) thence running & binding with said road South forty four
and a half degrees West twenty two perches, then South sixty five and a
half degrees West forty eight perches, then South sixty seven degrees
West eighty perches, thence with the County Road leading from the
Worlds End Bridge to William W. Lakes store North twenty two and a
quarter degrees West seventy and a half perches, thence North fifty
eight and a half degrees West fifty perches to the Worlds End Creek,
thence binding with said creek North thirty eight and a half degrees
nineteen perches to the County Road last named, then by a straight line
to the place of beginning, containing one hundred and seven acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John Newton & Solomon Kirwan; and
Samuel Molray.
|
1835/01/26
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Mace
& wife Mary M. Mace
|
Thomas C.
Jones et al.
|
Lot No.One
|
0.75
|
ER:14:385
|
Deed
|
January
26, 1835: John Mace and his wife Mary M. Mace,both of Dorchester County
in the State of Maryland, sell for $30.00 to Thomas C. Jones, John
Jones, and William Cooper, also of Dorchester County, 3/4 acre of the
tract lying in Dorchester County near the Worlds End Bridge and near
the Forrest Road which intersects the County Road near where Edward
Griffith lived and died, the said lot being a part of Lot No.One of the
land sold by Henry Page, trustee for the sale of George Graham's real
estate [see Liber ER No.14,
Folio 94], which is contained within the following metes and
bounds: Beginning at a locust post near the aforesaid Forrest Road,
which post has two notches, then running South sixty five degrees West
nineteen perches to a locust post with four notches, then North twenty
five degrees West six perches to a locust post with six notches,
then North sixty five degrees East nineteen perches to a locust post
with eight notches, then South twenty five degrees East six perches to
the place of beginning, containing three quarters of an acre.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Solomon Kirwan and Henry L. McNamara.
|
1835/09/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John G.
Bell, Sheriff
|
John D.
Farquhausen
|
Griffiths
Attainment
|
208
|
ER:15:71
|
Deed
|
September 7, 1835: John D.
Farquhausen of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys at a
publicly advertised sale for $375.00 from John G. Bell, Esquire,
Sheriff of Dorchester County, who is obeying a writ of fieri facias for
Noah Dixon against Levin T. Fisher, late of Dorchester County, the land
located in Straights Hundred in Dorchester County, which land is the
same as was sold to Levin T. Fisher by Henry Page, trustee appointed to
sell the real estate of Edward Griffith, deceased, and known as Griffiths Attainment and containing
two hundred and eight acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John
Newton and Lewis Ross.
|
1836/02/08
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John T.
Mace & wife Mary Margaret Mace
|
Lake
Robinson
|
Lot No.One
|
107-
|
ER:15:211
|
Deed
|
February
8, 1836: John T. Mace and his wife Mary Margaret Mace, both of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sell for $1,000.00 to Lake
Robinson, also of Dorchester County, Lot No.One, the parcel which Henry
Page, also of Dorchester County, appointed as trustee by the Chancery
Court of Dorchester County to sell and dispose of the real estate of
George Graham, sold to John T. Mace by deed dated April 29, 1834, and
recorded in Liber
ER
No.14, Folio 94], contained within the following metes and bounds:
Beginning at a light wood post with twelve notches standing on the East
side of the Worlds End Creek, being also a bounder made the beginning
bounder of the whole real estate and noted in the plat by the letter A,
and from thence running the following four courses: binding with said
creek North twenty six degrees East twenty three perches, then North
nine and a quarter degrees East twenty eight perches, then North six
degrees West fourteen perches, then North twenty five degrees East
eleven and a half perches to a locust post with four notches thereon
set down on the West end of the divisional line between John T. Mace
and Thomas C. Jones, John Jones of Col. and Levin Jones of John T.P.,
and from thence running with said divisional line reversed South fifty
and a half degrees East one hundred and ninety five perches to a locust
post set down at the West side of the County Road (said post has four
notches thereon) thence running & binding with said road South
forty four and a half degrees West twenty two perches, then South sixty
five and a half degrees West forty eight perches, then South sixty
seven degrees West eighty perches, thence with the County Road leading
from the Worlds End Bridge to William W. Lakes store North twenty two
and a quarter degrees West seventy and a half perches, thence North
fifty eight and a half degrees West fifty perches to the Worlds End
Creek, thence binding with said creek North thirty eight and a half
degrees nineteen perches to the County Road last named, then by a
straight line to the place of beginning, containing one hundred and
seven acres, excepting so much of said parcel which John T. Mace and
Mary Margaret Mace sold to Thomas C. Jones. John Jones of Col. and
William C. Cooper by deed dated January 15, 1835 and recorded in Liber ER No.14, Folio 385,
and also with the exception of a small piece of said parcel reserved by
John T. Mace and his wife Mary Margaret Mace for their own use for
right of way to the County Road, contained within the following metes
and bounds: Within a line thirty six feet in length, running along the
North edge of the grave of George Cook Mowbray, son of Samuel Mobray,
and parallel with said grave, and a line from each end of said line and
at right angles with said line, running straight back to the division
line between the said John T. Mace and the land on which Barzillai
Slocum now lives, let the said piece contain whatever quantity it
may. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Solomon Kirwan and Henry L.
McNamara.
|
1836/05/02
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Henry
Page, trustee
|
John T.
