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Third Generation
12.
George Marable the immigrant, was christened, it
is believed, on 14 Aug 1631 in
Canterbury, Saint Alphege, Kent, England..2 He immigrated in or before 1652 to the Colony of
Virginia..4,5 This signature
appears on a bond dated 19 Jul 1659 made in Surry Co., Virginia.6
He owned ½ acre on the James River in
Jamestown. He was granted a patent on this land on 25 Feb 1663.7
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It was here that George Marable and his family occupied the
middle house of the three that make up what are now called the "Merchant
Rowhouse" on the walking tour of the New Towne on Jamestown Island. To the left
is a sketch of the floor plan of the three houses. The premises were used as an
"ordinary," or inn, certainly by his widow's second husband, Henry Gauler, and
presumably by George Marable as well. The Marable name is also now associated
with what was once called the "Yeoman's Cottage" and perhaps other buildings near
to it which are now referred to as the "Marable Warehouse / Workhouse."
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The map shown at the right is the National
Park Service walking tour map of the New Towne area of Jamestown, modified
to focus on the Marable properties. The Marable House /
Workhouse is stop 11 on the tour, the small building next to the James River (the former Yeoman's Cottage). The Workhouse area may include two buildings
across the path from the River not shown on this map. The Merchant
Rowhouse is stop 12. The larger rectangle marks the approximate
boundaries of the 1/2-acre patented by George Marable in 1663. Marked
within it is the middle house occupied by George Marable's family.
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George Marable was awarded the contract to build the second
Bruton Parish Church, the so-called "First Brick Church," in Jun 1679,
but a
dispute arose with the Vestry which resulted in a lawsuit.
The contract was modified and re-let to Capt. Francis Page in 16818 It is possible that, before the dispute arose, George Marable laid the
foundation of the church (which is now buried beneath the churchyard of the
third church which was built in 1715 and still stands in Williamsburg). The
foundations include supports for buttressed walls, but the only known drawing of
the finished church (made in 1702 by Swiss traveler Francis Louis Michel) shows
no buttresses. It may be that the original plans called for buttressed
walls but that the revised 1681 plans eliminated that feature after the
foundations were laid. (See, Ivor Noël Hume, Here Lies Virginia, An
Archaeologist's View of Colonial Life and History (Alfred A. Knopf, 1963), p.
194.) So, it may be that the foundations which are now beneath the churchyard
(unearth in 1938 and then reburied) were laid by George Marable.
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With his wife Agnes, George Marable witnessed the Power
of Attorney of Sarah S. Drummond on 10 Oct 1679.9
Sarah was the widow of William Drummond, one of the three leaders of Bacon's
Rebellion of 1676. Drummond was the only one of the three who was
hanged. Nathanial Bacon died of disease before his capture, and Richard
Lawrence simply disappeared, never to be heard from again. Sarah was left
destitute. The power of attorney was given to her son in an effort to
collect debts that might have been owed to her late husband in North
Carolina from the time that he was Governor there. Ultimately, she had to
appeal to the Crown for relief for herself and her children.
The immigrant George Marable was a justice of James City Co.
in 168010 and likely in
other years as well. His presence in Jamestown is shown in the surviving court
records of James City and Charles City Co.counties in which he appears
throughout the 1670's as the plaintiff in cases to settle accounts and as a
juror in matters relating to lands held by a persons who died intestate. He died
about 1684 in James City Co., VA.11
George Marable married Agnes Marjorum, possibly in 1652, and
certainly before 1675, when an order of the General Court dated 3 March 1675
directed James Alsapp [Alsop] to deliver the estate of Bennett Marjorum to
George Marable in the right of his wife, Agnes. Agnes
Marjorum
must have died shortly after 1680 (when the Drummond power of attorney was
signed). We know that Agnes predeceased the immigrant, because he remarried
shortly before his death. On 3 February 1685 the court of Charles City Co.
issued a judgment in favor of "Henry Gawler [Gauler] as marrying Katherine
late relict and one of the exors of George Marable decd."11
George Marable and Agnes Marjorum had the following children:
+18 |
i. | Maj. George
Marable. | |
19 | ii. |
William Marable A William Marable is named with George Marable as lessee
of a tract of 117 acres of the Governor's Land in a survey dated 1683. No
other record has been found of this William Marable. It is presumed that he
died or left the Colony shortly after 1683, or that this was a surveyor's
error and the leasehold was in fact held by the immigrant and his known son,
George. |
George
Marable and Katherine _____ were married about 1680 in James City Co., VA.13 |
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