Mertz Genealogy - Person Sheet
Mertz Genealogy - Person Sheet
Name6G GM Isabella
Parent-Proof notes for John (Spouse 1)
The Andrew Cross pamphlet on the History of Bethel Presbyterian has already been mentioned in the McClung and Creighton chapters and will come up again in the Carlin chapter.

Andrew Cross listed among the 91 contributors to a minister’s fund in 1769: James Creighton (Crichton), Adam McClung and James Carlin. Adam McClung and Letitia Richardson had a daughter Mary who married James Creighton’s son Robert. Their daughter Delilah married Christopher Slade and their son Christopher married Maria Elizabeth Carlin, great-grand-daughter of James Carlin (who had adopted Maria’s grandfather William). So I sure find it significant that Cross also listed among those 91 contributors a Charles Richardson. Charles may be an outsider among the other Richardsons of Harford County -- as I can find no mention of anyone of that name among the descendants of Thomas or his father or grandfather Lawrence.

The problem is I know nothing about Charles Richardson -- several of that name appear in various early Maryland records, but the date or county seems wrong in all cases. So it might well be an important name to us, but as of now, I couldn’t even begin to speculate as to how.
My Comments notes for John (Spouse 1)
With everything I wrote above as background and more or less reflecting the chronology of my findings, I then found what may be the most compelling evidence yet. There was an estate inventory filed in 1769 for John Richardson, deceased. The inventory was signed by the two appraisers and three other people were named:

• Isabella Richardson was the administrator of the estate. Typically back then, when a woman was appointed administrator, she was the widow. Note that I had spent some time searching for a John and Mary as possibly Letitia’s parents -- but that was before I found the documents involving Alice (Johnson) Mutchner which listed all the children of Adam and Letitia, namely: Isabella, Mary, Letitia, Jean, Sarah and Alice. And interestingly, I can’t be sure, but it is quite possible that list of John’s sisters was in age order -- Isabella may have been the name of the oldest daughter of Adam and Letitia. My names of children theory should have had me looking for a John and Isabella as Letitia’s parents rather than John and Mary.

• David Johnson and Adam McClung were listed as next of kin. I have to admit I am unable to find a technically accurate statement of who qualified as next of kin when Colonial Maryland estates were administered. I have read it wouldn’t be a man’s wife or children. I have seen many instances where it seemed to be his brothers. But, in this case, I am speculating it was his sons-in-law (though they may have been his brothers-in-law instead).

Confusing matters though, there also was a 1769 estate inventory filed of Robert Richardson, deceased, by Ann and James Richardson (I would guess Robert’s wife and son) and the nearest relations (same as next of kin) were said to be David Johnston and Isabalah Richardson.

Robert and John must have been closely related. Were they brothers or father and son (if so, which was which?). I sort of like the idea they were brothers the best so in that case his next of kin were his brother-in-law David Johnson and his sister-in-law Isabella, widow, by that point, of John Richardson. I do not know in any event why Adam McClung was not also listed. In any event, Robert is related somehow and someday more information may help sort this all out.

So I’m left with a puzzle. There are two plausible explanations of all of this:

• John and Isabella were the parents of Letitia and Alice. The main argument for this theory is that Letitia named her first two children John and Isabella.

• But the case can be made that John was the brother of Letitia and Alice. The arguments in favor of this theory would be based on the fact that David Johnson and John Richardson surveyed their land the same day which sounds more like a brother and brother-in-law coincidence and not as likely a father and son-in-law. Plus my feeling is that next of kin relationships were not children or sons-in-law, rather brothers or brothers-in-law.

• In either case, it would make sense that John’s land went to Alice and Letitia who were either his sisters or his daughters, if the latter meaning there were no other surviving children.

And Robert could be John’s brother in either case.

As I’ve ended other chapters, the search for more information continues.
Last Modified 30 September 2012Created 19 June 2022 using Reunion for Macintosh
19 June 2022
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