Mace
|
Project,
Worlds End, Taylors Shad Landing, Hazzard, Taylors Landing &
Griffiths Attainment
|
42.5,
29,9, 20, 18, & 61.25
|
ER:15:310
|
Deed
|
May
2, 1836: John T. Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $550.00 from Henry Page, appointed trustee by the Chancery
Court of Dorchester County to sell and dispose of the real estate of
Edward Griffith, late of Dorchester county, for the payment of his
debts, through the intermediary of John D. Farquhauson, who had
purchased the land at sheriff's sale (Liber ER No.15
, Folio71) and later assigned it to John T. Mace, including the
tracts called Project (with forty two and a half acres), Worlds End
(with twenty nine acres), Taylors Shad Landing (with nine acres),
Hazzard (with twenty acres), Taylors Landing (with eighteen acres),
part of Griffiths Attainment (with
sixty one and a quarter acres), making altogether two hundred acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John Newton and T.J. Pattison.
|
1836/11/28
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Samuel
LeCompte
|
John Mace
|
Colstens
Good Will
|
300
|
ER:15:510
|
Deed
|
October
28, 1836: John Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys
for $2,400.00 from Samuel LeCompte, also of Dorchester County, the land
known as Colsten's Good Will, which
Samuel LeCompte had obtained from William Colsten of Dorchester by deed
dated February 5, 1830, in order to secure payment of Colsten's debts
and subsequently sold on August 13, 1830, [whatever happened to the
intervening six years ? - GL,III, ed.] to John Mace the tract called
Colstens Good Will which is located in Dorchester County near the head
of Church Creek and which is contained within the following metes and
bounds: Beginning at a marked locust post with five notches thereon
standing in the fifth course of the said land and at the distance of
fifty perches from the beginning thereof, and from thence running South
by West forty nine and a half perches to a marked pine standing on the
North edge of the new road commonly called Kentucky Road, then with
said road South eighty seven and a half degrees East ninety five and a
half perches to a sassafras post and stone in a line of a tract called
Two Brothers, thence with the
same South twenty nine degrees Westone hundred and eighty four perches
to another sassafras post and stone, then West forty eight [perches] to
another post and stone, then North twenty nine degrees West one hundred
and nine perches to another post and stone, then South forty two and a
half degrees West fifty seven perches to another post and stone, then
West by South twenty perches, then North sixty four degrees West eight
perches to the West side of the County Road, thence with the said
County Road North fifteen degrees West twenty seven and a half perches
to a locust post set down at the end of a division line between William
Holsten and John S. Barrow, deceased, then with the said division line
South seventy seven degrees West one hundred and seventeen perches to a
post on the side of Hodsons Branch, then West South West forty seven
perches, thence with the middle of said branch North fifty two perches,
then North sixty one degrees West fifty three perches, then North
seventeen degrees West eighteen perches, then North forty three degrees
East thirty seven perches, then North seventeen degrees West twenty two
perches, thence North sixty five degrees West seventy perches to a
locust post set down near the edge of the branch, then with ditch North
thirty eight degrees East seventy five perches to the fence and ditch
at the woods, then North sixty nine degrees West eight perches, then
still with the fence and ditch North ten perches, thence by a straight
line to the place of beginning, containing three hundred acres.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace John Newton and Henry L. McNamara.
|
1839/06/21
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John
Bunting & wife Rose Ann Bunting
|
Joseph
Stewart
|
Blackford,
Maces Chance, Addition to Chance & Colstens Good Will
|
230
|
ER:17:315
|
Deed
|
June 21, 1839: Joseph Stewart of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys for $2,141.875 from
John Bunting and his wife Rose Ann Bunting, also of Dorchester County,
the tracts called Blackford, part of Mace's Chance, part of Addition to Chance, and part of Colstens Goodwill (Good Will), lying in
Dorchester County and contained within the following metes and bounds:
Beginning for the out bounds of the whole at a square stone set down on
the edge of Hodsons Branch, it being the first boundary of Colstens
Good Will, also a divisional boundary between the late William Colsten
and Thomas Colsten, and from thence running West twenty perches to the
middle of said branch, thence with the same South seven degrees East
one hundred and seventeen perches to a locust post, a bounder for that
part of Colstens Good Will conveyed to John Mace, thence binding with
said tract by the four following courses: North thirty eight degrees
East seventy seven and a half perches, then North thirty seven degrees
West ten perches, then North ten perches, then South seventy and a half
degrees East two hundred and nineteen and a half perches to another
locust post standing in the line of that part of Blackford that was
conveyed by Murray to Brunwood, it also being the first boundary of
said part of Colstens Good Will conveyed to John Mace, thence binding
with said part of Blackwood conveyed to Brunwood, North by East thirty
six and a half perches, then North seventy degrees West sixty nine and
a half perches, then North twenty one degrees East five perches, then
North six and a half degrees East twenty perches, then North [five]
degrees West forty and a half perches to a stone by the side of the
County Road, the first boundary of said part of Blackford conveyed to
Brunwood, thence north seventy three degrees East sixteen perches to
the middle of said Hodsons Branch, thence binding with the middle of
Hodsons Branch by the following courses: North two degrees West twelve
perches, then North twelve degrees East twenty two perches, then North
thirty three and a half degrees West twelve perches, then North seven
and a half degrees East thirty four perches, South fifty and a half
degrees West nine perches, then North sixty five degrees West twenty
perches, then North forty degrees West twenty two perches, then North
sixteen degrees West twenty two perches, then North sixty five degrees
West sixteen perches, then South four degrees East twenty two perches,
then South sixteen degrees West sixteen perches, then South twenty
eight degrees West fourteen perches, then South forty seven and a half
degrees West forty eight perches, then North seventy degrees West forty
perches, then North twenty eight degrees West thirty three perches,
then South sixteen degrees West twenty two perches, then South fifty
four degrees West forty nine perches, then by a straight line to the
place of beginning, containing two hundred and thirty acres. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace T.J. Pattison and James Hammersly.
|
1844/04/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John
Bunting & wife Rose Ann Bunting
|
William
Rea
|
Sweet
Prospect
|
[not
stated]
|
WJ:2:32
|
Trust Deed
|
April 6, 1844: John Bunting and
his wife Rose Ann Bunting, both of Dorchester County in the State of
Maryland, sell for $5.00 and promises to be kept to William Rea, also
of Dorchester County, all the farm in Brannocks Neck in Dorchester
County that is known as Sweet Prospect,
and which John Bunting and his wife Rose Ann Bunting are to hold in
trust and to sell and dispose of said farm in such manner and on such
terms asfor all deem most advisable, and the purchase money when
received shall be applied to the payment of the mortgage of Levi
Travers on said farm, and the claim due on the estate of Henry Page and
the balance after deducting necessary expenses and a reasonable
compensation pay over to the said John and Rose Ann Bunting. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace James Rea and Charles Corkran.
|
1844/12/27
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
Rea
|
Hooper C.
