Ambrose Cobbs

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Ambrose Cobbs
Cobb armsedited.jpg
Coat-of-Arms of Cobbs of Kent
Born
Ambrose Cobbs

1603 (1603)
Kent, England
Died1655 (aged 51–52)
Henrico (now Chesterfield) County, Virginia
OccupationColonist, Planter

Ambrose Cobbs (1603 – c. 1655) was an early Virginia colonist and planter who established the long lasting social and political Cobb dynasty in the southern states.

Life[]

Ambrose Cobbs was born in 1603 in Kent, England. He was the son of Ambrose Cobbs and Angelica Hunt, the sister of Robert Hunt, chaplain of the first permanent English settlement at Jamestown in 1607.[1] Cobbs married before 1627, Ann White with whom he had at least six known children.[2] In 1633, Cobbs and his wife sold their property in Kent in preparation for their immigration to Virginia. It is believed that he, his wife Ann, children Robert and Margaret arrived in Virginia in 1635.[3] In 1639 Cobbs patented 350 acres at the mouth of the Appomattox River as a headright for have paid for the immigration of his family along with Hugh Barker, Thomas Barker and Thomas Harding.[4]

Two of the Ambrose Cobbs children, Ambrose and Jane were born and died in Kent before his immigration. He and his wife Ann bore another two children, sons Ambrose (the younger) and Thomas after their arrival in Virginia. Cobbs died about late 1655 or within the first few days of 1656, his will was probated January 15, 1656.[5] His home-site was later sold to the Bolling family who used the name "Cobbs Hall" for their estate.[6]

Children[]

  • Robert Cobbs: The eldest surviving of Ambrose Cobbs, he was born in Kent in 1627.[2] He was executor of his father estate and later removed to York County, Virginia just outside present-day Williamsburg. He is believed to have married Elizabeth Thorpe a relation of Maj. Otho Thorpe. He served as a vestryman of Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg from 1674 to 1683 during the period in which the first brick church was built on the present site.[7]
  • Margaret Cobbs: The second surviving child of Ambrose Cobbs, she was born in Kent in 1631 and was listed in her father's land patent.[4] Her later fate is unknown.
  • Ambrose Cobbs: The second eldest surviving son of Ambrose Cobbs born after 1635 in Virginia. He resided in York County, Virginia and married leaving two children, a son and daughter. His widow later remarried George Glasscock.[2]
  • Thomas Cobbs: The youngest surviving child of Ambrose Cobbs was born in Virginia. He died unmarried and without issue in York County, Virginia.

Georgia Cobb family[]

A number of Ambrose Cobbs descendants migrated to Georgia in the later part of the 18th century founding a powerful dynasty which has continued to hold social and political influence into the 21st century. This prominent Georgia branch of the Cobbs family was founded by Thomas 'Old Tom' Cobbs and John Addison Cobbs, great-great grandsons of Ambrose through his son Robert. The two men would eventually drop the 'S' from their surname as would all their descendants by the Civil War.[8] Cobb County, Georgia was named for his descendant Thomas Willis Cobb, grandson of Thomas 'Old Tom' Cobbs

Descendants and relations of Ambrose Cobbs[]

The following is a list of direct and collateral descendants of Ambrose Cobbs .

