In doing research on the Northen family, most of the material that I run across are lists of names and dates,
but occasionally something colorful comes along that shows what some of our
ancestors were really like. That is the
case with William Northen and his wife Abigail.
William was born in 1719. He and
Abigail were married in 1738 and lived in Richmond
County, Virginia. In 1775 (one year before the Declaration of
Independence), Abigail sued her husband. What happened?
Apparently William posted
a note on the courthouse door saying that he was selling four or five
hundred acres of land long with all of his cattle, household goods and eleven
slaves. Abigail went to court to stop
him. Why would she want to do that? Well, they had seventeen children and he had
not supported them in any material way for the past two years. Abigail claims he had not even given
her linen to make clothes for the kids.
The truth is, William had not been around for some
time. Six years early he had built another
house for himself about a quarter mile away. The reason for the second house
originally was that it was a sort of store for him to sell the brandy that he
made. As marital problems increased he
began staying away more and more at the second house.
For his part, William claims that one night he had to
stay late at his store. When he climbed into bed with Abigail that night she
told him that she was going to cut his throat.
Given the predicament he left her in, it was probably lucky that was the
only thing she threatened to cut. He
began sleeping in a different bed but did come home for dinner until according
to William one day she said she was going to poison him, so he set down his
knife and fork and moved out. William claims his old place had become "a Harbour of horse roges and bastards."
It seems as if the court decided in favor of Abigail, but eventually
William did sign over his property to
one of his sons, Peter (unfortunately, not our direct ancestor) and moved down to Edgecombe County, North Carolina. I guess he couldn’t take the heat. If there's any moral to the story it's probably that, as
much as we may romanticize the past and talk about how great family values were
in “the good old days”, they probably had the same basic problems we have today
and weren’t coping any better.
An interesting note on the Northen name is that some of the
court papers spelled it Northen and some spelled it Northern. What eventually happened was that those family members who moved to North
Carolina began
spelling it Northern, whereas those in Virginia (up until mid 1800’s at least)
still spelled it Northen.
By the way, William’s son, George, our direct ancestor, was
given a hundred dollars and cut out of his father’s will. He inherited nothing.
1 comment:
This certainly is a very colorful story. While you'd love to romanticize the past, this is probably way more accurate of things that went on, and certainly more entertaining to pass down through the generations (though I'm sure that wasn't their motivation). No one can ever say the Northen's are boring, that's for sure!
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