Hicks
|
Sweet
Prospect
|
[Not
stated]
|
WJ:2:198
|
Deed
|
December 27, 1844: Hooper C.
Hicks of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys for $5.00 from
William Rea, trustee, also of Dorchester County, all that tract called Sweet Prospect, lying in Brannocks
Neck in Dorchester County, which was conveyed to William Rea by John
Bunting and Rose Ann Bunting on February 14, 1844, which has been sold
by the said Bunting and wife to the said Hooper C. Hicks without the
intervention of the trustee and without regard to the said trust deed
as then intended. Witnesses: James Rea and Justice of the Peace Charles
Corkran.
|
1845/05/22
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Hooper C.
Hicks
|
James
Fooks
|
Sweet
Prospect
|
298
|
WJ:2:369
|
Deed
|
May 22, 1845: Hooper C. Hicks of
Dorchester County in the State of Maryland sells for $5,000.00 to James
Fooks of the City and County of Baltimore, all of the tract called Sweet Prospect, lying in Dorchester
County and described by a Commission recorded in Liber
ER No.5 Folio 72, dated April 2, 1817, upon the petition of William
Colsten against James Colsten, Thomas Colsten, Eliza Colsten and Samuel
Colsten to divide the real estate of Thomas Colston (Colsten), the said
tract having been devised by James Colsten to Samuel Colsten, and by
Samuel Colsten to Eliza Williams, and by Eliza Williams devised to Rose
Ann Colsten and Rose Ann Bunting, wife of John Bunting. Witnesses:
Justices of the Peace Wiliam W. LeCompte and Robert Betts.
|
1845/08/12
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James A.
Stewart, trustee
|
John Mace
|
Blackford,
Mace's Chance, Addition to Chance & Colsten's Good Will
|
230
|
WJ:2:433
|
Deed
|
August 12,
1845: John Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys for
$1,499.60 from James A. Stewart, trustee appointed by the High Court of
Chancery to dispose of the real estate of Joseph Stewart, late of
Dorchester County, all of the farm where Thomas Mace, son of John Mace,
now resides, embracing the following tracts: Blackford,
Mace's Chance, Addition to Chance, and Colsten's Good Will, containing two
hundred and thirty acres, but subject to the widow's dower right.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace Robert Bell and William W. LeCompte.
|
1848/11/21
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John
Tubman
|
Thomas
Mace & Zachariah W. Linthicum
|
Resolution
|
94.5
|
WJ:4:422
|
Deed
|
November 21, 1848: Thomas Mace and
Zachariah W. Linthicum of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $975.00 from John Tubman, also or Dorchester County, the
94-1/2 acre tract called Resolution,
lying in Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds:
Beginning at a sassafras post and stone at the end of the tenth line of
the division line of the whole tract, commencing at a stone near Big
Black Water bridge, and from thence running North forty five degrees
West one hundred and one and a quarter perches, thence North thirty
three and three quarter degrees East one hundred and fifty five and a
quarter perches to the fifty fourth line of the whole tract, thence
with said line South twenty nine degrees East two hundred and twenty
eight perches to a tract called Tubman's Discovery, thence South three
degrees West twenty six perches, thence North twenty nine degrees West
seventy one and a half perches, thence South sixty one degrees West
forty four perches, thence North twenty nine degrees West ninety nine
perches, thence South one hundred and twenty one perches, and from
thence to the place of beginning, containing ninety four and a half
acres. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace James Hammersly and Whitefield
Woolford.
|
1849/09/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John Mace
& wife Mary Mace
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Blackford,
Maces Chance, Addition to Chance & Colstens Good Will
|
231
|
WJ:5:121
|
Deed
|
September 3, 1849: John Mace and his wife
Mary Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland sell for
$500.00 to Thomas Mace, also of Dorchester County, all the 231 acre
farm located near Church Creek in Dorchester County and embracing the
following tracts: Blackford, Mace's Chance, Addition to Chance, and Colstens Good Will, containing two
hundred and thirty one acres, subject to the right of dower of the
widow of Joseph Stewart, it being the same land purchased from James A.
Stewart, trustee for the sale of the real estate of Joseph Stewart, by
deed dated August 12, 1845, and recorded in Liber
WJ No.2, Folio 433. For courses and distances, refer to the deed
from John Bunting and wife to Joseph Stewart dated June 12, 1839 and
recorded in Liber ER No.17, Folio 315.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace James Hammersly and Whitefield
Woolford.
|
1849/09/10
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Zachariah
W. Linthicum
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Resolution
|
97.5
|
WJ:5:130
|
Deed
|
September
10, 1849: Thomas Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $260.00 from Zachariah W. Linthicum, also of Dorchester
County, part of the tract called Resolution,
lying in Dorchester County and contained within the following metes and
bounds: Beginning at a sassafras post and stone at the end of the tenth
line of the division line of the whole tract, commencing at a stone
near Big Black Water bridge and from thence running North forty five
degrees West one hundred and one and a quarter perches, thence North
thirty three and three quarter degrees East one hundred and fifty six
and a quarter perches to the fifty fourth line of the whole tract,
thence with said line South twenty nine degrees East two hundred and
twenty eight perches to a tract called Tubmans Discovery, thence South
three degrees West twenty six perches, thence North twenty nine degrees
West seventy and a half perches, thence South sixty one degrees West
forty four perches, thence North twenty nine degrees West ninety nine
perches, thence South one hundred and twenty one perches, and from
thence to the place of beginning, containing ninety seven and a half
acres, it being the same land which Zachariah W. Linthicum and Thomas
Mace purchased from John Tubman by deed dated November 20, 1848, and
recorded in Liber WJ No.4, Folio 422.