  1. (U.S. Naval Commander)
  2. William Yates Atkinson (55th Governor of Georgia) married
  3. Nathan Franklin Barrett (American landscape architect) married Lucy Mildred Lampkin
  4. (Atlanta developer and builder of Atlanta's 'Flatiron building')
  5. Henry L. Benning (Confederate officer, Lawyer, Politician and Jurist)
  6. (Methodist minister and founding member of Emory University)
  7. (U.S. Naval Captain)
  8. (U.S. Naval Captain)
  9. Walter Eli Clark (1st Governor of the Alaska Territory) married Lucy Harrison Norvell.
  10. Howell Cobb (born 1772) (Politician)
  11. Howell Cobb (Secretary of the Treasury, 40th Governor of Georgia, Provincial head of the C.S.A)
  12. James E. Cobb (U.S. Representative from Alabama)
  13. (Antebellum author, Planter and Mississippi legislator)
  14. Mary E. Cobb (Inventor of the modern manicure)
  15. Norvell P. Cobb (Confederate Colonel of the 44th Virginia)
  16. Rufus W. Cobb (25th Governor of Alabama)
  17. (Socialite and Heiress presumptive)
  18. (Confederate Lieutenant of the 13th Virginia)
  19. Thomas Reade Rootes Cobb (Author of the Confederate Constitution, Civil War Officer)
  20. Thomas W. Cobb (U. S. Representative and Senator from Georgia) Cobb County, Georgia is named in his honor.
  21. Merian C. Cooper (Film director, Producer, Screenwriter and adventurer) best known for 'King Kong'
  22. (Shipping heir and Newspaper owner)
  23. (Television news reporter)
  24. (Shipping heir)
  25. Margaret Eliott of Redheugh (Scottish Aristocrat and Landowner)
  26. Sir Gilbert Eliott, 10th Baronet, of Stobs (Scottish Aristocrat and Landowner) married Dora Adams Hopkins
  27. Sir Arthur Eliott, 11th Baronet, of Stobs (Scottish Aristocrat and Landowner)
  28. Theodore Gordon Ellyson (First Naval aviator) married Helen Mildred Lewis Glenn.
  29. John Glenn (Mayor of Atlanta)
  30. Luther Glenn (Confederate officer, lawyer, Mayor of Atlanta). married Mildred Lewis Cobb.
  31. Henry W. Grady (Georgia journalist and orator)
  32. John Grant (Antebellum railroad baron and reconstruction era developer) married Martha Cobb Jackson
  33. (Socialite and Philanthropist)
  34. John W. Grant (Atlanta merchant and owner of the Kimball House)
  35. Burton Harrison (Lawyer, politician and private secretary of Jefferson Davis)
  36. Constance Cary Harrison (Writer) married Burton Harrison
  37. Fairfax Harrison (Railroad executive, lawyer, historian, writer)
  38. Francis Burton Harrison (Governor-General of the Philippines and U.S. Representative from New York).
  39. (Atlanta developer)
  40. Lucas Hedges (actor)
  41. Peter Hedges (Writer, Director)
  42. William A. Hocker (Florida Jurist) married Mattie Norvell Glover.
  43. Dorothy Jordan (Film actress) wife of Merian C. Cooper
  44. Robert F. Kennedy (Politician, US Attorney General)
  45. (Georgia historian and newspaper editor)
  46. (Chief Counsel, U.S. Maritime Administration)
  47. (Confederate officer) married Mary Athena Lamar.
  48. John Lawrence Marye, Jr. (Conservative politician)
  49. P. Thornton Marye (Georgia architect and preservationist)
  50. John Milton (Florida politician) (5th Governor of Florida) married Susan Amanda Cobb.
  51. (Suffragette, educator, entrepreneur, first female postmistress in Georgia, First Lady of Georgia)
  52. (Georgia lawyer and jurist)
  53. (Washington D.C. photographer)
  54. William Hayes Pope (New Mexico Jurist) married May Nisbet Hull
  55. Mildred Lewis Rutherford (Educator, Writer and History Revisionist)
  56. (Environmental Activist) married to Rurtherford Seydel.
  57. (Belgian-American chemical manufacturer)
  58. Mildred Seydell (journalist)
  59. John M. Slaton (60th Governor of Georgia) married
  60. Maciej Słomczyński (Polish translator and writer)
  61. M. Hoke Smith (U.S. Secretary of the Interior, U.S. Senator, 58th Governor of Georgia) married Marion 'Birdie' Cobb
  62. Samuel Spencer (First president of the Southern Railway) married Louisa Vivian Benning
  63. Philip Thompson (Kentucky politician) (U. S. Representative from Kentucky)
  64. Charles L. Weltner (U.S. Representative from Georgia and Georgia Supreme Court Justice)
  65. Barbara Harrison Wescott (publisher)
  66. Lloyd Wescott (Agriculturalist, civil servant, and philanthropist) married Barbara Harrison Wescott.
  67. (New York City Preservationist and Pacifist)
  68. Elizabeth Cobbs (Historian and Author)
  69. Jerrie Cobb (American Aviator and one of the women of Mercury 13. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerrie_Cobb)

The list above is compiled through reference with available genealogical resources from the Library of Virginia, Library of Congress, multimedia referencing through Ancestry.com and through internal wikipedia cross-referencing.[9][10][11]

References[]

  1. ^ Last Will and Testament of Stephen Hunt, Canterbury Registry Office, Canterbury, Kent, United Kingdom
  2. ^ a b c Virkus, Frederick Adams, Albert Nelson Marquis (1928). The abridged compendium of American genealogy: first families of America: A genealogical encyclopedia of the United States, Volume 3. New York: F. A. Virkus & Co.
  3. ^ McAllister, John Meriwether, Lura May B. Tandy (1906). Genealogies of the Lewis and Kindred Families. New York: E.W. Stephens Publishing Company. p. 280.
  4. ^ a b Greer, George Cabell (1912). Early Virginia Immigrants, 1623-1666. Richmond, VA: W. C. Hill Printing Co.
  5. ^ Henrico County Wills, BK. A. January 15, 1656.
  6. ^ Bolling, Robert (1868). A Memoir of a Portion of the Bolling Family in England and Virginia (1st ed.). Richmond, VA: W. H. Wade & Co. pp. 6–8. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  7. ^ Goodwin, William Archer Rutherfoord (1907). Bruton Parish Church restored and its historic environment. 119: The Franklin press, Co.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  8. ^ Knight, Lucian Lamar (1907). Reminiscences of famous Georgians: embracing episodes and incidents in the lives of the great men of the state : also an appendix devoted to extracts from speeches and addresses, Vol. 1. Atlanta, Georgia: Franklin-Turner Company. pp. 198–202.
  9. ^ Stanard, W. G. (1982). The Cobbs Family: Genealogies of Virginia Families from the William and Mary College Quarterly. Baltimore, MD: William and Mary College/Genealogical Publishing Co.
  10. ^ "Ancestry.com". Ancestry.com. Permira CMGI. Retrieved October 31, 2017.
  11. ^ Virkus, Frederick A. (1925–1942). The Compendium of American Genealogy, First Families of America (Vol 1 - 7 ed.). Library of Congress: A.N. Marquis and Company.
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