Witnesses: Justices of the Peace James Rea and Charles Corkran.
|
1852/10/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James
Fooks & wife Margaret W. Fooks
|
Samuel
Pattison
|
Sweet
Prospect
|
153+
|
FJH:2:64
|
Deed
|
October 7, 1852: James Fooks and his wife
Margaret W. Fooks, both of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
sell for $4,595.00 to Samuel Pattison of the City of Baltimore, all
that parcel called Sweet Prospect,
lying in Dorchester Count and enclosed within the following metes and
bounds: Beginning at a stone and post set down in the mouth of a small
cove, and from thence running South eleven degrees West thirteen and
60/100 perches to another post, and from thence South forty three and
three quarter degrees East one hundred and fifty eight and 32/100
perches to the intersection of the twentieth line of the land belonging
to Thomas Brannock and from thence running North fifty seven and a half
degrees West one hundred and sixty three perches to a bounder of John
R. Martin's land, and then with said land South eighty degrees West
sixty nine perches to another bounder, then South fifty seven degrees
West fifty nine perches to the waters of Church Creek, then binding
with the said waters and Colsten's Cove, the following courses: South
fifty one and a half degrees East seven perches, then South one and a
half degrees East fourteen perches, then South fifty degrees East
sixteen perches, then South sixty three degrees East eighteen perches,
then South eighty six degrees East six perches, then North twenty nine
and a half degrees East twenty two perches, then South fifty four
degrees East thirty six perches, then North eighty one and three
quarter degrees East forty two perches, then North twenty six degrees
East fourteen perches, then South sixty six and a quarter degrees East
sixteen perches, South eleven degrees East nineteen perches, then South
twenty eight and a half degrees West sixteen perches, then South
seventy nine and three quarter degrees West eight perches, then South
forty nine and a quarter degrees West eight and 44/100 perches to the
place of beginning, containing one hundred and fifty three acres and
thirty four and a half perches, it being a part of the same tract
conveyed by Hoofur (Hooper) C. Hicks to the said James Fooks by deed
dated April 28, 1845 and recorded in Liber WJ No.2,
Folio 369, with the reservation of the first part of one-eighth of
an acre, it being a grave yard, with the further reservation that the
said James Fooks and his heirs and assigns shall have a right of way by
a road twenty feet wide leading across said land from the John Diller
house so called to the Brannock Neck or County Road, it being
distinctly understood and agreed by the parties that the said Samuel
Pattison shall have the right at any time to change the direction of
said road or to make a new road of the same width to the said County
Road. Witnesses: Justices of the Peace James Rae and Charles Corkran;
Francis J. Henry is Dorchester County clerk.
|
1856/03/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John R.
Martin & wife Harriett Ann Martin
|
John W. Mace;
Zachariah W. Linthicum
|
North
Range & Colsten Lane; and Keenes Inclosure
|
50 &
50
|
FJH:3:471
|
Deed
|
March
1, 1856: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum, both of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland, buy for $2,550.00 from John R. Martin
and his wife Harriett Ann Martin, also of Dorchester County: (1) 50
acres in the two tracts of land called North Range and Colsten Lane, lying in Dorchester
County and contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning
for the out lines of the entire parcel at the distance of two perches
East from the end of the East line of Kiener and [illegible], thence
running South twenty degrees West sixty five perches, then South eighty
three degrees East one hundred and sixty nine perches to Pelar Williams
land, then running with the said land to the intersection of the second
line of Dorsey's Range, and then running to the West with said lands to
the first bounder of such lands, then by a straight line to the place
of beginning, containing fifty acres; and (2) also another 50 acres in
all that part of Keene's Inclosure
which was bought by [John Martin] from the estate of Joseph Stewart:
Beginning for the out lines of the same at the end of thity five and a
half perches distance on the sixth line of the original tract and from
thence running with the said line South twelve degrees West one hundred
and [seventy] three perches to the end thereof, thence North fifty six
degrees West seventy one perches, thence North twenty degrees East
fifty nine perches, thence South fifty six degrees East thirty five and
a half perches, thence North twenty degrees East one hundred and
fourteen and a half perches,, thence to the place of beginning,
containing fifty acres. Witness: Justice of the Peace David M. Robinson.
|
1856/03/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Thomas
Willis
|
John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum
|
Two
Brothers
|
76.75
|
FJH:3:470
|
Deed
|
March
1, 1856: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum, both of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland, buy for $825.00 from Thomas Willis,
also of Dorchester County, all that 76-3/4 acre tract called Two Brothers, which was purchased by
Thomas Willis from the estate of Nathan Richards, lying in Dorchester
County and contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning
at a marked cedar post & gum standing in a cane swamp at the South
West side of William Dorsey's [hard to read] lands and from thence
running South five degrees East one hundred and thirty perches to the
intersection of the division line between [illegible] Spencer and Henry
Spencer, thence running & binding with said division line North
fifty degrees West one hundred and twenty three perches, then North six
degrees East one hundred and twenty perches, then South seventeen
degrees East one hundred perches, then South fifty nine degrees East
twenty perches, then by a straight line to the place of beginning,
containing seventy six and three quarter acres. Witness: Justice of the
Peace David M. Robinson.
|
1856/08/08
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
Rea, trustee
|
Charles
P. Straughn & wife Leah Straughn
|
Forest
Range
|
170
|
FJH:3:558
|
Deed
|
August 8, 1856: William Rea,
trustee of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sells for [an
undisclosed sum] to Charles P. Straughn and his wife Leah Straughn,
also of Dorchester County, according to a decree of Circuit Court of
Dorchester County dated July 21, 1855, in the case of Lydia Bradley,
next friend of William W. Wrightson and Mary M. Wrightson vs. William
W. Wrightson and Mary M. Wrightson, in which William Rea was appointed
trustee to sell the lands decreed to be sold as he has now done. The
land lies in Dorchester County near [illegible] Point Neck and adjoins
the lands of Charles M. Greenwood and Andrew J. Robinson and also
adjoins the Little Choptank River; it is called Forest Range and contains one hundred and
seventy acres. Witnesses: Elias [illegible] and Charles Corkran.
|
1856/11/13
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Skinner
Richardson & wife Mary & Samuel Harrington
|
John W. Mace;
Zachariah W. Linthicum
|
Hoopers
Plantation
|
46+
|
FJH:3:605
|
Deed
|
November
13, 1856: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum, both of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland, buy for $325.32 from Skinner
Richardson and his wife Mary Richardson and Samuel Harrington, also of
Dorchester County, the tract called Hooper's Plantation, lying in
Dorchester County within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a
sassafras post placed North sixty nine and three quarter degrees West
one hundred and thirty seven and a half perches from an oak tree at the
end of the division line between Martin D. Wright and William
[illegible] lands and running thence South seven and a half degrees
East one hundred and thirty four perches, thence [West] forty perches,
then South thirty degrees West eleven perches, then North eleven
degrees West one hundred and sixty [one] perches, then South [sixty]
nine and three quarter degrees East sixty three perches to the
beginning, containing forty six acres, one rood, and thirty six
perches. Witnesses: Justice of the Peace David W. Robinson and Richard
S. Richardson.
|
1857/06/11
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Benjamin
Travers & wife Dorinda H. Travers
|
John W. Mace,
Zachariah W. Linthicum,
& Solaman Messick
|
Griffiths
Last Adventure
|
100
|
FJH:4:38
|
Deed
|
June
11, 1857: John W. Mace, Zacahriah W. Linthicum, and Solaman Messick,
all of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, as tenants in common
and not as joint tenants, buy for $1,000.00 from Benjamin Travers and
his wife Dorinda H. Travers, also of Dorchester County, the 100 acre
tract lying in Dorchester County called Griffith's Last Adventure,
contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at the end
of the thirty first course of the said tract, it being the beginning of
Richard Wallace's lands, also parts of the same tract on which John
Griffith formerly lived, then running North fifty two degrees West
thirty four perches to a bounded post, then South twenty two degrees
West sixty eight Perches, then South forty degrees East thirty three
perches, then South sixty seven degrees East ninety six perches to
intersect a parcel of land called Keene's Timber Yard, then with the
said land East twenty perches, then East South East twenty six perches,
then South six degrees East twenty perches, then South eighty one
degrees East twenty six perches, then South fifty two degrees East
twenty perches, then South fifty two degrees East to a marked post
standing by the side of a path that leads from the road gate of Thomas
Travers' field, then North fifteen degrees East till a course drawn
North seventy one degrees West will strike the end of the twenty
seventh course of the said lands, which is North seventy one degrees
West, and to continue on the twenty seventh course of the said land to
the end of the same, then running the several courses of the said lands
[here the scribe grew weary of writing so many courses or ran out of
paper - GL,III, ed.] to the first beginning, containing one hundred
acres. Witness: Justice of the Peace [illegible] C. Woodland.
|
1857/07/31
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
James W.
Stewart & wife Rebecca S. Stewart
|
John W. Mace &
Zachariah W. Linthicum
|
Ennalls
Out Range
|
71
|
FJH:4:57
|
Deed
|
July
31, 1857: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum, both of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland, buy for $1,400.00 from James W.
Stewart and his wife Rebecca S. Stewart, all that 71 acre tract called
Ennalls Out Range, which formerly belonged to James Chaplin and which
was also purchased by the said James W. Stewart from the Chaplins, and
which is contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning for
the out lines of this tract at a large cedar post set in the Indian
line which on the plat [is noted] by the letter A, and from thence
running South seventy perches to a post and stone, thence South sixty
nine and a half degrees East one hundred and ninety five perches, then
North fifty four perches to the said Indian line, then with the same to
the place of beginning, containing seventy one acres. Witnesses:
Justice of the Peace Samuel W. LeCompte and Delias B. Bayly.
|
1858/01/05
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
H. Yates
|
John W.
Mace
|
House
& lot
|
[not
stated]
|
FJH:4:125
|
Deed
|
January
5, 1858:John W. Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys
for $247.00 from William H. Yates (Gates), also of Dorchester County,
all that house and lot on Church Creek which William H. Yates bought at
the sale of the real estate of Thomas Woolford, deceased. Witnesses:
Samuel L. Byrn and Justice of the Peace William Rea.
|
1858/05/21
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Sarah
Earle & Lloyd W. Valiante
|
John W. Mace &
Zachariah W. Linthicum
|
Smith Land
|
36.5
|
FJH:4:197
|
Deed
|
May
21, 1858: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum, both of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland, buy for $1,000.00 from Sarah Earle and
Lloyd Valiante of Talbot County, all that 36-1/2 acre tract called
Smith Land, situated in Dorchester County near Church Creek, and which
is described by the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a post and
stone set down near the middle of the original tract, and from thence
running North seven degrees East sixty four perches, thence South
eighty three degrees East eighty three perches, thence South eight
degrees East sixty six perches, thence North eighty three degrees West
ninety seven and a half perches to the place of beginning,
containing[thirty] six and a half acres. Witnesses: Justice of the
Peace William L. Wrightman and John Valliante.
|
1858/07/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W. Mace and
Zachariah W. Linthicum
& wife Sarah E. Linthicum
|
John E.
Stevens
|
Ennalls
Out Range
|
20
|
FJH:4:228
|
Deed
|
July
6, 1858: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah
Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sell for
$300.00 to John E. Stevens, of the City of Baltimore, all that 20 acre
tract called Ennalls Out Range, lying in Dorchester County back of
Applebay Barmo and the Stone Bounder, enclosed within the following
metes and bounds: Beginning at the end of the second course of the deed
Cramo Bhamas Lockerman to James Chaplains, dated September 11, 1822,
where stands a post and stone (letter A on the plat) and from thence
running North fifty four and a half perches to the Indian line, then
with said line North sixty three degrees West sixty two perches, then
South fifty nine perches to the said second course, then with the same
to the place of beginning, containing twenty acres. Witnesses: William
I. Bowdle, James F. Stewart and Justice of the Peace Hugh MaGuire.
|
1859/04/12
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W. Mace and
Zachariah W. Linthicum
& wife Sarah E. Linthicum
|
Dennis
Cornish
|
North
Range
|
4
|
FJH:4:407
|
Deed
|
April
12, 1859: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah
Linthicum, all of Dorchester County, sell for $100.00 to Dennis
Cornish, also of Dorchester County, all the 4 acre tract called North Range which is contained
within the following metes and bounds: Beginnning for the out lines of
North Range at a post and stone, a bounder of John Dorsey's land, and
from thence running South twenty two degrees West fifty and a quarter
perches to a sassafras post, then North sixty one degrees West fifteen
perches to John B. [illegible] land, then with that land North twenty
two degrees East thirty five and a quarter perches to another bounder,
then North seventy degrees East twenty perches to the place of
beginning, containing four acres.
|
1859/04/12
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Susan A.
Linthicum, Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah E. Linthicum
|
Hester E.
Linthicum
|
Blackford
|
200
|
FJH:4:407
|
Deed
|
April 12, 1859: Susan A.
Linthicum and Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah (Sallie) E.
Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sell for
$2,000.00 to Hester E. Linthicum, also of Dorchester County, all the
200 acre tract called Blackford, which
Samuel Linthicum purchased from Thomas Greenwood, located in Dorchester
County, and containing about two hundred acres. Witnesses Charles S.
Direann, James Fookes, and Justice of the Peace Hugh Maguire.
|
1859/05/06
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Caleb
Shepherd, trustee
|
Thomas
Mace
|
Sweet
Prospect
|
153+
|
FJH:4:426
|
Deed
|
May
6, 1859: Thomas Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland,
buys for [an undisclosed amount] from Caleb Shepherd, trustee
(appointed by the Circuit Court of Dorchester County to sell the 153+
acres of land involved in the case of Elizabeth T.H. Pattison, for
herself and as next friend of Caroline H. Pattison and Samuel Pattison
against Caroline H. Pattiron and Samuel Pattison) the tract called Sweet Prospect, which is contained
within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at a stone and post
set down in the mouth of a small cove, and from thence running South
eleven degrees West thirteen and 60/100 perches to another post, and
from thence South forty three and three quarter degrees East one
hundred and fifty eight and 32/100 perches to the intersection of the
twentieth line of the land belonging to Thomas Brannock's heirs and
from thence running North thirteen degrees East seventy six perches,
thence North two degrees East fifty six perches to a stone on
Brannock's Neck Road, and from thence running North fifty seven and a
half degrees West one hundred and sixty three perches to a bounder of
John R. Maston's land, and then with said land South eighty degrees
West sixty nine perches to another bounder, then South fifty seven
degrees West fifty nine perches to the waters of Church Creek, then
binding with the said waters and Colsten's Cove, the following courses:
South fifty one and a half degrees East seven perches, then South one
and a half degrees East fourteen perches, then South fifty degrees East
sixteen perches, then South sixty three deegrees East eighteen perches,
then South sighty six degrees East six perches, then North twenty nine
and a half degrees East twenty two perches, then South fifty four
degrees East thirty six perches, then North eighty one and three
quarter degrees East forty two perches, then North twenty six degrees
East fourteen perches, then South sixty six and a quarter degrees East
sixteen perches, then South eleven degrees Est nineteen perches, then
South twenty eight and a half degrees West sixteen perches, then South
seventy nine and three quarter degrees West eight perches, then South
forty nine and a quarter degrees West eight and 44/100 perches to the
place of beginning, containing one hundred and fifty three acres and
thirty four and a half perches, excepting thereform twenty one and a
half perches for the graveyard, it being the same land conveyed by
James Fooks to Samuel Pattison by deed dated October 7, 1852, and
recorded in Liber FJH No.2, Folio 64.
Witnesses: Justice of the Peace William Rea and John H. Willoughby.
|
1859/10/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W. Mace and
Zachariah W. Linthicum
& wife Sarah E. Linthicum
|
Eleanor
Adkins
|
Ennalls
Out Range
|
14
|
FJH:4:477
|
Deed
|
October
3, 1859: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah E.
Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, sell for
$140.00 to Eleanor Adkins, also of Dorchester County, 14 acres of that
tract called Ennalls Out Range, lying in Dorchester County which is
contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning at the end
of fourteen perches on the first course of a deed from James A. Stewart
to Linthicum & Mace and on the South side of the New Road, and from
thence running with said first course South fifty nine perches to a
stone, then South sixty nine and a half degrees East eighty nine
perches to to the aforesaid New Road, then binding therewith North
forty two degrees West one hundred and twenty two perches to the place
of beginning, containing fourteen acres, it being a tract purchased by
Linthicum & Mace from James A. Stewart called Ennalls Out Range.
Witnesses: Daniel J. Orem, Charles T. Dixon, William Rea and Justice of
the Peace Hugh MaGuire.
|
1860/04/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Charles
P. Straughn & wife Leah Straughn
|
John W.
Mace and
Zachariah W. Linthicum & wife Sarah E. Linthicum
|
Forest
Range
|
170
|
FJH:4:595
|
Deed
|
April
3, 1860: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah
Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, buy for
$3,000.00 from Charles P. Straughn and his wife Leah Straughn all that
farm which the said Charles P. Straughn purchased from William Rea,
trustee for the real estate of William W. Wrightson and Mary W.
Wrightson, lying in Town Point in Dorchester County, and adjoining the
lands of Charles W. Breerwood and Andrew Robinson and binding upon the
Little Choptank River, called Forest Range
and containing one hundred and seventy acres, as described in the deed
from William Rea to Charles P. Straughn dated August 9, 1856. Witness:
Justice of the Peace William Rea.
|
1860/04/03
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W. Mace and
Zachariah W. Linthicum
& wife Sarah E. Linthicum
|
Charles
P. Straughn & wife Leah Straughn
|
Forest
Range
|
170
|
FJH:4:594
|
Mortgage
to Secure a Debt
|
April
3, 1860: John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and his wife Sarah E.
Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland, mortgage
for $3,000.00 to Charles P. Straughn, also of Dorchester County, all
the 170 acre tract called Forest Range,
lying in Town Point Neck in Dorchester County, which is being conveyed
by this same date to Charles P. Straughn and his wife Leah Straughn,
containing one hundred and seventy acres, as by reference to Liber FJH No.4, Folio 595. The present mortgage
grants Charles P. Straughn the right to sell the mortgaged property if
John W. Mace defaults on the payment of the $3,000.00 debt; until then,
John W. Mace can occupy the property without hindrance. At the bottom
is the notation that Charles P. Straughn transferred the mortgage to
James L. Colsten for value received on May 14, 1860.
|
1863/09/21
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
William
W. Mace & wife Annie Mace
|
Lazarus
Powell
|
Tubmans
Resolution
|
93
|
FJH:5:425
|
Deed
|
September
21, 1863: William W. Mace and his wife Ennie Mace, both of Dorchester
County in the State of Maryland, sell for $1,400.00 to Lazarus Powell,
also of Dorchester County, 93 acres of the parcel called Tubmans Resolution, located in
Dorchester County, and contained within the following metes and bounds:
Beginning at a stone marked RT at or near Black Water Bridge on the
edge of the County Road, and from thence running North sixteen and a
half degrees East twenty six perches, thence North nine and a half
degrees East sixty eight perches, thence North twenty three and a half
degrees East twenty perches, thence North fifty six and a quarter
degrees East thirty three perches, thence North sixty four degrees West
one hundred eighteen and a quarter perches, thence South forty degrees
West ninety perches, thence South thirty degrees West forty eight
perches, thence South one half degree West twenty six perches to the
Black Water River, thence running and binding with Black Water River to
the place of beginning, containing ninety three acres, being a part of
the land conveyed by John E. Applegate and his wife Ann to the said
William W. Mace and his wife Annie by deed dated November 20, 1856.
Witnesses: John H. Sard, William Jester, and Justice of the Peace Hugh
Maguire.
|
1864/10/22
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
Samuel
Pattison & wife Ann Pattison
|
John W.
Mace
|
Vickerses
Beginning & The Grove
|
28
|
FJH:5:668
|
Deed
|
October
22, 1864: John W. Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Marylans
buys for $700.00 from Samuel Pattison and his wife Ann Pattison, also
of Dorchester County, 28 acres of those parcels lying in Dorchester
County and called Vickerses Beginning and The Grove, being the same
parts and parcels conveyed to Mark Cook by Isaiah Brickill by deed
dated February 7, 1839, and recorded in Liber ER No.17, Folio 158.
Witness: Justice of the Peace Thomas R. Skinner.
|
1864/11/14
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John C.
Stapleford
|
William
W. Mace
|
Back
Range, [not named] Cow Pasture & Rod Island
|
12,
213.5, 18 & 45÷2 - 15
|
FJH:5:672
|
Deed
|
November
14, 1864: William W. Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $2,000.00 from John C. Stapleford of Baltimore City 260 acres
in several tracts, among them one called Back Range (excepting fifteen
acres deeded to Ezekiel Keene) that is contained within the following
metes and bounds: Beginning for the first part at a bounded white oak
standing on the East side of Black Water River and on the West side of
the Main Road that leads down to Ezekiel Keene's dwelling plantation,
it also being the original bounder of a tract called Partridge
Regulation and also the original bounder of a tract called Adventure,
and from thence running North seventy two degrees East twenty one
perches, then North West thirty nine perches, then South sixty six
degrees West forty seven perches, then South eleven perches, then South
East thirty perches, and then by a straight line to the beginning,
containing twelve acres. For the second part: Beginning at the end of a
line drawn North seventy five degrees East thirty nine perches distance
from the first mentioned bounded white oak, where stands a bounded
cedar post which is set down in the South West line of a tract called
Addition, and thence running North seventy five degrees East one
hundred and thirty two perches, then South one hundred and seventy five
perches, then South East thirteen perches, then North East nineteen
perches, then North eighty four perches, then North East eighty two
perches, then South forty seven degrees East thirty seven perches, then
South eighty six degrees East one hundred and ten perches, then North
four degrees East twelve perches, then North eighty six degrees West
ninety eight perches, then North forty seven degrees West seventy
perches, then North twenty six perches, then South seventy five degrees
East five perches, then South forty seven degrees East thirty three
perches, then North nine degrees East one hundred and seventy perches,
then South sixty two degrees West one hundred and twenty perches, then
South eighty five degrees West twenty six perches, then South sixty two
degrees West one hundred and fifteen perches, then South East fifty
four perches, then by a straight line to the first beginning,
containing two hundred and thirteen and a half acres. Two more tracts:
Cow Pasture, with eighteen acres; and half of a tract called Rod
Island, the whole forty five acres in fee simple. Witnesses: Justice of
the Peace Edward R. Christopher and James Burnett.
|
1865/04/17
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John
Bunting & wife Rose Ann Bunting
|
Hooper C.
Hicks
|
Sweet
Prospect
|
398
|
WJ:2:330
|
Deed
|
April 17, 1865: Hooper Columbus
Hicks of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland buys for $5,000.00
from John Bunting and his wife Rose Ann Bunting, both of the City and
County of Baltimore, the tract called Sweet
Prospect, lying in Dorchester County and containing three hundred
and ninety eight acres as described in Liber ER
No.5, Folio72 upon the petition of William Colsten against James
Colsten, Thomas Colsten, Eliza Colsten and Samuel Colsten to divide the
real estate of Thomas Colsten, the said tracts having been devised by
James Colsten to Samuel Colsten and by Samuel Colsten devised to Eliza
Williams, and by Eliza Williams devised to Rose Ann Colsten, now Rose
Ann Bunting wife of the aforesaid John Bunting. Witnesses: Justices of
the Peace J. Hanson Bell and William Eackellburger.
|
1866/03/07
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John C.
Staplefort
|
William
W. Mace
|
Browns
Folly
|
56+
|
FJH:6:323
|
Deed
|
March
7, 1866: William W. Mace of Dorchester County in the State of Maryland
buys for $225.00 from John C. Staplefort, also of Dorchester County, 56
acres of the tract called Brown's Folly, lying in Dorchester County
(except what is to the East of the County Road leading from the Little
Black Water Bridge to Cambridge) which is contained within the
following metes and bounds: Beginning at a marked gum standing on the
West side of a marsh and near the boundary of a tract called Stephens Gift, and from thence
running West one hundred and eighty five perches to a post at the end
of said line, then North ten perches to intersect the [second] line of
Stephen's Gift, thence North eighty six degrees West sixteen perches,
then South seventy six perches, thence East one hundred and twenty one
perches, thence South fifteen perches, then East three perches, thence
North ten degrees East seventy perches, then by a straight line to the
place of beginning, containing fifty six acres and thirty two perches.
Witnesses: Lazarus Powell and Justice of the Peace Hugh Maguire.
|
1866/04/09
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W.
Mace & wife Kate W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and wife Sarah
E. Linthicum
|
James M.
Richardson
|
Keenes Inclosure
|
50
|
FJH:6:362
|
Deed
|
April
9, 1866: John W. Mace and his wife Kate W. Mace and Zachariah W.
Linthicum and wife Sarah E. Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the
State of Maryland sell for $390.15 to James M. Richardson 50 acres of
the part of the tract called Keene's Inclosure,
which was bought by John R. Martin from the estate of Joseph Stewart,
and which is contained within the following metes and bounds: Beginning
at the end of thirty five and a half perches distance on the sixth line
of the original tract, and from thence running and binding with said
line South[twenty] degrees West one hundred and seventy three perches
to the end thereof, thence North fifty six degrees West seventy one
perches, thence North [twenty] degrees East fifty nine perches,
thence South fifty six East thirty five and a half perches, thence
North [twenty] degrees East one hundred and fourteen and a half
perches, and from thence to the place of beginning, containing fifty
acres. Witnesses: John E. Christopher and Justice of the Peace Hugh
Maguire.
|
1866/04/09
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W.
Mace & wife Kate W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and wife Sarah
E. Linthicum
|
William
J. Richardson
|
Smith Land
|
36.5
|
FJH:6:361
|
Deed
|
April
9, 1866: John W. Mace and his wife Kate W. Mace and Zachariah W.
Linthicum and wife Sarah E. Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in the
State of Maryland, sell for $315.62 to William T. Richardson all that
tract called Smith Land that is contained within the following metes
and bounds: Beginning at a post and stone set down near the middle of
the original tract, and from thence running North seven degrees East
sixty four perches, thence South eighty three degrees East eighty three
perches, thence South eight degrees East sixty six perches, thence
North eighty three degrees West ninety seven and a half perches to the
beginning, containing thirty six and a half acres. Witnesses: John E.
Christopher and Justice of the Peace Hugh Maguire.
|
1866/04/23
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
John W.
Mace & wife Kate W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum and wife Sarah
E. Linthicum
|
Levin W.
Mobrary
|
Ennalls
Out Range
|
37
|
FJH:7:26
|
Deed
|
April
23, 1866: John W. Mace and his wife Kate W. Mace and Zachariah W.
Linthicum and his wife Sarah E. Linthicum, all of Dorchester County in
the State of Maryland, sell [for an undisclosed amount] plus $5.00 to
Levin W. Mobray, also of Dorchester County, the 37 acre tract which was
purchased July 13, 1857, by John W. Mace and Zachariah W. Linthicum
from James A. Stewart and wife, called Ennalls Outrange, lying on the
Stone-Bounder Road in Election District No.7 of Dorchester County,
[originally] containing seventy one acres and recorded in Liber FJH No.4, Folio 57, and of which Zachariah
W. Linthicum subsequently sold to Samuel Eaves, freed slave of
Dorchester County, all of that part of Ennalls Outrange (Out Range)
that had not been conveyed by us to John E. Stevens by deed recorded in
Liber FJH No.4, Folio 228, and to Eleanor
Adkins by deed recorded in Liber FJH No.4, Folio
477. Samuel Eaves failed to comply with the terms of the bill
obligatory for his purchase, the tract reverting to Zachariah W.
Linthicum, et al., and since being auctioned by Sheriff's sale in the
case between Zachariah W. Linthicum and James Fooks vs. Samuel Eaves.
Witnesses: William H. Willis for J.W. Mace & wife, P.W. Woolford
and A.V. Woolford, and Justice of the Peace Hugh Maguire.
|
1600/01/01
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1600/01/02
|
Grantor
|
Grantee
|
Parcel
|
Acreage
|
Lib:No:Fol
|
Type
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|